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I 



THE 



ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA 



ELEVENTH EDITION 



FIRST 


edition, published in three volume*, 


1768-1771. 


SECOND 


*t t* **° »t 


1777— 1784. 


THIRD 


„ „ eighteen „ 


1788— 1797. 


FOURTH 


i» ** twenty „ 


1801—1810. 


FIFTH 


ii ii twenty „ 


1815— 1817. 


SIXTH 


ti •• twenty „ 


1823—1824. 


SEVENTH 


•• f* twenty-one „ 


1830—1842. 


EIGHTH 


tt i> twenty.two „ 


1853— 1860, 


NINTH 


ti *»» twenty-five „ 


1875— 1889. 


TENTH 


„ ninth edition and eleven 






supplementary volumes, 


1902—1003. 


ELEVENTH 


„ published in twenty-nine volumes, 


19x0—19x1* 



THE 

ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA 

A 

DICTIONARY 

OF 

ARTS, SCIENCES, LITERATURE AND GENERAL 

INFORMATION 

ELEVENTH EDITION . 



VOLUME XIII 
HARMONY to HURSTMONCEAUX 



NEW YORK 
THE ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITANNICA COMPANY 

1910 



Copyright, in the United States of America, 1910. 
by 
v The Encyclopadifc Britannic* Company. 



INITIALS USED IN VOLUME XIII. TO IDENTIFY INDIVIDUAL 

CONTRIBUTORS, 1 WITH THE HEADINGS OF THE 

ARTICLES IN THIS VOLUME SO SIGNED. 



A.B.O.* 



4.D. 


A.B.T.W. 


A.&S. 


/LCy. 


A. P. P. 


A. Go.* 


A.H.& 


A.tt-8. 


A.J.H. 



A.L. 

A.B.O. 

A.R. 

A.* 
A.W.H.* 

CA.B.P 



Rev. Alfred Ernest Garvie, M.A., D.D. 

Principal of New College, Hampstead. Member of the Board of Theology and 
the Board of Philosophy, London University. Author of Studies, in the Junes Life 
of Jesus, &c 

Henry Austin Dobson, LL.D. -f 

See the biographical article, Dobson; H. A. I 

Alfred Edward Thomas Watson. 

Editor of the Badminton Library and Badminton Magazine. 

of the illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News. *--•-- » — 

its Inhabitants; &c 



Formerly Editor. 
Author of The Racing World and 



Heresy (in part). 

Hogarth. 

Hona-Rtelor (in pari); 
Hunting. 



| Hugo, Victor. 
(* Hebrew 



Htbitw Literature. 

Heath, Nicholas; • 
Henry VnL of ] 
Hooter, Bishop; 
Homphrey, Lawrenee. 



Algernon Charles Swinburne. 

See the biographical article, Swinburne, A. C 

Arthur Ernest Cowley, M.A., Lrrr.D. 

Sab-Librarian of the Bodkian Library* Oxford . Fellow of Magdalen College. 

Albert Frederick Pollard, M.A., F.R.Hist.S. 

Professor of English History in the University of London. Fellow of All Souls 
College, Oxford. Assistant Editor of the Dictionary of National Biography, 1893- 
1901. Lothian Prizeman (Oxford), 1802, Arnold Prizeman, 1898. Author of England 
under the Protector Somerset', Henry will. ; Life of Thomas Crammer; Ac. 

Rev. Alexander Gordon, M.A. 

Lecturer on Church History in the University of Manchester. 

Rev. Archibald Henry Sayce, D.D., Lrrr.D., LL.D. 
See the biographical article, Sayce, A. H. 

Sir A. Houtum-Schindler, CLE. 

General in the Persian Army. Author of Eastern Persian Irak. 
Alfred J. Hifkins, F.S.A. (1826-iooj). 

Formerly Member of Council and Hon. Curator of the Royal College of Musk. ■ 

London. Member of Committee of the Inventions and Music Exhibition, 1885: of \ HsVp (in pari). 

the Vienna Exhibition, 189a; and of the Paris Exhibition, 1900. Author of Musical I 

Instruments ; &c 
Andrew Lang. 

See the biographical article, Lang, Andrew. 



{ 

/HnifiboMt, KM W. Voo. 
^Hormns (in pari). 



Agues Mary Clerke. 

See the biographical article. Clerks, A. M. 



Alfred Newton, F.R.S. 

See the biographical article, Newton, Alfred. 



Arthur Shadwell, M.A., M.D., LL.D., F.R.C.P. 

meal Society. 

Temperance and Legislation* 

Arthur William Holland. 

Formerly Scholar of St John's College, Oxford. Bacon Scholar of Gray's Inn, 1900. 



Member of Council of Epidemiological Society. Author of Industrial Efficiency; 
The London Water Supply; Drinh, Temp J »—■-»--•- 



Hertohel, ttr P. W. (feforf); 
Hefsebel, Sir J. P. W. 

(in pari). 
HeveDtts; HIppRrehos; 
Horroeks; Hoggins; 
Humboldt 

Harpy; Harrier; Htwflneb; 
Hawk; Heron; Hotetxin; 
Honeyettar; Honey Guide; 
Hoopoe; HornbUl; 
Httamlng»Blrd. 

Hooting. 



Roman Emperor; 



Adolphus William Ward. Lm.D., LL.D. 
See the biographical article, Ward, A. W. 



Avcustus Maude Fennbll, M.A., Lm D. ' 

Formerly Fellow of Jesus College, Cambridge. Editor of Pindar'e Odes and Frag" Hercules. 
ments ; and of the Stanford Dictionary of A nglictsed Words and Phrase*. [ 

1 A complete list, showing all individual contributors, appears in the final volume. 



f Henry IV.: 
Hide; 
[Honorins tt.; AnfrPope. 

HrosfithR, 



VI 


CB.» 


CO. 


CF.A. 


C.H.H1. 


C.J.L. 


0.1* K. 


CMo. 


O.P. 


CPt. 


G.EB. 


C.fl. 


C.VT.W. 



D.6.E 
D.P.T. 

D.GL 

D.O.H. 

D.BL 
D. Mil 
D.8.* 

B.O.B. 
B.D.B. 



INITIALS AND HEADINGS OF ARTICLES 

Chau.es B£kont, Lttt.D. (Oxon.). fHtvot; 

See the biographical article, Bsmont, C \F 

Sir Charles Norton Edgcukbe Eliot, K.C.M.G., C.B.. MA, LL.D., D.C.L. r 
Vice-Chancellor of Sheffield University. Formerly Fellow of Trinity College, 
Oxford. H.M.'s Commissioner and Commander-in-Chief for the British East<{ Htmgmry: Lantuatn 
Africa Protectorate; Agent and Consul-General at Zanzibar; and Coasul-General I Hum. "»—»~» 

for German East Africa, 1900-1904. I 



Charles Francis Atkins 
Formerly Scholar of < 
(Royal Fusiliers). Autl 



een*a College, Oxford. Captain, 1st CJty of London 
rot The Wutorness and Cold Harbour. 



Member 



Carlton Huntley Hayes. KM., Ph.D. 

Assistant Professor of History in Columbia University, New York Gty. 
of the American Historical Associa t ion. 

Sir Charles James Lyall, K.C.S.I., C.I.E., LL.D. (EdinJ. 

Secretary Judicial and Public Department, India Office. Fellow of King's College, 
London. Secretary to Government of India, Home Department, 1 889-1 894. 
Chief Commissioner. Central Provinces, India, 1895-1898. Author of Tn m sUt i ons 
of Ancient Arabic Pottry, &c 

Charles Letebrtdge Kingsyord, M.A., F.R.Hist.S., F.S.A. 

Assistant Secretary to the Board of Education. . Author of Lif$ of Henry V. 
Editor of Chronicles of London, and Stow's Survey of London, < 

William Cosmo Monkhouse. 

See the biographical article, Monkhousk, W. C 

Rev. Charles Pritchard. M.A. 

See the biographical article, Pritchard, Charles. 

Christian Pester, D.-es-L. 

Professor at the Sorbonne, Paris. Chevalier of the Legjoa of Honour, Author 

of Eludes sur U regno de Robert le Pieux. 
Charles Raymond Beazley, M.A., D.Lrrr. 

Professor of Modern History in the University of Birmingham. Formerly Fellow 

of Merton College. Oxford, and University Lecturer in the History of Geography. 

Author of Henry the Navigator; The Dawn of Modern Geography; Ac 

Carl Sckurz, LL.D. 

§ee the biographical article, Schurx, Carl. 

Sir Charles William Wilson, K.C.B., K.C.M.G., F.R.S. (1836-1067). 

Major-G*ncral, Royal Engineers. Secretary to the North American Boundary 
Commission, 1858-1862. British Commissioner on the Servian Boundary Com- 
mission. Director-General of the Ordnance Survey, 1886-1894. Dfrector£eneral 
of Military Education, 1895^1898. Author of From KorH to Khartoum; Lift of 
Lord One; &c 

David Binning Monro, M.A., Lrrr.D. 

See the biographical article, Monro, David Binning. 

Donald Francis Tovey. 

Author of Essays in Musical Analysis: comprising The Classical Concerto, The 
Goldberg Variations, and analyses of many other classical works. 

Str David Gill, K.C.B., LL.D., F.R.S., F.R.A.S., D.Sc. 

H.M, Astronomer at Cape of Good Hope, 1 879-1907. Served in Geodetic Survey 
of Egypt, and on the expedition to Ascension Island to determine the Solar, 
Parallax by observations of Mars. Directed Geodetic Survey of Natal, Cape Colony 
and Rhodesia. Author of Geodetic Survey of South Africa; Catalogues of Stars for 
the Equinoxes (1850, i860, 1885, 1890, 1900); ftc 

Davtd George Hogarth, M.A. 

Keeper of the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford. Fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford 
Fellow of the British Academy. Excavated at Paphos, 1888; Naucratis, 1899 * nd 
1903; Ephesus, 1904-1905; Assiut, 1906-1907. Disector, British School at Athena. 
1 897-1900. Director, Cretan Exploration Fund, 1899. 

David Hanmay. 

Formerly British Vice-Consul at Barcelona. Author of Short Hi*** of the Royal 
Navy; Ufe of Emilia Castelar; &c 



Cfe*«& 



Honor! ai H, HL, 1Y. 



Henry IV, V, VL: 

of E*gfan*\ 

Punt, W. 



Horse**], Sir P. W. 

(m pari); 
Hetscbd, Sir J. F.W. 

(in pari). 



Hayton; Htm* 
the navigator. 

Htyot, Btrthortoti B. 



merapoBf (in part). 



Heraelea (in pari); 
HlerapoUi tf» pari); 



Heyn; Hood, Viscount; 
Howe, Earl; Humour. 



insects. " (Cambridge Natural History) ; Ac. 



■•{< 



Henderson, AJexindor 
(in part). 



Rev. Dugald Mactadyen, M.A. 

Minister of South Grove Congregational Church, Highgate. Author of Constructive 

Congregational Ideals ; &c 

David Sharp, M.A., M.B., F.R.S., F.Z.S. 

Editor of the Zoological Record. Formerly Curator of Museum of Zoology, Uru'ver- J HftTBPftdi (m tartS 
«tv of Cambridge. _ President oj Entomological Society of London. Author of"* f, ™w™ ^ *"'* 



RT. 



Rev. Edward Cuthbert Butler, O.S.B., M.A.,D.Lrrr. f a g onymH e o : 

Abbot of Downside Abbey. Bath. Author of " The Lauaiac History of Palladia* ° \ HUarion. Saint 
in Cambridge Texts and Studies, vol vi I ""•*"'"• "—** 



Edwin Dampier Brickwood. 
Author of Boat-Racing; &c 



{ 



Hone: 



History; 

(in part). 



INITIALS AND HEADINGS OF ARTICLES ** 

E.D.BO. Edward Dukdas Butler. f n _. 

Formerly Assistant in the Department of Printed Books. British Museum. Foreign J u ™faiy: LttcraMirn 

Member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences- Author of Hungarian Pirns and I (in fat(). 

FabUs Jar English Readers; &c I 

& & & Ernest Edwaid Sons, M.A. f „ . _. 

Fellow, Tutor and Lecturer, St John's College, Cambridge. Newton Student at J nepnaastoi; 

Athens, 189a Editor of the Prometheus Vincius of Aeschylus, and of The Homeric \ Bent; Hermee. 

Hymns. I 

&VF.& Edward Fairbrothbr Strange, f 

Assistant* Keeper, Victoria and Albert Museum, South Kensington. Member of J Hlroshlge; 

Council, Japan Society. Author of numerous works on art subjects, joint-editor | HoknsaL 

of Bell's r * Cathedral ,f Series. I «* vm "~ 

B.O. Edmund Gosst%LL.D. f Heroic Romtne*; 

See the biographical article, Gossx, Edmund, W. 1 Herow Verse; 

iHarriok; Hojbarg. 

HM. Eduard Meyer, Ph.D., D.Lrrr. (Oxon.). LL.D. f 

Professor of Ancient History in the University of Berlin. Author of GeichichuA Hormlxd*. 
dee AJlerthunu;Geschuhtea^altenAeaplens; Die Israeliten undine I 

B. H. W. »*v. Edward Mewburn Walker, M.A. f xs^mAtitn* u~ aw\ 

Fellow, Senior Tutor and Librarian of Queen's College, Oxford. \ nwgTOMB W» ***)* 

B. 0.* Edmund Owen, M.B., F.R.C.S., LL.D., D.Sc. f 

Consulting Surgeon to St Mary's Hospital, London, and to the Children's Hospital, I Heart: Wmt** 
Great Ormond Street, London. Chevalier of the Legion of Honour. Late Examiner "j H ZliL urger *' 
in Surgery at the Universities of Cambridge, London and Durham. Author of [ nsnuB * 
A Manual of Anatomy for Senior Students. { 

■Vlfc Edgar Prestace. r 

Special Lecturer in Portuguese Literature at the University of Manchester. Com- I Hereulano de Camlho • 
roendador, Portuguese Order of S. Thiago. Corresponding Member of Lisbon 1 Anjyo. 
Royal Academy of Sciences and Lisbon Geographical Society. I 

&*•.• Emxl Reich, Doc. Juris., F.R.Hist.S. i Suummrr t.i~„h~. r.v *~t\ 

Author of Hungarian Literature: History of Civilisation; *c \ BUBWr: *•**«** (s» parti. 

E. B. B. Edwyn Robert Bevan, M.A. f 

New College, Oxford. Author of The House of SeUucus; Jerusalem under the High i 
Priests. I 

F. B. Feuce Barkabei, Lttt.D. 

Formerly Director of Museum of Antiquities at Rome. Author of archaeological' 
papers in Italian reviews and in the Athenaeum. 

F. C C Frederick Cornwalus Conybeare, M.A.. D.Th. (Giessen). 

Fellow of the British Academy. Formerly Fellow of University College, Oxford. 
Author of The Ancient Armenian Texts of Arutotle; Myth, Magic and Morals; &c 

F. 0. fl. B. Frederick Georoe Meeson Beck, M.A. /HaraiL 

Fellow and Lecturer of Clare College, Cambridge. \ 

F. 0. F. Frederick Gymer Parsons, F.R.C.S., F.Z.S., F.R.AnthropJnst. 



HerouJsjienni* 
Holy Water. 



bderick Gymer Parsons, F.R.C.S., F.Z.S., F.R.AnthropJnst. r 

Vice-President, Anatomical Society of Great Britain and Ireland. Lecturer on J tfasj*> «~- -— - 
Anatomy at St Thomas's Hospital and the London School of Medicine for Women. 1 """■*• Anasomy\ 
Formerly Hunterian Professor at the Royal College of Surgeons. I 

F.O.S. F.G.Stephens. f 

Formerly art critic of the Athenaeum. Author of Artists at Home; George Cruih- J fr A lt Vnnk 
shank; Memorials of W. Mulready; French and Flemish Pictures; Sir E. Landseer; 1 n0Ut ™ nfc 
T. C.Hooh t lLA.;&c. I 

F. H. B. Francis Henry Butler, M.A. f Honey; Hunter, John; 

Worcester College, Oxford. Associate of the Royal School of Mines. \ Hunter, William. 



F. LL G. Francis Llewellyn Grotto, M.A., Ph.D., F.S.A. 

Reader in Egyptology, Oxford University. Editor ot tne Archaeological Survey J p. ..,,"_, ■ri, M .-hf„i. 
and Archaeological Reports of the Egypt Exploration Fond. Fellow of Imperial 1 Hermes TrtanegWOJ, 
German Archaeological Institute. L Horns. 



F. 0. B. Frederick Orpen Bower, D.Sc, F.R.S. r 

Regius Professor of Botany in the University of Glasgow. Author of Practical \ _ 
Botany for Beginners. \ 

F.Ffc Frank Puaux. r 

President of the Societe de l*Histoire du Protestantisme francais. Author of I _ ^. 
Let Prtcurseurs fronqiis de la toUrance; Histotre de FitabHisement des protestantsi HUgUenOB. 
francais en Suide; LEglise rtformie de France; Ac I 

G. A. 6r # George Abraham Grierson, CLE. Ph.D., D.Lrrr. 



Member of the Indian Civil Service, 1873-1903. In charge of Linguistic Survey 
of India, 1898-1902. Gold Medallist, Asiatic S " ....... 



Society. 1909. Vice-President of. 

, jtv Formerlv Fellow «* ~ ' " 

The Languages of India 

0. C B. George Croom Robertson, M.A. 



the Royal Asiatic Society Formerly Fellow of Calcutta University. Author of 



rge Croom Robertson, M.A. f tirM** timhm* (2- a«a 

See the biographical article, Robertson. G C \ HoM * > TbmU "* W- 

0.0. W. George Charles Williamson. Litt.D. -fnmtnri ramm**- 

Chevalier of the Legion of Honour. Author of Portrait Miniatures; Life of Richard I 2um!2* JSES^V^w— 
Cosway, JLA.: George EngUheart; Portrait Drawings; &c Editor of new edition } «w"»W» mcnoai, HOtKUtt. 
of Bryan's Dictionary of Printers and Engravers. I Humphry, OxUi. 



INITIALS AND HEADINGS OF ARTICLES 



George Gregory Smith, M.A. 



Author oi Tlu< Henryson. 



ia- j 



Giessea. Author of Das 



via 

G.O.S. 

Professor of English Literature, Queen's University of Belfast. 

Days of Janus IV.; The Transition Period; Spectmens of Middle Scats; &c 

0. & Rev. George Edmttndson, M.A., F.R.Hist.S 

Formerly Fellow and Tutor of Brasenose College, Oxford. Ford's Lecturer, 1909. 
Hon. Member, Dutch Historical Society, and Foreign Member, Netherlands Associa- 
tion of Literature. 

0. H. G» George Herbert Carpenter, B.Sc. 

Professor of Zoology in the Royal College of Science, Dublin. President of the 
Association of Economic Biologists. Member of the Royal Irish Academy. Author 
of Insects: their Structure and Life; Ac 

G. J. T. George James Torner. 

Barrister-at-Law, Lincoln's Inn. Editor of Select Pleas for the Porosis for the 
Seldcn Society. 

G. K. GtJSTAV KftftGER. 

Professor of Church History in the University of 
Papsttum; &c. 

G. R. Rev. Gegrce Rawlinson, M.A. 

See the biographical article, Rawlinson, Gborgb. 

G. W. T. Rev. Gripftthes Wheeler Thatcher, M.A., B.D. 

Warden of Camden College. Sydney, N.S.W. Formerly Tutor in Hebrew and Old 
Testament History at Mansfield College, Oxford. 

H. Lord Houghton. 

See the biographical article, Houghton, ist Baron. 

H. Br. Henry Bradley. M.A., Ph.D. 

Joint-editor of the New English Dictionary (Oxford). Fellow of the British Academy. 

Author of The Story of the Goths ; The Making of English; Ac 
H. Bt Sir Henry Burdett, K.C.B., K.C.V.O. 

Founder and Editor of The Hospital. Formerly Superintendent of the Queen's 

Hospital, Birmingham, and tie Seamen's Hospital, Greenwich. Author of 

> Hospitals and Asylums of the World; Ac 
H. Ch. Huch Chisholm, M.A. 

Formerly Scholar of Corpus Christ! College, Oxford. Editor of the nth edition 

of the Encyclopaedia Britannica; Co-editor of the 10th edition. 

H.D0. Htppolyte Delehaye, S.J. 

Assistant in the compilation of the BolUndist publications: AnaJocta BollandioKa 
and Acta -sanctorum. 

H. L. Henri Labrosse. 

Assistant Librarian at the Bibliotfaeque Nationalc, Paris. Officer of the Academy. 

H. L. 0. Hugh Longbourne Callendar, F.R.S., LL.D. 

Professor of Physics. RoyaL College of Science, London. Formerly Professor of 
Physics in McGUl College, Montreal, and in University College, London. 

H. V. V. Herbert M. Vaughan, F.S.A. 

Keble College, Oxford. Author of The Last of the Royal Stuarts; The Medici Popes; 
The Last Stuart Queen. 

H. W. C. D. Henry William Carless Davis, M.A. 

Fellow and Tutor of BaJliol College, Oxford. Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford, 
1895-1902. Author of England under the Normans and Angeoiut; Charlemagne. 

H. W. fL* Rev. Henry Wheeler Robinson, M.A. 

Professor of Church History in Rawdon College. Leeds. Senior Kennfeott Scholar, 

Oxford, tooi. Author of Hebrew Psychology in Relation to Pauline Anthropology 

(in Mansfield College Essays) ; &c 
H. W. 8. H. Wickham Steed. 

Correspondent of The Times at Vienna. Correspondent of The Times at Rome, 

1 897-1902. 

H. Y. Sir Henry Yule, K.C.S.I., C.B. 

See the biographical article, Yule, Sir H. 

I* A. Israel Abrahams, M.A, 

Reader in Talmudic and Rabbinic Literature in the University of Cambridge. 
Formerly President, Jewish Historical Society of England. Author of A Short 
History of Jewish Literature; Jewish Life in the Middle Ages; Judaism; &c 

J. A. C Sir Joseph Archer Crowe, K.C.M.G. 

See the biographical article, Crowe, Sir J. A 

J. A. S. Vssy Rev. Joseph Ariotage Robinson, D.D. 

Dean of Westminster. Fellow of the British Academy. Hon. Fellow of Christ's 
College, Cambridge. Formerly Fellow of Christ's College, Cambridge, and Norn's- 
ian Professor of Divinity in the University. Author of Some Thoughts on the 
Incarnation; 8cc _ 

J. Bl James Bartlett. 

Lecturer on Construction, Architecture, Sanitation, Quantities, &c, at King' 
College, London. Member of Society of Architects. Member of I imitate of 
Junior Engineers. 



HoUtnd: History. 
Holland: County and 
Province of. 



Hemlptera; 



(Jn part). 



Hundred. 



ffippolytus. 

Herodotus (/» pari). 

rJasan-uVBaSTT; 
Hassan ibn thiblt; 
Bfchim fbn tt-KalM. 

Hood, Thomas. 



Howe, Samuel Gridley. 

Helena. St; Hubert, St 
Hugh of St Ober. 



Henry, Steart (Cardinal 
York). 

Henry L, TL, HL: 

Of England. 
Henry of Huntingdon. 

Hosea {in pari). 



Humbert, King. 

Homos (in pari); 

Hsftan Tsang (in part)* 

Hasdal lhn Aaprat; 

Henl; 

Hindi, Samson B. 

Hobbema; Holbein. 



Hlppotytns, The 



<1 



Heating. 



INITIALS AND HEADINGS OF ARTICLES 



IX 



J.B.T, 

/.Oft. 

J.B. 
I. P. P. 
J. F. fi. B. 

J. 04. 
J.G.H. 

1.0. S. 



J.H.A.H. 
J.H.P. 
J. H. Mb. 

J.H.B. 

M. J. P. 

J.K.L. 

J.M.H. 

J.FwB. 
J.P.Pi. 

J. 8. Co. 
J. IF. 
J.T.lsV 



Sut John Batty Tuxe, M.D., F.R.S. (Edin.), D.Sc., LL.D. 

President of the Neurological Society of the United Kingdom. Medical Director 
of New Sa ugh ton Hatl Asylum, Edinburgh. M.P. for the Universities of Edinburgh 
and St Andrews, 1900-1910. 

Riv, James Davtes, M.A. (1820-1883). 

Formerly Head Master of Ludlow Grammar School sod Prebendary of Hereford 
Cathedral. Translated classical authors for Bohn's " Classical Library." Author 
of volumes in CoUins's Ancient Classics for English Readers. 

H. Julius Ecgeling, Ph.D. 

Professor of Sanskrit and Comparative Philology, University of Edinburgh. 
Formerly Secretary and Librarian to Royal Asiatic Society. 

John Fatthtull Fleet, CLE. 

Comm i s s i oner of Central and Southern Divisions of Bombay, 1891-1807. Author 
of Inscriptions of the Early Gupta Kings ; ftc. 

Sot John Francis Harpin Broadbent, Bart., M.A., M.D. 

Physician to Out-Patients, St Mary's Hospital, London, and to the Hempstead 
General Hospital. Assistant Physician to the London Fever Hospital Author 
of Heart Disease and Aneurysm; && 

Rev. James Cow, M.A., Lxrr.D. 

Head Master of Westminster School. Fellow of King's College, London. Formerly 
Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge. Editor of Horace's Odes and Satires. Author 
of A Companion to the School Classics; &c 

James Gairdner, C.B. 

Sea the biographical article, Gairdnbr, J 

John Gray McKendricz, M.D., LL.D., F.R.S., F.R.C.P. (Edin.) 

Emeritus Professor of Physiology at the University of Glasgow. Author of Life 
in Motion ; Life of Helmholts ;8tc 

John George Robertson. M.A., Ph.D. 

Professor of German at the University of London. 



Language, Strassburg University. Author 



ndon. Formerly Lecturer on the English 
of History of German Literature; ftc. 



Justus Hashagen, Ph.D. 

Privatdozent in Medieval and Modern History, University of Bonn. Author of 
Das Rhainland unler der frantdsischen Herrschafi. 

John Henry Arthur Hast, M.A. 

Fellow, Theological Lecturer and Librarian. St John's College, Cambridge. 

John Henry Freese, M.A. 

Formerly Fellow of St John's College, Cambridge. 

John Henry Mutrhead, M.A., LL.D. 

Professor of Philosophy in the University of Birmingham. Author of Elements 
of Ethics; Philosophy and Life; Ac. Editor of Library of Philosophy. 

John Horace Round, M.A., LL.D. (Edin.). 

Author of Feudal England; Studies in Peerage and Family History; Peerage and 

Rev. James J. Fox. 

St Thomas's College, Brookland, D.C, U.&A. 

Sir John Knox Laughton, M.A., Lrrr.D. 

Professor of Modern History, King's College, London, Secretary of the Navy 
Records Society. Served in the Baltic, 1854-1655; in China. 1856-1859. Honorary 
Fellow, Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge. Fellow, King's College, London. 
Author of Physical Geography in tts Relation to the Prevailing Winds and Currents; 
Studies in Naval History; Sea Fights and Adventures; ftc 

John Malcolm Mitchell. 

Sometime Scholar of Queen's College. Oxford. Lecturer in Classics, East London 
College (University of London). Joint-editor of Grote's History of Greece. 

James Geqrge Joseph Penderil-Broohurst. 
Editor of the Guardian (London). 

Rev. John Punnett Peters, Ph.D.. D.D. 

Canon Residentiary, Cathedral of New York. Formerly Professor of Hebrew In 
the University of Pennsylvania. Director of the University Expedition to 
Babylonia, 1888-1895. Author of Nippur, or Explorations and Adventures on the 
Euphrates. 

James Sutherland Cotton, M.A. 

Editor of The Imperial Gaeetteer of India. Hon. Secretary of the Egyptian Explora- 
tion Fund. Formerly Fellow and Lecturer of Queen's College, Oxford. Author 
ef India in the " Citizen " Series; &c 

Johm Smith Flett, D.Sc., F.G.S. 

Petrpgrapber to the Geological Survey. Formerly Lecturer on Petrology in 
Edinburgh University. Neifl Medallist of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. Bigsby 
Medallist of the Geological Society of London. 

John t. Bealby. 

Joint-author of Stanford's Europe. Formerly Editor of the Scottish Geographical 
Miagasine. Translator of Sven Hedin's Through Asia, Central Asia and Tibet; &c. 



Hipocrates. 
Hasted (*• *ar0. 



Heart: Bean Dims*. 

Horace (is pari). 
Henry VH.: of England. 



Heine (,'» part); 
HUdebrand, Lay of; 
Hoffmann, B. T. W. 

Heeler, p. P. K.; 
Hertxberf, Count Von; 
Hormayr. 



Herod; 

Herald; Heated (*» peri). 

Hegel: Hcgdianism m 
England., 



Hereward. 



Heeker, L T. 



Hood of Anion. 



Home, David (in part). 



HLHaJi; Htt. 



Hastings, Warren. 



Hlssar (in part). 





X 


j.T.a 


J.T.M0. 


J.T.ft.* 


J. v.* 


J.V.I. 


J.Ws. 


J.W.* 


i. W. P. 


J. W. I*. 



INITIALS AND HEADINGS OF ARTICLES 

Joseph Thomas Cunntncham, M.A.. F.Z.S. f 

Lecturer on Zoology at the, South-western Polytechnic London. Formerly Fellow J Hnrrtnc 
of University College, Oxford. Assistant Professor of Natural History in the f —•••■»• 
University of Edinburgh and Naturalist to the Marine Biological Association. I 

John Torrey Morse, Jr. /Holms*. Oftvsr 

Author of ThelSfeerndbemmefOtumWeadtUBetmau ^nons^ OTnT 

James Thomson Shoxwkx, Ph.D. I 

Professor of History m Colu mbi a University, New York City. I 

JULES VTARD. 

Archivist at the National Archives, Paris. Officer of Public Instruction. Author ' 

of La Frame* sous Philippe VI. de Valois; Ac 
Jakes Vernon Bartlet, MA, D.D. (St Andrews). 

Professor of Church History, Mansfield College, Oxford. Author of The Apostolic 

Age;&c 

John Weathers, F.ILH.S. f mppeiihiwi. HoatyroeUa: 

Lecturer on Horticulture to the Middlesex County Council. Author of Practical \ SSSE^r^Si^ 
Guide to Garden Plants; French Market Gardening: «c L HorttOttltore <*» P™). 

Javes Wad, D.Sc, LL.D. 



Hundred Yearr War. 

Hebrews, Kittle to the; 
of, 



aed, D.Sc., LL.D. f 

Professor of Mental Philosophy and Logic in the University of Cambridge. Fellow J •*..*.,« 
" - Inky College, Cambridge. Fellow of the British Academy. Fcftow of the | "•"•"• 
York Academy of S ci e nc es . I 



of Trinity 
NewYo 

Walter Ferrter. f 

Translated George Eliot and Judaism from the German of Kanfmann. Author of i HtlM (in part 4 ). 



Moltisdiffe. 

The Hon. John Watson Foster, A.M., LL.D. 

Professor of American Diplomatics, George Washington University, Washington, \ flarrtSOD, 
VSJi. Formerly U.S. Secretary of State, Author of Diplomatic Memoirs; Ac. 



n.(l 



K. ft. Kathleen Schlesinoer. [ a^LM^t^nJrm^hts^ 

Editor of The Portfolio of Musical Archaeology. Author of The Instruments of the i jr ^"" *' warpsiCDOtW, 
Orchestra. HoWroiapele; 

iHorn; Hordj-Gardy. 

IV. & I. Libeky Hyde BflMjJljD. >f _ ^ , f-f _^ _ , n ^ J HortkuW. American 



ieety Hyde Bailey. LLJ>. f Hortkultore: jimma 

Director of the College of Agriculture, Cornell University. Chairman of Roosevelt 1 r.i~.A~ u ^^\ 

Commission on Country Life, I OOmdar \m part). 

■{■ 



L. J. ft. Leonard James Spencer, M.A. f n«M«/»<A!*.. n«mi m nmvif A . 

Assistaot in Department of Mineralogy, British Mqseum. Formerly Scholar of 1 S^^'irtSSJ? 
Sidney Sus»<^U^c,aunbridge,a^Haricness Scholar. Editor of the Mineralo- 1 Heukndlto; Hornblende; 
fico/ J/agasiJM. I Hamito. 

L. W. LuaiN Wolf. 

Vice-President of the Jewish Historical Society of England. Formerly President "j Hind), BifOD. 
of the Society. Joint-editor of thio BMiotlseca Angto-judaica. 

H. 0. Moses Caster, Ph.D. (Leipzig). 

Chief Rabbi of the Sephardtc Communities of England. Vice-President. Zionist 



Congress, 1898, 1890, 1900. Ilchester Lecturer at Oxford on Slavonic ami Byaantine 
Literature, 1886 and 1891. President. Folk lore Society of England. Vice-President 
Anglo- Jewish Association. Author of History of R u man ian Popular Literature ; Ac. 



H. Ha. . Marcus Hartog, M.A., D.Sc, F.L.S. 

Professor of Zoology, University College, Cork. Author of " Pro to xo a " in Cam- ■ HeUosoa* 
bridge Natural History ; and papers for various scientific journals. I 

H. H. C Montague Hughes Crackanthorfe, K.C., D.CJL f 

President of the Eugenics Education Society. Honorary Fellow, St John's College. I 
Oxford. Bencher of Lincoln's Inn. Formerly Member of the General Council of *j HafSehefl. 1st BifOn. 
the Bar and of the Council of Legal Education, and Standing Counsel to the Univer- I 
sity of Oxford. [ 

M. 9. T. Marcus Niehbdr Too. WLA. f 

Fellow and Tutor of Oriel College, Oxford. University Lecturer in Epigraphy, i 
Joint-author of Catalogue of the Sparta Museum. I 

M. 0. B. C. MaxnmxAN Otto Bismarck Casfarx. f 

Reader in Ancient History at London University. Lecturer in Greek at Birmingham i HexioBus. 
University, 1905-1908. I 

H. T« H. Maxwell T. Masters. M.D., F.R.S. (1833-1007). r 

Formerly Editor of Gardeners* Chronicle; tad Lecturer on Botany. St George's Hos- J nartieiiltmn f«. amA 
pital. London. Author of Plant Life; Botany for Beginners; and numerous mono- | —* WUWU9 w» !■»"/• 
graphs in botanical works. I 

M. JJ. M. Newton Dennison Mereness, A.M., Ph.D. f i^l^!?^ 

Author of Maryland as a Proprietary Province. i HOIDBstaa* ani 

I Laws. 



0. Btx Oswald Barron, F.S.A. 

Editor of The Ancestor, 1902-1905. Hon. Genealogist to Standing Council of the 
Honourable Society of the Baronetage, 

Ik Bs. Oscar Broxant. 



Heraldry; 
Herbert: family, 
Howard: family. 
Hangary: Goograpko 
and Stetittift 



INITIALS AND HEADINGS OF ARTICLES 

0. C W. Rbv. Owen Charles Whttehouse, M.A., D.D. f 

Christ's College. Cambridge. Professor of Hebrew, Biblical Exegesis and Theology, i Hebrew Religion, 
and Theological Tutor, Cheshunt College. Cambridge. I 

P. A. Paul Daniel Alphandery. f Henry of Lausanne; 

Professor of the History of Dogma, Ecole pratique des hautcs 6tudcs, Sorbonne, J Unrh nt fit Vktinr- 
Paris. Author of Les /dies morales eket les hitirodoxes Latines au debut du XIII* | 5?S1„.« ^^^ 
sietle. I Humlllau. 

P. C M. Peter Chalmers Mitchell. M.A., F.R.S., F.Z.S., D.Sc., LLD. 

Secretary to the Zoological Society of London. University Demonstrator in Com- 
parative Anatomy and Assistant to Linacre Professor at Oxford, I 888-1891. 
Examiner in Zoology to the University of London, 1903. Author of Outlines of 
Biology; &c 



Hemtohordn; 
Heredity. 



P. C T. Philip Chesney Yorke, M.A. f WMU . 

Magdalen College, Oxford. Editor of Letters of Princess Elisabeth of England. \ nouw » 

P.H. Peter Henderson ( 1 823-1800). f Hortlcuttur*: American 

Formerly Horticulturist, Jersey City and New York. Author of Gardening fori r 1 j f-7Zj\ 
Profit; Garden and Farm Topics. ' I Calendar (tn pari). 

P. H. P<-S* Philip Henry Pye-Smith, M.D., F.R.S. f 

Consulting Physician to Guy's Hospital, London. Formerly Vice-Chancellor of the 1 Hutey, William. 
University of London. Joint-author of A Text Book of Medicine', &c. I 

P. U. Philip Lake, M.A., F.G.S. f 

Lecturer on Physical and Regional Geography in Cambridge University. Formerly J m m «i««-. n 1 
of the Geological Survey of India. Author of Monograph of British Cambrian 1 ™»"l*- Geology. 
Trilobiles. Translator and Editor of Kayscr's Comparative Geology. I 

R. A* m Robert Anchel. f Haranlt da SfehaliM. 

Archivist to the Department de ITure. \ umm W ^ tolMUm ' 

R.A& Robert Adamson. LLD. /„„.,. *.«,.- .. A A 

See the biographical article, Adamson, R. ^Httnie, DftVId (m part). 

B. A. S» H. Robert Alexander Stewart Maca lister, M.A., F.S.A. r 

St John's Conege, Cambridge. Director of Excavations for the Palestine Explora- -{ Hebron; Hor, ML 
turn Fund. [ 

B. A. W. Robert Alexander Wahab, C.B„ C.M.G., CLE. r 

Colonel, Royal Engineers Formerly H.M. Commissioner, Aden Boundary Delimi- J _ »t. w t. 
tation, and Superintendent. Survey of India. Served with Tirah Expeditionary 1 ****■» **> HOjai. 
Force, 1897-1898; Anglo-Russian Boundary Commission, Pamirs, 1895; &c [_ 

R. H. S. Richard Henry Stoddard. f u.-**,,.-.., v.«h«tii«t 

See the biographical article, Stoddard, Ricuaro Hehrt. \ Hawthorne, HatnanleL 

R. L P. Reginald. Innes Pococe F Z.S. JHamrtet; Hlbematton. 

Superintendent of the Zoological Gardens, London. \ 

Christ Church. Oxford. Barnster-at-Law. Formerly Editor of the & James's \ Hety-Hutchlnson. 
Cautte. London. \ 

B. J. 8. Hon. Robert John Strutt. M.A., F R.S. 

Professor of Physics in the In " 

Kensington. Fellow of Trinity 

R. K. D. Sir Robert Kennaway Douclas. 



B. J. H. Ronald John McNeill, M.A. 

:. M.A., F R.S. f 

he Imperial College of Science and Technology, South * HeUam. 

rinity College, Cambridge. ^ 

Robert Kennaway Douclas. f 

Formerly Keeper of Oriental Printed Books and MSS. at the British Museum, J Rcnm Taanr (l» Wf 
and Professor of Chinese, King's College, London. Author of The Language o»d ] *»u» \wi mw*h 

Literature of China ; &c I 

R. L.* Richard Lydekker, F.R.S., F.G.S., F.Z.S. f Hedgehog: 

Member of the Staff of the Geological Survey of India, 1874-1882. Author of J Hlnnonotamna* 

Catalogue of Fossil Mammals, Reptiles and Birds in the British Museum; The Deer) „ *!? *J. ' „ »_ 

of all Lands; The Game Animals of Africa; &c I Hone (mi pari); HOWfer. 

R.H. B. Robert Nisbet Bain (d. iooq). fHopken; Horn, A. B., Count; 

Assistant Librarian, British Museum, 1 883-1909. Author of Scandinavia, the n n nmrv tr:~i~~ d- a^-a. 
Political History of Denmark. Norway and Sweden, 1*13-1900; The First Romanovs! J™ 8 *?' ~ wtory Km r * 1 '* 
1613-1725; Slavonic Europe, the Political History of Poland and Russia from 1469. MunyW Janot; 
to 1790; StL [ Hunyadi, Usxlo. 

B. Pd. Rene" Poupardin, L>.-is-L. r 

Secretary of the Ecole des Chartes. Honorary Librarian at the Bibliotheque I 
Nationale. Paris. Author of Le Royaume de Provence sous les Carolingiens; Recueil] 
des chartes de Saint-Germain ; &c. I 

R. P. 8. R. Phene" Spiers, F.S.A., F.R I B.A. 

Formerly Master of the Architectural School, Royal Academy, London. Past 
President of Architectural Association. Associate and Fellow of King's College, 
London. Corresponding Member of the Institute of France. Editor of Fergusson't 
History of Architecture. Author of Architecture: East and West; &c 

R. 8. d Robert Seymour Conway. M.A., D.Litt. (Cantab.). 



Boom. 



ert Seymour Conway. M.A., D.Litt. (Cantab.). r 

Professor of Latin and Indo-European Philology in the University of Manchester. J HeTnlCl; 
Formerly Professor of Latin in University College, Cardiff: and Fellow of Gonville 1 Hirplnl. 
and Caius College, Cambridge. Author of The Italic Dialects. ^ 



R. 3. T. Ralph Stockman Tarr. S Hudson Biter. 

Professor of Physical Geography, Cornell Unnremty. \ »»«»«■ »m. 



Hatha*. 



x« INITIALS AND HEADINGS OF ARTICLES 

R. W. Robert Wallace, F.R.S. (Edin.), F.L.S. 

P rof es sor of Agriculture and Rural Economy at Edinburgh University, and Carton 

Lecturer on Colonial and Indian Apiculture. Professor of Agriculture, R.A.C., I HOTM (in tovtL 

Cirencester, 1 882-1 885. Author of Farm Live Stock of Great Britain; The AtrkuU ■ r ^ h 

ture and Rural Economy of Australia and Now Zealand; Farming Industries oj Cape 

Colony; Sac 

8. P. B. Spencer Fullerton Baird, LL.D. J nv_«_ » ■. 

See the biographical article, Bairo.S. P. ^JMBrJ, JCHfsV 

8. A. C. Stanley Arthur Cook, M.A. 

Lecturer in Hebrew and Syriac, and formerly Fellow, Goovule and Caius College. 
Cambridge. Editor for Palestine Exploration Fund. Examiner in Hebrew and • 
Aramaic, London University, 1 904-1908. Author of Glossary of Aramaic Inscrip- 
tions; The Laws of Moses and the Code of Hammurabi; Critical Notes on Old Testament 
History; ReHgion of Ancient Palestine; Ac* 

T. A. L Thomas Allan Ingram. MA, LL.D. / HoUday. 

Trinity College. Dublin. \ 

T. As. Thomas Ashby, M.A.. D.LrrT. (Oxon.). f 

Director of British School of Archaeology at Rome. Formerly Scholar of Christ 1 Htrtehft (til pari); 
Church, Oxford. Craven Fellow, 1807. Coningtoa Prizeman, 1906. Member of 1 wup^iinm , 
the Imperial German Archaeological Institute. I 

T. Bi. Str Thomas Barclay, M.P. f 

Member of the Institute of International Law. Member of the Supreme Council J m-fc m tm m 
of the Congo Free State. Officer of the Legion of Honour. Author of Problems \ °*" amm * 
of International Practice and Diplomacy; &c M J\ for Blackburn, 191a I 

T. !•• Thomas Brown. f 

Incorporated Weaving, Dyeing and Printing College, Glasgow. \ 

T. P. H. T. F. Henderson. f BjkJlW . •^.j 

Authordf The Cashet Letters and Mary Queen of Scots; Life of Robert Burns; &c ^ H00 " r » ™»* 

T. GL Thomas Gtlray, M.A. f Handamm. . 

Formerly Professor of Modern History and English Literature, University College J T.r_Z 
Dundee. [ v»* Pan), 

T. H. H.* Colonel Sir Thomas Hunoerford Holdich, K.C.M.G., K.C.T.E., Hon. D.Sc f Halmtmfl'* Vmrnf. 

Superintendent Frontier Surveys, India, 1892-1898. Gold Medallist. R.G.S., I E:~r~^ ^" • 
London, 1887. Author of The Indian Borderland; The Countries of me King's! 5?? 1 *??' ^ 
Award; India; Tibet; &c L Hindu Kush. 

T. L.H. Sr* Thomas Little Heath, K.C.B., D.Sc. f 

Assistant Secretary to the Treasury. Formerly Fellow of Trinity College, Cam- "j Hero Of AJexamdrll. 
bridge. I 

T. 8tv Thomas Seccombe, M.A. f 

Balliol College, Oxford. Lecturer in History, East London and Birkbeck Colleges, I Haywtfd. AhfsJaam: 
University of London. Stanhope Prizeman, Oxford, 1887. AssisUnt Editor "j aw >iu. Tlttm**. 
of Dictionary of National Biography. 1801-1901. Author of Ike Ate of Johnson; ""*■"■» * rTTmTTl 
joint-author of Bookman Hlst&ry of English Literature; &c I 

T. Wo. Thomas Woodhouse. f WnM ^ 

Head of the Weaving and Textile Designing Department, Technical College, Dundee. \ OBB ' "^ 

T. W. A. Thomas William Allen, M. A. /w«m*» r* *^n 

Fellow and Tutor of Queen's College, Oxford. Joint-editor of The Homeric Hymns. \ noumr U». fOrt)* 

W. A. B. 0. Rev. William Atjctjstds Brevoort Coolidoe, MJV..F.R.G.S.. Ph.D. r u»nimm Atnae* 

Fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford. Professor of English History. St David's if^!,I^e!«l^. , 
College, Lampeter. 1880-1881. Author of Guide to Switzerland; The Alps in Nature 1 *™««"w01i, 
and in History; &c Editor of The Alpine Journal, 1 880-1889, { Herxog, HlM. 

W. A. P. Wawer Alison Phillips, M.A. f 5®5f , 2?»^^S* tZ$' 

Formerly Exhibitioner of Merton College and Senior Scholar of St John's College, J 5 01 * AJBMiee » ™» 
Oxford. Author of Modem Europe; &c I HonoriOS 14 

[Hungary: History (in pan). 

W. Bft. William Bacher, D.Pn. f -„. - 

Professor of Biblical Studies at the Rabbinical Seminary, Budapest. \ aum ' 

W. Ft. William Fream, LL.D. (d. 1907). r _ 

Formerly Lecturer on Agricultural Entomology, University of Edinburgh, and J JJ , 
Agricultural Correspondent of The Times. [ Horw {in part). 

W. P. G» William Feilden Crates, M.A. r 

Barristcr-at-Law, Inner Temple. Lecturer on Criminal Law at King's College, < HflfftlftHt. 
London. Editor of Archbold's Criminal Pleading (23rd ed.). [ 

W. 0. H. Walter George Headlam (1866-1008). r 

Fellow of King's College, Cambridge, Editor of Herodas. Translator of the plays J I 
of Aeschylus. (^ 

W. H. P. Snt William Henry Flower, F.R.S. f _ .. 

See the biographical article. Flower, Sir W. H. \ "«• w» port). 

W. H. Ha. William Henry Hadow, M.A., Mus.Doc. r 

Principal, Armstrong College, Newcastle-on-Tyne. Formerly Fellow and Tutor J •»...... 

of Worcester College, Oxford. Member of Council, Royal College of Music Editor 1 ° t 9 (UL 
of Oxford History of Music Author of Studies in Modem Music; Ac. L 



INITIALS AND HEADINGS OF ARTICLES 



xiii 



W. L. 0. William Lawson Grant, M.A. 

Professor at Queen's University, Kingston, Canada. Formerly Beit Lecturer in . 

Colonial History at Oxford University. Editor of Acts of the Privy Council, Colonial 

Series; Canadian Constitutional Development (in collaboration). 
W. H. R. William Michael Rossrrn. 

See the biographical article, Rossbtti, Dante Gabriel. 
W. P. J. William Price James. 

University College. Oxford. Barrister-at-Law. High Bailiff of County Courts, - 

Cardiff. Author of Romantic Professions; &c 
W. S. ML Sot William Robertson Nicoll, LL.D. 

See the biographical ankle, Nicoll, Sir W. R. 
W. R. S. William Robertson Smith, LL.D. 

See the biographical article, Smith, William Robertson. 
W. R. &-R. William Ralston Shedden-Ralston, M.A. 

Assistant in the Department of Printed Books, British Museum. Author of Russian 

Folk Tales i&c 
W. R. W. William Robert Worthtncton Williams, F.L.S. 

Superintendent of London County Council Botany Centre. Assistant Lecturer. 

in Botany, Birkbeck College (University of London). Member of the Geologists' 

Association. 

W. T. H. William Tod Helmuth, M.D., LL.D. (d. iooi). 

Formerly Professor of Surgery and Dean of the Homoeopathic and Medical College 
and Hospital, New York. President of the Collins State Homoeopathic Hospital. 
Sometime President of the American Institute of Homoeopathy and the New York 
State Homoeopathic Medical Society. Author of Treatise on Diphtheria; System 
if Surgery; &c 

W. W. William Wallace, LL.D. 

See the biographical article, Wallace, William (1844-1897). 

W. Wr. WrxusroN Walker, Ph.D., D.D. 

Professor of Church History, Yale University. Author of History of the Congrega 
Uonal Churches in the United States; The Reformation; John Calvin; &c. 

W.Y.S. William Young Sellar. LL.D. 

See the biographical article, Sella a, W. Y. 



Haydon, Benjamin Robert 



Harris, 



Howe, Joseph. 



Henley, W. B. 



Thomas Lake 

(w port). 



Hertsen. 



Horticulture (in parti. 



Homoeopathy. 



Hegel {in part). 

Hopkins, Samnet 

{Horace (in part). > 



PRINCIPAL UNSIGNED ARTICLES 



Harrow. 

Hartford. 

Hartlepool. 

Harvard University. 

Han Mountains. 

Hat 

Havana. 

HawaJL 

HaxeL 



Heath. 

Hebrides, The. 

Heidelberg Catechism. 

Heligoland. 

Heliostat 

Hellebore. 

Helmet 

Hemp. 

Herbarium. 



Herefordshire. 

Hero. 

Hertfordshire. 

Hesse. 

Hesse-CasseL 

Hesse-Darmstadt 

High Place. 

Highway. 

Hockey. 



Hotly. 

Homily. 

Honduras. 

Hong-Kong. 

Hostage. 

Hottentots. 

Household, RoyaL 

Hudson's Bay Company. 

Huntingdonshire. 



ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA 

ELEVENTH EDITION 



VOLUME XIII 



HARMONY (Gr. dp/iorfa, a concord of musical sounds, 
Iptitfur to join; iptionicfi (sc. r*x*t) meant the science or 
art of music, /jmntud) being of wider significance), a combination 
of parts so that the effect should be aesthetically pleasing. In 
its earliest sense in English it is applied, in music, to a pleasing 
combination of musical sounds, but technically it is confined 
to the science of the combination of sounds of different pitch. 

I. Concord and Discord. — By means of harmony modem 
music has attained the dignity of an independent art. In ancient 
times, as at the present day among nations that have not come 
under the influence of European music, toe harmonic sense was, 
if not altogether absent, at all events so obscure and undeveloped 
as to have no organizing power in the art. The formation by 
the Greeks of a scale substantially the same as that which has 
received our harmonic system shows a latent harmonic sense, 
but shows it in a form which positively excludes harmony as an 
artistic principle. The Greek perception of certain successions 
of sounds as concordant rests on a principle identifiable with the 
scientific basis of concord in simultaneous sounds. But the 
Greeks did not conceive of musical simultaneity as consisting of 
anything but identical sounds; and when they developed the 
practice of magadizing — ue. singing in octaves— they did so 
because, while the difference between high and low voices was 
a source of pleasure, a note and its octave were then, as now, 
perceived to be in a certain sense identical We will now start 
from this fundamental identity of the octave, and with it trace 
the genesis of other concords and discords; bearing in mind 
that the history of harmony is the history of artistic instincts 
and not a series of progressive scientific theories. 

The unisonous quality of octaves is easily explained when we 
examine the " harmonic series " of upper partials (see Sound). 
Every musical sound, if of a timbre at all rich (and hence 
pre-eminently the human voice), contains some of these upper 
ptkTtials. Hence, if one voice produce a note whkh is an upper 



&. t.— The notes 
savked • are wl of 



js^^^te?: 



r,,*±= 



4 5 i 7 1 9 to u ii 



partial of another note sung at the same time by another voice, 
the higher voice adds nothing new to the lower but only rein- 
forces what is already there. Moreover, the upper partials of the 



higher voice will also coincide with some of the lower. Thus, 
if a note and its octave be sung together, the upper octave is 
itself No. a in the harmonic series of the lower, No. a of its own 
series is No. 4 of the lower, and its No. 3 is No. 6, and so on. The 
impression of identity thus produced is so strong that we often 
find among people unacquainted with music a firm conviction 
that a man is singing in unison with a boy or an instrument when 
be is really singing in the octave below. And even musical 
people find a difficulty in realising more than a certain brightness 
and richness of single tone when a violinist plays octaves per- 
fectly in tune and with a strong emphasis ort the lower notes. 
Doubling in octaves therefore never was and never will be a 
process of harmonization. 

Now if we take the case of one sound doubling another In the 
xath, it will be seen that here, too, no real addition b made by 
the higher sound to the lower. The xath is No. 3 of the harmonic 
series, No. a of the higher note will be No. 6 of the lower, No. 3 
will be No. 9, and so on. But there is an important difference 
between the xath and the octave. However much we alter the 
octave by transposition into other octaves, we never get anything 
but unison or octaves. Two notes two octaves apart are just 
as devoid of harmonic difference as a plain octave or unison. 
But, when we apply our principle of the identity of the octave 
to the xath, we find that the removal of one of the notes by an 
octave may produce a combination in which there is a distinct 
harmonic element. If, for example, the lower note is raised by 
an octave so that the higher note is a fifth from it, No. 3 of the 
harmonic series of the higher note will not belong to the lower 
note at all. The 5th is thus a combination of whkh the two notes 
are obviously different; and, moreover, the principle of the 
identity of octaves can now operate in a contrary direction and 
transfer this positive harmonic value of the 5th to the xath, 
so that we regard the xath as a 5th plus an octave, instead of 
regarding the 5th as a compressed xath. 1 At the same time, the 
relation between the two is quite dose enough to give the 5th 
much of the feeling of harmonic poverty and reduplication that 
characterizes the octave; and hence when medieval musicians 

1 Musical intervals are reckoned numerically upwards along the 
degrees of the diatonic scales (described below). Intervals greater 
than an octave are called compound, and are referred to their simple 
forms, e.g. the 12th is a compound 5th. „ 



HARMONY 



doubled a melody in sths and octaves they believed themselves 
to be doing no more than extending and diversifying the means 
by which a melody might be sung in unison by different voices. 
How they came to prefer for this purpose the 4th to the 5th 
seems puzzling when we consider that the 4th does not appear 
as a fundamental interval in the harmonic series until that series 
has passed beyond that part of it that maintains any relation 
to our musical ideas. But it was of course certain that they 
obtained the 4th as the inversion of the 5th; and it is at least 
possible that the singers of lower voices found a peculiar pleasure 
in singing below higher voices in a position which they felt 
harmonically as that of a top part. That is to say, a bass, in 
singing a fourth below a tenor, would lake pleasure in doubling 
in the octave an alto singing normally a 5th above the tenor. 1 
This should also, perhaps, be taken in connexion with the fact 
that the interval of the downward 4th is in melody the earliest 
that became settled. And it is worth noticing that, in any 
singing-cfass where polyphonic music is sung, there is a marked 
tendency among the more timid members to find their way into 
their part by a gentle humming which is generally a 4th below 
the nearest steady singers. 

The limited compass of voices soon caused modifications in 
the medieval parallelisms of 4ths and sths, and the introduction 
of independent ornaments into one or more of the voices increased 
to an extent which drew attention to other intervals. It was 
long, however, before the true criterion of concord and discord, 
was attained; and at first the notion of concord was purely 
acoustic, that is to say, the ear was sensitive only to the difference 
In roughness and smoothness between combinations in them- 
selves. And even the modern researches of Helmholtz fail to 
represent classical and modern harmony, in so far as the pheno- 
mena of beats are quite independent of the contrapuntal nature 
of concord and discord which depends upon the melodic intelligi- 
bility of the motion of the parts. Beats give rise to a strong 
physical sense of discord akin to the painf ulness of a flickering 
light (see Sound). Accordingly, in the earliest experiments in 
harmony, the ear, in the absence of other criteria, attached 
much more importance to the purely acoustic roughness of 
beats than our ears under the experience of modern music 
This, and the circumstance that the imperfect concords* (the 
3rds and 6ths) long remained out of tune owing to the incom- 
pleteness of the Pythagorean system of harmonic ratios, 
sufficiently explain the medieval treatment of these combinations 
as discords differing only in degree from the harshness of ands 
and 7ths. In the earliest attempts at really contrapuntal 
writing (the astonishing 13th- and 14th- century motets, in which 
voices are made to sing different melodies at once, with what 
seems to modern ears a total disregard of sound and sense) we 
find that the method consists in a kind of rough-hewing by which 
the concords of the octave, 5th and 4th are provided at most 
of the strong accents, while the rest of the harmony is left to 
take care of itself. As the art advanced the imperfect concords 
Jt>egan to be felt as different from the discords; but as then- 
true nature appeared it brought with it such an increased sense 
of the harmonic poverty of octaves, sths and 4ths, as ended in 
a complete inversion of the earliest rules of harmony. 

The harmonic system of the later 15th century, which cul- 
minated in the "golden age" of the 16th-century polyphony, may 
be described as follows: Imagine a flux of simultaneous inde- 
pendent melodies, so ordered as to form an artistic texture based 
not only on the variety of the melodies themselves, but also upon 
gradations between points of repose and points in which the 
roughness of sound is rendered interesting and beautiful by 
means of the clearness with which the melodic sense in each part 
indicates the convergence of all towards the next point of repose. 
The typical point of repose owes its effect not only to the acoustic 
smoothness of the combination, but to the fact that it actually 

1 It is at least probable that this is one of the several rather 
obscure reasons for the peculiar instability of the 4th in modern 
harmony, which is not yet satisfactorily explained. 

* The perfect concords are the octave, unison, 5th and 4th. Other 
diatonic combinations, whether concords or discords, are called 
imperfect. 



consists of the essential elements present in the first five notes 
of the harmonic series. The major 3rd has thus in this scheme 
asserted itself as a concord, and the fundamental principle of 
the identity of octaves produces the result that any combination 
of a bass note with a major 3rd and a perfect sib above it, at 
any distance, and with any amount of doubling, _g. 

may constitute a concord available even as the ^ fc g-g= 
final point of repose in the whole composition. — = ™ = 

And by degrees the major triad, with its major m 

3rd, became so familiar that a chord consisting of a bare 5th, 
with or without an octave, was regarded rather as a skeleton 
triad without the 3rd than as a concord free from elements 
of imperfection. Again, the identity of the octave secured for 
the combination of a note with its minor 3rd and minor 6lh a 
place among concords; because, whether so recognized by early 
theorists or not, it was certainly felt as an inversion of the major 
triad. The fact that its bass note is not the -fundamental note 
(ajid therefore has a series of upper partial* not compatible with 
the higher notes) deprives it of the finality and perfection of the 
major triad, to which, however, its rclationhsip is too near for it 
to be felt otherwise than as a concord. This sufficiently explains 

why the minor 6th ranks as a concord -y P~] 

in music, though it is acoustically nearly Ex. 3. ffi z JP l r *lj 
as rough as the discord of the minor 7th, » 

and considerably rougher than that of the 7th note of the 
harmonic series, which has not become accepted in our musical 
system at all. 

But the major triad and its inversion are not the only concords 
that will be produced by our flux of melodies. From time to 
time this flux will arrest attention by producing a combination 
which, while it does noi appeal to the car as being a part of the 
harmonic chord of nature, yet contains in itself no elements not 
already present in the major triad. Theorists have in vain tried 
to find in " nature " a combination of a note with its minor 3rd 
and perfect 5th; and so long as harmony was treated unhistori- 
cally and unscientifically as an a priori theory in which every 
chord must needs have a " root," the minor triad, together with 
nearly every other harmonic principle of any complexity, 
remained a mystery. But the minor triad, as an artistic and 
not purely acoustic phenomenon, is an inevitable thing. It 
has the character of a concord because of our intellectual percep- 
tion that it contains the same elements as the major triad; but 
its absence of connexion with the natural harmonic series deprives 
it of complete finality in the simple system of 16th-century 
harmony, and at the same time gives it a permanent contrast 
with the major triad; a contrast which is acoustically intensified 
by the fact that, though its intervals are in themselves as con- 
cordant as those of the major triad, their relative position 
produces decidedly rough combinations of "resultant tones." 

By the time cur flux of melodies had come to include the 
major and minor triads as concords, the notion of the independence 
of parts bad become of such paramount importance as totally 
to revolutionize the medieval conception of the perfect concords. 
Fifths and octaves no longer formed an oasis in a desert of 
cacophony, but they assumed the character of concord so nearly 
approaching to unison that a pair of consecutive sths or octaves 
began to be increasingly felt as violating the independence of 
the parts. And thus it came about that in pure 16th-century 
counterpoint (as indeed at the present day whenever harmony 
and counterpoint are employed in their purest significance) 
consecutive sths and octaves are strictly forbidden. When we 
compare our laws of counterpoint with those of medieval discant 
(in which consecutive sths and octaves are the rule, while con- 
secutive jrds and 6ths are strictly forbidden) we are sometimes 
tempted to think that tn « veTV nature of the human ear has 
changed. But it is now generally recognized that the process 
was throughout natural and inevitable, and the above account 
aims at showing that consecutive sths are forbidden by our 
harmonic system for the very reason which inculcated them in 
the system of the tatb century. 

II. TcnaKty.-~As soon as the major a*nd minor triad and their 
first inversions were well-defined entities, it became evident that 



HARMONY 



the successions of these concords «nd their alternations with 
discord involved principles at once larger and more subtle than 
those of mere difference in smoothness and artificiality. Not 
only was a major chord (or at least its skeleton) necessary for 
the final point of repose in a composition, but it. could not itself 
sound final unless the concords as well as the discords before it 
showed a well-defined tendency towards it. This tendency was 
best realized when the penultimate concord bad its fundamental 
note at the distance of a 5th or a 4th above or below that of the 
final chord. When the fundamental note of the penultimate 
chord is a 5th above or (what is the same thing) a 4th below 
that of the final chord, we have an " authentic " or " perfect " 
cadence, and the relation between the two chords is very clear. 
While the contrast between them is well marked, they have one 
note in common— for the root of the penultimate chord is the 
5th of the final chord; and the statement of this common note, 
first as an octave or unison and then as a 5th, expresses the 
first facts of harmony with a force which the major 3rds of the 
chords can only strengthen, while it also involves in the bass 
that melodic interval of the 4th or the 5th which is now known 

ip w _ 1 to be the germ of all melodic scales. The 
Ex.4. ^— g r S z f relation of the final note of a scale with its 
•cf upper 5th or lower 4th thus becomes a 

fundamental fact of complex harmonic significance— that is to 
say, of harmony modified by melody in so far as it concerns the 
succession of sounds as well as their simultaneous combination. 
In our modem key-system the final note of the scale is called the 
tonic, and the 5th above or 4th below it is the dominant* (In 
the 1 6th century the term " dominant " has this meaning only 
in the " authentic " modes other than the Phrygian, but as 
an aesthetic fact it is present in all music, though the theory 
here given would not have been intelligible to any composers 
before the 18th century). Another penultimate chord asserts 
itself as the converse of the dominant— namely, the chord of 
which the root is a 5th below or a 4th above the final. This 
chord has not that relationship to the final which the dominant 
chord shows, for its fundamental note is not in the harmonic 
series of the final. But the fundamental note of the final chord 
is in its harmonic series, and in fact stands to it as the dominant 
stand* to the final. Thus the progression from subdominant, 
as it is called, to tonic, or final, forms a full close known as the 
" plagal cadence," second only in importance to the " perfect " 

_p __ or " authentic cadence." In our modern 

El 5. S=E1I§§3 key-system these three chords, the tonic, 

* * the dominant and the subdominant, form 

a firm harmonic centre in reference to which all other chords are 
grouped. The tome is the final in which everything ultimately 
resolves: the dominant stands on one side of it as a chord based 
on the note harmonically most closely related to the tonic, 
and the subdominant stands on the other aide as the converse 
and opposite of the dominant, weaker than the dominant because 
not directly derived from the tonic The other triads obtainable 
from the notes of the scale are all minor, and of less importance, 
and their relationship to each other and to the tonic is most 
definite when they are so grouped that their basses rise and fall 
in 4th and sths, because they then tend to imitate the relation- 
ship between tonic, dominant and subdominant. 



Toole Supertooic Mediant Sub- Dominant Std>» 



Ba. 



Here are the six common chords of the diatonic scale. The triad 
on the 7th degree or " leading-note " (B) is a discord, and is therefore 
not given here. 

Now, In the r6th century it was neither necessary nor desirable 
that chords should be grouped exclusively in this way. The 
relation between tonic, dominant and subdominant must 
necessarily appear at the final close, and in a lesser degree at 

1 The submediant is so-called because if the subdominant is taken 
a 5th below the tonic, the submediant will come midway between 
it and the took, as the mediant comes midway between tonic and 
dominant. 



subordinate pointa of repose; but, where no harmonies were 
dwelt on as stable and independent entities except the major 
and minor triads and their first inversions, a scheme in which 
these were confined to the illustration of thci* most elementary 
relationship would be intolerably monotonous. It is therefor* 
neither surprising nor a sign of archaism that the tonality of 
modal music is from the modern point of view often very in- 
definite. On the contrary, the distinction between masterpieces 
and inferior works in the x6th century is nowhere more evident 
than in the expressive power of modal tonality, alike where it 
resembles and where it differs from modern. Nor is it too much 
to say that that expressive power is basedon the modern sense of 
key, and that a description of modal tonality in terms of modern 
key will accurately represent the harmonic art of Palestrina 
and the other supreme masters, though it will have almost as 
little an common with x6th<entury theory and inferior 16th- 
century practice as it has with modern custom. We must 
conceive modal harmony and tonality as a scheme in which 
voices move independently and melodiously in a scale capable 
of bearing the three chords of the tonic, dominant and sub- 
dominant, besides three other minor triads, but not under such 
restrictions of symmetrical rhythm and melodic design as will 
necessitate a confinement to schemes in which these three cardinal 
chords occupy a central position. The only stipulation is that 
the relationship of at least two cardinal chords shall appear at 
every full close. At other points the character and drift of the, 
harmony is determined by quite a different principle— namely, 
that, the scale being conceived as indefinitely extended, the 
voices are agreed in selecting a particular section of it, the position 
of which determines not only the melodic character of each part 
but also the harmonic character of the whole, according to its 
greater or less remoteness from the scale in which major cardinal 
chords occupy a central position. Historically these modes 
were derived, with various errors and changes, from the purely 
melodic modes of the Greeks. Aesthetically they are systems' 
of modern tonality adapted to conditions in which the range of 
harmony was the smallest possible, and the necessity for what 
we may conveniently call a dear and solid key-perspective 
incomparably slighter than that for variety within so narrow a 
range. We may thus regard modal harmony as an essentially 
modem scheme, presented to us in cross-sections of various 
degrees of obliquity, and modified at every close so as either to 
take us to a point of view in which we see the harmony sym- 
metrically (as in those modes* of which the final chord 16 normally 
major, namely the Ionian, which is practically our major scale, 
the Jklixolydian and the Lydian, which last is almost invariably 
turned into Ionian by the systematic flattening of its 4th degree) 
or ebe to transform the mode itself so that its own notes are 
flattened and sharpened into suitable final chords (as is necessary 
in those modes of which the triad on the final is normally minor, 
namely, the Dorian, Phrygian and Aeolian). In this way we 
may describe Mixolydian tonality as a harmonic scheme in which 
the keys of G major and C major are so combined that sometimes 
we feel that we are listening to harmony in C major that is 
disposed to overbalance towards the dominant, and sometimes 
that we arc in G major with a pronounced leaning towards the 
subdominant. In the Dorian mode our sensations of tonality 
are more confused. We seem to be wandering through all the 
key-relationships of a minor tonic without defining anything, 
until at the final close the harmonies gather strength and bring 
us, perhaps with poetic surprise, to a close in D with a major 
chord. In the Phrygian mode the difficulty in forming the final 
close is such that classical Phrygian compositions actually end 
in what we feel to be a half-close, an impression which is by the 
great masters rendered perfectly artistic by the strong feeling 
that all such parts of the composition as do not owe their ex- 
pression to the variety and inconstancy of their harmonic drift 
are on the dominant of A minor. 

It cannot be too strongly insisted that the expression of modal 
music is a permanent artistic fact. Its refinements maybe 
crowded out by the later tonality, in which the much greater 
•See Plain Song. 



HARMONY 



variety of find chords seeds a ranch more rigid harmonic 
scheme to control it, but they can never be Cabined. And when 
Beethoven an his last " Bagatelle " raises the 6th of a minor 
scale for the pfeasnre he takes in an unexpectedly bright major 
chord; or when, in the Incarmatus of his Mass in D, he makes a 
free use of the Dorian scale, he is actuated by precisely the same 
harmonic and aesthetic motives as those of the wonderful 
opening of Palestrina's eight-part Stabot Mater; just as in the 
Lydian figured chorale in his A minor Quartet he carries out the 
principle of harmonic variety, as produceable by an oblique 
melodic scale, with a thoroughness from which Palestrina himself 
would have shrunk. (We have noted that in 16th-century musk 
the Lydian mode is almost invariably Ionicixed.) 

III. Modern Harmony and Tonality.— -In the harmonic system 
of Palestrina only two kinds of discord are possible, namely, 
suspensions and passing-notes. The principle of the suspension 

^ ^j ; is that while parts are moving 

-J*" 7 : i£=a=ttL~=l from one concord to another 
&h«*«. f -g-r ^ ^1 one of the parts remains 
J n l ^ behind, so as to create a 

No. s. -9 • ■ • Tgr rrpgrri discord at the moment when 
*»•*»« **<*«. tgr— ^ggg jgj^a the other parts proceed. The 
^ — =^ suspended part then goes on 

to its concordant note, which must lie on an adjacent (end 
in most cases a lower) degree of the scale. Passing-notes 
are produced transiently by the motion of a part up or down the 
scale while other parts remain stationary. The possibilities of 
these two devices can be worked out logically so as to produce 
combinations of extreme harshness. And, when combined with 
the rules which laid on the performers the responsibility for 
modifying the strict scale of the mode in order to form satis- 
factory closes and avoid melodic harshness, they some- 
times gave rise to combinations which the clearest artistic 
intellects of the i6th century perceived as incompatible with 
the modal style. For example, in a passage written thus 






^ 



gg^s 



=a the singer of the lower 



-j — = ■ part would be obliged 

to flatten his B in 
order to avoid the 
ugly "tritone" be- 
tween F and B, while the other singer would be hardly 
less likely on the spur of the moment to sharpen his G 
under the impression that he was making a close; and thus one 
of the most complex and characteristically modern discords, that 
of the augmented 6th, did frequently occur in 16th-century 
performances, and was not always regarded as a blunder. But 
if the technical principles of 16th-century discord left much to 
the good taste of composers and singers, they nevertheless in 
conjunction with that good taste severely restricted the resources 
of harmony; for, whatever the variety and artificiality of the 
discords admitted by them, they all had this in common, that 
every discord was transient and could only arise as a phenomenon 
of delay in the movement of one or more parts smoothly along 
the scale ( M in conjunct motion ") or of a more rapid motion up 
and down the scale in which none but the rigorously concordant 
first and last notes received any emphasis. No doubt there were 
many licenses (such as the " changing-note ") which introduced 
discords by skip, or on the strong beat without preparation, but 
these were all as natural as they were illogical They were 
artistic as intelligible accidents, precisely like those which make 
language idiomatic, such as " attraction of the relative " in Greek. 
But when Monteverde and his fellow monodists tried experi- 
ments with unprepared discords, they opened up possibilities 
far too vast to be organised by them or by the next three genera- 
tions. We have elsewhere compared the difference between 
early and modern harmony with that between classical Greek, 
which is absolutely literal and concrete in expression, and modern 
English, which is saturated with metaphors and abstractions. 
We may go further and say that a 16th-century discord, with its 
preparation and resolution, is, on a very small scale, like a 
simile, in which both the figure and its interpretation are given, 
whereas modern discord is like the metaphor, in which the figure 



is a substitute for and not an addition to the plain statement. 
It is not surprising that the sudden opening up of the whole 
possibilities of modern harmony at the end of the 16th century 
at first produced a chaos of style. 

Another feature of the harmonic revolution arose from the 
new habit of supporting a single voice on chords played by an 
instrument. This, together with the use of discords in a new 
sense, drew attention to the chords as things in themselves and 
not as moments of greater or less repose in a flux of independent 
melodies. This was as valuable an addition to musical thought 
and expression as the free use of abstract terms is in literature, 
but it had precisely the same dangers, and has until recent 
times vitiated harmonic theory and divorced it from the 
modest observation of the practice of great masters. When, 
early in the 18th century, Rameau devoted much of his best 
energy to the elaboration of a theory of harmony, his field of 
observation was a series of experiments begun in chaos and 
resolved, not as yet in a great art, but in a system of conventions, 
for the contemporary art of Bach and Handel was beyond the 
scope of contemporary theory. He showed great analytical 
genius and sense of tonality in his development of the notion 
of the " fundamental bass," and it is rather to his credit than 
otherwise that he did not emphasize the distinction between 
discords on the dominant and those on other degrees of the scale. 
But his system, with all subsequent improvements, refutations 
and repairs only led to that bane of 10th-century theory and 
source of what may be called the journalese of harmonic style, 
according to which every chord (no matter how obviously 
artificial and transient) must be regarded, so to speak, as a 
literal fact for which a root and a scientific connexioo with the 
natural harmonic series must at all cost be found. Some modern 
theorists have, however, gone too far in denying the existence of 
harmonic roots altogether, and certainly it is neither scientific 
nor artistic to regard the coincidence of the major triad with the 
first five notes of the harmonic series as merely accidental. It 
is not likely that the dominant 7th owes all its naturalness to a 
resemblance to the flat 7th of the harmonic series, which is loo 
far out of tune even to pass for an augmented 6th. But the 
dominant major oth certainly gains in sonorousness from its 
coincidence with the 9th harmonic, and many cases in music 
could be found where the dominant 7th itself would gain from 
being so far flattened as to add coincidence with a natural 
harmonic to its musical significance as an unprepared discord 
(see, for example the " native wood-notes wild " of the distant 
huntsmen in the second act of Tristan und Isolde, where also the 
9th and 1 ith are involved, and, moreover, on horns, of which the 
natural scale is the harmonic series itself). If the distinction 
between " essential " and " unessential " discords is, in the light 
of history and common sense, a difference only in degree, it is 
thus none the less of great aesthetic importance. Arithmetic 
and acoustics show that in proportion as musical harmony 
emphasises combinations belonging to the lower region of the 
harmonic series the effect will be sonorous and natural, bat 
common sense, history and aesthetics also show that the inter- 
action of melody, harmony and rhythm must produce a host 
of combinations which acoustics alone cannot possibly explain. 
These facts are amply competent to explain themselves. To 
describe them in detail is beyond the scope of the present article, 
but a few examples from different periods are given at the end in 
musical type. 

IV. The Minor Mode.— When the predecessors of Bach and 
Handel had succeeded in establishing a key-system able to bear 
the weight of free discord, that key-system took two forms, in 
both of which the three chords of tonic, dominant and sub- 
dominant occupied cardinal points. In the one form the tonk 
chord was natural, that is to say, major In the other form 
the tonic chord was artificial, that is to say, minor. In the minor 
mode so firm is the position of the tonk and dominant (the 
dominant chord always being major) that it is no longer necessary, 
as in the 16th century, to conclude with a major chord, although 
it long remained a frequent practice, rather because of the 
inherent beauty and surprise of the effect than because of any 



HARMONY 



m*re survival of ancient customs, at least where great masters 
are concerned. (This final major chord is known as the Tien* 
it PUardu.) The effect of the minor mode is thus normally 
plaintive because it centres round the artificial concord instead 
of the natural; and, though the keynote bears this minor 
artificial triad, the ear nevertheless has an expectation (which 
may be intensified into a powerful emotional effect) that the 
final conclusion of the harmonic scheme may brighten out into 
the more sonorous harmonic system of major chords. Let us 
once more recall those ecclesiastical modes of which the 3rd 
degree is normally minor. We have seen how they may be 
regarded as the more oblique of the various cross-sections of the 
rotb-century harmonic scheme. Now, the modern minor mode 
is too firmly rooted in its minor tonic chord for the 16th-century 
feeling of an oblique harmonic scheme to be of more than 
secondary importance, though that feeling survives, as the 
discussion of key-relationships will show us. But it is constantly 
thrust into the background by the new possibility that the minor 
tonic chord with its attendant minor harmonies may give place 
to the major system round the same tonic, and by the certainty 
that if any change is made at the conclusion of the work it will 
be upon the same tonic and not have reference to some other 
harmonic centre. In other words, a major and minor key on 
the same tonic are felt as identical in everything but expression 
(a point in which the Tonic Sol Fa system, as hitherto practised, 
with its identification of the minor key with its "relative" 
instead of its tonic major, shows a most unfortunate confusion 
of thought). The characteristics of the major and minor modes 
may of course be modified by many artistic considerations, and 
it would be as absurd to develop this account into a scheme of 
pigeon-holed passions as to do the same for the equally obvious 
and closely parallel fact that in drama a constant source of 
pathos is the placing of our sympathies in an oblique relation 
to the natural sequence of events or to the more universal issues 
of the subject. 

V. Key- Relationships. — On the modern sense of the identity 
of the tonic in major and minor rests the whole distinctive 
character of modem harmony, and the whole key-system of the 
classical composers. The masters of the i6lh century naturally 
found it necessary to make full closes much more frequently 
than would be desirable if the only possible close was that on the 
final of the mode. They therefore formed closes on other notes, 
but they formed them on these exactly as on a final. Thus, a 
close on the second degree of the Ionian mode was identical with 
a Dorian final close. The notes, other than the final, on which 
closes could be made were called modulations. And what 
between the three " regular modulations " (known as the 
dominant, mediant, and participant) and the " conceded modula- 
tions," of which two were generally admitted in each mode 
simply in the interests of variety, a composer was at liberty to 
form a full close on any note which did not involve too many 
extraneous sharps or flats for its correct accomplishment. But 
there was a great difference between modal and modern con- 
ceptions of modulation. We have said that the close on the 
second degree of the Ionian mode was Dorian, but such a modula- 
tion was not regarded as a visit paid to the Dorian mode, but 
merely as the formation of a momentary point of repose on the 
second degree of the Ionian mode. When therefore it is said 
that the modulations of 16th-century music are " purposeless 
and shifting," the criticism implies a purpose in change of key 
which is wholly irrelevant. The modal composers' purpose lay 
in purely local relationships of harmony, in various degrees of 
refinement which are often crowded out of the larger and more 
coarse-grained scheme of modern harmony, but which modern 
harmony is perfectly capable of employing in precisely the same 
sense whenever it has leisure. 

Modulation, in the modern sense of the term, is' a different 
thing. The modern sense of tonality is so firm, and modern 
designs so large, that it is desirable that different portions of a 
composition should be arranged round different harmonic 
centres or keys, and moreover that the relation between these 
keys and the primary key should be idt, and the whole design 



should at last return to the primary key, to remain there with 
such emphasis and proportion as shall leave upon the mind the 
impression that the whole is in the primary key and that the 
foreign keys have been as artistically grouped around it as its 
own local harmonies. The true principles on which keys are 
related proved so elastic in the hands of Beethoven that their 
results utterly outstripped the earlier theory which adhered 
desperately to the limitations of the 16th century; and so 
vast is the range of key which Beethoven is able to organize 
in a convincing scheme of relationship, that even modern 
theory, dazzled by the true harmonic possibilities, is apt to 
come to the conclusion, more lame and impotent than any 
ancient pedantry, that all keys are equally related. A vague 
conception, dubbed " the unity of the chromatic scale," is thus 
made to explain away the whole beauty and power of Wagner's 
no less than Beethoven's harmonic system. We have not space 
to dispute the matter here, and it mutt suffice to state dog- 
matically and statistically the classical facts of key-relationship, 
including those whkh Beethoven established as normal possi- 
bilities on the suggestion of Haydn, in whose works they appear 
as special effects. 

a, Dirzcl Relationships.— The first principle on which two keys 
are considered to be related is a strengthening of that which 
determined the so-called modulations of the 16th-century modes. 
Two keys are directly related when the tonic chord of the one 
is among the common chords of the other. Thus, D minor is 
related to C major because the tonic chord of D minor is the 
common chord on the supertonic of C (see Ex. 6). In the same 
way the four other related keys to C major are E minor the 
mediant, F major the subdominant, G major the dominant 
and A minor the submediant. 

This last key-relationship is sometimes called the " relative " 
minor, partly because it is usually expressed by the same key- 
signature as the tonic, but probably more justifiably because it 
is the point of view from which to reckon the key-relationships 
of the minor tonic If we take the minor scale in its " harmonic " 
form (i.e. the form deducible from its chords of minor tonic, 
minor subdominant and major dominant, without regard to 
the exigencies of melody in concession to which the " melodic " 
minor scale raises the 6th in ascent and flattens the 7th in 
descent), we shall find it impossible to build a common chord 
upon its mediant (Ex. 10). But we have 
seen that A minor is related to C major; Ex 10. 
therefore it is absurd to suppose that C 
major is not related to A minor. Clearly then we must deduce 
some of the relationships of a minor tonic as the converse of 
those of a major tonic. Thus we may read Ex. 6 backwards and 
reason as follows: A minor is the submediant of C major; 
therefore C major is the mediant or relative major of A minor. 
D minor is the supertonic of C major; therefore C major is 
related to D minor and may be called its flat 7th. Taking A 
minor as our standard key, G major is then the flat 7th to A minor. 
The remaining major keys (C major to E minor — F major to 
A minor) may be traced directly as well as conversely; and 
the subdominant, being minor, does not involve an appeal to 
the major scale at all. But with the dominant we find the curious 
fact that while the dominant chord of a minor key is major it 
is impossible to regard the major dominant key as directly 
related to the minor tonic, since it does not contain the minor 
tonic chord at all; e.g. the only chord of A in E major is A major. 
But the dominant minor key contains the tonic chord of the 
primary minor key clearly enough as subdominant, and therefore 
when we modulate from a minor tonic to a minor dominant 
we feel that we have a direct key-relationship and have not lost 
touch with our tonic. Thus in the minor mode modulation to 
the dominant key is, though frequent and necessary, a much 
more uphill process than in the major mode, because the naturally 
major dominant chord has first to be contradicted. On the other 
hand, a contrast between minor tonic and major dominant key 
is very difficult to work on a large scale (as, for example, in the 
complementary key for second subjects of sonata movements) 
because, while the major dominant key behaves as if not directly 



HARMONV 



related to" the minor tonic, it also gives • curioos sens a tion of 
heiog merely on the dominant instead of t» it; and thus we find 
that in the few classical examples of a dominant major second 
subject in a minor sonata-movement the secood subject either 
relapses into the dominant minor, as in Beethoven's Kreutaer 
Sonata and the finale of Brahms's Third Symphony, or begins in 
it, as in the first movement of Brahms's Fourth Symphony. 

The effect of a modulation to a related key obviously d ep ends 
upon the change of meaning in the chords common to both keys, 
and also in the new chords introduced. Thus, in modulating 
to the dominant we invest the brightest chord of our first key 
with the finality and importance of a tonic; our original took 
chord becomes comparatively soft in its new position as sub- 
dominant; and a new dominant chord arises, surpassing in 
brilliance the old dominant (now tonic) as that surpassed the 
primary tonic. Again, in modulating to the subdominant the 
softest chord of the primary key becomes tonic, the old tonic 
is comparatively bright, and a new and softer subdominant 
chord appears. We have seen the peculiarities of modulation 
to the dominant from a minor tonic, and it follows from them 
that modulation from a minor tonic to the subdominant involves 
the beautiful effect of a momentary conversion of the primary 
tonic chord to major, the poetic and often dramatically ironical 
power of which is manifested at the conclusion of more than half 
the finest classical slow movements in minor keys, from Bach's 
Eb minor Prelude in the first book of the Forty-tight to the slow 
movement of Brahms's G major String Quintet, Op. in. 

The effect of the remaining key-relationships involves contrasts 
between major and minor mode; but it is otherwise far less 
defined, since the primary tonic chord does not occupy a cardinal 
position in the second key. These key-relationships are most 
important from a minor tonic, as the change from minor to 
major is more vivid than the reverse change. The smoothest 
changes are those to " relative " minor, " relative " major 
(C to A minor; C minor to Eb); and mediant minor and sub* 
mediant major (C to £ minor; C minor to Ab). The change 
from major tonic to supertonic minor is extremely natural on a 
small scale, i.e. within the compass of a single melody, as may be 
seen in countless openings of classical sonatas. But on a large 
scale the identity of primary dominant with secondary sub- 
dominant confuses the harmonic perspective, and accordingly 
in classical music the supertonic minor appears neither in the 
second subjects of first movements nor as the key for middle 
movements. 1 But since the key-rebnonships of a minor tonic 
are at once more obscure harmonically and more vivid in con- 
trast, we find that the converse key-relationship of the flat 7th, 
though somewhat bold and archaic in effect on a small scale, 
has once or twice been given organic function on a large scale 
in classical movements of exceptionally fantastic character, 
of which the three great examples arc the ghostly slow movement 
of Beethoven's D major Trio, Op. 70, No. 1, the scherzo of his 
Ninth Symphony, and the finale of Brahms's D minor Violin 
Sonata (where, however, the C major theme soon passes per- 
manently into the more orthodox dominant minor). 

Thus far we have the set of key-relationships universally 
recognized since the major and minor modes were established, 
a relationship based entirely on the place of the primary tonic 
chord in the second key. It only remains for us to protest 
against the orthodox description of the five related keys as being 
the " relative " minor or major and the dominant and sub- 
dominant with their " relative " minors or majors; a conception 
which expresses the fallacious assumption that keys which are 
related to the same key arc related to one another, and which 
thereby implies that all keys are equally related and that classical 
composers were fools. It cannot be too strongly insisted that 
there is no Toundation for key-relationship except through a 
tonic, and that it is through the tonic that the most distant keys 

1 Until Beethoven developed the resources for a wider scheme of 
key-contrasts, the only keys for second subjects of sonata-movements 
were the dominant (when the tonic was major) and the " relative " 
major or dominant minor (when the tonic was minor). A wider 
range was possible only in the irresponsible style of O. Scarlatti. 



have always been connected by every composer with a wMe 
range of modulation, from Haydn to Brahms and (with due 
allowance for the conditions of his musical drama) Wagner. 

b. Indirect Relationships.— So strong is the indentity of the 
tonic in major and minor mode that Haydn and Mozart had no 
scruple in annexing, with certain reservations, the key-relation- 
ships of either as an addition to those of the other. The smooth- 
ness of Mozart's style makes him prefer to annex the key-relation- 
ships of the tonic minor (e.g. C major to Ab, the submediant of 
C minor), because the primary ionic note is in the second key, 
although its chord is transformed. His range of thought does 
not allow him to use these keys otherwise than episodically; 
but he certainly does not treat tbcm as chaotically remote by 
confining them to rapid modulations in the development- 
portions of his movements. They occur characteristically as 
beautiful purple patches before or during his second subjects. 
Haydn, with his mastery of rational paradox, takes every 
opportunity, in his later works, of using all possible indirect 
Itey-reUtionships in the choke of key for slow movements and 
for the trios of minuets. By using them thus sectionaUy (ic 
so as not to involve the organic connecting links necessary for the 
complementary keys of second subjects) he gives himself a free 
hand; and be rather prefers those keys which are obtained by 
transforming the minor relationships of a major primary key 
(eg. C to A major instead of A minor). These relationships art 
of great brilliance and also of some remoteness of effect, since 
the primary tonic note, as well as its chord, disappears entirely. 
Haydn also obtains extreme contrasts by changing both modes 
(e.g. C minor to A major, as in the G minor Quartet, Op. 7a, 
No 6, where the slow movement is in E major), and indeed 
there is not one key-contrast known to Beethoven and Brahms 
which Haydn does not use with complete sense of its ir****'"!. 
though his art admits it only as a surprise. 

Beethoven rationalized every step in the whole possible range 
of key-relationship by such harmonic means as are described in 
the article Beethoven. Haydn's favourite key-relationships 
he used for the complementary key in first movements; and 
he at once discovered that the use of the major mediant as 
complementary key to- a major tonic implied at all events just 
as much suggestion of the submediant major in the recapitula- 
tion as would not keep the latter half of the movement for too 
long out of the tonic The converse is not the case, and where 
Beethoven uses the submediant major as complementary key 
in a major first movement he does not subsequently introduce 
the still more remote and brilliant mediant in the recapitulation. 
The function of the complementary key is that of contrast and 
vividness, so that if the key is to be remote it is as well that it 
should be brilliant rather than sombre; and accordingly the 
easier key-relationships obtainable through transforming the 
tonic into minor do not appear as complementary keys until 
Beethoven's latest and most subtle works, as the Quartet in 
Bo, Op. 130 (where we again note that the flat submediant of 
the exposition is temporarily answered by the flat mediant of 
the recapitulation). 

c. Artificial Key-relationships. — Early in the history of the 
minor mode it was discovered that the lower letrachord could 
be very effectively and naturally altered so as to resemble the 
upper (thus producing the scale C Db EH F, G Ab B* C). This 
produces a flat supertonic (the chord of which is generally pre- 
sented in its first inversion, and is known as the Neapolitan 6th. 
from its characteristic use in the works of the Neapolitan school 
which did so much to establish modern tonality) and its origin, 
as just described, often impels it to resolve on a major tome 
chord. Consequently it exists in the minor mode as a pheno- 
menon not much more artificial than the mode itself; and 
although the keys it thus connects are extremely remote, and 
the effect of their connexion very surprising, the connexion is 
none the less real, whether from a major or a minor tonic, and 
is a crucial lest of a composer's sense of key-perspective. Thus 
Philtpp Emanuel Bach in a spirit of mere caprice puts the 
charming little slow movement of his D major Symphony into 
Eb and obliterates all real relationship by chaotic operatic 



HARMONY 



connecting links. Haydn's greatest pianoforte sonata (which, 
being probably his last, is of course No. i in most editions) 
b in Et», and its slow movement is in Fb. major («*Fb). That 
key had already appeared, with surprising effect, in the wander- 
ings of the development of the first movement. No attempt is 
made to indicate its connexion with Eb; and the finale begins 
in Eb, but its first bar is unharmonizcd and starts on the one 
note which most contradicts EJ| and least prepares the mind for 
EK The immediate repetition of the opening phrase a step 
higher on the normal supcrtonic strikes the note which the open- 
ing had contradicted, and thus shows its function in the main 
key without in the least degree explaining away the paradoxical 
effect of the key of the slow movement. Brahms'* Violoncello 
Sonata Op. oo, is in F; a prominent episode in the development 
of the first movement is in E$ minor (-Cb), thus preparing the 
mind for the slow movement, which is in F$ major (— Gb), with 
a central episode in F minor. The scherzo is in F minor, and 
begins on the dominant. Thus if we pby its first chord immedi- 
ately after the last chord of the slow movement we have exactly 
that extreme position of flat supcrtonic followed by dominant 
which is a favourite form of cadence in Wagner, who can even 
convey its meaning by its mere bast without any harmonies 
{WalkUre, Act 3, Scene 2^'Was jcUt du bist,das sage dir selbst"). 

Converse harmonic relationships arc, as we have seen, always 
weaker than their direct forms. And thus the relation of C major 
to B major or minor (as shown in the central episode of the slow 
movement just mentioned) is rare. Still more rare is the obtain- 
ing of indirect artificial relationships, of which the episode in 
the first movement just mentioned is an illustration in so far 
as it enhances the effect of the slow movement, but is incon- 
clusive in so far as it is episodic. For with remote key-relation- 
ships everything depends upon whether they are used with what 
may be called cardinal function (like complementary keys) or not. 
Even a near key may occur in the course of wandering modula- 
tions without producing any effect of relationship at all, and this 
should always be borne in mind whenever we accumulate 
statistics from classical music. 

d. Contrary and Unconnected Keys.— There remain only two 
pairs of keys that classical music has not brought into connexion, 
a circumstance which has co-operated with the utter vagueness 
of orthodox theories on the subject to confirm the conventionally 
progressive critic in his conviction that all modulations arc 
alike. We have seen how the effect of modulation from major 
tonic to minor supcrtonic is, on a large scale, obscured by the 
identity of the primary dominant with the secondary sub- 
dominant, though the one chord is major and the other minor. 
Now when the supcrtonic becomes major this difference no 
longer obviates the confusion, and modulation from C major 
to D major, though extremely easy, is of so bewildering effect 
that it is used by classical composers only in moments of intensely 
dramatic surprise, as, for example, in the recapitulation of the 
first subject of Beethoven's Eroica Symphony, and the last 
variation (or coda) cf the slow movement of his Trio in BV, 
Op. 07. And in both cases the balance is restored by the 
converse (and equally if not more contradictory) modulation 
between major tonic and major flat 7th, though in the slow 
movement of the Bb Trio the latter is represented only by its 
dominant chord which is " enharmonically " resolved into quite 
another key. The frequent attempts made by easy-going 
innovators to treat these key-contrasts on another footing than 
that of paradox, dramatic surprise or hesitation, only show a 
deficient sense of tonality, which must also mean an inability 
to see the intensely powerful effect of the true use of such 
modulations in classical music, an effect which is entirely inde- 
pendent of any ability to formulate a theory to explain it. 1 

1 Many theorists mistake the usual extreme emphasis on the 
dominant chord of the dominant key, in preparation for second 
subjects, for a modulation to the major supcrtonic, but this can 
deceive no one with any sense of tonality. A good practical test 
is to see what becomes of such passages when translated into the 
minor mode. Illusory modulation to the flat 7th frequently occurs 
as a bold method of throwing strone emphasis on to the subdominant 
at the outset of a movement, as in Beethoven's S i ml a t Op. 31, No. 1. 



There now remains only one pair of keys that have never been 
related, namely, those that (whether major or minor) are at the 
distance of a intone 4th. In the first place they are unrelated 
because there is no means of putting any form of a tonic chord 
of F$ into any form of the key of C, or vice versa; and in the 
second place because it is impossible to tell which of two precisely 
opposite keys the second key may be {e.g. we have no means of 
knowing that a direct modulation from C to F# is not from C to Gb, 
which is exactly the same distance in the opposite direction). And 
this brings us to the only remaining subjects of importance in 
the science and art of harmony, namely, those of the tempered 
scale, enharmonic ambiguity and just intonation. Before 
proceeding we subjoin a table of all the key-relationships from 
major and minor tonics, representing the degrees by capital 
Roman figures when the second key is major and small figures 

TABLES OF KEY-RELATIONSHIPS 



A. From Major Tonic 

\ Direct RcWUooUrpe f 



III IV V vt 



Indirect throat* both 
I and the tecond key 



Indirect, tfcrooffc I 

m» vi> 



Indirect throat* tlit 
tecood key 



jb 



Doubly Indirect thfTOffc the \ 
(onset Indirect keys \ 
Ht» *» 



Artificial, direct 
Artificial indirect* 



!»' 



» ITS • frt ■¥»»;,» 



Contradictory 



frtt &v0» 



B. From Minor Tonic* 
I Direct Relationships l?t k f Vt VJI 



Indirect throofh both \ ' 
I and the second key 1 IV 

J 

Indirect throat* ths • 
1 key HI 



Indirect, through I 



Drably indirect 
HIS VIS 



Aftfftdsi, dfroct 
Artificial, Indirect 4 



II* 



t-A- 



vffl'fc tW 



/ 



Unrelated 



\lVifch*.,V»arvr 



. Contradictory* 



\t H *it» 



* Very rare, but the slow movement of Schubert's C major String 
Quintet demonstrates it magnificently. 

* All the indirect relationships from a minor tonic are distinctly 
strained and, except in the violently contrasted doubly indirect 
keys, obscure as being themselves minor. But the direct artificial 
modulation is quite smooth, and rich rather than remote. Sec 
Beethoven's C% minor Quartet. 

4 No classical example, though the dearer converse from a major 
tonic occurs effectively. 

* Not (with the exception of II) so violent as when from major 
tonic Bach, whose' range seldom exceeds direct key-relationships, 
is not afraid to drift from D minor to C minor, though nothing would 
induce him to go from O major to C major or minor. 



8 



HARMONY 



when minor. Thus I represents tonic major, iv represents 
subdominant minor, and so on. A flat or a sharp after the figure 
indicates that the normal degree of the standard scale has been 
lowered or raised a semitone, even when in any particular pair 
of keys it would not be expressed by a flat or a sharp. Thus 
vib would, from the tonic of Bb major, express the position of the 
slow movement of Beethoven's Sonata, Op. 106, which is written 
in F# minor since Cb minor is beyond the practical limits of 
notation. 

VI. Temperament and Enharmonic Ckantes. — As the facts 
of artistic harmony increased in complexity and range, the 
purely acoustic principles which (as Helmholu has shown) 
go so far to explain 16th-century aesthetics became more and 
more inadequate; and grave practical obstacles to euphonious 
tuning began to assert themselves. The scientific (or natural) 
ratios of the diatonic scale were not interfered with by art so 
long as no discords were '* fundamental "; but when discords 
began to assume independence, one and the same note often 
became assignable on scientific grounds to two slightly different 
positions in pitch, or at all events to a position incompatible 
with even tolerable effect in performance. Thus, the chord of 
the diminished 7th is said to be intolerably harsh in "just 
intonation," that is to say, intonation based upon the exact 
ratios of a normal minor scale. In practical performance the 
diminished 7th contains three minor jrds and two imperfect 
5ths (such as that which is present in the dominant 7th), while 
the peculiarly dissonant interval from which the chord takes its 
name is very nearly the same as a major 6th. Now it can only 
be said that an intonation which makes nonsense of chords of 
which every classical composer from the time of Corelli has made 
excellent sense, is a very unjust intonation indeed; and to 
anybody who realizes the universal relation between art and 
nature it is obvious that the chord of the diminished 7th must 
owe its naturalness to its close approximation to the natural 
ratios of the minor scale, while it owes its artistic possibility 
to the extremely minute instinctive modification by which its 
dissonance becomes tolerable. As a matter of fact, although 
we have shown here and in the article Music how artificial 
is the origin and nature of all but the very scantiest materials 
of the musical language, there is no art in which the element of 
practical compromise is so minute and so hard for any but trained 
scientific observation to perceive. If a painter could have a 
scale of light and shade as nearly approaching nature as the 
practical intonation of music approaches the acoustic facts 
it really involves, a visit to a picture gallery would be a severe 
strain on the strongest eyes, as Ruskin constantly points out. 
Yet music is in this respect exactly on the same footing as other 
arts. It constitutes no exception to the universal law that 
artistic ideas must be realized, not in spite of, but by means of 
practical necessities. However independent the treatment of 
discords, they assert themselves in the long run as transient. 
They resolve into permanent points of repose of which the 
basis is natural; but the transient phenomena float through 
the harmonic world adapting themselves, as best they can, to 
their environment, showing as much dependence upon the 
stable scheme of " just intonation " as a crowd of metaphors 
and abstractions in language shows a dependence upon the 
rules of the syllogism. As much and no more, but that is no 
doubt a great deal Yet the attempt to determine the point 
in modern harmony where just intonation should end and the 
tempered scale begin, is as vexatious as the attempt to define 
in etymology the point at which the literal meaning of a word 
gives places to a metaphorical meaning. And it is as unsound 
scientifically as the conviction of the typical circle-squarer 
that he is unravelling a mystery and mcasuringaquantityhtiherlo 
unknown. Just intonation is a reality in so far as it emphasizes 
the contrast between concord and discord; but when it forbids 
artistic interaction between harmony and melody it is a chimera. 
It is sometimes said that Bach, by the example of his forty-eight 
preludes and fugues in all the major and minor keys, first fixed 
the modern scale. This is true practically, but not aesthetically. 
By writing a series of movements in every key of which the 



keynote was present in the normal organ and harpsichord 
manuals of his and later times, he enforced the system by which 
all facts of modern musical harmony are represented on keyed 
instruments by dividing the octave into twelve equal semitones, 
instead of tuning a few much-used keys as accurately as possible 
and sacrificing the euphony of all the rest. This system of 
equal temperament, with twelve equal semitones in the octave, 
obviously annihilates important distinctions, and in the most 
used keys it sours the concords and blunts the discords more than 
unequal temperament; but it is never harsh; and where it does 
not express harmonic subtleties the ear instinctively supplies 
the interpretation; as the observing faculty, indeed, always 
does wherever the resources of art indicate more .than they 
express. 

Now it frequently happens that discords or artificial chords 
are not merely obscure in their intonation, whether ideally or 
practically, but as produced in practice they are capable of two 
sharply distinct interpretations. And it is possible for music to 
take advantage of this and to approach a chord in one signifi- 
cance and quit it with another. Where this happens in just 
intonation (in so far as that represents a real musical conception) 
such chords will, so to speak, quiver from one meaning into the 
other. And even in the tempered scale the ear will interpret the 
change of meaning as involving a minute difference of intonation. 
The chord of the diminished 7 th has in this way four different 
meanings— 



and the chord of the augmented 6th, when accompanied by the 
fifth, may become a dominant 7th or vice versa, as in the passage 
already cited in the coda of the slow movement of Beethoven's 
Bb Trio, Op. 97. Such modulations are called enharmonic. 
We have seen that all the more complex musical phenomena 
involve distinctions enharmonic in the sense of intervals smaller 
than a semitone, as, for instance, whenever the progression 
D E in the scale of C, which is a minor tone, is identified with the 
progression of D E in the scale of D, which is a major tone 
(differing from the former as g from f 6 ). But the special musical 
meaning of the word " enharmonic " is restricted to the difference 
between such pairs of sharps with flats or naturals as can be 
represented on a keyboard by the same note, this difference 
being the most impressive to the ear in " just intonation " and 
to the imagination in the tempered scale. 

Not every progression of chords which is, so to speak, spelt 
enharmonically is an enharmonic modulation in itself. Thus a 
modulation from D flat to E major looks violently enharmonic 
on paper, as in the first movement of Beethoven's Sonata, 
Op. no. But E major with four sharps is merely the most 
convenient way of expressing F flat, a key which would need 
six flats and a double flat. The reality of an enharmonic modula- 
tion can be easily tested by transporting the passage a semi- 
tone. Thus, the passage just cited, put a semitone lower, 
becomes a perfectly diatonic modulation from C to E flat. But 
no transposition of the sixteen bars before the return of the main 
theme in the scherzo of Beethoven's Sonata in £b, Op. 31, 
No. 3, will get rid of the fact that the diminished 7th (G Bb Db EJl), 
on the dominant of F minor, must have changed intoG Bb Db F> 
(although Beethoven does not take the trouble to alter the 
spelling) before it could resolve, as it does, upon the dominant 
of Ab. But though there is thus a distinction between real and 
apparent enharmonic modulations, it frequently happens that 
a series of modulations perfectly diatonic in themselves 
returns to the original key by a process which can only be 
called an enharmonic circle. Thus the whole series of keys now 
in practical use can be arranged in what is called the circle of 
fifths (CGDAEBF8 ( = Gbl Db Ab Bb F C, from which 
series we now see the meaning of what was said in the discussion 
of key-relationships as to the ambiguity of the relationships 
between keys a iritonc fourth apart). Now no human memory 
is capable of distinguishing the difference of pitch between the 



HARMONY 



9 



leys of C and Bfl after a -wide series of modulations. The 
difference would be perceptible enough in immediate juxta- 
position, but after some interval of time the memory will certainly 
accept two keys so near in pitch as identical, whether in "just 
intonation " or ,not. And hence the enharmonic circle of fifths 
is a conception of musical harmony by which infinity is at once 
rationalized and avoided, just as some modern mathematicians 
are trying to rationalize the infinity of space by a non-Euclidian 
space so curved in the fourth dimension as to return upon itself 
A similar enharmonic circle progressing in major yds is of 
frequent occurrence and of very rich effect For example, 
the keys of the movements of Brahms's C Minor Symphony 
are C minor, E major, Ab major ( = G#), and C ( - B#). And the 
same circle occurs in the opposite direction in the first movement 
of his Third Symphony, where the first subject is in F, the transi- 
tion passes directly to Db and thence by exactly the same step 
to A ( ■= Bbb). The exposition is repeated, which of course 
means that in " just intonation " the first subject would begin 
in Cbb and then pass through a transition in Ebbb to the second 
subject in Cbbb As the development contains another spurious 
enharmonic modulation, and the recapitulation repeats in 
another position the first spurious enharmonic modulation 
of the exposition, it would follow that Brahms's movement 
began in F and ended in C sextuple-flatl So much, then, for 
the application of bad metaphysics and circle-squaring 
mathematics to the art of music. Neither in mathematics nor in 
art is an approximation to be confused with an imperfection. 
Brahms's movement begins and ends in F much more exactly 
than any wooden diagonal fits a wooden square. 

The following aeries of musical illustrations show the genesis of 
typical harmonic resources of classical and modern music. 



Bl ia.— Th t mwna* A (tank, frit fawmfen of wb- JpT f P" 
lomiaasL and dominant of A minor, a pauible 16th- Q J • 

■tforycftdcoctial!* Phrygian node). I— fj-J- 




Ptfiniticnt. 

(Intended to comprise the general conceptions set forth in the 
above article.) 

1. Musical sounds, or notes, are sensations produced by regular 
periodical vibrations in the air, sufficiently rapid to coalesce in a 
single continuous sensation, and not too rapid for the mechanism 
of the human car to respond. 

2. The pitch of a note is the sensation corresponding to the degree 
of rapidity of its vibrations; being low or grave where these are 
slow, and high or acute where they are rapid. 

3. An interval is the difference in pitch between two notes. 

4. Rhythm is the organization, in a musical scheme, of sounds in 
respect of time. 

5. Melody is the organization, in a musical scheme, of rhythmic 
notes in respect of pitch. 

6 Harmony is the organization, in a musical scheme, of simul- 
taneous combinations ol notes on principles whereby their acoustic 
properties interact with laws of rhythm and melody. 

7 The harmonic series is an infinite series of notes produced by 
the subdivision of a vibrating body or column of air into aliquot 
parts, such notes being generally inaudible except in the form of 
the timbre which their presence in various proportions imparts to 
the fundamental note produced by the whole vibrating body or 
air-column. 

8 A concord is a combination which, both by its acoustic smooth- 
ness and by its logical origin and purpose in a musical scheme, can 
form a point of repose. 

9. A discord is a combination in which both its logical origin in a 
musical scheme and its acoustic roughness show that it cannot 
form a point of repose. 

10. The perfect concords and perfect intervals are those comprised 
within the first four members of the harmonic scries, namely, the 
octave, as between numbers 1 and 2 of the series (see Ex. 1 above); 
the 5th, as between Nos. a and 3; and the 4th, as between Nos. 
3 and 4. 

1 1. All notes exactly one or more octaves apart are regarded as 
harmonically identical. 

12. The root of a chord is that note from which the whole or the 
most important parts of the chord appear (if distributed in the right 
octaves) as members of the harmonic series. 

13. A chord is inverted when its lowest note is not its root. 

14. The major triad is a concord containing three different notes 
which (octaves being disregarded) are identical with the first, third 
and fifth members of the harmonic series (the second and fourth 
members being negligible as octaves). 

15. The minor triad is a concord containing the same intervals 
as the major triad in a different order; in consequence it is artificial, 
as one of its notes is not derivable from the harmonic series. 

16. Unessential discords are those that are treated purely as the 
phenomena of transition, delay or ornament, in an otherwise con- 
cordant harmony. 



IO 

used a reiterated instrumental note as an accompaniment above 
the melody. These primitive devices, though harmonic in the true 
modern sense of the word, are out of the line of harmonic develop- 
ment, and did not help it in any definite way. 

27. The fundamental bass of a harmonic passage is an imaginary 
bass consisting of the roots of the chords. 

28. A figured bass, or continuo, is the bass of a composition supplied 
with numerals indicating the chords to be filled in by the accompanist. 
Thorough-bass (Ger. Gtntralbass) is the art of interpreting such 
figures. (D.FTT.) 

HARMOTOME, a mineral of the zeolite group, consisting of 

hydrous barium and aluminium silicate, H*BaAI»(SiOa)»+5HiO. 

Usually a small amount of potassium is present replacing part 

of the barium. The system of 

crystallization is monodinic; only 

complex twinned crystals are 

! known. A common and character- 
istic form of twinned crystal, such 
as is represented in the figure, con- 
sists of four intercrossing indi- 
viduals twinned together according 
to two twin-laws; the compound 
group resembles a tetragonal crystal 
with prism and pyramid, but may 
be distinguished from this by the 
grooves along the edges of the 
pseudo-prism. The faces of the 
crystals are marked by character- 
istic striations, as indicated in the figure. Twinned crystals of 
exactly the same kind are also frequent in phillipsite (q.v.). 
Crystals are usually white and translucent, with a vitreous 
lustre. The hardness is 4$, and the specific gravity 2*5. 

The name harmotome (from 6\pub%, '* a joint," and rktivttv, 
" to cut ") was given by R. J. Hatty in 1801, and has a crystallo- 
graphy signification. Earlier names are cross-stone (Ger. 
Kreuzstein), ercinite, andreasbergolite and andreolite, the two 
last being derived from the locality, Andreasberg in the Harz. 
Morvenite (from Morven in Argyllshire) is the name given to 
small transparent crystals formerly referred to phillipsite. 

like other zeolites, harmotome occurs with calcite in the 
amygdaloidal cavities 'of volcanic rocks, for example, in the 
dolcrites of Dumbartonshire, and as fine crystals in the agate- 
lined cavities in the melaphyrc of Oberstcin in Germany. It 
also occurs in gneiss, and sometimes in metalliferous veins. 
At Andreasberg in the Harz it is found in the lead and silver 
veins; and at Strontian in Argyllshire in lead veins, associated 
with brewsterite (a strontium and barium zeolite), barytes and 
calcite. (L. J. S.) 

HARMS, CLAUS (17 78-1855), German divine, was born at 
Fahrstedt in Schleswig-Holstein on the 25th of May 1778, and 
in his youth worked in his father's mill. At the university of 
Kiel he repudiated the prevailing rationalism and under the 
influence of Schlciermacher became a fervent Evangelical 
preacher, first at Lundcn (1806), and then at Kiel (1816). His 
trenchant style made him very popular, and he did great service 
for his cause especially in 1817, when, on the 300th anniversary 
of the Reformation, he published side by side with Luther's 
theses, ninety-five of his own, attacking reason as " the pope of 
our lime " who " dismisses Christ from the altar and throws 
God's word from the pulpit." He also had some fame as a hymn- 
writer, and besides volumes of sermons published a good book on 
Pastoraltheologic (1830). He resigned his pastorate on account 
of blindness in 1849, and died on the 1st of February 1855. 

See Autobiography (2nd cd., Kiel, 1852); M. Baumgartcn, Ein 
Denkmalfur C. Harms (Brunswick, 1855). 

HARNACK, ADOLF (1851- ), German theologian, was born 
on the 7th of May 1851 at Dorpat, in Russia, where his father, 
Theodosius Harnack (181 7-1889), held a professorship of pastoral 
theology. 

Theodosius Harnack was a staunch Lutheran and a prolific 
writer on theological subjects; his chief field of work was 
practical theology, and his important book on that subject, 
summing up his long experience and teaching, appeared at 



HARMOTOME— HARNESS 



Erlangen (1877^878, 3 vols.). The liturgy of the Lutheran 
church of Russia has, since 1898, been based on his Lilurgische 
Formulate (1872). 

The son pursued his studies at Dorpat (1860-1872) and at 
Leipzig, where he took his degree; and soon afterwards (1874) 
began lecturing as a Privaldotcnt. These lectures, which dealt 
with such special subjects as Gnosticism and the Apocalypse, 
attracted considerable attention, and in 1876 be was appointed 
professor extraordinarius. In the same year he began the publica- 
tion, in conjunction with O. L. von Gebhardt and T. Zahn, of 
an edition of the works of the Apostolic Fathers, Patrum apostoli- 
eorum opera, a smaller edition of which appeared in 1877 
Three years later he was called to Gicssen as professor ordinarius 
of church history. There he collaborated with Oscar Leopold 
von Gebhardt in Texte und U titer suchungen tur Ceschicluc der 
alt christ tic hen Litteratur (1882 sqq.), an irregular periodical, con- 
taining only essays in New Testament and patristic fields. In 
i88t he published a work on monasticism, Das hfdnchtum, seine 
I deal e und seine Geschtcftte (5th ed., 1900; English translation, 
1001), and became joint-editor with Emil Scourer of the 
Tticologisctte Literatuneilung. In 1885 he published the first 
volume of his epoch-making work, Lehrbuch der DogmengeschichU 
(3rd ed. in three volumes, 1894-1898; English translation in 
seven volumes, 1894-1809). In this work Harnack traces the 
rise of dogma, by which he understands the authoritative 
doctrinal system of the 4th century and its development down 
to the Reformation. He considers that in its earliest origins 
Christian faith and the methods of Greek thought were so 
closely intermingled that much that is not essential to Chris- 
tianity found its way into the resultant system. Therefore 
Protestants are not only free, but bound, to criticize it; indeed, 
for a Protestant Christian, dogma cannot be said to exist. An 
abridgment of this appeared in 1889 with the title Crundriss 
der Dogmengeschichte (3rd ed., 1808). In 1886 Harnack was 
called to Marburg; and in 1888, in spite of violent opposition 
from the conservative section of the church authorities, to 
Berlin. In 1890 he became a member of the Academy of Sciences. 
At Berlin, somewhat against his will, he was drawn into a 
controversy on the Apostles' Creed, in which the party antagon- 
isms within the Prussian Church had found expression. Harnack's 
view is that the creed contains both too much and too little to 
be a satisfactory test for candidates for ordination, and he 
would prefer a briefer symbol which could be rigorously exacted 
from all (cf. his Das aposloliseke daubensbekenntnis. Ein 
geschichllicher Bericht nebst einem Nachworte, 1892; 27th ed., 
1896). At Berlin Harnack continued his literary labours. In 
1893 he published a history of early Christian literature down 
to Eusebius, Ceschickte dor allchristl. Litteratur bis Eusebius 
(part 2 of vol. i., 1897); and in 1900 appeared his popular 
lectures, Das Wesen des Christeniums (5th ed., 1901; English 
translation, What is Christianity? 1901; 3rd ed., 1904). One 
of his more recent historical works is Die Mission und A usbreitung 
des Christeniums in den ersten drei Jahrhunderten (1002; English 
translation in two volumes, 1904-1905). It has been followed 
by some very interesting and important New Testament studies 
(Beitr&ge tur Einleitung in das neue Testament , 1906 sqq.; Engl 
trans.: Luke the Physician, 1907; The Sayings of Jesus, 1908). 
Harnack, both as lecturer and writer, was one of the most 
prolific and most stimulating of modern critical scholars, and 
trained up in his " Seminar " a whole generation of teachers, 
who carried his ideas and methods throughout the whole of 
Germany and even beyond its borders. His distinctive character- 
istics are his claim for absolute freedom in the study of church 
history and the New Testament; his distrust of speculative 
theology, whether orthodox or liberal; his interest in practical 
Christianity as a religious life and not a system of theology. 
Some of bis addresses on social matters have been published 
under the heading "Essays on the Social Gospel " (1007). 

HARNESS (from 0. Fr. harneis or karnais; the ultimate origin 

is obscure; the Celtic origin which connects it with the Welsh 

haiarn, iron, has phonetic and other difficulties; the French is 

I the origin of the Span, antes, and Ger. Harnisch), probably, in 



HARO— HARP 



ii 



origin, gear* tackle, equipment In general, but early applied 
particularly to the body armour of a soldier, including the 
trappings of the horse; now the general term for the gear of an 
animal used for draft purposes, traces, collar, bridle, girth, 
breeching, &c. It is usually not applied to the saddle or bridle 
of a riding animal. The word, in its original meaning of tackle 
or working apparatus, is still found in weaving, for the mechanism 
which shUts the warp-threads to form the "shed," and in 
bell-hanging, for the apparatus by which a large bell is hung. 
The New English Dictionary quotes an early use of the word for 
the lines, rod and hooks of an angler {JFysihing with an Angle, 
€. M5©)- 

HARO, CLAMEUR DB, the ancient Norman custom of " crying 
for justice," still surviving in the Channel Islands. The wronged 
party must on his knees and before witnesses cry: " Haro! 
Harot Haro I a l'aide, mon prince, on me fait tort." This 
appeal has to be respected, and the alleged trespass or tort 
must cease till the matter has been thrashed out in the courts. 
The " cry " thus acts as an interim injunction, and no inhabitant 
of the Channel Islands would think of resisting it. The custom 
b undoubtedly very ancient, dating from times when there 
were no courts and no justice except such as was meted out by 
princes personally. The popular derivation for the name is 
that which explains " Haro " as an abbreviation of "Ha! 
Rollo," a direct appeal to Rollo, first duke of Normandy. It 
is far more probable that haro is simply an exclamation to call 
attention (O.H.G. kera, haro, "here"!). Indeed it is clear 
that the " cry for justice " was in no sense an institution of 
Rollo, but was a method of appeal recognized in many countries. 
It is said to be identical with the " Legatro of the Bavarians 
and the Tburingians," and the first mention of it in France is 
to be found in the " Grand coutumier de Normandie." A 
similar custom, only observed in criminal charges, was recognized 
by the Saxon laws under the name of " Clamor Violentiac." 
Thus there is reason to think that William the Conqueror on his 
arrival in England found the " cry " fully established as far as 
criminal matters were concerned. Later the " cry " was made 
applicable to civil wrongs, and, when the administration of 
justice became systematized, disappeared altogether in criminal 
eases. It naturally tended to become obsolete as the administra- 
tion of justice became systematized, but it was long retained 
in north-western France in cases of disputed possession, 
and was not actually repealed until the close of the 18th 
century. A survival of the English form of haro is possibly to 
be found in the " Ara," a cry at fairs when " settling time " 
arrived. 

HAROLD I. (d. 1040), surnamed Harefoot, the illegitimate 
ton of Canute, king of England, and /fclfgifu of Northampton. 
On the death of his father in 1035, he claimed the crown of 
England in opposition to Canutes legitimate son, Hardicanute. 
His claims were supported by Leofric, earl of Mcrcia, and the 
north; those of Hardicanute by his mother, Queen Emma, 
Godwine, earl of the West-Saxons and the south. Eventually 
Harold was temporarily elected regent, pending- a final settle- 
ment on Hardicanute's return from Denmark. Hardicanute, 
however, tarried, and meanwhile Harold's party increased 
rapidly. In 1037 he was definitely elected king, and banished 
Emma from the kingdom. The only events of his brief reign 
are ineffectual inroads of the Welsh and Scots. Hardicanute 
was preparing to invade England in support of his claims when 
Harold died at Oxford on the 10th of March 1040. 

HAROLD II. (c. 1022-1066), king of the English, the second 
son of Earl Godwine, was born about 1032. While still very 
young (before 1045) he was appointed to the earldom of the 
East-Angles. He shared his father's outlawry and banishment 
in 1051; but while Godwine went to Flanders, Harold with his 
brother Leofwine took refuge in Ireland. In 1052 Harold and 
Leofwine returned. Having plundered in the west of England, 
they joined their father, and weTe with him at the assembly 
which decreed the restoration of the whole family. Harold 
was now restored to his earldom of the East-Angles, and on his 
father's death in 1053 he succeeded him in the greater earldom 



of the West-Saxons. He was now the chief man in the kingdom, 
and when the older earls Leofric and Siward died his power 
increased yet more, and the latter part of Edwards reign was 
virtually the reign of Harold. In 1055 he drove back the Welsh, 
who had burned Hereford. In 1063 came the great Welsh war, 
in which Harold, with the help of his brother Tostig, crushed the 
power of Gruff yd, who was killed by his own people. But in 
spite of his power and bis prowess, Harold was the minister of 
the king rather than his personal favourite. This latter position 
rather belonged to Tostig, who on the death of Siward in 1055 
received the earldom of Northumberland. Here, however, 
his harshness soon provoked enmity, and in 1065 the North- 
umbrians revolted against him, choosing Morkere in bis place. 
Harold acted as mediator between the king and the insurgents, 
and at length agreed to the choice of Morkere, and the banish- 
ment of his brother. At the beginning of 1066 Edward died, 
with his last breath recommending Harold as his successor. 
He was accordingly elected at once and crowned. The men 
of Northumberland at first refused to acknowledge him, but 
Harold won them over. The rest of his brief reign was taken 
up with preparations against the attacks which threatened 
him on both sides at once. William challenged the crown, 
alleging both a bequest of Edward in his favour and a personal 
engagement which Harold had contracted towards him— 
probably in 1064; and prepared for the invasion of England. 
Meanwhile Tostig was trying all means to bring about his own 
restoration. He first attacked the Isle of Wight, then Lindescy, 
but was compelled to take shelter in Scotland. From May to 
September the king kept the coast with a great force by sea 
and land, but at last provisions failed and the land army was 
dispersed. Harold then came to London, ready to meet which- 
ever enemy came first. By this time Tostig had engaged Harold 
Hardrada of Norway to invade England. Together they sailed 
up the Humber, defeated Edwin and Morkere, and received the 
submission of York. Harold hurried northwards; and on the 
25th of September he came on the Northmen at Stamford 
Bridge and won a complete victory, in which Tostig and Harold 
Hardrada were slain. But two days later William landed at 
Pevensey. Harold marched southward as fast as possible. He 
gathered his army in London from all southern and eastern 
England, but Edwin and Morkere kept back the forces of the 
north. The king then marched into Sussex and engaged the 
Normans on the hill of Senlac near Battle (see Hastings). After 
a fight which lasted from morning till evening, the Normans had 
the victory, and Harold and his two brothers lay dead on the 
field (14th of October 1066). 

HARP (Fr. korpe; Ger. Harfe;' Hal. arpa), a member of the 
class of stringed instruments of which the strings are twanged or 
vibrated by the fingers. The harp is an instrument of beautiful 
proportions, approximating to a triangular form, the strings 
diminishing in length as they ascend in pitch. The mechanism 
is concealed within the different parts of which the instrument 
is composed, (t) the pedestal or pedal-box, on which rest (2) the 
vertical pillar, and (3) the inclined convex body in which the 
soundboard is fixed, (4) the curved neck, with (5) the comb 
concealing the mechanism for stopping the strings, supported 
by the pillar and the body. 

(1) The pedestal or pedal -box forms the base of the harp and 
contains seven pedals both in single and double action harps, the 
difference being that in the single action the pedals are only capable 
of raising the strings one semitone by means of a drop into a notch, 
whereas with the double action the pedals, after a first drop, can by 
a further drop into a second and lower notch shorten the string a 
second semitone, whereby each string is made to serve in turn lor 
flat, natural and sharp. The harp is normally in the key of C flat 
major, and each of the seven pedals acts upon one of the notes of 
this diatonic scale throughout the compass. The choice of this 
method of tuning was imposed by the construction of the harp with 
double action. The pedals remain in the notches until released by 
the foot, when the pedal returns to its normal position through the 
action of a spiral spring, which may be seen under each of the pedals 
by turning the harp up. 

(2) The vertical pillar is a kind of tunnel in which are placed the 
seven rods worked by the pedals, which set in motion the mechanism 
sit uated in the neck of the instrument. Although the pillar apparently 



12 

rests on the pedestalTtt is' really supported f ~ 
screwed to the beam which forms the loi 
connexion which remains undisturbed win 
cover are removed. 

• (x) The body or sound-chest of the harpi 
tuounal section of a cone. It was formerly ( 
together as in the lute and mandoline. Er 
it in two pieces of wood, generally sycarooi 
flat soundboard of Swiss pine. The bod 
inside, in order to resist the tension of the i 
there are five soundholes in the back, whid 
furnished with swell shutters opened at wi 
fourth from the left worked by the left i 
sound obtained by means of the swell was 
has now been discarded. The harp is strut 
the string and passing it through its hole ic 
board, where it is kept in position by meat 
grips the string. 

(4) The neck consists of a curved piece of 
at the treble end of the instrument and joii 
end. In the neck are set the tuning pins ro 
strings. 

(5) The comb is the name given to tw 
which fit over both sides of the neck, conce 
ism for shortening the strings and raisinj 
when actuated by the pedals. On the front 
left of the player, is a row of brass bridges 
rest below the tuning pins, and which deter 
of the string reckoned from the peg in the 
bridges are two rows of brass disks, know 
steel levers; each disk is equipped with ti 
string and shortening it. The mechanisr 
pedal is depressed to the first notch, the 
turns a little way on a mandrel keeping the 
The upper disk, set in motion by the steel le 
revolves simultaneously till the string is < 
which thus form a new bridge, shortening 
the string by just the length necessary to r< 
If the same pedal be depressed to the seco 
ment causes the lower disk to revolve again 
time seized and shortened, the upper di 
The hidden mechanism meanwhile has g 
movements; the pedal is really a lever set 
depressed it draws down the connecting ro 
in motion chains governing the mandrels ol 

The harp usually has forty-six strings, < 
upper registers, and of covered steel wire i 
are red and the F strings blue. The com 



HARP 



6( octaves from 



Mpj^ft 



E 



I % f J £ 



i »t"L i t * *\ e. •_ ..1 - 



PP 

Lsi 
U 
,ol 

'. t 



ht 

foi 
E 
A, 

Cfi 

ita 
pn 
nt 

Presents uie least aimcuity, iot inc iinge 
cys. The strings are twanged with the tl 
fingers. 

The quality of tone does not vary much 
but it has the greatest brilliancy in keys 
strings are then open and not shortened 



effects can be obtained on the harp: (i) by 
ing, (3) by guitar tones, (4) by the glissa 
produced by resting the ball of the hand 01 



and setting it in vibration by the thumb c 
the same hand, whereby a mysterious and t 
Two or three harmonics can be played tog 
and by using both hands at once as ma 
(?) Damping is effected by laying the palm 



HARP 13 



foot the stank* bow-form to the uf 
family (see fig. 2). 

The Egyptian harp had no front p 
catgut the teuton and pitch must n 



I 



Fig. a. 
bestowed a wealth of decoration, 1 
prized them. 

The ancient Assyrians had harps 
without a front pillar, but differing f 
body uppermo s t, in which we find 
while the lower portion was a bar to 
by means of which the tuning was a 
Hebrew harp was, whether it follow© 
we do not know. That King David 
monly depicted is rather a modern id 
gave King David the psaltery, a hori 
which has gradually developed the 
" kinnor " may have been a kind of 
instrument between a small harp 1 
plectrum, or more probably, as adva 
on the music of the Bible, a kind of 

The earliest records that we poss 
Gaelic or Cymric, give the harp a 



peculiar veneration and distinction. 
however, quite different from the Tci 
the Highland Scottish "darsach, 1 
" telyn, " telein," *• tdlen." show 1 
other European names. The first 1 
is derived from the Gaelic " dar," 
while the first syllable of telyn is d 
tensile meaning; thus resonance 1 
the other. 

The literature of these Celtic harps 
Bunting's Ancient Musk of I r elan 
torical Enquiry respecting the Perform 
0/ Scotland (Edinburgh, 1807). and 
Memoirs oj the Welsh Bards (London. 
Dal yell, and others may also be const 
due care must be taken of the bias 
aim to r eco nstr uct much that we mi 
vaguely indicated in records and old 1 
one early Irish monument about whi 
harp upon a cross belonging to the 
Kilkenny, the date of which cannot 
b rude, but the instrument is eta 
Bunting's work to have no front pill 
likeness to the old harps of Egypt 1 
but permits the plausible hypothesis 
specimen of the beautiful form b> 
recognized, with gracefully curved 
(the latter known as the harmonic 
Trinity College, Dublin, the possessi 
to King Brian Boiroimhe. From tl 
(see essay in Bunting) has delivered 
age from the ornamentation and he 
14th century or a little later. Thei 
and Albert Museum. The next oldes 
the Ctarsach Lumanaeh, or Lamoi 
another of later date, to the old Pe 
Lode. Both are described in detail 
waa taken by a lady of that famil; 
on her marriage into the family of L 
tuned singly, but the scale was some 
like lutes and other contemporary i 
in Ireland (fig. 3) inscribed " Ego 
dated i6ai, appears to have had pa 
These were of brass wire, and play< 
The Italian contemporary " Arpa 1 
duplex principle, but with gut strut 
the fingers. When E. Bunting 

1 Representations of these may b 
in the Nimrod Gallery at the Britk 



1+ 



HARPENDEN— HARPIES 




than eight major scale*. By a sequence of improvements, in which 
two Frenchmen named Cousineatf took an important part, the 
various defects inherent in Hochbrucker's plan became ameliorated. 
The pedals were doubled, and, the tuning of die instrument being 
changed from the key of Eb to Cb, it became possible to play in 
fifteen keys, thus exceeding the power of the keyboard instruments, 
over which the harp has another important advantage in the sim- 
plicity of the fingering, which is the same for every key. 

It is to Sebastian Erard we owe the perfecting of the pedal harp 
(^ 5)» A triumph he gained in Paris by unremitting studies begun 
when he adopted a fork " mechanism in 1786 
and ended in 1810 when be had attained com- 
plete success with the double action pedal 
mechanism already described above. Erard's 
merit was not confined to this improvement 
only; he modified the structure of the comb 
that conceals the mechanism, and constructed 
the sound-body of the instrument upon a 
modern principle more advantageous to the 
tone. 

Notwithstanding these improvements and the 

great beauty of tone the harp possesses, the 

domestic use of it in modern tunes has almost 

disappeared. The great cost of a good harp, 

and the trouble to many amateurs of tuning,^ 

may have led to the supplanting of the harp 

by the more convenient and useful* pianoforte. 

with this comes naturally a diminution in 

Fie. 5. the number of solo-players on the instru- 

Modern Erard Harp. ment. Were it not for the increasing use of 

the harp in the orchestra, the colour of its 

tone having attracted the masters of instrumentation, so that 

the great scores of Meyerbeer and Gounod, of Berlioz. Liszt and 

Wagner are not complete without it, we should perhaps know 

little more of the harp than of the dulcimer, in spite of the 

efforts of distinguished virtuosi whose devotion to their instrument 

maintains its technique on an equality with that of any other, even 

the most in public favour. The first record of the use of harps in the 

orchestra occurs in the account of the Ballet comique de la royne 

performed at the chateau de Mouticrs on the occasion of the marriage 

of Mary of Lorraine with the due de Joyeuse in 1581, when harps 

formed part of the concert de musique. 

See in addition to the works already referred to, Engel's Musical 
Instruments in the South Kensington Museum (1874); and the 
articles " Harp," in Rees's Cyclopaedia, written by Dr Burner, in 
Stainer and Barrett's Dictionary of Musical Terms (1876), and in 
Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians. On the origins of the 
instrument see Proceedings of British Association (1904) (address of 
president of anthropological section). (K. S. ; A. J. H.) 

HARPENDEN, an urban district in the Mid or St Albans 
parliamentary division of Hertfordshire, England, 25 m. N.W. 
by N. from London by the Midland railway, served also by a 
branch of the Great Northern railway. Pop. (1901) 4735. It 
is a favourite outlying residential district for those whose work 
lies in London. The church of St Nicholas is a modern recon- 
struction with the exception of the Perpendicular lower. In the 
. Lawes Testimonial Laboratory there is a vast collection of 
samples of experimentally grown produce, annual products, 
ashes and soils. Sir John Bennet Lawes (d. 1900) provided an 
endowment of £100,000 for the perpetuation of the agricultural 
experiments which he inaugurated here at his seat of Rothamsled 
Park. The success of his association of chemistry, with botany 
is shown by the fact that soil has been made to bear wheat without 
intermission for upwards of half a century without manure. 
The country neighbouring to Harpenden is very pleasant, includ- 
ing the gorse-covered Harpenden Common and the narrow 
well-wooded val ley o f the upper Lea. 

HARPER'S FERRY, a town of Jefferson county, West 
Virginia, U.S.A., finely situated at the confluence of the Potomac 
and Shenandoah rivers (which here pass through a beautiful 
gorge in the Blue Ridge), 55 m. N.W. of Washington. Pop. 
(1900) 896; (1910) 766. It is served by the Baltimore & Ohio 
railway, which crosses the Potomac here, by the Winchester & 
Potomac railway (Baltimore & Ohio) of which it is a terminus, 
and by boats on the Chesapeake & Ohio Canal, which passes 
along the Maryland side of the Potomac. Across the Potomac 
on the north rise the Maryland Heights; across the Shenandoah, 
on the West Virginia side, the Virginia or Loudoun Heights; 
and behind the town to the W. the Bolivar Heights. A United 
States arsenal and armoury were established at Harper's Ferry 
in 1796, the site being chosen because of the good water-power; 



these wen seised on the 16th of October 1859 by John Brown 
(q.v.), the abolitionist, and some 21 of his followers. For four 
months before the raid Brown and his men lived on the Kennedy 
Farm, in Washington county, Maryland, about 4 m. N.W. of 
Harper's Ferry. The engine-house in which Brown was captured 
was exhibited at the Columbian Exposition at Chicago and was 
later rebuilt on Bolivar Heights; a marble pillar, marked 
"John Brown's Fort," has been erected on its original site. 
On Camp Hill is Storer College (state-aided), a normal school for 
negroes, which was established under Free Baptist control in 
1867, and has acad e mic, normal, biblical, musical and industrial 
departments. 

The first settlement here was made about 1747 by Robert 
Harper, who ran a ferry across the Potomac. The position 
of Harper's Ferry at the lower end of the Shenandoah Valley 
rendered it a place of strategic importance during the Civil 
War. 6n the x8th of April i86t, the day after Virginia passed 
her ordinance of secession, when a considerable force of Virginia 
militia under General Kenton Harper approached the town — an 
attack having been planned in Richmond two days before — the 
Federal garrison of 45 men under Lieutenant Roger Jones set fire 
to the arsenal and fled. Within the next few days large numbers 
of Confederate volunteers assembled here; and Harper was 
succeeded' in command (27th April) by "Stonewall" Jackson, 
who was in turn succeeded by Brigadier-General Joseph E. 
Johnston on the 33rd of May. Johnston thought that the place 
was unimportant, and withdrew when (15th June) the Federal 
forces under General Robert Patterson and Colonel Lew Wallace 
approached, and Harper's Ferry was again occupied by a Federal 
garrison. In September 1862, during General Lee's first invasion 
of the North, General McClellan advised that the place be 
abandoned in order that the 10,000 men defending it might be 
added to his fighting force, but General Halleck would not 
consent, so that when Lee needed supplies from the Shenandoah 
Valley he was blocked by the garrison, then under the command 
of Colonel Dixon S. Miles. On Jackson's approach they were 
distributed as follows: about 7000 men on Bolivar Heights, 
about 2000 on Maryland Height j, and about 1800 on the lower 
ground. On the 13th of September General Lafayette McLaws 
carried Maryland Heights and General John G. Walker planted 
a battery on Loudoun Heights. On the 14th there was some 
fighting, but early on the 15th, as Jackson was about to make 
an assault on Bolivar Heights, the garrison, surrounded by a 
superior force, surrendered. The total Federal loss (inducting 
the garrisons at Winchester and Martinsburg) amounted to 
44 killed (the commander was mortally wounded), 12,520 
prisoners, and 13,000 small arms. For this terrible loss to the 
Union army the responsibility seems to have been General 
Halleck. 's, though the blame was officially put on Colonel Miles, 
who died immediately after the surrender. Jackson rejoined 
Lee on the following day In time to take part in the battle of 
Antietam, and after the battle General McClellan placed a 
strong garrison (the 12th Corps) at Harper's Ferry. In June 
1863 the place was again abandoned to the Confederates on their 
march to Pennsylvania. After their defeat at Gettysburg, the 
town again fell into the hands of the Federal troops, and it 
remained in their possession until the end of the war. On the 
4th of July 1864 General Franz Sigel, who was then in command 
here, withdrew his troops to Maryland Heights, and from there 
resisted Early's attempt to enter the town and to drive the 
Federal garrison from Maryland Heights. Harper's Ferry was 
seriously damaged by a flood In the Shenandoah in October 
187S. 

HARPIES (Gr. 'Apruuu, older form 'Apacvuu, "swift 
robbers "), in ancient mythology, the personification of the sweep- 
ing storm-winds. In Homer, where they appear indifferently under 
the name of aprvtcu and 0CcXXot, their function is to carry off 
those whose sudden disappearance is desired by the gods. Only 
one of them is there mentioned (Iliad, xvi. 150) by name, PodargC, 
the mother of the coursers of Achilles by Zephyrus, the generative 
wind. According to Hesiod (Theog. 265) they are two in number, 
Aello and Ocypete, daughters of Thaumas and Electra, winged 



HARPIGNIES— HARPSICHORD 



*5 



with beautiful locks, swifter than winds and birds 
ia their flight, and their domain is the air. In later times their 
number was increased (Celaeno being a frequent addition and 
their Leader in Virgil), and they were described as hateful and 
repulsive creatures, birds with the faces of old women, the ears 
of bears, crooked talons and hanging breasts; even in Aeschylus 
(Emwumdat, 50) they appear as ugly and misshapen monsters. 
Their function of snatching away mortals to the other world 
brings them into connexion with the Erinyes, with whom they 
are often confounded. On the so-called Harpy monument from 
Lycia, now in the British Museum, the Harpies appear carrying 
off some small figures, supposed to be the daughters of Pan dare us, 
unless they are intended to represent departed souls. The 
repulsive character of the Harpies is more especially seen in the 
legend of Phineus, king of Salmydessus in Thrace (Apollodorus 
L o, si ; see also Diod. Sic iv. 43). Having been deprived of 
his sight by the gods for his ill-treatment of his sons by his first 
wife (or for having revealed the future to mortals), he was con- 
demned to be tormented by two Harpies, who carried off what- 
ever food was placed before him. On the arrival of the Argonauts, 
Phineus promised to give them particulars of the course they 
should pursue and of the dangers that lay before them, if they 
would deliver him from his tormentors. Accordingly, when the 
Harpies appeared as usual to carry off the food from Phineus'* 
table, they were driven off and pursued by Calais and Zetes, the 
sons of Boreas, as far as the Sirophades islands in the Aegean. 
On promising to cease from molesting Phineus, their lives were 
spared. Their place of abode is variously placed in the 
Stropbades, the entrance to the under-world, or a cave in Crete. 
According to Cecil Smith, Journal of Hellenic Studies, ziii. 
(1802-1803), the Harpies are the hostile spirits of the scorching 
south wind; £. Rohde (Rheinischts Museum, i., 1895) regards 
tbom as spirits of the storm, which at the bidding of the gods 
carry off human beings alive to the under-world or some spot 
beyond human ken. 

See articles in Roscher's Ltxikon der Mytkologie and Daremberg 
and Saglio's Dictionnairt des antiquitis. In the article GREEK Art, 
fig. 14 gives a representation of the winged Harpies. 

HARPIGNIES. HENRI (1810- ), French landscape painter, 
born at Valenciennes in 1819, was intended by his parents for 
a business career, but his determination to become an artist was 
so strong that it conquered all obstacles, and he was allowed at 
the age of twenty-seven to enter Ac hard's atelier in Paris. From 
this painter he acquired a groundwork of sound constructive 
draughtsmanship, which is so marked a feature of his landscape 
painting. After two years under, this exacting teacher be went 
to Italy, whence he returned in 1850. During the next few 
years he devoted himself to the painting of children in landscape 
setting, and fell in with Corot and the other Barbizon masters, 
whose principles and methods are to a certain extent re- 
flected in his own personal art. To Corot he was united by a 
bond of warm friendship, and the two artists went together to 
Italy in i860. On his return, he scored his first great success 
at the Salon, in 1861, with his " Lisiere de bois sur les bords 
de 1'Allier." After that year be was a regular exhibitor at the old 
Salon; in 1886 he received his first medal for "Le Soir dans la 
campagne de Rome," which was acquired for the Luxembourg 
Gallery. Many of his best works were painted at Herisson in 
the Bourbonnais, as well as in the Nivernais and the Auvergne. 
Among his chief pictures are " Soir sur les bords de la Loire " 
(1861), "Les Corbeaux" (1865), "Le Soir" (1866), "Le 
Saut-du-Loup " (1873), "La Loire" (1882), and " Vue de 
Saint-Privt " (1883). He also did some decorative work for the 
Paris Optra— the " Vallee d'Egerie " panel, which he showed 
at the Salon of 1870. 

HARP-LUTE, or Dital Harp, one of the many attempts to 
revive the popularity of the guitar and to increase its compass, 
invented in 1708 by Edward Light. The harp-lute owes the first 
part ol its name to the characteristic mechanism for shortening 
the effective length of the strings; its second name — dital harp- 
emphasizes the nature of the stops, which are worked by the 
thumb ia contradistinction to the pedals of the harp worked i 



by the feet. It consists of a pear-shaped body, to which is added 
a curved neck supported on a front pillar or arm springing from 
the body, and therefore reminiscent of the harp. There are 
1 2 catgut strings. The curved fingerboard, almost parallel with 
the neck, is provided with frets, and has in addition a thumb* 
key for each string, by means of which the accordance of the 
string is mechanically raised a semitone at wilL The dital or 
key, on being depressed, acts upon a stop-ring or eye, which 
draws the string down against the fret, and thus shortens its 
effective length. The fingers then stop the strings as usual 
over the remaining frets. A further improvement was patented 
in 18 16 as the British harp-lute. Other attempts possessing less 
practical merit than the dital harp were the lyra-guitarre, which 
appeared in Germany at the beginning of the 19th century; 
the accord-guitarre, towards the middle of the same century; 
and the keyed guitar. (K. S.) 

HARPOCRATES, originally an Egyptian deity, adopted by 
the Greeks, and worshipped in later times both by Greeks and 
Romans. In Egypt, Harpa-khruti, Horus the child, was one of 
the forms of Horus, the sun-god, the child of Osiris. He was 
supposed to carry on war against the powers of darkness, and 
hence Herodotus (ii. 144) considers him the same as the Greek 
Apollo. He was represented in statues with his finger on his 
mouth, a symbol of childhood. The Greeks and Romans, not 
understanding the meaning of this attitude, made him the god 
of silence (Ovid, Melam. ix. 691), and as such he became a 
favourite deity with the later mystic schools of philosophy. 

See articles by G. Lafayc in Daremberg and Saglto's Dictionnairt 
des antiquitis^ and by E. Meyer (sj. " Horos ") in Roscher's Ltxikon 
der Mytkologte. 

HARPOCRATION, VALERIUS, Greek grammarian of Alex- 
andria. He is possibly the Harpocration mentioned by Julius 
Capitolinus (Life of Verus, 2) as the Greek tutor of Antoninus 
Vcrus (2nd century a.d.); some authorities place him. much 
later, on the ground that he borrowed from Athenaeus. He 
is the author of a Ae£txoy (or Efcpl tQv "kkfaav) ruvbiica farbpuv, 
which has come down to us in an incomplete form. The work 
contains, in more or less alphabetical order, notes on well-known 
events and persons mentioned by the orators, and explanations 
of legal and commercial expressions. As nearly all the lexicons to 
the Greek orators have been lost, Harpocration's work is especially 
valuable. Amongst his authorities were the writers of Atthides 
(histories of Attica), the grammarian Didymus, Dionysius of 
Halicarnassus, and the lexicographer Dionysius, son of Tryphon. 
The book also contains contributions to the history of Attic 
oratory and Greek literature generally. Nothing is known of 
an 'AvBnpuv avpayary^, a sort of anthology or chrestomathy 
attributed to him by Suidas. A series of articles in the margin 
of a Cambridge MS. of the lexicon forms the basis of the Lexicon 
rkeioricum Canlabrigiense (see Dobree, P. P.). 

The best edition is by W. Dindorf (1853); see also J. E. Sandys, 
History of Classical Scholarship, i. (1906), p. 325; C. Boysen, Do 
Harpocrationis fontibus (Kiel, 1876). 

HARPOON (from Fr. harpon, a grappling-iron, 0. Fr. karpe, 
a dog's claw, an iron clamp for fastening stones together; the 
source of these words is the Lat. harpago, harpa, &c, formed 
from Gr. aprayq, hook, dpi-afco*, to snatch, tear away, cf. 
" harpy "), barbed spear, particularly one used for spearing 
whales or other large fish, and either thrown by hand ox fired 
from a gun (see Whale-Fishery). 

HARPSICHORD, Harpsicon, double virginals (Fr. clavetw; 
Ger. Clavicymbel, KUl-FlUgd; I Lai. arpicordo, cembalo, clavi- 
cembalo, gravecembaloi Dutch, davisinbal), a large keyboard 
instrument (see Pjanoiorte), belonging to the same family as 
the virginal and spinet, but having 2, 3, or even 4 strings to each 
note, and a case of the harp or wing shape, afterwards adopted 
for the grand pianoforte. J. S. Bach's harpsichord, preserved 
in the museum of the Hochschule fur Musik at Cbarlottenburg, 
has two manuals and 4 strings to each note, one 16 ft., two 
8 ft. and one 4 ft. By means of stops the performer has within 
his power a number of combinations for varying the tone and 
dynamic power. In all instruments of the harpsichord family 



i6 



HARPY— HARRAR 



the strings, instead of being struck by tangents as in the davi- 
. chord, or by hammers as in the pianoforte, are plucked by means 
of a quill firmly embedded in the centred tongue of a jack or 
upright placed on the back end of the key-lever. When the 
finger depresses a key, the jack is thrown up, and in passing the 
crow-quill catches the string and twangs it. It is this twanging 
of the string which produces the brilliant incisive tone peculiar 
to the harpsichord family. What these instruments gain in 
brilliancy of tone, however, they lose in power of expression and 
of accent. The impossibility of commanding any emphasis 
necessarily created for the harpsichord an individual technique 
which influenced the music composed for it to so great an extent 
that it cannot be adequately rendered upon the pianoforte. 

The harpsichord assumed a position of great importance 
during the 16th and 17th centuries, more especially in the 
orchestra, which was under the leadership of the harpsichord 
player. The most famous of all harpsichord makers, whose 
names form a guarantee for excellence, were the Ruckers, 
established at Antwerp from the last quarter of the 16th 
century. (K. S.) 

HARPY, a large diurnal bird of prey, so named after the 
mythological monster of the classical poets (see Harpies), — the 
ThrasoBtus harpyia of modern omitho'ogists— an inhabitant 
of the warmer parts of America from Southern Mexico to Brazil. 
Though' known since the middle of the 17th century, its habits 
have come very little under the notice of naturalists, and what 
is said of them by the older writers must be received with some 



Harpy. 

suspicion. A cursory inspection of the turd, which is not tin- 
frequently brought alive to Europe, its size, and its enormous 
bill and talons, at once suggest the vast powers of destruction 
imputed to it, and are enough to account for the stories told of 
its ravages on mammals — sloths, fawns, peccaries and spider* 
monkeys. It has even been asserted to attack the human race. 
How much of this is fabulous there seems no means at present of 
determining, but some of the statements are made by veracious 
travellers — D'Orbigny and Tschudi. It is not uncommon in the 
forests of the isthmus of Panama, and Salvin says (Proc. Zoot. 
Society, 1864, p. 368) that its flight is slow and heavy. Indeed 
its owl-like visage, its short wings and soft plumage, do not in- 
dicate a bird of very active habits, but the weapons of offence 
with which it is armed show that it must be able to cope with 
vigorous prey. Its appearance is sufficiently striking— the head 
and lower parts, except a pectoral band, white, the former 



adorned with an erectile crest, the upper parts dark grey beaded 
with black, the wings dusky, and the tail barred; but the huge 
bill and powerful scutellated legs most of all impress the be* 
bolder. The precise affinities of the harpy cannot be said to 
have been determined. By some authors it is referred to the 
eagles, by others to the buzzards, and by others again to the 
hawks; but possibly the first of these alliances is the most likely 
to be true. (A. N.). 

HARRAN, Haran or Charran (Sept. Xa/>fa> or Xafifr: Strabo, 
Kd/^cu: Pliny, Carrot or Carrkae; Arab. Horrdn), in biblical 
history the place where Tenth halted after leaving Ur, and ap- 
parently the birthplace of Abraham, a town on the stream 
Jullab, some nine hours' journey from Edessa in Syria. At this 
point the road from Damascus joins the highway between 
Nineveh and Carchemish, and Haran had thus considerable 
military and commercial value. As a strategic position it 
is mentioned in inscriptions as early as the time of Tigkth 
Pileser I., about 1 100 B.C., and subsequently by Sargon II., who 
restored the privileges lost at the rebellion which led to the con- 
quest referred to in 2 Kings xix. 13 (-Isa. xxxvii. xa). It was 
the centre of a considerable commerce (Ezek. xxvii. 93), and one 
of its specialities was the odoriferous gum derived from the 
strobus (Pliny, H.N. xii. 40). It was here that Crassus in bis 
eastern expedition was attacked and slain by the Parthians Xs3 
B.C.) ; and here also the emperor Caracalla was murdered at the 
instigation of Macrinus (a.d. 217). Haran was the chief home of 
the moon-god Sin, whose temple was rebuilt by several kings, 
among them Assur-bani-pal and Nabunidus and Herodian (iv. 
13, 7) mentions the town as possessing in his day a temple of the 
moon. In the middle ages it is mentioned as having been the 
seat of a particular heathen sect, that of the Haranite Sabeans. 
It retained its importance down to the period of the Arab 
ascendancy; but by Abulfeda it is mentioned as having before 
his time fallen into decay; It is now wholly in ruins. The 
Yahwistic writer (Gen. xxvii. 43) makes it the home of Laban 
and connects it with Isaac and Jacob. But we cannot thus put 
Haran in Aramnaharaim; the home of the Labanites is rather 
to be looked for in the very similar word Hauran. 

HARRAR (or Haras), a city of N.E. Africa, in 8° 4^ N., 
42° 36' E., capital of a province of Abyssinia and 220 m. S.S.W. 
of the ports of Zaila (British) and Jibuti (French) on the Gulf of 
Aden. With Jibuti it is connected by a railway (x88 m. long) 
and carriage-road. Harrar is built on the slopes of a hill at an 
elevation of over 5000 ft. A lofty stone wall, pierced by five 
gates and flanked by twenty-four towers, encloses the cityv< 
which has a population of about 40,000. The streets are steep, 
narrow, -dirty and unpaved, the roadways consisting of rough 
boulders. The houses are in general made of undressed stone 
and mud and are flat-topped, the general aspect of the city 
being Oriental and un- Abyssinian. A few houses, including the 
palace of the governor and the foreign consulates, are of more 
elaborate and solid construction than the majority of the build- 
ings. There are several mosques and an Abyssinian church (of 
the usual circular construction) built of stone. Harrar is a dty 
of considerable commercial importance, through it passing all 
the merchandise of southern Abyssinia, Kaffa and Galla land. 
The chief traders are Abyssinians, Armenians and Greeks. The 
principal article of export is coffee, which is grown extensively 
in the neighbouring hills and is of the finest quality. Besides 
coffee there is a large trade in durra, the kat plant (used by the 
Mahommedans as a drug), ghee, cattle, mules and camels, skins 
and hides, ivory and gums. The import trade is largely in cotton 
goods, but every kind of merchandise is included. 

Harrar is believed to owe its foundation to Arab immigrants 
from the Yemen in the 7th century of the Christian era. In the 
region of Somaliland, now the western part of the British pro- 
tectorate of that name, the Arabs established the Moslem state 
of Adel or Zaila, with their capital at Zaila on the Gulf of Aden. 
In the 13th century the sultans of Adel enjoyed great power. In 
1 521 the then sultan Abubekr transferred the seat of govern- 
ment to Harrar, probably regarding Zaila as too exposed to the 
attacks of the Turkish and Portuguese navies then contending 



HARRATIN— HARRIGAN 



17 



tor the mastery of the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden. Abubekr's 
successor was Mahommcd III., Ahmed ibn Ibrahim el-Ghaxi 
(»S°7-»543), surnamed Gran (Granyi), the left-handed. He 
was not an Arab but, probably, of Somali origin. The son of a 
noted warrior, he quickly rose to supreme power, becoming 
sultan or amir in 1525. He is famous for his invasion of Abys- 
sinia, of which country he was virtual master for several years. 
From the beginning of the 17th century Add suffered greatly 
from the ravages of pagan Galla tribes, and Harrar sank to the 
position of an amirate of little importance. It was first visited 
by a European in 1854 when (Sir) Richard Burton spent ten days 
there in the guise of an Arab. In 187 s Harrar was occupied by 
an Egyptian force under Raouf Pasha, by whose orders the amir 
was strangled. The town remained in the possession of Egypt 
until i88St when the garrison was withdrawn in consequence of 
the rising of the Mahdi in the Sudan. The Egyptian garrison 
and many Egyptian civilians, in all 6500 persons, left Harrar 
between November 1884 and the 25th of April 1885, when a son 
of the ruler who had been deposed by Egypt was installed as 
amir, the arrangement being carried out under the super- 
intendence of British officers. The new amir held power until 
January 1887, in which month Harrar was conquered by 
Menelek II., king of Shoa (afterwards emperor of Abyssinia). 
The governorship of Harrar was by Mcncick entrusted to Ras 
Makonnen, who held the post until his death in 1006. 

The Harrari proper are of a distinct stock from the neigh- 
bouring peoples, and speak a special language. Harraresc 
is " a Semitic graft inserted into an indigenous stock " (Sir R. 
Burton, First Footsteps in East Africa). The Harrari are 
Mahommedans of the Shafa'i or Persian sect, and they employ 
the solar year and the Persian calendar. Besides the native 
population there are in Harrar colonies 01 Abyssinians, Somalis 
and Gallas. By the Somalis the place is called Adari, by the 
Gallas Adaray. 

See Abyssinia; Soualiland. Also P. Paulitschke, ffarar: 
Forsckungsrcise naeh den SomAl- und Galla- Landem Ost-Afrikas 
(Leipzig, 1888). 

HARRATDf. black Berbers; dwelling in Tidikdt and other 
Saharan oases. Many of them arc blacker than the average 
negro. In physique, however, they are true to the Berber type, 
bring of handsome appearance with European features and well- 
proportioned bodies. They are the result of an early crossing 
with the Sudanese negro races, though to-day they have all the 
pride of the Berbers (q.v.), and do not live with or intermarry 
among negroes. 

HARRIER, or Hen-Harrtek, name given to certain birds of 
prey which were formerly very abundant in parts of the British 
Islands, from their habit of harrying poultry. The first of these 
names has now become used in a generic sense for all the species 
ranked under the genus Circus of Laccpedc, and the second con- 
fined to the particular species which is the Falco cyaneus of 
Linnaeus and the Circus cyaneus of modern ornithologists. 

One European species, C. aeruginosa, though called in books 
the marsh-harrier, is far more commonly known in England and 
Ireland as the moor-buzzard. But harriers arc not, like buzzards, 
arboreal in their habits, and always affect open country, generally, 
though not invariably, preferring marshy or fenny districts,' for 
snakes and frogs form a great part of their ordinary food. On 
the ground their carriage is utterly unlike that of a buzzard, and 
their long wings and legs render it easy to distinguish the two 
groups when taken in the hand. All the species also have a more 
or less well-developed ruff or frill of small thickset feathers 
surrounding the lower part of the head, nearly like that seen in 
owls, and accordingly many system at ists consider that the genus 
Circus, though undoubtedly belonging to the Falconidae, connects 
that family with the Striges. No osteological affinity, however, can 
be established between the harriers and any section of the owls, 
and the superficial resemblance will have to be explained in some 
other way. Harriers are found almost all over the world, 1 and 

1 The distribution of the different species is rather curious, while 
the range of some is exceedingly wide,— one, C. maillardi, seems to be 
limited to the island of Reunion (Bourbon). 
X11I I* 



fifteen species are recognised by Bowdler Sbarpe (Ctf. Birds 
Brit. Museum, L pp. 50-73). In most if not all the harriers the 
sexes differ greatly in colour, so much so that for a long while the 
males and females of one of the commonest and best known, the 
C. cyaneus above mentioned, were thought to be distinct species, 
and were or still are called in various European languages by 
different names. The error was maintained with the greater 
persistency since the young males, far more abundant than the 
adults, wear much the same plumage as their mother, and it was 
not until after Montagu's observations were published at the 



Hen-Harricr (Male and Female). 

beginning of the 19th century that the " ringtail," as she was 
called (the Falco pygargus of Linnaeus), was generally admitted 
to be the female of the " hen-harrier." Bui this was not Montagu's 
only good service as regards this genus. He proved the hitherto 
unexpected existence of a second species, 9 subject to the same 
diversity of plumage. This was called by him the ash-coloured 
falcon, but it now generally bears his name, and is known as 
Montagu's harrier, C. ciner actus. In habits it is very similar to 
the hen-harrier, but it has longer wings, and its range is not so 
northerly, for while the hen-harrier extends to Lapland, Mon- 
tagu's is but very rare in Scotland, though in the south of 
England it is the most common species. Harriers indeed in the 
British Islands are rapidly becoming things of the past. Their 
nests are easily found, and the birds when nesting are easily 
destroyed. In the south-east of Europe, reaching also to the 
Cape of Good Hope and to India, there is a fourth species, the 
C. swainsoni of some writers, the C. pallidus of others. In North 
America C. cyaneus is represented by a kindred form, C. hud s on i us, 
usually regarded as a good species, the adult male of which is 
always to be recognized by its rufous markings beneath, in which 
character it rather resembles C. cineraceus, but it has not the long 
wings of that species. South America has in C. cinereus another 
representative form, while China, India and Australia possess 
more of this type. Thus there is a section in which the males 
have a strongly contrasted black and grey plumage, and finally 
there is a group of larger forms allied to the European C. aeru- 
ginosas, wherein a grey dress is less often attained, of which the 
South African C. ranivorus and the New Zealand C. gouldi are 
examples. (A. N.) 

HARRIGAN, EDWARD (1845- ), American actor, was 
born in New York of Irish parenU on the 26th of October 1845. 
He made his first appearance in San Francisco in 1867, and soon 
afterwards formed a stage partnership with Tony Hart, whose 
real name was Anthony Cannon. As " Harrigan and Hart," they 
had a great success in the presentation of types of low life in New 
York. Beginning as simple sketches, these were gradually 
worked up into plays, with occasional songs, set to popular music 

* A singular mistake, which has been productive of further error, 
was made by Albtn. who drew his figure {Hist. Birds, ii. pi. 5) from 
a specimen of one species, and coloured it from a specimen of the 
other. 



i8 



HARRIMAN, E. H.— HARRINGTON, J. 



by David Braham. The titles of these plays indicate their 
character, The Mulligan Guards, Squatter Sovereignly, A Leather 
Patch, The O' Regans. The partnership with Hart lasted from 
1871-1884. Subsequently Hanigan played in different cities of 
the United States, one of his favourite parts being George Coggs- 
well in Old Lavender. 

HARRIMAN, EDWARD HENRY (1848-1900), American 
financier and railroad magnate, son of the Rev. Orlando 
Harriman, rector of St George's Episcopal church, Hempstead, 
L.I., was born at Hempstead on the 25th of February 1848. He 
became a broker's clerk in New York at an early age, and in 
1870 was able to buy a seat on the New York Slock Exchange 
on his own account. For a good many years there was nothing 
sensational in his success, but he built up a considerable business 
connexion and prospered in his financial operations. Meanwhile 
he carefully mastered the situation affecting American railways. 
In this respect he was assisted by his friendship with Mr Stuy- 
vesant Fish, who, on becoming vice-president of the Illinois 
Central in 1883, brought Harriman upon the directorate, and in 
1887, being then president, made Harriman vice-president; 
twenty years later it was Harriman who dominated the finance 
of the Illinois Central, and Fish, having become his opponent, 
was dropped from the board. It was not till 1898, however, that 
his career as a great railway organizer began with his formation, 
by the aid of the bankers, Kuhn, Locb & Co., of a syndicate to 
acquire the Union Pacific line, which was then in the hands of a 
receiver and was generally regarded as a hopeless failure. It 
was soon found that a new power had arisen in the railway world. 
Having brought the Union Pacific out of bankruptcy into 
prosperity, and made it an efficient instead of a decaying line, 
he utilized his position to draw other lines within his control, 
notably the Southern Pacific in 1001. These extensions of his 
power were not made without friction, and his abortive contest 
in 1901 with James J. Hill for the control of the Northern 
Pacific led to one of the most serious financial crises ever known 
on Wall Street. But in the result he became the dominant 
factor in American railway matters. At his death, on the oth of 
September 1909, his influence was estimated to extend over 
60,000 m. of track, with an annual earning power of $700,000,000 
or over. Astute and unscrupulous manipulation of the stock 
markets, and a capacity for the hardest of bargaining and the 
most determined warfare against his rivals, had their place in 
this success, and Harriman's methods excited the bitterest 
criticism, culminating in a stern denunciation from President 
Roosevelt himself in 1007. Nevertheless, besides acquiring 
colossal wealth for himself, he helped to create for the 
American public a vastly improved railway service, the benefit 
of which survived all controversy as to the means by which he 
triumphed over the obstacles in his way. 

HARRIMAN, a city of Roane county, Tennessee, U.S.A., on the 
Emory river, about 35 m. VV. by S. of Knoxville. Pop. (1900) 3442 
(516 being negroes); (1910)3061. Harriman is served by the Har- 
riman & North Eastern, the Tennessee Central, and the Southern 
railways. It is the seat of the East Tennessee Normal and 
Industrial Institute, for negroes, and of the American University 
of Harriman (Christian Church, coeducational; 1893), which 
comprises primary, preparatory, collegiate, Bible school, civic 
research, commercial, music and art departments, and in 1907- 
1908 had 12 instructors and 317 students. Near the city are 
large deposits of iron and an abundance of coal and timber. 
Among manufactures are cotton products, farming tools, leather, 
tannic acid, furniture and flour. Harriman was founded in 1890 
by a land company. A clause in this company's by-laws requires 
that every conveyance of real estate by the company " shall 
contain a provision forbidding the use of the property or any 
building thereon, for the purpose of making, storing or selling 
intoxicating beverages as such." Harriman was chartered as a 
city in 189 1 , and its charter was revised in 1899. 

HARRINGTON. EARLS OF. The first earl of Harrington 
was the diplomatist and politician, William Stanhope (c. 1690- 
'756)1 a younger son of John Stanhope of El vast on, Derbyshire, 
and a brother of Charles Stanhope (1673-1760), an active 



politician during the reign of George L His ancestor, Sir John 
Stanhope (d. 1638), was a half-brother of Philip Stanhope, isi 
earl of Chesterfield. Educated at Eton, William Stanhope 
entered the army and served in Spain, but soon he turned his 
attention to more peaceful pursuits, went on a mission to Madrid 
and represented his country at Turin. When peace was made 
between England and Spain in 1720 Stanhope became British 
ambassador to the latter country, and he retained this position 
until March 1 727, having built up his reputation as a diplomatist 
during a difficult period. In 1729 be had some part in arranging 
the treaty of Seville between England, France and Spain, and for 
his services in this matter he was created Baron Harrington in 
January 1730. Later in the same year hewasoppointcd secretary 
of state for the northern department under Sir Robert Walpole, 
but, like George II., he was anxious to assist the emperor Charles 
VI. in his war with France, while Walpole favoured a policy of 
peace. Although the latter had his way Harrington remained 
secretary until the great minister's fall in 1742, when he was 
transferred to the office of president of the council and was 
created earl of Harrington and Viscount Petersham. In 1744, 
owing to the influence of his political allies, the Pclhams, he 
returned to his former post of secretary of state, but he soon 
lost the favour of the king, and this was the principal cause 
why he left office in October 1746. He was lord lieutenant, 
of Ireland from 1747 to i75«» and he died in London on the 8th 
of December 1756. 

The- earl's successor was his son, William (1710-1779), who 
entered the army, was wounded at Fonlenoy and became a 
general in 1770. He was a member of parliament for about ten 
years and he died on the xst of April 1779. This earl's wife 
Caroline (1722-1784), daughter of Charles Fitzroy, 2nd duke of 
Grafton, was a noted beauty, but was also famous for her 
eccentricities. Their elder son, Charles (1 753-1 829), who became 
the 3rd carl, was a distinguished soldier. He served with the 
British army during the American War of Independence And 
attained the rank of general in 1802. From 1805 to xSi 2 he was 
commander-in-chief in Ireland; he was sent on diplomatic 
errands to Vienna and to Berlin, and he died at Brighton on the 
15th of September 1829. 

Charles Stanhope, 4th carl of Harrington (1780-1851), the 
eldest son of the 3rd carl, was known as Lord Petersham 
until be succeeded to the earldom in 1829. He was very well 
known in society owing partly to his eccentric habits; he 
dressed like the French king Henry IV., and had other personal 
peculiarities. He married the actress, Maria Foote, but when 
he died in March 1851 he left no sons, and his brother Leicester 
Fitzgerald Charles (1784-1862) became the 5th earL This 
nobleman was a soldier and a politician of advanced views, who 
is best known as a worker with Lord Byron in the cause of 
Greek independence. He was in Greece in 1823 and 1824, where 
his relations with Byron were not altogether harmonious. He 
wrote A Sketch of Hie History and Influence oftiie Press in British 
India (1823); and Greece in 1823 and 1824 (English edition 
1824, American edition 1825). His son Sydney Seymour Hyde, 
6lh carl (1845-1S66), dying unmarried, was succeeded by a 
cousin, Charles Wyndham Stanhope (1809-1881), as 7th earl, 
and in 1881 the latter's son Charles Augustus Stanhope (b. 1844) 

be 

n the Stanhope family 
ha >n, which was created 

in 1-1621) of Harrington, 

N< r son of Sir Michael 

St re, who was a brother- 

in 's support of Somerset 

co 6th 01 February 1552. 

Sii io6 to 1616 and was a 

m< died on the 9th of 

M I baron (c. 1595-1675), 

di( ... extinct. 

HARRINGTON, or Harington, JAMES (1611-1677J, English 
political philosopher, was born in January 161 1 of an old Rutland- 
shire family. He was son of Sir Sapcotcs Harrington of Rand, 
Lincolnshire, and great-nephew of the first LoTd Harington of 
Exton (d. 161 5). In 1629 he entered Trinity College, Oxford, as 



HARRIOT—HARRIS, J. 



a gentleman commoner. One of Ms tutors was the famous 
Chflfingworth. Alter several years spent in travel, and as a 
soldier in the Dutch army, he returned to England and lived m 
retirement till 1646, when he was appointed to the suite of 
Charles I., at that time being conveyed from Newcastle as 
prisoner. Though republican in his ideas, Harrington won the 
king's regard and esteem, and accompanied him to the Isle of 
Wight. He roused, however, the suspicion of the parliament- 
arians and was dismissed: it is said that he was for a short time 
put in confinement because he would not swear to refuse assist- 
ance to the king should he attempt to escape. After Charles's 
death Harrington devoted his time to the composition of his 
Oceana, a work which pleased neither party. By order of Cromwell 
it was seized when passing through the press. Harrington, how- 
ever managed to secure the favour of the Protector's favourite 
daughter, Mrs Clay pole; the work was restored to him, and 
appeared in 1656, dedicated to Cromwell. The views embodied 
in Oceana, particularly that bearing on vote by ballot and rota- 
tion of magistrates and legislators, Harrington and others (who 
m 1659 formed a club called the " Rota ") endeavoured to push 
practically, but with no success. In November 1661, by order 
Of Charles II., Harrington was arrested, apparently without 
sufficient cause, on a charge of conspiracy, and was thrown into 
the Tower. Despite his repeated request no public trial could 
be obtained, and when at length his sisters obtained a writ of 
habeas corpus he was secretly removed to St Nicholas Island off 
Plymouth. There his health gave way owing to his drinking 
guaiacum on medical advice, and his mind appeared to be 
affected. Careful treatment restored him to bodily vigour, but 
his mind never wholly recovered. After his release he married, — 
at what date does not seem to be precisely known. He died on 
the nth of September 1677, and was buried next to Sir Walter 
Raleigh in St Margaret's, Westminster. 

Harrington's writings consist of the Oceana, and of papers, 
pamphlets, aphorisms, even treatises, in defence of the Oceana. 
The Oceana is a hard, prolix, and in many respects heavy exposi- 
tion of an ideal constitution, " Oceana " being England, and the 
lawgiver Olphaus Mcgaletor, Oliver Cromwell. The details arc 
elaborated with infinite care, even the salaries of officials being 
computed, but the main ideas are two in number, each with 
a practical corollary. The first is that the determining element 
of power in a state is property generally, property in land in 
particular; the second is that the executive power ought not 
to be vested for any considerable time in the same men or class 
of men. In accordance with the first of these, Harrington re- 
commends an agrarian law, limiting the portion of land held to 
that yielding a revenue of £3000, and consequently insisting on 
particular modes of distributing landed property. As a practical 
issue of the second he lays down the rule of rotation by ballot. A 
third part of the executive or senate arc voted out by ballot every 
year (not being capable of being elected again for three years). 
Harrington explains very carefully how the state and its govern- 
ing parts are to be constituted by his scheme. Oceana contains 
many valuable ideas, but it is irretrievably dull. 

His Works were edited with biography by John ToTand in 1700; 
Toland's edition, with additions by Birch, appeared in 1747, and 
again in 1771. Oceana was reprinted by Henry Mortey in 1887. 
See Dwight in Political Science Quarterly (March, 1887). Harrington 
has often been confused with bis cousin Sir James Harrington, a 
member of the commission which tried Charles I., and afterwards 
excluded from the acts of pardon. 

HARRIOT. or Harriott, THOMAS (1560-1 621), English mathe- 
matician and astronomer, was born at Oxford in 1560. After 
studying at St Mary Hall, Oxford, he became tutor to Sir Walter 
Raleigh, who appointed him in 1585 to the office of geographer 
to the second expedition to Virginia. Harriot published an 
account of this expedition in 1588, which was afterwards 
reprinted in Hakluyt's Voyages. On his return to England, 
after an absence of two years, he resumed his mathematical 
studies, and having made the acquaintance of Henry Percy, 
earl of Northumberland, distinguished for his patronage of 
men of science, he received from him a yearly pension of £1 20. 
He died at London on the and ol July 1621. A manuscript of 



19 

Harriot's entitled EpkemeHs chrysometria is preserved in Sion 
College; and his Arlis analyUcae praxis ad oequationes alge- 
braical resohtndas was published at London in 1651. His con- 
tributions to algebra are treated in the article Algebra; 
Wallis's History of Algebra ( 1685) may also be consulted. From 
some papers of Harriot's, discovered in 1784, it would appear 
that he had either procured a telescope from Holland, or divined 
the construction of that instrument, and that he coincided in 
point of time with Galileo in discovering the spots on the sun's 
disk. 

See Charles Hurt on, Mathematical and Philosophical Dictionary 
(1815), and J. E. Montucla, Histoit* des ntaikematiques (1758;. 

HARRIS, GEORGE, ist Baron (2746-1820), British general, 
was the son of the Rev George Harris, curate of Brasted, Kent, 
and was born on the x8th of March 1746. Educated at West- 
minster school and at the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich, 
he was commissioned to the Royal Artillery in 1760, transferring 
to an ensigncy in the 5th foot (Northumberland Fusiliers) in 
1762. Three years later he became lieutenant, and in 1771 
captain. His first active service was in the American War of 
Independence, in which he served at Lexington, Bunker Hill 
(severely wounded) and in every engagement of Howe's army 
except one up to November x 778. By this time he had obtained 
his majority, and his next service was under Major-General 
Mcdows at Santa Lucia in 17 78-1770, after which his regiment 
served as marines in Rodney's fleet. Later in 1779 he was for a 
time a prisoner of war. Shortly before his promotion to hen- 
tenant-colonel in his regiment (1780) he married. After com- 
manding the 5th in Ireland for some years, he exchanged and 
went with General Mcdows to Bombay, and served with that 
officer in India until 1792, taking part in various battles and 
engagements, notably Lord Cornwall's attack on Seringapatam. 
In 1794, after a short period of home service, he was again in 
India. In the same year he became major-general, and in 1706 
local lieutenant-general in Madras. Up to 1800 he commanded 
the troops in the presidency, and for a short time he exercised the 
civil government as well. In December 1798 he was appointed 
by Lord Wcllesley, the governor-general, to command the field 
army which was intended to attack Tipu Sahib, and in a few 
months Harris reduced the Mysore country and stormed the 
great stronghold of Seringapatam. His success established his 
reputation as a capable and experienced commander, and its 
political importance led to his being offered the reward (which 
he declined) of an Irish peerage. He returned home in 1800, 
became lieutenant-general in the army the following year, and 
attained the rank of full general m 1812. In 181 $ he was made a 
peer of the United Kingdom under the title Baron Harris of 
Seringapatam and Mysore, and of Belmont, Kent. In 1820 he 
received the G.C.B., and in 1824 the governorship of Dumbarton 
Castle. Lord Harris died at Belmont in May 1829. He had 
been colonel of the 73rd Highlanders since 1800* 

His descendant, the 4th Baron Harris (b. 1851), best known as 
a cricketer, was under-secretary for India (1885-1886), under* 
secretary for war (1886-1889) and governor of Bombay (1890- 
189s). 

See Rt. Hon. S. Lushiogton, Life of Lord Harris (London, 1840), 
and the regimental histories of the 5th Northumberland Fusiliers 
and 73rd Highlanders. 

HARRIS, JAMES (1709-1780), English grammarian, was born 
at Salisbury on the 20th of July 1709. He was educated at the 
grammar school in the Close at Salisbury, and at Wadharo 
College, Oxford. On leaving the university he was entered at 
Lincoln's Inn as a student of law, though not intended for the 
bar. The death of his father in 1733 placed him in possession of 
an independent fortune and of the house in Salisbury Close. He 
became a county magistrate, and represented Christchurch in 
parliament from 1761 till his death, and was comptroller to the 
queen from 1774 to 1780. He held office under Lord Grenville, 
retiring with him in 1765. The decided bent of his mind had 
always been towards the Greek and Latin classics; and to the 
study of these, especially of Aristotle, he applied himself with 
unremitting assiduity during a period of fourteen or^te* 



20 



HARRIS, J. C— HARRIS, SIR W. S. 



years. He published in 1744 three treatises— on art; on music, 
painting and poetry; and on happiness. In 1751 appeared the 
work by which he became best known, Hermes, a philosophical 
inquiry concerning universal grammar. He also published 
Philosophical Arrangements and Philosophical Inquiries. Harris 
was a great lover of music, and adapted the words for a selec- 
tion from Italian and German composers, published by the 
cathedral organist, James Corfe. He died on the 32nd of 
December 1780. 

His works were collected and published in 1801, by his son, the 
first earl of Malmesbury, who prefixed a brief biography. 

HARRIS, JOEL CHANDLER (1848-1008), American author, 
was born in Eatonton, Putnam county, Georgia, on the 8th of 
December 1848. He started as an apprentice to the printer's 
trade in the office of the Countryman, a weekly paper published 
on a plantation not far from his home. He then studied law, 
and practised for a short time in Forsyth, Ga., but soon took 
to journalism. He joined the staff of the Savannah Daily News 
in 1871, and in 1876 that of the Atlanta Constitution, of which 
he was an editor from 1800 to 1001, and in this capacity did 
much to further the cause of the New South. But his most 
distinctive contribution to this paper, and to American literature, 
consisted of his dialect pieces dealing with negro life and folklore. 
His stories are characterized by quaint humour, poetic feeling 
and homely philosophy; and " Uncle Remus," the principal 
character of most of them, is a remarkably vivid and real creation. 
The first collection of his stories was published in 1880 as Uncle 
Remus: his Songs and his Sayings* Among his later works are 
Nights with Uncle Remus (1883), Mingo and Other Sketches in 
Black and White (1884), Free Joe and Other Georgian Sketches 
(1887), Balaam and His Master and OUter Sketches and Stories 
(1891), Uncle Remus and His Friends (1892), On the Plantation 
(1892), which is partly autobiographic, Sister Jane (1896), The 
Chronicles of Aunt Mineny Ann (1809), and The Tar- Baby and 
Other Rhymes of Uncle Remus (1004). More purely juvenile are 
Daddy Jake the Runaway and Other Stories (1889), Little Mr 
Thimblefinger and his Queer Country (1894) and its sequel Mr 
Rabbit at Home (1895), Aaron in the Wild woods (1897), Plantation 
Pageants (1899), Told by Uncle Remus (1905), and Uncle Remus 
and Br'cr Rabbit (1907). He was one of the compilers of the 
Life of Henry W. Grady, including his Writings and Speeclies 
(1890) and wrote Stories of Georgia (1806), and Georgia from the 
Invasion of De Soto to Recent Times (1899). He died in Atlanta 
on the 3rd of July 1908. 

HARRIS, JOHN (c. 1666-1719), English writer. He is best 
known as the editor of the Lexicon technicum, or Dictionary 
of the Arts and Sciences (1704), which ranks as the earliest of the 
long line of English encyclopaedias, and as the compiler of the 
Collection of Voyages and Travels which passes under his name. 
He was born about 1666, probably in Shropshire, and was a 
scholar of Trinity College, Oxford, from 1684 to 1688. He was 
presented to the vicarage of Icklcsharo in Sussex, and subse- 
quently to the rectory of St Thomas, Winchclsca. In 1698 he 
was entrusted with the delivery of the seventh scries of the 
Boyle lectures — Atheistical Objections against the Being of God 
and His Attributes fairly considered and fully refuted. Between 
1702 and 1704 he delivered at the Marine Coffee House in 
Birchin Lane the mathematical lectures founded by Sir Charles 
Cox, and advertised himself as a mathematical tutor at Amen 
Corner. The friendship of Sir William Cowper, afterwards lord 
chancellor, secured for him the office of private chaplain, a 
prebend in Rochester cathedral (1708), and the rectory of the 
united parishes of St Mildred, Bread Street and St Margaret 
Moses, in addition to other preferments. He showed himself 
an ardent supporter of the government, and engaged in a bitter 
quarrel with the Rev. Charles Humphreys, who afterwards *as 
chaplain to Dr SachevcreL Harris was one of the early members 
of the Royal Society, and for a time acted as vice-president. 
At his death on the 7th of September 1719, he was busy 
completing an elaborate History of Kent. He is said to have 
died in poverty brought on by his own bad management of his 
affairs. 



HARRIS. THOMAS LAKE (1803-1906), American spiritual- 
istic " prophet," was born at Fenny Stratford in Buckinghamshire, 
England, on the 1 5th of May 1823. His parents were Calvinistic 
Baptists, and very poor. They settled at Utica, New York, 
when Harris was five years old. When he was about twenty 
Harris became a Universalist preacher, and then aSwedenborgian. 
He became associated about 1847 with a spiritualist of indifferent 
character named Davis. After Davis had been publicly exposed, 
Harris established a congregation in New York. About 1850 
he professed to receive inspirations, and published some long 
poems. He had the gift of improvisation in a very high degree. 
About 1859 he preached in London, and is described as a man 
" with low, black eyebrows, black beard, and sallow countenance." 
He was an effective speaker, and his poetry was admired by 
many; Alfred Austin in his book The Poetry of the Period even 
devoted a chapter to Harris. He founded in 1861 a community, 
at Wassaic, New York, and opened a bank and a mill, which 
he superintended. There he was joined by about sixty converts, 
including five orthodox clergymen, some Japanese people, some 
American ladies of position, and especially by Laurence Olipbant 
(q.v.) with bis wife and mother. The community— the Brother- 
hood of the New Life — decided to settle at the village of B roc ton 
on the shore of Lake Erie. Harris established there a wine- 
making industry. In reply to the objections of teetotallers he 
said that the wine prepared by himself was filled with the 
divine breath so that all noxious influences were neutralized. 
Harris also built a tavern and strongly advocated the use of 
tobacco. He exacted complete surrender from his disciples- 
even the surrender of moral judgment. He taught that God 
was bi-sexual, and apparently, though not in reality, that the 
rule of society should be one of married celibacy. He professed 
to teach his community a change in the mode of respiration 
which was to be the visible sign of possession by Christ and the 
seal of immortality. The Oliphants broke away from the restraint 
about 1 881, charging him with robbery and succeeding in getting 
back from him many thousands of pounds by legal proceedings. 
But while losing faith in Harris himself, they did not abandon 
his main teaching. In Laurence Oliphant's novel Masollom 
his view of Harris will be found. Briefly, he held that Harris 
was originally honest, greatly gifted, and possessed of certain 
psychical powers. But in the end he came to practise unbridled 
licence under the loftiest pretensions, made the profession of 
extreme disinterestedness a cloak to conceal his avarice, and 
demanded from his followers a blind and supple obedience. 
Harris in 1876 discontinued for a time public activities, but 
issued to a secret circle books of verse dwelling mainly on sexual 
questions. On these his mind ran from the first. In 1891 he 
announced that his body had been renewed, and that he had 
discovered the secret of the resuscitation of humanity. He pub- 
lished a book, Lyra triumphalis, dedicated to A. C. Swinburne. 
He also made a third marriage, and visited England intending 
to remain there. He was called back by a fire which destroyed 
large stocks of his wine, and remained in New York till 1903, 
when he visited Glasgow. His followers believed that he had 
attained the secret of immortal life on earth, and after his death 
on the 23rd of March 1906 declared that he was only sleeping. 
It was three months before it was acknowledged publicly that 
he was really dead. There can be little or no doubt as to the 
real character of Harris. His teaching was esoteric in form, but 
is a thinly veiled attempt to alter the ordering of sexual relations. 

The authoritative biography from the side of his disciples is the 
Life by A. A. Cuthbert. published in Glasgow in 1908. It is full of the 
jargon of Harris's sect, but contains some biographical facts as well 
as many quotations. Mrs Oliphant's Life of Laurence OUhkanl 
(1891) has not been shaken in any important particular, ana Oli- 
phant's own portrait of Harris in Masollam is apparently uncxag- 
gcrated. But Harris had much personal magnetism, unbounded 
self-confidence, along with endless fluency, and to the last was 
believed in by some disciples of character and influence. (W. R. N 1.) 

HARRIS, SIR WILLIAM SNOW (1 791-1867), English 
electrician, was descended from an old family of solicitors at 
Plymouth, where he was born on the 1st of April 1791. He 
received bis early education at the Plymouth grammar-school. 



HARRIS, W. T.—HARRJSBURG 



21 



and completed a course of medical studies at the university of 
Edinburgh, after which he established himself as a general 
medical practitioner in Plymouth. On his marriage in 1824 he 
resolved to abandon his profession on account of its duties 
interfering too much with his iavourite study of electricity. As 
early as 1820 he had invented a new method of arranging the 
lightning Jbnductors of ships, the peculiarity of which was that 
the metal was permanently fixed in the masts and extended 
throughout the hull; but it was only with great difficulty, and 
not till nearly thirty years afterwards, that his invention was 
adopted by the government for the royal navy. In 1826 he 
read a paper before the Royal Society " On the Relative Powers of 
various Metallic Substances as Conductors of Electricity," which 
led to his being ejected a fellow of the society in 183 1. Subse- 
quently, in 1834, 1836 and 1839, he read before the society several 
valuable papers on the elementary laws of electricity, and he 
also communicated to the Royal Society of Edinburgh various 
interesting accounts of his experiments and discoveries in the 
same field of inquiry. In 1835 he received the Copley gold 
medal from the Royal Society for his papers on the laws of 
electricity of high tension, and in 1839 he was chosen to deliver 
the Bakerian lecture. Meanwhile, although a government 
commission had recommended the general adoption of his 
conductors in the royal navy, and the government had granted 
him an annuity of £300 " in consideration of services in the 
cultivation of science," the naval authorities continued to offer 
various objections to his invention-, to aid in removing these 
he in 1S43 published his work on Thunderstorms, and also about 
the same time contributed a number of papers to the Nautical 
Magazine illustrative of damage by lightning. His system was 
actually adopted in the Russian navy before be succeeded in 
removing the prejudices against it in England, and in 1845 the 
emperor of Russia, in acknowledgment of his services, presented 
him with a valuable ring and vase. At length, the efficiency of 
his system being acknowledged, he received in 1847 the honour 
of knighthood, and subsequently a grant of £s°°o. After suc- 
ceeding in introducing his invention into general use Harris 
resumed his labours in the field of original research, but as he 
failed to realize the advances that had been made by the new 
school of science his application resulted in no discoveries of 
much value. His manuals of Electricity, Galvanism and 
Magnetism, published between 1848 and 1856, were, however, 
written with great clearness, and passed through several editions. 
He died at Plymouth on the a and of January 1867, while having 
in preparation a Treatise on F fictional S&ectricity, which was 
published posthumously in the same year, with a memoir of the 
author by Charles Tomlinson. 

HARRIS, WILLIAM TORRBT (1835-1900), American edu- 
cationist, was born in North Killingly, Connecticut, on the 
10th. of September 1835. He studied at Phillips Andover 
Academy, Andover, Massachusetts, and entered Yale, but left 
in his junior year (1857) to accept a position as a teacher of 
shorthand in the St Louis, Missouri, public schools. Advancing 
through the grades of principal and assistant superintendent, 
he was city superintendent of schools from 1867 until 1880. In 
1858, under the stimulus of Henry C. Brockmeycr, Harris 
became interested in modern German philosophy in general, 
and in particular in Hegel, whose works a small group, gather- 
ing about Harris and Brockmeyer, began to study in 1859. 
From 1867 to 1893 Harris edited The Journal oj Speculative 
Philosophy (22 vols.), which was the quarterly organ of the 
Philosophical Society founded in 1866. The Philosophical 
Society died out before 1874, when Harris founded in St Louis 
a Kant Club, which lived for fifteen years. In 1873, with Miss 
Susan E. Blow, he established in St Louis the first permanent 
public-school kindergarten in America. He represented the 
United States Bureau of Education at the International Con- 
gress of Educators at Brussels in 1880. In 1889 be represented 
the United States Bureau of Education at the Paris Exposition, 
and from 1889 to 1906 was United States commissioner of 
education. In 1899 the university of Jena gave him the honorary 
degree of Doctor of Philosophy for his work on Hegel. In 1006 



the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching 
conferred upon him " as the first man to whom such recognition 
for meritorious service is given, the highest retiring allowance 
which our rules will allow, an annual income of $3000." Besides 
being a contributor to the magazines and encyclopedias on 
educational and philosophical subjects, he wrote An Intro- 
duction, to the Study of Philosophy (1889); The Spiritual Sense 
of Dante* s Divina Commedia (1889); Hegel's Logic (1890); 
and Psychologic Foundations of Education (1898); and edited 
Appleton's International Education Series and Webster's Inter- 
national Dictionary. He died on the 5th of November 1909. 

See Henry R. Evans, "A List of the Writings of William Torrey 
Harris" in the Report of the Commissioner of Education for 1907, 
vol. i. (Washington, 1908). 

HARRISBURO, the capital' of Pennsylvania, U.S.A.; and the 
county-seat of Dauphin county, on the E. bank of the Susque- 
hanna river, about 105 m. W. by N. of Philadelphia. Pop. 
(1890), 39,385; (1000), 50,167, of whom 2493 were foreign-born 
and 4107 were negroes; (1910 census) 64,186. It is served by 
the Pennsylvania, the Philadelphia & Reading, the Northern 
Central and the Cumberland Valley railways; and the Pennsyl- 
vania canal gives it water communication with the ocean. The 
river here is a mile wide, and is ordinarily very shallow and 
dotted with islets, but rises from 4 to 6 ft. after a moderate rain; 
it is spanned by several bridges. 

The city lies for the most part on the E. slope of a hill extend- 
ing from the river bank, several feet in height, across the Penn- 
sylvania canal to Paxton Creek. Front Street, along the river, 
is part of a parkway connecting the park system with which the 
city is encircled. Overlooking it are the finest residences, among 
them the governor's -mansion. State Street, 120 ft. in width, 
runs at right angles with Front Street through the business 
centre of the city, being interrupted by the Capitol Park (about 
16 acres). The Capitol, 1 dedicated in 1906, was erected to re- 
place one burned in 1897; it is a fine building, with a dome 
modelled afteT St Peter's at Rome. At the main entrance are 
bronze doors, decorated in relief with scenes from the state's 
history; the floor of the rotunda is of tiles made at Doylestown, 
in the style of the pottery made by early Moravian settlers, and 
illustrating the state's resources; the Senate Chamber and the 
House Chamber have staincd-gtass windows by W. B. van Ingen 
and mural paintings by Edwin A. Abbey, who painted a series, 
" The Development of the Law," for the Supreme Court room 
in the eastern wing and decorated the rotunda. The mural 
decorations of the south corridor, by W. B. van Ingen, portray 
the state's religious sects; those in the north corridor, by John 
W. Alexander, represent the changes in the physical and material 
character of the state; and there is a frieze by Miss Violet 
Oakley, " The Founding of the State of Liberty Spiritual," 
in the governor's reception room. Two heroic groups of 
statuary for the building were designed by George Grey Barnard. 
The state library in the Capitol contains about 150,000 volumes. 
In the same park is also a monument 105 ft. high erected in 

1 For this building the legislature in toot appropriated S4.0o0.ood, 
stipulating that it should be completed before the 1st of January 
1907. It was completed by that time, the net expenditure of the 
building commission being about 13.970,000. Although the legis- 
lature had made no provision for furniture and decoration, the state 
Board of Public Grounds and Buildings (governor, auditor-general 
and treasurer) undertook to complete the furnishing and decoration 
of the building within the stipulated time, and paid out for that 
purpose more than $8,600,000. I n May 1906 a new treasurer entered 
office, who discovered that many items for furniture and decoration 
were charged twice, once at a normal and again at a remarkably high 
figure. In 1907 the legislature appointed a committee to investigate 
the charge of fraud. The committee's decision was that the Board 
of Grounds and Buildings was not authorized to let the decorating 
and furnishing of the state house: that it had illegally authorized 
certain expenditures; and that architect and contractors had made 
fraudulent invokes and certificates. Various indictments were 
found: in the first trial for conspiracy in the making and delivering 
of furniture the contractor and the former auditor-general, state 
treasurer and superintendent of public grounds and buildings were 
convicted and in December 1908 were sentenced to two years* 
imprisonment and fined $500 each: in 1910 a suit was brougb* f ~ 
the recovery of about 15,000.000 from those responsible. 



22 



HARRISMITH— HARRISON, BENJAMIN 



1868 to the memory of the soldiers who fell in the Mexican War; 
it has a column of Maryland marble 76 ft. high, which is sur- 
mounted by an Italian marble statue of Victory, executed in 
Rome. At the base of the monument are muskets used by 
United States soldiers in that war and guns captured at Cerro 
Gordo. In State Street is the Dauphin County Soldiers' monu- 
ment, a shaft 10 ft. sq. at the base and x to ft. high, with a pyra- 
midal top. 

For several years prior to 1002 Harrisburg suffered much from 
impure water, a bad sewerage system, and poorly paved and 
dirty streets. In that year, however, a League for Municipal 
Improvements was formed; in February 1902 a loan of 
$1,000,000 for municipal improvements was voted, landscape 
gardeners and sewage engineers were consulted, and a non- 
partisan mayor was elected, under whom great advances were 
made in street cleaning and street paving, a new filtration plant 
was completed, the river front was beautified and protected 
from flood, sewage was diverted from Paxton Creek, and the 
development of an extensive park system was undertaken. 

Harrisburg's charitable institutions include a city hospital, 
a home for the friendless, a children's industrial home, and 
a state lunatic hospital (1845). The city is the seat of a Roman 
Catholic bishopric. Both coal and iron ore abound in the 
vicinity, and the city has numerous manufacturing establish- 
ments. The value of its factory products in 1005 was 
$17,146,338 (14*3% more than in 1000), the more import- 
ant being those of steel works and rolling mills ($4,528,907), 
blast furnaces, steam railway repair shops, cigar and cigarette 
factories ($1,258,498), foundries and machine shops ($953,617), 
boot and shoe factories ($922,568), flouring and grist mills, 
slaughtering and meat-packing establishments and silk mills. 

Harrisburg was named in honour of John Harris, who, upon 
coming into this region to trade early in the 181 h century, was 
attracted to the site as an easy place at which to ford the Susque- 
hanna, and about 1726 settled here. He was buried in. what is 
now Harris Park, where he erected the first building, a small but, 
within the present limits of Harrisburg. In 1753 his son estab- 
lished a ferry over the river, and the place was called Harris's 
Ferry until 1785, when the younger Harris laid out the town and 
named it Harrisburg. In the same year it was made the county- 
seat of the newly constituted county of Dauphin, and its name was 
changed to Louisburg; but when, in 1791, it was incorporated 
as a borough, the present name was again adopted. In 181 2, 
after an effort begun twenty-five years before, it was made the 
capital of the state; and in i860 it was chartered as a city. In 
the summer of 1827. through the persistent efforts of persons 
most interested in the woollen manufactures of Massachusetts 
and other New England states to secure legislative aid for that 
industry, a convention of about 100 delegates — manufacturers, 
newspaper men and politicians — was held in Harrisburg, and 
the programme adopted by the convention did much to bring 
about the passage of the famous high tariff act of 1828. 

HARRISMITH, a town in the Orange Free State, 60. m. N.W. 
by rail of Ladysmith, Natal, and 240 m. N.E. of Bloemfontein 
via Bethlehem. Pop. (1904) 8300 (including troops 1921). It is 
built on the banks of the Wilge, 5 2 50 ft. above the sea and some 
20 m. W. of the Drakcnsberg. Three miles N. is the Platberg, 
a table-shaped mountain rising 2000 ft. above the town, whence 
an excellent supply of water is derived. The town is well laid 
out and several of the streets are lined with trees. Most of the 
houses are built of white stone quarried in the neighbourhood. 
The Kaffirs, who numbered in 1904 3483, live in a separate 
location. Harrismith has a dry, bracing climate and enjoys a 
high reputation in South Africa as a health resort. It serves 
one of the best-watered and most fertile agricultural and pastoral 
districts of the province, of which it is the chief eastern trading 
centre. Wool and hides are the principal exports. 

Harrismith was founded in 1849, the site first chosen being on 
the Elands river, where the small town of Aberfeldig now is; 
but the advantages of the present site soon became apparent 
and the settlement was removed. The founders were Sir Harry 
Smith (after whom the town is named), then governor of Cape 



Colony, and Major Henry D. Warden, at that time British 
resident at Bloemfontein, whose name is perpetuated in that 
of the principal street. In a cave about t m. from the town are 
well-preserved Bushman paintings. 

HARRISON, BENJAMIN (1833-1001), the twenty-third 
president of the United States, was born at NorthjBend, near 
Cincinnati, Ohio, on the 20th of August 1833. "His great- 
grandfather, Benjamin Harrison of Virginia (c. 1740-1791), was 
a signer of the Declaration of Independence. His grandfather, 
William Henry Harrison (177J-1841), was ninth president of 
the United States. His father, John Scott Harrison (1804-1878), 
represented his district in the national House of Representatives 
in 1853-1857. Benjamin's youth was passed upon the ancestral 
farm, and as opportunity afforded he attended school m the log 
school-house near his home. He was prepared for college by a 
private tutor, studied for two years at the Farmers' College, 
near Cincinnati, and in 1852 graduated from Miami University, 
at that time the leading educational institution in the State of 
Ohio. From his youth he was diligent in his studies and a 
great reader, and during his college life showed a marked talent 
for extemporaneous speaking. He pursued the study of law, 
partly in the office of Bellamy Storer (1798-1875), a leading 
lawyer and judge of Cincinnati, and in 1853 he was admitted 
to the bar. At the age of twenty-one he removed to Indianapolis. 
He bad but one acquaintance in the place, the clerk of the federal 
court, who permitted him to occupy a desk in his office and 
place at the door his sign as a lawyer. Waiting for professional 
business, he was content to act as court crier for two dollars 
and a hah* a day; but he soon gave indications of his talent, and 
his studious habits and attention to his cases rapidly brought 
him clients. Within a few years he took rank among the leading 
members of the profession at a bar which included some of the 
ablest lawyers of the country. His legal career was early inter- 
rupted by the Civil War. His whole heart was enlisted in the 
anti-slavery cause, and during the second year of the war he 
accepted a commission from the governor of the state as second- 
lieutenant and speedily raised a regiment. He became its 
colonel, and as such continued in the Union Army until the dose 
of the war, and on the 23rd of January 1865 was breveted a 
brigadier-general of volunteers for "ability and manifest energy 
and gallantry in command of brigade." He participated with 
his regiment in various engagements during General Don Carlos 
Buell's campaigns in Kentucky and Tennessee in 1862 and 1863; 
took part in General W. T. Sherman's march on Atlanta in 1864 
and in the Nashville* campaign of the same year; and was 
transferred early in 1865 to Sherman's army in its march through 
the Carolinas. As the commander of a brigade he served with 
particular distinction in the battles of Kencsaw Mountain 
(June 29-July 3, 1864), Peach Tree Creek (20th of July 1864) 
and Nashville (i5th-i6th of December 1864). 

Allowing for this interval of military service,- he applied 
himself exclusively for twenty-four years to his legal work. 
The only office he held was that of reporter of the supreme court 
of Indiana for two terms (1860-1862 and 1864-1868), and this 
was strictly in the line of his profession. He was a devoted 
member of the Republican party, but not a politician in the 
strict sense. Once he became a candidate for governor, in 1876, 
but his candidature was a forlorn hope, undertaken from a sense 
of duty after the regular nominee had withdrawn. He took 
a deep interest in the campaign which resulted in the election 
of James A. Garfield as president, and was offered by him a 
place in his cabinet; but this he declined, having been elected 
a member of the United States Senate, in which he took his seat 
on the 4th of March 1881. He was chairman of the committee 
on territories, and took an active part in urging the admission 
as states of North Dakota, South Dakota, Washington, Idaho 
and Montana, which finally came into the Union during his 
presidency. He served also on the committee of military and 
Indian affairs, the committee on foreign relations and others, 
was prominent in the. discussion of matters brought before the 
Senate from these committees, advocated the enlargement of 
the navy and the reform of the civil service, and opposed the 



HARRISON, F.— HARRISON, J. 



pgnatoa veto memgri of President OevelsaHL Having failed to 
secure a re-election to the Senate in 1887, Harmon -waft nominated 
by the Republican party for the presidency in 1888, and defeated 
Graver Cleveland, tbe candidate of the Democratic party, 
receiving 333 electoral votes to Cleveland's 168. Among the 
measures and events distinguishing his term as president were 
the following: Tbe meeting of the Pan-American Congress at 
Washington; the passage of the McKinley Tariff Bill and of the 
Sherman Silver Bill of 1890; the suppressing of the Louisiana 
Lottery; the enlargement of the navy; further advance in 
dvil service reform; the convocation by the United States of an 
international monetary conference; the establishment of 
commercial reciprocity with many countries of America and 
Europe; the peaceful settlement of a controversy with Chile; 
the negotiation of a Hawaiian Annexation Treaty, which, 
however, before its ratification, his successor withdrew from the 
Senate; the settlement of difficulties with Germany concerning 
the Samoan Islands, and tbe adjustment by arbitration with 
Great Britain of the Bering Sea fur-seal question. His adminis- 
tration was marked by a revival of American industries and a 
reduction of the public debt, and at its conclusion the country 
was left in a condition of prosperity and on friendly terms with 
foreign nations. He was nominated by hfa party in 189a for 
re-election, but was defeated by Cleveland, this result beingdue, 
at least in part, to tbe labour strikes which occurred during tbe 
presidential campaign and arrayed the labour unions against the 
tariff party. 

After leaving public fife be resumed the practice of the law, 
and in 1808 was retained by the government of Venezuela as its 
leading counsel in the arbitration of its boundary dispute with 
Great Britain. In this capacity he appeared before the inter- 
national tribunal of arbitration at Paris in 1809, worthily main- 
taining the reputation of the American bar. After the Spanish- 
American War he strongly disapproved of the colonial policy 
of his party, which, however, he continued to support. He 
occupied a portion of his leisure in writing a book, entitled 
This Country of Ours (1897), treating of the organization and 
administration of the government of the United States, and a 
collection of essays by him was published posthumously, in 
1901, under the title Views of an Ex-President. He died at 
Indianapolis on the 13th of March 1001 . Harrison's distinguish- 
ing trait of character, to which bis success is to be most largely 
attributed, was bis thoroughness. He was somewhat reserved 
in manner, and this led to the charge in political circles that he 
was cold and unsympathetic; but no one gathered around him 
more devoted and loyal friends, and his dignified bearing in and 
out of office commanded the hearty respect of his countrymen. 

President Harrison was twice married; in 1853 to Miss 
Caroline Lavinia Scott, by whom be had a son and a daughter, 
and in 1806 to Mrs Mary Scott Lord Dimmock, by whom he had 
a daughter. 

A M campaign ** biography was published by Lew Wallace (Phila- 
delphia, 1888), and a sketch of his life may be found in Presidents 
of tiu United States (New York, 1894), edited by lames Grant 
Wusoo. <J. W. Fo.) 

HARRISON, FREDERIC (1831- ), English jurist and 
historian, was born in London on the 18th of October 1831. 
Members of his family (originally Leicestershire yeomen) had 
been lessees of Sutton Place, Guildford, of which he wrote an 
interesting account (Annals of on Old Manor Bouse, 1893). He 
was educated at King's College school and at Wadham College, 
Oxford, where, after taking a first -class in Litcrae Humaniores in 
1853, he became fellow and tutor. He was called to the bar in 
1858, and, in addition to his practice in equity cases, soon began 
to distinguish himself as an effective contributor to the higher- 
class reviews. Two articles in the Westminster Review, one on 
the Italian question, which procured him the special thanks of 
Cavour, the other on Essays and Reviews, which had the probably 
undesigned effect of stimulating thcattack on the book, attracted 
especial notice. A few years later Mr Harrison worked at the 
codification of the law with Lord Westbury, of whom he con- 
tributed an interesting notice to Nash's biography of the chan~ 



43 

cellor. His special interest in legislation for the working classes 
led him to be placed upon the Trades Union Commission of 1867- 
1869; be was secretary to the commission for the digest of the 
law, 1869*1870; and was from 1877 to 1889 professor of juris* 
prudence and international law under the council of legal educa- 
tion. A follower of tbe positive philosophy, but in conflict with 
Richard Congreve fo.v.) as to details, he led the Positiviats who 
split off and founded Newton Hall in 1881, and he was president 
of the English Poaittvist Committee from 1880 to 1005; he was 
also editor and part author of the Positivist New Calendar of 
Great Men ( 1892) , and wrote much on Corate and Positivism. Of 
his separate publications, the most important are his lives of 
Cromwell (1888), William the Silent, (1897), Ruskin (190a), and 
Chatham (1005); his Meaning of History (1862; enlarged 1894) 
and Bysontine History in the Early Middle Ages (1900); and 
his essays on Early Victorian Literature (1896) and The Choice 
of Books (1886) are remarkable alike for generous admiration 
and good sense. In 1004 he published a "romantic mono- 
graph " of the roth century, Tkeopkono, and in 1006 a verse 
tragedy, Nicephorus. An advanced and vehement Radical in 
politics and Progressive in municipal affairs, Mr Harrison in 1886 
stood unsuccessfully for parliament against Sir John Lubbock 
for London University. In 1889 he was elected an alderman 
of the London County Council, but resigned in 1893. In 1870 
he married Ethel Berta, daughter of Mr William Harrison, by 
whom he had four sons. George Gissing, the novelist, was at 
one time their tutor; and in 1905 Mr Harrison wrote a preface 
to Gisstng's Veranilda (see also Mr Austin Harrison's article on 
Gissing in the Nineteenth Century, September 1906). As a relig- 
ious teacher, literary critic, historian and jurist, Mr Harrison 
took a prominent part in the life of his time, and his writings, 
though often violently controversial on political and social 
subjects, and in their judgment and historical perspective 
characterised by a modern Radical point of view, are those of an 
accomplished scholar, and of one whose wide knowledge of 
literature was combined with independence of thought and 
admirable vigour of style. In 1007 he published The Creed of a 
Layman, Apologia pro fide nco, in explanation of his religious 
position. 

HARRISON, JOHN (1693-1776), English borologist, was the 
son of a carpenter, and was born at Faulby, near Pontefract 
in Yorkshire, in the year 1693. Thence his father and family 
removed in 1700 to Barrow in Lincolnshire. Young Harrison 
at first learned his father's trade, and worked at it for several 
years, at the same time occasionally making a little money by 
land-measuring and surveying. The bent of h:& mind, however, 
was towards mechanical pursuits. In 1 7 1 5 he made a clock wit n 
wooden wheels, which is in the patent museum at South 
Kensington, and in 1726 he devised his ingenious "gridiron 
pendulum," which maintains its length unaltered in spite of 
variations of temperature (see Clock). Another invention of 
his was a recoil clock escapement in which friction was reduced 
to a minimum, and he was the first to employ the commonly 
used and effective form of " going ratchet," which is a spring 
arrangement for keeping the timepiece going at its usual rate 
during the interval of being wound up. 

In Harrison's time the British government had become fully 
alive to the necessity of determining more accurately the longi- 
tude atsea. For this purpose they passed an act in 1713 offering 
rewards of £10,000, £15,000 and £20,000 to any who should 
construct chronometers that would determine the longitude 
within 60, 40 and 30 m. respectively. Harrison applied himself 
vigorously to tbe task, and in 1735 went to the Board of Longi- 
tude with a watch which he also showed to Edmund Hafley, 
George Graham and others. Through their influence be was 
allowed to proceed in a king's ship to Lisbon to test it; and the 
result was so satisfactory that he was paid £soo to carry out 
further improvements. Harrison worked at the subject with the 
utmost perseverance, and, after making several watches, went up 
to London in 1761 with one which he considered almost perfect 
His son William was sent on a voyage to Jamaica to test it ; and. 
on his return to Portsmouth, in 2762, it was found to have lost 



HARRISON, T.— HARRISON, T. A. 



2+ 

only x minute 54} seconds. This was surprisingly accurate, as it 
determined the longitude within 18 m., and Harrison claimed the 
full reward of £20,000; but though from time to time he received 
sums on account, it was not till 1773 that he was paid in full. 
In these watches compensation for changes of temperature was 
applied for the first time by means of a " compensation-curb," 
designed to alter the effective length of the balance-spring in 
proportion to the expansion or contraction caused by variations 
of temperature. Harrison died in London on the 24th of March 
1776. His want of early education was felt by him greatly 
throughout life. He was unfortunately never able to express his 
ideas clearly in writing, although in conversation he could give 
a very precise and exact account of his many intricate mechanical 
contrivances. 

Among fiis writings were a Description concerning such Mechanism 
as will afford a Nice or True Mensuration of Time (1775), and The 
Principles of Mr Harrison's Timekeeper t published by order of the 
Commissioners of Longitude (1767). 

HARRISON. THOMAS (1606-1660), English parliamentarian, 
a native of Newcastle-under-Lyme in Staffordshire, the son of a 
butcher and mayor of that town, was baptized in 1606. He was 
placed with an attorney of Clifford's Inn, but at the beginning of 
the war in 1642 he enlisted in Essex's lifeguards, became major 
in Fleetwood's regiment of horse under the earl of Manchester, 
was present at Marston Moor, at Naseby, Langport and at the 
taking of Winchester and Basing, as well as at the siege of Oxford. 
At Basing Harrison was accused of having killed a prisoner in cold 
blood. In 1646 he was returned to parliament for Wendover, 
and served in Ireland in 1647 under Lord Lisle, returning to 
England in May, when he took the side of the army in the dispute 
with the parliament and obtained from Fairfax a regiment of 
horse. In November he opposed the negotiations with the king, 
whom he styled " a man of blood " to be called to account, 
and he declaimed against the House of Lords. At the surprise of 
Lambert's quarters at Appleby on the i8ih of July 1648, in the 
second civil war, he distinguished himself by his extraordinary 
daring and was severely wounded. He showed a special zeal in 
bringing about the trial of the king. Charles was entrusted to 
his care on being brought up from Hurst Castle to London, and 
believed that Harrison intended his assassination, but was at 
once favourably impressed by his bearing and reassured by his 
disclaiming any such design. Harrison was assiduous in his 
attendance at the trial, and signed the death-warrant with the 
fullest conviction that it was his duty. He took part in sup- 
pressing the royalist rising in the midlands in May 1649, and in 
July was appointed to the chief command in South Wales, where 
he is said to have exercised his powers with exceptional severity. 
On the 20th of February 1 651 he became a member of the council 
of state, and during Cromwell's absence in Scotland held the 
supreme military command in England. He failed in stopping 
the march of the royalists into England at Knutsford on the 
16th of August 1651, but after the battle of Worcester he ren- 
dered great service in pursuing and capturing the fugitives. 
Later he pressed on Cromwell the necessity of dismissing the 
Long Parliament, and it was he who at Cromwell's bidding, on 
the 20th of April 1653, laid hands on Speaker Lcnihall and com- 
pelled him to vacate the chair. He was president of the council 
of thirteen which now exercised authority, and his idea of govern- 
ment appears to have been an assembly nominated by the congre- 
gations, on a strictly religious basis, such as Barebone's Parlia- 
ment which now assembled, of which he was a member and a 
ruling spirit. Harrison belonged to the faction of Fifth Monarchy 
men, whose political ideals were entirely destroyed by Cromwell's 
assumption of the protectorate. He went immediately into 
violent opposition, was deprived of his commission on the 22nd of 
December 1653, and on the 3rd of February 1654 was ordered to 
confine himself to his father's house in Staffordshire. Suspected 
of complicity in the plots of the anabaptists, he was imprisoned 
for a short time in September, and on that occasion was sent 
for by Cromwell, who endeavoured in a friendly manner to per- 
suade him to desist. He, however, incurred the suspicions of the 
administration afresh, and on the 15th of February 1655 he was 



imprisoned in Carishrooke Castle, being liberated in March 1656, 
when he took up his residence at Highgate with his family, la 
April 1657 he was arrested for supposed complicity in Venner'a 
conspiracy, and again once more in February 1658, when be was 
imprisoned in the Tower. At the Restoration, Harrison, who 
was excepted from the Act of Indemnity, refused to take any 
steps to save bis life, to give any undertaking not to conspire 
against the government or to flee. " Being so clear in the thing," 
he declared, " 1 durst not turn my back nor step a foot out of 
the way by reason I had been engaged in the service of so glorious 
and great a Cod." He was arrested in Staffordshire in M ay 1 660 
and brought to trial on the nth of October. He made a manly 
and straightforward defence, pleading the authority of parlia- 
ment and adding, " May be I might be a little mistaken, but I 
did it all according to the best of my understanding, desiring to 
make the revealed will of God in His holy scriptures a guide to 
me." At his execution, which took place at Charing Cross on the 
13th of October 1660, he behaved with great fortitude. 

Richard Baxter, who was acquainted with him, describes 
Harrison as "a man of excellent natural parts for affection 
and oratory, but not well seen in the principles of his religion; 
of a sanguine complexion, naturally of such a vivacity, hilarity 
and alacrity as another man hath when he hath drunken a cup 
too much, but naturally also so far from humble thoughts of 
himself that it was his ruin." Cromwell also complained of bis 
excessive eagerness. " Harrison is an honest man and aims at 
good things, yet from the impatience of his spirit will not wait 
the Lord's leisure but hurries me on to that which he and all 
honest men will have cause to repent." Harrison was an 
eloquent and fluent expounder of the scriptures, and his " rap- 
tures" on the field of victory are recorded by Baxter. He was 
of the chief of those " fiery spirits " whose ardent and emotional 
religion inspired their political action, and who did wonders 
during the period of struggle and combat, but who later, in the 
more sober and difficult sphere of constructive statesmanship, 
showed themselves perfectly incapable. 

Harrison married about 1648 Kathcrine, daughter and heiress 
of Ralph Harrison of Highgate in Middlesex, by whom he had 
several children, all of whom, however, appear to have died in 
infancy. 

See the article on Harrison bv C. H. Firth in the Diet, of Nat. 
Biog.\ Life of Harrison by C. H. Simple inson (1905); Notes and 
Queries, 9 scries, xi. 211. 

HARRISON, THOMAS ALEXANDER (1853- ), American 
artist, was born in Philadelphia on the 17th of January 1853. 
He was a pupil of the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts and 
of the £cole des Beaux -Arts, Paris, whither be went in 1878, 
having previously been with a United States government survey 
expedition on the Pacific coast. Chafing under the restraints of 
the schools, he went into Brittany, and at Pont Aven and Con- 
car r.cau turned his attention to marine painting and landscape. 
In 1882 he sent a figure-piece to the Salon, a fisher boy on the 
beach, which he called " Chateaux en Espagne." This attracted 
attention, and in 1885 he received an honourable mention, the 
first of many awards conferred upon him, including the Temple 
gold medal (Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, Philadelphia, 
1887), first medal, Paris Exhibition (1889), and medals in Munich, 
Brussels, Ghent, Vienna and elsewhere. He became a member 
of the Legion of Honour and ojficier of Public Instruction, 
Paris; a member of the Soci£t6 Nationale des Beaux- Arts, 
Paris; of the Royal Institute of Painters in Oil Colours, London; 
of the Secession societies of Munich, Vienna and Berlin; of the 
National Academy of Design, the Society of American Artists, 
New York, and other art bodies. In the Salon of 1885 he had 
a large canvas of several nude women, called " In A ready," a 
remarkable study of flesh tones in light and shade which had a 
strong influence on the younger men of the day. But his reputa- 
tion rests rather on his marine pictures, long waves rolling in on 
the beach, and great stretches of open sea under poetic con- 
ditions of light and colour. 

His brother, Birce Harrison (1854- ), also a painter, 
particularly successful in snow scenes, was a pupil of the £colc 



HARRISON, W.— HARRISON, W. H. 



*5 



des Beaux Arts, Paris, under Cabaoel and Carolus Duran; his 
" November " (honourable mention, 1882) was purchased by 
the French government. Another brother, Butler Harrison 
(d. 1886), was a figure painter. 

HARRISON. WILLIAM (i$j4-i59j). English topographer and 
antiquary, was born in London on the 18th of April 1534. He 
was educated, according to his own account, at St Paul's school 
and at Westminster under Alexander NowelL In 1551 he was 
at Cambridge, but he took his B.A. degree from Christ Church, 
Oxford, in 1560. He was inducted early in 1550 to the rectory 
of Radwinter, Essex, on the presentation of Sir William Brooke, 
Lord Cob ham, to whom he had formerly acted as chaplain; and 
from 1 57 1 to 1581 he held from another patron, Francis de la 
Wood, the living of Wimbish in the same count/. He became 
canon of Windsor in 1.586, and his death and burial are noted in 
the chapter book of St George's chapel on the 24th of April 1593. 

His famous and amusing Description 0/ England was under- 
taken for the queen's printer, Reginald Wolfe, who designed the 
publication of " an univcrsall cosmographie of the whole world 
. . . with particular histories of every knowne nation." After 
Wolfe's death in 1 $76 this comprehensive plan was reduced to 
descriptions and histories of England, Scotland and Ireland. 
The historical section was to be supplied by Raphael Holinshed, 
the topographical by Harrison. The work was eventually pub- 
lished as The Chronicles 0/ England, Scotland and Ireland . . . 
by Raphael Holinshed and others, and was printed in two black- 
letter folio volumes in 1577. Harrison's Description 0/ England, 
humbly described as his " foulc frizeled treatise," and dedicated 
to his patron Cobham, is an invaluable survey of the condition of 
England under Elizabeth, in all its political, religious and social 
aspects. Harrison is a minute and careful observer of men and 
things, and his descriptions are enlivened with many examples 
of a lively and caustic humour which makes the book excellent 
reading. In spite of his Puritan prejudices, which lead him to 
regret that the churches had not been cleared of their " pictures 
in glass " (" by reason of the extreme cost thereof "), and to 
exhaust his wit on the effeminate Italian fashions of the younger 
generation, be had an eye for beauty and is loud in his praise of 
such architectural gems as Henry VII. 's chapel at Westminster. 
He is properly contemptuous of the snobbery that was even then 
characteristic of English society, but his account of " how 
gentlemen are made in England " must be read in full to be 
appreciated. He is especially instructive on the condition and 
services of the Church immediately after the Reformation; 
notably in the fact that, though an ardent Protestant, he is quite 
unconscious of any breach of continuity in the life and organiza- 
tion of the Church of England. 

Harrison also contributed the translation from Scots into 
English of Bellenden's version of Hector Boece's Latin Descrip- 
tion of Scotland. His other works include a " Chronologic," 
giving an account of events from the creation to the year 1593, 
wjuch is of some" value for" the period covered by the writer's 
lifetime. This, with an elaborate treatise on weights and 
measures, remains in MS. in the diocesan library of Londonderry. 

For the later editions of the Chronicles of England ... see 
Holinshed; The second and third books of Harrison's Description 
were edited by Or F. J. Furnivall for the New Shakspcre Society, 
with extracts from his " Chronologic " and from other contemporary 
writers, as Shckspert't England (2 vols., 1877-1878). 

.' HARRISON. WILLIAM HENRY (1773-1841). ninth president 
of the United Slates, was born at Berkeley, Charles City county, 
Virginia, on the 9th of February 1773, the third son of Benjamin 
Harrison (c. i74<>-«790. His father was long prominent in 
Virginia politics, and became a member of the Virginia House 
of Burgesses in 1764, opposing Patrick Henry's Stamp Act 
resolutions in the following year; he was a member of the 
Continental Congress in 1774-1 77 7. signing the Declaration of 
Independence and serving for a time as president of the Board 
of War; speaker of the Virginia House of Delegates in 1777- 
1782; governor of Virginia in 1781-1784; and in 1788 as a 
member of the Virginia Convention he actively opposed the 
ratification of the Federal Constitution by his state. William 



Henry Harrison received a classical education at Hampden* 
Sidney College, where be was a student in 1787-1700, and began 
a medical course in Philadelphia, but the death of his father 
caused him to discontinue his studies, and in November 1791 he 
entered the army as ensign in the Tenth Regiment at Fort 
Washington, Cincinnati. In the following year he became a 
lieutenant, and subsequently acted as aide-de-camp to General 
Anthony Wayne in the campaign which ended in the battle of 
Fallen Timbers on the 10th of August 1 704. He was promoted to 
a captaincy in 1 707 and for a brief period served as commander of 
Fort Washington, but resigned from the army in June 1798. 
Soon afterwards he succeeded Winthrop Sargent as secretary of 
the North-west Territory. In 1709 he was chosen by the Jeffer- 
sonian party of this territory as the delegate of the territory in 
Congress. While serving in thb capacity he devised a plan for 
disposing 61 the public lands upon favourable terms to actual 
settlers, and also assisted in the division of the North-west 
Territory. It was his ambition to become governor of the more 
populous eastern portion, which retained the original name, but 
instead, in January 1800, President John Adams appointed him 
governor o( the newly created Indiana Territory, which com- 
prised until 1809 a much larger area than the present state of 
the same name. (See Indiana: Hislory.y He was not sworn 
into office until the loth of January 1801, and was governor 
until September 1812. Among the' legislative measures of his 
administration may be menliooed the. attempted modification 
of the slavery clause of the ordinance of 1787 by means of an 
indenture law— a policy which Harrison favoured; more 
effective land laws; and legislation for the more equitable 
treatment of the Indians and for preventing the sale of liquor to 
them. In 1803 Harrison also became a special commissioner to 
treat with the Indians " on the subject of boundary or lands," 
and as such negotiated various treaties— at Fort Wayne (1803 
and 1809), Vincennes (1804 and 1809) and Grouseland (1805)— 
by which the southern part of the present state of Indiana and 
portions of the present states of Illinois, Wisconsin and Missouri 
were opened to settlement. For a few months after the division 
in 1804 of the Louisiana Purchase into the Orleans Territory 
and the Louisiana Territory he also acted as governor of the 
Louisiana Territory— all of the Louisiana Purchase N. of the 
thirty-third parallel, his jurisdiction then being the greatest 
in extent ever exercised by a territorial official in the United 
States. 

The Indian cessions of 1809, along the Wabash river, aroused 
the hostility of Tecumseh (q.v.) and his brother, familiarly known 
as " The Prophet," who were attempting to combine the tribes 
between the Ohio and the Great Lakes in opposition to the 
encroachment of the whites. Several fruitless conferences 
between the governor and the Indian chiefs, who were believed 
to be encouraged by the British, resulted in Harrison's advance 
with a force of militia and regulars to the Tippecanoe river,' 
where (near the present Lafayette, Ind.) on the 7th of November 
181 1 he won over the Indians a victory which established his' 
military reputation and was largely responsible for his sub- 
sequent nomination and election to the presidency of the United 
States. From one point of view the battle of Tippecanoe may 
be regarded as the opening skirmish of the war of 181 2. When' 
in the summer of 181 2 open hostilities with Great Britain began,' 
Harrison was appointed by Governor Charles Scott of Kentucky 
major-general in the militia of that state. A few weeks later 
(22nd August 181 2) he was made brigadier-general in the regular 
U.S. army, and soon afterwards was put in command of all the 
troops in the north-west, and on the and of March 18 13 be was 
promoted to the rank of major-general. General James Win- 
chester, whom Harrison had ordered to prepare to cross Lake 
Erie on the ice and surprise Fort Maiden, turned back to rescue 
the threatened American settlement at Frenchlown (now 
Monroe), on the Raisin river, and there on the 22nd of January 
1813 was forced to surrender to Colonel Henry A. Proctor. 
Harrison's offensive operations being thus checked, he accom- 
plished nothing that summer except to hold in check Proctor, who 
I (May 1-5) besieged him at Fort Meigs, the American advanced 



26 



HARRISON 



post after the disaster of the river Raisin. After Lieutenant 
O. H. Perry's naval victory on the 10th of September i8ij, 
Harrison no longer had to remain on the defensive; he advanced 
to Detroit, re-occupied the territory surrendered by General 
William Hull, and on the 5th of October administered a crushing 
defeat to Proctor at the battle of the Thames. 

In 1814 Harrison received no active assignments to service, 
and on this account and because the secretary of war (John 
Armstrong) issued an order to one of Harrison's subordinates 
without consulting him, he resigned his commission. Armstrong 
accepted the resignation without consulting President Madison, 
but the president later utilized Harrison in negotiating with the 
north- western Indians, the greater part of whom agreed (22nd 
July 1814) to a second treaty of Greenville, by which they were 
to become active allies of the United States, should hostilities 
with Great Britain continue. This treaty publicly marked an 
American policy of alliance with these Indians and caused the 
British peace negotiators at Ghent to abandon them. In the 
following year Harrison held another conference at Detroit with 
these tribes in order to settle their future territorial relations 
with the United States. 

From 1816 to 1819 Harrison was a representative in Congress, 
and as such worked in behalf of more liberal pension laws and a 
better militia organization, including a system of general military 
education, of improvements in the navigation of the Ohio, and of 
relief for purchasers of public lands, and for the strict construc- 
tion of the power of Congress over the Territories, particularly 
in regard to slavery. In accordance with this view in 1819 he 
voted against Tallmadge's amendment (restricting the extension 
of slavery) to the enabling act for the admission of Missouri. 
He also delivered forcible speeches upon the death of Kosciusko 
and upon General Andrew Jackson's course in the Floridas, 
favouring a partial censure of the latter. 

Harrison was a member of the Ohio senate in 1810-1821, and 
was an unsuccessful candidate for the National House of Repre- 
sentatives in 1822, when his Missouri vote helped to cause his 
defeat; he was a presidential elector in 1824, supporting Henry 
Clay, and from 1825 to 1828 was a member of the United States 
Senate. In 1828 after unsuccessful efforts to secure for him the 
command of the army, upon the death of Major-General Jacob 
Brown, and the nomination for the vice-president, on the ticket 
with John Quincy Adams, his friends succeeded in getting 
Harrison appointed as the first minister of the United Slates to 
Colombia. He became, however, an early sacrifice to Jackson's 
spoils system, being recalled within less than a year, but not 
until he had involved himself in some awkward diplomatic com- 
plications with Bolivar's autocratic government.* 

For some years after his return from Colombia he lived in 
retirement at North Bend, Ohio. He was occasionally " men- 
tioned " for governor, senator or representative, by the anti- 
Jackson forces, and delivered a few addresses on agricultural or 
political topics. Later he became clerk of the court of common 
pleas of Hamilton county — a lucrative position that was then 
most acceptable to him. Early in 1835 Harrison began to be 
mentioned as a suitable presidential candidate, and later in the 
year he was nominated for the presidency at large public meet- 
ings in Pennsylvania, New York and Maryland. In the election 
of the following year he attracted a large part of the Whig and 
Anti-Masonic vote of the Middle and Western states and led 
among the candidates opposing Van Buren, but received only 
73 electoral votes while Van Buren received 1 70. His unexpected 
strength, due largely to his clear, if non-committal, political 
record, rendered him the most " available " candidate for the 
Whig party for the campaign of 1840, and he was nominated by 
the Whig convention at Harrisburg, Pa., in December 1839, his 
most formidable opponent being Henry Clay, who, though 
generally regarded as the real leader of his party, was less 
" available " because as a mason he would alienate former 
members of the old Anti-Masonic party, and as an advocate of a 
protective tariff would repel many Southern voters. The conven- 
tion adjourned without adopting any " platform " of principles, 
the party shrewdly deciding to make its campaign merely on the 



issue of whether the Van Buren administration should be con- 
tinued in power and thus to take full advantage of the popular 
discontent with the administration, to which was attributed the 
responsibility for the panic of 1837 and the subsequent business 
depression. Largely to attract the votes of Democratic mal- 
contents the Whig convention nominated for the vice -presidency 
John Tyler, who had previously been identified with the Demo- 
cratic party. The campaign was marked by the extraordinary 
enthusiasm exhibited by the Whigs, and by their skill in attacking 
Van Buren without binding themselves to any definite policy. 
Because of his fame as a frontier hero, of the circumstance that 
a part of his home at North Bend, Ohio, had formerly been a log 
cabin, and oHhe story that cider, not wine, was served on his 
table, Harrison was derisively called by his opponents the " log 
cabin and hard cider " candidate, the term was eagerly accepted 
by tfie Whigs, in whose processions miniature log cabins were 
carried and at whose meetings hard cider was served, and 
the campaign itself has become known in history as the "log 
cabin and hard cider campaign." Harrison's canvass was con- 
spicuous for the immense Whig processions and mass meetings, 
the numerous "stump " speeches (Harrison himself addressing 
meetings at Dayton, Chillicothe, Columbus and other places), 
and the use of campaign songs, of party insignia, and of campaign 
cries (such as " Tippecanoe and Tyler too "); and in the election 
he won by an overwhelming majority of 234 electoral voles to 
60 cast for Van Buren. 

President Harrison was inaugurated on the 4th of March 1841. 
He chose for his cabinet Daniel Webster as secretary of state, 
Thomas Ewingas secretary of the treasury, John Bell as secretary 
of war, George E. Badger as secretary of the navy, Francis 
Granger as postmaster-general, and John J. Crhtenden as 
attorney-general. He survived his inauguration only one month, 
dying on the 4th of April 1841, and being succeeded by the vice* 
president, John Tyler. The immediate cause of his death was 
an attack of pneumonia, but the disease was aggravated by the 
excitement attending his sudden change in circumstances and 
the incessant demands of office seekers. After temporary 
interment at Washington, his body was removed to the tomb at 
North Bend, Ohio, where it now lies. A few of Harrison's public 
addresses survive, the most notable being A Discourse on the 
Aborigines of the Ohio. It has been said of him: " He was not a 
great man, but he had lived in a great time, and he had been a 
leader in great things." He was the first territorial delegate in 
the Congress of the United States and was the author of the first 
step in the development of the country's later homestead policy; 
the first presidential candidate to be selected upon the ground 
of " expediency " alone; and the first president to die In office. 
In 1795 he married Anna Symmes (1775-1864), daughter of John 
Cleves Symmes. Their grandson, Benjamin Harrison, was the 
twenty-third president of the United States. 

ncinnatithe 
H of Major- 

Gt lefence and 

pc rnt " lives " 

th jiographies, 

in leb Cushing 

(1 In tied States 

(f« tit study of 

H ta Historical 

St •espondence 

ar. w Historical 

an 

HARRISON, a town of Hudson county, New Jersey, U.S.A., 
on the Passaic river, opposite Newark (with which it is connected 
by bridges and electric railways), and 7 m. W. of Jersey City. 
Pop. (1890) 8338; (1900) 10,596, of whom 3633 were foreign- 
born; '(1910 census) 14498. It Is served by the Pennsylvania, 
the Erie, and the Delaware, Lackawanna & Western railways. 
Harrison was chosen as the eastern terminal of the Pennsylvania 
railroad for steam locomotive service, transportation thence 
to New York being by electric power through the railway's 
Hudson river tunnels. The" town has an extensive river-front, 
along which are many of its manufactories; among their 
products axe stcam-puraps, sted, iron, machinery, roller bearings, 



HARRODSBURG— HARROW 



»7 



brass tubing, iron and brats castings, marine engines, hoisting 
engines, metal novelties, dry batteries, electric lamps, concrete 
blocks, cotton thread, wire cloth, leather, trunks, beer, barrels, 
lumber, inks and cutlery. The factory product in 1905 was 
valued at $8408,924. The town is governed by a mayor and a 
common council. Harrison was settled toward the close of the 
17th century, and for many years constituted the S. portion of 
the township of Lodi. In 1840, however, it was set of! from 
Lodi and named in honour of President William Henry Harrison, 
and in 1873 it was incorporated. Harrison originally included 
what is now the town of Kearny (9.9.). 

HARRODSBURG, a city and the county-scat of Mercer 
county, Kentucky, U.S.A., 32 m. S. of Frankfort, on the Southern 
railway. Pop. (1800) 3230; (1000) 2876, of whom 11 so were 
negroes; (1010 U.S. census) 3147. On account of its sulphur 
springs Harrodsburg became early in the 19th century a fashion- 
able resort, and continues to attract a considerable number of 
visitors. The city is the scat of Harrodsburg Academy, Beau- 
mont College for women (1894; founded as Daughters' College 
in 1836); and Wayman College (African M.E.) for negroes. 
Among its manufactures arc flour, whisky, dressed lumber and 
ice. About 7 m. £. of Harrodsburg is Pleasant Hill, or Union 
Village, a summer resort and the home, since early in the 19th 
century, of a Shaker community. Harrodsburg was founded on 
the 16th of June 1774 by James Harrod (1746-1793) *"d » 
few followers, and is the oldest permanent settlement in the 
state. It was incorporated in 1875. Harrodsburg was formerly 
the scat of Bacon College (sec Lexington, Kentucky). 

HARROGATE, a municipal borough and walcring-place in 
the Ripon parliamentary division of the West Riding of York- 
shire, England, 203 m. N. by W. from London, on the North- 
Eastern railway. Pop. (1891) 16,316; (1901) 28,423. It is 
indebted for its rise and importance to its medicinal springs, 
and is the principal inland watering-place in the north of England. 
It consists of two scattered townships, Low Harrogate and High 
Harrogate, which have gradually been connected by a continuous 
range of handsome houses and villas. A common called the 
Stray, of 200 acres, secured by act of parliament from ever being 
built upon, stretches in front of the main line of houses, and on 
this account Harrogate, notwithstanding its rapid increase, has 
retained much of its rural charm. As regards climate a choice 
is offered between the more bracing atmosphere of High Harro- 
gate and the sheltered and warm climate of the low town. The 
waters are chalybeate, sulphureous and saline, and some of the 
springs possess all these qualities to a greater or less extent. 
The principal chalybeate springs arc the Tcwitt well, called by 
Dr Bright, who wrote the first account of it. the " English Spa," 
discovered by Captain William Slingsby of Bilton Hall near the 
close of the i6th century; the Royal Chalybeate Spa, more 
commonly known as John's Well, discovered in 1631 by Dr 
Stanhope of York; Muspratt's chalybeate or chloride of iron 
spring discovered in 1819. but first properly analysed by Dr 
Sheridan Muspratt in 1865; and the Starbeck springs midway 
between High Harrogate and Knaresborough. The principal 
sulphur springs are the old sulphur well in the centre of Low 
Harrogate, discovered about the year 1656; the Montpellicr 
springs, the principal well of which was discovered in 1822, 
situated in the grounds of the Crown Hotel and surmounted by 
a handsome building in the Chinese style, containing pump-room, 
baths and reading-room; and the Harlow Car springs, situated 
in a wooded glen about a mile west from Low Harrogate. Near 
Harlow Car is Harlow observatory, a square tower 100 ft. in 
height, standing on elevated ground and commanding a very 
extensive view. A saline spring situated in Low Harrogate was 
discovered in 1783. Some eighty springs in all have been dis- 
covered. The principal bath establishments are the Victoria 
Baths (1871) and the Royal Baths (1897) There are also a 
handsome kursaal (1903). a grand opera house, numerous modem 
churches, and several hospitals and benevolent institutions, 
including the Royal Bath hospital The corporation owns the 
Stray, and also the Spa concert rooms and grounds, Harlow 
Moor, Crescent Gardens. Royal Bath gardens and other large 



open spaces, as well as Royal Baths, Victoria Baths and Starbeck 
Baths. The mineral springs are vested in the corporation. The 
high-lying moorland of the surrounding district is diversified 
by picturesque dales; and Harrogate is not far from many 
towns and sites of great interest, such as Ripon, Knaresborough 
and Fountains Abbey. The town was incorporated in 1884, 
and the corporation consists of a mayor, 8 aldermen and 24 
councillors. Area, 3276 acres. 

HARROW, 1 an agricultural implement used for (1) levelling 
ridges left by the plough and preparing a smooth surface for 
the reception of seeds; (2) covering in seeds after sowing; (3) 
tearing up and gathering weeds; (4) disintegrating and levelling 
the soil of meadows and pastures; (5) forming a surface tilth 
by pulverizing the top soil and so conserving moisture. 

The harrow rivals the plough in antiquity. In its simplest 
form it consists of the boughs of trees interlaced into a wooden 
frame, and this form survives in the " bush-harrow." Another 
old type, found in the middle ages and still in use, consists of a 
wooden framework in which iron pegs or " tines " are set. This 
is now generally superseded by the '* zig-zag " harrow patented 
by Armstrong in 1839, built of iron bars in which the tines are so 
arranged that each follows its own track and has a separate line 
of action. This harrow is usually made in two or three sections 




Fig. 1.— Jointed Zig-zag Harrow. (Ransomes, Sims St Jcffcries, Ltd.) 

which fold over one another and are thus easily portable, the 
arrangement at the same time giving a flexibility on uneven 
ground. Additional flexibility may be imparted to the imple- 
ment by jointing the stays of the frame which are in the line of 
draught. The liability that the tines may snap off is the chief 
weakness of this type, and improvements have consisted chiefly 
in alterations in their shape and the method of fixing them to the 
frame. 

- The other type of harrow most used is the chain harrow, con- 
sisting of a number of square-link chains connected by cross links 
and attached to a draught-bar, the whole being kept expanded 
by stretchers and trailing weights. It is used for levelling and 
spreading manure over grass-land, from which it at the same 
time tears up moss and coarse herbage. Mention may also be 
made of the drag-harrow, a heavy implement with long tines, 
approximating closely to the cultivator, aud of the Norwegian 
harrow with its revolving rows of spikes. 

A few variations and developments of the ordinary harrow require 
notice. In the adjustable harrow (fig. 2) the teeth are secured to 
bars pivoted at their end* in the side bars of the frame, and provided 
with crank arms connected to a common Knk bar. which may be 
moved horizontally by means of a lever for the purpose of adjusting 



1 In Mid. Eng karve; the O. Eng appears to have been hearge-, the 
word is cognate with the Dutch hark, Swcd. harke, Ccr. Harke, rake, 
and with Danish harv, and Swed harf, harrow, but the ultimate 
origin is unknown: the Fr. htm is a different word, cf. Hfijutss. 



28 



HARROWBY— HARROWING OF HELL 



the angle which the teeth make with the ground, and thus convert 
the machine from a pulverizer to a smooching harrow. The small 
figure illustrates a spring connexion between the adjusting lever and 
its locking bar, which allows the teeth to yield upon striking an 
obstruction. As the briskness of the operation adds to its effective- 



Fic. *.— Adjustable Harrow. 

ness, the harrow is often made with a seat from which the operator 
can hasten the. team without fatiguing himself. 

Fig. 3 illustrates a spring-tooth harrow. In this harrow the in- 
dependent frames are carried upon wheels, and a scat for the operator 
is mounted upon standards supported by the two frames. The teeth 
consist of flat steel springs of scroll form, which yield to rigid obstruc- 
tions and are mounted on rock shafts in the same manner as in the 
walking harrow before described. The levers enable the operator lo 
raise the teeth more or less, and thus free them from rubbish and 
also regulate the depth of action. 

Another variation of the harrow with great pulverizing and 
loosening capabilities consists of a main frame, having a pole and 
whipple-trees attached ; to this frame are pivoted two supplemental 
frames, each of which has mounted on it a shaft carrying a series of 
concavo-convex disks. The supplemental frames may be swung by 



^ 



Fie. 3. — Spring-tooth Harrow. 

the adjusting levers to any angle with relation to the line of draught, 
and the disks then act like that of the disk plough (see Plough), 
throwing the soil outward with more or less force, according to the 
angle at which they are set, and thus thoroughly breaking up and 
pulverizing the clods. Above the disks is a bar to which are pivoted 
a series of scrapers, one for each disk, which arc held to their work 
with a yielding action, being thrown out of operation when desired 
by the fevers shown in connexion with the operating bar Pans on 
the main frame are used to carry weights to hold the disks down to 
their work. The cut away disk harrow differs from the ordinary disk 
harrow in that its disks arc notched' and so have greater penetrating 
power. The curved knife-tooth harrow consists of a frame to which 
a row of curved blades is attached. Other forms of the implement 
are illustrated and discussed in Farm Machinrry and Farm Motors 
by J. B. Davidson and L. W. Chase (New York. 1906). 

HARROWBY. DUDLEY RYDER, ist Earl of (1762-1847). 
the eldest son of Nathaniel Ryder, isl Baron Harrowby (1735- 
1803), was bom in London on the 22nd of December 1762. His 
grandfather Sir Dudley Ryder (1691-1756) became a member 
of parliament and solicitor-general owing to the favour of Sir 
Robert Walpole in 1733; in 1737 he was appointed attorney- 
general and three years later he was knighted; in 1754 he was 
made lord chief justice of the king's bench and a privy councillor, 
the patent creating him a peer having been just signed by the 
king, but not passed, when he died on the 25th of May 1756. His 
only son Nathaniel, who was member of parliament for Tiverton 
for twenty years, was created Baron Harrowby in 1776. Edu- 
cated at St John's College, Cambridge, Dudley Ryder became 




member of parliament for Tiverton in 1784 and under-aecretary 
for foreign affairs in 1789. . In 1791 he was appointed paymaster 
of the forces and vice-president of the board of trade, bat be 
resigned the positions and also that of treasurer of the navy 

when he succeeded to 
his father's barony in 
June 1803. In 1804 he 
was secretary of state 
for foreign affairs and 
in 1805 chancellor of 
the duchy 61 Lancaster 
under his intimate 
friend William Pitt; in 
the latter year he was 
sent on a special and 
important mission to 
the emperors of Austria 
and Russia and the 
king of Prussia, and 
for the long period between 18x2 and 1827 he was lord 
president of the council. After Canning's death in 1827 he 
refused to serve George IV. as prime minister and he 
never held office again, although he continued to take part 
in politics, being especially prominent during the deadlock 
which preceded the passing of the Reform Bill in 2832. 
Harrow by 's long association with the Tories did not prevent 
him from assisting to remove the disabilities of Roman Catholics 
and Protestant dissenters, or from supporting the movement 
for electoral reform; he was also in favour of the emancipation 
of the slaves. The earl died at his Staffordshire residence, 
Sandon Hall, on the 26th of December 1847, being, as Charles 
Grcville says, " the last of his generation and of the colleagues 
of Mr Pitt, the sole survivor of those stirring limes and mighty 
contests." 

Harrowby'seldest son, Dudley Ryder, 2nd earl (1708-1882), was 
born in London on the 19th of May 1798, his mother being Susan 
(d. 1838), daughter of Granville Leveson-Gower, marquess of 
Stafford, a lady of exceptional attainments. As Viscount Sandon 
he became member of parliament for Tiverton in 1819, in 1827 
he was appointed a lord of the admiralty, and in 1830 secretary 
to the India board. From 1831 to 1847 Sandon represented 
Liverpool in the House of Commons. For a long time he was 
out of office, but in 1855, eight years after he had become earl 
of Harrowby, he was appointed chancellor of the duchy of 
Lancaster by Lord Palmcrston; in a few months he was trans- 
ferred lo the office of lord privy seal, a position which he resigned 
in 1857. He was chairman of the Maynoolh commission and a 
member of other important royal commissions, and was among 
the most stalwart and prominent defenders of the established 
church. He died at Sandon on the ioth of November 1S82. His 
successor was his eldest son, Dudley Francis Stuart Ryder (1831- 
1000), vice-president of the council from 1874 lo 1878, president of 
the board of trade from 1878 lo 18S0, and lord privy seal in 188s 
and 1886. He died without sons on the 26th of March 1900, and 
was succeeded by his brother, Henry Dudley Ryder (1836-1000), 
whose son, John Herbert Dudley Ryder (b. 1864), became 5th 
earl of Harrowby. 

HARROWING OF HELL, an English poem in dialogue, dating 
from the end of the 13th century. It is written in the East 
Midland dialect, and is generally cited as the earliest dramatic 
work of any kind preserved in the language, though it was in 
reality probably intended for recitation rather than performance. 
It is closely allied to the kind of poem known as a dibat, and the 
opening words — " Allc hcrkneth to me nou A strif willc I tellcn 
ou Of Jcsu and of Satan " — seem lo indicate that ihe piece was 
delivered by a single performer. The subject — the descent of 
Christ into Hades to succour the souls of the just, as related in 
the apocryphal gospel of Nicodcmus— is introduced in a kind of 
prologue; then follows the dispute between "Dominus" and 
" Satan " at the gale of Hell; the gatekeeper runs away, and 
the just are set free, while Adam, Eve, Habraham. David, 
Johannes and Moyscs do homage to the deliverer. The poem 



HARROW-ON-THE-HILL— HARSDORFFER 



29 



ead* wftfc a short prayer: " God, for bis moder taie Let ous 
never thider come" Metrically, the poem is charactcriicd by 
frequent alliteration imposed upon the rhymed octosyllabic 
couplet.*— 

Welcome, loucrd, god of londe 

Godes sone and godes sonde (ii. 149*150). 

The piece is obviously connected with the Easter cycle of litur- 
gical drama, and.the subject is treated in the York and Townley 
plays. 

MSS. are: Brit. Mus., Hart. MS. 2953; Edinburgh, Auchinleck 
MS.. W 41 : Oxford, Bodleian, Digby 86. It was privately printed 
*-r J. P. Collier and by J. O. Halhwell, but is available in Appendix 



II. of A. W. Pollard's English Miracle Plays . . . (4th ed.,' 1004) 
C Boddeker, Altentt. Dichlungen des MS. Hart. 2253 (Berlin, 1878): 
and E. Mall. The Harrowing of Hell (Breslau, 1871). See also E. K. 



Chambers. The Medieval Stage (2 vols., 1903). 

HARROW-ON-THE-HILL, an urban district in the Harrow 
parliamentary division of Middlesex, England, 12 m. W.N.W. 
of St Paul's cathedral, London, served by the London and North 
Western, Metropolitan and District railways. Pop. (1001), 10,220. 
It takes its name from its position on an isolated hill rising to 
a height of 545 ft. On the summit, and forming a conspicuous 
landmark, is the church of Si Mary, said to have been founded by 
Lanfranc, archbishop of Canterbury, in the reign of William I., 
and Norman work appears at the base of the tower. The re- 
mainder of the church is of various later dates, and there are 
several ancient monuments and brasses. 

Harrow is celebrated for its public school, founded in 1 571 by 
John Lyon, whose brass is in the church, a yeoman of the 
neighbouring village of Preston who had yearly during his life 
set aside 20 marks for the education of poor children of Harrow; 
though a school existed before his lime. Though the charter 
was granted by Queen Elisabeth in 1 57 1 , and the statutes drawn 
up by the founder in 1500, two years before his death, it was not 
till 161 1 that the first building was opened for scholars. Lyon 
originally settled about two-thirds of his property on the school, 
leaving the remainder for the maintenance of the highway 
between London and Harrow, but in the course of time the 
values of the respective endowments have changed so far that 
the benefit accruing to the school is a small proportion of the 
whole. About 1660 the headmaster, taking advantage of a con- 
cession in Lyon's statutes, began to receive " foreigners," i.e. 
boys from other parishes, who were to pay for their education. 
From this time the prosperity of the school may be dated. In 
1809 the parishioners of Harrow appealed to the court of chan- 
cery against the manner in which the school was conducted, but 
the decision, while it recognized their privileges, confirmed the 
right of admission to foreigners. The government of the school 
was originally vested in six persons of standing in the parish who 
had the power of filling vacancies in their number by election 
among themselves; but under the Public Schools Act of 1868 
the governing body now consists of the surviving members of 
the old board, besides six new members who are elected re- 
spectively by the lord chancellor, the universities of Oxford, 
Cambridge and London, the Royal Society, and the assistant 
masters of the school. There are several scholarships in con- 
nexion with the school to Oxford and Cambridge Universities. 
Harrow was originally an exclusively classical school, but 
mathematics became a compulsory study in 1837; modern 
languages, made compulsory in the upper forms in 1851, were 
extended to the whole school in 1855; while English history and 
literature began to be especially studied about 1869. The 
number of boys is about 60a The principal buildings are 
modern, including the chapel (1857), the library (1863), named 
after the eminent headmaster Dr Charles John Vaughan, and the 
speech-room (1877), the scene of the brilliant ceremony on 
" Speech Day " each summer term. The fourth form room, 
however, dates from 161 1, and on its panels are cut the names of 
many eminent alumni, such as Byron, Robert Peel, R. B. 
Sheridan and Temple (Lord Palmerston). Several of the 
buildings were erected out of the Lyon Tercentenary Fund, sub- 
scribed after the tercentenary celebration in 1871. 



A considerable extension of Harrow as an outer residential 
suburb of London has taken place north of the hill, where is the 
urban district of Wealdstone (pop. 5001), and there are also 
important printing and photographic works. 

HARRY THE MINSTREL, or Bund Hariy (fl. 1470-1492), 
author of the Scots historical poem The Actis and Deidis of the 
Hlustere and Vaikeand Campiaun Sckir William Wallace, Knickt 
of EUtrslie, flourished in the latter half of the 15th century. The 
details of his personal history are of the scantiest. He appears 
to have been a blind Lothian man, in humble circumstances, who 
had some reputation as a story-teller, and who received, on five 
occasions, in 1400 and 1491, gifts from James IV. The entries of 
these, in the Accounts of the Lord High Treasurer, occur among 
others to harpers and singers. He is alluded to by Dunbar (9.*.) 
in the fragmentary Interlude of the Droichis Part of the Play, where 
a " droich," or dwarf, personates 

" the nakit blynd Harry 
That lang has bene in the fary 
Farleis to find;" 

and again In Dunbar's Lament for the Makaris. John Major 
{q.v.) in his Latin History speaks of " one Henry, blind from his 
birth, who, in the time of my childhood, fashioned a whole book 
about William Wallace, and therein wrote down in our popular 
verse — and this was a kind of composition in which he had much 
skill — all that passed current among the people in his day. I, 
however, can give but partial credence to these writings. This 
Henry used to recite his tales before nobles, and thus received 
food and clothing as his reward " (Bk. iv. ch. xv.). 

The poem (preserved in a unique MS., dated 1488, In the 
Advocates' library, Edinburgh) is divided into eleven books and 
runs to 1 1,853 lines. Its poetic merits are few, and its historical 
accuracy is easily impugned. It has the formal interest of being 
one of the earliest, certainly one of the most extensive verse- 
documents in Scots written in five-accent, or heroic, couplets. 
It is also the earliest outstanding work which discloses that 
habit of Scotticism which took such strong hold of the popular 
Northern literature during the coming years of conflict with 
England. In this respect it is in marked contrast with all the 
patriotic verse of preceding and contemporary literature. This 
attitude of the Wallace may perhaps be accepted as corroborative 
evidence of the humble milieu and popular sentiment of its 
author. The poem owed its subsequent widespread reputation 
to its appeal to this sentiment rather than to its literary quality. 
On the other hand, there are elements in the poem which show 
that it is not entirely the work of a poor crowder; and these 
(notably references to historical and literary authorities, and 
occasional reminiscences of the literary tricks of the Scots 
Chaucerian school) have inclined some to the view that the text, 
as we have it, is an edited version of the minstrel's rough song- 
story. It has been argued, though by no means conclusively, that 
the " editor " was John Ramsay, the scribe of the Edinburgh MS. 
and of the companion Edinburgh MS. of the Brus by John 
Barbour (q.v.). 

The poem appears, on the authority of Laing. to have been printed 
at the press of Cbcpman & My liar about 1508, but the fragments 
which Laing saw arc not extant. The first complete edition, now 
available, was printed by Lckprevik for Henry Charteris in 1570 
(Brit. Museum). It was reprinted by Charteris in 1594 and 1601, 
and by Andro Hart in 161 1 and 1620. At least six other editions 
appeared in the 17th century. There are many later reprints, 
including some of William Hamilton of Gilbertficla's modern Scots 
version of 1722. The first critical edition was prepared by Dr 
Jamieson and published in 1820. In 1889 the Scottish Text Society 
completed their edition of the text, with prolegomena and notes by 
James Moir. 

See, in addition to Jamieson's and Moir's volumes (u.s.), J. T. T. 
Brown's The Wallace and the Bruce Restudied (Bonner, Beitr&ge zur 
Angiistik. vi., 1900). a plea for Ramsay's authorship of the known 
text : also W. A. Craigie s article in The Scottish Renew (July 1903), 
a comparative estimate of the Brus and Wallace, in favour of the 
latter. 

HARSD0RFFER, OEOPO PHIUPP (1607-1658), German 
poet, was born at Nuremberg on the 1st of November 1607. He 
studied law at Altdorf and Strasbourg, and subsequently. travelled 



3Q 

through Holland, England, France and Italy. His knowledge 
of languages gained for him the appellation " the learned," 
though he was as little a learned man as he was a poet. As a 
member of the Frucktbringende Gesetlschaft he was called der 
Spieltnde (the player). Jointly with Johatin Klaj ($.*.) he 
founded in 1644 at Nuremberg the order of the Pegnitzschafcr, 
a literary society, and among the members thereof be was known 
by the name of Strephon. He died at Nuremberg on the a 2nd of 
September 1658. His writings in German and Latin fill fifty 
volumes, and a selection of his poems, interesting mostly for 
their form, is to be found in M tiller's Bibliothek deutscher DichUr 
des lite* Jahrhunderts, vol. ix. (Leipzig, 1826). 

His life was written by Widmann (Altdorf, 1707). See also 
Tittmann, Die Nurnberger Duhterschule (Gtittingcn, 1847); Hoder- 
mann, Eine vomchme Gesetlschaft, nach Harsdorffers " Gesprdch- 
spielen" (Padcrborn, 1800); T. Bischoff, " Georg Philipp Hars- 
dorffer" in the Festschrift tur 2SOJahrigen Jubeltticr des Peg- 
nesischen Blumenordens (Nuremberg, 1894); and Krapp, Die 
dsthetischen Tendenxen Harsdorffers (Berlin, 1904). 

HARSHA, or Harshavardiiana (fl. a.d. 606-648), an Indian 
king who ruled northern India as paramount monarch for over 
forty years. The events of his reign arc related by Hsiian Tsang, 
the Chinese pilgrim, and by Bana, a Brahman author. He was 
the son of a raja of Thancsar, who gained prominence by success- 
ful wars against the Huns, and came to the throne in a.d. 606, 
though he was only crowned in 612. He devoted himself to a 
scheme of conquering the whole of India, and carried on wars for 
thirty years with success, until (a.d. 620) he came in contact 
with Pulakesin II., the greatest of the Chalukya dynasty, who 
made himself lord of the south, as Harsha was lord of the north. 
The Nerbudda river formed the boundary between the two. 
empires. In the latter years of his reign Harsha's sway over the 
whole basin of the Ganges from the Himalayas to the Nerbudda 
was undisputed. After thirty-seven years of war he set himself 
to emulate Asoka and became a patron of art and literature. 
He was the last native monarch who held paramount power in 
the north prior to the Mahommcdan conquest; and was suc- 
ceeded by an era of petty states. 

Sec Bana, Sri-harsha<harita, trans. Cowcll and Thomas (1897); 
Ettinghauscn, Harsha Vardhana (Louvain, 1906). 

HARSNETT, SAMUEL (1561-1631), English divine, arch- 
bishop of York, was born at Colchester in June 1561, and was 
educated at Pembroke Hall, Cambridge, where he was success- 
ively scholar, fellow and master (1605-1616). He was also vice- 
chancellor of the university in 1606 and 1614. His ecclesiastical 
career began somewhat unpromisingly, for he was censured by 
Archbishop Whitgift for Romanist tendencies in a sermon which 
he preached against predestination in 1584. After holding the 
living of Chigwcll (1 597-1605) he became chaplain to Bancroft 
(then bishop of London), and afterwards archdeacon of Essex 
(1603-1609), rector of Stistcd and bishop of Chichester (1609- 
1619) and archbishop of York (1629). He died on the 25th of 
May 16,31. Harsnelt was no favourite with the Puritan com- 
munity, and Charles I. ordered his Considerations for the better 
Settling of Church Government (1629) to be circulated among the 
bishops. His Declaration of Egregious Popish Impostures (1603) 
furnished Shakespeare with the names of the spirits mentioned 
by Edgar in King Lear, 

HART, ALBERT BUSHNELL (1854- ), American his- 
torian, was born at Clarksville, Mercer county, Pennsylvania, 
on the 1st of July 1854. He graduated at Harvard College in 
18S0, studied at Paris, Berlin and Freiburg, and received 
the degree of Ph.D. at Freiburg in 1883. He was instructor in 
history at Harvard in 1883- 1887, assistant professor in 1887- 
1897, and became professor in 1897. Among his writings are: 
Introduction to the Study of Federal Government (1890), Forma- 
tion of the Union (1892, in the Epochs of American History 
series), Practical Essays on American Government (1893), Studies 
in American Education (1895), Guide to the Study of American 
History (with Edward Charming, 1897), Salmon Portland Chase 
(1899, in the American Statesman series), Foundations of 
American Foreign Policy (tooi), Actual Government (1903), 
Slavery and Abolition (1906, the volume in the American 



HARSHA— HART, SIR R. 



Nation scries dealing with the period 1831-1841), Ifationat 
Ideals Historically Traced (1907), the 26th volume of the 
American Nation series, and many historical pamphlets and 
articles. In addition he edited American History told by Con- 
temporaries (4 vols., 1 808-1901), and Source Readers in American 
History (4 vols., 1001*1903), and two co-operative histories of the 
United Slates, the Epochs of American History series (3 small 
text -books), and, on a much larger scale, the American Nation 
series (27 vols., 1 003-1907); he also edited the American 
Citizen series. 

HART, CHARLES (d. 1683), English actor, grandson of 
Shakespeare's sister Joan, is first heard of as playing women's 
parts at the Blackfriars' theatre as an apprentice of Richard 
Robinson. In the Civil War he was a lieutenant of horse in 
Prince Rupert's regiment, and after the king's defeat he played 
surreptitiously at the Cockpit and at Holland House and other 
noblemen's residences. After the Restoration he is known to 
have been m 1660 the original Dorantc in The Mistaken Beauty, 
adapted from Cornci lie's Le Mcutcur* In 1663 he went to the 
Theatre Royal in Killigrew's company, with which he remained 
until 1682, taking leading parts in Dryden's, Jonson's and 
Beaumont and Fletcher's plays. He is highly spoken of by 
contemporaries in such Shakespearian parts as Othello and 
Brutus. He is often mentioned by Pcpys. Betterton praised 
him, and would not himself play the part of Hotspur until after 
Hart's retirement. He died in 1683 and was buried on the 20th 
of August. Hart is said to have been the first lover of Nell Gwyn, 
and to have trained her for the stage. 

HART, ERNEST ABRAHAM (1835-1808), English medical 
journalist, was born in London on the 26th of June 1835. the son 
of a Jewish dentist. He was educated at the City of London 
school, and became a student at St George's hospital. In 1856 
he became a member of the Royal College of Surgeons, making 
a specialty of diseases of the eye. He was appointed ophthalmic 
surgeon at St Mary's hospital at the age of 28, and occupied 
various other posts, introducing into ophthalmic practice some 
modifications since widely adopted. His name, too, is associated 
with a method of treating popliteal aneurism, which he was the 
first to use in Great Britain. His real life-work, however, was 
as a medical journalist, beginning with the Lancet in 1857. 
He was appointed editor of the British Medical Journal in 1866. 
He took a leading part in the exposures which led to the inquiry 
into the state of London workhouse infirmaries, and to the reform 
of the treatment of sick poor throughout England, and the 
Infant Life Protection Act of 1872, aimed at the evils of baby- 
farming, was largely due to his efforts. The record of his public 
work covers nearly the whole field of sanitary legislation during 
the last thrity years of his life. He had a hand in the amend- 
ments of the Public Health and of the Medical Acts; in the 
measures relating to notification of infectious disease, to vaccina- 
tion, to the registration of plumbers; in the improvement of 
factory legislation; in the remedy of legitimate grievances of 
Army and Navy medical officers; in the removal of abuses and 
deficiencies in crowded barrack schools; in denouncing the 
sanitary shortcomings of the Indian government, particularly in 
regard to the prevention of cholera. His work on behalf of the 
British Medical Association is shown by the increase from 
2000 to 19,000 in the number of members, and the growth of the 
British Medical Journal from 20 to 64 pages, during his editor- 
ship. From 1872 to 1807 he was chairman of the Association's 
Parliamentary Bill Committee. He died on the 7th of January 
1808. For his second wife he married Alice Marion Rowland, 
who had herself studied medicine in London and Paris, and was 
no less interested than her husband in philanthropic reform. 
She was most active in her encouragement of Irish cottage 
industries, and was the founder of the Donegal Industrial 
Fund. 

HART, SIR ROBERT, Bart. (1835- )♦ Anglo-Chinese 
statesman, was born at Milttown, Co. Armagh, on the aotb of 
February 1835. He was educated at Taunton, Dublin and 
Belfast, and graduated at Queen's College, Belfast, ia 1853. 
In the following year he received an appointemnt as student 



HART, W.—HARTE, BRET 



3» 



interpreter in the China consular service, and alter serving for 
• short time at the Ningpo vice-consulate, he was transferred to 
Canton, where after acting as secretary to the allied commis- 
sioners governing the city, he was appointed the fecal inspector 
of customs. There he first gained an insight into custom-house 
work. One effect of the Taiping rebellion was to close the native 
custom-house at Shanghai; and as the corrupt alternatives 
proposed by the Chinese were worse than useless, it was arranged 
by Sir Rutherford Akock, the British consul, with his French 
and American colleagues, that they should undertake to collect 
the duties on goods owned by foreigners entering and leaving 
the port. Sir T. Wade was appointed to the post of collector 
in the first instance, and after a short tenure of office wassucceeded 
by Mr II. N. Lay, who held the post until 1863, when he resigned 
owing to a disagreement with the Chinese government in con- 
nexion with the Lay-Osborn fleet. During his tenancy of office 
the system adopted at Shanghai was applied to the other treaty 
ports, so that when on Mr Lay's resignation Mr Hart was 
appointed inspector-general of foreign customs, he found himself 
at the bead of an organization which collected a revenue of up- 
wards of eight million tacls per annum at fourteen treaty ports. 
From the date when Mr Hart took up his duties at Peking, in 
1863, he unceasingly devoted the whole of his energies to the 
work of the department, with the result that the revenue grew 
from upwards of eight million taels to nearly twenty-seven 
million, collected at the thirty-two treaty ports, and the customs 
staff, which fn 1864 numbered aco, reached in 1901 a total of 
5704. From the first Mr Hart gained the entire confidence of 
the members of the Chinese government, who were wise enough 
to recognize his loyal and able assistance. Of all their numerous 
sources of revenue, the money furnished by Mr Hart was the only 
certain asset which could be offered as security for Chinese loans. 
For many years, moreover, it was customary for the British 
minister, as well as the ministers of other powers, to consult him 
in every difficulty; and such complete confidence had Lord 
Granville in his ability and loyalty, that on the retirement of 
Sir T. Wade he appointed him minister plenipotentiary at Peking 
(1885). Sir Robert Hart, however— -who was made a K.C.M.C. 
in 1882 — recognized the anomalous position in which he would 
have been placed had he accepted the proposal, and declined the 
proffered honour. On all disputed points, whether commercial, 
religious or political, his advice was invariably sought by the 
foreign ministers and the Chinese alike. Thrice only did he visit 
Europe between 1863 and 1002, the result of this long comparative 
isolation, and of his constant intercourse with the Peking 
officials, being that he learnt to look at events through Chinese 
spectacles; and his work, These from the Land of Sbtim, shows 
how far this affected his outlook. The faith which he put in the 
Chinese made him turn a deaf car to the warnings which he re- 
ceived of the threatening Boxer movement in 1000. To the last 
he believed that the attacking force would at least have spared 
his house, which contained official records of priceless value, 
but he was doomed to see his faith falsified. The building was 
burnt to the ground with all that it contained, including his 
private diary Tor forty years. When the stress came, and he 
retreated to the British legation, he took an active part in the 
defence, and spared neither risk nor toil in his exertions. In 
addition to the administration of the foreign customs service, 
the establishment of a postal service in the provinces devolved 
upon him, and after the signing of the protocol of 1901 he was 
called upon to organize a native customs service at the treaty 
ports. 

The appointment of Sir Robert Hart as inspector-general 
of the imperial maritime customs secured the interests of 
European investors in Chinese securities, and helped to place 
Chinese finance generally on a solid footing. When, therefore, 
m May 1906 the Chinese government appointed a Chinese 
administrator and assistant administrator of the entire customs 
of China, who would control Sir Robert Hart and his staff, great 
anxiety was aroused. The Chinese government had bound 
itself in 1806 and 1898 that the imperial maritime customs 
services should remain as then constituted during the currency 



of the loan. The British government obtained no satisfactory 
answer to its remonstrances, and Sir Robert Hart, finding 
himself placed in a subordinate position after his long service, 
retired in July 1907. He received formal leave of absence in 
January 1908, when he received the title of president of the 
board of customs. Both the Chinese and the British govern- 
ments from time to time conferred honours upon Sir Robert 
Hart. By giving him a Red Button, or button of the highest 
rank, a Peacock's Feather, the order of the Double Dragon, a 
patent of nobility to his ancestors for three generations, and the 
title of Junior Guardian of the heir apparent, the Chinese showed 
their appreciation of his manifold and great services; while 
under the seal of the British government there were bestowed 
upon him thcordcrsof C.M.G. (1880), K.C.M.G.(i882),G.C.M.G. 
(1889), and a baronetcy (1893). He has also been the recipient 
of many foreign orders. Sir Robert Hart married in 1886 
Hester, the daughter of Alexander Bredon, Esq., M.D., of 
Portadown. 

Sec his life by Julia Bredon (Sir Robert Hart, 1909). 

HART, WILLIAM (1823-1894), American landscape and 
cattle painter, was born in Paisley, Scotland, on the 31st of 
March 1823, and was taken to America in early youth. He was 
apprenticed to a carriage painter at Albany, New York, and his 
first efforts in art were in making landscape decorations for the 
panels of coaches. Subsequently he returned to Scotland, 
where he studied for three years. He opened a studio in New 
York in 1853, and was elected an associate of the National 
Academy of Design in 1857 and an academician in the following 
year. He was also a member of the American Water Colour 
Society, and was its president from 1870 to 1873. As one of the 
group of the Hudson River School he enjoyed considerable 
popularity, his pictures being in many well-known American 
collections. He died at Mount Vernon, New York, on the 17th 
of June 1894. 

His brother, James McDoucal Hast (1828-1001), born In 
Kilmarnock, Scotland, was also a landscape and cattle painter. 
He was a pupil of Schirmer in DUsscldorf, and became an 
associate of the National Academy of Design in 1857 and a full 
member in 1859. He was survived by two daughters, both 
figure painters, Letitia B. Hart (b. 1867) and Mary Theresa 
Hart (b.1872). 

HARTS, FRANCIS BRET (1830- 1902), American author, was 
born at Albany, New York, on the 25th of August 1839. His 
father, a professor of Greek at the Albany College, died during 
his boyhood. After a common-school education he went with 
his mother to California at the age of seventeen, afterwards 
working in that state as a teacher, miner, printer, express- 
messenger, secretary of the San Francisco mint, and editor. His 
first literary venture was a series of Condensed Novels (travesties 
of well-known works of fiction, somewhat in the style of 
Thackeray), published weekly in The Calif ornian, of which he 
was editor, and reissued in book form in 1867. The Overland 
Monthly, the earliest considerable literary magazine on the 
Pacific coast, was established in 1868, with Harte as editor. 
His sketches and poems, which appeared in its pages during the 
next few years, attracted wide attention in the eastern states 
and in Europe. 

Bret Harte was an early master of the short story, and his 
Californian tales were regarded as introducing a new genre into 
fiction. •• The Luck of Roaring Camp " (1868), ** The Outcasts 
of Poker Flat " (1869), the later sketch " How Santa Claus came 
to Simpson's Bar," and the verses entitled " Plain Language 
from Truthful James," combined humour, pathos and power 
of character portrayal in a manner that indicated that the new 
land of mining-gulches, gamblers, unassimilated Asiatics, and 
picturesque and varied landscape had found its best delineator; so 
that Harte became, in his pioneer pictures, a sort of later Fenimore 
Cooper. Forty-four volumes were published by him between 
1867 and 1898. AfteT a year as professor in the university of 
California, Harte lived in New York, 1871-1878; was United 
States consul at Crefeld, Germany, 1878-1880; consul at 
Glasgow, 1880-1885; and after 1885 resided in London, engaged 



32 



HARTEBEEST— HARTFORD 



in literary work. He died at Cambcrlcy, England, on the 5th 
of May 1 90a. 

A library edition of his Writings (16 volt.) was issued in 1900, and 
increased to 19 vols, in 1904. See also H. W. Boynton. Bret Jfarle 
(1005) in the Contemporary Men of Letters series; T. E. Pcmberton, 
Life of Bret Harte (1903), which contains a list of his poems, tales, &c. 

HARTEBEEST, the Boer name for a large South African 
antelope (also known as caama) characterized by its red colour, 
long face with naked muzzle and sharply angulated lyrate 
horns, which are present in both sexes. This antelope is the 



Cape Hartebeest (Bubalis coma). 

Bubalis tana or Alcelaphus coma of naturalists; but the name 
hartebeest has been extended to include all the numerous 
members of the same genus, some of which are to be found in 
every part of Africa, while one or two extend into Syria. Some 
of the species of the allied genus Damaliscus, such as Hunter's 
antelope (D. hunleri), are also often cailed hartebeests. (See 
Antelope.) 

HARTFORD, a city and the capital of Connecticut, U.S.A., 
the county-seat of Hartford county, and a port of entry, coter- 
minous with the township of Hartford, in the west central part 
of the state, on the W. bank of the Connecticut river, and about 
35 m. from Long Island Sound. Pop. (1800), 53.23°; (1000), 
79,850, of whom 23.758 were foreign-born (including 8076 Irish, 
2700 Germans, 2260 Russians, 1952 Italians, 1714 Swedes, 
1634 English and 1309 English Canadians); (into census) 
98,915. Of the total population in 1000, 43,872 were of foreign 
parentage (both parents foreign-born), and of these 18,410 were 
of Irish parentage. Hartford is served by two divisions of the 
New York, New Haven & Hartford railway, by the Central 
New England railway, by the several electric lines of the Con- 
necticut Company which radiate to the surrounding towns, and 
by the steamboats of the Hartford & New York Transporta- 
tion Co., all of which are controlled by the N.Y., N.H. & H. 
The river, which is navigable to this point, is usually dosed from 
the middle of December to the middle of March. 

The city covers an area of 17*7 sq. m.; it is well laid out and 
compactly built, and streets, parks, &c., are under a city-plan 
commission authorized in 1907. It is intersected by the sluggish 
Park river, which is spanned by ten bridges. A stone arch 
bridge, with nine arches, built of granite at a cost of Si, 700,000 
and dedicated in 1008, spans the Connecticut (replacing the old 
Connecticut river bridge built in 1818 and burned in 1895), & R d 
connects Hartford with the village of Blast Hartford in the town- 
ship of East Hartford (pop. 1900, 6406), which has important 
paper-manufacturing and tobacco-growing interests. The park 
system of Hartford is the largest in any city of the United Slates 
in proportion to the city's population. In 1908 there were 21 
public parks, aggregating more than 1335 acres. In the extreme 



S. of the city is Goodwin Park (about 900 acres); in the S.E. is 
Colt Park (106 acres), the gift of Mrs Elizabeth Colt, the widow 
of Samuel Colt, inventor of the Colt revolver; in the S.W. is 
Pope Park (about 00 acres); in the W. is Elizabeth (100 acres); 
in the E., along the Connecticut river front, is Riverside (about 
80 acres); and in the extreme N. is Keney Park (680 acres), the 
gift of Henry Keney, and, next to the Metropolitan Reservations 
near Boston, the largest park in the New England slates. Near 
the centre of the city are the Capitol Grounds (27 acres; until 
1872 the campus of Trinity College) and Bushnell Park (41 acres), 
adjoining Capitol Park. Bushnell Park, named in honour of 
Horace Bushnell, contains the Corning Memorial Fountain, 
erected in 1809 and designed by J. Masscy Rhind, and three 
bronze statues, one, by J. Q. A. Ward, of General Israel Putnam; 
one, by Truman H. Bartlett, of Dr Horace Wells (181 5-1848), the 
discoverer of anaesthesia; and one, by E. S. Woods, of Colonel 
Thomas K no wit on (1740-1776), a patriot soldier of the War of 
Independence, killed at the bailie of Harlem Heights. On the 
Capitol Grounds is the state capitol (Richard M. Upjohn, archi- 
tect), a magnificent white marble building, which was completed in 
1880 at a cost of $2,534,000. Its exterior is adorned with statues 
and busts of Connecticut statesmen and carvings of scenes in 
the history of l he stale. Within the building are regimental 
flags of the Civil War, a bronze statue by Olin L. Warner of 
Governor William A. Buckingham, a bronze statue by Karl 
Gerhardt of Nathan Hale, a bronze tablet (also by Karl Ger- 
hard t) in memory of John Fitch (1743-1708), the inventor; a 
portrait of Washington, purchased by the state in 1800 from the 
artist, Gilbert Stuart; and a scries of oil portraits of the colonial 
and state governors. The elaborately carved chair of the 
lieutenant-governor in the senate chamber, made of wood from 
the historic Charter Oak, and the original charter of 1662 (or 
its duplicate of the same date) are preserved in a special vault 
in the Connecticut stale library. A new state library and 
supreme court building and a new stale armoury and arsenal, 
both of granite, have been (1910) erected upon lands recently 
added to the Capilol Grounds, thus forming a group of state 
buildings with the Capitol as the centre. Near the Capitol, at 
the approach of the memorial bridge across the Park river, is 
the Soldiers' and Sailors' memorial arch, designed by George 
Keller and erected by the city in 18S5 in memory of the Hartford 
soldiers and sailors who served in the American Civil War. 

Near the centre of the city is the old town square (now known 
as the City Hall Square), laid off in 1637. Here, facing Main 
Street, stands the city hall, a beautiful example of Colonial 
architecture, which was designed by Charles Bulnnch, completed 
in 1796, and until 1879 used as a stale capitol; it has subse- 
quently been restored. In Main Street is the present edifice 
of the First Church of Christ, known as the Centre Congregational 
Church, which was organized in Cambridge, Massachusetts, 
in 1632, and removed to Hartford, under the leadership of Thomas 
Hooker and Samuel Stone, in 1636. In the adjoining cemetery 
are the graves of Thomas Hooker, Governor William Lcete 
( 1 603-1683), and Governor John Haynes, and a monument 
in memory of 100 early residents of Hartford. In the same 
thoroughfare is the Wadsworth Atheneum (built in 1842; 
enlarged in 1892-1893 and 1907) and its companion buildings, 
Ihe Colt memorial (built in 1008 to accommodate the Elizabeth 
Colt art collection) and the Morgan art gallery (built in 1008 by 
J. Picrpont Morgan in memory of his father, Junius Morgan, 
a native of Hartford). In this group of buildings are the Hart ford 
public library (containing 00,000 volumes in 1008), the Watkinson 
library of reference (70,000 volumes in 1908), the library of the 
Connecticut historical society (25,000 volumes in 1008) and a 
public art gallery. Other institutions of importance in Hartford 
are the American school for the deaf (formerly the American 
asylum for ihe deaf and dumb), founded in 18 16 by Thomas 
H. Gallaudel; ihe retreat for the insane (opened for patients 
in 1824); the Hartford hospital; St Francis hospital; St 
Thomas's seminary (Roman Catholic); La Salette Missionary 
college (R.C.; 1898); Trinity college (founded by members of the 
Protestant Episcopal church, and now non-sectarian), which was 



HARTFORD 



33 



chartered as Washington College in i8aj, opened la 1814, 
renamed Trinity College in 184s, and in 1007-1008 bad 27 in- 
structors and 208 students; the Hartford Theological seminary, 
a Congregational institution, which was {bunded at East Windsor 
Hill in 1834 as the Theological Institute of Connecticut, was 
removed to Hartford in 1865,. and adopted its present name 
in 1885; and, affiliated with the last mentioned institution, 
the Hartford School of Religious Pedagogy. The Hartford 
grammar school, founded in 1638, long managed by the town 
and in 1847 merged with the classical department of the Hartford 
public high school, is the oldest educational institution in the 
state. In Farmington Avenue is St Joseph's cathedral (Roman 
Catholic), the city being the seat of the diocese of Hartford. 
: During the x8th century Hartford enjoyed a large and lucrative 
commerce, but the railway development of the 19th century 
centralised commerce in New York and Boston, and consequently 
the principal source of the city's wealth has come to be manu- 
facturing and insurance. In 1005 the total value of the "factory" 
product was $25,975,651. The principal industries are the 
manufacture of small arms (by the Colt's Patent Fire-Arms 
Manufacturing Co., makers of the Colt revolver and the Catling 
gun), typewriters (Roland Underwood), automobiles, bicycles, 
cyclometers, carriages and wagons, belting, cigars, harness, 
machinists' tools and instruments of precision, coil-piping, 
church organs, horse-shoe nails, electric equipment, machine 
screws, drop forgings, hydrants and valves, and engines and 
boilers. In 1788 the first woollen mill in New England was 
opened in Hartford; and here, too, about 1846, the Rogers 
process of electro-silver plating was invented. The city is one 
of the most important insurance centres in the United States. 
As early as 1704 policies were issued by the Hartford Fire 
Insurance Company (chartered in 1810). In 1009 Hartford 
was the home city of six fire insurance and six life insurance 
companies, the principal ones being the Aetna (fire), Aetna 
Life, Phoenix Mutual Life, Phoenix Fire, Travelers (Life and 
Accident), Hartford Fire, Hartford Life, National Fire, Connecti- 
cut Fire, Connecticut General Life and Connecticut Mutual 
Life. In 1006 the six fire insurance companies had an aggregate 
capital of more than $10,000,000; on the 1st January 1006 
they reported assets of about $50,000,000 and an aggregate 
surplus of $30,000,000. In the San Francisco disaster of that 
year they paid more than $15,000,000 of losses. Since the fire 
insurance business began in Hartford, the companies of that 
city now doing business there have paid about $340,000,000 in 
losses. Several large and successful foreign companies have 
made Hartford their American headquarters. The life insurance 
companies have assets to the value of about $225,000,000. 
The Aetna (fire), Aetna Life, Connecticut Fire, Connecticut 
Mutual Life, Connecticut General Life, Hartford Fire, Hartford 
Life, Hartford Steam Boiler Inspection and Insurance Co., 
National Fire, Orient Fire, Phoenix Mutual Life and Travelers 
companies have their own homes, some of these being among 
the finest buildings in Hartford. The city has also large banking 
interests. 

The first settlement on the site of Hartford was made by the 
Dutch from New Amsterdam, who in 1633 established on the 
bank of the Connecticut river, at the mouth of the Park river, 
a fort which they held until 1654. The township of Hartford 
was one of the first three original townships of Connecticut. 
The first English settlement was made in 1635 by sixty immi- 
grants, mostly from New Town (now Cambridge), Massachusetts; 
but the main immigration was in 1636, when practically all the 
New Town congregation led by Thomas Hooker and Samuel 
Stone joined those who had preceded them. Their settlement 
was called Newtown until 1637, when the present name was 
adopted from Hertford, England, the birthplace of Stone. In 
1636 Hartford was the meetmg-piace of the first general court 
of the Connecticut colony; the Fundamental Orders, the first 
written constitution, were adopted at Hartford in 1639; and 
after the union of the colonies of New Haven and Connecticut, 
accomplished by the charter of 1662, Hartford became the sole 
capital; but from 1701 until 1873 that honour was shared with 



New Haven. At Hartford occurred in 1687 the meeting of 
Edmund Andros and the Connecticut officials (see Connecticut). 
Hartford was first chartered in 1784, was rechartered in 1856 
(the charter of that date has been subsequently revised), and in 
1 88 1 was made coterminous with the township of Hartford. 
The dty was the literary centre of Federalist ideas in the latter 
part of the 18th century, being the home of Lemuel Hopkins, 
John Trumbull, Joel Barlow and David Humphreys, the leading 
members of a group of authors known as the " Hartford Wits "; 
and in 1814-1815 the dty was the meeting-place of the famous 
Hartford Convention, an event of great importance in the history 
of the Federalist party. The War of 1812, with the Embargo 
Acts (1807-1813), which were so destructive of New England's 
commerce, thoroughly aroused the Federalist leaders in this 
part of the country against the National government as ad- 
ministered by the Democrats, and in 1814, when the British 
were not only threatening a general invasion of their territory 
but had actually occupied a part of the Maine coast, and the 
National government promised no protection, the legislature 
of Massachusetts invited the other New England states to join 
with her in sending delegates to a convention which should 
meet at Hartford' to consider their grievances, means of preserv- 
ing their resources, measures of protection against the British,! 
and the advisability of taking measures to bring about a con-, 
vention of delegates from all the United Stales for the purpose 
of revising the Federal constitution. The legislatures of Connecti- 
cut and Rhode Island, and town meetings in Cheshire and Grafton 
counties (New Hampshire) and in Windham county (Vermont) 
accepted the invitation, and the convention, composed of x* 
delegates from Massachusetts, 7 from Connecticut, 4 from Rhode 
Island, s from New Hampshire and 1 from Vermont, all 
Federalists, met on the 15th of December 18 14, chose George 
Cabot of Massachusetts president and Theodore Dwight of 
Connecticut secretary, and remained in secret session until the 
5th of January 1815, when it adjourned sine die. At the con- 
clusion of its work it recommended greater military control for 
each of the several states and that the Federal constitution 
be so amended that representatives and direct taxes should be 
apportioned among the several states "according to their 
respective numbers of free persons," that no new state should 
be admitted to the Union without the concurrence of two-thirds 
of both Houses of Congress, that Congress should not have the 
power to lay an embargo for more than sixty days, that the 
concurrence of two-thirds of the members of both Houses of 
Congress should be necessary to pass an act " to interdict the 
commercial intercourse between the United States and any 
foreign nation or the dependencies thereof " or to declare war 
against any foreign nation except in case of actual invasion, that 
" no person who shall hereafter be naturalised shall be eligible, 
as a member of the Senate or House of Representatives of the 
United States, nor capable of holding any civil office under the 
authority of the United States," and that " the same person 
shall not be elected president of the United States a second time; 
nor shall the president be elected from the same state two terms 
in succession. " After making these recommendations concerning 
amendments the Convention resolved: " That if the application 
of these states to the government of the United States, recom- 
mended in a foregoing resolution, should be unsuccessful, and 
peace should not be concluded, and the defence of these states 
should be neglected, as it has been since the commencement 
of the war, it will, in the opinion of this convention, be expedient 
for the legislatures of the several states to appoint delegates 
to another convention, to meet at Boston in the state of 
Massachusetts on the third Thursday of June next, with such 
powers and instructions as the exigency of a crisis so momentous 
may require." The legislatures of Massachusetts and Connecticut 
approved of these proposed amendments and sent commissioners 
to Washington to urge their adoption, but before their arrival 
the war had closed, and not only did the amendments fail to 
receive the approval of any other state, but the legislatures of 
nine states expressed their disapproval of the Hartford Convention 
itself, some charging it with sowing "seeds of dissension and 



34 



HARTFORD CITY— HARTLEPOOL 



disunion." The cessation ofthc war brought increased popularity 
to the Democratic administration, and the Hartford Convention 
was vigorously attacked throughout the country. 

Hartford was the birthplace of Noah Webster, who here 
published his Grammatical Institute of Ike English Language 
(1783-1785), and of Henry Barnard, John Ftske and Frederick 
Law Olmsted, and has been the home of Samuel P. Goodrich 
(Peter Parley), George D. Prentice, Harriet Beecher Stowe, 
Charles Dudley Warner, Samuel L. Clemens (Mark Twain) 
and Horace BushneU. More than 100 periodicals have been 
established in Hartford, of which the oldest is the Hartford 
Courant ( 1 764) , the oldest newspaper in the United States. This 
paper was very influential in shaping public opinion in the 
years preceding the War of Independence; after the war it 
was successively Federalist, Whig and Republican. The Times 
(serai-weekly 1817; daily 1841) was one of the most powerful 
Democratic organs in the period before the middle of the 19th 
century, and had Gideon Wells for editor 1826-1836. The 
Congregationalist (afterwards published in Boston) and the 
Churchman (afterwards published in New York) were also 
founded at Hartford. 

. Sec Scaeva, Hartford in the Olden Times: Its First Thirty Years 
(Hartford, 1853), edited by W. M. B. Hartley; and J. H. Trumbull, 
Memorial History of Hartford County (Boston, 1886). For the 
Hartford Convention see History of the Hartford Contention (Boston, 
'833), published by its secretary, Theodore DwigKt; H. C. Lodge, 
Life and Letters of George Cabot (Boston, 1877); and Henry Adams, 
Documents Relating to New England Federalism (Boston, 1877). 

HARTFORD CITY, a city and the county-seat of Blackford 
county, Indiana, U.S.A., 62 m. N.E. of Indianapolis. Pop. 
(1890) 2287; (1900) 5912 (572 foreign-born); (1910) 6187. The 
city is served by the Fort Wayne, Cincinnati & Louisville, and 
the Pittsburg, Cincinnati, Chicago & St Louts railways, and the 
Indiana Union Traction line (electric). There are oil and natural 
gas wells in the vicinity, and the city has pulp and paper mills, 
glass, and tile works, and manufactories of woodenware, and 
nitroglycerine and powder. The municipality owns and operates 
its water-works system. The first settlement in the vicinity was 
made in 1832. Hartford City became the county-seat of Black- 
ford county when that county was erected in 1837; it was laid 
out in 1839 and was first incorporated as a town in 1867. 

HARTIG, GEORO LUDWIQ (1764-1837), German agricul- 
turist and writer on forestry, was born at Gladcnbach, near 
Marburg, on the and of September 1764. After obtaining a 
practical knowledge of forestry at Harzburg. he studied from 
1 781 to 1783 at the university of Giessen. In 1786 he became 
manager of forests to the prince of Solms-Braunfels at Hungen in 
the Wetterau, where he founded a school for the teaching of 
forestry. After obtaining in 1797 the appointment of inspector 
of forests to the prince of Orange-Nassau, he continued his school 
of forestry at Dillenburg, where the attendance thereat increased 
considerably. On the dissolution of the principality by Napoleon 
Lin 1805 he lost bis position, but in 1806 he went as chief inspector 
of forests to Stuttgart, whence in 181 1 he was called to Berlin in 
a like capacity. There he continued his school of forestry, and 
succeeded in connecting it with the university of Berlin, where in 
1830 he was appointed an honorary professor. He died at Berlin 
on the 2nd of February 1837. His son Theodor (1805-1880), and 
grandson Robert (1830-1901), were also distinguished for their 
contributions to the study of forestry. 

G. L. Hartig was the author of a number of valuable works: 
Lchrbuchfur Jdter (Stuttgart. 18 10); Lehrbuck fur Fdrster (3 vols., 
Stuttgart, 1808); Kubiktabellen fur geschniUene, besefdagene, ttnd 
runde H&lzer (1815, xoth ed. Berlin, 187!); and Lex ikon fur J&ger 
und Jagdfreunde (1836, 2nd ed. Berlin, 1859-1861). Theodor 
Hartig and his son Robert also published numerous works dealing 
with forestry, one of the latter's books being translated into English 
by W. Somcrvillc and H. Marshall Ward as Diseases of Trees (1894). 

HARTLEPOOL, a parliamentary borough of Durham, England, 
embracing the municipal borough of Hartlepool or East Hartle- 
pool and the municipal and county borough of West Hartlepool 
Pop, (1901) of Hartlepool, 22,723; of West Hartlepool, 62,627. 
The towns are on the coast of the North Sea separated by Hartle- 
pool Bay, with a harbour, and both have stations on branches of 



the North Eastern railway, 247 m. N. by W. from London. The 
surrounding country is bleak, and the coast is low. Caves occur 
in the slight cliffs, and protection against the attacks of the waves 
has been found necessary. The ancient market town of Hartle* 
pool lies on a peninsula which forms the termination of a south- 
eastward sweep of the coast and embraces the bay. Its naturafiy 
strong position was formerly fortified, and part of the walls, 
serving as a promenade, remain. The parish church of St H ilda, 
standing on an eminence above the sea, is late Norman and Early 
English, with a massive tower, heavily buttressed. There is a 
handsome borough ball in Italian style. West Hartlepool, a 
wholly modern town, has several handsome modern churches, 
municipal buildings, exchange, market hall, Athenaeum and 
public library. The municipal area embraces the three town- 
ships of Seaton Carew, a seaside resort with good bathing, 
and golf links; Stranton, with its church of All Saints, of the 
14th century, on a very early site; and Throston. 

The two Hartlepools are officially considered as one port. The 
harbour, which embraces two tidal basins and six docks aggregat- 
ing 83} acres, in addition to timber docks of 57 acres, covers 
altogether 350 acres. There are five graving docks, admitting 
vessels of 550 ft. length and zo to 21 ft. draught. The depth of 
water on the dock sills varies from x 7 \ f t. at neap tides to 25 ft. at 
springtides. A breakwater three-quarters of a mile long protects 
the entrance to the harbour. An important trade is carried on 
in the export of coal, ships, machinery, iron and other metallic 
ores, woollens and cottons, and in the import of timber, sugar, iron 
and copper ores, and eggs. Timber makes up 59 % of the 
imports, and coal and ships each about 30% of the exports. The 
principal industries are shipbuilding (iron), boiler and engineer- 
ing works, iron and brass foundries, steam saw and planing mills, 
Hour-mills, paper and paint factories, and soapworks. 

The parliamentary borough (failing within the south-east 
county division) returns one member. The municipal borough 
of Hartlepool is under a mayor, 6 aldermen and 18 councillors, 
and has an area of 97a acres. The municipal borough of West 
Hartlepool is under a mayor, 8 ald erme n and 24 councillors, and 
has an area of 2684 acres. 

Built on the horns of a sheltered bay, Hartlepool (Hertepufl, 
HcrtipoJ), grew up round the monastery founded there in 640, 
but was destroyed by the Danes in 600 and rebuilt by Ecgred, 
bishop of Lindisfarne. In 1173 Bishop Hugh de Puiset allowed 
French and Flemish troops to land at Hartlepool to aid the Scots. 
It is not mentioned in Boldon Book as, being part of the royal 
manor of Sadberg held at this time by the family of Bruce, it did 
not become the property of the see of Durham until the purchase 
of that manor in 1189. The bishops did not obtain possession 
until the reign of John, who during the interval in 1201 gave 
Hartlepool a charter granting the burgesses the same privileges 
that the burgesses of Newcastle enjoyed; in 1230 Bishop 
Richard Poor granted further liberties, including a gild merchant. 
Edward II. seized the borough as a possession of Robert Bruce, 
but he could control it very slightly owing to the bishop's powers. 
In 1328 Edward HI. granted the borough 100 marks towards the 
town-wall and Richard U. granted murage for seven years, the 
term being extended in 1400. In 1383 Bishop Fordham gave 
the burgesses licence to receive tolls within the borough for the 
maintenance of the walls, while Bishop Neville granted a com- 
mission for the construction of a pier or mole. In the 16th 
century Hartlepool was less prosperous; in 1523 the haven was 
said to be ruined, the fortifications decayed. An act of 1535 
declared Hartlepool to be in Yorkshire, but in 1554 it was re- 
instated in the county of Durham. It fell into the hands of the 
northern earls in 1563, and a garrison was maintained there after 
the rebellion was crushed. In 1593 Elizabeth incorporated it, 
and gave the burgesses a town hall and court of pie powder. 
During the civil wars Hartlepool, which a few years before was 
said to be the only port -town in the country, was taken by the 
Scots, who maintained a garrison there until 1647. As a borough 
of the Palatinate Hartlepool was not represented in parliament 
until the 19th century, though strong arguments in its favour 
were advanced in the Commons in 1614 The markets of 



HARTLEY, SIR C— HARTLIB 



35 



Hartlepool were important throughout the middle ages. In 1 216 
John confirmed toRobcrt Bruce the market on Wednesday granted 
to bit father and the (air on the feast of St Lawrence ; this fair was 
extended to fifteen days by the grant of 1330, while the charter 
of 1 so 5 also granted a fair and market. During the 1 4th century 
trade was carried on with Germany, Spain and Holland, and in 
1346 Hartlepool provided five ships for the French war, being 
considered one of the chief seaports in the kingdom. The 
markets were still considerable in Camden's day, but declined 
during the 18th century, when Hartlepool became fashionable as 
a watering-place. 

HARTLEY, SIR CHARLES AUGUSTUS (1825- ), English 
engineer, was born in 182 s at He worth, Durham. Like most 
engineers of his generation he was engaged in railway work in 
the early part of his career, but subsequently he devoted himself 
to hydraulic engineering and the improvement of estuaries and 
harbours for the purposes of navigation. He was employed in 
connexion with some of the largest and most important water- 
ways of the world. After serving in the Crimea as a captain of 
eogineers in the Anglo-Turkish contingent, he was in 1856 
appointed engineer-in-chief for the works carried out by the 
European Commission of the Danube for improving the naviga- 
tion at the mouths of that river, and that position he retained 
till 187a, when he became consulting engineer to the Commission 
(see Danube). In 1875 be was one of the committee appointed 
by the authority of the U.S.A. Congress to report on the works 
necessary to form and maintain a deep channel through the south 
pass of the Mississippi delta; and in 1884 the British government 
nominated him a member of the international technical commission 
for widening the Suez Canal. In addition he was consulted by 
the British and other governments in connexion with many other 
river and harbour works, including the improvement of the 
navigation of the Scheldt, Hugh, Don and Dnieper, and of the 
ports of Odessa, Trieste, Kustendjie, Burgas, Varna and Durban. 
He was knighted in 1862, and became K.C.M.G. in 1884. 

HARTLEY, DAVID (1705-1757), English philosopher, and 
founder of the Associationist school of psychologists, was born 
on the 30th of August 1705. He was educated at Bradford 
grammar school and Jesus College, Cambridge, of which society 
he became a fellow in 1 727. Originally intended for the Church, 
be was deterred from taking orders by certain scruples as to 
signing the Thirty-nine Articles, and took up the study of 
medicine. Nevertheless, he remained in the communion of the 
English Church, living on intimate terms with the most dis- 
tinguished churchmen of his day. Indeed he asserted it to be a 
duty to obey ecclesiastical as well as civil authorities. The 
doctrine to which he most strongly objected was that of eternal 
punishment. Hartley practised as a physician at Newark, 
Bury St Edmonds, London, and lastly at Bath, where he died on 
the 28th of August 1757. His Observations on Man was pub- 
lished in 1740, th(ee years after Condillac's Essai sur I' origin* des 
tonnaissances humaines, in which theories essentially similar 
to his were expounded. It is in two parts— the first dealing 
with the frame of the human body and mind, and their mutual 
connexions and influences, the second with the duty and expecta- 
tions of mankind. His two main theories are the doctrine of 
vibrations and the doctrine of associations. His physical 
theory, he tells us, was drawn from certain speculations as to 
nervous action which Newton had published in his Principia. 
His psychological theory was suggested by the Dissertation con- 
cerning Ike Fundamental Principles of Virtue or Morality, which 
was written by a clergyman named John Gay (1600-1745), and 
prefixed by Bishop Law to his translation * of Archbishop King's 
Latin work on the Origin of Evil, its chief object being to show 
that sympathy and conscience are developments by means of 
association from the selfish feelings. 

The outlines of Hartley's theory are as follows. With Locke he 
asserted that, prior to sensation, the human mind is a blank. By 
a growth from simple sensations those states of consciousness which 
appear most remote from sensation come into being. And the one 



1 Anonymously in the 1731 ed., with acknowledgment in the 
J75*«d- 



law of growth of which' Hartley took account was the law of con- 
tiguity, synchronous and successive. By this law he sought to 
explain, not only the phenomena of memory, which others had 
similarly explained before him, but also the phenomena of emotion, 
of reasoning, and of voluntary and involuntary action (see Associa- 
tion of Ideas). 

By his physical theory Hartley gave the first strong impulse to 
the. modern study of the intimate connexion of physiological and 
psychical facts which has proved so fruitful, though his physical 
theory in itself b inadequate, and has not been largely adopted. 
He held that sensation is the result of a vibration of the minute 
particles of the medullary substance of the nerves^ to account for 
which he postulated, with Newton, a subtle elastic ether, rare in 
the interstices of solid bodies and in their close neighbourhood, and 
denser as it recedes from them. Pleasure is the result of moderate 
vibrations, pain of vibrations so violent as to break the continuity 
of the nerves. These vibrations leave behind them in the brain 
a tendency to fainter vibrations or " vibratiuncles " of a similar 
kind, which correspond to " ideas of sensation." Thus memory is 
accounted for. The course of reminiscence and of the thoughts 
generally, when not immediately dependent upon external sensation, 
is accounted for on the ground that there are always vibrations in 
the brain on account ofits heat and the pulsation of its arteries. 
What these vibrations shall be is determined by the nature of each 
man's past experience, and by the influence of the circumstances of 
the moment, which causes now one now another tendency to prevail 
over the rest. Sensations which are often associated together 
become each associated with the ideas corresponding to the others; 
and the ideas corresponding to the associated sensations become 
associated together, sometimes so intimately that they form what 
appears to be a new simple idea, not without careful analysis resolv- 
able into its component parts. 

Starting, like the modern Associationists, from a detailed account 
of the phenomena of the senses. Hartley tries to show how, by the 
above laws, all the emotions, which he analyses with considerable 
skill, may be explained. Locke's phrase " association of ideas " is 
employed throughout, " idea " being taken as including every 
mental state but sensation. He emphatically asserts the existence 
of pure disinterested sentiment, while declaring it to be a growth 
from the self-regarding feelings. Voluntary action b explained as 
the result of a firm connexion between a motion and a sensation or 
" idea," and, on the physical side, between an " ideal " and a . 
motory vibration. Therefore in the Freewill controversy Hartley 
took his place as a determinist. It is singular that, as he tells us, 
it was only with reluctance, and when his speculations were nearly 
complete, that he came to a conclusion on this subject in accordance 
with hb theory. 

See life of Hartley by his son in the 1801 edition of the Observations, 
which also contains notes and additions translated from the German 
of H. A. Pistorius; Sir Leslie Stephen, History of English Thought 
in the Eighteenth Century (3rd ed., 1902), and article in the Dictionary 
of Notional Biography: G. S. Bower. Hartley and James Mtll (1881) ; 
B. Sch6nlank, Hartley und Priestley die Begrtinder des Assotiatio- 
nismus in England (188a). See also the histories of philosophy and 
bibliography in J. M. Baldwin's Dictionary of Philosophy and 
Psychology (1905), vol. iii. 

HARTLEY, JONATHAN SCOTT (184s 6 - ), American 
sculptor, was born at Albany, New York, on the 93rd of 
September 1845- He was a pupil of £. D. Palmer, New York, 
and of the schools of the Royal Academy, London; he latex 
studied for a year in Berlin and for a year in Paris. His first 
important work ( 1882) was a statue of Miles Morgan , the Puritan, 
for Springfield, Mass. Among hb other works are the Daguerre 
monument in Washington; "Thomas K. Beecher," Elmira, 
New York, and "Alfred the Great," Appellate Court House, 
New York. He devoted himself particularly to the making of 
portrait busts, in which he attained high rank. In 1891 he 
became a member of the National Academy of Design. 

HARTLIB, SAMUEL (c. 1590-c. 1670), English writer on 
education and agriculturist, was born towards the dose of the 
1 6th century at Elbing in Prussia, hb father being a refugee 
merchant froir Poland. Hb mother was the daughter of a rich 
English merchant at Danzig. About 1628 Hartlib went to 
England, where he carried on a mercantile agency, and at the 
same time found lebure to enter with interest into the public 
questions of the day. An enthusiastic admirer of Comenius, he 
published in 1637 his Conaluum Comcnianorum pradudia> and 
in 1639 Comenii pansophiae prodromus el didactica disscrtaiio. 
In 1 64 1 appeared his Relation of that which hath been lately 
attempted to procure Ecclesiastical Peace among Protestants, and 
A Description of Macaria, containing his ideas of what a model 
state should be. During the civil war Hartlib occupied himself 



36 



HARTMANN, K. R, E. VON — HARTMANN, M. 



with the peaceful study of agriculture, publishing various works 
by himself, and printing at his own expense several treatises 
by others on the subject. In 1652 he issued a second edition of 
the Discourse of Flanders Husbandry by Sir Richard Weston 
(1645); and in 1651 Samuel Hartlib, his Legacy, or an Enlarge- 
ment of the Discourse of Husbandry used in Brabant and Flanders, 
by Robert Child. For his various labours Hartlib received from 
Cromwell a pension of £100, afterwards increased to £300, as he 
had spent all his fortune on his experiments. He planned a school 
for the sons of gentlemen, to be conducted on new principles, 
and this probably was the occasion of his friend Milton's Tractate 
on Education, addressed to him in 1644, and of Sir William Petty'* 
Two Letters on the same subject, in 1647 and 1648. At the 
Restoration Hartlib lost his pension, which had already fallen 
into arrears; he petitioned parliament for a new grant of it, 
but what success he met with is unknown, as his latter years and 
death are wrapped in obscurity. A letter from him is known to 
have been written in February 1661-1662, and apparently he 
is referred to by Andrew Marvcll as alive in 1670 and fleeing to 

Holland from his creditors. 

A Biographical Memoir of Samuel Hartlib, by H. Dircks, appeared 
in 1865. 

HARTMANN, KARL ROBERT EDUARD VON (1842-1906), 
German philosopher, was born in Berlin on the 23rd of February 
1842. He was educated for the army; and entered the artillery 
of the Guards as an officer in i860, but a malady of the knee, 
which crippled him, forced him to quit the service in 1865. 
After some hesitation between music and philosophy, he decided 
to make the latter the serious work of his life, and in 1867 the 
university of Rostock conferred on him the degree of doctor of 
philosophy. He subsequently returned to Berlin, and died at 
Grosslichterfelde on the 5th of June 1906. His reputation 
as a philosopher was established by his first book, The Philosophy 
of the Unconscious (i860; 10th cd. 1800). This success was 
largely due to the originality of its title, the diversity of its 
contents (von Hartmann professing to obtain his speculative 
results by the methods of inductive science, and making plentiful 
use of concrete illustrations), the fashionablcncss of its pessimism 
and the vigour and lucidity of its style. The conception of the 
Unconscious, by which von Hartmann describes his ultimate 
metaphysical principle, is not at bottom as paradoxical as it 
sounds, being merely a new and mysterious designation for the 
Absolute of German metaphysicians. The Unconscious appears 
as a combination of the mctaphysic of Hegel with that of Schopen- 
hauer. The Unconscious is both Will and Reason and the 
absolute all-embracing ground of all existence. Von Hartmann 
thus combines " pantheism " with " panlogism " in a manner 
adumbrated by Schelling in his " positive philosophy.' 1 Never- 
theless Will and not Reason is the primary aspect of the Un- 
conscious, whose melancholy career is determined by the primacy 
of the Will and the subservience of the Reason. Precosmically 
the Will is potential and the Reason latent, and the Will is void 
of reason when it passes from potentiality to actual willing. 
This latter is absolute misery, and to cure it the Unconscious 
evokes its Reason and with its aid creates the best of all possible 
worlds, which contains the promise of its redemption from 
actual existence by the emancipation of the Reason from its 
subjugation to the Will in the conscious reason of the enlightened 
pessimist. When the greater part of the Will in existence is so 
far enlightened by reason as to perceive the inevitable misery 
of existence, a collective effort to will non-existence will be made, 
and the world will relapse into nothingness, the Unconscious into 
quiescence. Although von Hartmann is a pessimist, his pessim- 
ism is by no means unmitigated. The individual's happiness 
is indeed unattainable either here and now or hereafter and in 
the future, but he does not despair of ultimately releasing the 
Unconscious from its sufferings. He differs from Schopenhauer 
in making salvation by the " negation of the Will-to-live " 
depend on a collective social effort and not on individualistic 
asceticism. The conception of a redemption of the Unconscious 
also supplies the ultimate basis of von Hartmann 's ethics. We 
must provisionally affirm life and devote ourselves to social 



(~„- 



HARTMANN VON AUE— HARUSPICES 



37 



5N AUE (c. it 70-*. 1 210), one of the chief 
Middle High German poets. He belonged to the lower nobility 
of Swabia, where he was born about 11 70. After receiving a 
monastic education, he became retainer (dienslmon) of a noble- 
man whose domain, Aue, has been identified with Obernau 
00 the Neckar. He also took part in the Crusade of 1196-97. 
The date of his death is as uncertain as that of his birth; he 
is mentioned by Gottfried von Strassburg (r. iaxo) as still alive, 
and in the Krone of Heinrich von dem Turlin, written about 1 a 20, 
he is mourned for as dead. Hartmann was the author of four 
narrative poems which are of importance for the evolution of 
the Middle High German court epic. The oldest of these, Erec t 
which may have been written as early as 1 191 or 1192, and the 
latest and ripest, Ivein, belong to the Arthurian cycle and are 
based on epics by Chretien de Troyes fa.t.); between them lie 
the romance, Grtgorius, also an adaptation of a French epic, and 
Der arme Heinrich, one of the most charming specimens of 
medieval German poetry. The theme of the latter— the cure 
of the leper, Heinrich, by a young girl who is willing to sacrifice 
her life for him— Hartmann had evidently found in the annals of 
the family in whose service he stood. Hartmann 's most con- 
spicuous merit as a poet lies in his style; his language is care- 
fully chosen, . his narrative lucid, flowing and characterised by a 
sense of balance and proportion which is rarely to be found in 
German medieval poetry. Gregorius, Der arme Heinrich and his 
lyrics, which are all fervidly religious in tone, imply a tendency 
towards asceticism, but, on the whole, Hartmann 's striving 
seems rather to have been to reconcile the extremes of life; to 
establish a middle way of human conduct between the worldly 
pursuits of knighthood and the ascetic ideals of medieval religion. 

Erec has been edited by M. Haupt (2nd ed., Leipzig, 187 1); 
Gregorius, by H. Paul (2nd ed., Halle, 1900); Der arm* Heinrich, 
by W\ Wackemagel and W. Toischer (Basel, 1885) and by H. 
Paul (2nd ed., Halle, 1893); by J. G. Robertson (London, 1895), 
with English notes; Iwein, by G. F. Bcnecke and K. Lach- 
mann (4th ed., Berlin, 1877) and E. Henrici (Halle, 1891-1893). 
A convenient edition of all Hartmann 's poems by-F. Been, 
3 vols. (3rd ed., Leipzig, 1891-1893, 

The literature on Hartmann is 
Schmid, Des Minnesingers Hartmann i 

GcickUckt (Tubingen, 1874): H. R / 

Hetnnchs ton VeUeke una Hartmann 

Saran, Hartmann eon A ne als Lyrther ( I , 

Vber Hartmann ten Aue (Graz, 1894] 

status e7Aue (Paris, 1808). Transla 3 

modern German of all Hartmann's po h 

has repeatedly attracted the attention 1 

{Longfellow, Rossetti) and German (n 
See H. Tardcl, Der arme Hetnnck tu 
1905). 

HARTSHORN, SPIRITS OF, a name signifying originally the 
ammoniacsl liquor obtained by the distillation of horn shavings, 
afterwards applied to the partially purified similar products of the 
action of heat on nitrogenous animal matter generally, and now 
popularly used to designate the aqueous solution of ammonia (qv). 

HARTZENBUSCH, JUAN BUOENIO (1806-1880). Spanish 
dramatist, was born at Madrid on the 6th of September 1806. 
The son of a German carpenter, he was educated for the priest- 
hood, but he had no religious vocation and, on leaving school, 
followed his father's trade till 1830, when he learned shorthand 
and joined the staff of the Gaceta. His earliest dramatic essays 
were translations from Moliere, Voltaire and the elder Dumas; 
he next recast old Spanish plays, and in 1837 produced his first 
original play, Los AmanUs de Tenet, the subject of which had 
been used by Rey de Artieda, Tirso de Molina and Perez de 
Montalban. Los AmanUs de fend at once made the author's 
reputation, which was scarcely maintained by Doha Mencio 
(1839) and Alfonso el Casio (1841); it was not till 1845 that he 
approached bis former success with La Jura en Santa Gadea. 
Hartxenbusch was chief of the National Library from 1862 to 
2875, and was an indefatigable— though not very judicious— 
editor of many national classics. Inferior in inspiration to other 
contemporary Spanish" dramatists, Hartzenbusch excels his 
rivals in versatility and in conscientious workmanship. 



HARtfN AL-RASHlD (763 or 766-809), U. "Hartn the 
Orthodox," the fifth of the 'Abbasid caliphs of Bagdad, and the 
second son of the third caliph Mahdi. His full name was Harun 
ibn Muhammad ibn 'Abdallah ibn Muhammad ibn 'Ali ibn 
'Abdallah ibn 'Abbas. He was born at Rai (Rhagae) on the 20th 
of March aj>. 763, according to some accounts, and according 
to others on the 15th of February aj>. 766. Harun al-Rashld 
was twenty-two years old when, he ascended the throne. His 
father Mahdi. just before his death conceived the idea of 
superseding his elder son MQsa (afterwards known as Haa% 
the fourth caliph) by Harun. But on Mahdi's death Hirtto 
gave way to his brother. For the campaigns in which he 
took part prior to his accession see Caliphate, section C, 
The Abbosids, ft 3 and 4. 

Rashld owed his succession to the throne to the prudence and 
sagacity of Yahya b. Khalid the Barmecide, his secretary, 
whom on his accession he appointed his lieutenant and grand 
vizier (see Barmecides). Under his guidance the empire 
flourished on the whole, in spite of several revolts in the provinces 
by members of the old Alid family. Successful wars were waged 
witfi the rulers of Byzantium and the Khazars. In 803, however, 
Harun became suspicious of the Barmecides, whom with only 
a single exception he caused to be executed. Henceforward 
the chief power was exercised by Fadl b. Rabi', who had 
been chamberlain not only under Harun himself but under his 
predecessors, Mansor, Madhi and Hadl. In the later years of 
Harun's reign troubles arose in the eastern parts of the empire. 
These troubles assumed proportions so serious that Hartm 
himself decided to go to Khorasan. He died, however, at Tus 
in March 809. 

The reign of Harta (see Caliphate, section C, « 5) was one of 
the most brilliant in the annals of the caliphate, in spite of 
losses in north-west Africa and Transoxiana. His fame spread 
to the West, and Charlemagne and he exchanged gifts and com- 
pliments as masters respectively of the West and the East. No 
caliph ever gathered round him so great a number of learned men, 
poets, jurists, grammarians, cadis and scribes, to say nothing of 
the wits and musicians who enjoyed his patronage. Harun 
himself was a scholar and poet, and was well versed in history, 
tradition and poetry. He possessed taste and discernment, 
and his dignified demeanour is extolled by the historians. In 
religion he was extremely strict; he prostrated himself a hundred 
times daily, and nine or ten times made the pilgrimage to Mecca. 
At the same time he cannot be regarded as a great administrator. 
He seems to have left everything to his viziers Yahya and Fadl, 
to the former of whom especially was due the prosperous con- 
dition of the empire. Harun is best known to Western readers 
as the hero of many of the stories in the Arabian Nights; and in 
Arabic literature be is the central figure of numberless anecdotes 
and humorous stories. Of his incognito walks through Bagdad, 
however, the authentic histories say nothing* His Arabic 
biographers are unanimous in describing him as noble .and 
generous, but there is little doubt that he was in fact a man of 
little force of character, suspicious, untrustworthy and on 
occasions cruel 

See the Arabic histories of Ibn al-Athir and Ibn XhaldQa. Among 

odern works see Sir W. Muir, The Caliphate (London, 1891); 
R. D. Osborn, Islam under the Khalifs of Bagdad (London, 1878); 



modern works see Sir W. Muir, The Caliphate (London, 1891); 
R. D. Osborn, Islam under the Khalifs of Bagdad (London, 1878); 
Gustav VJcU, Geschtchte der Chalifen (Mannheim and Stuttgart, 



1846-1862); G. le Strange, Baghdad during the Abbastd Caliphate 
(Oxford, 1900); A. Mailer. Der Islam, vol. 1. (Berlin, 1885); E. H. 
Palmer, The Caliph Haroun Alraschid (London, 1880); J. B. Bur/s 



edition of Gibbon's Decline and Fall (London, 1898), vol. vi. pp. 
34 foil. 

HARUSPICES, or Abusptces (perhaps "entrail observers," 
cf. Skt. hira, Gr. xopblj), a class of soothsayers in Rome. Their 
art {discipline) consisted especially in deducing the will of the 
gods from the appearance presented by the entrails of the slain 
victim. They also interpreted all portents or unusual phenomena 
of nature, especially thunder and lightning, and prescribed the 
expiatory ceremonies after such events. To please the god, the 
victim must be without spot or blemish, and the practice of ob- 
serving whether the entrails presented any abnormal appearance, 



3« 



HARVARD UNIVERSITY 



and thence deducing the win of heaven, was also very im- 
portant in Greek religion. This art, however, appears not to 
have been, as some other modes of ascertaining the will of the 
gods undoubtedly were, of genuine Aryan growth. It is foreign 
to the Homeric, poems, and must have been introduced into 
Greece after their composition. In like manner, aa the Romans 
themselves believed, the art was not indigenous in Rome, but 
derived from Etruria. 1 The Etruscans were said to have learned 
it from a being named Tages, grandson of Jupiter, who had 
suddenly sprung from the ground near TarquiniL Instructions 
were contained in certain books called libri haruspicini, fulgurates, 
rituaUs. The art. was practised in Rome chiefly by Etruscans, 
occasionally by native-born Romans who had studied in the 
priestly schools of Etruria. From the regal period to the end 
of the republic, haruspices were summoned from Etruria to deal 
with prodigies not mentioned in the pontifical and Sibylline 
books, and the Roman priests carried out their instructions as to 
the offering necessary to appease the anger of the deity con- 
cerned. Though the art was of great importance under the early 
republic, it never became a part of the state religion. In this 
respect the haruspices ranked lower than the augurs, as is shown 
by the fact that they received a salary; the augurs were, a more 
ancient and purely Roman institution, and were a most important 
element in the political organization of the city. In later times 
the art fell into disrepute, and the saying of Cato the Censor is well 
known, that he wondered bow one naruspex could look another 
in the face without laughing (Cic. De div. ii. 24). Under the 
empire, however, we hear of a regular collegium of sixty haru- 
spices; and Claudius is said to have tried to restore the art and 
put it under the control of the pontifices. This collegium con- 
tinued to exist till the time of Alaric 

See A. Boocho-Leclercq, Histoire de la dhination dans fantiauiU 
(1879-1881); Marquardt, Rdmtuhe Stastnenoallu*t, iii. (1885), 
pp. 410-415; G. Schmcisscr, Die etruskisclie Disctplin vom Bundes- 

Essenkriege bis turn Untergang des HeuUntums (1881), and 
•sttonum de Etrusca disciptina parttcula (1872); P. Clairin, De 
sptcibus opud Romanos (1880). Also Omen. 
HARVARD UNIVERSITY, the oldest of American educational 
institutions, established at Cambridge, Massachusetts. In 1636 
the General Court of the colony voted £400 towards '* a schoale 
or colledge," which in the next year was ordered to be at " New 
Towne." In memory of the English university where many 
(probably some seventy) of the leading men of the colony had 
been educated, the township was named Cambridge in 1638. 
In the same year John Harvard (1607-1638), a Puritan minister 
lately come to America, a bachelor and master of Emmanuel 
college, Cambridge, dying in Chariest own (Mass.), bequeathed 
to the wilderness seminary half his estate (£780) and some three 
hundred books; and the college, until then unorganized, was 
named Harvard College (1639) in his honour. Its history b 
unbroken from 1640, and its first commencement was held in 
164a. The spirit of the founders is beautifully expressed in the 
words of a contemporary letter which are carved on the college 
gates: '• After God had carried us safe to New-England, and wee 
had builded our houses, provided necessaries for our livelihood, 
rear'd convenient places for Gods worship, and setled the Civill 
Government, One of the next things we longed for, and looked 
after was to advance Learning, and perpetuate it to Posterity, 
dreading to leave an illiterate Ministry to the Churches, when our 
present Ministers shall lie in the Dust." The college charter of 
1650 dedicated it to " the advancement of all good literature, 
arts, and sciences," and " the education of the English and Indian 
youth ... in knowledge and godlynes." The second building 
(1654) on the college grounds was called " the Indian College.*' 
In it was set up the College press, which since 1638 had been in the 
president's house, and here, it is believed, was printed the trans- 
lation of the BiWe (1661-1663) by John Eliot into the language 
of the natives, with primer, catechisms, grammars, tracts, &c. 
A fair number of Indians were students, but only one, Caleb 
Cheeshahteaumuck, look a bachelor's degree( 1665). By generous 

l The statement of Dionysius of Halicarnassus (it. 22) that the 
haruspices .were instituted by Romulus is due to his confusing them 
with the augur*. 



aid received from abroad for this special object, the college was 
greatly helped in its infancy. 

The charter of 1650 has been in the main, and uninterruptedly 
since 1707, the fundamental source of authority in the administra- 
tion of the university. It created a co-optating corporation 
consisting of the president, treasurer and five fellows, who 
formally initiate administrative measures, control the college 
funds, and appoint officers of instruction and government; 
subject, however, to confirmation by the Board of Overseers 
(established in 1642), which has a revisory power over all acts 
of the corporation. Circumstances gradually necessitated 
ordinary government by the resident teachers; and to-day the 
various faculties, elaborately organized, exercise immediate 
government and discipline over all the students, and individually 
or in the general university council consider questions of policy. 
The Board of Overseers was at first jointly representative of 
state and church. The former, as founder and patron, long 
regarded Harvard as a state institution, controlling or aiding 
it through the legislature and the overseers; but the contro- 
versies and embarrassments incident to legislative action proved 
prejudicial to the best interests of the college, and its organic 
connexion with the state was wholly severed in 1866. Financial 
aid and. practical dependence had ceased some time earlier; 
indeed, from the very beginning, and with steadily fnn^yng 
preponderance, Harvard has been sustained and fostered- by 
private munificence rather than by public money. The last 
direct subsidy from the state determined in 18*4, although 
state aid was afterwards given to the Agassis museum, later 
united with the university. The church was naturally sponsor 
for the early college. The changing composition of its Board 
of Overseers marked its liberation first from clerical* and later 
from political control; since 1865 the board has been chosen 
by the alumni (non-residents of Massachusetts being eligible 
since z88o), who therefore really control the university. When 
the state ceased to repress effectually the rife speculation 
characteristic of the first half of the seventeenth century, in 
religion as in politics, and in America as in England, the unity 
of Puritanism gave way to a variety of intense sectarianisms, 
and this, as also the incoming of Anglican churchmen, made 
the old faith of the college insecure. President Henry Dunster 
(c. 161 2-1659), the first president, was censured by the 
magistrates and removed from office for questioning infant 
baptism. The conservatives, who dung to pristine and undiluted 
Calvinism, sought to intrench themselves in Harvard, especially 
in the Board of Overseers. The history of the college from about 
1673 to 172$ was exceedingly troubled. Increase and Cotton 
Mather, forceful but bigoted, were the bulwarks of reaction 
and fomenters of discord One episode in the struggle was the 
foundation and encouragement of Yale College by the reaction- 
aries of New England as a truer "school of the prophets" 
(Cotton Mather being particularly zealous in its interests), alter 
they had failed to secure control of the government of Harvard. 
It represented conservative secession. In 1792 the first kyman 
was chosen to the corporation; in 1805 a Unitarian became 
professor of theology; in 1843 the board of overseers was 
opened to clergymen of all denominations; in 1886 attendance 
on prayers by the students ceased to be compulsory. Thus 
Harvard, in response to changing ideas and conditions, grew 
away from the ideas of its founders. 

Harvard, her alumni, and her faculty have been very closely 
connected with American letters, not only in the colonial period, 
when' the Mathers, Samuel Sewall and Thomas Prince were 
important names, or in the revolutionary and early national 
epoch with the Adamses, Fisher Ames, Joseph Dennie and 
Robert Treat Paine, but especially in the second third of the 
19th century, when the great New England movements of 
Unitarianism and Transcendentalism were led by Harvard 
graduates. In 1805 Henry Ware (1764-184$) was elected the 
first anti-Trinitarian to be Hollis professor of divinity, and this 
marked Harvard's close connexion with Unitarianism, in the 
later history of which Ware, his son Henry (1704-1843). and 
Andrews Norton(i786-i85i), allHarvard alumni and profrasnm, 



HARVARD UNIVERSITY 



39 



mad Joseph Budcxainster (1751-1614) and William Ellery 
Changing were leaders of the conservative Unitarians, and 
Joseph Stevens Buckminster (1784-1812), James Freeman 
Clarke, and Theodore Parker were liberal leaders. Of the 
" Tra nscendeotab'sts," Emerson, Francis Henry Hedge (1805- 
1890), Clarke, Convers Francis (1705-1863), Parker, Tboreau 
and Christopher Pearse Cranch (18x3-1802) were Harvard 
graduates. Longfellow's professorship at Harvard identified 
him with it rather than with Bowdoin; Oliver Wendell Holmes 
waa professor of anatomy and physiology at Harvard in 1847- 
1882; and Lowell, a Harvard alumnus, was Longfellow's 
successor in 1855-1886 as Smith Professor of the French and 
Spanish language* and literatures. Ticknor and Charles Eliot 
Norton are other important names in American literary criticism. 
The historians Sparks, Bancroft, Hildreth, Palfrey, Prescott, 
Motley and Parkman were graduates of Harvard, as were 
Edward Everett, Charles Sumner and Wendell Phillips* 

In organization and scope of effort Harvard has grown, 
especially after 1869, under the direction of President Charles 
W. Eliot, to be in the highest sense a university; but the 
"college " proper, whose end is the liberal culture of under- 

Saduates* continues to be in many ways the centre of university 
e, as it is the embodiment of university traditions. The 
medical school (in Boston) dates from 1782, the law school from 
1817, the divinity school * (though instruction in theology was of 
course given from the foundation of the college) from 1819, and 
the dental school (jn Boston ) from 1867. The Bussey Institution 
at Jamaica Plain was established in 187 1 as an undergraduate 
school of agriculture, and reorganized in xoo8 for advanced 
instruction and research in subjects relating to agriculture and 
horticulture. The Graduate School of Arts and Sciences dates 
from 1872, the Graduate School of Applied Science (growing 
out of the Lawrence Scientific School) from 1906, and the 
Graduate School of Business Administration (which applies to 
commerce the professional methods used in post-graduate 
schools of medicine) law, &c.) from 1008. The Lawrence 
Scientific School, established in 1847, was practically abolished 
in 1007-1008, when its courses were divided between the College 
(which thereafter granted a degree of S.B.) and the Graduate 
School of Applied Science, which was established in 1906 and 
gives professional degrees in civil, mechanical and electrical 
engineering, mining, metallurgy, architecture, landscape archi- 
tecture, forestry, applied physics, applied chemistry, applied 
zoology and applied geology. A school of veterinary medicine, 
established in 1882, was discontinued in xoox. The university 
institutions comprise the botanic garden (1807) and the (Asa) 
Gray herbarium (1864); the Arnold arboretum (1872), at 
Jamaica Plain, for the study of arboriculture, forestry and 
dendrology; the university museum of natural history, founded 
in 1859 by Louis Agassiz as a museum of comparative zoology, 
enormously developed by his son, Alexander Agassiz, and 
transferred to the ^university in 1876, though under an inde- 
pendent faculty; the Peabody museum of American archaeology 
and ethnology, founded in 1866 by George Peabody; the 
William Hayes Fogg art museum (1895); the Semitic museum 
(1889); the Germanic Museum (1902), containing rich gifts 
from Kaiser Wilhelm II., the Swiss government, and individuals 
and societies of Germanic lands; the social museum (1906); 
and the astronomical observatory (1843; location 42° 22' 48* N. 
Iat., 71 8' W. long.), which since 1891 has maintained a station 
near Arcquipa, Peru. A permanent summer engineering camp is 
maintained at Squam Lake, New Hampshire. In Petersham, 
Massachusetts, is the Harvard Forest, about 2000 acres of hilly 
Wooded country with a stand in 1908 of 10,000,000 ft. B.M. of 
merchantable timber (mostly white pine) ; this forest was given. 
to the university in 1907, and is an important part of the equip- 
ment of the division of forestry. The university library is the 
largest college library in the country, and from its slow and 
competent selection is of exceptional value. In x 908 it numbered , 

* Affiliated with the university, but autonomous and Independent, 
is the Andover Theological Seminary, which in 1908 removed from 
Andover to Cambridge. 



including the various special libraries, 803,800 bound volumes, 
about 496,600 pamphlets, and 27,450 maps. Some of its collec- 
tions are of great value from associations or special richness, 
such as Thomas Carlyle's collection on Cromwell and Frederick 
the Great ; the collection on folk-lore and medievah romances, 
supposed to be the largest in existence and including the material 
used by Bishop Percy in preparing his Relioucs; and that on the 
Ottoman empire, The law library has been described by 
Professor A. V. Dicey of Oxford as "the most perfect collection 
of the legal records of the English people to be found in any 
part of the English-speaking world." There are department 
libraries at the Arnold arboretum, the Gray herbarium, the 
Bussey Institution, the astronomical observatory, the dental 
school, the medical school, the law school, the divinity school, 
the Peabody museum, and the museum of comparative zoology. 
In 1878 the library published the first of a valuable series of 
Bibliographical Contributions. Other publicat ions of the univer- 
sity (apart from annual reports of various departments) are: 
the Harvard Oriental Series (started 1891), Harvard Studies in 
Classical Philology (1890), Harvard Theological Review (1007), 
the Harvard Law Review (1S89), Harvard Historical Studies 
(1897), Harvard Economic Studies (1906), Harvard Psychological 
Studies (1903), the Harvard Engineering Journal (1902), the 
Bulletin (1874) of the Bussey Institution, the Archaeological 
and Ethnological Papers (1888) of the Peabody museum, and the 
Bulletin (1863), Contributions and Memoirs (1865) of the museum 
of comparative zoology. The students' publications include the 
Crimson (1873), a daily newspaper; the Advocate (1831), a 
literary bi-weekly; the Lampoon (1876), a comic bi-weekly; 
and the Harvard Monthly (1885), a literary monthly. The 
Harvard Bulletin, a weekly, and the Harvard Graduates' Magazine 
(1892), a quarterly, are published chiefly for the alumni. 

In 1908-1909 there were 743 officers of instruction and ad- 
ministration (including those for Radcliffe) and 5250 students 
(1059 in 1869), the latter including 2238 in the college, 1641 in 
the graduate and professional schools, and 1332 in the summer 
school. Radcliffe College, for women, had 449 additional 
students. The whole number of degrees conferred up to 1905 
was 31,805 (doctors of science and of philosophy by examination, 
408 ; masters of arts and of science by examination ,1759). The 
conditions of the time when Harvard was a theological seminary 
for boys, governed like a higher boarding school, have left traces 
still discernible in the organization and discipline, though no 
longer in the aims of the college. The average age of students 
at entrance, only 14 years so late as 1820, had risen by 1890 to 
io years, making possible the transition to the present regime 
of almost entire liberty of life and studies without detriment, 
but with positive improvement, to the morals of the student 
body. A strong development toward the university ideal 
marked the opening of the 19th century, especially in the widen- 
ing of courses, the betterment of instruction, and the suggestions 
of quickening ideas of university freedom, whose realization, 
along with others, has come since 187a The elimination of the 
last vestiges of sectarianism and churchly discipline, a lessening 
of parietal oversight, a lopping off of various outgrown colonial 
customs, a complete reconstruction of professional standards 
and methods, the development of a great graduate school in 
arts and sciences based on and organically connected with the 
undergraduate college, a great improvement in the college 
standard of scholarship, the allowance of almost absolute 
freedom to students in the shaping of their college course (the 
" elective " system), and very remarkable material prosperity 
marked the administration (1860-1909) of President Eliot. In 
the readjustment in the curricula of American colleges of the 
elements of professional training and liberal culture Harvard 
has been bold in experiment and innovation. With Johns 
Hopkins University she has led the movement that has trans* 
formed university education, and her influence upon secondary 
education in America has been incomparably greater than that 
of any other university. Her entrance requirements to the 
college and to the schools of medicine, law, dentistry and divinity 
have been higher than those of any other American university. 



+o 



HARVEST 



A bachelor's degree is requisite for entrance to the professional 
schools (except that of dentistry), and the master's degree (since 
1872) is given to students only for graduate work in residence, 
and rarely to other persons as an honorary degree. In scholarship 
and in growth of academic freedom Germany has given the 
quickening impulse. This influence began with George Ticknor 
and Edward Everett, who were trained in Germany, and was 
continued by a number of eminent German scholars, some driven 
into exile for their liberalism, who became professors in the 
second half of the 19th century, and above all by the many 
members of the faculty still later trained in German universities. 
The ideas of recognizing special students and introducing the 
elective system were suggested in 1824, attaining establishment 
even for freshmen by 1885, the movement characterizing particu- 
larly the years 1 865-1885. The basis of the elective system (as 
in force in 19x0) is freedom in choice of studies within liberal 
limits; and, as regards admission to college 1 (completely 
established 1891), the idea that the admission is of minds for the 
quality of their training and not for their knowledge of particular 
subjects, and that any subject may be acceptable for such 
training if followed with requisite devotion and under proper 
methods. Except for one course in English in the Freshman 
year, and one course in French or German for those who do not 
on entrance present both of these languages, no study is pre- 
scribed, but the student is compelled to select a certain number 
of courses in some one department or field of learning, and to 
distribute the remainder among other departments, the object 
being to secure a systematic education, based on the principle of 
knowing a little of everything and something well. 

The material equipment of Harvard is very rich. In 1909 it 
included invested funds of $22,716,760 ($2,257,000 in 1869) 
and lands and buildings valued at $1 2,000,000 at least. In 1008- 
1009 an income of more than $130,000 was distributed in 
scholarships, fellowships, prizes and other aids to students. The 
yearly income available for immediate use from all sources in 
1809-1904 averaged $1,074,229, -of which $452,760 yearly 
represented gifts. The total gifts, for funds and for current use, 
in the same years aggregated $6,152,988. The income in 1007- 
1908 was $1,846,976; $241,924 was given for immediate use, 
and $449,822 was given for capital The medical school is well 
endowed and is housed in buildings (1006) on Longwood Avenue, 
Boston; the gifts for its buildings and endowments made in 
1 901-1002 aggregate $5,000,000. Among the university buildings 
are two dining-halls accommodating some 2500 students, a 
theatre for public ceremonies, a chapel, a home for religious 
societies, a club-home (the Harvard Union) for graduates and 
undergraduates, an infirmary, gymnasium, boat houses and large 
playgrounds, with a concrete stadium capable of seating 27,000 
spectators. Massachusetts Hall (1720) is the oldest building. 
University Hall (1815), the administration building, dignified, 
of excellent proportions and simple lines, is a good example 
of the work of Charles Bulfinch. Memorial Hall (1874), an 
ambitious building of cathedral suggestion, commemorates the 
Harvard men who fell in the Civil War, and near it is an ideal 
statue (1884) of John Harvard by Daniel C. French. The 
medical and dental schools are in Boston, and the Bussey 
Institution and Arnold Arboretum are at Jamaica Plain. 

Radclxtte College, essentially a part of Harvard, dates 
from the beginning of systematic instruction of women by 
members of the Harvard faculty in 1879, the Society for the 
Collegiate Instruction of Women being formally organized in 
1882. The present name was adopted in 1894 in honour of Ann 

1 The requirements for admission as changed in 1908 are based 
on the " unit system " ; satisfactory marks must be got in subjects 
aggregating 26 units, the unit being a measure of preparatory study. 
Of these 26 units, English (4 units), algebra (2), plane geometry. (2), 
some science or sciences (2), history (2; either Greek and Roman, 
or American and English), a modern language (2; French and 
German) are prescribed; prospective candidates for the degree of 
A.B. are required to take examinations for a additional units in 
Greek or Latin, and for the other 8 points have large range of choice ; 
and candidates for the degree of S.B. must take additional examina- 
tions in French or German (2 units) and have a similar freedom of 
choice in making up the remaining 10 units. 



Raddifle, Lady Mowlson (06. c. 1661), widow of Sir Thomas 
Mowlson, alderman and (1634) lord mayor of London, who in 
1643 founded the first scholarship in Harvard College. From 
1894 also dates the present official connexion of Raddifle with 
Harvard. The requirements for admission and for degrees are the 
same as in Harvard (whose president countersigns all diplomas), 
and the' president and fellows of Harvard control absolutely the 
administration of the college, although it has for immediate ad- 
ministration a separate government. Instruction is given by 
members of the university teaching force, who repeat in Rad- 
cliife many of the Harvard courses. Many advanced courses in 
Harvard, and to a certain extent laboratory facilities, are directly 
accessible to Raddifle students, and they have unrestricted 
access to the library. " * 

The presidents of Harvard have been: Henry Dunster (1640- 
1654); Charles Chauncy (1654-1672); Leonard Hoar (xo?*- 
1675); Urian Oakes (X675-X681); John Rogers (1682-1684); 
Increase Mather (1685-1701); Charles Morton (vice-president) 
(1697-1698); Samuel Willard (1700-1707); John Leverett (170&- 
1724); Benjamin Wadsworth (1725-1737) ; Edward Holyoke 
( 1 737-1 7M; Samuel Locke (1770-1773); Samuel Langdon 
(1774-1780); Joseph Willard (1781-1804); Samuel Webber 
(1806-18 10); John Thornton Kirkland (x8xo-x8s8); Josiah 
Quincy (1820-1845); Edward Everett (1846-1849); Jared 
Sparks (1849-1853); James Walker (1853-1860); Cornelius 
Conway Felton (1860-1862); Thomas Hill (1862-1868); Charles 
William Eliot (1869-1009); Abbott Lawrence Lowell (appointed 
1009). 

Authorti 

1636-1775 ( 
UntversUy (2 
and its Bern 
and his Time 
1874) ;G. Bi 
1894); Willi 
University," 
Official Guid 
university; i 

HARVEST (A.S. harfest "autumn," O.H. Ger. kerbist, 
possibly through an old Teutonic root representing Lat. car pert, 
" to pluck ") , the season of the ingathering of crops. Harvest has 
been a season of rejoicing from the remotest ages. The ancient 
Jews celebrated the Feast of Pentecost as their harvest festival, 
the wheat ripening earlier in Palestine. The Romans had their 
Cerealia or feasts in honour of Ceres. The Druids celebrated 
their harvest on the 1st of November. In pre-reformation 
England Lammas Day (Aug. xst, O.S.) was observed at the be- 
ginning of the harvest festival, every member of the church 
presenting a loaf made of new wheat. Throughout the world 
harvest has always been the occasion for many queer customs 
which all have their origin in the animistic belief in the Corn- 
Spirit or Corn-Mother. This personification of the crops has left 
its impress upon the harvest customs of modern Europe. In 
west Russia, for example, the figure made out of the last sheaf of 
corn is called the Bastard, and a boy is wrapped up in it. The 
woman who binds this sheaf represents the " Cornmother," and 
an elaborate simulation of childbirth takes place, the boy in the 
sheaf squalling like a new-born child, and being, on his liberation, 
wrapped in swaddling bands. Even in England vestiges of 
sympathetic magic can be detected. In Northumberland, where 
the harvest rejoicing takes place at the close of the reaping and 
not at the ingathering, as soon as the last sheaf is set on end 
the reapers shout that they have " got the kern." An image 
formed of a wheatsheaf, and dressed in a white frock and 
coloured ribbons, is hoisted on a pole. This is the " kern-l)aby " 
or harvest-queen, and it is carried back in triumph with musk 
and shouting and set up in a prominent place during the harvest 
supper. In Scotland the last sheaf if cut before Hallowmas is 
called the " maiden," and the youngest girl in the harvest-field 
is given the privilege of cutting it. If the reaping finishes after 
Hallowmas the last corn cut is called the CaiUcach (old woman). 
In some parts of Scotland this last sheaf is kept till Christinas 
morning and then divided among the cattle " to make them 



HARVEST-BUG— HARVEY 



thrive all the year round," or is kept till the first mare foals and 
m then given to her as her first food. Throughout the world, as 
J. C. Frazer shows, the. semi-worship of the last sheaf is, or has 
been the great feature of the harvest-home. Among harvest 
customs none is more interesting than harvest cries. The cry 
of the Egyptian reapers announcing the death of the corn-spirit, 
the rustic prototype of Osiris, has found its echo on the world's 
harvest-fields, and to this day, to take an English example, the 
Devonshire reapers utter cries of the same sort and go through 
a ceremony which in its main features is an exact counterpart of 
pagan worship. " After the wheat is cut they ' cry the neck.' 
... An old man goes round to the shocks and picks out a bundle 
of the best ears he can find. . . this bundle is called ' the neck '; 
the harvest hands then stand round in a ring, the old man holding 
' the neck ' in the centre. At a signal from him they take off 
their hats, stooping and holding them with both hands towards 
the ground. Then all together they utter in a prolonged cry ' the 
neck I ' three times, raising themselves upright with their hats 
held above their heads. Then they change their cry to ' Wee 
yenl way yen! ' or, as some report, • we haven I* " On a fine still 
autumn evening " crying the neck " has a wonderful effect at 
a distance. In East AngUa there still survives the custom known 
as "Hallering Largess." The harvesters beg largess from 
passers, and when they have received money they shout thrice 
44 Halloo, largess," having first formed a circle, bowed their heads 
low crying " Hoo-Hoo-Hoo," and then jerked their heads back- 
wards and uttered a shrill shriek of " Ah 1 Ah I " 

For a very full discussion of harvest customs we J. G. Fraser, 
TkeCoUen Bovgk, and Brand's Antiquities of Gnat Britain (Hazlitt's 
edit., 1905). 

HARVEST-BUG, the familiar name for mites of the family 
Trombidiidae, belonging to the order Acari of the class Arachnida. 
Although at one time regarded as constituting a distinct species, 
described as Leptus autumnalis, harvest-buqs are now known to 
be the six-legged larval forms of several British species of mites 
of the genus Trombidium* They are minute, rusty-brown 
organisms, barely visible to the naked eye, which swarm in grass 
and low herbage in the summer and early autumn, and cause 
considerable, sometimes intense, irritation by piercing and 
adhering to the akin of the leg, usually lodging themselves in 
some part where the clothing is tight, such as the knee when 
covered with gartered stockings. They may be readHy destroyed, 
and the irritation allayed, by rubbing the affected area with some 
insecticide like turpentine or benzine. They are not permanently 
parasitic, and if left alone will leave their temporary host to 
resume the active life characteristic of the adult mite, which is 
predatory in habits, preying upon minute living animal 
organis ms. 

1 HARVESTER, Haxyzst-Sfdek, or Ha»vest-Man, names 
given to Arachnids of the order Opiliones, referable to various 
species of the family PbalangUdae. Harvest-spiders or harvest- 
men, so-called on account of their abundance in the late summer 
and early autumn, may be at once distinguished from all true 
spiders by the extreme length and thinness of their legs, and by 
the small size and spherical or oval shape of the body, which is not 
divided by a waist or constriction into an anterior and a posterior 
region. They may be met with in .houses, back yards, fields, 
woods and heaths; either climbing on walls, running over the 
glass, or lurking under stones and fallen tree trunks. They are 
predaceous, feeding upon small insects, mites and spiders. The 
males are smaller than the females, and often differ from them in 
certain well-marked secondary sexual characters, such as the 
mandibular protuberance from which one of the common English 
spiders, Pkalangium cornutum, takes its scientific name. The 
male is also furnished with a long and protrusible penis, and the 
female with an equally long and protrusible ovipositor. The 
•exes pair in the autumn, and the female, by means of her 
ovipositor, lays her eggs in some cleft or hole in the soil and 
leaves them to their fate. After breeding, the parents die with 
the autumn cold; but the eggs retain their vitality through the 
winter and hatch with the warmth of spring and early summer, 
the young gradually attaining maturity as the latter season 



41 

Hence the prevalence of adult individuals in the late 
summer and autumn, and at no other time of the year. They 
are provided with a pair of glands, situated one on each side of 
the carapace, which secrete an evil-smelling fluid believed to be 
protective in nature. Harvest-men are very widely distributed 
an4 are especially abundant in temperate countries of the 



Fig. I.— Harvest-man (Phalaugiun cornutum, Linn.); profile of 
male, with legs and palpi truncated. 

a, Ocular tubercle. <*, Sheath of penis protruded. 

b, Mandible «, Penis. 

c, Labrum (upper lip). /, The glans. 

northern hemisphere. They are also, however, common in India, 
where they are well known for their habit of adhering together 
in great masses, comparable to a swarm of bees, and of swaying 
gently backwards and forwards. The long legs of harvest-men 
serve them not only as organs of rapid locomotion,, but also as 
props to raise the body well off the ground, thus enabling the 
animals to stalk unmolested from jthe midst of an army of raiding 
ant*. (R. I. P.) 

HARVEY, GABRIEL (c. 1545-1630), English writer, eldest son 
of a ropemaker of Saffron-Walden, Essex, was born about 1545. 
He matriculated at Christ's College, Cambridge, in 1566, and in 
1570 was elected fellow of Pembroke Hafl. Here be formed a 
lasting friendship with Edmund Spenser, and it has been sug- 
gested (Aiken. Cantab, ii. 258) that he may have been the poet's 
tutor. Harvey was a scholar of considerable weight, who has 
perhaps been judged too exclusively from the brilliant invectives 
directed against him by Thomas Nashe. Henry Morley, writing 
in the Fortnightly Review (March 1869), brought evidence from 
Harvey's Latin writings which shows that he was distinguished 
by quite other qualities than the pedantry and conceit usually 
associated with his name. He desired to be " epitaphed as the 
Invent our of the English Hexameter," and was the prime mover 
in the literary clique that desired to impose on English verse the 
Latin rules of quantity. In a " gallant, familiar letter " to M. 
Immerito (Edmund Spenser) he says that Sir Edward Dyer and 
Sir Philip Sidney were helping forward " our new famous enter- 
prise for the exchanging of Barbarous and Balductum Rymes 
with Artificial Verses." The document includes a tepid apprecia- 
tion of the Faerie Queene which had been sent to him for his 
opinion, and he gives examples of English hexameters illustrative 
of the principles enunciated in the correspondence. The opening 
lines — 
"What might I call this Tree? ALaurdl? O bonny Laurell 

Necdes to thy bowes will I bow this knee, and vayle my bonetto " — 

afford a fair sample of the success of Harvey's metrical experi- 
ments, which presented a fair mark for the wit of Thomas Nashe. 
" He (Harvey) goes twitching and hopping in our language like 
a man running upon quagmires, up the hill in one syllable, and 
down the dale in another," says Nashe in Strange Newts, and he 
mimics him in the mocking couplet: 

" But eh ! what news do you hear of that good Gabriel Huffe-Snnffe, 
Known to the world lor a foole, and clapt in the Flctte for a 
Runner ? " 

Harvey exercised great influence over Spenser for a short time, 
and the friendship lasted even though Spenser's genius refused 



HARVEY, SIR G.— HARVEY, WILLIAM 



42 

to be bound by the laws of the new prosody. Harvey is the 
Hobbinoll of his friend's Shepheards Calender , and into his mouth 
is put the beautiful song in the fourth eclogue in praise of Eliza. 
If he was really the author of the verses "To the Learned 
Shepheard " signed " Hobynoll " and prefixed to the Faerie 
Queen*, he was a good poet spoiled. But Harvey's genuine 
friendship for Spenser shows the best side of a disposition un- 
compromising and quarrelsome towards the world in general 
In 1373 ill-will against him in his college was so strong that there 
was a delay of three months before the fellows would agree to 
grant him "the necessary grace for his M.A. degree. He be- 
came reader in rhetoric about 1576, and in 1578, on the occasion 
of Queen Elizabeth's visit to Sir Thomas Smith at Audley End, 
he was appointed to dispute publicly before her. In the next 
year he wrote to Spenser complaining of the unauthorized publi- 
cation of satirical verses of his which were supposed to reflect on 
high personages, and threatened seriously to injure Harvey's 
career. In 1583 he became junior proctor of the university, and 
in 1585 he was elected master of Trinity Hall, of which he had 
been a fellow from 1578, but the appointment appears to have 
been quashed at court. He was a protege" of the Earl of Leicester, 
to whom he introduced Spenser, and this connexion may account 
for his friendship with Sir Philip Sidney. But in spite of patron- 
age, a second application for the mastership of Trinity Hall 
failed in 1598. In 1585 he received the degree of D.C.L. from 
the university of Oxford, and is found practising at the bar in 
London. Gabriel's brother, Richard, had taken part in the 
Marprelate controversy, and had given offence to Robert Greene 
by contemptuous references to him and his fellow wits. Greene 
retorted in his Quip for an Upstart Courtier with some scathing 
remarks on the Harveys, the worst of which were expunged in 
later editions, drawing attention among other things to Harvey's 
modest parentage. In 1509 Archbishop Whitgift made a raid on 
contemporary satire in general, and among other books the tracts 
of Harvey and Nashe were destroyed, and it was forbidden to 
reprint them. Harvey spent the last years of his life in retire- 
ment at his native place, dying in 1630. 



>ee 
ors 
tt. 
the 
>as 



HARVEY, SIR GEORGE (1806-1876), Scottish painter, the 
son of a watchmaker, was born at St Ninians, near Stirling, in 
February 1806. Soon after his birth his parents removed to 
Stirling, where George was apprenticed to a bookseller. His 
love for art having, however, become very decided, in his 



eighteenth year he entered the Trustees 9 Academy at Edinburgh. 
Here he so distinguished himself that in 1826 he was invited 
by the Scottish artists, who had resolved to found a Scottish 
academy, to join it as an associate. Harvey's first picture, 
" A Village School," was exhibited in 1826 at the Edinburgh 
Institution; and from the time of the opening of the Academy 
in the following year he continued annually to exhibit. His 
best-known pictures are those depicting historical episodes 
in religious history from a puritan or evangelical point of view, 
such as ** Covenanters breaching," " Covenanters' Communion," 
" John Bunyan and his Blind Daughter, 1 * '* Sabbath Evening* 
and the *' Quitting of the Manse." He was, however, equally 
popular in Scotland for subjects not directly religious; and 
M The Bowlers," " A Highland Funeral," - The Curlers," "A 
Schule Skailin'," and •• Children Blowing Bubbles in the Church- 
yard of Greyf liars', Edinburgh," manifest the same close observa- 
tion of character, artistic conception and conscientious elabora- 
tion of details. In "The Night Mail" and " Dawn Revealing 
the New World to Columbus " the aspects of nature are made 
use of in different ways, but with equal happiness, to lend 
impressivencss and solemnity to human concerns. He also 
painted landscapes and portraits. In 1829 he was elected a 
fellow of the Royal Scottish Academy; in 1864 he succeeded 
Sir J. W. Gordon as president; and he was knighted in 1867. 
He died at Edinburgh on the 22nd of January 1876. 

Sir George Harvey was the author of a paper on the " Colour of 
the Atmosphere," read before the Edinburgh Royal Society, and 
afterwards published with illustrations in Good Words; and in 
1870 he published a email volume entitled Notes of the Early History 
of tke Royal Scottish Academy. Selections from the' Works of Su 
George Harvey, P.R.S.A., described by the Rev. A, L. Simpson, 
F.S.A. Scot., and photographed by Thomas Annan, appeared at 
Edinburgh in 1869. 

HARVEY. WILLIAM (1578-1657), English physician, the 
discoverer of the circulation of the blood, was the eldest- son of 
Thomas Harvey, a prosperous Kentish yeoman, and was bora 
at Folkestone on the 1st of April 1578. After passing through 
the grammar school of Canterbury, on the 31st of May 1593, 
having just entered his sixteenth year, he became a pensioner 
of Caius College, Cambridge, at nineteen he took his B A. degree, 
and soon after, having chosen the profession of medicine, he 
went to study at Padua under H. Fabridus and Julius Casserius. 
At the age of twenty-four Harvey became doctor of medicine, in 
April 1602. Returning to England in the first year of James L, 
he settled in London; and two years later he married the 
daughter of Dr Lancelot Browne, who had been physician to 
Queen Elizabeth. In the same year he became a candidate 
of the Royal College of Physicians, and was duly admitted a 
fellow (June 1607). In 1609 he obtained the reversion of the 
post of physician to St Bartholomew's hospital His application 
was supported by the king himself and by Dr Henry Atkins 
(1558-1635), the president of the college, and on the death of 
Dr Wilkinson in the course of the same year he succeeded to the 
post. He was thrice censor of the college, and in 16x5 was 
appointed Lumleian lecturer. 

In 1616 he began his course of lectures, and first brought 
forward his views upon the movements of the heart and blood. 
Meantime his practice increased, and he had the lord chancellor, 
Francis Bacon, and the earl of Arundel among his patients. 
In 1618 he was appointed physician extraordinary to James L, 
and on the next vacancy physician in ordinary to his successor, 
In 1628, the year of the publication of the ExercUatio anaUmica 
de ntotu cordis tt sanguinis, he was elected treasurer of the 
College of Physicians, but at the end of the following year he 
resigned the office, in order, by command of Charles I., to accom- 
pany the young duke of Lennox (James Stuart, afterwards duke 
of Richmond) on bis travels. He appears to have visited 
Italy, and returned in 1632. Four years later be accompanied 
the earl of Arundel on his embassy to the emperor Ferdinand IL 
He was eager in collecting objects of natural history, sometimes 
causing the earl anxiety for his safety by his excursions in a 
country infested by robbers in consequence of the Thirty Years' 
War. In a letter written on this journey, he says: a By the 



HARVEY, WILLIAM 



43 



way w© could sense* see a dogg, crow, kite, raven, or any bird, 
or anything to anatomise; only sum lew miserable people, the 
rctiques of the war and the plague, whom famine had made 
anatomies before I came." Having returned to his practice 
in London at the close of the year 1636, he accompanied Charles I. 
in one of his journeys to Scotland (1649 or 1641). While at 
Edinburgh he visited the Bass Rock; he minutely describes 
its abundant population of sea-fowl in his treatise De generaiione, 
and incidentally speaks of the account then credited of the solan 
goose growing on trees as a fable. He was in attendance on the 
king at the battle of Edgehill (October 1642), where he withdrew 
under a hedge with the prince of Wales and the duke of York 
(then boys of twelve and ten years old), " and took out of his 
pocket a book and read. But he had not read very long before 
a bullet of a great gun grazed on the ground near htm, which 
made him remove his station," as he afterwards told John 
Aubrey. After the indecisive battle, Harvey followed Charles L 
to Oxford, " where," writes the same gossiping narrator, " I 
first saw him, but was then too young to be acquainted with so 
great a doctor. I remember he came several ti mes to our college 
(Trinity) to George Bathurst, B.D. who had a hen to hatch eggs 
in his chamber, which they opened daily to see the progress and 
way of generation. " In Oxford he remained three years, and 
there was some chance of his being superseded in his office at 
St Bartholomew's hospital, " because he hath withdrawn himself 
from his charge, and fa retired to the party in arms against the 
Parliament." It was no doubt at this time that his lodgings 
at Whitehall were searched, and not only the furniture seized 
but also invaluable manuscripts and anatomical preparations. 1 
While with the king at Oxford he was made warden of Merton 
College, but a year later, in 1646, that city surrendered to Fairfax, 
and Harvey returned to London. He was now sixty-eight years 
old, and, having resigned ms appointments and relinquished 
the cares of practice, lived in learned retirement with one or 
other of his brothers. It was in his brother Daniel's house at 
Combe that Dr (afterwards Sir George) Ent, a faithful friend and 
disciple (1604-1680), visited him in 1650. " I found him," he 
says. " with a cheeerful and sprightly countenance investigating, 
take Democritus, the nature of things. Asking if all were well 
with him — 'How can that be,' he replied, 'when the state is so 
agitated with storms and I myself am yet in the open sea? And 
indeed, were not my mind solaced by my studies and the recollec- 
tion of the observations I have formerly made, there is nothing 
which should make me desirous of a longer continuance. But 
thus employed, this obscure life and vacation from public cares 
which would disgust other minds Is the medicine of mine.' " 
The work on which he had been chiefly engaged at Oxford, and 
indeed since the publication of his treatise on the circulation 
in 1628, was an investigation into the recondite but deeply 
interesting subject of generation. Charles I. had been an 
enlightened patron of Harvey's studies, had put the royal deer 
parks at Windsor and Hampton Court at his disposal, and had 
watched his demonstration of the growth of the chick with no 
less interest than the movements of the living heart. Harvey 
had now collected a large number of observations, though he 
would probably have delayed their publication. But Ent 
succeeded in obtaining the manuscripts, with authority to print 
them or not as he should find them. " I went from him," he says, 
" like another Jason in possession of the golden fleece, and when 

1 " Ignoscant rnihi niveaeanimae, si, summarum injuriarum memor, 
levem gemitum effudero. Doloris mini hacc causa est: cum. inter 
nuperos nostras lumultus et bella plusquam civilia, scrcnissimum 
regem (idquc non solum senatus pcrmissionc sed ct jussu) scquor, 
rapaces quacdam manus non modo aedium mearum supellectilcm 
oaanem cxpilarunt, sed etiam, quae rnihi causa gravior qucrimoniae, 
adversaria mea, multorura annorum laborious part a, e muse© mco 
sununoverunt. Quo factum est ut observationes plurimae. prac- 
tertim de generation* insectorum. cum rcpublicae litcrariae (ausim 
dkere) detriments perierint," — De gen., Ex. Ixviii. To this loss 
Cowley refers— 

•" O cursed war! who can forgive thee this? 
Houses and towns may rise again. 
And ten times easier 'tis 
To rebuild Paul's than any work of his." 



I came home and perused the pieces singly, I was amazed that 
so vast a treasure should have been so long hidden." The result 
was the publication of the Exercitationes de generation* (1651). 

This was the last of Harvey's labours. He had now reached 
bis seventy-third year. His theory of the circulation had been 
opposed and defended, and was now generally accepted by the 
most eminent anatomists both in bis own country and abroad. 
He was known and honoured throughout Europe, and his own 
college (Caius) voted a statue in his honour (1652) viro monu- 
mcutis suis immorlali. In 1654 he was elected to the highest post 
in his profession, that of president of the college; but the follow- 
ing day he met the assembled fellows, and, declining the honour 
for himself on account of the infirmities of age, recommended 
the re-election of the late president Dr Francis Prujean (1593- 
1666). He accepted, however, the office of consiliarius, which 
be again held in the two following years. He had already 
enriched the college with other gifts besides the honour of his 
name. He had raised for them "a noble building of Roman 
architecture (rustic work with Corinthian pilasters), comprising 
a great parlour or conversation room below and a library above"; 
he bad furnished the library with books, and filled the museum 
with " simples and rarities," as well as with specimens of instru- 
ments used in the surgical and obstetric branches of medicine, 
At last he determined to give to his beloved college his paternal 
estate at Burmarsh in Kent. His wife had died some years before, 
his brothers were wealthy men, and he was childless, so that he 
was defrauding no heir when, in July 1656, he made the transfer 
of this property, then valued at £56 per annum, with provision 
for a salary to the college librarian and for the endowment of an 
annual oration, which is still given on the anniversary of the day. 
The orator, so Harvey orders in his deed of gift, is to exhort 
the fellows of the college " to search out and study the secrets 
of nature by way of experiment, and also for the honour of 
the profession to continue mutual love and affection among 
themselves." 

Harvey, like his contemporary and great successor Thomas 
Sydenham, was long afflicted with gout, but he preserved his 
activity of mind to an advanced age. In his eightieth year, on 
the 3rd of June 1657, he was attacked by paralysis, and though 
deprived of speech was able to send for his nephews and distribute 
his watch, ring, and other personal trinkets among them. He 
died the same evening, " the paby giving him an easy passport," 
and was buried with great honour in his brother Eliab's vault at 
Hempstead in Essex, annorum etfamae tolur. In 1883 the lead 
coffin containing his remains was enclosed in a marble sarcophagus 
and moved to the Harvey chapel within the church. 

John Aubrey, to whom we owe most of the minor particulars 
about Harvey which have been preserved, says: " In person he 
was not tall, but of the lowest stature; round faced, olivasler 
complexion, little eyes, round, very black, full of spirits; his 
hair black as a raven, but quite white twenty years before he 
died." The best portrait of him extant is by Cornelius Jansea 
in the library of the College of Physicians, one of those rescued 
from the great fire, which destroyed their original hall in 1666. 
It has been often engraved, and is prefixed to the fine edition of 
his works published in 1 766; 

Harvey's Work on the Circulation. — In estimating the character 
and value of the discovery announced in the Exercilalio de mot* 
cordis ct sanguinis, it is necessary to bear in mind the previous 
state of knowledge on the subject. Aristotle taught that in man 
and the higher animals the blood was elaborated from the food 
in the liver, thence carried to the heart, and sent by it through 
the veins over the body. His successors of the Alexandrian 
school of medicine, Erasistratus and Heropbilus, further elabor- 
ated his system, and taught that, while the veins carried blood 
from the heart to the members, the arteries carried a subtle kind 
of air or spirit. For the practical physician only two changes had 
been made in this theory of the circulation between the Christian 
era and the 16th century. Galen had discovered that the 
arteries were not, as their name Implies, merely air-pipes, but 
that they contained blood as well as vital air or spirit. And it 
had been gradually ascertained that the nerves (vcCpa) which 



4+ 

arose from the brain and conveyed " animal spirits " to the 
body were different from the tendons or sinews (vtupa) which 
attach muscles to bones. First, then, the physicians of the 
time of Thomas Linacre knew that the blood is not stagnant in 
the body. So did Shakespeare and Homer, and every augur who 
inspected the entrails of a victim, and every village barber who 
breathed a vein. Plato even uses the expression rd alua *ard 
r&vra rd neXif ofa&pun npKpkptcBai. But no one had a con- 
ception of a continuous stream returning to its source (a circula- 
tion in the true sense of the word) either in the system or in the 
lungs. If they used the word circulatio, as did Caesalpinus, 1 it 
was as vaguely as the French policeman cries " Circules." The 
movements of the blood were in fact thought to be slow and 
irregular in direction as well as in speed, like the " circulation " 
of air in a house, or the circulation of a crowd in the streets of a 
city. Secondly, they supposed that one kind of blood flowed 
from the liver to the right ventricle of the heart, and thence to 
the lungs and the general system by the veins, and that another 
kind flowed from the left ventricle to the lungs and general 
system by the arteries. Thirdly, they supposed that the septum 
of the heart was pervious and allowed blood to pass directly 
from the right to the left side. Fourthly, they bad no conception 
of the functions of the heart as the motor power of the movement 
of the blood. They doubled whether its substance was muscular ; 
they supposed its pulsation to be due to expansion of the spirits 
it contained; they believed the only dynamic effect which it 
had on the blood to be sucking it in during its active diastole, 
and they supposed the chief use of its constant movements to be 
the due mixture of blood and spirit*. 

Of the great anatomists of the 16th century, Sylvius (7* Hipp, 
el Gal. phys. partem anatom. isagoge) described the valves of 
the veins; Vesalius (De humani corporis fabrica, 1542) ascer- 
tained that the septum between the right and left ventricles is 
complete, though he could not bring himself to deny the invisible 
pores which Galen's system demanded. Servetus, in his Chris- 
tianismi restitutio (1553), goes somewhat farther than his fellow- 
student Vesalius, and says : " Pariesille medius non est aptus ad 
communicationem et elaborationem illam; licet aliquid resudare 
possit "; and, from this anatomical fact and the large size of the 
pulmonary arteries he concludes that there is a communication 
in the lungs by which blood passes from the pulmonary artery to 
the pulmonary vein: " Eodem artifido quo in hepate fit trans- 
fusio a vena porta ad venam cavam propter sanguinem, fit etiam in 
pulmone transfusio a vena arteriosa ad arteriam venosam propter 
spirit um." The natural spirit of the left side and the vital spirit 
of the right side of the heart were therefore, he concluded, 
practically the same, and hence two instead of three distinct 
spiritus should be admitted. It seems doubtful whether even 
Servetus rightly conceived of the entire mass of the blood passing 
through the pulmonary artery and the lungs. The transference 
of the spiritus naluralis to the lungs, and its return to the left 
ventricle, as spiritus vitalis, was the function which he regarded 
as important. Indeed a true conception of the lesser circulation 
as a transference of the whole blood of the right side to the left 
was impossible until the corresponding transference in the 
greater or systematic circulation was discovered. Servetus, 
however, was the true predecessor of Harvey in physiology, and 
his claims to that honour are perfectly authentic and universally 
admitted.* 

1 Indeed the same word, mpfofet dftarot, occurs in the Hippo- 
cratic writings, and was held by Van der Linden to prove that to 
the father of medicine himself, and not to Columbus or Caesalpinus, 
belonged the laurels of Harvey. 

* Realdo Columbus (De re analomica, 1559) formally denies the 
muscularity of the heart, yet correctly teaches that blood and spirits 

Eass from the right to the left ventricle, not through the septum 
ut through the lungs, " quod nemo hactenus aut ammadvertit aut 
scriptum reliquit." The fact that Harvey quotes Columbus and not 
Servetus is explained by the almost entire destruction of the writings 
of the latter, which are now among the rarest curiosities. The great 
anatomist Fabridus. Harvey's teacher at Padua, described the valves 
of the veins more perfectly than had Sylvius. Carlo Ruini, in his 
treatise on the Anatomy and Diseases of the Horse (1590). taught that 
the left ventricle sends blood and vital spirits to all parts of the body 
except the lungs— the ordinary Galenical doctrine, Yet on the 



HARVEY, WILLIAM 



The way then to Harvey's great work had been paved by the 
discovery of the valves in the veins, and by that of the leaser 
drculation — the former due to Sylvius and Fabridus, the latter 
to Servetus— but the significance of the valves was unsuspected, 
and the fact of even the pulmonary circulation was not .generally 
admitted in its full meaning. 

In his treatise Harvey proves (x) that it is the contraction, not 
the dUatation, of the heart which coincides with the pulse, and 
that the ventricles as true muscular sacs squeeze the blood which 
they contain into the aorta and pulmonary artery; (a) that the 
pulse is not produced by the arteries enlarging and so filling, but 
by the arteries being filled with blood and so enlarging; (3) that 
there are no pores in the septum of the heart, so that the whole 
blood in the right ventride is sent to the lungs and round by the 
pulmonary veins to the left ventride, and also that the whole 
blood in the left ventricle is again sent into the arteries, round by 
the smaller veins into the venae cavae, and by them to the right 
ventricle again — thus making a complete " circulation " ; (4) 
that the blood in the arteries and that in the veins is the same 
blood; (5) that the action of the right and left sides of the heart, 
aurides, ventrides and valves, is the same, the mechanism in 
both being for reception and propulsion of liquid and not of air, 
since the blood on the right side, though mixed with air, is still 
blood; (6) that the blood sent through the arteries to the tissues 
is not all used, but that most of it runs through into the veins; 
(7) that there is no to and fro undulation in the veins, but a con- 
stant stream from the distant parts towards the heart; (8) that 
the dynamical starting-point of the blood is the heart and not 
the liver. 

The method by which Harvey arrived at his complete and 
almost faultless solution of the most fundamental and difficult 
problem in physiology has been often discussed, and is well 
worthy of attention. He begins his treatise by pointing out the 
many inconsistendes and defects in the Galenical theory, quoting 
the writings of Galen himself, of Fabridus, Columbus and others, 
with great respect, but with unflinching criticism. For, in his 
own noble language, wise men must learn anatomy, not from the 
decrees of philosophers, but from the fabric of nature herself, 
" nee ita in verba jurare antiquitatis magistrae, ut veritatem 
amicam in apertis relinquant, et in conspectu omnium deserant." 
He had, as we know, not only furnished himself with aU the 
knowledge that books and the instructions of the best anatomists 
of Italy could give, but, by a long series of dissections, had 
gained a far more complete knowledge of the comparative 
anatomy of the heart and vessels than any contemporary — we 
may almost say than any successor— until the times of John 
Hunter and J. F. Meckel. Thus equipped, he tells us that be 
began his investigations into the movements of the heart and 
blood by looking at them — t>. by seeing their action in living 
animals. After a modest preface, he heads his first chaster 
strength of this phrase Professor J. B. Ereobni actually put up a 



tablet in the veterinary school at bologna to Ruini as the discoverer 
of the circulation of the t* "** " '" 

flausible claimant to Har . 
n his Quaestiones peripatetieae (1571) he followed Servetus and 



of the circulation of the blood! The claims of Caesalpinus, i 

•lausible claimant to Harvey's laurels, are scarcely better founded. 



Columbus in describing what we now know as the pulmonary 
" drculation " under that name, and this is the only toundatiosi 
for the assertion (first made in Bayle's dictionary) that Caesalpinus 
knew " the drculation of the blood." He is even behind Servetus, 
for he only allows part of the blood of the right ventricle to go round 
by this ''drcutt ; some, be conceives, passes through the hypo- 
thetical pores in the septum, and the rest by the superior cava to 
the head: and arms, by the inferior to the rest of the body: " Hanc 



esse venarum utilitatem ut omncs partes corporis sanguinem pro 
nutrimento deferant. Ex dextro vcntr° cordis vena cava sanguinem 
crassiorem. in quo calor intensus est magis, ex altera autem vrntr* 
sanguinem temperatissimum ac stneerissimum habentc, cgreditur 
aorta." Caesalpinus seems to have had no original views on the 
subject; all that he writes is copied from Galen or from Servetus 
except some erroneous observations of his own. His greatest merit 
was as a botanist ; and no claim to the "discovery of the circulation *• 
was made by him or by his contemporaries. When it was made, 
Haller decided conclusively against it. The fact that an inscription 
has been placed on the bust of Caesalpinus at Rome, which states 
that he preceded others 'in recognising and demonstrating " the 
general circulation of the blood," u only a proof of the blindness of 
misplaced national vanity. 



HARVEY, WILLIAM 



45 



* Ex "forum dSsectfone, qualis sit' cordis motns." He minutely 
describes what he saw and handled in dogs, pigs, serpents, frogs 
and fishes, and even in slugs, oysters, lobsters and insects, in the 
transparent minima scuilla, " quae Anglice dicitur a shrimp" 
and lastly in the chick while still in the shell. In these investiga- 
tions he used a pcrspicUlvm or simple lens. He particularly 
describes his observations and experiments on the ventricles, 
the auricles, the arteries and the veins. He shows how the 
arrangement of the vessels in the foetus supports his theory. 
He adduces facts observed in disease as well as in health to prove 
the rapidity of the circulation. He explains how the mechanism 
of the valves in the veins is adapted, not, as Fabricius believed, 
to moderate the flow of blood from the heart, but to favour its 
flow to the heart. He estimates the capacity of each ventricle, 
and reckons the rate at which the whole mass of blood passes 
through it. He elaborately and clearly demonstrates the effect 
of obstruction of the blood-stream in arteries or in veins, by the 
forceps in the case of a snake, by a ligature on the arm of a man, 
and illustrates his argument by figures. He then sums up his 
conclusion thus: " Circulari quodam motu, in circuitu, agitari 
in animalibus sanguinem, ct esse in perpetuo motu; et hanc esse 
actionem sive functionem cordis quam pulsu peragit; et omnino 
mot us et pulsus cordis causam unam esse." Lastly, in the 15th, 
16th and 17th chapters, he adds certain confirmatory evidence, 
as the effect of position on the circulation, the absorption of 
animal poisons and of medicines applied externally, the muscular 
structure of the heart and the necessary working of its valves. 
The whole treatise, which occupies only 67 pages of large print 
in the quarto edition of 1766, is a model of accurate observation, 
patient accumulation of facts, ingenious experimentation, bold 
yet cautious hypothesis and logical deduction. 

In one point only was the demonstration of the circulation 
Incomplete. Harvey could not discover the capillary channels 
by which the blood passes from the arteries to the veins. This 
gap in the circulation was supplied several years later by the great 
anatomist Marcello Malpighi, who in 166 1 saw in the lungs of 
a frog, by the newly invented microscope, how the blood passes 
from the one set of vessels to the other. Harvey saw all that 
could be seen by the unaided eye in his observations on living 
animals; Malpighi, four years after Harvey's death, by another 
observation on a living animal, completed the splendid chain of 
evidence. If this detracts from Harvey's merit it leaves Servetus 
no merit at all. But in fact the existence cf the channels first 
seen by Malpighi was as clearly pointed to by Harvey's reasoning 
as the existence of Neptune by the calculations of Leverricr and 
of Adams. 

ie 
le 
:h 
Id 
at 
h, 
le 



already convinced of the truth of his theory, urged its publication, 
continued him in his lectureship, and paid him every honour in 
their power. In other countries the book was widely read and 
much canvassed. Few accepted the new theory; out no one 
dreamt of claiming the honour of it for himself, nor for several years 
did any one pretend that it could be found in the works of previous 
authors. The first attack on it was a feeble tract by one James 
Primeroee, a pupil of Jean Riolan (Exerc. et animadv. in libr. 
Harvei de motu cord, et sanj., 1630). Five years later Parisanus, 
an Italian physician, published his Lapis Lydius dt motu cord. 



et sang. (Venice, 1635). a still more bulky and futile performance. 
Primerose's attacks were " imbelha pleraque " and " sine ictu "; 
that of Parisanus " in quamplurimis turpius," according to the con- 
temporary judgment of Johann Vessling. Their dulness has pro- 
tected them from further censure. Caspar Hoffmann, professor at 
Nuremberg, while admitting the truth of the lesser circulation in 
the full Harveian sense, denied the rest of the new doctrine. To 
him the English anatomist replied in a short letter, still extant, 
with great consideration yet with modest dignity, beseeching htm 
to convince himself by actual inspection of the truth of the fact* in 
question. He concludes: " I accept your censure in the candid 
and friendly spirit in which you say you wrote it; do you also the 
same to me. now that I have answered you in the same spirit.** 
This letter Is dated May 1636, and in that year Harvey passed 
through Nuremberg with the earl of Arundel, and visited Hoffmann. 
But he failed to convince him; V nee tamen valuit Harveius vel 
coram," writes P. M. Schlegd, who, however, afterwards succeeded 
in persuading the obstinate old Galcnist to soften his opposition to 
the new doctrine, and thinks that his complete conversion might have 
been effected if he had but lived a little longer — " nee dubito quin 
conccssisset tandem in nostra castra." While in Italy the following 
year Harvey visited his old university of Padua, and demonstrated 
his views to Professor Vessling. A few months later this excellent 
anatomist wrote him a courteous and sensible letter, with certain 
ot 

8 



Ol 



R. 

At last Jean Riolan ventured to publish his Enckiridium ana* 
tomicum (1648), in which he attacks Harvey's theory, and proposes 
one of his own. Riolan bad accompanied the queen dowager of 
France (Maria de' Medici) on a visit to her daughter at Whitehall, 
and had there met Harvey and discussed his theory. He was, in the 
opinion of the judicious Haller, " vir aspcr et in nuperos suosque 
coaevos immitis ac nemini parcens, nimis avidus suarum laudum 
praeco, et se ipso fatente anatomicorum princeps.' 1 Harvey replied 
to the Enckiridium with perfectly courteous language and perfectly 
conclusive arguments, in two letters De circulation* sanguinis, 
which were published at Cambridge in 1649, and are still well worth 
reading. He speaks here of the " circuitus sanguinis a me in* 
ventua." Riolan was unconvinced, but lived to see another pro- 
fessor of anatomy appointed in his own university who taught 
Harvey's doctrines. Even in Italy, Trullius, professor of anatomy 
at Rome, expounded the new doctrine in 1651. But the most 
illustrious converts were Jean Pecquet of Dieppe, the discoverer of 
the thoracic duct, and of the true course of the lacteal vessels, and 
Thomas Bartholinus of Copenhagen, in his Anatome ex omnium 
veterum recentiorumque obsenalionibus, imprimis isutUuHonibus 
beaii met parentis Caspari Bartholini, ad circulations Harveianam 
et vasa Ivmpkoiica renovata (Leiden, 1651). At last Plemptus also 
retracted all his objections; for, as he candidly stated, having 
opened the bodies of a few living dogs. I find that all Harvey's state- 
ments are perfectly true." Hobbes of Malmcsbury could thus say in 
the preface to his EUmenta pkilosopkiae that his friend Harvey, 
"solus quod aciam, doctrinam novam superata invidia vivens 
stabilivit." 

It has been made a reproach to Harvey that he failed to appreciate 
the importance of the discoveries of the lacteal and lymphatic vessels 
by G. Aselli, J. Pecquet and C. Bartholinus. In three letters on the 
subject, one to Dr R. Morison of Paris (1652) and two to Dr Horst of 
Darmstadt (1655), a correspondent of Bartholin's, he discusses 
these observations, and shows himself unconvinced of their accuracy. 
He writes, however, with great moderation and reasonableness, and 
excuses himself from investigating the subject further on the score 
of the infirmities of age; he was then above seventy-four. The 
following quotation shows the spirit of these letters: " Laudo 
equidem summopere Pecqueti ahorumque jn indaganda veritate 
industriam singutarem, nee dubito quin multa adhuc in Democriti 
puteo abscondita tint, a venturi saeculi indefatigabili diligentia 
expromenda." Bartholin, though reasonably disappointed in not 
having Harvey's concurrence, speaks of him with the utmost respect, 
and generously says that the glory of discovering the movements of 
the heart and of the blood was enough for one man. 



+6 



HARVEY, WILLIAM 



Harvey?* Work on Generation.— Vft have seen how Dr. Ent per- 
suaded his friend to publish this book in 1651. It is between 
five and six times as long as the Exerc. de tnolu cord, el sang., 
and is followed by excursus De partu, De uteri memhranis, De 
conception*; but, though the fruit of as patient and extensive 
observations, its value is far inferior. The subject was far more 
abstruse, and in fact inaccessible to proper investigation without 
the aid of the microscope. And the field was almost untrodden 
since the days of Aristotle. Fabricius, Harvey's master, in his 
work De formation* ovi et pulli (162 1), had alone preceded him 
in modern times. Moreover, the seventy-two chapters which 
form the book lack the co-ordination so conspicuous in the earlier 
treatise, and some of them seem almost like detached chapters of 
a system which was never completed or finally revised. 

Aristotle had believed that the male pa of 

the future embryo, while the female only he 

seed; this is in fact the theory on wl of 

Aeschylus, Apollo obtains the acquittal < ;ht 

almost as "erroneously that each parent cc on 

of which produced the young animal. H ith 

due honour of Aristotle and Fabricius. t "; 

for, as he remarks, " eggs cost little and a ire 

to be had," and moreover " almost all a ch 

bring forth their young alive, and man h )tn 

eggs " (" omnia omnino animilia, ctiam cm 

adeo ipsum, ex ovo progigni "). This d. as 



1 tpsum t . w „ 

" omne vivum ex ovo," would alone stan 
the discoverer of the circulation of the blc 
of genius, and was not proved to be a I 
discovered the mammalian ovum in 182 
a careful anatomical description of the ova 
describes the new-laid egg, and then gives 
ance seen on the successive days of incub 
6th, the loth and the 14th, and lastly 



hatching. He then comments upon and corrects the opinions of 
Aristotle and Fabricius, declares against spontaneous generation 
(though in one passage he seems to admit the current doctrine of 
production of worms by putrefaction as an exception), proves that 
there is no semen focmineum. that the chalazae of the hen's eggs arc 
not the semen gafti, and that both parents contribute to the forma- 
tion of the egg. He describes accurately the first appearance of the 
ovarian ova as mere specks, their assumption of yelk and after- 
wards of albumen. In chapter xlv. he describes two methods of 
production of the embryo from the ovum : one is metamorphosis, or 
the direct transformation of pre-existing material, as a worm from 
an egg, or a butterfly from an aurelia (chrysalis); the other is 
effigenesis, or development with addition of parts, the true genera- 
tion observed in all higher animals. Chapters xlvi.-l. are devoted 
to the abstruse question of the efficient cause of generation, which, 
after much discussion of the opinions of Aristotle and of Senncrtius, 
Harvey refers to the action of both parents as the efficient instru- 
ments of the first great cause. 1 He then goes on to describe the 
order in which the several parts appear in the chicle He states that 
the punctum saliens or foetal heart is the first organ to be seen, and 
explains that the nutrition of the chick is not only effected by yelk 
conveyed directly into the midgut, as Aristotle taught, but also by 
absorption from yelk and white by the umbilical (omphalomcseraic) 
veins; on the fourth day of incubation appear two masses (which he 
oddly names vermictdus), one of which develops into three vesicles, 
to form the cerebrum, cerebellum and eyes, the other into the 
breastbone and thorax; on the sixth or seventh day come the 
viscera, and lastly, the feathers and other external parts. Harvey 
points out how nearly this order of development in the chick agrees 
with what he had observed in mammalian and particularly in human 
embryos. He notes the bifid apex of the foetal heart in man and 
the equal thickness of the ventricles, the soft cartilages which 
represent the future bones, the large amount of liquor amnii and 
absence of placenta which characterise the foetus in tho third month ; 
in the fourth the position of the testes in the abdomen, and the uterus 
with its Fallopian tubes resembling the uterus bicornis of the sheep; 
the large thymus; the caecum, small as in the adult, not forming a 



1 So in Exerc. liv.: "Superior itaquc ct divinior opifex, quam 
est homo, vidctur hominem fabricate et conservare, et nobilior 
artifex, quam gallus, pullum ex ovo producerc. Ncmpe agnoscimus 
Deum. creatorem summum atque omnipotentcm, in cunctorum 
animalium fabrica uhique praesentcm esse, et in operibus suis quasi 
digito monstrari: cujus in procreatione pulli instrumenta sint gallus 
et gallina. . . . Nee cuiquam sane haec attributa conveniunt nisi 
omnipotent! rcrum Principio, quocunque demum nomine ioip&um 
appellare libucrit: sive Mentem divinam cum Aristotclc, sive cum 
rlatone Animara Mundi, aut cum aliis Naturam naturantcm, vel 
cum ethnicis Saturnum aut Iovem; vel pot i us (ut nos deed) Crea- 
torem ac Patrem omnium quae in coelis et terris, a quo animalia 
eoruraque origines dependent, cuj usque nutu sive enatu fiunt et 
generantur omnia. 



second stomach as in the pig, the horse and the hare; the tabulated 
kidneys, like those of the seal (" vilulo," ac. morino) and porpoise, 
and the large suprarenal veins, not much smaller than those of the 
kidneys (li.-lvi). He failed, however, to trace the connexion of 
the uracfaus with the bladder. In the following chapters (txHL- 
lxxii.) he describes the process of generation in the fallow deer or 
the roe. After again insisting that all animals arise from ova, 
that a " conception " is an internal egg and an egg an extruded 
conception, he goes on to describe the uterus of the doe, the process 
of impregnation, and the subsequent development of the foetus and 
its membranes, the punctum saliens, the cotyledons of the placenta. 
and the " uterine milk," to which Sir William Turner recalled 
attention in later years. The treatise concludes with detached 
notes on the placenta, parturition and allied subjects. 

Harvey* 's other Writings and Medical Practice. — The remaining 
writings of Harvey which are extant are unimportant. A com- 
plete list of them will be found below, together with the titles of 
those which we know to be lost. Of these the most important 
were probably that on respiration, and the records of post- 
mortem examinations. From the following passage (De partu, 
p. 550) it seems that he had a notion of respiration being con- 
nected rather with the production of animal heat than, as then 
generally supposed, with the cooling of the blood. " Haec qui 
diligentcr pcrpendcrit, naturamquc aeris diligenter introspexerit, 
facile opinor fatcbitur eundem nee refrigerationis gratia nee in 
pabulum animalibus concedi. Haec autcm obiter duntaxat de 
respiratione diximus, proprio loco de eadem forsitan copiosius 
disceptaturL" 

Of Harvey as a practising physician we know very little. 
Aubrey tells us that " he paid his visits on horseback with a foot- 
doth, his man following on foot, as the fashion then was." He 
adds — " Though all of his profession would allow him to be an 
excellent anatomist, I never heard any that admired his thera- 
peutic way. I knew several practitioners that would not have 
given threepence for one of his bills " (the apothecaries used to 
collect physicians' prescriptions and sell or publish them to their 
own profit), " and that a man could hardly tell by bis bill what 
he did aim at." However this may have been, — and rational 
therapeutics was impossible when the foundation stone of physio- 
logy had only just been laid, — we know that Harvey was an active 
practitioner, performing such important surgical operations as 
the removal of a breast, and he turned his obstetric experience 
to account in his book on generation. Some good practical 
precepts as to the conduct of labour are quoted by Percivall 
Witlughby (1596-1685). He also took notes of the anatomy of 
disease; these unfortunately perished with his other manuscripts. 
Otherwise we might regard him as a forerunner of G. B. Mor- 
gagni; for Harvey saw that pathology is but a branch of physio- 
logy, and like it must depend first on accurate anatomy. He 
speaks strongly to this purpose in his first epistle to Riolan: 
"Sicut cnim sanorum et boni habitus corporum dissectio piuri- 
mum ad philosophiam et rectam physiologiam fadt, ita corporum 
morbosorum et cacheclicorum inspectio potissimum ad patho- 
logiam philosophic am." The only specimen we have of his 
observations in morbid anatomy is his account of the post- 
mortem examination made by order of the king on the body of 
the famous Thomas Parr, who died in 1635, at the reputed age 
of 152. Harvey insists on the value of physiological truths for 
their own sake, independently of their immediate utility; but 
he himself gives us an interesting example of the practical 
application of his theory of the circulation in the cure of a large 
tumour by tying the arteries which supplied it with blood [De 
general. Exerc. xix.). 

The following is believed to be a complete list of all the knowt 
writings of Harvey, published and unpublished : — 

Exercitatio anatomica de motu cordis et sanguinis, 4to (Frankfort* 
on-the-Main, 1628); Exercilationes duae anatomicae de circulation* 
sanguinis, ad Johannem Riolanum f /ilium. Parisiensem (Cambridge. 
1649); £xereitaliones de generation* animalium, quibus accedunt 
quaedam de partu, de membranis ac humoribus uteri, et de concep- 
tione, 4to (London, 1651); Anatomic Thomae Parr, first published 
in the treatise of Dr John Betts, De ortu et nature sanguinis, 8vo 
(London, 1669). Letters: (1) to Caspar Hoffmann, of Nuremberg, 
'May 1636; (2) to Schlcgel of Hamburg, April 1651; ft) three to 
Giovanni Nardi of Florence, July 1651. Dec 1653 and Nov. 1653: 
(4) two to Dr Morison of Paris, May 1652 ; (5) two to Dr Horst of 



HARVEY— HARZBURG 



+7 



Darmstadt, Feb. 1654-165) and July 1655; (6) to Dr VtackveW of 
Haarlem. May 1657. His letters to Hoffmann and Schlegel are on 
the circulation; those to Moricon, Horst and Viae Ic veld refer to 
the discovery of the lacteal* ; the two to Nardi are short letters of 
friendship. All these letters were published bv Sir George Ent m 
his collected works (Leiden, 1687). Of two MS. letters, one on 
official business to the secretary Dorchester was printed by Dr 
Aveling, with a facsimile of the crabbed handwriting (Memorials of 
Honey, 1875). and the other, about a patient, appears in Dr Robert 
Willis s Life of Harvey (1878). Praelectiones ana torn iae universalis 
per me Cut. Harveium medicum Londmtnsem, anal, el ckir. professor em, 
an. dom. (1616), aeiat. 37, — MS. notes of his Lumlctan lectures in 
Latin. — are in the British Museum library; an autotype reproduction 
was issued by the College of Physicians in 1886. An account of a 
second MS. jn the British Museum, entitled Gutielmus Harveius de 
tnusculis, motu locali, &c, was published by Sir G. E. Paget (Notice 
of an unpublished MS. of Harvey, London. i8«o). The following 
treatises, or notes towards them, were lost either in the pillaging 
of Harvey's house, or perhaps in the Are of London, which destroyed 
the old College of Physicians: A Treatise on Respiration, promised 
and probably at least in part completed (pp. 82, 550, ed. 1766); 
Observationes de usu Lienis; Observaliones die motu locali, perhaps 
identical with the above-mentioned manuscript : Trattatum physio- 
logicum: Anatomia medicalis (apparently notes of morbid anatomy); 
De teneratione insectorum. The fine 4to edition of Harvey's Works, 
published by the Royal College of Physicians in 1766, was super- 
intended by Dr Mark Akenslde: it contains the two treatises, 
the account of the post-mortem examination of old Parr, and the 
six letters enumerated above. A translation of this volume by Dr 
Willis, with Harvey's will, was published by the Sydenham Society, 
8vo (London. 1849). \ 

The following are the principal biographies of I larvcy : in Aubrey's 
Letters of Eminent Persons, Ac, vol. ii. (London, 1813), first pub- 
lished in 1685. the only contemporary account ; in Baylc's Diction- 
naire historian* el critique (1608 and 1720; Enc. ed.. 1738); 
in the Biographia Brilannica, ana in Ait ken s Biographical Memoirs; 
the Latin Life by Dr Thomas Lawrence, prefixed to the college 
edition of Harvey's Works in 1766; memoir in Lives of British 
Physicians (London, 1830); a Life by Dr Robert Willis, founded on 
that by Lawrence, and prefixed to his English edition of Harvey 
in 1847; the much enlarged Life by the same author, published in 
1878: the biography by Dr William Munk in the Roll of the College 
of Physicians, vol. i. (2nd ed., 1879). 

The literature which has arisen on the great discovery of Harvey, 
on his methods and his merits, would filla library. The most im- 
portant contemporary writings have been mentioned above. The 
following list gives some of the most remarkable in modern times: 
the article in Bayle's dictionary quoted above; Anatomical Lectures, 
by Wm. Hunter. M.D. (1784) ; Sprengell, Ceschichle der Armeikunde 
(Halle, 1800). vol. iv.; Flourens, Hisloire de la circulation (1854); 
Lewes. Physiology of Common Life (i8v>), vol. i. pp. 29 | -345I 
Ccradini, La Scoperla deJla circolazione del sangue (Milan, 1876); 
Tollin, Die Entdeckmng des Blutkreislaufs^durch Michael Servet 
(Jena, 1876); Kirchner, Die Entdeckung des Blutkreislaufs (Berlin, 
1878): Willis, in his Life of Harvey; Wharton Jones, " Lecture on 
the Circulation of the Blood." Lancet for Oct. 25 and Nov. 1, 1879: 
and the various Harteian Orations, especially those by Sir E. Sieve- 
king, Dr Guy and Professor George Rollestoo. (P. H. P.-S.) 

HARVEY, a city of Cook county, Illinois, U.S.A., about 18 m. 
S. of the Chicago Court House. Pop. (1000) 5395 (982 foreign- 
born); (1910) 7227. It is served by the Chicago Terminal Transfer, 
the Grand Trunk and the Illinois Central railways. Harvey is 
1 manufacturing and residence suburb of Chicago. Among its 
nanufactures are railway, foundry and machine-shop supplies, 
nining and ditching machinery, stone crushers, street-making 
tnd street -cleaning machinery, stoves and motor-vehicles. It 
vas named in honour of Turlington W. Harvey, a Chicago 
apitalist, founded in 1890, incorporated as a village in 1891 
tnd chartered as a city in 1895. 

HARWICH, a municipal borough and seaport in the Harwich 
>arliamemary division of Essex, England, on the extremity of 
1 small peninsula projecting into the estuary of the Stour and 
)rwell, 70 m. N.E. by E. of London by the Great Eastern 
ailway. Pop. (1001), 10,070. It occupies an elevated situation, 
nd a wide view is obtained from Beacon Hill at the southern 
ad of the esplanade. The church of St Nicholas was built of 
•rick in 1821; and there are a town hall and a custom-house. 
he harbour is one of the best on the east coast of England, and 
% stormy weather is largely used for shelter. A breakwater 
nd sea-wall prevent the blocking of the harbour entrance and 
ncroachments of the sea; and there is another breakwater at 
andguard Point on the opposite (Suffolk) shore of the estuary. 
he principal imports are grain and agricultural produce, timber 



and coal, and the export! cement and fish. Harwich is one of 
the principal English ports for continental passenger tfaffic, 
steamers regularly serving the Hook of Holland, Amsterdam, 
Rot terdam, Ant werp, Esbjerg, Copenhagen and Hamburg. The 
continental trains of the Great Eastern railway run to Parkeston 
Quay, x m. from Harwich up the Stour, where the passenger 
steamers start. The fisheries are important, principally those 
for shrimps and lobsters. There are cement and shipbuilding 
works. The port is the headquarters of the Royal Harwich 
Yacht Gub. There are batteries at and opposite Harwich, and 
modern works on Shotley Point, at the fork of the two estuaries. 
There arc also several of the Martello towers of the Napoleonic 
era. At Landguard Fort there are important defence works with 
heavy modern guns commanding the main channel This has 
been a point of coast defence since the time of James I. Between 
the Parkeston Quay and Town railway stations is that of Dover- 
court, an adjoining parish and popular watering-place. Harwich 
is under a mayor, 4 aldermen and 12 councillors. Area, 1541 
acres. * 

Harwich (Herewica, Hercwyck) cannot be shown to have been 
inhabited very early, although in the 18th century remains of a 
camp, possibly Roman, existed there. Harwich formed part of 
the manor of Dovcrcourt. It became a borough in 1319 by a 
charter of Edward II., which was confirmed in 1342 and 1378, 
and by each of the Lancastrian kings. The exact nature and 
degree of its self-government is not dear. Harwich received 
charters in 1547, 1 553 and 1 560. In 1604 James I. gave it a charter 
which amounted to a new constitution, and from this charter 
begins the regular parliamentary representation. Two burgesses 
had attended parliament in 1343, but none had been summoned 
since. Until 1867 Harwich returned two members; it then lost 
one, and in 1885 it was merged in the county. Included in the 
manor of Dovcrcourt, Harwich from 1086 was for long held by 
the de Vcre family. In 1 252 Henry III. granted to Roger Bigod 
a market here every Tuesday, and a fair on Ascension day, and 
eight days after. In 1320 a grant occurs of a Tuesday market, 
but no fair is mentioned. James I. granted a Friday market,* 
and two fairs, at the feast of St Philip and St James, and on 
St Luke's day. The fair has died out, but markets arc still 
held on Tuesday and Friday. Harwich has always had a 
considerable trade; in the 14th century merchants came 
efen from Spain, and there was much trade in wheat and 
wool with Flanders. But the passenger traffic appears to have 
been as important at Harwich in the 14th century as it is now. 
Shipbuilding was a considerable industry at Harwich in the 
17th century. 

HARZBURO, a town of Germany, in the duchy of Brunswick, 
beautifully situated in a deep and well-wooded vale at the north 
foot of (be Harz Mountains, at the terminus of the Brunswick- 
Harzburg railway, 5 m. E.S.E. from Goslar and 18 m. S. 
from WolfcnbUltel. Pop. (1905), 4396. The Radau, a mountain 
stream, descending from the Brock en, waters the valley and adds 
much to its picturesque charm. The town is much frequented 
as a summer residence. It possesses brine and carbonated springs, 
the Juliushall saline baths being about a mile to the south of 
the town, and a hydropathic establishment. A mile and a half 
south from the town lies the Burgberg, 1500 ft. above sea-level, 
on whose summit, according to tradition, was once an altar to 
the heathen idol Krodo, still to be seen in the Ulrich chapel at 
Goslar. There are on the summit of the hill the remains of an 
old castle, and a monument erected in 1875 to Prince Bismarck, 
with an inscription taken from one of bis speeches against 
the Ultramontane claims of Rome— "Nock Canossa tekm 
vrir nichl.** 

The castle on the Burgberg called the Harzburg is famous in 
German history. It was built between 1065 and 1069, but was 
laid iri ruins by the Saxons in 1074; again it was built and 
again destroyed during the struggle between the emperor 
Henry IV. and the Saxons. By Frederick I. it was granted to 
Henry the Lion, who caused it to be rebuilt about 1 180. It was 
a frequent residence of Otto IV., who died therein, and after 
being frequently besieged and taken, it passed to the house of 



+8 



HARZ MOUNTAINS— HASA, EL 



Brunswick. It ceased to be of importance as a fortress after the 
Thirty Years' War, and gradually fell into ruins. 

See Delius, Uniersuckungen abet die Geukukle der Hanburg 
(Halberstadt, 1826); Dommes, Hanburg und seine Umgebung 
(Goslar. 1862); Jacobs, Die Hanburg und Hue Ceuhkkte (1885); 
and Stolle, Fuhrer von Bad Hanburg (1809). 

HARZ MOUNTAINS (also spelt Hartz, Ger. Harzgebirge, anc. 
Silva Hcrcynia), the most northerly mountain-system of 
Germany, situated between the rivers Weser and Elbe, occupy 
an area of 784 sq. m., of which 45s belong to Prussia, 386 to 
Brunswick and 43 to Anhalt. Their greatest length extends in 
a S.E. and N.W. direction for 57 m., and their maximum breadth 
is about 20 m. The group is made up of an irregular series of 
terraced plateaus, rising here and there into rounded summits, 
and intersected in various directions by narrow, deep valleys. 
The north-western and higher part of the mass is called the Ober 
or Upper Harz; the south-eastern and more extensive part, 
the Unter or Lower Hare; while the N.W. and S.W. slopes of 
the Upper Harz form, the Vorhare. The Brocken group, which 
divides the Upper and Lower Harz, is generally regarded as 
belonging to the first. The highest summits of the Upper Harz 
are the Brocken (3747 ft.), the HcinrichshShe (3425 ft.), the 
Konigsberg (3376 ft.) and the Wurmberg (3176 ft.); of the 
Lower Harz, the Josephshohe in the Auerberg group and the 
Viktorhehe in the Ramberg, each 1887 ft. Of these the Brocken 
(q.v.) is celebrated for the legends connected with it, immortal- 
ize^ in Goethe's Faust. Streams are numerous, but all small. 
While rendered extensively useful, by various skilful artifices, in 
working the numerous mines of the district, at other parts of 
their course they present the most picturesque scenery in the 
Harz. Perhaps the finest valley is the rocky Bodethal, with the 
Rosstrappe, the Hexentanzplatz, the Baumannshdhle and the 
Bielshohle. 

The Harz is a mass of Pa!a< >ic 

strata of north Germany, and es, 

schists, quartzitcs and limest lis, 

but the Brocken and Victor te, 

•and diabases and diabase ti di- 

mentary deposits. The Sil >us 

systems are represented — thi he 

greater part of the hills S.E to 

Wernigerode, while N.W. of 1 re- 

dominates. A few patches of he 

borders of the hills near llfcld, Jy 

upon the Devonian. The str W, 

but the general strike of the fc iu, 

is N.E. or N.N.E. Thcwhol< nt 

Hercynian chain of North El ne 

from the Harz), and is the n< ks 

of the Ardennes and the Eif< ok 

place towards the close of tl to 

which they owe their presi -y. 

Metalliferous veins are comm he 

silver-bearing lead veins of h or 

Lower Carboniferous. 

Owing to its position as the first range which the northerly 
winds strike after crossing the north German plain, the climate 
on the summit of the Harz is generally raw and damp, even in 
summer. In 1895 an observatory was opened on the top of the 
Brocken, and the results of the first five years (1896-1900) showed 
a July mean of 50° Fahr., a February mean of 24-7°, and a yearly 
mean of 36-6°. During the same five years the rainfall averaged 
64 § ins. annually. But while the summer is thus relatively un- 
genial on the top of the Harz, the usual summer heat of the 
lower-lying valleys is greatly tempered and cooled; so that, 
adding this to the natural attractions of the scenery, the deep 
forests, and the legendary and romantic associations attaching 
to every fantastic rock and ruined castle, the Harz is a favourite 
summer resort of the German people. Among the more popular 
places of resort are Harzburg, Thalc and the Bodethal; Blanken- 
burg, with the Teufelsmauer and the HermannshShle; Werni- 
gerode, Usenburg, Grand, Lauterberg, Hubertusbad, Alexisbad 
and Suderode. Some of these, and other places not named, add 
to their natural attractions the advantage of mineral springs and 
baths, pine-needle baths, whey cures, &c. The Harz is pene- 
trated by several railways, among them a rack-railway up the 



Brocken, opened in 1898. Toe district is traversed by excellent 
roads in all directions. 

The northern summits are destitute of trees, but the lower 
slopes of the Upper Harz are heavily wooded with pines and firs. 
Between the forests of these stretch numerous peat-mosses, 
which contain in their spongy reservoirs the sources of many 
small streams. On the Brocken are found one or two arctic and 
several alpine, plants. In the Lower Harz the forests contain a 
great variety of timber. The oak, elm and birch are common, 
while the beech especially attains an unusual size and beauty. 
The walnut-tree grows in the eastern districts. 

The last bear was killed in the Harz in 1705, and the last lynx 
in 1817, and since that time the wolf too has become extinct; 
but deer, foxes, wild cats and badgers are still found in the 
forests. 

The Harz is one of the richest mineral storehouses in Germany, 
and the chief industry is mining, which has been carried on since 
the middle of the xoth century. The most important mineral b 
a peculiarly rich argentiferous lead, but gold in small quantities, 
copper, iron, sulphur, alum and arsenic are also found. Mining 
is carried on principally at KJauslhaJ and St Andreasberg in the 
Upper Harz. Near the latter is one of the deepest mining shafts 
in Europe, namely the Samson, which goes down 2700 ft. or 720 
ft. below sea-level. For the purpose of getting rid of the water, 
and obviating the flooding of such deep workings, it has been 
found necessary to construct drainage works of some magnitude. 
As far back as 1777*- 1709 the Georgsstollen was cut through the 
mountains from the east of Klausthal westward to Grand, a 
distance of 4 m.; but this proving insufficient, another sewer, 
the Ernst-Auguststollen, no less than 14 m. in length, was made 
from the same neighbourhood to Gittelde, at the west side of the 
Harz, in 1 851- 1864. Marble, granite and gypsum are worked; 
and large quantities of vitriol are manufactured. The vast 
forests that cover the mountain slopes supply the materials 
for a considerable trade in timber. Much wood is exported for 
building and other purposes, and in the Harz itself is used as 
fuel. The sawdust of the numerous milk is collected for use 
in the manufacture of paper. Turf-cutting, coarse lace-making 
and the breeding of canaries and native song-birds also occupy 
many of the people. Agriculture is carried on chiefly on the 
plateaus of the Lower Harz; but there is excellent pasturage 
both in the north and in the south. In the Lower Harz, as in 
Switzerland, the cow?, which carry bells harmoniously tuned, 
are driven up into the heights in early summer, returning to the 
sheltered regions in late autumn. 

The inhabitants are descended from various stocks. The 
Upper and Lower Saxon, the Thuringian and the Frankish 
races have all contributed to form the present people, and their 
respective influences are still to be traced in the varieties of 
dialect. The boundary line between High and Low German 
passes through the Harz. The Harz was the last stronghold of 
paganism in Germany, and to that fact are due the legends, in 
which no district is richer, and the fanciful names given by the 
people to peculiar objects and appearances of nature. 

»ally since 1868); 

Gt anasckaflsb&dern 

(H tonograpkien tmr 

Er rtbers. Dew Han 

it |; Hampe, Hen 

h Ur Geognosic da 

Hi tsagen (2nd ed., 

Le rsegen des Hants 

!B > und Unierhan 

K (Leipzig. 1895); 

HASA, EL (Aha, Al Hasa), a district in the east of Arabia 
stretching along the shore of the Persian Gulf from Kuwet in 29* 
20' N. to the south point of the Gulf of Bahrein in 25* id' N., a 
length of about 360 m. On the W. it is bounded by Nejd, and 
on the S.E. by the peninsula of El Katr which forms part of 
Oman. The coast is low and flat and has no deep-water port 
along its whole length with the exception of Kuwet; from that 
place' to El Katif the country is barren and without villages 



HASAN AND HOSAIN— HASDEU 



49 



or permanent settlements, and is ailly occupied by nomad tribes, 
of which the principal are the Bani Hajar, Ajman and Rhftlid. 
The interior consists of low stony ridges rising gradually to the 
inner plateau. The oases of Hofuf and Katif , however, form a 
strong contrast to the barren wastes that cover the greater part 
of the district. Here an inexhaustible supply of underground 
water (to which the province owes its name Hasa) issues in strong 
springs! marking, according to Arab geographers, the course of a 
great subterranean river draining the Nejd highlands. Hofuf the 
capital, a town of 15,000 to 20,000 inhabitants, withits neighbour 
Mubiriz scarcely lea populous, forms the centre of a thriving 
district 50 m. long by 15 m. in breadth, containing numerous 
villages each with richly cultivated fields and gardens. The town 
walls enclose a space of 1 J by x m., at the north-west angle 
of which is a remarkable citadel attributed to the Carmathkn 
princes. Mubiriz is celebrated for its hot spring, known as Urn 
Saba or " mother of seven," from the seven channels by which 
its water is distributed. Beyond the present limits of the oasis 
much of the country is well supplied with water, and ruined 
sites and half -obliterated canals, show that it has only relapsed 
into waste in recent times. Cultivation reappears at Katif, a 
town situated on a small bay some 35 m> north-west of Bahrein. 
Date groves extend for several miles along the coast, which is 
low and muddy. The district is fertile but the climate is hot and 
unhealthy; still, owing to its convenient position, the town has 
a considerable trade with Bahrein and the gulf ports on one side 
and the interior of Nejd on the other. The fort is a strongly built 
enclosure attributed, like that at Hofuf, to the Carmathian prince 
AbuTahir. _ 

"Ukcr or 'Ujer is the nearest port to Hofuf, from which it is 
distant about 40 m.; large quantities of rice and piece goods 
transhipped at Bahrein are landed here and sent on by caravan 
to Hofuf, the great entrepot for the trade between southern Nejd 
and the coast. It also shares In the valuable pearl fishery of 
Bahrein and the adjacent coast. 

Politically £1 Hasa is a dependency of Turkey, and its capital 
Hofuf is the headquarters of the sanjak or district of Nejd. 
Hofuf, Katif and £1 Katr were occupied by Turkish garrisons in 
1871, and the occupation has been continued in spite of British 
protest as to £1 Katr, which according to the agreement made in 
1867, when Bahrein was taken under British protection, was 
tributary to the latter. Turkish claims to Kuwet have not been 
admitted by Great Britain. 

Authorities. — W. G. Palgrave, Central and Eastern Arabia 
(Loadon, 1865); L. Pelly, Journal R.G.S. (1866); S. M. Zwemer, 
Geog. Journal (1903) ; G. F. Sadlier, Diary of a Journey across Arabia 
(Bombay, 1866); V. Cairo!, The Middle East (London. 1904). 

QASAH and gOSAIH (or IJusein), sons of the fourth 
Mahommedan caliph All by his wife Fatima, daughter of 
Mahomet. On Ali's death Hasan was proclaimed caliph, but 
the strength of Moawiya who had rebelled against All was such 
that he resigned his claim on condition that be should have the 
disposal of the treasure stored at Kufa, with the revenues of 
Darabjird. This secret negotiation came to the ears of IJasan's 
mpporters, a mutiny broke out and Hasan was wounded. He 
-etired to Medina where he died about 669. The story that he 
ras poisoned at Moawiya's instigation is generally discredited 
see Caliphate, sect. B, § 1). Subsequently his brother IJosain 
ras invited by partisans in Kufa to revolt against Moawiya's 
uccessor Yaxid. He was, however, defeated and killed at 
Cerbela on the 10th of October (Muharram) 680 (see Caliphate, 
ect. B, 5 a od init.). IJosain is the hero of the Passion Play 
vhich is performed annually (e.g. at Kerbela) on the anniversary 
>f his death by the Shf ites of Persia and India, to whom from 
he earliest times the family of All are the only true descendants of 
.fabomet. The play lasts for several days and concludes with 
be carrying out of the coffins (tab «) of the martyrs to an open 
>lace in the neighbourhood. 

See Sir Wro. Muir, The Caliphate (1883); Sir Lewis Pelly, The 
Oracle Play of Hasan and Hosem (1879). 

HASAN UL-BA$Rl [Aba Sa'dd ul-Hasan ibn AbM-rJasan 
fassar ul-Basrl], (642-728 or 737), Iranian theologian, was 

xm 2 



born at Medina, - Hb father was a freedman of Zaid ibn Th&bit, 
one of the Ansar (Helpers of the Prophet), his mother a client of 
Umm Salama, a wife of Mahomet. Tradition says that Umm 
Salama often nursed Hasan in his infancy. He was thus one 
of the 7Wfi* (i.e. of the generation that succeeded the Helpers). 
He became a teacher of Basra and founded a school there. 
Among his pupils was Wasil ibn 'At&, the founder of the 
Mo'taziUtcs. He himself was a great supporter of orthodoxy 
and the most important representative of asceticism in the time 
of its first development. With him fear is the basis of morality, 
and sadness the characteristic of his religion. Life b only a 
pilgrimage, and comfort must be denied to subdue the passions. 
Many writers testify to the purity of hb life and to hb excelling 
in the virtues of Mahomet's own companions. He was " as if 
he were in the other world." In politics, too, be adhered to the 
earliest principles of Islam, being strictly opposed to the in- 
herited caliphate of the Omayyads and a believer in the election 
of the caliph. _ 
Hb life is given in NawfiwTs Biorrapkical Dictionary (ed. P. 



HASBEYA, or Hasbeiya, a town of the Druses, about 36 m. 
W. of Damascus, situated at the foot of Mt. Hermon in Syria, 
overlooking a deep amphitheatre from which a brook flows to 
the Hasb&ni. The population b about 5000 (4000 Christians). 
Both sides of the valley are planted in terraces with olives, vines 
and other fruit trees. The grapes are either dried or made 
into a kind of syrup. In 1846 an American Protestant mission 
was established in the town. This little community suffered 
much persecution at first from the Greek Church, and afterwards 
from the Druses, by whom in i860 nearly 1000 Christians were 
massacred, while others escaped to Tyre or Sidon. The castle 
in Hasbeya was held by the crusaders under Count Oran; but 
In 1x71 the Druse emirs of the great Shehib family (see Druses) 
recaptured it. In 1205 thb family was confirmed in the lordship 
of the town and dbtrict, which they held till the Turkish 
authorities took possession of the castle in the 19th century. 
Near Hasbeya are bitumen pits let by the government; and to 
the north, at the source of the Hasb&ni, the ground b volcanic 
Some travellers have attempted to identify Hasbeya with the 
biblical Baal-Gad or Baal-Hermon. 

.gASDAI IBN J5HAPRUT, the founder of the new culture of 
the Jews in Moorish Spain in the xoth century. He was both 
physician and minister to Caliph Abd ar- Rahman III. in Cordova* 
A man of wide learning and culture, he encouraged the settlement 
of Jewish scholars in Andalusia, and hb patronage of literature, 
science and art promoted the Jewish renaissance in Europe. 
Poetry, philology, philosophy all nourished under hb encourage- 
ment, and hb name was handed down to posterity as the first 
of the many Spanish Jews who combined diplomatic skill with 
artistic culture. Thb type was the creation of the Moors in 
Andalusia, and the Jews ably seconded the Mahommedans 
in the effort to make life at once broad and deep. (I. A.) 

HASDEU, or Hajdeu, BOGDAK PETRICBICD (1836-1007), 
Rumanian philologist, was bom at Khotin in Bessarabia in 
1836, and studied at the university of Kharkov. In r8s8 he 
first settled in Jassy as professor of the high school and librarian. 
He may be considered as the pioneer in many branches of 
Rumanian philology and history. At Jassy he started hb Arckiva 
historica a Romaniei (1865-1867), in which a large number of 
old documents in Slavonic and Rumanian were published for 
the first time. ' In 1870 he inaugurated Cotumna lui Traian, 
the best philological review* of the time in Rumania. In his 
Cuoente den Balrani (2 vols., 1878-1881) he was the first to 
contribute to the history of apocryphal literature in Rumania. 
Hb Historia crilica a Romanilor (1875), though incomplete, 
marks the beginning of critical investigation into the history 
of Rumania. Hasdeu edited the ancient Psalter of Coresi of 
1577 (PsaUirea lui Coresi, 1881). Hb Etymologlcum magnum 
Romaniae (1S86, &c) b the beginning of an encyclopaedic 
dictionary of the Rumaiihn language, though never finished 



5° 



HASDRUBAL— HASLINGDEN 



beyond the letter B. In 1876 he-was appointed director of the 
state archives in Bucharest and in 1878 professor of philology 
at the university of Bucharest. His works, which include one 
drama, Rasvan si Vidra, bear the impress of great originality 
of thought, and the author is often carried away by his profound 
erudition and vast imagination. Hasdeu was a keen politician. 
After the death of his only child Julia in 1888 he became a 
mystic and a strong believer in spiritism. He died at Campina 
on the 7th of September 1007. CM. C.) 

HASDRUBAL, the name of several Carthaginian generals, 
among whom the following are the most important. — 

x. The son-in-law of Hamilcar Barca (?.».), who followed 
the latter in his campaign against the governing aristocracy 
at Carthage at the close of the First Punic War, and in his 
subsequent career of conquest in Spain. After Hamilcar's 
death (22$) Hasdrubal, who succeeded him in the command, 
extended the newly acquired empire by skilful diplomacy, and 
consolidated it by the foundation of New Carthage (Cartagena) 
as the capital of the new province, and by a treaty with Rome 
winch fixed the Ebro as the boundary between the two powers. 
In 221 he was killed by an assassin. 

Polybius ii. I ; Livy xxL 1 ; Appian. Htspanka, 4-8. 

2. The second son of Hamilcar Barca, and younger brother 
of Hannibal. Left in command of Spain when Hannibal departed 
to Italy (218), he fought for six years against the brothers 
Gnaeus and Publius Scipio. He had on the whole the worst 
of the conflict, and a defeat in 216 prevented him from joining 
Hannibal in Italy at a critical moment; but in 212 he com- 
pletely routed his opponents, both the Scipios being killed. He 
was subsequently outgeneraled by Publius Scipio the Younger, 
who in 200 captured New Carthage and gained other advantages. 
In the same year he was summoned to join his brother in Italy. 
He eluded Scipio by crossing the Pyrenees at their western 
extremity, and, making his way thence through Gaul and the 
Alps in safety, penetrated far into Central Italy (207). He was 
ultimately checked by two Roman armies, and being forced to 
give battle was decisively defeated on the banks of the Metauru*. 
Hasdrubal himself fell in the fight; his head was cut off and 
thrown into Hannibal's camp as a sign of his utter defeat. 

Polybius x, 34-xi. 3; Livy xxvii. 1-51; Appian. Bcllum Hanni- 
balicum, ch. lit. sqq. ; R. Oehler, Der Uixte Feldsug des Barhdcn 
Hasdrubal* (Berlin, 1807); C. Lehmann, Die Angrtffe dcr drei 
Barkiden auf Italien (Leipzig, 1905). See also Punic Wars. 

EASE. CARL BENEDICT (1 780-1864), French Hellenist, of 
German extraction, was born at Suiza near Naumburg on the 
nth of May 1780. Having studied at Jena and Helmstedt, in 
1801 he made his way on foot to Paris, where he was commis- 
sioned by the comte de Choiseul-Gouffier, late ambassador to 
Constantinople, to edit the works of Johannes Lydus from a 
MS. given to Choiseul by Prince Mourousi. Hase thereupon 
decided to devote himself to Byzantine history and literature, 
on which he became the acknowledged authority. In 1805 he 
obtained an appointment in the MSS. department of the royal 
library; in 1816 became professor of palaeography and modern 
Greek at the £cole Royale, and in 1852 professor of compara- 
tive grammar in the university. In 1812 he was selected to 
superintend the studies of Louis Napoleon (afterwards Napoleon 
III.) and his brother. He died on the 21st of March 1864. His 
most important works are the editions of Leo Diaconus and 
other Byzantine writers (1810), and of Johannes Lydus, 2te 
oslentis (1823), a masterpiece of textual restoration, the diffi- 
culties of which were aggravated by the fact that the MS. had 
for a long time been stowed away in a wine-barrel in a monastery. 
He also edited part of the Greek authors in the collection of the 
Historians of the Crusades and contributed many additions 
(from the fathers, medical and technical writers, scholiasts and 
other sources) to the new edition of Stephanus's Thesaurus, 

See J. D. Guieniaut, Notice historiqne sur la vie et Us travaux de 
Carl Benedict Hose (Paris, 1867): articles in Nouvelle Biographie 
glnhale and AU%emeine deutsclie Biographic' and a collection of 
autobiographical letters, Bricfc von der Wanacrung und aus Paris, 
edited by O. Heine (1894). containing a vivid account of Hase's 

tourney, his enthusiastic impressions of Paris and the hardships of 
lis early life. 



f HASE. KARL AUGUST VON (1 800-1800), German Protestant 
1 theologian and Church historian, was bom at Stembacfa in Saxoiy 
1 on the 2 5th of August 1 800. He studied at Leipzig and Erlangea, 
and in 1829 was called to Jena at professor of theology. He 
retired in 1883 and was made a baron. He died at Jena 00 the 
3rd of January 1800. Hase's aim was to reconcile modern culture 
with historical Christianity in a scientific way. But though a 
liberal theologian, he was no dry rationalist, Indeed, he vigor- 
ously attacked rationalism, as distinguished from the rational 
principle, charging it with being unscientific inasmuch as it 
ignored the historical significance of Christianity, shut its eyes 
to individuality and failed to give religious feeling its due. His 
views are presented scientifically in his Evangdisck-preteMen- 
tische Degmotik (1826, 6th ed., 1870), the value of which M lies 
partly in the full and judiciously chosen historical materials 
prefixed to each dogma, and partly in the skill, caution and tact 
with which the permanent religious significance of various 
dogmas is discussed " (Otto Pfleiderer). More popular in style is 
his Gnosis oder prot.-evang. GloubertsUkrc (3 vols., 1827- 1829, and 
ed. in 2 vols., 1860*1870). But his reputation rests chiefly on his 
treatment of Church history in his Kirckcngesekickte, LcJtrbucm 
tutUickstfur okodemtuke Vorlesungen (1834, 12th ed., 1900) 

His biographical studies, Fran* von Assist (1636; 2nd ed., 1893), 
Katertno von Siena (1864, and ed.. 189a). Neue PropkcUn (Die 
Jungfrau von Orleans, Savonarola, Thomas Munxer) are judicious 
and sympathetic Other works are: Hutterus redtvtvus oder Dog- 



mahk der cvang4uth. Ktrche (1827; 12th ed., 1883), in which he 
sought to present the teaching of the Protestant church in such a 

1 H utter would have reconstructed it, had he still been alive; 

Jesu (1829, 5th ed. 1865, Eng. trans., i860); in an enlarged 
•w.iu, Gescktchte Jesu (2nd ed., 1891); and Handbuch der &ot. 
Polemik gegen die rom.-kath, Ktrche (1862; 7th ed., 1900; Eng. 



ege 

& 



trans., 1006} 

For his hie see his Ideate und Irrtimer (1872, 5th ed., 1694) *°d 
Annalen meines Lebens (1891), and cf. generally Otto Pfleiderer, 
Development of Theology (1890); F. Lichtenberger, Hist, of German 
Theology (1889). 

HASHISH, or Hasheesh, the Arabic name, meaning literally 
" dried herb," for the various preparations of the Indian hemp 
plant {Cannabis indua), used as a narcotic or intoxicant in the 
East, and either smoked, chewed or drunk (sec Hemp and Bmakg). 
From the Arabic kasktsfan, £*. " hemp-eaters," comes the English 
" assassin " (see Assassin). 

HASLEMERE, a market-town in the Guildford parliamentary 
division of Surrey, England, 43 m. S.W from London by the 
London & South- Western railway It is situated in an elevated 
valley between the bold ridges of Hindhead (895 ft.) and Black- 
down (918 ft.). Their summits are open and covered with heath, 
but their flanks and the lower ground are magnificently wooded 
The hills are deeply scored by steep and picturesque valleys, of 
which the most remarkable i& the Devil's Punch Bowl, a hollow 
of regular form on the west flank of Hindhead. The invigorating 
air has combined with scenic attraction to make the district a 
favourite place of residence. Professor Tyndall built a house on 
the top of Hindhead, setting an example followed by many 
others. On Blackdown, closely screened by plantations, » 
Aid worth, built for Alfred, Lord Tennyson, who died here in 
1892. George Eliot stayed for a considerable period at Shotter- 
mill, a neighbouring village* Pop. of Haslemere (1001), 2614; 
of Hindhead, 666. 

' HASLINGDEN, a market-town and municipal borough in the 
Rossendale and Heywood parliamentary divisions of Lancashire, 
England, 19 m. N. by W. from Manchester by the Lancashire & 
Yorkshire railway. Pop. (r 001), 18,543. It lies in a hilly district 
on the borders of the forest of Rossendale, and is supposed by 
some to derive its name from the hazel trees which formerly 
abounded in its neighbourhood. The old town stood on the 
slope of a hill, but the modern part has extended about its base. 
The parish church of St James was rebuilt in 1780, with the 
exception of the tower, which dates from the time of Henry MIL 
The woollen manufacture was formerly the staple. The 
town, however, steadily increasing in importance, has cotton, 
woollen and engineering works — coal-mining, quarrying and 
brickmaking are carried on in the neighbourhood. The borough, 



HASPE— HASSELQUIST 



5« 



■itiK«porat«d In xS^t, comprised several towoships and puts of 
townshlpe, but under the Local Government Act of 1804 these 
were united into one civil parish. The corporation consists of a 
mayor, 6 aldermen and 18 councillors. Area, 8x06 acres. 

HA8PB; a town of Germany, in the Prussian province of 
Westphalia, in the valley of the Ennepe, at the confluence of the 
Hasper, and on the railway from Dusseldorf to Dortmund, 10 m. 
N.E. of Barmen by rail. Pop. (1005), 19,813. Its industries 
include iron foundries, rolling mills, puddling furnaces, and 
manufactures of iron, steel and brass wares and of machines. 
Haape was raised to the rank of a town in 1873. 

HASSAM, CHILDB (1850- ), American figure and land- 
scape painter, born in Boston, Massachusetts, was a pupil of 
Boulanger and Lef ebvre in Paris. He soon fell under the influence 
of the Impressionists, and took to painting in a style of his own, 
in brilliant colour, with effective touches of pure pigment. He 
won a bronte medal at the Paris Exhibition of 1880; medals at 
the World's Fair, Chicago, 1803; Boston Art Club, 1806; 
Philadelphia Art Club, 1892; Carnegie Institute, Pittsburg, 
1808; Buffalo Pan-American, 1001; Temple gold medal, 
Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, Philadelphia, 1809; and 
silver medal, Paris Exhibition, 1000. He became a member of 
the National Academy of Design, the Society of American 
Artists, the Ten Americans, the American Water Colour Society, 
the Society Nationale des Beaux Arts, Paris, and the Secession 
Society, Munich. 

HASSAN, a town and district of Mysore, India. The town 
dates from the r ith century and had in ioox a population of 8241. 
The district naturally divides into two portions, the Malnad, 
or hill country, which includes some of the highest ranges of 
the Western Ghats, and the Maidan or plain country, sloping 
towards the south. The Hemavati, which flows into the Cauvery 
in the extreme south, is the most important river of the district. 
The upper slopes of the Western Ghats are abundantly clothed 
with magnificent forests, and wild animals abound. Among 
the mineral products are kaolin, felspar and quartz. The soil 
of the valleys is a rich red alluvial loam. The area is 2547 sq. m. 
Population (1.901), 568,0x9, showing an increase of 11% in the 
decade. The district contains some of the most remarkable 
archaeological monuments in India, such as the colossal Jain 
image at Sravana Belgola (a monolith 57 ft. high on the summit 
of a hQl) and the great temple at Halebid. Coffee cultivation 
has been on the increase of late years. The first plantation was 
opened in 1843, and now there are many coffee estates owned 
by Europeans and also native holdings. The exports are large, 
consisting chiefly of food-grains and coffee. The imports are 
European piece-goods, hardware of all sorts and spices. The 
largest weekly fair is held at Alur. A great annual religious 
gathering and fair, attended by about 10,000 persons, takes 
place every year at Mclukot. The Southern Mahratta railway 
traverses the north-east of the district. 

The real history of Hassan does not begin until the epoch of 
the Hoysala dynasty, which lasted from the nth till the 14th 
century. Their capital was at Dwarasamundra (Dwaravati-pura), 
the ruins of which are still to be seen scattered round the village 
of Halebid. The earlier kings professed the Jain faith, but the 
finest temples were erected to Siva by the later monarchs of the 
Gne. While they were at the zenith of their power the whole 
of southern India acknowledged their sway. 

HAS8ANTA, an African tribe of Semitic stock. They inhabit 
the desert between Mcrawi and the Nile at the 6th Cataract, 
and the left bank of the Blue Nile immediately south of Khartum. 
QASSAM IBN THABIT (died 674), Arabian poet, was born 
in Yathrib (Medina), a member of the tribe Khazraj. In his 
youth he travelled to Hira and Damascus, then settled in Medina, 
where, after the advent of Mahomet, he accepted Islam and 
wrote poems in defence of the prophet. His poetry is regarded 
as commonplace and lacking in distinction. 



His diwan has been published at Bombay (1864), Tunis (1864) and 

(1878). See H. HirechfekJ's " Prolegomena to an edition 

of the Diwan of Hatian" in Transactions of Oriental Congress 

(G.W.T.) 



Lahore (1878). See 
of the Diwan of 
(London, 1892). 



HASSE, JOHAMf ADOLPH (1690-1783), German musical 
composer, was born at Bcrgedorf near Hamburg, on the 25th 
of March 1609, and received his first musical education from 
his father. Being possessed of a fine tenor voice, he chose the 
theatrical career, and joined the operatic troupe conducted by 
Reinhard Reiser, in whose orchestra Handel had played the 
second violin some years before. Hasse's success led to an 
engagement at the court theatre of Brunswick, and it was there 
that, in 1723, he made his debut as a composer with the opera 
Antigonus. The success of this first work induced the duke to 
send Hasse to Italy for the completion of his studies, and in 
17 24 he went to Naples and placed himself under Porpora, with 
whom, however, he seems to have disagreed both as a man and 
as an artist. On the other hand he gained the friendship of 
Alessandro Scarlatti, to whom be owed his first commission for 
a serenade for two voices, sung at a family celebration of a 
wealthy merchant by two of the greatest singers of Italy, Farinelli 
and Signora Tesi. This event established Hasse's fame; he 
soon became very popular, and his opera Scsostrato, written for 
the Royal Opera at Naples in 1726, made his name known all 
over Italy. At Venice, where he went in 1727, he became 
acquainted with the celebrated singer Faustina Bordogni (born 
at Venice in 1700), who became the composer's wife in 1730. 
The two artists soon aftenrards went to Dresden, in compliance 
with a brilliant offer made to them by the splendour-loving 
elector of Saxony, Augustus II. There Hasse remained for two 
years, after which he again journeyed to Italy, and also in 1733 
to London, in which latter city he was tempted by the aristocratic 
clique inimical to Handel to become the rival and antagonist 
of that great master. But this he modestly and wisely declined, 
remaining in London only long enough to superintend the 
rehearsals for his opera Arlaserse (first produced at Venice, 
1730). All this while Faustina had remained at Dresden, the 
declared favourite of the public and unfortunately also of the 
elector, nor was her husband, who remained attached to her, 
allowed to see her except at long intervals. In 1739, after the 
death of "Augustus II., Hasse settled permanently at Dresden 
till 1763, when he and his wife retired from court service with 
considerable pensions. But Hasse was still too young to rest 
on his laurels. He went with his family to Vienna, and added 
several operas to the great number of his works already in 
existence. His last work for the stage was the opera Ruggiero 
(1771), written for the wedding of Archduke Ferdinand at Milan. 
On the same occasion a work by Mozart, then fourteen years 
old, was performed, and Hasse observed " this youngster will 
surpass us all." By desire of his wife Hasse settled at her 
birthplace Venice, and there he died on the 23rd of December 
1783. His compositions include as many as 120 operas, besides 
oratorios, cantatas, masses, and almost every variety of instru- 
mental music. During the siege of Dresden by the Prussians 
in 1760, most of his manuscripts, collected for a complete edition 
to be brought out at the expense of the elector, were burnt. 
Some of his works, amongst them an opera Alcide al Bivio (1 760), 
have been published, and the libraries of Vienna and Dresden 
possess the autographs of others. Hasse's instrumentation is 
certainly not above the low level attained by the average 
musicians of his time, and his ensembles do not present any 
features of interest. In dramatic fire also he was wanting, but 
he had a fund of gentle and genuine melody, and by this fact 
his enormous popularity during his life must be accounted for. 
The two airs which Farinelli had to repeat every day for ten 
years to the melancholy king of Spain, Philip V., were both from 
Hasse's works. Of Faustina Hasse it will be sufficient to add 
that she was, according to the unanimous verdict of the critics 
(including Dr Burney), one of the greatest singers of a time rich 
in vocal artists. The year of her death is not exactly known. 
Most probably it shortly preceded that of her husband. 

HASSELQUIST, FREDERIK (1722-1752), Swedish traveller 
and naturalist, was bom at TSrncvaila, East Gothland, on the 
3rd of January 172a. On account of the frequently expressed 
regrets of Linnaeus, under whom he studied at Upsala, at the 
lack of information regarding the natural history of Palestine. 



HASSELT, A. H. C. VAN— HA8SENPFLUG 



52 

Hasselquist resolved to undertake a journey to that country, 
and a sufficient subscription having been obtained to defray 
expenses, he reached Smyrna towards the end of 1749. He 
visited parts of Asia Minor, Egypt, Cyprus and Palestine, 
making large natural history collections, but his constitution, 
naturally weak, gave way under the fatigues of travel, and 
he died near Smyrna on the 9th of February 1752 on his way 
home. His collections reached home in safety, and five years 
after his death his notes were published by Linnaeus under the 
title Resa till Heliga LandctfdriiUadfr&n&r 1749 till 17s** which 
was translated into French and German in 1762 and into English 
in 1766. 

HASSELT, ANDR6 HENRI CONSTANT VAN (1806-1874), 
Belgian poet, was born at Maastricht, in Limburg, on the 5th of 
January 1806. He was educated in his native town, and at the 
university of Liege. In 1833 he left Maastricht, then blockaded 
by the Belgian forces, and made his way to Brussels, where he 
became a naturalized Belgian, and was attached to the Biblio- 
tbeque de Bourgogne. In x 843 he entered the education depart- 
ment, and eventually became an inspector of normal schools. 
His native language was Dutch, and as a French poet Andrl van 
Hasselt had to overcome the difficulties of writing in a foreign 
language. He had published a Chant hdUnique in honour of 
Canaris in the columns of La Sentinel^ des Pays-Bos as early as 
1826, and other poems followed. His first volume of verse, 
Primeteres (1834), shows markedly the influence of Victor Hugo, 
which had been strengthened by a visit to Paris in 1830. His 
relations with Hugo became intimate in 1851-1852, when the 
poet was an exile in Brussels. In 1839 he became editor of the 
Renaissance, a paper founded to encourage the fine arts. His 
chief work, the epic of the Quatre Incarnations du Christ, was 
published in 1867. In the same volume were printed his Etudes 
rythmiquts, a series of metrical experiments designed to show 
that the French language could be adapted to every kind of 
musical rhythm. With the same end in view he executed trans- 
lations of many German songs, and wrote new French libretti 
for the best-known operas of Mozart , Weber and others. Hasselt 
died at Saint Josse ten Noode, a suburb of Brussels, on the xst 
of December 1874. 

A selection from his works (10 vols., Brussels, 1 876-1 877) was 
edited by MM. Charles Hen and Louis Alvin. He wrote many 
books for children, chiefly under the pseudonym of Alfred* Avelines; 
and studies on historical and literary subjects. The books written 
in collaboration with Charles Hen are signed Charles Andrc\ A 



bibliography of his writings is appended to the notice by Louis 
Alvin in the Biographic nat. de Belgique, vol. vii. Van Hasselt's 
fame has continued to increase since his death. A series of tributes 



to his memory are printed in the Poesies choisies (1901), edited by 
M. Georges Barrel for the Collection des twites francais de I'itranger 
This book contains a biographical and critical study by Jules Guil 



laumc, and some valuable notes on the poet's theories of rhythm 

HASSELT, the capital of the Belgian province of Limburg. 
Pop. (1904), 16,1 79. It derives its name from Uazcl-bosch (hazel 
wood). It stands at the junction of several important roads 
and railways from Maaseyck, Maastricht and Liege. It has many 
breweries and distilleries, and the spirit known by its name, 
which is a coarse gin, has a certain reputation throughout 
Belgium. On the 6th of August 1831 the Dutch troops obtained 
here their chief success over the Belgian nationalists during the 
War of Independence. Hasselt is best known foritsgreatsepten- 
nial fete held on the day of Assumption, August 15th. The 
curious part of this fete, which is held in honour of the Virgin 
under the name of Virga Jesse, is the conversion of the town for 
the day into the semblance of a forest. Fir trees and branches 
from the neighbouring forest are collected and planted in front 
of the houses, so that for a few hours Hasselt has the appearance 
of being restored to its primitive condition as a wood. The 
figure of the giant who is supposed to have once held the Hazel- 
bosch under his terror is paraded on this occasion as the " lounge 
man." Originally this celebration was held annually, but in 
the 18th century it was restricted to once in seven years. There 
was a celebration in 1905. 

HASSENPFLUG, HANS DANIEL LUDWIG FRIEDRICH 
(1 794-1862), German statesman, was bom at Hanau in Hesse 



on the 26th of February 1704. He studied law at GOttiagea* 
graduated in 1816, and took his seat as Assess* in the judicial 
chamber of the board of government (Regiermngskotiegium) at 
Cassel, of which his father Johann Hassenpflug wasalsoa member. 
In 1821 he was nominated by the new elector, William II., 
Justisrat (councillor of justice); in 1832 he became Utmsterielrat 
and reporter {Referent) to the ministry of Hease-CaaseA, and in 
May of the same year was appointed successively minister of 
justice and of the interior. It was from this moment that he 
became conspicuous in the constitutional strugglesof Germany. 

The reactionary system introduced by the elector William I. 
had broken down before the revolutionary movements of x8jo, 
and in 183 1 Hesse had received a constitution. This develop- 
ment was welcome neither to the elector nor to the other German 
governments, and Hassenpflug deliberately set to work to reverse 
it. In doing so he gave the lie to his own early promise; for he 
had been a conspicuous member of the revolutionary Burscheu- 
schajt at Gottingen, and had taken part as a volunteer in the War 
of Liberation. Into the causes of the change it is unnecessary to 
inquire; Hassenpflug by training and tradition was a strait-laced 
official; he was also a first-rate lawyer; and his naturally 
arbitrary temper had from the first displayed itself in an attitude 
of overbearing independence towards his colleagues and even 
towards the elector. To such a man constitutional restrictions 
were intolerable, and from the moment he came into power be 
set to work to override them, by means of press censorship, legal 
quibbles, unjustifiable use of the electoral prerogatives, or frank 
supersession of the legislative rights of the Estates by electoral 
ordinances. The story of the constitutional deadlock that 
resulted belongs to the history of Hesse-Cassel and Germany; 
so far as Hassenpflug himself was concerned, it made him, more 
even than Metternich, the Mephistopheles of the Reaction to 
the German people. In Hesse itself he was known as ' ' Hessen's 
Hass und Fluch " (Hesse's hate and curse). In the end, however, 
his masterful temper became unendurable to the regent (Frederick 
William) ; in the summer of 1837 he was suddenly removed from 
his post as minister of the interior and he thereupon left the 
elector's service. 

In 1838 he was appointed head of the administration of the 
little principality of HohenzoUcrn-Sigmaringen, an office which 
he exchanged in the following year for that of civil governor 
of the grand-duchy of Luxemburg. Here, too, his independent 
character suffered him to remain only a year: be resented having 
to transact all business with the grand-duke (king of the Nether- 
lands) through a Dutch official at the Hague; he protested 
against the absorption of the Luxemburg surplus in the Dutch 
treasury; and, failing to obtain redress, he resigned (1840). 
From 1841 to 1850 he was in Prussian service, first as a member 
of the supreme court of justice {Obertribunal) and then (1846) 
as president of the high court of appeal {Obcrappdlationsgcruhi) 
at Greifswald. In 1 850 he was tried for peculation and convicted; 
and, though this judgment was reversed on appeal, he left the 
service of Prussia. 

With somewhat indecent haste (the appeal had not been 
heard) he was now summoned by the elector of Hesse once 
more to the head of the government, and he immediately threw 
himself again with zeal into the struggle against the constitution. 
He soon found, however, that the opinion of all classes, including 
the army, was solidly against him, and he decided to risk all on 
an alliance with the reviving fortunes of Austria, which was 
steadily working for the restoration of the status quo overthrown 
by the revolution of 1848. On his advice the elector seceded 
from the Northern Union established by Prussia and, on the 
.13th of September, committed the folly of flying secretly from 
Hesse with his minister. They went to Frankfort, where the 
federal diet had been re-established, and on the 21st persuaded 
the diet to decree an armed intervention in Hesse. This decree, 
carried out by Austrian troops, all but led to war with Prussia, 
but the unreadiness of the Berlin government led to the triumph 
of Austria and of Hassenpflug. who at the end of the year was 
once more installed in power at Cassel as minister of finance. 
His position was, however, not enviable; he was loathed and 



HASTINAPUR— HASTINGS, MARQUESS OF 



53 



despised by 9U, and disliked even by Jiis xbastcr. The climax 
otoe in November 1855, when he was publicly horse-whipped 
by the count of Isenburg-Wachtersbach, the elector's son-in-law. 
The count was pronounced insane; but Hassenpfiug was con- 
sriousot the method in his madness, and tendered his resignation. 
This was* however, not accepted; and it was not till the x6th 
of October 1855 that he was finally relieved of his offices. He 
retired to Marburg, where he died on the 15th of October i86a< 
He lived just long enough to hear of the restoration of the Hesse 
constitution of x8*x (June 21, x86a), whkh it had been his life's 
mission to destroy. Of his publications the most important is 
Ackmmcke, die landsUndinken Anklogen wider den Kurjiint- 
lichen hessiscken Stool tminuter Hosstn&big. Bin Beting tnr 
ZtitgtsdtkkU nnd mm neueren dentscken StootsrcchU,naonym. 
(Stuttgart and Tubingen, 1836). He was twice married, his 
first wile being the sister of the brothers Grimm. His son Karl 
Hassenpfltig (1824- i3oo) was a distinguished sculptor. 
► * See the biography by Wippermann in AUgtwuine dented* Bie~ 
grepkie, with authorities. 

" HASTINAPUR, an ancient city of British India, in the Meerut 
district of the United Provinces, lying on the hank of a former 
bed of the Ganges, 2 2 m. N.E. of Meerut. It formed the capital 
of the great Pandava kingdom, celebrated in the Mohdbhdrata, 
and probably one of the earliest Aryan settlements outside the 
Punjab. Tradition points to a group of shapeless mounds as 
the residence of the Lunar princes of the bouse of Bharata whose 
deeds are commemorated in the great national epic After the 
conclusion of the famous war which forms the central episode 
of that poem, Hastinapur remained for some time the metropolis 
of the descendants of Parikshit, but the town was finally swept 
away by a flood of the Ganges, and the capital was transferred 
to Kausambi. 

HASTINGS, a famous English family. John, Baron Hastings 

(<*. xs6s-c. 1313), was a son of Sir Henry de Hastings (d. 1268), 

who was summoned to parliament as a baron by Simon de 

Montibrt in 1264. Having joined Montfort's party Sir Henry 

led the Londoners at the battle of Lewes and was taken prisoner 

at Evesham. After his release he continued his opposition 

to Henry III.; he was among those who resisted the king at 

KenOworth, and after the issue of the Dictum de Kenilwortk 

be commanded the remnants of the baronial party when they 

made their last stand in the isle of Ely, submitting to Henry in 

July 1267. His younger son, Edmund, was specially noted for 

bis military services in Scotland during the reign of Edward I. 

John Hastings married Isabella (d. 1305), daughter of William 

de Valence, earl of Pembroke, a half-brother of Henry III., 

and fought in Scotland and in Wales. Through his mother, 

Joanna de Cantihipe, he inherited the extensive lordship of 

Abergavenny, hence he is sometimes referred to as lord of 

Bergavenny, and in 1205 he was summoned to parliament as 

a baron. Before this date, however, he had come somewhat 

prominently to the front. His paternal grandmother, Ada, 

was a younger daughter of David, earl of Huntingdon, and a 

niece of the Scottish king, William the Lion; and in x 200 when 

Margaret, the maid of Norway, died, Hastings came forward 

as a claimant for the vacant throne. Although unsuccessful 

in the matter he did not swerve from his loyalty to Edward I. 

He fought constantly either in France or in Scotland; he led 

the bishop of Durham's men at the celebrated siege of Carlaverock 

castle in 1300; and with his brother Edmund he signed the 

letter which in 1301 the English barons sent to Pope Boniface 

VTU. repudiating papal interference in the affairs of Scotland; 

0x1 two occasions he represented the king in Aquitaine. Hastings 

died in 13x2 or X313. His second wife was Isabella, daughter 

of the elder Hugh le Despenser. Hastings, who was one of the 

most wealthy and powerful nobles of his time, stood high in the 

regard of the king and is lauded by the chroniclers. 

His eldest son John (d. 1325), who succeeded to the barony, 
was the father of Laurence Hastings, who was created earl of 
Pembroke in 1339, the earls of Pembroke retaining the barony 
of Hastings until 1389. A younger son by a second marriage, 
Sir Hugh Hastings (c. 1307-1347), saw a good deal of military 



service in France; his portrait and also that of his wife may 
still be seen on the east window of Eking church, which contains 
a beautiful brass to his memory. 

On the death of John, the third and last earl of Pembroke 
of the Battings family, in 1389, Sir Hugh's son John had, 
according to a decision of the House of Lords in 1840, a title 
to the barony of Hastings, but he did not prosecute his claim 
and he died without sons in 1393. However his grand-nephew^ 
and heir, Hugh (d. 1306), cUixned the barony, which was also 
claimed by Reginald, Lord Grey of Ruthyn. Like the earls of 
Pembroke, Grey was descended through his grandmother; 
Elisabeth Hastings, from John, Lord Hastings, by his first wife; 
Hugh, on the other hand, was descended from John's second wife. 
After Hugh's death his brother, Sir Edward Hastings (c. 1382- 
1438), claimed the barony, and the case as to who should bear 
the arms of the Hastings family came before the court of chivalry. 
In 14x0 it was decided in favour of Grey, who thereupon assumed 
the arms. Both disputants still claimed the barony, but the 
view seems to have prevailed that it had fallen into abeyance 
in 1389.' Sir Edward was imprisoned for refusing to pay ma 
rival's costs, and be was probably still in prison when he died in 
January 1438. After his death the Hastings family, which 
became extinct during the 16th century, tacitly abandoned the 
claim to the barony. Then in 1840 the title was revived in 
favour of Sir Jacob Astley, Bart. (1797-1859), who derived his 
claim from a daughter of Sir Hugh Hastings who died in 1540/ 
Sir Jacobus descendant, Albert Edward (b. 1882), became 21st 
Baron Hastings in 1004. 

A distant relative of the same family was William, Baroa 
Hastings (c. 1430-1483), a son of Sir Leonard Hastings (d. 1455)* 
He became attached to Edward IV., whom he served before hi* 
accession to the throne, and after this event he became master of 
the mint, chamberlain of the royal household and one of the king's 
most trusted advisers. Having been made a baron in 1461, he 
married Catherine, daughter of Richard Neville, earl of Salisbury „ 
and was frequently sent on diplomatic errands to Burgundy and 
elsewhere. He was faithful to Edward IV. during the king's exile 
in the winter of 1 470-1 471, and after his return he fought for 
him at Barnet and at Tewkesbury; he has been accused of taking 
part in the murder of Henry Yl.'s son, prince Edward, after the 
latter battle. Hastings succeeded his sovereign in the favour of 
Jane Shore. He was made captain of Calais in 1 47 1 , and was with 
Edward I V.wfaen he met Louis XI. of France at Picquigny in 147 5,. 
on whkh occasion he received gifts from Louis and from Charles 
the Bold of Burgundy. After Edward IV. 's death Hastings be- 
haved in a somewhat undecided manner. He disliked the queen, 
Elizabeth WoodvUk, but he refused to ally himself with Richard, 
duke of Gloucester, afterwards King Richard III. Suddenly 
Richard decided to get rid of him, and during a meeting of the 
council on the 13th of June 1483 he was seized and at once put 
to death. This dramatic incident is related by Sir Thomas More 
in his History of Richard 1 1 1., &n<\ has been worked by Shakespeare 
into his play Richard III. . Hastings is highly praised by his 
friend Philippe de Commines, and also by More. He left a son, 
Edward (d. 1508), the father of George, Baron Hastings (c. 1488- 
i545)» *ho was created earl of Huntingdon (q.v.) in 1529. 

When Francis, xoth earl of Huntingdon, died in October 1789,' 
the barony of Hastings passed to his sister Elizabeth ( 1 73 t-i 808) , 
wife of John Rawdon, earl of Moira, and from her it came to her 
son Francis Rawdon-Hastmgs (see below), who was created 
marquess of Hastings in 18x7. 

HASTINGS, FRANCIS RAWDON-HASTOGB, 1st Marquess 
of (1754-1826), British soldier and governor-general of India, 
born on the 9th of December 1754, *as the son of Sir John 
Rawdon of Moira in the county of Down, 4th baronet, who was 
created Baron Rawdon of Moira, and afterwards earl of Moira, 
in the Irish peerage. His mother was the Lady Elizabeth 
Hastings, daughter of Theophilus, 9th earl of Huntingdon. 
Lord Rawdon, as he was then called, was educated at Harrow 
and Oxford, and joined the army in 1771 as ensign in the 15th 
foot. His life henceforth was entirely spent iu the service of his 
I country, and may be divided into four periods: from X77S to 



54 

1782 be was engaged with much distinction in the American war; 
from 1783 to 1813 he held various high appointments at home, 
and took an active part in the business of the House of Lords; 
from 1813 to i8aj was the period of his labours In India; after 
retiring from which, in the last years of his life (1804-1826), he 
was governor of Malta. 

In America Rawdon served at the battles of Bunker Hill, 
Brooklyn, White Plains, Monmouth and Camden, at the attacks 
on Forts Washington and Clinton, and at the siege of Charleston. 
In fact he was engaged in many important operations of the war. 
Perhaps his most noted achievements were the raising of a 
corps at Philadelphia, called the Irish Volunteers, who under him 
became famous for their fighting qualities, and the victory of 
Hobkirk's Hill, which, in command of only a small force, he 
gained by superior military skill and determination against a 
much larger body of Americans. In 1781 he was invalided. The 
vessel in whkh he returned to England was captured and carried 
into Brest. He was speedily released, and on his arrival in 
England was much honoured by George UL, who created him 
an English peer (Baron Rawdon) in March 1783. In 1789 his 
mother succeeded to the barony of Hastings, and Rawdon added 
the surname of Hastings to his own. 

f In 1793 Rawdon succeeded his father as earl of Moira. In 
1794. he was sent with 7000 men to Ostend to reinforce the duke 
of York and the allies in Flanders. The march by which he 
effected a junction was considered extraordinary. In 1803 he 
was appointed commander-in-chief in Scotland, and in 1804 he 
married Flora Mure Campbell, countess of Loudoun in her own 
right. When Fox and Crenville came into power in 1806, Lord 
Moira, who had always voted with them, received the place of 
master-general of the ordnance. He was now enabled to carry 
a philanthropic measure, of which from his first entry into the 
House of Lords he had been a great promoter, namely, the Debtor 
and Creditor Bill for relief of poor debtors. Ireland was another 
subject to which he had given particular attention: in 2797 there 
was published a Speech by Lord Moira on the Dreadful and Alarm- 
t*f State of Ireland. Lord Moira's sound judgment on public 
affairs, combined with his military reputation and the upright- 
ness of his character, won for him a high position among the 
statesmen of the day, and he gained an additional prestige from 
his intimate relations with the prince of Wales. As a mark of 
the regent's regard Lord Moira received the order of the Garter 
in 181 a, and in the same year was appointed governor-general 
of Bengal and commander-in-chief of the forces in India. He 
landed at Calcutta, and assumed office in succession to Lord 
Minto in October 1813. One of the chief questions which awaited 
him was that of relations with the Gurkha state of Nepal The 
Gurkhas, a brave and warlike little nation, failing to extend 
their conquests in the direction of China, had begun to encroach 
on territories held or protected by the East India Company; 
especially they had seized the districts of Batwal and Seoraj, 
in the northern part of Oudh, and when called upon to relinquish 
these, they deliberately elected (April 181 4) to go Jo war rather 
than do so. Lord Moira, having travelled through the northern 
provinces and fully studied the question, declared war against 
Nepal (November 1814). The enemy's frontier was 600 m. long, 
and Lord Moira, who directed the plan of the campaign, resolved 
to act offensively along the whole line. It was an anxious under- 
taking, because the native states of India were all watching the 
issue and waiting for any serious reverse to the English to join 
against them. At first all seemed to go badly, as the British 
officers despised the enemy, and the sepoys were unaccustomed 
to mountain warfare, and thus alternate extremes of rashness 
and despondency were exhibited. But this rectified itself in 
time, especially through the achievements of General (afterwards 
Sir David) Ochterlony, who before the end of 1815 had taken all 
the Gurkha posts to the west, and early in 1816 was advancing 
victoriously within 50 m. of Rhatmandu, the capital. The 
Gurkhas now made peace; they abandoned the disputed districts, 
ceded some territory to the British, and agreed to receive a 
British resident. For his masterly conduct of these affairs Lord 
Moira was created marquess of Hastings in February 1817. 



HASTINGS, MARQUESS OF 



He had now to deal with internal dangers." A combination of 
Mahratta powers was constantly threatening the continuance 
of British rule, under the guise of plausible assurances severally 
given by the peshwa, Sindhia, Holkar and other princes. At 
the same time the existence of the Pindari state was not only 
dangerous to the British, as being a warlike power always ready 
to turn against them, but it was a scourge to India itself. In 
1816, however, the Pindaris entered British territory in the 
Northern Circars, where they destroyed 330 villages. On tins, 
permission was obtained to act for their suppression. Before 
the end of 28x7 the preparations of Lord Hastings were com* 
pleted, when the peshwa suddenly broke into war, and the 
British were opposed at once to the Mahratta and Pindari powers, 
estimated at 200,000 men and 500 guns. Both were utterly 
shattered in a brief campaign of four months (1817-ffc). Hie 
peshwa's dominions were annexed, and those of Sindhia, Holkar, 
and the raja of Berar lay at the mercy of the governor-general, 
and were saved only by his moderation. Thus, after sixty years 
from the battle of Plassey, the supremacy of British power in 
India was effectively established. The Pindaris had ceased to 
exist, and peace and security had been substituted for misery 
and terror. 

" It is a proud phrase to use," said Lord Hastings, " but It is a 
true one, that we have bestowed blessings upon millions. Nothing 
can be more delightful than the reports I receive of the sensibility 
manifested by the inhabitants to this change in their circumstances. 
The smallest detachment of our troops cannot pass through that 
district without meeting everywhere eager and exulting gratub- 
tions, the tone of which peeves them to come from glowing hearts. 
Multitudes of people have, even in this short interval, come from 
the hills and fastnesses in which they had sought refuge for years, 
and have reoccupicd their ancient deserted villages. The plough- 
share is again in every quarter turning op a soil which had for 
many seasons never been stirred, except by the hoofs of predatory 
cavauy." 

While the natives of India appreciated the results of Lord 
Hastings's achievements, the court of directors grumbled at his 
having extended British territory. They also disliked and 
opposed his measures for introducing education among the 
natives and his encouraging the freedom of the press. In xSxo 
he obtained the cession by purchase of the island of Singapore. 
In finance his administration was very successful* as notwith- 
standing the expenses of his wars he showed an annual surplus 
of two millions sterling. Brilliant and beneficent as bis career 
had been, Lord Hastings did not escape unjust detraction. His 
last years of office were embittered by the discussions on a matter 
notorious at the time, namely, the affairs of the banking-house 
of W. Palmer and Company. The whole affair was mixed 
up with insinuations against Lord Hastings, especially charging 
him with having been actuated by favouritism towards one of 
the partners in the firm. From imputations which were incon- 
sistent with his whole character he has subsequently been 
exonerated. But while smarting under them he tendered his 
resignation in 1821, though he did not leave India till the first 
day of 1823. He was much exhausted by the arduous labours 
which for more than nine years he had sustained. Among his 
characteristics it is mentioned that "his ample fortune 
absolutely sank under the benevolence of his nature "; and, 
far from having enriched himself in the appointment of governor- 
general, he returned to England in circumstances which obliged 
him still to seek public employment. In 1824 he received the 
comparatively small post of governor of Malta, in which island 
he introduced many reforms and endeared himself to the in- 
habitants. He died on the 28th of November 1826, leaving a 
request that his right hand should be cut off and preserved till 
the death of the marchioness of Hastings, and then be interred 
in her coffin. 

Hastings was succeeded by. his son, Francis George Augustus 
(1808-1844), who in 1840 succeeded through his mother to the 
earldom of Loudoun. When his second son, Henry Weysford, 
the 4th marquess, died childless on the xoth of November 1868 
the marquessate became extinct; the earldom of Loudoun 
devolved upon his sister, Edith Mary (d. 1874), wife of Charles 
Frederick Abney-Hastiags, afterwards Baron Donington; the 



HASTINGS, F. A.— HASTINGS, WARREN 



55 



barony of Hastings, which fell into abeyance, was also revived 
is 187 1 in her favour. 

See Roas-of-Bladensburg, Tke Marquess of Hastings (" Rulen of 
India " series) (1893); and Private Journal of Ike Marquess of 
Hastings, edited by his daughter, the marchioness of Bute C l8 5 8 )- 

HASTINGS, FRANK ABNBY (2704-1828), British naval 
officer and PhDbellene, was the son of Lieut.-general Sir Charles 
Hastings, a natural son of Frauds Hastings, tenth earl of 
Huntingdon. He entered the navy in 1805, and was in the 
* Neptune " (too) at the battle of Trafalgar; but in 2820a quarrel 
with his flag captain led to his leaving the service. The revolu- 
tionary troubles of the time offered chances of foreign employ- 
ment. Hastings spent a year on the continent to learn French, 
and sailed for Greece on the 22th of March 2822 from Marseilles. 
On the 3rd of April he reached Hydra. For two years he took 
part in the naval operations of the Greeks in the Gulf of Smyrna 
and elsewhere. He saw that the light squadrons of the Greeks 
must in the end be overpowered by the heavier Turkish navy, 
dumsy as it was; and in 1823 he drew up and presented to 
Lord Byron a very able memorandum which he laid before the 
Greek government in 1824. This paper is of peculiar interest 
apart from its importance in the Greek insurrection, lor it 
contains the germs of the great revolution which has since 
been effected in naval gunnery and tactics. In substance the 
memorandum advocated the use of steamers in preference to 
sailing ships, and of direct fire with shells and hot shot, as a more 
trustworthy means of destroying the Turkish fleet than fire-ships. 
It will be found in Finlay's History of the Greek Revolution, 
vol. H. appendix L The application of Hastings's ideas led 
necessarily to the disuse of sailing ships, and the introduction 
of armour. The incompetence of the Greek government and 
the corrupt waste of its resources prevented the full application 
of Hastings's bold and far-seeing plans. But largely by the use 
of his own money, of which he is said to have spent £7000, he 
was able to some extent to carry them out. In 2824 he came 
to England to obtain a steamer, and in 1825 he had fitted out a 
small steamer named the " Karteria " (Perseverance), manned 
by Englishmen, Swedes and Greeks, and provided with apparatus 
for the discharge of shell and hot shot. He did enough to show 
that if his advice had been vigorously followed the Turks would 
have been driven off the sea long before the date of the battle 
of Navarino. The great effect produced by his shells in an 
attack on the sea-line of communication of the Turkish army, 
then besieging Athens at Oropus and Volo in March and April 
2827, was a clear proof that much more could have been done. 
Military mismanagement caused the defeat of the Greeks round 
Athens. But Hastings, in co-operation with General Sir R. 
Church (<7-t .), shifted the scene of the attack to western Greece. 
Here his destruction of a small Turkish squadron at Salona Bay 
fn the Gulf of Corinth (29th of September 2827) provoked 
Ibrahim Pasha into the aggressive movements which led to the 
destruction of his fleet by the allies at Navarino (?.t.) on the 
20th of October 2827. On the 25th of May 2828 he was wounded 
in an attack on Anatolikon, and he died in the harbour of Zante 
on the 1 st of June. General Gordon, who served in the war 
and wrote its history, says of him: "If ever there was a 
disinterested and really useful Phifhdlene it was Hastings. 
He received no pay, and had expended most of his slender 
fortune in keeping the ' Karteria * afloat for the last six months. 
His ship, too, was the only one in the Greek navy where regular 
discipline was maintained." 

See Thomas Gordon, History of the Greek Reoeeution (London* 
1832); George Finlay, History of the Greek Revolution (Edinburgh, 

HASTINGS, WARREN (2732-2828), the first governor-general 
of British India, was born on the 6th of December 1732 in the 
little hamlet of Churchill in Oxfordshire. He came of a family 
which had been settled for many generations in the adjoining 
village of Daylesford; but' his great-grandfather had sold the 
ancestral manor-house, and his grandfather bad been unable 
to maintain himself in possession of the family living. His 
mother died a few days after giving him birth; his father, 



Pynaston Hastings, drifted away to perish obscurely in the West 
Indies. Thus unfortunate in his birth, young Hastings received 
the elements of education at a charity school in his native village. 
At the age of eight he was taken in charge by an elder brother 
of his father, Howard Hastings, who held a post in the customs. 
After spending two yeaa at a private school at Newington Butts, 
he was moved to Westminster, where among his contemporaries 
occur the names of Lord Thurlow and Lord Shdburne, Sir 
Elijah Impey, and the poets Cowper and Churchill. In 1740, 
when his headmaster Dr Nichols was already anticipating for him 
a successful career at the university, his unde died, leaving him 
to the care of a distant kinsman,Mr Creswkke, who was afterwards 
in the direction of the East India Company; and he determined 
to send his ward to seek his fortune as a " writer " in Bengal. 

When Hastings landed at Calcutta in October 2750 the affairs 
of the East India Company were at a low ebb. Throughout the 
entire south of the peninsula French influence was predatninant. 
The settlement of Fort St George or Madras, captured by force 
of arms, had only recently been restored in accordance with a 
dause of the peace of Aix4a>CkapelIe. The organizing genius of 
Dupleix everywhere overshadowed the native imagination, and 
the star of Clive had scarcely yet risen above the horizon. The 
rivalry between the English and the French, which had already 
convulsed the south, did not penetrate to Bengal That province 
was under the able government of Ali Vardi Khan, who 
peremptorily forbade the foreign settlers at Calcutta and Cbander- 
nagore to introduce feuds from Europe. The duties of a young 
" writer " were then such 9M are implied in the name. At an 
early date Hastings was placed in charge of an aurang or factory 
in the interior, where his duties would be to superintend the 
weaving of sQk and cotton goods under a system of money 
advances. In 2753 he was transferred to Cossixnbaaar, the 
river-port of the native capital of Musshidabad. In 2736 the 
old nawab died, and was succeeded by his grandson Suraj- 
ud-Dowlah, a young madman of 29, whose name is indelibly 
associated with the tragedy of the Black Hole. When that 
passionate young prince, in revenge for a fancied wrong, resolved 
to drive the English out of Bengal, his first step was to occupy 
the fortified factory at Cossimbasar, and make prisoners of 
Hastings and his companions. Hastings was soon released at the 
intercession of the Dutch resident, and made use of his position 
at Murahidabad to open negotiations with the English fugitives 
at Falta, the site of a Dutch factory near the mouth of the HugH 
In later days he used to refer with pride to his services on this 
occasion, when he was first initiated into the wiles of Oriental 
diplomacy. After a while he found it necessary to fly from the 
Mahommedan court and join the main body of the English at 
Falta. When the relieving force arrived from Madras under 
Colonel Clive and Admiral Watson, Hastings enrolled himself as 
a volunteer, and took part in the action which led to the recovery 
of Calcutta. Clive showed his appreciation of Hastings's merits 
by appointing him Sn 2758 to the important post of resident at 
the court of Musshidabad. It was there that he first came into 
collision with the Bengali Brahman* Nuncomar, whose sub- 
sequent fate has supplied more material for controversy than any 
other episode in his career. During his three years of office as 
resident he was able to render not a few valuable services to the 
Company; but it is more important to observe that his name 
nowhere occurs in the official lists of those who derived pecuniary 
profit from the necessities and weakness of the native court. In 
2762 he was promoted to be member of council, under the presi- 
dency of Mr Vansktart, who had been introduced by Clive from 
Madras. The period of Vansittart's government has been truly 
described as " the most revolting page of our Indian history." 
The entire duties of administration were suffered to remain in 
the hands of the nawab, while a few irresponsible English traders 
had drawn to themselves ail real power. Tlie members of 
council, the commanders of the troops, and the commercial 
residents plundered on a grand scale. The youngest servant of 
the Company claimed the right of trading on his own account, 
free from taxation and from local jurisdiction, not only for him- 
self but also for every native subordinate whom he might permit 



56 



HASTINGS, WARREN 



to use his name. It was this exemption, threatening the vary 
foundations of the Mussulman government, that finally led to a 
rupture with the nawab. Macaulay, in his celebrated essay, has 
said that " of the conduct of Hastings at this time little is known." 
As a matter of fact, the book which Macaulay was professing to 
review describes at length the honourable part consistently 
taken by Hastings in opposition to the great majority of the 
council. Sometimes in conjunction only with Vansittart, some* 
times absolutely alone, he protested unceasingly against the 
policy and practices of his colleagues. On one occasion he was 
stigmatized in a minute by Mr Batson with " having espoused 
the nawab 's cause, and as a hired solicitor defended all his actions, 
however dishonourable and detrimental to the Company." An 
altercation ensued. Batson gave him the lie and struck him in 
the council chamber. When war was actually begun, Hastings 
officially recorded his previous resolution to have resigned, in 
order to repudiate responsibility for measure* which he had 
always opposed. Waiting only for the decisive victory of Buxar 
over the allied forces of Bengal and Oudh, he resigned his seat 
and sailed for England in November X764. 

After fourteen years' residence in Bengal Hastings did not 
return home a rich man, estimated by the opportunities of his 
position. According to the custom of the time he had augmented 
his slender salary by private trade. At a later date he was 
charged by Burke with having taken up profitable contracts for 
supplying bullocks for the use of the Company's troops. It is 
admitted that he conducted by means of agents a large business 
in timber in the Gangetic Sundarbans. When at Falta he had 
married Mrs Buchanan, the widow of an officer. She bore him 
two children, of whom one died in infancy at Murshidabad, and 
was shortly followed to the grave by her mother. Their common 
gravestone is in existence at the present day, bearing date 
July xx, 1759. The other child, a son, was sent to England, and 
also died shortly before his father's return. While at home 
Hastings is said to have attached himself to literary society; 
and it may be inferred from his own letters that he now made the 
personal acquaintance of Samuel Johnson and Lord Mansfield. 
In 1766 he was called upon to give evidence before a committee 
of the House of Commons upon the affairs of Bengal. The good 
sense and clearness of the views which he expressed caused 
attention to be paid to his desire to be again employed in India. 
His pecuniary affairs were embarrassed, partly from the liberality 
with which he had endowed his few surviving relatives. The 
great influence of Lord Give was also exercised on his behalf. 
At last, in the winter of 1768, he received the appointment of 
second in council at Madras. Among bis companions on his 
voyage round the Cape were the Baron Imhoff, a speculative 
portrait-painter, and his wife, a lady of some personal attractions 
and great social charm, who was destined henceforth, to be 
Hastings's lifelong companion. ■ Of his two years' work at Madras 
it is needless to speak in detail He won the good-will of his 
employers by devoting himself to the imp ro ve m ent of their 
manufacturing business, and he kept his hands clean from the 
prevalent taint of pecuniary transactions with the nawab of the 
Carnatlc. ' One fact of some interest is not generally known. 
He drew up a scheme for the construction of a pier at Madras, 
to avoid the dangers of landing through the surf, and instructed 
his brother-in-law in England to; obtain estimates from the 
engineers Brindley and Smeaton. 

In the beginning of 177a his ambition was stimulated &>y the 
nomination to the second place in council in Bengal with a 
promise of the reversion of the governorship when Mr Carrier 
should retire. Since his departure from Bengal in X764* the 
situation of affairs in that settlement had scarcely improved. 
The second governorship of Give was marked by the transfer 
of the dlvoini or financial administration from the Mogul emperor 
to the Company, and by the enforcement of stringent regulations 
against the besetting sin of peculation. But Give was followed 
by two inefficient successors; and in 1770 occurred the most 
terrible Indian famine on record, which is credibly estimated 
to have swept away one-third of the population. In April 1771 
Warren Hastings took his seat as president of the council at Fort 



William. His fiat care warn, to carry out the instructions received 
from home, and effect a radical reform in the system of govern- 
ment. Give's plan of governing through the agency of the native 
court had proved a failure. The directors were determiied " to 
stand forth as rffutf *, and take upon themselves by their own 
servants the entire management of the revenues.*' All the 
officers of administration were transferred from Murshidabad 
to Calcutta, which Hastings boasted at this early date that ho 
would make the first city in Asia. This reform involved the 
ruin of many native reputations, and for a second time brought 
Hastings Into collision with the wily Brahman, Nuncomar. 
At the same time a settlement of the land revenue on leases for 
five years was begun* and the police and military systems of 
the country were placed upon a new footing. Hastings was a 
man of immense industry, with an insatiable appetite for detail. 
The whole of this large series of reforms was- conducted under 
his own personal supervision, and upon no part of his multifarious 
labours did he dwell in his fetters home with greater pride. 
As an independent measure of economy, the stipend paid to the 
titular nawab of Bengal, who was then a minor, was reduced by 
one-half— to sixteen lakhs a year (say £160,000). Macaulay 
imputes this reduction to Hastings as a characteristic act of 
financial immorality; but in truth it had been expressly enjoined 
by the court of directors, in a despatch dated six months befom 
he took up office. His pecuniary bargains with Shuja-ud-Dowlafa, 
the nawab wazlr of Oudh, stand on a different basis. Hasting* 
himself always regarded them as incidents in his general scheme 
of foreign policy. The Mahrattas at this time had got possession 
of the person of the Mogul emperor, Shah Alam, from whom 
Give obtained the grant of Bengal in 1765, and to whom he 
assigned in return the districts of Allahabad and Kora and a 
tribute of £300,000. With the emperor in their camp, the 
Mahrattas were threatening the province of Oudh, and 
causing a large British force to be cantoned along the frontier 
for its defence. Warren Hastings, as a deliberate measure of 
policy, withheld the tribute due to the emperor, and resold 
Allahabad and Kora to the wadr of Oudh. The Mahrattas 
retreated, and all danger for the time was dissipated by the 
death of their principal leader. The waztr now bethought him 
that he had a good opportunity for satisfying an old quarrel 
against the adjoining tribe of RohOlas, who had played fast and 
loose with him while the Mahratu army was at hand. The 
RohQlas were a race of Afghan origin, who had established 
themselves for some generations in a fertile tract west of Oudh, 
between the Himalayas and the Ganges, which still bears the 
name of Rohilkhand. They were not so much the occupiers of 
the soil as a dominant caste of warriors and freebooters. But 
in those troubled days their title was as good as any to be found 
in India. After not a little hesitation, Hastings consented to 
allow the Company's troops to be used to further the ambitious 
designs of his Oudh ally, in consideration of a sum of money 
which relieved the ever-pressing wants of the Bengal treasury. 
The Rohillas were defeated in fair fight. Some of them fled the 
country, and so far as possible Hastings obtained terms for 
those who remained. The fighting, no doubt, on the part of the 
wazlr was conducted with all the savagery of Oriental warfare; , 
but there is no evidence that it was a war of extermination. 

Meanwhile, the affairs of the East India Company had come 
under the consideration of parliament. The Regulating Act, 
passed by Lord North's ministry in 1773, effected considerable 
changes in the constitution of the Bengal government. The 
council was reduced to four members with a governor-general, 
who were to exercise certain indefinite powers of control over the 
presidencies of Madras and Bombay. Hastings was named in 
the act as governor-general for a term of five years. The council 
consisted of General Clavering and the Hon. Colonel Monson, 
two third-rate politicians of considerable parliamentary influence; 
Philip Francis (g.v.), then only known as an able permanent 
official; and Barwell, of the Bengal Civil Service. At the same 
time a supreme court of judicature was appointed, composed 
of a chief and three puisne judges, to exercise an indeterminate 
Jurisdiction at Calcutta. ^ The chief-justice was Sir Elijah Impey,' 



HASTINGS, WARREN 



57 



already mentioned as a schoolfellow of Hastings at Westminster. 
The whole tendency of the Regulating Act was to establish for 
the first time the influence of the crown, or rather of parliament, 
in Indian affairs. The new members of council disembarked 
at Calcutta on the iolh of October 1774; and on the following 
day commenced the long feud which scarcely terminated twenty- 
one years later with the acquittal of Warren Hastings by the 
House of Lords. Macaulay states that the members of council 
were put in ill-humour because their salute of guns was not 
proportionate to their dignity. In a contemporary letter 
Francis thus expresses the same petty feeling: " Surely Mr H. 
might have put on a ruffled shirt." Taking advantage of an 
ambiguous clause in their commission, the majority of the 
council (for Barwell uniformly sided with Hastings) forthwith 
proceeded to pats in review the recent measures of the governor- 
general. All that he had done they condemned; all that they 
could they reversed. Hastings was reduced to the position of a 
cipher at their meetings. After a time they lent a ready ear to 
detailed allegations of corruption brought against him by has 
old enemy Nuncomar. To charges from such a source, and 
brought in such a manner, Hastings disdained to reply, and 
referred his accuser to the supreme court. The majority of the 
council, in their executive capacity, resolved that the governor- 
general had been guilty of peculation, and ordered him to 
refund. A few days later Nuncomar was thrown into prison on 
a charge of forgery preferred by a private prosecutor, tried before 
the supreme court sitting in bar, found guilty by a jury of 
Englishmen and sentenced to be hanged. Hastings always 
maintained that he did not cause the charge to be instituted, 
and the legality of Nuncomax's trial is thoroughly proved by 
Sir James Stephen. The majority of the council abandoned 
their supporter, who was executed in due course. He had 
forwarded a petition for reprieve to the council, which Clsveriug 
took care should not be presented in time, and which was subse- 
quently burnt by the common hangman on the motion of Francis.' 
While the strife was at its hottest, Hastings had sent an agent 
to England wkh a general authority to place his resignation in 
the hands of the Company under certain conditions. The agent 
thought fit to exercise that authority. The resignation was 
promptly accepted, and one of the directors was appointed 
to* the vacancy. But in the meantime Colonel Monson had 
died, and Hastings was thus restored, by virtue of his casting 
vote, to the supreme management of affairs. He refused to 
ratify his resignation; and when Clavering attempted to seise 
on the governor-generalship, he judiciously obtained an opinion 
from the judges of the supreme court in his favour. From that 
time forth, though he could not always command an absolute 
majority in council, Hastings was never again subjected to 
gross insult, and his general policy was able to prevail. 

A crisis was now approaching in foreign affairs which de- 
manded all the experience and all the genius of Hastings for 
its solution. Bengal was prosperous, and free from external 
enemies on every quarter. But the government of Bombay had 
hurried on a rupture with the Mahratta confederacy at a time 
when France was on the point of declaring war against England, 
and when the mother-country found herself unable to subdue 
her rebellious colonists in America. Hastings did not hesitate 
to take upon his own shoulders the whole responsibility of 
military affairs. All the French settlements in India were 
promptly occupied. On the part of Bombay, the Mahratta war 
was conducted with procrastination and disgrace. But Hastings 
amply avenged the capitulation of Wargaon by the complete 
success of his own plan of operations. Colonel Goddard with a 
Bengal army marched across the breadth of the peninsula from 
the valley of the Ganges to the western sea, and achieved almost 
without a blow the conquest of Gujarat. Captain Popham, with 
a small detachment, stormed the rock fortress of Gwalior, then 
deemed impregnable and the key of central India; and by this 
feat held in check Sindhia, the most formidable of the Mahratta 
chiefs. The Bhonsla Mahratta raja of Nagpur, whose dominions 
bordered on Bengal, was won over by the diplomacy of an 
emissary of Hastings. But while these events were taking place, 



a new source of embarrassment had arisen at Calcutta* The 
supreme court, whether rightly or wrongly, assumed a jurisdic- 
tion of first instance over the entire province of Bengal. The 
English common law, with all the absurdities and rigours of that 
day, was arbitrarily extended to an alien system of society. 
Zomtnddrs, or government renters, were arrested on mesne 
process; the sanctity of the Mendna, or women's chamber, as 
dear to Hindus as to Mahommedans, was violated by the sheriff's 
officer; the deepest feelings of the people and the entire fabric 
of revenue administration were alike disregarded. On this point 
the entire council acted in harmony. Hastings and Francis went 
joint-bail for imprisoned natives of distinction. At last, after 
the dispute between the judges and the executive threatened to 
become a trial of armed force, Hastings set it at rest by a charac- 
teristic stroke of policy. A new judicial office was created in 
the name of the Company, to which Sir Elijah Impey was 
appointed, though he never consented to draw the additional 
salary offered to him. The understanding between Hastings 
and Francis, originating in this state of affairs, was for a short 
period extended to general policy. An agreement was come to 
by which Francis received patronage for his circle of friends, 
while Hastings was to be unimpeded in the control of foreign 
affairs. But a difference of interpretation arose. Hastings 
recorded in an official minute that he had found Francis's private 
and public conduct to be " void of truth and honour.** They 
met as duellists. Francis fell wounded, and soon afterwards 
returned to England. 

The Mahratta war was not yet terminated, but a far more 
formidable danger now threatened the English in India. The 
imprudent conduct of the Madras authorities had irritated 
beyond endurance the two greatest Mussulman powers m the 
peninsula, the nizam of the Deccan and Hyder Ali, the usurper 
of Mysore, who began to negotiate an alliance with the Mahrattas. 
A second time the genius of Hastings saved the British empire 
in the cast. On the arrival of. the news that Hyder bad descended 
from the highlands of Mysore, cut to pieces the only British army 
in the field, and swept the Carnatic up to the gates of Madras, 
he at once adopted a poUcy of extraordinary boldness. Ho 
signed a blank treaty of peace with the Mahrattas, who were still 
in arms, reversed the action of the Madras government towards 
the nizam, and concentrated all the resources of Bengal against 
Hyder AIL Sir Eyre Coote, a general of renown in former 
Carnatic wars, was sent by sea to Madras with all the troops and 
treasure that could be got together; and a strong body of rein- 
forcements subsequently marched southwards under Colonel 
Pearse along the coast line of Orissa. The landing of Coote 
preserved Madras from destruction, though the war lasted 
through many campaigns and only terminated with the death 
of Hyder. . Pearse's detachment was decimated by an epidemic 
of cholera (perhaps the first mention of this disease by name in 
Indian history); but the survivors penetrated to Madras, and 
not only held in check Bhonsla and the nizam, but also corro- 
borated the lesson taught by Goddard— that the Company's 
sepoys could march anywhere, when boldly led. Hastings's 
personal task was to provide the ways and means for this exhaust- 
ing war. A considerable economy was effected by a reform in 
the establishment for collecting the land tax. The government 
monopolies of opium and salt were then for the first time placed 
upon a remunerative basis. But these reforms were of necessity 
slow in their beneficial operation. The pressing demands of the 
military chest had to be satisfied by loans, and in at least one 
case from the private purse of the governor-general. Ready 
cash could alone fill up the void; and it was to the hoards of 
native princes that Hastings's fertile mind at once turned. 
Chait Sing, raja of Benares, the greatest of the vassal chiefs who 
had grown rich under the protection of the British rule, lay 
under the suspicion of disloyalty. The wazir of Oudh had fallen 
into arrears in the payment due for the maintenance of the 
Company's garrison posted in his dominions, and his administra- 
tion was in great disorder. In his case the ancestral hoards were 
under the control of his mother, the begum of Oudh, into whose 
hands they had been allowed to pass at the time when Hastings 



58 



HASTINGS, WARREN 



was powerless to counea. Hastings resolved to make a progress 
up country in order to arrange the affairs of both provinces, and 
bring back all the treasure that could be squeezed out of its 
holders by his personal intervention. When he reached Benares 
and presented his demands, the raja rose in insurrection, and the 
governor-general barely escaped with his life. But the faithful 
Popham rapidly rallied a force for his defence. The insurgents 
were defeated again and again; Chait Sing took to flight, and 
an augmented permanent tribute was imposed upon his suc- 
cessor. The Oudh business was managed with less risk. The 
waiir consented to everything demanded of him. The begum 
was charged with having abetted Chait Sing in his rebellion } 
and after the severest pressure applied to lierself and her 
attendant eunuchs, a fine of more than a million sterling was 
exacted from her. Hastings appears to have been not altogether 
satisfied with the incidents of this expedition, and to have antici- 
pated the censure which it received in England. As a measure 
of precaution, he procured documentary evidence of the rebellious 
intentions of the raja and the begum, to the validity of which 
Impey obligingly lent his extra-judicial sanction. 

The remainder of Hastings's term of office in India was passed 
in comparative tranquillity, both from internal opposition and 
foreign war. The centre of interest now shifts to the 'India 
House and to the British parliament. The long struggle between 
the Company and the ministers of the crown for the supreme 
control of Indian affairs and the attendant patronage had 
reached its climax. The decisive success of Hastings's adminis- 
tration alone postponed the inevitable solution. His original 
term of five years would have expired in 1778; but it was 
annually prolonged by special act of parliament until his 
voluntary resignation. Though Hastings was thus irremovable, 
his policy did not escape censure. Ministers were naturally 
anxious to obtain the reversion to his vacant post, and Indian 
affairs formed at this time the hinge on which party politics 
turned. On one occasion Dundas carried a motion in the House 
of Commons, censuring Hastings and demanding his recall. 
The directors of the Company were disposed to act upon this 
resolution; but in the court of proprietors, with whom the 
decision ultimately lay, Hastings always possessed a sufficient 
majority. Fox's India Bill led to the downfall of the Coalition 
ministry in 1783. The act which Pitt successfully carried in the 
following year introduced a new constitution, in which Hastings 
felt that he had no place. In February 1785 he finally sailed 
from Calcutta, after a dignified ceremony of resignation, and 
amid enthusiastic farewells from all classes. 

On his arrival in England, after a second absence of sixteen 
years, he was not displeased with the reception he met with at 
court and in the country. A peerage was openly talked of as 
his due, while his own ambition pointed to some responsible 
office at home. Pitt had never taken a side against lum, while 
Lord Chancellor Thurlow was bis pronounced friend. But he 
was now destined to learn that his enemy Francis, whom be had 
discomfited in the council chamber at Calcutta, was more than 
his match in the parliamentary arena. Edmund Burke had taken 
the subject races of India under the protection of his eloquence. 
Francis, who had been the early friend of Burke, supplied htm 
with the personal animus against Hastings, and with the know- 
ledge of detail, which he might otherwise have lacked. The 
Whig party on this occasion unanimously followed Burke's lead. 
Dundas, Pitt's favourite subordinate, had already committed 
himself by his earlier resolution of censure; and Pitt was induced 
by motives which are still obscure to incline the ministerial 
majority to the same side. To meet the oratory of Burke and 
Sheridan and Fox, Hastings wrote an elaborate minute with 
which he wearied the ears of the House for two successive nights, 
and he subsidized a swarm of pamphleteers. The impeachment 
was decided upon in 1786, but the actual trial did not commence 
until 1 788. For seven long years Hastings was upon his defence 
on the charge of " high crimes and misdemeanours." During 
this anxious period he appears to have borne himself with charac- 
teristic dignity, such as is consistent with no other hypothesis 
than the consciousness of innocence. At last, in 1705, the House 



of Lords gave a verdict of not guilty on all charges laid against 
him; and he left the bar at which he had so frequently appeared, 
with his reputation dear, but ruined in fortune. However large 
the wealth he brought back from India, ail was swallowed up in 
defraying theexpenses of his trial. Continuing the line of conduct 
which in most other men would be called hypocrisy, he forwarded 
a petition to Pitt praying that he might be reimbursed his costs 
from the public funds. This petition, of course, was rejected. 
At last, when he was reduced to actual destitution, it was 
arranged that the East India Company should grant him an 
annuity of £4000 for a term of years, with £00,000 paid down in 
advance, This annuity expired before his death; and he was 
compelled to make more than one fresh appeal to the bounty of 
the Company, which was never withheld. Shortly before his 
acquittal he had been able to satisfy the dream of his childhood, 
by buying back the ancestral manor of Daylesford, where the 
remainder of his life was passed in honourable retirement. In 
1813 he was called on to give evidence upon Indian affairs before 
the two houses of parliament, which received him with excep- 
tional marks of respect. The university of Oxford conferred on 
him the honorary degree of D.C.L.; and in the following year 
be was sworn of the privy council, and took a prominent part in 
the reception given to the duke of Wellington and the allied 
sovereigns. He died on the 22nd of August t8iS, in his 86th 
year, and lies buried behind the chancel of the parish church, 
which he had recently restored at his own charges. 

In physical appearance, Hastings "looked like a great man, 
and not like a bad man." The body was wholly subjugated to 
the mind. A frame naturally slight bad been further attenuated 
by rigorous habits Of temperance, and thus rendered proof 
against the diseases of the tropics. Against his private character 
not even calumny has breathed a reproach: As brother, as 
husband and as friend, his affections were as steadfast as they 
were warm. By the public he was always regarded as reserved, 
but within his own Inner circle he gave and received perfect 
confidence. lit his dealings with money, he was characterized 
rather by liberality of expenditure than, by carefulness of acquisi- 
tion. A classical education and the instincts of family pride 
saved him from both the greed and the vulgar display which 
marked the typical " nabob," the self-made man of those days. 
He could support the position of a governor-general and of a 
country gentleman with equal credit. Concerning his second 
marriage, it suffices to say that the Baroness Imhoff was nearly 
forty years of age, with a family of grown-up children, when the 
complaisant law of her native land allowed her to become Mrs 
Hastings. She survived her husband, who cherished towards 
her to the last the sentiments of a lover. Her children he 
adopted as his own; and it was chiefly for her sake that he 
desired the peerage which was twice held out to him. 

Hastings's public career will probably never cease to -be a 
subject of controversy. It was his misfortune to be the scape- 
goat upon whose head parliament laid the accumulated sins, 
real and imaginary, of the East India Company. If the acquisi- 
tion of the Indian empire can be supported on ethical grounds, 
Hastings needs no defence. No one who reads his private 
correspondence will admit that even his least -defensible acts 
were dictated by dishonourable motives. It is more pleasing to 
point out certain of his public measures upon which no difference 
of opinion can arise. He was the first to at tempt to open a trade 
route with Tibet, and to organize a survey of Bengal and of the 
eastern seas. It was he who persuaded the pundits of Bengal to 
disclose the treasures of Sanskrit to European scholars. He 
founded the Madras* or college for Mahommedan education at 
Calcutta, primarily out of his own funds; and he projected the 
foundation of an Indian institute in England. The Bengal 
Asiatic Society was established under his auspices, though he 
yielded the post of president to Sir W. Jones. No Englishman 
ever understood the native character so weR as Hastings; none 
ever devoted himself more heartily to the promotion of every 
scheme, great and small, that could advance the prosperity of 
India. Natives and Anglo-Indians alike venerate his name, the 
former as their first beneficent administrator, the latter as the 



HASTINGS 



59 



most able and the most enlightened of their own dass. If Clive's 
sword conquered the Indian empire, it was the brain of Hastings 
that planned the system of civil administration, and his genius 
that saved the empire in its darkest hour. 

See G. B. Malleson, Life of Warren Hastings (1804); G. W. 
Forrest, The Administration of Warren Hastings (Calcutta. 1892); 



S 



Sir Charles Law son, The Private Life of Warren Hastings (1895J; 
L. J. Trotter, Warren Hastings (" Rulers of India " aeries) (1890); 
Sir Alfred Lyall, Warren Hastings (" English Men of Action " series) 
(1889); F. M. Holmes, Four Heroes of India (1892) : G. W. Hastings, 
A Vindication of Warren Hastings (1009). Macaulay's famous essay, 
though a classic, is very partial and inaccurate; and Burke's speech, 
00 the impeachment of Warren Hastings, is magnificent rhetoric. 
The true historical view has been restored by Sir James Stephen's 
Story of tfuncomar (1885) and by Sir John Strachey's Hastings and 
the Roktila War (1802), and it is enforced in some detail in Sydney 
C. Grier's Letters of Warren Hastings to his Wife (1005), material for 
which existed in a mass of documents relating to Hastings, acquired 
by the British Museum. (J. S. Co.) 

HASTINGS, a municipal, county and parliamentary borough 
and watering-place of Sussex, England, one of the Cinque Ports, 
62 m. S.E. by S. from London, on the South Eastern & Chatham 
and the London, Brighton & South Coast railways. Pop. (1001), 
65,528. It is picturesquely situated at the mouth of two narrow 
valleys, and, being sheltered by considerable hills on the north 
and east, has an especially mild climate. Eastward along the 
coast towards Fairlight, and inland, the country is beautiful. 
A parade fronts the English Channel, and connects the town on 
the west with St Leonard's, which is included within the borough. 
This is mainly a residential quarter, and has four railway stations 
on the lines serving Hastings. Both Hastings and St Leonard's 
have fine piers; there is a covered parade known as the Marina, 
and the Alexandra Park of 75 acres was opened in 1891. There 
are also numerous public gardens. The sandy beach is extensive, 
and affords excellent bathing. On the brink of the West Cliff 
stand a square and a circular lower and other fragments of the 
castle, probably erected soon after the time of William the 
Conqueror; together with the ruins, opened up by excavation 
in 1824, of the castle chapel, a transitional Norman structure 
110 ft. long* with a nave, chancel and aisles. Besides the chapel 
there was formerly a college, both being under the control of a 
dean and secular canons. The deanery was held by Thomas 
Beckct, and one of the canonrics by William of Wykcham. The 
principal public buildings are the old parish churches of All 
Saints and St Clements, the first containing in its register for 
1619 the baptism of Titus Oates, whose father was rector of the 
parish; numerous modern churches, the town hall (1880); 
theatre, music hall and assembly rooms. The Brasscy Institute 
contains a public library, museum and art school. The Albert 
Memorial clock-tower was erected in 1864. Educational institu- 
tions include the grammar school (1883), school of science and 
art (1878) and technical schools. At the west end of the town 
are several hospitals and convalescent homes. ' The prosperity 
of the town depends almost wholly on its reputation as a watering- 
place, but there is a small fishing and boat-building industry. 
In 1800 an act of parliament authorized the construction of a 
harbour, but the work, begun in 1806, was not completed. The 
fish-market beneath the castle cliff is picturesque. The parlia- 
mentary borough, returning one member, falls within the Rye 
division of the county. The county borough was created in 
1888. The municipal borough is under a mayor, 10 aldermen 
and 30 councillors. Area, 4857 acres. 

Rock shelters on Castle Hill and numerous flint instruments 
which have been discovered at Hastings point to an extensive 
neolithic population, and there are ancient earthworks and a 
promontory camp of unknown date. There is no evidence that 
Hastings was a Roman settlement, but it was a place of some 
note in the Anglo-Saxon period. In 705 land at Hastings 
(Ha est in ga coaster, Haestingas. Haestingaport) is included in a 
grant, which may possibly be a forgery, of a South Saxon chieftain 
to the abbey of St Denis in France; and a royal mint was 
established at the town by /El heist an. The battle of Hastings 
in 1066 described below was the first and decisive act of the 
Norman Conquest . 1 1 was fought near the present Battle Abbey, 



about 6 m. inland. After the Conquest William I. erected the 
earthworks of the existing castle. By 1086 Hastings was a 
borough and had given its name to the rape of Sussex in which 
it lay. The town at that time had a harbour and a market* 
Whether Hastings was one of the towns afterwards known as 
the Cinque Ports at the time when they received their first charter 
from Edward the Confessor is uncertain, but in the reign of 
William I. it was undoubtedly among them. These combined 
towns, of which Hastings was the head, had special liberties 
and a separate jurisdiction under a warden. The only charter 
peculiar to Hastings was granted in 1589 by Elizabeth, and 
incorporated the borough under the name of " mayor, jurats 
and commonalty," instead of the former title of " bailiff, jurats 
and commonalty." Hastings returned two members to parlia- 
ment probably from 1322, and certainly from 1366, until 1885, 
when the number -was reduced to one. 

Battle of Hastings.— Oq the 28th of September 1066, William 
of Normandy, bent on asserting by arms his right to the English 
crown, landed at Pevensey. King Harold, who had destroyed 
the invaders of northern England at the battle of Stamford 
Bridge in Yorkshire, on hearing the news hurried southward, 
gathering what forces he could on the way. He took up his 
position, athwart the road from Hastings to London, on a hill* 
some 6 m. inland from Hastings, with his back to the great 
forest of Anderida (the Weald) and in front of him a long glads- 
like slope, at the bottom of which began the opposing slope of 
Tclham Hill. The English army was composed almost entirely 
of infantry. The shire levies, for the most part destitute of body 
armour and with miscellaneous and even improvised weapons, 
were arranged on either flank of Harold's guards (huscarks), 
picked men armed principally with the Danish axe and shield. 

Before this position Duke William appeared on the morning 
of the 14th of October. His host, composed not only of his 
Norman vassals but of barons, knights and adventurers from all 
quarters, was arranged in a centre and two wings, each corps 
having its archers and arblasters in the front line, the rest of the 
infantry in the second and the heavy armoured cavalry in the 
third. Neither the arrows nor the charge of the second line 
of foot-men, who, unlike the English, wore defensive mail, made 
any impression on the English standing in a serried mass behind 
their interlocked shields.* 

Then the heavy cavalry came on, led by the duke and his 
brother Odo, and encouraged by the example of the minstrel 
Taillefer, who rode forward, tossing and catching his sword, 
into the midst of the English line before he was pulled down and 
killed. All along the front the cavalry came to close quarters 
with the defenders, but the long powerful Danish axes were 

1 Freeman called this hill Senlac and introduced the fashion of 
describing the battle as " the battle of Senlac." Mr J. H. Round, 
however, proved conclusively that this name, being French (Sen- 
Iccquc). could not have been in use at the time of the Conquest, 
that the battlefield had in fact no name, pointing out that in William 
of Malmesbury and in Domesday Book the battle is called " of 
Hastings " (Bellum Haslingense). while only one writer. Ordericus 
Vitalis, describes it two hundred years after the event as Bellum 
Senlacium. Sec Round, Feudal England (London, 1895), p. 333 
et seq. _ 



Pi 
th 
of 
su 
Ei 
the subject will be found. 



6o 



HASTINGS— HAT 



as formidable as the faalbert and thfe bill proved to be in battles 
of later centuries, and they lopped off the arms of the assailants 
and cut down their horses. The fire of the attack died out and 
the left wing (Bretons) fled in rout. But as the fyrd levies broke 
out of the line and pursued the Bretons down the hill in a wild, 
formless mob, William's cavalry swung round and destroyed 
them, and this suggested to the duke to repeat deliberately 
what the Bretons had done from fear. Another a dvance , followed 
by a feigned retreat, drew down a second large body of the 
English from the crest, and these in turn, once in the open, were 
ridden over and slaughtered by the men-at-arms. Lastly, 
these two disasters having weakened the defenders both 
materially and morally, William subjected the kuscarlcs, who 
had stood fast when the fyrd broke its ranks, to a constant rain 
of arrows, varied from time to time by cavalry charges. These 
magnificent soldiers endured the trial for many hours, from 
noon till close on nightfall; but at last, when the Norman 
archers raised their bows so as to pitch the arrows at a steep 
angle of descent in the midst of the huscarUs, the strain became 
too great. While some rushed forward alone or in twos and threes 
to die in the midst of the enemy, the remainder stood fast, too 
closely crowded almost for the wounded to drop. At last 
Harold received a mortal wound, the English began to waver, 
and the knights forced their way in. Only a remnant of the 
defenders made its way back to the forest; and William, after 
resting for a night on the hardly-won ground, began the work of 
the Norman Conquest. 

HASTINGS, a city and the county-seat of Adams county, 
Nebraska, U.S.A., about 95 m. W. by S. of Lincoln. Pop. 
(1890) 13.584; (1000) 7188 (1253 foreign-born); (1910) 9338. 
Hastings is served by the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy, the 
Chicago & North-western, the Missouri Pacific and the St Joseph 
& Grand Island railways. It is the scat of Hastings College 
(Presbyterian, coeducational), opened in 1882, and having 286 
students in 1008, and of the state asylum for the chronic insane. 
The city carries on a considerable jobbing business for the farm- 
ing region of which it is the centre and produce market. There 
are a large foundry and several large brickyards here. Hastings 
was settled in 187a, was incorporated in 1874 and was chartered 
as a city in the same year. 

HAT, a covering for the head worn by both sexes, and dis- 
tinguished from the cap or bonnet by the possession of a brim. 
The word in O.E. is hcet, which is cognate with O. Frisian halt, 
O.N. kotto, &c, meaning head-covering, hood ; it is distantly 
related to the O.E. hod, hood, which is cognate with the German 
for " hat," Hut. The history of the hat as part of the apparel 
of both sexes, with the various changes in shape which it has 
undergone, is treated in the article Costume. 

Hats were originally made by the process of felting, and as 
tradition ascribed the discovery of that very ancient operation 
to St Clement, he was assumed as the patron saint of the craft. 
At the present day the trade is divided into two distinct classes. 
The first and most ancient is concerned with the manufacture 
of felt hats, and the second has to do with the recent but now 
most extensive and important manufacture of silk or dress hats. 
In addition to these there is the important manufacture of straw 
or plaited hats (see Straw and Straw Manufactures); and 
hats are occasionally manufactured of materials and by processes 
not included under any of these heads, but such manufactures 
do not take a large or permanent position in the industry. 

Fell Hats. — There is a great range in tho quality of felt hats: 
the finer and more expensive qualities are made entirely of fur; 
for commoner qualities a mixture of fur and wool is used ; and for 
the cheapest kinds wool alone is employed. The processes and 
apparatus necessary for making hats of fur differ also from those 
required in the case of woollen bodies; and in large manufactories 
machinery is now generally employed for operations which at no 
distant date were entirely manual. An outline of the operations 
by which the old beaver hat was made will give an idea of the 
manual processes in making a fur napped hat, and the apparatus 
and mechanical processes employed in making ordinary hard and 
soft felts will afterwards be noticed. 

Hatters' fur consists principally of the hair of rabbits (technically 
called coneys) and hares, with some proportion of nutria, musquash 
and beavers hair; and generally any parings and cuttings from 



d for felting are deprived of thek 
r are treated with a solution of 
ed carroting or sccrelage, whereby 
e greatly increased. The fur m 
the skit 1 , and in this state it is 

caver hat was as follows. The 
»d, for the body or foundation, of 
■er fur, although the beaver was 
y a more common fur. In pre- 
eighed out a sufficient quantity 
pread it out and combined it by 
or stang ABC (fig. 1) was about 




le cord of catgut D, which the 
wooden pin E. furnished with a 
\ bow in his left hand, and the pin 
g string to come in contact with 
ot cover a space greater than that 
ne of the filaments started up to 
I away from the mass, a little to 
n% being restrained by a concave 
askct. One half of the material 
ig and gathering, or a patting use 
y matted into a triangular figure, 
1 this formation care was taken to 
iown towards what was intended 

effected, greater density was in- 
tasket. It was then covered with 

was laid the hardening skin, a 
». On this the workman pressed 
' damp cloth, in which it was then 
e hand, and laid aside. By this 

became compactly felted and 

The other half of the fur was next 
cesses, after which a cone-shaped 
face, and the sides of the bat were 
I size. It was then laid paper-side 
1 was now replaced on the hurdle, 
bled over Jthc introverted side-lays 
tal thickness to the whole body. 
xd between folds of damp linen 
unite the two halves, the knitting 
cted. The paper was then with- 

of a large cone removed to the 

1 iron boiler or kettle A ' 
shelves, B. C, partly of 11 




L 



to enable the workman to handle 



Fig. 2. 

th a brush frequently dipped into 
k sufficiently (about one-half) and 
te dried, stiffening was effected 
rnish of shellac, and rubbed into 
it the inside having much more 
i brim was made to absorb many 
other part. 

as ready to be covered with a nap 
w qualities, the hair of the otter, 
hues substituted. The requisite 
vas taken and mixed with a pro- 
•as bowed up into a thin uniform 
ive sufficient body to the material 
' the lap. The body of the hat 



HATCH, EDWIN— HATCH 



61 



being damped, the workman spread over it a covering of this lap, 
and by moistening and gentle patting with a brush the cut ends 
of the hair penetrated and fixed themselves in the felt body. The 
hat waa then put into a coarse hair cloth, dipped and rolled in 
the hot liquor until the fur was quite worked in, the cotton being 
left on the surface loose and ready for removal. The blocking, 
dyeing and finishing processes in the case of beaver hats were 
umilar to those employed for ordinary felts, except that greater care 
and dexterity were required on the part of the workmen, and further 
that the coarse hairs or kemps which might be in the fur were cut off 
by shaving the surface with a razor. The nap also had to be laid in 
one direction, smoothed and rendered glossy by repeated wettings. 
ironings and brushing*. A hat so finishecf was very durable and 
much more light, cool and easy-fitting to the head than the silk hat 
which baa now so largely superseded it. 

The first efficient machinery for making felt hats waa devised in 
America, and from the United States the machine-making processes 
were introduced into England about the year 1858; and now in all 
Urge establishments machinery such as that alluded to below is 
employed. For the forming of hat bodies two hands of machine are 
used, according as the material employed is fur or wool. In the case 
of fur, the essential portion of the apparatus is a " former," con- 
sisting of a metal cone of the size and form of the body or bat to 
be made, perforated all over with small holes. The cone is made to 
revolve on hs axis slowly over an orifice under which there is a 
powerful fan, which maintains a strong inward draught of air 
through the holes in the cone. At the side of the cone, and with 
an opening towards it, is a trunk or box from which the fur to be 
made into a hat is thrown out by the rapid revolution of a brush- 
like cylinder, and as the cloud of separate hairs is expelled from 
the trunk, the current of air being sucked through '* ' 1 

the fibres to it and causes them to cling closely to it \ 

a coating of loose fibres is accumulated on the c 
these are kept in position only by the exhaust al 
When sufficient for a hat body has been deposited, it 
cloth is wrapped round it; then an outer cone is sli 
the whole is removed for felting, while another coppi 
in position for continuing the work. The fur ta 
being rolled and pressed, these operations being perl 
hand and partly by machine. 

In the case of wool bats the hat or body is prepared by first 
carding in a modified form of carding machine* The wool is divided 
into two separate slivers as delivered from the cards, and these are 
wound simultaneously on a double conical block of wood mounted 
and geared to revolve slowly with a reciprocating horizontal motion, 
so that there is a continual crossing and recrossing of the wool as 
the sliver is wound around the cone. This diagonal arrangement of 
the sliver is an essential feature in the apparatus, as thereby the 
strength of the finished felt is made equal in every direction; and 
when strained in the blocking the texture yields in a uniform manner 
without rupture. The wool wound on the double block forms the 
material of two hats, which are separated by cutting around the 
median or base line, and slipping each half off at its own end. Into 
each cone of wool or bat an " inlayer " is now placed to prevent the 
inside from matting, after which they are folded in cloths, and placed 
over a perforated iron plate through which steam is blown. When 
well moistened and heated, they are placed between boards, and 
subjected to a rubbing action sufficient to harden them for bearing 
the subsequent strong planking or felting operations. The planking 
of wool hats is generally done by machine, in some cases a form of 
fulling mill being used; but in all forma the agencies are heat, 
moisture, pressure, rubbing and turning. 

When by thorough felting the hat bodies of any kind have been 
reduced to dense leathery cones about one-half the size of the original 
bat, they are dried, and, if hard felts are to be made, the bodies are 
at this stage hardened or stiffened with a varnish of shellac. Next 
follow* the operations of blocking, in which the felt for the first time 
assumes approximately the form it is ultimately to possess. For 
thi* purpose the conical body is softened in boiling water, and 
forcibly drawn over and over a hat-shaped wooden block. The 
operation of dyeing next follows, and the finishing processes include 
shaping on a block, over which crown and brim receive ultimately 
their accurate form, and pouncing or pumicing, which consists of 
smoothing the surface with fine emery paper, the hat being for this 
purpose mounted on a rapidly revolving block. The trimmer finally 
binds the outer brim and inserts the lining, after which the brim 
may be given more or lest of a curl or turn over according to pre- 
vailing fashion. 

Silk Hats. — The silk bat, which has now become co-extensive with 
civilization, is an article of comparatively recent introduction. It 
was invented in Florence about 1760, but it was more than half a 
century before it was worn to any great extent. 

A silk hat consists of a light stiff body covered with a plush of 
silk, the manufacture of which in a brilliant glossy condition is the 
most important element in the industry. Originally the bodies 
v* ere made of felt and various other materials, out now calico is 
chiefly used. The calico is first stiffened with a varnish of shellac, 
and. then cut into pieces sufficient for crown, side and brim. The 
side-piece b wound round a wooden- hat block, and its edges are 



joined by hot ironing, and the crown-piece isput~oa and similarly 
attached to the side. The brim, consisting of three thicknesses of 
calico cemented together, is now slipped over and brought to its 
position, and thereafter a second side-piece and another crown are 
cemented on. The whole of the body, thus prepared, now receives 
a coat of size, and subsequently it is varnished over, and thus it is 
ready for the operation of covering. In covering this body, the 
1 J *"' tncrally of merino, is first attached, then the upper 
1 y the crown and side sewn together are drawn over. 

. t ironing and stretching are drawn smooth and tight, 

t kish of the body softens with the heat, body and cover 

t to each other without wrinkle or pucker. Dressing 

a by means of damping, brushing and ironing, come 

1 ch the hat is " rehired " in a revolving machine by 

1 of haircloth and velvet velures, which cleans the nap 

i mooth and glossy surface. The brim has only then to 

I linings inserted, and the brim finally curled, when 

l y for use. 

HATCH, EDWIN (1835*1889), English theologian, was born 
at Derby on the 14th of September 1835, and was educated at 
King Edward's school, Birmingham, under James Prince Lee, 
afterwards bishop of Manchester. He had many struggles to 
pass through in early life, which tended to discipline his character 
and to form the habits of severe study and the mental independ- 
ence for which he came to be distinguished. Hatch became 
scholar of Pembroke College, Oxford, took a second-class in 
classics in 1857, and won the Ellerton prize in 1858. He was 
professor of classics in Trinity College, Toronto, from 1859 to 
1862, when he became rector of the high school at Quebec. 
In 1867 he returned to Oxford, and was made vice-principal of 
St Mary Hall, a post which he held until 1885. In 1883 he was 
presented to the living of Purlcigh in Essex, and in 1884 was 
appointed university reader in ecclesiastical history. In 1880 
he was Bampton lecturer, and from 18S0 to 2884 Grinfield 
lecturer on the Sept uagint. In 1 883 the university of Edi nburgh 
conferred on him the D.D. degree. He was the first editor of 
the university official Gasetle (1870), and of the Student's Hand- 
book to the University. A reputation acquired through certain 
contributions to the Dictionary of Christian Antiquities was 
confirmed by his treatises On the Organization of the Early 
Christian Churches (1881, his Bampton lectures), and on The 
Influence of Greek Ideas and Usages on the Christian Chunk 
(the Hibbert lectures for 1888) . These works provoked no little 
criticism on account of the challenge they threw down to the 
high-church party, but the research and fairness displayed were 
admitted on all hands. The Bampton lectures were translated 
into German by Harnack. Among his other works are The 
Growth of Church Institutions (1887); Essays in Biblical Greek 
(1889); A Concordance to the Scptuagint (in collaboration with 
H. A. Redpath); Towards Fields of Light (verse, 1889); The 
God of Hope (sermons with memoir, 1800). . .Hatch died on the 
10th of November 2889. . 

An appreciation by W. Sanday appeared in The Expositor tor, 
February 189a 

HATCH. - 1. (In Mid. Eng. hacche; the word is of obscure 
origin, but cognate forms appear in Swed. kScka, and Dan. 
kackke; it has been connected with "hatch," grating, with 
possible reference to a coop, and with " hack " in the sense 
" to peck," of chickens coming out of the shell), to bring out 
young from the egg, by incubation or other process, natural or 
artificial. The word is also used as a substantive of a brood of 
chickens brought out from the eggs. " Hatchery " is particularly 
applied to a place for the hatching of fish spawn, where the 
natural process is aided by artificial means. In a figurative 
sense " to hatch " is often used of the development or contrivance 
of a plot or conspiracy. 

a. (From the Fr. hacker, to cut, hache t hatchet), to engrave 
or draw by means of cutting lines on wood, metal, &c, or to 
ornament by inlaying with strips of some other substance as 
gold or silver. Engraved lines, especially those used in shading, 
are called " hatches " or " hachures " (see Hachure). 

3. (O.E. hoc, a gate, rack in a stable; found in various 
Teutonic languages; cf. Dutch kek, Dan. kehhe; the ultimate 
origin is obscure; Skeat suggests a connexion with the root 
seen in " hook "), the name given to the lower half of a divided 



62 



HATCHET— HATHERLEY, BARON 



door, as in "buttery-hatch," the half-door leading from the 
buttery or kitchen, through which the dishes could be passed 
into the dining-hall. It was used formerly as another name for 
a ship's deck, and thus the phrase " under hatches " meant 
properly below deck; the word is now applied to the doors of 
grated framework covering the openings (the " hatchways ") 
which lead from one deck to another into the. hold through 
which the cargo is lowered. In Cornwall the word is used to 
denote certain dams or mounds used to prevent the tin-washes 
and the water coming from the stream-works from flowing into 
the fresh rivers. 

HATCHET (adapted from the Fr. hachette, diminutive of kacke, 
axe, hacher, to cut, hack), a small, light form of axe with a short 
handle (see Tool); for the war-hatchet of the North American 
Indians and the symbolical ceremonies connected with itsee 
Tomaha wk. 

HATCH JflTlTH* sometimes termed Mountain Tallow, Mineral 
Adipocire, or Adipocerite, a mineral hydrocarbon occurring in 
the Coal-measures of Belgium and elsewhere, occupying in some 
cases the interior of hollow concretions of iron-ore, but more 
generally the cavities of fossil shells or crevices in the rocks. 
It is of yellow colour, and translucent, but darkens and becomes 
opaque on exposure. It has no odour, is greasy to the touch, and 
has a slightly glistening lustre. Its hardness is that of soft 
wax. The melting point is 46° to 47 C, and the composition is 
C. 85-55, H.«i4-45. 

HATCHMENT, properly, in heraldry, an escutcheon or armorial 
shield granted for some act of distinction or " achievement," 
of which word it is a corruption through such forms as elchcament, 
achement, hachement, &c. " Achievement " is an adaptation 
of the Fr. achtvement, from ackever, A chef venir, Lat. ad caput 
tenire, to come to a head, or conclusion, hence accomplish, 
achieve. The term "hatchment" is now usually applied to 
funeral escutcheons or armorial shields enclosed in a black 
lozenge-shaped frame suspended against the wall of a deceased 
person's house. It is usually placed over the entrance at the 
level of the second floor, and remains for from six to twelve 
months, when it is removed to the parish church. This custom 
fa falling into disuse, though still not uncommon. It is usual to 
hang the hatchment of a deceased head of a house at the univer- 
sities of Oxford and Cambridge over the entrance to his lodge 
or residence. 

If for a bachelor the hatchment bears upon a shield his arms, 
crest, and other appendages, the whole on a black ground. If 
for a single woman, her arms are represented upon a lozenge, 
bordered with knotted ribbons, 
also on a black ground. If the 
hatchment be for a married 
man (as in the illustration), his 
arms upon a shield impale those 
of his surviving wife; or if she 
be an heiress they are placed 
upon a scutcheon of pretence, 
and crest and other appendages 
are added. The dexter half of 
the ground is black, the sinister 
white. For a wife whose bus- 
band is alive the same arrange- 
ment is used, but the sinister 
ground only is black. For a 
widower the same is used as 
for a married man, but the 
whole ground is black; for a 
widow the husband's arms are given with her own, but upon a 
lozenge, with ribbons, without crest or appendages, and the 
whole ground is black. When there have been two wives or 
two husbands the ground is divided into three parts per pale, 
and the division behind the arms of the survivor is white. 
Colours and military or naval emblems are sometimes placed 
behind the arms of military or naval officers. It is thus easy 
to discern from the hatchment the sex, condition and quality, 
and possibly the name of the deceased. 



c 
c 
c 

L 

c 
r. 

E 

c 



In Scottish hatchments it is not unusual to place the arms 
of the father and mother of the deceased in the two lateral 
angles of the lozenge, and sometimes the 4, 8 or 16 genealogical 
escutcheons are ranged along the margin. 

HATFIELD, a town in the Mid or St Albans parliamentary 
division of Hertfordshire, England, 17} m. N. of London by the 
Great Northern railway. Pop* (1901), 4754. It lies picturesquely 
on the flank of a wooded hill, and about its foot, past which runs 
the Great North Road. The church of St Elheldreda, well 
situated towards the top of the hill, contains an Early English 
round arch with the dog-tooth moulding, but for the rest is 
Decorated and Perpendicular, and largely restored. The chapel 
north of the chancel is known as the Salisbury chapel, and was 
erected by Robert Cecil, first carl of Salisbury (d. 161 2), who 
was buried here. It is in a mixture of classic and Gothic styles. 
In a private portion of the churchyard is buried, among others 
of the family, the third marquess of Salisbury (d. 1003). In the 
vicinity is Hatfield House, dose to the site of a palace of the 
bishops of Ely, which was erected about the beginning of the 
12th century. From this palace comes' the proper form of the 
name of the town, Bishop's Hatfield. In 1538 the manor was 
resigned to Henry VIII. by Bishop Thomas Goodrich of Ely, 
in exchange for certain lands in Cambridge, Essex and Norfolk; 
and after that monarch the palace was successively the residence 
of Edward VI. immediately before his accession, of Queen 
Elizabeth during the reign of her sister Mary, and of James I. 
The last-named exchanged it in 1607 for Theobalds, near 
Cheshunt, in the same county, an estate of Robert Cecil, earl of 
Salisbury, in whose family Hatfield House has since remained. 
The west wing of the present mansion, built for Cecil in 1608- 
161 1, was destroyed by fire in November 1835, the dowager 
marchioness of Salisbury, widow of the xst marquess, perishing 
in the flames. Hatfield House was built, and has been restored 
and maintained, in the richest style of its period, both without 
and within. The buildings of mellowed red brick now used as 
stables and offices are, however, of a period far anterior to Cecil's 
time, and are probably part of the erection of John Morton, 
bishop of Ely in 1478-1486. The park measures some 10 m. 
in circumference. From the eminence on which the mansion 
stands the ground falls towards the river Lea, which here expands 
into a small lake. Beyond this is a rare example of a monks' 
walled vineyard. In the park is also an ancient oak under 
which Elizabeth is said to have been seated when the news of her 
sister's death was brought to her. Brocket Park is another fine 
demesne, at the neighbouring village of Lemsford, and the 
Brocket chapel in Hatfield church contains memorials of the 
families who have held this seat 

HATHERLEY, WILLIAM PAGE WOOD, zst Baron (1801- 
1881), lord chancellor of Great Britain, son of Sir Matthew 
Wood, a London alderman and lord mayor who became famous 
for befriending Queen Caroline and braving George IV., was born 
in London on the 20th of November 1801. He was educated 
at Winchester, Geneva University, and Trinity College, Cam- 
bridge, where he became a fellow after being 24th wrangler in 
1824. He entered Lincoln's Inn, and was called to the bar in 
1824, studying conveyancing in Mr John Tyrrell's chambers. 
He soon obtained a good practice as an equity draughtsman 
and before parliamentary committees, and in 1830 married 
Miss Charlotte Moor. In 1845 he became Q.C., and in 1847 was 
elected to parliament for the dty of Oxford as a Liberal. In 
1849 he was appointed vice-chancellor of the county palatine 
of Lancaster, and in 1851 was made solicitor-general and knighted, 
vacating that position in 1852. When his party returned to 
power in 1853, he was raised to the bench as a vice-chancellor. 
In 1868 he was made a lord justice of appeal, but before the end 
of the year was selected by Mr Gladstone to be lord chancellor, 
and was raised to the peerage as Lord Hatherley of Down 
Hatherley. He retired in 1872 owing to failing eyesight, but sat 
occasionally as a law lord. His wife's death in 1878 was a great 
blow, from which he never recovered, and he died in London 
on the 10th of July i88t. Dean Hook said that Lord Hatherley 
— who was a sound and benevolent supporter of the Church el 



HATHERTON, BAROtf— HATTON, SIR.C. 



*3 



England— was the best man he had ever known. He wmi a 
particularly dear-headed lawyer, and his judgments— always 
delivered extempore— commanded the greateM confidence both 
with the public and the legal profession. He left no issue and 
the title became extinct on his death. 

HATHBRTON, EDWARD JOHN UTTLBTON, ist Babon 
(1791-1863), was born on the 18th of March 1741 and was 
educated at Rugby school and at Brasenose College, Oxford. 
He was the only son of aioreton Walhouse of Hatherton, Stafford- 
shire; but in 181 1, in accordance with the will of his great-uncle 
Sir Edward Littleton, Bart. (d. 1812), he took the name of 
Littleton. From 1812 to 1833 he was member of parliament for 
Staffordshire and from 1833 to 1835 for the southern division of 
that cownty, being specially prominent in the House of Commons 
as an advocate of Roman Catholic emancipation. In January 
1833, against his own wish, he was put forward by the Radicals 
as a candidate for the office of speaker, but he was not elected and 
in May 1833 he became chief secretary to the lord-lieutenant of 
Ireland in the ministry of Earl Grey. His duties in this capacity 
brought him frequently into conflict with (^Council, but he was 
obviously unequal to the great Irishman, although he told his 
colleagues to " leave me to manage Dan." He had to deal with 
the vexed and difficult question of the Irish tithes on which the 
government was divided, and with his colleagues had to face the 
problem of a new coercion act. Rather hastily he made a 
compact with O'ConneU on the assumption that the new act could 
not contain certain clauses which were part of the old act. 
The clauses, however, were inserted; O'ConneU charged Littleton 
with deception; and in July 1834 Grey, Althorp (afterwards 
Earl Spencer) and the Irish secretary resigned. The two latter 
were induced to serve under the new premier, Lord Melbourne, 
and they remained in office until Melbourne was dismissed in 
November 1834. In 1835 Littleton was created Baron Hatherton, 
and he died at his Staffordshire residence, Teddesley Hall, on the 
4th of May 1863. In 1888 his grandson, Edward George Littleton 
(b. 184a), became 3rd Baron Hatherton. 

See Hathcrton's Memoirs and Correspondence relating to Political 
Occurrences, June- July 1834* edited by H. Reeve (1873) ; and Sir 
Sv Walpole, History of England, voL iii. (1890). 

HATHRAS, a town of British India, in the Aligarh district 
of the United Provinces, 29 m. N. of Agra. Pop. (tooi), 42.578. 
At the end of the 18th century it was held by a Jat chieftain, 
whose ruined fort still stands at the east end of the town, and 
was annexed by the British in 1803, but insubordination on 
the part of the chief necessitated the siege of the fort in 1817. 
Since it came under British rule, Hathras has rapidly risen to 
commercial importance, and now ranks second to Cawnpore 
among the trading centres of the Doab. The chief articles of 
commerce are sugar and grain, there arc also factories for ginning 
and pressing cotton, and a cotton spinning-mill. Hathras is 
connected by a light railway with Muttra, and by a branch with 
Hathras junction, on the East Indaln main line. 

HATT1ESBTJRG, a city and the county-seat of Forrest county, 
Mississippi, U.S.A., on the Hastahatchee (or Leaf) river, about 
90 m. S.E. 0? Jackson. Pop. (1800) 11 72; (1000) 4175 (1687 
negroes); (1910) 11,733. Hat tiesburg is served bythe Gulf & Ship 
Island, the Mississippi Central, the New Orleans, Mobile & 
Chicago and the New Orleans & North Eastern railways. The 
officers and employees of the Gulf & Ship Island railway own and 
maintain a hospital here. The city is in a rich fanning, truck- 
gardening and lumbering country. Among its manufactures 
are lumber (especially yellow-pine), wood-alcohol, turpentine, 
paper and pulp, fertilizers, wagons, mattresses and machine-shop 
products. Hat tiesburg was founded about 188a and was named 
in honour of the wife of W. H. Hardy, a railway official, who 
planned a town at the intersection of the New Orleans & North- 
Eastern (which built a round bouse and repair shops here in 1885) 
and the Gulf & Ship Island railways. The latter railway was 
opened from GuHport to Hat tiesburg m January 1897, and from 
Hattksburg to Jackson in September 1900. Hattlesburg was 
Incorporated as a town in 1884 and was chartered as a city in 
2890. Formerly the "court house" of the second judicial 



district of Perry county, Hattlesburg became ' on* tfwTist of 
January 1908 the county-seat of Forrest county, erected from 
the W. part of Perry county. 

HATTINGEM, a town of Germany, in the Prussian province 
of Westphalia, on the river Ruhr, ar m. N.E. of Dtisseldorf. 
Pop. (1000). 897 5. It has two Evangelical and a Roman Catholic 
church. The manufactures include tobacco, and iron and steel 
goods. In the neighbourhood are the ruins of the Isenburg, 
demolished in 1 326. Hattingen, which received communal rights 
in 1306, was one of the Hanse towns. 

HATTO I. (c. 850-913), archbishop of Mainz, belonged to a 
Swabian family, and was probably educated at the monastery 
of Reichenau,of whkh be became abbot in 888. He soon became 
known to the German king, Arnulf, who appointed him arch- 
bishop of Mainz in 891; and he became such a trustworthy 
and confidential counsellor that he was popularly called " the 
heart of the king." He presided over the important synod at 
Tribur in 895, and accompanied the king to Italy in 894 and 
895, where he was received with great favour by Pope Formosus. 
In 899, when Arnulf died, Hatto became regent of Germany, and 
guardian of the young king, Louis the Child, whose authority 
he compelled Zwentibold, king of Lorraine, an illegitimate son of 
Arnulf, to recognize. During these years he did not neglect 
his own interests, for in 896 he secured for himself the abbey of 
EUwangen and in 898 that of Lorsch. He assisted the FVanconian 
family of the Conradmes in its feud with the Babenbergs, and 
was accused of betraying Adalbert, count of Babenberg, to 
death. He retained his influence during the whole of the reign 
of Louis; and on the king's death in 911 was prominent in 
securing the election of Conrad, duke of Franconia, to the 
vacant throne. When trouble arose between Conrad and Henry, 
duke of Saxony, afterwards King Henry the Fowler, the attitude 
of Conrad was ascribed by the Saxons to the influence of Hatto, 
who wished to prevent Henry from securing authority in Thur- 
ingia, where the see of Mainz had extensive possessions. He 
was accused of complicity in a plot to murder Duke Henry, who 
fn return ravaged the archiepiscopal lands in Saxony and 
Thuringia. He died on the 15th of May 913, one tradition saying 
he was struck by lightning, and another that he was thrown alive 
by the devil into the crater of Mount Etna. His memory was 
long regarded in Saxony with great abhorrence, and stories of 
cruelty and treachery gathered round his name. The legend of 
the Mouse Tower at Bingen is connected with Hatto II., who 
was archbishop of Mainz from 968 to 970. This Hatto built, 
the church of St George on the island of Reichenau, was generous 
to the sec of Mainz and to the abbeys of Fuldaand Reichenau, 
and was a patron of the chronicler Regino, abbot of Prilm. 

See E. Dummlcr, Geschickte des ostfrankiscken Reiths (Leipzig, 
1887-1888); G. Phillips, Dif grosse Synod* yon Tribur {Vienna, 

G. 



86<j) ; j. Heidemann, tiotto J., Erztnschof von Main* (Berlin, 1865); 
j. Waitz, Jahrbuctier der deutschen Geschickte unlet Heinrich I. 



(Berlin and Leipzig, 1863): and J. F. Bdhmcr, Regesta arehiepiseo- 
ponon Maguniinensium, edited by C. Will (Innsbruck, 1 877-1 886). 

HATTON, SIR CHRISTOPHER (1540-1591), lord chancellor of 
England and favourite of Queen Elizabeth, was a son of William 
Hat ton (d. 1546) of Holdenby, Northamptonshire, and was 
educated at St Mary Hall, Oxford. A handsome and accom- 
plished man, being especially distinguished for his elegant 
dancing, he soon attracted the notice of Queen Elizabeth, became 
one of her gentlemen pensioners in 1564, and captain of her 
bodyguard in 1572. He received numerous estates and many 
positions of trust and profit from the queen, and suspicion was 
not slow to assert that he was Elizabeth's lover, a chaxge which 
was definitely made by Mary queen of Scots in 1584. Hatton, 
who was probably innocent in this matter, had been made vice- 
chamberlain of the royal household and a member of the privy 
council in 1578, and had been a member of parliament since 1571, 
first representing the borough of Higham Ferrers and afterwards 
the county of Northampton. In 1 578 he was knighted, and was 
now regarded as the queen'sspokesman in the House of Commons, 
being an active agent in the prosecutions of John Stubbs and 
William Parry. He was one of those who were appointed to 
arrange a marriage between Elizabeth and Francis, duke of 



6 4 



HATTON, J. L.— HAUCH 



Alencon, in 1582; was a member of the court which tried 
Anthony Babington in 1586; and was one of the commissioners 
who found Mary queen of Scots guilty. He besought Elizabeth 
not to marry the French prince; and according to one account 
repeatedly assured Mary that he would fetch her to London if 
the English queen died. Whether or no this story be true, 
Hat ton's loyalty was not questioned; and he was the foremost 
figure in that striking scene in the House of Commonsin December 
1584, when four hundred kneeling members repeated after him 
a prayer for Elizabeth's safety. Having been the constant 
recipient of substantial marks of the queen's favour, he vigor- 
ously denounced Mary Stuart in parliament, and advised William 
Davison to forward the warrant for her execution to Fother- 
ingay. In the same year (1587) Hatton was made lord chan- 
cellor, and although he had no great knowledge of the law, he 
appears to have acted with sound sense and good judgment in 
his new position. He is said to have been a Roman Catholic 
in all but name, yet he treated religious questions in a moderate 
and tolerant way. He died in London on the aoth of November 
1 59 1, and was buried in St Paul's cathedral. -, Although mention 
has been made of a secret marriage, Hatton appears to have 
remained single, and his large and valuable estates descended 
to his nephew, Sir William Newport, who took the name of 
Hatton. Sir Christopher was a knight of the Garter and chan- 
cellor of the university of Oxford. • Elizabeth frequently showed 
her affection for her favourite in an extravagant and ostentatious 
manner. She called him her mouton, 1 and forced the bishop of 
Ely to give him the freehold of Ely Place, Holborn, which became 
his residence, his name being perpetuated in the neighbouring 
Hatton Garden. Hatton is reported to have been a very mean 
man, but he patronized men of letters, and among his friends 
was Edmund Spenser. He wrote the fourth act of a tragedy, 
Tancred and Osmund, and his death occasioned several pane- 
gyrics in both prose and. verse. 

When Hatton 's nephew, Sir William Hatton, died without 
sons in 1597, his estates passed to a kinsman, another Sir Christ- 
opher Hatton (d. 1619), whose son and successor, Christopher 
(c. 1 605-1670), was elected a member of the Long Parliament in 
1640, and during the Civil War was a partisan of Charles I. 
In 1643 fl c was created Baron Hatton of Kirby; and, acting as 
comptroller of the royal household, he represented the king during 
the negotiations at Uxbridge in 1645. Later he lived for some 
years in France, and after the Restoration was made a privy 
councillor and governor of Guernsey. He died at Kirby on 
the 4th of July 1670, and was buried in Westminster Abbey. 
By his wife Elizabeth (d. 1672), daughter of Sir Charles Montagu 
of Boughton, be had two sons and three daughters. His eldest 
son Christopher (1632-1706), succeeded his father as Baron 
Hatton and also as governor of Guernsey in 1670. In 1683 he 
was created Viscount Hatton of Grendon. He was married three 
times, and left two sons: William (1600-1760), who succeeded 
to his father's titles and estates, and Henry Charles (e. 1700- 
1762), who enjoyed the same dignities for a short time after his 
brother's death. When Henry Charles died, the titles became 
extinct, and the family is now represented by the Finch-Hat tons, 
earls of Winchilsea and Nottingham, whose ancestor, Daniel 
Finch, 2nd earl of Nottingham, married Anne (d. 1743), daughter 
of the 1st Viscount Hatton. 

See Sir N. H. Nicolas, Life ana Times of Sir Christopher Hatton 
(London, 1847) ; and Correspondence oj the Family of Hatton, being 
chiefly Letters addressed to Christopher, first Viscount Hatton, 1601- 
1704, edited with introduction by E. M. Thompson (London, 1878). 

HATTON, JOHN LIPTROT (1809-1886), English musical 
composer, was born at Liverpool on the 12th of October 1809. 
He was virtually a self-taught musician, and besides holding 
several appointments as organist in Liverpool, appeared as an 
actor on the Liverpool stage, subsequently finding his way to 
London as a member of Macready's company at Drury Lane 
in 1832. Ten years after this he was appointed conductor 
at the same theatre for a series of English operas, and in 1843 
his own first operetta, Queen of the Thames, wasgiven with success. 
Staudifcl, the eminent German bass, was a member of the com- 



pany, and at his suggestion Hatton wrote a more ambitiott* work, 
Pascal Bruno, which, in a German translation, was presented at 
Vienna, with Staudigl in the principal part; the opera con- 
tained a song, " Revenge," which the basso made very popular 
in England, though the piece as a whole was not successful 
enough to be produced here. Hatton'a excellent pianoforte 
playing attracted much attention in Vienna; he took the 
opportunity of studying counterpoint under Sechter, and wrote 
a number of songs, obviously modelled on the style of German 
classics. In 1846 he appeared at the Hereford festival as a singer, 
and also played a pianoforte concerto of Mozart. He undertook 
concert tours about this time with Sivori, Vieuxtemps and others. 
From 1848 to 1850 he was in America; on his return he became 
conductor of the Glee and Madrigal Union, and from about 
1853 was engaged at the Princess's theatre to provide and con- 
duct the music for Charles Keen's Shakespearean revivals. He 
seems to have kept this appointment for about five years. la 
1856 a cantata, Robin Hoed, was given at the Bradford festival, 
and a third opera, Rose, or Love's Ransom, at Covent Garden in 
1864, without much success. In 1866 be went again to America, 
and from this year Hatton held the post of accompanist at the 
Ballad Concerts, St James's Hail, for nine seasons. In 1875 
he went to Stuttgart, and wrote an oratorio, Hexekiah, given 
at the Cyrstal Palace in 1877; like all his larger works it met 
with very moderate success. Hatton excelled in the lyrical 
forms of music, and, in spite of his distinct skill in the severer 
styles of the madrigal, &c, he won popularity by such songs as 
"To Anthea," "Good-bye,. Sweetheart," and "Simon the 
Cellarer," the first of which may be called a classic in its own 
way. His glees and part-songs, such as "When Evening's 
Twilight," are still reckoned among the best of their dass; 
and he might have gained a place of higher distinction among 
English composers had it not been for his irresistible animal 
spirits and a want of artistic reverence, which made it uncertain 
in his younger days whether, when be appeared at a concert, 
he would play a fugue of Bach or sing a comic song. He died 
at Margate on the 20th of September 1886. 

HAUCH, JOHANNES CARSTEN (1700-1872), Danish poet, 
was bom of Danish parents residing at Fredcrikshald in Norway, 
on the 12th of May 1790. In 1802 he lost his mother, and in 
1803 returned with his father to Denmark. In 1807 be fought 
as a volunteer against the English invasion. He entered the 
university of Copenhagen in x8o8, and in 1821 took his doctor's 
degree. He became the friend and associate of Steflens and 
Oehlenschlager, warmly adopting the romantic views about 
poetry and philosophy. His first two dramatic poems, Tm 
Journey to Cinistan and The Power of Fancy, appeared in 1816, 
and were followed by a lyrical drama, Rosaura (1S17); but 
these works attracted little or no attention. Hauch therefore 
gave up all hope of fame as a poet, and resigned himself entirely 
to the study of science. He took his doctor's degree in zoology 
in 1821, and went abroad to pursue his studies. At Nice he 
had an accident which obliged him to submit to the amputation 
of one foot. He returned to literature, publishing a dramatized 
fairy tale, the Hamadryad, and the tragedies of Bafozet, Tiberius, 
Gregory VI 1^ in 1828- 1829, The Death of Charles V. (1831), 
and The Siege of Maestrkht (1832). These plays were violently 
attacked and enjoyed no success. Hauch then turned to novel- 
writing, and published in succession five romances — Vilhetm 
Zabern (1834); The Alchemist (1836); A Polish Family (1830); 
The Castle on the Rhine (1845); and Robert Fulton (1853). 
In 1842 he collected his shorter Poems. In 1846 he was 
appointed professor of the Scandinavian languages in Kiel, 
but returned to Copenhagen when the war broke out in 1848. 
About this time his dramatic talent was at its height, and he 
produced one admirable tragedy after another; among these 
may be mentioned Svend Gralhe (1841); The Sisters at Kinne- 
hulle (1849); Marshal Stig (1850); Honour Lost and Won (1851); 
and Tycho Brake's Youth (1852). From 1858 to i860 Hauch 
was director of the Danish National Theatre; he produced 
three more tragedies— The King's Favourite (1859); Henry of 
Navarre (1863); and Julian the Apostate (1866). In 1861 he 



HAUER— HAUGE 



*5 



published another collection of Lyrical Items and Romanies', 
and in 1862 the historical epic of Valdemar Seir, volumes which 
contain his best work. From 1851, when, he succeeded Ochlcn- 
schliger, to his death, he held the honorary post of professor 
of aesthetics at the university of Copenhagen. He died in Rome 
in 1873. Hauch was one of the most prolific of the Danish 
poets, though his writings are unequal in value. His lyrics and 
romances in verse are always fine in form and often strongly 
imaginative. In all his writings, but especially in his tragedies, 
he displays a strong bias in favour of what is mystical and 
supernatural. . Of his dramas Marshal Stig is perhaps the best, 
and of his novels the patriotic tale of Vilhclm Zabern is admired 
the most. 

See G. Brandes, " Carsten Hauch " (if 73) in DansheDigten (1877) ; 
F. Running, J. C. Hauch (1890), and in Dansh Biografish-Lextcon, 
(vol. vii. Copenhagen, 1893). Hauch's novels were collected (1873- 
1874) and hts dramatic works (3 vols., 2nd ed., 1852- 1859). 

HAUER^FHANZ, Ritter von (1822-1809), Austrian geologist, 
born in Vienna on the 30th of January 1822, was son of Joseph 
von Hauer (1778-1863), who was equally distinguished as a high 
Austrian official and authority on finance and as a palaeontologist. 
He was educated in Vienna, afterwards studied geology at 
the mining academy of Schemniu (1830-1843), and for a time 
was engaged in official mining work in Styria. In 1846 he 
became assistant to W. von Haidingcr at the mineralogical 
museum in Vienna; three years later he joined the imperial 
geological institute, and in 1866 he was appointed director. 
In 1886 he became superintendent of the imperial natural history 
museum in Vienna. . Among his special geological works are 
those on the Cephalopoda of the Triassic and Jurassic formations 
of Alpine regions (1855-1856). His most important general 
work was that of the Geological Map of Austro-Hmngary, in 
twelve sheets (1867-1871; 4th ed., 1884, including Bosnia 
and Montenegro). This map was accompanied by a series of 
explanatory pamphlets. In 1882 be was awarded the Wollaston 
medal by the Geological Society of London. In 1892 von Hauer 
became a life-member of the upper house of the Austrian parlia- 
ment. He died on the 20th of March 1899. 

Publications.'— Beitrdge tur Paldont olographic' von Osterreich 
(1858-1859); Die Geologic und ihre Anwenaung auf die Kenninis 
der Bodenbeschaffenheit der toterr.-vngar. Monarchic (1875; ed. 3, 
1878). 

Memoir by Dr £. Tietxe; Jahrbuch der K. K. geolog. Reichsanstali 
(1899, reprinted 1900, with portrait). 

HAUFF. WILHELM (1802-1827), German poet and novelist, 
was born at Stuttgart on the 29th of November 1802, the son 
of a secretary in the ministry of foreign afiairs. Young Hauff 
lost his father when he was but seven years of age, and his early 
education was practically self-gained in the library of his maternal 
grandfather at Tubingen, to which place his mother had removed, 
In 1818 he was sent to the Klosterschule at Blaubeuren, whence 
he passed in 1820 to the university of Tubingen. In four years 
he completed his philosophical and theological studies, and on 
leaving the university became tutor to the children of the famous 
Wurttemberg minister of war, General Baron Ernst Eugen von 
Hugel (17 74-1849), and for, them wrote his Milrchcn, which be 
published in his M&rchcnalmanach auf das Jahr 1826. He also 
wrote there the first part of the Mitteitungen aus den Mtmoiren 
des Solan (1826) and Der Mann im Monde (1825). The latter, 
a parody of the sentimental and sensual novels of H. Clauren 
(pseudonym of Karl Gottlieb Samuel Heun [177 1-1854D, became, 
in course of composition, a close imitation of that author's style 
and was actually published under his name. Clauren, in con- 
sequence, brought an action for damages against Hauff and 
gained his case. Whereupon Hauff followed up the attack in 
his witty and sarcastic Kontrovefspredigt Uber H. Clauren und 
den Mann im Monde (1826) and attained his original object — 
the moral annihilation of the mawkish and unhealthy literature 
with which Clauren was flooding the country. Meanwhile, 
animated by Sir Walter Scott's novels, Hauff wrote the historical 
romance Lichtcnstein (1826), which acquired great popularity 
in Gecmany and especially in Swabia, treating as it did the 
most interesting period in the history of that country, the reign 



of Duke Ulrich (1487-1550). While on a journey to France, 
the Netherlands and north Germany he wrote the second part 
of the Memoir en des Satan and some short novels, among then 
the charming Bettlerin torn Pont des Arts and his masterpiece, 
the Phantasien im Bremer RaUheUet (1837). He also published 
some short poems which have passed into Volkslieder, among 
them Morgenrot, M or gemot y touchiest mir turn fruhen Tod; 
and Steh* kh in Jinstrer Mitternacht. In January 1827, Hauff 
undertook the editorship of the Stuttgart MorgenblaU and in 
the following month married, but his happiness was prematurely 
cut short by his death from fever on the 18th of November 1827. 

Considering his brief life, Hauff was an extraordinarily prolific 
writer.- The freshness and originality of his talent, his inventive- 
ness, and his genial humour have won him a high place among the 
south German prose writers of the early nineteenth century. 

His Sdmthkho Werke were published, with a biography, by 
G. Schwab (3 vols., 1830-1834; 5 vols., 18th ed- 1882), and by 
F. Bobcrtag (1891-1897), and a selection by M. Mendheim (3 vols... 
1 89 1). For his life cf. J. Klaiber, WUhelm Hauff, ein Lebensbild 
(1881); M. Mendheim, Hauffs Leben und Werke (1894); and 
H. Hofmaan, W. Hauff (1902). 7 

HAUG, MARTIN (1827-1876), German Orientalist, was born 
at Ostdorf near Balingen, Wurttemberg, on the 30th of January 
1827. He became a pupil in the gymnasium at Stuttgart at a 
comparatively late age, and in 2848 he entered the university 
of TQbingen, where ne studied Oriental languages, especially 
Sanskrit. He afterwards attended lectures in Get tin gen, and 
in 1854 settled as Privaldosent at Bonn. In 1856 he removed 
to Heidelberg, where he assisted Bunsen in his literary under- 
takings; and in 1859 he accepted an invitation to India, where 
he became superintendent of Sanskrit studies and professor of 
Sanskrit in Poena. Here his acquaintance with the Zend 
language and literature afforded him excellent opportunities 
for extending his knowledge of this branch of literature. The 
result of his researches was a volume of Essays on the sacred 
language, writings and religion of the Par sets (Bombay, 1862). 
Having returned to Stuttgart in 1866, be was called to Munich 
as professor of Sanskrit and comparative philology in 1868. 



divine, was born in the parish of Thund, Norway, on the 3rd of 
April 1771, the son of a peasant. With the aid of various 
religious works which be found in his father's house, he laboured 
to supplement his scanty education. In his twenty-sixth year, 
believing himself to be a divinely-commissioned prophet, he 
began to preach in his native parish and, afterwards throughout 
Norway, calling people to repentance and attacking rationalism. 
In 1800 be passed to Denmark, where, as at home, he gained 
many followers and assistants, chiefly among the lower orders. 
Proceeding to Christiansand in 1804, Hauge set up a printing- 
press to disseminate his views more widely, but was almost 
immediately arrested for holding illegal religious meetings, 
and for insulting the regular clergy in his books, all of which 
were confiscated; he was also heavily fined. After being in 
confinement for some years, he was released in 1814 on payment 
of a fine, and retiring to an estate at BreddwiU, near Christiania* 
he died there on the 29th of March 1824. His adherents, who 
did not formally break with the church, were called Haugianer 
Qr Lcscr (i.e. Readers). He unquestionably did much to revive 



66 



HAUGESUND— HAUGWITZ 



the spiritual life of the northern Lutheran Church. His views 
were of a pietistic nature. Though he cannot be said to have 
rejected any article of the Lutheran creed, the peculiar emphasis 
which be laid upon the evangelical doctrines of faith and grace 
involved considerable antagonism to the rationalistic or sacerdotal 
views commonly held by the established dergy. 

Hauge 's principal writings are Forsog til AfhandeUug om Gmds 
Visdom (1706); Anvisning til nogle mdrhelige Sprog i Bibeten 
(1798) ; For/daring over Loven og Evaugelinm {1803). For an account 
of his life and doctrines sec C. Bang s Hans Nielsen Hauge 



Samlid (Christiania; and ed., 1875); O. Rost, Nogle Bemaerkninger 
om Hans Nielsen Hauge og ham tietni 
Hcrzog-Hauclc, Realencykloptidie, 



og hans 

rkninger 

ing (1883), and the axtidc in 



HAUGESUND, a seaport of Norway in Stavanger ami (county), 
on the west coast, 34 m. N. by W. of Stavanger. Pop. (1000), 
7935* It is an important fishing centre. Herrings are. exported 
to the annual value of £100,000 to £200,000, also mackerel and 
lobsters. The principal imports are coal and salt. There are 
factories for wooDcn goods and a margarine factory. Haugesund 
is the reputed death-place of Harald Haarfager, to whom an 
obelisk of red granite was erected in 1872 on the thousandth 
anniversary of his victory at the Haf sf jord (near Stavanger) 
whereby be won the sovereignty of Norway. The memorial 
stands i\ m. north of the town, on the Haraldshaug, where (he 
hero's supposed tombstone is shown. 

HAUGHTON, SAMUEL (1821-1897), Irish scientific writer, 
the son of James Haughton (1795-1873), was born at Carlow 
on the 2 1 st of December 1821. His father, the son of a Quaker, 
but himself a Unitarian, was an active philanthropist, a strong 
supporter of Father Theobald Mathew, a vegetarian, and an 
anti-slavery worker and writer. After a distinguished career 
in Trinity College, Dublin, Samuel was elected a fellow in 1844. 
He was ordained priest in 1847, but seldom preached. In 1851 
he was appointed professor of geology in Trinity College, and 
this post he held for thirty years. He began the study of 
medicine in 1859, and in 1862 took the degree of M.D. in the 
university of Dublin, lie was then made registrar of the 
Medical School, the status of which he did much to improve, 
and be represented the university on the General Medical 
Council from 1878 to 1896. He was elected F.R.S. in 1858, and 
in course of time Oxford conferred upon him the hon. degree 
of D.C.L., and Cambridge and Edinburgh that of LL.D. He 
was a man of remarkable knowledge and ability, and he 
communicated papers on widdy different subjects to various 
learned societies and scientific journals in London and Dublin. 
He wrote on the laws of equilibrium and motion of solid and 
fluid bodies (1846), on sun-heat, terrestrial radiation, geological 
di mates and on tides. He wrote also on the granites of Leinster 
and Donegal, and on the deavage and joint-planes in the Old 
Red Sandstone of Waterford (1857-1858). He was president of 
the Royal Irish Academy from 1886 to 1891, and for twenty 
years he was secretary of the Royal Zoological Society of Ireland. 
He died in Dublin on the 31st of October 1897. 

; Publications. — Manual of Geology (1 865) ; Principles of A nimal 
Mechanics (1873); Six Lectures on Physical Geography (1880). In 
conjunction with his friend, Professor J. Gaibratth, he issued a 
series of Manuals of Mathematical and Physical Science. 

HAUGHTON, WILLIAM (fl. 1598), English playwright. He 
collaborated in many plays with Henry Chettle, Thomas Dekker, 
John Day and Richard Hath way. The only certain biographical 
information about him is derived from Philip Henslowe, who on 
the 10th of March 1600 lent him ten shillings *' to release him 
out of the Clink." Mr Fleay credits him with a considerable 
share in The Patient Grissill (1509), and a merry comedy entitled 
English-Men for my Money, or A Woman will have her Will 
(1598) is ascribed to his sole authorship. The Devil and his 
Dame, mentioned as a forthcoming play by Henslowe in March 
1600, is identified by Mr Fleay as Grim, the Collier of Croydon, 
which was printed in 1662. In this play an emissary is sent 
from the infernal regions to report on the conditions of married 
life on earth. 

Grim is reprinted in vol. viii., and English-Men for my Money in 
vol. x., of W. C. Hazlitt's edition of Dodslcy's Old Plays. 



HAUGWITZ, CHRISTIAM AUGUST HBTHRTCH KURT. 
Count vow, Fretae** von Kmappitz (1751-1831), Prussian 
statesman, was born on the nth of June 1752, at Peucke near 
OU. He belonged to the Silesian (Protestant) branch of the 
ancient family of Haugwitz, of which the Catholic branch is 
established in Moravia. He studied law, spent some time m 
Italy, returned to settle on his estates in Silesia, and in 1791 was 
elected by the Silesian estates general director of the province. 
At the urgent instance of King Frederick Wflfiam II. he entered 
the Prussian service, became ambassador at Vienna in 1792 
and at the end of the same year a member of the cabinet at 
Berlin. 

Haugwitz, who bad attended the young emperor Francis II. 
at his coronation and been present at the conferences held at 
Mainz to consider the attitude of the German powers towards 
the Revolution, was opposed to the exaggerated attitude of the 
French imigris and to any interference in the internal affairs of 
France. After the war broke out, however, the defiant temper 
of the Committee of Public Safety made an honourable peace 
impossible, while the strained relations between Austria and 
Prussia on the question of territorial " compensations " crippled 
the power of the Allies to carry the war to a successful conclusion. 
It was in these circumstances that Haugwitz entered on the 
negotiations that resulted in the subsidy treaty between Great 
Britain and Prussia, and Great Britain and Holland, signed at 
the Hague on the 19th of April 1704. Haugwitz, however, was 
not the man to direct a strong and aggressive policy; the 
failure of Prussia to make any effective use of the money supplied 
broke the patience of Pitt, and in October the denunciation by 
Great Britain of the Hague treaty broke the last tic that bound 
Prussia to the Coalition. The separate treaty with France, 
signed at Basel on the 5th of April 1795, was mainly due to the 
influence of Haugwitz. 

His object was now to save the provinces on the left bank of 
the Rhine from being lost to the Empire. No guarantee of thdr 
maintenance had been inserted in the Basel treaty; but Haug- 
witz and the king hoped to preserve them by establishing the 
armed neutrality of North Germany and securing its recognition 
by the French Republic This policy was rendered futile by 
the victories of Napoleon Bonaparte and the virtual conquest 
of South Germany by the French. Haugwitz, who had con- 
tinued to enjoy the confidence of the new king, Frederick 
William III., recognized this fact, and urged his master to join 
the new Coalition in 1798. But the king clung blindly to the 
illusion of neutrality, and Haugwitz allowed himself to be made 
the instrument of a policy of which he increasingly disapproved. 
It was not till 1803, when the king refused his urgent advice to 
demand the evacuation of Hanover by the French, that he 
tendered his resignation. In August 1804 he was definitdy 
replaced by Hardenberg, and retired to his estates. 

In his retirement Haugwhz was still consulted, and he used 
all his influence against Hardenberg's policy of a rapprochement 
with France. His representations had little weight, however, 
until Napoleon's high-handed action in violating Prussian 
territory by marching troops through Ansbach, roused the anger 
of the king. Haugwitz was now once more appointed foreign 
minister, as Hardenberg's colleague, and it was he who was 
charged to carry to Napoleon the Prussian ultimatum which was 
the outcome of the visit of the tsar Alexander I. to Berlin in 
November. But in this crisis his courage failed him; his nature 
was one that ever let " I dare not wait upon I will "; he delayed 
his journey pending some turn in events and to give time for 
the mobilization of the duke of Brunswick's army; he was 
frightened by reports of separate negotiations between Austria 
and Napoleon, not realizing that a bold dedaration by Prussia 
would nip them in the bud. Napoleon, when at last they met, 
read him like a book and humoured his diplomatic weakness 
until the whole issue was decided at Austerlitz. On the 15th of 
December, instead of delivering an ultimatum, Haugwitz signed 
at SchSnbrunn the treaty which gave Hanover to Prussia in 
return for Ansbach, Cleves and Neuchltel. 

The humiliation of Prussia and her minister was, however* 



HAUNTINGS 



67 



not yet complete. In February 1806 Haugwits went to Paris 
to ratify tbe treaty of Schonbnmn and to attempt to secure some 
modifications in favour of Prussia. He was received with a storm 
of abuse by Napoleon, who insisted on tearing up the treaty and 
drawing up a fresh one, which doubled the amount of territory 
to be ceded by Prussia and forced her to a breach with Great 
Britain by binding her to close the Hanoverian ports to British 
commerce. The treaty, signed on the 15th of February, left 
Prussia wholly isolated in Europe. What followed belongs to 
the history of Europe rather than to the biography of Haugwitz. 
He remained, indeed, at the head of the Prussian ministry of 
foreign affairs, but the course of Prussian policy it was beyond his 
power to contiol. The Prussian ultimatum to Napoleon was 
forced upon him by overwhelming circumstances, and with 
the battle of Jena, on the 14th of October, his political career 
came to an end. He accompanied the flight of the king into East 
Prussia, there took leave of him and retired to his SUesian estates. 
In 1 811 he was appointed Curator of the university of Breslau; 
in x8*o, owing to failing health, he went to live in Italy, where 
he remained till his death at Venice in 1831. 
1 HaugwiU was a man of great intellectual gifts, of dignified 
presence and a charming address which endeared him to his 
sovereigns and his colleagues; bat as a statesman he failed, 
not through want of perspicacity, but through lack of will power 
and a fatal habit of procrastination. During his retirement 
in Italy he wrote memoirs in justification of his policy, a fragment 
of which dealing with the episode of the treaty of Schonbrunn 
was published at Jena in 1837. 

1 See J. von Minutoli, Der Graf von Haugmti und Jab von Witdtben 
(Berlin, 1844) ; L. von Ranke; Hardtnberi u. d. Gist*, des preuss. 
Staatts (Leipzig, 1879-1881), note on Haugwitz'a memoirs in voL «.; 
Drnkvurdigkeittn des Staatshanzlers FArsten von Hardenberg, ed. 
Ranke (5 vols., Leipzig, 1877); A. Sorel, L' Europe ct la Rtvcl. 
Frame,, passim. 

) HAUNTINGS (from " to haunt," Fr. konter, of uncertain 
origin, but possibly from Lat. awibitare, ambire, to go about, 
frequent), the supposed manifestations of existence by sprits 
of the dead in houses or places familiar to them in life. The 
lavage practice of tying up the corpse before burying it is dearly 
intended to prevent the dead from " walking "; and cremation, 
whether in savage lands or in classical times, may have originally 
had the same motive. The "spirit ".manifests himself, as a 
rule, either in his bodily form, as when he lived, or in the shape 
of some animal, or by disturbing noises, as in the case of the 
poltergeist (q.v.). Classical examples occur in Plautus {MoskU 
laria), Lucian (Pliilofscudcs), Pliny, Suetonius, St Augustine, 
St Gregory, Plutarch and elsewhere, while Lucretius has his 
theory of apparitions of the dead. He does not deny the fact; 
he explains it by " films " diffused from the living body and 
persisting in the atmosphere. 

I A somewhat similar hypothesis, to account for certain alleged 
phenomena, was invented by Mr Edmund Gurhey. Some 
visionary appearances in haunted houses do not suggest the idea 
of an ambulatory spirit, but rather of the photograph of a past 
event, impressed we know not how on we know not what. In 
this theory there is no room for the agency of spirits of the dead. 
The belief in hauntings was naturally persistent through the 
middle ages, and example and theory abound in the Loca infesta 
(Cologne, 1508) of Pctrus Thyraeus, S.J.; Wierius (c. 1560), 
in De pratstigiis daemonum, is in the same tale. According 
to Thyraeus, hauntings appeal to the senses of sight, hearing 
and touch. The auditory phenomena arc mainly thumping 
noises, sounds of footsteps, laughing and moaning. Rackets 
in general arc caused by lares domestic i (" brownies ") or the 
Poltergeist. In the tactile way ghosts push the Irving; " I have 
been thrice pushed by an invisible power," writes the Rev. 
Samuel Wesley, in 1717, in his narrative of the disturbances at 
his rectory at Epworth. Once he was pushed against the corner 
of his desk in the study; once up against the door of the matted 
chamber; and, thirdly, "against the right-hand side of the 
frame of my study door, as I was going in." We have thus 
Protestant corroboration of the statement of the learned 
Jesuit. 



Thyraeus raises the question, Are the experiences hallucina- 
tory? Did Mr Wesley (to take his case) receive a mere halluci- 
natory set of pushes? Was the hair of a friend of the writer's, 
who occupied a haunted bouse, only pulled in a subjective 
way? Thyraeus remarks that, in cases of noisy phenomena, 
not all persons present hear them; and, rather curiously! Mr 
Wesley records the same experience; he sometimes did not 
hear sounds that seemed violently loud to his wife and family, 
who were with him at prayers. Thyraeus says that , as collective 
hallucinations of sight are rare— all present not usually seeing 
the apparition — so audible phenomena are not always ex- 
perienced by all persons present. In such cases, he thinks that 
the sights and sounds have no external cause, he regards the 
sights and sounds as delusions— caused by spirits. This is a 
difficult question. He mentions that we bear all the furniture 
being tossed about (as Sir Walter and Lady Scott heard it at 
Abbotsford; see Lockharfs Life, v. 311-31$). Yet, on inspec- 
tion, we find all the furniture in its proper place. There is 
abundant evidence to experience of this phenomenon, which 
remains as inexplicable as it was in the days of Thyraeus. When 
the sounds are heard, has the atmosphere vibrated, or has the 
impression only been made on " the inner ear " ? In reply, 
Mr. Procter, who for sixteen years (1831-1847) endured the 
unexplained disturbances at Willington Mill, avers that tbe 
material objects on which the knocks appeared to be struck 
did certainly vibrate (see Poltergeist). Is then the felt 
vibration part of the hallucination? 

As for visual phenomena, " ghosts," Thyraeus does not regard 
them as space-filling entities, but as hallucinations imposed by 
spirits on the human senses; the spirit, in each case, not being 
necessarily the soul of the dead man or woman whom the 
phantasm represents. 

In the matter of alleged hauntings, the symptoms, the pheno- 
mena, to-day, are exactly thesame asthose recorded by Thyraeus. 
The belief in them is so far a living thing that it greatly lowers 
tbe letting value of a house when it is reported to be haunted. 
(An action for libelling a house as haunted was reported in the 
London newspapers of the 7th of March 1007). It is true that 
ancient family legends of haunts are gloried in by the inheritors 
of stately homes in England, or castles in Scotland, and to 
discredit the traditional ghost — in the days of Sir Walter Scott 
—was to come within measurable distance of a duel. But the 
time-honoured phantasms of old houses usually survive only in 
the memory of " the oldest aunt telling the saddest tale." Their 
historical basis can no more endure criticism than does the family 
portrait of Queen Mary,— signed by Medina about 1750-1770, 
and described by the family as " given to out ancestor by tbe 
Queen herself." After many years' experience of a baronial 
dwelling credited with seven distinct and separate phantasms, 
not one of which was ever seen by hosts, guests or domestics, 
scepticism as regards traditional ghosts is excusable. Legend 
reports that they punctually appear on the anniversaries of their 
misfortunes, but no evidence of such punctuality has been 
produced. 

The Society for Psychical Research has investigated hundreds 
of cases of the alleged haunting of houses, and tbe reports are 
in the archives of the society. But, as the mere rumour of a 
haunt greatly lowers the value of a house, it is seldom possible 
to publish the names of the witnesses, and hardly ever permitted 
to publish the name of the house. From the point of view' of 
science this is unfortunate (see Proceedings S.P.R. vol. viii. 
PP. 3«-33* and Proceedings of 1882-2883, 1883-1884). As 
far as inquiry had any results, they were to the following effect. 
The spectres were of the most shy and fugitive kind, seen now by 
one person, now by another, crossing a room, walking along a 
corridor, andenteringchambers in which,on inspection, they were 
not found. There was almost never any story to account for the 
appearances, as in magazine ghost-stories, and, if story there 
were, it lacked evidence. Recognitions of known dead persons 
were infrequent; occasionally there was recognition of a portrait 
in the house. The apparit ions spoke in only one or two recorded 
cases, and, as a rule, seemed to have no motive for appearing. 



68 



HAUPT— HAUPTMANN, M. 



The " ghost " resembles nothing so much as a somnambulist, 
or the dream-walk of one living person made visible, telepathic- 
ally, to another living person. Almost the only sign of conscious- 
ness given by the appearances is their shyness; on being spoken 
to or approached they generally vanish. Not infrequently they 
are taken, at first sight, for living human beings. In darkness 
they are often luminous, otherwise they would be invisible I 
Unexplained noises often, but not always, occur in houses where 
these phenomena are perceived. Evidence is only good, approxi- 
mately, when a series of persons, in the same house, behold the 
same appearance, without being aware that it has previously 
been seen by others. : Naturally it if almost impossible.lo prove 
this ignorance. 

When inquirers believe thai the appearances are due to the 
agency of spirits of the dead, they usually suppose the method 
to be a telepathic impact on the mind of the living by some 
" mere automatic projection from a consciousness which has its 
centre elsewhere " (Myers, Proceedings S.P.R. voL xv. p. 64). 
Myers, in Human Personality, fell back on " palaeolithic psycho- 
logy/' and a theory of a phantasmogenctic agency producing a 
phantasm which had some actual relation to space. But space 
forbids us to give examples of modern experiences in haunted 
bouses, endured by persons sane, healthy and well educated. 
The cases, abundantly offered in Proceedings S.P.R., suggest that 
certain localities, more than others, are " centres of permanent 
possibilities of being hallucinated in a manner more or less 
uniform." The causes of this fact (if causes there be, beyond a 
casual hallucination or illusion of A, which, when reported, 
begets by suggestion, or, when not reported, by telepathy, 
hallucinations in B, C, D and £), remain unknown (Proceedings 
S.P.R. vol. viii. p. 133 et seq.).. Mr Podmore proposed this 
hypothesis of causation, which was not accepted by Myers; 
he thought that the theory laid too heavy a burden on telepathy 
and suggestion. Neither cause, nor any other cause of similar 
results, ever affects members of the S.P.R- who may be sent to 
dwell in haunted houses. .They have no weird experiences, 
except when they are visionaries who see phantoms wherever 
they go. (A. L.) 

. HAUPT, MORITZ (1808- 1874), German philologist, was born- 
at Zittau, in Lusatia, on the 27th of July 1808. His early 
education was mainly conducted by his father, Ernst Friedrich 
Haupt, burgomaster of Zittau, a man of good scholarly attain- 
ment, who used to take pleasure in turning German hymns or 
Goethe's poems into Latin, and whose memoranda were employed 
by G. Freytag in the 4th volume of his BUder aus der deutschen 
VergangenkeiL From the Zittau gymnasium, where he spent 
the five years 1821-1826, Haupt removed to the university of 
Leipzig with the intention of studying theology; but the natural 
bent of his mind and the influence of Professor G. Hermann soon 
turned all his energies in the direction of philosophy. On the 
close of his university course (1830) he returned to his father's 
house, and the next seven years were devoted to quiet work, not 
only at Greek, Latin and German, but at Old French, Provencal 
and Bohemian. He formed with Lachmann at Berlin a friendship 
which had great effect on his intellectual development. In 
September 1837 he " habilitated " at Leipzig as Privaidoienl, 
and his first lectures, dealing with such diverse subjects as 
Catullus and the Nibelungenlied, indicated the twofold direction 
of his labours. A new chair of German language and literature 
being founded for his benefit, he became professor extraordinarius 
(1841) and then professor ordinarius (1843); and in 1&42 he 
married Louise Hermann, the daughter of his master and col- 
league. But the peaceful and prosperous course opening out 
before him at the university of Leipzig was brought to a sudden 
close. Having taken part in 1849 with Otto Jahn and Theodor 
Mommsen in a political agitation for the maintenance of the 
imperial constitution, Haupt was deprived of his professorship 
by a decree of the 2?nd of April 1851. Two years later, however, 
he was called to succeed Lachmann at the university of Berlin; 
and at the same time the Berlin academy, which had made him 
a corresponding member in 1841, elected him an ordinary 
member. For twenty-one years he continued to hold a prominent 



place among the scholars of the Prussian capital, making has 
presence felt, not only by the prestige of his erudition and the 
clearness of his intellect, but by the tirekssness of his energy 
and the ardent fearlessness of his temperament*. He (tied, of 
heart disease, on the 5th of February 1874. 

Haupt's critical work is distinguished by a happy ookm of the 
most painstaking investigation with intrepidity of conjecture, and 
while in his lectures and addresses he was frequently carried away 
\y'^ ~ " *-•-- --------- - • • rid questionable 

al bits great self- 

ex altogether lost, 

h what fell much 

si Eresa of classical 

sc llianae (1837), 

O id's Haltruttc* 

ai 8), of Catullus, 

T (3rd ed., 1871) 

ai with Hoffmann 

vi which in 1 841 

gt v, of which he 

e's Erec (1830) 

ai ( l H*h Rtt&o' 

vi on Wuraburg's 

£„„ x — _, _.„ » — „ , — v ^...„... „„.^ „hich he edited. 

To form a collection of the French songs of the 1 6th century was 
one of hk favourite schemes, but a little volume published after bis 
death. Froneonsche Volkslieder (1877), is the only monument of 
his labours in that direction. Three volumes of his Opttscula were 
published at Leipzig (1875-1877). 

See Kirehhoff, " Gedachtnisrede" In AhhanH. der Kdnitl. A had, 
der Wissensckaften ssi Berlin (1875); Otto Belger, Merit* Haupt eis 
L*aw (1879) ; Sandys, Hist. Class. Sckol. iiL (1908). 

HAUPTMANN, GERHART (1862* ), German dramatist, 
was born on the 15th of November 1862 at Obersalzbrunn in 
Silesia, the son of an hotel-keeper. From the village school of 
his native place he passed to the Realschule in Breslau, and was 
then sent to learn agriculture on his uncle's farm at Jauer. 
Having, however, no taste for country life, he soon returned to 
Breslau and entered the art school, intending to become a 
sculptor. He then studied at Jena, and spent the greater part 
of the years 1683 and 1884 in Italy. In May 1885 Hauptmann 
married and settled in Berlin, and, devoting himself henceforth 
entirely to literary work, soon attained a great reputation as 
one of the chief representatives of the modern drama. In 1891 
he retired to Scbreiberhau in Silesia, Hanptmann's first drama, 
Vor Sonnenaufgang (1880) inaugurated the realistic movement 
in modern German literature; it was followed by Das Priedens* 
jest (1800) , Einsan* Menschen (1891) and Die Weber (1802), a 
powerful drama depicting the rising of the Silcsian weavers in 
1844. Of Hauptmann's subsequent work mention may be 
made of the comedies KoUege CrampUm (1892), Der Biberpek 
(1893) and Der rote Hahn (1001), a " dream poem," HanneU 
(1893), and an historical drama Pierian Geyer (1895). He also 
wrote two tragedies of Silesian peasant life, Fukrmann Hensckd 
(1898) and RostBcrndt (1003), and the M dramatic fairy-tales n 
Die versunktne Glocke (1897) and Und Pippa total (1905). 
Several of his works have been translated into English. 

Biographies of Hauptmann and critical studies of hw dramas 
have been published by A. Battels (1897); P. Schlenther (1898); 
and U. C. Woerner (2nd ed., 1000). See alao L. BeiKHSt-Hanappier, 
Lt Drame naturalist* en AUemagju (1905). 

HAUPTMANN, MORITZ (1 792-1868), German musical com- 
poser and writer, was born at Dresden, on the 13th of October 
1792, and studied music under Schok, Lanska, Grosse and 
Morlacchi, the rival of Weber. Afterwards he completed his 
education as a violinist and composer under Spohr, and till 1820 
held various appointments- in private families, varying his 
musical occupations with mathematical and other studies 
hearing chiefly on acoustics and kindred subjects. For a time 
also Hauptmann was employed as an architect, but all other 
pursuits gave place to music, and a grand tragic opera, Matkilde, 
belongs to the period just referred to. In 1822 he entered the 
orchestra of Cassel, again under Spohr's direction, and it was then 
that he first taught composition and musical theory to such men 
, as Ferdinand David. BurgmUllcr, Kiel and others. His com- 
I positions at this time chiefly consisted of motets, masses, can- 
I tatas and songs. His opera Matkilde was performed at Gassd 



HAUREAU— HAUSA 



6q 



mth great success. In t8*s Hnuptm*n» obtained the portion 
of cantor at the Thomas-ecbool ol Leipsig (k>ng previously 
ocafpied by the great Johann Sebastian Bach) together with 
that of professor at the conservatoire, and it was in this capacity 
that his unique gift as a teacher developed itself and was acknow- 
ledged by a crowd of enthusiastic and more or less distinguished 
pupils. He died on the 3rd of January r868, and the universal 
regret felt at his death at Leipzig is said to have been all but 
equal to that caused by the loss of bis friend Idedelssohn many 
years before. Hauptmann's compositions are marked by 
symmetry and perfection of workmanship rather than by 
spontaneous invention. 

Among* his vocal compo*iuoru—by far the most important 
portion of his work— may be mentioned two masses, choral songs 
for mixed voices (Op. 32, 47), and numerous part songs. The re- 
sults of his scientific research were embodied in his book Vie Nalur 
der Harmonik mnd Metrih (1855), a standard work of its kind, in 
which a philosophic explanation of the form* of music is attempted. 
* HAUfttAU, (J1AP) BARTHtUMY (1812-1806), Fiench 
historian and miscellaneous writer, was born in Paris. At the 
age of twenty he published a series of apologetic studies on the 
Uemtagnards. In later years he regretted the youthful enthu- 
siasm of these papers, and endeavoured to destroy the copies. 
He joined the staff of the National, and was praised by Tneophite 
Gautier as the " tribune " of romanticism. At that thne he 
seemed to be destined to a political career, and, indeed, after 
the revolution of the 24th of February 1848 was elected member 
of the National Assembly; but dose contact with revolutionary 
men and ideas gradually cooled his old ardour. Throughout 
his life he was an enemy to innovators, not only in politics and 
religion, but also in literature. This attitude sometimes led 
him to form unjust estimates, but only on very rare occasions, 
for his character was as just as his erudition was scrupulous. 
After the coup d'ttat he resigned his position as director of the 
MS. department of the Bibliotheque Nationale, to which he had 
been appointed in 1848, and he refused to accept any adminis- 
trative post until after the fall of the empire. After having acted 
as director of the national printing press from 1870 to 1 881, he 
retired, but in 1893 accepted the post of director of the Fondation 
Thiers. He was also a member of the council of Improvement 
of the £cole des Chartes. He died on the 29th of April 1896. 
For over half a century he was engaged in writing on the religious, 
philosophical, and more particularly the literary history of the 
middle ages. Appointed librarian of the town of Le Mans in 
1838, he was first attracted by the history of Maine, and in 1843 
published the first volume of his Histoire litUraire du Maine 
(4 vols., 1843-1852), which he subsequently recast on a new plan 
(10 vols., 1870-1877). In 1845 ne brought out an edition of 
vol. ii. of G. Menage's Histoire de SabU. He then undertook 
the continuation of the Gallia Christiana, and produced vol. xiv. 
(1856) for the province of Tours, vol. xv. (1862) for the province 
of Besancon, and vol. xvi. (1865-1870) for the province of Vienne. 
This important work gained him admission to the Academic des 
Inscriptions et Bclles-Lettres (1862). In the Notices et cxtraits 
des manuscrits he inserted several papers which were afterwards 
published separately, with additions and corrections, under the 
dtle Notices et cxtraits de qudques manuscrits de la Bibliotheque 
National* (6 vols., 1800-1893). To the Histoire liUbraire de la 
France he contributed a number of studies, among which must 
be mentioned that relating to the sermon-writers (vol. xxvi., 
1873), whose works, being often anonymous, raise many problems 
of attribution, and, though deficient in orginality of thought 
and style, reflect the very spirit of the middle ages. Among his 
other works mention must be made of his remarkable Histoire 
de la philosophic scolastique (1872-1880), extending from the 
time of Charlemagne to the 13th century, which was expanded 
from a paper crowned by the AcadSmie des Sciences Morales et 
Politiques in 1850; Lcs Milangcs poitiques d'Hildcbcrl de Lavardin 
(1882); an edition of the Works of Hugh of St Victor (1886); a 
critical study of the Latin poems attributed to St Bernard 
(1890); and Bernard Dtlicuux et Vinquisition albigeoise (1877). 
To these must be added his contributions to the Diclionnaire des 
sciences phUosophiques, Didofs Biographic ginirale, the Biblio- 



thequedtr&oU des Chartes, tnd the Journal des saeonis. From 
the time of bis appointment to the Bibliotheque, Nationale up 
to the last days of his life he was engaged in making abstracts 
of all the medieval Latin writings (many anonymous or of 
doubtful attribution) relating to philosophy, theology, grammar, 
canon law, and poetry, carefully noting on cards the first words 
of each passage. After his death this index of incipits, arranged 
alphabetically, was presented to the Academic des Inscriptions,, 
and a copy was placed in the MS. department of the Bibliotheque 
Nationale. 

See obituary notice read by Henri Walton at a meeting of the 
Academic des Inscriptions on the 12th of November 1897; and the 
notice by Paul Meyer prefixed to vol. xxxiiL of the Histoire Uttiraire 
de la France* 

HAUSA, sometimes incorrectly written Haussa, Houssa or 
Haoussa, a people inhabiting about half a million square miles 
in the western and central Sudan from the river Niger in the 
west to Bornu in the east. Heinrich Barth identifies them with 
the Atarantians of Herodotus. According to their own traditions 
the earliest home of the race was the divide between the Sokoto 
and Chad basins, and more particularly the eastern watershed, 
whence they spread gradually westward. In the middle ages, 
to which period the first authentic records refer, the Hausa, 
though never a conquering race, attained great political power. 
They were then divided into seven states known as " Hausa 
bokoy " (" the seven Hausa ") and named Biram, Daura, Gober, 
Kano, Rano, Katsena and Zegzeg, after the sons of their legendary 
ancestor. This confederation extended its authority over many 
of the neighbouring countries, and remained paramount till 
the Fula under Sheikh Dan Fodio in 1810 conquered the Hausa 
states and founded the Fula empire of Sokoto (see Fula). 

The Hausa, who number upwards of 5,000,000, form the most 
important nation of the central Sudan. They are undoubtedly 
nigritic, though in places with a strong crossing of Fula and 
Arab blood. Morally and intellectually they are, however, 
far superior to the typical Negro. They are a powerful, heavily 
built race, with skin as black as most Negroes, but with lips not 
so thick nor hair so woolly. They excel in physical strength. 
The average Hausa will carry on his head a load of ninety or a 
hundred pounds without showing the slightest signs of fatigue 
during a long day's march. When carrying their own goods 
it is by no means uncommon for them to take double this weight. 
They are a peaceful and industrious people, living partly in 
farmsteads amid their crops, partly in large trading centres 
such as Kano, Katsena and Yakoba (Bauchi). They are 
extremely intelligent and even cultured, and have exercised a 
civilizing effect upon their Fula conquerors to whose oppressive 
rule they submitted. They are excellent agriculturists, and, 
almost unaided by foreign influence, they have developed a 
variety of industries, such as the making of cloth, mats, leather 
and glass. In Sierra Leone and the Gold Coast territory they 
form the backbone of the military police, and under English 
leadership have again and again shown themselves to be admir- 
able fighters and capable of a high degree of discipline and good 
conduct. Their food consists chiefly of guinea corn (sorghum 
tulgare) 1 which is ground up and eaten as a sort of porridge 
mixed with large quantities of red pepper. The Hausa attribute 
their superiority in strength to the fact that they live on guinea 
com instead of yams and bananas, which form the staple food of 
the tribes on the river Niger. The Hausa carried on agriculture 
chiefly by slave labour; they are themselves born traders, 
and as such are to be met with in almost every part of Africa 
north of the equator. Small colonies of them are to be found in 
towns as far distant from one another as Lagos, Tunis, Tripoli, 
Alexandria and Suakin. 

Language. — The Hausa language has a wider range over Africa 
north of the equator, south of Barbery and west of the valley of the 
Nile, than any other tongue. It is a rich sonorous language, with a 
vocabulary containing perhaps 10,000 words. As an example of 
the richness of the vocabulary Bishop Crowther mentions that there 
are eight names for different parts of the day from cockcrow tilt 
after sunset. About a third of the words are connected with Arabic 
roots, nor are these such as the Hausa could well have borrowed in 
anything like recent times from the Arabs. Many words representing 



7 o HAUSER— HAUSMANN 



d about Kaspar's personality and conduct, not 
inconnected with the vogue in Germany, at that time, 
magnetism," " somnambulism," and similar theories 
t and strange. People associated him with all sorts 
ies. On the 17th of October 1829 he was found to 
ed a wound in the forehead, which, according to his 
ient f had been indicted on him by a man with a 
ace. Having on this account been removed to the 
magistrate and placed under dose surveillance, he 
by Earl Stanhope, who became so interested in his 
t be sent him in 183 s to Ansbach to be educated 
tain Dr Meyer. After this he became clerk in the 
ml John Anselm von Feuerbach, president of the 
peal, who had begun to pay attention to his case in 
his strange history was almost forgotten by the 
1 the interest in it was suddenly revived by his 
leep wound on his left breast, on the 14th of December 
dying from it three or four days afterwards. He- 
it the wound was inflicted by a stranger, but many 
to be the work of his own hand, and that he did 
t to be fatal, but only so severe as to give a sufficient 
truth to his story. The affair created a great sensa- 
xiuced a long literary agitation. But the whole story 
tmewhat mysterious. Lord Stanhope eventually 
idedly sceptical as to Kaspar's stories, and ended by 
id of contriving his death 1 

1 pamphlet was published at Berlin, entitled Kaspar 
t unwakrschcinlicn tin Betriiger; but the truthfulness 
icnts was defended by Daumer, who published Millet- 
Kaspar Hauser (Nuremberg, 1832), and EntkuUungen 
Hauser (Frankfort. 1859): as well as Kaspar House?, 
stint Unsckutd. &c (Rcgcnsburg, 187,}), in answer to 
son of Kaspar s tutor} Authentixhe Mttteilungen uber 
xcr (Ansbach, 1872). Feuerbach awakened considerable 
1 interest in the case by his pamphlet Kaspar Hawser. 
s Verbreckeus am Seetenleben (Ansbach. 1832), and Earl 
to took part in the discussion by publishing MateriaUu 
e K. Hausers (Heidelberg, 1816). The theory of Daumer 
ch and other pamphleteers (finally presented in 1892 by 
th E. Evans in her Story of Kaspar Hauser from Authentic 
1 that the youth was the crown prince of Baden, the 
>n of the grand-duke Charles of Baden, and that he 
dnapped at Karlsruhe in October 1812 by minions of 
> of Hochberg (morganatic wife of the grand-duke) in 
ire the succession to her offspring; but this theory was 
1875 by the publication in the Augsburg AUgewuine 
k official record of the baptism, post-mortem examina- 
rial of the heir supposed to have been kidnapped. See 
iser und sein badtsckes Prinzeutum (Heidelberg, 1876). 
tory wasagain revived in a Regensburg pamphlet attack- 
other people, Dr Meyer; and the sons of the latter, 
id, brought an action for libel, under the German law, 
defence was made ; all the copies of the pamphlet were 
>e destroyed. The evidence has been subtly analyzed 
Lang in his Historical Mysteries (1004), with results un- 

the " romantic " version of the story. Lang's view 
bly Kaspar was a sort of " ambulatory automatist," an 
a phenomenon, known by other cases to students of 
normalities, of which the characteristics are a mania 
away and the persistence of delusions as to identity; 
nes to regard Kaspar as simply a " humbug " The 
records " purporting to confirm the kidnapping story 
itizes as worthless and impudent rubbish. The 

1 any case in complete confusion. 

NN, JOHANN FRIEDRICH LUDWTO (1 782-1859), 
icralogist, was born at Hanover on the 22nd of Feb- 
He was educated at GcHtingcn, where he obtained 
f Ph.D. After making a geological tour in Denmark, 
i Sweden in 1807, he was two years later placed at 

a government mining establishment in Westphalia, 
blished a school of mines at Clausthal in the Harz 
In 18x1 he was appointed professor of technology 
, and afterwards of geology and mineralogy in the 
1 G&ttingen, and this chair he occupied until a short 

his death. He was also for many years secretary 
J Academy of Sciences of Gttttingen. He published 
5 on geology and mineralogy in Spain and Italy as 
entral and northern Europe: he wrote on gypsum, 
spar, tachylitc, cordierite and on some eruptive 



HAUSRATH— HAUSSONVILLE 



7« 



racks, and he devoted much attention to the crystals developed 
during {Metallurgical processes. He died at Hanover on the 26th 
of December 1839. 

Publications. — Grundlinim titter Encyklop&die der Bergmrks* 
wuscnsikaflcn (1811); Reue dunk Skandtnaoien (5 vols., 181 1-1818); 
Bandbnck der Mtncralogu (3 vols.. 1813. 2nd ed.. 1828-1847). 

HAUSRATH, ADOLPH (1837- 1009), German theologian, 
was born at Karlsruhe on the 13th of January 1837 and was 
educated at Jena, Gotlingcn, Berlin and Heidelberg, where 
he became Pritaldoscnt in 1861, professor extraordinary in 
1867 and ordinary professor in 1872. He was a disciple of the 
Tubingen school a rid a strong Protestant. Among other works he 
wrote Der Apostel Paul us (1865), NeuUstamentliche Zeitgesckichte 
(1868-1873, 4 vols.; Eng. trans ), D. P. Strauss und die Theologie 
seiner Zeit (1876-1878, 2 vols.), and lives of Richard Rothe 
(2 vols. 1902), and Luther (1904). His scholarship was sound 
and his style vigorous. Under the pseudonym George Taylor 
he wrote several historical romances, especially Antiuous (1880), 
which quickly ran through five editions, and is the story of a 
soul " which courted death because the objective restraints 
of faith had been lost." Klytia (1883) was a 16th-century story, 
Jctta (1884) a tale of the great immigrations, and Elfriede " a 
romance of the Rhine." He died on the 2nd of August 1009. 

HXUSSER, LUDWIO (1818-1867), German historian, was 
born at Kleeburg, in Alsace. Studying philology at Heidelberg 
in 1835, he was led by F. C. Schlosscr to give it up for history, 
and after continuing his historical work at Jena and teaching 
in the gymnasium at Werthcim he made his mark by his Die 
teutschen CcschichtsscJireiber votn Anfang des Frankenreichs 
bis auf die Hokenstaufen, (1839). Next year appeared his Sate 
fon TeU. After a short period of study in Paris on the French 
Revolution, he spent some time working in the archives of 
Baden and Bavaria, and published in 1845 Die Geschichte der 
rkciniscken PJalz, which won for him a professorship cxtra- 
ordinarius at Heidelberg. In 1850 he became professor ordinarius. 
H&usser also interested himself in politics while at Heidelberg, 
publishing miZ^Schleswig-Holstcin, DUnemark und Deutschland, 
and editing with Gexvinus the Deutsche Zeitung, In 1848 he 
was elected to the lower legislative chamber of Baden, and in 
1850 advocated the project of union with,Frussia at the parlia- 
ment held at Erfurt. Another timely work was his edition 
of Fried rich List's CesammelU Schrijten (1850), accompanied 
with a life of the author. His greatest achievement, and the 
one on which his fame as an historian rests, is his Deutsche 
CeschichU vem Tode Friedrichs des Crossen bis vur Griindung 
des deutschen Bundes (Leipzig, 1854-1857, 4 vols.). This was 
the first work covering that period based on a scientific study 
of the archival sources. In 1859 he again took part in politics, 
resuming his place in the lower chamber, opposing in J863 the 
project of Austria for the reform of the Confederation brought 
forward in the assembly of princes at Frankfort, in his book 
Die Reform da deutschen Bundcstages, and becoming one of 
the leaders of the " little German " (Jdeindeutsche) party, which 
advocated the exclusion of Austria from Germany. In addition 
to various essays (in his Ccsammeite Schrijten, Berlin, 1869- 
1870, 2 vols.), Hiiusser's lectures have been edited by W. Oncken 
in the Ccschichte des Zcitaiters der Reformation (1869, 2nd ed, 
1880), and Ccschichte der franzusiuhen Revolution (1869, and 
ed. 1870). These lectures reveal all the charm of style and 
directness of presentation which made Hiiusser's work as a 
professor so vital. 

Sec W. Watteobach, Lud. Hdusser.tin Vortrag (Heidelberg, 1867), 

HAUSSMANN, GEORGES EUO&NB, Bason (1809-1891), 
whose name is associated with the rebuilding of Paris, was born 
in that city on the 27th of March 2809 of a Protestant family, 
German in origin. He was educated at the College Henri IV, 
and subsequently studied law, attending simultaneously the 
classes at the Paris conservatoire of music, for be was a good 
musician. He became sous-prtfet of Nerac in 1830, and advanced 
rapidly in the civil service until in 1853 be was chosen by Persigny 
prefect of the Seine in succession to Jean Jacques Berger, who 
hesitated to incur the vast expenses of the imperial schemes 



for the embellishment of Paris. ^Hantsmann laid out the Bob 
de Boulogne, and made extensive improvements in the smaller 
parks. The gardens of the Luxembourg Palace were cut down 
to allow of the formation of new streets, and the Boulevard 
de Sebastopol, the southern half of which is now the Boulevard 
St Michel, was driven through a populous district A new 
water supply, a gigantic system of sewers, new bridges, the 
opera, and other public buildings, the inclusion of outlying 
districts— these were among the new prefect's achievements, 
accomplished by the aid of a bold handling of the public funds 
which called forth Jules Ferry's indictment, Les Comptes fan* 
tasHques de Haussmann, in 1867. A loan of 250 million francs 
was sanctioned for the city of Paris in 1865, and another of 
260 million in 1869. These sums represented only part of his 
financial schemes, which led to his dismissal by the government 
of £mile Ollivier. After the fall of the Empire he spent about 
a year abroad, but he reentered public life in 1877) when he 
became Bonapartist deputy for Ajacdo. He died in Paris 
on the nth of January 1891. Haussmann had been made 
senator in 1857, member of the Academy of Fine Arts in 1867, 
and grand cross of the Legion of Honour in 1862. His name 
is preserved in the Boulevard Haussmann. His later years 
were occupied with the preparation of his Memoir es (3 vols., 
1800-1893). 

HAUS80NVILLB, JOSEPH OTHEKDf BERNARD DB 
CLftRON, Comte d' (1800-1884), French politician and historian, 
was born in Paris on the 27th of May 1809. His grandfather had 
been "grand louverier" of France; hb father Charles Louis 
Bernard de Cleron, comte d'Haussonville (1770-1846), was 
chamberlain at the court of Napoleon, a count of the French 
empire, and under the Restoration a peer of France and an 
opponent of the Villele ministry. Comte Joseph had filled a 
series of diplomatic appointments at Brussels, Turin and Naples 
before he entered the chamber of deputies in 1842 for Provins. 
Under the Second Empire he published a liberal anti-imperial 
paper at Brussels, Le Bulletin francais.ind in 1863 he actively 
supported the candidature of Prevost Paradol. He was elected 
to the French Academy in 1869, in recognition of his historical 
writings, Histoire de fa politique exUrieure du gouvernement 
francais de 1830 & 1848 (2 vols., 1850), Histoire de la riunion de 
la Lorraine & la Francs (4 vols., 1854-1859), L'£glise romaine 
et le premier empire 1800-18 14 (5 vols., 1864-1879). In 1870 
he published a pamphlet directed against the Prussian treatment 
of France, La France et la Prusse dewant P Europe, the sale of 
which was prohibited in Belgium at the request of King William 
of Prussia, He was the president of an association formed to 
provide new homes in Algeria for the inhabitants of Alsace- 
Lorraine who elected to retain their French nationality. In 
1878 he was made a life-senator, in which capacity he allied 
himself with the Right Centre in defence of the religious associa- 
tions against the anti-clericals. He died in Paris on the 28th 
of May 1884. 

His wife Louise (t8i8-i88s), a daughter of Due Victor de 
Brogue, published in 1858 a novel Robert Emmet, followed by 
Marguerite de VoUis reine de Navarre (1870), La Jeunesse de Lord 
Byron (1872), and Let Dernleres Annies de Lord Byron (1874). 

His son, Gabriel Paul Oihbnin de Clekon, comte 
d'Haussonville, was bom at Gurcy de Chatel (Scme-et-Marne) 
on the 21st of September 1843, and married in 1865 Mile Pauline 
d'Harcourt. He represented Seine-et-Marne in the National 
Assembly (1871) and voted with the Right Centre. Though he 
was not elected to the chamber of deputies he became the right- 
hand man of hb maternal uncle, the due de Broglie, in the 
attempted coup of the 16th of May. -Hb Jttabtissements ptni- 
tentiaires en Prance et aux colonies (1875) *** crowned by the 
Academy, of which be was admitted a member in* 1888. In 
1891 the resignation of Henri £douard Bocher from the adminis- 
tration of the Orleans estates led to the appointment of M 
d'Haussonville as accredited representative of the comte de 
Paris in France. He at once set to work to strengthen the 
Orleanist party by recruiting from the smaller nobility the 
offidab of the focal monarchical committees. He estabfisbed 



72 



HAUTE-GARONNE— HAUTE-MARNE 



new Orlcanist organs,, and sent out lecturers with instructions 
to emphasize the modern and democratic principles of the comte 
de Paris; but the prospects of the party were dashed in 1804 
by the death of the comte de Paris. In 1004 he was admitted 
to the Academy of Moral and Political Science. The comte 
d'Haussonville published. — C. A. Sainie-Beuve, sa vie et ses 
ttuvres (1875), Etudes biograpkiques ct UtUr aires, 2 series (1879 
and 1888), Le Salon de Ume Necker (1882, a vols.), Madame 
de La Fayette (1891), Madame Ackermenn (1892), Le Comte de 
Paris, souvenirs personnels (1895), La Duckesse de Bourgogne 
et V alliance savoyarde (1808-1903), Salaire ct misercs de femme 
(1000) , and, with G. Hanotaux, Souvenirs sur Madame de 
Maintenon (3 vols., 1002- 1904). 

HAUTE-GARONNB, a frontier department of south-western 
France, formed in 1700 from portions of the provinces of 
Languedoc(Touk>usain and Lauraguais)and Gascony (Comminges 
and Nebouzan). Pop. (1006), 442,065. Area, 2458 sq. m. It 
is bounded N. by the department of Tarn-et-G&ronne,- E. by 
Tarn, Aude and Ariege, S. by Spain and W. by Gers and Hautes- 
Pyrlnees. Long and narrow in shape, the department consists 
in tho north of an undulating stretch of country with continual 
interchange of hill and valley nowhere thrown into striking 
relief; while towards the south the land rises gradually to the 
Pyrenees, which on the Spanish border attain heights of upwards 
of 10,000 ft. Two passes, the Port d'Oo, near the beautiful lake 
and waterfall of Oo, and the Port de Venasque, exceed 9800 and 
7900 ft. in altitude respectively. Entering the department in 
the south-east, the Garonne flows in a northerly direction and 
traverses almost its entire length, receiving in its course the 
Pique, the Salat, the Louge, the Ariege, the Touch and the Save* 
Except in the mountainous region the climate is mild, the mean 
annual temperature being rather higher than that of Paris. 
The rainfall, which averages 24 in. at Toulouse, exceeds 40 in. 
in some parts of the mountains; and sudden and destructive 
inundations of the Garonne — of which that of 1875 is a celebrated 
example— arc always to be feared. The valley of the Garonne 
is also frequently visited by severe hail-storms. Thick forests 
of oak, fir and pine exist in the mountains and furnish timber 
for shipbuilding. The arable land of the plains and valleys is 
well adapted for the cultivation of wheat, maize and other grain 
crops; and the produce of cereals is generally much more than is 
required for the local consumption. Market-gardening flourishes 
around Toulouse. A large area is occupied by vineyards, though 
the wine is only of medium quality; and chestnuts, apples and 
peaches are grown.- As pasture land is abundant a good deal 
of attention is given to the rearing of cattle and sheep, and 
co-operative dairies are numerous in the mountains; but de- 
forestation has tended to reduce the area of pasture-land, because 
the soil, unretained by the roots of trees, has been gradually 
washed away. Haute-Garonne has deposits of zinc and lead, 
and salt-workings; there is an ancient and active marble- 
working industry at St Beat. Mineral springs are common, 
those of Bagneres-de-Luchon Encausse, Barbazan and Salics-du- 
Salat being well known. The manufactures are various though 
not individually extensive, and include iron and copper goods, 
woollen, cotton and linen goods, leather, paper, boots and shoes, 
tobacco and table delicacies. Flour-mills, iron-works and 
brick-works are numerous. Railway communication is furnished 
by the Southern and the Orleans railways, the main line of the 
former from Bordeaux to Cette passing through Toulouse. The 
Canal du Midi traverses the department for 32 m. and the lateral 
canal of the Garonne for 15 m. The Garonne is navigable below 
its confluence with the Salat. There are four arrondissements— 
Toulouse, Villefranche, Muret and St Gaudens, subdivided into 
39 cantons and 588 communes. The chief town is Toulouse, 
which is the seat of a court of appeal and of an archbishop, the 
headquarters of the XVIIlh army corps and the centre of an 
academy; and St Gaudens, Bagneres-de-Luchon end, from an 
architectural and historical standpoint, St Bertrand-de- 
Comminges arc of importance and receive separate treatment. 
Other places of interest are St A vent in, Mont saunas and Venerque, 
which possess ancient churches in the Romanesque style. The 



church of St Just at Valcabrere is of still greater age, the choir 
dating from the 8th or 9th century and part of the nave from the 
nth century. There are ruins of a celebrated Cistercian abbey 
at Bonnefont near St Martory. GaUo-Roman remains and 
works of art have been discovered at Martres. Near Revel is 
the fine reservoir of St Fcrrcol, constructed for the canal du Midi 
in the 17th century. 

HAUTE-LCHRE, a department of central France, formed 
in 1700 of Vclay and portions of Vivarais and Gevaud&n, three 
districts formerly belonging to the old province of Langucdoc, 
of a portion of Forez formerly belonging to Lyonnais, and a 
portion of lower Auvergne. Pop. (1006), 314,770. Area, 1931 
sq. m. It is bounded N. by Puy-de-D6me and Loire, E. by Loire 
and Ardeche, S. by Ardeche and Lozere and W. by Lozere and 
Cantal. Hautc-Loire, which is situated on the central plateau 
of France, is traversed from north to south by four mountain 
ranges. Its highest point, the Mont Mezenc (5755 ft.), in the 
south-east of the department, belongs to the mountains of 
Vivarais, which are continued along the eastern border by the 
Boutieres chain. The Lignon divides the Boutidres from the 
Massif du Megal, which is separated by the Loire itself from the 
mountains of Velay, a granitic range overlaid with the eruptions 
of more than one hundred and fifty craters. The Margeride 
mountains ran along the western border of the department. 
The Loire enters the department at a point 16 m. distant from 
its source in Ardeche, and first flowing northwards and then 
north-east, waters its eastern half. The Allier, which joins the 
Loire at Nevers, traverses the western portion of Hautc-Loire 
in a northerly direction. The chief affluents of the Loire within 
the limits of the department are the Borne on the left, joining it 
near Le Puy, and the Lignon, which descends from the Mezenc, 
between the Bouti&res and M6gal ranges, on the right. The 
climate, owing to the altitude, the northward direction of the 
valleys, and the winds from the Cevennes, is cold, the winters 
being long and rigorous. Storms and violent rains are frequent 
on the higher grounds, and would give rise to serious inundations 
were not the rivers for the most part confined within deep rocky 
channels. Cereals, chiefly rye, oats, barley and wheat, are 
cultivated in the lowlands and on the plateaus, on which aromatic 
and medicinal plants- are abundant. Lentils, peas, mangel- 
wurzeb and other forage and potatoes are also grown. Horned 
cattle belong principally to the Mezenc breed; goats are 
numerous. The woods yield pine, fir, oak and beech. Lace- 
making, which employs about 90,000 women, and coal-mining 
are main industries; the coal basins are those of Brassac and 
Langeac There are also mines of antimony and stone-quarries. 
Silk-milling, caoutchouc-making, various kinds of smith's work, 
paper-making, glass-blowing, brewing, wood-sawing and flour- 
milling are also carried on. The principal imports are flour, 
brandy, wine, live-stock, lace-thread and agricultural implements. 
Exports include fat stock, wool, aromatic plants, coal, lace. 
The department is served chiefly by the Paris-Lyon-Mediterranee 
company. There are three arrondissements— Le Puy, Brioude 
and Yssingeaux, with 28 cantons and 265 communes. 

Haute-Loire forms the diocese of Le Puy and part of the 
ecclesiastical province of Bourges, and belongs to the academie 
(educational division) of Germont-Ferrand. Its court of appeal 
Is at Riom. Le Puy the capital, Brioude and La Chaise- Dicu 
Jhe principal towns of the department, receive separate treat- 
ment. It has some notable churches, of which those of Chama- 
lieres, St Paulien and Sainte-Marie-des-Chazes are Romanesque 
in style; Le Monastier preserves the church, in part Romanesque, 
and the buildings of the abbey to which it owes its origin. 
Aiierapdcs and Bouzols (near Coubon) have the ruins of large 
feudal chateaus. The rocky plateau overlooking Polignac is 
occupied by the ruins of the imposing stronghold of the ancient 
family of Polignac, including a square donjon of the 14th century- 
Interesting Gallo-Roman remains have been found on the site. 

HAUTE-MARNE, a department of north-eastern France, made 
up for the roost part of districts belonging to the former province 
of Champagne (Bassigny, Perthois, Village), with smaller 
portions of Lorraine and Burgundy, and some fragments of 



HAUTERIVE— HAUTES ALPES 



73 



Franche-Cbmte. Area, 2415 sq. m. Pop. (1906), 221,714. It is 
bounded N.E. by Meuse, £. by Vosges, S.E. by HauteSaone, 
S. and S.W. by Cote d'Or, W. by Aube, and N.W. by Mime. 
Its greatest elevation (1693 ft.) is in the plateau of Langres in 
the south between the sources of the Marne and those of the 
Aube; the watershed between the basin of the Rhone on the 
south and those of the Seine and Meuse on the north, which is 
formed by the plateau of Langres continued north-east by the 
Monts Faucitles, has an average height of 1500 or 1600 ft. The 
country descends rapidly towards the south, but in very gentle 
slopes northwards; To the north is Bassigny (the paybas or 
low country, as distinguished from the highlands), a district 
characterised by monotonous flats of little fertility and extensive 
wooded tracts. The lowest level of the department b 361 ft. 
Hydrographically Haute-Marne belongs for the most* part to 
the basin of the Seine, the remainder to those of the Rhone and 
the Meuse. The principal river is the Marne, which rises here, 
and has a course of 75 m. within the department. Among its 
more important affluents are, on the right the Rognon, and on 
the left the Blaise. The Saulz, another tributary of the Marne 
on the right, also rises in Haute-Marne. Westward the depart- 
ment is watered by the Aube and its tributary the Aujon, both 
of which have their sources on the plateau of Langres. The Meuse 
also rises in the Monts Fauctlles, and has a course of 31 m. within 
the department. On the Mediterranean side the department 
sends to the Sa6ne the Apance, the Amance, the Salon and the 
Vingeanne. The climate is partly that of the Seine region, 
partly that of the Vosges, and partly that of the Rhone; the 
mean temperature is 51° F., nearly that of Paris; the rainfall 
is slightly below the average for France. 

The agriculture of the department is carried on chiefly by 
small proprietors. The chief crops are wheat and oats, which 
are more than sufficient for the needs of the inhabitants; potatoes, 
lucerne and mangel wurxels are next in importance. Natural 
pasture is abundant, especially in Bassigny, where horse and 
cattle-raising flourish. The vineyards produce some fair wines, 
notably the white wine of Soyers. More than a quarter of the 
territory is under wood. The department is rich in iron and 
building and other varieties of stone are quarried. The warm 
springs of B our bonne-Ies- Bains are among the earliest known and 
most frequented in France. The leading industry is the metal- 
lurgical; its establishments include blast furnaces, foundries, 
forges, plate-rolling works, and shops for nailmaking and smith's 
work of various descriptions. St Dizier is the chief centre of 
manufacture and distribution. The cutlery trade occupies 
thousands of hands at Nogent-en-Bassigny and in the neighbour* 
bood of Langres. Val d'Osne is well known for its production 
of fountains, statues, &c, in metal-work. Flour-milling, glove- 
making (at Chaumont), basket-making, brewing, tanning and 
other industries are also carried on. The principal import is 
coal, while manufactured goods, iron, stone, wood and cereals 
are exported. The department is served by the Eastern railway, 
of which the line from Paris to Belfort passes through Chaumont 
and Langres. The canal from the Marne to the Saone and the 
canal of the Haute-Marne, which accompany the Marne, together 
cover 99 m.; there is a canal 14 m. long from St Dizier to Wassy. 
There arc three arrondissements (Chaumont, Langres and Wassy), 
with 28 cantons and 550 communes. Chaumont is the capital. 
The department forms the diocese of Langres; it belongs to the 
VII. military region and to the educational circumscription 
(academie) of Dijon, where also is its court of appeal. The 
principal towns — Chaumont, Langres, St Dizier and Bourbonnc- 
ks- Bains — receive separate notice. At Monticr-en-Der the 
remains of an abbey founded in the 7th century include a fine 
church with nave and aisles of the 10th, and choir of the 13th 
century. Wassy, the scene in 1 56a of the celebrated massacre of 
Protestants by the troops of Francis, duke of Guise, has among 
its old buildings a church much of which dates from the Roman- 
esque period. Vignory has a church of the nth century. Join- 
ville, a metallurgical centre, preserves a chateau of the dukes of 
Guise in the Renaissance style. Pailly, near Langres, has a fine 
chateau of the last half of the i6lh century. 



HAUTERIVE. ALEXANDRE MAURICE BLANC DE 
LANAUTTE, Coute d' (1754-1830), French statesman and 
diplomatist, was born at Aspres (Hautes-Alpes) on the 14th of 
April 1754, and was educated at Grenoble, where he became a 
professor. Later he held a similar position at Tours, and there 
he attracted the attention of the due de Choiseul, who invited 
him to visit him at Chanteloup. Hautcrive thus came in contact 
with the great men who visited the duke, and one of these, the 
comte de Choiseul- Goifficr, on his appointment as ambassador 
to Constantinople in 1784 took him with him. Hauterive was 
enriched for a time by his marriage with a widow, Madame de 
Marchais, but was ruined by the Revolution. In 1 700 he applied 
for and received the post of consul at New York. Under the 
Consulate, however, he was accused of embezzlement and re- 
called; and, though the charge was. proved to be. false, was not 
reinstated. In 1708, after trying his hand at farming in America, 
Hauterive was appointed to a post in the French foreign office. 
In this capacity he made a sensation by his L'/utal de la France 4 
la fin de Van VIII (1800), which he had been commissioned by 
Bonaparte to draw up, as a manifesto to foreign nations, after 
the coup d'ttot of the 18th Brumaire. This won him the con- 
fidence of Bonaparte, and he was henceforth employed in drawing 
up many of the more important documents. In 1805 he was 
made a councillor of state and member of the Legion of Honour, 
and between 1805 and 18 13 he was more than once temporarily 
minister of foreign affairs. He attempted, though vainly, to use 
his influence to moderate Napoleon's policy, especially in the 
matter of Spain and the treatment of the pope. In 1805 a 
difference of opinion with Talleyrand on the question of the 
Austrian alliance, which Hauterive favoured, led to his with- 
drawal from the political side of the ministry of foreign affairs, 
and he was appointed keeper of the archives of the same depart- 
ment. In this capacity he did very useful work, and after the 
Restoration continued in this post at the request of the due de 
Richelieu, his work being recognized by his election as a member 
of the Academie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres in 1820. He 
died at Paris on the 28th of July 1830. 

There is a detailed account of Hauterive, with considerable extracts 
from his correspondence with Talleyrand, in the Biographic universale 
by A. F. Artand de Montor, who published a separate life in 1831. 
Criticisms of his Etat de la France appeared in Germany and England 
by F. von Gents (Von dem polituchat Zustande, 1801). and by 
T. B. Clarke (A Hist, and Pol. View 1803). 

HAUTES ALPES. a department in S.E. France, formed in 
1700 out of the south-eastern portion of the old province of 
Dauptane, together with a small part of N. Provence. It is 
bounded N. by the department of Savoie, E. by Italy and the 
department of the Basses Alpes, S. by the last-named depart- 
ment and that of the Dr6me, and W. by the departments of the 
Drome and of the Isere. Its area is 2178 sq. m., its greatest 
length is 85 m. and its greatest breadth 62 m. It is very moun- 
tainous, and includes the Pointe des £crins (13,462 ft.), the 
loftiest summit in France before the annexation of Savoy in 
i860, as well as the Meije (13,081 ft.), the Ailefroide (12,989 ft.) 
and the Mont Pel voux (1 2,973 ft.), though Monte Viso (1 2,609 ft) 
is wholly in Italy, rising just over the border. The department 
is to a large extent made up of the basins of the upper Durance 
(with its tributaries, the Guisane, the Gyronde and the Guil), of 
the upper Drac and of the Buech — all being to a very large 
extent wild mountain torrents in their upper course. The depart- 
ment is divided into three arrondissements (Gap, Briancon and 
Embrun), 24 cantons and 186 communes. In 1006 its population 
was 107,498. It is a- very poor department owing to its great 
elevation above the sea-level. There are no industries of any 
extent, and its commerce is almost wholly of local importance. 
The prolonged winter greatly hinders agricultural development, 
while the pastoral region has been greatly damaged and the 
forests destroyed by the ravages of the Provencal sheep, vast 
flocks of which are driven up here in the summer, as the pastures 
are leased out to a large extent, and but little utilized by the 
inhabitants. It now forms the diocese of Gap (this see is first 
certainly mentioned in the 6th century), which is in the ecclesi- 
astical province of Aix eo Provence; in 1791 there was ann*xad 



74 



HAUTE-SAONE— HAUTES-PYRENEES 



to it the archiepiscopal see of Embrun, which was then sup- 
pressed. There are 114 ra. of railway in the department, .This 
includes the main line from Briancon past Gap towards Grenoble. 
About 16J m. W. of Gap is the important railway junction of 
Veynes, whence branch off the lines to Grenoble, to Valence by 
Die and Livron, and to Sisteron for Marseilles. The chief town 
is Gap, while Briancon and Embrun are the only other important 
places. 

See J. Roman, Dtclionnaire totopapkique du dip. des Hles-Altxs 
(Paris, 1884), TabUau kistorique du dip. des Htes-Alpes (Paris, 1887- 
1890, 2 vols.), and Repertoire arch&olottque du dip. des Hles-Alpes 
(Paris, 1888); I. C. F. Udouecttc, Iiistotre, topographic. 6rc. des 
Uauies-Alpes (3rd ed., Paris, 1848). (W. A. B. C.) 

HAUTE-SA6NE, a department of eastern France, formed in 
1 700 from the northern portion of Franche Comtek It is traversed 
by the river Sa6ne, bounded N. by the department of the Vosges, 
E. by the territory of Belfort, S. by Doubs and Jura, and W. by 
C6te-d'Or and Haute-Marne. Pop. (1906), 263,890; area, 2075 
sq. m. On the north-east, where they are formed by the Vosges, 
and to the south along the course of the Ognon the limits are 
natural. The highest point of the department is the Ballon de 
Servance (3970 ft.), and the lowest the confluence of the Sa6ne 
and Ognon (6 to ft.). The general slope is from north-east to 
south-west, the direction followed by those two streams. In the 
north-east the department belongs to the Vosgian formation, 
Consisting of forest-clad mountains of sandstone and granite, 
and is of a marshy nature; but throughout the greater part of its 
extent it is composed of limestone plateaus 800 to 1000 ft. high 
pierced with crevasses and subterranean caves, into which the 
rain water disappears to issue again as springs in the valleys 200 
ft. lower down. In its passage through the department the 
Saone receives from the right the Amance and the Salon from the 
Lang'res plateau, and from the left the Coney, the Lanterne 
(augmented by the Breuchin which passes by Luxeuil), the 
Ducgeon (passing Vcsoul), and the Ognon. The north-eastern 
districts are cold and have an annual rainfall ranging from 36 
to 48 in. Towards the south-west the climate becomes more 
temperate. At Vcsoul and Gray the rainfall only reaches 24 in. 
per annum. 

Hautc-Sadne is primarily agricultural Of its total area 
nearly half is arable land; wheat, oats, meslin and rye are the 
chief cereals and potatoes are largely grown. The vine flourishes 
mainly in the arrondissement of Gray. Apples, plums and 
cherries (from which the kirsch, for which the department is 
famous, is distilled) are the chief fruits. The woods which cover 
a quarter of the department are composed mainly of firs in the 
Vosges and of oak, beech, hornbeam and aspen in the other 
districts. The river-valleys furnish good pasture for the rearing 
of horses and of horned cattle. The department possesses mines 
of coal (at Rone h amp) and rock-salt (at Gouhenans) and stone 
quarries are worked. Of the many mineral waters of Haute* 
Sa6ne the best known are the hot springs of Luxeuil (q.v.). 
Besides iron-working establishments (smelting furnaces, foundries 
and wire-drawing mills), Haute-Saone possesses copper-foundries, 
engineering works, steel-foundries and factories at Plancher-les- 
Mines and elsewhere for producing ironmongery, nails, pins, files, 
saws, screws, shot, chains, agricultural implements, locks, spin- 
ning machinery, edge tools. Window-glass and glass wares, 
pottery and earthenware are manufactured; there are also 
brick and tile-works. The spinning and weaving of cotton, of 
which Hlricourt (pop. in 1006, 5104) is the chief centre, stand 
next in importance to metal working, and there are numerous 
paper-mills. Print-works, fulling mills, hosiery factories and 
straw-hat factories are also of some account; as well as sugar 
works, distilleries, dye-works, saw-mills, starch-works, the 
chemical works at Gouhenans, oil-mills, tanyards and flour- 
mills. The department exports wheat, cattle, cheese, butter, 
iron, wood, pottery, kirschwasser, plaster, leather, glass, &c. 
The Sa6ne provides a navigable channel of about 70 m., which 
is connected with the Moselle and the Meuse at Corre by the 
Canal de I'Est along the valley of the Coney. Gray is the chief 
emporium of the water-borne trade of the Saone. Haute-Saone 



is served chiefly by the Eastern railway. There are three arron- 
dissemenU— Vesoul, Gray, Lure 4 — comprising 28 cantons, 583 
communes. Haute-Saone is in the district of the VII. army 
corps, and in its legal, ecclesiastical and educational relations 
depends on Besancon. 

Vesoul, the capital of the department, Gray and Luxeuil are 
the principal towns. There is an important school of agri- 
culture at St Remy in the arrondissement of Vesoul. The 
Roman ruins and mosaics at Membrey in the arrondissement 
of Gray and the church (13th and 15th centuries) and abbey 
buildings at Faverncy. in the arrondissement of Vesoul, are of 
antiquarian interest. 

HAUTE»SAVOIB, a frontier department of France, formed 
in i860 of the old provinces of the Genevois, the Chablais and 
the Faucigny, which constituted the northern portion of the 
duchy of Savoy. It is bounded N. by the canton and Lake of 
Geneva, E. by the Swiss canton of the Valais, S. by Italy and the 
department of Savoie, and W. by the department of the Ain. It 
is mainly made up of the river-basins of the Arve (flowing along 
the northern foot of the Mont Blanc range, and receiving the 
Giffre, on the right, and the Borne and Foron, on the left — the 
Arve joins the Rhone, close to Geneva), of the Dfanse (with 
several branches, all flowing into the Lake of Geneva), of the 
Usses and of the Fier (both flowing direct into the Rhone, the 
latter after forming the Lake of Annecy). The upper course of the 
Arly is also in the department, but the river then leaves it to fall 
into the Isere. The whole of the department is mountainous. 
But the hills attain no very great height, save at Us south-east 
end, where rises the snowclad chain of Mont Blanc, with many 
high peaks (culminating in Mont Blanc, 15,781 ft.) and many 
glaciers. That portion of the department is alone frequented by 
travellers, whose centre is Chamonix in the upper Arve valley. 
The lowest point (045 ft.) in the department is at the junction of 
the Fier with the Rhone. The whole of the department is 
included in that portion of the duchy of Savoy which was neutral- 
ized in 1815. In 1906 the population of the department was 
260,617. Its area is 1775 sq. m., and it is divided into four 
arrondissement* (Annecy, the chief town, Bonneville, St Julien 
and Thonon), 28 cantons and 314 communes. It forms the 
diocese of Annecy. There are in the department 176 m. of 
broad-gauge railways, and 70 m. of narrow-gauge lines. 
There are also a number of mineral springs, only three of 
which are known to foreigners — the chalybeate waters of 
£vian and Amphion, close to each other on the south shore 
of the Lake of Geneva, and the chalybeate and sulphurous 
waters of St Gcrvais, at the north-west end of the chain of Mont 
Blanc Anthracite and asphalte mines are numerous, as well as 
stone quarries. Cotton is manufactured at Annecy, while Cluses 
is the centre of the dock-making industry. There is a well-known 
bell foundry at Annecy le Vieux. Thonon (the old capital of the 
Chablais) is the most important town on the southern shore of the 
Lake of Geneva and, after Annecy, the most populous place in 
the department. (W. A. B. O 

HAUTBS-PYR6n£ES, a department of south-western France, 
on the Spanish frontier, formed in 1700* half of it being taken 
from Bigorre and the remainder from Armagnac, Nebouxao, 
Astarac and Quatre Vallees, districts which all belonged to the 
province of Gascony. Pop. (1006), 200,307. Area, 1 750 sq. m. 
Hautes- Pyrenees is bounded S. by Spain, W. by the department 
of Basses- Pyrenees (which encloses on its eastern border five 
communes belonging to Hautes-Pyreoees), N. by Gees and E. 
by Haute-Garonne. Except on the south its boundaries are 
conventional The south of the department, comprising two- 
thirds of its area, is occupied by the central Pyrenees. Some 
of the peaks reach or exceed the height of 10,000 ft., the Vigne- 
male (10,820 ft.) being the highest in the French Pyrenees, The 
imposing cirques (Cirques de Trou mouse, Gavarnie and Estaube), 
with their glaciers and waterfalls, and the pleasant valleys 
attract a large number of tourists, the most noted point being 
the Cirque de Gavarnie. The northern portion of the depart- 
ment is a region of plains and undulating hills clothed with corn- 
fields, vineyards and meadows. To the north-east, however, the 



HAUTE-VIENNE 



75 



coW and windswept plateau of Lannemezan (about aeoo ft.), 
the watershed of the streams that come down on the French side 
of the Pyrenees, presents in its bleakness and barrenness a 
striking contrast to the plain that lies below. The department 
is drained by three principal streams, the Gave de Pau, the Adour 
and the Neste, an affluent of the Garonne. The sources of the 
first and third lie close together in the O'rque of Gavarnie and 
on the slopes of Troumouse, whence they flow respectively to 
the north-west and north-east. An important section of the 
Pyrenees, which carries the Massif Neouvielle and the Pic du 
Midi de Bigorre (with its meteorological observatory), runs 
northward between these two valleys. From the Pic du Midi 
descends the Adour, whkh, after watering the pleasant valley 
of Campan, leaves the mountains at Bagneres and then divides 
into a multitude of channels, to irrigate the rich plain of Tarbes. 
The chief of these is the Canal d'Alaric with a length of 36 m. 
Beyond Hautes-Pyrenees it receives on the right the Arros, 
which flows through the department from south to north-north- 
west; on the left it receives the Gave de Pau. This latter 
stream, rising in Gavarnie, is joined at Luz by the Gave de 
Bastan from Neouvielle, and at Pierrefittc by the Gave de 
Cauterets, fed by streams from the Vignemale. The Gavede Pau, 
after passing Argeles, a well-known centre for excursions, and 
Lourdes, leaves the mountains and turns sharply from north 
to west; it has a greater volume of water than the Adour, but, 
being more of a mountain torrent, is regarded as a tributary 
of the Adour, which is navigable in the latter part of its course. 
The Neste d'Aure, descending from the peaks of Neouvielle 
and Troumouse, receives at Arreau the Neste de Louron from 
the pass of Ciarabide and flows northwards through a beautiful 
valley as far as La Barthe, where it turns east; it is important 
as furnishing the plateau of Lannemczan with a canal, the Canal 
de la Neste, the waters of which arc partly used for irrigation 
and partly for supplying the streams that rise there and are dried 
up in summer— the Gers and the Balse, affluents of the Garonne. 
This latter only touches the department. The climate of Hautes- 
Pyrenees, though very cold on the highlands, is warm and moist 
in the plains, where there are hot summers, fine autumns, mild 
winters and rainy springs. On the plateau of Lannemezan, 
while the summers are dry and scorching, the winters are very 
severe. The average annual rainfall at Tarbes, in the north of 
the department, is about 34 in-', at the higher altitudes it is 
much greater. The mean annual temperature at Tarbes is 
S9* Fahr. 

Hautes-Pyrenees is agricultural in the plains, pastoral in the 
highlands. The more important cereals are wheat and maize, 
which is much used for the feeding of pigs and poultry, especially 
geese; rye, oats and barley are grown in the mountain districts. 
The wines of Madiran and Peyriguere are well known and 
tobacco is also cultivated; chestnut trees and fruit trees are 
grown on the lower slopes. In the neighbourhood of Tarbes and 
Bagneres-de-Bigorre horse-breeding is the principal occupation 
and there is a famous stud at Tarbes. The horse of the region 
is the result of a fusion of Arab, English and Navarrese blood 
and is well fitted for saddle and harness; it is largely used by 
light cavalry regiments. Cattle raising is important; the milch- 
cows of Lourdes and the oxen of Tarbes and the valley of the 
Aure are highly esteemed. Sheep and goats are also reared. 
The forests, which occur chiefly in the highlands, contain bears* 
boars, wolves and other wild animals. There are at Campan 
and Sarrancolin quarries of fine marble, which Is sawn and 
worked at Bagneres. There is a group of slate quarries at 
Labassere. Deposits of lignite, lead, manganese and zinc are 
found. The mineral springs of Hautcs- Pyrenees are numerous 
and much visited. The principal in the valley of the Gave de 
Pau are Cauterets (hot springs containing sulphur and sodium), 
St Sauveur (springs with sulphur and sodium), aud Bareges 
(hot springs with sulphur and sodium), and in the valley of the 
Adour Bagneres (hot or cold springs containing calcium sulphates, 
iron, sulphur and sodium) and Capvcrn near Lannemczan 
(springs containing calcium sulphates). 

The department has flour-mills and saw-mills, a large military 



arsenal at Tarbes, paper-mills, tanneries and manufactories of 
agricultural implements and looms. The spinning and weaving 
of wool and the manufacture of knitted goods are carried 
on; Bagn6res-dc- Bigorre is the chief centre of the textile 
industry. 

Of the passes (ports) into Spain, even the chief, Gavarnie 
(7308 ft.), is not accessible to carriages. The department is 
served by the Southern railway and is traversed from west to 
cast by the main line from Bayonne to Toulouse. There arc 
three arrondissements, those of Tarbes, Argeles and Bagneres- 
de-Bigorre, 26 cantons and 480 communes. Tarbes is the capital 
of Hautes-Pyrenees, which constitutes the diocese of Tarbes, and 
is attached to the appeal court of Pau; it forms part of the region 
of the XVIII. army corps. In educational matters it falls within 
the circumscription of the academie of Toulouse. Tarbes, 
Lourdes, Bagnercs-dc-Bigorrc and Luz-Sl Sauveur are the prin- 
cipal towns. St Savin, in the valley of the Gave de Pau, and 
Sarrancolin have interesting Romanesque churches. The church 
of Maubourguet built by the TemDiars in the 12th century is also 
remarkable. 

HAUTE-VIENNE, a department of central France, formed in 
1 700 of Haut-Limousin and of portions of Marche, Poitou and 
Berry. Pop. (1006), 385,732. Area, 2144 sq. m. It is bounded 
N. by Indre, E. by Creusc, S.E. by Correze, S.W. by Dordogne, 
W. by Charente and N.W. by Vienne. Haute- Vienne belongs 
to the central plateau of France, and drains partly to the Loire 
and partly to the Garonne. The highest altitude (2549 ft.) is 
in the extreme south-east, and belongs to the treeless but well- 
watered plateau of Millev aches, formed of granite, gneiss and 
mica. From that point the department slopes towards the west, 
south-west and north. To the north-west of the Millevaches 
are the Ambazac and Blond Hills, both separating the valley 
of the Vienne from that of the Gartempe, a tributary of the 
Creuse. The Vienne traverses the department from east to 
west, passing Eymoutiers, St Leonard, Limoges and St Junien, 
and receiving on the right the Maude and the Taurion. The Isle, 
which flows into the Dordogne, with its tributaries the Auvezere 
and the Dronne, and the Tardoire and the Bandiat, tributaries 
of the Charente, all rise in the south of the department. The 
altitude and inland position of Haute-Vienne, its geological 
character, and the northern exposure of its valleys make the 
winters long and severe; but the climate is milder in the west 
and north-west. The annual rainfall often reaches 36 or 37 in. 
and even more in the mountains. Haute-Vienne is on the whole 
unproductive. Rye, wheat, buckwheat and oats are the cereals 
most grown, but the chestnut, which is a characteristic product 
of the department, still forms the staple food of large numbers 
of the population. Potatoes, mangolds, hemp and colza are 
cultivated. After the chestnut, walnuts and cider-apples are 
the principal fruits. Good breeds of horned cattle and sheep are 
reared and find a ready market in Paris. Horses for remount 
purposes are also raised. The quarries furnish granite and large 
quantities of kaolin, which is both exported and used in the 
porcelain works of the department. Amianthus, emeralds and 
garnets arc found. Limoges is the centre of the porcelain industry 
and has important liqueur distilleries. Woollen goods, starch, 
paper and pasteboard, wooden and leather shoes, gloves, agri- 
cultural implements and hats are other industrial products, 
and there are flour-mills, breweries, dye-works, tanneries, iron 
foundries and printing works. Wine and alcohol for the liqueur- 
manufacture, coal, raw materials for textile industries, 
hops, skins and various manufactured articles are among the 
imports. 

The department is served almost entirety by the Orleans 
Railway. It is divided into the arrondissements of Limoges, 
Bellac, Rochechouart and St Yrieix (29 cantons and 205 com- 
munes), and belongs to the academie (educational division) of 
Poitiers and the ecclesiastical province of Bourges. Limoges, 
the capital, is the seat of a bishopric and of a court of appeal, 
and is the headquarters of the XII. army corps. The other prin- 
cipal towns are St Yrieix and St Junien. Solignac, St Leonard 
and Le Dorat have fine Romanesque churches. The remains 



7 6 



HAUT-RHIN— HAVANA 



of the chateau of Chalusset (S.S.E. of Limoges), the most remark- 
able feudal ruins in Limousin, and the chateau of Rochechouart, 
which dates from the 13th, 15th and 16th centuries, are also of 
interest. 

HAUT-RHIN, before 187 1 a department of eastern France, 
formed in 1700 from the southern portion of Alsace. The 
name " Haut-Rhin " is sometimes used of the territory of 
Belfort (q.v.). 

HAOY, RENft JUST (1743-1822), French mineralogist, 
commonly styled the Abb* Hatty, from being an honorary 
canon of Notre Dame, was born at St Just, in the department 
of Oise, on the 28th of February 1743. His parents were in 
a humble rank of life, and were only enabled by the kindness of 
friends to send their son to the college of Navarre and afterwards 
to that of Lemoine. Becoming one of the teachers at the 
latter, he began to devote his leisure hours to the study of botany ; 
but an accident directed his attention to another field in natural 
history. Happening to let fall a specimen of calcareous spar 
belonging to a friend, he was led by examination of the fragments 
to make experiments which resulted in the statement of the 
geometrical law of crystallization associated with his name 
(see Crystallography). The value of this discovery, the 
mathematical theory of which is given by Haily in his Traill 
dc miniralogic, was immediately recognized, and when communi- 
cated to the Academy, it secured for its author a place in that 
society. Hatty's name is also known for the observations he 
made in pyro-electricity. When the Revolution broke out, he 
was thrown into prison, and his life was even in danger, when 
he was saved by the intercession of E. Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire. 
In 1802, under Napoleon, he became professor of mineralogy 
at the museum of natural history, but after 1814 he was deprived 
of his appointments by the government of the Restoration. 
His latter days were consequently clouded by poverty, but the 
courage and high moral qualities which had helped him forward 
in his youth did not desert him in his old age; and he lived 
cheerful and respected till his death at Paris on the 3rd of June 
1822. 

The following are his principal works: Essai d*une Oiiorie sur 
la structure des cristaux (1784); Exposition raisonnie de la thiorie 
de I'Hectriciti et du mognitiime, dapres Us principes d'Aepinus 
(1787); De la structure considirie commt caractire distincttf ties 
mtniraux (1793); Exposition abrigie de la Ihtorie de la structure 
des cristaux (1793); Extrait d'un traiti iUmentaire de miniralogie 
(1797); Traiti de miniralogie (4 vols., 1801); Traiti iUmentaire 
de physique (2 vols., 1603, 1806); Tableau comparatif des risultats 
de la crtstallographie, el de V analyse chimique relativentent a la 
classification des miniraux (1809); Traiti des pierres prcxieuses 
(1817); Trait* de cristallographie (2 vols., 1822). He also contri- 
buted papers, of which 100 are enumerated in the Royal Society'? 
catalogue, to various scientific journals, especially the Journal de 
physique and the Annals du Musium d'Histoire Naiurclk. 

HAVANA (the name is of aboriginal origin; Span. Habana 
or, more fully, San Crist6bal de la Habana), the capital of Cuba, 
the largest city of the West Indies, and one of the principal 
seats of commerce in the New World, situated on the northern 
coast of the island in 23 9' N. lat. and 82° 22' W. long. Pop. 
(1899)* 235*981 ; (1007), 297,159. The city occupies a peninsula 
to the W. of the harbour, between its waters and those of the 
sea. Several small streams, of which the Almendares river is 
the largest, empty into the harbour. The pouch-shaped, land- 
locked bay is spacious and easy of access. Large merchantmen 
and men-of-war can come up and unload along at least a consider- 
able part of the water-front. The entrance, which is encumbered 
by neither bar nor rock, averages about 260 yds. in width and 
is about 1400 yds. long. Within, the bay breaks up into three 
distinct arms, Man* male na or Regla Bay, Guanabacoa Bay 
and the Bay of Atares. On the left band of the entrance stands 
the lofty lighthouse tower of the Morro. The sewage of the 
city and other impurities were for centuries allowed to pollute 
the bay, but the extent to which the harbour was thereby filled 
up has been exaggerated. Though certainly very much smaller 
than it once was, there is a difference of opinion as to whether 
the harbour has grown smaller since the end of the 18th century. 

From the sea the city presents a picturesque appearance. 



The Havana side of the bay has a sea-wall *nd an excellent 
drive. The city walls, begun in 167 1 and completed about 1 740, 
were almost entirely demolished between 1893 and 1880, only 
a few insignificant remnants having survived the American 
military occupation of 1899-1002; but it is still usual to speak 
of the " intramural " and the " extramural " city. The former, 
the old city, lying dose to the harbour front, has streets as 
narrow as is consistent with wheel traffic Obispo (Pi y Margafl 
in the new republican nomenclature), O'Reilly and San Rafael 
are the finest retail business streets, and the Prado and the 
Cerro the handsomest residential streets in the city proper. 
The new city, including the suburbs to the W. overlooking the 
sea, has been laid out on a somewhat more spacious plan, with 
isolated dwellings and wide thoroughfares, some planted with 
trees. Most of the houses, and especially those of the planter 
aristocracy, are massively built of stone, with- large grated 
windows, fiat roofs with heavy parapets and inner courts. As 
the erection of wooden buildings was illegal long after 1772, 
it is only in the suburban districts that they are to be seen. 
The limestone which underlies almost all the island affords 
excellent building stone. The poorer houses arc built of brick 
with plaster fronts. Three-fourths of all the buildings of the 
city are of one very high storey; there are but a few dozen 
buildings as high as four storeys. Under Spanish rule, Havana 
was reputed to be a city of noises and smells. There was no 
satisfactory cleaning of the streets or draining of the sub-soil, 
and the harbour was rendered visibly foul by the impurities 
of the town. A revolution was worked in this respect during 
the United States military occupation of the city, and the 
1 

cs of the climate of Havana are 

< mperature as low as 40° F. is 

< s only reached on extremely 
1 rancs or electric storms. The 
1 >5-7* C. (78° F.): that of the 
1 ' F.), and that of the coldest. 

u seasons are approximately — 
I and successive quarters — 23°, 



•4° and 78-8° F.). The mean 
80 for all seasons save spring, 
ipward. A difference of 30° C. 



ire of two spots close together,' 
1 usual. The daily variation of 
le depressing effect of the heat 
»..v. .. u .... u .. 7 » K .<.«w 7 icikum uj afternoon breezes from the sea, 
and the nights are invariably comfortable and generally cool. 

Defences. — The principal defences of Havana under Spanish rule, 
when the city was maintained as a military stronghold of the first 
rank, were (to use the original and unabbreviated form of the names) 
the Castillo de San Salvador dc la Punta, to the W. of the harbour 
entrance; the Castillo de Los Tres Reyes del Mono and San Carlos 
de la Cabana, to the E.; the Santo Domingo de Atares, at the 
head of the western arm of the bay, commanding the city and its 
vicinity; and the Castillo del Principe (1767-1780). situated inland 
on an eminence to the W. El Morro, as it is popularly called, was 
first erected in 1590-1640. and La Punta, a much smaller fort, is of 
the same period; both were reconstructed after the evacuation of 
the city by the English in 1763, from which time also date the castles 
of Principe, Atares and the CabaAa. The Cabana, which alone 
can accommodate some 6000 men, fronts the bay for a distance of 
more than 800 yds., and was long supposed, at least by Spaniards, 
to be the strongest fortress of America. Here is the " laurel 
ditch " or " dead-line " — commemorated by a handsome bronze 
relief set in the wall of the fortress — where scores of Cuban patriots 
were shot. To the E. and W. inland are several small forts. The 
military establishment of the republic is very small. 

Churches. — Of the many old churches in the city, the most note- 
worthy is the cathedral The original building was abandoned 
in 1762. The present one, originally the church of the Jesuits, was 
erected in 1656-1724. The interior decoration dates largely from 
the last decade of the 18th century and the first two decades of the 
19th. In the wall of the chancel, a medallion and inscription long 
distinguished the tomb of Columbus, whose remains, were removed 
hither from Santo Domingo in 1796. In 1898 they were taken to 
Spain. Mention may also be made of the churches of Santo Domingo 
(begun in 1578). Santa Catalina (1700). San Agustin (1608), Santa 
Clara (1644). La Merced (1744. with a collection of oil paintings) 
and San Felipe (1693). Monasteries and nunneries were very 
numerous until the suppression of the religious orders in 1842. 
when many became simple churches. Some of the convents were 
successful in conserving their wealth. The former monastery of the 
Jesuits, now the Jesuit church of Belen (1704), at the corner of Los 



HAVANA 77 



78 



HAVANT 



prevalence of yellow fever (first brought to Havana, it is thought, in 
1761, from Vera Cruz), the reputation of the city. as regards Health 
was long very bad. The practical extermination of yellow fever 
during the U.S. military occupation following 1899 was a remarkable 
achievement. In 1895-1899, owing to the war, there were few 
non-immune persons in the city, and there was no trouble with 
the fever, but from the autumn of 1899 a heavy immigration from 
Spain began, and a fever epidemic was raging in 1900. The American 
military authorities found that the most extraordinary measures for 
cleansing the city — involving repeated house-to-house inspection, 
enforced cleanliness, improved drainage and sewerage, the destruc- 
tion of various public buildings, and thorough cleansing of the streets 
— although decidedly effective in reducing the general death-rate 
of the city (average. 1890-1899, 45'83; 1900. 2440; 1901, 22*1 1; 
1902, 20-03 ; general death-rate of U.S. soldiers in 1898, 67-94; in 
1901-1902, 7-00), apparently did not affect yellow fever at all. 
In 1 000- 1 90 1 Major Walter Reed (1851-1902), a surgeon in the 
United States army, proved by experiments on voluntary human 
subjects that the infection was spread by the Slegomyia mosquito, 1 
and the prevention of the disease was then undertaken by Major 
William C. Gorgas — all patients being screened and mosquit xs 
practically exterminated.* The number of subsequent deaths from 
yellow fever has depended solely on the degree to which the necessary 
precautionary measures were taken. 

The entire administrative system of the island, when a Spanish 
colony, was centred at Havana. Under the republic this remains 
the capital and the residence of the president, the supreme £Ourt, 
Congress when in session and the chief administrative officers. 
None of the public services was good in the Spanish period, except 
the water-supply, which. was excellent. The water is derived from 
the Vento springs, 9 m. from Havana, and is conducted through 
aqueducts constructed between 1859 an d 1894 at a cost of some 
$5,000,000. About 40,000,000 gallons are supplied daily. The 
system is owned by the municipality. The older Fernando Vlt. 
aqueduct* (1831-1835) is still usable in case of need; its supply was 
the Almendares river (until long after the construction of this, a 
still older aqueduct, opened at the end of the 16th century, was in 
use). The sewerage system and conditions of house sanitation 
were found extremely inadequate when the American army occupied 
the city in 1899. Several public buildings were so foul that they 
were demolished and burned. The improvement since the end of 
Spanish rule hat been steady. 

History.— Havana, originally founded by Diego Velasquez 
in 1 514 on an unhealthy site near the present Batabano (pop. 
in 1907, 15,435, including attached country districts), on the 
south coast j was soon removed to its present position, was 
granted an ayuntamiento (town council), and shortly came to 
be considered one of the most important places in the New 
World. Its commanding position gained it in 1634, by royal 
decree, the title of "Llave del Nuevo Mundo y Antemural 
de las Indias Occidentals " (Key of the New World and Bulwark 
of the West Indies), in reference to which it bears on its coat 
of arms a symbolic key and representations of the Mono, Punta 
and Fueraa. In the history of the place in the 16th century 
few things stand out except the investments by buccaneers: 
in 1537 it was sacked and burned, and in 1555 plundered by 
French buccaneers, and in 1586 it was threatened by Drake. 
In 1589 Philip II. of Spain ordered the erection of the Punta 
and the Morro. In the same year the residence of the governor 
of the island was moved from Santiago de Cuba to Havana. 
Philip II. granted Havana the title of " dudad " in x 592. Sugar 
plantations in the environs appeared before the end of the 
1 6th century. The population of the city, probably about 3000 
at the beginning of the 17th century, was doubled In the 
years following 1655 by the coming of Spaniards from Jamaica. 
In the course of the 17th century the port became the great 

1 Dr Carlos Finlay of Havana, arguing from the coincidence 
between the climatic limitation of yellow fever and the geographical 
limitation of the mosquito, urged (1881 sqq.) that there was some 
relation between the disease and the insect. Reed worked from 
the observation of Dr H. R. Carter (U.S. Marine Hospital Service) 
that although the incubation of the disease was 5 days, 15 to 20 days 
had to elapse before the " infection " of the house, and from Ross's 
demonstration of the part played in malaria by the Anopheles. 
See H. A. Kelly, Walter Reed and YeUow Fever (New York, 1907). 

* The average number of deaths from yellow fever annually from 
1885 (when reliable registration began) to 1898 was 455; maximum 
1282 in 1896 (supposed average for 4 years, 1856-1859, being 1489-8 



and for 7 years, 1873-1879, 1395*1), minimum 136, in 1898; average 
deaths of military, 1885-1898, 278-4 (in 1806-1897 constituting 1966 
out of a total of 2140); deaths of American soldiers, 1 899-1900, 
18 out of 431. 



rendezvous far the royal merchant and treasure fleets that moot* 
polized trade with America, and the commercial centre of the 
Spanish-American possessions. It was blockaded four times 
by the Dutch (who were continually molesting the treasure 
fleets) in the first half of the 17th century. In 1671 the city 
walls were began; they were completed in 1702. The European 
wars of the 17th and 18th centuries were marked by various 
incidents in local history. After the end of the Spanish War of 
Succession (1713) came a period of comparative prosperity 
in slavc-trad»ng and general commerce. The creation in 1740 
of a monopolistic trading-company was an event of importance 
in the history of the island. English squadrons threatened the 
city several times in the first half of the 18th century, but it 
was not until 1762 than an investment, made by Admiral Sir 
George Pocock and the earl of Albemarle, was successful The 
siege lasted from June to August and was attended by heavy 
loss to both besiegers and besieged. The British commanders 
wrung great sums from the church and the dty as prize of war 
and price of good order. By the treaty of the 10th of February 
1763, at the close of the Seven Years' War, Havana was restored 
to Spain in exchange for the Floridas. The English turned 
over the control of the city on the 6th of July. Their occupation 
greatly stimulated commerce, and from it dates the modern 
history of the city and of the island (see Cuba). The gradual 
removal of obstacles from the commerce of the island from 
1766 to 181 8 particularly benefited Havana. At the end of the 
1 8th century the city was one of the seven or eight great com- 
mercial centres' of the world, and in the first quarter of the 
19th century was a rival in population and in trade of Rio 
Janeiro, Buenos Aires and New York. In 1789 a bishopric 
was created at Havana suffragan to the archbishopric at Santiago. 
From the end of the 18th century Havana, as the centre of 
government, was the centre of movement and interest. During 
the administration of Miguel Tac6n Havana was improved 
by many important public works; his name is frequent in the 
nomenclature of the city. The railway from Havana to Gaines 
was built between 1835 and 1838. Fifty Americans under 
Lieut. Crittenden, members of the Bahia Honda filibustering 
expedition of Narciso Lopez, were Shot at Fort Atares in 1851. 
Like the rest of Cuba, Havana has frequently suffered severely 
from hurricanes, the most violent being those of 1768 (St 
Theresa's), 1810 and 1846. The destruction of the U.S. battle- 
ship " Maine " in the harbour of Havana on the 15th of 
February 1898 was an influential factor in causing the outbreak 
of the Spanish-American War, and during the war the city was 
blockaded by a United States fleet. 

See J. de la Pezuela, Dieeumariode la Isia de Cuba, vol. iii. (Madrid, 
1863), for minute details of history, administration and economic 
conditions down to 1862; J. M. de la Torre, Lo que futmasy to 

Si* somas, 6 la Habana antieua y moderns (Habana, 1857); P. J. 
uiteras, Historic de la conguista de la Habana 1762 (Philadelphia, 
1856); I. de la Pezuela, Sttto y rendition de la Habana en 176a 
(Madrid, 1859); A. Bachiller y Morales, Monorrofia histories 
(Habana, 1883), minutely covering the English occupation (the 
best account) of 1762-1763: Maria de lot Mercedes, comtesse de 
Merlin, La Hamna (3 vols., Paris, 1844) ; and the works cited under 
Cusa. 

HAVANT, a market-town in the Fareham parliamentary 
division of Hampshire, England, 67 m. S.W. from London by 
the London & South Western and the London, Brighton k 
South Coast railways. Pop. of urban district (1901), 3837. 
The urban district of Warblington, 1 m. S.E. (pop. 3630), has 
a fine church, Norman and later, with traces of pre-Norman 
work, and some remains of a Tudor castle. Havant lies in a 
flat coastal district, near the bead of Langstone Harbour, a wide 
shallow inlet of the English Channel. The church of St Faith 
was largely rebuilt in 1875, but retains some good Early English 
work. There are breweries and tanneries, and the manufacture 
of parchment is carried on. Off the mainland near Havant lies 
Hayiing, a flat island of irregular form lying between the harbours 
of Langstone and Chichester. It measures 4 m. in length from 
N. to S., and is nearly the same in breadth at the south, but the 
breadth generally is about 1} m. It is well wooded and fertile. 
A railway serves the village 0/ South Hayiing, which is in some 



HAVEL— HAVELOCK, SIR.HENJtY 



79 



favour as a seaside resort, hiving a wide sandy beach and good 
gotf links. Thei&land was in die possession of successive religious 
bodies from the Conquest (when it was given to the Benedictines 
of Jumieges, near Rouen), until the Dissolution. The church 
of South HayHng is a fine Early English building. 
* HAVEL, a river of Prussia, Germany, having its origin in 
Lake Daxnbeck (223 ft.) on the Mecklenburg plateau, a few 
miles north-west of Neu-StreliU, and after threading several 
lakes flowing south as far as Spandau. Thence it curves south- 
west, past Potsdam and Brandenburg, traversing another chain 
of lakes, and finally continues north-west until it joins the Elbe 
from the right some miles above Wittenberge after a total 
course of 221 m. and a total fall of only 158 ft. Its banks are 
mostly marshy or sandy, and the stream is navigable from the 
Mecklenburg lakes downwards. Several canals connect it 
with these lakes, as well as with other rivers— e.g. the Finow 
canal with the Oder, the Ruppin canal with the Rhirt, the Berlin- 
Spandau navigable canal (si m.) with the Spree, and the Plaue- 
Ihlc canal with the Elbe. The Sakrow-Paretz canal, 1 1 m. long, 
cuts off the deep bend at Potsdam. The most notable of the 
tributaries is the Spree (227 m. long), which bisects Berlin and 
joins the Havel at Spandau. Area of river basin, 10,1 50 sq. m. 

HAVELBERG, a town of Germany, in the Prussian province 
of Brandenburg, on the Havel and the railway Gldwen-Havd- 
berg. Pop. ( 1005), 5988. The town is built partly on an island 
in the Havel, and partly on hills on the right bank of the river, 
on one of which stands the fine Romanesque cathedral dating 
from the 12th century. The two parts, which are connected 
by a bridge, were incorporated as one town in 187$. The 
inhabitants are chiefly engaged in tobacco manufacturing, 
sugar-refining and boat-building, and in the timber trade. 

Otto L founded a bishopric at Havclberg in 046; the bishop, , 
however, who was a prince of the Empire, generally resided at 
Piatt enburg, or Wittstock, a few miles to the north. In 1548 
the bishopric was seised by the elector of Brandenburg, who 
finally took possession of it fifty years later, and the cathedral 
passed to the Protestant Church, retaining its endowments till 
the edict of 18x0, by which aU former ecclesiastical oossessfons 
were assumed by the crown. Thefinal secularization was delayed 
till 181 9. Havelberg was formerly a strong fortress, but in the 
Thirty Years' War it was taken from the Danish by the imperial 
troops in 1627. Recaptured by the Swedes in 1651, and again 
in 163$ and 1636, it was in 1637 retaken by the Saxons. It 
suffered severely from a conflagration in 1870. 

HAVELOCK, SIR HENRY (1795-1857), British soldier, one Of 
the heroes of the Indian Mutiny, the second of tour brothers (all 
of whom entered the army), was born at Ford Hall, Bishop- 
Wearmouth, Sunderland, on the 5th of April 1 795. His parents 
were William Ha vetoes, a wealthy shipbuilder in Sunderland, 
and Jane, daughter of John Carter, solicitor at Stockton-on-Tees. 
When about five years old Henry accompanied his elder brother 
William to Mr Bradley's school at Swanscombe, whence at the 
age of ten he removed for seven years to Charterhouse school. 
In accordance with the desire of his mother, who had died in 
181 1, be entered the Middle Temple in 1813, studying under 
Chitty the eminent special pleader. His legal studies having been 
abridged by a misunderstanding with his father, he in 1815 
accepted a second lieutenancy in the Rifle Brigade (95th), 
procured for him by the interest of his brother William. During 
the following eight years of service in Britain be read extensively 
and acquired a good acquaintance with the theory of war. In 
1823, having exchanged into the 21st and thence into the 13th 
Light Infantry, he followed his brothers William and Charles 
to India, first qualifying himself in Hindustani under Dr Gilchrist, 
a celebrated Orientalist. 

At the close of twenty-three years' service he was still a 
lieutenant, and it was not until 1838 that, after three years' 
adjutancy of his regiment, he became captain. Before this, 
however, he had held several staff appointments, notably that 
of deputy assistant-adjutant-general of the forces in Burma till 
the peace of Yandabu, of which he, with Lumsden and Knox, 
procured the ratifications at Ava from the M Golden Foot," 



who bestowed on him the " gold leaf " insignia of Burmese 
nobility. His first command had been at a stockade capture 
in the war, and he was present also at the battles of Napadee, 
Patanago and Pagan. He had also held during his lieutenancy 
various interpreferthtps and the adjutancy of the king's troops 
at Chinsura. In 1828 he published at Serampore Campaigns in 
Ata, and in 1829 he married Hannah Shepherd, daughter of Dr 
Ma rah man, the eminent missionary. About the same time he 
became a Baptist, being baptised by Mr John Mack at Serampore. 
During the first Afghan war he was present as aide-de-camp to 
Sir Willoughby Cotton at the capture of Ghaani, on the 23rd of 
July 1839, and at the occupation of Kabul. After a short absence 
in Bengal to secure the publication of his Memoirs 0/ the Afghan 
Campaign, he returned to Kabul in charge of Tecruits, and 
became interpreter to General Elphinstone. In 1840, being 
attached to Sir Robert Sale's force, he took part in the Khurd- 
Kabul fight, in the celebrated passage of the defiles of the Gbilzais 
(1841) and in the fighting from Tezeen to Jalalabad. Here, 
after many months' siege, his column in a sortie en masse defeated 
Akbar Khan on the 7th of April 1842. He was now madedeputy 
adjutant-general of the infantry division in Kabul, and in 
September he assisted at Jagdalak, at Tezeen, and at the release 
of the British prisoners at Kabul, besides taking a prominent 
part at Istaliff. Having obtained a regimental majority he next 
went through the Mahratta campaign as Persian interpreter 
to Sir Hugh (Viscount) Cough, and distinguished himself at 
Maharajpore in 1843, and also in the Sikh campaign at Moodkee, 
Fereeeshab and Sobraon in 1845. For these services he was. 
made deputy adjutant-general at Bombay. He exchanged from 
the 13th to the 39th, then as second major into the 53rd at the 
beginning of 1849, and soon afterwards left for England, where 
be spent two years. In 1854 he became quartermaster-general, 
then full colonel, and lastly ajdutant-general of the troops in 
India. 

In 1857 he was selected by Sir James Outram for the command 
of a division' in the Persian campaign , during which he was present 
at the actions of Muhamra and Ahwaz. Peace with Persia set 
him free just as the Mutiny broke out; and he was chosen to 
command a column " to quell disturbances in Allahabad, to 
support Lawrence at Luck now and Wheeler at Cawnpore, to 
disperse and utterly destroy aU mutineers and insurgents." At 
this time Lady Canning wrote of him in her diary: " General 
Havelock is not in fashion, but all the same we believe that he 
will do well. No doubt he is fussy and tiresome, but his little 
old stiff figure looks as active and fit for use as if he were made of 
steel." But in spite of this lukewarm commendation Havelock 
proved himself the man for the occasion, and won the reputation 
of a great military leader. At Fatehpur, on the 12th of July, 
at Aong and Pandoobrtdge on the 15th, at Cawnpore on the 
16th, at Unao on the 29th, at Busherutgunge on the 29th and 
again on the 5th of August, at Boorhya on the 12th of August, 
and at Bhhur on the i6th, he defeated overwhelming forces. 
Twice he advanced for the relief of Lucknow, but twice prudence 
forbade a .reckless exposure of troops wasted by battle and 
disease In the almost impracticable task. Reinforcements arriv- 
ingat last under Out ram, hewas enabled by the generosity of his 
superior officer to crown his successes on the 25th of September 
1857 by the capture of Lucknow. There he died on the 24th of 
November 1857, of dysentery, brought on by the anxieties and 
fatigues connected with his victorious march and with the 
subsequent blockade of the British troops. He lived long enough 
to receive the intelligence that he had been created K.C.B. for 
the first three battles of the campaign; but of the major-general- 
ship which was shortly afterwards conferred he never knew. 
On the 26th of November, before tidings of his death had reached 
England, letters-patent were directed to create him a baronet 
and a pension of £1000 a year was voted at the assembling of 
parliament. The baronetcy was afterwards bestowed upon his 
eldest son; while to his widow, by royal order, was given the 
rank to which she would have been entitled had her husband 
survived and been created a baronet. To both widow and son 
pensions of £1000 were awarded by parliament. 



8o 



HAVELOK THE DANE— HAVERFORDWEST 



See Marehman, Life of Hawiock (i860) ; L. J. Trotter, The Bayard 
of India (1903) ; F. M. Holmes, Four Heroes of India; G. B. Smith, 
Heroes of the. Nineteenth Century (loot); and A. Forbes, Haveloch 
(" English Men of Action " series, 1890). 

HAVELOK THE DANE, an Anglo-Danish romance * The hero, 
under the. name of Cuhe&an or Cuaran, was a scullion-jongleur 
at the court of Edelsi (Alsi) or Godric, king of Lincoln and 
Lindsey. At the same court was .brought up Argentille or 
Goldborough, the orphan daughter of Adelbrict, the Danish 
king of Norfolk, and his wife Orwain, Edelsi 's sister; and 
Edelsi, to humiliate his ward, married her to the scullion Cuaran. 
But, inspired by a vision, Cuaran and Goldborough set out for 
Grimsby, where Cuaran learned that Grim, his supposed father, 
was dead. His foster-sister, moreover, told him that his real 
name was Havelok, that he was the son of Gunter (or Birkabeyn), 
king of Denmark, and had been rescued by Grim, who though 
a poor fisherman was a noble in his own country, when Gunter 
perished by treason. The hero then wins back his own and 
Goldborough's kingdoms, punishing traitors and rewarding the 
faithful. The story exists in two French versions: as. an inter- 
polation between Geffrei Gaimar's Brut and his Estorie des 
Engles (c. 11 50) and in the Anglo-Norman Lai d' Havelok (12th 
century). The English Havelok (c. 1300) is written in a Lincoln- 
shire dialect and embodies abundant local tradition. A short 
version of the tale is interpolated in the Lambeth MS. of Robert 
Mannyng*s Handlyng Synne, The story reappears more than 
once in English literature, notably in the ballad of " Argentille 
and Curan " in William Warner's Albion's England. The name 
of Havelok (Habloc, Abloec, Abloyc) is said to correspond in 
Welsh to Anlaf or Olaf . Now the historical Anlaf Curan was the 
son of a Viking chief Sihtric, who was king of Northumbria in 
925 and died in 927. Anlaf Sihtricson was driven into exile by 
his stepmother's brother iEthelstan, and took refuge in Scotland 
at the court of Constantine II., whose daughter he married. 
He was defeated with Constantine 1 at Brunanburh (937), put 
was nevertheless for two short periods joint ruler in Northumbria 
with his cousin Anlaf Godfreyson. He reigned in Dublin till 080, 
.when he was defeated. He died the next year as a monk at Iona. 
Round the name of Anlaf Curan a number of legend* rapidly 
gathered, and the legend of the Danish hero probably filtered 
through Celtic channels, as the Welsh names of Argentille and 
Orwain indicate. The close similarity between the Havelok 
saga and the story of Hamlet (Amlethus) as told by Saxo Gram- 
maticus was pointed out long ago by Scandinavian scholars. 
The individual points they have in common are found in other 
legends, but the series of coincidences between the adventurous 
history of Anlaf Curan and the life of Amlethus can hardly be 
fortuitous. Interesting light is thrown on the whole question by 
Professor I. Gollancx {Hamlet in Iceland, 1808) by the identifica- 
tion of Amhlaide — who is said by Queen Gormnaith* in the 
Annals of Ireland by the Four Masters to have slain Niall 
Glundubh— with Anlaf 's father Sihtric. _ The exploits of father 
and son were likely to be confused. 

The mythical elements in the Havelok story are. numerous. 
Argentille, as H. L. Ward points out, is a disguised Valkyrie. 
Like Svava she inspired a dull and nameless youth, and as Hild 
raised the dead to fight by magic, so Argentille in Havelok and 
Hermuthruda in Amletk prop up dead or wounded men with 
stakes to bluff the enemy. Havelok's royal lineage is betrayed 
by his flame breath when he is asleep, a phenomenon which has 
parallels in the history of Servius Tullius and of Dietrich of Bern. 
Part of the Havelok legend lingers in local tradition. Havelok 
destroyed his enemies in Denmark by casting down great stones 
upon them from the top of a tower, and Grim is said to have 

» H. L. Ward (Cat. of Romances, i. 426) suggests that it was the 
mention of Constantine in the Havclock legend which led Gaimar 
to place the tale in the 6th century in the days of the Constantine 
who succeeded King Arthur. Gaimar voices more than once an 
Anglo-Danish legend of a Danish dynasty in Britain anterior to the 
Saxon invasion. 

8 A different person from the second wife of Anlaf Curan, also 
Gormflaith, who forms another link with Amlethus, as she was a 
woman of the Hermuthruda type and married her husband's 
c&nqueror. 



kicked three of the turrets from the church tower in his efforts to 
destroy the enemy's ships. John Weever {AnUent FuneraU 
Monuments, 1631, p. 749) says that the privilege of the town in 
Elsinore, where its merchants were free from toll, was due to the 
interest of Havelok, the Danish prince, and the common seal of 
the town of Grimsby represents Grim, with " Habloc " on his 
right hand and Goldeburgh'on his left. 

The English M 
library is unicfui 
F. Madden in 18 
the two French - 
Skeat (1868) for 
New York and ! 
Press, Oxford, 1 
be found); and a 
1002). Gaimar' 
Hardy and C. F 
(1888). Seeals 
Romances, i. 4s 
Anlaf Curan sci 
reprint of an ear 
Havelok (Baltim 

HAVBRFORDWEST (Welsh' 'Htrtfordd, • the English name 
being perhaps a corruption of the Scandinavian Haf na-Fjord), 
the chief town of Pembrokeshire, S. Wales, a contributory 
parliamentary and municipal borough, and a. county of itself 
with its own. lord-lieutenant. Pop. (1901), 6007. It is pictur- 
esquely situated on the slopes overlooking the West Cleddau river, 
which is here crossed by two stone bridges. It has a station on 
the Great Western Railway on the east side of the river, and 
when viewed from this point the town presents an imposing 
appearance with its castle-keep and its many ancient buildings. 
The river is tidal and navigable for vessels of not more than 
ISO tons. Coal, cattle, butter and grain are exported, but the 
commercial importance of the place has greatly declined, as the 
many ruined warehouses near the river plainly testify. The 
old walls and fortifications have almost disappeared, but Haver- 
fordwest is still rich in memorials of its past greatness. The huge 
castle-keep, which dominates the town, was probably built by 
Gilbert de Clare, early in the 12th century; formerly used as 
the county gaol, ft now serves as the police-station. The large 
church of St Mary, at the top of the steep High Street, has fine 
clerestory windows, clustered columns and an elaborate carved- 
oak ceiling of the 15th century; it contains several interesting 
monuments of the 17th and 18th centuries, some of which 
commemorate members of the family of Philipps of Picton Castle. 
At the N. corner of the adjacent churchyard stands 4n ancient 
building with a vaulted roof, once the record office, but now used 
as a fish-market- St Martin's, with a. low tower and spire, close 
to the castle, is probably the oldest church in the town, but has 
been much modernized. Near St Thomas's church on the Green 
stands an old Moravian chapel which is closely associated with 
the great scholar and divine, Bishop John Gambold (1711-1771). 
In a meadow on the W. bank of the river are the considerable 
remains of the Augustinian Priory of St Mary and St Thomas, 
built by Robert de Hwlfordd, lord of Haverford, about the year 
1200. On the E. bank are the suburbs of Cartlet and Prendcr- 
gast, the latter of which contains the ancient parish church of 
St David and the ruins of a large mansion originally built by 
Maurice de Prendergast (12th century) and subsequently the 
seat of the Stepney family. A little to the S. of the town are the 
remains of Haroldstone, once the residence of the powerful 
Perrot family. The charities belonging to the town, which 
include John Perrot's bequest (1579)* yielding about £350 
annually for the improvement of the town, and Tasker's charity 
school (1684), are very considerable. 

Haverfordwest owes its origin to the advent of the Flemings, 
who were permitted by Henry I. to settle in the hundred of 
Roose, or Rhos, in the years 110671108, in 11 ti, and again in 
1 156. English is exclusively spoken in the town and district, 
and its inhabitants exhibit their foreign extraction by their 
language, customs and appearance. Haverfordwest is, in fact, 
the capital of that English-speaking portion of Pembrokeshire, 
which has been nicknamed " Little England beyond Wales." 



HAVERGAI^HAVERSACK 



81 



litis fiew settlement of intruding foreigners had naturally to be 
protected against the infuriated natives, and the castle was 
accordingly built e. 11 13 by Gilbert de Clare, first earl of Pem- 
broke, who subsequently conferred the seignory of Haverford 
on his castellan, Richard FiU-Tancred. On the death of Robert 
de Hwlfordd, the benefactor and perhaps founder of the priory 
of St Mary and St Thomas, in 1213, the lordship of the castle 
reverted to the Crown, and was purchased for 1000 marks from 
King John by William Marshal, earl of Pembroke, who gave 
various privileges to the town. Of the numerous charters the 
earliest known (through an allusion found in a document of 
Bishop Houghton of St Davids, c. 1370) is one from Henry II., 
who therein confirms all former rights granted by his grand- 
father, Henry I. John in 1207 gave certain rights to the town 
concerning the Port of MU/ord, white William Marshal II., earl 
of Pembroke, presented it with three charters, the earliest of 
which is dated 1210. An important charter of Edward V., as 
prince of Wales and lord of Haverford, enacted that the town 
should be incorporated under a mayor, two sheriffs and two 
bailiffs, duly chosen by the burgesses. In 1536, under Henry 
VIII., Haverfordwest was declared a town ami county of itself 
and was further empowered to send a representative burgess to 
parliament. 

The town long played a prominent part In South Welsh 
history. In 1220 Llewelyn ap Iorwerth, prince of North 
Wales, during the absence of William Marshal II., earl of 
Pembroke, attacked and burnt the suburbs, but failed to reduce 
the castle by assault. Several of the Plantagenet kings visited 
the town, including Richard II., who stopped here some time 
on Ins return from Ireland in 1299, and is said to have performed 
here his last regal act— the confirmation of the grant of a 
burgage to the Friars Preachers. Oliver Cromwell spent some 
days here on his way to Ireland, and his original warrant to the 
mayor and council for the demolition of the castle is still 
preserved in the councH chamber. The prosperity and local im- 
portance of Haverfordwest continued unimpaired throughout the 
17th and 18th centuries, and Richard Fenton, the historian of 
Pembrokeshire, describes it in 1810, as " the largest town in the 
county, if not in all Wales." With the rise of Milford, however, 
the shipping trade greatly declined, and Haverfordwest has now 
the appearance of a quiet country town. 

HAVEROAL, FRANCES RIDLEY (1836-1879), English hymn- 
writer, daughter of the Rev. William Henry Havergal, was born 
at Astley, Worcestershire, on the 14th of December 1836. At 
the age of seven she began to write verse, most of it of a religious 
character. As a hymn-writer she was particularly successful, 
and the modern English Church collections include several of her 
compositions. Her collected Poetical Works were published in 
1884. She died at Caswell Bay, Swansea, on the 3rd of June 
1870. 

See Memorials of Frances Ridley Hcoertal (1880), by her sister. 

HAVERHILL, a market town of England, in the Sudbury 
parliamentary division of Suffolk, and the Saffron Walden 
division of Essex. Pop. of urban district (1001), 486a. It is 
55 m. N.N.E. from London by the Great Eastern railway, on 
the Long Melford-Cambridge branch, and is the terminus of 
the Colne Valley railway from Chappel in Essex. The church 
of St Mary is Perpendicular, but extensively restored. There 
are large manufactures of cloth, silk, matting, bricks, and boots 
and shoes, and a considerable agricultural trade. 

HAVERHILL, a city of Essex county, Massachusetts, U.S.A., 
situated on the Merrimac river, at the head of tide and navigation, 
and on the Boston & Maine railway, 33 m. N. of Boston. Pop. 
(1880) 18,472; (1800) 27.41 a; (1900) 37,i75» of whom 8530 
were foreign-born (including 2403 French Canadians, 1651 
English Canadians and 2144 Irish), and 15,077 were of foreign 
parentage (both parents foreign-born); (1910 census) 44, "5- 
The dty, 3 m. wide and 10 m. long, lies for its entire length 
along the Merrimac river, from which it rises picturesquely, 
hs surface being undulating, with several detached round hills 
(maximum 339 ft.). Like all old New England cities, it is 
irregularly laid out. A number of lakes within its limits are the 
XIII 2* 



source of an abundant and excellent water supply. There are 
fifteen public parks, the largest of which, Winnikenni Park 
(214 acres), contiguous to Lake Kenosa, is of great natural 
beauty. The city has three well-equipped hospitals, the beautiful 
Pentucket club house, a children's home, an old ladies' home 
and numerous charitable organizations. The schools of the 
dty, both public and private, are of high standing; they indude 
Bradford Academy (1803) for girls and the St James School 
(Roman Catholic). The public library is generously endowed, 
and in zoo8 had about 90,000 volumes. Almost from the 
beginning of its history Haverhill was active industrially. 
Thomas Dustin, the husband of Hannah Dustin, manufactured 
bricks, and this industry has been carried on in the same locality 
for more than two hundred years. The large Stevens woollen 
mills are the outgrowth of mills established in 1835. The 
manufacture of woollen bats, established In the middle of the 
18th century, is one of the prominent industries. There are 
large morocco factories. By far the leading industry of the 
city is the manufacture of boots, shoes and slippers, chiefly 
of the finer kinds, of which it is one of the largest producers in 
the world. In 1905 Haverhill ranked fourth among the dties 
of the United States in the product value of this manufacture, 
which was 4*8% of the total value of boots and shoes made in 
the United States. This industry began about 1795. In 1905 
Haverhill's manufacturing establishments produced goods valued 
at $24,446,594, 83*9% of this output being represented by 
boots and shoes or their accessories. One of the largest sole- 
leather manufactories in the world is here. 

Haverhill was settled in June. 1640 by a small colony from 
Newbury and Ipswich, and its Indian name, Pentucket, was 
replaced by that of Haverhill in compliment to the first minister, 
Rev. John Ward, who was born at Haverhill, England. In its 
earlier years this frontier town suffered severely from the forays 
of the Indians, and in 1690 the abandonment) of the settlement 
was contemplated. Two Indian attacks are. particularly 
noteworthy— one in 1698, in which Hannah Dustin, her new- 
born babe, and her nurse were carried away to the vicinity of 
Fenacook, now Conostd, New Hampshire. Here in the night 
Mrs Dustin, assisted by her nurse and by a captive English boy, 
tomahawked and scalped ten Indians (two men, the others 
children and women) and escaped down the river to Haverhill; 
a monument to her stands in City Hall Park. In 1708 250 
French and Indians attacked the village, killing 40 of its 
inhabitants. In 1873 a destructive fire caused the loss of 35 
places of business, and on the 17th of February 1882 almost the 
entire shoe district (consisting of 10 acres) was burned, with a 
loss of more than $2,000,000; but a greater' business district 
was built on the ruins of the old. Haverhill was the birthplace 
of Whittier, who lived here in 1807-1836, and who in his poem 
Haverhill, written for the 250th anniversary of the town in 1890, 
and in many of his other poems, gave the poet's touch to the 
history, the legends and the scenery of bis native dty. His 
birthplace, the scene of Snow-Bound in the eastern part of the 
dty, is owned by the Whittier Association and is open to 
visitors. A petition from Haverhill to the national House of 
Representatives in 1842, praying for a peaceable dissolution 
of the Union, raised about J. Q. Adams, its presenter, perhaps 
the most violent storm in the long course of his defence of the 
right of petition. Haverhill was incorporated as a town in 
1645 and became a dty in 1869. Bradford, a town (largely 
residential) lying on the opposite bank of the river, became 
a part of the city in 1897. In October 1008, by popular vote, 
the dty adopted a new charter providing for government by 
commission. 

HAVERSACK, or Havresack (through the French from 
Ger. Habersack, an pat-sack, a nose-bag, Hajer or Haver, oats), 
the bag in which horsemen carried the oats for their horses. 
In Scotland and the north of England haver, meaning oats, is 
still used, as haver-meal or haver-bread. Haversack is now 
used for the strong bag made of linen or canvas, in which soldiers, 
sportsmen or travellers, carry thdr personal belongings, or more 
usually the provisions for the day. 



82 



HAVERSTRAW— HAVRE 



HAVERSTRAW, a village of Rockland county, New York, 
U.S.A., in a township of the same name, 32 m. N. of New York 
City, and finely situated on the W. shore of Haverstraw Bay, 
an enlargement of the Hudson river. Pop. of the village (1890), 
5070; (1000) 593 s, of whom 1231 were foreign-born and 568 
were negroes;.(ioo5, state census) 6182; (1910) 5669; of the town- 
ship (1910) 9335. Haverstraw is served by the West Shore, 
the New Jersey & New York (Erie), and the New York, Ontario. 
& Western railways, and is connected by steamboat lines with 
Beekskill and Newburgb. The village lies at the N. base of 
High Tor (83 2 ft.). It has a public library, founded by the King's 
Daughters' Society in 1895 and housed in the Fowler library 
building. Excellent clay is found in the township, and Haver* 
straw is one of the largest brick manufacturing centres in the 
world; brick-machines also are manufactured here. The 
Mtnesceongo creek furnishes water power for silk nulls, dye 
works and print works. Haverstraw was settled by the Dutch 
probably as early as 1648. Near the village of Haverstraw 
(in the township of Stony Point), in the Joshua Hett Smith 
House, or "Old Treason House," as it is generally called, 
Benedict Arnold and Major Andre met before daylight on the 
22nd of September 1780 to arrange plans for the betrayal bf 
West Point. In 1826 a short-lived Owenite Community (of 
about 80 members) was established near West Haverstraw and 
Garnerville (in the township of Haverstraw). The members 
of the community established a Church of Reason, in which 
lectures were delivered on ethics, philosophy and science. 
Dissensions soon arose in the community, the experiment was 
abandoned within five months, and most of the members joined 
in turn the Coxsackie Community, also in New York, and the 
Kendal Community, near Canton, Ohio, both of which were 
also short-lived. The village of Haverstraw was originally 
known as Warren and was incorporated under that name in 
1854; in 1873 it became officially the village of Haverstraw— 
both names had previously been used locally. The village of 
West Haverstraw (pop. in 1890, 180; in 1900, 2079; and in x9io> 
9369), also in Haverstraw township, was founded in 1830, was 
long known as Samsondale, and was incorporated under its 
present name in 1883. 

See F. B. Green. History of Rockland County (New York, x886). 

HAVET, EUGEJJE AUGUSTS ERNEST (1813-1889), French 
scholar, was born in Paris on the 1 ith of April 18x3. Educated 
at the Lycee Saint-Louis and the ficole Nonnale, he was for 
many years before his death on the 21st of December 1889 
professor of Latin eloquence at the College de France. His two 
capital works were a commentary on the works of Pascal, Penstcs 
de Pascal publiits dans leur texte autkentique ante un commentate 
sum (1852; 2nd ed. 2 vols., 1881), and Le CkrisHanisma et see 
engines (4 vols., 1871-1884), the chief thesis of which was that 
Christianity owed more to Greek philosophy than to the writings 
of the Hebrew prophets. His elder son, Pierre Antoine Louis 
Havet (b. 1849), was professor of Latin philology at the College 
de France and a member of the Institute. The younger, Julien, 
is separately noticed. 

HAVET, JULIEN (FrxKftB Evahn) (1853-1893), French 
historian, was born at Vitry-sur-Seine on the 4th of April 1853, 
the second son of Ernest Havet. He early showed a remarkable 
aptitude for learning, but had a pronounced aversion for pure 
rhetoric His studies at the Ecole des Chartes (where he took 
first place both on entering and leaving) and at the Ecole des 
Hautes Etudes did much to develop his critical faculty, and the 
historical method taught and practised at these establishments 
brought home to him the dignity of history, which thenceforth 
became his ruling passion. His valedictory thesis at the Ecole 
des Chartes, Sirie ckronologique des gardiens et seigneurs des lies 
Normandes (1876), was a definitive work and but slightly affected 
by later research. In 1 878 be followed his thesis by a study called 
Les Coursroyales dans les lies Normandes, Both these works were 
composed entirely from the original documents at the Public 
Record Office, London, and the archives of Jersey and Guernsey. 
On the history of Merovingian institutions, Havet 's conclusions 
were widely accepted (sec La Formnle N» rex Francor., 9, inl., 



1885). His first work in this province was Dm sen dm nut 
" romain " dans les loisf renames (1876), acritical study on a theory 
of Fustel de Coulanges. In this he showed that the statu* of the 
homo Jtomanus of the barbarian laws was inferior to that of the 
German freeman; that the Gallo-Romans had been subjected 
by the Germans to a state of servitude; and, consequently, 
that the Germans had conquered the Gallo-Romans. He aimed 
a further blow at FusteTs system by showing that the Frankisk 
kings had never borne the Roman title of nr minster, and that 
they could not therefore be considered as being in the first place 
Roman magistrates; and that in the royal diplomas the king 
issued his commands as rex Prancarum and addressed Ins 
functionaries as ttrs' tnlustres. His attention having been drawn 
to questions of authenticity by the forgeries ofVraia Lucas, he 
devoted himself to tracing the spurious documents that en- 
cumbered and perverted Merovingian and Carolingian history. 
In his A propos des dicouverUs da Jtroma Vignier (1880), he 
exposed the forgeries committed in the 17th century by this 
priest. He then turned his attention to a group of documents 
relating to ecclesiastical history in the Carobngian period and 
bearing on the question of false decretals, and produced La 
Chartes da SUCalais (1887) ««d Les Adas da PettdU dm Mans 
(1894). On the problems afforded by the chronology of Gerbert's 
(Pope Silvester II.) let teat and by the notes in cipher in the MS. 
of his letters, he wrote L'Actilure secrete da Gerbert (1877), which 
may be compared with his Motes uroniannes dans let diploma 
mtronngiens (1885). In 2889 he brought out an edition of 
Gerbert's fetters, which was a model of critical sagacity. Each 
new work increased his reputation, in Germany as well as France. 
At the Bibliotheque Nationale, where he obtained a post, he 
rendered great service by his wide knowledge of foreign languages, 
and read voraciously everything that related, however remotely, 
to his favourite studies. He was finally appointed snistint 
curator in the department of printed books. He died pre- 
maturely at St Cloud an the 10th of August 1893. 

After his death his published and unpublished writings were 
collected and published (wkh the exception of La Conn rorales da 



lla Normandes and LaUra da Gerbert) in two volume* called Questions 
mirovingiennes and Opuscules inmUs (1896), containing, besides 
important papers on diplomatic and on Carolingian andMcroviogiaa 



history, a Targe number of short monographs ranging over a great 
variety of subjects. A collection of bis articles was published 
by his friends under the title of Mmangu Haaet (1895), pre- 
fixed by a bibliography of his works compiled by his friend Henri 
Omont. »-r"v (CB.*) , 

HAVRE, LB, a seaport of north-western France, in the depart* 
ment of Seine-Infeneure, on the north beak of the estuary of the 
Seine, 143 m. W.N.W. of Paris and 55 m. W. of Rouen by the 
Western railway. Pop. (1006), 129,403. Thegreaterpartofthe 
town stands on the level strip of ground bordering the estuary, 
but on the N. rises an eminence, la Cote, covered by the gardens 
and villas of the richer quarter. The central point of the town 
is the Place de I'hotel de vflle in which are the public gardens. 
It is crossed by the Boulevard de Strasbourg, running from the 
sea on the west to the railway station and the barracks on the 
east. The rue de Paris, the busiest street, starts at the Grand 
Quai, overlooking the outer harbour, and, intersecting the Place 
Gambetta, runs north and enters the Place de I'hotel de ville on 
its southern side. The docks start Immediately to the east of this 
street and extend over a large area to the south and south-east 
of the town. Apart from the church of Notre-Dame, dating 
from the 16th and 17th centuries, the chief buildings of Havre, 
including the hotel de ville, the law courts, and the exchange, 
are of modern erection. The museum contains a collection of 
antiquities and paintings. Havre is the seat of a sub-prefect, 
and forms part of the maritime arrondissement of Cherbourg. 
Among the public institutions are a tribunal of first instance, a 
tribunal of commerce, a board of trade arbitrators, a tribunal of 
maritime commerce, a chamber of commerce and a branch of the 
Bank of France. There are lycees for boys and girls, schools of 
commerce and other educational establishments. Havre, which is 
a fortified place of the second class, ranks second to Marseilles 
among French seaports. There are nine basins (the oldest of which 



HAWAII 



83 



dates back tc> i66q)-*nth an area of about 200 acres ami more 
than 8 m. of quays. They extend to the east of the outer 
harbour which on the west opens into the new outer harbour, 
formed by two breakwaters converging from the land and leaving 
an entrance facing west. The chief docks (see Dock for plan) 
are the Bassin Bcllot and the Bassin de 1'Eure. In the latter 
the mail-steamers of the CompagnJc Generate Transatlantique are 
berthed; and the Tancarville canal, by which river-boats unable 
to attempt the estuary of the Seine can make the port direct, 
enters the harbour by this basin. There are, besides, several 
repairing docks and a petroleum dock for the use of vessels carry- 
ing that dangerous commodity. The port, which is an important 
point of emigration, has regular steam-communication with 
New York (by the vessels of the Compagnie Generate Trans- 
atlantique) and with many of the other chief ports of Europe, 
North, South and Central America, the West Indies and Africa. 
Imports in 1007 reached a value of £57,686,000. The chief were 
cotton, for which Havre is the great French market, coffee, 
copper and other metals, cacao, cotton goods, rubber, skins and 
hides, silk goods, dye-woods, tobacco, oil-seeds, coal, cereals and 
wool. In the same year exports were valued at £47*130,000, the 
most important being cotton, silk and woollen goods, coffee, bides, 
leather, wine and spirits, rubber, tools and metal ware, earthen- 
ware and glass, clothes and millinery, cacao and fancy goods. 
In 1007 the total tonnage of shipping (with cargoes) reached its 
highest point, via. 5,671,975 tons (4018 vessels) compared with 
3,816,540 tons (3832 vessels) in 1808. Forty-two per cent of 
this shipping sailed under the British flag. France and Germany 
were Great Britain's most serious rivals. Havre possesses oil 
works, soap works, saw mills, flour mills, works for extracting 
dyes and tannin from dye-woods, an important tobacco manu- 
factory, chemical works and rope works. It also has metal- 
lurgical and engineering works which construct commercial and 
war-vessels of every kind as well as engines and machinery, 
cables, boilers, &c. 

Until 1 516 Havre was only a fishing village possessing a 
chapel dedicated to Notre-Dame de Grace, to which it owes 
the name, Havre (harbour) de Grace, given to it by Francis I. 
when be began the construction of its harbour. The town in 
1562 was delivered over to the keeping of Queen Elizabeth 
by Louis I., prince de Conde, leader of the Huguenots, and the 
command of it was entrusted to Ambrose Dudley, earl of Warwick; 
but the English were expelled in 1563, after a most obstinate 
siege, which was pressed forward by Charles EX. and his mother, 
Catherine de' Medici, in person. The defences of the town 
and the harbour- works were continued by Richelieu and com- 
pleted by Vauban. In 1604 it was vainly besieged by the 
English, who also bombarded it in 1759, 1704 and 1795- I- 
was a port of considerable importance as early as 157)1 and 
despatched vessels to the whale and cod-fishing at Spitsbergen 
and Newfoundland. In 1672 it became the entrepot of the 
French East India Company, and afterwards of the Senegal 
and Guinea companies. Napoleon I. raised it to a war harbour 
of the first rank, and under Napoleon III. works begun by Louis 
XVL were completed. 

See A. E. Bordy, Hisioire 64 ia vHU du Havre (Le Havre. 1880- 
1881). 

HAWAII (Hawaiian or Sandwich Islands), a Territory of 
the United States of America, consisting of a chain of islands 
in the North Pacific Ocean, eight inhabited and several unin- 
habited. The inhabited islands lie between latitudes 18° 54' 
and a 2 15' N., and between longitudes 154° 50' and 160 30' W., 
and extend about 380 m. from E.S.E. to W.N.W.; the unin- 
habited ones, mere rocks and reefs, valuable only for their 
guano deposits and shark- fishing grounds, continue the chain 
several hundred mites farther W.N.W. From Honolulu, the 
capital, which is about ioora. N.W. of the middle of the inhabited 
group, the distance to San Francisco is about 2100 m.; to 
Auckland, New Zealand, about 3810 m.; to Sydney, New South 
Wales, about 4410 m.; to Yokohama, about 3400 m.; to 
Hong-Kong, about 4920 m.; to Manila, about 4800 m. The 
total area of the inhabited islands is 6651 sq. m., distributed as 



follows: Hawaii, 4210; Maui, 728; Oahu, about 600; TCauai, 
547; Molokai, 261; Lanai, 139; Niihau, 97; Kahoolawc, 6ov 

All the islands are of volcanic origin, and have been built up by 
the eruptive process from a base about 15,000 ft. below the tea to a 
maximum height (Njauna Kea) on the largest island (Hawaii) of 
13823 ft. above the sea; altogether there are forty volcanic peaks. 
Evidence of slight upheaval is occasionally afforded by an elevated 
^j—i _._# _. ..- _!___- — -. __...• * .... . dence of the S. 

pc discovered by 

ar anccs, notably 

tli of the E. half 

of d by the sub* 

m ion of the coral 

ar ;ks are entirely 

vc mainly basalt. 

C wt distinguish* 

in eat number of 

cr enlarge slowly 

b) discharge vast 

la ;e of the several 

in it eruptions on 

th sterly (Hawaii) 

vc > the westward 

he n of craters by 

dc eroded on the 

m y the depth of 

so amount as well 
as variety of vegetable lite. 

Hawaii Island, from which the group and later the Territory 
was named, has the shape of a rude triangle with sides of 00 m., 
75 m. and 65 m. Its coast, unlike that of the other islands of 
the archipelago, has few coral reefs. Its surface consists mainly 
of the gentle slopes of five volcanic mountains which have 
encroached much upon one another by their eruptions. 



1789. or about that time, and deposits of volcanic sand, large stones, 
sponge-like scoria (pumice) and ashes for miles around are evidence 
of such an eruption. Since the Rev. William Ellis and a party of 
American missionaries first made the volcano known to the civilized 



1 Among the minor phenomena of Hawaiian volcanoes are the 
delicate glassy fibres called Pete's hair by the Hawaiian*, which are 
spun by the wind from the rising and falling drops of liquid lava, 
and blown over the edge or into the crevices of the crater. Pele in 
idolatrous times was the dreaded goddess of Kilauea, 



84 



HAWAII 



_^ !«£ 




170* Wm t6s* Long. 160* 



B Longitude Wwi islTof Cwwwi.h 



world in 1823, the eruptions have consisted mainly in the quiet 
discharge of lava through a subterranean passage into the sea. In 
the eruptions of 1823, 1832, 1840 and 1868 the floor of the crater 
rose on the eve of an eruption and then sank, sometimes hundreds 
of feet, with the discharge of lava; but since 1868 (in 1879, 1886, 
1891, 1894 and 1907; and once, before 1868, in 1855) this action 
has been confined to Halemaumau and such other pits as at the time 
existed. 

Mokuaweoweo, on the flat top of Mauna Loa, is a pit crater with 
a floor 3*7 sq. m. in area and sunk 500-600 ft. within walls that 
are almost vertical and that measure 9-47 m. in circumference. 
Formerly, on the eve of a great eruption of Mauna Loa, this crater 
often spouted forth great columns of flame and emitted clouds of 
vapour, but in modern times this action has usually been followed 
by a fracture of the mountain side from the summit down to a point 
1000 ft. or more below where the lava was discharged in great 
streams, the action at the summit diminishing or wholly ceasing 
when this discharge began. The first recorded eruption of Mauna 
Loa was ia 183a; since then there have been eruptions in 1851, 
185a, 1855, 1859. 1868, 1880-1881, 1887, 1896, 1809 and 1907. The 
eruptions of 1868, 1887 and 1907 were attended by earthquakes; 
in 1868 huge sea waves, 40 ft. in height, were raised, and, as they 
broke on the S. shore, they destroyed the villages of Punaluu, 
Ninole, Kawaa and Honuapo. But the eruptions of Mauna Loa 
have consisted mainly in the quiet discharge of enormous flows of 
lava: in 1859 the lava -stream, which began to run on the 23rd of 
January, flowed N.W., reached the sea, 33 m. distant, eight days 
later, and continued to flow into it untilthe 25th of November; 
and the average length of the flows from seven other eruptions is 
nearly 14 m. The surface of the upper slopes of Mauna Loa is 
almost wholly of two widely different kinds of barren lava-flows, 
called by the Hawaiians the pakochoe and the aa. The pakoekoe 
has a smooth but billowy or humraocky surface, and is marked by 
lines which show that it cooled as it flowed. The aa is lava broken 
into fragments having sharp and jagged edges. As the same stream 
sometimes changes abruptly from one kind to the other, the two 
kinds must be due to different conditions affecting the flow, and 
among the conditions which may cause a stream to break up into 
the aa have been mentioned the greater depth of the stream, a 
sluggish current, impediments in its course just as it Is granulating, 
ana, what is more probable, subterranean moisture which causes it 
to cool from below upward instead of from above downward as in 
the pakoekoe. The natives arc in the habit of making holes in the aa, 
and planting in them banana shoots or sweet-potato cuttings, and 
though the boles are simply filled with stones or fern leaves, the 



plants grow and in due time are productive. Another curious feature 
of Mauna Loa, and to some extent of other Hawaiian volcanoes, ia 
the great number of caves, some of them as much as 60 to 80 ft. in 
height and several miles in length; they were produced by the 
escape of lava over which a crust had formed. In the midst of 
barren wastes to the $.£. and S.W. of Kilauea are small chanaels 
with steam cracks, along which appears the only vegetation of the 
region. 

Maui, lying 26 m. N.W. of Hawaii, is composed of two 
mountains connected by an isthmus, Wailuku, 7 or 8 m. long, 
about 6 m. across, and about 160 ft. above the sea in its 
highest part. 

Mauna Haleakala, on the E. peninsula, has a height of 10,032 ft., 
and forms a great dome-like mass, with a circumference at the base 
of 90 m. and regular slopes of only 8° or 9*. It has numerous cinder 
cones on its S.W. slope, is well wooded on the N. and E. slopes, 
and has on its summit an extinct pit-crater which is one of the 
largest in the world. This crater is 7*48 nt. long, 2*37 m. wide, 
and covers 19 sq. m.; the circuit of its walls, which are composed of 
a hard grey clinkstone much fissured, is 20 m.; its greatest depth 
is 2720 Ft. At opposite ends are breaks in the walls a mile or more 
in width— one about 1000 ft., the other at least 3000 ft. in depth- 
through which poured the lava of probably the last great eruption. 
From the floor of the crater rise sixteen well-preserved cinder-cones, 
which range from more than 400 ft. to 900 ft. in height. Aloes the 
N. base ofthe mountain are numerous ravines (several hundred feet 
deep), to the bottom of which small streams of water fall in long 
cascades, but elsewhere on the eastern mountain there is littleerosion 
or other mark of age. That the mountainous mass of western Maui 
is much older is shown by the destruction of its crater, by ita sharp 
ridges and by deeply eroded gorges or valleys. Its highest peak, 
Puu Kukui, rises 5788 ft. above the sea, and directly under this 
is the head of lao Valley, 5 m. long and 2 m. wide, which has been cut 
in the mountain to a depth of 4000 ft. This and the smaller valleys 
are noted for the beauty of their tropical scenery. 

Kahoolav* is a small island 6 m. S.W. of Maui. It is 14 o- 
long by 6 m. wide. lis mountains, which rise to a height of 
1472 ft., are rugged and nearly destitute of verdure, but the 
intervening valleys afford pastiirage for sheep. 

Lanai is another small island, 7 m. W. of Maui, about xS m. 
long and 1 2 m. wide. It has a mountain range which rises to s 



HAWAII 



85 



maximum height, S.E. of its centre, of about 5480' ft- The NJ5. 
slope is cut by deep gorges, and at the bottom of one of these, 
which fa 2000 ft. deep, is the only water-supply on the island. 
On the S. side is a rolling table-land affording considerable 
pasturage for sheep, but over the whole N.W. portion of the 
island the trade winds, driving through the channel between 
Maui and Molofcai, sweep the rocks bare. Kaboolawe and Lanai 
are both privately owned. 

Molakaiy 8 m. N.W. of Maui, extends 40 m. from E. to W. 
and has an average width of nearly 7 m. From the S.W. ex- 
tremity of the island rises the backbone of a ridge which extends 
EJN.E. about 10 m., where it culminates in the round-topped 
hill of Mauna Loa, 1382 ft. above the sea. Both the northern 
and southern slopes of this ridge are cut by ravines and gulches, 
and along the N. shore is a steep sea-cliff. At the E. extremity 
of the ridge there is a sudden drop to a low and gently rolling 
plain, but farther on the surface rises gradually towards a range 
of mountains which comprises more than one-half the island 
and attains a maximum height of 4958 ft. in the peak of Kama- 
kou. The S. slope of this range is gradual but is cut by many 
straight and narrow ravines, in some instances to a great depth. 
The N. slope is abrupt, with precipices from 1000 to 4000 ft. 
in height. Extending N. from the foot of the precipice, a little 
E. of the centre of the island, is a comparatively low peninsula 
(separated from the mainland by a rock wall 2000 ft. high), 
on which is a famous leper settlement. The peninsula forms a 
separate county, Kalawao. 

Oahu, 23 m. N.W. of Molokai, has an irregular quadrangular 
form. It is traversed from S.E. to N.W. by two roughly parallel 
ranges of hill separated by a plain that is 20 m. long and in some 
parts 9 to 10 m. wide. The highest point in the island is Mauna 
Kaala, 4030 ft., in the Waianae or W. range; but the Koolau 
or E. range is much longer than the other, and its ridge is very 
much broken; on the land side there are many ravines formed 
by lateral spurs, but to the sea for 30 m. it presents a nearly 
vertical wall without a break. The valleys are remarkable for 
beautiful scenery,— peaks, cliffs, lateral ravines, cascades and 
tropical vegetation. There are few craters on the loftier heights, 
but on the coasts there are several groups of small cones with 
craters, some of lava, others of tufa. The greater part of the 
coast is surrounded by a coral reef, often half a mue wide; in 
several localities an old reef upheaved, sometimes xoo ft. high, 
forms part of the land. 

Kauai, 63 m. W.N.W. of Oahu, has an irregularly circular 
form with a maximum diameter of about 25 m. On the N.W. 
is a precipice 2000 ft. or more in height and above this is a 
mountain plain, but elsewhere around the island is a shore 
plain, from which rises Mount Waialeale to a height of 5*5© ft. 
The peaks of the mountain are irregular, abrupt and broken; 
its sides are deeply furrowed by gorges and ravines; the shore 
plain is broken by ridges and by broad and deep valleys; no 
other island of the group is so well watered on all sides by large 
mountain streams; and it is called " garden isle." 

Niikau, the most westerly of the inhabited islands, is 18 m. 
W. by S. of Kauai. It is 16 m. long and 6 m. wide. The western 
two-thirds consists of a low plain, composed of an uplifted 
coral reef and matter washed down from the mountains; but 
on the E. side the island rises precipitously from the sea and 
attains a maximum height of 1304 ft. at Paniau. There are 
large salt lagoons on the southern coast. 

Qimate. — The climate is cooler than that of other regions in the 
same latitude, and is very healthy. The sky is usually cloudless 
or onlv partly cloudy. The N.E. trades blow with periodic varia- 
tions from March to December; and the leeward coast, being pro- 
tected by high mountains, is refreshed by regular land and sea 
breezes. Dunns January, February and a part of March the wind 
blows strongly from the S. or S.W. ; and at this season an unpleasant 
hot, damp wind is sometimes felt. More rain falls from January to 
May than during the other months; very much more falls on the 
windward side ofthe principal islands than on the leeward; and the 
amount increases with the elevation also up to about 4000 ft. The 
greatest recorded extremes of local rainfall for a year within the larger 
islands range from la to 300 in. For Honolulu the mean annual 
rainfall (1884-1809) was 28-18 in.; the maximum 498a; and the 



86 



HAWAII 



snakes. Land-snails, mostly Achatinettida e , ace remarkably frequent 
and diverse; over 300 varieties exist. Insects are numerous, and 
of about 500 species of beetle some 80% are not known to exist 
elsewhere; cockroaches and green locusts are pests, aa are, also, 
mosquitoes,* wasps, scorpion*, centipedes and white ants, which 
have all been introduced from elsewhere. 

Soil. — The soil of the Territory is almost wholly a decomposition 
of lava, and in general differs much from the soils of the United 
States, particularly in the large amount of nitrogen (often more 
than 1*25% in cane and coffee soil, and occasionally 2-2%) and 
iron, and in the high degree of acidity. High up on the windward 
side of a mountain it' is thin, light red or yellow, and of inferior 
quality. Low down on the leeward side it is dark red and fertile, 
but still too pervious to retain moisture well. In the older valleys 
on the islands of Kauai, Oahu and Maui, as well as on the lowland 
plain of Molokai, the soil is deeper and usually, too, the moisture is 
retained by a heavy clay. In some places along the coast these is a 
narrow strip of decomposed coral limestone; often, too, a coral reef 
has served to catch the sediment washed down the mountain 
side until a deep sedimentary soil has been deposited. On the still 
lower levels the soil is deepest and most productive. 

Agriculture. — The tenure by w^ilch lands were held before 1838 
was strictly feudal, resembling that of Germany in the 4 Ith century, 
and lands were sometimes enfeoffed to the seventh degree. But 
in the " Great Division " which took place in 1848 and forms the 
foundation of present land titles, about 984,000 acres, nearly one- 
fourth of the inhabited area, were set apart for the crown, about 
1,495,000 acres for the government, and about 1,619,000 acres for 
the several chiefs; and the common people received fee-simple 
titles * for their house lots and the pieces 01 land which they culti- 
vated for themselves, about 28,600 acres, almost entirely in isolated 
patches of irregular shape hemmed in by the holdings of the crown, 
the government or the great chiefs. Generally the chiefs ran into 
debt; many died without heirs; and their lands passed largely 
into the hands of foreigners. At the abolition of the monarchy in 
1893, the crown domains were declared to be public lands, and, 
with the other government lands, were by the terms of annexation 
turned over to the United States in 1898. They had been offered for 
sale or lease in accordance with land acts (ot 1884 and 1895 — the 
latter corresponding generally to the land laws of New Zealand) 
designed to promote division into small farms and their .immediate 
improvement. In 1909 the area of the public land was about 
1,700,000 acres. In i960 there were in the Territory 2273 farms, of 
which 1209 contained less than 10 acres, 785 contained between 10 
and 100 acres, and 1 16 contained 1000 acres or more. The natives 
seldom cultivate more than half an acre apiece, and the Portuguese 
settlers usually only 25 or 30 acres at most. Of the total area of 
the Territory only 86,854 acres, or 2*77%, were under cultivation 
in 1900, and of this 65,687 acres, or 75*6%. were divided into 170 
farms and planted to sugar-cane, in 1909 it was estimated that 
213,000 acres (about half of which, was irrigated) were planted to sugar, 
one half being cropped each year. The average yield per acre of 
cane-sugar is the greatest in the world, 30 to 40 tons of cane being 
an average per acre, and as much as iof tons of sugar having been 
produced from a single acre under irrigation. The cultivation of the 
cane was greatly encouraged by the Reciprocity Treaty of 1875, 
which established practically free trade between the islands and the 
United States, and since 1879 it has been widely extended by means 
of irrigation, the water being obtained both by pumping from 
numerous artesian wells and by conducting surface water through 
canals and ditches. The sugar farms are mostly on the islands 
of Hawaii, Oahu, Maui and Kauai, at the bases of mountains; those 
on the leeward side have the better soil, but require much more 
irrigating. The product increased from 26,072429 tt> in 1876 
to 259,789462 lb in 1890, 542,098.500 lb in 1899 and about 
1 .060,000,000 lb (valued at more than $40,000,000) in 1909. Nearly 
all of it is exported to the United States. Rice was the second 
product in importance until competition with Japan, Louisiana and 
Texas made the crop a poor investment; improved culture and 
machinery may restore rice culture to its former importance. It is 
grown almost wholly by Japanese and Chinese on small low farms 
along the coasts, mostly on the islands of Kauai and Oahu. In 
1899 the product amounted to 33,442400 lb; in 1907 about 12,000 
acres were planted, and the crop wasestimated to be worth $2,500,000. 
Coffee of good quality is grown at elevations ranging between 1000 
to 3000 ft. above the sea; the Hawaiian product is called Kona 
coffee — from Kona. a district of the S. side of Hawaii island, where 
much of it is grown. In 1909 about 4500 acres were in coffee, 
the value of the crop was ¥350,000; and 1,763,119 ft> of coffee, 
valued at $211,535, were exported from Hawaii to the mainland of 
the United States. A few bananas and (especially from Oaho) 
pineapples of fine quality are exported; since 1901 the canning of 



■The entomological department of the Hawaii Experiment 
Station undertakes " mosquito control." and in 1005-1906 imported 
top-minnows {PoecUiidad) to destroy mosquito larvae. 

4 These and other title-holders received corresponding 1 
the use of irrigation ditches, and to fish in certain sea areas a 
to their holdings. 



its to 



HAWAII 



*7 



pineapples ha* been successfully carried on, and in the year ending 
May xi, 1907. 186,700 cases were exported, being packed in nine 
canneries. Oranges, lemons, limes, figs, mangoes, grapes and 
peaches, besides a considerable variety of vegetables, are raised 
in small quantities (or local consumption. In 1909 the exports of 
fruits ana nuts to the continental United States were valued at 
$1457,644. An excellent quality of sisal is grown. Rubber trees 
have been planted with some success, particularly on the eastern 
part of the island of Maui; they were not tapped for commercial 
use until 1909. In 1997 there were vanilla plantations in the islands 
of Oahu and Hawaii. Tobacco of a high grade, especially for 
wrapper*, has been grown at the Agricultural Experiment Station's 
farm at Hamakua, on the island of Hawaii, where the tobacco is 
practically " shade grown " under the afternoon fogs from Mauna 
Kea. Cotton and silk culture have been experimented with on the 
islands; .and the work of the Hawaiian Agricultural Experiment 
Station is of great value, in introducing new crops, in improving 
old, in studying soils ana fertilizers ana in entomological research. 
Honey is a crop of some importance; in 1908 the yield was about 
050 tons of honey and 15 tons of wax. The small islands of Lanai, 
Nuhan and Kahoolawe are devoted chiefly to the raising of sheep 
and cattle— Niihau is one large privately owned sheep-ranch. 
There are large cattle-ranches on the islands supplying nearly all 
the meat for domestic consumption, and cattle-raising is second in 
importance to the sugar industry. It was estimated in 1908 that 
there were about 130,500 cattle and about 99*900 sheep oa the 
;.u„^o The " native cattle, descended from those left on the 



islands by early navigators, are being improved by breeding with 
imported Hereford, Shorthorn, Angus and Holstein bulls, the Here- 
fords being the best for the purpose. In the fiscal year 1908, 
\S9.4»3 !b of wool (valued at 858.133) «nd 928^99 lb of raw hides 



, lb of wool (valued at 858.133) And 9*8.599 lb 

I at 887,599) were shipped from the Territory to the United 



Minerals. — The islands have large (onworked) supplies of pumice, 
sandstone, sulphur, gypsum, alum and mineral-paint ochres, and 
some salt, kaolin ana sal-ammoniac but otherwise they are without 
mineral wealth other than lava rocks for building purposes. 

Manufactures. — The manufactures are chiefly sugar, fertilizers, 
and such products of the foundry and machine shop as are required 
for the machinery of the sugar factories. Most of the manufacturing 
industries, indeed, are maintained for supplying' the local market, 
there being only three important exceptions— the manufacture of 
sugar, the cleaning of coffee and the cleaning and polishing of rice. 
The manufacture of sugar, which began between 1830 and 1840, 
has long been much the most important of the manufacturing in- 
dustries: thus in 1000 the value of the sugar production was 
$19,254,773, and the total value of all manufactures, including 
custom work and repairing, was only $24,092,068. Next to sugar, 
fertilizers were the most important manufactured product, their value 
being $1,150,625; the products of the establishments for the 
polishing and cleaning of rice were valued at $664,300. Of the total 
product tn 1900, only 18*5% (by value) is to be credited to the city 
of Honolulu. The growth of manufacturing is much hampered by 
the lack of labour. Excellent water power is utilized on the island 
of Kauai in an electric plant. 

Communications. — There are good wagon roads on the islands, 
some of them macadamized, built of the hard blue lava rock. 
Hawaii had in 1909 about 200 m. of railway, of which the principal 
line is that of the Oahu Railway & Land Company (about 89 m.), 
extending from Honolulu W. and N. along the coast to Kahuku 
about one-half the distance around Oahu; another line from 
Kahuku Mill, the r— # — •■— ■- •—*-* ** •»- :«i—«« c p •* u~q. 
luhi, waa projecto ilo 

Railroad (about 4 id 

lumber; other rail' ar 

estates and in col m 

and Maui. Each c 1 a 

local steamboat s ar 

service of seven trai ip 

Co. , the Canadian- wi 

Co., the Oceanic Si lie 

Mexican Oriental ly 

station for vessels b iia 

and Southern Asia. ed 

in traffic between i >). 

Honolulu has cabk ad 

the several islands 

Commerce.— -The r ——~.. _ . ..« — ~-_ r — p_, — — _ — — . — —> 
of the North Pacific, has made it commercially important since the 
days of the whale fishery, and it has a practical monopoly of coaling, 
watering and victualling. Its main disadvantage is the lack of 
harbours — Honolulu and Pearl Harbor are the only ones in the archi- 
pelago: tnt under the River and Harbour Act of 1905 examinations 
*nd surveys were made to improve Hilo Bay on the island of Hawaii. 
Pearl Harbor is the U.S. naval station, and a great naval dock, 
nearly laoo ft. long, was projected for the station in 1908. Within 
recent years commerce has grown greatly in volume: it has always 
been almost entirely with the United States. In 1880 the value of 
imports from the United States was $2,086,000, that of exports 
to the United States was $4,606,000; In 1907 the value of shipments 



of domestic merchandise from the United States to Hawaii was 
•15*357.907. and the value of shipments of domestic merchandise 
from Hawaii to the United States was $31,984,433, of which 
$30,111,524. was the value of brown sugar, $133,133 the value of 
nee, 8601,748 the value of canned fruits, $124,146 the value of 
green, ripe or dried fruits, $117,403 the value of hides and skins, 
and $105,515 the value of green or raw coffee. The shipments of 
foreign merchandise each way are relatively insignificant. In the 
fiscafyear 1908 the exports from Hawaii to foreign countries were 
valued at $597,640, ten times as much as in 1905 (859,541): the 
imports into Hawaii from foreign countries were valued at $^682,399 
in the fiscal year 1908, as against $3,0x4464 in 1905. 

Population.— Tht total population of the islands in 1890 waa 
89,990; in 1900 it was 154,001, an increase within the decade 
of 71*13%; in 19x0 it was 191,909. In 190ft there were about 
72,000 Japanese, 18,000 Chinese, 5000 Koreans, ^23,000 Portu- 
guese, 2000 Spanish, 2000 Porto Ricans, 35,000 H&waiians and 
part Hawaiians and 12,000 Teutons. Of the total for 1900 
there were 6x,in Japanese, 25,767 Chinese and 233 negroes; 
of the aame total there were 00,780 foreign-born, of whom 
56,234 were natives of Japan, and 6512 were natives of Portugal 
There were in all in 1900, 106,369 males (69*1%; a preponder- 
ance due to the large number of Mongolian labourers, whose 
wives are left in Asia) and only 47,632 females. About three- 
fifths of the Hawaiians and nearly all of American, British or 
North European descent are Protestants. Most of the Portuguese 
and about one-third of the native Hawaiians are Roman Catholics. 
The Mormons daim more than 4000 adherents, whose principal 
settlement is at Laie, on the north-east shore of Oahu; the first 
Mormon missionaries came to the islands in 1850. The popula- 
tion of 1910 was distributed among the several islands as follows: 
Oahu, 82,028; Hawaii, 55,382; Kauai andNiihau, 23,952; Kalawao, 
785; and Maui, Lanai, Kahoolawe and Molokaf, 29,762. The 
population of Honolulu district, the entire urban population of the 
Territory, was 22,007 in 1890, 39,306 in 1000, and 52,183 in 191a 

The aboriginal Hawaiians (sometimes called Kanakas, from 
a Hawaiian word kanaka, meaning " man ") belong to the 
Malayo-Polynesian race; they probably settled in j^^. 
Hawaii in the xoth century, having formerly lived in JJJJiJ. 
Samoa, and possibly before that in Tahiti and the osc. 
Marquesas. Their reddish-brown skin has been com- 
pared in hue to tarnished copper. Their hair is dark brown or 
black, straight, wavy or curly; the beard is thin, the face broad, 
the profile not prominent, the eyes large and expressive, the 
nose somewhat flattened, the lips thick, the teeth exceUent-in 
shape and .of a pearly whiteness. The skull is sub-brachycephalic 
in type, with an index of 82*6 from living " specimens " and 79 
from a large collection of skulls; it is never prognathous. Most 
of the people are of moderate stature, but the chiefs and the 
women of their families have been remarkable for their height, 
and 400 pounds was formerly not an unusual weight for one of 
this class. This corpulence was due not alone to over-feeding but 
to an almost purely vegetable diet; stoutness was a part of the 
ideal of feminine beauty. The superiority in physique of the 
nobles to the common people may have been due in part to a 
system of massage, the hmi-lomi; it is certainly contrary 
tq the belief in the bad effects of inbreeding— among the upper 
classes marriage was almost entirely between near relatives. 

The Rev. William EBis, an early English missionary, described 
the natives as follows: " The inhabitants of these islands are, 
considered physically, amongst the finest races in the Pacific, 
bearing the strongest resemblance to the New Zealanders in 
stature, and in their well-developed muscular limbs. The tattoo- 
ing of their bodies is less artistic than that of the New Zealanders, 
and much more limited than among some of the other islanders. 
They are also more hardy and industrious than those living 
nearer the equator. This in all probability arises from their 
salubrious climate, and the comparative sterility of their soil 
rendering them dependent upon the cultivation of the ground 
for the yarn, the arum, and the sweet potato, their chief articles 
of food. Though, like all Undisciplined races, the Sandwich 
Islanders [Hawaiians] have proved deficient in firm and steady 
perseverance, tbey manifest considerable intellectual capability. 
Their moral character, when first visited by Europeans, was not 



88 



HAWAII 



superior to that of other islanders; and excepting when improved 
and preserved by the influence of Christianity, it has suffered 
much from the vices of intemperance and licentiousness 
introduced by foreigners. Polygamy prevailed among the duels 
and rulers, and women were subject to all the humiliations of 
the tabu system, which subjected them to many privations, and 
kept them socially in a condition of inferiority to the other sex. 
Infanticide was practised to some extent, the children destroyed 
being chiefly females. Though less superstitious than the 
Tahitians, the idolatry of the Sandwich Islanders was equally 
barbarous and sanguinary, as, in addition to the chief objects 
of worship included in the mythology of the other islands, the 
supernatural beings supposed to reside in the volcanoes and 
direct the action of subterranean fires rendered the gods objects 
of peculiar terror. Human sacrifices were slain on several 
occasions, and vast offerings presented to the spirits supposed to 
preside over the volcanoes, especially during the periods of 
actual eruptions. The requisitions of their idolatry were severe 
and its rites cruel and bloody. Grotesque and repulsive wooden 
figures, animals and the bones of chiefs were the objects of 
worship. Human sacrifices were offered whenever a temple 
was to be dedicated, or a chief was sick, or a war was to be under- 
taken; and these occasions were frequent. The apprehensions 
of the people with regard to a future state were undefined, but 
fearful. The lower orders expected to be slowly devoured by 
evil spirits, or to dwell with the gods in burning mountains. 
The several trades, such as that of fisherman, the tiller of the 
ground, and the builder of canoes and houses, had each their pre- 
siding deities. Household gods were also kept, which the natives 
worshipped in their habitations. One merciful provision, 
however, had existed from time immemorial, and that was 
[the puuhonuas] sacred indosures, places of refuge, into which 
those who fled in time of war, or from any violent pursuer, 
might enter and be safe. To violate their sanctity was one of 
the greatest crimes of which a man could be guilty." The native 
religion was an admixture of idolatry and hero-worship, ol some 
ethical but little moral force. The king was war chief, priest and 
god in one, and the shocking licence at the death of a king* was 
probably due to the feeling that all law or restraint was annulled 
by the death of the lung— incarnate law. The mythic and 
religious legends of the people were preserved in chants, handed 
down from generation to generation; and in like poetic form 
was kept the knowledge of the people of botany, medicine and 
other sciences. Name-songs, written at the birth of a- chief, 
gave his genealogy and the deeds of his ancestors; dirges and 
love-songs were common. These were without rhyme or rhythm, 
but had alliteration and a parallelism resembling Hebrew poetry. 
Drums, gourd and bamboo flutes,and a kind of guitar, were known 
before Cook's day. 

When the islands first became known to Europeans, the 
Hawaiian family was in a stage including both polyandry 
and polygyny, and, according to Morgan, older than either: 
two or more brothers, with their wives, or two or more sisters 
with their husbands, cohabited with seeming promiscuity. 
This system called punalua (a word which in the modern verna- 
cular means merely " dear friend ") was first brought to the 
attention of ethnologists in 1871 by Lewis H. Morgan (who 
was incorrect in many of his premises) and was made the basis 
of his second stage, the punaluan, in the evolution of the family. 
These conditions did not last long after the coming of the mission- 
aries. Descent was more commonly traced through the female 
line. As regard cannibalism, it appears that the heart and liver 
of the human victims offered in the temples were eaten as a 
religious rite, and that the same parts of any prominent warrior 
slain in battle were devoured by the victor chiefs, who believed 
that they would thereby inherit the valour of the dead man. 
Under taboo as late as 181 9 women were to be put to death if they 
ate bananas, cocoa-nuts, pork, turtles or certain fish. In the 
days of idolatry the only dress worn by the men was a narrow 
strip of cloth wound around the loins and passed between the 
legs. Women wore a short petticoat made of kapa doth (already 
referred to), which reached from the waist to the knee. But now 



the common class of men Wear a shirt and, trousers; the better 
class are attired in the European fashion. The women are dad 
in the holoka, a loose white or coloured garment with sleeves, 
reaching from the neck to the feet. A coloured handkerchief 
is twisted around the head or a straw hat is worn. Both sexes 
delight in adorning themselves with garlands (kis) of flowers and 
necklaces of coloured seeds. The Hawaiians are a good-tempered, 
light-hearted and pleasure-loving race. They have many games 
and sports, including boxing, wrestling (both in and out of water), 
hill-su'ding, spear-throwing, and a game of bowls played with 
stone discs. Both sexes are passionately fond of riding. They 
delight to be in the water and swim with remarkable skill and 
ease. In the exciting sport of surf-riding, which always astonishes 
strangers, they balance .themselves lying, kneeling or standing 
on a small board which is carried landwards on the curling crest 
of a great roller. All games were accompanied by gambling. 
Dances, espedally the indecent ktda, " danse du ventre," were 
favourite entertainments. 

Even at the time when they were first known to Europeans, 
they had stone and lava hatchets, shark's- tooth knives, hard- 
wood spades, kapa doth or paper, mats, fans, fish-hooks and nets, 
woven baskets, &c, and they bad introduced a rough sort ol 
irrigation of the inland country with long canals from highlands 
to plains. They derived their sustenance chiefly from pork 
and fish (both fresh and dried), from seaweed (limu), and from 
the kalo (Colocasia cntiqtwrum, var. esadenio), the banana, 
sweet potato, yam, bread-fruit and cocoa-nut. From the root 
of the kalo is made the national dish called poi; after having been 
baked and well beaten on a board with -a stone pestle it is made 
into a paste with water and then allowed to ferment for a few 
days, when it is ready to be eaten. One of the table delicacies 
of former days was a particular breed of dog which was fed 
exdusivdy on pdi before it was killed, cooked and served. Like 
other South Sea Islanders they made an intoxicating drink, 
awa or kava, from the roots of the Macro piper lalijotium or 
Piper metkysticum; in early times this could be drunk only by 
nobles and priests. The native dwellings are constructed of 
wood, or occasionally are huts thatched with grass at the sides 
and top. What little cooking is undertaken among the poorer 
natives is usually done outside. The oven consists of a hole 
in the ground in winch a fire is lighted and stones made hot; 
and the fire having been removed, the food is wrapped up i* 
leaves and placed in the hole beside the hot stones and covered 
up until ready; or else, as is now more common, the cooking 
is done in an old kerosene-oil can over a fire. 

The Hawaiian language is a member of the widely-diffused 
Malayo-Polynesian group and dosdy resembles the dialect of 
the Marquesas; Hawaiians and New Zealanders, although 
occupying the most remote regions north and south at which 
the race has been found, can understand each other without 
much difficulty. Various unsuccessful attempts have been made 
to prove the language Aryan in its origin. It is soft and har- 
monious, being highly vocalic in structure. Every -syllable is 
open, ending in a vowd sound, and short sentences may be 
constructed wholly of vocalic sounds. The only consonants are 
k, /, *t, n and p, which with the gently aspirated h, the five, vowels, 
and the vocalic w, make up all the letters in use. The letters r 
and t have been discarded in favour of / and k, as expressing 
more accuratdy the native pronunciation, so that, for example, 
iaro, the former name of the Colocasia plant, is now kalo. The 
language was not reduced to a written form until after the 
arrival of the missionaries. A Hawaiian spelling book was 
printed in 1822; in 1834 two newspapers were founded; and in 
1839 the first translation of the Bible was published. 

In spite of moral and material progress— indeed largely because 
of changes in their food, dothing, dwellings and of other " advan- 
tages " of civilization — the race is probably dying out. Captain 
Cook estimated the number of natives at 400,000, probably as 
over-estimate; in 1823 the American missionaries estimated 
their number at 142,000; the census of 1832 showed the popula- 
tion to be 130,313; the census of 1878 proved that the number 
of natives was no more than 44,088. In 1890 they numbered 



HAWAII 



89 



54,43^; in 1900, 29,834, a decrease of 4602 or 15*3% within 
the decade. To account for this it is said that the blood of the 
race has become poisoned by the introduction of foreign dis- 
eases. The women are much less numerous than the men; and 
the married ones have few children at the most; two out of 
three have none. Moreover, the mothers appear to have little 
maternal instinct and neglect their offspring. It is, however, 
thought by some that these causes are now diminishing in force, 
and that the " fittest " of the race may survive. The part- 
Hawaiians, the offspring of intermarriage between Hawaiian 
women and men of other races, increased from 3420 in 1878 to 
6x86 in 1890 and 7835 in 1000. 

Thepresi ty 

of 1875 witl an 

., < he 

** ! of 

Portuguese be 

next ten y he 

islands; in he 

Azores and of 

Portuguese ar 

from 16.00c is. 

They have w- 

abiding. I ct 

about Mab of 

Portuguese >n, 

using funds to 

encourage t n- 

migratioo 1 mi 

through co ve 

also been 1 a 

cognate rac ly 

unsattafact< Is. 

were broug! nd 

1884; but 1 as 

citizens, ar 

There neve 

and China. 

the islands 

and econoir 

ised under I 

was in 185 

During the 

free immigi 

sent a desp 

Again, in / 

days five s 

passengers, 

that severs 

the Hawaii 

Hong Kon| 

Chinese fn 

immigratio 

landing of 1 

The numbt 

The com** 

subjects to 

a labour c 

the Japane 

in 1884 to 

recruited fr 

show no in 

of making an 

end to all de 

all Chinese tiy 

other Terri *s 

of the a6tl nd 

migration ( to 

perform lal 

of Columfa 

extended t< 

and Japan 1 

and several 

of contract 

1900, and l 

their work 

labourers t 

or profit -sh 

An inters. .. p * „ — r ~~ / --- r ™ 

the large Astatic clement in the population. The Japanese and 
Koreans, and in less measure the Chinese, act as domestic servants, 
work under white contractors on irrigating ditches and reservoirs, 
do most of the plantation labour and compete successfully with 
whites and. native islanders in all save skilled urban occupations, 
such as printing and the manufacture of machinery. The '* Yellow 



IT- 



>e; 



ng 



Pcnl ' is considered less dangerous in Hawaii than formerly, although 
it was used as a political cry in the campaign for American annexa- 
tion. No success met the apparently well-meaning efforts of the 
Central Japanese League which was organized in November and 
December 1903 to promote the observance of law and order by the 
Japanese in the islands, who assumed a too independent attitude and 
felt themselves free from governmental control whether Japanese 
or American; indeed, after the League had been in operation 
for a year or more, it almost seemed that it contributed to industrial 
disorders among the Japanese. At about the same time Japanese 
immigration to Hawaii fell off upon the opening of new fields for 
colonization by the Russo-Japanese War, and Korean immigration 
was promoted by employers on the islands. From the first of 
January 1903 to the 30th of Tune 1905 Japanese immigrants num- 
bered 18,027; Koreans 7388 (four Koreans to every ten Japanese); 
but in the last twelve months of this same period there were 4733 
Koreans to 5941 Japanese (eight Koreans to every ten Japanese). 
Another fact which is possibly contributing to the solution of the 
pf . ,_•_._.- -i_ L _ » . numbers 

as Hawaii 
be ber 1905 
ni Japanese 
in spending 
fig number 
lei tocember 
IS the same 
p« is shown 
bj iry 1906) 
oc 1 months 
fn itrictions 
b) eatly de- 
er ec r casing 
ra Japanese 
is : ratio of 
fe ar 1907- 
15 as in the 

Administration. — The Hawaiian Islands are governed under 
an Act of Congress, signed by the president on the 30th of April 
1000, which first organised them as a Territory of the United 
States. The legislature, which meets biennially at Honolulu, 
consists of a Senate of 15 members holding office for four years, 
and a House of Representatives of 30 members holding office 
for two years. In order to vote for Representatives or Senators, 
the elector must be a male citizen of the United States who has 
attained the age of twenty-one years, has lived in the Territory 
not less than one year preceding, and is able to speak, read and 
write the English or Hawaiian language. No person is allowed 
to vote by reason of being in or attached to the army or navy. 
The executive power is vested in a governor, appointed by the 
president and holding office for four years. He must not be 
less than thirty-five years of age and must be a citizen of the 
Territory. The secretary of the Territory is appointed in like 
manner for a term of the same length. The governor appoints, 
by and with the consent of the Senate of the Territory, an 
attorney-general, treasurer, commissioner of public lands, 
commissioner of agriculture and forestry, superintendent of 
public works, superintendent of public instruction, commissioners 
of public instruction, auditor and deputy-auditor, surveyor, 
high sheriff, members of the board of health, board of prison 
inspectors, board of registration, inspectors of election, &c 
All such officers are appointed for four years except the com- 
missioners of public instruction and the members of the said 

1 Large numbers of Japanese immigrants have used the Hawaiian 
Islands merely as a means of gaining admission at the mainland 
ports of the United States. For, as the Japanese government 
would issue only a limited number of passports to the mainland but 
would quite readily grant passports to Honolulu, the latter were 
accepted, and after a short stay on some one of the islands the im- 
migrants would depart on a " coastwise " voyage to some mainland 
port. The increasing numbers arriving by this means, however, 
provoked serious hostility in the Pacific coast states, especially in 
San Francisco, and to remedy the difficulty Congress inserted a 
clause in the general immigration act of the 20th of February 1907 
which provides that whenever the president is satisfied that passports 
issued by any foreign government to any other country than the 
United States, or to any of its insular possessions, or to the Canal 
Zone, " are being used for the purpose of enabling the holders to 
come to the continental territory of the United States to the detri- 
ment of labour conditions therein," he may refuse to admit them. 
This provision has been successful in reducing the number of Japanese 
coming to the mainland from Hawaii. 



9° 



HAWAII 



boards, whose terms are as provided by the laws of the Territory ; 
all must be citizens of the Territory. The judicial power is 
vested in a supreme court, 5 circuit courts, and 29 district 
courts, each having a jurisdiction corresponding to similar 
courts in each state in the Union; and, entirely distinct from 
these territorial courts, Hawaii has a United States district 
court. A Supplementary Act of the 3rd of March 1005 provides 
that writs of error and appeals may be taken from the Supreme 
Court of Hawaii to the Supreme Court of the United States 
" in all cases where the amount involved exclusive of costs or 
value exceeds the sum of five thousand dollars." The Territory 
was without the forms of local government common to the 
United States until 1005, when the Territorial legislature divided 
it into five counties 1 without, however, giving to them the 
usual powers of taxation. Each county has the following 
officers: a board of supervisors, a clerk, a treasurer, an auditor, 
an assessor and tax-collector, a sheriff and coroner, and an 
attorney. The members (from five to nine) of the board of 
supervisors are elected by districts into which the county is 
divided, usually only one from each. All county officers arc 
elected for a term of two years. The act of 1000 provides for 
the election of a delegate to Congress, and prescribes that the 
delegate shall have the qualifications necessary for membership 
in the Hawaiian Senate, and shall be elected by voters qualified 
to vote for members of the House of Representatives of Hawaii. 
As usual, the delegate has a right to take part in the debates in 
the national House of Representatives, but may not vote. 

ie Territory is the leper 
1 on the N. side of the 
natural wall between 
5 an asylum for lepers 
ty under government 
at first unspeakably 
ue to Father Daroien, 
te patients are almost 
- is slowly but steadily 
here were at Molokai 
istants, including the 
ge of the homes. In 
mtcd f 1 00,000 for a 
ly of the methods of 
' and $50,000 a year 
;ory to be established 
ceded to the United 

r ion. The cession was 

made soon afterward by the territorial government. In 1907-1908 
a home for non-leprous boys of leprous parents was established at 
Honolulu. Another public charity of Hawaii is the general free 
dispensary maintained by the territorial government at Honolulu. 

Edttcalton. — Education is universal, compulsory and free. Every 
child between the ages of six and fifteen must attend cither a public 
school or a duly authorized private school. Consequently the per- 
centage of illiteracy is extremely low. The school system is essenti- 
ally American in its text-books and in its methods, thanks to the 
foundations laid by American missionaries. Between 1820 and 1824 
the missionaries taught about 2000 natives to read. Several im« 

C)rtant schools were founded before 1840, when the first written 
ws were published. Among these was a law providing for com- 
pulsory education, and decreeing that no illiterate born after the 
beginning of Liholiho's reign should hold office, and that no illiterate 
man or woman, born after the same date, could marry. The first 
Hawaiian minister of public instruction was the Rev. William 
Richards (1792-1847), who held office from 1843 to 1847, and was 
followed by Richard Armstrong (1805-1860), an American Presby- 
terian missionary, the father of General S. (£ Armstrong. He laid 
stress on the importance of manual and industrial training during 
his term of office (1 847-1855), and was succeeded by a board of 
education (1855-1865). of which he was first president; then an 
inspector-general of schools was appointed, Judge Abraham For- 
nander being the first inspector; in 1896 an executive department 
was created under a minister of public instruction and six com- 



1 These are: the county of Hawaii, consisting of the island of the 
same name; the county of Maui, including the islands of Maui, 
Lanai and Kahoolawe, and the greater part of Molokai; the county 
of Kalawao, being the leper settlement on Molokai; the city and 
county of Honolulu (created from the former county of Oahu by 
an act of 1907, which came into effect in 1909), consisting of the 
island of Oahu and various small islands, of which the only ones of 
any importance are the Midway Islands, 1232 m. from Honolulu, 
a Pacific cable relay station and a post of the U.S. navy marines; 
and the county of Kauai, including Kauai and Niihau islands. 



misttoners; in 1900 a superintendent of public instruction was 
first appointed. English is by law the medium of instruction in all 
schools, both public and private, although other languages may be 
taught in addition. Formal instruction in Hawaiian ceased in 1898. 
Th « ...._.. ._ : :._ t ,._ ...._.__ ... , n I9o8 thcfe 

wc of whom were 
Ja aiian, 1872% 
Pc schools with 
4* I at Honolulu, 
wi .1 legislature of 
>9 mic Arts of the 
T« y. The Hono- 
lul I buildings and 
g* 1 ui, founded in 
18 instruction to 
Hi nd mechanical 
dr ■) at Waialee. 
on he teaching of 
se' s, and a simple 
foi of the schools 
in chools in 1903. 
Bi ie independent 
scl the first place. 
Tl > (1831-1884). 
th< t her extensive 
lai :. They furnish 
a j boys and girls, 
in • of study, and 
exi ling schools for 
Hi most advanced 
coi ich occupies a 
be e was founded 
in Jdren. and was 
ch icd with build- 
ing r , , ._„ 9300.000. 

Finance.— The revenue of the Territory for the fiscal year ending 
the 30th of June 1008 amounted to $2.669.748-32 , of which 
$640,051*42 was the proceeds of the tax on real estate. $635.26581 
was the proceeds of the tax on personal property; and among the 
larger of the remaining items were the income tax ($266.24 1-74), 
waterworks ($141 ,898*04), public lands (sales. $37.585*75; revenue, 
$122,541-71) and licences ($206,374*28). On the 30th ot June 1908 
the bonded debt of the Territory was $3,979,000; there was on hand 
net cash, without floating debt, $677 ,648 48. 

History.— -The history of the islands before their discovery 
by Captain James Cook, in 1778, is obscure.* This famous 
navigator, who named the islands in honour of the earl of Sand- 
wich, was received by the natives with many demonstrations 
of astonishment and delight; and offerings and prayers were 
presented to him by their priest in one of the temples; and 
though in the following year he was killed by a native when he 
landed in Kealakckua Bay in Hawaii, his bones were preserved 
by the priests and continued to receive offerings and homage 
from the people until the abolition of idolatry. At the time of 
Cook's visit the archipelago seems to have been divided into 
three distinct kingdoms: Hawaii; Oahu and Maui; and Lanai 
and Molokai. On the death of the chief who ruled Hawaii at 
that time there succeeded one named Kamehameha (1 736-1819), 
who appears to have been a man of quick perception and great 
force of character. When Vancouver visited the islands in 1792, 
he left sheep and neat cattle,' protected by a ten years' taboo, 
and laid down the keel of a European ship for Kamehameha. 
Ten or twelve years later Kamehameha had 20 vessels (of 25 
to* 50 tons), which traded among the islands. He afterwards 
purchased others from foreigners. Having encouraged a warlike 
spirit in his people and having introduced firearms, Kamehameha 
attacked and overcame the chiefs of the other kingdoms one after 
another, until (in 1795) he became undisputed master of the whole 
group. He made John Young (c. 1775-1835) and Isaac Davis, 
Americans from one of the ships of Captain Met calf which visited 
the island in 1789, his advisers, encouraged trade with foreigners, 

* Their discovery in the 16th century (in 1542 or 1555 by Juan 
Gaetan, or in 1528 when two of the vessels of Alva ro de Saavcdra 
were shipwrecked here and the captain of one, with his sister, sur- 
vived and intermarried with the natives) seems probable, because 
there are traces of Spanish customs in the islands; and they are 
marked in their correct latitude on an English chart pf 1687, which 
is apparently based on Spanish maps; a later Spanish chart (1743) 
gives a group of islands io° E. of the true position of the Hawaiian 
Islands. 

* The first horses were left by Captain R. J. Cleveland in 1803. 



HAWAII 



9* 



and derived from its profits a Urge increase of revenue as well 
as the means of consolidating bis power. He <fied in 1819, and 
was succeeded by his son, Liiohilo, or Kamehameha II., a mild 
and well-disposed prince, but destitute of his father's energy. 
One of the first acts of Kamehameha II. was, for vicious and 
Selfish reasons, to abolish taboo and idolatry throughout the 
Islands. Some disturbances were caused thereby, but the 
insurgents were defeated. 

On the 31st of March 18 20 missionaries of the American Board 
of Commissioners for Foreign Missions— two clergymen, two 
teachers, a physician, a farmer, and a printer, each with his 
wife — and three Hawaiians educated in the Cornwall (Con* 
necticut) Foreign Missionary School, arrived from America 
and began their labours at Honolulu. A short time afterwards 
the British government presented a small schooner to the king, 
and this afforded an opportunity for the Rev. William Ellis, 
the well-known missionary, to visit Honolulu with a number 
of Christian natives from the Society Islands. Finding the 
language of the two groups nearly the same, Mr Ellis, who had 
spent several years in the southern islands, was able to assist 
the American missionaries in reducing the Hawaiian language 
to a written form. In 1825 the ten commandments were recog- 
nized by the king as the basis of a code of laws. In the years 
1 830- 1 84 5 the educational work of the American missionaries 
was so successful that hardly a native was unable to read and 
write. A law prohibiting drunkenness (1835) was followed in 
1838 by a licence law and in 1839 by a law prohibiting the 
importation of spirits and taxing wines fifty cents a gallon; in 
1840 another prohibitory law was enacted; but licence laws 
soon made the sale of liquor common. Missionary effort was 
particularly fruitful in Hilo, where Titus Coan (1801-1882), sent 
out in 1835 by the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign 
Missions, worked in repeated revivals, induced most of his 
church members to give up tobacco even, and received prior to 
1880 more than 12,000 members into a church which became 
self-supporting and sent missions to the Gilbert Islands and the 
Marquesas. In 1823 Keopuolani, the king's mother, was baptized; 
and on a single Sunday in 1838 Coan baptized 1705 converts at 
Hilo. In 1864 the American Board withdrew its contro^of 
evangelical work. 

In 1824 the king and queen of the Hawaiian Islands paid a 
visit to England, and both died there of measles. His successor, 
Kamehameha III. ruled from 1825 to 1854. In 1839 Kame- 
hameha III. signed a Bill of Rights and in 1840 he promulgated 
the first constitution of the realm; in 1842 a code of laws was 
proclaimed; by 1848 the feudal system of land tenure was 
completely abolished; the first legislature met in 1845 and full 
suffrage was granted in 1852, but in 1864 suffrage was restricted. 
Progress was at times interrupted by the conduct of the officers 
of foreign powers. On one occasion (July 1839) French officers 
abrogated the laws (particularly against the importation of 
liquor), dictated treaties, extorted $20,000 and by force of arms 
procured privileges for Roman Catholic ' priests in the country; 
and at another time (February 1843) a British officer, Captain 
Paulet of the " Carysfort," went so far as to take possession of 
Oahu and establish a commission for its government. The act 
of the British officer was disavowed by his superiors as soon as 
known. 

These incidents led to a representation on the part of the 
native sovereign to the governments of Great Britain, France 
and the United States, and the independence of the islands 
(recognized by the United States in 1842) was recognized in 
1844 by France and Great Britain. In 1844 John Ricord, an 
American lawyer, became the first minister of foreign affairs. 
A new constitution came into effect in 1852. It was the aim 
of Kamehameha III. and his advisers to combine the native 
and the foreign elements under one government; to make 
the king the sovereign not of one race or class, but of all; and to 
extend equal and impartial laws over all inhabitants of the 

' The first Roman Catholic priests came in 1827 and were banished 
in 1 83 1. but returned in 1837. An edict of toleration in 1839 shortly 
preceded the visit of the " Arteraise." 



country. Kamehameha IV. and hit queen, Emma, ruled from 
1855 to 1863 and were succeeded by his brother, Kamebaroeha 
V., who died in 187', and in whose reign a third (and a re- 
actionary) constitution went into effect in 1864, by mere royal 
proclamation. Lunalilo, a grandson of Kamehameha I., was 
king for two years, and in 1874, backed by American influence, 
Kalakaua was elected his successor, in preference to Queen 
Emma, 41 member of the Anglican Church and the candidate 
of the pro-British party. Kalakaua considered residents of 
European or American descent as alien invaders, and he aimed 
to restore largely the ancient system of personal government, 
under which he should have control of the public treasury. On 
the and of July 1878, and again on the 14th of August 1880, 
he dismissed a ministry without assigning any reason, after 
it had been triumphantly sustained by a test vote of the legis- 
lature. On the latter occasion he appointed C. C. Moreno, 
who had come to Honolulu in the interest of a Chinese steam- 
ship company, as Premier and minister of foreign affairs. This 
called forth the protest of the representatives of Great Britain, 
France and the United States, and aroused such opposition 
on the part of both the foreigners and the better class of natives 
that the king was obliged, after four days of popular excitement, 
to remove the obnoxious minister. During the king's absence 
on a tour round the world in 1681, his sister, Mrs Lydia Dominis 
(b. 1838), also styled Liliuokalani, acted as regent. After his 
return the contest was renewed between the so-called National 
party, which favoured absolution, and the Reform party, which 
sought to establish parliamentary government. The king took 
an active part in the elections, and used his patronage to the 
utmost to influence legislation. For three successive sessions 
a majority of the legislature was composed of office-holders, 
dependent on the favour of the executive. Among the measures 
urged by the king and opposed by the Reform party were the 
project of a ten-million dollar loan, chiefly for military purposes; 
the removal of the prohibition of the sale of alcoholic liquor to 
Hawaiians, which was carried in 1882; the licensing of the sale 
of opium; the chartering of a lottery company; the licensing 
of kahunas, or medicine men, &c. Systematic efforts were 
made to turn the constitutional question into a race issue, and 
the party cry was raised of " Hawaii for Hawaiians." Adroit 
politicians flattered the king's vanity, defended his follies and 
taught him how to violate the spirit of the constitution while 
keeping the letter of the law. From 1882 till 1887 his prime 
minister was Walter Murray Gibson (1823-1888), a singular and 
romantic genius, a visionary adventurer and a shrewd politician, 
who had been imprisoned by the Dutch government in Batavia 
in 1852 on a charge of inciting insurrection in Sumatra, and had 
arrived at Honolulu in 1861 with the intention of leading a 
Mormon colony to the East Indies. To exalt his royal dignity, 
which was lowered, he thought, by his being only an elected 
king, Kalakaua caused himself to be crowned with imposing 
ceremonies on the ninth anniversary of his election (Feb. 12, 
1883). 

Kalakaua was now no longer satisfied with being merely 
king of Hawaii, but aspired to what was termed the '* Primacy 
01 the Pacific." Accordingly Mr Gibson addressed a protest to 
the great powers, deprecating any further annexation of the 
islands of the Pacific Ocean, and claiming for Hawaii the ex- 
clusive right " to assist them in improving their political and 
social condition." In pursuance of this policy, two commissioners 
were sent to the Gilbert Islands in 1883 to prepare the way for 
a Hawaiian protectorate. On the 23rd of December 1886 Mr 
J. E. Bush was commissioned as minister plenipotentiary to the 
king of Samoa, the king of Tonga and the other independent 
chiefs of Polynesia. He arrived in Samoa on the 3rd of January 
18S7, and remained there six months, during which time he 
concluded a treaty of alliance with Malietoa, which was ratified 
by his government. The " Explorer," a steamer of 170 tons, 
which had been employed in the copra trade, was purchased for 
$20,000, and refitted as a man-of-war, to form the " nest-egg " 
of the future Hawaiian navy. She was renamed the " Kaim- 
iloa," and was despatched to Samoa on the 17th of May 1887 



92 



HAWAII 



to strengthen the hands of the embassy. As R. L. Stevenson 
wrote: " The history of the ' Kaimiloa ' is a story of debauchery, 
mutiny and waste of government property." At length the 
intrigues of the Hawaiian embassy gave umbrage to the German 
government, and it was deemed prudent to recall it to Honolulu 
in July 1887. Meanwhile a reform league had been formed to 
stop the prevailing misrule and extravagance; it was supported 
by a volunteer military force, the "Honolulu Rifles." The 
king carried through the legislature of 1886 a bill for an opium 
licence, as well as a Loan Act, under which a million dollars were 
borrowed in London. Under his influence the Hale Naua 
Society was organized in 1886 for the spread of idolatry and 
king- worship; and in the same year a "Board of Health" 
was formed which revived the vicious practices of the kahunas 
or medicine-men. 

The king's acceptance of two bribes— one of $75,000 and 
another of $80,000 for the assignment of an opium licence- 
precipitated the revolution of 1887. An immense mass meeting 
was held on the 30th of June, which sent a committee to the 
king with specific demands for radical reforms. Finding himself 
without support, he yielded without a struggle, dismissed his 
ministry and signed a constitution on the 7th of July 1887, 
revising that of 1864, and intended to put an end to personal 
government and to make the cabinet responsible only to 
the legislature; this was called the " bayonet constitution/' 
because it was so largely the result of the show of force made by 
the Honolulu Rifles. By its terms office-holders were made 
ineligible for seats in the legislature, and no member of the 
legislature could be appointed to any civil office under the 
government during the term for which he had been elected. 
The members of the Upper House, instead of being appointed 
by the king for life, were henceforth to be elected for terms of 
six years by electors possessing a moderate property qualification. 
The remainder of Kalakaua's reign teemed with intrigues 
and conspiracies to restore autocratic rule. One of these 
came to a head on the 30th of July 1889, but this " Wilcox 
rebellion," led by R. W. Wilcox, a half-breed, educated in 
Italy, and a friend of the king and of his sister, was promptly 
suppressed. Seven of the insurgents were killed and a large 
number wounded. For his health the king visited California 
in the United States cruiser " Charleston " in November x8oo, 
and died on the 20th of January- 1891 in San Francisco. On 
the 29th of January at noon his sister, the regent, took the oath 
to maintain the constitution of 1887, and was proclaimed queen, 
under the title of Liliuokalani. 

The history of her reign shows that it was her constant purpose 
to restore autocratic government. The legislative session of 

1892, during which four changes of ministry took place, was 
protracted to eight months chiefly by her determination to 
carry through the opium and lottery bills and to have a pliable 
cabinet. She had a new constitution drawn up, practically 
providing for an absolute monarchy,- and disfranchising a large 
class of citizens who had voted since 1887; this constitution 
(drawn up, so the royal party declared, in reply to a petition 
signed by thousands of natives) she undertook to force on the 
country after proroguing the legislature on the 14th of January 

1893, but her ministers shrank from the responsibility of so 
revolutionary an act, and with difficulty prevailed upon her to 
postpone the execution of her design. An uprising similar to 
that of 1887 declared the monarchy forfeited by its own act. 
A third party proposed a regency during the minority of the 
heir-apparent, Princess Kaiulani, but in her absence this scheme 
found few supporters. A Committee of Safety was appointed 
at a public meeting, which formed a provisional government 
and reorganized the volunteer military companies, which had 
been disbanded in 1890. Its leading spirits were the "Sons of 
Missionaries " (as E. L. Godkin styled them), who were accused 
of using their knowledge of local affairs and their inherited 
prestige among the natives for private ends — of founding a 
" Gospel Republic " which was actually a business enterprise. 
The provisional government called a mass meeting of citizens, 
which met on the afternoon of the 6th and ratified its action. 



The United States steamer " Boston," which had unexpectedly 
arrived from Hilo on the 14th, landed a small force on the 
evening of the 16th, at the request of the United States minister, 
Mr J. L. Stevens, and a committee of residents, to protect the 
lives and property of American citizens in case of riot or in- 
cendiarism. On the 1 7th the Commit tee of Safety took possession 
of the government building, and issued a proclamation declaring 
a monarchy to be abrogated, and establishing a provisional 
government, to exist " until terms of union with the United 
States of America shall have been negotiated and agreed upon." 
Meanwhile two companies of volunteer troops arrived and 
occupied the grounds. By the advice of her ministers, and to 
avoid bloodshed, the queen surrendered under protest, in view 
of the landing of United States troops, appealing to the govern- 
ment of the United States to reinstate her in authority. A 
treaty of annexation was negotiated with the United States 
during the next month, just before the close of President 
Benjamin Harrison's administration, but it was withdrawn 
on the 9tb of March 1893 by President Harrison's successor, 
President Cleveland, who then despatched James H. Blount 
1837-1903) of Macon, Georgia, as commissioner paramount, 
to investigate the situation in the Hawaiian Islands. On 
receiving Blount's report to the effect that the revolution had 
been accomplished by the aid of the United States minister 
and by the landing of troops from the " Boston," President 
Cleveland sent Albert Sydney Willis (1843-1897) of Kentucky 
to Honolulu with secret instructions as United States minister. 
Willis with much difficulty and delay obtained the queen's 
promise to grant an amnesty, and made a formal demand on the 
provisional government for her reinstatement on the 19th of 
December 1893. On the 23rd President Sanford B. Dole sent 
a reply to Willis, declining to surrender the authority of the 
provisional government to the deposed queen. The United 
States Congress declared against any further intervention by 
adopting on the 31st of May 1894 the Turpie Resolution. On the 
30th of May 1804 a convention was held to frame a constitution 
for the republic of Hawaii, which was proclaimed on the 4th of 
July following, with S. B. Dole as its first president Toward 
the end of the same year a plot was formed to overthrow the 
republic and to restore the monarchy. A cargo of arms and 
ammunition from San Francisco was secretly landed at a point 
near Honolulu, where a company of native royalists were 
collected on the 6th of January 1895, intending to capture the 
government buildings by surprise that night, with the aid of 
their allies in the city. A premature encounter with a squad 
of police alarmed the town and broke up their plans. There 
were several other skirmishes during the following week, resulting 
in the capture of the leading conspirators, with most of their 
followers, The ex-qucen, on whose premises arms and am- 
munition and a number of incriminating documents were 
found, was arrested and was imprisoned for nine months in the 
former palace. On the 24th of January 1895 she formally 
renounced all claim to the throne and took the oath of allegiance 
to the republic. The ex-qucen and forty-eight others were 
granted conditional pardon on the 7th of September, and on 
the following New Year's Day the remaining prisoners were 
set at liberty. 

On the inauguration of President McKinley, in March 1897, 
negotiations with the United States were resumed, and on the 
1 6th of June a new treaty of annexation was signed at Washington. 
As its ratification by the Senate had appeared to be uncertain, 
extreme measures were taken: the Newlands joint resolution, 
by which the cession was "accepted, ratified and confirmed,*' 
was passed by the Senate by a vote of 42 to 21 and by the 
House of Representatives by a vote of 209 to 91, and was 
signed by the president on the 7th of July 1898. The formal 
transfer of sovereignty took place on the 12th of August 1898, 
when the flag of the United States (the same flag hauled down 
by order of Commissioner Blount) was raised over the Executive 
Building with impressive ceremonies. 

The sovereigns of the monarchy, the president of the republic 
and the governors of the Territory up to 1910 were as follows: 



HAWARDEN--HAWES, STEPHEN 



93 



Sovereigns: Kamehameha I, 1 795-1819; Kamehameha II., 
1819-1824; Kaahnmanu (regent), 1824-1832; Kamehameha 
III., 1 83 2-1854;* Kamchameha IV., 1855-1863; Kamehameha 
V., 1863-1872; Lunalilo, 1873-1874; Kalakaua, 1874-1891; 
Liliuokalani, 1891-1893. President: Sanford B. Dole, 2893- 
1898. Governors: S. B. Dole, 1 898-1004; George R. Carter, 
1904-1907; W. F. Frear, 1907. 

Authorities.— Consult the bibliography in Adolf Marcuse, Die 
kawaiischen Inseln (Berlin, 1894) ; A. P» C Griffen, List of Book* 
relating to Hawaii (Washington, 1898); C. E. Dutton, Hawaiian 
Volcanoes, in the fourth annual report of the United States Geological 
Survey (Washington, 1884); J. D. Dana, Characteristics of Volcanoes 
with Contribution of Facts and Principles from the Hawaiian Islands 
(New York, 1890); W. H. Pickering, Lunar and Hawaiian Physical 
Features compared (1906) ; C. H. Hitchcock, Hawaii and its Volcanoes 



(Honolulu, 1909); Augustin Kramer, Hawaii, Ostmikronesien 
und Samoa (Stuttgart, 1906); Sharp, Fauna (London, 1899); 
Walter Maxwell, Lavas and Soils of the Hawaiian Islands 



(Honolulu, 1898); W. Hfflebrand, Flora of the Hawaiian Islands 
(London, 1888); G. P, Wilder, Fruits of the Hawaiian Islands 
(3 vols., Honolulu, 1907); H. W. Henshaw, Birds of the Hawaiian 
Islands (Washington, 1902); A. Fornander, Account of the Poly- 
nesian Race and the Ancient History of the Hawaiian People to the 
Times of Kamehameha J. (3 vols* London, 1878-1885); W. D. 
Alexander. A Brief History of the Hawaiian People (New York, 
1809); C H. Forbes-Lindsay, American Insular Possessions (Phila- 
delphia, 1906) ; Jose dc OHvarcs, Our Islands and their People (New 
York, 1899); J. A. Owen, Story of Hawaii (London, 1898); E. J. 
Carpenter, America in Hawaii (Boston, 1899); W. F. Blackman, 
The Making of Hawaii, a Study in Social Evolution (New York, 
1899), with bibliography; T. C. Thrum, Hawaiian Almanac and 
Annual (Honolulu); Lucien Young, The Real Hawaii (New York, 
1899), written by a lieutenant of the " Boston,** an ardent defender 
of Stevens: Liliuokalani, Hawaii's Story (Boston, 1898); C. T. 
Rodger*, Education in the Hawaiian Islands (Honolulu, 1897); 
Henry E. Chambers, Constitutional History of Hawaii (Baltimore, 
1896), in Johns Hopkins University Studies; W. Ellis, Tour Around 
Hawaii (London. 1829); I. J. Jarves, History of the Sandwich Islands 
(Honolulu, 1847); H. Bingham, A Residence of Twenty-one Years 
in the Sandwich Islands (Hartford, 1848) ; Isabella Bird, Six Months 
in the Sandwich Islands (New York, 1881); Adolf Bastian, Zur 
Kennlnis Hawaiis (Berlin, 1883) ; the annual Reports of the governor 
of Hawaii, of the Hawaii Agricultural Experiment Station, of the 
Hawaiian Sugar Planters' Experiment Station, of the Board of 
Commissioners on Agriculture and Forestry, and of the Hawaii 
Promotion Committee; and the Papers of the Hawaiian Historical 
Society. 

HAWARDEN (pronounced Harden, Welsh PenatUg), a 
market-town of Flintshire, North Wales, 6 m. W. of Chester, 
on a height commanding an extensive prospect, connected 
by a branch with the London & North-Western railway. Pop. 
(1001), 5372. It lies in a coal district, with day beds near. 
Coarse earthenware, draining tiles and fire-clay bricks are the 
chief manufactures. The Maudes take the title of viscount 
from the town. Ha warden castle — built in 1752, added to and 
altered in the Gothic style in 1814 — stands in a fine wooded 
park near the old castle of the same name, which William the 
Conqueror gave to his nephew, Hugh Lupus. It was taken in 
1282 by Dafydd, brother of Llewelyn, prince of Wales, destroyed 
by the Parliamentarians in the Civil War, and came into the 
possession of Sergeant Glynne, lord chief justice of England 
under Cromwell. The last baronet, Sir Stephen R. Glynne, 
dying in 1874) Castell Penarlag passed to his brother-in-law, 
William Ewart Gladstone. St Deiniol church, early English, 
was restored in 1857 and 1878. There are also a grammar 
school (1606), a Gladstone golden-wedding fountain (1889), and 
St Deiniol's Hostel (with accommodation for students and an 
Anglican clerical warden); west of the church, on Truman's 
hill, is an old British camp. 

' HAWAWIR (Hauhauin), an African tribe of Semitic origin, 
dwelling in the Bayuda desert, Anglo-Egyptian Sudan. They 
are found along the road from Debba to Khartum as far as 
Bir Gamr, and from Ambigol to Wadi Bishara. They have 
adopted none of the negro customs, such as gashing the cheeks 
or elaborate hairdressing. They own large herds of oxen, sheep 
and camels. 

HAWEIS, HUGH REGINALD (1838-1901), English preacher 
and writer, was born at Egham, Surrey, on the 3rd of April 
1838. On leaving Trinity College, Cambridge, he travelled in 



Italy and served under Garibaldi in i860. On his return to 
. England he was ordained and held various curacies in London, 
becoming in 1866 incumbent of St James's, Marylebone. His 
unconventional methods of conducting the service, combined 
with his dwarfish figure and lively manner, soon attracted 
crowded congregations. He married Miss M. E. Joy in 1866, 
and both be and Mrs Haweis (d. z8o8) contributed largely to 
periodical literature and travelled a good deal abroad. Haweis 
was Lowell lecturer at Boston, U.S.A., in 1885, and represented 
the Anglican Church at the Chicago Parliament of Religions in 
2893. He was much interested in music, and wrote books on 
violins and church bells, besides contributing an article to the 
9th edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica on bell-xinging, 
His best-known book was Music and Morals (3rd ed., 1873); 
and for & time be was editor of Cassell's Magazine. He also 
wrote five volumes on Christ and Christianity (a popular church 
history, 1886-1887). Other writings include Travel and Talk 
(1896), and similar chatty and entertaining books. He died on 
the 29th of January 1901, 

HAWES, STEPHEN (fl. 1502-1521), English poet, was probably 
a native of Suffolk, and, if his own statement of bis age may be 
trusted, was born about 1474. He was educated at Oxford, 
and travelled in England, Scotland and France. On his return 
his various accomplishments, especially his "most excellent 
vein " in poetry, procured him a place at court, He was groom 
of the chamber to Henry VII. as early as 1502. He could repeat 
by heart the works of most of the English poets, especially the 
poems of John Lydgate, whom he called his master. He was 
still living in 1521, when it is stated in Henry VIII.'s household 
accounts that £6, 13s. 4d. was paid " to Mr Hawes for his 
play," and he died before X530, when Thomas Field, in his 
" Conversation between a Lover and a Jay," wrote " Yong 
Steven Hawse, whose soule God pardon, Treated of love so 
clerkly and well." His capital work is The Passelyme of Pleasure, 
or the History of Grounds Amour and la Bel Pucd, conteining 
Ike knowledge of the Seven Sciences and the Course of Man's Life 
in titis Wotide, printed by Wynkyn de Worde, 2509, but finished 
three years earlier* It was also printed with slightly varying 
titles by the same printer in 1517, by J. Wayland in 1554, by 
Richard Tottcl and by John Waley in 1555. Tottel's edition 
was edited by T. Wright and reprinted by the Percy Society 
in 1845. The poem is a long, allegory in seven-lined stanzas of 
man's life in this world. It is divided into sections after the 
manner of the Morte Arthur and borrows the machinery of 
romance. Its main motive is the education of the knight, 
Graunde Amour, based, according to Mr W. J. Courthope 
(Hist, of Eng. Poetry, vol i. 382), on the Marriage of Mercury and 
Philology, by Martianus Capella,and the details of the description 
prove Hawes to have been well acquainted with medieval systems 
of philosophy. At the suggestion of Fame, and accompanied 
by her two greyhounds, Grace and Governance, Graunde Amour 
starts out in quest of La Bel Pucel. He first visits the Tower of 
Doctrine or Science where he acquaints himself with the arts of 
grammar, logic, rhetoric and arithmetic. After a long dis- 
putation with the lady in the Tower of Music he returns to his 
studies, and after sojourns at the Tower of Geometry, the Tower 
of Doctrine, the Castle of Chivalry, &c, he arrives at the Castle 
of La Bel Pucel, where he is met by Peace, Mercy, Justice, 
Reason and Memory. His happy marriage does not end the 
story, which goes on to tell of the oncoming of Age, with the 
concomitant evils of Avarice and Cunning. The adnoonition 
of Death brings Contrition and Conscience, and it is only when 
Remembraunce has delivered an epitaph chiefly dealing with 
the Seven Deadly Sins, and Fame has enrolled Graunde Amour's 
name with the knights of antiquity, that we are allowed to part 
with the hero. This long imaginative poem was widely read 
and esteemed, and certainly exercised an influence on the genius 
of Spenser. 

The remaining works of Hawes are all of them bibliographical 
rarities. The Conversyon of Swerers (1509) and A Joy full Medy- 
tacyon to all Englonde, a coronation boem (1500), was edited by 
David Laing for the Abbotsford Club (Edinburgh, 1865). A 



94 



HAWBS, WILLIAM— HAWK 



Compendious Story . . . coiled Uu Example of Vtrtu (pr. 15x2) and 
the Comfort of Lovers (not dated) complete the list of hU extant, 
work. 

See also G. Saint sbury, The Flourishing of Romance and the Rise of 
Allegory (Edin. and Lond., 1897) ; the same writer's Hisl. of English 
Prosody (vol. i. 1906); and an article by W. Murison in the Cam- 
bridge History of English Literature (vol. ii. 1906). 

HAWBS, WILLIAM (1 785-1846), English musician, was bora 
in London in 1785, and was for eight years (1 703-1801) a chorister 
of the Chapel Royal, where he studied music chiefly under Dr 
Ayrton. He subsequently held various musical posts, being in 
181 7 appointed master of the children of the Chapel Royal. 
He also carried on the business of a music publisher, and was 
for many years musical director of the Lyceum theatre, then 
devoted to English opera. In the last-named capacity (July 
23rd, 1824), he introduced Weber's Der PrcischUtz for the first 
time in England, at first slightly curtailed, but soon afterwards 
In its entirety. Winter's Interrupted Sacrifice, Mozart's Cosi 
fan tutu, Marschnei's V am pyre and other important works 
were also brought out under his auspices. Hawes also wrote 
or compiled the music for numerous pieces. Better were his 
glees and madrigals, of which he published several collections. 
He also superintended a new. edition of the celebrated Triumph 
of Oriana. He died on the x8th of February 1846. 

HAWFINCH, a bird so called from the belief that the fruit 
of the hawthorn {Crataegus Oxyocanlka) forms its chief food, 
the Loxia couothrausles of Linnaeus, and the Coccotkraustes 
vulgaris of modern ornithologists, one of the largest of the finch 
family (FrtngiUidae), and found over nearly the whole of Europe, 
in Africa north of the Atlas and in Asia from Palestine to Japan. 
It was formerly thought to be only an autumnal or winter- 
viiitOT to Britain, but later experience has proved that, though 
there may very likely be an immigration In the fall of the year, 
it breeds in nearly all the English counties to Yorkshire, and 
abundantly in those nearest to London. In coloration it bears 
some resemblance to a chaffinch, but its much larger size and 
enormous beak make it easily recognizable, while on closer 
inspection the singular bull-hook form of some of its wing-feathers 
will be found to be very remarkable. Though not uncommonly 
frequenting gardens and orchards, in which as well as in woods 
It builds its nest, it is exceedingly shy in its habits, so as seldom 
to afford opportunities for observation. (A. N.) 

HAWICK, a municipal and police burgh of Roxburghshire, 
Scotland. Pop. (1801), 19,104; (iooi), 17,303. It is situated 
at the confluence of the Slitrig (which flows through the town) 
with the Teviot, 10 m. S.W. of Jedburgh by road and 52! m. 
S.E. of Edinburgh by the North British railway. The name 
has been derived from the O. Eng. heaih-vnc, " the village on the 
flat meadow," or kaga-wie t " the fenced-in dwelling," the Gadeni 
being supposed to have had a settlement at this spot. Hawick is 
a substantial and flourishing town, the prosperity of which dates 
from the beginning of the 19th century, its enterprise having 
won for it the designation of "The Glasgow of the Borders." 
The municipal buildings, which contain the free library and 
reading-room, stand on the site of the old town hall. The 
Bucdeuch memorial hall, commemorating the 5th duke of 
Buccleuch, contains the Science and Art Institute and a museum 
rich in exhibits illustrating Border history. The Academy 
furnishes both secondary and technical education. The only 
church of historical interest is that of St Mary's, the third of 
the name, built in 1 763. The first church, believed to have been 
founded by St Cuthbert (d. 687), was succeeded by one dedicated 
in 12 14, which was the scene of the seizure of Sir Alexander 
Ramsay of Dalhousie in 1342 by Sir William Douglas. The 
modern Episcopal church of St Cuthbert was designed by Sir 
Gilbert Scott. The Moat or Moot hill at the south end of the 
town— an earthen mound 30 ft. high and 300 ft. in circumference 
<— is conjectured to have been the place where formerly the court 
of the manor met; though some authorities think it was a 
primitive form of fortification. The Baron's Tower, founded in 
X155 by the Lovcls, lords of Branxholm and Hawick, and after- 
wards the residence of the Douglases of Drumlanrig, is said to 
have been, the only building that was not burned down during 



the raid of Thomas Raddiffe, 3rd earl of Sussex, in April 1570. 
At a later date it was the abode of Anne, duchess of Bucdeuch 
and Monmouth, after the execution of her •husband, James, 
duke of Monmouth in 1585, and finally became the Tower Hotel 
Bridges across the Teviot connect Hawick with the suburb of 
Wilton, in which a public park has been laid out, and St Leonard's 
Park and race-course are situated on the Common, 2 m. S.W. 
The town is governed by a provost, bailies and council, and 
unites with Selkirk and Galashiels (together known as the 
Border burghs) to send a member to parliament. The leading 
industries are the manufacture of hosiery, established in 1771, 
and woollens, dating from 1830, including blankets, shepherd's 
plaiding and, tweeds. There are, besides, tanneries, dye works, 
oil-works, saw-mills, iron-founding and engineering works, 
quarries and nursery gardens. The markets for live stock and 
grain are also important* 

In 1537 Hawick received from Sir James Douglas of Drum- 
lanrig a charter which was confirmed by the infant Queen Mary 
in 1545, and remained in force until 1861, when the corporation 
was reconstituted by act of parliament. Owing to its situation 
Hawick was often imperilled by Border warfare and maraud- 
ing freebooters. Sir Robert Umfraville (d. 1436), governor of 
Berwick, burned it about 141 7, and in 1562 the regent Moray 
had to suppress the lawless with a strong hand. Neither cf 
the Jacobite risings aroused enthusiasm. In 1715 the dis- 
contented Highlanders mutinied on the Common, 500 of them 
abandoning their cause, and in 1745 Prince Charles Edward's 
cavalry passed southward through the town. In 1514, the year 
after the battle of Flodden, in which the burghers had suffered 
severely, a number of young men surprised an English force at 
Hornshole, a spot on the Teviot 2 m. below the town, routed 
them and bore away their flag. This event is celebrated every 
June in the ceremony of " Biding the Common "—in which a 
facsimile of the captured pennon is carried in procession to the 
accompaniment of a chorus " Teribus, ye Teri Odin," supposed 
to be an invocation to Thar and Odin — a survival of Northum- 
brian paganism. Two of the most eminent natives of the burgh 
were Dr Thomas Somervflle (1741-1830), the historian, and James 
Wilson ( 1 805-1860), founder of the Economist newspaper and 
the first financial member of the council for India. 

Minto House, 5 m. N.E., is the teat of the earl of Minto. Denhoun, 
about midway between Hawick and Jedburgh, was the birthplace 
of John Leyden the poet. The cottage in which Leyden was bora 
is now the property of the Edinburgh Border Counties Association, 
and a monument to his memory has been erected in the centre of 
Denholm green. Cavers, nearer Hawick, was once the home of 
a branch of the Douglases, and it is said that in Cavers House are 
still preserved the pennon that was borne before the Douglas at 
the battle of Otterburn (Chevy Chase), and the gauntlets that were 
then taken from the Percy (1388). Two m. S.W. of Hawick is the 
massive peel of Goldlelands— the " watch-tower of Branxholm," a 
well-preserved typical Border stronghold. One mile beyond it, 
occupying a commanding site on the left bank of the Teviot, stand* 
Branxholm Castle, the Branksome Hall of The Lay of the Lest 
Mtnslrd, once owned by the Lovels. but since the middle of the 15th 
century the property of the Scotts of Buccleuch, and up to 1756 
the chief seat of the duke. It suffered repeatedly in English in- 
vasions and was destroyed in 1570. It was rebuilt next year, t 



peel, finished five years later, forming part of the modern mansion. 
About 3 m. W. of Hawick, finely situated on high ground above 
Harden Burn, a left-hand affluent of Borthwick Water, >s Harden, 



the 
ion. 
h ground above 
ater, >s Harden, 
the home of Walter Scott (1550-1699), an ancestor of the novelist. 
HAWK (O. Eng. hafoc or heajoc, a common Teutonic word, 
cf. Dutch havik, Ger. Habitht; the root is hab-, hof-, to hold, 
cf. Lat. accipiler, from caper e), a word of somewhat indefinite 
meaning, being often used to signify all diurnal birds-of-prey 
which are neither vultures nor eagles, and again more exclusively 
for those of the remainder which are not buzzards, falcons, 
harriers or kites. Even with this restriction it is comprehensive 
enough, and will include more than a hundred species, which have 
been arrayed in genera varying in number from a dosen to above 
a score, according to the fancy of the systematise?. Speaking 
generally, hawks may be characterized by possessing compara- 
tively short wings and long legs, a bill which begins to decurve 
directly from the cere (or soft bare skin that covers its base), 
and has the cutting edges of its maxilla (or upper mandiMf) 



HAWKE, BARON 



95 



sinuated 1 but never notched. To these may be added as 
characters, structurally perhaps of less value, but iA other 
respects quite as important, that the sexes differ very greatly in 
sixe, that in most species the irfdes are yellow, deepening with 
age into orange or even red, and that the immature plumage is 
almost invariably more or less striped or mottled with heart- 
shaped spots beneath, while that of the adults is generally much 
barred, though toe old males have in many instances the breast 
and belly quite free from markings. Nearly all are of small 
or moderate sire— the largest among them being the gos-hawk 
(q.t.) and its immediate allies, and the male of the smallest, 
Acciptitr linus, is not bigger than a song-thrush. They are all 
birds of great boldness in attacking a quarry, but if foiled in 
the first attempts they are apt to leave the pursuit. Thoroughly 
arboreal in their habits, they seek their prey, chiefly consisting 
of birds (though reptiles and small mammals are also taken), 
; trees or bushes, patiently waiting for a victim to shew 



European Sparrow-Hawk (Male and Female). 

itself, and gliding upon it when it appears to be unwary with a 
rapid swoops- clutching it in their talons, and bearing it away to 
eat it in some convenient spot. 

> Systematic ornithologists differ as to the groups into which 
the numerous forms known as hawks should be divided. There is 
at the outset a difference of opinion as to the scientific name 
which the largest and best known of these groups should bear- 
tome authors terming it Nisus, and others who seem to have the 
most justice on their side, AccipiUr. In Europe there are two 
specks— first, A, uisus, the common sparrow-hawk, which has a, 
wide distribution from Ireland to Japan, extending also to 
northern India, Egypt and Algeria, and secondly, A. brevipes 
(by some placed in the group Mkronisus and by others called 
an Astur), which only appears in the south-east and the adjoining 
parts of Asia Minor and Persia. In North America the place of 
the former is taken by two very distinct species, a small one, 
A.fuscus, usually known in Canada and the United States as the 
sharp-shinned Jiawk, and Stanley's or Cooper's hawk, A. cocpcri 
(by some placed in another genus, Cooperastur), which is larger 
and has not so northerly a range. In South America there are 
four or five more, including A. tinus, before mentioned as the 
smallest of all, while a species not much larger, A. minullus, 
together with several others of greater size, inhabits- South 
Africa. Madagascar and its neighbouring islands have three 
or four species sufficiently distinct, and India has A. badius. 
A good many* more forms are found in south-eastern Asia, 
in the Indo-Malay Archipelago, and in Australia three or four 
species, of which A. cirrhocepkalus most nearly represents the 
sparrow-hawk of Europe and northern Asia, while A. radiatus 
and A. approximans show some affinity to the gos-hawks (A slur) 

1 In one form, Nisoides, Which on that account has been genetically 
separated, they are said to be perfectly straight. 



with which they are often classed. The differences between all 
the forms above named and the much larger number here 
unnamed are such as can be only appreciated by the specialist 
The so-called " sparrow-hawk " of New Zealand (Hieracidea) 
does not belong to this group of birds at all, and by many 
authors has been deemed akin to the falcons. For hawking 
see Falcons*. (A. N.) 

HAWKB, EDWARD HAWKB, Baron (1705-1781), British 
admiral, was the only son of Edward Hawke, a barrister. On 
his mother's side he was the nephew of Colonel Martin Bladen 
(1680-1746), a politician of some note, and was connected with 
the family of Fairfax. Edward Hawke entered the navy on the 
20th of February 1720 and served the time required to qualify 
him to hold a lieutenant's commission on the North American 
and West Indian stations. Though he passed his examination 
on the and of June. 1725, he was not appointed to a ship to act in 
that rank till 1729, when he was named third lieutenant of the 
44 Portland " in the Channel. The continuance of peace allowed 
him no opportunities of distinction, but he was fortunate in 
obtaining .promotion as commander of the " Wolf " sloop in 
«733. and as post captain of the " Flamborough " (20) in 1734. 
When war began with Spain in 1739, he served as captain of the 
" Portland " ( 50) in the West Indies. His ship was old and rotten. 
She nearly drowned her captain and crew, and was broken up 
after she was paid off in 1742. In the following year Hawke was 
appointed to the " Berwick " (70), a fine new vessel, and was 
attached to the* Mediterranean fleet then under- the command 
of Thomas Mathews. The " Berwick " was manned badly, and 
suffered severely from sickness, but in the ill-managed battle of 
Toulon on the nth of January 1744 Hawke gained great dis- 
tinction by the spirit with which he fought his ship. The only 
prize taken by the British fleet, the Spanish " Poder " (74), 
surrendered to him, and though she was not kept by the admiral, 
Hawke was not in any degree to blame for the loss of the only 
trophy of the fight. His gallantry attracted the attention of 
the king. There is a story that he was dismissed the service for 
having left the line to engage the "Poder," and was restored 
by the king's order. The legend grew not unnaturally out of the 
confusing series of courts martial which arose out of the battle, 
but it has no foundation. There is better reason to believe that 
when at a later period the Admiralty intended to pass over 
Hawke's name in a promotion of admirals, the king, George II., 
did insist that he should not be put on the retired list. 

He had no further chance of making his energy and ability 
known out of the ranks of his own profession, where they were 
fully realized, till 1747. In July of that year he attained flag 
rank, and was named second in command of the Channel fleet. 
Owing to the ill health of his superior he was sent in command of 
the fourteen ships detached to intercept a French convoy on its 
way to the West Indies. On the 14th of October 1747 he fell in 
with it in the Bay of Biscay. The French force, under M. Desher- 
biers de l'£tenduere, consisted of nine ships, which were, how- 
ever, on the average larger than Hawke's. He attacked at once. 
The French admiral sent one of his liners to escort the merchant 
ships on their way to the West Indies, and with the other eight 
fought a very gallant, action with the British squadron. Six 
of the eight French ships were taken. The French admiral did 
for a time succeed in saving the trading vessels under his charge, 
but most of them fell into the hands of the British cruisers in 
the West Indies. Hawke was made a knight of the Bath for 
this timely piece of service, a reward which cannot be said to 
have been lavish. 

In 1747 Hawke had been elected M.P. for Portsmouth, which 
he continued to represent for thirty years, though he can seldom 
have been in his place, and it does not appear that he often spoke. 
A seat in parliament was -always valuable to a naval officer at 
that time, since it enabled him to be useful to ministers, and 
increased his chances of obtaining employment. Hawke had 
married a lady of fortune in Yorkshire, Catherine Brook, in 1737, 
and was able to meet the expenses entailed by a seat in parlia- 
ment, which were considerable at a time when votes Were openly 
paid for by money down. In the interval between the war of 



96 



HAWKE, BARON 



the Austrian Succession and the Seven Years' War, Hawke was 
almost always on active service. From 1748 till 1752 he was 
in command at home, and he rehoisted his flag in 1755 as admiral 
in command of the Western Squadron. Although war was not 
declared for some time, England and France were on very hostile 
terms, and conflicts between the officers of the two powers in 
America had already taken place. Neither government was 
scrupulous in abstaining from the use of force while peace was 
still nominally unbroken. Hawke was sent to sea to intercept a 
French squadron which had been cruising near Gibraltar, but 
a restriction was put on the limits within which he might cruise, 
and he failed to meet the French. The fleet was much weakened 
by ill-health. In June 1756 the news of John Byng's retreat 
from Minorca reached England and aroused the utmost indigna- 
tion. Hawke was at once sent out to relieve him in the Mediter- 
ranean command, and to send him home for trial He sailed 
in the "Antelope," carrying, as the wits of the day put it, "a 
cargo of courage " to supply deficiencies in that respect among 
the officers then in the Mediterranean. Minorca had fallen, 
from want of resources rather than the attacks of the French, 
before he could do anything for the assistance of the garrison of 
Fort St Philip. In winter he was recalled to England, and he 
reached home on the 14th of January 1757. On the 24th of 
February following he was promoted full admiral. 
. It is said, but on no very good authority, that he was not 
on good terms with Pitt (afterwards earl of Chatham), and it is 
certain that when Pitt's great ministry was formed in June 
1757, he was not included in the Board of Admiralty. Yet as 
he was continued in command of important forces in the Channel, 
it Is obvious that his great capacity was fully recognized. In 
the late summer of 1757 he was entrusted with the naval side 
of an expedition to the coast of France. These operations, 
which were scoffingly described at the time as breaking windows 
with guineas, were a favourite device of Pitt's for weakening 
the French and raising the confidence of the country. The 
expedition of 1757 was directed against Rochefort, and it 
effected nothing. Hawke, who probably, expected very little 
good from it, did his own work as admiral punctually* but- he 
cannot be said to have shown zeal, or any wish to inspirit the 
military officers into making greater efforts than they were 
disposed, naturally to make. . The expedition returned to Spit- 
head by the 6th of October. £ No part of the disappointment of 
the public, which was acute, was visited on Hawke. During 
the end of 1757 and the beginning of 1758 he continued cruising 
in the Channel in search of the French naval forces, without 
any striking success. In May of that year he was ordered to 
detach a squadron under the command of Howe to carry out 
further combined operations. Hawke considered himself as 
treated with a want of due respect, and was at the time in bad 
humour with the Admiralty. He somewhat pettishly threw 
up his command, but was induced to resume it by the board, 
which knew his value, and was not wanting in flattery. He re- 
tired in June for a time on the ground of health, but happily 
for his own glory and the service of the country he was able to 
hoist his flag in May 2759, the " wonderful year " of Qarrick's 
song. 

■ France was then elaborating a scheme of invasion which bears 
much resemblance to the plan afterwards formed by Napoleon. 
An army of invasion was collected at the Morbihan in Brittany, 
and the intention was to transport it under the protection of a 
powerful fleet which was to be made up by uniting the squadron 
at Brest with the ships at Toulon. The plan, like Napoleon's, 
had slight chance of success, since the naval part of the invading 
force must necessarily be brought together from distant points 
at the risk of interruption by the British squadrons. The 
naval forces of England were amply sufficient to provide what- 
ever was needed to upset the plans of the French government. 
But the country was not so confident in the capacity of the 
navy to serve as a defence as it was taught to be in later genera- 
tions. It had been seized by a most shameful panic at the 
beginning of the war in face of a mere threat of invasion. There- 
fore the anxiety of Pitt to baffle the schemes of the French 



decisively was great, and the country looked on at the develop 
ment of the naval campaign with nervous attention. The 
proposed combination of the French fleet was defeated by the 
annihilation of the Toulon squadron on the coast of Portugal by 
Boscawen in May, but the Brest fleet was still untouched and 
the troops were still at Morbihan. It was the duty of Hawke 
to prevent attack from this quarter. The manner in which be 
discharged his task marks an epoch in the history of the navy. 
Until his time, or very nearly so, it was still believed that there 
was rashness in keeping the great ships out after September. 
Hawke maintained his blockade of Brest till far into November. 
Long cruises had always entailed much bad health on the crews, 
but by the care he took to obtain fresh food, and the energy he 
showed in pressing the Admiralty for stores, he was able to keep 
his men healthy. Early in November a series of severe gales 
forced him off the French coast, and he was compelled to anchor 
in Torbay. His absence was brief, but it allowed the French 
admiral, M. de Conflans (1690?-! 7 7 7), time to put to sea, 
and to steer for the Morbihan. Hawke, who had left Torbay 
on the 13th of November, learnt of the departure of the French 
at sea on the 17th from a look-out ship, and as the French 
admiral could have done nothing but steer for the Morbihan, be 
followed him thither. The news that M. de Conflans had got to sea 
spread a panic through the country, and for some days Hawke 
was the object of abuse of the most irrational kind. There was 
in fact no danger, for behind Hawke's fleet there were ample 
reserves in the straits of Dover, and in the North Sea. Following 
his enemy as fast as the bad weather, a mixture of calms and 
head winds would allow, the admiral sighted the French about 
40 m. to the west of Belleisle on the morning of the 20th of 
November. The British fleet was of twenty-one sail, the French 
of twenty. There was also a small squadron of British ships 
engaged in watching the Morbihan as an inshore squadron, 
which was in danger of being cut off. M. de Conflans had a 
sufficient force to fight in the open sea without rashness, but 
after making a motion to give battle, he changed his mind and 
gave the signal to his fleet to steer for the anchorage at Quiberon. 
He did not believe that the British admiral would dare to follow 
him, for the coast is one of the most dangerous In the world, 
and the wind was blowing hard from the west and rising to a 
storm. Hawke, however, pursued without hesitation, though 
it was well on in the afternoon before he caught up the rear of 
the French fleet, and dark by the time the two fleets were in the 
bay. The action, which was more a test of seamanship than of 
gunnery, or capacity to manoeuvre in order, ended in the destruc- 
tion of the French. Five ships only were taken or destroyed, 
but others ran ashore, and the French navy as a whole lost all 
confidence. Two British vessels were lost, but the price was 
little to pay for such a victory. No more fighting remained to be 
done. The fleet in Quiberon Bay suffered from want of food, 
and its distress is recorded in the lines:— 

" Ere Hawke did bang 
Mounseer Conflang 

You sent us beef and beer; 
Now Mounseer's beat 
We've nought to eat, 

Since you have nought to fear.** 

Hawke returned to England in January 1760 and bad no 
further service at sea. He was not made a peer till the 20th of 
May 1776, and then only as Baron Hawke of Towton. From 
1776101771 he was first lord of the Admiralty. His administra- 
tion was much criticized, perhaps more from party spirit than 
because of its real defects. Whatever his relations with Lord 
Chatham may have been he was no favourite with Chatham's 
partizans. It is very credible that, having spent all his life at 
sea, his faculty did not show in the uncongenial life of the shore. 
As an admiral at sea and on his own element Hawke has had 
no superior. It is true that he was not put to the test of having 
to meet opponents of equal strength and efficiency, but then 
neither has any other British admiral since the Dutch wars of 
the 17th century. On his death on the 17th of October 17*1 
his title passed to his son, Martin Bladen (1744-1805), and it is 



HAWKER— HAWKESWORTH 



97 



still held by his descendants, the 7th Baron (b. i860) being 
best known as a great Yorkshire cricketer. 

There is a portrait of Hawke in the Painted Hall at Greenwich. 
His Life by Montagu Borrows (1883) has superseded all other 
authorities: it is supplemented in a few early particulars by Sir 
J. K. Laughton's article in the Diet, Nat. Biog. (1891). 

HAWKER, ROBERT STEPHEN (1803-1874), English anti- 
quary and poet, was born at Stoke Damerel, Devonshire, 
on the 3rd of December 1803. His father* Jacob Stephen 
Hawker, was at that time a doctor, but afterwards curate and 
vicar of Stratton, Cornwall. Robert was sent to Iiskeard 
grammar school, and when he was about sixteen was apprenticed 
to a solicitor. He was soon removed to Cheltenham grammar 
school, and in April 1813 matriculated at Pembroke College, 
Oxford. In the same year he married Charlotte TAns, a lady 
much older than himself. On returning to Oxford he migrated 
to Magdalen Hall, where he graduated in 1828, having already 
won the Newdigate prize for poetry in 1837. He became 
vicar of Morwenstow, a village on the north Cornish coast, 
u 1834. Hawker described the bulk of his parishioners as a 
M mixed multitude of smugglers, wreckers and dissenters of 
various hues." He was himself a high churchman, and carried 
things with a high hand in his parish, but was much beloved 
by his people. He was a man of great originality, and numerous 
stories were told of his striking sayings and eccentric conduct. 
He was the original of Mortimer Coifins's Canon Tremaihe in 
Sweet and Twenty. His first wife died in 1863, and in 1864 be 
married Pauline Kuezynski, daughter of a Polish exile. He died 
in Plymouth on the 15th of August 1875. Before his death 
he was formally received into the Roman Catholic Church, a 
proceeding which aroused a bitter newspaper controversy. 
The best of his poems is The Quest of the Sangraal: Chant the 
First (Exeter, 1864). Among his Cornish Ballads (1869) the 
most famous is on " Trelawny," the refrain of which, " And 
shall Trelawny die," &c, he declared to be an old Cornish saying. 

See The Vicar of Monoenstow (1875; later and corrected editions, 
1876 and 1886), by the Rev. S. Baiio?-Go«ld, which was severely 
criticized by Hawker's friend, W. Maskcll, in the Athenaeum (March 
26, 1876); Memorials of the late Robert Stephen Hawker (1876), 
by the late Dr F. G. Lee. These were superseded in 1905 by The 
Life and Letters of R. S. Hawker, by his son-in-law. C. E. ByJes, 
which contains a bibliography of his works, now very valuable to 
collectors. See also Boase and Courtney, Bibliotheca Cornubiensis. 
His Poetical Works C1879) and his Prose Works (1803) were edited 
by J. G. Godwin. Another edition of his Poetical Works (1899) has 
a preface and bibliography by Alfred Wall is, and a complete edition 
of his poems by C. E. Byles, with the title Cornish Ballads and other 
Poems, appeared in 1904. 

HAWKBRS and PEDLARS, the designation of itinerant 
dealers who convey their goods from place to place to sell. 
The word " hawker " seems to have come into English from the 
Ger. Hdker or Dutch heuhtr in the early 16th century. In an 
act of 1533 (25 Henry VIII. c. 9, $ 6) we find " Sundry evill 
disposed persons which commonly beene called haukers . . . 
buying and selling of Brasse and Pewter." The earlier word 
for. such an itinerant dealer is " huckster," which is found in 
1 200, " For that they have turned God's house intill hucksteress 
bothe " (Omnium, 15,817). The base of the two words is the 
same, and is probably to be referred to German hecken, to squat, 
crouch; cf. u huckleboae," the hip-bone; and the hawkers or 
hucksters were so called either because they stooped under 
their packs, or squatted at booths in markets, &c. Another 
derivation finds the origin in the Dutch hock, a hole, corner. 
It may be noticed that the termination of " huckster " Is 
feminine; though there are examples of its application to women 
it was always applied indiscriminately to either sex. 

" Pedlar " occurs much earlier than the verbal form " to 
peddle," which is therefore a derivative from the substantive. 
The origin is to be found in the still older word "peddcr," one 
who carries about goods for sale in a " ped," a basket or hamper. 
This is now only used dialectically and in Scotland. In the 
Ancren Rvwle (c, 1225), peoddare is found with the meaning of 
" pedlar," though the Promptarium parvulorum (c. 1440) defines 
it as calathasius, i.e. a maker of panniers or baskets. 



The French term for a hawker or pedlar of books, colporteur 
(col, neck, porter, to carry), has been adopted by the Bible 
Society and other English religious bodies as a name for itinerant 
vendors and distributors of Bibles and other religious literature. 



ex 
sel 
of 
ob 
mi 
licences unaer ocaie laws ana, reaerai laws. 

H A WKES WORTH, JOHN (c. 1715-1773)* English miscellaneous 
writer, was bom In London about 1715. He is said to have been 
clerk to an attorney, and was certainly self-educated. In 1744 
he succeeded Samuel Johnson as compiler of the parliamentary 
debates for the Gentleman's Magazine, and from 1746 to 1749 
he contributed poems signed Greville, or H. Grcville, to that 
journal. In company with Johnson and others he started a 
periodical called The Adventurer, which ran to 140 numbers, 
of which 70 were from the pen of Hawkes worth himself. -On 
account of what was regarded as its powerful defence of morality 
and religion, Hawkesworth was rewarded by the archbishop 
of Canterbury with the degree of LL.D. In 1 754-1755 he pub- 
lished an edition (12 vols.) of Swift's works, with a life prefixed 
which Johnson praised in his Lives of the Poets. A larger edition 
(27 vols.) appeared in 1766-1779. He adapted Dryden's 
Amphitryon for the Drury Lane stage in 1756, and Southerner 
Oronooho in 1759. He wrote the libretto of an oratorio Zimri 
in 1760, and the next year Edgar and Em incline: a Fairy Tale, 
was produced at Drury Lane. His Almoran and Harriet (2 vols,, 
1 761) was first of all drafted as a play, and a tragedy founded 
on it by S. J. Pratt, The Fair Circassian (1781), met with some 
success. He was commissioned by the admiralty to edit Captain 
Cook's papers relative to his first voyage. For this work, An 
Account of the Voyages undertaken . . .for making discoveries 
in the Southern Hemisphere and performed by Commodore By rone, 
Captain Wall is, Captain Carteret and Captain Cook (from 1764 
la if 71) drawn up from the Journals ... (3 vols., 1773), 
Hawkesworth is said to have received from the publishers the 
sum of £6000. His descriptions of the manners and customs 
of the South Seas were, however, regarded by many critics 
as inexact and hurtful to the interests of morality, and the 
severity of their strictures is said to have hastened his death, 
which took place on the 16th of November 1 773. He was buried 



9« 



HAWKHURST— HAWKINS, SIR J. 



at Bromley, Kent, where be and his wife had kept a school. 
Hawkesworth was a close imitator of Johnson both in style and 
thought, and was at one time on very friendly terms with him. 
It is said that he presumed on his success, and lost Johnson's 
friendship as early as 1756. 

HAWKHURST, a town in the southern parliamentary divi- 
sion of Kent, England, 47 m. S.E. of London, on a branch 
of the South-Eastern & Chatham railway. Pop. (1001), 3136. 
It lies mainly on a ridge above the valley of the Kent Ditch, 
a tributary of the Rother. The neighbouring country is hilly, 
rich and well wooded, and the pleasant and healthy situation 
has led to the considerable extension of the old village as a 
residential locality. The Kent Sanatorium and one of the 
Barnardo homes are established here. The church of St Lawrence, 
founded from Battle Abbey in Sussex, is Decorated and Per- 
pendicular and its east window, of the earlier period, is specially 
beautiful. 

HAWKINS, CAESAR HENRY (1798-1884), British surgeon, 
son of the Rev. E. Hawkins and grandson of the Sir Caesar 
Hawkins (1711-1786), who was serjeant-surgeon to Kings 
George II. and George HI., was born at Bisley, Gloucestershire, 
on the 19th of September 1 798, was educated at Christ's Hospital, 
and entered St George's Hospital, London, in 18 18. He was 
surgeon to the hospital from 1829 to x86x, and in 1862 was made 
Serjeant-surgeon to Queen -Victoria. He was president of 
the College of Surgeons in 1852, and again in 1861; and he 
delivered the Hunterian oration in 1849. His success in complex 
surgical cases gave him a great reputation. For long he was 
noted as the only surgeon who had succeeded in the operation 
of ovariotomy in a London hospital. This occurred in 1846, 
when anaesthetics were unknown. He did much to popularize 
colotomy. A successful operator, he nevertheless was attached 
to conservative surgery, and was always more anxious to teach 
his pupils how to save a limb than how to remove it. He re- 
printed his contributions to the medical journals in two volumes, 
1874, the more valuable papers being on Tumours, Excision of 
the Ovarium, Hydrophobia and Snake-bites, Stricture of the Colon, 
and The Relative Claims of Sir Charles Bell and Magendie to the 
Discovery of the Functions of the Spinal Nerves. He died on the 
ffoth of July 1884. His brother, Edward Hawkins (1 789-1882) , 
was the well-known provost of Oriel, Oxford, who played so 
great a part in the Tractarian movement* 

HAWKINS, or Hawkyns, SIR JOHN (1533-1505). British 
admiral, was born at Plymouth in 1531, and belonged to a 
family of Devonshire shipowners and skippers— occupations 
then more closely connected than is now usual. His father, 
William Hawkins (d. 1553), was a prosperous freeman of Ply- 
mouth, who thrice represented that town in parliament, and is 
described by Hakluyt as one of the principal sea-captains in the 
west parts of England; his elder brother, also called William 
(d. 1589), was closely associated with him in his Spanish expedi- 
tions, and took an active part in fitting out ships to meet the 
Armada; and his nephew, the eldest son of the last named and 
of the same name, sailed with Sir Francis Drake to the* South 
Sea in 1577, and served as lieutenant under Edward Fenton 
(q.v.) in the expedition which started for the East Indies and 
China in 1582. His son, Sir Richard Hawkins, is separately 
noticed. 

Sir John Hawkins was bred to the sea In the ships of his 
family. When the great epoch of Elizabethan maritime 
adventure began, he took an active part by sailing to the Guinea 
coast, where he robbed the Portuguese slavers, and then smuggled 
the negroes he had captured into the Spanish possessions in the 
New World. After a first successful voyage in 1 562-1 563, two 
vessels which he had rashly sent to Seville were confiscated by 
the Spanish government. With the help of friends, and the 
open approval of the queen, who hired one of her vessels to him, 
he sailed again in 1564, and repeated his voyage with success, 
trading with the Creoles by force when the officials of the king 
endeavoured to prevent him. These two voyages brought him 
reputation, and he was granted a coat of arms with a demi-Moor, 
or negro, chained, as his crest. . The rivalry with Spain was now 



becoming very acute, and when Hawkins smiled for the third 
time in 1567, he went in fact, though not technically, on a 
national venture. Again be kidnapped negroes, and forced his 
goods on the Spanish colonies. Encouraged by his discovery 
that these settlements were small and unfortified, he on this 
occasion ventured to enter Vera Cruz, the port of Mexico, after 
capturing some Spaniards at sea to be held as hostages. He 
alleged that be had been driven in by bad weather. The falsity 
of the story was glaring, but the Spanish officers on the spot were 
too weak to offer resistance. Hawkins was allowed to enter 
the harbour, and to refit at the small rocky island of San Joan de 
Ulloa by which it is formed. Unfortunateljrfor him, and tor a 
French corsair whom he had in his company, a strong Spanish 
force arrived, bringing the new viceroy. The Spaniards, who 
were no more scrupulous of the troth than himself, pretended 
to accept the arrangement made before their arrival, and then 
when they thought he was off his guard attacked him on the 
24th of September. Only two vessels escaped, his own, the 
" Minion," and the " Judith," a small vessel belonging to his 
cousin Francis Drake. The voyage home was miserable, and 
the sufferings of all were great. 

For some years Hawkins did not return to the sea, though he 
continued to be interested in privateering voyages as a capitalist. 
In the course of 1572 he recovered part of his loss by pretending 
to betray the queen for a bribe to Spain. He acted with the 
knowledge of Lord Burleigh. In 1573 he became treasurer of 
the navy in succession to his father-in-law Benjamin Gonson. 
The office of comptroller was conferred on him soon after, and 
for the rest of his life he remained the principal administrative 
officer of the navy. Burleigh noted that he was suspected of 
fraud in his office, but the queen's ships were kept by him in 
good condition. In 1588 he served as rear-admiral against the 
Spanish. Armada and was knighted. In 1590 he was sent to 
the coast of Portugal to intercept the Spanish treasure Beet, but 
did not meet it In giving an account of his failure to the queen 
he quoted the text " Paul doth plant, Apollo doth water, but 
God giveth the increase," which exhibition of piety is said to 
have provoked the queen into exclaiming, " God's death f 
This fool went out a soldier, and has come home a divine." In 
1595 he accompanied Drake on another treasure-hunting voyage 
to the West Indies, which was even less successful, and be died 
at sea off Porto Rico on the 12th of November 1595. 

Hawkins was twice married, first to Katharine Gonson and 
then to Margaret Vaughan. He was counted a puritan when 
Puritanism meant little beyond hatred of Spain and popery, 
and when these principles were an ever-ready excuse for voyages 
in search of slaves and plunder. In the course of one of his 
voyages, when be was becalmed and his negroes were dying, he 
consoled himself by the reflection that God would not suffer 
His elect to perish. Contemporary evidence can be produced to 
show that he was greedy, unscrupulous and rude. But if he had 
been a more delicate man he would not have risked the gallows 
by making piratical attacks on the Portuguese and by appearing 
in the West Indies as an armed smuggler; and in that case he 
would not have played: an important part in history by setting 
the example of breaking down the pretension of the Spaniards 
to exclude all comers from the New World. His morality was 
that of the average stirring man of his time, whether in England 
or elsewhere. 

See R. A. J. Walling, A Seo*dot °! Deeon (1007); and Soothe? In 
his British Admirals, voL iit. The original accounts of his voyages 
compiled by Hakluyt have been reprinted by the Hakluyt Society, 
with a preface by Sir C. R. Markham. 

HAWKINS, SIR JOHN (1710-1789), English writer on musk, 
was born on the 30th of March 1719* in London, the son of an 
architect who destined him for hisj>wn profession. Ultimately, 
however, Hawkins took to the law, devoting his leisure hours 
to his favourite study of music. A wealthy marriage in 1753 
enabled him to indulge his passion for acquiring rare works of 
music, and he bought, for example, the collection formed by 
Dr Pepusch, and subsequently presented by Hawkins to the 
British Museum. It was on such materials that Hawkins 



HAWKINS, SIR R.—HAWKSHAW 



99 



fo un de d his celebrated work on the Gtneral History of the Science 
ond Practice of Music, in $ vols, (republished in 2 vols., 1876). 
It wu brought out in 1776, the same year which witnessed the 
appearance of the first volume of Burney's work on the same 
subject. The relative merits of the two works were eagerly 
discussed by contemporary critics. Burney no doubt is in- 
finitely superior as a literary man, and his work accordingly 
comes much nearer the idea of a systematic treatise on the 
subject than Hawkins's, which is essentially a collection of rare 
and valuable pieces of mask with a more or less continuous 
commentary. But by rescuing these from oblivion Hawkins has 
given a permanent value to his work. Of Hawkins's literary 
efforts apart from music it will be sufficient to mention his 
occasional contributions to the Gentleman's Mogrnne, his 
edition (1760) of the Complete Angler (1787) and his biography 
of Dr Johnson, with whom he was intimately acquainted. 
He was one of the original members of the Ivy Lane Club, and 
ultimately became one of Dr Johnson's executors. If there were 
any doubt as to his intimacy with Johnson, it would be settled 
by the slighting way in which Boswell refers to him. Speaking 
of the Ivy Lane Club, he mentions amongst the members " Mr 
John Hawkins, an attorney," and adds the following footnote, 
which at the same time may serve as a summary of the remaining 
facts of Hawkins's life: " He was for several years chairman 
of the Middlesex justices, and upon presenting an address to 
Che king accepted the usual offer of knighthood (1772). He 
is the author of a History of Music in five volumes in quarto. 
By assiduous attendance upon Johnson in his last illness he 
obtained the office of one of his executors — in consequence of 
which the booksellers of London employed him to publish an 
edition of Dr Johnson's works and to write his life." Sir John 
Hawkins died on the 21st of May 1789, and was buried in the 
cloisters of Westminster Abbey. 

HAWKINS, or Hawkyns, SIR RICHARD (c. 1562-1632), 
British seaman, was the only son of Admiral Sir John Hawkins 
(q.v.) by his first marriage. He was from his earliest days 
familiar with ships and the sea, and in 1582 he accompanied 
his uncle, William Hawkins, to the West Indies. In 1 58$ he was 
captain of a galliot in Drake's expedition to the Spanish main, 
in 1 588 he commanded a queen's ship against the Armada, and in 
1500 served with his father's expedition to the coast of Portugal. 
In 1593 he purchased the " Dainty," a ship originally built for 
his father and used by him in his expeditions, and sailed for the 
West Indies, the Spanish main and the South Seas. It seems 
clear that his project was to prey on the oversea possessions of 
the king of Spain. Hawkins, however, in an account of the 
voyage written thirty years afterwards, maintained, and by that 
time perhaps had really persuaded himself, that his expedition 
was undertaken purely for the purpose of geographical discovery. 
After visiting the coast of Brazil, the ** Dainty " passed through 
the Straits of Magellan, and in due course reached Valparaiso. 
Having plundered the town, Hawkins pushed north, and in June 
1594, a year after leaving Plymouth, arrived in the bay of San 
Mateo. Here the" Dainty " was attacked by two Spanish ships. 
Hawkins was hopelessly outmatched, but defended himself with 
great courage. At last, when he himself had been severely 
wounded, many of his men killed, and the " Dainty " was nearly 
sinking, he surrendered on the promise of a safe-conduct out of 
the country for himself and his crew. Through no fault of the 
Spanish commander this promise was not kept. In 1 597 Hawkins 
was sent to Spain, and imprisoned first at Seville and subse- 
quently at Madrid. He was released in 1602, and, returning to 
England, was knighted in 1603. In 1604 he became member of 
parliament for Plymouth and vice-admiral of Devon, a post 
which, as the coast was swarming with pirates, was no sinecure. 
In 1620-1621 he was vice-admiral, under Sir Robei Mansell, 
of the fleet sent into the Mediterranean to reduce the Algerian 
corsairs. He died in London on the 1 7th of April 1612. 

See his Observations in his Voiage into the South Sea (1622), re- 
published by the Hakluyt Society. 

HAWKS, FRANCIS LISTER (1708-1866), American clergyman, 
was born at Newbern, North Carolina, on the roth of June 1798, 



and graduated at the university of his native state in 181 5. 
After practising law with some distinction he entered the 
Episcopalian ministry in 1827 and proved a brilhant and im- 



pressive preacher, holding livings in New Haven, Philadelphia, 
New York and New Orleans, and declining several bishoprics. 
On his appointment as historiographer of his church in 1835, 
be went to England, and collected the abundant materials 
afterwards utilised in his Contributions to the Bcdesiastical 
History of US. A. (New York, 1836-1839). These two volumes 
dealt with Maryland and Virginia, while two later ones (1863- 
1864) were devoted to Connecticut. He was the first president 
of the university of Louisiana (now merged in Tulane). He 
died in New York on the 26th of September 1866. 

HAWKSHAW, SIR JOHN (18x1-1891), English engineer, was 
born in Yorkshire in x8xx, and was educated at Leeds grammar 
school. Before he was twenty-one he had been engaged for six or 
seven years in railway engineering and the construction of roads 
in his native county, and in the year of his majority he obtained 
an appointment as engineer to the Bolivar Mining Association 
in Venezuela. But the climate there was more than his health 
could stand, and in 1834 he was obliged to return to England. 
He soon obtained employment under Jesse Hartley at the 
Liverpool docks, and subsequently was made engineer in charge 
of the railway and navigation works of the Manchester, Bury 
and Bolton Canal Company. In 1845 he became chief engineer 
to the Manchester & Leeds railway, and in 1847 to its successor! 
the Lancashire & Yorkshire railway, for which he constructed a 
large number of branch lines. In 1850 he removed to London 
and began to practise as a consulting engineer, at first alone, 
but subsequently In partnership with Harrison Hayter. In that 
capacity his work was of an extremely varied nature, embracing 
almost every branch of engineering. He retained his connexion 
with the Lancashire ftc Yorkshire Company until his retirement 
from professional work in 1888, and was consulted on all the 
important engineering points that affected it in that long period. 
In London be was responsible for the Charing Cross and Cannon 
Street railways, together with the two bridges which carried 
them over the Thames; be was engineer of the East London 
railway, which passes under the Thames through Sir M. I. 
Brunei's well-known tunnel; and jointly with Sir J. Wolfe 
Barry he constructed the section of the Underground railway 
which completed the " inner circle " between the Aldgate and 
Mansion House stations. In addition, many railway works 
claimed his attention in all parts of -the world — Germany, 
Russia, India, Mauritius* &c. One noteworthy point in his 
railway practice was his advocacy, in opposition to Robert 
Stephenson, of steeper gradients than had previously been 
thought desirable or possible, and so far back as 1838 he expressed 
decided disapproval of the maintenance of the broad gauge on 
the Great Western, because of the troubles he foresaw it would 
lead to in connexion with future railway extension, and because 
he objected in general to breaks of gauge in the lines of a country. 
The construction of canals was another branch of engineering 
in which he was actively engaged. In 1862 he became engineer 
of the Amsterdam ship-canal, and in the succeeding year he may 
fairly be said to have been the saviour of the Suez Canal. About 
that time the scheme was in very bad odour, and the khedive 
determined to get the opinion of an English engineer as to its 
practicability, having made up his mind to stop the works if that 
opinion was unfavourable. Hawkshaw was chosen to make the 
inquiry, and it was because his report was entirely favourable that 
M. de Lessens was able to say at the opening ceremony that to 
him he owed the canal. As a member of the International 
Congress which considered the construction of an interoceanic 
canal across central America, he thought best of the Nicaraguan 
route, and privately he regarded the Panama scheme as im- 
practicable at a reasonable cost, although publicly he expressed 
no opinion on the matter and left the Congress without voting. 
Sir John Hawkshaw also had a wide experience in constructing 
harbours (e.g. Holyhead) and docks (e.g. Penarth, the Albert 
Dock at Hull, and the south dock of the East and West India 
Docks in London), in river-engineering, in drainage and sewerage. 



ioo 



HAWKSLEY— HAWLEY, H. 



in water-supply, &c. He was engineer, with Sir Janes Brunlees, 
of the original Channel Tunnel Company from 1872, but many 
years previously he had investigated for himsself the question of 
a tunnel under the Strait of Dover from an engineering point of 
view, and had come to a belief in its feasibility, so far as that 
could be determined from borings and surveys. Subsequently, 
however, he became convinced that the tunnel would not be to 
the advantage of Great Britain, and thereafter would have 
nothing to do with the project. He was also engineer of the 
Severn Tunnel, which, from its magnitude and the difficulties 
encountered in its construction, must rank as one of the most 
notable engineering undertakings of the 29th century. He died 
in London on the and of June 1891. 

HAWKSLEY, THOMAS (1807-1803), English engineer, Was 
born on the 12th of July 1807, &t Arnold, near Nottingham. 
He was at Nottingham grammar school till the age of fifteen, but 
was indebted to his private studies for his knowledge of mathe- 
matics, chemistry and geology. In 182a he was articled to. an 
architect m Nottingham, subsequently becoming a partner in 
the firm, which also undertook engineering work; and in 1852 
he removed to London, where he continued in active practice 
till he was well past eighty. His work was chiefly concerned with 
water and gas supply and with main-drainage. Of water- 
works he used to say that he had constructed 150, and a long 
list might be drawn up of important towns that owe their water 
to his skill, including Liverpool, Sheffield, Leicester, Leeds, 
Derby, Darlington, Oxford, Cambridge and Northampton in 
England, and Stockholm, Altona and Bridgetown (Barbados) 
in other countries. To his native town of Nottingham he was 
water engineer for fifty years, and the system he designed for 
it was noteworthy from the fact that the principle of constant 
supply wasadopted for the first time. Thegas-works at Notting- 
ham, and at many other towns for which he provided Water 
supplies were also constructed by him. He designed main- 
drainage systems for Birmingham, Worcester and Windsor among 
other places, and in 1857 he was called in, together with G. P. 
Bidder and Sir J. Basalgette, to report on the best solution of the 
vexed question of a main-drainage scheme for London. In 1872 
he was president of the Institution of Civil Engineers— an office 
in which his son Charles followed him in zoox. He died in 
London on the 23rd of September 1893. 

HAWKSMOOR, NICHOLAS (1661-1736), English architect, of 
Nottinghamshire birth, became a pupil of Sir Christopher Wren 
at the age of eighteen, and his name is intimately associated 
with those of Wren and Sir J. Vanbrugh in the English archi- 
tecture of his time. Through Wren's influence, he obtained 
various official posts, as deputy-surveyor at Chelsea hospital, 
clerk of the works and deputy-surveyor at Greenwich hospital, 
clerk of the works at Whitehall, St James's and Westminster, 
and he succeeded Wren as surveyor-general of Westminster 
Abbey. He took part in much of the work done by Wren and 
Vanbrugh, and it is difficult often to assign among them the 
credit for the designs of various features. Hawksmoor appears, 
however, to have been responsible for the early Gothic designs 
of the two towers of All Souls' (Oxford) north quadrangle, 'and 
the library and other features at Queen's College (Oxford). 
At the close of Queen Anne's reign he had a principal part in 
the scheme for building fifty new churches in London, and 
himself designed five or six of them, including St Mary Woolnoth. 
(1716-1719) and St George's, Bloomsbury (1720-1730). A 
number of his drawings have been preserved. He died in 
London on the 25th of March 1736. 

HAWKWOOD. SIR JOHN (d. 1394), an English adventurer 
who attained great wealth and renown as a condottiere in the 
Italian wars of the 14th century. His name is variously spelt 
as Haccoude, Aucud, Aguto, &c, by contemporaries. It is said 
that he was the son of a tanner of Hedingham Sibil in Essex, 
and was apprenticed in London, whence he went, in the English 
army, to France under Edward III. and the Black Prince. It 
is said also that he obtained the favour of the Black Prince, and 
received knighthood from King Edward III., but though it is 
certain that he was of knightly rank, there is no evidence as to 



the time or place at which he won it. On the peace of Bretigny 
in 1360, he collected a band of men-at-arms, and moved south- 
ward to Italy, where we find the White Company, as his men 
were called, assisting the marquis of Monferrato against Milan 
in 1362-43, and the Pisans against Florence in 1364. After 
several campaigns in various parts of central Italy, Hawkwood 
in 1368 entered the service of Bernabd ViscontL In 1360 he 
fought for Perugia against the pope, and in 1370 for pie Visconti 
against Pisa, Florence and other enemies. In 1372 he defeated 
the marquis of Monferrato, but soon afterwards, resenting the 
interference of a council of war with his plans, Hawkwood 
resigned his command, and the White Company passed into the 
papal service, in winch he fought against the Visconti in 1373- 
1375. In 137s the Florentines entered into an agreement with 
him, by which they were to pay him and his companion 130,000 
gold florins in three months on condition that he undertook 
no engagement against them; and in the same year the priors 
of the arts and the gonfalonier decided to give him a pension 
of 1200 florins per annum for as long as he should remain in 
Italy. In 1377, under the orders of the cardinal Robert of 
Geneva, legate of Bologna, he massacred the inhabitants of 
Cesena, but in May of the same year, disliking the executioner's 
work put upon him by the legate, he joined the anti-papal league, 
and married, at Milan, Donnina, an illegitimate daughter of 
Bernabd ViscontL In 1378 and 1379 Hawkwood was constantly 
in the field; he quarrelled with Bernabd in 1378, and entered 
the service of Florence, receiving, as in 1375, 130,000 gold florins,. 
He rendered good service to the republic up to 1382, when for a 
time he was one of the English ambassadors at the papal court. 
He engaged in. a brief campaign* in Naples in 1383, fought for 
the marquis of Padua against Verona in 1386, and in 1388 made 
an unsuccessful effort against Gian Galeaaao Visconti, who had 
murdered Bernabd. In 1300 the Florentines took up the war 
against Gian Galeazxo in earnest, and appointed Hawkwood 
commander-in-chief. His campaign against the Milanese army 
in the Veronese and the Bergamask was reckoned a triumph 
of generalship, and in 1392 Florence exacted a satisfactory 
peace from Gian Galeasso. His latter years were spent in a 
villa in the neighbourhood of Florence. On his death in 1394 
the republic gave him a public funeral of great magnificence, and 
decreed the erection of a marble monument in the cathedral. 
This, however, was never executed; but Paolo Uccelli painted 
his portrait in terre-verte on the inner facade of the building, 
where it still remains, though damaged by removal from the 
plaster to canvas. Richard II. of England, probably at the 
instigation of Hawkwood 's sons, who returned to their native 
country, requested the Florentines to let him remove the good 
knight's bones, and the Florentine government signified its 
consent. 

Of his children by Donnina Visconti, who appears to have been 
his second wife, the eldest daughter married Count Brezaglia 
of Pordglia, podesta of Ferrara, who succeeded him as Florentine 
commander-in-chief, and another a German condottiere named 
Conrad Prospergh. His son, John, returned to England and 
settled at Hedingham Sibil, where, it is supposed, Sir John 
Hawkwood was buried. The children of the first marriage- 
were two sons and three daughters, and of the latter the youngest 
married John Shelley, an ancestor of the poet. 

Authorities. — hlunton, Rerum J laiicarum srriptores t zn6 supple-, 
ment by, Tartinius and Manni; Archivio storxco ilaliano; Temple- 
Leader and Marcotti, Giovanni Aculo (Florence, 1889; Eng. transl.. 
Leader Scott, London, 1889); NichoU Bibltotheca topographic* 
Britannic** vol. vi.; J. G. Alger in Register and Magazine of Bio- 
graphy, v. 1.; and article in Diet. Nat. Biog. 

HAWLEY, HENRY (c. 1679-1759), British licut.-general, 
entered the army, it is said, in 1694. He saw service in the War 
of Spanish Succession as a captain of Erie's (the 19th) foot. 
After Almanza he returned to England, and a few years later 
had become li cut. -colonel of the 19th. With this regiment he 
served at Sheriffmuir in 1 7 x 5, where he was wounded. After this 
for some years he served in the United Kingdom, obtaining pro- 
motion in the usual course, and in 1 739 he arrivod at the grade 
of major gencraL Four years later he accompanied George II. 



HAWLEY, J. R.— HAWTHORN 



IOI 



and Stair to Germany, and, at a general officer of cavalry 
aoder Sir John Cope, was present at Dettingen. Becoming 
bcut.-general somewhat later, be was second-in-command of 
the cavalry at Fontenoy, and on the aoth of December 1745 
became com mandrr»in-chicf in Scotland. Less than a month 
later Hawley suffered a severe defeat at Falkirk at the hands of 
the Highland insurgents. This, however, did not cost him his 
command, for the doke of Cumberland, who was soon afterwards 
sent north, was captain-general Under Cumberland's orders 
Hawley led the cavalry in the campaign of Culloden, and at that 
battle his dragoons distinguished themselves by their ruthless 
butchery of the fugitive rebels. After the end of the " Forty- 
Five " be accompanied Cumberland to the Low Countries and led 
the allied cavalry at Lauffeld (Val). He ended his career as 
governor of Portsmouth and died at that place in 1759. James 
Wolfe, his brigade-major, wrote of General Hawley in no flattering 
terms. " The troops dread his severity, hate the man and hold 
his military knowledge in contempt," he wrote. But, whether it 
be true or false that he was the natural son of George II., Hawley 
was always treated with the greatest favour by that king and 
by his son the duke of Cumberland. 

HAWLEY, JOSEPH ROSWELL (1836- 1005), American 
political leader, was bora on the 31st of October at Stewartsville, 
Richmond county, North Carolina, where his father, a native of 
Connecticut, was pastor of a Baptist church. The father returned 
to Connecticut in 1837 and the son graduated at Hamilton 
College (Clinton, N.Y.)in 1847. He was admitted to the bar in 
1850, and practised at Hartford, Conn., for six years. An ardent 
opponent of slavery, he became a Free Soiler, was a delegate 
to the National Convention which nominated John P. Hale 
for the presidency in 185 a, and subsequently served as chairman 
of the State Committee, having at the same time editorial control 
of the Charter Oak, the party organ. In 1856 he took a leading 
part in organizing the Republican party in Connecticut, and 
in 1857 became editor of the Hartford Evening Press, a newly 
established Republican newspaper. He served in the Federal 
army throughout the Civil War, rising from the rank of captain 
(April 22, 1861) to that of brigadier-general of volunteers (Sept. 
1864); took part in the Port Royal Expedition, in the capture 
of Fort Pulaski (April 1862), in the siege of Charleston and the 
capture of Fort Wagner (Sept. 1863), in the battle of Olustee 
(Feb. 20, 1864), in the siege operations about Petersburg, and 
m General W. T. Sherman's campaign in the Carolina*; and 
In September 1865 received the brevet of major-general of 
volunteers. From April 1866 to April 1867 he was governor 
of Connecticut, and in 1867 he bought the Hartford Courunt, 
with which he combined the Press, and which became under his 
editorship the most influential newspaper in Connecticut and 
one of the leading Republican papers in the country. He was 
the permanent chairman of the Republican National Convention 
in x868, was a delegate to the conventions of 1872, 1876 and 
1880, was a member of Congress from December 1872 until 
March 187s and again in 1870-1881, and was a United States 
senator from x88x until the 3rd of March 1005, being one of the 
Republican leaders both in the House and the Senate. From 
1873 to 1876 he was president of the United States Centennial 
Commission, the great success of the Centennial Exhibition 
being largely due to him. He died at Washington, D.C., on the 
17th of March 1005. 

HA WORTH, an urban district in the Keighley parliamentary 
division of the West Riding of Yorkshire, England, xo m. N.W. 
of Bradford, on a branch of the Midland railway. Pop. (1901), 
7492. It is picturesquely situated on a steep slope, lying high, 
and surrounded by moorland. The Rev. Patrick Bronte (d. 1861) 
was incumbent here for forty-one years, and a memorial near 
the west window of St Michael's church bears his name and the 
names of his gifted daughters upon it The grave of Charlotte 
and Emily Bronte is also marked by a brass. In 1805 a museum 
was opened by the Bronte society. There is a large worsted 
industry. 

HAWSER (in sense and form as if from "hawse," which, 
from the 16th-century form kalse, isjicrived from. Teutonic 



hols, neck, of which there is a Scandinavian use in the sense of 
the forepart of a ship; the two words are not etymological!? 
connected; "hawser" is from an O. Fr. kaucier, hausser, to 
raise, tow, hoist, from the Late Lat. aUiare, to lift, alius, high), 
a small cable or thick rope used at sea for the purposes of mooring 
or warping, in the case of large vessels made of steel. When a 
cable or tow line is made of three or more small ropes it is said 
to be " hawser-laid.' 1 The " hawse " of a ship is that part of the 
bows where the " hawse-holes " are made. These are two holes 
cut in the bows of a vessel for the cables to pass through, having 
small cast-iron pipes, called " hawse-pipes," fitted into them to 
prevent abrasion. In bad weather at sea these holes are plugged 
up with " hawse-plugs " to prevent the water entering. The 
phrase to enter the service by the " hawse-holes " is used of 
those who have risen from before the mast to commissioned 
rank in the navy. When the ship is at anchor the space between 
her head and the anchor is called u hawse," as in the phrase 
" athwart the hawse." The term also applies to the position 
of the ship's anchors when moored; when they are laid out in a 
line at right angles to the wind it is said to be moored with an 
" open hawse "; when both cables are laid out straight to their 
anch ors wi thout crossing, it is a " dear hawse." 

HAWTHORN, a city of Bourke county, Victoria, Australia, 
4} m. by rail E. of and suburban to Melbourne. Pop. (1001), 
2i,339. It is the seat of the important Methodist Ladies' 
College. The majority of the inhabitants are professional and 
business men engaged in Melbourne and their residences are 
nume rous a t Hawthorn. 

HAWTHORN (O. Eng. to**-, hag-, or hete-ihern, ix. u hedge- 
thorn "), the common name for Crataegus, in botany, a genus 
of shrubs or small trees belonging to the natural order Rosaceae, 
native of the north temperate regions, especially America. It 
is represented in the British Isles by the hawthorn, white-thorn 
or may (Ger. Hagedorn and Christdorn; Fr. aubipine), C. 
Oxyacantha, a small, round-headed, much-branched tree, xo to 
20 ft. high, the branches often ending in single sharp spines. 
The leaves, which are deeply cut, are x to 2 in. long and very 
variable in shape. The flowers are sweet-scented, in flat-topped 
dusters, and J to | in. in diameter, with five spreading white 
petals alternating with five persistent green sepals, a large 
number of stamens with pinkish-brown anthers, and one to three 
carpels sunk in the cup-shaped floral axis. The fruit, or haw, 
as in the apple, consists of the swollen floral axis, which is usually 
scarlet, and forms a fleshy envelope surrounding the hard stone. 

The common hawthorn is a native of Europe as far north as 
6o}° in Sweden, and of North Africa, western Asia and Siberia, 
and has been naturalized in North America and Australia. It 
thrives best in dry soils, and in height varies from 4 or 5 to x 2, 1 $ 
or, in exceptional cases, as much as between 20 and 30 ft. It 
may be propagated from seed or from cuttings. The seeds 
must be from ripe fruit, and if fresh gathered should be freed 
from pulp by maceration in water. They germinate only in the 
second year after sowing; in the course of their first year the 
seedlings attain a height of 6 to 12 in. Hawthorn has been for 
many centuries a favourite park and hedge plant in Europe, and 
numerous varieties have been developed by cultivation; these 
. differ in the form of the leaf, the white, pink or red, single or 
double flowers, and the yellow, orange or red fruit. In England 
the hawthorn, owing to its hardiness and doseness of growth, 
has been employed for enclosure of land since the Roman occupa- 
tion, but for ordinary field hedges it is believed it was generally 
in use till about the end of the 17th century. James I. of 
Scotland, in his Quair, ii. 14 (early 15th century), mentions the 
" hawthorn hedges knet " of Windsor Castle. The first hawthorn 
hedges in Scotland are said to have been planted by soldiers 
of Cromwell at Inch Buckling Brae in East Lothian and Finlarig 
in Perthshire. Annual pruning, to which the hawthorn is par- 
ticularly amenable, is necessary if the hedge is to maintain its 
compactness and sturdiness. When the lower part shows 
a tendency to go bare the strong stems may be " plashed," i.e. 
split, bent over and pegged to the ground so that new growths 
may start. The wood of the hawthorn is white in colour, with 



102 



HAWTHORNE, NATHANIEL 



* yeUowish tinge Fresh cut it weighs 68 lb 1 2 02. per cubic foot, 
and dry 57 lb j oz. It can seldom be obtained in large portions, 
and has the disadvantage of being apt to warp; its great hard* 
ness, however, renders it valuable for the manufacture of various 
articles, such as the cogs of mill-wheels, flails and mallets, and 
handles of hammers. Both green and dry it forms excellent 
fuel. The bark possesses tanning properties, and in Scotland 
in past times yielded with ferrous sulphate a black dye for wool. 
The leaves are eaten by cattle, and have been employed as a 
substitute for tea. Birds and deer feed upon the haws, which are 
used in the preparation of a fermented and highly intoxicating 
liquor. The hawthorn serves as a stock for grafting other trees. 
As an ornamental feature in landscapes, it is worthy of notice; 
and the pleasing shelter it affords and the beauty of Us blossoms 
have frequently been alluded to by poets. The custom of 
employing the flowering branches for decorative purposes on 
the 1st of May is of very early origin; but since the alteration 
in the calendar the tree has rarely been in full bloom in England 
before the second week of that month. In the Scottish Highlands 
the flowers may be seen as late as the middle of June. The 
hawthorn has been regarded as the emblem of hope, and its 
branches are stated to have been carried by the ancient Greeks 
in wedding processions, and to have been used by them to deck 
the altar of Hymen. The supposition that the tree was the 
source of Christ's crown of thorns gave rise doubtless to the 
tradition current among the French peasantry that it utters 
groans and cries on Good Friday, and probably also to the old 
popular superstition in Great Britain and Ireland that ill-luck 
attended the uprooting of hawthorns. Branches of the Glaston- 
bury thorn, C. Oxyacanika, var. praecox, which flowers both in 
December and in spring, were formerly highly valued in England, 
on account of the legend that the tree was originally the staff of 
Joseph of Arimathea. 

The number of species in the genus is from fifty to seventy, 
according to the view taken as to whether or not some of the 
forms, especially of those occurring in the United States, repre- 
sent distinct species. C. coccineo, a native of Canada and the 
eastern United States, with bright scarlet fruits, was introduced 
into English gardens towards the end of the 17th century. 
C. Crus-Galli, with a somewhat similar distribution and intro- 
duced about the same time, is a very decorative species with 
showy, bright red fruit, often remaining on the branches till 
spring, and leaves assuming a brilliant scarlet and orange in the 
autumn; numerous varieties are in cultivation. C, Pyraeanlha, 
known in gardens as pyracantha, is evergreen and has white 
flowers, appearing in May, and fine scarlet fruits of the size of 
a pea which remain on the tree nearly all the winter. It is a 
native of south Europe and was introduced into Britain early 
in the 17th century. 

HAWTHORNE, NATHANIEL (1804-1864), American writer, 
son of Nathaniel Hathorne (1 776-1808), was born at Salem, 
Massachusetts, on the 4th of July 1804. The bead of the 
American branch of the family, William Hathorne of Wilton, 
Wiltshire, England, emigrated with Winthrop and his pompany, 
and arrived at Salem Bay, Mass., on the 12th of June 1630. He 
had grants of land at Dorchester, where he resided for upwards 
of six years, when he was persuaded to remove to Salem by the 
tender of further grants of land there, it being considered a public 
benefit that he should become an inhabitant of that town. He 
represented his fellow-townsmen in the legislature, and served 
them in a military capacity as a captain in the first regular troop 
organized in Salem, which he led to victory through an Indian 
campaign in Maine. Originally a determined " Separatist," 
and opposed to compulsion for conscience, he signalized himself 
when a magistrate by the active part which he took in the Quaker 
persecutions of the time (165 7- 1662), going so far on one occasion 
as to order the whipping of Anne Coleman and four other Friends 
through Salem, Boston and Dedbam. He died, an old man, in 
the odour of sanctity, and left a good property to his son John, 
who inherited his fathers capacity and intolerance, and was in 
turn a legislator, a magistrate, a soldier and a bitter persecutor 
of witches. Before the death of Justice Hathorne in 1717, the 



destiny of the family suffered aseaxhange* and they began to 
be noted as mariners. One of these seafaring Hathornes figured 
in the Revolution aa a privateer, who had the good fortune to 
escape from a British prison-ship; and another, Captain Daniel 
Hathorne, has left his mark on early American ballad-lore. 
He too was a privateer, commander of the brig " Fair American, 1 * 
which, cruising off the coast of Portugal, fell in with a British 
scow laden with troops for General Howe, which scow the bold 
Hathorne and his valiant crew at once engaged and fought for 
over an hour, until the vanquished enemy was glad to cut the 
Yankee grapplings and quickly bear away. The last of the 
Hathornes with whom we are concerned was a son of this 
sturdy old privateer, Nathaniel Hathorne. He was born in 
1776, and about the beginning of the 10th century married Mist 
Elisabeth Clarke Manning, a daughter of Richard Manning of 
Salem, whose ancestors emigrated to America about fifty years 
after the arrival of William Hathorne. Young Nathaniel took 
his hereditary place before the mast, passed from the forecastle 
to the cabin, made voyages to the East and West Indies, Brazil 
and Africa, and finally died of fever at Surinam, in the spring of 
1808. He was the father of three children, the second of whom 
was the subject of this article. The form of the family name was 
changed by the latter to " Hawthorne " in his early manhood. 

After the death of her husband Mrs Hawthorne removed to 
the house of her father with her little family of children. Of 
the boyhood of Nathaniel no particulars have reached us, except 
that he was fond of taking long walks alone, and that he used to 
declare to his mother that he would go to sea some time and 
would never return. Among the books that he is known to have 
read as a child were Shakespeare, Milton, Pope and Thomson, 
The Castle of Indolence being an especial favourite. In the 
autumn of 1818 his mother removed to Raymond, a town ia 
Cumberland county, Maine, where his uncle, Richard Manning, 
bad built a large and ambitious dwelling. Here the lad resumed 
his solitary walks, exchanging the narrow streets of Salem for 
the boundless, primeval wilderness, and its sluggish harbour 
for the fresh bright waters of Sebago lake. He roamed the 
woods by day, with his gun and rod, and in the moonlight nights 
of winter skated upon the lake alone till midnight. When he 
found himself away from home, and wearied with his exercise, 
he took refuge in a log cabin where half a tree would be burning 
upon the hearth. He had by this time acquired a taste for 
writing, that showed itself in a little blank-book, in which be 
jotted down his woodland adventures and feelings, and which 
was remarkable for minute observation and nice perception of 
nature. 

After a year's residence at Raymond, Nathaniel returned 
to Salem in order to prepare for college. He amused himself 
by publishing a manuscript periodical, which he called the 
Spectator, and which displayed considerable vivacity and talent. 
He speculated upon the profession that he would follow, with a 
sort of prophetic insight into his future. " I do not want to be 
a doctor and live by men's diseases," he wrote to his mother, 
" nor a minister to live by their sins, nor a lawyer and live by 
their quarrels. So I don't see that there is anything left forme 
but to be ^n author. How would you like some day to see a 
whole shelf full of books, written by your son, with ' Hawthorne's 
Works' printed on their backs?" 

Nathaniel entered Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine, ia 
the autumn of 1821, where he became acquainted with two 
students who were destined to distinction — Henry W.Longfellow 
and Franklin Pierce. He was an excellent classical scholar, 
his Latin compositions, even in his freshman year, being remark- 
able for their elegance, while his Greek (which was less) was good. 
He made graceful translations from the Roman poets, and 
wrote several English poems which were creditable to him. 
After graduation three years later (1825) he returned to Salem, 
and to a life of isolation. He devoted his mornings to study, 
his afternoons to writing, and his evenings to long walks along 
the rocky coast. He was scarcely known by sight to his towns- 
men, and he held so little communication with the members 
of his own family that his meals were frequently left at his 



HAWTHORNE, NATHANIEL 



locked door. He wrote largely, but destroyed many of his 
manuscripts, his taste was so difficult to please. He thought 
well enough, however, of one of his compositions to print it 
anonymously in 1828. A crude melodramatic story, entitled 
Fanshawt, it was unworthy even of his immature powers, and 
should never have been rescued from the oblivion which speedily 
overlook it. The name of Nathaniel Hawthorne finally became 
known to his countrymen es a writer in The Token, a holiday 
annual which was commenced in 1828 by Mr S. G. Goodrich 
(better known as "Peter Parley "), by whom it was conducted 
for fourteen years. This forgotten publication numbered among 
its contributors most of the prominent American writers of the 
time, none of whom appear to haver added to their reputation 
ia its pages, except the least popular of all— Hawthorne, who 
was for years the obscurest man of letters in America, though 
he gradually made admirers in a quiet way. His first public 
recognition came from England, where his genius was discovered 
in 1835 by Henry F. Chorley, oae of the editors of the Athenaeum, 
m which be copied three of Hawthorne's most characteristic 
papers from The Token. He had but little encouragement to 
continue in literature, for Mr Goodrich was so much more a 
publisher than an author that he paid him wretchedly for his 
contributions, and still more wretchedly for his work upon an 
Awurican Magazine of Useful and Entertaining Knowledge, which 
be persuaded him to edit. This author-publisher consented, 
however, at a later period (1837) to bring out a collection of 
Hawthorne's writings under the title of Twice-told Tales. A 
moderate edition was got rid of, but the great body of the reading 
public ignored the book altogether. It was generously reviewed 
in the North American Review by his college friend Longfellow, 
who said it came from the hand of a man of genius, and praised 
it for the exceeding beauty of its style, which was as dear as 
running waters* 

The want of pecuniary success which had so far attended 
his authorship led Hawthorne to accept a situation which was 
tendered him by George Bancroft, the historian, collector of 
the port of Boston under the Democratic rule of President 
Van Buren. He was appointed a weigher in the custom-house 
at a salary of about Si 200 a year, and entered upon the duties 
of bis office, which consisted for the most part in measuring 
coal, salt and other bulky commodities on foreign vessels. 
It was irksome employment, but faithfully performed for two 
years, when he was superseded through a change in the national 
administration. Master of himself once more, he returned to 
Salem, where he remained until the spring of 1841, when he 
wrote a collection of children's stories entitled Grandfather's 
Chair, and joined an industrial association at West Roxbury, 
Mass. Brook Farm, as it was called, was a social Utopia, 
composed of a number of advanced thinkers, whose object was 
so to distribute manual labour as to give its members time for 
intellectual culture. The scheme worked admirably—on paper; 
but it was suited neither to the temperament nor the taste of 
Hawthorne, and after trying it patiently for nearly a year he 
returned to the everyday life of mankind. 

One of Hawthorne's earliest admirers was Miss Sophia Pea body , 
a lady of Salem, whom he married in the summer of 1842. He 
made himself a new home in an old manse, at Concord, Mass., 
situated on historic ground, in sight of an old revolutionary 
battlefield, and devoted himself diligently to literature. He 
was known to the few by his Twice-told Tales, and to the many 
by his papers in the Democratic Review. He published in 1842 
a further portion of Grandfather's Chair, and also a second 
volume of Twice-told Tales. He also edited, during 1845, 
the African Journals of Horatio Bridge, an officer of the navy, 
who had been at college with him; and in the following year he 
published in two volumes a collection of his later writings, under 
the title of Mosses from an Old Manse. 

After a residence of nearly four years at Concord, Hawthorne 
returned to Salem, having been appointed surveyor of the 
custom-bouse of that port by a new Democratic administration. 
He filled the duties of this position until the incoming of the 
Whig administration again led to his retirement. He seems to 



103 

have written little during his official term, but, as he had leisure 
enough and to spare, he read much, and pondered over subjects 
for future stories. His next work, The Scarlet Letter , which was 
begun after his removal from the custom-house, was published 
in 1850. If there had been any doubt of his genius before, it 
was settled for ever by this powerful romance. 

Shortly after the publication of The Scarlet Letter Hawthorne 
removed from Salem to Lenox, Berkshire, Mass., where he wrote 
The House of the Seven Gables (1851) and The Wonder-Booh 
(1851). From Lenox he removed to West Newton, near Boston, 
Mass., where hi wrote The Blithedale Romance (1852) and The 
Snow Image and other Twice-told Tales (1852). In the spring 
of 1852 he removed back to Concord, where he purchased an 
old house which he called The Wayside, and where he wrote a 
Life of Franklin Pierce (1852) and Tanglewood Tales (1853). 
Mr Pierce was the Democratic candidate for the presidency, 
and it was only at his urgent solicitation that Hawthorne 
consented to become his biographer. He declared that he 
would accept no office in case he were elected, lest it might 
compromise him; but his friends gave him such weighty reasons 
for reconsidering his decision that he accepted the consulate 
at Liverpool, which was understood to be oae of the best gifts 
at the disposal of the president. 

Hawthorne departed for Europe in the summer of 1853, and 
returned to the United States in the summer of i860. Of the 
seven years which he passed in Europe five were spent in attending 
to the duties of his consulate at Liverpool, and in little Journeys 
to Scotland, the Lakes and elsewhere, and the remaining two 
in France and Italy. They were quiet and uneventful, coloured 
by observation and reflection, as his note-books show, but 
productive of only one elaborate work. Transformation, or The 
Marble Faun, which he sketched out during his residence in 
Italy, and prepared for the press at Leamington, England, 
whence it was despatched to America and published in. i860. 

Hawthorne took op his abode at The Wayside, not much richer 
than when he left it, and sat down at his desk once more with a 
heavy heart. He was surrounded by the throes of a great civil 
war, and the political party with which he had always acted 
was under a doud. His friend ex-President Pierce was stig- 
matised as a traitor, and when Hawthorne dedicated his next 
book to him— a volume of English impressions entitled Our Old 
Home (1863) — it was at the risk of his own popularity. His pen 
was soon to be laid aside for ever; for, with the exception of 
the unfinished story of SepHmius Fdtou, which was published 
after his death by his daughter Una (1872), and the fragment 
of The DoUher Romance, the beginning of which was published 
in the Atlantic Monthly in July ■ 1864, he wrote no more. His 
health gradually declined, his hair grew white as snow, and 
the once stalwart figure that in early manhood flashed along the 
airy cliffs and glittering sands sauntered idly on the little hill 
behind his house. In the beginning of April 1864 he made a short 
southern tour with his publisher Mr William D.Ticknor, and was 
benefited by the change of scene until he reached Philadelphia, 
where he was shocked by the sudden death of Mr Ticknor. 
He returned to The Wayside, and after a short season of rest 
joined his friend ex-President Pierce. He died at Plymouth, 
New Hampshire, on the 19th of May 1864, and five days later 
was buried at Sleepy Hollow, a beautiful cemetery at Concord, 
where he used to walk under the pines when he was living at the . 
Old Manse, and where his ashes moulder under a simple stone, 
inscribed with the single word " Hawthorne." 

The writings of Hawthorne are marked by subtle imagination, 
curious power of analysis and exquisite purity of diction. He 
studied exceptional developments of character, and was fond of 
exploring secret crypts of emotion. His shorter stories are re* 
markable for originality and suggestiveness, and his larger ones 
are as absolute creations as Hamlet or Undine. Lacking the 
accomplishment of verse, he was in the highest sense a poet. 
His work is pervaded by a manly personality, and by an almost 
feminine delicacy and gentleness. He inherited the gravity of 
his Puritan ancestors without their superstition, and learned in 
his solitary meditations a knowledge of the night-side of life 



104 



HAWTREY— HAY, G. 



which would have filled them with suspicion. A profound 
anatomist of the heart, he was singularly free from morbidness, 
and in his darkest speculations concerning evil was robustly 
right-minded. He worshipped conscience with his intellectual 
as well as his moral nat ure ; it is supreme in all be wrote. Besides 
these mental traits, he possessed the literary quality of style — 
a grace, a charm, a perfection of language which no other 
American writer ever possessed in the same degree, and which 

th 
he 



>r, 
was bora at Eton, where his father was master of the lower 
school, and educated at Rugby and Oxford. He took to the stage 
in 1881, and in 1883 adapted von Moser's Bibliolhekar as The 
Private Secretary, which had an enormous success. He then 
appeared in London in a number of modern plays, in which he 
was conspicuous as a comedian. He was inapproachable for 
parts in which cool imperturbable lying constituted the leading 
characteristic Among his later successes A Message from Mars 
was particularly popular in London and in America. 
. HAWTREY, EDWARD CRAVEN (1789-1862), English educa- 
tionalist, was born at Burnham on the 7th of May 1789, the son 
of the vicar of the parish. He was educated at Eton and King's 
College, Cambridge, and in 18 14 was appointed assistant master 
at Eton under Dr Keate. In 1854 he became headmaster of the 
college, and his administration was a vigorous one. New 
buildings were erected, including the school library and the 
sanatorium, the college chapel was restored, the Old Christopher 
Inn was closed, and the custom of " Montcm," the collection by 
street begging of funds for the university expenses of the captain 
of the school, was suppressed. He is supposed to have suggested 
the prince consort's modern language prises, while the prize for 
English essay he founded himself. In 1852 he became provost of 
Eton, and in 1854 vicar of Mapledurham. He died on the 37th 
of January 1862, and was buried in the Eton College chapel. 
On account of his command of languages ancient and modern, 
he was known in London as " the English Mezzofanti," and 
he was a book collector of the finest taste. Among bis own books 
are some excellent translations from the English into Italian, 
German and Greek. He had a considerable reputation as 
a writer of English- hexameters and as a judge of Homeric 
translation. 

HAXO, FRANCOIS NICOLAS, BENOiT, feaitON (1774-1838), 
French general and military engineer, was born at Luneville 
on the 24th of June 1774, and entered the Engineers in 1793. 
. He remained unknown, doing duty as a regimental officer for 
many years, until, as major, he had his first chance of distinction 
in the second siege of Saragossa in 1809, after which Napoleon 
made him a colonel. Haxo took part in the campaign of Wagram , 
and then returned to the Peninsula to direct the siege operations 
of Suchet's army in Catalonia and Valencia. In 18x0 be was 
made general of brigade, in 181 1 a baron, and in the same year 
he was employed in preparing the occupied fortresses of Germany 
against a possible Russian invasion. In 181 2 he was chief 
engineer of Davout's I. corps, and after the retreat from Moscow 
he was made general -of division. In 18 13 he constructed the 
works around Hamburg which made possible the famous defence 
of that fortress by Davout, and commanded the Guard Engineers 
unt il he fell into the enemy's hands at Kulra. After the Restora- 



tion Louis XVIII. wished to give Haxo a command in the Royal 
Guards, but the general remained faithful to Napoleon, and in the 
Hundred Days laid out the provisional fortifications of Paris 
and fought at Waterloo. It was, however, after the second 
Restoration that the best work of his career as a military engineer 
was done. As inspector-general he managed, though not without 
meeting considerable opposition, to reconstruct in accordance 
with the requirements of the time, and the designs which he 
had evolved to meet them, the old Vauban and Cormontaigne 
fortresses which had failed to check the invasions of 1814 and 
18x5. For his services he was made a peer of France by Louis 
Philippe (1832). Soon after this came the French intervention in 
Belgium and the famous scientific siege of Antwerp ciladd 
Under Marshal Gerard Haxo directed the besiegers and com- 
pletely outmatched the opposing engineers, the fortress being 
reduced to surrender after a siege of a little more than three weeks 
(December 23, 1832). He was after this regarded as the first 
engineer in Europe, and his latter years were spent in urging 
upon the government and the French people the fortification el 
Paris and Lyons, a project which was partly realized in his time 
and after his death fully carried out. General Haxo died at 
Paris on the 25th of June 1838* He wrote Mtmoire surle figvrl 
du terrain dans Us cartes topographiqucs (Paris, N.D.), arid a 
memoir of General Dejean (1824). 

HAXTHAUSEN, AUGUST FRANZ LUDWIO MARIA, 
Fr ether R von (1 792-1866), German political economist, was 
born near Paderborn in Westphalia on the 3rd of February 
1792. Having studied at the school of mining at Klausthal, and 
having served in the Hanoverian army, he entered the university 
of Gdtttngen in 1 8 1 5. Finishing bis cou rse there in x 81 8 he was 
engaged in managing his estates and in studying the land laws. 
The result of his studies appeared in 1829 when he published 
Vber die Agrarverfassung in den Filrstenttimcrn Paderborn mud 
Coney, a work which attracted much attention and which 
procured for its author a commission to investigate and report 
upon the land laws of the Prussian provinces with a view to a new 
code. After nine years of labour he published in 1839 an 
exhaustive treatise, Die liindliche V erf as sung in dcr Praam 
Preussen, and in 1843, at the request of the emperor Nicholas, 
he undertook a similar work for Russia, the fruits of his in* 
vestigations in that country being contained in his Studicn uber 
die innem ZusUtnde des VetksUbens, und iusbesondere die land- 
lichen Einricktungen Russlands (Hanover, 1847-1852). He 
received various honours, was a member of the combined diet 
in Berlin in 1847 and 1848, and afterwards of the Prussian upper 
house. Haxthauscn died at Hanover on the 31st of December 
1866. 

t Die land- 
lie • has been 

tn "he Russian 

£1 in English 

ar * - 

Bl 

18 
be 

HAT, GEORGE (17 20-181 1), Scottish Roman Catholic divine, 
was born at Edinburgh on the 24th of August 1729. He was 
accused of sympathizing with the rebellion of 1745 and served 
a term of imprisonment 1 746-1 747. He then entered the 
Roman Catholic Church, studied in the Scots College at Rome, 
and in 1759 accompanied John Geddes (1735-1799). afterwards 
bishop of Morocco, on a Scottish mission. Ten years laler 
he was appointed bishop of Daulis in partibus and coadjutor 
to Bishop James Grant (1706-1778). In 1778 he became vicar 
apostolic of the lowhnd district. During the Protestant riots 
in Edinburgh in 1779 his furniture and library were destroyed 
by fire. From 1788 to 1793 he was in charge of the Scalan 
seminary; in 1802 he retired to that of Aquhorties near In vera ry 
which he had founded in 1799. He died there on the 15th of 
October 181 1. 

His theological works, Including The Sincere Christian, The Detent 
Christian, The Pious Christian and The Scripture Doctrine of Miracles, 
were edited by Bishop Strain in 1871-1873. 



t Caucasus 
f> <Ji«P«g, 
, which has 



HAY, GILBERT— HAY 



HAT. GILBEftT, or "Sim Grunt m Haye" (ft. 1490), 
Scottish poet and transUtor, was perhaps a kinsman of the house 
of ErroL If he be the student nasaed in the registers of the 
university of St Andrews in 1418-1419, his birth may be fixed 
about 1403- He was in France in 1432, perhaps some years 
earlier, for a " Gilbert de la. Haye " is mentioned as present at 
Rams, in July 1430, at the coronation of Charles VIL He has 
kftit on record, in the Prologue to his Buhe of the Law of Army*, 
that he was *i chaumedayn umquhyle to the maist worthy 
King Charles of France." In 1456 he was back in Scotland, 
in the service of the chancellor, William, earl of Orkney and 
Caithness, "in his castell of Roaselyn," south of Edinburgh. 
The date of his death is unknown. 

Hay is named by Dunbar (q.v.) in his Lament for the Makaris, 
and by Sir David Lyndssy (?.».) in his Testament and Complaynt 
eftha Popyuio. His only political work is The Buih of Alexander 
the Ceenjneronr,ol which a portion, in copy, remains atlayrnouth 
Castle. He has left three translations, extant in one volume 
(in old binding) in the collection of Abbotsford: (a) TheBuke 
ef the Law ef Armys or The Buke of BataUlis, a translation of 
Honor* Bonet's Arbre des bataHles; (b) The Buke of the Order 
ef Kn ich l ho e d from the Here de Vordre de chtoalerie; and (c) 
The Buke of the Gevemaunce of Princes, from a French version 
of the pseudo-Aristotelian Secreta secretorum. The second of 
these precedes Carton's independent translation by at least 
ten years. 

For the Buih of Alexander see Albert Herrmann's The Taymouth 
Castle MS. of Sir Gilbert Hay's Buih, 9rc (Berlin, 1898). The com- 



K Abbotsford MS. has been reprinted by the Scottish Text Society 
J. H. Stevenson). The first volume, containing The Buhe of 
aw of Armys, appeared in 1901. The Order of Knichthood was 
printed by David Laing for the Abbotsford Club (1847). See also 
S.T.S. edition (mj.) " Introduction,'* and Gregory Smith's Specimens 
ef Middle Scots, in which annotated extracts are given from the 
Abbotsford MS., the oldest known example of literary Scots prose. 

HAT, JOHN (1838- 1905), American statesman and author, 
was bora at Salem, Indiana, on the 8th of October 1838. He 
graduated from Brown University in 1858, studied law in the 
office of Abraham Lincoln, was admitted to the bar in Spring- 
field, Illinois, in 1861, and soon afterwards was selected by 
President Lincoln as assistant private secretary, in which 
capacity he served till the president's death, being associated 
with John George Nicolay (1832-1001). Hay was secretary of 
the U.S. legation at Paris in 1865-1867, at Vienna in 1867-1869 
and at Madrid in 1 869-1870. After his return he was for five 
years an editorial writer on the New York Tribune; in 1879- 
188 1 he was first assistant secretary of state to W. M. Evarts; 
and in 1881 was a delegate to the International Sanitary Con- 
ference, which met in Washington, D.C., and of which he was 
chosen president. Upon the inauguration of President McKinley 
in 1897 Hay was appointed ambassador to Great Britain, from 
which post he was transferred in 1898 to that of secretary of 
state, succeeding W. R. Day, who was' sent to Paris as a member. 
of the Peace Conference. He remained in this office until his 
death at Newburg, New Hampshire, on the 1st of July 1005. 
He directed the peace negotiations with Spain after the war of 
1898, and not only secured American interests in the imbroglio 
caused by' the Boxers in China, but grasped the opportunity 
to insist on " the administrative entity " of China; influenced 
the powers to declare publicly for the " open door " in China; 
challenged Russia as to her intentions in Manchuria, securing 
a promise to evacuate the country on the 8th of October 1903; 
and in 1004 again urged " the administrative entity " of China 
and took the initiative in inducing Russia and Japan to " localize 
and limit " the area of hostilities. It was largely due to bis tact 
and good management, in concert with Lord Pauncefote, the 
British ambassador, that negotiations for abrogating the Clay ton- 
Bulwer Treaty and for making a new treaty with Great Britain 
regarding the Isthmian Canal were successfully concluded at the 
end of 1001; subsequently he negotiated treaties with Colombia 
and with Panama, looking towards the construction by the 
United States of a trans-isthmian canal. He also arranged the 
settlement of difficulties with Germany over Samoa in December 



105 

1899, and the settlement, by joint commission, of the question 
concerning the disputed Alaskan boundary in 1903. John Hay 
was a man of quiet and unassuming disposition, whose training 
in diplomacy gave a cool and judicious character to his states- 
manship. As secretary of state under Presidents McKinley 
and Roosevelt his guidance was invaluable during a rather critical 
period in foreign affairs, and no man of his time did more to 
create confidence in the increased interest taken by the United 
States in international matters. He also represented, in another 
capacity, the best American traditions— namely in literature. 
He published Pike County Ballads (1871)— the most famous 
being " Little Breeches "—a volume worthy to rank with Bret 
Harte, if not with the Lowell of the Bighw Papers ; CastUian 
Days (1871), recording his observations in Spain; and a volume 
of Poems (1 890) ; with John G. Nicolay be wrote A braham Lincoln: 
A History (xo vols,, 1890), a monumental work indispensable 
to the student of the Civil War period in America, and published 
an edition of Lincoln's Complete Works (a vols., 1804). The 
authorship of the brilliant novel The Breadwinners (1883) is now 
certainly attributed to him. Hay was an excellent pubhc speaker; 
some of his best addresses are In Praise of Omar; On the 
Unveiling of the Bust of Sir Walter Scott in Westminster 
Abbey, May ax, 1897; and a memorial address in honour of 
President McKinley. 

The best of his previously unpublished speeches appeared in 
Addresses of John Hay (1906). 

HAT, a town of Waradgery county, New South Wales, 
Australia, on the Murrumbidgee river, 454 m. by rail W.S.W. of 
Sydney.- Pop. (1001), 3011. It is the cathedral town of the 
Anglican diocese of Riverina, the terminus of the South Western 
railway, and the principal depot for the wool produced at the 
numerous stations on the banks of the Murrumbidgee and 
Lachlan rivers. 

HAT, a market town and urban district of Breconshire, 
south Wales, on the Hereford and Brecon section of the Midland 
railway, 164J m. from London, so m. W. of Hereford and 
17 m. N.E. of Brecon by rail. Pop. (1901), 1680. The Golden 
Valley railway to Pontrilas (i8f m.), now a branch of the Great 
Western, also starts from Hay. The town occupies rising ground 
on the south (right) bank of the Wye, which here separates 
the counties of Brecknock and Radnor but immediately beww 
enters Herefordshire, from which the town is separated on the 
E. by the river Dulas. 

Leland and Camd e n ascribe a Roman origin to the town, and 
the former states that quantities of Roman coin (called by the 
country people " Jews' money ") and some pottery had been 
found near by, but of this no other record is known. The 
Wye valley in this district served as the gate between the present 
counties of Brecknock and Hereford, and, though Welsh con- 
tinued for two or three centuries after the Norman Conquest 
to be the spoken language of the adjoining part of Herefordshire 
south of the Wye (known as Archenfield), there must have been 
a " burn " serving as a Mercian outpost at Glasbury, 4 m. W. of 
Hay, which was itself several miles west of Offa's Dyke. But 
the earliest settlement at Hay probably dates from the Norman 
conquest of the district by Bernard Newmarch about 1088 
(in which year he granted. Glasbury, probably as the first fruits 
of his invasion, to St Peter's, Gloucester). The manor of Hay, 
which probably corresponded to some existing Welsh division, 
he gave to Sir Philip Walwyn, but it soon reverted to the donor, 
and its subsequent devolution down to its forfeiture to the 
crown as part of the duke of Buckingham's estate in x$2i, was 
identical with that of the lordship of Brecknock (see Brecon- 
shue). The castle, which was probably built in Newmarch'a 
time and rebuilt by his great-grandson William de Breos, passed 
on the latter's attainder to the crown, but was again seized by 
de Breos's second son, Giles, bishop of Hereford, in 12x5, and re- 
taken by King John in the following year. In 1231 it was 
burnt by Llewelyn ab Iorwerth, and in the Barons' War it was 
taken in 1263 by Prince Edward, but in the following year was 
burnt by Simon Montfort and the last Llewelyn. From the 
x6th century the castle has been used as a private residence. 



io6 



HAY 



The Webh name of the town is Y Gclli (" the wood "), or 
formerly in full (Y) Gelli ganddryll (literally M the wood all to 
pieces "), which roughly corresponds to Stpcs Itucisso, by which 
name Walter Map (a native of the district) designates it. Its 
Norman name, La Haia (from the Fr. hate, cf. English 
41 hedge "), was probably intended as a translation of Gclli 
The same word is found in Urishay and Oldhay, both between 
Hay and the Golden Valley. The town is still locally called ike 
Hay, as it also is by Leland. 

Even down to Leland s time Hay was surrounded by a " right 
strong wall," which had three gates and a postern, but the town 
within the wall has " wonderfully decayed," its ruin being 
ascribed to Owen Glendower, while to the west of it was a 
flourishing suburb with the church of St Mary on a precipitous 
eminence overlooking the river. This was rebuilt in 1834. The 
old parish church of St John within the walls, used as a school- 
house in the 17th century, has entirely disappeared. The 
Baptists, Cal vinistic Methodists, Congregationalists and Primitive 
Methodists have a chapel each. The other public buildings are 
the market house (1833) ; a masonic hall, formerly the town hall, 
its basement still serving as a cheese market; a clock tower 
(1884); parish hall (1890); and a drill halL The Wye is here 
crossed by an iron bridge built in 1864. There arc also eighteen 
almshouses for poor women, built and endowed by Miss Frances 
Harley in 1832-1836, and Gwyn's almshouses for six aged 
persons, founded in 1702 and rebuilt in 1878 

Scarcely anything but provisions are sold in the weekly market, 
the farmers of the district now resorting to the markets of Brecon 
and Hereford. There are good monthly stock fairs and a hiring 
fair in May. There is rich agricultural land in the district. 

Hay was reputed to be a borough by prescription, but it never 
had any municipal institutions. Its manor, like that of Talgarth, 
consisted of an Englishry and a Welshery, the latter, known as 
Haya Wallensis, comprising the parish of Llamgon with the 
hamlet of Glynfach, and in this Welsh tenures and customs 
prevailed. The manor is specially mentioned in the act of Henry 
VIIL (1535) as one of those which were then taken to constitute 
the new county of Brecknock. (D. Ll. T.) 

HAY (a word common in various forms to Teutonic languages; 
cf. Ger. Hcu, Dutch hooi; the root from which it is derived, 
meaning " to cut," is also seen in •* to hew "; cf. " hoe "), grass 
mown and dried in the sun and used as rodder for cattle. It is 
properly applied only to the grass when cut, but is often also used 
of the standing crop. (See Haymaking below). Another word 
" hay," meaning a fence, must be distinguished; the root from 
which it is derived is seen in Us doublet " hcdgei" cf . " haw-thorn," 
i.e. " hedge thorn." In this sense it survives in legal history in 
" hay bote," i.e. hedgc-bote, the right of a tenant, copyholder, 
&c. to take wood to repair fences, hedges, &c. (see Estovzis), 
and also in " bayward," an official of a manor whose duty was 
to protect the enclosed lands from cattle breaking out of the 
common land. 

Haymaking .—The term " haymaking " signifies, the process 
of drying and curing grass or other herbage so as to fit it for 
storage in sucks or sheds for future use. As a regular part of 
farm work it was unknown in ancient times. Before its introduc- 
tion into Great Britain the animals intended for beef and mutton 
were slaughtered in autumn and salted down; the others were 
turned out to fend for themselves, and often lost all the fat in 
winter they had gained the previous summer. The introduction 
of haymaking gave unlimited scope for the production of winter 
food, and improved treatment of live stock became possible. 

Though every country has its own methods of haymaking, 
the principal stages in the process everywhere are: (1) mowing, 
(a) drying or " making," (3) " carrying " and storage in stacks 
or sheds. 

In a wet district such as the west of Ireland the " making " 
is a difficult affair and large quantities of hay are often spoiled, 
while much labour has to be spent in cocking up, turning over, 
ricking, &c, before it is fit to be stacked up. On the other hand, 
in the dry districts of south-eastern England it is often possible 
to cut and carry the hay without any special " making," as the 



sun and wind will dry It quickly enough to fit ft for stacking up 
without the expenditure of much labour. This rule also applies 
to dry countries like the United States and several of the British 
colonies, and it is for this reason that most of the modern imple- 
ments used for quickly handling a bulk of hay have been invented 
or improved in those countries. Forage of all kinds intended for 
hay should be cut at or before the flowering stage if possible. 
The full growth and food value of the plant are reached then, and 
further change consists in the formation and ripening of the seed 
at the expense of the leaves and stems, leaving these hard and 
woody and of less feeding value. 

Grass or other forage, when growing, contains a large pro- 
portion of water, and after cutting must be left to dry in the sua 
and wind, a process which may at times be assisted by turning 
over or shaking up. In fine weather in the south of England 
grass is sufficiently dried in from two to four days to be stacked 
straight away. In Scotland or other districts where the rainfall 
is heavy and the air moist, it is first put into small field- 
ricks or " pykes " of from xo to 20 cwt. each. In the drying 
process the 75% of water usually present in grass should be 
reduced to approximately 15% in the hay, and in wet or broken 
weather it is exceedingly difficult to secure tins reduction- With 
a heavy crop or in damp weather grass may need turning in the 
swathe, raking up into " windrows," and then making -up into 
cocks or " quiles," ix. round beehive-like heaps, before it can 
be " carried." A properly made cock will stand bad weather 
for a week, as only the outside straws are weathered, and there- 
fore the hay is kept fresh and green. Indeed, it is a good rule 
always to cock hay, for even in sunny weather undue exposure 
ends in bleaching, which is almost as detrimental to its quality 
as wet-weathering. 

In the last quarter of the 19th century the methods of hay- 
making were completely changed, and even some of the principles 
underlying its practice were revised. Generally speaking, before 
that time the only implements used were the scythe, the rake 
and the pitchfork; nowadays— with the exception of the 
pitchfork— these implements are seldom used, except where 
the work is carried on in a small way. Instead of the scythe, for 
instance, the mowing machine is employed for cutting the crop, 
and with a modern improved machine taking a swathe as wide 
as s or 6 ft. some zo acres per day can easily be mown by one 
man and a pair of horses (figs. 1 and 9). 

It will be seen from the figures that a mower consists of three 
principal parts: (i) a truck or carriage on two high wheels carrying 
the driving gear; (2) the cutting mechanism, comprising a reciprocat- 
ing knife or sickle operating through dots in the guards or " ' 



Fig. 1.— Mower (viewed from above) with enlarged detail of Blade. • 
(Harrison, M'Gregor & Co.) 

fastened to the cutting bar which projects to either the right or 
left of the track; and (3) the pole with whippletrces, by which the 
horses are attached to give the motive power. The reciprocating 
knife has a separate blade to correspond to each finger, and is driven 
by a connecting rod and crank on the fore part of the truck. In 
work the pointed " fingers " pass in between the stalks of grass 
and the knives shear them off, acting against the fingers as the crank 
drives them backwards and forwards. In the swathe of grass kit 



HAY 



107 



behind by the machine* the stalks ate, in a manner, thatched over 
one another, so that it is in the best position for drying in the sun. 
or, per contra, for shedding off the rain if the weather is wet. This 
b a great point in favour of the use of the machine, because the 
swathe left by the scythe required to be " tedded " out, i.e. the grass 
had to be shaken out or spread to allow it to be more easily dried. 

After the grass has lain in the swathe a day or two till it is 
partly dried, it is necessary to turn it over to dry the other side. 
This used to be done with the band rake, and a band of men or 
women would advance in Ukdon across a field, each turning the 



Fig. *.— Mower (side view). 

swathe of hay by regular strokes of the rake at each step: 
" driving the dusky wave along the mead " as described in 
Thomson's Seasons. This part of the work was the act of 
" haymaking " proper, and the subject of much sentiment in 
both prose and poetry. The swathes as laid by the mowing 
machine lent themselves to this treatment in the old days when 
the swathe was only some 3 to 4 ft. wide, but with the wide cut 
of the present day it becomes impracticable. If the hay is 
turned and "made" at all, the operation is now generally 
performed by a machine made for the purpose. There is a wide 
selection of " tedders " or " kickers," and " swathe-turners " 
on the market. The one illustrated in fig. 3 is the first prize 
winner at the Royal Agricultural Society's trials (1907). It 



Fie. 3.— Swathe-turner. (Blaclcstone & Co., Ltd.). 

takes two swathes at a time, and it will be seen that the working 
part consists of a wheel or cirde of prongs or tines, which revolves 
across the line of the swathe. Each prong in turn catches the 
edge of the swathe of grass and kicks it up and over, thus turning 
it and leaving it loose for the wind to blow through. 

The " kicker " is mounted on two wheels, and carries in 
bearings at the rear of the frame a multiple-cranked shaft, 
provided with a series of forks sleeved on the cranks and having 
their upper ends connected by links to the frame. As the crank- 
shaft is driven from the wheels by proper gearing the forks move 



upward and forward, then downward and rearward, in an 
elliptical path, and kick the hay sharply to the rear, thus scatter* 
ing and turning it. 

It is a moot point, however, whether grass should be turned 
at all, or left to " make " as it falls from the mowing machine. la 
a dry sunny season and with a moderate crop it is only a waste 
of time and labour to turn it, for it will be cured quite well as it 
lies, especially if raked up into loose " windiows " a little before 
carrying to the stack. On the other hand, where the crop is hcavy # 
(say over 2 tons per acre) or the climate is wet, turning will be 
necessary. 

With heavy crops of clover, lucerne and similar forage crops, 
turning may be an absolute necessity, because a thick swathe of 
a succulent crop will be difficult to dry or " make " excepting in 
hot sunny weather, but with ordinary meadow grass or with a 
mixture of " artificial " grasses it may often be dispensed with. 
It must be remembered, however, that the process of turning 
breaks the stalks (thus letting out the albuminoid and saccharine 
juices), and should be avoided as far as possible in order to save 
both labour and the quality of the hay. 

One of the earlier mechanical inventions in connexion with hay- 
making was that of the horse rake (fig. 4). Before its introduction 
the hay, after making, had to be gathered up by the hand rake 4 — 
a tedious and laborious process — but the introduction of this imple- 
ment, whereby one horse and one man can do work before requiring 
six or eight men, marked a great advance. The horse rake is a 
framework on two wheels carrying hinged steel teeth placed % in. 
apart, so that their points slide along the ground below the hay. 
In work it gathers up the loose hay, and when full a tipping mechan- 
ism permits the emptying of the load. 

The tipping is effected by pulling down a handle which sets 'a 
leverage device in motion, whereby the teeth are lifted up and the 
load of hay dropped below and left behind. On son 



FlC. 4.— Self-acting Horse Rake. (Ransomes, Sims 
& Jeffcries. Ltd.). 

clutch is worked by the driver's foot, and this put in action causes 
the ordinary forward revolving motion of the driving wheels to do 
the tipping. 

The loads are tipped end to end as the rake passes and repasses 
at the work, and thus the hay is left loose in long parallel rows on 
the field. Each row is termed a " windrow," the passage of the wind 
through the hay greatly aiding the drying and making " thereof. 
When hay is in this form it may either be carried direct to the stack 
if sufficiently " made," or else put into cocks to season a little longer. 
The original width of horse rakes was about 8 ft., but nowadays 
they range up to 16 and 18 ft. The width should be suited to that 
of the swathes as left by the mower, and as the latter is now made 
to cut 5 and 6 ft. wide, it is necessary to have a rake to cover two 
widths. The very wide rakes are only suitable for even, level land ; 
those of less width must be used where the land has been laid down 
in ridge and furrow. As the swathes lie in long parallel rows, it is a 
great convenience in working for two to be taken in width at a time, 
so that the horse can walk in the space between. 

The side-delivery rake, a development of the ordinary horse raVe, 
is a useful implement, adapted for gathering and laying a quantity 
of hay in one continuous windrow. It is customary with this to 

§0 up the field throwing two swathes to one sido, and then back 
own on the adjacent swathes, so that thus four are thrown into one 
central windrow. The implement consists of a frame carried on two 
wheels with shafts for a horse; across the frame are fixed travelling 
or revolving prongs of different varieties which pick up the hay off 
the ground and pass it along sideways across the line of travel, 
leaving it in one continuous line. Some makes of swathe-turners 
are designed to do this work as well as the turning of the hay. 
Perhaps the greatest improvement of modern times Is the method 



io8 



HAY 



of carrying the hay from the field to the stack. An American in- 
vention known as the sweep rake was introduced by the writer into 
England in 1894, and now in many modified forms » in very general 
use in the Midlands and south of England, where the hay is carried 
from the cock, windrow or swathe straight to the stack. This 
implement consists of a wheeled framework fitted with long wooden 
iron-pointed teeth which slide along the ground; two horses are 
yoked to it— one at each side — the driver directing from a central 
seat behind the framework. When in use it is taken to the farther 
end of a row of cocks, a windrow, or even to a row of untouched 
swathes on the ground, and walked forward. As it advances it 
scoops up a load, and when full is drawn to where the stack is being 
erected (fig. 5). In ordinary circumstances the sweep rake will 



Fig. 5.— Sweep Rake. 

pick up at a load two-thirds of an ordinary cart-load, but, where 
the hay is in good order and it is swept down hill, a whole one-horse 
cart-load can be carried each time. The drier the hay the better 
Will the sweep rake work, arid if it is not working sweetly but has a 
tendency to clog or make rolls of hay. it may be inferred that the 
latter is not in a condition fit for stacking. Where the loads must 
be taken through a gateway or a long distance to the stack, it is 
necessary tp use carts or wagons, and toe loading of these in the field 
out of the windrow is largely expedited by the use of the ".loader," 
also an American invention of which many varieties are in the market. 
Generally speaking, it consists of a frame carrying a revolving web 
with tines or prongs. The implement is hitched on behind a cart 
or wagon, and as it moves forward the web picks the .loose hay off 
the ground and delivers it on the top, where a man levels it with a 
pitchfork and. builds it into a load ready to move to the stack. 
At the stack the most convenient method of transferring the hay 
from a cart, wagon or sweep rake is the elevator, a tall structure 
with a revolving web carrying teeth or spikes (fig. 6).. The hay is 
thrown in forkfuls on at the bottom, a pony-gear causes the web to 
revolve, and the hay is carried in an almost continuous stream up the 
elevator and dropped over the top on to the stack. The whole imple- 
ment is made to told down, and is provided with wheels so that it 
can be moved from stack to stack. In the older forms there is a 
" hopper " or box at the bottom into which the hay is thrown to 
enable the teeth of the web to catch it, but in the modem forms 
there is no hopper, the web reaching down to the ground so that hay 
can be picked up from the ground fcvcL Where the hay is brought 
to the stack on carts or wagons it can be unloaded by means of the 
horse fork. This is an adaptation of the principle of the ordinary 
crane; a central pole and jib are supported by guy ropes, and from 
the end of the jib a rope runs over a pulley. At the end of this 
rope is a " fork formed of two sets of prongs which open and shut. 
This is lowered on to the load of hay, the prongs are forced into it, 
a horse pulls at the other end of the rope, and the prongs dose and 
" grab several cwt. of hay which are swung up and dropped on the 
stack. In this way a large cart or wagon load is hoisted on to the 
stack in three or four " forkfuls." The horse fork is not suited 
lor use with the sweep rake, however, because the hay is brought 
up to the stack in a loose flat heap without sufficient body for the 
fork to get hold of. 

Id northern and wet districts of England ft is customary to 
" make " the hay as in the south, but it is then built up into 
little stacks in the field where it grew (ricks, pykes or tramp- 
cocks are names used for these in different districts), each con- 
taining about xo to 15 cwt. These are made in the same 
way as the ordinary stack — one pexson on top building, another 
on the grouud pitching up the hay — and are carefully roped and 
raked down. In these the hay gets a preliminary sweating or 
tempering while at the same time it is rendered safe from the 
weather, and, thus stored, it may remain for weeks before being 



carried to the big stacks at the homestead. The practice of 
putting up the hay into little ricks in the field has brought about 
the introduction of another set of implements for carrying these 
to the stackyard. 

Various forms of rick-lifters are in use, the characteristic feature 
of which is a tipping platform on wheels to which a horse is attached 
between shafts. The vehicle is backed against a rick, and a chain 
passed round the bottom of the latter, which is then pulled up the 
slant of the tipped platform by means of a small windlass. When 
the centre of the balance is passed, the platform carrying the rick 
tips back to the level, and the whole is thus loaded ready to move. 
Another variety of loader is formed of three shear-legs with block 
and tackle. These are placed over a rick, under which the grab- 
irons are passed, and the whole hauled up by a horse. When high 
enough a cart is backed in below, the rick lowered, and the load is 
ready to carry away. 

When put into a stack the next stage in curing the hay begins— 
the heating or sweating. In the growing plants the tissues are 
composed of living cells containing protoplasm. This continues 
its life action as long as it gets sufficient moisture and air. As 
life action involves the development of heat, the temperature in 
a confined space like a stack where the heat is not dissipated may 
rise to such a point that spontaneous combustion occurs. The 
chemical or physical reasons for this are not very well under- 
stood. The starch and sugar contents of the tissues are changed 
in part into akohoL In the analogous process of making silage 
(i.e. stacking wet green grass in a closed building) the alcohol 
develops into acetic acid, thus making "sour "silage. In a hay- 
stack the intermediate body, acetaldebyde, which is both inflam- 
mable and suffocating, is produced—men having been suffocated 
when sleeping on the top of a heating stack. The production of 
this gas leads to slow combustion and ignition. One explanation 
of the process is that the protoplasm of the cells acts as a ferment- 
ing agent (like yeast) until a temperature sufficient to kill germ 
life, say 150 F., is reached, beyond which the action which leads 
up to the temperature of ignition must be purely chcmicaL If 
the stack contains no air at all it does not heat, or if it has excess 



Pig. 6.— Hay Elevator. (Maldon Iron Works Co.), 

of air it is safe. The danger-point in a stack is the centre at 
about 6 ft. from the ground; below this the weight of the hay 
itself squeezes put the air, and at the sides and top the heat is 
dissipated outwaids. If a stack shows signs of overheating 
(a process that may take weeks or even months to develop) it 
can be saved by cutting a gap in the side of it with the hay knife, 
thus letting out the heat and fumes, and admitting fresh air to 
the centre. The essential point in haymaking is that the hay 
should be dried sufficiently to ensure the sweating process in the 
stack reaching no further than the stage of the formation of 



HAYASHI— HAYDN 



109 



sugar. Good hay should come out green aad with the odour of 
ooumarin — to which is due the scent of new-mown hay. Only 
part of a stack can ever attain to a perfect state: the tops, 
bottom and out sides are generally wasted by the weather after 
stacking, while there may be three or four intermediate qualities 
present. In some markets hay that -has been sweated till it is 
brown in colour is desired, but for general purposes green hay is 
the best. 

Hay often becomes musty when the weather during " making " 
has been too wet to allow of its getting sufficiently dry for stack- 
ing. Mustiness is caused by the growth of various moulds 
(Penkillium, Aspergillus, &c.) on the damp stems, with the 
result that the hay when cut out for use is dusty and shows 
white streaks and spots. Such hay is inferior to that which 
has been overheated, and in practice it is found that a strong 
heating will prevent mouldiness by killing the fungi. 

Heavy lush crops— especially those containing a large propor- 
tion of clover or other leguminous plants — are proportionately 
more difficult to " make " than light grassy ones. Thus, if one 
too is taken as a fair yield off one acre, a two-ton crop will 
probably require four times as much work in curing as the 
smaller crop. In the treacherous climate of Great Britain hay 
is frequently spoiled because the weather does not hold good long 
enough to permit of its being properly " made." Consequently 
many experienced haymakers regard a moderate crop as the 
more profitable because it can be stacked in first-class condition, 
whereas a heavy crop forced by " high farming " is grown at a 
toss, owing to the weather waste and the heavier expenses in- 
volved in securing it. 

ed 
it. 
Uy 



In handling or marketing out of tt 
loose on a cart or wagon, but it is 
A truss is a rectangular block cut 



about 3 ft. long and 2 ft. wide, and c 
weight of 56 lb : thirty-six of these c 
the unit of sale in many markers. 
two bands of twisted straw, but if ii 
it is compressed in a hay-press an 
In some districts a baler is used : a 
lid. The hay is tumbled in loose, tl 
arrangement and the bale tied by tl 
to weigh from 1 to 1 i cwt. The cu 
very much in their methods of hai 
hay trade the size and style of the 
packing on ship-board. 

HAYASHI, TADASU, Count (1850- ), Japanese states- 
man, was born in Tokyd (then Yedo), and was one of the first 
batch of students sent by the Tokugawa government to study 
in England. He returned on the eve of the abolition of the 
Sbogunate, and followed Enomoto (q.v.) when the latter, sailing 
with the Tokugawa fleet to Yezo, attempted to establish a 
republic there in defiance of the newly organized government of 
the emperor. Thrown into prison on account of this affair, 
Hayashi did not obtain office until 1871. Thereafter he rose 
rapidly, until, after a long period of service as vice-minister of 
foreign affairs, he was appointed to represent his country first 
in Peking, then in St Petersburg and finally in London, where 
he acted an important part in negotiating the first Anglo- 
Japanese Alliance, for which service he received the title of 
viscount. He remained in London throughout the Russo- 
Japanese War, and was the first Japanese ambassador at the 
court of St James after the war. Returning to Tokyo in 1006 
to take the portfolio of foreign affairs, he remained in office 
until the resignation of the Saionji cabinet in 1 008. He was raised 
to the rank, of count for eminent services performed during the 
war between his country and Russia, and in connexion with 
the second Anglo-Japanese Alliance of 1005. 

HAYDEN, FERDINAND VANDEVEER (1829-1887), American 
geologist, was born at West field, Massachusetts, on the 7 th of 
September 1829. He graduated from Oberiin College in 1850 and 
from the- Albany Medical College in 1853, where he attracted 
the notice of Professor James Hall, state geologist of New York, 
through whose influence he was induced to join in an exploration 
of Nebraska. In 1856 he was engaged under the United Slates 
government, aad commenced a series of investigations of the 



Western Territories, one result of which was his Geological 
Report of the Exploration of the Yellowstone and Missouri Rivers 
in 1850-1860 (1869). During the Civil War he was actively 
employed as an army surgeon. In 1867 he was appointed 
geologist-in -charge of the United States Geological and Geo- 
graphical Survey of the Territories, and from his twelve years 
of labour there resulted a most valuable series of volumes in all 
branches of natural history and economic science; and he issued 
in 1877 his Geological and Geographical Atlas of Colorado. Upon 
the reorganization and establishment of the United States 
Geological Survey in 1879 he acted for seven years as one of the 
geologists. He died at Philadelphia on the 22nd of December 
1887. 

Sc 
ch 
M 
W 
v. 
br 

i 

fo 

was born on the 31st of March 175s at Rohrau (Trstnik), a village 
on the borders of Lower Austria and Hungary. There is sufficient 
evidence that his family was of Croatian stock: a fact which 
throws light upon the distinctively Slavonic character of much 
of his music He received the first rudiments of education from 
his father, a wheelwright with twelve children, and at an early 
age evinced a decided musical talent. This attracted the atten- 
tion of a distant relative named Johann Mathias Frankh, who 
was schoolmaster in the neighbouring town of Hamburg, and 
who, in 1738, took the child and for the next two years trained 
him as a chorister. In 1740, on the recommendation of the Dean 
of Hamburg, Haydn obtained a place in the cathedral choir of 
St Stephen's, Vienna, where he took the solo-part in the services 
and received, at the choir school, some further instruction on 
the violin and the harpsichord. In 2 749 his voice broke, and the 
director, Georg von Reutter, took the occasion of a boyish 
escapade to turn him into the streets. A few friends lent him 
money and found him pupils, and in this way he was enabled to 
enter upon a rigorous course of study (he is said to have worked 
for sixteen hours a day), partly devoted to Fux's treatise on 
counterpoint, partly to the " Friedrich " and " Wdrttemberg » 
sonatas of C. P. E. Bach, from which he gained his earliest 
acquaintance with the principles of musical structure. The 
first fruits of his work were a comic opera, Der ntue krutnme 
Teufd, and a Mass in F major (both written in 1751), the 
former of which was produced with success. About the same 
time he made the acquaintance of Metastasio, who was lodging 
in the same house, and who introduced him to one or two patrons*, 
among others Sefior Martinez, to whose daughter he gave lessons, 
and Porpora, who, in 1753, took him for the summer to Manners- 
dorf, and there gave him instruction in singing and in the Italian 
language. 

The turning-point of Ins career came in 1755, when he accepted 
an invitation to the country-house of Freiherr von Fflrnberg, 
an accomplished amateur who was to the habit of collecting 
parties of musicians for the performance of chamber-works. 
Here Haydn wrote, in rapid succession, eighteen divertimenti 
which include his first symphony and his first quartet; the two 
earliest examples of the forms with which his name is most 
closely associated. Thenceforward his prospects improved. 
On his return to Vienna in 1756 he became famous as teacher 
and composer, in 1759 he was appointed conductor to the private 
band of Count Morzin, for whom he wrote several orchestral 
works (including a symphony in D major erroneously called 
his first), and in 1760 he was promoted to the sub-directorship 
of Prince Paul Esterhazy's Kapdlc, at that time the best in 
Austria. During the tenure of his appointment with Count 
Morzin he married the daughter of a Viennese hairdresser named 
Keller, who had befriended him in his days of poverty, but the 



no 



HAYDN 



marriage turned out ill and be was shortly afterwards separated 
from his wife, though he continued to support her until her death 
in 1800. From 1760 to 1790 he remained with the Esterhazys, 
principally at their country-seats of Esterhaz and Eisenstadt, 
with occasional visits to Vienna in the winter. In 176 a Prince 
Paul Esterhazy died and was succeeded by his brother Nicholas, 
surnamed the Magnificent, who increased Haydn's salary, 
showed him every mark of favour, and, on the death of Werner 
in 1766, appointed him Ober kapellmeister. With the encourage- 
ment of a discriminating patron, a small but excellent orchestra 
and a free hand, Haydn made the most of his opportunity and 
produced a continuous stream of compositions in every known 
musical form. To this period belong five Masses, a dozen 
operas, over thirty clavier-sonatas, over forty quartets, over a 
hundred orchestral symphonies and overtures, a Stabat Mater, 
a set of interludes for the service of the Seven Words, an Oratorio 
Tobias written for the TonkUnstler-SocieUU of Vienna, and a 
vast number of concertos, divertimenti and smaller pieces, among 
which were no less than 175 for Prince Nicholas' favourite 
instrument, the baryton. 

Meanwhile his reputation was spreading throughout Europe. 
A Viennese notice of his appointment as Oberkapellmeister spoke 
of him as " the darling of our nation," his works were reprinted 
or performed in every capital from Madrid to St Petersburg. 
He received commissions from the cathedral of Cadiz, from the 
grand duke Paul, from the king of Prussia, from the directors 
of the Concert Spirited at Paris; beside his transactions with 
Breitkopf and Hirtel, and with La Chcvardiere, he sold to one 
English firm the copyright of no less than xao compositions. 
But the most important fact of biography during these thirty 
years was his friendship with Mozart, whose acquaintance he 
made at Vienna in the winter of 1 781-1 78a. There can have been 
little personal intercourse between them, for Haydn was rarely 
in the capital, and Mozart seems never to have visited Eisenstadt ; 
but the cordiality of their relations and the mutual influence 
which they exercised upon one another are of the highest moment 
in the history of 18th-century music. " It was from Haydn that 
I first learned to write a quartet," said Mozart; it was from 
Mozart that Haydn learned the richer style and the fuller 
mastery of orchestral effect by which his later symphonies are 
distinguished. 

In 1700 Prince Nicholas Esterhazy died and the Kapelle was 
disbanded. Haydn, thus released from his official duties, forth- 
with accepted a commission from Salomon, the London concert- 
director, to write and conduct six symphonies for the concerts in 
the Hanover Square Rooms. He arrived in England at the 
beginning of x 792 and was welcomed with the greatest enthusiasm, 
receiving among other honours the degree of D Mus. from the 
university of Oxford. In June 1792 he returned home, and, 
breaking his journey at Bonn, was presented with a Cantata by 
Beethoven, then aged two-and-twenty, whom he invited to come 
to Vienna as his pupil. The lessons, which were not very success- 
ful, lasted for about a year, and were then interrupted by. Haydn's 
second visit to England (January 1794 to July 1795), where he 
produced the last six of his " Salomon " symphonies. From 
179S onward he resided in the Mariahilf suburb of Vienna, and 
there wrote his last eight Masses, the last and finest of his chamber 
works, the Austrian national anthem (1797), the Creation (1799) 
and the Seasons (1801). His last choral composition which can 
be dated with any certainty was the Mass in C minor, written 
in 1802 for the name-day of Princess Esterhazy. Thence- 
forward his health declined, and his closing years, surrounded 
by the love of friends and the esteem of all musicians, were spent 
almost wholly in retirement. On the 27th of March x 808 he 
was able to attend a performance of the Creation, given in his 
honour, but it was his last effort, and on the 31st of May 1809 
be died, aged seventy-seven. Among the mourners who followed 
him to the grave were many French officers from Napoleon's 
army, which was then occupying Vienna. 

Haydn's place in musical history is best determined by his 
instrumental compositions. His operas, for all their daintiness 
and melody, no longer hold the stage; the Masses in which he 



" praised God with a cheerful heart " have been condemned 
by the severer decorum of our own day; of his oratorios the 
Creation alone survives. In all these his work belongs mainly 
to the style and idiom of a bygone generation: they are monu- 
ments, not l and m a r ks, and their beauty and invention seem 
rather to close an epoch than to inaugurate its successor. Even 
the naif pictorial suggestion, of which free use is made in the 
Creation and in the Seasons, is closer to the manner of Handel 
than to that of the 19th century: it is less the precursor of 
romance than the descendant of an earlier realism. But as the 
first great master of the quartet and the symphony his claim 
is incontestable. He began, half-consdousry, by applying 
through the fuller medium the lessons of design which he had 
learned from C. P. E. Bach's sonatas; then the medium itseU 
began to suggest wider horizons and new possibilities of treat- 
ment; his position at Eisenstadt enabled him to experiment 
without reserve; his genius, essentially symphonic in character, 
found its true outlet in the opportunities of pure musical structure. 
The quartets in particular exhibit a wider range and variety of 
structural invention than those of any other composer except 
Beethoven. Again it is here that we can most readily trace 
the important changes which he wrought in melodic idiom. 
Before his time instrumental music was chiefly written for the 
Paradiesensaal, and its melody often sacrificed vitality of idea 
to a ceremonial courtliness of phrase. Haydn broke through this 
convention by frankly introducing his native folk-musk, and 
by writing many of his own tunes in the same direct, vigorous 
and simple style. The innovation was at first received with 
some disfavour; critics accustomed to polite formalism censured 
it as extravagant and undignified; but the freshness and beauty 
of its melody soon silenced all opposition, and did more than 
anything else throughout the 18th century to establish the 
principle of nationalism in musical art. The actual employment 
of Croatian folk-tunes may be illustrated from the string 
quartets Op. 17, No. 1; Op. 33. No. 3; Op. 50, No. x; Op. 77, 
No. x, and the Salomon Symphonies in D and Eb, while there 
is hardly an instrumental composition of Haydn's in which his 
own melodies do not show some traces of the same influence, 
His natural idiom in short was that of a heightened and ennobled 
folk-song, and one of the most remarkable evidences of his genius 
was the power with which he adapted all his perfection and 
symmetry of style to the requirements of popular speech. His 
music is in this way singularly expressive; its humour and pathos 
are not onlyabsolutely sincere, but so outspoken that we cannot 
fail to catch their significance. 

In the development of instrumental polyphony Haydn's 
work was almost as important as that of Mozart. Having at 
his disposal a band of picked virtuosi be could produce effects 
as different from the tentative experiments of C. P. E. Bach 
as these were from the orchestral platitudes of Reutter or Hasse. 
His symphony Le Midi (written in 1761) already shows a remark- 
able freedom and independence in the handling of orchestral 
forces, and further stages of advance were reached in the oratorio 
of Tobias, in the Paris and Salomon symphonies, and above all 
in the Creation, which turns to good account some of the debt 
which he owed to his younger contemporary. The importance 
of this lies not only in a greater richness of musical colour, but 
in the effect which it produced on the actual substance and 
texture of composition. The polyphony of Beethoven was 
unquestionably influenced by it and, even in his latest sonatas 
and quartets, may be regarded as its logical outcome. 

The compositions of Haydn include 104 symphonies, 16 over tures, 
76 quartets, 68 trios, 54 sonatas, 31 concertos and a large number of 
divertimentos, cassationsand other instrumental pieces : 24 operas aad 
dramatic pieces, 16 Mastes,a Stabat Mater, interludes lor the " Seven 
Words," 3 oratorios, 2 Te Deums and many smaller pieces for the 
church, over 40 songs, over 50 canons and arrangements of Scottish 
and Welsh national melodies. 

His younger brother, Johann Michael Haydn (1737-1806), 
was also a chorister at St Stephen's, and shortly after leaving 
the choir-school was appointed Kapellmeister at Grosswardein 
(1755) and at Salzburg ( 1 762). The latter office he held for forty- 
three years, during which time he wrote over 360 compositions 



HAYDON, B. R. 



for the church and much instrumental music, which, though 
unequal, deserves more consideration than it has received. 
He was the intimate friend of Mozart, who bad a high opinion 
of his genius, aod the teacher of C. M. von Weber. His most 
important works were the Afissa kispauico, which he exchanged 
for bis diploma at Stockholm, a Mass in D minor, a Lauda 
Sion, a set of graduate, forty-two of which are reprinted 
in Diabelli's Ecclesiasiican, three symphonies (1785), and a 
string quintet in C major which has been erroneously attri- 
buted to Joseph Haydn. Another brother, Johann Evangelist 
Haydn (1 743-1805), gained some reputation as a tenor vocalist, 
and was for many years a member of Prince Esterhaxy's 
Kapdle. 



HAYDON, BENJAMIN ROBERT (1 786-1846), English 
historical painter and writer, was born at Plymouth on the 
s6th of January 1786. His mother was the daughter of the 
Rev. Benjamin Cobley, rector of Dodbrook, Devon, whose son, 
General Sir Thomas Cobley, signalized himself in the Russian 
service at the siege of Ismail. His father, a prosperous printer, 
stationer and publisher, was a man of literary taste, and was 
well known and esteemed amongst all classes in Plymouth. 
Haydon, an only son, at an early date gave evidence of his 
taste for study, which was carefully fostered and promoted by 
his mother. At the age of six he was placed in Plymouth 
grammar school, and at twelve in Plympton St Mary school. 
He completed his education in this institution, where Sir Joshua 
Reynolds also- bad acquired all the scholastic training be ever 
received. On the ceiling of the school-room was a sketch by 
Reynolds in burnt cork, which it used to be Haydon's delight 
to sit and contemplate. Whilst at school he had some thought 
of adopting the medical profession, but he was so shocked at 
the sight of an operation that he gave up the idea. A perusal 
of Albinus, however, inspired him with a love for anatomy; 
and Reynolds's discourses revived within him a smouldering 
taste for painting, which from childhood bad been the absorbing 
idea of his mind. 

Sanguine of success, full of energy and rigour, he started from 
the parental roof, on the 14th of May 1804, for London, and 
entered his na me as a student of the Royal Academy. He began 
and prosecuted his studies with such unwearied ardour that 
Fuseli wondered when he ever found time to eat. At the age 
of twenty-one (1807) Haydon exhibited, for the first time, at 
the Royal Academy, " The Repose in Egypt," which was bought 
by Mr Thomas Hope the year after. This was a good start for 
the young artist, who shortly received a commission from Lord 
Mulgrave and an introduction to Sir George Beaumont. In 
1809 he finished his well-known picture of " Dentatus," which, 
though it brought him a great increase of fame, involved him 
in a lifelong quarrel with the Royal Academy, whose committee 
had hung the picture in a small side-room instead of the great 
hall. In 1810 his difficulties began through the stoppage of an 
allowance of £300 a year he had received from his father. His 
disappointment was embittered by the controversies in which 
he now became involved with Sir George Beaumont, for whom 
be had painted his picture of " Macbeth," and Payne Knight, 
who had denied the beauties as well as the money value of the 
Elgin Marbles. " The Judgment of Solomon," his next pro- 



III 

duction, gained him £700, besides £100 voted to him by the 
directors of the British Institution, and the freedom of the 
borough of Plymouth. To recruit his health and escape for a 
time from the cares of London life, Haydon joined his intimate 
friend Wilkie in a trip to Paris; he studied at the Louvre; 
and on his return to England produced his " Christ's Entry into 
Jerusalem," which afterwards formed the nucleus of the 
American Gallery of Painting, erected by his cousin, John 
Haviland of Philadelphia. Whilst painting another large work, 
the "Resurrection of Lazarus," his pecuniary difficulties 
increased, and for the first time he was arrested but not im- 
prisoned, the sheriff-officer taking his word for his appearance. 
Amidst all these harassing cares he married in October 1821 a 
beautiful young widow who had some children,. Mrs Hyman, to 
whom he was devotedly attached. 

In 1823 Haydon was lodged in the Ring's Bench, where he 
received consoling letters from the first men of the day. Whilst 
a prisoner he drew up a petition to parliament in favour of the 
appointment of " a committee to inquire into the state of en- 
couragement of historical painting," which was presented by 
Brougham. He also, during a second imprisonment in 1827, 
produced the picture of the " Mock Election," the idea of which 
had been suggested by an incident that happened in the prison. 
The king (George IV.) gave him £500 for this work. Among 
Haydon's other pictures were — 1829, " Eucles " and " Punch "; 
183 1," Napoleon at St Helena," for Sir Robert Peel; "Xcno- 
phon, on his Retreat with the ' Ten Thousand,' first seeing 
the Sea "; and " Waiting for the Times," purchased by the 
marquis of Stafford; 1832, " Falstaff " and " Achilles playing 
the Lyre." In 1834 he completed the " Reform Banquet," for 
Lord Grey — this painting contained 197 portraits; in 1843, 
" Curtius Leaping into the Gulf," and " Uriel and Satan." 
There was also the " Meeting of the Anti-Slavery Society," 
energetically treated, now in the National Portrait Gallery. 
When the competition took place at Westminster Hall, Haydon 
sent two cartoons, " The Curse of Adam " and " Edward the 
Black Prince," but, with some unfairness, he was not allowed 
a prize for either. He then painted " The Banishment of Aria- 
tides," which was exhibited with other productions under the 
same roof where the American dwarf Tom Thumb was then 
making his deout in London. The exhibition was unsuccessful; 
and the artist's difficulties increased to such an extent that, 
whilst employed on his last grand effort, " Alfred and the Trial 
by Jury," overcome by debt, disappointment and ingratitude, 
he wrote " Stretch me no longer on this rough world," and put 
an end to his existence with a pistol-shot, on the 22nd of June 
1846, in the sixty-first year of his age. He left a widow and three 
children (various others had died), who, by the generosity of 
their father's friends, were rescued from their pecuniary diffi- 
culties and comfortably provided for; amongst the foremost 
of these friends were Sir Robert Peel, Count D'Orsay, Mr Justice 
Talfourd and Lord Carlisle. 

Haydon began his first lecture on painting and design in 
183s, and afterwards visited all the principal towns in England 
and Scotland. His delivery was energetic and imposing, hit 
language powerful, flowing and apt, and replete with wit and 
humour; and to look at the lecturer, excited by his subject, 
one could scarcely fancy him a man overwhelmed with difficulties 
and anxieties. The height of Haydon's ambition was to behold 
the chief buildings of his country adorned with historical repre- 
sentations of her glory. He lived to see the acknowledgment 
of his principles by government in the establishment of schools 
of design, and the embellishment of the new bouses of parliament ; 
but in the competition of artists for the carrying out of this 
object, the commissioners (amongst whom was one of his former 
pupils) considered, or affected to consider, that he had failed. 
Haydon was well versed in all points of his profession; and his 
Lectures, which were published shortly after their delivery* 
showed that be was as bold a writer as painter. It may be 
mentioned in this connexion that he was the author of the long 
and elaborate article, " Painting," in the 7th edition of the 
Encyclopaedia Britannic*. 



IIS 



HAYES, R. B. 



To form a correct estimate of Haydon it It necessary to read 
his autobiography. This is one of the most natural books ever 
written, full of various and abundant power, and fascinating 
to the reader. The author seems to have daguerreotyped his 
feelings and sentiments without restraint as they rose in his 
mind, and his portrait stands in these volumes limned to the 
life by his own hand. His love for his art was both a passion 
and a principle. He found patrons difficult to manage; and, 
not having the tact to lead them gently, he tried to drive them 
fiercely. He failed, abused patrons and patronage, and inter- 
mingled talk of the noblest independence with acts not always 
dignified. He was self-willed to perversity, but his perseverance 
was such as is seldom associated with so much vehemence and 
passion. With a large fund of genuine self-reliance he combined 
a considerable measure of vanity. To the last he believed in his 
own powers and in the ultimate triumph of art. In taste he was 
deficient, at least as concerned himself. Hence the tone of self- 
assertion which be assumed in his advertisements, catalogues 
and other appeals to the public. He proclaimed himself the 
apostle and martyr of high art, and, not without some justice, he 
believed himself to have on that account a claim on the sympathy 
and support of the nation. It must be confessed that be often 
tested severely those whom he called his friends. Every reader of 
his autobiography will be struck at the frequency and fervour 
of the short prayers interspersed throughout the work. Haydon 
had an overwhelming sense of a personal, overruling and merciful 
providence, which influenced his relations with his family, 
and to some extent with the world. His conduct as a husband 
and father entitles him to the utmost sympathy. In art his powers 
and attainments were undoubtedly very great, although his 
actual performances mostly fall short of the faculty which was 
manifestly within him; his general range and force of mind 
were also most remarkable, and would have qualified him to 
shine in almost any path of intellectual exertion or of practical 
work. His eager and combative character was partly his 
enemy; but he had other enemies actuated by motives as 
unworthy as his own were always high-pitched and on abstract 
grounds laudable. Of his three great works — the " Solomon," 
the " Entry into Jerusalem " and the " Lazarus " — the second 
has generally been regarded as the finest. The " Solomon " is 
also a very admirable production, showing his executive power 
at its loftiest, and of itself enough to place Haydon at the head 
of British historical painting in his own time. The " Lazarus " 
(which belongs to the National Gallery, but is not now on view 
there) Is a more unequal performance, and in various respects 
open to criticism and censure; yet the head of Lazarus is so 
majestic and impressive that, if its author had done nothing 
else, we must still pronounce him a potent pictorial genius. 

The chief authorities for the life of Haydon are Life of B. R. 
Haydon, from his Autobiography and Journals, edited and compiled 
by Tom Taylor (x vols., 1853); and B. R. Haydon" s Correspondence 
end Table Talk, with a memoir by his son, F. W. Haydon (2 vols., 
1876). (W. M. R.) 

HAVES, RUTHERFORD BIRCHARD (1823-1893), nine- 
teenth president of the United States, was born in Delaware, 
Ohio, on the 4th of October 1822. He received his first education 
In the common schools, graduated in 1842 at Kenyon College, 
Cambier, Ohio, and was a student at the law school of Harvard 
University from 1843 until his graduation in 1845. He was 
admitted to the bar in 1845, and practised law, first at Lower 
Sandusky (now Fremont), and then at Cincinnati, where be won 
a very respectable standing, and in 1858-1861 served as city 
solicitor. In politics he was at first an anti-slavery Whig and 
then from the time of its organization in 1854 until his death 
was a member of the Republican party. In December 1852 he 
married Lucy Ware Webb of Chillicothe, Ohio, who survived 
him. After the breaking out of the Civil War the governor of 
Ohio, on the 7th of June 1861, appointed him a major of a 
volunteer regiment, and in July he was sent to western Virginia 
tor active service. He served throughout the war, distinguished 
himself particularly at South Mountain, Winchester, Fisher's Hill 
and Cedar Creek, and by successive promotions became a 
brigadier-general of volunteers and, by brevet, a major-general 



of volunteers. Whfle still in the field be was elected a mexnber 
of the National House of Representatives, and took his seat in 
December 1865. He was re-elected in 1866, and supported the 
reconstruction measures advocated by his party. From 1868 to 
1872 he was governor of Ohio. In 1873 he removed from 
Cincinnati to Fremont, his intention being to withdraw from 
public life; but in 1875 the Republican party in Ohio once more 
selected him as its candidate for the governorship. He accepted 
the nomination with great reluctance. The Democrats adopted 
a platform declaring in favour of indefinitely enlarging the 
volume of the irredeemable paper currency which the Civil War 
had left behind it. Hayes stoutly advocated the speediest 
practicable resumption of specie payments, and carried tbe 
election. The " sound-money campaign " in Ohio having 
attracted the attention of the whole country, Hayes was marked 
out as a candidate for the presidency, and he obtained the 
nomination of the Republican National Convention of 1876, his 
chief competitor being James G. Blaine, The candidate of the 
Democratic party, Samuel J. Tilden, by his reputation as a states- 
man and a reformer of uncommon ability, drew many Republican 
votes. An excited controversy having arisen about tbe result of 
the balloting in the states of South Carolina, Florida, Oregon 
and Louisiana, the two parties in Congress in order to allay a 
crisis dangerous to public peace agreed to pass an act referring 
all contested election returns to an extraordinary commission, 
called the " Electoral Commission " (?.*.)> which decided each 
contest by eight against seven votes in favour of the Republican 
candidates. Hayes was accordingly on the 2ndVof March 1877 
declared duly elected. 

During his administration President Hayes devoted his 
efforts mainly to civil service reform, resumption of specie pay- 
ments and the pacification of the Southern States, recently in 
rebellion. In order to win the co-operation of the white people 
in the South in maintaining peace and order, he put himsHf in 
communication with their leaders. He then withdrew the 
Federal troops which since the Civil War had been stationed at 
the southern State capitals. An end was thus made of the 
" carpet-bag governments " conducted by Republican politicians 
from the North, some of which were very corrupt, and had been 
upheld mainly by the Federal forces. This policy found much 
favour with the people generally, but displeased many of the 
Republican politicians, because it loosened the hold of the 
Republican party upon the Southern States. Though it did not 
secure to the negroes sufficient protection in the exercise of their 
political rights, it did much to extinguish the animosities still 
existing between the two sections of the Union and to promote 
the material prosperity of the South. President Hayes en- 
deavoured in vain to induce Congress to appropriate money 
for a Civil Service Commission; and whenever he made 
an effort to restrict the operation of tbe traditional "spoils 
system," he met the strenuous opposition of a majority of the 
most powerful politicians of his party. Nevertheless the 
system of competitive examinations for appointments was 
introduced in some of the great executive departments in 
Washington, and in the custom-house and the post-office in 
New York. Moreover, he ordered that " no officer should be 
required or permitted to take part in the management of poli ti cal 
organizations, caucuses, conventions or election campaigns,* 
and that " no assessment for political purposes on officer* or 
subordinates should be allowed "; and he removed from their 
offices the heads of the post-office in St Louis and of the custom- 
house in New York— influential party managers— on the ground 
that tbey had misused their official positions for partisan ends. 
In New York the three men removed were Chester A. Arthur, 
the collector; Alonzo B. Cornell, tbe naval officer of the Port; 
and George H. Sharpe, the surveyor of the customs. While these 
measures were of limited scope and effect, they served greatly to 
facilitate the more extensive reform of the civil service which 
subsequently took place, though at the same time they alienated 
a powerful faction of the Republican parly in New York under 
the leadership of Roscoe Conkling. Although the resumption 
of specie payments bad been provided for, to begin at a five* 



HAY FEVER— HAYM 



**3 



time by the Resumption Act of January 1875, opposition to it 
did not cease. A bill went through both Houses of Congress 
providing that a silver dollar should be coined of the weight of 
412} grains, to be full legal tender for all debts and dues, public 
and private, except where otherwise expressly stipulated in. the 
contract. President Hayes returned this bill with his veto, but 
the veto was overruled in both Houses of £ongress. Meanwhile, 
however, the preparations for the return to specie payments 
were continued by the Administration with iinflinrhing constancy 
and on the 1st of January 1879 specie payments were resumed 
without difficulty. None of the evils predicted appeared. A 
marked revival of business and a period of general prosperity 
ensued. In his annual message of the xst of December 1870 
President Hayes urged the suspension of the silver coinage and 
also the withdrawal of the United States legal tender notes, but 
Congress failed to act upon the recommendation. His ad- 
ministration also did much to ameliorate the condition of the 
Indian tribes and to arrest the spoliation of the public forest 
lands. 

Although President Hayes was not popular with the pro- 
fessional politicians of his own party, and was exposed to bitter 
attacks on the part of the Democratic opposition on account of 
the cloud which hung over his election, his conduct of public 
affairs gave much satisfaction to the people generally. In the 
presidential election of 1880 the Republican party carried the 
day after an unusually quiet canvass, a result largely due to 
popular contentment with the then existing state of public 
affairs. On the 4th of March 1881 President Hayes retired to his 
home at Fremont, Ohio. Various universities and colleges con- 
ferred honorary degrees upon him. His- remaining years he 
devoted to active participation in philanthropic enterprises ; 
thus he served as president of the National Prison Association 
and of the Board of Trustees chosen to administer the John F. 
Slater fund for the promotion of industrial education among the 
negroes of the South, and was a member, also, of the Board of 
Trustees of the Peabody Education fund for the promotion of 
education in the South. He died at Fremont, after a short ill- 
ness, on the 17th of January 1893. 

There is no adequate biography, but three " campaign lives " 
may be mentioned: Life, Public Services and Select Speeches of 
Rutherford B. Hayes, by James Quay Howard (Cincinnati, 1876); 
Life o/R. B. Hayes, by William D. Howells (New York, 1876) ; and 
a Life by Russell H. Conwell (Boston, 1876). See also Paul L. 
Haworth, The Hayes-Tilden Disputed Presidential Election of 1876 
(Cleveland, O., 1906). (C. S.) 

HAT FEVER, Hay Asthma, or Summer Catakbh, a catarrhal 
affection of the mucous membrane of the upper respiratory tract, 
due to the action of the pollen of certain grasses. It is often 
associated with asthmatic attacks. The disease affects certain 
families, and is hereditary in about one-third of the cases. It 
is more common among women than men, dty than country 
dwellers, and the educated and highly nervous than the lower 
classes. It has no connexion with the coryzas that are produced 
in nervous people by the odour of cats, &c. The complaint has 
been investigated by Professor W. P. Dunbar of Hamburg, 
who has shown that it is due to the pollens of certain grasses 
(notably rye) and plants, and that the severity of the attack is 
directly proportional to the amount of pollen in the air. He has 
isolated an albuminoid poison which, when applied to the nose 
of a susceptible individual, causes an attack, while there is no 
result in the case of a normal person. By injecting the poison 
into animals, he has obtained an anti-toxin, which is capable of 
aborting an attack of hay fever. The symptoms are those 
commonly experienced in the case of a severe cold, consisting of 
headache, violent sneezing and watery discharge from the nostrils 
and eyes, together with a hard dry cough, and occasionally severe 
asthmatic paroxysms. The period of liability to infection 
naturally coincides with the pollen season. 

The radical treatment is to avoid vegetation. Local treat- 
ment consisting of thorough destruction of the sensitive area 
of the mucous membrane of the nose often produces good results. 
There are various drugs, the best of which are cocaine and the 
extract of the suprarenal body, which, when applied to the nose, 
A HI 3 



are sometimes effectual; in practice, however, it is found that 
larger and larger doses are required, and that sooner or later they 
afford no relief. The same remarks apply to a number of patent 
specifics, of which the principal constituent is one of the above 
drugs. An additional and stronger objection to the use of cocaine 
is that a " habit " is often contracted, with the most disastrous 
results. Finally Dunbar's serum may be applied to the nose and 
eyes on rising, and on the slightest suggestion of irritation during 
the day; it will, in the large majority of cases, be found to be 
quite effectual. 

HAYLEY, WILLIAM (1745-1830), English writer, the friend 
and biographer of William Cowper, was born at Chichester on 
the 9th of November 1745. He was sent to Eton in 1757, and 
to Trinity Hall, Cambridge, in 1763; his connexion with the 
Middle Temple, London, where be was admitted in 1766, was 
merely nominal. In 1767 he left Cambridge and went to live in 
London. Two years later he married Eliza, daughter of Thomas 
Ball, dean of Chichester. His private means enabled Hayley to 
live on his patrimonial estate at Eartham, Sussex, and he retired 
there in x 774. He had already written many occasional poetical 
pieces* when in 1771 his tragedy, The Afflicted Pother, was 
rejected by David Garrick. In the same year his translation of 
Pierre Corneille's Rodogune as The Syrian Queen was also declined 
by George Colman. Hayley won the fame he enjoyed amongst 
his contemporaries by his poetical Essays and Epistles; a 
Poetical Epistle to an Eminent Painter (1780), addressed to his 
friend George Romney, an Essay on History (1780), in three 
epistles, addressed to Edward Gibbon: Essay on Epic Poetry 
(1782) addressed to William Mason; A Philosophical Essay on 
Old Maids (1785); and the Triumphs of Temper (1781). The last- 
mentioned work was so popular as to run to twelve or fourteen 
editions; together with the Triumphs of Music (Chichester, 
1804) it was ridiculed by Byron in English Bards and Scotch 
Reviewers. So great was Hayley 's fame that on Thomas Warton's 
death in 2790 he was offered the laureateship, which he refused. 
In 1793, while writing the Life of Milton (1794), Hayley made 
Cowper's acquaintance. A warm friendship sprang up between 
the two which lasted till Cowper's death in 1800. Hayley indeed 
was mainly instrumental in getting Cowper his pension. In 
1800 Hayley also lost his natural son, Thomas Alphonso Hayley, 
to whom he was devotedly attached. He had been a pupil of 
John Flaxman's, to whom Haylcy's Essay on Sculpture (1800) 
is address e d. Flaxman introduced William Blake to Hayley, 
and after the latter had moved in 1800 to his " marine hermitage " 
at Felpham, Sussex, Blake settled near him for three years to 
engrave the illustrations for the Life of Cowper. This, Hayley's 
best known work, was published in 1803-1804 (Chichester) in 
3 vols. In 1805 he published Ballads founded on Anecdotes of 
Animals (Chichester), with illustrations by Blake, and in 1809 
The Life of Romney. For the last twelve years of his life Hayley 
received an allowance for writing his Memoirs. He died at 
Felpham on the iath of November x8ao. Hayley's first wifo 
died in 1797; her mind had been seriously affected, and 
since 1789 they had been separated. He married in 1809 Mary 
Welford, but they also separated after three years. He left no 
children. 

lished in 3 vols. (1785); his 

ley . . . and Memoirs of his 

so a (a vols., 1833) (containing 

m i on these memoirs by Robert 

Sc . xxxi., 1825; William Blake, 

bi p. a8 et seq!); Life of William 

Bt , 1880), with some of Blake's 

le e of William Cowper, arranged 

b} taimng many letters to Hayley. 

HAYM, RUDOLF (182 1-1901), German publicist and philo- 
sopher, was born at Grdnberg, in Silesia, on the 5th of October 
1821, and died at St Anton (Arlberg) on the 27th of August xooi. 
He studied philosophy and theology at Halle and Berlin, and 
lived at Halle during 1846 and 1847. He was a member of the 
National Assembly at Frankfort in 1848, and wrote an account 
of the proceedings from the standpoint of the Right Centre. 

2a 



H4 



HAYNAU— HAYTON 



From 1851 he lectured in literature and philosophy at the uni- 
versity of Halle, and became professor in i860. His writings are 
biographical and critical, devoted mainly to modern German 
philosophy and literature. In 1870 he published a masterly 
history of the Romantic school. He also wrote biographies of 
W. von Humboldt (1856), Hegel (1857), Schopenhauer (1864), 
Herder (1877-1885), Max Duncker (1890). In 1901 he published 
Erinnemngen eus meinem Leben. 

HAYNAU, JULIUS JACOB (1786-1853), Austrian general, 
was the natural son of the landgrave — afterwards elector — of 
Hesse-Cassel, William IX. He entered the Austrian army as 
an infantry officer in x8ox, and saw much service in the 
Napoleonic wars. He was wounded at Wagram, and distinguished 
during the operations in Italy in 1813 and 1814. Between 1815 
and 1847 he rose to the rank of field marshal lieutenant. A 
violent temper, which he made no attempt to control or conceal, 
led. him into trouble with his superiors. His hatred of revolu- 
tionary principles was fanatical . When the insurrectionary move- 
ments of 1848 broke out in Italy, his known zeal for the cause 
of legitimacy, as much as his reputation as an officer, marked 
him out for command. He fought with success in Italy, but was 
chiefly noted for the severity he showed in suppressing and 
punishing a rising in Brescia. It ought to be remembered that 
the mob of Brescia had massacred invalid Austrian soldiers in 
the hospital, a provocation which always leads to reprisals. 
In June 1849 Haynau was called to Vienna to command first an 
army of reserve, and then in the field against the Hungarians. 
His successes against the declining revolutionary cause were 
numerous and rapid. In Hungary, as in Italy, he was accused 
of brutality. It was, for instance, asserted that he caused women 
who showed any sympathy with the insurgents to be whipped. 
His ostentatious hatred of the revolutionary parties marked him 
out as the natural object for these accusations. On the restora- 
tion of peace he. was appointed to high command in Hungary. 
His temper quickly led him into quarrels with the minister of 
war, and he resigned his command in 1850. He then travelled 
abroad. The refugees had spread his evil reputation. In London 
he was attacked and beaten by Messrs Barclay & Perkins' dray- 
men when visiting the brewery, and he was saved from mob 
violence in Brussels with some difficulty. He died on the 14th 
of March 1853. On the xxth of October x8o8 Haynau had 
married Thfrese von Weber, the daughter of Field Marshal 
Lieutenant Weber, who was slain at Aspern. She died, leaving 
one daughter, in 1850. 

See R. v. Schdnhals, Biograpkie ies K. K. Fdduugmeisters Julius 
Freiherm von Haynau (Vienna, 1875). 

HAYNE, ROBERT YOUNG (1701-1830), American political 
leader, born in St Paul's parish, Colleton district, South Carolina, 
on the 10th of November 1792. He studied law in the office of 
Langdon Cheves( 1 7 76-1 85 7) in Charleston, S.C., and in November 
181 2 was admitted to the bar there, soon obtaining a large 
practice. For a short time during the War of 181 2 against 
Great Britain, he was captain in the Third South Carolina 
Regiment. He was a member of the lower house of the state 
legislature from 1814 to 1818, serving as speaker in the latter 
year; was attorney-general of the state from 1818 to 1833, 
and in 1823 was elected, as a Democrat, to the United States 
Senate. Here he was conspicuous as an ardent free-trader 
and an uncompromising advocate of " States Rights," opposed 
the protectionist tariff bills of 1824 and 1828, and consistently 
upheld the doctrine that slavery was a domestic institution and 
should be dealt with only by the individual states. In one of his 
speeches opposing the sending by the United States of repre- 
sentatives to the Panama Congress, he said, " The moment the 
federal government shall make the unhallowed attempt to inter- 
fere with the domestic concerns of the states, those states will 
consider themselves driven from the Union/' Hayne is best 
remembered, however, for his great debate with Daniel Webster 
(q.v.) in January 1830. The debate arose over the so-called 
M Foote's Resolution," introduced by Senator Samuel A. Foote 
(1780-X846) of Connecticut, calling for the restriction of the sale 
of public lands to those already in the market, but was con* 



cerned primarily with the relation to one another and the respect 
ive powers of the federal government and the individual states, 
Hayne contending that the constitution was essentially a com- 
pact between the states, and the national government and the 
states, and that* any state might, at will, nullify any federal law 
which it considered to be in contravention of that compact. He 
vigorously opposed the. tariff of 1832, was a member of the 
South Carolina Nullification Convention of November 1832, 
and reported the ordinance of nullification passed by that body 
on the 24th of November. Resigning from the Senate, he was 
governor of the state from December 1832 to December 1834, 
and as such took a strong stand against President Jackson, 
though he was more conservative than many of the nullifica- 
tionists in the state. He was intendant (mayor) of Charleston, 
S.C., from 1835 to 1837, and was president of the Louisville, 
Cincinnati & Charleston railway from 1837 to 1839. He died at 
Asheville, N.C., on the. 24th of September 1839. His son, Paul 
Hamilton Hayne (183 0-1886), was a poet of some extinction, and 
in -1878 published a life of his father. 

See Theodore D. Jervey, Robert Y. Haynt and his Times (New 
York. 1909) . 

HATTER, SIR GEORGE (1792-1871), English painter, was 
the son of a popular drawing-master and teacher of perspective 
who published a well-known introduction to perspective and 
other works. He was bora in London, and in his early youth 
went to sea. He afterwards studied in the Royal Academy, 
became a miniature-painter, and was appointed in 1816 
miniature-painter to the princess Charlotte. He passed some 
years in Italy, more especially in Rome, between 18x6 and 1831, 
returned to London in the last-named year, resumed portrait- 
painting, now chiefly in oil-colour, executed many likenesses 
of the royal family, and attained such a reputation for finish 
and refinement in bis work that he received the appointment 
of principal painter to Queen Victoria and teacher of drawing 
to the princesses. In 1842 he was knighted. He painted 
various works on a large scale of a public and semi-historical 
character, but essentially works of portraiture; such as " The 
Trial of Queen Caroline " (189 likenesses), " The Meeting of the 
First Reformed Parliament," now in the National Portrait 
Gallery, ".Queen Victoria taking the Coronation Oath" 
(accounted his finest production), " The Marriage of the Queen," 
and the " Trial of Lord William Russell." The artistic menu 
of Hayter's works are not, however, such as to preserve to him 
with posterity an amount of prestige corresponding to that 
which court patronage procured him. 

He is not to be confounded with a contemporary artist, John 
Haytcr, who produced illustrations for the Book of Beauty, &c 

HAYTON (Haitbon, Hethum), king of Little Armenia or 
Cilicia from X224 to 1269, traveller in western and central 
Asia, Mongolia, &c, was the son of Constant ine Rupen, and 
became heir to the throne of Lesser Armenia by bis marriage 
with Isabella, daughter and only child of Leo II. After a reign of 
forty-five years he abdicated (1269) in favour of his son Leo IH., 
became a monk and died in 1271. Before his accession he had 
been " constable," or head of the Armenian army, and " bailiff n 
of the realm. Throughout his reign he followed the policy of 
friendship and alliance with the overwhelming power of the, 
Mongols. In about X248 he sent his brother Sempad, who was 
now constable in his place, on a mission to Kuyuk Khan, the 
supreme Mongol emperor. Sempad was well received and 
returned home in 1250, bringing letters from Kuyuk. After 
Mangu's accession in 1251, Batu (the most powerful of the 
Mongol princes and generals, and the conqueror— in name at 
least—of eastern Europe, now commanding on the line of the 
Volga) summoned Hayton to the court of the new grand khan. 
Carefully disguised, so as to pass safely through the Turkish 
states in the interior of eastern Asia Minor (where he was hated 
as an ally of the Mongols against Islam), Hayton made his way 
to Kars, the central Mongol camp in Great Armenia, where the 
famous general Bachu, or Baiju, commanded. Here be reported 
himself, and was permitted to remain some time in the Ararat 
region, at the foot of Mt Alagos, near the -metropolitan church of 



HAYWARD, ABRAHAM 



"5 



Echmiadzin. Being joined by lib suite, especially the clerical 
diplomatists Basil the Priest, and James the Abbot, Hayton next 
passed through eastern Caucasia, threading the pass of the 
Iron Gates of Derbent, and so reached the camp of Batu on the 
Volga, where he was cordially welcomed. Thence he set out 
(May 13th, 1354) on the " very long road beyond the Caspian 
Sea " to the residence of Mangu at or near Karakorum, south of 
Lake Baikal. After passing the Ural river, we only hear of his 
arrival at Or, probably the present Hi province, east of Balkhash, 
and of his reaching the Irtish, entering the Naiman country, 
and passing through "Karakhitai" (apparently the capital 
of the ruined Karakhitai empire is intended, a place perhaps 
situated on the Chu, mentioned out of itsproper place in Hayton 's 
record). On the 13th of September the travellers entered 
Mongolia, and on the 14th (?) of September were received by 
Mangu. Here the king remained till the 1st of November, 
when he left with diplomas, seals and letters of enfranchisement 
which promised great things for the Armenian state, church 
and people. His return journey was by very unusual and 
interesting routes— through the Urumtsi region, the basin of 
" the sea of milk," Lake Sairam, the valley of the Hi, the neigh- 
bourhood of Kulja, and so over mountains, which probably 
answer to certain outliers of the Alexander range, to Talas 
near the present Aulie Ata, midway between the Syr Daria and 
the Chu. Here he met and conferred with Hulagu Khan, 
Mangu 's brother, the future conqueror of Bagdad: probably 
Hayton was expected to aid in the coming forward movement 
of the Mongol armies against the Moslem world. From Talas 
Hayton made a detour to the north-west to meet another Mongol 
prince, Sartach the son of Batu; after which he ascended the 
valley of the Syr Daria, crossed into Trans-Oxiana, visited 
Samarkand and Bokhara, and passed the Oxus apparently 
near Charjui. By way of Merv and Sarakhs he then entered 
Khorasan and traversed north Persia, passing through Rai 
near Tehran, Kazvin and Tabriz, and so returning to the camp 
of Bachu in Armenia, now at Sisian near Lake Gokcha (July 1255). 
Thanks to his powerful friends, Hayton's journey was unusually 
rapid. Eight months after quitting Mangu's horde, he was 
back in Great Armenia. The narrative of this journey, which 
was written by a member of the king's suite, one Kirakos of 
Gandsak (the modern Elizavetpol), concludes with some interest- 
ing references to Buddhist tenets, to Chinese habits, to various 
monstrous races and to certain " women endowed with reason " 
dwelling " beyond Cathay." It also gives some notes, com- 
pounded of truth and legend, on the wild tribes and animals of 
the Gob 

The n m. 

A MS. c in 

Georgia, he 

Sibirsky 'as 

again tn xal 

asiaiiqm re- 

lation w he 

Memoir* a 

fresh Rui ed 

in 1874. >m 

Eastern r's 

Oriental ii. 

38i-39» 

HAYWARD, ABRAHAM (1801-1884), English man of letters, 
son of Joseph Hayward, of an old Wiltshire family, was born 
at Wilton, near Salisbury, on the 22nd of November x8or. 
After education at Blundell's school, Tiverton, he entered the 
Inner Temple in 1824, and was called to the bar in June 1832. 
He took part as a conservative in the discussions of the London 
Debating Society, where his opponents were J. A. Roebuck 
and John Stuart Mill. The editorship of the Law Magazine; 
or, Quarterly Review of Jurisprudence, which he held from 1829 
to 1844, brought him into connexion with John Austin, G. 
Cornewall Lewis, and such foreign jurists as Savigny, whose 
tractate on contemporary legislation and jurisprudence he 
rendered into English. In 1833 he travelled abroad, and on his 
return printed privately a translation of Goethe's Faust into 
English prose (pronounced by Carlyle to be the best version 



extant in his time). A second and revised edition was published 
after another visit to Germany in January 1834, in. the course of 
which Hayward met Tieck, Chamisso, De La Motte Fouqui, 
Varnhagen von Ense and Madame Goethe. In 1878 he con- 
tributed the rather colourless volume on Goethe to Blackwood's 
Foreign Classics. A successful translation was in those days 
a first-rate credential for a reviewer, and Hayward began con- 
tributing to the New Monthly, the Foreign Quarterly, the Quarterly 
Review and the Edinburgh Review. His first successes in this 
new field were won in 1835-1836 by articles on Walker's 
" Original " and on " Gastronomy." The essays were reprinted 
to form one of his best volumes, The Art of Dining, in 1852. 
In February 1835 he was elected to the Athenaeum Club under 
Rule II., and he remained for nearly fifty years one of its most 
conspicuous and most influential members. He was also a 
subscriber to the Carlton, but ceased to frequent it when he be- 
came a Peelite. At the Temple, Hayward, whose reputation 
was rapidly growing as a connoisseur not only of a bill of fare 
but also (as Swift would have said) of a bill of company, gave 
reeherchi dinners, at which ladies of rank and fashion appreciated 
the wit of Sydney Smith and Theodore Hook, the dignity of 
Lockhart and Lyndhurst and the oratory of Macaulay. At the 
Athenaeum and in political society he to some extent succeeded 
to the position of Croker. He and Macaulay were commonly 
said to be the two best-read men in town. Hayward got up every 
important subject of discussion immediately it came into pro- 
minence, and concentrated his information, in such a way that 
he habitually had the last word to say on a topic. When Rogers 
died, when Vanity Fair was published, when the Creville Memoirs 
was issued or a revolution occurred on the continent, Hayward, 
whose memory was as retentive as his power of accumulating 
documentary evidence was exhaustive, wrote an elaborate essay 
on the subject for the Quarterly at the Edinburgh. He followed 
up his paper by giving his acquaintances no rest until they either 
assimilated or undertook to combat his views. Political ladies 
first, and statesmen afterwards, came to recognize the advantage 
of obtaining Hayward's good opinion. In this way the " old 
reviewing band " became an acknowledged link between society, 
letters and politics. As a professional man he was less successful ; 
his promotion to be Q.C. in 1845 excited a storm of opposition, 
and, disgusted at not being elected a Bencher of his Inn in the 
usual course, Hayward virtually withdrew from legal practice. 
In February 1848 be became one of the chief leader-writers for 
the Peelite organ, the Morning Chronicle. The morbid activity 
of his memory, however, continued to make him many enemies. 
He alienated Disraeli by tracing a purple patch in his official 
eulogy of Wellington to a newspaper translation from Thiers's 
funeral panegyric on General St Cyr. His sharp tongue made 
an enemy of Roebuck, and be disgusted the friends of Mill by 
the stories he raked up for an obituary notice of the great 
economist (The Times, 10th May 1873). He broke with Henry 
Reeve in 1874 by a venomous review of the Creville Memows, y 
in which Reeve was compared to the beggarly Scot deputed to let 
off the blunderbuss which Bolingbroke (Greville) had charged. 
His enemies prevented him from" enjoying a well-selected quasi- 
sinecure, which both Palmerston and Aberdeen admitted to be 
his due. Samuel Warren attacked him (very unjustly, for 
Hayward was anything but a parasite) as Venom Tuft in Ten 
Thousand a Year; and Disraeli aimed at him partially in Ste 
Barbe (in Endymion), though the satire here was directed 
primarily against Thackeray. After his break with Reeve, 
Hayward devoted himself more exclusively to the Quarterly. 
His essays on Chesterfield and Selwyn were reprinted in 1854. 
Collective editionsof his articles appeared in volume form in 1858, 
1873 and 1874, and Selected Essays in two volumes, 1878. In 
his useful but far from flawless edition of the Autobiography, 
Letters and Literary Remains of Mrs (T/trale) Fioai (1861), 
he again appears as a supplementer and continuator of J. W. 
Croker. His Eminent Statesmen and Writers (1880) commemo- 
rates to a large extent personal friendships with such men 
as Dumas, Cavour and Thiers, whom be knew intimately. As 
a counsellor of great ladies and of politicians, to whom he 



n6 



HAYWARD, SIR J.— HAZARA 



held forth with a sense of all-round responsibility surpassing' 
that of a cabinet minister, Hayward retained his influence to 
the last years of his life. But he had little sympathy with modern 
ideas. He used to say that he bad outlived every one that he 
could really look up to. He died, a bachelor, in his rooms at 
8 St James's Street {a small museum of autograph portraits and 
reviewing trophies) on the 2nd of February 1884. 

Two volumes of Hayward's Correspondence (edited by H. E. 
Carlisle) were published in 1886. In Vanity Fair (27th November 
1875) he may be sepa as he appeared in later life. (T. SB.) 

HAYWARD, SIR JOHN (c. 1560-1627), English historian, 
was born at or near Felixstowe, Suffolk, where he was educated, 
and afterwards proceeded to Pembroke College, Cambridge, 
where he took the degrees of B.A., Mj\. and LL.D. In x 509 he 
pubUshed T heF ir st Part of the Life and Raigne of King Henrie IV. 
dedicated to Robert Devereuz, earl of Essex. This was reprinted 
In 1642. Queen Elizabeth and her advisers disliked the tone 
of the book and its dedication, and the queen ordered Francis 
Bacon to search it for " places in it that might be drawn within 
case of treason." Bacon reported " for treason surely I find 
none,' but for felony very many," explaining that many of the 
sentences were stolen from Tacitus; but nevertheless Hayward 
was put in prison, where he remained until about 1601. On the 
accession of James I. in 2603 he courted the new king's favour 
by publishing two pamphlets— "An Answer to the first part of a 
certaine conference concerning succession," and " A Treatise 
of Union of England and Scotland." The former pamphlet, 
an argument in favour of the divine right of kings, was reprinted 
in 1683 as " The Right of Succession " by the friends of the duke 
of York during the struggle over the Exclusion Bilk In 16x0 
Hayward was appointed one of the historiographers of the college 
which James founded at Chelsea; in 1613 he published his 
Lives of the Three Norman Kings of England, written at the re- 
quest of James's son, Prince Henry; in 1616 he became a member 
of the College of Advocates; and in 1619 he was knighted. He 
died in London on the 27th of June 1627. Among his manu- 
scripts was found The Life and Raigne of King Edward VI ^ 
first published in 1630, and Certain Yeres of Queen Elisabeth's 
Raigne, the beginning of which was printed in an edition of his 
Edward VI., published in 1636, but which was first published in 
a complete form in 1840 for the Camden Society under the editor- 
ship of John Bruce, who prefixed an introduction on the life and 
writings of the author. Hayward was conscientious and diligent 
in obtaining information, and although his reasoning on quest ions 
of morality is often childish, his descriptions ate generally 
graphic and vigorous. Notwithstanding his imprisonment under 
Elizabeth, his portrait of the. qualities of the queen's .mind and 
person is flattering rather than detractive. He also wrote 
several works of a devotional character. 

HAYWOOD, ELIZA (c. 1693-1756), English writer, daughter 
of a "London tmdesman named Fowler, was bom about 1603. 
She made an early and unhappy marriage with a man named 
Haywood, and her literary enemies circulated scandalous 
stories about her, possibly founded on her works rather than her 
real history. She appeared on the stage as early as 1715, and 
in 1721 she revised for. Lincoln's Inn Fields The Fair Captive, 
by a Captain Hurst. Two other pieces followed, but Eliza 
Haywood made her mark as a follower of Mrs Manley in writing 
scandalous and voluminous novels. To Memoirs of a certain 
Island adjacent to Utopia, written by a celebrated author of that 
country. If aw translated into English (1725), she appended 
a key in which the characters were explained by initials denoting 
living persons. The names are supplied to these initials in the 
copy in the British Museum. The Secret History of the Present 
Intrigues of the Court of Caramania (1727) was explained in a 
similar manner. The style of these productions is as extravagant 
as their matter. Pope attacked her in a coarse passage in The 
Dunciad (bk. ii. xx. 157 et seq.), which is aggravated by a 
note alluding to the " profligate licentiousness of those shameless 
scribblers (for the most part of that sex which ought least to be 
capable of such malice or impudence) who in libellous Memoirs 
and Novels reveal the faults or misfortunes of both sexes, to 



the ruin of public fame, or disturbance of private happiness." 
Swift, writing to Lady Suffolk, says, "Mrs Haywood I have beard 
of as a stupid, infamous,, scribbling woman, but have not seen 
any of her productions. 1 ' She continued to be a prolific writer 
of novels until her death on the 25th of February 1756, but her 
later works are characterized by extreme propriety,- though an 
anonymous story of The Fortunate Foundlings (1 744), purporting 
to be an account of the children of Lord Charles Manners, is 
generally ascribed, to her. 

A collected edition of her novels, plays and poems appeared in 
1724, and her Secret Histories, Novels and Poems in 1725; See afeo 
an article by S. L. Lee in the Dictionary of National Biography, ' 

HAZARA, a race of Afghanistan. The Haaaras are of 
Mongolian origin, speak- a dialect of Persian, and belong to the 
Shiah sect of Mahommedans. They are of middle size but 
stoutly made, with small, grey eyes, high cheek bones and 
smooth faces. They are descendants of military colonists 
introduced by Jenghiz Khan, who occupy all the highlands of 
the upper Hehnund valley, spreading through the country 
between Kabul and Herat, as well as into a strip of territory 
on the frontier slopes of the Hindu Kush north of KabuL In the 
western provinces they are known as the Chahar Aimak (Hazaras, 
Jamshidis, Taimanis and Ferozkhois), and in other districts 
they are distinguished by the name of the territory they occupy. 
They are pure Mongols, intermixing with no other races (chiefly 
for the reason that no other races will intermix with them), 
preserving their language and their Mongol characteristics 
uninfluenced by their surroundings, having absolutely displaced 
the former occupants of the Hazarajat and Ghor. They make 
good soldiers and excellent pioneers. The amir's companies of 
engineers are recruited from the Hazaras, and they form perhaps 
the most effective corps in his heterogeneous army. They are 
now recruited into the British service in India. 

HAZARA, a district of British India, in the Peshawar 
division of the North-West Frontier Province, with an area 
of 339X sq. m. It is bounded on the "N. by the Black Moun- 
tain, the Swat country, Kohistan and Chilas; on the E. by 
the native state of Kashmir; on the S. by Rawalpindi 
district; and on the W. by the river Indus. On the creation 
of the North-West Frontier Province in 190X the district was 
reconstituted, theTahsilof At tock being transferred toRawalpindi. 
The district forms a wedge of territory extending far into the 
heart of the outer Himalayas, and consisting of a long narrow 
valley, shut in on both sides by lofty mountains, whose peaks 
rise to a height of 17,000 ft. above sea leveL Towards the 
centre of the district the vale of Kagan is bounded by mountain 
chains, which sweep south ward still maintaining a general 
parallel direction, and send off spurs on every side which divide 
the country into numerous minor dales. The district is weU 
watered by the tributaries of the Indus, the Kunhar, which 
flows through the Kagan Valley into the Jhclum, and many 
rivulets. Throughout the scenery is picturesque Tq the north 
rise the distant peaks of the snow-clad ranges; midway, the 
central mountains stand clothed to their rounded summits with 
pines and other forest trees, while grass and brushwood spread 
a green cloak over the nearer hills, and cultivation covers every 
available slope. The chief frontier tribes on the border are 
the cis-Indus Swatis, Hassanzais, Akazats, Chagarzais, Parian 
Syads, Madda Khels, Amazais and Umarzais. * Within the 
district Pathans are not numerous. 

The name Hazara possibly belonged originally to a Turki 
family which entered India with Timur, in the 14th century, 
and subsequently settled in this remote region. During the 
prosperous period of the Mogul dynasty the population included 
a number of mixed tribes, which each began to assert its inde- 
pendence, so that the utmost anarchy prevailed until Haeara 
attracted the attention of the rising Sikh monarchy. Ranjit 
Singh first obtained a footing here in 1818, and, after eight years 
of constant aggression, became master of the whole country. 
During the minority of the young maharaja Dhuleep Singh, the 
Sikh kingdom fell into a state of complete disorganization; the 
people seized the opportunity for recovering their independence, 



HAZARD— HAZEL 



117 



tnd rose in 1845 in rebellion. They stormed the Sikh forts, 
laid siege to Haripur, and droye the governor* across the 
borders. After the first Sikh War.it was proposed to transfer 
Hazara with Kashmir to Gulab Singh, but it remained under 
the Lahore government in charge of James Abbott, who pacified 
it in less than a year and held it single-handed throughout the 
troubles of the second Sikh War. It was also undisturbed 
during the Mutiny. The population in iooi was 560, 288, showing 
an increase of 8-52% in the decade. The headquarters are at 
Abbot abaci; pop. (iooi) 7764. Through the Kagan valley and 
over the Babusar pass at its head lies the most direct route 
from the Punjab to Chilas and Gilgit. 

HAZARD (O. Ft. hazard, from Span. azar t unlucky throw at 
dice, misfortune, from Arab, al, and zar, dice), a game of dice 
(called Craps in America), once very popular in England and 
played for large stakes at the famous rooms of Crockford (St 
James's Street, London) and Almack (Pall Mall, London). The 
player or " caster " calls a " main " (that is, any number from 
five to nine inclusive). He then throws with two dice. If he 
" throws in," or " nicks," he wins the sum played for from the 
banker or " setter." Five is a nick to five, six and twelve are 
nicks to six, seven and eleven to seven, eight and twelve to eight 
and nine to nine. If the caster " throws out " by throwing 
aces, or deuce-ace (called crabs or craps), he loses. When the 
main is five or nine the caster throws out with ix or 12; when 
the main is six or eight he throws out with n; when the main 
is seven he throws out with 12. If the caster neither nicks nor 
throws out, the number thrown is his "chance," and he keeps 
on throwing till either the chance comes up, when he wins, or 
till the main comes up, when he loses. When a chance is thrown 
the " odds " for or against the chance are laid by the setter to 
the amount of the original stake. Seven is the best main for 
the caster to call, as it can be thrown in six different ways out 
of the thirty-six casts which arc possible with dice. Supposing 
seven to be the main; then the caster wins if he throws 7 or 
xx ; he loses if he throws crabs or 12. If he throws any other 
number, 4 for example, that is his chance. The odds against 
him are two to one, as 7 can be thrown in six ways, but 4 only 
in three; hence six to three, or two to one, are the correct odds, 
and if the original stake was £1, the setter now lays £2 to £1 in 
addition. It is useful to remember that 2 and 12 can be thrown 
in one way; 3 and xx in two ways; 4 and 10 in three ways; 
5 and 9 in four ways; 6 and 8 in five ways. The odds against 
the caster are thus given by Hoyle: If 7 is the main and 4 
the chance, two to one; 6 and 4, five to three; 5 and 4, four 
to three; 7 and 9, three to two; 7 and 6, six and five; 7 and 5, 
three to two; 6 and 5, five to four; 8 and 5, five to four, drc. 

HAZARIBAGH, a town and district of British India, in the 
Chota Nagpur division of Bengal. The town is well situated at 
an elevation of 2000 ft. Pop. (iooi) i5»799« Hazaribagh has 
ceased to be a military cantonment since the European peni- 
tentiary was abolished. There are a central jail and a reform- 
atory school. The Dublin University Mission maintains a 
First Arts college. 

The District comprises an area of 7021 sq. m. In 1001 the 
population was 1,177,061, showing an increase of 1% in the 
decade. The physical formation of Hazaribagh exhibits three 
distinct features: (x) a high central plateau occupying the 
western section, the surface of which is undulating and cultivated ; 
(2) a lower and more extensive plateau stretching along the north 
and eastern portions; to the north, the land is well cultivated, 
while to the east the country is of a more varied character, the 
elevation is lower, and the character of a plateau is gradually 
lost; (3) the central valley of the Damodar river occupying the 
entire southern section. Indeed, although the characteristics 
of the district are rock, hill and wide-spreading jungle, fine 
patches of cultivation are met with in all parts, and the scenery 
is generally pleasing and often striking. The district forms a 
part of the chain of high land which extends across the continent 
of India, south of the Nerbudda on the west, and south of the 
Sone river on the east. The most important river is the Damodar, 
with its many tributaries, which drains an area of 2480 sq. m. 



The history of the district is involved in obscurity until 1755, 
about which time a certain Mukund Singh was chief of the 
country. In a few years he was superseded by Tej Singh, who 
had gained the assistance of the British. In 1780 Hazaribagh, 
along with the surrounding territory, passed under direct British 
rule. 

The district contains an important coal-field at Giridih which 
supplies the East Indian railway. There are altogether six 
mines. There are also mica mines which are gaining in import* 
ance. Rice and oilseeds are the principal crops. Tea cultivation 
has been tried but does not flourish, and is almost extinct. The 
only railways are the branch of the East Indian to the coal- 
field at Giridih, where there is a technical school maintained 
by the railway company, and the newly-opened Gaya-Katrasgarh 
chord line; but the district is traversed by the Grand Trunk 
road. Parasnath hill is annually visited by large numbers of 
Jain worshippers. 

HAZEBROUCK, a town of northern France, capital of an 
arrondissement in the department of Nord, on the canalized 
Bourre, 29 m. W.N.W.of Lille, on the Northern railway, between 
that town and St Omer. Pop. (1906), town, 8708; commune, 
12,8x9. With the exception of the church of St Eloi, a building 
of the x6th century witfi a spire of fine open work 260 ft. high, 
and the hospice, occupying a convent built in the x6th and 17th 
centuries, there is little of architectural interest in the town. 
Hazebrouck is the seat of a sub prefect, and has a tribunal of first 
instance and a board of trade arbitration. It is the market for 
a fertile agricultural district, and has trade in live-stock, grain and 
hops. Cloth-weaving is the chief industry. Hazebrouck is an 
important junction, and railway employes form a large part of 
its population. 

HAZEL (0. Eng. hasd 1 ; cf. Ger. HaseJ, Swed. and Dan. 
hassel, &c.,;Fr. noisctier, ceudrier), botanically cor y I us, a genus of 
shrubs or low trees of the natural order Corylaceae. The common 
hazel, Corylus Avellana (fig. x), occurs throughout Europe, in 
North Africa and in 
central and Russian 
Asia, except the 
northernmost parts. 
It is commonly found 
in hedges and coppices, 
and as an undergrowth 
in woods, and reaches 
a height of some 12 

ft.; occasionally, as at FlG# 1 ._ H azcl (Corylus Avellana). -i, 
Eastwell Park, Kent, Female catkin (enlarged) ; 2, Pair of fruits 
it may attain to 30 ft. (nuts) each enclosed in its involucre 
According to Evelyn (reduced). 
(Sylva, p. 35, 1664), 

hazels " above all affect cold, barren, dry, and sandy soils; also 
mountains, and even rockie ground produce them; but more 
plentifully if somewhat moist, dankish, and mossie." In Kent they 
flourish best in a calcareous soil. The bark of the older stems is 
of a bright brown, mottled with grey, that of the young twigs is 
ash-coloured, and glandular and hairy. The leaves are alternate, 
from 2 to 4 in. in length, downy below, roundish heart-shaped, 
pointed and shortly stalked. In the variety C. purpurea, the 
leaves, as also the pellicle of the kernel and the husk of the not, 
are purple, and in C. heUropkyUa they are thickly clothed with 
hairs. In autumn the rich yellow tint acquired by the leaves 
of the hazel adds greatly to the beauty of landscapes. The 
flowers are monoecious, and appear in Great Britain in February 
and March, before the leaves. The cylindrical drooping yellow 
male catkins (fig. 2) are x to a| in. long, and occur 2 to 4 in a 
raceme; when in unusual numbers they may be terminal in 
position. The female flowers are small, sub-globose and sessile, 

1 It has been supposed that the origin is to be found in O. Eng. 
hats, a behest, connected with Aalon-Ger. heisstn, to give orders: 
the hazel-wand was the sceptre of authority of the shepherd 
chieftain (rtnuiir XaA») of olden times, see Grimm, Cesch. d. deulsck. 
Sprache, p. 1016, 1848. The root is has-, cf. Lat. corulas, eorylta; 
and the original meaning is unknown. 




xi8 



HAZLETON 



Fig. a.— Catkin of 



resembling leaf-bud*, and have protruding crimson stigmas; 
the minute inner bracts, by their enlargement, form the palmately 
lobed and cut involucre or husk of the nut. The ovary is not 
visible till nearly midsummer, and is not fully developed before 
autumn. The nuts have a length of from J to | in., and grow in 
clusters. Double nuts are the result of 
the equal development of the two carpels 
of the original flower, of which ordinarily 
one becomes abortive; fusion of two or 
more nuts is not uncommon. From the 
light-brown or brown colour of the nuts 
the terms hazel and hazelly, i.e. " in hue 
as hazel nuts " (Shakespeare, Taming of 
the Shrew, ii. x), derive their significance. 1 
The wood of -the hazel is whitish-red, 
close in texture and pliant, and has 
when dry a weight of 49 lb per cub. ft.; 
it has been used in cabinet-making, and 
for toys and turned articles. Curiously 
veined veneers are obtained from the 
roots; and the root-shoots are largely 
employed in the making of crates, coal- 

hLS- (S3S™ J ?>"<» « b - ta j* *«*■. j** «* 

lana), consisting of an bands, whip-handles and other objects, 
axis covered with bracts The rods are reputed to be most durable 
in the form of scales. w j, en f rom ^ ^ tsi ground, and to be 

^^^•^32 ***** #** whcre the ***** » 
stamens of which are chalky. The light charcoal afforded by 
seen projecting beyond the hazel serves well for crayons, and 
the scale. The catkin fe valued by gunpowder manufacturers. 
«iif ro » V&bSS* An objection to the construction of 
by an articulation. hedges of hazel is the injury not in- 
frequently done to them by the nut- 
gatherer, who "with active vigour crushes down the tree" 
(Thomson's Seasons, " Autumn "), and otherwise damage* iL 
■ The filbert* among the numerous varieties of Corylus A vellana, 
is extensively cultivated, especially in Kent, for the sake of its 
nuts, which are readily distinguished from cob-nuts by their 
ample involucre and greater length. It may be propagated by 
suckers and layers, by grafting and by sowing. Suckers afford 
the strongest and earliest-bearing plants. Grafted filberts are 
less'liable than others to be encumbered by suckers at the root. 
By the Maidstone growers the best plants are considered to be 
obtained from layers. These become well rooted in about a 
twelvemonth, and then, after pruning, are bedded out in the 
nursery for two or three years. The filbert is economically grown 
on the borders of plantations or orchards, or in open spots in 
woods. It thrives most in a light loam with a dry subsoil; rich 
and, in particular, wet soils are unsuitable, conducing to the 
formation of too much wood. Plantations of filberts arc made 
in autumn, in well-drained ground, and a space of about 10 ft. 
by 8 has to be allowed for each tree. In the third year after 
planting the trees may require root-pruning; in the fifth or sixth 
they should bear well. The nuts grow in greatest abundance on 
the extremities of second year's branches, where light and air 
have ready access. To obtain a good tree, the practice in Kent is 
to select a stout upright shoot 3 ft. in length; this is cut down 
to about 18 in. of which the lower xa are kept free from out- 
growth. The head is pruned to form six or eight strong offsets; 
and by judicious use of the knife, and by training, preferably on 
a hoop placed within them, these are caused to grow outwards and 
upwards to a height of about 6 ft. so as to form a bowl-like shape. 
Excessive luxuriance of the laterals may be combated by root- 
pruning, or by checking them early in the season, and again later, 
and by cutting back to a female blossom bud, or else spurring 
nearly down to the main branch in the following spring. 

Filbert nuts required for keeping must be gathered only when 

3uite ripe; they may then be preserved in dry sand, or, after 
rying, by packing with a sprinkling of salt in sound casks or new 



On the expression " hazel eyes," see Notes and Queries, 2nd ser. 
137, and 3rd ser. iii. 18, 39. 
'For derivations of the word see Latham's Johnson's Dictionary. 



Mlord, which art 
uare nut, having 
filbert; and the 
wlliclc. The last 
sen distinguished 



ike these, apnar* 
ampania (cl. Fr. 
inally designated 



nd Greece from 
-nuts, under the 
f exported from 
d other places in 
le-ycllow, sweet- 
y of 0*92 nearly, 
ipproximatcly of 
V Hazel outs 
rs of Switzerland 
Dwellings, trans, 
sometimes eaten 
1*74) enumerates 
I these the beetle 
and oak stems 
tivc to the nuts. 
i kerne! of which 
way through the 
in into a chrysalis 
1 arc frequently 
dy by the larvae 
Squirrels and 
icy not only take 
upply. Parasitic 
leafless Latkraea 

1 the authorized 
Jieved to signify 
id iii. 8x1, 1864). 
' the discovery of 
f. Hosea iv. 12). 
adx-xxxi., Basel, 
tut, of their em- 
sin persons, who 
Is, rods of hazel, 
xlcs, and by the 
rtcral veins, they 
1 the hazel wand 
forks; these were 
most, but with 
the opposite end 
6 Interfered with, 
dowsing rod b 
t treasures of the 
end of the 17th 
• divinatoire,' is 
isls. The Jesuit 
18th century, in 
use, 174a) amus- 
chicanery of one 
od to point out 
axel nuts for the 
by John Gay in 
The hazel is very 
writers. Corrlns 
edible fruits like 

Metis virriuka, of 
bark of which m 
native of North 
owers in autumn 



ylvania, U.S.A., 
11,872; (1900) 
• census) 85,453. 
nia (for freight), 
railways. The 
opeck or Buck 
t 1620 ft. above 
some residences; 
nation make it 
1 public library, 
coal regions (the 
to state, and its 
anthracite coal 
>reweries, maca- 
tant iron works, 
L The value of 



HAZUTT, WILLIAM 



"9 



the city's factory products increased from $998,823 in 1900 to 
$9,185,876 in ioo$, or x 18-8%, only three other cities in the state 
having a population of 8000 or more in xooo showing a greater 
rate of increase. There is a state hospital here for the treatment 
of persons injured in mines. Hazleton was settled in 1820, was 
laid out in 1836, was incorporated as a borough in 1856 and 
received a city charter in 1891. The local coal industry dates 
from 1837. 

HAZUTT, WILLIAM (1778-1830), British literary critic and 
essayist, was born on the xoth of April 1778 at Maidstone, where 
his father, WilKam Hazlift, was minister of a Unitarian con* 
gregation. The father took the side of the Americans in their 
struggle with the mother-country, and during a residence at 
Bandon, Co. Cork, interested himself in the welfare of some 
American prisoners at Kinsale. In 1783 he migrated with his 
family to America, but in the winter of 1786-1787 returned to 
England, and settled at Wem in Shropshire, where he ministered 
to a small congregation. There his son William went to school, 
till in 1793 n « was »?nt to the Hackney theological college in the 
hope that he would become a dissenting minister. For this 
career, however, he had no inclination, and returned, probably 
in 1794, to Wem, where he led a desultory life until 1802, and then 
decided to become a portrait painter. His elder brother John 
was already established as a miniature painter in London. The 
monotony of life at Wem was broken in January 1798 by the 
visit of Samuel Taylor Coleridge to Shrewsbury, where young 
Haxtitt went to bear him preach. Coleridge encouraged William 
Hazlitt's interest in metaphysics, and in the spring of the next 
year Hazlitt visited Coleridge at Net her Stowcy and made the 
acquaintance of William Wordsworth. The circumstances of 
this early intercourse with Coleridge are related with in- 
fmitable skill in a paper in Hazlitt's Literary Remains (1639). 
On visits to his brother in London he made many acquaint- 
ances, the most important being a friendship with Charles 
Lamb, said to have been founded on a remark of Lamb's 
interpolated in a discussion between Coleridge, Godwin and 
Holcroft, " Give me man as he Is not to be." He also formed 
an acquaintance with John Stoddart, whose sister Sarah he 
married in 1808. In October 1802 be went to Paris to copy 
portraits in the Louvre, and spent four happy months in Paris. 
When he returned to London he undertook commissions for 
portraits, but soon found he was not likely to excel in his art; 
bis last portrait, one of Charles Lamb as a Venetian senator 
(now in the National Portrait Gallery), was executed in 1805. 
In that year he published his first book, An Essay on the 
Principles of Human Action: being an argument in favour of 
the Natural Disinterestedness of the Human Mind, which had 
occupied Mm at intervals for six or seven years. It attracted 
Bttle attention, but remained a favourite with its author. Other 
works belonging to this period are: Free Thoughts on Public 
Affairs (1806); An Abridgment of the Light of Nature Revealed, 
by Abraham Tucher. . . (1807); The Eloquence of the British 
Senate ... (2 vols., 1807); A Reply to Mai thus, on his Essay 
on Population (1807); A New and Improved Grammar of the 
English Tongue . *. . (1810). 

Hazlitt married in 1808. His domestic life was unhappy. 
His wife was an unromantic, business-like woman, while he him- 
self was fitful and moody, and impatient of restraint. The 
dissolution of the ill-assorted union was nevertheless deferred 
for fourteen years, during which much of Hazlitt's best literary 
work had been produced. Mrs Hazlitt had inherited a small 
estate at Winterslow near Salisbury, and here the Hazlitt s lived 
until 1812, when they removed to 19 York Street, Westminster, 
a house that was once Milton's. Hazlitt delivered in 1812 a 
course of lectures at the Russell Institution on the Rise and 
Progress of Modern Philosophy. He soon abandoned philosophy, 
however, to give his whole attention to journalism. He was 
parliamentary reporter and subsequently dramatic critic for the 
Morning Chronicle; he also contributed to the Champion and 
The Times; but his closest connexion was with the Examiner, 
owned by John and Leigh Hunt. In conjunction with Leigh 
Hunt be undertook the series of articles called The Round Tabh, 



a collection of essays on literature, men and manners which 
were originally contributed to the Examiner. To this time 
belong his View of the English Stage (1818), and Lectures on the 
English Poets (1818), on the English Comic Writers (18:9), and on 
the Dramatic Literature of the Age of Elisabeth (1821). By these 
works, together with his Characters of Shakespeare's Plays 
(x8x7),andhis Table Talk; or Original Essays on Men and Manners 
(1821-1822), his reputation as a critic and essayist was established. 
Next to Coleridge, Hazlitt was perhaps the most powerful ex* 
ponent of the dawning perception that Shakespeare's art was no 
less marvellous than his genius; and Hazlitt's criticism did not, 
like Coleridge's, remain in the condition of a series of brilliant 
but fitful glimpses of insight, but was elaborated with steady 
care. His lectures on the Elizabethan dramatists performed a 
similar service for the earlier, sweeter and simpler among them, 
such as Dekker, till then unduly edipsed by later writers like 
Massinger, better playwrights but worse poets. Treating of the 
contemporary drama, he successfully vindicated for Edmund 
Kean, whose genius he recognized from the first, the high place 
which he has retained as an actor, and his enthusiasm for Mrs 
Siddons knew no bounds. His criticisms on the English comic 
writers and men of letters in general are masterpieces of inge- 
nious and felicitous exposition, though rarely, like Coleridge's, 
penetrating to the inmost core of the subject. Moreover, at 
the time when the lectures were written, Hazlitt's views, orthodox 
as they may seem now, were novel enough. 

As an essayist Hazlitt is even more effective than as a critic 
Being enabled to select his own subjects, he escapes dependence 
upon others either for his matter or his illustrations, and presents 
himself by turns as a metaphysician, a moralist, a humorist, a 
painter of manners and characteristics, but always, whatever 
his ostensible theme, deriving the essence of his commentary 
from himself. This combination of intense subjectivity with 
strict adherence to his subject is one of Hazlitt's most distinctive 
and creditable traits. Intellectual truthfulness is a passion with 
him. He steeps bis topic in the hues of his own individuality, 
but never uses it as a means of self-display. The first reception 
of his admirable essays was by* no means in accordance with 
their deserts. Hazlitt's political sympathies and antipathies were 
vehement, and he had taken the unfashionable side. The 
Quarterly Review attacked him with deliberate malignity, stopped 
the sale of his writings for a time and blighted his credit with 
publishers. Hazlitt retaliated by his Letter to William Ciffotd 
(1819), accusing the editor of deliberate misrepresentation. 
In downright abuse and hard-hitting, Hazlitt proved himself 
more than a match even for Gifford. By the writers in Black* 
wood's Magazine Hazlitt was also scurrilously treated. 1 He had 
become estranged from his early friends, the Lake poets, by what 
he uncharitably but not unnaturally regarded as their political 
apostasy; and he had no scruples about recording his often very 
unfavourable opinions of his contemporaries. He displayed, 
moreover, an exasperating facility in grounding his criticisms 
on facts that his victims were unable to deny. His inequalities 
of temper separated him for a time even from Leigh Hunt and 
Charles Lamb, and on the whole the period of his most brilliant 
literary success was that when he was most soured and broken. 
Domestic troubles supervened; he had gone to live in South- 
ampton Buildings in September 1819, and his marriage, long 
little more than nominal, was dissolved in consequence of the 
infatuated passion he had conceived for his landlord's daughter, 
Sarah Walker, a most ordinary person in the eyes of every one 
else. It is impossible to regard Hazlitt as a responsible agent 
while he continued subject to this influence. His own record 
of the transaction, published by himself under the title of Liber 
Amoris, or the New Pygmalion (1823), is an unpleasant but 
rema rkable psychological document. It consists of conversations 
between Hazlitt and Sarah Walker, drawn up in the spring of 
1822, of a correspondence between Hazlitt and his friend P. G. 
Pat more between March and July, and an account of the rupture 
of his relations with Sarah. The business-like dissolution of 
his marriage under the law of Scotland is related with amazing 

1 For some quotations see Alexander Ireland's bibliography. 



120 



HEAD, SIRE. W. 



naivete by the family biographer. Rid of his wife and cured 
of bis mistress, he shortly afterwards astonished his friends by 
marrying a widow. " All I know," says his grandson, " is that 
Mrs Bridgewater became Mrs Hazlitt." They travelled on the 
continent for a year and then parted finally. Hazlitt's study of 
the Italian masters during this tour, described in a series of letters 
contributed to the Morning Chronicle, had a deep effect upon him, 
and perhaps conduced to that intimacy with the cynical old 
painter Northcote which, shortly after his return, engendered 
a curious but eminently readable volumo of The Conversations 
of James Northcote, R.A.(i 830). The respective shares of author 
and artist are not always easy to determine. During the recent 
agitations of his life be had been writing essays, collected in 1826 
under the title of The Plain Speaker: opinions on Books, Men 
and Things (1826). The Spirit of the Age; or Contemporary 
Portraits (1835), a series of criticisms on the leading intellectual 
characters of the day, is in point of style perhaps the most 
splendid and copious of his compositions. It is eager and ani- 
mated to impetuosity, though without any trace of careless- 
Bess or disorder. He now undertook a work which was to have 
crowned 1 his literary reputation, but which can hardly be said 
to have even enhanced it — The Life of Napoleon Buonaparte 
(4 vols., 1828-1830). The undertaking was at best premature, 
and was inevitably disfigured by partiality to Napoleon as 
the representative of the popular cause, excusable in a Liberal 
politician writing in the days of the Holy Alliance. Owing to 
the failure of his publishers Hazlitt received no recompense for 
this laborious work. Pecuniary anxieties and disappointments 
may have contributed to hasten his death, which took place 
on the 18th of September 1830. Charles Lamb was with him 
to the last. 

Hazlitt had many serious defects of temper. His consistency 
was gained at the expense of refusing to revise his early impres- 
sions and prejudices. His estimate of a man's work was too 
apt to be decided by sympathy or the reverse with his politics. 
For Scott, however, he had a great admiration, although they 
were far enough apart in politics. He was a compound of in- 
tellect and passion, and the refinement of his critical analysis 
is associated with vehement eloquence and glowing imagery. 
He was essentially a critic, a dissector and, as Bulwer justly 
remarks, a much better judge of men of thought than, of men of 
action. The paradoxes with which his works abound never 
spring from affectation; they are in general the sallies of a mind 
so agile and ardent as to overrun its own goal His style is 
perfectly natural, and yet admirably calculated for effect. His 
diction, always rich and masculine, seems to kindle as he pro- 
ceeds ; and when thoroughly animated by his subject, he advances 
with a succession of energetic, hard-hitting sentences, each 
carrying his argument a step further, like a champion dealing 
out blows as he presses upon the enemy. Although, however, 
his grasp upon his subject is strenuous, his insight into it is 
rarely profound. He can amply satisfy men of taste and culture ; 
he cannot, like Coleridge or Burke, dissatisfy them with them- 
selves by showing them how much they would have missed 
without him. He is a critic who exhibits, rather than reveals, 
the beauties of an author. But all shortcomings are forgotten 
in the genuineness and fervour of the writer's self-portraiture. 
The intensity of his personal convictions causes all he wrote to 
appear in a manner autobiographic. Other men have been said 
to speak like books, Hazlitt 's books speak like men. To read 
his works in* connexion with Leigh Hunt's and Charles Lamb's 
Is to be introduced into one of the most attractive of English 
literary circles, and this alone will long preserve them from 
oblivion. 

His son, William Hazlitt (1811-1893), was born on the 
toth of September 181 1. The separation between his parents 
did not prevent him from being on affectionate terms with both 
of them. He early began to write for the Morning Chronicle, 
and in 1833 married Caroline Rcynell. He was the author of 
many translations, chiefly from the French, and of some works 
on the law of bankruptcy. He was called to the bar at the 
Middle Temple in 1844, and became registrar in the court of 



bankruptcy. He held this position for more than thirty years, 
retiring two years before his death, which took place at Addle* 
stone, Surrey, on the sjrd of February 1893. 

Hazlitt's grandson, William Caxew Hazlitt, the biblio- 
grapher, was born on the 22nd of August 1834. He was educated 
at the Merchant Taylors' school and was called to the bar of the 
Inner Temple in 186 1. Among his many publications may be 
noted his invaluable Handbook to the Popular, Poetical and 
Dramatic Literature of Great Britain, from the Invention of 
Printing to the Restoration (1867), supplemented in 1876, 1882, 
1887 and 2889, a General Index by J. G. Gray appearing in 1893. 
He published further contributions to the subject in Biblio- 
graphical Collections and Notes on Early English Literature made 
during the years 1*93-1903 (1903), and a Manual for the Collector 
and Amateur of Old English Plays . . . (1892). He was the chief 
editor of the useful 1871 edition of Warton's History of English 
Poetry, and compiled the Catalogue of the Huih Library 
(1880). 

E 
Pi 



W 
A 

hi 

$ 

Wiiw iwu ixc^.« utm ian iiiiuu> < licit ta «n caccu«iiv iiivuwia)M «n 

William Haslitt (1902) by Mr Augustine Birrrll, in the English 
Men of Letters " series, and one in French by J. Donady (Paris, 1907), 



HEAD, SIR EDMUND WALKER, Bast. (1805-1868), English 
colonial governor and writer on art, was the son of the Rev. 
Sir John Head, Bart.,rcctor of Raylcigh, Essex. He was educated 
at Winchester school and Oriel College, Oxford, and taking his 
degree with first-class honours in classics, he became fellow of 
Merton College. On his father's death in 1838, he succeeded 
to the baronetcy as 8th baronet. His services as poor-law 
commissioner, to which post he was appointed in 1841 after 
five years as assistant-commissioner, procured for him in 1847 
the office of lieutenant-governor of New Brunswick, whence 
he passed in 1854 to the governor-generalship of Canada, which 
he retained till 1861. The following year, having returned to 
England, Head was nominated a civil service commissioner. 
In 1857 he was sworn of the Privy Council, and in i860 was 
decorated as K.C.B.,whiIe in the course of his career he received 
the degrees of D.C.L. at Oxford and LL.D. at Cambridge. He 
died in London on the 28th of January 1868, the baronetcy 
becoming extinct, as his only son had died in 1859. 

Sir Edmund Head wrote the article " Painting " in the Penny 
Cyclopaedia: A Handbook of the Spanish and French Schools of 
Painting (1845) ; Shall and Will, or two Chapters on Future Auxiliary 
Verts (1856) ; and Ballads and other Poems, Original and Transtamd 
(1868). He also edited F. T. Kugler's Handbook of Painting qf the 



HEAD, SIR F. B.— HEALTH 



German, Flemish, Dutch, Spanish, and French Schools (185*) and tine 
Essays on the Administrations of Great Britain (1864), written by 
his lifelong friend, Sir George Cornewall Lewis. His translation 
from the Icelandic of Vtga Ci urn's Saga appeared in 1866. 

HEAD, SIR FRANCIS BOND, Bart. (1 793-1875), English 
soldier, traveller and author, son of James Roper Head of the 
Hermitage, High am, Kent, was born there on the 1st of January 
1793. He was educated at Rochester grammar school and the 
Royal Military Academy, whence in 181 1 he was commissioned 
to the Royal Engineers. He was for some years stationed in 
the Mediterranean, and he served in the campaign of 181 5, 
being present at the battle of Waterloo. He went on half-pay 
in 1825, when he accepted the charge of an association formed 
to work the gold and silver mines of Rio de La Plata. In 
connexion with this enterprise he made several rapid journeys 
across the Pampas and among the Andes, his Rough Notes of 
which, published in 1826, and written in a clear and spirited 
style, obtained for him the name of " Galloping Head." On 
his return in 1827, he became involved in a controversy with 
the directors of his company, and in defence of his conduct he 
published Reports of the La Plata Mining Association (London, 
1827). He was soon afterwards restored to the active list of 
the army as a major unattached, mainly owing to his efforts 
to introduce the South American lasso into the British service 
for auxiliary draught. In 1830 he published a life of Bruce, 
the African traveller, and in 1834 Bubbles from the Brunncns 
of Nassau, by an Old Man. In 1835 he was knighted, and in 
the following year created a baronet. In 1835 ne was appointed 
lieutenant-governor of Upper Canada, and in this capacity he 
had to deal with a political situation of great difficulty, being 
catted upon in 1837 to suppress a serious insurrection. Shortly 
afterwards, in consequence of a dispute with the home govern- 
ment, he resigned his post and returned to England, via New 
York (see Quarterly Review, vols. 63-64). Thereafter he devoted 
himself to writing, chiefly for the Quarterly Review, and to hunting. 
He rode to hounds until he was seventy-five. In 1869 Sir Francis 
Head was made a privy councillor. He died on the 20th of July 
1875, at Duppas Hall, Croydon. 

Head was the author of a considerable number of works, chiefly 
of travel, written in a clever, amusing and graphic fashion, and 
displaying both acute observation and genial humour. His principal 
works, beside those mentioned above, and a narrative of his Canadian 
administration (1839), were The Emigrant (1846); Highways and 
Dryways, the Britannia and Conway Tubular Bridges (1849); Stokers 
and Pokers, a sketch of the working of a railway line (1849); The 
Defenceless Stats' of Great Britain (1850) ; A Faggot of French Slicks 
(1852); A Fortnight in Ireland (1852); Descriptive Essays (1856); 
comments on Kingtake's Crimean War (1853); The Horse and his 
Rider (1860); The Royal Engineer (1870); and a sketch of the life 
of Sir John Burgoyne (1872). 

His brother, Sir George Head (1782-1855), was educated 
at the Charterhouse. In 1808 he received an appointment in 
the commissariat of the British army in the Peninsula, where 
he was a witness of many exciting scenes and important battles, 
of which he gave an interesting account in " Memoirs of an 
Assistant Commissary-General " attached to the second volume 
of his Home Tour, published in 1837. In 1814 he was sent to 
America to take charge of the commissariat in a naval establish- 
ment on the Canadian. lakes, and he subsequently held appoint- 
ments at Halifax and Nova Scotia. Some of his Canadian 
experiences were narrated by him in Forest Scenery and Incidents 
in the Wilds of North America (1829). In 1831 he was knighted. 

He published in 18; 
Districts '" ' ' 
tkroui 

amusing ... r „_ 

fished in 1840, is somewhat dull and tedious. He also translated 
Historical Memoirs of Cardinal Pacca (1850), and the Metamorphoses 
ofApuleius (1851). 

READ (in O. Eng. hiafod; the word is common to Teutonic 
languages; cf. Dutch hoofd, Ger. HautH, generally taken to be 
in origin connected with Lat. caput, Gr. «e$aX^), the upper 
portion of the body In man, consisting of the skull with its 
integuments and contents, &c, connected with the trunk by 
the neck (sec Anatomy, Skull and Brain); also the anterior 



121 

or fore part of other animals. The word Is used in a large 
number of transferred and figurative senses, generally with 
reference to the position of the head as the uppermost part, 
hence the leading, chief portion of anything. 

HEAD-HUNTING, or Head-Snapping, as the Dutch call it, 
a custom once prevalent among all Malay races and surviving 
even to-day among the Dyaks (q.v.) of Borneo and.elsewbere. 
Martin dc Rada, provincial of the Augustinians, reported its 
existence in Luzon (Philippine Islands) as early as 1577. The 
practice is believed to have had its origin in religious motives, 
the worship of skulls being universal among the Malays. Severe 
repressive measures have led to its decrease. Among the 
Igorrotes all that remains is the dance, accompanied by singing, 
around the bare pole on which the head was formerly fixei 
With the Ilongotes a bridegroom must bring his bride a number 
of heads, those of Christians being preferred. The chief examples 
of head-hunters are the Was, a hill-tribe on the north-eastern 
frontier of India, and the Nagas and Kukk of Assam. 

See Bock, Headhunted of Borneo (t88t) ; W. H. Furness, Home 
Life of Borneo Head-hunters (Philadelphia, 1902) ; T. C. Hodaon, 
" Head-hunting in Assam," in Folk'Lort, xx. a, 13a. 

HEALTH, a condition of physical soundness or well-being, 
In which an organism discharges its functions efficiently; also 
in a transferred sense a state of moral or intellectual well-being 
(see Hygiene, Therapeutics and Public Health). " Health " 
represents the O. Eng. hedth, the condition or state of being hdl t 
safe or sound. This word took in northern dialects the form 
" hale," in southern or midland English hole, hence " whole," 
with the addition of an initial w, as in " whoop," and in the 
pronunciation of " one." " Hail," properly an exclamation of 
greeting, good health to you, hence, to greet, to call out to, 
is directly Scandinavian In origin, from Old Norwegian heill, 
cognate with the 0. Eng. ha% used also in this sense. " To heal " 
(O. Eng. hedon), to make in sound health, to cure, is also cognate. 

Drinking of Healths. —The custom of drinking " health " to 
the living is most probably derived from the ancient religious 
rite of drinking to the gods and the dead. The Greeks and 
Romans at meals poured out libations to their gods, and at 
ceremonial banquets drank to them and to the dead. The 
Norsemen drank the " minni " of Thor, Odin and Freya, and of 
their kings at their funeral feasts. With the advent of Christianity 
the pagan custom survived among the Scandinavian and Teutonic 
peoples. Such festal formulae as "God's minnel" "A bowl 
to God in Heaven!" occur, and Christ, the Virgin and the 
Saints were invoked, instead of heathen gods and heroes. The 
Norse "minne" was at once love, memory and thought of 
the absent one, and it survived in medieval and later England 
in the " minnying " or " mynde " days, on which the memory 
of the dead was celebrated by services and feasting. Intimately 
associated with these quasi-sacrificial drinking customs must 
have ever been the drinking to the health of living men. The 
Greeks drank to one another and the Romans adopted the 
custom. The Goths pledged each other with the cry " Hails 1 " 
a greeting which had its counterpart in the Anglo-Saxon " waes 
hael " (see Wassail). Most modern drinking-usages have had 
their equivalents in classic times. Thus the Greek practice of 
drinking to the Nine Muses as three times three survives to-day 
in England and elsewhere. The Roman gallants drank as many 
glasses to their mistresses as there were letters in each one's 
name. Thus Martial: 

" Six cups to Naevia's health go quickly round, 
And be with seven the fair Justina't crown 'd." 
The English drinking phrase— a "toast," to "toast" anyone— 
not older than the 17th century, had reference at first to this 
custom of drinking to the ladies. A toast was at first invariably 
a woman, and the origin of the phrase is curious. In Stuart 
days there appears to have been a time-honoured custom of 
putting a piece of toast in the wine-cup before drinking, from 
a fanciful notion that It gave the liquor a better flavour. In 
the Toiler Ho. 24 the connexion between this sipoet of toast and 
the fair one pledged is explained as follows: " It happened that 
on a publick day " (speaking of Bath in Charles II.'s ream) 



122 



HEALY— HEARING 



" a celebrated' beauty of those times was in the cross bath, and 
one of the crowd of her admirers took a glass of the water in which 
the- fair one stood, and drank her health to the company. There 
was in the place a gay fellow, half fuddled, who offered to jump 
in, and swore, though he liked not the liquor, he would have the 
toast.,- He was opposed in his resolution; yet this whim gave 
foundation to the present honour which is done to the lady we 
mention in our liquor, who has ever since been called a toast." 
Skeat adds (Elym* Diet., 1008), "whether the story be true or 
not, it may be seen that a ' toast, 1 i.e. a health, easily took its 
name from being the usual accompaniment to liquor, especially 
in loving cups," &c. 

t Health drinking had by the beginning of the 27th century 
become a very ceremonious business in England. At Christmas 
1633 the members of the Middle Temple, according to one of the 
Harleian MSS. quoted in The Life of Sir Simonds D'Ewes, drank 
to the health of the princess Elizabeth, who, with her husband 
the king of Bohemia, was then suffering great misfortunes, and 
stood up, one after the other, cup in one hand, sword in the other, 
and pledged ber, swearing to die in her service. Toasts were 
often drunk solemnly on bended knees; according to one 
authority, Samuel Ward of Ipswich, in his Woe to Drunkards 
(1622), on bare knees. In j668 at Sir George Carteret's* at 
Cranbourne the health of the duke of York was drunk by all in 
turn, each on his knees, the king, who was a guest, doing the like. 
A Scotch custom, still surviving, was to drink a toast with one 
foot on the table and one on the chair. Healths, too, were drunk 
in a definite order. Braithwaite says: " These cups proceed 
either in order or out of order. In order when no person trans* 
gresseth or drinkes out of course, but the cup goes round according 
to their manner of sitting: and this we call a health-cup, because 
in our wishing or confirming of any one's health, bare headed and 
standing, it is performed by all the company "(Laws of Drinking, 
161 7). Francis Douce's MSS. notes say: " It was the custom 
in Beaumont and Fletcher's time for the young gallants to stab 
themselves in the arms or elsewhere, in order to drink the health 
of their mistresses." Pepys, in his Diary for the 19th of June 
1663, writes: " To the Rhenish wine house, where Mr Moore 
showed us the French manner when a health is drunk, to bow 
to him that drunk to you, and then apply yourself to him, whose 
lady's health is drunk, and then to the person that you drink to, 
which I never knew before; but it seems it is now the fashion." 
A Frenchman visiting England in Charles II. '3 time speaks of 
the custom of drinking but half your cup, which is then filled 
up again and presented to him or her to whose health you drank. 
England's divided loyalty in the 18 th century bequeathed to 
modern times a custom which possibly yet survives. At dinners 
to royalties, until the accession of Edward VII., finger-glasses 
were not placed on the table, because in early Georgian days 
' those who were secretly Jacobites passed their wine-glasses over 
the finger-bowls before drinking the loyal toasts, in allusion to 
the royal exiles " over the water," thus salving their consciences. 
Lord Cockburn (1 770-1854), in.his Memorials of his Time (1856), 
states that in his day the drinking of toasts had become a perfect 
social tyranny; "every glass during dinner had to be dedicated 
to some one. It was thought sottish and rude to take wine 
without this, as if forsooth there was nobody present worth 
drinking with. I was present about 1803 when the late duke of 
Buccleuch took a glass of sherry by himself at the table of Charles 
Hope, then lord advocate, and this was noticed afterwards as a 
piece of direct contempt." In Germany to-day it is an insult 
to refuse to drink with any one; and at one time in the west of 
America a man took his life in his hands by declining to pledge 
another. All this is a survival of that very early and universal 
belief that drinking to one another was a proof of fair play, 
whether it be in a simple bargain or in matters of life and death. 
The ceremony surrounding the Loving Cup to-day is reminiscent 
of the perils of those times when every man's hand was raised 
against his fellow. This cup, known at the universities as the 
Grace Cup, was originated, says Miss Strickland in her Lives of 
the Queens of Scotland, by Margaret Atheling, wife of Malcolm 
Canmore, who, in order to induce the Scots to remain at table for 



grace had a cup of the choicest wine handed round immediately 
after it had been said. The modern "loving cup" sometimes 
has a cover, and in this case each guest rises and bows to his 
immediate neighbour on the right, who, also rising, removes 
and holds the cover with his right hand while the other drinks; 
the little comedy is a survival of the days when he who drank 
was glad to have the assurance that the right or dagger hand of 
his neighbour was occupied in holding the lid of the chalice. 
When there is no cover it is a common custom for both the left- 
and the right-hand neighbour to rise while the loving cup is 
drunk, with the similar object of protecting the drinker from 
attack. The Stirrup Cup is probably the Roman poculum boni 
genii, the last glass drunk at the banquet to a general " good 
night." 

See Chambers, Book of Days; Valpy, History of Toasting (1881); 
F. W. Hackwood, Inns, Ales, and Drinking Customs (London, 1909). 

HEALY, GEORGE PETER ALEXANDER (1808-1894), 
American painter, was born in Boston, Massachusetts, on the 
15th of July 1808. Going to Europe in 1835 Healy studied 
under Baron Gros in Paris and in Rome. He received a third- 
class medal in Paris in 1840, and one of the second class in 1855, 
when he exhibited his "Franklin urging the claims of the 
American Colonies before Louis XVI." Among his portraits 
of eminent men are those of Webster, Clay, Calhoun, tfuyot, 
Seward, Louis Philippe, and the presidents of the United States 
from John Quincy Adams to Grant—this series being .painted 
for the Corcoran Gallery, Washington. His large group, 
" Webster replying to Hayne," containing 150 portraits, is in 
Faneuil Hall, Boston, Mass. He was one of the most prolific and 
popular painters of his day. He died in Chicago, Illinois, on the 
24th of June 1894. 

HEANOR, an urban district in the Ilkeston parliamentary 
division of Derbyshire, England, 10 m. N.W. of Nottingham, 
on the Great Northern and Midland railways. Pop. (1901) 
16,249. Large hosiery works employ many of the inhabitants, 
and collieries are worked in the parish. The urban district 
includes Codnor-cum-Loscoe. Shipley Hall, to the south of 
Heanor, is a mansion built on a hill, amidst fine gardens. The 
ruin of the ancient moated castle of Codnor stands, overlooking 
the vale of the Ere wash, on land which was once Codnor Park, 
and is now the site of large ironworks. 

HEARING (formed from the verb " to hear," O. Eng. kyran, 
her an, &c, a common Teutonic verb; cf. Ger. hdren, Dutch 
ho or en, &c; the O. Teut. form is seen in Goth, kausjan; the 
initial h makes any connexion with " ear," Lat. audire, or Gr. 
Axofoy very doubtful), in' physiology, the function of the ear 
(q.v.) , and the general term for the sense or special sensation, the 
cause of which is an excitation of the auditory nerves by the 
vibrations of sonorous bodies. The anatomy of the ear is 
described in the separate article on that organ. A description of 
sonorous vibrations is given in the article Sound; here we shall 
consider the transmission of such vibrations from the external 
ear to the auditory nerve, and the physiological characters of 
auditory sensation 

x. Transmission in External Ear. — The external ear consists 
of the pinna, or auricle, and the external auditory meatus, or 
canal, at the bottom of which we find the membrana tym- 
pani, or drum head. In many animals the auricle is trumpet- 
shaped, and, being freely movable by muscles, serves to collect 
sonorous waves coming from various directions. The auricle 
of the human ear presents many irregularities of surface. If 
these irregularities are abolished by filling them up with a soft 
material such as wax or oil, leaving the entrance to the canal free, 
experiment shows that the intensity of sounds is weakened, and 
that there is more difficulty in judging of their direct ion . When 
waves of sound strike the auricle, they are partly reflected 
outwards, while the remainder, impinging at various angles, 
undergo a number of reflections so as to be directed into the 
auditory canal. Vibrations are transmitted along the auditory 
canal, partly by the air it contains and partly by its walls, to 
the membrana tympani. The absence of the auricle, as the 
result of accident or injury, does not cause diminution of hearing. 



HEARING 



123 



la the atufitory canal waves of sound are reflected from aide 
to aide until they reach the membrana tympani. From the 
obliquity in position and peculiar curvature of this membrane, 
most of the waves strike it nearly perpendicularly, and in the 
most advantageous direction. 

2. Transmission in Middle Ear .— The middle ear is a small 
cavity, the walls of which are rigid with the exception of the 
portions consisting of the membrana tympani, and the membrane 
of the round window and of the apparatus filling the oval window. 
This cavity communicates with the pharynx by the Eustachian 
tube, which forms an air-tube between the pharynx and the 
tympanum for the purpose of regulating pressure on the mem- 
brana tympani. During rest the tube is open, but it is closed 
during the act of deglutition. As this action is frequently 
taking place, not only when food or drink is introduced, but when 
saliva is swallowed, it is evident that the pressure of the air in 
the tympanum will be kept in a state of equilibrium with that 
of the external air on the outer surface of the membrana tym- 
pani, and that thus the membrana tympani will be rendered 
independent of variations of atmospheric pressure such as occur 
when we descend in a diving beO or ascend in a balloon. By a 
forcible expiration, the oral and nasal cavities being closed, air 
.may be driven into the tympanum, while a forcible inspiration 
(Valsalva's experiment) will draw air from that cavity. In the 
first case, the membrana tympani will bulge outwards, in the 
second case inwards, and in both, from excessive stretching of 
the. membrane, there will be partial deafness, especially for 
sounds of high pitch. Permanent occlusion of the tube is one of 
the most common causes of deafness. 

The membrana tympani is capable of being set into vibration 
by a sound of any pitch included in the range of perceptible 
sounds. It responds exactly as to number of vibrations (pitch), 
intensity of vibrations (intensity), and complexity of vibration 
(quality or timbre). Consequently we can hear a sound of any 
given pitch, of a certain intensity, and in its own specific timbre 
or quality. Generally speaking, very high tones are heard more 
easily than low tones of the same intensity. As the membrana 
tympani is not only fixed by its margin to a ring or tube of bone, 
but is also adherent to the handle of the malleus, which follows 
its movements, its vibrations meet with considerable resistance. 
This diminishes the intensity of its vibrations, and prevents also 
tbe continued vibration of the membrane after an external 
pressure has ceased, so that a sound is not heard much longer 
than its physical cause lasts. The tension of the membrane 
may be affected (1) by differences of pressure on the two surfaces 
of the membrana tympani, as may occur during forcible expira- 
tion or inspiration, and (2) by muscular action, due to con- 
traction of the tensor tympani muscle. This small muscle arises 
from the apex of the petrous temporal and the cartilage of the 
Eustachian tube, enters the tympanum at its anterior wall, and 
is inserted into the malleus near its root The handle of the 
malleus is inserted between the layers of the membrana tympani, 
and, as the malleus and incus move round an axis passing 
through the neck of the malleus from before backwards, the 
action of the muscle is to pull the membrana tympani inwards 
towards the tympanic cavity in the form of a cone, the meridians 
of which arc not straight but curved, with convexity outwards. 
When the muscle contracts, the handle of the malleus is drawn 
still farther inwards, and thus a greater tension of the tympanic 
membrane is produced. On relaxation of the muscle, the mem- 
brane returns to its position of equilibrium by its elasticity and 
by the elasticity of the chain of bones. This power of varying 
the tension of the membrane is an accommodating mechanism 
for receiving and transmitting sounds of different pitch. With 
different degrees of tension it will respond more readily to sounds 
of different pitch. Thus, when the membrane is tense, it will 
readily respond to high sounds, while relaxation will be the 
condition most adapted for low tones. In addition, increased 
tension of the membrane, by increasing the resistance, will 
diminish the intensity of vibrations. This is especially the case 
for sounds of low pitch. 

The vibrations of the membrana tympani are transmitted to 



the internal ear partly by the air which the middle ear or tym- 
panum contains, and partly by the chain of bones, consisting 
of the malleus, incus and stapes. Of these, transmission by the 
chain of bones is by far the most important. In birds and in the 
amphibia, this chain is represented by a single rod-like ossicle, 
the columella, but in man the two membranes — the membrana 
tympani and the membrane filling the fenestra ovalis— are con- 
nected by a. compound lever consisting of three bones, namely, 
the malleus, or hammer, inserted into the membrana tympani, 
the incus, or anvil, and the stapes, or stirrup, the base of which is 
attached to a membrane covering the oval window. It must 
also be noted that in the transmission of vibrations of the mem- 
brana tympani to the fluid in the labyrinth or internal ear, 
through the oval window, the chain of ossicles vibrates as a whole 
and acts efficiently, although its length may be only a fraction 
of the wave-length of the sound transmitted. The chain is a 
lever in which the handle of the malleus forms the long arm, 
the fulcrum is where the short process of the incus abuts against 
the wall of the tympanum, while the long process of the incus, 
carrying the stapes, forms the short arm. The mechanism is a 
lever of the second order. Measurements show that the ratio 
of the lengths of the two arms is as 1*5:1; the ratio of the 
resulting force at the stapes is therefore as 1:1*5; while tbe 
amplitudes of the movements at the tip of the handle of the 
malleus and tbe stapes is as 1*5:1. Hence, while there is a 
diminution in amplitude there is a gain in power, and thus the 
pressures are conveyed with great efficiency from the membrana 
tympani to tbe labyrinth, while the amplitude of. the oscillation 
is diminished so as to be adapted to the small capacity of the 
labyrinth. As the drum-head is nearly twenty times greater in 
area than the membrane covering the oval window, with which 
the base of the stapes is connected, the energy of the movements 
of the membrana tympani is concentrated on an area twenty 
times smaller; hence the pressure is increased thirtyfold 
(1*5X20) when it acts at the base of the stapes. . Experiments 
on the human ear have shown that the movement of greatest 
amplitude was at the tip of the handle of the malleus, 0*76 mm.; 
the movement of the tip of tbe long arm process of the incus 
was 0-21 mm.; while the greatest amplitude at the base of the 
stapes was only *C7i4 mm. Other observations have shown 
the movements at the stapes to have a still smaller amplitude; 
varying from 0001 to 0*032 mm. With tones of feeble intensity 
the movements must be almost infinitesimal. There may also 
be very minute transverse movements at the base of the stapes. 
3. Transmission in the Internal Ear. — The internal ear is 
composed of the labyrinth, formed of the vestibule or central 
part, the semicircular canals, and the cochlea, each of which 
consists of an osseous and a membranous portion. The osseous 
labyrinth may be regarded as an osseous mould in the petrous 
portion of the temporal bone, lined by tesselated endothelium, 
and containing a small quantity of fluid called the perilymph. 
In this mould, partially surrounded by, and to some extent 
floating in, this fluid, there is the membranous labyrinth, in 
certain parts of which we find the terminal apparatus in connexion 
with the auditory nerve, immersed in another fluid called the 
endolymph. The membranous labyrinth consists of a vestibular 
portion formed by two small sac-like dilatations, called the 
saccule and the utricle, the latter of which communicates with the 
semicircular canals by five openings. Each canal consists of 
a tube, bulging out at each extremity so as to form the so-called 
ampulla, in which, on a projecting ridge, called the crista acustica, 
there are cells bearing long auditory hairs, which are the peripheral 
end-organs of the vestibular branches of the auditory nerve. 
The cochlear division of the membranous labyrinth consists of 
the ductus cochlear is, a tube of triangular form fitting in between 
the two cavities in the cochlea, called the scala veslibuli, because 
it commences in the vestibule, and the scala tympani, because it 
ends in the tympanum, at the round window. These two scalae 
communicate at the apex of the cochlea. The roof of the ductus 
cochlearis is formed by a thin membrane called the membrane 
of Reissner, while its floor consist* of the basilar membram* 
on which we find the remarkable organ oJCorti, which constitutes 



126 



HEARING 



while a complex tone, although occurring in the same duration of 
time, will cause the drum-head to move out and in in a much more 
complicated manner. The complex movement will be conveyed to 
the base of the stapes, thence to the vestibule, and thence to the 
cochlea, in which we find the ductus cochlea ris containing the organ 
of Corti. It is to be noted also that the parts in the cochlea are so 
small as to constitute only a fraction of the wave-length of most 
tones audible to the human car. Now it is evident that the cochlea 
must act either as a whole, all the nerve fibres being affected by any 
variations of pressure, or the nerve fibres may have a selective action, 
each fibre being excited by a wave of a definite period, or there may 
exist small vibratile bodies between the nerve filaments and the 
pressures sent into the organ. The last hypothesis gives the most 
rational explanation of the phenomena, and on it is founded a theory 
generally accepted and associated with the names of Thomas 
Young and Hermann Heunholtt. It may be shortly stated as 
follows: — 

" (i) In the cochlea there are vibrators, tuned to frequencies 
within the limits of hearing, say from 30 to 40,000 or 50,000 vibs. 
per second. (2) Each vibrator is capable of exciting its appropriate 
nerve filament or filaments, so that a nervous impulse, correspond- 
ing to the frequency of the vibrator, is transmitted to the brain — 
not corresponding necessarily, as regards the number of nervous 
impulses, but in such a way that when the impulses along a particular 
nerve filament reach the brain, a state of consciousness is aroused 
which docs correspond with the number of the physical stimuli 
and with the period of the auditory vibrator. (3) The mass of 
each vibrator is such that it will be easily set in motion, and after 
the stimulus has ceased it will readily come to rest. (4) Damping 
arrangements exist in the ear, so as quickly to extinguish movements 
of the vibrators. (5) If a simple tone falls on the ear, there is a 
pendular movement of the base of the stapes, which will affect 
all the parts, causing them to move; but any part whose natural 
period is nearly the same as that of the sound will respond on the 
principle of sympathetic resonance, a particular nerve fib men t or 
nerv* filaments will be affected, and a sensation of a tone of definite 
pitch wilt be experienced, thus accounting for discrimination in 
pitch. (6) Intensity or loudness will depend on the amplitude of 
movement of the vibrating body, and consequently on the intensity 
of nerve stimulation. (7) If a compound wave of pressure be com- 



municated by the base of the stapes, it will be resolved into its 
constituents by the vibrators corresponding to tones existing in 1 
each picking out its appropriate portion of the wave, and th 



irritating corresponding nerve filaments, so that nervous impulses 
are transmitted to the brain, where they are fused in such a way as 
to give rise to a sensation of a particular quality or character. 

-•'•-•-■ -•- ~ )rt 

by 

(lis 
it 
ite 
sis 
of 
oL 
its 
it 
lex 
he 



all 



Ear-teeth . 
Holes in habcnula for n 
Inner rods of Corti's organ 
Outer rods of Corti's organ 
Inner hair-cells (one row) 
Outer hair-cells (several rows) 
Fibres in basilar membrane 



Man. Cat. Rabbit. 

i,55o 
1.650 
2,800 
1.900 
1,600 
6,100 
83,750 15,700 10,500 



2490 
3.985 


2,430 
2.780 


3.487 


4.700 


3.300 
2,600 


11.750 


9.900 



W?ei 



7. Dissonance. — The theory can also be used to explain dissonance. 

hen two tones sufficiently near in pitch are simultaneously sounded, 
beats are produced. If the beau are few in number they can be 
counted, because they give rise to separate and distinct sensations; 
but if they are numerous they blend so as to give roughness or dis- 
sonance to the interval. The roughness or dissonance is most dis- 
agreeable with about 33 beats falling on the ear per second. When 
two compound tones are sounded, say a minor third on a harmonium 
in the lower part of the keyboard, then we have beats not only 
between the primaries, but also between the upper partials of each 
of the primaries. The beating distance may, for tones of medium 

K'tch, be fixed at about a nvnomhird, but this interval will expand 
r intervals on low tones and contract for intervals on high ones. 
This explains why the same interval in the lower part of the scale 
may give slow beats that are not disagreeable, while in the higher 
part it may cause harsh and unpleasant dissonance. The partials 
up to the seventh are beyond beating distance, but above this they 



come clos« together. Consequently instruments (such as tongues* 

or reeds) that abound in upper partials cause an intolerable dissonance 
if one of the primaries is slightly out of tune. Some intervals are 
pleasant and satisfying when produced on instruments having few 
partials in their tones. These are concords. Others are less so, 
and they may give rise to an uncomfortable sensation. These are 
discords. In this way unison, \, minor third I, major third I, 
fourth i, fifth I, minor sixth I, major sixth } and octave f, are all 
^ r L ., . . _? L . • 3rttven|hV| 

ar dissonance to 

th imilar 1 have 

fo the skin, or 

m; s giving forth 

be sation is that 

of tinctivc effort 

at le sensation " 

(S 

the analysis 
th [Ztsckr. f. rat. 

M his view was 

re ) some years 

lai ». Brit. Assoc. 

At lea to that of 

a ' hairs of the 

au :11s transform 

so imilar m fre- 

qi tions. There 

is n 1891 (Proc 

PI ar membrane 

as vibrations of 

th ove with the 

ba isure patterns 

ag uditory nerve 

ar sertain degree 

of 1 to the brain. 

Tl leave out of 

ac , or, in other 

w< » - - mple function 

which could be performed by a simple membrane capable of vibrating. 
Wc find that the cochlea becomes more elaborate as 'we ascend the 
scale of animals, until in man, who possesses greater powers of 
analysis than any other being, the number of hair-cells, fibres of the 
basilar membrane and arches of Corti are all much increased in 
number (sec Retzius's table, supra). The principle of sympathetic 
resonance appears, therefore, to offer the most likely solution of the 
problem. Hurst's view is that with each movement of the stapes 
a wave is generated which travels up the scala vestibuli, through 
the helicotrema into the scala tympani and down the latter to the 
fenestra rotunda. The wave, however, is not merely a movement 
of the basilar membrane, but an actual movement of fluid or a 
transmission of pressure. As the one wave ascends while the other 
descends, a pressure of the basilar membrane occurs at the point 
where they meet; this causes the basilar membrane to move to- 
wards the tectorial membrane, forcing this membrane suddenly 
against the apices of the hair-cells, thus irritating the nerves. The 
point at which the waves meet will depend on the time interval 
between the waves (Hurst, " A New Theory of Hearing." Trans. 
Biol. Soc. Liverpool, 1895, vol. ix. p. 321). More recently Max Mayer 
has advanced a theory somewhat similar. He supposes that with 
each movement of the stapes corresponding to a vibration, a wave 
travels up the scala vestibuli, pressing the basilar membrane down- 
wards. As it meets'with resistance in passing upwards, its amplitude 
therefore diminishes, and in this way the distance up the scala 
through which the wave progresses wiu be determined by its ampli- 
tude. The wave in its progress irritates a certain number of nerve 
terminations, consequently feeble tones will irritate only those nerve 
fibres that are near the fenestra ovalis, while stronger tones will pass 
farther up and irritate a larger number of nerve fibres the same 
number of times per unit of time. Pitch, according to this view, 
depends on the number of stimuli per second, while loudness depends 
on the number of nerve fibres irritated. Mayer also applies the 
theory to the explanation of the powers of the cochlea as an analyser, 
by supposing that with a compound tone these are at maxima and 
minima of stimulation. As the compound wave travels up the scala, 
portions of the wave corresponding to maxima and minima die away 
in consecutive series, until only a maximum and minimum are left; 
and, finally, as the wave travels farther, these also disappear. With 
each maximum and minimum different parts of the basilar membrane 
are affected, and affected a different number of times per second, 
according to the frequencies of the partials existing in the compound 
tone. Thus with a fifth, 2 : 3, there are three maxima and three 
minima ; but the compound tone is resolved into three tones having 
vibration frequencies in the ratio of 3 : 2 : 1. According to Mayer, 
we actually hear when a fifth is sounded tones of the relationship of 
3:2:1, the last (1 ) being the differential tone. He holds, also, that 
combinational tones are entirety subjective (Max Mayer, Zlsckr.J. 
Psych, und Phys. d. Sinnesorrane, Leipzig, Eld. xvi. and xvfi.j abo 
Verhandl. d. fhysiolog GescUsch. su Berlin, Feb. 1 8. 1898, S. 49). 
Two fatal objections can be urged to these theories, namely, first, it 
is impossible to conceive 0/ minute waves following each other m 



HEARING 



127 



rapid succession In the minute tubes forming the scalae— the length 
of the scala being only a very small part of the wave-length of the 
sound; and, secondly, neither theory takes into account the differ- 
entiation of structure found in the epithelium of the organ of Corti. 
Each push in and out of the base of the stapes must cause a move- 
ment of the fluid, or a pressure, in the scalae as a whole. 

There are difficulties in the way of applying the resonance theory 
to the perception of noises. Noises have pitch, and also each noise 
has a special character; if so, if the noise is analysed into its con- 
stituents, why is it that it seems impossible to analyse a noise, 
or to perceive any musical element in it ? Helmholtz assumed that 
a sound is noisy when the wave is irregular in rhythm, and he 
mggested that the crista and macula acustica, structures that exist 
sot in the cochlea but in the vestibule, have to do with the per- 
ception of noise. These structures, however, are concerned rather 
in the tense of the perception of equilibrium than of sound (sec 
Equilibrium). 

9. Hitherto we have considered only the audition of a single 
sound, but it is possible also to have simultaneous auditive sensa- 
tions, as in musical harmony. It is difficult to ascertain what is the 
limit beyond which distinct auditory sensations may be perceived. 
We have in listening to an orchestra a multiplicity of sensations 
which produces a total effect, while, at the same time, we can with 
ease single out and notice attentively the tones of one or two special 
instruments. Thus the pleasure of music may arise partly 
from listening to simultaneous, and partly from the effect of 
contrast or suggestion in passing through successive, auditory 
sensations. 

The principles of harmony belong to the subject of music (see 
Harmomv). but tt is necessary here briefly to refer to these from the 
physiological point of view. If two musical sounds reach the ear 
at the same moment, an agreeable or disagreeable sensation is 
experienced, which may be termed a concord or a discord, and it can 
be shown by experiment with the syren that this depends upon the 
vibrational numbers of the two tones. The octave (1 : 2), the 
twelfth (1 : 3) and double octave (1 ; 4) are absolutely consonant 



sounds; the fifth (2 13) is said to be perfectly consonant; then 
follow, in the direction of dissonance, the fourth (3 : 4), major sixth 

g* 5), major third (4 : 5), minor sixth (5 : 8) and the minor third 
. 6). Helmholtz has attempted to account for this by the appli- 
cation of his theory of bets. 

Beats are observed when two sounds of nearly the same pitch are 
produced together, and the number of beats per second is equal to 
the difference of the number of vibrations of the two sounds. Beau 
give rise to a peculiarly disagreeable intermittent sensation. The 
maximum roughness of beats is attained by 33 per second ; beyond 
133 per second, the individual impulses are blended into one uniform 
auditory sensation. When two notes are sounded, say on a piano, 
not only may the first, fundamental or prime tones beat, butpartial 
tones of each of the primaries may beat also, and as the difference 
of pitch of two simultaneous sounds augments, the number of beats, 
both of prime tones and of harmonics, augments also. The physio- 
logical effect of beats, though these may not be individually dis- 
tinguishable, is to give roughness to the ear. If harmonics or partial 
tones of prime tones coincide, there are no beats; if they do not 
coincide, the beats produced will give a character of roughness to 
the interval. Thus in the octave and twelfth, all the partial tones 
of the acute sound coincide with the partial tones of the grave 
sound; in the fourth, major sixth and major third, only two pairs 
of the partial tones coincide, while in the minor sixth, minor third 
and minor seventh only one pair of the harmonics coincide. 

It is possible by means of beats to measure the sensitiveness of 
the ear by determining the smallest difference in pitch that may 
give rise to a beat. In no part of the scale can a difference smaller 
than o-a vibration per second be distinguished. The sensitiveness 
varies with pitch. Thus at 120 vibs. per second 0-4 vib. per second, 
at 500 about 0-3 vib. per second, and at 1000, 0*5 vib. per second 
can be distinguished. This is a remarkable illustration of the 
sensitiveness of the ear. When tones of low pitch are produced 
that do not rapidly die away, as by sounding heavy tuning-forks, 
not only may the beats be perceived corresponding to the difference 
between the frequencies of the forks, but also other sets of beats. 
Thus, if the two tones have frequencies of 40 and 74. a two-order 
beat may be heard, one having a frequency of 34 and the other 
of 6, as74+40-i-fa positive remainder of 34, and 74+40-2-6, 
or 80-74, a negative remainder of 6. The lower beat is heard most 
distinctly when the number is less than half the frequency of the 
lower primary, and the upper when the number is greater. The beats 
we have been considering are produced when two notes arc sounded 
slightly differing in frequency, or at all events their frequencies arc 
not so great as those of two notes separated by a musical interval, 
such as an octave or a fifth. But Lord Kelvin has shown that beats 
may also be produced on slightly inharmonious musical intervals 
{Proc. Roy. Soc. Ed. 1878. vol ix. p. 602). Thus, take two tuning- 
forks, u/,-256 and u/» -512; slightly flatten utj so as to make its 
frequency 510, and we hear, not a roughness corresponding to 254 
beats, but a slow beat of 2 per second. The sensation also passes 
through a cycle, the beats now sounding loudly and fading away in 
intensity, again sounding loudly, and so on. One might suppose that 
the beat occurred between 510 (the frequency of ut t flattened) and 



$12, the first partial of utt, namely utu but this is not so, as the beat 
is most audible when ut, is sounded feebly. In a similar way, beau 
may be produced on the approximate harmonics 2 3, 3 : 4, 4 : 5, 
5 : $• 6 . 7, 7 : 8, 1 : 3, 3 : 5, and beats may even be produced on the 
major chord 4 . 5 : 6 by sounding ut,, mt t , sol*, with soli or mi t 
slightly flattened, " when a peculiar beat will be heard as if a wheel 
were being turned against a surface, one small part of which was 
rougher than the rest." These beats on imperfect harmonics 
appear to indicate that the ear does distinguish between an increase 
of pressure on the drum-head and a diminution, or between a push 
and a pull, or, in other words, that it is affected by phase. This 
was denied by Helmholtz. 

10. Beat Tones. — Considerable difference of opinion exists as to 
whether beats can blend so as to give a sensation of tone; but 
R. Kdnig, by using pure tones of high pitch, has settled the question. 
These tones were produced by large tuning- forks. Thus «/, -2048 
and rci-2304. Then the beat tone is uti-*2$(> (2304-2048). If 
we strike the two forks, «/» sounds as a grave or lower beat tone. 
Again, ufa-2048 *nd xii-3840. Then (2048)1-3840-256, a 
negative remainder, utt, as before, and when both forks are sounded 
ut» will be heard. Again, «/»— 2048 and xo/6-3072, and 3072-2048- 
1024, or ulu which will be distinctly heard when ut* and sol t are 
sounded (Kdnig, Qutlques expediences d'acouslique, Paris, 1882, 

11. Combtnaiu 
not only do we 
out the constiti 
which is lower 
is higher in pit 
combination toe 
the frequency is 
tones, and sum, 
sum of the freq 
tones, first noti< 
an interval of a fi 
below 2; a fourt 
4 : 5. gives I, tw 
octaves and a n 
that is, a fifth b 
a major sixth be 
holu, are so di 
place as to theii 
are produced b) 
they may exist 
tones may be ge 
stratcd their ind 
the vibrations ol 
motion at the s 
powerful that tl 
mathematical th 
which have the ss 
(Helmholtz. Sen 
combinational to 
can only analyse 
of a certain ordc 

detect combinational tones, which do not ' belong to that order ? 
Again, if such tones are purely subjective and only exist in the 
mind of the listener, the fact would be fatal to the resonance theory. 
There can be no doubt, however, that the ear, in dealing with 
them, vibrates in some part of its mechanism with each generator, 
while it also is affected by the combinational tone itself, according to 
its frequency. 

12.1-lcaring with two ears docs not appear materially to influence 
auditive sensation, but probably the two organs are enabled, not 
only to correct each other's errors, but also to aid us in determin- 
ing the locality in which a sound originates. It is asserted by 
G. T. Fechncr that one car may perceive the same tone at a slightly 
higher pitch than the other, but this may probably be due to some 
slight pathological condition in one car If two tones, produced by 
two tuning-forks, of equal pitch, are produced one near each ear, 
there is a uniform single sensation; it one of the tuning-forks be 
made to revolve round its axis in such a way that its tone increases 
and diminishes in intensity, neither fork is heard continuously, but 
both sound alternately, the fixed one being only audible when the 
revolving one is not. It is difficult to decide whether excitations 
of corresponding elements in the two cars can be distinguished from 
each other. It is probable that the resulting sensations may be 
distinguished, provided one of the generating tones differs from the 
other in intensity or quality, although it may be the same in pitch 
Our judgment as to the direction of sounds is formed mainly from 
the different degrees of intensity with which they are heard by two 
cars. Lord Raytcigh states that diffraction of the sound-waves 
wilt occur as they pass round the head to the cor farthest from the 
source of sound; thus partial tones will reach the two ears with 
different intensities, and thus quality of tone may be affected 
(Trans. Music. Soc., London, 1876). bilvanus P. Thompson advo- 
cates a similar view, and he shows that the direction of a 
complex tone can be more accurately determined than the 
direction of a simple tone, especially if it be of low pitch (Phil. 
Mag., 1882). 0- C. M \ 



128 



HEARN— HEARSE 



HEARN, LAFCADIO (1850-1904), author of books about 
Japan, was born on the 27th of June 1850 in Leucadia (pro- 
nounced Lefcadia, whence his name, which was one adopted 
by himself) 1 one of the Greek Ionian Islands. He was the son 
of Surgeon-major Charles Hearn, of King's County, Ireland, 
who, during the English occupation of the Ionian Islands, was 
stationed there, and who married a Greek wife. Artistic and 
rather bohemian tastes were in Lafcadio Hearn's blood. His 
father's brother Richard was at one time a well-known member 
of the Barbizon set of artists, though he made no mark as a 
painter through his lack of energy. Young Hearn had rather a 
casual education, but was for a time (1865) at Usbaw Roman 
Catholic College, Durham. The religious faith in which he was 
brought up was, however, soon lost; and at nineteen, being 
thrown on his own resources) he went to America and at first 
picked up a living in the lower grades of newspaper work. The 
details are obscure, but he continued to occupy himself with 
journalism and with out-of-the-way observation and reading, 
and meanwhile his erratic, romantic and rather morbid idio- 
syncrasies developed. He was for some time in New Orleans, 
writing for the Times Democrat, and was sent by that paper 
for two years as correspondent to the West Indies, where he gath- 
ered material for his Two Years in the French West Indies (1890). 
At last, in 189 1, he went to Japan with a commission as a news- 
paper correspondent, which was quickly broken off. But here 
he found his true sphere. The list of his books on Japanese 
subjects tells its own tale: Glimpses of Unfamiliar Japan 
(1894); Out of the East (1895); Kokoro (1896); Gleanings in 
Buddha Fields (1897); Exotics and Retrospections (1808); In 
Ghostly Japan (1899); Shadowings (1900); A Japanese 
Miscellany (1001); Kolio (1002); Japanese Fairy Tales and 
Kwaidan (1003), and (published just after his death) Japan, 
an Attempt at Interpretation (1004), a study full of knowledge 
and insight. He became a teacher of English at the Uni- 
versity of Tokyo, and soon fell completely under the spell 
of Japanese ideas. He married a Japanese wife, became a 
naturalized Japanese under the name of Yakumo Koizumi, and 
adopted the Buddhist religion. For the last two years of his life 
(he died on the 26th of September 1004) his health was failing, 
and he was deprived of his lecturership at the University. But 
he had gradually become known to the world at large by the 
originality, power and literary charm of his writings. This 
wayward bohemian genius, who had seen life in so many dimes, 
and turned from Roman Catholic to atheist and then to Buddhist, 
was curiously qualified, among all those who were " interpreting" 
the new and the old Japan to the Western world, to see it with 
unfettered understanding, and to express its life and thought 
with most intimate and most artistic sincerity. Lafcadio Hearn 's 
books were indeed unique for their day in the literature about 
Japan, in thefr combination of real knowledge with a literary 
art which is often exquisite. 

See Elizabeth Bisland, The Life and Letters of Lafcadio Hearn 
(2 vols., 1906); G. M. Gould, Concerning Lafcadio Hearn (1908). 

HEARNE, SAMUEL (1745-1792), English explorer, was born 
in London. In 1756 he entered the navy, and was some time 
with Lord Hood; at the end of the Seven Years' War (1763) 
he took service with the Hudson's Bay Company. In 1768 he 
examined portions of the Hudson's Bay coasts with a view to 
improving the cod fishery, and in 1 760-1 772 he was employed 
in north-western discovery, searching especially for certain 
copper mines described by Indians. His first attempt (from 
the 6th of November 1769) failed through the desertion of his 
Indians, his second (from the 23rd of February 1770) through 
the breaking of his quadrant; but in his third (December 1770 
to June 1772) he was successful, not only discovering the copper 
of the Coppermine river basin, but tracing this river to the 
Arctic Ocean. He reappeared at Fort Prince of Wales on the 
30th of June 1772. Becoming governor of this fort in 1775, 
he was taken prisoner by the French under La Perouse in 1782. 
Be returned to England in 1787 and died there in 1792. 

See his posthumous Journey from Prince of Wales Fort in Hudson's 
Bay to the Northern Ocean (London, 1795). 



HEARNE, THOMAS (1678-1735), English antiquary, was 
born in July 1678 at LUUefield Green in the parish of White 
Waltham, Berkshire. Having received his early education from 
his father, George Hearne, the parish clerk, he showed such taste 
for study that a wealthy neighbour, Francis Cherry of Shottes- 
brooke (c. 1665-1713), a celebrated nonjuror, interested himself 
in the boy, and sent him to the school at Bray " on purpose to 
learn the Latin tongue." Soon Cherry took him into his own 
house, and his education was continued at Bray until Easter 
1696, when he matriculated at St Edmund Hall, Oxford. At 
the university he attracted the attention of Dr John Mill (1645- 
1707), the principal of St Edmund Hall, who employed ham to 
compare manuscripts and in other ways. Having taken the 
degree of B A. in 1699 he was made assistant keeper of the 
Bodleian Library, where he worked on the catalogue of books, 
and in 17x2 he was appointed second keeper. In 1715 Hearne 
was elected architypographus and esquire bedell in civil law 
in the university, but objection having been made to his holding 
this office together with that of second librarian, be resigned 
it in the same year. As a nonjuror he refused to take the oaths 
of allegiance to King George I., and early in 17 16 he was deprived 
of his librarianship. However he continued to reside in Oxford, 
and occupied himself in editing the English chroniclers. Having 
refused several important academical positions, including the 
librarianship of the Bodleian and the Camden professorship of 
ancient history, rather than take the oaths, he died on the xoth 
of June 1755. 

Hearne's most important work was done as editor of many of 
the English chroniclers, and until the appearance of the "Rolls "series 
his editions were in many cases the only ones extant. Very carefully 

Erepared, they were, and indeed are still, of the greatest value to 
istorical students. Perhaps the most important of a long list are: 
Benedict of Peterborough's (Benedictus Abbas) De vUa et testis 
Henrici II. et Ruardt I. (1735); John of Fordun's Scotuhronicon 

1722); the monk of Evesham's Htstoria vita* et regni Ruardt II. 

1729); Robert Manning's translation of Peter Langtoft's Chronicle 
.1725) ; the work of Thomas Otterbourne and John Whethamstede 
as Duo return Anglicarum scriptores veteres (1732); Robert of 
Gloucester's Chronicle (1724); J. Sprott's Chronica (1719): the 
Vita et testa Henrici V., wrongly attributed to Thomas Elmham 
(1727); Titus Livy's Vita Henna V. (1716); Walter of Hewing- 
burgh's Chromcon (1731); and William of Ncwburgh's Hislcrta 
rerum Angltcarum (1719). He also edited John Leland's Itinerary 
(1710-1712) and the same author's Collectanea (1715) : W. Camden's 
A nnales rerum A nglicarumetHibernicarumregnanteElitabelha (1717); 
Sir John Spelman^s Life of Alfred (1709); and W. Roper's Life ef 
Sir Thomas More (1716). He brought out an edition of Livy (1708) ; 
one of Pliny's Epistolae et panegyrtcus (1703) ; and one of the Acts 
of the Apostles (1715). Among his other compilations may be 
mentioned; Ductor historicus. a Short System of Universal History 
(1704. 1705> I7M.> 1724); A Collection of Curious Discourses by 
Eminent Antiquaries (1720) ; and Reliquiae Bodletanae (1703). 

Hearne left his manuscripts to William Bedford, who sold them to 
Dr Richard Rawlinson, who in his turn bequeathed them to the 
Bodleian. Two volumes of extracts from his voluminous diary 
were published by Philip Bliss (Oxford, 1857), and afterwards an 
enlarged edition in three volumes appeared (London, 1869). A large 
part of his diary entitled Remarks and Collections, 1705-/714, edited 
by C. E. Doble and D. W. Rannie, has been published by the Oxford 
Historical Society (1 835-1898). Bibliotheca Hearntana, excerpts 
from the catalogue of Hearne's library, has been edited by B. 
Botficld (1848). 

See Impartial Memorials of the Life and Writings of Thomas Hearm 
by several hands (1736) ; and W D. Macray, Annals of the Bodleian 
Library (1890). Hearne's autobiography is published in W. Huddes* 
ford's Lives ofLeland, Hearne and Wood (Oxford, 1 772). T. Ouvry's 
Letters addressed to Thomas Hearne has been privately printed 
(London, 1874). 

HEARSE (an adaptation of Fr. hersc\ a harrow, from Lax. 
hirpex, hirpicem, rake or harrow, Greek ipraZ), a vehicle for 
the conveyance of a dead body at a funeral. The most usual 
shape is a four-wheeled car, with a roofed and enclosed body, 
sometimes with glass panels, which contains the coffin. This is 
the only current use of the word. In its earlier forms it is usually 
found as " herse," and meant, as the French word did, a harrow 
(q.v.). It was then applied to other objects resembling a harrow, 
following the French. It was then used of a portcullis, and thus 
becomes a heraldic term, the " herse " being frequently borne 
as a " charge, " as in the arms of the City of Westminster. The 



ANATOMY! 



HEART 



129 



chief application of the word it, however, to various objects 
used in funeral ceremonies. A " herse " or " hearse " seems 
first to have been a barrow-shaped framework of wood, to hold 
lighted tapers and decorations placed on a bier or coffin; this 
later developed into an elaborate pagoda-shaped erection of 
woodwork or metal for the funerals of royal or other distinguished 
persons. This held banners, candles, armorial bearings and 
other heraldic , devices. Complimentary, verses or epitaphs 
were of ten attached to the " hearse." An elaborate " hearse " 
was designed by Inigo Jones for the funeral of James I. t The 
" hearse " is also iound as a permanent erection over tombs. 
It is generally . made of iron or other metal, and was used, 
not only to carry lighted candles, but also for the support 
of a pall during the funeral ceremony. There is a brass 
" hearse " in the Beauchamp Chapel at Warwick Castle, and 
one over the tomb of Rol^ert Marmion and his wife at Tanfield 
Church near Ripon. 

HEART, in anatomy. — The heart 1 is a four-chambered 
muscular bag, which lies in the cavity of the thorax between 
the two lungs. It is surrounded by another bag, the pericardium, 
for protective and lubricating purposes (see Coelom and Serous 
Membranes). Externally the heart is somewhat conical, its 
base being directed upward, backward and to the right, its 
apex downward, forward and to the left. In transverse section 
the cone is flattened, so that there is an anterior and a posterior 
surface and a superior and inferior border. The superior border, 
running obliquely downward and to the left, is vtry thick, and 
so gains the name of margo obtusus, while the inferior border is 
horizontal and sharp and is called margo acutus (see fig. 1). 
The divisions between the four chambers of the heart (namely, 
the two auricles and two ventricles) are indicated on the surface 
by grooves, and when these are followed it will be seen that the 



Fie. 1. The Thoracic Viscera. — In this diagram the lungs are 
turned to the side, and the pericardium removed to display the 
heart, a, upper, a', lower lobe of left lung; b, upper, b', middle, 
b\ lower lobe of right lung; c, trachea; d, arch of aorta; e, 
superior vena cava;"/, pulmonary artery; e, left, and k, right 
auricle; k, right, and /, left ventricle; m, inferior vena cava; «, 
descending aorta; 1, innominate artery; 2, right, and 4, left 
common carotid artery; 3, right, and 5, left subclavian artery; 
6, 6, right and left innominate vein ; 7 and o, left and right internal 
jugular veins; 8 and 10, left and right subclavian veins; 11, 12, 13, 
left pulmonary artery, bronchus and vein; 14, 15, 16, right pulmonary 
bronchus, artery and vein; 17 and 18, left and right coronary arteries. 

right auricle and ventricle lie on the front and right side, while 
the left auricle and ventricle are behind and on the left. 

The right auricle is situated at the base of the heart, and its 
outline is seen on looking at the organ from in front. Into the 

*In O. Eng. heorie; this is a common Teut. word, cl. Dut. hart, 
Ger. Herz, Goth, kairto; related by root are Lat. cor and Gr. «ap6la: 
the ultimate root is hard-, to quiver, shake. 



posterior part of it open the two venae cavae (see fig. t), the 
superior (a) above and the inferior (b) below. In front and to the 
left of the superior vena cava is the right auricular appendage (<) 
which overlaps the 
front of the root of the 
aorta, while running 
obliquely from the 
front of one vena cava 
to the other is a shal- 
low groove called the 
sulcus terminal is, which 
indicates the original 
separation between the 
true auricle in front 
and the sinus veriosus 
behind. . When the 
auricle is opened by . 
turning the front wall 
to the right as a flap 
the following structures 
are exposed: 

x. A muscular ridge, 
called the crista tcrmin- 
alis, corresponding to 
the sulcus terminalis 
on the exterior. 

2. A series of ridges ^^ 

on the anterior wall Fig. 2. Cavities of the Right Side of the 
and in the appendage. Heart.— a, superior, and b, inferior vena 
«,.««;«» ^T™»T.J cava; c, arch of aorta; d, pulmonary 
running downward artery .,, rig ht, and/, left auifcuferappend- 
from the last and at age; it fossa ovalis; k t Eustachian valve; 
right angles to it, like k, mouth of coronary vein; /, m, n, cusps 
the teeth of a comb; « th « tricuspid valve; *>, o, papillary 
tk M . .« irn/i™, •• muscles; p, semilunar valve; q, corpus 
these are known as a^h Zonula. 
muscult pecltnatu 

3. The orifice of the superior vena cava (fig. 2, a) at the upper 
and back part of the chamber. 

4. The orifice of the inferior vena cava (fig. 2, b) at the* lower 
and back part. 

5. Attached to the right and lower margins of this opening 
are the remains of the Eustachian valve (fig. 2, A), which in the 
foetus directs the blood from the inferior vena cava, through the 
joramen ovale, into the left auricle. 

6. Below and to the left of this is the opening of the coronary 
sinus (fig. 2, k), which collects most of the veins returning blood 
from the substance of the heart. 

7. Guarding this opening is the coronary valve or valve of 
Tkcbesius. 

8. On the posterior or septal wall, between the two auricles, 
is an oval depression, called the fossa ovalis (fig. 2, g), the remains 
of the original communication between the two auricles. In 
about a quarter of all nprmal hearts there is a small valvular 
communication between the two auricles in the left margin of 
this depression (see " 7th Report of the Committee of Collective 
Investigation," /. Anal, and Pkys. vol. xxxii. p. 164). 

9. The annulus ovalis is the raised margin. surrounding this 
depression. 

xo. On the left side, opening into the right ventricle, is the 
right auriculo-venlricular opening* 

11. On the right wall, between the two caval openings, may 
occasionally be seen a slight eminence, the tubercle of Lower, 
which is supposed to separate the two streams of blood in the 
embryo. j 

12. Scattered all over the auricular wall are minute depres- 
sions, the foramina Tkcbcsii, some of which receive small veins 
from the substance of the heart. 

The right ventricle is a triangular cavity (see fig. 2) the base of 
which is largely formed by the auriculo-ventricular orifice. To 
the left of this it is continued up into the root of the pulmonary 
artery, and this part is known as the infundibulum. Its anterior 
wall forms part of the anterior surface of the heart, while its 
posterior wall is chiefly formed by the septum ventriculorum, 



130 



HEART 



IANAT0MY 



between it and the left ventricle. Its lover border is the margo 
acutus already mentioned. In transverse section it is crescent k, 
since the septal wall bulges into its cavity. In its interior the 
following structures are seen: 

i. The tricuspid valve (fig. a, t, m, n) guarding against reflux 
of blood into the right auricle. This consists of a short cylindrical 
curtain of fibrous tissue, which projects into the ventricle from 
the margin of the auriculo-ventricular aperture, while from its 
free edge three triangular flaps hang down, the bases of which 
touch one another. ' These cusps are spoken of as septal, marginal 
and infundibular, from their position. 

?. The chordae tendineae are fine fibrous cords which fasten 
the cusps to the musculi papillares and ventricular wall, and 
prevent the valve being turned inside out when -the ventricle 
contracts. 

3. The columnar cornea* are fleshy columns, and are of three 
kinds. The first are attached to the wall of the ventricle in 
their whole length and are merely sculptured in relief, as it were; 
the second are attached by both ends and are free in the middle; 
while the third are known as the musculi papillares and are 
attached by one end to the ventricular wall, the other end giving 
attachment to the chordae tendineae. These, musculi papillares 
are grouped into three bundles (fig, a, 0). 

4. The moderator band is really one of the second kind of 
columnae carneae .which stretches from the septal to the anterior 
wall of the ventricle. 

5. The pulmonary valve (fig. a, p) at the opening of the 
pulmonary artery has three crcscentic, pocket-like cusps, which, 
when the ventricle is filling, completely close the aperture, but 
during the contraction of the ventricle fit into three small niches 
known as the sinuses of Valsalva, and so are quite out of the way 
of the escaping blood. In the middle of the free margin of each 
is a small knob called the corpus Arantii (fig. a, q), and on each 
side of this a thin crescent-shaped flap, the lunula (fig. 2, r), which 
is only made of two layers of endocardium, whereas in the rest 
of the cusp there is a .fibrous backing between these two layers. 

The left auricle is situated at the back of the base of the heart, 
behind and to the left Of the right auricle. Running down behind 
it are the oesophagus and the thoracic aorta. When it is opened it 
is seen to have a much lighter colour than the other cavities, 
owing to the greater thickness of its endocardium obscuring the 
red muscle beneath. There are no musculi pectinati except in 
the auricular appendage. The openings of the four pulmonary 
veins are placed two on each side of the posterior wall, but 
sometimes there may be three on the right side, and only one 
on the left. On the septal wall is a small depression like the 
mark of a finger-nail, which corresponds to the anterior part of 
the fossa ovalis and often forms a valvular communication with 
the right auricle. The auriculo-ventricular orifice is large and 
oval, and is directed downward and to the left. Foramina 
Tbebcsli and venae minimae cordis are found in this auricle, 
as in the right, although the chamber is one for arterial or 
oxidized blood. 

At the lower part of the posterior surface of the unopened 
auricle, lying in the left auriculo-ventricular furrow, is the 
coronary sinus, -which receives most of the veins returning the 
blood from the heart substance; these are the right and left 
coronary veins at each extremity and the posterior and left 
cardiac veins from below. One small vein, called the oblique 
vein of Marshall, runs down into it across the posterior surface 
of the auricle, from below the left lower pulmonary vein, and 
is of morphological interest. 

The left ventricle is conical, the base being above, behind and 
to the right, while the apex corresponds to the apex of the heart 
and lies opposite the. fifth intercostal space, 3} in. from the mid 
line. The following structures are seen inside it: — 

x. The mitral valve guarding the auriculo-ventricular opening 
has the same arrangement as the tricuspid, already described, 
save that there are only two cusps, named marginal and aortic, 
the latter of which is the larger. 

a. The chordae tendineae and columnae carneae resemble 
those of the right ventricle, though there are only two bundles 



of musculi papfllares instead of three. 'These are very large. 
A moderator band has been found as an abnormality (see 
7. Anal, and Phys. vol. xxx. p. 568). 

3. The aortic valve has the same structure as the pulmonary, 
though the cusps are more massive. From the anterior and left 
posterior sinuses of Valsalva the coronary arteries arise. That 
part of the ventricle just below the aortic valve, corresponding 
to the infundibulum on the right, is known as the aortic vestibule. 

The walls of the left ventricle are three times as thick as those 
of the right, except at the apex, where they are thinner. The 
septum ventriculorum is concave towards the left ventricle, so 
that a transverse section of that cavity is nearly circular. The 
greater part of it has nearly the same thickness as the rest of the 
left ventricular wall and is muscular, but a small portion of the 
upper part is membranous and thin, and ts called the pars 
membranacu scpti; it lies between the aortic and pulmonary 
orifices. 

Structure of the Heart.— Thi arrangement of the muscular 
fibres of the heart is very complicated and only imperfectly 
known. For details one of the larger manuals, such as Cunning- 
ham's Anatomy (London, 1910), or Gray's Anatomy (London, 
xooo) , should be consulted. The general scheme is that there are 
superficial fibres common to the two auricles and two ventricles 
and deeper fibres for each cavity. Until recently no fibres had 
been traced from the auricles to the ventricles, though GaskeO 
predicted that these would be found, and the credit for first 
demonstrating them is due to Stanley Kent, their details having 
subsequently been worked out by W. His, Junr., and S. Tawara. 
The fibres of this auriculo-ventricular bundle begin, in the right 
auricle, below the opening of the coronary sinus, and run forward 
on the right side of the auricular septum, below the fossa ovalis, 
and close to the auriculo-ventricular septum. Above the septal 
flap of the tricuspid valve they thicken and divide into two main 
branches, one on either side of the ventricular septum, which run 
down to the bases of the anterior and posterior papillary muscles, 
and so reach the walls of the ventricle, where their secondary 
branches form the fibres of Purkinje. The bundle is best seen 
in the hearts of young Ruminants, and it is presumably through 
it that the wave of contraction passes from the auricles to the 
ventricles (see article by A. Keith and M. Flack, Lancet, xxth of 
August xooo, p. 359). 

The central fibrous body is a triangular mass of fibro-cartllage, 
situated between the two auriculo-ventricular and the aortic 
orifices. The upper part of the septum ventriculorum blends 
with it. The endocardium is a delicate layer of endothelial cells 
backed by a very thin layer of fibro-elastic tissue; it is continuous 
with the endothelium of the great vessels and lines the whole of 
the cavities of the heart. 

The heart is roughly about the size of the closed fist and weighs 
from ft to 1 a oz.; it continues to increase in size up to about 
fifty years of age, but the increase is more marked in the male 
than in the female. Each ventricle holds about 4 f . oz. of blood, 
and each auricle rather less. The nerves of the heart are derived 
from the vagus, spinal accessory and sympathetic, through the 
superficial and deep cardiac plexuses. 

Embryology, 

In the article on the arteries (q.v.) the formation and coal- 
escence of the two primitive ventral aortae to form the heart are 
noticed, so that we may here start with a straight median tube 
lying ventral to the pharynx and being prolonged cephalad into 
the ventral aortae and caudad into the vitelline veins. This 
soon shows four dilatations, which, from the tail towards the 
head end, are called the sinus venosus, the auricle, the ventricle 
and the truncus l arteriosus. As the tubular heart grows more 
rapidly than the pericardium which contains it, it becomes bent 
into the form of an S laid on its side (CO), the ventral convexity 
being the ventricle and the dorsal the auricle. The passage 
from the auricle to the ventricle is known as the auricular canal, 
and in the dorsal and ventral parts of this appear two thickenings 

' ' This is often called bulbus arteriosus, but it will be seen that 
the term is used rather differently in comparative .anatomy. 



ANATOMY] 



HEART 



13' 




Fig. x. — Formation of Septa. Diagram 

of the formation of some of the septa of 

the heart (viewed from the right side). 

S.V. Sinus venosus. 

Au. . Auricle. 

E.C. Endocardial cushions forming 
septum intermedium. 

V. Septum ventriculorum. 

T.Ar. Septum aorticum intruncus ar- 
teriosus. 

V.A. Ventral aorta. 



known as endocardial cushions, which approach one another and 
leave a transverse slit between them (fig. 3, EX.). Eventually 
these two cushions fuse in the middle line, obliterating the 
central part of the slit, while the lateral parts remain as the two 
auriculo-ventricular orifices'^this fusion is known as the septum 
intermedium. From the bottom (ventral convexity) of the 
ventricle an antero-posterior median septum grows up, which is 

the septum inferius or 
septum ventriculorum 
(fig. 3» V). Posteriorly 
(caudally) this septum 
fuses with the septum 
intermedium, but ante- 
riorly it is free at the 
lower part of the truncus 
arteriosus. On referring 
to the development of the 
arteries (see Arteries) it 
will be seen that another 
septum starts between 
the last two pairs of 
aortic arches and grows 
downward (caudad) until 
it reaches and joins with 
the septum inferius just 
mentioned. This upturn 
aorticum (formed by two 
ingrowths from the wall 
of the vessel which fuse 
later) becomes twisted in- such a way that the right ventricle 
is continuous with the last pair of aortic arches (pulmonary 
artery), while the left ventricle communicates with the other 
arches (the permanent ventral aorta and its branches); it 
joins the septum ventriculorum in the upper part of the 
ventricular cavity and so forms the pars membranous sepli 
(fig. 3, T.. At). 

The fate of the sinus venosus and auricle must now be followed. 
Into the former, at first, only the two vitelline veins open, but 
later, as they develop, the ducts of Cuvier and the umbilical 
veins join in (see Veins). As the ducts of Cuvier come from 
each side the sinus spreads out to meet them and becomes 
transversely elongated. The slight constriction, which at first 
is the only separation between the sinus and the auricle, becomes 
more marked, and later the opening is into the right part of 
the auricle, and is guarded by two valvular folds of endocardium 
(the venous valves) which project into that cavity, and are 
continuous above with a temporary downgrowth from the 
roof, known as the septum spurium. Later the right side of the 
sinus enlarges, and so does the right part of the aperture, until 
the back part of the right side of the auricle and the right part 
of the sinus venosus are thrown into one, and the only remnants 
of the partition are the crista terminals and the Eustachian 
and Thebesian valves. The left part of the sinus venosus, 
which does not enlarge at the same rate as the right part, remains 
as the coronary sinus. It will now be seen why, in the adult 
heart, all the veins which open into the right auricle open into 
its posterior part, behind the crista terminalis. The septum 
spurium has been referred to as a temporary structure; the 
real division between the two auricles occurs at a later date 
than that between the ventricles and to the left of the septum 
spurium. It is formed by two partitions, the first of which, 
called the septum primum, grows down from the auricular roof. 
At first it does not quite reach the endocardial cushions in the 
auricular canal, already mentioned, but leaves a gap, called 
the ostium primum, between. This has nothing to do with the 
foramen ovale, which occurs as an independent perforation higher 
up, and at first is known as the ostium secundum. When it is 
established the septum primum grows down and meets the 
endocardial cushions, and so the ostium primum is obliterated. 
The septum secundum grows down on the right of the septum 
primum and is never complete; it grows round and largely 
overlaps the foramen ovale and its edges form the annulus 



ovalis, so that, in the later months of foetal life, the foramen 
ovale is a valvular opening, the floor of which is formed by the 
septum primum and the margins by the septum secundum. 
The closure of the foramen is brought about by adhesion of the 
two septa. 

The pulmonary veins of the two sides at first join one another, 
dorsal to the left auricle, and open into that cavity by a single 
median trunk, but, as the auricle grows, this trunk and part of 
the right and left veins are absorbed into its cavity. 

The mitral and tricuspid valves are formed by the shortening 
of the auricular canal which becomes telescoped into the ventricle, 
and the cusps are the remnants of this telescoping process. 

The columnae carneae and chordae tendineae are the remains 
of a spongy network which originally filled the cavity of the 
primary ventricle. 

The aortic and pulmonary valves are laid down in the ventral 
aorta, before it is divided into aorta and pulmonary artery, 
as four endocardial cushions; anterior, posterior and two 
lateral The septum aorticum cuts the latter two into two, so 
that each artery has the rudiments of three cusps. 

Abnormalities of the heart are very numerous, and can 
usually be explained by a knowledge of its development. They 
often cause grave clinical symptoms. A dear and well-illustrated 
review of the most important of them will be found in the chapter 
on congenital disease of the heart in Clinical Applied Anatomy, 
by C. R. Box and W. McAdam Ecdes, London, 1006. 

For further details of the embryology of the heart see Oscar 
Hertwig's Enhmckelungslekre der WtrbeUiere (Jena, 190a); G. Born, 
" Entwicklung des S&ugctierherzcns," Archiv f. mik. Anat, Bd. 33 
(1880); W. His, Anatomie menschluher Embryonen (Leipzig, 1881- 
1885); Quain's Anatomy, vol. i. (1908); C. S. Minot, Human 
Embryology (New York, 1893); and A. Keith, Human Embryology 
and Morphology (London, 1905). 

Comparative Anatomy, 

In the Acrania (e.g. lancelet} there is no heart, thougn the. 
vessels are specially contractile in the ventral part of the pharynx. 

In the Cydostomata (lamprey and hag), and Fishes, the 
heart has the same arrangement which has been noticed in the 
human embryo. There is a smooth, thin-walled sinus venosus, 
a thin reticulate-walled auricle, produced laterally into two 
appendages, a thick-walled ventricle, and a conus arteriosus 
containing valves. In addition to these the beginning of the 
ventral aorta is often thickened and expanded to form a bulbus 
arteriosus, which is non-contractile, and, strictly speaking, 
should rather be described with the arteries than with the heart. 
In relation to human embryology the smooth sinus venosus 
and reticulated auricle are interesting. Between the auride 
and ventricle is the auriculo-ventricular valve, which primarily 
consists of two cusps, comparable to the two endocardial cushions 
of the human embryo, though in some forms they may be sub- 
divided. In the interior of the ventricle is a network of muscular 
trabecular The conus arteriosus in the Elasmobranchs (sharks 
and rays) and Ganoids (sturgeon) is large and provided with 
several rows of semilunar valves, but in the Cydostomes (lamprey) 
and Teleosts (bony fishes) the conus is reduced and only the 
anterior (cephalic) row of valves retained. With the reduction of 
the conus the bulbus arteriosus is enlarged. So far the heart is 
a single tubular organ expanded into various cavities and having 
the characteristic (O-shaped form seen in the human embryo; 
it contains only venous blood which is forced through the gills 
to be oxidized on its way to the tissues. In the Dipnoi (mud 
fish), in which rudimentary lungs, as well as gills, are developed , 
the auricle is divided into two, and the sinus venosus opens 
into the right auricle. The conus arteriosus too begins to be 
divided into two chambers, and in Protopterus this division 
is complete. This division of the heart is one instance in which 
mammalian ontogeny does not repeat the processes of phylogeny, 
because, in the human embryo, it has been shown that the 
ventricular septum appears before the auricular. This want 
of harmony is sometimes spoken of as the " falsification of the 
embryological record." 

In the Amphibia there are also two auricles and one ventricle, 



l$2 



HEART 



[DISEASE 



though in the Urodeia (tailed amphibians) the auricular septum 
is often fenestrated. The sinus venosus is still a separate 
chamber, and the conus arteriosus, which may contain many 
or few valves, is usually divided into two by a spiral fold. 
Structurally the amphibian heart closely resembles the dipnoan, 
though the increased size of the left auricle is an advance. In 
the Anura (frogs and toads) the whole ventricle is filled with a 
spongy network which prevents the arterial and venous blood 
from the two auricles mixing to any great extent. (For the 
anatomy and physiology of the frog's heart, see The Frog, 
by Milnes Marshall.) 

In the Reptiles the ventricular septum begins to appear; 
this in the lizards is quite incomplete, but in the crocodiles, 
which are usually regarded as the highest order of living reptiles, 
the partition has nearly reached the" top of the ventricle, and the 
condition resembles that of the human embryo before the pars 
membranacea septi is formed. The conus arteriosus becomes 
included in the ventricular cavity, but the sinus venosus still 
remains distinct, and its opening into the right ventricle is 
guarded by two valves which closely resemble the two venous 
valves in the auricle of the human embryo already referred to. 

In the Birds the auricular and ventricular septa are complete; 
the right ventricle is thin-walled and crescentic in section, as in 
Man, and the rausculi papillares are developed. The left auriculo- 
ventricular valve has three membranous cusps with chordae 
tendineae attached to them, but the right auriculo- ventricular 
valve has a large fleshy cusp without chordae tendineae. The 
sinus venosus is largely included in the right auricle, but remains 
of the two venous valves are seen on each side of the orifice of the 
inferior vena cava. 

In the Mammals the structure of the heart corresponds closely 
with the description of that of Man already given. In the 
Ornithorynchus, among the Monotreroes, the right auriculo- 
ventricular valve has two fleshy and two membranous cusps, 
thus showing a resemblance to that of the bird. In the Echidna, 
the other member of the order, however, both auriculo-ventricular 
valves are membranous. In the Edentates the remains of the 
venous valves at the opening of the inferior vena cava are better 
marked than in other orders. In the Ungulates the moderator 
band in the right ventricle is especially well developed, and the 
central fibrous body at the base of the heart is often ossified, 
forming the os cordis so well known in the heart of the ox. 

The position of the heart in the lower mammals is not so 
oblique as it is in Man. 

For further details, see C. Rose, Britr. t. vergl. Anat. des "Renins 
d*r Wirbdtkierc Morpk. Jahrb., Bd. xvi. (1890); R. Wiedersheim, 
Vertfeichende Anatomic der Wirbelthiere (Jena, 1902) (for literature) ; 
also Parker and HasweU's Zoology (London, 1897). (F. G. P.) 

Heabt Disease.— In the early ages of medicine, the absence 
of correct anatomical, physiological and pathological knowledge 
prevented diseases of the heart from being recognized with any 
certainty during life, and almost entirely precluded them from 
becoming the object of medical treatment. But no sooner did 
Harvey (1628) publish his discovery of the circulation of the 
blood, and its dependence on the heart as its central organ, than 
derangements of the circulation began to be recognized as signs 
of disease of that central organ. (See also under Vascular 
System.) 

Among the earliest to profit by this discovery and to make 
important contributions to the literature of diseases of the heart 
and circulation were, R. Lower (1631-1691), R. Vieussens 
(1641-1716), H. Boerhave -(1668-1738) and the great patho- 
logists at the beginning of the 18th century, G. M. Lancisi 
(1654-1720), G. B. Morgagni (1682-1771) and J. B. Senac 
(1693-17 70). The works of these writers form very interesting 
reading, and it is remarkable how careful were the observations 
made, and how sound the conclusions drawn, by these pioneers 
of scientific medicine. J. N. Corvisart (1755-1821) was one of the 
earliest to make practical use of R. T. Auenbruggcr's (1722- 
1800) invention of percussion to determine the size of the heart. 
R. T. H. Lacnncc (1781-1826) was the first to make a scientific 
application of mediate auscultation to the diagnosis of disease of 



the chest, by the invention of the stethoscope. J. BouIHaud 
(1796-1881) extended its use to the diagnosis of disease of the 
heart. To James Hope (1801-1841) we owe much of the precision 
we have now attained in diagnosis of valvular disease from 
abnormalities m the sounds produced during cardiac movements. 
This short list by no means exhausts the earlier literature on the 
subject, but each of these names marks an era in the progress of 
the diagnosis of cardiac disease. In later years the literature on 
this subject has become very copious. 

The heart and great vessels occupy a position immediately to 
the left of the centre of the thoracic cavity. The anterior surface 
of the heart is projected against the chest wall and is surrounded 
on either side by the lungs, which are resonant organs, so that 
any increase in the size of the heart, " dilatation," can be de- 
tected by percussion. By placing the hand on the chest, palpa- 
tion, the impulse of the left ventricle, or apex beat, can normally 
be felt just below and internal to the nipple. Deviations from 
the normal in the position or force of the apex beat will afford 
important information as to the nature of the pathological 
changes in the heart. Thus, displacement downwards and out- 
wards of the apex beat, with a forcible thrusting impulse, 
will indicate hypertrophy, or increase of the muscular wall 
and increased driving power of the left ventricle, whereas a 
similar displacement with a feeble diffuse impulse will indicate 
dilatation, or over-distension of its cavity from stretching of 
the walls. 

By auscultation, or listening with a suitable instrument named 
a stethoscope over appropriate areas, we can detect any abnor- 
mality in the sounds of the heart, and the presence of murmurs 
indicative of disease of one or other of the valves of the heart. 

The pericardium is a fibro-scrous sac which loosely envelops the 
heart and the origin of the great vessels. Inflammation of this 
sac, or perieardUiSy is apt to occur as a result of rheumatism, 
more especially in children. It may also occur as a complication of 
pneumonia. It is a serious affection associated with pain over 
the heart, fever, shortness of breath, rapid pulse and' dilatation 
of the heart. As a result of the inflammation, fluid may accu- 
mulate in the pericardial sac, or the walls of the sac may become 
adherent to the heart and tend to embarrass its action. In 
favourable cases, however, recovery may take place without any 
untoward sequelae. 

Diseases of the heart may be classified in two main groups, 
(r) Disease of the valves, and (2) Disease of the walls of the 
heart. 

1. Valvular Disease.— 'Inflammation of the valves of the heart, 
or endocarditis , is one of the most common complications of 
rheumatism in children and young adults. More severe types, 
which are apt to prove fatal from a form of blood poisoning, may 
result when the valves of the heart are attacked by certain 
micro-organisms, such as the pneumococcus, which is responsible 
for pneumonia, the streptococcus and the staphylococcus 
pyogenes, the gonococcus and the influenza bacillus. 

As a result of endocarditis, one or more of the valves may be 
seriously damaged, so that it leaks or becomes incompetent. 
The valves of the left side of the heart, the aortic and mitral 
valves, are affected far more commonly than those of the right 
side. It is indeed comparatively rarely that the latter are 
attacked. In the process of healing of a damaged valve, scar 
tissue is formed which has a tendency to contract, so that in some 
cases the orifice of the valve becomes narrowed, and the resulting 
stenosis or narrowing gives rise to obstruction of the blood 
stream. We may thus have incompetence or stenosis of a valve 
or both combined. * 

Valvular lesions are detected on auscultation over appropriate 
areas by the blowing sounds or murmurs to which they give rise, 
which modify or replace the normal heart sounds. Thus, lesions 
of the mitral valve give rise to murmurs which are heard at the 
apex beat of the heart, and lesions of the aortic valves to murmurs 
which are heard over the aortic area, in the second right inter- 
costal space. Accurate timing of the murmurs in relation to the 
heart sounds enables us to judge whether the murmur is due to 
stenosis or incompetence of the valve aCecled. 



DISEASE1 HEART 

If the valvular lesion is severe, it is essential for the proper 
maintenance of the circulation that certain changes should take 
place in the heart to compensate for or neutralize the effect* of 
the regurgitation or obstruction, as the case may be. In affec- 
tions of the aortic valve, the extra work falls on the left ventride, 
which enlarges proportionately and undergoes hypertrophy. In 
affections of the mitral valve the effect is felt primarily by the 
left auricle, which is a thin walled structure incapable of under- 
going the requisite increase in power to resist the backward flow 
through the mitral orifice in case of leakage, or to overcome the 
effects of obstruction in case of stenosis. The back pressure to 
therefore transmitted to the pulmonary circulation, and as the 
right ventricle is responsible for maintaining the flow of blood 
through the lungs, the strain and extra work fall oa the right 
ventricle, which in turn enlarges and undergoes hypertrophy. 
The degree of hypertrophy of the left or right ventricle is thus, 
op to a certain point, a measure of the extent of the lesion of the 
aortic or mitral valve respectively. When the effects of the 
valvular lesion are so neutralised by these structural changes in 
the heart that the circulation is equably maintained, " com- 
pensation " is said to be efficient. 

When the heart gives way under the strain, compensation 
is said to break down, and dropsy, shortness of breath, cough 
and cyanosis, are among the distressing symptoms which may 
set in. The mere existence of a valvular lesion does not call 
for any special treatment so long as compensation is efficient, 
and a large number of people with slight valvular lesions are 
living lives indistinguishable from those of their neighbours. 
It will, however, be readily understood that in the case of the 
more serious lesions certain precautions should be observed 
in regard to over-exertion, excitement, over-indulgence in 
tobacco or alcohol, &c., as the balance is more readily upset 
and any undue strain on the heart may cause a breakdown of 
compensation. When this occurs treatment is required. A 
period of rest in bed is often sufficient to enable the heart to 
recover, and this may be supplemented as required by the 
administration of mercurial and saline purgatives to relieve 
the embarrassed circulation, and of suitable cardiac tonics, 
socfa as digitalis and strychnin, to reinforce and- strengthen 
the heart's action. 

a. Affections of the Muscular Wall of the Heart.— Dilatation of 
the heart, or stretching of the walls of the heart, is an incident, 
as has already been stated, in pericarditis and in the earlier 
stages of valvular disease antecedent to hypertrophy. Temporary 
over-distension or dilatation of the cavities of the heart occurs 
in violent and protracted exertion, but rapidly subsides and is 
in no wise harmful to the sound and vigorous heart of the young. 
It is otherwise if the heart is weak and flabby from a too sedentary 
life or degenerative changes in its walls or during convalescence 
from a severe illness, when the same circumstances which will 
not injure a healthy heart, may give rise to serious dilatation 
from which recovery may be very protracted. 

Influenza is a common cause of cardiac dilatation, and is 
liable to be a source of trouble after the acute illness has subsided, 
if the patient goes about and resumes his ordinary avocations 
too soon. 

Fatty or fibroid degeneration of the heart wall may occur in 
later life from impaired nutrition of the muscle, due to partial 
obstruction of the blood-vessels supplying it, when they are 
the seat of the degenerative changes known as arteriosclerosis 
or atheroma. The affection known as angina pectoris (q.v.) may 
be a further consequence of this defective blood-supply. 

The treatment will vary according to the nature of the case. 
In serious cases of dilatation, rest in bed, purgatives and cardiac 
tonics may be required. 

In commencing degenerative change the Oertel treatment, 
consisting of graduated exercise up a gentle slope, limitation 
of fluids and a special diet, may be indicated. 

In cases of slight dilatation after tnflue.ua or recent illness, 
the Schott treatment by baths and exercises as carried out at 
Nauheim may be sometimes beneficial. The change of air and 
scene, the enforced rest, the placid life, together with freedom 



133 

from excitement and worry, are among the most important 
factors which contribute to success in this class of case. 

Disorders of Rhythm of the Hearts Action.— Under this heading 
may be grouped a number of conditions to which the name 
" functional affections of the heart " has sometimes been applied, 
inasmuch. as the disturbances in question cannot usually be 
attributed to definite organic disease of the heart. We must, 
of course, exclude from this category the irregularity in the 
force and frequency of the pulse, which is commonly associated 
with incompetence of the mitral valve. 

The heart is a muscular organ possessing certain properties, 
rhythmicity, excitability, contractility, conductivity and ton- 
icity, as pointed out by Gaskell, in virtue of which it is able 
to m a int ai n a regular automatic beat independently of nerve 
stimulation. It is, however, intimately connected with the brain, 
blood-vessels and the abdominal and thoracic viscera, by 
innumerable nerves, through which impulses or messages are 
being constantly sent to and received from these various portions 
of the body. Such messages may give rise to disturbances of 
rhythm with which we are all familiar. For instance, sudden 
fright or emotion may cause a momentary arrest of the heart's 
action, and excitement or apprehension may set up a rapid 
action of the heart or palpitation. Palpitation, again, is often 
the result of digestive disorders, the message in this case being 
received from the stomach, instead of the brain as in emotional 
disturbances. It may also result from over-indulgence in tobacco 
and alcohol. 

Tachycardia is the name applied to a more or less permanent 
increase in the rate of the heart-beat. It is usually a prominent 
feature in the affection known as Graves' disease or exophthalmic 
goitre. It may also result from chronic alcoholism. In the 
condition known as paroxysmal tachycardia there appears to 
be no adequate explanation for its onset. 

Bradycardia or abnormal slowness of the heart-beat, is the 
converse of tachycardia. An abnormally slow pulse is met 
with in melancholia, cerebral tumour, jaundice and certain 
toxic conditions, or may foDow an attack of influenza. There 
is, however, a peculiar affection characterized by abnormal 
slowness of pulse (often ranging as low as 30), and the onset, 
from time to time, of epileptiform or syncopal attacks. To 
this the name " Stokes-Adams disease " has been applied, as it 
was first called attention to by Adams in 1827, and subsequently 
fully described by Stokes in 1856. It is usually associated 
with senile degenerative change of the heart anq* vascular system, 
and is held to be due to impairment of conductivity in the 
muscular fibres (bundle of His) which transmit the wave of 
contraction from the auricle to the ventricle. It is of serious 
significance in view of the symptoms associated with it. 

lntertnittency of the Pulse. — By this is understood a pulse in 
which a beat is dropped from time to time. The dropping of 
a beat may occur at regular intervals every two, four or six 
beats, &c, or occasionally at irregular intervals after a series 
of normal beats. On examining the heart, it is found, as a rule, 
that the cause of the intermission at the wrist is not actual 
omission of a heart-beat, but the occurrence of a hurried imperfect 
cardiac contraction which does not transmit a pulse-wave to 
the wrist. It is not characteristic of any special form of heart 
affection, and is rarely of serious import. It may be due to 
reflex digestive disturbances, or be associated with conditions 
of nervous breakdown and irritability, or with an atonic 
and relaxed condition of the heart muscle. The treatment of 
these disorders of rhythm of the heart will vary greatly 
according to the cause and is often a matter of considerable 
difficulty. (J. F. H. B.) 

Surgery of Heart and Pericardium.— A& the result of acute or 
chronic inflammation of the lining membrane of the fibrous 
sac which surrounds the heart and the neighbouring parts of 
the large blood-vessels, a dropsical or a purulent collection may 
form in it, or the sac may be quietly distended by a thin 
watery fluid. In either case, but especially in the latter, the 
heart may be so embarrassed in its work that death seems 
imminent. The condition is generally due to the cultivation 



'3+ 



HEART-BURIAL— HEARTS 



in the pericardium of the germs of rheumatism, influenza 
or gonorrhoea, or of those of ordinary suppuration. Respiration 
as well as circulation is embarrassed, and there is a marked 
fulness and dulness of- the front wall of the chest to the left of 
the breast-bone. In that region also pain and tenderness are 
complained of. By using the slender, hollow needle of an 
aspirator great relief may be afforded, but the tapping may have 
to be repeated from time to time. If the fluid drawn off is found 
to be purulent, it may be necessary to make a trap-door opening 
into the chest by cutting across the 4th and 5th ribs, incising 
and evacuating the pericardium and providing for drainage. 
In short, an abscess in the pericardium must be treated like an 
abscess in the pleura. 

Wounds of the heart are apt to be quickly fatal. If the 
probability is that the enfeebled action of the heart is due to 
pressure from blood which is leaking into, and is locked up 
in the pericardium, the proper treatment will be to open 
the pericardium, as described above, and, if possible, to 
close the opening in the auricle, ventricle or large vessel, by 
sutures. (E. O*). 

HEART-BURIAL, the burial of the heart apart from the body. 
This is a very ancient practice, the special reverence shown 
towards the heart being doubtless due to its early association 
with the soul of man, his affections, courage and conscience. 
In medieval Europe heart-burial was fairly common. Some 
of the more notable cases are those of Richard I., whose heart, 
preserved in a casket, was placed in Rouen cathedral; Henry III., 
buried in Normandy; Eleanor, queen of Edward I., at Lincoln; 
Edward I., at Jerusalem; Louis IX., Philip III., Louis XIII. 
and Louis XIV., in Paris. Since the 17th century the hearts 
of deceased members of the house of Habsburg have been buried 
apart from the body in the Loretto chapel in the Augustiner 
Kirche, Vienna. The most romantic story of heart-burial is 
that of Robert Bruce. He wished his heart to rest at Jerusalem in 
the church of the Holy Sepulchre, and on his deathbed entrusted 
the fulfilment of his wish to Douglas. The latter broke his 
journey to join the Spaniards in their war with the Moorish king 
of Granada, and was killed in battle, the heart of Bruce enclosed 
in a silver casket hanging round his neck. Subsequently the 
heart was buried at Melrose Abbey. The heart of James, 
marquess of Montrose, executed by the Scottish Covenanters in 
1650, was recovered from his body, which had been buried by 
the roadside outside Edinburgh, and, enclosed in a steel box, 
was sent to the duke of Montrose, then in exile. It was lost on 
its journey, and years afterwards was discovered in a curiosity 
shop in Flanders. Taken by a member of the Montrose family 
to India, it was stolen as an amulet by a native chief, was once 
more regained, and finally lost in France during the Revolution. 
Of notable 17th-century cases there is that of James II., whose 
heart was buried in the church of the convent of the Visitation 
at Chaillot near Paris, and that of Sir William Temple, at Moor 
Park, Farnham. The last ceremonial burial of a heart in England 
was that of Paul Whitehead, secretary to the Monks of Med- 
menham club, in 1775, tnc interment taking place in the Le 
Despenser mausoleum at High Wycombe, Bucks. Of later cases 
the most notable are those of Daniel O'Connell, whose heart is 
at Rome, Shelley at Bournemouth, Louis XVII. at Venice, 
Kosciusko at the Polish museum at Rapperschwyll, Lake Zurich, 
and the marquess of Bute, taken by his widow to Jerusalem for 
burial in 1000. Sometimes other parts of the body, removed in 
the process of embalming, are given separate and solemn burial. 
Thus the viscera of the popes from Sixtus V. (1500) onward have 
been preserved in the parish church of the Quirinai The custom 
of heart-burial was forbidden by Pope Boniface VIIL (1294- 
1303)1 but Benedict XI. withdrew the prohibition. 

See Pettigrew, Chronicles of the Tombs (1857). 

HEARTH (a word which appears in various forms In several 
Teutonic languages, cf. Dutch hoard, German Herd, in the sense 
of " floor "), the part of a room where a fire is made, usually 
constructed of stone, bricks, tiles or earth, beaten hard and 
having a chimney above; the fire being lighted either on the 
beartn itself, or in a receptacle placed there for the purpose. 



Like the Latin focus, especially in the phrase for " hearth and 
home " answering to pro oris etfocis, the word is used as equiva- 
lent to the home or household. The word is also applied to the 
fire and cooking apparatus on board ship; the floor of a smith's 
forge; the floor of a reverberatory furnace on which the ore is 
exposed to the flame; the lower part of a blast furnace through 
which the metal goes down into the crucible; in soldering, a 
portable brazier or chafing dish, and an iron box sunk in the 
middle of a flat iron plate or table. An " open-hearth furnace " 
is a regenerative furnace of the reverberatory type used in making 
steel, hence "open-hearth steel" (see Ikon and Steel). 

Hearth-money, hearth tax or chimney-money, was a tax im- 
posed in England on all houses except cottages at a rate of 
two shillings for every hearth. It was first levied in 1662, but 
owing to its unpopularity, chiefly caused by the domiciliary visits 
of the collectors, it was repealed in 1089, although it was pro- 
ducing £170,000 a year. The principle of the tax was not new 
in the history of taxation, for in Ajiglo-Saxon times the king 
derived a part of his revenue from a fumage or tax of smoke 
farthings levied on all hearths except those of the poor. It 
appears also in the hearth-penny or tax of a penny on every 
hearth, which as early as the 10th century was paid annually 
to the. pope (see Peter's Pence). 

HEARTS, a game of cards of recent origin, though founded 
upon the same principle as many old games, such as Slobber- 
/tonnes, Four Jacks and Enfii, namely, that of losing instead of 
winning as many tricks as possible. Hearts is played with a full 
pack, ace counting highest and deuce lowest. In the fourfaanded 
game, which is usually played, the entire pack is dealt out as at 
whist (but without turning up the last card, since there are no 
trumps), and the player at the dealer's left begins by leading any 
card he chooses, the trick being taken by the highest card of the 
suit led. Each player must follow suit if he can; if be has no 
cards of the suit led he is privileged to throw away any card he 
likes, thus having an opportunity of getting rid of his hearts, which 
is the object of the game. When all thirteen tricks have been 
played each player counts the hearts he has taken in and pays 
into the pool a certain number of counters for them, according 
to an arrangement made before beginning play. In the four- 
handed, or sweepstake, game the method of settling called 
" Howell's, 1 ' from the name of the inventor, has been generally 
adopted, according to which each player begins with an equal 
number of chips, say too, and, after the hand has been played, 
pays into the pool as many chips for each heart he had taken as 
there are players besides himself. Then each player takes out 
of the pool one chip for every heart he did not win. The pool 
is thus exhausted with every deal. Hearts may be played by 
two, three, four or even more players, each playing for himself. 

Ion the hearts count according to the 
nt 5, excepting that the ace counts 14. 

th nave n, the combined score of the 

th 

he eldest hand examines his hand 
aii counters for the privilege of naming 

th svithout naming the suit. The other 

pi >e privilege of outbidding him. and 

wl ; suit andpays the amount of his bid 

in git. 

ce of hearts is discarded, and an extra 
ca 1 place, ranking in value between ten 

ar irown away, excepting when hearts 

at ud is played, though if an opponent 

di of hearts, then the holder of the joker 

m usually considered worth five chips, 

wl . j pool or to the player who succeeds 

in discarding the joker. 

Heartsette. — In this variation the deuce of spades is deleted and 
the three cards left after dealing twelve cards to each player are 
called the widow (or kilty), and are left face downward on the table. 
The winner of the first trick must take the widow without showing it 
to his opponents. 

Slobbtrkannes. — The object of this older form of Hearts is to avoid 
taking either the first or last trick or a trick containing the queen of 
clubs. A euchre pack (thirty two-cards, lacking all below the 7) is 
used, and each player is given 10 counters, one being Forfeited to the 
pool if a player takes the first or last trick, or that containing the 
club queen. If he takes all three he forfeits four points. 



HEAT 



»35 



Pour Jacks (PoUrnae or Quatri Valets) b usually played with a 
piquet pack, the cards ranking in France as at ccartl, but in Great 
Britain and America as at piquet. There is no trump suit. Counters 
are used, and the object of the game is to avoid taking any trick 
containing a knave, especially the knave of spades, called Polignac. 
The player taking such a trick forfeits one counter to the pool. 

EnJU (or Sckweuen) is usually played by four persons with a piquet 
pack ana for a pool. The cards rank as at Hearts, and there is no 
trump suit. A player must follow suit if he can, but if he cannot 
he may not discard, bnt must take up all tricks already won and add 
them to hb hand. Play b continued until one player gets rid of all 
bis cards and thus wins. 

HEAT (O.E. haku, which like " hot/' Old Eng. h&t, is from the 
Teutonic type haito, hit, to be hot, cf. Ger. hitie, heiss; Dutch, 
hittt, hut, &c), a general term applied to that branch of physical 
science which deals with the effects produced by heat on material 
'bodies, with the laws of transference of heat, and with the 
transformations of heat into other kinds of energy. The object 
of the present article is to give a brief sketch of the historical 
development of the science of heat, and to indicate the relation 
of the different branches of the subject, which are discussed in 
greater detail with reference to the latest progress in separate 
articles. 

i. Meanings of the Term Heat.— The term heat is employed in 
ordinary language in a number of different senses. This makes it 
a convenient term to employ for the general title of the science, 
but the different meanings must be carefully distinguished in 
scientific reasoning. For the present purpose, omitting meta- 
phorical significations, we may distinguish four principal uses 
of the term: (a) Sensation of heat; (b) Temperature, or 
degree of hotness; (c) Quantity of thermal energy; (d) Radiant 
beat, or energy of radiation. 

(a) From the sense of heat, aided in tl es 

by the sense of sight, we obtain our first as 

a physical entity, which alters the state o >n 

in respect of warmth, and b capable of to 

another. By touching a body we can tel or 

colder than the hand, and, by touching ' c- 

ccssion, wc can form a rough estimate, ie 

sensation experienced, of their differenc as 

over a limited range. If a hot iron is pi e, 

we may observe that the plate is heated til 

both atuin appreciably the same degree er 

from similar cases that something which to 

pass from hot to cold bodies, and to attaii ile 

diffusion when all the bodies concerned s ., — , __-d. 

Ideas such as these derived entirely from the sense of heat, are, 
so to speak, embedded, in the language of every nation from the 
earliest tiroes. 

(6) From the sense of heat, again, we naturally derive the idea 
of a continuous scale or order, expressed by such terms as summer 
heat, blood heat, fever heat, red heat, white heat, in which all bodies 
nay be placed with regard to their degrees of hotness, and we speak 
of the temperature of a body as denoting its place in the scale, in 
contradistinction to the quantity of heat it may contain. 

(c ) The quantity of heat contained in a body obviously depends 
on the size of the body considered. Thus a large kettleful of boiling 
water will evidently contain more heat than a tcacupful, though both 
may be at the same temperature. The temperature does not depend 
on the size of the body, but on the degree of concentration of the 
heat in it, i.e. on the quantity of heat per unit mass, other things 
being equal. We may regard it as axiomatic that a given body (6ay 
a pound of water) in a given sUte (say boiling under a given 
pressure) must always contain the same quantity of heat, and 
conversely that, if it contains a given quantity of heat, and if it 
b under conditions in other respects, it must be at a definite tempera- 
ture, which wilt always be the same for the same given conditions. 

(d) It it a matter of common observation that rays of the sun 
or of a fire falling on a body warm it, and it was in the first instance 
natural to suppose that heat itself somehow travelled across the 
intervening space from the sun or fire to the body warmed, in 
much the same way as heat may be carried by a current of hot air 
or water. But we now know that energy of radiation is not the 
same thing as heat, though it b converted into heat when the rays 
strike an absorbing substance. The term " radiant heat," however, 
is generally retained, because radiation is commonly measured 
in terms of the heat it produces, and because the transference of 
energy by radiation and absorption b the most important agency in 
the diffusion of heat. 

2. Evolution of the Thermometer.— The first step in the develop- 
ment of the science of heat was necessarily the invention of a 
thermometer, an instrument for indicating temperature and 
measuring its changes. The first requisite in the case of such an 



instrument is that it should always give, at least approximately, 
the same indication at the same temperature. The air-thermo- 
scope of Galileo, illustrated in fig. x, which consisted of a 
glass bulb containing air, connected to a glass tube of 
small bore dipping into a coloured liquid, though very sensi- 
tive to variations of temperature, was not satisfactory as 
a measuring instrument, because it was also affected by varia- 
tions of atmospheric pressure. The invention of the type of 
thermometer familiar at the present day, containing a liquid 
hermetically sealed in a glass bulb with a fine tube attached, 
is also generally attributed to Galileo at 
a slightly later date, about i6x 2. Alcohol 
was the liquid first employed, and 
the degrees, intended to represent 
thousandths of the volume of the bulb, 
were marked with small beads of enamel 
fused on the stem, as shown in fig. 2. 
In order to render the readings of such 
instruments comparable with each dther, 
it was necessary to select a fixed point 
or standard temperature as the zero or 
starting-point of the graduations. In- 
stead of making each degree a given 
fraction of the volume of the bulb, which 
would be difficult in practice, and would 
give different values for the degree with 
different liquids, it was soon found to 
be preferable to take two fixed points, 
and to divide the interval between 
them into the same number of degrees. 






Fig. 2. 



It was natural in the 
first instance to take the temperature of the human body as one 
of the fixed points. In 1701 Sir Isaac Newton proposed a scale 
in which the freezing-point of water was taken as zero, and the 
temperature of the human body as 12°. About the same date 
(1714) Gabriel Daniel Fahrenheit proposed to take as zero the* 
lowest temperature obtainable with a freezing mixture of ice 
and salt, and to divide the interval between this temperature and 
that of the human body into 12°. To obtain finer graduations 
the number was subsequently increased to 06 . The freezing- 
point of water was at that time supposed to be somewhat variable, 
because as a matter of fact it b possible to cool water several 
degrees below its freezing-point in the absence of ice. Fahrenheit 
showed, however, that as soon as ice began to form the tempera- 
ture always rose to the same point, and that a mixture of ice 
or snow with pure water always gave the same temperature. 
At a later period he also showed that the temperature of boiling 
water varied with the barometric pressure, but that it was always 
the same at the same pressure, and might therefore be used 
as the second fixed point (as Edmund Halley and others had 
suggested) provided that a definite pressure, such as the average 
atmospheric pressure, were specified. The freezing and boiling- 
points on one of hb thermometers, graduated as already ex- 
plained, with the temperature of the body as 06 , came out in 
the neighbourhood of 32° and 2x2° respectively, giving an interval 
of x8o° between these points. Shortly after Fahrenheit's death 
(1736) the freezing and boiling-points of water were generally 
recognized as the most convenient fixed points to adopt, but 
different systems of subdivision were employed. Fahrenheit's 
scale, with its small degrees and its zero below the freezing-point, 
possesses undoubted advantages for meteorological work, and 
b still retained in most English-speaking countries. But for 
general scientific purposes, the centigrade system, in which the 
freezing-point b marked o° and the boiling-point xoo°, b now 
almost universally employed, on account of its greater simplicity 
from an arithmetical point of view. For work of precision the 
fixed points have been more exactly defined (see Thermometry), 
but no change has been made in the fundamental principle of 
graduation. 

3. Comparison of Scales based on Expansion.— Thermometers 
constructed in the manner already described will give strictly 
comparable readings, provided that the tubes be of uniform 
bore, and that the same liquid and glass be employed in their 



136 



HEAT 



[CALORIMETRV 



construction. But tbey possess one obvious delect from a theo- 
retical point of view, namely, that the subdivision of the tem- 
perature scale depends on the expansion of the particular liquid 
selected as the standard. A liquid such as water, which, when con- 
tinuously heated at a uniform rate from its freezing-pcint, first 
contracts and then expands, at a rapidly increasing rate, would 
obviously be unsuitable. But there is no a priori reason why other 
liquids should not behave to some extent in a similar way. As 
a matter of fact, it was soon observed that thermometers care- 
fully constructed with different liquids, such as alcohol, oil and 
mercury, did not agree precisely in their indications at points of 
the scale intermediate between the fixed points, and diverged 
even more widely outside these limits. Another possible method, 
proposed in 1694 by Carlo Renaldcni (1615-1698), professor 
of mathematics and philosophy at Pisa, would be to determine 
the intermediate points of the scale by observing the temperatures 
of mixtures of ice-cold and boiling water in varying proportions. 
On this method, the temperature of 50° C. would be defined 
as that obtained by mixing equal weights of water at o° C. and 
ioo° C; 3o° C, that obtained by mixing 80 parts of water at 
o° C. with 20 parts of water at ioo° C. and soon. Each degree 
rise of temperature in a mass of water would then represent 
- the addition of. the same quantity of .heat. The scale thus 
obtained would, as a matter of fact, agree very closely with that 
of a mercury thermometer, but the method would be very 
difficult to put in practice, and would still have the disadvantage 
of depending on the properties of a particular liquid, namely, 
water, which is known to behave in an anomalous manner in 
other respects. At a later date, the researches of Gay-Lussac 
(1802) and Regnault ( 1 847) showed that the laws of the expansion 
of gases are much simpler than those of liquids. Whereas the 
expansion of alcohol between o° C. and xoo° C. is nearly seven 
times as great as that of mercury, all gases (exclud in g easily 
condensible vapours) expand equally, or so nearly equally that 
the differences between them cannot be detected without the 
most refined observations. This equality of expansion affords 
a strong a priori argument for selecting the scale given by the 
expansion of a gas as the standard scale of temperature, but there 
are still stronger theoretical grounds for this choice, which will 
be indicated in discussing the absolute scale (f ai). Among 
liquids mercury is found to agree most nearly with the gas scale, 
and is generally employed in thermometers for scientific purposes 
on account of its high boiling-point and for other reasons. 
The differences of the mercurial scale from the gas scale haying 
been carefully determined, the mercury thermometer can be 
used as a secondary standard to replace the gas thermometer 
within certain limits, as the gas thermometer would be very 
troublesome to employ directly in ordinary investigations. 
For certain purposes, and especially at temperatures beyond 
the range of mercury thermometers, electrical thermometers, 
also standardized by reference to the gas thermometer, have 
been very generally employed in recent years, while for still 
higher temperatures beyond the range of the gas thermometer, 
thermometers based on the recently established laws of radiation 
are the only instruments available. For a further discussion of 
the theory and practice of the measurement of temperature, 
the reader is referred to the article Thermometry. 

4. Change of State. — Among the most important effects of 
heat is that of changing the state of a substance from solid to 
liquid, or from liquid to vapour. With very few exceptions, all 
substances, whether simple or compound, are known to be capable 
of existing in each of the three states under suitable conditions 
of temperature and pressure. The transition of any substance, 
from the state of liquid to that of solid or vapour under the 
ordinary atmospheric pressure, takes place at fixed temperatures, 
the freezing and boiling-points, which are very sharply defined 
for pure crystalline substances, and serve in fact as fixed points 
of the thermometric scale. A change of state cannot, however, 
be effected in any case without the addition or subtraction of a 
certain definite quantity of beat. If a piece of ice below the 
freezing-point is gradually heated at a uniform rate, its tem- 
perature may be observed to rise regularly till the freezing-point 



is reached. At this point ft begins to melt, and its temperature 
ceases to rise. The melting takes a considerable time, during the 
whole of which heat is being continuously supplied without 
producing any rise of temperature, although if the same quantity 
of heat were supplied to an equal mass of water, the temperature 
of the water would be raised nearly 8o° C. Heat thus absorbed 
in producing a change of state without rise of temperature is 
called " Latent Heat," a term introduced by Joseph Black, who 
was one of the first to study the subject of change of state from 
the point of view of heat absorbed, and who in many cases 
actually adopted the comparatively rough method described 
above of estimating quantities of heat by observing the time 
required to produce a given change when the substance was 
receiving heat at a steady rate from its surroundings. For 
every change of state a definite quantity of heat is required, 
without which the change cannot take place. Heat must be 
added to melt a solid, or to vaporize a solid or a liquid, and 
conversely, heat must be subtracted to reverse the change, ix. 
to condense a vapour or freeze a liquid. The quantity required 
for any given change depends on the nature of the substance 
and the change considered, and varies to some extent with the 
conditions (as to pressure, ftc) under which the change is made, 
but is always the same for the same change under the same 
conditions. A rough measurement of the latent heat of steam 
was made as early as 1764 by James Watt, who found that steam 
at 2X2° F., when passed from a kettle into a jar of cold water, 
was capable of raising nearly six times its weight of water to 
the boiling point. He gives the volume of the steam as about 
1800 times that of an equal weight of water. 

The phenomena which accompany change of state, and the 
physical laws by which such changes are g ov e r n ed, are dinruiwd 
in a series of special articles dealing with particular cases. The 
articles on Fusion and Alloys deal with the chance from the 
■olid to the liquid state, and the analogous case of solution is dis- 
cussed in the article on Solution. The articles on Conoknsatkmi 



measuring the latent beat of fusion or vaporization are described in 
the article Calorimetry, and need not be further discussed here 
except as an introduction to the history of the evolution of knowledge 
with regard to the nature of heat. 

5. Calorimetry by Latent Heat.— In principle, the simplest 
and most direct method of measuring quantities of heat consists 
in observing the effects produced in melting a solid or vaporizing 
a liquid. It was, in fact, by the fusion of ice that quantities 
of heat were first measured. If a hot body is placed in a cavity 
in a block of ice at o° C, and is covered by a closely fitting slab 
of ice, the quantity of ice melted will be directly proportional to 
the quantity of heat lost by the body in cooling to 6° C. None 
of the heat can possibly escape through the ice, and conversely 
no heat can possibly get in from outside. The body must cool 
exactly to o° C, and every fraction of the heat it loses must melt 
an equivalent quantity of ice. Apart from heat lost in trans- 
ferring the heated body to the ice block, the method is theoretic- 
ally perfect. The only difficulty consists in the practical 
measurement of the quantity of ice melted. Black estimated this 
quantity by mopping out the cavity with a sponge before and 
after the operation. But there is a variable film of water adhering 
to the walls of the cavity, which gives trouble in accurate work. 
In 1780 Laplace and Lavoisier used a double-walled metallic 
vessel containing broken ice, *which was in .many r espects more 
convenient than the block, but aggravated the difficulty of the 
film of water adhering to the ke.- In spite of this practical 
difficulty, the quantity of beat r equired to melt unft weight of 
ice was for a long time taken as the unit of heat. This unit 
possesses the great advantage that it is independent of the scale 
of temperature adopted. At a much later date R~ Bunsea 
(Phil. Mag., 1871), adopting a suggestion of Sir John Herschd's, 
devised an ice-calorimeter suitable for measuring small quan- 
tities of beat, in which the difficulty of the water firm was over- 
come by measuring the change in volume due to the melting of 
the ice. The volume of unit mass of ke b approaimetefy x ooso 
times that of unit mass of water, so that the diminution of vornme 



WATTS INDICATOR DIAGRAM] 



HEAT 



137 



is o*oqs of a cubic centimetre for each gramme of ice melted. 
The method requires careful attention to details of manipulation, 
which are more fully discussed in the article on Calortmetry. 

For measuring large quantities of heat, such as those produced 
by the combustion of fuel in a boiler, the most convenient method 
is the evaporation of water, which is commonly employed by 
engineers for the purpose. The natural unit in this case is the 
quantity of heat required to evaporate unit mass of water at the 
boiling point under atmospheric pressure. In boilers working at 
a higher pressure, or supplied with water at a lower temperature, 
appropriate corrections are applied to deduce the quantity 
evaporated in terms of this unit. 

For laboratory work on a small scale the converse method of 
condensation has been successfully applied by John Joly, in 
whose steam-calorimeter the quantity of heat required to raise 
the temperature of a body from the atmospheric temperature 
to that of steam condensing at atmospheric pressure is observed 
by weighing the mass of steam condensed on it. (See Calori- 
metkv.) 

6. Tkermonutric Calorimetry.—'Fox the majority of purposes 
the most convenient and the most readily applicable method 
of measuring quantities of beat, is to observe the rise of tem- 
perature produced in a known mass of water contained in a 
suitable vessel or calorimeter. This method was employed from 
a very early date by Count Rumford and other investigators, 
and was brought to a high pitch of perfection by Regnault in his 
extensive calorimetric researches (Memoires de I'lnstitui de Paris, 
1847); but it is only within comparatively recent years that it 
has really been placed on a satisfactory basis by the accurate 
definition of the units involved. The theoretical objections to 
the method, as compared with latent heat calorimetry, are that 
some heat is necessarily lost by the calorimeter when its tem- 
perature is raised above that of the surroundings, and that some 
beat is used in heating the vessel containing the water. These are 
small corrections, which can be estimated with considerable 
accuracy in practice. A more serious difficulty, which has 
impaired the value of much careful work by this method, is that 
the quantity of heat required to raise the temperature of a given 
mass of water i°C. depends on the temperature at which the 
water is taken, and also on the scale of the thermometercmployed. 
It is for this reason, in many cases, impossible to say, at the 
present time, what was the precise value, within i or even 1 % 
of the beat unit, in terms of which many of the older results, 
such as those of Regnault, were expressed. For many purposes 
this would not be a serious matter, but for work of scientific 
precision such a limitation of accuracy would constitute a very 
serious bar to progress. The unit generally adopted for scientific 
purposes is the quantity of heat required to raise x gram (or 
kilogram) of water i° C, and is called the calorie (or kilo-calorie). 
English engineers usually state results in terms of the British 
Thermal Unit (B.Th.U.), which is the quantity of heat required 
to raise 1 lb of water i° F. 

7. Watl's Indicator Diagram; Work of Expansion.— -The 
rapid development of the steam-engine (q.v.) in England during 
the latter part of the 18th century had a marked effect on the 
progress of the science of heat. In the first steam-engines the 
working cylinder served both as boiler and condenser, a very 
wasteful method, as most of the heat was transferred directly 
from the fire to the condensing water without useful effect. 
The first improvement (about 1700) was to use a separate boiler, 
but the greater part of the steam supplied was still wasted in 
reheating the cylinder, which had been cooled by the injection 
of cold water to condense the steam after the previous stroke. 
In 1760 James Watt showed how to avoid this waste by using 
a separate condenser and keeping the cylinder as hot as possible. 
In his earlier engines the steam at full boiler pressure was 
allowed to raise the piston through nearly the whole of its stroke. 
Connexion with the boiler was then cut off, and the steam at 
full pressure was discharged into the condenser. Here again 
there was unnecessary waste, as the steam was still capable of 
doing useful work. He subsequently introduced "expansive 
working/' which effected still further economy. The connexion 



with the boiler was cut off when a fraction only, say \, of the 
stroke had been completed, the remainder of the stroke being 
effected by the expansion of the steam already in the cylinder 
with continually diminishing pressure. By the end of the stroke, 
when connexion was made to the condenser, the pressure was 
so reduced that there was comparatively little waste from this 
cause. Watt also devised an instrument called an indicator 
(see Steam Engine), in which a pencil, moved up and down 
vertically by the steam pressure, recorded the pressure in the 
cylinder at every point of the stroke on a sheet of paper moving 
horizontally in time with the stroke of the piston. The diagram 
thus obtained made it possible to study what was happening 
inside the cylinder, and to deduce the work done by the steam 
in each stroke. The method of the indicator diagram has since 
proved of great utility in physics in studying the properties of 
gases and vapours. The work done, or the useful effect obtained 
from an engine or any kind of machine, is measured by the 
product of the resistance overcome and the distance through 
which it is overcome. The result is generally expressed in terms 
of the equivalent weight raised through a certain height against 
the force of gravity. 1 If, for instance, the pressure on a piston 

* Units of Work, Energy and Power. — In English-speaking countries 
work is generally measured in foot- pounds. Elsewhere it is generally 
measured in kilogrammetres, or in terms of the work done tn raising 
I kilogramme weight through the height of 1 metre. In the middle 
of the 19th century the terms " force " and " motive power " were 
commonly employed in the sense of " power of doing work." The 
term " energy " is now employed in this sense. A quantity of 

en : - 1 «*-■ *■■- ~~ •- ■** : L «- -' --?—'-- A 

bo dcr 

pr sus 

ot tial 

en ion 

(a ess 

«*' (as 

in :tic 

an her 

th um 

is its 

s« its 

nru ole 

en gy. 

an the 

fib 
If 

on 
of 

me 

ive 

Wy 
me 
ilo. 
ity. 
the 
eof 
iral 

m : of 

it! ure 

in ity. 

K wir- 

in ilo- 

gf ilo- 

Si eft 

tli ing 

tr to 

ts : of 

ei lass 

ergs done by a force acting through a distance of t cm. is the absolute 
measure of the force. A force equal to the weight of 1 gm. (in 
England) acting through a distance of 1 cm. does 981 ergs o? work. 
A force equal to the weight of 1000 gm. (1 kilogramme) acting 
through a distance of 1 metre (100 cm.) does 98-1 million ergs of 
work. As the erg is a very small unit, for many purposes, a unit 
equal to 10 million ergs, called a joule, is employed. In England, 
where the weight of 1 gm. is 981 ergs per cm., a foot-pound is equal 
to 1*356 joules, and a kilogram met re is equal to 9-81 joules. 

The term power is now generally restricted to mean rate of work- 
ing." Watt estimated that an average horse was capable of raising 
550 lb 1 ft. in each second, or doing work at the rate of 550 foot- 
pounds per second, or 33.000 foot-pounds per minute. This con- 
ventional horse-power is the unit commonly employed for estimating 



i 3 8 



HEAT 



(NATURE OP HEAT 



is 50 lb per sq. in., and the area of the piston is xoo sq. in., the 
force on the piston is 5000 lb weight. If the stroke of the piston 
is z ft., the work done per stroke is capable of raising a 
weight of 5000 lb through a height of x ft., or 50 lb through a 
height of xoo ft. and so on. 

Fig. 3 represents an imaginary indicator diagram for a steam- 
engine, taken from one of Watt 9 patents. Steam is admitted to 
the cylinder when the piston is at the beginning of its stroke, at S. 
ST represents the length of the stroke or the limit of horizontal 
movement of the paper on which the diagram is drawn. The indicat- 
ing pencil rises to the point A, representing the absolute pressure of 
60 lb per sq. in. As the piston moves outwards the pencil traces 

9 : 

Ii' 






ii 



Fig. 3.— Watt's Indicator Diagram. Patent of 1782. 



8. Thermal Efficiency. — The thermal efficiency of an engine 
is the ratio of the work done by the engine to the heat supplied 
to it. According to Watt's observations, confirmed later by 
Clement and Desorraes, the total heat required to produce 
x lb of saturated steam at any temperature from water at 
o° C. was approximately 650 times the quantity of heat required 
to raise 1 lb of water x° C. Since x lb of steam represented 
on this assumption a certain quantity of heat, the efficiency 
could be measured naturally in foot-pounds of work obtainable 
per lb of steam, or conversely in pounds of steam consumed 
per horse-power-hour. 

In his patent of 178a Watt gives the following example of the 
improvement in thermal efficiency obtained by expansive work- 

the power of engines. The horse-power-hour, or the work done by one 
horse-power in one hour, is nearly 2 million foot-pounds. For electrical 
and scientific purposes the unit of power employed is called the watt. 
The watt is the work per second done by an electromotive force of 
I .volt in driving a current of 1 ampere, and is equal to 10 million 
ergs or 1 joule per second. One horse-power is 746 watts or nearly 
\ of a kilowatt. The kilowatt-hour, which is the unit by which 
electrical energy is sold, is 3-6 million joules or 2*65 million foot- 
pounds, or 366.000 kilogram metres, and is capable of raising nearly 
19 lb of water from the freezing to the boiling point. 



ing. Taking the diagram already given, if the quantity of steam 
represented by AB, or 300 cub. in. at 60 lb pressure, were em- 
ployed without expansion, the work realized, represented by the 
area ABSF, would be 6000/4 - x 500 foot-pounds. With expansion 
to 4 times its original volume, as shown in the diagram by the 
whole area ABCTSA, the mean pressure (as calculated by Watt, 
assuming Boyle's law) would be 0-58 of the original pressure, 
and the work done would be 6000 Xo- 58 -3480 foot-pounds for 
the same quantity of steam, or the thermal efficiency would be 
2-32 times greater. The advantage actually obtained would not 
be so great as this, on account of losses by condensation, back- 
pressure, &c, which are neglected in Watt's calculation, but the 
margin would still be very considerable. Three hundred cub. 
in. of steam at 60 lb pressure would represent about -0245 of 
1 lb of steam, or 28*7 B.Th.U., so that, neglecting all losses, 
the possible thermal efficiency attainable with steam at this 
pressure and four expansions (J cut-off) would be 3480/28*7, or 1 21 
foot-pounds per B.Th.U. At a later date, about 1820, it was usual 
to include the efficiency of the boiler with that of the engine, 
and to reckon the efficiency or " duty " in foot-pounds per bushel 
or cwt. of coal. The best Cornish pumping-engines of that date 
achieved about 70 million foot-pounds per cwt., or consumed 
about 32 lb per horse-power-hour, which is roughly equivalent to 
43 foot-pounds per B.Th.U. The efficiency gradually increased 
as higher pressures were used, with more complete expansion, 
but the conditions upon which the efficiency depended were 
not fully worked out till a much later date. Much additional 
knowledge with regard to the nature of heat, and the properties 
of gases and vapours, was required before the problem could 
be attacked theoretically. 

9. Of the Nature of Heat.— la the early days of the science it 
was natural to ascribe the manifestations of heat to the action 
of a subtle imponderable fluid called " caloric," with the power 
of penetrating, expanding and dissolving bodies, or dissipating 
them in vapour. The fluid was imponderable, because the most 
careful experiments failed to show that heat produced any in- 
crease in weight. The opposite property of levitation was often 
ascribed to heat, but it was shown by more cautious investigators 
that the apparent loss of weight due to heating was to be attri- 
buted to evaporation or to upward air currents. The funda- 
mental idea of an imaginary fluid to rep r esent heat was useful 
as helping the mind to a conception of something remaining 
invariable in quantity through many transformations, but in 
some respects the analogy was misleading, and tended greatly 
to retard the progress of science. The caloric theory was very 
simple in its application to the majority of calorimetric ex- 
periments, and gave a fair account of the elementary phenomena 
of change of state, but it encountered serious difficulties in 
explaining the production of heat by friction, or the changes 
of temperature accompanying the compression or expansion 
of a gas. The explanation which the calorists offered of the 
production of heat by friction or compression was that some 
of the latent caloric was squeezed or ground out of the bodies 
concerned and became " sensible." In the case of heat developed 
by friction, they supposed that the abraded portions of the 
material were capable of holding a smaller quantity of beat, 
or had less " capacity for heat," than the original materiaL 
From a logical point of view, this was a perfectly tenable 
hypothesis, and one difficult to refute. It was easy to account 
in this way for the heat produced in boring cannon and similar 
operations, where the amount of abraded material was large. 
To refute this explanation, Rumford (Phil. Trans., 1798) made 
his celebrated experiments with a blunt borer, in one of 
which he succeeded in boiling by friction 26 5 ib of cold 
water in 2} hours, with the production of only 4x4s grains 
of metallic powder. He then showed by experiment that the 
metallic powder required the same amount of heat to raise its 
temperature i°, as an equal weight of the original metal, or that 
its " capacity for heat " (in this sense) was unaltered by reducing 
it to powder; and he argued that " in any case so small a 
quantity of powder could not possibly account for all the heat 
generated, that the supply of heat appeared to be inexhaustible, 



THERMAL PROPERTIES OF GASES] HEAT 

and that beat could not be a material substance, but must be 
something of the nature of motion." Unfortunately Rumford's 
argument was not quite conclusive. The supporters of the 
caloric theory appear, whether consciously or unconsciously, 
to have used the phrase " capacity for heat" in two entirely 
distinct senses without any dear definition of the difference. 
The phrase " capacity for heat " might very naturally denote 
the total quantity of heat contained in a body, which we have 
no means of measuring, but it was generally used to signify the 
quantity of heat required to raise the temperature of a body 
one degree, which is quite a different thing, and has no necessary 
relation to the total heat. In proving that the powder and the 
solid metal required the same quantity of heat to raise the 
temperature of equal masses of either one degree, Rumford 
did not prove that they contained equal quantities of heat, 
which was the real point at issue in this instance. The metal 
tin actually changes into powder below a certain temperature, 
and in so doing evolves a measurable quantity of heat. A 
mixture of the gases oxygen and hydrogen, in the proportions 
in which they combine to form water, evolves when burnt 
sufficient heat to raise more than thirty times its weight of water 
from the freezing to the boiling point; and the mixture of gases 
may, in this sense, be said to contain so much more heat than 
the water, although its capacity for heat in the ordinary sense 
is only about half that of the water produced. To complete 
the refutation of the calorists' explanation of the heat produced 
by friction, it would have been necessary for Rumford to show 
that the powder when reconverted into the same state as the 
solid metal did not .absorb a quantity of heat equivalent to that 
evolved in the grinding; in other words that the heat produced 
by friction was not simply that due to the change of state of 
the metal from solid to powder. 

Shortly afterwards, in 1799, Davy 1 described an experiment 
in which he melted ice by rubbing two blocks together. This 
experiment afforded a very direct refutation of the calorists' 
view, because it was a well-known fact that ice required to have 
a quantity of heat added to it to convert it into water, so that 
the water produced by the friction contained more heat than the 
ice- In stating as the conclusion to be drawn from this experi- 
ment that " friction consequently does not diminish the capacity 
of bodies for heat," Davy apparently uses the phrase capacity 
for heat in the sense of total heat contained in a body, because 
in a later section of the same essay he definitely gives the phrase 
this meaning, and uses the term " capability of temperature " to 
denote what we now term capacity for beat. 
» The delay in the overthrow of the caloric theory, and in the 
acceptance of the view that heat is a mode of motion, was no 
doubt partly due to some fundamental confusion of ideas in the 
use of the term " capacity for heat " and similar phrases. A 
still greater obstacle lay in the comparative vagueness of the 
motion or vibration theory. Davy speaks of heat as being 
" repulsive motion," and distinguishes it from light, which is 
" projective motion "; though heat is certainly not a substance — 
according to Davy, in the essay under discussion — and may not 
even be treated as an imponderable fluid, light as certainly is a 
material substance, and is capable of forming chemical com- 
pounds with ordinary matter, such as oxygen gas, which is not a 
simple substance, but a compound, termed phosoxygen, of light 
and oxygen. Accepting the conclusions of Davy and Rumford 
that heat is hot a material substance but a mode of motion, 
there still remains the question, what definite conception is to be 
attached to a quantity of heat? What do we mean by a quantity 
of vibratory motion, how is the quantity of motion to be esti- 
mated, and why should it remain invariable in many trans- 
formations? The idea that heat was a " mode of motion " 
was applicable as a qualitative explanation of many of the 
effects of heat, but it lacked the quantitative precision of a 
scientific statement, and could not bt applied to the calculation 
and prediction of definite results. The state of science at the 
time of Rumford's and Davy's experiments did not admit of a 

* In an essay on " Heat, Light, and Combinations of Light," 
repabfished in Sir H. Davy's Collected Works, u. (London. 1836). 



*39 

more exact generalisation. The way was paved in the first 
instance by a more complete study of the laws of gases, to which 
Laplace, Dalton, Gay-Lussac, Dulong and many others contri- 
buted both on the experimental and theoretical side. Although 
the development proceeded simultaneously along many parallel 
lines, it is interesting and instructive to take the investigation 
of the properties of gases, and to endeavour to trace the steps 
by which the true theory was finally attained. 

ro. Thermal Properties of Gases. — The most characteristic 
property of a gaseous or elastic fluid, namely, the elasticity, or 
resistance to compression, was first investigated scientifically 
by Robert Boyle (1662), who showed that the pressure p of a 
given mass of gas varied inversely as the volume v, provided that 
the temperature remained constant. This is generally expressed 
by the formula £r-C, where C is a constant for any given 
temperature, and v is taken to represent the specific volume, or 
the volume of unit mass, of the gas at the given pressure 
and temperature. Boyle was well aware of the effect of heat 
in expanding a gas, but he was unable to investigate this properly 
as no thermometric scale had been defined at that date. Accord- 
ing to Boyle's law, when a .mass of gas is compressed by a small 
amount at constant temperature, the percentage increase of 
pressure is equal to the percentage diminution of volume (if the 
compression is v/xoo, the increase of pressure is very nearly 
p/100) . Adopting this law, Newton showed, by a most ingenious 
piece of reasoning (Principia, ii., sect. 8), that the velocity of 
sound in air should be equal to the velocity acquired by a body 
falling under gravity through a distanae equal to half the height 
of the atmosphere, considered as being of uniform density equal 
to that at the surface of the earth. This gave the result 918 ft. 
per sec. (280 metres per sec.) for the velocity at the freezing 
point. Newton was aware that the actual velocity of sound was 
somewhat greater than this, but supposed that the difference 
might be due in some way to the size of the air particles, of which 
no account could be taken in the calculation. The first accurate 
measurement of the velocity of sound by the French Acadftnie 
des Sciences in 1738 gave the value 332 metres per sec. as the 
velocity at o* C. The true explanation of the discrepancy was 
not discovered till nearly xoo years later. 

The law of expansion of gases with change of temperature was 
investigated by Dalton and Gay-Lussac (1802), who found that 
the volume of a gas under constant pressure increased by i/267th 
part of its volume at o° C. for each i° C. rise in temperature. 
This value was generally assumed in all calculations for nearly 
50 years. More exact researches, especially those of Regnault, 
at a later date, showed that the law was very nearly correct for 
all permanent gases, but that the value of the coefficient should 
be rfard* According to this law the volume of a gas at any 
temperature f C. should be proportional to 273+/, i.e. to the 
temperature reckoned from a zero 273 below that of the 
Centigrade scale, which was called the absolute zero of the gas 
thermometer. If T— 273+f, denotes the temperature measured 
from this zero, the law of expansion of a gas may be combined 
with Boyle's law in the simple formula 



pv-RT. 



(1) 



which is generally taken as the expression of the gaseous laws. 
If equal volumes of different gases are taken at the same tempera- 
ture and pressure, it follows that the constant R is the same for 
all gases. If equal masses are taken, the value of the constant R 
for different gases varies inversely as the molecular weight or as 
the density relative to hydrogen. 

Dalton also investigated the laws of vapours, and of mixtures 
of gases and vapours. He found that condensible vapours 
approximately followed Boyle's law when compressed, until the 
condensation pressure was reached, at which the vapour lique- 
fied without further increase of pressure. He found that when a 
liquid was introduced into a closed space, and allowed to evaporate 
until the space was saturated with the vapour and evaporation 
ceased, the increase of pressure in the space was equal to the 
condensation pressure of the vapour, and did not depend on the 
volume of the space or the presence of any other gas or vapour 



140 



HEAT 



(SPECIFIC HEAT OP CASES 



provided that there was do solution or chemical actio*. He 
showed that the condensation or saturation-pressure of a vapour 
depended only on the temperature, and increased by nearly the 
same fraction of itself per degree rise of temperature, and that 
the pressures of different vapours were nearly the same at equal 
distances from their boiling points. The increase of pressure 
per degree C. at the boiling point was about iVth of 760 mm. or 
27*2 mm., but increased in geometrical progression with rise of 
temperature. These results of Dalton's were confirmed, and in 
part corrected, as regards increase of vapour-pressure, by Gay- 
Lussac, Dulong, Regnault and other investigators, but were found 
to be as close an approximation to the- truth as could be obtained 
with such simple expressions. More accurate, empirical ex- 
pressions for the increase of vapour-pressure of a liquid with 
temperature were soon obtained by Thomas Young, J. P. L. A. 
Roche and others, but the explanation of the relation was not 
arrived at until a much later date (see Vaporization). 

xi. Specific Heals oj Cases. —In order to estimate the quantities 
of heat concerned in experiments with gases, it was necessary 
in the first instance to measure their specific heats, which pre- 
sented formidable difficulties. The earlier attempts by Lavoisier 
and others, employing the ordinary methods of calorimetry, 
gave very uncertain and discordant results, which were not 
regarded with any confidence even by the experimentalists 
themselves. Gay-Lussac (Mtmoires d'Arcueil, 1807) devised 
an ingenious experiment, which, though misinterpreted at the 
time, is very interesting and instructive. With the object of 
comparing the specific heats of different gases, he took two equal 
globes A and B connected by a tube with a stop-cock. The globe 
B was exhausted, the other A being filled with gas. On opening 
the tap between the vessels, the gas flowed from A to B and the 
pressure was rapidly equalized. He observed that the fall of 
temperature in A was nearly equal to the rise of temperature in 
B, and that for the same initial pressure the change of tempera- 
ture was very nearly the same for all the gases he. tried, except 
hydrogen, which showed greater changes of temperature than 
other gases. He concluded from this experiment that equal 
volumes of gases had the same capacity for heat, except hydrogen, 
which he supposed to have a larger capacity, because it showed 
A greater effect. The method does not in reality afford any 
direct information with regard to the specific heats, and the 
conclusion with regard to hydrogen is evidently wrong. At 
A later date (Ann.de Chim., 18 12, 81, p. 08) Gay-Lussac adopted 
A. Crawford's method of mixture, allowing two equal streams 
of different gases, one heated and the other cooled about 20 C, 
to mix in a tube containing a thermometer. The resulting 
temperature was in all cases nearly the mean of the two, from 
which he concluded that equal volumes of all the gases tried, 
namely, hydrogen, carbon dioxide, air, oxygen and nitrogen, 
had the same thermal capacity. This was correct, except as 
regards carbon dioxide, but did not give any information as to 
the actual specific heats referred to water or any known substance. 
About the same time, F. Dclaroche and J. E. Berard (Ann. de 
chim., 1813, 85, p. 72) made direct determinations of the specific 
heats of air, oxygen, hydrogen, carbon.monoxide, carbon dioxide, 
nitrous oxide and ethylene, by passing a stream of gas heated 
to nearly 100 C. through a spiral tube in a calorimeter containing 
water. Their work was a great advance on previous attempts, 
and gave the first trustworthy results. With the exception of 
hydrogen, which presents peculiar difficulties, they found that 
equal volumes of the permanent gases, air, oxygen and carbon 
monoxide, had nearly the same thermal capacity, but that the 
compound condensible gases, carbon dioxide, nitrous oxide 
and ethylene, had larger thermal capacities in the order given. 
They were unable to state whether the specific heats of the gases 
increased or diminished with temperature, but from experiments 
on air at pressures of 740 mm. and 1000 mm., they found the 
specific heats to be '269 and ^245 respectively, and concluded 
that the specific heat diminished with increase of pressure. 
The difference they observed was really due to errors of experi- 
ment, but they regarded it as proving beyond doubt the truth 
of the calorists' contention that the beat disengaged on the 



co m pression of a gas was due to the diminution of its thermal 
capacity. 

Dalton and Others had endeavoured to measure directly the 
rise of temperature produced by the compression ol a gas. 
Dalton had observed a rise of 50° F. in a gas when suddenly com- 
pressed to half its volume, but no thermometers at that time 
were sufficiently sensitive to indicate more than a fraction of 
the change of temperature. Laplace was the first to see in this 
phenomenon the probable explanation of the discrepancy between 
Newton's calculation of the velocity of sound and the observed 
value. The increase of pressure due to a sudden compression, 
in which no heat was allowed to escape, or as we now call it aa 
" adiabatic " compression, would necessarily be greater than the 
increase of pressure in a slow isothermal compression, on account 
of the rise of temperature. As the rapid compressions and 
rarefactions occurring in the propagation of a sound wave were 
perfectly adiabatic, it was necessary to take account of the rise 
of temperature due to compression in calculating the velocity* 
To reconcile the observed and calculated values of the velocity, 
the increase of pressure in adiabatic compression must be 1-410 
times greater than in isothermal compression. This is the ratio 
of the adiabatic elasticity of air to the isothermal elasticity. 
It was a long time, however, before Laplace saw his way to any 
direct experimental verification of the value of thjs ratio. At 
a later date (Ann. de chitn,, 1816, 3, p. 238) he stated that he 
had succeeded in proving that the ratio in question must be the 
same as the ratio of the specific heat of ak at constant pressure 
to the specific heat at constant volume. 

In the method of measuring the specific heat adopted by Dclaroche 
and Berard, the gas under experiment, while passing through a tube 
at practically constant pressure, contracts in cooling, as it gives up 
ita heat to the calorimeter. Part of the heat surrendered to the 
calorimeter is due to the contraction of volume. If a gramme of 
gas at pressure p, volume v and temperature T abs. is heated 1* C 
at constant pressure p, it absorbs a quantity of heat S—238 calorie 
(according to Regnault) the specific heat at constant pressure. At 
the same time the gas expands by a fraction l/T of v, which b the 
same as 1/273 of it* volume at o* C. If now the air is suddenly 
compressed by an amount v/T, It will be restored to its original 
volume, and its temperature will be raised by the liberation of a 
quantity of heat R\ the latent heat of expansion for an increase of 
volume o/T. If no heat has been allowed to escape, the air will now 
be in the same state as if a quantity of heat S had been communicated 
to it at its original volume * without expansion. The rise of tempera- 
ture above the original temperature T will be S/< degrees, where 1 
is the specific heat at constant volume, which is obviously equal to 
S-R'. Since p/T is the increase of pressure fori* C. rise of tempera- 
ture at constant volume, the increase of pressure for a rise of Sfs 
degrees will be yp/T, where «v is the ratio 5/s. But this is the rise 
of pressure produced by a sudden compression v/T, and is seen to be 
y times the rise of pressure pfT produced by the same compression 
at constant temperature. The ratio of the adiabatic to the iso- 
thermal elasticity, required for calculating the velocity of sound, is 
therefore the same as t he rat io of the specific heat at constant pressure 
to that at constant volume. 

12. Experimental Verification of the Ratio cf Specific Heals.— Thh 
was a most interesting and important theoretical relation to dis- 
cover, but unfortunately it did not help much in the determination 
of the ratio required, because it was not practically, possible at that 
time to measure the specific heat of air at constant volume in a 
closed vessel. Attempts had been made to do this, but they had 
signally failed, on account of the small heat capacity of the gas as 
compared with the containing vessel. Laplace endeavoured to 
extract some confirmation of his views from the values given by 
Delaroche and Berard for the specific heat of air at 1000 and 74° 
mm. pressure. On the assumption that the quantities of heat con- 
tained in a given mass of air increased in duvet proportion to its 
volume when heated at constant pressure, he deduced, by some rather 
obscure reasoning, that the ratio of the specific heats Sand s should 
be about i«* to 1, which he regarded as a fairly satisfactory agree- 
ment with the value y 1*41 deduced from the velocity of sound. 

The ratio of the specific heats could not be directly measured, 
but a few years later, Clement and De'sormes (Journ. de Pkys., Nov. 
1819) succeeded in making a direct measurement of the ratio of 
the elasticities in a very simple manner. They took a large globe 
containing air at atmospheric pressure and temperature, and re- 
moved a small quantity of air. They then observed the defect of 
Pressure fa when the air had regained its original temperature. 
iy suddenly opening the globe, and immediately closing it, the 
pressure was restored almost instantaneously to the atmospheric, 
the rise of pressure p% corresponding to the sudden compression 
\ produced. The air, having been heated by the compression, was 



GARNOTS AXIOM} HEAT 

aOmd to regain its origuial temperature^ tr*tap remaining closed, 

■o- 
i is 
he 

l Xr 

sn- 
m- 
«n 
he 
;he 
he 
«ac 
ire 
to 
m. 
ra- 
he 
ed 
of 

mart vary as p\ according to the caloric theory. The specific 

i 
heat per unit mass must then vary as p* * which he found agreed 
precisely with the experiment of Deiaroche and B6rard already cited. 
This was undoubtedly a strong confirmation of the caloric theory. 
Foisson by the same assumptions (Ann. de chim., 1823, 23, p 337) 
obtained the same results, and also showed that the relation between 
the pressure and the volume of a gas in adiabatk compression or 
expansion must be of the form pt y » constant. 

P. L. Dulong (Ann. de chtm., 18.0, 41, p. 156), adopting a method 
due to E. F. F. Chladni, compared the velocities of sound in different 
gases by observing the pitch of the note given by the same tube 
when fified with the gases in question. He thus obtained the values 
of the ratios of the elasticities or of the specific heats for the gases 
employed. For oxygen, hydrogen and carbonic oxide, these ratios 
were the same as for air. But Tor carbonic acid, nitrous oxide and 
oTefiant gas, the values were much smaller, showing that these gases 
experienced a smaller change of temperature in compression. On 
comparing his results with the values of the specific beats for the 
same gases found by Deiaroche and Bcrard, Dulong observed that 
the changes of temperature for the same compression were in the 
inverse ratio of the specific heats at constant volume, and deduced 
the important conclusion that " Equal volumes of all gases under 
the same conditions evolve on compression the same quantity of heat.'* 
This is equivalent to the statement that the difference of the specific 
heats, or the latent heat of expansion R' per i", is the same lor all 
gases if equal volumes are taken. Assuming the ratio 7"* 1*410, 
and taking Deiaroche and Berard's value for the specific heat of air 
at constant pressure S-=*267, we have »«S/i*4i --189, and the 
difference of the specific heats per unit mass of air S— s =»R' — *078. 
Adopting Rcgnault's value of the specific heat of air. namely, S - -238, 
we should have S— s = -o6g This quantity represents the heat 
absorbed by unit mass of air m expanding at constant ' 'ire 

T by a fraction i/T of its volume p. or by *W ird of its > C. 

If, instead of taking unit mass, wc take a volume v •■ res 

at o° C. and 760 mm. being the volume of the molecul of 

the gas in grammes, the qoantity of heat evolved by a on 

equal to vfT will be approximately 2 calorics, and is 1 r or 

all gases. The work done in this compression is PvfT - 1 Iso 

the same for all gases, namely, 8*3 joules. Dulong's 1 .at 

result,, therefore, shows that the heat evolved in the co of 

a gas is proportional to the work done. This result ha ;lv 

been deduced theoretically by Camot (1824). At a .aivi *«■•.<= it 
was assumed by Mayer, Clausius and others, on the evidence of these 
experiments, that the heat evolved was not merely proportional 
to the work done, but was equivalent to it. The further experimental 
evidence required to justify this assumption was first supplied by 
Joule. 

Latent heat of expansion R'« -069 calorie per gramme of air, 

peri°C. 
-20 calories per gramme-molecule 

of any gas. 
Work done in expansion R -» -287^ joule per gramme of air per 

—8*3 joules per gramme-molecule 
of any gas. 



13. Camot: On the MotHc Power of Heat— A practical and 
theoretical question of the greatest importance was first answered 
by Sadi Carnot about this time in his Reflections on the Motive 
Power of Heat (1824). How much motive power (defined by 
Carnot as weight lifted through a certain height) can be obtained 
from heat alone by means of an engine repeating a regular success 



»4* 

sion or " cycle " of operations continuously ? Is the efficiency 
limited, and, if so, how is it limited ? Are other agents preferable 
to steam for developing motive power from heat ? In discussing 
this problem, we cannot do better than follow Carnot 's reasoning 
which, in its main features, could hardly be improved at the 
present day. 

Carnot points out that in order to obtain an answer to this 
question, it is necessary to consider the essential conditions of 
the process, apart from the mechanism of the engine and the 
working substance or agent employed. Work cannot be said 
to be produced/roffi heat alone unless nothing but beat is supplied, 
and the working substance and all parts of the engine are at 
the end of the process in precisely the same state as at the 
beginning.- 

Carnot' s Axiom.— Carnot here, and throughout bis reasoning, 
makes a fundamental assumption, which he states as follows: 
" When a body has undergone any changes and after a certain 
number of transformations is brought back identically to its 
original state, considered relatively to density, temperature 
and mode of aggregation, it must contain the same quantity 
of heat as it contained originally."* 

Heat, according to Carnot, in the type of engine we are con- 
sidering, can evidently be a cause of motive power only by virtue 
of changes of volume or form produced by alternate beating and 
cooling. This involves the existence of cold and hot bodies to 
act as boiler and condenser, or source and sink of heat, respec- 
tively. Wherever there exists a difference of temperature, it 
is possible to have the production of motive power from heat; 
and conversely, production of motive power, from heat alone, 
is impossible without difference of temperature. In other words 
the production of motive power from heat is not merely a question 
of the consumption of heat, but always requires transference 
of heat from hot to cold. What then are the conditions which 
enable the difference of temperature to be most advantageously 
employed in the production of motive power, and how much 
motive power can be obtained with a given difference of tempera- 
ture from a given quantity of heat? 

Carnot's Rule for Maximum Effect.— la order to realize the 
maximum effect, it is necessary that, in the process employed, 
there should not be any direct interchange of heat between 
bodies at different temperatures. Direct transference of heat 
by conduction or radiation between bodies at different tempera- 
tures is equivalent to wasting a difference of temperature which 
might have been utilized to produce motive power. The working 
substance must throughout every stage of the process be in 
equilibrium with itself (i.e. at uniform temperature and pressure) 
and also with external bodies, such as the boiler and condenser, 
at such times as it is put in communication with them. In the 
actual engine there is always some interchange of heat between 
the steam and the cylinder, and some loss of heat to external 
bodies. There may also be some diOercnce of temperature 
between the boiler steam and the cylinder on admission, or 
between the waste steam and the Condenser at release. These 
differences represent losses of efficiency which may be reduced 
indefinitely, at least in imagination, by suitable means, and 
designers had even at that date been very successful in reducing 

1 For instance a mass of compressed air, if allowed to expand in a 
cylinder at the ordinary temperature, will do work, and will at the 
same time absorb a quantity of beat which, as we now know, is the 
thermal equivalent of the work done. But this work cannot be said 
to have been produced solely from the heat absorbed in the process, 
because the air at the end of the process is in a changed condition, 
and could not be restored to its original state at the same temperature 
without having work done upon it precisely equal to that obtained 
by its expansion. The process could not be repeated indefinitely 
without a continual supply of compressed air. The source of the 
work in this case is work previously done in compressing the air, 
and no part of the work is really generated at the expense of heat 
alone, unless the compression is effected at a lower temperature than 
the expansion 

• Clausius (Pogg Ann. 79, p. 369) and others have misinterpreted 
this assumption, and have taken it to mean that the quantity of heat 
required to produce any given change of state is independent of the 
manner in which the change is effected, which Carnot does not here 
assume. 



I + 2 



HEAT 



ICARNOTS PRINCIPLE 



9"~ 



h 



them. All such losses are supposed to be absent in deducing the 
ideal limit of efficiency, beyond which it would be impossible 
to go. 

14. Car mat's Description of his Ideal Cycle. — Carnot first gives 
a rough illustration of an incomplete cycle, using steam much in 
the same way as it is employed in an ordinary steam-engine. 
After expansion down to condenser pressure the steam is 
completely condensed to water, and is then returned as cold water 
to the hot boiler. He points out that the last step does not 
conform exactly to the condition he laid down, because although 
the water is restored to its initial state, there is direct passage of 
heat from a hot body to a cold body in the last process. He 
points out that this difficulty might be overcome by supposing 
the difference of temperature small, and by employing a series 
of engines, each working through a small range, to cover a finite 
interval of temperature. Having established the general notions 
of a perfect cycle, he proceeds to give a more exact illustration, 
employing a gas as the working substance. He takes as the 
basis of his demonstration the well-established experimental 
fact that a gas is heated by rapid compression and cooled by 
rapid expansion, and that if compressed or expanded slowly in 
contact with conducting bodies, the gas will give out heat in 
compression or absorb beat in expansion while its temperature 
remains constant. He then goes on to say: — 

" This preliminary notion being settled, let us imagine an elastic 
fluid, atmospheric air for example, enclosed in a cylinder abed, fig. 4, 
fitted with a movable diaphragm or piston cd. Let there also be 
two bodies A, B, each maintained at a 
constant temperature, that of A being 
more elevated than that of B. Let us now 
suppose the following series of operations 
to be performed : 

" i. Contact of the body A with the air 
contained in the 6pacc abed, or with the 
bottom of the cylinder, which we will 
suppose to transmit heat easily. The air is 
now at the temperature of the body A, and 
cd is the actual position of the piston. 

" 2. The piston is gradually raised, and 
takes the position ef. The air remains in 
contact with the body A, and is thereby 
maintained at a constant temperature during 
the expansion. The body A furnishes the 
heat necessary to maintain the constancy 
of temperature. 

" 3. The body A is removed, and the air 
no longer being in contact with any body 
capable of giving it heat, the piston con- 
tinues nevertheless to rise, and passes from 
the position ef to gh. The air expands 
without receiving heat and its temperature 
falls. Let us imagine that it falls until it 
is just equal to that of the body B. At 
this moment the piston is stopped and 
occupies the position gh. 

* f 4. The air is placed in contact with the 
body B: it is compressed by the return of 
the piston, which is brought from the position gh to the position cd. 
The air remains meanwhue at a constant temperature, because of its 
contact with the body B to which it gives up its heat. 

" 5. The body B is removed^ and the compression of the air is 
continued. The air being now isolated, rises in temperature. The 
compression is continued until the air has acquired the temperature 
of the body A. The piston passes meanwhile from the position cd 
to the position ih. 

" 6. The air is replaced m contact with the body A, and the 
piston returns from the position ik to the position ef, the temperature 
remaining invariable. 

" 7. The period described under (3) is repeated, then successively 
the periods (7), (5), (6) ; (3), (4). (5). (6) : (3M4). (5). (6) s and so on. 
" During these operations the air enclosed in the cylinder exerts 
an effort more or less great on the piston. The pressure of the air 
varies both on account of changes of volume and on account of changes 
of temperature; but it should be observed that for equal volumes, 
that is to say, for like positions of the piston, the temperature is 
higher during the dilatation than during the compression. Since the 
pressure is greater during the expansion, the quantity of motive 
power produced by the dilatation 19 greater than that consumed by 
the compression. We shall thus obtain a balance of motive power, 
which may be employed for any purpose. The air has served as 
working substance in a heat-engine; it has also been employed in 
the most advantageous manner possible, since no useless re-establish- 
ment of the equilibrium of heat has been allowed to occur. 



Fio. 4. 
Carnot 's Cylinder. 



" AN the operations t y be executed in the 

reverse order and direct e that after the sixth 

period, that is to say, wl eaehed the position ef, 

we make it return to the it at the smme time we 

keep the air in contact A; the heat furnished 

by this body during the urn to its source, that. 

is, to the body A, and ev t was at the end of the 

fifth period. If now we re d if we make the piston 

move from ihtocd, the t ir will decrease by just 

as many degrees as it ii fifth period, and win 

become that of the body ly continue in this way 

a series of operations the « i which were previously 

described , it suffices to p ime circumstances and 

to execute for each pera xpansion in place of a 

movement of compression, and vice versa. 

" The result of the first series of operations was the production 
of a certain quantity of motive power, and the transport ot heat from 
the body A to the body B ; the result of the reverse operations is the 
consumption of the motive power produced in the first case, and the 
return of heat from the body B to the body A, in such sort that these 
two series of operations annul and neutralize each other. 

" The impossibility of producing by the agency of heat alone a 
quantity of motive power greater than that which we have obtained 
in our first series 01 operations is now easy to prove. It is demon- 
strated by reasoning exactly similar to that which we have already 
given. The reasoning will have in this case a greater degree of 
exactitude; the air of which we made use to develop the motive 
power is brought back at the end of each cycle of operations precisely 
to its initial state, whereas this was not quite exactly the case for the 
vapour of water, as we have already remarked." 

15. Proof of Cornel's Principle. — Carnot considered the proof 
too obvious to be worth repeating, but, unfortunately, his 
previous demonstration, referring to an incomplete cycle, is not 
so exactly worded that exception cannot be taken to it. We 
will therefore repeat his proof in a slightly more definite and 
exact form. Suppose that a reversible engine R, working in 
the cycle above described, takes a quantity of heat H from the 
source in each cycle, and performs a quantity of useful work W r . 
If it were possible for any other engine S, working with the same 
two bodies A and B as source and refrigerator, to perform a 
greater amount of useful work W, per cycle for the same quantity 
of heat H taken from the source, it would suffice to take a portion 
W P of this motive power (since W. is by hypothesis greater than 
W r ) to drive the engine R backwards, and return a quantity of 
heat H to the source in each cycle. The process might be re- 
peated indefinitely, and we should obtain at each repetition a 
balance of useful work W.-Wr, without taking any heat from the 
source, which is contrary to experience. Whether the quantity 
of heat taken from the condenser by R is equal to that given to 
the condenser by S is immaterial. The hot body A might be a 
comparatively small boiler, since no heat is taken from it. The 
cold body B might be the ocean, or the whole earth. We might 
thus obtain without any consumption of fuel a practically 
unlimited supply of motive power. Which is absurd. 

Carnot' s Statement of his Principle. 1 — If the above reasoning 
be admitted, we must conclude with Carnot that the motive 
power obtainable from heat is independent of the agents employed 
to realize it. The efficiency is fixed solely by the temperatures of the 
bodies between which, in the last resort, the transfer of heal is 
ejected. " We must understand here that each of the methods 
of developing motive power attains the perfection of which it 
is susceptible. This condition is fulfilled if, according to our rule, 
there is produced in the body no change of temperature that is 
not due to change of volume, or in other words, if there is no 
direct interchange of heat between bodies of sensibly different 
temperatures." 

It is characteristic of a state of frictionless mechanical equili- 
brium that an indefinitely small difference of pressure suffices 
to upset the equilibrium and reverse the motion. Similarly in 
thermal equilibrium between bodies at the same temperature, 
an indefinitely small difference of temperature suffices to reverse 
the transfer of heat. Carnot's rule is therefore the criterion of 
the reversibility of a cycle of operations as regards transfer 
of beat It is assumed that the ideal engine is mechanically 

1 Carnot's description of his cycle and statement of his principle 
have been given as nearly as possible in his own words, because some 
injustice has been done him by erroneous descxiptionsaxid statements. 



CAMiOrS FUNCTION) 



HEAT 



H3 



reversible, that there Is not, for instance, any communication 
between reservoirs of gaaor vapour at sensibly different pressures, 
and that there is no waste of power in friction. If there is 
equilibrium both mechanical and thermal at every stage of the 
cycle, the ideal engine will be perfectly reversible. That is to say, 
all its operations will be exactly reversed as regards transfer of 
beat and work, when the operations are performed in the reverse 
order and direction. On this understanding Carnot's principle 
may be put in a different way, which is often adopted, but is really 
only the same thing put in different words: The efficiency of a 
fcrfetfty reversible engine is the maximum possible, and is a 
function solely of the limits of temperature between which it works. 
This result depends essentially on the existence of a stale of 
thermal equilibrium defined by equality of temperature, and 
independent, in the majority of cases, of the state of a body in 
other respects. In order to apply the principle to the calculation 
and prediction of results, it is sufficient to determine the manner 
in which the efficiency depends on the temperature for one 
particular case, since the efficiency must be the same for all 
reversible engines. 

16. Experimental Verification of Carnot's Principle. — Carnot en- 
deavoured to test his result by the following simple calculations. 
Suppose that we have a cylinder fitted with a frictionlcsa piston, 
containing 1 gram of water at 100 ° C, and that the pressure of the 
steam, namely 760 mm., is in equilibrium with the external pressure 
on the piston at this temperature. Place the cylinder in connexion 
with a boiler or hot body at 101 * C. The water will then acquire 
the temperature of 101 ° C, and will absorb 1 gram-calorie of heat. 
Some waste of motive powei occurs here because heat is allowed to 
pass from one body to another at a different temperature, but the 
waste in this case is so small as to be immaterial. Keep the cylinder 
in contact with the hot body at 101* C. and allow the piston to rise. 
It may be made to perform useful work as the pressure is now 27 7 
mm. (or 37*7 grams per sq. cm.) in excess of the external pressure. 
Continue the process till all the water is converted into steam. 
The heat absorbed from the hot body will be nearly 540 gram- 
calories, the latent heat of steam at this temperature. The increase 
of volume will be approximately 1620 c.c, the volume of 1 gram of 
■team at this pressure and temperature. The work done by the 
excess pressure will be 377 X 1620-61,000 gram-centimetres or 
0-61 of a kilogrammetre. Remove the hot body, and allow the 
steam to expand further till its pressure is 760 mm. and its tempera- 
ture has fallen to 100 s C. The work which might be done in this 
expansion is less than rtWh part of a kilogrammetre, and may be 
neglected for the present purpose. Place the cylinder in contact 
with the cold body at loo* C, and allow the steam to condense at 
this temperature. No work is done on the piston, because there is 
equilibrium of pressure, but a quantity of heat equal to the latent 
heat of steam at too* C. is given to the cold body. The water is 
now in its initial condition, and the result of the process has been to 
gain 0-61 of a kilogrammetre of work by allowing 540 eram-calorics 
of heat to pass from a body at 101 * C. to a body at ioo*C. by means 
of an ideally simple steam-engine. The work obtainable in this 
way from 1000 gram-calories of htat. or 1 kilo-calorie, would evidently 
be 1*13 kilogrammetre (-061XVW >• 

Taking the same range of temperature, namely 101* to too* C, 
we may perform a similar series of operations with air in the cylinder, 
instead of water and steam. Suppose the cylinder to contain 1 

framme of air at ioo° C. and 760 mm. pressure instead of water, 
'omprcss it without loss of heat (adiabatically), so as to raise its 
temperature to 101* C. Place it in contact with the hot body at 
101 C, and allow it to expand at this temperature, absorbing neat 
from the hot body, until its volume is increased by r^jth part (the 
expansion per degree at constant pressure). The quantity of heat 
absorbed in this expansion, as explained in 1 14, will be the difference 
of the specific heats or the latent heat of expansion R' - -069 calorie 
Remove the hot body, and allow the gas to expand further without 
gain of heat till its temperature falls to 100' C. Compress it at 
100* C. to its original volume, abstracting the heat of compression by 
contact with the cold body at 100 ° C. The air is now in its original 
state, and the process has been carried out in strict accordance with 
Carnot's rule. The quantity of external work done in the cycle 
is easily obtained by the aid of the indicator diagram ABCD (fig 5), 
which is approximately a parallelogram in this instance. The area 
of the diagram is equal to that of the rectangle BEHG. being the 
product 01 the vertical height BE. namely, the increase of pressure 
per 1° at constant volume^ by the increase of volume BG, which is 
nm., or 2-83 c.c. The increase 
which is equivalent to 2-76 



k»ci a «i vuii>i«iii wiwiiiv, uy iwvr uiticiatr ui vwiumv u\J, wiiu.ii is 

i lirdof the volume at o° C and 760 mm., or 2*83 c.c. The increase 

of pressure BE is 14 f, or 2-03 mm., which is equivalent to 2-76 

per sq. cm. The work done in the cycle is 2 76X2-83 - 7-82 



gin. cm., or -0782 gram-metre. The heat absorbed at 101 ° C was 
•069 gram-calorie, so that the work obtained is -0782/069 or 1 13 
gram-metre per gram-calorie, or 1-13 kilogrammetre per kilogram- 
calorie. This result is precisely the same as that obtained by using 



steam with the same range of temperature, but a very different kind 
of cycle. Carnot in making the same calculation did not obtain quite 
so good an agreement, because the experimental data at that time 
available were not so accurate. He used the value T ly for the 
coefficient of expansion, and -267 for the specific heat of air. More- 
over, he did not feci justified in assuming, as above, that the difference 
of the specific heats was the 
same at 100* C. as at the 
ordinary temperature of 
1 5 to 20* C, at which it had 
been experimentally deter- 
mined. # He made similar 
calculations for the vapour 
of alcohol, which differed 
•lightly from the vapour of 
water. But the agreement 
he found was close enough 
to satisfy him that his theor- 
etical deductions were cor- 
rect, and that the resulting 
ratio of work to heat should 
be the same for all substances 
at the same temperature. 
17. Carnot's Function. 



B^. .O 



Variation of Efficiency vrilh 
Temfmature.--py means of 



AXIS OF VOLUME 
FlG. 5. — Elementary Carnot Cycle 
for Gas. 



calculations, similar to those given above, Carnot endeavoured 
to ' " "' I of motive power obtainable from one unit of 

he all at various temperatures with various sub- 

sti lue found above, namely 1-13 kilogrammetre 

pc 1 ° fall, is the value of the efficiency per 1 * fall at 

10 able to show that the efficiency per degree fall 

pr d with rise of temperature, but the experimental 

da vere too inconsistent to suggest the true relation. 

Hi ytical expression of his principle that the efficiency 

W engine taking in heat H at a temperature *° C, 

an at the temperature o° C, must be some function 

F/ ire /, which would be the same for all substances. 

Tl degree fall at a temperature / he represented by 

F' ction of Ft The function F't would be the same 

foi t the same temperature, but would have different 

va temperatures. In terms of this function, which 

is gi-nvidiiy Riiuwn as (farnot's function, the results obtained in the 
previous section might be expressed as follows: — 

" The increase of volume of a mixture of liquid and vapour per 
unit-mass vaporized at any temperature, multiplied by the increase 
of vapour- pressure per degree, is equal to the product of the function 
F't by the latent heat of vaporization. 

"The difference of the specific heats, or the latent heat of ex- 
pansion for any substance multiplied by the function F'l, is equal 
to the product of the expansion per degree at constant pressure by 
the increase of pressure per degree at constant volume." 

Since the last two coefficients are the same for all gases if equal 
volumes are taken, Carnot concluded that : M The difference of the 
specific heats at constant pressure and volume is the same for equal 
volumes of all gases at the same temperature and pressure." 

Taking the expression W-RT log jr for the whole work done by a 
gas obeying the gaseous laws pp- RT in expanding at a temperature 
T from a volume 1 (unity) to a volume r, or for a ratio of expansion 
r, and putting W - R log j for the work done in a cycle of range 1*, 
Carnot obtained the expression for the heat absorbed by a gas in 
isothermal expansion 

H-RlogWF'f . . . . (2) 
He gives several important deductions which follow from this formula, 
which is the analytical expression of the experimental result already 
quoted as having been discovered subsequently by Dulong. Employ- 
ing the above expression for the latent heat of expansion. Carnot 
deduced a general expression for the specific heat of a gas at constant 
volume on the basis of the caloric theory. He showed that if the 
specific heat was independent of the temperature (the hypothesis 
already adopted by Laplace and Poisson) the function F'l must be 
of the form 

F7-R/C(/+«.) . . .. . (3) 
where C and U are unknown constants. A similar result follows 
from his expression for the difference of the speci6c h*ats. If this is 
assumed to oe constant and equal to C, the expression lor F't becomes 
R/CT, which is the same as the above if fc-273. Assuming the 
specific heat to be also independent of the volume, he shows that the 
function F7 should be constant. But this assumption is inconsistent 
with the caloric theory of latent heat of expansion, which requires 
the specific heat to be a function of the volume. It appears in fact 
impossible to reconcile Carnot's principle with the caloric theory 
on any simple assumptions. As Carnot remarks* "The main Drift- 
c'.ples on which the theory of heat rests require most careful examina- 
tion. Many experimental facts appear almost inexplicable in the 
present state of this theory " 

Camot's work was subsequently put in a more complete 
analytical form by B. P. £. Clapeyroo Uourn. dcVtc. pdyltchn., 



144 



HEAT 



[MECHANICAL THEORY OF HEAT 



Paris, 1832, 14, p. 153), who also made use of Watt's indicator 
diagram for the first time in discussing physical problems. 
Clapeyron gave the general expressions for the latent heat of a 
vapour, and for the latent heat of isothermal expansion of any 
substance, in terms of Carnot's function, employing the notation 
of the calculus. The expressions he gave are the same in form as 
those in use at the present day. He also gave the general 
expression for Carnot's function, and endeavoured to find its 
variation with temperature; but having no better data, he 
succeeded no better than Caraot. Unfortunately, in describing 
Carnot's cycle, he assumed the caloric theory of heat, and made 
some unnecessary mistakes, which Carnot (who, we now know, 
was a believer in the mechanical theory) had been very careful 
to avoid. Clapeyron directs one to compress the gas at the lower 
temperature in contact with the body B until the heat disengaged 
is equal to that which has been absorbed at the higher temperature. 1 
He assumes that the gas at this point contains the same quantity 
of heat as it contained in its original state at the higher tempera- 
ture, and that, when the body B is removed, the gas will be 
restored to its original temperature, when compressed to its 
initial volume. This mistake is still attributed to Carnot, and 
regarded as a fatal objection to his reasoning by nearly all 
writers at the present day. 

18. Mechanical Theory of Heat. — Accordingto the caloric theory, 
the heat absorbed in the expansion of a gas became latent, 
like the latent heat of vaporization of a liquid, but remained 
in the gas and was again evolved on compressing the gas. This 
theory gave no explanation of the source of the motive power 
produced by expansion. The mechanical theory had explained 
the production of heat by friction as being due to transformation 
of visible motion into a brisk agitation of the ultimate molecules, 
tout it had not so far given any definite explanation of the con- 
Verse production of motive power at the expense of heat. The 
theory could not be regarded as complete until it bad been 
shown that in the production of work from heat,. a certain 
quantity of heat disappeared, and ceased to exist as heat; and 
that this quantity was the same as that which could be generated 
by the expenditure of the work produced. The earliest complete 
statement of the mechanical theory from this point of view 
is contained in some notes written by Carnot, about 1830, but 
published by his brother (Life of Sadi Carnot, Paris-, 1878). 
Taking the difference of the specific heats to be -078, he estimated 
the mechanical equivalent at 370 kilograrametres. But he 
fully recognized that there were no experimental data at that 
time available for a quantitative test of the theory, although 
it appeared to afford a good qualitative explanation of the 
phenomena. He therefore planned a number of crucial experi- 
ments such as the "porous plug" experiment, to test the 
equivalence of heat and motive power. His early death in 1836 
put a stop to these experiments, but many of them have since 
been independently carried out by other observers. 

The most obvious case of the production of work from heat 
is in the expansion of a gas or vapour, which served in the first 
instance as a means of calculating the ratio of equivalence, on 
the assumption that all the heat which disappeared had been 
transformed into work and had not merely become latent. 
Marc Seguin, in* his De V influence des chemins de fer (Paris, 
1830), made a rough estimate in this manner of the mechanical 
equivalent of heat, assuming that the loss of heat represented 
by the fall of temperature of steam on expanding was equivalent 
to the mechanical effect produced by the expansion. He also 
remarks (be. cit. p. 382) that it was absurd to suppose that " a 
finite quantity of heat could produce ah indefinite quantity of 
mechanical action, and that it was more natural to assume 
that a certain quantity of heat disappeared in the very act of 
producing motive power." J. R. Mayer (Liebig's AnnaUn, 
1842, 42, p. 233) stated the equivalence of heat and work more 

1 It was for this reason that Professor W. Thomson (Lord Kelvin) 
6tated (Phil. Mag., 1852, 4) that " Carnot's original demonstration 
utterly fails," and that he introduced the " corrections " attributed 
to James Thomson and Clerk Maxwell respectively. In reality 
Carnot's original demonstration requires no correction. 



definitely, deducing it from the old principle, causa aequo* 
ejfectunu Assuming that the sinking of a mercury column by 
which a gas was compressed was equivalent to the heat set free 
by the compression, he deduced that the warming of a kilo- 
gramme of water i° C. would correspond to the fail of a weight 
of one kilogramme from a height of about 365 metres. But 
Mayer did not adduce any fresh experimental evidence, and 
made no attempt to apply his theory to the fundamental 
equations of thermodynamics. It has since been urged that the 
experiment of Gay-Lussac (1807), on the expansion of gas from 
one globe to another (see above, fin), was sufficient justification 
for the assumption tacitly involved in Mayer's calculation. 
But Joule was the first to supply the correct interpretation of 
this experiment, and to repeat it on an adequate scale with suit- 
able precautions. Joule was also the first to measure directly 
the amount of heat liberated by the compression of a gas, and to 
prove that heat was not merely rendered latent, but disappeared 
altogether as heat, when a gas did work in expansion. 

19. Joule's Determinations of the Mechanical Equivalent. — The 
honour of placing the mechanical theory of heat on a sound 
experimental basis belongs almost exclusively to J. P. Joule, 
who showed by direct experiment that in all the most important 
cases in which heat was generated by the expenditure of 
mechanical work, or mechanical work was produced at the 
expense of heat, there was a constant ratio of equivalence 
between the heat generated and the work expended and vice 
versa. His first experiments were on the relation of the chemical 
and electric energy expended to the heat produced in metallic 
conductors and voltaic and electrolytic cells; these experiment* 
were described in a series of papers published in the Phil. Mag., 
1840-1843. He first proved the relation, known as Joule's 
law, that the heat produced in a conductor of resistance R by 
a current C is proportional to OR per second. He went on to 
show that the total heat produced in any voltaic circuit was 
proportional to the electromotive force E of the battery and 
to the number of equivalents electrolysed in it. Faraday had 
shown that electromotive force depends on chemical affinity. 
Joule measured the corresponding heats of combustion, and 
showed that the electromotive force corresponding to a chemical 
reaction is proportional to the heat of combustion of the electro- 
chemical equivalent. He also measured the E.M.F. required 
to decompose water, and showed that when part of the electric 
energy EC is thus expended in a voltameter, the heat generated 
is less than the heat of combustion corresponding to EC by a 
quantity representing the heat of combustion of the decomposed 
gases. His papers so far had been concerned with the relations 
between electrical energy, chemical energy and heat which 
he showed to be mutually equivalent. The first paper in which 
he discussed the relation of heat to mechanical power was entitled 
" On the Calorific Effects of Magnet o-Electridty; and on the 
Mechanical Value of Heat" (Brit. Assoc., 1843; Phil. Mag., 
23, p. 263). In this paper he showed that the heat produced 
by currents generated by magneto-electric induction followed 
the same law as voltaic currents. By a simple and ingenious 
arrangement he succeeded in measuring the mechanical power 
expended in producing the currents, and deduced the mechanical 
equivalent of heat and of electrical energy. The amount of 
mechanical work required to raise 1 lb of water i* F. (1 
B.Th.U.), as found by this method, was 838 foot-pounds. In 
a note added to the paper he states that he found the value 
770 foot-pounds by the more direct method of forcing water 
through fine tubes. In a paper " On the Changes of Tempera- 
ture produced by the Rarefaction and Condensation of Air " ( Phil. 
Mag., May 1845), he made the first direct measurements of 
the quantity of heat disengaged by compressing air, and also 
.of the heat absorbed when the air was allowed to expand against 
atmospheric pressure; as the result he deduced the value 798 
foot-pounds for the mechanical equivalent of 1 B.Th.U. He also 
showed that there was no appreciable absorption of heat when 
air was allowed to expand in such a manner as not to develop 
mechanical power, and he pointed out that the mechanical 
equivalent of heat could not be satisfactorily deduced from 



JOULE'S DETERMINATIONS) 



HEAT 



145 



the relations of the specific heats, because the knowledge of 
the specific beats of gases at that time was of so uncertain a 
character. He attributed most weight to his later determina- 
tions of the mechanical equivalent made by the direct method 
of friction of liquids. He showed that the results obtained with 
different liquids, water, mercury and sperm oil, were the same, 
namely, 782 foot-pounds; and finally repeating the method with 
water, using all the precautions and improvements which his ex- 
perience had suggested, he obtained the value 772 foot-pounds, 
which was accepted universally for many years, and has only 
recently required alteration on account of the more eaact defini- 
tion of the heat unit, and the standard scale of temperature (see 
Calorimet*y). The great value of Joule's work for the general 
establishment of the principle of the conservation of energy 
lay in the variety and completeness of the experimental' evidence 
he adduced. It was not sufficient to find the relation between 
beat and mechanical work or other forms of energy in one 
particular case. It was necessary to show that the same relation 
held in all cases which could be examined experimentally, and 
that the ratio of equivalence of the different forms of energy, 
measured in different ways, was independent of the manner in 
which the conversion was effected and of the material or working 
substance employed. 

As the result of Joule's experiments, we are justified in con- 
cluding that beat is a form of energy, and that all its transforma- 
tions are subject to the general principle of the conservation 
of energy. As applied to beat, the principle is called the first 
law of thermo-dynamics, and may be stated as follows: 
When heat is transformed into any other hind of energy, or nee 
versa, the Mai quantity of energy remains invariable; that is to 
say, the quantity of heat which disappears is equivalent to the 
quantity of the other hind of energy produced and vice versa. 

The number of units of mechanical work equivalent to one unit 
of heat is generally called the mechanical equivalent of heat, or 
Joule's equivalent, and is denoted by the letter J. Its numerical 
value depends on the units employed for heat and mechanical 
energy respectively. The values of the equivalent in terms of 
the units most commonly employed at the present time are as 
follows:— 

777 foot-pounds (Lat. 45*)are equivalent to 1 B. Th. U.flbdeg.Fahr.) 
1399 foot-pounds „ „ ,. lib deg. C. 

aSo-j kilogrammetres „ „ 1 kilogranvdeg.C. or kilo- 

calorie. 
426*3 gramraetres „ M I gram-dog. Cor calorie. 

4180 joules „ .. 1 gram-deg. Cor calorie. 

The water for the heat units is supposed to be taken at 20 C. 
or 68° F., and the degree of temperature is supposed to be 
measured by the hydrogen thermometer. The acceleration of 
gravity in latitude 45 is taken as 080-7 C.G.S. For details of 
more recent and accurate methods of determination, the reader 
should refer to the article Calowmetry, where tables of the 
variation of the specific heat of water with temperature are also 
given. 

The second law of thermodynamics is a title often used to 
denote Carnot's principle or some equivalent mathematical 
expression. In some cases this title is not conferred on Carnot's 
principle itself, but on some axiom from which the principle 
may be indirectly deduced. , These axioms, however, cannot 
as a rule be directly applied, so that it would appear preferable 
to take Carnot's principle itself as the second law. It may be 
observed that, as a matter of history, Carnot's principle was 
established and generally admitted before the principle of the 
conservation of energy as applied to heat, and that from this point 
of view the titles, first and second laws, are not particularly 
appropriate. 

20. Combination" of Carnot's Principle with the Mechanical 
Theory. — A very instructive paper, as showing the state of the 
science of heat about this time, is that of C H. A. Hohzmann, 
" On the Heat and Elasticity of Gases and Vapours " (Ma nnheim , 
1845; Taylor's Scientific Memoirs, iv. 180). He points out 
that the theory of Laplace and Poisson does not agree with 
facts when applied to vapours, and that Clapeyron's formulae, 
-XIH 3* 



though probably correct, contain an undetermined function 
(Carnot's F"*, Clapeyron's i/C) of the temperature. He deter- 
mines the value of this function to be J/T by assuming, with 
Seguin and Mayer, that the work done in the isothermal expan- 
sion of a gas is a measure of the heat absorbed. From the then 
accepted value '078 of the difference of the specific heats of air, 
he finds the numerical value of J to be 374 kilogrammetres per 
kilo-calorie. Assuming the heat equivalent of the work to remain 
in the gas, he obtains expressions similar to Clapeyron's for the 
total heat and the specific heats. In consequence of this assump- 
tion, the formulae he obtained for adiabatic expansion were 
nec essa ri ly wrong, but no data existed at that time for testing 
them. In applying his formulae to vapours, he obtained an 
expression for the saturation-pressure of steam, which agreed with 
the empirical formula of Roche, and satisfied other experimental 
data on the supposition that the co-efficient of expansion of steam 
was '00423, and its specific heat i-oo— value* which are now 
known to be impossible, but which appeared at the time to give 
a very satisfactory explanation of the phenomena. 

The essay of Hermann Helmhotts, On the ConsarvaUon of 
Peru (Berlin, 1847), discusses all the known cases of the - trans- 
formation of energy, and is justly regarded as one of the chief 
landmarks in the establishment of the energy-principle. Helnv 
holtx gives an admirable statement of the fundamental principle 
as applied to heat, but makes no attempt to formulate the correct 
equations of thermodynamics on the mechanical theory. He 
points out the fallacy of Holtamann's (and Mayer's) calculation 
of the equivalent, but admits that it is supported by Joule's 
experiments, though he does not seem to appreciate the true 
value of Joule's work. He considers that Holtamann's formulae 
are well supported by experiment, and are much preferable to 
Clapeyron's, because the value of the undetermined function 
F'/ is found. But be fails to notice that Hottzmann's equations 
are fundamentally inconsistent with the conservation of energy, 
because the heat equivalent of the external work done is supposed 
to remain in the gas. 

That a quantity of heat equivalent to the work performed 
actually disappears when a gas does work in expansion, was first 
shown by Joule in the paper on condensation and rarefaction 
of air (1 845) already referred to. At the conclusion of this paper 
he felt justified' by direct experimental evidence in reasserting 
definitely the hypothesis of Seguin (he. cit. p. 383) that " the 
steam while expanding in the cylinder loses heat in quantity 
exactly proportional to the mechanical force developed, and that 
on the condensation of the steam the heat thus converted into 
power is not given back." He did not see his way to reconcile 
this conclusion with Clapeyron's description of Carnot's cycle. 
At a later date, in a letter to Professor W. Thomson (Lord Kelvin) 
(1848), he pointed out that, since, according to his own experi- 
ments, the work done in the expansion of a gas at constant 
temperature is equivalent to the heat absorbed, by equating 
Carnot's expressions (given in § 17) for the work done and the 
heat absorbed, the value of Carnot's function F't must be equal to 
J/T, in order to reconcile his principle with' the mechanical 
theory. 

Professor W. Thomson gave an account of Carnot's theory 
(Trans. Roy. Soc. Edin., Jan. 1849), in which he recognized the 
discrepancy between Clapeyron's statement and Joule's experi- 
ments, but did not see his way out of the difficulty. He there- 
fore adopted Carnot's principle provisionally, and proceeded 
to calculate a table of values of Carnot's function F'/, from 
the values of the total-heat and vapour-pressure of steam then 
recently determined by Regnault (Memoires de Flnstitut de Paris, 
1847). In making the calculation, he assumed that the specific 
volume v of saturated steam at any temperature T and pressure 
p is that given by the gaseous laws, pv—KT. The results are 
otherwise correct so far as Regnault 's data are accurate, because 
the values of the efficiency per degree F'f are not affected by any 
assumption with regard to the nature of heat. He obtained the 
values of the efficiency F't over a finite range from t to o° C, by 
adding up the values of F't for the separate degrees. This latter 
proceeding is inconsistent with the mechanical theory, but is the 



146 



HEAT 



(ABSOLUTE SCALE OP TEMPERAfURE 



correct method 00 the assumption that the heat given up to the 
condenser is equal to that taken from the source. The values be 
obtained for F / agreed very well with those previously given by 
Carnot and Clapeyron, and showed that this function diminishes 
with rue of temperature roughly u\ the inverse ratio of T, as 
suggested by Joule. 

R, J. E. Clausius (Pogg. Ann., i8so, 79, p. 360) and W. J. M. 
feankine (Traits. Roy. Soc. Ediru, 1850) were the first to develop 
the correct equations of thermodynamics on the mechanical 
theory. When heat was supplied to a body to change its tempera- 
ture or state, part remained in the body as intrinsic heat energy 
E, but part was converted into external work of expansion W 
and ceased to exist as heat. The part remaining in the body was 
always the same for the same change of state, however performed, 
as required by Carnot's fundamental axiom, but the part corre- 
sponding to the external work was necessarily different for 
different values of the work done. Thus in any cycle in which 
the body was exactly restored to its initial state, the heat 
remaining in the body would always be the same, or as Carnot 
puts it, the quantities of heat absorbed and given out in its 
diverse transformations are exactly " compensated," so far as 
the body is concerned. But the quantities of heat absorbed and 
given out are not necessarily equaL On the contrary, they differ 
by the equivalent of the external work done in the cycle. Apply- 
ing this principle to the case of steam, Clausius deduced a fact 
previously unknown, that the specific heat of steam maintained 
in a state of saturation is negative, which was also deduced by 
Rankine (lot. cit.) about the same time. In applying the principle 
to gases Clausius assumes (with Mayer and Holtzmann) that the 
heat absorbed by a gas in isothermal expansion is equivalent 
to the work done, but he does not appear to be acquainted with 
Joule's experiment, and the reasons he adduces in support of 
this assumption are not conclusive. This being admitted, he 
deduces from the energy principle alone the propositions already 
given by Carnot with reference to gases, and snows in addition 
that the specific heat of a perfect gas must be independent 
of the density. In the second part of his paper he introduces 
Carnot's principle, which he quotes as follows: " The perform- 
ance of work is equivalent to a transference of heat from a hot 
to a cold body without the quantity of heat being thereby 
diminished." This is not Carnot's way of stating his principle 
(see jis), but has the effect of exaggerating the importance of 
Clapeyron's unnecessary assumption. By equating the expres- 
sions given by Carnot for the work done and the heat absorbed 
in the expansion of a gas, he deduces (following Holtzmann) 
the value J/T for Carnot's function F't (which Clapeyron 
denotes by i/C). He shows that this assumption gives values of 
Carnot's function which agree fairly well with those calculated 
by Clapeyron and Thomson, and that it leads to values of the 
mechanical equivalent not differing greatly from those of Joule. 
Substituting the value J/T for C in the analytical expressions 
given by Clapeyron for the latent heat of expansion and vaporiza- 
tion, these relations are immediately reduced to their modern 
form (see Thermodynamics, 8 4)- Being unacquainted with 
Carnot's original work, but recognizing the invalidity of 
Clapeyron's description of Carnot's cycle, Clausius substituted 
a proof consistent with the mechanical theory, which he based 
on the axiom that " heat cannot of itself pass from cold to hot." 
The proof on this basis involves the application of the energy 
principle, which does not appear to be necessary, and the axiom 
to which final appeal is made does not appear more convincing 
than Carnot's. Strange to say, Clausius did not in this paper 
give the expression for the efficiency in a Carnot cycle of finite 
range (Carnot's Ft) which follows immediately from the value 
J/T assumed for the efficiency F't of a cycle of infinitesimal range 
at the temperature t C or T Abs. 

Rankine did not make the same assumption as Clausius 
explicitly, but applied the mechanical theory of heat to the 
development of his hypothesis of molecular vortices, and deduced 
from it a number of results similar to those obtained by Clausius. 
Unfortunately the paper (loc. cit.) was not published till some 
time later, but in a summary given in the Phil. Mag. (July 1851) 



the principal results were detailed. Assuming the vitoe of 
Joule's equivalent, Rankine deduced the value 0*2404 for the 
specific heat of air at constant pressure, in place of o-»©7 at 
found by Delaroche and Berard. The subsequent verification 
of this value by Regnault (Compies rendu*, 1853) afforded strong 
confirmation of the accuracy of Joule's work. In a note appended 
to the abstract in the Phil. Mag. Rankine states that he has 
succeeded in proving that the maximum efficiency of an engine 
working in a Carnot cycle of finite range /1 to U is of the form 
(/r-*o)/(/i-*), where k is a constant, the same for all substances. 
This is correct if I repr esen ts temperature Centigrade, and 
4—873. 

Professor W. Thomson (Lord Kelvin) in a paper u On the 
Dynamical Theory of Heat " (Trans. Ray. Soc. Edin., 1851, 
first published in the Phil. Mat., 1852) gave a very dear stater 
ment of the position of the theory at that time. He showed 
that the value Fi-J/T, assumed for Carnot's function by 
Clausius without any experimental justification, rested solely 
on the evidence of Joule's experiment, and might possibly not 
be true at all temperatures. Assuming the value J/T with tins 
reservation, he gave as the expression for the efficiency over a 
finite range t x to I* C, or T r to T# Abs., the result, 



W/H-(/i-M/(/i+*73) -CT»-T.)m 



(4) 



which, he observed, agrees in form with that found by Rankine. 

ai. Tha Absolute Seals of Temperature.— Since Carnot's 
function is the same for all substances at the same temperature, 
and is a function of the temperature only, it supplies a means of 
measuring temperature independently of the properties of any 
particular substance, f his proposal was first made by Lord 
Kelvin (Phil. Mag., 1848), who suggested that the degree of 
temperature should be chosen so that the efficiency of a perfect 
engine at any point of the scale should be the same, or that 
Carnot's function F't should be constant. This would eve the 
simplest expression for the efficiency on the caloric theory, but 
the scale so obtained, when the values of Carnot's function were 
calculated from Regnault 's observations on steam, was found to 
differ considerably from the scale of the mercury or air-thermo- 
meter. At a later date, when it became clear that the value 
of Carnot's function was very nearly proportional to the re- 
ciprocal of the temperature T measured from the absolute zero 
of the gas thermometer, he proposed a simpler method (Pkil. 
Trans., 1854), namely, to define absolute temperature as 
proportional to the reciprocal of Carnot's function. On this 
definition of absolute temperature, the expression (0i*-0«)/0i 
for the efficiency of a Carnot cyde with limits 0i and 0« would 
be exact, and it became a most important problem to determine 
how far the temperature T by gas thermometer differed from 
the absolute temperature 0. With this object he devised a very 
delicate method, known as the "porous plug experiment'' 
(see Thermodynamics) of testing the deviation of the gas 
thermometer from the absolute scale. The experiments were 
carried out in conjunction with Joule, and finally resulted in 
showing (Phil. Trans., 1862, "On the Thermal Effects of 
Fluids in Motion ") that the deviations of the air thermometer 
from the absolute scale as above denned are almost negligible, 
and that in the case of the gas hydrogen the deviations are 
so small that a thermometer containing this gas may be 
taken for all practical purposes as agreeing exactly with the 
absolute scale at all ordinary temperatures. For this reason 
the hydrogen thermometer has since been generally adopted as 
the standard. 

22. Availability of Heai of Combustion.— Taking the value 
1 13 kilogrammetres per kilo-calorie for i* C. fall of temperature 
at ioo° C, Carnot attempted to estimate the possible perform- 
ance of a steam-engine receiving heat at 160° C. and rejecting 
it at 40° C. Assuming the performance to be simply proportional 
to the temperature fall, the work done for iao° fall would be 
134 kilogrammetres per kilo-calorie. To make an accurate 
calculation required a knowledge of the variation of the function 
F/ with temperature. Taking the accurate formula of | to, the 
work obtainable is zx8 kilogrammetres per kilo-calorie, which 4s 



INTERNAL COMBUSTION) 



HEAT 



H7 



a8% of 426, the mechanical equivalent of the Mo-calorie in 
kflogrammetres. Caraot pointed oat that the fall of 1 ao* C. 
utilized in the steam-engine was only a small fraction of the 
whole temperature fall obtainable by combustion, and made an 
estimate of the total power available if the whole fall could be 
utilized, allowing for the probable diminution of the function 
F*l with rise of temperature. His estimate was 3*9 million 
kilogrammetres per kilogramme of coal. This was certainly 
an over-estimate, but was surprisingly dose, considering the 
scanty data at his disposal. 

In reality the fraction of the heat of combustion available, 
even in an ideal engine and apart from practical limitations, is 
much less than might be inferred from the efficiency formula of 
the Caraot cycle. In applying this formula to estimate the 
availability of the heat it is usual to take the temperature 
obtainable by the combustion of the fuel as the upper limit of 
temperature m the formula. For carbon burnt in air at constant 
pressure without any loss of heat, the products of combustion 
might be raised 3300° C. in temperature, assuming that .the 
specific heats of the products were constant and that there was 
no dissociation. If all the heat could be supplied to the working 
fluid at this temperature, that of the condenser being 40* €., 
the possible efficiency by the- formula of j 20 would be 80%. 
But the combustion obviously cannot maintain so high a tem- 
perature if heat is being continuously abstracted by a boiler. 
Suppose that if is the maximum temperature of combustion as 
above estimated, 0* the temperature of the boiler, and 0* that 
of the condenser. Of the whole heat supplied by combustion 
represented by the rise of temperature 0*— 0*, the fraction 
(0'-0')/(e y ~0 D ) is the maximum that could be supplied to the 
boiler, the fraction (0* -WW -fy being carried away with the 
waste gases. Of the heat supplied to the boiler, the fraction 
(0*-0*)/0* might theoretically be converted into work. The 
problem in the case of an engine using a separate working fluid, 
like a steam-engine, is to find what must be the temperature $" 
of the boiler in order to obtain the largest possible fraction of the 
heat of combustion in the form of work. It is easy to show that 0* 
must be the geometric mean of V and 0*, or 0*= V^o. Taking 
e r -0*»23oo° G, and 0°«3i3° Abs. as before, we -find r «* 
003* Abs. or 630° C. The heat supplied to the boiler is then 
74-4% of the heat of combustion, and of this 65-3% Is converted 
into work, giving a maximum possible efficiency of 49% in 
place of 89 %. With the boiler at 160 C, the possible efficiency, 
calculated in a similar manner, would be 26-3%, which shows 
that the possible increase of efficiency by increasing the tem- 
perature range is not so great as is usually supposed. If the 
temperature of the boiler were raised to 300 C, corresponding 
to a pressure of 1260 lb per sq. in., which is occasionally surpassed 
in modern flash-boilers, the possible efficiency would be 40%. 
The waste heat from the boiler, supposed perfectly efficient, 
would be in this case 11%, of which less than a quarter could 
be utilized in the form of work. Caraot foresaw that in order 
to utilize a larger percentage of the heat of combustion it would 
be necessary to employ a series of working fluids, the waste heat 
from one boiler and condenser serving to supply the next in the 
series. This has actually been effected in a few cases, e.g. 
steam and SOi, when special circumstances exist to compensate 
for the extra complication. . Improvements in the steam-engine 
since Carnot's time have been mainly in the direction of reducing 
waste due to condensation and leakage by multiple expansion, 
superheating, &c. The gain by increased temperature range 
has been comparatively small owing to limitations of pressure, 
and the best modern steam-engines do not utilize more than 20% 
of the heat of combustion. This is in reality a very respectable 
fraction of the ideal .limit of 40% above calculated on the 
assumption of 1260 lb initial pressure, with a perfectly efficient 
boiler and complete expansion, and with an ideal engine which 
does not waste available motive power by complete condensation 
of the steam before it Is returned to the boiler. 

23. Advantages of Internal Combustion. — As Caraot pointed 
out, the chief advantage of using atmospheric air as a working 
fluid in a heat-engine lies In the possibility of imparting beat to 



it directly by internal combustion. This avoids the limitation 
imposed by the use of a separate boiler, which as we have seen 
reduces the possible efficiency at least 50%. Even with internal 
combustion, however, the full range of temperature is not 
available, because the heat cannot conveniently in practice 
be communicated to the working fluid at constant temperature, 
owing to the large range of expansion at constant temperature 
required for the absorption of a sufficient quantity of heat. 
Air-engines of this type, such as Stirling's or Ericsson's, taking 
in beat at constant temperature, though theoretically. the most 
perfect, are bulky and mechanically inefficient. In practical 
engines the heat is generated by the combustion of an explosive 
mixture at constant volume or at constant pressure. ' The heat 
is not all communicated at the highest temperature, but over 
a range of temperature from that of the mixture at the beginning 
of combustion to the maximum temperature. The earliest 
instance of this type of engine is the lycopodhtm engine of 
M.M. Niepee, discussed by Carnot, in which a combustible 
mixture of air and lycopodium powder at atmospheric pressure 
was ignited in a cylinder, and did work on a piston. The 
early gas-engines of E. Lenoir (i860) and N. Otto and E. 
Langen (1866), operated in a similar manner with illuminating 
gas in place of lycopodium. Combustion in this case is effected 
practically at constant volume, and the maximum efficiency 
theoretically obtainable is i-log,r/(r-i), where r h the ratio 
of the maximum temperature if to the initial temperature t . 
In order to obtain this efficiency it would be necessary to follow 
Carnot's rule, and expand the gas after ignition without loss 
or gain of heat from V down to 0", and then to compress it 
at 0° to its initial volume. ^If the rise of temperature in conv 
bustkm were 2300° C, and the initial temperature were o° C. 
or 273° Abs., the theoretical efficiency would be 73*3 %i which 
is much greater than that obtainable with a boiler. But In 
order to reach this value, it would be necessary to expand the 
mixture to about 270 times its initial volume, which is obviously 
impracticable. Owing to incomplete expansion and rapid 
cooling of the heated gases by the large surface exposed, the 
actual efficiency of the Lenoir engine was kss than 5%, and of 
the Otto and Langen, with more rapid expansion, about 10%. 
Carnot foresaw that in order to render an engine of this type 
practically efficient, it would be necessary to compress the 
mixture before ignition. Compression is beneficial in three 
ways: (1) it permits a greater range of expansion after ignition; 
(2) it raises the mean effective pressure, and thus improves the 
mechanical efficiency and the power in proportion to size and 
weight; (3) it reduces the loss of heat during ignition by reducing 
the surface exposed to the hot gases. In the modern gas or 
petrol motor, compression Is employed as in Carnot's cycle, 
but the efficiency attainable is limited not so much by considera- 
tions of temperature as by limitations of volume. It is impractic- 
able before combustion at constant volume to compress a rich 
mixture to much less than ith of its initial volume, and, for 
mechanical simplicity, the range of expansion is made equal 
to that of compression. The cycle employed was patented 
in 1862 by Beau de Rochas (d. 1892), but was first successfully 
carried out by Otto (1876). It differs from the Carnot cycle 
in employing reception and rejection of heat at constant volume 
instead of at constant temperature. This cycle is not so efficient 
as the Carnot cycle for given limits of temperature, but, for Ike 
given limits of volume imposed*, it gives a much higher efficiency 
than the Carnot cycle. The efficiency depends only on the 
range of temperature in expansion and compression, and is 
given by the formula (0'-0 r )/0', where 0' is the maximum 
temperature, and 0* the temperature at the end of expansion. 
The formula is the same as that for the Carnot cycle with the 
same range of temperature in expansion. The ratio 07?' is 
r*" 1 , where r is the given ratio of expansion or compression, 
and y is the ratio of the specific heats of the working fluid. 
Assuming the working fluid to be a perfect gas with the same 
properties as air, we should have 7-x*4i. Taking r-5, the 
formula gives 48% for the maximum possible efficiency. The 
actual products of combustion vary with the nature of the fuel 



148 



HEAT 



(TRANSFERENCE OP HEAT 



employed, and have different properties from air, but the 
efficiency is found to vary with compression in the same manner 
as for air. For this reason a committee of the Institution of Civil 
Engineers in 1905 recommended the adoption of the air-standard 
for estimating the effects of varying the compression ratio, 
and defined the relative efficiency of an internal combustion 
engine as the ratio of its observed efficiency to* that of a perfect 
air-engine with the same compression. 

24. Effect of Dissociation, and Increase of Specific Heat.— One 
of the most important effects of heat is the decomposition or 
dissociation of compound molecules. Just as the molecules 
of a vapour combine with evolution of heat to form the more 
complicated molecules of the liquid, and as the liquid molecules 
require the addition of heat to effect their separation into 
molecules of vapour; so in the case of molecules of different 
kinds which combine with evolution of heat, the reversal of the 
process can be effected either by the agency of heat, or indirectly 
by supplying the requisite amount of energy by electrical or 
other methods. Just as the latent heat of vaporization diminishes 
with rise of temperature, and the pressure of the dissociated 
vapour molecules increases, so in the case of compound molecules 
in general the heat of combination diminishes with rise of tempera- 
ture, and the pressure of the products- of dissociation increases. 
There is evidence that the compound carbon dioxide, COt, is 
partly dissociated into carbon monoxide and oxygen at high 
temperatures, and that the proportion dissociated increases 
with rise of temperature. There is a very close analogy between 
these phenomena and the vaporization of a liquid. The laws 
which govern dissociation are the same fundamental laws of 
thermodynamics, but the relations involved are necessarily 
more complex on account of the presence of different kinds of 
molecules, and present special difficulties for accurate investiga- 
tion in the case where dissociation does not begin to be appreciable 
until a high temperature is reached. It is easy, however, to 
see that the general effect of dissociation must be to diminish 
the available temperature of combustion, and all experiments 
go to show that in ordinary combustible mixtures the rise of 
temperature actually attained is much less than that calculated 
as in § a2, on the assumption that the whole beat of combustion 
is developed and communicated to products of constant specific 
heat. The defect of temperature observed can be represented 
by supposing that the specific heat of the products of combustion 
increases with rise of temperature. This is the case for COt 
even at ordinary temperatures, according to Regnault, and 
probably also for air and steam at higher temperatures. Increase 
of specific heat is*a necessary accompaniment of dissociation, 
and from some points of view may be regarded as merely another 
way of stating the facts. It is the most convenient method to 
adopt in the case of products of combustion consisting of a 
mixture of COi and steam with a large excess* of inert gases, 
because the relations of equilibrium of dissociated molecules 
of so many different kinds would be too complex to permit of 
any other method of expression. It appears from the researches 
of Dugald Clerk, H. le Chatelier and others that the apparent 
specific heat of the products of combustion in a gas-engine 
may be taken -as approximately '34 to -33 in place of -24 at 
working temperatures between 1000° C. and 1700° C, and that 
the ratio of the specific heats is about 1*29 in place of 1*41. 
This limits the availability of the heat of combustion by reducing 
the rise of temperature actually obtainable in combustion at 
constant volume by 30 or 40%, and also by reducing the range 
of temperature 070* for a given ratio of expansion r from r'^to 
r n . The formula given in $ 21 is no longer quite exact, because 
the ratio of the specific heats of the mixture during compression is 
not the same as that of the products of combustion during 
expansion. But since the work done depends principally on the 
expansion curve, the ratio of the range of temperature in ex- 
pansion (P-d*) to the maximum temperature tir will still give 
• very good approximation to the possible efficiency. Taking 
r*> 5, as before, for the compression ratio, the possible efficiency 
is reduced from' 48% to 38%, if 7 = 1-29 instead of 1-41. A 
large gas-engine of .the present day with r— 5 may actually 



realise as much as 34% indicated efficiency, which is 90% of 
the maximum possible, showing how perfectly all avoidable heat 
.losses have been minimized. 

It 1 is often urged that the gas-engine is relatively less efficient 
than the steam-engine, because, although it has a much higher 
absolute efficiency, it does not utilize so large a fraction of its 
temperature range, reckoning that of the steam-engine from the 
temperature of the boiler to that of the condenser, and that of 
the gas-engine from the maximum temperature of combustion 
to that of the air. This is not quite fair, and has given rise to the 
mistaken notion that " there is an immense margin for improve- 
ment in the gas-engine," which is not the case if the practical 
limitations of volume are rightly considered. If expansion could 
be carried out in accordance with Ca mot's principle of maximum 
efficiency, down to the lower limit of temperature 60, with 
rejection of heat at 0» during compression to the original volume 
Vfl, it would no doubt be possible to obtain an ideal efficiency of 
nearly 80%. But this would be quite impracticable, as it would 
require expansion to about 100 times r#, or 500 times the com- 
pression volume. Some advantage no doubt might be obtained 
by carrying the expansion beyond the original volume. This 
has been done, but is not found to be worth the extra complica- 
tion. A more practical method, which has been applied by 
Diesel for liquid fuel, is to introduce the fuel at the end of 
compression, and adjust the supply in such a manner as to give 
combustion at nearly constant pressure. This makes it possible 
to employ higher compression, with a corresponding increase 
in the ratio of expansion and the theoretical efficiency. With a 
compression ratio of 14, an indicated efficiency of 40% has been 
obtained in this way, but owing to additional complications the 
brake efficiency was only 31%, which is hardly any improve- 
ment on the brake efficiency of 30% obtained with the ordinary 
type of gas-engine. Although Carnot's principle makes it possible 
to calculate in every case what the limiting possible efficiency 
would be for any kind of cycle if ail heat losses were abolished, 
it is very necessary, in applying the principle to practical cases, 
to take account of the possibility of avoiding the heat losses 
which are supposed to be absent, and of other practical limita- 
tions in the working of the actual engine. An immense amount 
of time and ingenuity has been wasted in striving to realize 
impossible margins of ideal efficiency, which a dose study of 
the practical conditions would have shown to be illusory. As 
Carnot remarks at the conclusion of his essay: " Economy of 
fuel is only one of the conditions a heat-engine must satisfy; 
in many cases it is only secondary, and must often give way to 
considerations of safety, strength and wearing qualities of the 
machine, of smallness of space occupied, or of expense in erecting. 
To know how to appreciate justly in each case the considerations 
of convenience and economy, to be able to distinguish the 
essential from the accessory, to balance all fairly, and finally 
to arrive at the best result by the simplest means, such must be 
the principal talent of the man called on to direct and co-ordinate 
the work of his fellows for the attainment of a useful object of 
any kind." 

Tran&teksncb or Heat 

25. Modes of Transference.— There are three principal modes 
of transference of heat, namely (1) convection,. (2) conduction, 
and (3) radiation. 

(1) In convection, Beat is carried or conveyed by the motion 
of heated masses of matter. The most familiar illustrations of 
this method of transference are the heating of buildings by tbe 
circulation of steam or hot water, or the equalization of tem- 
perature of a mass of unequally heated liquid or gas by convection 
currents, produced by natural changes of density or by artificial 
stirring. (2) In conduction, heat is transferred by contact 
between contiguous particles of matter and is passed on from 
one particle to the next without visible relative motion of the 
parts of the body. A familiar illustration of conduction is the 
passage of heat through the metal plates of a boiler from tne 
fire to the water inside, or the transference of heat from a soldering; 
bolt to the solder and the metal with which it is placed in contact. 



KEWTOtTS LAW OF COOLING) HEAT 

is) III radiation, the heated body gives rise to a motion of 
vibration in the aether, which is propagated equally in all 
directions, and is reconverted into heat when it encounters any 
obstacle capable of absorbing it. Thus radiation differs from 
conduction and convection in taking place most perfectly in the 
absence of matter, whereas conduction and convection require 
material communication between the bodies concerned. 

In the majority of cases of transference of heat all three 
modes of transference are simultaneously operative in a greater 
or less degree, and the combined effect is generally of great 
complexity. The different modes of transference are subject 
to widely different laws, and the difficulty of disentangling their 
effects and subjecting them to calculation is often one of the 
most serious obstacles in the experimental investigation of heat. 
In space void of matter, we should have pure radiation, but it 
is difficult to obtain so perfect a vacuum that the effects of the 
residual gas in transferring heat by conduction or convection 
are inappreciable. In the interior of an opaque solid we should 
have pure conduction, but if the solid is sensibly transparent 
in thin layers there must also be an internal radiation, 
while in a liquid or a gas it is very difficult to eliminate the effects 
of convection. These difficulties are well illustrated in the 
historical development of the subject by the experimental 
investigations which have been made to determine the laws of 
beat-transference, such as the laws of cooling, of radiation 
and of conduction. 

26. Newton's Law oj Cooling. — There is one essential condition 
common to all three modes of heat-transference, namely, that 
they depend on difference of temperature, that the direction 
of the transfer of heat is always from hot to cold, and that the 
rate of transference is, for small differences, directly proportional 
to the difference of temperature. Without difference of tem- 
pera t ure there is no transfer of heat. When two bodies have been 
brought to the same temperature by conduction, they arc also in 
equilibrium as regards radiation, and vice versa. If this were 
not the case, there could be no equilibrium of heat defined by 
equality of temperature. A hot body placed in an enclosure of 
lower temperature, e.g. a calorimeter in its containing vessel, 
generally loses heat by all three modes simultaneously in different 
degrees. The loss by each mode will depend in different ways 
on the form, extent and nature of its surface and on that of the 
enclosure, on the manner in which it is supported, on its relative 
position and distance from the enclosure, and on the nature of 
the intervening medium. But provided that the difference of 
temperature is small, the rate of loss of heat by all modes will 
be approximately proportional to the difference of temperature, 
the other conditions remaining constant. The rate of cooling 
or the rate of fait of temperature will also be nearly proportional 
to the rate of loss of heat,4f the specific heat of the cooling body 
is constant, or the rate of cooling at any moment will be pro- 
portional to the difference of temperature. This simple relation 
is commonly known as Newton's law of cooling, but is limited 
in its application to comparatively simple cases such as the 
foregoing. Newton himself applied it to estimatethe temperature 
of a red-hot iron ball, by observing the time which it took to 
cool from a red heat to a known temperature, and comparing 
this with the time taken to cool through a known range at 
ordinary temperatures. According to this law if the excess of 
temperature of the body above its surroundings is observed 
at equal intervals of time, the observed values will form a 
geometrical progression with a common ratio. Supposing, for 
instance, that the surrounding temperature were o° C, that the 
red-hot ball took 25 minutes to cool from its original temperature 
to 20 C, and 5 minutes to cool from 20 C. to io° C, the original 
temperature is easily calculated on the assumption that the excess 
of temperature above o° C. falls to hall its value in each interval 
of s minutes. Doubling the value ao° at 25 minutes five times, 
we arrive at 640 C. as the original temperature. No other method 
of estimation of such temperatures was available in the time of 
Newton, but. as we now know, the simple law of proportionality 
to the temperature difference is inapplicable over such large 
rangts of temperature. The rate of loss of heat by radiation, 



149 

and also by convection and conduction to the surrounding air, 
increases much more rapidly than in simple proportion to the 
temperature difference, and the rate of increase of each follows 
a different law. At a later date Sir John Herschel measured the 
intensity of the solar radiation at the surface of the earth, and 
endeavoured to form an estimate of the temperature of the sun 
by comparison with terrestrial sources on the assumption that 
the intensity of radiation was simply ptoportional to the tem- 
perature difference. He thus arrived at an estimate of several 
million degrees, which we now know would be about a thousand 
times too great. The application of Newton's law necessarily 
leads to absurd results when the difference of temperature is 
very large, but the error will not in general exceed 2 to 3% if 
the temperature difference does not exceed io° C, and the 
percentage error is proportionately much smaller for smaller 
differences. 

27. Dulong and Petit' s Empirical Laws of Coding.— One of the 
most elaborate experimental investigations of the law of cooling 
was that of Dulong and Petit (Ann. Chim. Pkys., 1817, 7, pp. 
22s and 337), who observed the rate of cooling of a mercury 
thermometer from 300" C. in a water-jacketed enclosure at 
various temperatures from o° C. to 8o° C. In order to obtain the 
rate of cooling by radiation alone, they exhausted the enclosure 
as perfectly as possible after the introduction of the thermometer, 
but with the imperfect appliances available at that time they 
were not able to obtain a vacuum better than about 3 or 4 mm. 
of mercury. They found that the velocity of cooling V in a 
vacuum could be represented by a formula of the type 

V-A(a'-<x'o) .... (5) 

in which / is the temperature of the thermometer, and t 9 that of 
the enclosure, a is a constant having the value 1-0075, and the 
coefficient A depends on the form of the bulb and the nature 
of its surface. For the ranges of temperature they employed, 
this formula gives much better results than Newton's, but it 
must be remembered that the temperatures were expressed on 
the arbitrary scale of the mercury thermometer, and were not 
corrected for the large and uncertain errors of stem-exposure 
(sec Thermometry). Moreover, although the effects of cooling 
by convection currents are practically eliminated by exhausting 
to 3 or 4 mm. (since the density of the gas is reduced to 1 /200th 
while its viscosity is not appreciably affected), the rate of cooling 
by conduction is not materially diminished, since the conduct ivit y , 
like the viscosity, is nearly independent of pressure. It has 
since been shown by Sir William Crookes (Proc. Roy. Soc., 1881, 
21, p. 239) that the rate of cooling of a mercury thermometer 
in a vacuum suffers a very great diminution when the pressure 
is reduced from x mm. to 001 mm., at which pressure the effect 
of conduction by the residual gas has practically disappeared. 

Dulong and Petit also observed the rate of cooling under the 
same conditions with the enclosure filled with various gases. 
They found that the cooling effect of the gas could be represented 
by adding to the term already given as representing radiation, 
an expression of the form 

V'-B^(/-M t,m .... (6) 

They found that the cooling effect of convection, unlike that of 
radiation, was independent of the nature of the surface of the 
thermometer, whether silvered or blackened, that it varied as 
some power c of the pressure p, and that it was independent 
of the absolute temperature of the enclosure, but varied as the 
excess temperature (<-/«) raised to the power 1233. This 
highly artificial result undoubtedly contains some elements of 
truth, but could only be applied to experiments similar to those 
from which it was derived. F. Herv6 de la Provostaye and 
P. Q. Dcsains (Ann. Chim. Phys., 1846, 16, p. 337), in repeating 
these experiments under various conditions, found that the 
coefficients A and B were to some extent dependent on the 
temperature, and that the manner in which the cooling effect 
varied with the pressure depended on the form and size of the 
enclosure. It is evident that this should be the case, since the 
cooling effect of the gas depends partly on convective currents, 



15° 



HEAT 



(DIFFUSION OP TEMPERATURE 



which are necessarily greatly modified by the form of the 
enclosure in a manner which it would appear hopeless to 
attempt to represent by any general formula. 

28. Surface Emissivity. — The same remark applies to many 
attempts which have since been made to determine the general 
value of the constant termed by Fourier and early writers the 
" exterior conductivity," but now called the surface emissivity. 
This coefficient represents the rate of loss of heat from a body 
per unit area of surface per degree excess of temperature, and 
includes the effects of radiation, convection and conduction. 
As already pointed out, the combined effect will be nearly 
proportional to the excess of temperature in any given case 
provided that the excess is small, but it is not necessarily pro- 
portional to the extent of surface exposed except in the case of 
pure radiation. The rate of loss by convection and conduction 
varies greatly with the form of the surface, and, unless the 
enclosure is very large compared with the cooling body, the effect 
depends also on the size and form of the enclosure. Heat is 
necessarily communicated from the cooling body to the layer 
of gas in contact with it by conduction. If the linear dimensions 
of the body are small, as in the case of a fine wire, or if it is 
separated from the enclosure by a thin layer of gas, the rate 
of loss depends chiefly on conduction. For very fine metallic 
wires heated by an electric current, W. E. Ayrton and H. 
Kilgour (Phil. Trans., 189a) showed that the rate of loss is 
nearly independent of the surface, instead of being directly 
proportional to it. This should be the case, as Porter has shown 
(Phil. Mag., March 1895), since the effect depends mainly on 
conduction. The effects of conduction and radiation may be 
approximately estimated if the conductivity of the gas and the 
nature and forms of the surfaces of the body and enclosure are 
known, but the effect of convection in any case can be determined 
only by experiment. It has been found that the rate of cooling 
by a current of air is approximately proportional to the velocity 
of the current, other things being equal. It is obvious that this 
should be the case, but the result cannot generally be applied 
to convection currents. Values which are commonly given for 
the surface emissivity must therefore be accepted with great 
reserve. They can be regarded only as approximate, and as 
applicable only to cases precisely similar to those for which they 
were experimentally obtained. There cannot be said to be any 
general law of convection. The loss of heat is not necessarily 
proportional to the area of the surface, and no general value of 
the coefficient can be given to suit all cases. The laws of con- 
duction and radiation admit of being more precisely formulated, 
and their effects predicted, except in so far as they are complicated 
by convection. 

29. Conduction of Heat.— -The laws of transference of heat in 
the interior of a solid body formed one of the earliest subjects 
of mathematical and experimental treatment in the theory of 
heat. The law assumed by Fourier was of the simplest possible 
type, but the mathematical application, except in the simplest 
cases, was so difficult as to require the development of a new 
mathematical method. Fourier succeeded in showing how, 
by his method of analysis, the solution of any given problem 
with regard to the flow of heat by conduction in any material 
could be obtained in terms of a physical constant, the thermal 
conductivity of the material, and that the results obtained by 
experiment agreed in a qualitative manner with those predicted 
by his theory. But the experimental determination of the actual 
values of these constants presented formidable difficulties which 
were not surmounted till a later dale The experimental methods 
and difficulties are discussed in a special article on Conduction 
or Heat. It will suffice here to give a brief historical sketch, 
including a few of the more important results by way of 
illustration. 

30. Comparison of Conducting Powers. — That the power of 
transmitting heat by conduction varied widely in different 
materials was probably known in a general way from prehistoric 
times. Empirical knowledge of this kind is shown in the con- 
struction of many articles for heating, cooking, &c, such as the 
copper soldering bolt, or the Norwegian cooking*stovc. One 



of the earliest experiments for making an actual comparison of 
conducting powers was that suggested by Franklin, but 
carried nut by Jan Ingenhouss (Journ. de phys., 1789, 34, 
pp. 68 and 380). Exactly similar bars of different materials, 
glass, wood, metal, &c , thinly coated with wax, were fixed 
in the side of a trough of boiling water so as to project for equal 
distances through the side of the trough into the external air. 
The wax coating was observed to melt as the heat travelled along 
the bars, the distance from the trough to which the wax was 
melted along each affording an approximate indication of 
the distribution* pf temperature. When the temperature of each 
bar had become stationary the heat which it gained by conduction 
from the trough must be equal to the heat lost to the surrounding 
air, and must therefore Le approximately proportional to the 
distance to which the wax had melted along the bar. But the 
temperature fall per unit length, or the temperature-gradient, 
in each bar at the point where it emerged from the trough would 
be inversely proportional to the same distance. For equal 
temperature-gradients the quantities of heat conducted (or the 
relative conducting powers of the bars) would therefore be 
proportional to the squares of the distances to which the wax 
finally melted on each bar. This was shown by Fourier and 
Despretz (Ann. ckinu phys., 182a, 19, p. 97). 

31. Diffusion of Temperature. — It was shown in connexion 
with this experiment by Sir H. Davy, and the experiment was 
later popularized by John Tyndall, that the rate at which wax 
melted along the bar, or the rate of propagation of a given 
temperature, during the first moments of heating, as distinguished 
from the melting-distance finally attained, depended on the 
specific heat as well as the conductivity. Short prisms of iron 
and bismuth coated with wax were placed on a hot metal plate. 
The wax was observed to melt first on the bismuth, although its 
conductivity is less than that of iron. The reason is that its 
specific heat is less than that of iron in the proportion of 3 to 1 r. 
The densities of iron and bismuth being 7-8 and 98, the thermal 
capacities of equal prisms will be in the ratio *86 for iron to 39 
for bismuth. If the prisms receive heat at equal rates, the bis- 
muth will reach the temperature of melting wax nearly three 
times as quickly as the iron. It is often stated on the strength 
of this experiment that the rate of propagation of a temperature 
wave, which depends on the ratio of the conductivity to the 
specific heat per unit volume, is greater in bismuth than in icon 
(e.g. Preston, Heat, p. 628). This is quite incorrect, because the 
conductivity of iron is about six times that of bismuth,- and the 
rate of propagation of a temperature wave is therefore twice 
as great in iron as in bismuth. The experiment in reality is 
misleading because the rates of reception of heat by the prisms 
are limited by the very imperfect contact with the hot metal 
plate, and are not proportional to the respective conductivities. 
If the iron and bismuth bars are properly faced and soldered to 
the top of a copper box (in order to ensure good metallic contact, 
and exclude a non-conducting film of air), and the box is then 
heated by steam, the rates of reception of heat will be nearly 
proportional to the conductivities, and the wax will melt nearly 
twice as fast along the iron as along the bismuth. A bar of lead 
similarly treated will show a faster rate of propagation than 
iron, because, although its conductivity is only half that of iron, 
its specific heat per unit volume is 2*5 times smaller. 

32. Bad Conductors, Liquids and Gases. — Count Rumford 
(1792) compared the conducting powers of substances used in 
clothing, such as wool and cotton, fur and down, by observing 
the time which a thermometer took to cool when embedded in a 
globe filled successively with the different materials. The times 
of cooling observed for a given range varied from 1300 to 000 
seconds for different materials. The low conducting power of 
such materials is principally due to the presence of air in the 
interstices, which is prevented from forming convection currents 
by the presence of the fibrous material. Finely powdered silica 
is a very bad conductor, but in the compact form of rock crystal 
it is as good a conductor as some of the metals. According to the 
kinetic theory of gases, the conductivity of a gas depends on 
molecular diffusion. Maxwell estimated the cond uct ivity of 



HEATING BY COKDENSATtON) 



HEAT 



151 



air mt ordinary temperatures at about 20,000 times less than that 
of copper. This has been verified experimentally by Kundt and 
Warburg, Stefan and Wmkelmann, by taking special precautions 
to eliminate the effects of convection currents and radiation. 
It was for some time doubted whether a gas possessed any true 
conductivity for heat. The experiment of T. Andrews, repeated 
by Grove, and Magnus, showing that a wire heated by an electric 
current was raised to a higher temperature in air than in 
hydrogen, was explained by Tyndall as being due to the greater 
mobility of hydrogen which gave rise to stronger convection 
currents. In reality the effect is due chiefly to the greater 
velocity of motion of the ultimate molecules of hydrogen, and is 
most marked if molar (as opposed to molecular) convection is 
eliminated. Molecular convection or diffusion, which cannot be 
distinguished experimentally from conduction, as it follows the 
same law, is also the main cause of conduction of heat in liquids. 
Both in liquids and gases the effects of convection currents are 
so much greater than those of diffusion or conduction that the 
latter are very difficult to measure, and, except In special cases, 
comparatively unimportant as affecting the transference of heat. 
Owing to the difficulty of eliminating the effects of radiation 
and convection, the results obtained for the conductivities of 
liquids are somewhat discordant, and there is in most cases great 
uncertainly whether the conductivity increases or diminishes 
with rise of temperature. It would appear, however, that liquids, 
such as water and glycerin, differ remarkably little in conduc- 
tivity in spite of enormous differences of viscosity. The viscosity 
of a liquid diminishes very rapidly with rise of temperature, 
without any marked change in the conductivity, whereas the 
viscosity of a gas increases with rise of temperature, and is 
always nearly proportional to the conductivity. 

33. Difficulty of Quantitative Estimation of Heat Transmitted. — 
The conducting powers of different metals were compared by 
C. M. Desprctz, and later by G. H. Wiedemann and R. Franz, 
employing an extension of the method of Jan Ingenhousz, in 
which the temperatures at different points along a bar heated 
at one end were measured by thermometers or thermocouples 
let into small holes in the bars, instead of being measured at one 
point only by means of melting wax. These experiments un- 
doubtedly gave fairly accurate relative values, but did not permit 
the calculation of the absolute amounts of heat transmitted. 
This was first obtained by J. D. Forbes (Brit. Assoc. Rep., 185a; 
Trans. Roy. Soc. Ed., 1862, 23, p. 133) by deducing the amount 
of heat lost to the surrounding air from a separate experiment in 
which the rate of cooling of the bar was observed (see Conduc- 
tion of Heat). Clement (Ann. ehim. pftys., 1841) had pre- 
viously attempted to determine the conductivities of metals by 
observing the amount of heat transmitted by a plate with one 
side exposed to steam at ioo° C, and the other side cooled by 
water at 28 C. Employing a copper plate 3 mm. thick, and 
assuming that the two surfaces of the pfate were at the same 
temperatures as the water and the steam to which they were 
exposed, or that the temperature-gradient in the metal was 
72° in 3 mm., he had thus obtained a value which we now know 
to be nearly 200 limes too small. The actual temperature 
difference in the metal itself was really about 0-36° C. The 
remainder of the 72° drop was in the badly conducting films 
of water and steam close to the metal surface. Similarly in a 
boiler plate in contact with flame at 1500 C. on one side and 
water at, say, 150 C. on the other, the actual difference of 
temperature in the metal, even if it is an inch thick, is only a 
few degrees. . The metal, unless badly furred with incrustation, 
is but little hotter than the water. It is immaterial so far as 
the transmission of heat is concerned, whether the plates are 
iron or copper. The greater part of the resistance to the passage 
of heat resides in a comparatively quiescent film of gas close 
to the surface, through which film the heat has to pass mainly 
by conduction. If a Bunsen flame, preferably coloured with 
sodium, is observed impinging on a cold metal plate, it will be 
seen to be separated from the plate by a dark space of a millimetre 
or less, throughout which the temperature of the gas is lowered 
by its own conductivity below the temperature Of incandescence. 



There is no abrupt change of temperature In passing from the gas 
to the metal, but a continuous temperature-gradient from the 
temperature of the metal to that of the flame. It is true that 
this gradient may be upwards of iooo° C. per mm., but there 
Is no discontinuity. 

34. Resistance of a Gas Film to the Passage of Heat.— It is possible 
to make a rough estimate of the resistance of such a film to the 
passage of heat through it. Taking the average conductivity of 
the gas in the film as 10,000 times less than that of copper 
(about double the conductivity of air at ordinary temperatures) 
a millimetre film would be equivalent to a thickness of 10 metres 
of copper, or about 1 • 2 metres of iron. Taking the temperature- 
gradient as iooo° C. per mm. such a film would transmit x 
gramme-calorie per sq. cm. per sec, or 36,000 kilo-calories per 
sq. metre per hour. With an area of 100 sq. cms. the heat 
transmitted at this rate would raise a litre of water from 20° C. 
to ioo° C. in 800 sees. By experiment with a strong Bunsen 
flame it takes from 8 to 10 minutes to do this, which would 
indicate that on the above assumptions the equivalent thickness 
of quiescent film should be rather less than x mm. in this case. 
The thickness of the film diminishes with the velocity of the 
burning gases impinging on the surface. This accounts for 
the rapidity of heating by a blowpipe flame, which is not due 
to any great increase in temperature of the flame as compared 
with a Bunsen. Similarly the efficiency of a boiler is but slightly 
reduced if half the tubes are stopped up, because the increase 
of draught through the remainder compensates partly for the 
diminished heating surface. Some resistance to the passage 
of heat into a boiler is also due to the water film on the inside. 
But this is of less account, because the conductivity of water 
is much greater than that of air, and because the film is continu- 
ally broken up by the formation of steam, which abstracts 
heat very rapidly. 

35. Healing by Condensation ofSteam.-~ll is often stated that 
the rate at which steam will condense on a metal surface at a 
temperature below that Corresponding to the saturation pressure 
of the steam is practically infinite (e.g. Osborne Reynolds, 
Proe. Roy. Soc. Ed., 1873, P- *75)> am * conversely that the rate 
at which water will abstract heat from a metal surface by the 
formation of steam (if the metal is above the temperature of 
saturation of the steam) is limited only by the rate at which 
the metal can supply heat by conduction to its surface layer. 
The rate at which heat can be supplied by condensation of 
steam appears to be much greater than that at which heat can 
be supplied by a flame under ordinary conditions, but there is 
no reason to suppose that it is Infinite, or that any discontinuity 
exists. Experiments by H. L. Callendar and J. T. Kicolson 
by three independent methods (Proc. Inst. Civ. Eng., 1898, 
131, p. 147; Brit. Assoc. Rep. p. 418) appear to show that the 
rate of abstraction of heat by evaporation, or that of communica- 
tion of heat by condensation, depends chiefly on the difference 
of temperature between the metal surface and the saturated 
steam, and is nearly proportional to the temperature difference 
(not to the pressure difference, as suggested by Reynolds) for 
such ranges of pressure as are common in practice. The rate 
of heat transmission they observed was equivalent to about 
8 calories per sq. cm. per sec., for a difference of 20 ° C. between 
the temperature of the metal surface and the saturation tempera- 
ture of the steam. This would correspond to a condensation 
of 530 kilogrammes of steam at xoo° C. per sq. metre per hour, 
or 100 lb per sq. ft. per hour for the same difference of temperature, 
values which are many times greater than those actually obtained 
in ordinary surface condensers. The reason for this is that there 
is generally some air mixed with the steam in a surface condenser, 
which greatly retards the condensation. It is also difficult to 
keep the temperature of the metal as much as 20° C below the 
temperature of the steam unless a very free and copious circula- 
tion of cold water is available. For the same difference of 
temperature, steam can supply heat by condensation about a 
thousand times faster than hot air. This rate is not often 
approached in practice, but the facility of generation and 
transmission of steam, combined with its high latent heat 



152 



HEAT 



(THEORY OF EXCHANGES 



and the accuracy of control and regulation of temperature 
afforded, render it one of the most convenient agents for the 
distribution of large quantities of heat in all kinds of manu- 
facturing processes. 

36. Spheroidal State. — An interesting contrast to the extreme 
rapidity with which heat is abstracted by the evaporation of a 
liquid in contact with a metal plate, is the so-called spheroidal 
state. A small drop of liquid thrown on a red-hot metal plate 
assumes a spheroidal form, and continues swimming about for 
some time, while it slowly evaporates at a temperature somewhat 
below its boiling-point. The explanation is simply that the 
liquid itself cannot come in actual contact with the metal plate 
(especially if the latter is above the critical temperature), but 
is separated from it by a badly conducting film of vapour, 
through which, as we have seen, the heat is comparatively slowly 
transmitted even if the difference of temperature is several 
hundred degrees. If the metal plate is allowed to cool gradually, 
the drop remains suspended on its cushion of vapour, until, in 
the case of water, a temperature of about 200 ° C. is reached, 
at which the liquid comes in contact with the plate and boils 
explosively, reducing the temperature of the plate, if thin, 
almost instantaneously to ioo° C. The temperature of the metal 
is readily observed by a thermo-electric method, employing a 
platinum dish with a platinum-rhodium wire soldered with gold 
to its under side. The absence of contact between the liquid 
and the dish in the spheroidal state may also be shown by 
connecting one terminal of a galvanometer to the drop and the 
other through a battery to the dish, and observing that no 
current passes until the drop boils. 

37. Early Theories of Radiation. — It was at one time supposed 
that there were three distinct kinds of radiation — thermal, 
luminous and actinic, combined in the radiation from a luminous 
source such as the sun or a flame. The first gave rise to heat, 
the second to light and the third to chemical action. The three 
kinds were partially separated by a prism, the actinic rays 
being generally more refracted, and the thermal rays less re- 
fracted than the luminous. This conception arose very naturally 
from the observation that the feebly luminous blue and violet 
rays produced the greatest photographic effects, which also 
showed the existence of dark rays beyond the violet, whereas the 
brilliant yellow and red were practically without action* on the 
photographic plate. A thermometer placed in the blue or violet 
showed no appreciable rise of temperature, and even in the yellow 
the effect was hardly discernible. The effect increased rapidly 
as the light faded towards the extreme red, and reached a 
maximum beyond the extreme limits of the spectrum (Herschel), 
showing that the greater part of the thermal radiation was al- 
together non-luminous. It is now a commonplace that chemical 
action, colour sensation and heat are merely different effects 
of one and the same kind of radiation, the particular effect 
produced in each case depending on the frequency and intensity 
of the vibration, and on the nature of the substance on which 
it falls. When radiation is completely absorbed by a black 
substance, it is converted into heat, the quantity of heal produced 
being equivalent to the total energy of the radiation absorbed, 
irrespective of the colour or frequency of the different rays. 
The actinic or chemical effects, on the other hand, depend essenti- 
ally on some relation between the period of the vibration and 
the properties of the substance acted on. The rays producing 
such effects are generally those which are most strongly absorbed. 
The spectrum of chlorophyll, the green colouring matter of plants, 
shows two very strong absorption bands in the red. The red 
rays of corresponding period are found to be the most active 
in promoting the growth of the plant. The chemically active 
rays are not necessarily the shortest. Even photographic 
plates may be made to respond to the red rays by staining them 
with pinachrome or some other suitable dye. 

The action of light rays on the retina is closely analogous to 
the action on a photographic plate. The retina, like the plate, 
is sensitive only to rays within certain restricted limits of 
frequency The limits of sensitiveness of each colour sensation 
are not exactly defined, but vary slightly from one individual 



to another, especially in cases of partial colour-blindness, and 
are modified by conditions of fatigue. We are not here concerned 
with these important physiological and chemical effects -el 
radiation, but rather with the question of the conversion of energy 
of radiation into heat, and with the laws of emission and absorp- 
tion of radiation in relation to temperature. We may here also 
assume the identity of visible and invisible radiations from a 
heated body in all their physical properties. It has been abund- 
antly proved that the invisible rays, like the visible, (1) are 
propagated in straight lines in homogeneous media; (a) arc 
reflected and diffused from the surface of bodies according to the 
same law; (3) travel with the same velocity in free space, but 
with slightly different velocities in denser media, being subject 
to the same law of refraction; (4) exhibit all the phenomena 
of diffraction and interference which are characteristic of wave- 
motion in general; (5) are capable of polarization and double 
refraction; (6) exhibit similar effects of selective absorption. 
These properties are more easily demonstrated in the case of 
visible rays on account of the great sensitiveness of the eye. 
But with the aid of the thermopile or other sensitive radiometer, 
they may be shown to belong equally to all the radiations from 
a heated body, even such as are thirty to fifty times slower in 
frequency than the longest visible rays. The same physical 
properties have also been shown to belong to electromagnetic 
waves excited by an electric discharge, whatever the frequency, 
thus including all lands of aetherial radiation in the same category 
as light. 

38. Theory of Exchanges. — The apparent concentration of 
cold by a concave- mirror, observed by G. B. Porta and redis- 
covered by M. A. Pictet, led to the enunciation of the theory 
of exchanges by Pierre Prevost in 1791. Prevost's leading idea 
was that all bodies, whether cold or hot, are constantly radiating 
heat. Heat equilibrium, he says, consists in an equality of ex- 
change. When equilibrium is interfered with, it is re-established 
by inequalities of exchange. If into a locality at uniform 
temperature a refracting or reflecting body is introduced, it has 
no effect in the way of changing the temperature at any point 
of that locality. A reflecting body, heated or cooled in the 
interior of such an enclosure, will acquire the surrounding 
temperature more slowly than would a non-reflector, and will 
less affect another body placed at a little distance, but will not 
affect the final equality of temperature. Apparent radiation of 
cold, as from a block of ice to a thermometer placed near it, is 
due to the fact that the thermometer being at a higher tempera- 
ture sends more heat to the ice than it received back from it. 
Although Prevost does net make the statement in so many words, 
it is clear that he regards the radiation from a body as depending 
only on its own nature and temperature, and as independent of 
the nature and presence of any adjacent body. Heat equilibrium 
in an enclosure of constant temperature such as is here postulated 
by Prevost, has often -been regarded as a consequence of Carnot's 
principle. Since difference of temperature is required for 
transforming heat into work, no work could be obtained from 
heat in such a system, and no spontaneous changes of tempera- 
ture can take place, as any such changes might be utilized for the 
production of work. This line of reasoning does not appear 
quite satisfactory, because it is tactitly assumed, in the reasoning 
by which Carnot's principle was established, as a result of 
universal experience, that a number of bodies within the same 
impervious enclosure, which contains no source of heat, will 
ultimately acquire the same temperature, and that difference of 
temperature is required to produce flow of heat. Thus although 
we may regard the equilibrium in such an enclosure as being 
due to equal exchanges of heat in all directions, the equal and 
opposite streams of radiation annul and neutralize each other in 
such a way that no actual transfer of energy in any direction 
takes place. The state of the medium is everywhere the same 
in such an enclosure, but its energy of agitation per unit volume 
is a function of the temperature, and is such that it would not 
be in equilibrium with any body at a different temperature, 

39. " Full " and Selective Radiation. Correspondence of 
Emission and Absorption.— The most obvious difficulties in the 



DUTHBRMANCY] 



HEAT 



*S3 



war <* this theory arise from the fact that nearly all radiation 
it more or less selective in character, as regards the quality 
and frequency of the rays emitted and absorbed. It was shown 
by J. Leslie, M. Melloni and other experimentalist* that many 
substances such as glass and water, which are very transparent to 
visible rays, are extremely opaque to much of the invisible 
radiation of lower frequency; and that polished metals, which 
are perfect reflectors, are very feeble radiators as compared 
with dull or black bodies at the same temperature. If two 
bodies emit rays of different periods in different proportions, 
it is not at first sight easy to see how their radiations can balance 
each other at the same temperature. The key to all such 
difficulties h'es in the fundamental conception, so strongly insisted 
on by Balfour Stewart, of the absolute uniformity (qualitative 
as well as quantitative) of the full or complete radiation stream 
inside an impervious enclosure of uniform temperature. It 
follows from this conception that the proportion of the full 
radiation stream absorbed by any body in such an enclosure 
must be exactly compensated in quality as well as quantity 
by the proportion emitted, or that the embsive and absorptive 
powers of any body at a given temperature must be precisely 
equal. A good reflector, like a polished metal, must also be a 
feeble radiator and absorber. Of the incident radiation it absorbs 
a small fraction and reflects the remainder, which together with 
Ube radiation emitted (being precisely equal to that absorbed) 
makes up the full radiation stream. A. partly transparent material, 
like glass, absorbs part of the full radiation and transmits part. 
But it emits rays precisely equal in quality and intensity to 
those which It absorbs, which together with the transmitted 
portion make up the full stream. The ideal black body or perfect 
radiator is a body which absorbs all the radiation incident on it. 
The rays emitted from such a body at any temperature must be 
equal to the full radiation stream in an isothermal enclosure at 
the same temperature. Lampblack, which may absorb between 
98 to 90% of the incident radiation, is generally taken as the 
type of a black body. But a closer approximation to full radia- 
tion may be obtained by employing a hollow vessel the internal 
walls of which are blackened and maintained at a uniform 
temperature by a steam jacket or other suitable means. If 
a relatively small hole is made in the side of such a vessel, the 
radiation proceeding through the aperture will be the full radia- 
tion corresponding to the temperature. -Such a vessel is also a 
perfect absorber. Of radiation entering through the aperture an 
infinitesimal fraction only could possibly emerge by successive 
reflection even if the sides were of polished metal internally. 
A thin platinum tube heated by an electric current appears 
feebly luminous as compared with a blackened tube at the same 
temperature. But if a small hole is made in the side of the 
polished tube, the light proceeding through the hole appears 
brighter than the blackened tube, as though the inside of the tube 
were much hotter than the outside, which is not the case to any 
appreciable extent if the tube is thin. The radiation proceeding 
through the hole is nearly that of a perfectly black body if the 
hole is smalL If there were no hole the internal stream of radiation 
would be exactly that of a black body at the same temperature 
however perfect the reflecting power* or however low the 
emissive power of the walls, because the defect in emissive power 
would be exactly compensated by the internal reflection. 

Balfour Stewart gave a number of striking illustrations of the 
qualitative identity of emission and absorption of a substance. 
Pieces of coloured glass placed in a fire appear to Idse their colour 
when at the same temperature as the coals behind them, because 
they compensate exactly for their selective absorption by 
radiating chiefly those colours which they absorb. Rocksalt 
is remarkably transparent to thermal radiation of nearly all 
kinds, but it is extremely opaque to radiation from a heated 
plate of rocksalt, because it emits when heated precisely those 
rays which it absorbs. A plate of tourmaline cut parallel to 
the axis absorbs almost completely light polarized in a plane 
parallel to the axis, but transmits freely light polarized in a 
perpendicular plane. When heated its radiation is polarized 
in the same plane as the radiation which it absorbs. In the case 



of Incandescent vapours, the exact correspondence of emission 
and absorption as regards wave-length of frequency of the light 
emitted and absorbed forms the foundation of the science of 
spectrum analysis. Fraunhofer had noticed the coincidence of 
a pair of bright yellow lines seen in the spectrum of a candle 
flame with the dark D lines in the solar spectrum, a coincidence 
which was afterwards more exactly verified by W. A. Miller. 
Foucault found that the flame of the electric arc showed the same 
lines bright in its spectrum, and proved that they appeared as 
dark lines in the otherwise continuous spectrum when the light 
from the carbon poles was transmitted through the arc Stokes 
gave a dynamical explanation of the phenomenon and illustrated 
it by the analogous case of resonance in sound. Kirch hoff 
completed the explanation tfkil. Mag., i860) of the dark lines 
in the solar spectrum by showing that the reversal of the spectral 
lines depended on the fact that the body of tne sun giving the 
continuous spectrum was at a higher temperature than the 
absorbing layer of gases surrounding it. Whatever be the nature 
of the selective radiation ^rom a body, the radiation of light of 
any particular wave-length cannot be greater than a certain 
fraction E of the radiation R of the same wave-length from a 
black body at the same temperature. The fraction £ measures 
the emissive power of the body for that particular wave-length, 
and cannot be greater than unity. The same fraction, by the 
principle of equality of emissive and absorptive powers, will 
measure the proportion absorbed of incident radiation R'. If 
the black body emitting the radiation R' is at the same tempera- 
ture as the absorbing layer, R«R', the emission balances the 
absorption, and the line will appear neither bright nor dark. If 
the source and the absorbing layer are at different temperatures, 
the radiation absorbed will be ER', and that transmitted will be 
R'-ER'. To this must be added the radiation emitted by the 
absorbing layer, namely ER, giving R'-E{R'-R). The line* 
will appear darker than the background R' if R' is greater than 
R, but bright if the reverse is the case. The D lines are dark in 
the sun because the photosphere is much hotter than the reversing 
layer. They appear bright in the candle-flame because theoutside 
mantle of the flame, in which the sodium burns and combustion 
is complete, is hotter than the inner reducing flame containing 
the incandescent particles of carbon which give rise to the con- 
tinuous spectrum. This qualitative identity of emission and 
absorption as regards wave-length can be most exactly and easily 
verified for luminous rays, and we are justified in assuming that 
the relation holds with the same exactitude for non-luminous 
rays, although in many cases the experimental proof is less 
complete and exact. 

40. Diathermancy. — A great array of data with regard to the 
transmissive power or diathermancy of transparent substances 
for the heat radiated from various sources at different tempera- 
tures were collected by Melloni, Tyndall, Magnus and other 
experimentalists. The measurements were chiefly of a qualitative 
character, and were made by interposing between the source 
and a thermopile a layer or plate of the substance to be examined. 
This method lacked quantitative precision, but led to a number 
of striking and interesting results, which are admirably set forth 
in Tyndall 's Heat. It also gave rise to many curious discrepancies, 
some of which were recognized as being due to selective 
absorption, while others are probably to be explained by im- 
perfections in the methods of experiment adopted. The general 
result of such researches was to show that substances, like water, 
alum and glass, which are practically opaque to radiation from 
a source at low temperature, such as a vessel filled with boiling 
water, transmit an increasing percentage of the radiation when 
the temperature of the source is increased. This is what would 
be expected, as these substances arc very transparent to visible 
rays. That the proportion transmitted is not merely a question 
of the temperature of the source, but also of the quality of the 
radiation, was shown by a number of experiments. For instance, 
K. H. Knoblauch (Pogg. Ann., 1847) found that a plate of glass 
interposed between a spirit lamp and a thermopile intercepts a 
larger proportion of the radiation from the flame itself than 
of the radiation from a platinum spiral heated in the flame, 



*54 



HEAT 



(DIATHERMANCY 



although the spiral is undoubtedly at a lower temperature than 
the flame. The explanation is that the spiral is a fairly good 
radiator of the visible rays to which the glass is transparent, 
but a bad radiator of the invisible rays absorbed by the glass 
which constitute the greater portion of the heat-radiation from 
the feebly luminous flame. 

Assuming that the radiation from the source under investiga- 
tion is qualitatively determinate, like that of a black body at a 
given temperature, the proportion transmitted by plates of 
various substances may easily be measured and tabulated for 
given plates and sources. But owing to the highly selective char- 
acter of the radiation and absorption, it is impossible to give 
any general relation between the thickness of the absorbing plate 
or layer and the proportion of the total energy absorbed. For 
these reasons the relative diathermancies of different materials 
do not admit of any simple numerical statement as physical 
constants, though many of the qualitative results obtained are 
very striking. Among the most interesting experiments were 
those of Tyndall, on the absorptive powers of gases and vapours, 
which led to a good deal of controversy at the time, owing to 
the difficulty of the experiments, and the contradictory results 
obtained by other observers. The arrangement employed by 
Tyndall for these measurements is shown in Fig. 6. A brass 




Fie. 6.— TyndalTs Apparatus for observing absorption of heat by 
gas and vapours. 

tube AB, polished inside, and dosed with plates of highly 
diathermanous rocksalt at either end, was fitted with stopcocks 
C and D for exhausting and admitting air or other gases or 
vapours. The source ot heat S was usually a plate of copper heated 
by a Bunsen burner, or a Leslie cube containing boiling water 
as shown at E. To obtain greater sensitiveness for differential 
measurements, the radiation through the tube AB incident on 
one face of the pile P was balanced against the radiation from 
a Leslie cube on the other face of the pile by means of an adjust- 
able screen H. The radiation on the two faces of the pile being 
thus balanced with the tube exhausted, Tyndall found that the 
admission of dry air into the tube produced practically no absorp- 
tion of the radiation, whereas compound gases such as carbonic 
acid, ethylene or ammonia absorbed ao to oo%, and a trace 
of aqueous vapour in the air increased its absorption 50 to 100 
times. H. G. Magnus, on the other hand, employing a thermopile 
and a source of heat, both of which were enclosed in the same 
exhausted receiver, in order to avoid interposing any rocksalt 
or other plates between the source and the pile, found an absorp- 
tion of 11% on admitting dry air, but could not detect any 
difference whether the air were dry or moist. Tyndall suggested 
that the apparent absorption observed by Magnus may have 
been due to the cooling of his radiating surface by convection, 
which is a very probable source of error in this method of experi- 
ment. Magnus considered that the remarkable effect of aqueous 
vapour observed by Tyndall might have been caused by con- 
densation on the polished internal walls of his experimental 
tube, or on the rocksalt plates at either end. 1 The question of 

1 In reference to this objection, Tyndall remarks (Phil. Mag., 
1862, p. 42a; Heal, p. 385); " In the first place the plate of salt 
nearest the source of neat is never moistened, unless the experiments 
are of the roughest character. Its proximity to the source enables 
the heat to chase away every trace of humidity from its surface." 
He therefore took precautions to dry only the circumferential por- 
tions of the plate nearest the pile, assuming that the flux of heat 
through the central portions would suffice to keep them dry. This 
reasoning is not at all satisfactory, because rocksalt is very hygro- 
scopic and becomes wet, even in unsaturated air, if the vapour 
pressure is greater than that of a saturated solution of salt at the 



the relative diathermancy of air and aqueous vapour for radiation 
from the sun to the earth and from the earth into space is one 
of great interest and importance in meteorology. Assuming 
with Magnus that at least 10% of the heat from a source at 
ioo* C. is absorbed in passing through a single foot of air, a very 
moderate thickness of atmosphere should suffice to absorb 
practically all the beat radiated from the earth into space. This 
could not be reconciled with well-known facts in regard to 
terrestrial radiation, and it was generally recognized that the 
result found by Magnus must be erroneous. TyndalTs experi- 
ment on the great diathermancy of dry air agreed much better 
with meteorological phenomena, but he appears to have 
exaggerated the effect of aqueous vapour. He concluded from 
his experiments that the water vapour present in the air absorbs 
at least 10% of the heat radiated from the earth within 10 ft. 
of its surface, and that the absorptive power of the vapour is 
about 17,000 times that of air at the same pressure. If the 
absorption of aqueous vapour were really of this order of magni- 
tude, it would exert a far greater effect in modifying climate 
than is actually observed to be the case. Radiation b observed 
to take place freely through the atmosphere at times when the 
proportion of aqueous vapour is such as would practically stop 
all radiation if TyndalTs results were correct. The very careful 
experiments of £. Lecher and J. Pernter (Phil. Mag., Jan. 1881) 
confirmed TyndalTs observations on the absorptive powers of 
gases and vapours satisfactorily in nearly all esses with the 
single exception of aqueous vapour. They found that there wo 
no appreciable absorption of heat from a source at xoo° C. in 
passing through 1 ft. of air (whether dry or moist), but that 
CO and COi at atmospheric pressure absorbed about 8%, and 
ethylene (defiant gas) about 50% in the same distance; the 
vapours of alcohol and ether showed absorptive powers of the 
same order as that of ethylene. They confirmed TyndalTs 
important result that the absorption does not diminish in pro- 
portion to the pressure, being much greater in proportion for 
smaller pressures in consequence of the selective character of 
the effect. They also supported .Us conclusion that absorptive 
power increases with the complexity of the molecule. But they 
could not detect any absorption by water vapour at a pressure 
of 7 mm., though alcohol at the same pressure absorbed 3% 
and acetic acid 10%. Later researches, especially those of 
S. P. Langley with the spectro-bolometer on the infra-red 
spectrum of sunlight, demonstrated the existence of marked 
absorption bands, some of which are due to water vapour. 
From the character of these bands and the manner in which 
they vary with the state of the air and the thickness traversed, 
it may be inferred that absorption by water vapour plays an 
important part in meteorology, but that it is too small to be 

temperature of the plate. Assuming that the vapour pressure of 
the saturated salt solution is only half that of pure water, it would 
require an elevation of temperature of io° C. to dry the rocksalt 
plates in saturated air at 15° C. It is only fair to say that the taws 
of the vapour pressures ot solutions were unknown in TyndalTs 
time, and that it was usual to assume that the plates would not 
become wetted until the dew-point was reached. The writer has 
repeated TyndalTs experiments with a facsimile of one of TyndalTs 
tubes in the possession of the Royal College of Science, fitted with 
plates of rocksalt cut from the same block as TyndalTs, and therefore 
of the same hygroscopic quality. Employing a reflecting galvano- 
'h a differential bolometer, which is quicker 



meter in conjunction with 
in '- ' ' - ' * 
dil 



wl 



"o be hardly any 
t the latter is not 
rith a Leslie cube 
become wet in a 
w>% according to 
nploying the open 
* rocksalt plates, 
i air saturated at 
Is of the tube. It 
r e become covered 
e calcium chloride 
end. Such a film 
Id account for the 
in drying the air 
a vacuum, it is 
pour were effected 



MIEN'S DISPLACEMENT LAW] 



HEAT 



*55 



readily detected by laboratory experiments in a 4 ft. tube, with- 
out the aid of spectrum analysis. 

41. Relation bctw&n Radiation and Temperature.— Assuming, in 
accordance with the reasoning of Balfour Stewart and Kirchhoff, 
that the radiation stream inside .an impervious enclosure at a 
uniform temperature is independent of the nature of the walls 
of the enclosure, and is the same for all substances at the same 
temperature, it follows that the full stream of radiation in such 
an enclosure, or the radiation emitted by an ideal black body 
or full radiator, is a function of the temperature only. The form 
of this function may be determined experimentally by observing 
the radiation between two black bodies at different temperatures, 
which will be proportional to the difference of the full radiation 
streams corresponding to tbeir several temperatures. The law 
now generally accepted was first proposed by Stefan as an 
empirical relation. Tyndall had found that the radiation from 
a white hot platinum wire at 1200° C. was 11*7 times its radiation 
when dull red at 525 C. Stefan (Witn. Akad. Ber., 1870, 79, 
p. 4*1) noticed that the ratio 11*7 is nearly that of the fourth 
power of the absolute temperatures as estimated by Tyndall. 
On making the somewhat different assumption that the radiation 
between two bodies varied as the difference of the fourth powers 
of their absolute temperatures, he found that it satisfied approxi- 
mately the experiments of Dulong and Petit and other observers. 
According to this law the radiation between a black body at 
a temperature 9 and a black enclosure or a black radiometer 
at a temperature 89 should be proportional to (0*-0 o 4 ). The 
law was very simple and convenient in form, but it rested so far 
on very insecure foundations. The temperatures given by 
Tyndall were merely estimated from the colour of the light 
emitted, and might have been some hundred degrees in error. 
We now know that the radiation from polished platinum is 
of a highly selective character, and varies more nearly as the 
fifth power of the absolute temperature. The agreement of the 
fourth power law with TyndaU's experiment appears therefore 
to be due to a purely accidental error in estimating the tempera- 
tures of the wire. Stefan also found a very fair agreement with 
Draper's observations of the intensity of radiation from a 
platinum wire, in which the temperature of the wire was deduced 
from the expansion. Here again the apparent agreement was 
largely due to errors in estimating the temperature, arising 
from the fact that the coefficient of expansion of platinum 
increases considerably with rise of temperature. So far as the 
experimental results available at that time were concerned, 
Stefan's law could be regarded only as an empirical expression 
of doubt f ul significance. But it received a much greater import- 
ance from theoretical investigations which were even then in 
progress. James Clerk Maxwell (Electricity and Magnetism, 
1873) had shown that a directed beam of electromagnetic 
radiation or light incident normally on an absorbing surface 
should produce a mechanical pressure equal to (he energy of the 
radiation per unit volume. A. G. Bartoli (1875) took up this idea 
and made it the basis of a thermodynamic treatment Of radiation. 
P. N. Lebedew in.iooo, and E. F. Nichols and G. F. Hull in 1901, 
proved the existence of this pressure by direct experiments. 
L. Boltzmann (1884) employing radiation as the working sub- 
stance in a Carnot cycle, showed that the energy of full 
radiation at any temperature per unit volume should be pro- 
portional to the fourth power of the absolute temperature. 
This law was first verified in a satisfactory manner by Heinrich 
Schneebeli (Wied. Ann.,, 1884, 22, p. 30). He observed the 
radiation from the bulb of an air thermometer heated to known 
temperatures through a small aperture in the walls of the furnace. 
With this arrangement the radiation was very nearly that of a 
black body. Measurements by J.T. Bottom Icy, August Schleier- 
macher, L. C. H. F. Paschen and others of the radiation from 
electrically heated platinum, failed to give concordant results 
on account of differences in the quality of the radiation, the 
importance of which was not fully realized at first. Later 
researches by Paschen with improved methods verified the law, 
and greatly extended our knowledge of radiation in other 
directions. One of the most complete series of experiments on | 



the relation between full radiation and temperature is that of 
O. K. Lummer and Ernst Pringsheim (Ann. Pkys., 1897, 63, 
p. 395)* They employed an aperture in the side of an enclosure 
at uniform temperature as the source of radiation, and compared 
the intensities at different temperatures by means of a bolometer. 
The fourth power law was well satisfied throughout the whole 
range of their experiments from -xoo° C. to 2300 C. According 
to this law, the rate of loss of heat by radiation R from a body 
of emissive power E and surface S at a temperature in an 
enclosure at 0» is given by the formula 
R-*ESp-09«), 

where a is the radiation constant. The absolute value of a was 
determined by F. Kurlbaum using an electric compensation 
method (Wied. Ann., 1898, 65, p. 746), in which the radiation re- 
ceived by a bolometer from a black body at a known temperature 
was measured by finding the electric current required to produce 
the same rise of temperature in the bolometer. K. Angstrom 
employed a similar method for solar radiation. Kurlbaum gives 
the value a = 5-32 X x o"» ergs per sq. cm. per sec. C. Christiansen 
(Wied. Ann., 1883, 19, p. 267) had previously found a value 
about 5% smaller, by observing the rate of cooling of a copper 
plate of known thermal capacity, which is probably a less accurate 
method. 

t proof given 
I erve that full 

1 haves exactly 

1 >t's or Clapey- 

i ation per unit 

, are f unctions 

< atcd vapour. 

inite amount, 

1 1 off from the 

r before. The 

] tnds with the 

1 as in the cose 

< nal energy of 
1 1 at constant 
I tion the pre*- 
1 external work 
I added" The 
1 crnal work of 

< he pressure P 

l ., — — I ^.. ...it increase of 

volume is four times the pressure. But by Canter's equation the 
latent heat of a saturated vapour per unit increase of volume is 
equal to the rate of increase of saturation-pressure per degree divided 
by Carnot's function or multiplied by the absolute temperature. 
Expressed in symbols we have, 

»(<?P/(»)-L/V-4P. 
where (d?ldti) represents the rate of increase of pressure. This 
equation shows that the percentage rate of increase of pressure is 
four times the percentage rate of increase of temperature, or that if 
the temperature is increased by 1 %, the pressure is increased by 
4 %. This is equivalent to the statement that the pressure varies 
as the fourth power of the temperature, a result which is mathematic- 
ally deduced by integrating the equation. 

43. Wien's Displacement Law. — Assuming that the fourth 
power law gives the quantity of full radiation at any tempera- 
ture, it remains to determine how the quality of the radiation 
varies with the temperature, since as we have seen both quantity 
and quality are determinate. This question may be regarded 
as consisting of two parts. (1) How is the wave-length or 
frequency of any given kind of radiation changed when its 
temperature is altered? (2) What is the form of the curve 
expressing the distribution of energy between the various wave- 
lengths in the spectrum of full radiation, or what is the distribu- 
tion of heat in the spectrum? The researches of Tyndall, 
Draper, Langley and other investigators had shown that while 
the energy of radiation of each frequency increased with rise 
of temperature, the maximum of intensity was shifted or dis- 
placed along the spectrum in the direction of shorter wave- 
lengths or higher frequencies. W. Wien (Ann. Phys., 1898, 
58, p. 662), applying Doppler's principle to the adiabatic com- 
pression of radiation in a perfectly reflecting enclosure, deduced 
that the wave-length of each constituent of the radiation should 
be shortened in proportion to the rise of temperature produced 



i S 6 



HEAT 



(CimVE IK SPECTRUM 



by the compression, In such a manner that the product X0 of 
wave-length and the absolute temperature should remain 
constant. According to this relation, which is known as Wien's 
Displacement Law, the frequency corresponding to the maximum 
ordinate of the energy curve of the normal spectrum of full 
radiation should vary directly (or the wave-length inversely) 
as the absolute temperature, a result previously obtained by 
H. F. Weber (1888). Paschen, and Lummer and Pringsheim 
. verified this relation by observing with a bolometer the intensity 
at different points in the spectrum produced by a fluorite prism. 
The intensities were corrected and reduced to a wave-length 
scale with the aid of Paschen's results on the dispersion formula 
of fluorite {Wied Ann., 1894, 53, p. 361). The curves in fig. 7 
illustrate results obtained by Lummer and Pringsheim (Bcr. 
dent. phys. Ges., 1899, x, p. 34) at three different temperatures, 
namely 1377°, 1087° and 836° absolute, plotted on a wave- 
length base with a scale of microns (ji) or millionths of a metre. 
The wave-lengths Oa, Ob, Oc, corresponding to the maximum 
ordinate* of each curve, vary inversely as the absolute tempera- 
tures given. The constant value of the product X0 at the 
maximum point is found to be 2920 Thus for a temperature 
of xooo° Abs. the maximum is at wave-length 2*92/*; at 2000° 
the maximum is at 1-46 n. 

44. Form of the Curve representing the Distribution of Energy 
in the Spectrum. — Assuming Wien's displacement law, it follows 
that the form of the curve representing the distribution of 
energy in the spectrum of full radiation should be the same 
for different temperatures with the maximum displaced in 
proportion to the absolute temperature, and with the total area 
increased in proportion to the fourth power of the absolute 
temperature. Observations taken with a bolometer along the 
length of a normal or wave-length spectrum, would give the 
form of the curve plotted on a wave-length base. The height of 
the ordinate at each point would represent the energy included 
between given limits of wave-length, depending on the width 
of the bolometer strip and the slit. Supposing that the bolometer 
strip had a width corresponding to *oi u, and were placed at 
10/i in the spectrum of radiation at 2000 Abs., It would receive 
the energy corresponding to wave-lengths between x-oo and 
i- 01 p. At a temperature of xooo° Abs. the corresponding part 
of the energy, by Wien's displacement law, would lie between 
the limits 200 and 2-02 ft, and the total energy between these 
limits would be 16 times smaller. But the bolometer strip 
placed at 2*0/1 would now receive only half of the energy, or the 
energy in a band 01 /1 wide, and the deflection would be 32 times 
less. Corresponding ordinates of the curves at different tempera- 
tures will therefore vary as the fifth power of the temperature, 
when the curves are plotted on a wave-length base. The 
maximum ordinates in the curves already given are found to 
vary as the fifth powers of the corresponding temperatures. 
The equation representing the distribution of energy on a wave- 
length base must be of the form 

E-CX-* F(W) -C**(X0)-*F(W) 
where F(X0) represents some function of the product of the 
wave-length and temperature, which remains constant for 
corresponding wave-lengths when is changed. If the curves 
were plotted on a frequency base, owing to the change of scale, 
the'maxknum ordinates would vary as the cube of the temperature 
instead of the fifth power, but the form of the function F would 
remain unaltered. Reasoning on the analogy of the distribution 
of velocities among the particles of a gas on the kinetic theory, 
which is a very similar problem, Wien was led to assume that 
the function F should be of the form «r*A*» where e is the base 
of Napierian logarithms, and c is a constant having the value 
14,600 if the wave-length is measured in microns /t. This 
expression was found by Paschen to give a very good approxima- 
tion to the form of the curve obtained, experimentally for those 
portions of the visible and infra-red spectrum where observations 
could be most accurately made. The formula was tested in 
two ways: (1) by plotting the curves of distribution of energy 
in the spectrum for constant temperatures as illustrated in 



fig. 7; (*) by plotting the energy corresponding to a given wave- 
length as a function of the temperature. Both methods gave 
very good agreement with Wien's formula for values of the 
product \0 not much exceeding 3000 A method of isolating 
rays, of great wave-length by successive reflection was devised 
by H. Rubens and E. 
F. Nichols {Wied. Ann., 
1897, 60, p. 418). They 
found that quarts and 
fluorite possessed the 
property of selective 
reflection for rays of 
wave-length 8*8p and 
24/i to 32*1 respec- 
tively, so that after 
four to six reflections 
these rays could be 
isolated from a source 
at any temperature in 
a state of considerable 
purity. The residual 
impurity at any stage 
could be estimated 
by interposing a thin 




spectrum of a black 



58: 



plate of quartz or fluorite which 
completely reflected or absorbed the residual rays, but 
allowed the impurity to pass. H. Beckmann, under the 
direction of Rubens, investigated the variation with tempera- 
ture of the residual rays reflected from fluorite employing 
sources from -8o e to 6oo° C, and found the results could not 
be represented by Wien's formula unless the constant c wens 
taken as 26,000 in place of 14,600. In their first series of observa- 
tions extending to 6 ji O.R. Lummer and E. Pringsheim (Dtttt. 
pkys.Gts., 1899, 1, p. 34) found systematic deviations indicating 
an increase in the value of the constant c for long waves and 
high temperatures. In a theoretical discussion of the subject. 
Lord Rayleigh (Phil. Mag., xooo, 49, p. 539) pointed out that 
Wien's law would lead to a limiting value Or*, of the radiatioa 
corresponding to any particular wavelength when the tempera- 
ture increased to infinity, whereas according to his view the 
radiation of great wave-length should ultimately increase is 
direct proportion to the temperature. Lummer and Pringsheim 
{Deut. phys. Ges., xooo, 2, p. 163) extended the range of their 
observations to x8/i by employing a prism of syivine in place of 
fluorite. They found deviations from Wien's formula increasing 
to nearly 50% at t8u, where, however, the observations were 
very difficult on account of the smallness of the energy to* be 
measured. Rubens and F. Kurlbaum (Ann. Phys., xooi, 4, 
p. 649) extended the residual reflection method to a temperature 
range from — xoo° to 1500° C, and employed the rays reflected 
from quartz 8-8p, 
and rocksalt 51 \x, in 
addition to those 
from fluorite. It ap- 
peared from these 
researches that the 
rays of great wave- 
length from a source 
at a high temperature 
tended to vary in the 
limit directly as the 
absolute temperature 
of the source, as 
suggested by Lord Fic - 8. —Distribution of energy in the 
Do»t.;«rh .»/i r.^.\A spectrum of full radiation at 2ooo - Abs. 
Raylagh, and wuk^^tng to formulae of Planck & Wien. 
not be represented 

by Wien's formula with any value of the constant c. The 
simplest type of formula satisfying the required conditions 
is that proposed by Max Planck (Ann. Phys., 1901, 4, p. 553) 
namely, 

E~CX-»(f/AA-i)-\ 

which agrees with Wien's formula when $ is small, where Wien's 
formula is known to be satisfactory, but approaches the limiting 




HEATH, B.— HEATH, N. 




Fig. 9. — Variation of 
energy of radiation cor- 
responding to wave- 
length 30 m. with tem- 
perature of source. 



form E«CV*¥/t, when is large, thus tatfefying-the condition 
proposed by Lord Rayleigh. The theoretical interpretation of 
this formula remains to some extent a matter of future investiga- 
tion, but it appears to satisfy experiment within the limits of 
observational error. In order to compare Planck's formula 
graphically with Wien's, the distribution curves corresponding 
to both formulae are plotted in fig. 8 for a temperature of 2000 
abs., taking the value of the constant 
c= 14,600 with a Bcale of wave-length 
in microns /c. The curves in fig. 9 
illustrate the difference between the 

!/ two formulae for the variation of the 

1 / intensity of radiation corresponding to 
" a fixed wave-length 30 /x. Assuming 

Wien's displacement law, the curves 
may be applied to find the energy for 
any other wave-length or temperature, 
by simply altering the wave-length 
scale in inverse ratio to the tempera- 
ture, or vice versa. Thus to find the 
distribution curve for iooo° abs., it is 
only necessary to multiply all the 
numbers in the wave-length scale of 
fig. 8 by 2; or to find the variation 
curve for wave-length 60 u, the numbers on the temperature scale 
of fig. 9 should be divided by 2. The ordinate scales must be 
increased in proportion to the fifth power of the temperature, or 
inversely as the fifth power of die wave-length respectively 
in figs. 8 and 9 if comparative results are required for different 
temperatures or wave-lengths. The results hitherto obtained 
for cases other than full radiation are not sufficiently simple and 
definite to admit of profitable discussion in the present article. 

Bibliography. — It would not be possible, within the limits of an 
article like the present, to give tables of the specific thermal properties 
of different substances so far as they have been ascertained bv ex- 
periment. To be of any use, such ta ?ly 
detailed, with very full references and to 
the value of the experimental evidence ch 
the results may be relied on. The qi >le 
is so enormous and its value so varied, t les 
still require reference to the original au on 
win be found collected in Landolt a nd 

Chemical Tables (Berlin, 1905). Shor„. t's 

Units and Physical Constants, are useful as illustrations of a system, 
but are not sufficiently complete for use in scientific investigations. 
Some of the larger works of reference, such as A. A. Winkelmann's 
Handbuch der Physik, contain fairly complete tables of specific 
properties, but these tables occupy so much space, and are so mis- 
leading if incomplete, that they are generally omitted in theoretical 
textbooks. 

Among older textboi m- 

tnended Tor its vivid p 
for early theories of ra<! 

Heat give a broad and ng 

modern textbooks, Pr nd 

Thomson's Heat are tl ell 

up to date. Sections 1 (t- 

books of Physics, such 2 t), 

Ganot (translated by A ial 

investigations on the si en 

cited. Others will be f 'in 

and Maxwell. Treatist as 

Fourier's Conduction oj les 

to this encyclopaedia he 

following is a list: Cai >N- 

DUCTIONOFHEAT, DlFrw««^,»-i^»«Ba*v.-,. w-w... «. XV .-~..~E3, 

Radiation, Radiometer, Solution, Thermodynamics, Thermo- 
electricity, Thermometry, Vaporization. For the practical 
aspects of beating see Heating. (H. l. C.) 

HRATH, BENJAMIN (1704-1766), English classical scholar 
and bibliophile, was born at Exeter on the 20th of April 1704. 
He was the son of a wealthy merchant, and was thus able to 
devote himself mainly to travel and book-collecting. He became 
town clerk of his native city in 175a, and held the office till his 
death on the 13th of September 1766. In 1763 he had published 
a pamphlet advocating the repeal of the cider tax in Devonshire, 
and his endeavours led to success three years later. As a classical 
scholar he made his reputation by his critical and metrical notes 
on the Greek tragedians, which procured him an honorary 



tat 



»57 

D.C.L. from Oxford (31st of Match 1752). He also left MS. 
notes on Burmann'a and Marty n's editions of Virgil, on Euripides, 
Catullus, Tibulltts, and the greater part of Hesiod. In some of 
these he adopts the whimsical name Dexiades Ericius. His 
Rerisal of Shakes pear's Text (1765) was an answer to the " in- 
solent dogmatism " of Bishop Warburton. The Essay towards a 
Demonstrative Proof of the Divine Existence, Unity and Attributes 
(1 740) was intended to combat the opinions of Voltaire, Rousseau 
and Hume. Two of bis sons (among a family of thirteen) were 
Benjamin, headmaster of Harrow (1771-1785), and George* 
headmaster of Eton (1 796). His collection of rare classical works 
formed the nucleus of his son Benjamin's famous library (Biblio- 
theca Heathiana). 

An account of the Heath family will be found in Sir W. R. Drake's 
Heathiana (1882). 

HEATH, NICHOLAS (c 1 501-1578), archbishop of York and 
lord chancellor, was born in London about 1501 and graduated 
B.A. at Oxford in 1510. He then migrated to Christ's College, 
Cambridge, where he graduated B.A. in 1520, M.A. in 1522, and 
was elected fellow in 1524. After holding minor preferments 
he was appointed archdeacon of Stafford in 1534 and graduated 
D.D. in 1535. He then accompanied Edward Fox (?.».), bishop 
of Hereford, on bis mission to promote a theological and political 
understanding with the Lutheran princes of Germany. His 
selection for this duty implies a readiness on Heath's part to 
proceed some distance along the path of reform; but his dealings 
with the Lutherans did not confirm this tendency, and Heath's 
subsequent career was closely associated with the cause of re- 
action. In 1 539, the year of the Six Articles, he was made bishop 
of Rochester, and in 1543 he succeeded Latimer at Worcester. 
His Catholicism, however, was of a less rigid type than Gardiner's 
and Bonner's; he felt something of the force of the national 
antipathy to foreign influence, whether ecclesiastical or secular, 
and was always impressed by the necessity of national unity, 
so far as was possible, in matters of faith. Apparently he made 
no difficulty about carrying out the earlier reforms of Edward VI., 
and he accepted the first book of common prayer after it had 
been modified by the House of Lords in a Catholic direction. 

His definite breach with the Reformation occurred on the 
grounds, on which four centuries later Leo XIII. denied the 
Catholicity of the reformed English Church, namely, on the 
question of the Ordinal drawn up m February 1550. Heath 
refused to accept it, was imprisoned, and in 1 551 deprived of his 
bishopric. On Mary's accession he was released and restored, 
and made president of the council of the Marches and Wales. 
In 1555 he was promoted to the archbishopric of York, which he 
did much to enrich after the Protestant spoliation; he built 
York House in the Strand. After Gardiner's death he was 
appointed lord chancellor, probably on Pole's recommendation; 
for Heath, like Pole himself, disliked the Spanish party in 
England. Unlike Pole, however, be seems to have been averse 
from the excessive persecution of Mary's reign, and no Protestants 
were burnt in his diocese. He exercised, however, little influence 
on Mary's secular or ecclesiastical policy. 

On Mary's death Heath as chancellor at once proclaimed 
Elizabeth. Like Sir Thomas More he held that it was entirely 
within the competence of the national state, represented by 
parliament, to determine questions of the succession to the 
throne; and although Elizabeth did not renew his commission 
as lord chancellor, he continued to sit in the privy council for 
two months until the government had determined to complete 
the breach with the Roman Catholic Church; and as late as 
April 1559 he assisted the government by helping to arrange 
the Westminster Conference, and reproving his more truculent 
co-religionists. He refused to crown Elizabeth because she 
would not have the coronation service accompanied with the 
elevation of the Host; and ecclesiastical ceremonies and doctrine 
could not, in Heath's view, be altered or abrogated by any mere 
national authority. Hence he steadily resisted Elizabeth's acts 
of supremacy and uniformity, although he had acquiesced in the 
acts of 1534 and 1540. Like others of Henry's bishops, he had 
been convinced by the events of Edward' VI. 's reign that Sir 



. S 8 



HEATH, W.— HEATH 



Thomas More wis right and Henry VHI. was wrong in their 
attitude towards the claims of the papacy and the Catholic 
Church. He was therefore necessarily deprived of his arch- 
bishopric in 1559, but he remained loyal to Elizabeth; and after 
a temporary confinement he was suffered to pass the remaining 
nineteen years of his life in peace and quiet, never attending 
public worship and sometimes bearing mass in private. The 
queen visited him more than once at his bouse at Chobbam, 
Surrey; he died and was buried there at the end of 1578. 

Authorities.— Letters and Papers of Henry VII L; Acts of the 
Privy Council; Cat State Papers, Domestic Addenda, Spanish and 
Venetian; Kemp's Loacley MSS.; Froude's History; Burnet. 
Collier, Dixon and Frere's Church Histories; Strype's Works (General 
Index); Parker Soc Publications (Gough's Index); But'* Eliza- 
btlkam Settlement. (A.F.P.) 

HEATH* WILLIAM (1737-18x4), American soldier, was born 
in Roxbury, Massachusetts, on the and of March 1737 (old 
style). He was brought up as a farmer and had a passion for 
military exercises. In 1765 he entered the Ancient and Honour- 
able Artillery Company of Boston, of which he became commander 
in 1770. In the same year he wrote to the Boston Gaulle letters 
signed "A Military Countryman, " urging the necessity of 
military training. He was a member of the Massachusetts 
General Court from 1770 to 1774, of the provincial committee of 
safety, and in 1774-1775 of the provincial congress. He was 
commissioned a provincial brig.-general in December 1774, 
directed the pursuit of the British from Concord (April 19, 1775) , 
was promoted to be provincial major-general on the aoth of June 
1775, and two days later was commissioned fourth brig.-general 
in the Continental Army. He became major-general on the 9th 
of August 1776, and was in active service around New York 
until early the next year. In January 1777 he attempted to 
take Fort Independence, near Spuyten Duyvil, then garrisoned 
by about aooo Hessians, but at the first sally of the garrison his 
troops became panic-stricken and a few days later he withdrew. 
Washington reprimanded him and never again entrusted to him 
any important operation in the field. Throughout the war, 
however, Heath was very efficient in muster service and in the 
barracks. From March 1 777 to October 1778 he was in command 
of the Eastern Department with headquarters at Boston, and 
had charge (Nov. 1777-Oct. 1778) of the prisoners of war from 
Burgoyne's army held at Cambridge, Massachusetts. In May 1 779 
he was appointed a commissioner of the Board of War. He was 
placed in command of the troops on the E. side of the Hudson 
in June 1779, and of other troops and posts on the Hudson in 
November of the same year. In July 1780 he met the French 
allies under Rochambeau on their arrival in Rhode Island; in 
October of the same year he succeeded Arnold in command of 
West Point and its dependencies; and in August 1781, when 
Washington went south to meet Cornwallis, Heath was left in 
command of the Army of the Hudson to watch Clinton. After 
the war he retired to his farm at Roxbury, was a member of the 
state House of Representatives in 1788, of the Massachusetts 
convention which ratified the Federal Constitution in the same 
year, and of the governor's council in 1 789-1 790, was a state 
senator (1 791-1793), and in 1806 was elected lieutenant-governor 
of Massachusetts but declined to serve. He died at Roxbury on 
the 24th of January 1814, the last of the major-generals of the 
War of American Independence. 

See Memoirs of Major-General Heath, containing Anecdotes, Details 
of Skirmishes. Battles and other Military Events during the American 
War, written by Himself (Boston, 1798; frequently reprinted, perhaps 
the best edition being that published in New York in 1901 by William 
Abbatt), particularly valuable for the descriptions of Lexington 
and Bunker HilL of the fighting around New York, of the contro- 
versies with Burgoyne and hb officers during their stay in Boston, 
and of relations with Rochambeau; and his correspondence, The 
Heath Papers, vols, iv.-v., seventh scries, Massachusetts Historical 
Society Collections (Boston, 1904-1905). 

HEATH, the English form of a name given in most Teutonic 
dialects to the common ling or heather (Calluna vulgaris), but 
now applied to all species of Erica, an extensive genus of mono- 
petalous plants, belonging to the order Ericaceae. The heaths 
are evergreen shrubs, with small narrow leaves, in whorls usually 




Fig. 1. 
Calluna vulgaris. 



set rather thkkly 00 the shoots; the persistent flowers have 4 
sepals, and a 4-cleft campanulate or tubular corolla, in many 
species more or less ventricose or inflated; the dry capsule is 
4-celled, and opens, in the true Ericae, in 4 segments, to the 
middle of which the partitions adhere, though in the ling the 
valves separate at the dissepiments. The plants are mostly of 
low growth, but several African kinds reach the size of large 
bushes, and a common South European species, £. arbor ea, 
oc c asio n ally attains almost the aspect and dimensions of a tree. 
One of the best known and moat interesting of the family is 
the common heath, heather or ling, Calluna vulgaris (fig. 1), 
placed by most botanists in a separate 
genus on account of the peculiar dehiscence 
of the fruit, and from the coloured calyx, 
which extends beyond the corolla, having 
a whorl of sepal-like bracts beneath. This 
shrub derives some economic importance 
from its forming the chief vegetation on 
many of those extensive wastes that occupy 
so large a portion of the more sterile lands 
of northern and western Europe, the usually 
desolate appearance of which is enlivened 
in the latter part of summer by its abundant 
pink blossoms. When growing erect to the 
height of 3 ft. or more, as it often does in 
sheltered places, its purple stems, dose- 
leaved green shoots and feathery spikes 
of bell-shaped flowers render it one of the 
h andsomest of the heaths; but on the 
bleaker elevations and more arid slopes it 
frequently rises only a few inches above the 
ground. In all moorland countries the ling 
is applied to many rural purposes; the 
larger stems are made into brooms, the 
shorter tied up into bundles that serve as 
brushes, while the long trailing shoots are 
woven into baskets. Pared up with the peat about its roots 
it forms a%ood fuel, often the only one obtainable on the 
drier moors. The shielings of the Scottish Highlanders were 
formerly constructed of heath stems, cemented together with 
peat-mud, worked into a kind of mortar with dry grass or 
straw; hovels and sheds for temporary purposes are still 
sometimes built in a similar way, and roofed in with ling. 
Laid on the ground, with the flowers above, it forms a soft 
springy bed, the luxurious couch of the ancient Gael, still gladly 
resorted to at times by the hill shepherd or hardy deer-stalker. 
The young shoots were in former days employed as a substitute 
for hops in brewing, while their astringency rendered them 
valuable as a tanning material in> Ireland and the Western Isles. 
They are said also to have been used by the Highlanders for 
dyeing woollen yarn yellow, and other colours are asserted to 
have been obtained from them, but some writers appear to con- 
fuse the dyer's-weed, Genista Hnctoria, with the heather. The 
young juicy shoots and the seeds, which remain long in the 
capsules, furnish the red grouse of Scotland with the larger portion 
of its sustenance; the ripe seeds are eaten by many birds. The 
tops of the ling afford a considerable part of the winter fodder of 
the hill flocks, and are popularly supposed to communicate the 
fine flavour to Welsh and Highland mutton, but sheep seldom crop 
heather while the mountain grasses and rushes are sweet and 
accessible. Ling has been suggested as a material for paper, 
but the stems are hardly sufficiently fibrous for that purpose. 
The purple or fine-leaved heath, E. cinerea (fig. ?), one of the most 
beautiful of the genus, abounds on the lower moors and commons 
of Great Britain and western Europe, in such situations being 
sometimes more prevalent than the ling. The flowers of both 
these species yield much honey, furnishing a plentiful supply 
to the bees in moorland districts; from this heath hooey the 
Picts probably brewed the mead said by Boetius to have been 
made from the flowers themselves. 

The genus contains about 420 known species, by far the greater 
part being indigenous to the western districts of South Africa, 



HEATHCOAT— HEATHFIELD 




Fic. 2. 
Erica cinerea. 



tat It b also a characteristic genus of the Mediterranean region, 
while several spedes extend into northern Europe. No species is 
native in America, but ling occurs as an introduced plant on the 
Atlantic side from Newfoundland to New Jersey. Five species 
occur in Britain: B. cinerea, E. ktralix (cross-leaved heath), 
both abundant on heaths and commons, 
E. Wga*s, Cornish heath, found only in 
West Cornwall, E. cUioris in the west of 
England and Ireland and E. medtterranea 
in Ireland. The three last are south-west 
European species which reach the northern 
limit of their distribution in the west of 
England and Ireland. E. scopcria is a 
common heath in the centre of France 
and elsewhere in the Mediterranean 
region, forming a spreading bush several 
feet high. It is known as bruyere, and 
its stout underground rootstocks yield 
the briar-wood used for pipes. 

The Cape heaths have long been 
favourite objects of horticulture. In the 
warmer putt of Britain several will bear 
*%nJ^lM(fi^ exposure to the cold of ordinary winters 

KaTTS^T- in a sheltered border, but most need the 

^ft x protection of the conservatory. They are 

^^* sometimes raised from seed, but are chiefly 

multiplied by cuttings ''struck " in sand, 
and afterwards transferred to pots filled 
with a mixture of black peat and sand; the peat should be dry 
and free from sourness. Much attention is requisite in watering 
heaths, as they seldom recover if once allowed to droop, while 
they will not bear much water about their roots: the heath* 
bouse should be light and well ventilated, the plants requiring 
son, and soon perishing in a close or permanently damp atmo- 
sphere; in England little or no heat is needed in ordinary seasons. 
The European heaths succeed well in English gardens, only 
requiring a peaty soil and sunny situation to thrive as well as In 
their native localities: E. cornea, mediterranea, eiliaris, vagans, 
and the pretty cross-leaved heath of boggy moors, E, Tctrolix, 
arc among those most worthy of cultivation. The beautiful large- 
flowered St Dabeoc's heath, belonging to the closely allied genus 
Dabeocia, is likewise often seen in gardens. It is found in boggy 
heaths in Connemara and Mayo, and is also native in West 
France, Spain and the Azores. 

A beautiful work on heaths is that by H. C. Andrews, containing 
coloured engravings of nearly 500 spedes and varieties, with descrip- 
tions in English and Latin (4 vols., 1802-1805). 

HBATHCOAT, JOHN (1783-1861), English inventor, was born 
at Duffield near Derby on the 7th of August 1783. During his 
apprenticeship to a framesmith near Loughborough, he made 
an improvement in the construction of the warp-loom, so as to 
produce mitts of a lacc-like appearance by means of it. He 
began business on his own account at Nottingham, but finding 
himself subjected to the intrusion of competing inventors he 
removed to Hathern. There in 1808 he constructed a machine 
capable of produdng an exact imitation of real pillow-lacc. 
This was by far the most expensive and complex textile apparatus 
till then existing; and in describing the process of his invention 
Heathcoat said in 1836, " The single difficulty of getting the 
diagonal threads to twist in the allotted space was so great that, 
If now to be done, I should probably not attempt its accomplish- 
ment." Some time before perfecting his invention, which he 
patented in 1809, he removed to Loughborough, where he 
entered into partnership with Charles Lacy, a Nottingham 
manufacturer; but in 1816 their factory was attacked by the 
Luddites and their 55 lace frames destroyed. The damages 
were assessed in the King's Bench at £10,000; but as Heathcoat 
declined to expend the money in the county of Leicester he never 
received any part of it. Undaunted by his loss, he began at 
once to construct new and greatly improved machines in an 
unoccupied factory at Tiverton, Devon, propelling them by 
water-power and afterwards by steam. His claim to the inven- 



"59 



tion of the twisting and traversing lace machine was disputed, 
and a patent was taken out by a clever workman for a similar 
machine, which was dedded at a trial in 1 816 to be an infringe- 
ment of Heathcoat 's patent. He followed his great invention by 
others of much ability, as, for instance, contrivances for orna- 
menting net while in couise of manufacture and for making 
ribbons and platted and twisted net upon his machines, improved 
yarn spinning-frames, and methods for winding raw silk from 
cocoons. He also patented an improved process for extracting 
and purifying salt. An offer of £10,000 was made to him in 
1833 for the use of his processes in dressing and finishing silk nets, 
but he allowed the highly profitable secret to remain undivulged. 
In 1832 he patented a steam plough. Heathcoat was elected 
member of parliament for Tiverton in 183 a. Though he sddom 
spoke in tne House he was constantly engaged on committees, 
where his thorough knowledge of business and sound judgment 
were highly valued. He retained his seat until 1859, and after 
two years of declining health fie died on the x8th of January 
1861 at Bolham House, near Tiverton. 

HEATHCOTE, SIR GILBERT (c. 1651-1733), lord mayor of 
London, belonged to an old Derbyshire family and was educated 
at Christ's College, Cambridge, afterwards becoming a merchant 
in London. His trading ventures were very successful; he 
was one of the promoters of the new East India company and 
he emerged victorious from a contest between himself and the 
old East India company in 1693; he was also one of the founders 
and first directors of the bank of England. In 1702 he became 
an alderman of the dty of London and was knighted; he served 
as lord mayor in 1711, being the last lord mayor to ride on horse- 
back in his procession. In 1700 Heathcote was sent to parlia- 
ment as member for the dty of London, but he was soon expelled 
for his share in the drculation of some exchequer bills; however, 
he was again elected for the dty later in the same year, and 
he retained his seat until 1710. In 17x4 he was member for 
Heist on, in 1722 for New Lymington, and in 1727 for St 
Germans. He was a consistent Whig, and was made a baronet 
eight days before his death. Although extremely rich, Heath- 
cote's meanness Is referred to by Pope; and it was this trait 
that accounts largely for his unpopularity with the lower dasses. 
He died in London on the 25th of January 1733 and was buried 
at Normanton, Rutland, a residence which he had purchased 
from the Mackworths. 

A descendant, Sir Gilbert John Heathcote, Bart. (1795-1867), 
was created Baron Avdand in 1856; and his son Gilbert Henry, 
who in 1888 inherited from his mother the barony of Willoughby 
de Eresby, became xst earl of Ancaster in 1892. 

HEATHEN, a term originally applied to all persons or races 
wfao did not hold the Jewish or Christian beHef, thus induding 
Mahommedans. It Is now more usually given to polytheistic 
races, thus excluding Mahommedans. The derivation of the 
word has been much debated. It is common to all Germanic 
languages ; d. German Hade, Dutch heiden. It is usually ascribed 
to. a Gothic haiVi, heath. In Ulfilas' Gothic version of the 
Bible, the earliest extant literary monument of the Germanic 
languages, the Syrophoenirian woman (Mark vn\ 26) is called 
hafyno, where the Vulgate has genlUis. " Heathen," i.e. the 
people of the heath or open country, would thus be a translation 
of the Latin paganus, pagan, i.e. the people of the pagvs or 
village, applied to the dwellers in the country where the worship 
of the old gods still lingered, when the people of the towns were 
Christians (but see Pagan for a more tenable explanation of that 
term). On the other hand it has been suggested (Prof. S. 
Bugge, Indo-German. Forsckungen, v. 178, quoted in the New 
English Dictionary) that Ulfilas may have adopted the word 
from the Armenian hetanos, i.e. Greek tfa?, tribes, races, the 
word used for the " Gentiles " in the New Testament. GenliKs 
in Latin, properly meaning " tribesman," came to be used of 
foreigners and non-Roman peoples, and was adopted in ecde- 
siastical usage for the non-Christian nations and in the Old 
Testament for non- Jewish races. 

HEATHFIELD, GEORGE AUGUSTUS BUOTT, £aion (1717-1. 
1790), British general, a younger son of Sir Gilbert EGott, Bart, 



i6o 



HEATING 



of Stobs, Roxburghshire, was born on the 25th of December 
171 7, and educated abroad for the military profession. As a 
volunteer he fought with the Prussian army in 1735 and 1736, 
and then entered the Grenadier Guards. He went through the 
war of the Austrian Succession and was wounded at Dettingen, 
rising to be lieutenant-colonel in 1 7 54. In 1 7 59 he became colonel 
of a new regiment of light horse (afterwards the 15th Hussars) 
and became well known for the efficiency which it displayed in 
the subsequent campaigns. He became lieutenant-general in 
1765. In 1775 he was selected to be governor of Gibraltar (g.v.), 
and it is in connexion with his magnificent defence in the great 
siege of 1779 that his name is famous. &is portrait by Sir 
Joshua Reynolds is in the National Gallery. In 1787 he was 
created Baron Heathfield of Gibraltar, but died on the 6th of 
July 1700. He had married in 1748 the heiress of the Drake 
family, to which Sir Francis Drake belonged. His son, the 
and baron, died in 1813 and the peerage became extinct, but 
the estates went to the family- ol Eliott-Drake (baronetcy of 
1821) through his sister. 

HEATING. In temperate latitudes the climate is generally 
such as to necessitate in dwellings during a great portion of the 
year a temperature warmer than that out of doors. The object 
of the art of heating is to secure this required warmth with the 
greatest economy and efficiency. For reasons of health it may 
be assumed that no system of heating is advisable which does 
not provide for a constant renewal of the air in the locality 
warmed, and on this account there is a difficulty in treating as 
separate matters the subjects of heating and ventilation, which 
in practical schemes should be considered conjointly. (See 
Ventilation). 

The object of all heating apparatus is the transference of heat 
from the fire to the various parts of the building it is intended 
to warm, and this transfer may be effected by radiation, by con- 
duction or by convection. An open fire acts by radiation; it 
warms the air in a room by first warming the walls, floor, ceiling 
and articles in the room, and these in turn warm the air. There- 
fore in a room with an open fire the air is, as a rule, less heated 
than the walls. In many forms of fireplaces fresh air is brought 
in and passed around the back and sides of the stove before being 
admitted into the room. A closed stove acts mainly by con- 
vection; though when heated to a high temperature it gives 
out radiant heat. Windows have a chilling effect on a room, 
and in calculations extra allowance should be made for window 
areas. 

There are a number of methods available for adoption in the 
heating of buildings, but it is a matter of considerable difficulty 
to suit the method of warming to the class of building to be 
warmed. Heating may be effected by one of the following 
systems, or installations may be so arranged as to combine the 
advantages of more than one method: open fires, closed stoves, 
hot-air apparatus, hot water circulating in pipes at low or at high 
pressure, or steam at high or low pressure. 

The open grate still holds favour in England, though in 
America and on the continent of Europe it has been superseded 
by the closed stove. The old form of open fire is 
2JJJJ certainly wasteful of fuel, and the loss of heat up the 

chimney and by conduction into the brickwork 
backing of the stove is considerable. Great improvements, 
however, have been effected in the design of open fireplaces, 
and many ingenious contrivances of this nature are now in the 
market which combine efficiency of heating with economy of 
fuel. Unless suitable fresh air inlets are provided, this form 
of stove will cause the room to be draughty, the strong current 
of warm air up the flue drawing cold air in through the crevices 
in the doors and windows. The best form of open fireplace is 
the ventilating stove, in which fresh air is passed around the 
back and sides of the stove before being admitted through 
convenient openings into the room. This has immense advantages 
over the ordinary type of fireplace. The illustrations show 
two forms of ventilating fireplace, one (fig. 1) similar in appearance 
to the ordinary domestic grate, the other (fig. 2) with descending 
smoke flue suitable for hospitals and public rooms, where it 



might be fixed in the middle of the apartment. The fixing of 

stoves of this kind entails the laying of pipes or ducts from the 

open to convey fresh air to the back of the stove. 

4 With closed stoves much less heat is wasted, and consequently 

less fuel is burned, than with open grates, but they often cause 

an unpleasant sensation of dryness in the air, and the nmmmim 

products of combustion also escape to some extent, 2S 

rendering this method of heating not only unpleasant 

but sometimes even dangerous. The method in Great Britain 

is almost entirely confined to places of public assembly, but in 



Fig. 1. 



Fio. 2. 



America and on the continent of. Europe it is much used for 
domestic heating. If the flue pipe be carried up a considerable 
distance inside the apartment to be warmed before being turned 
into the external air, practically the whole of the heat generated 
will be utilized. Charcoal, coke or anthracite coal are the fuels 
generally used in slow combustion heating stoves. 

Gas fires, as a substitute for the open coal fire, have many 
points in their favour, for they are conducive to cleanliness, they 
need but little attention, and t he heat is easily controlled. 
On the other hand, they may give off unhealthy ^v* 

fumes and produce unpleasant odours. They usually 
take the form of cast iron open stoves fitted with a number of 
Bunsen burners which heat perforated lumps of asbestos. The 
best form of stove is that with which perfect combustion is 
most nearly attained, and to which a pan of water is affixed to 
supply a desirable humidity to the air, the gas having the effect 
of drying the atmosphere. With another form of gas stove 
coke is used in place of the perforated asbestos; the fire is 
started with the gas, which, when the coke is well alight, may 
be dispensed with, and the fire kept up with coke in the usual 
way. 

Electrical heating appliances have only recently passed the 
experimental stage; there is, however, undoubtedly a great 
future for electric heating, and the perfecting of the 
stove, together with the cheapening of the electric n ,, ffl ^ 
current, may be expected to result in many of the 
other stoves and convectors being superseded. Hitherto the 
large bill for electric energy has debarred the general use of 
electrical heating, in spite of its numerous advantages. 

Oils are powerful fuels, but the high price of refined petroleum, 
the oil generally preferred, precludes its widespread use for 
many purposes for which it is suitable. In small 
stoves for warming and for cooking, petroleum presents 
some advantages over other fuels, in that there is no 
chimney to sweep, and if well managed no unpleasant fumes, 
and the stoves are easily portable. On the other hand, these 
stoves need a considerable amount of attention in filling, trimming 
and cleaning, and there is some risk of explosion and damage by 
accidental leaking and smoking. Crude or unrefined petroleum 
needs a special air-spray pressure burner for its use, and this 
suffers from the disadvantage of being noisy. Gas and oil 
radiators would be more properly termed " convectors," since 
they warm mainly by converted currents. They are similar 
in appearance to a hot-water or steam radiator, and, indeed, 
some are designed to be filled with water and used as such. 
They should always be fitted with a pan of water to supply the 
necessary humidity to the warmed air, and a flue to carry off 
any disagreeable fumes. 



HEATING 



i6t 



Hotting by warmed air, one of the oldest methods in use, 
has been much improved by attention to the construction of 
the apparatus, and if properly installed will give as 
^T"* good effects as it is possible to obtain. The system 
is especially suitable for churches, assembly halls and 
Urge rooms. A stove of special design is placed in a chamber 
in the basement or cellar, and cold fresh air is passed through 
it, and led by means of flues to the various apartments for dis- 
tribution by means of easily regulated inlet valves. To prevent 
the atmosphere from becoming unduly dry a pan of water is 
fitted to the stove; this serves to moisten the air before it, 
passes into the distributing flues. If each distributing flue is 
connected by means of a mixing valve with a cold-air flue, the 
warmth of the incoming air can be regulated to a nicety (see 
Vkntilatiom). 

There are many different systems of heating by hot water 
circulating in pipes. The oldest and best known is the " two 
L9W pipe " system, others being the " one pipe " or " simple 

circuit/' and the u drop " or M overhead." The high 
pressure system is of later invention, having been 
first put to practical use by A. M. Perkins in 1845. 
All these methods warm chiefly by means of converted heat, 
the amount of true radiation from the pipes being small. The 
manner in which the circulation of hot water takes place m the 
tubes is as follows. Fire heats the water in a boiler from the top 
of which a " flow " pipe communicates with the rooms to be 
warmed (fig. 3). As the water is heated it becomes lighter, 
rises to the top of the boiler, 
and passes along the flow 
pipe. It is followed by 
more and more hot water, 
and so travels along the flow 
pipe, which is rising all the 
time, to the farthest point 
of the circuit, by which 
time it has in all proba- 
bility cooled considerably. 
From this point the "re- 
turn " pipe drops, usually at 
the same rate as the flow 
pipe rises; and in due course 
the water reaches its start- 
ing point, the boiler, and is 
again heated and again cir- 
culated through the system. 
The connexion of the return 
pipe is made with the lower 
part of the boiler. Branches 
may be mide'from the main 
pipes by means of smaller 
pipes arranged in the same 
manner as the mains, the 
branch flow pipe being con- 
nected with the main flow 
pipe and returning into the 
Pic. 3. main return. To obtain a 

larger heating surface than 
a pipe affords, radiators are connected with the pipes where 
desired, and the water passing through them warms the sur- 
rounding air. 

The H one pipe " system (fig. 4) acts on precisely the 
same principle, but in place of two pipes being placed 
m adjacent positions one large main makes a complete 
circuit of the area to be warmed, starting from and return- 
ing to the boiler, and from this main flow and return branches 
are taken and connected with radiators and other heating 
appliances. 

In the " drop " or " overhead " system (fig. 5) a rising main 
is taken directly from the boiler to the topmost floor of the 
building, and from this branches are dropped to the lower floors, 
and connected by means of smaller branches to radiators or 
coils. The vertical branches descend to the basement and 




generally merge in a single return pipe which is connected to 
the lower part of the boiler. 

The rate of circulation in the ordinary low pressure hot-water 
system may be considerably accelerated by means of steam 
injections. The water after being heated passes into a circulating 



k Jg- S- JEE 




Fie. 4. 

tank into which steam is introduced; this, mixing with the hot 
water, gives it additional motive power, resulting in a faster 
circulation. This steam condensing adds to the water in the 
pipe and naturally causes an overflow, which is led back to the 
boiler and re-used. In districts where the water is hard, this 
arrangement considerably lengthens the life of the boiler, aa 



*Tf\. 



■*x 



octant ft* 




Fig. 5. 



the same water is used over and over again, and no fresh deposit 
of fur occurs. Owing to the very rapid movement and the 
consequent increased rate of transmission of heat, the pipes and 
radiators may be reduced in sise, in many circumstances a very 
desirable thing to achieve. With this system the temperature 



l62 



HEATING 



nRFJir, 



can be quickly raised and easily controlled. If the weather is 
mild, a moderate heat may be obtained by using the apparatus 
as an ordinary hot water system, and shutting off the steam 
injectors. 

The cold-water supply and expansion tank (fig. 3) are often 
combined in one tank placed at a point above the level of circula- 
tion. The tank should be of a size to hold not less than a 
twentieth part of the total amount of water held in the system. 
The automatic inlet of cold water to the hot water system from 
the main house tank or other source is controlled by a ball valve, 
which is so fixed as to allow the water to rise no more than an 
inch above the bottom of the tank, thus leaving the remainder 
of the space clear for expansion. An overflow is provided, 
discharging into the open air to allow the water to escape should 
the ball valve become defective. 

The "Perkins" or "small bore high pressure" system 
(fig. 6) has many advantages, for it is safe, the boiler is small 
nigk and is easily managed, the temperature is well under 
control and may be regulated to suit the changing 
weather, and the small pipes present a neat appearance 
in a room. The whole system is constructed of wrought 
iron pipe of small diameter, strong enough to resist a testing 
pressure of 2000 to 2500 lb per sq. in. The boiler consists of 
similar pipe coiled up to form 
a fire-box, inside which the 
furnace is lighted. The coil 
pc is encased with firebricks 

and brickwork, and the 
smoke from the fire is carried 
I >ommiw oa " Dv a ^ ue m *h e ordinary 
1 -t^r r- J- *"W w *y» The flow pipe of similar 

■ „^ c r.SRl£^»nS sect * on (usually having an 

*" •' internal diameter of about 1 

in., the metal being nearly J in. 
thick) continues from the top 
of the coil, and after travel- 
ling round the various apart- 
ments returns to, and is 
connected with, the lowest 
part of the boiler coil. The 
joints take a special form to 
enable them to withstand the 
great strain to which they 
are subjected (fig. 7). One 
end of a pipe is finished flat, 
the end of the other pipe 
being brought to a conical 
edge. On one end also a 
right-handed, and on the 
other a left-handed, screw- 
thread is turned. A coupling 
collar, tapped in the same 
manner, is screwed on, and causes the conical edge to impress 
itself tightly on the flat end, giving a sound and lasting joint. 
The system is hermetically sealed after being pumped full of 
water, an expansion chamber in the shape of a pipe of larger 
dimensions being provided at the top of the system above 
the highest point of circulation. Upon the application of heat 
to the fire-box coil the water 
naturally expands and forces its 
way up into the expansion 
chamber; but there it encounters 
| the pressure of the confined air, 
and ebullition is consequently 
prevented. Thus at no time 
can steam form in the system. 
This system is trustworthy and safe in working. The smallness 
of the pipe* renders it liable to damage by frost, but this accident 
may be prevented by always keeping in frosty weather a small 
fire in the furnace. If this course is inconvenient, some liquid 
of low freeaing-point, such at glycerine, may be mixed with the 



C. *MO<«t rorffef ln§ M/f 
V. „ f*0«lB<JMf Mfc* 



Fig. 6. 




Fig. 7. 



For large public buildings, factories, ftc, heating by steam 
is generally adopted on account of the rapidity with which heat 
is available, and the great distance from the boiler at 
which warming is effected. In the case of factories Hrfr f 
the exhaust steam from the engines used for driving 
the working machinery is made use of and forms the most 
economical method of heating possible. There are several 
different systems of heating by steam— low pressure, high 
pressure and minus pressure. 

In the low pressure two pipe system the flow pipe is carried 
to a sufficient height directly above the boiler to allow of its 
gradual fall to a little beyond the most distant point at whkh 
connexion is to be made with the return pipe, which thence 
slopes towards the boiler. Branches are taken off the flow pipe, 
and after circulating through coils or radiators are connected 
with the return pipe. In a well-proportioned system the pres- 
sure need not exceed 2 or 3 lb per sq. in. for excellent 
results to be obtained. The one-pipe system is similar in prin- 
ciple, the pipe rising to its greatest height above the boiler 
and being then carried around as a single pipe falling all the 
while. It resembles in many points the one-pipe low pressure 
hot-water system. Radiators are fed directly from the main. 
Where, as in factories or workshops, there axe already installed 
engines working at a high steam pressure, say x 20 to xSo lb per 
sq. in., a portion of the steam generated in the boilers may be 
utilized for heating by the aid of a reducing valve. The steam 
is passed through the valve and emerges at the pressure required 
generally from 3 lb upwards. It is then used for one of tjie 
systems described above. 

High-pressure steam-heating, compared with the beating by 
low pressure, is little used. The principles are the same as those 
applied to low-pressure work, but all fittings and appliances 
must, of course, be made to stand the higher strain to which 
they are subjected. 

The "minus pressure" steam system, sometimes termed 
" atmospheric " or " vacuum," is of more recent introduction 
than those just described. It is certainly the most scientific 
method of steam-heating, and heat can be made to travel a 
greater distance by its aid than by any other means. The heat 
of the pipes is great, but can be easily regulated. The system 
is economical in fuel, but needs skilled attendance to keep the 
appliances and fittings in order. The steam is introduced into 
the pipes at about the pressure of the atmosphere, and is sucked 
through the system by means of a vacuum pump, which at the 
same operation frees the pipes from air and from condensation 
water. This pumping action results in an extremely rapid 
circulation of the heating agent, enabling long distances to be 
traversed without much loss of heat. 

Compared with heating by hot water, steam-heating requires 
less piping, which, further, may be of much smaller diameter 
to attain a similar result, because of the higher temperature 
of the heat yielding surface. A drawback to the use of steam 
is the fact that the high temperature of the pipes and radiators 
attracts and spreads a great deal of dust. There is also a risk 
that woodwork near the pipes may warp and split. The apparatus 
needs constant attention, since neglect in stoking would result 
in stopping the generation of steam, and the whole system 
would almost immediately cooL To regulate the heat it is 
necessary either to instal a number of small radiators or to 
divide the radiators into sections, each section controlled by 
distinct valves; steam may then be admitted to all the sections 
of the radiator or to any less number of sections as desired. 
In a hot-water system the heat is given off at a lower temperature 
and is consequently more agreeable than that yielded by a 
steam-heating apparatus. The joint most commonly used for 
hot-water pipes is termed the " rust " joint, which is cheap to 
make, but unfortunately is inefficient. The materials required 
are iron borings, sal-ammoniac and sulphur; these axe mixed 
together, moistened with water, and rammed into the socket, 
which is previously half filled with yarn, well caulked. The 
materials mixed with the iron borings cause them to rust into a 
solid mass, and in doing so a alight expansion takes place. On 



HEATING 



163 



this account it is necessary to exercise some skill in forming the 

joint, or the socket of the pipe will be split; numbers of pipes 

are undoubtedly spoilt in this way. Suitable proportions of 

materials to form a rust joint are 00 parts by weight of iron 

borings well mixed with 2 parts of flowers of sulphur, and 1 

part of powdered sal-ammoniac. Another joint, less rigid but 

sound and durable, is made with yarn and white and red lead. 

The white and red lead are mixed together to form a putty, and 

are filled into the socket alternately with layers of wcll-caulked 

yarn, starting with yarn and finishing off with the lead mixture. 

Iron expands when heated to the temperature of boiling 

water (21 a° F.) about 1 part in 000, that is to say, a pipe 

100 ft. long would expand or increase in length when 

*r*fe«a. ncatc< * t0 tkk temperature about ij in., an amount 

which seems small but which would be quite sufficient 

to destroy one or more of the joints if provision were not made 

to prevent damage. The amount of expansion increases as the 

^^^ temperature is raised; at 340 F. it is 2\ in. 

£0*^^} in ico ft. With wrought iron pipes bends 

[ f^ may be arranged, as shown in fig. 8, to take 

|J up this expansion. With cast iron pipe this 

cannot be done, and no length of piping over 

40 ft. should be without a proper expansion 

joint. The pipes are best supported on rollers 

which allow of movement without straining 

Fig. 8. the joints. 

There are several joints in general use for the 
best class of work which are formed with the aid of india-rubber 
rings or collars, any expansion being divided amongst the whole 
number of joints. In the rubber ring joint an india-rubber ring is 
used ; slightly less in diameter than the pipe. The rubber is circular 
in section, and about \ in. thick, and is stretched on the extreme 
end of a pipe which is then forced into the next socket. This 
joint is durable, secure and easily made; it allows for expansion 
and by its use the risk of pipe sockets being cracked is avoided. 
It is much used for greenhouse heating works. Richardson's 



^ 





Fig. 9. 



Fig. xo. 



patent joint (fig. 0) is a good form of this class of joint. The 
pipes have specially shaped ends between which a rubber collar 
is placed, the joint being held together by clips. The result 
is very satisfactory and will stand heavy water pressure. 
Messenger's joint (fig. 10) is designed to allow more freedom of 
expansion and at the same time to withstand considerable 
pressure; one loose cast iron collar is used, and another is 
formed as a socket on the end of the pipe itself. One end of 
each pipe is plain, so that it may be cut to any desired length; 
pipes with shaped ends obviously 
must be obtained in the exact lengths 
required. Jones's expansion joint 
(fig. n) is somewhat similar to 
Messenger's but it is not capable 
of withstanding so great a pressure. 
Fig. 11. In this case both collars of cast 

iron are loose. 
Radiators (really convectors) were in their primitive design 
coils of pipe, used to give a larger heating area than the single 
2-^^ pipe would afford. They are now usually of special 
*■* design, and may be divided into three classes— indirect 

radiators, direct radiators and direct ventilating radiators. 
Indirect radiators are placed beneath the floor of the apartment 
to be heated and give off heat through a grating. This method 
is frequently adopted in combined schemes of heating and 
ventilating; the fresh air is warmed by being passed* over their 
surfaces previously to being admitted through the gratings into 
the room. Direct radiators are a development of the early coil 




of pipe; they are made in various types and designs and are 
usually of cast iron. Ventilating radiators are similar, but have 
an inlet arrangement at the base to allow external air to pass 
over the heating surface before passing out through the perfora- 
tions. Radiators should not be fixed directly on to the main 
heating pipe, but always on branches of smaller diameter leading 
from the flow pipe to one end of the radiator and back to the 
main return pipe from the other end; they may then be easily 
controlled by a valve placed on the branch from the flow pipe. 
To each radiator should be fitted an air tap, which when opened 
will permit the escape of any air that has accumulated in the 
coil; otherwise free circulation is impossible, and the full 
benefit of the heat is not obtained. 

A plentiful supply of hot water is a necessity in every house 
for domestic and hygienic purposes. In small houses all require- 
ments may be satisfied with a boiler heated by the 
kitchen fire. For large buildings where large quantities 
of hot water are used an independent boiler of suitable 
size should be installed. Every installation is made 
up of a boiler or other water-heater, a tank or cylinder to contain 
the water when heated, and a cistern of cold water, the supply 
from which to the system is regulated automatically by a ball 
valve. These containers, proportioned to the required supply 
of hot water, are connected with each other by means of pipes, 
a "flow" and a "return" connecting the boiler with the 
cylinder or tank (fig. 12). The flow pipe starts from the top 
of the boiler and is connected near the top of the cylinder, the 
return pipe joining the 






lower portions of the 
cylinder and boiler. The 
supply from the cold water 
cistern enters the bottom 
of the cylinder, and thence 
travels by way of the re- 
turn pipe to the boiler, 
where it is heated, and 
back through the flow m £ 
pipe to the cylinder, which 
is thus soon filled with hot 
water. A flow pipe which 
serves also for expansion 
is taken from the top of 
the cylinder to a point 
above the cold - water 
supply and turned down 
to prevent the ingress of 
dirt. From this pipe at Q 

various points are taken 

the supply pipes to baths, 
lavatories, sinks and other 
appliances. It will be observed that m fig. 







UTaotk 



Fig. 12. 



12 the cylinder 
is placed in proximity to the boiler; this is the usual and 
most effective method, but it may be placed some distance 
away if desired. The tank system is of much earlier date than 
this cylinder system, and although the two resemble each other 
in many respects, the tank system is in practice the less effective. 
The tank is placed above the level of the topmost draw off, and 
often in a cupboard which it will warm sufficiently to permit 
of its being used as a linen airing closet. An expansion pipe is 
taken from the top of the tank to a point above the roof. All 
draw off services are taken off from the flow pipe which connects 
the boiler with the tank. This method differs from that adopted 
in the cylinder system, where all services are led from the top 
of the cylinder. A suitable proportion between the size of the 
tank or cylinder and that of the boiler is 8 or 10 to xi Water 
may also be heated by placing a coil of steam or high-pressure 
hot-water pipes in a water tank (fig. 6), the water heated in this 
way circulating in the manner already described. An alternative 
plan is to pass the water through pipes placed in a steam chest. 
Cylinders, tanks and independent boilers should be encased 
in a non-conducting material such as silicate cotton, thick felt 
or asbestos composition. The two first mentioned are affixed 



164 



HEATING 




Fig. 13. 



by means of bands or straps or stitched on; the asbestos is laid 
on in the form of a plaster from a to 6 in. thick. 

Taps to baths and lavatories should be connected to the main 
services by a flow and return pipe so that hot water is constantly 
flowing past the tap, thus enabling hot water to be obtained 
immediately. Frequently a single pipe is led to the tap, but the 
water in this branch cools and must therefore be drawn off before 
hot water can be obtained. 

Two classes of boilers are chiefly used in hot-water heating 
installations, viz. those heated by the fire of the kitchen range, 
Botkr9t and those heated separately or independently. Of 
the first class there arc two varieties in common use — 
c form of " saddle " boiler (fig. 13) and the " boot " boiler 
(fig. 14). Independent boilers are made in every conceivable 
size and form of construction, and many of 
them are capable of doing excellent work. In 
the choice of a boiler of this description it 
should be remembered that rapid heating, 
economical combustion of fuel, and facilities 
for cleaning, are requisites, the absence of 
any of which considerably lowers the efficiency 
of the apparatus. Boilers set in brickwork 
are sometimes used in domestic work, although 
they are more favoured for horticultural 
heating. The shape mostly used is the "saddle" boiler, or 
some variation upon this very old pattern. The coiled pipe' fire- 
box of the high-pressure hot-water system previously described 
may be also classed with boilers. 

A notable feature of modern boiler construction is the mode of 
building the apparatus of cast iron in either horizontal or vertical 
sections. Both the types intended to be set in brickwork and 
those working independently are formed on the sectional 
principle, which has many good points. The parts are easy of 
transport and can be handled without difficulty through narrow 
doorways and in confined situations. The size of the boiler may 
be increased or diminished by the addition or subtraction of one 
or more sections; these, being simple in design, are easily fitted 
together, and should a section become defective it is a simple 
matter to insert a new one in its place. Should a defect occur 
with a wrought iron boiler it is usually necessary for the purpose 
of repair to disconnect and remove the 
fl££V\ whole apparatus, the heating system of 

(Jt^^ which it forms a part being in the 

^^ meantime useless. In a type built with 

vertical sections each division is complete 
in itself, and is not directly connected 
with the next section, but communicates 
• with flow and return drums. A defective 
1 section may thus be left in position and 
stopped off by means of plugs from the 
drums until it is convenient to fit a new 
one in its place. A boiler with horizontal 
sections is shown in fig. 15; it will be 
seen that each of the upper sections has a number of cross 
waterways which form a series of gratings over the fire-box 
and intercept most of the heat generated, effecting great 
economy of fuel. 

In the ordinary working of a hot-water apparatus the expansion 
pipe already referred to will prevent any overdue pressure 
occurring in the boiler; should, however, the pipes 
become blocked in any way while the apparatus is 
in use, or the water in them become frozen, the lighting 
of the fire would cause the water to expand, and having no outlet 
it would in all probability burst the boiler. To prevent this a 
safety valve should be fitted on the top of the boiler, or be con- 
nected thereto with a large pipe so as to be visible. The valve 
may be of the dead weight (fig. 16), lever weight, spring (fig. 17) 
or diaphragm variety. The three first named are largely used. 
In the diaphragm valve a thin piece of metal is fixed to an outlet 
from the boiler, and when a moderate pressure is exceeded this 
gives way, allowing the water and steam to escape. 
Fusible plugs are little used; they consist of pieces of softer 




Fig. 14. 



Saf»tr 



metal inserted on the side of the boiler, which melt should the 
heat of the water rise above a certain temperature. 

A " Geyser " is a very convenient form of apparatus for heat- 
ing a quantity of water in a short time. A water pipe of copper 
or wrought iron is passed through a cylinder in which u^^^. 
gas or oil heating burners are placed. The piping 
takes a winding or zigzag course, and by the time the outlet is 
reached, the water it contains has reached a high temperature. 



Fio. 15. 
By this means a continuous stream of hot water is obtained, 
greater or smaller in proportion to the size and power of the 
apparatus. The improved types of gas geysers are provided 
with a single control to both gas and water supplies, with a 
small " pilot " burner to ignite the gas. A flue should in all cases 
be provided to carry off the fumes of the fuel. 

In districts where the water is of a " hard nature," that is, 
contains bicarbonate of lime in solution, the interior of the 
boiler, cylinders, tanks and pipes of a hot water 
system will become incrusted with a deposit of lime ^' Jl " 
which is gradually precipitated as the water is heated 
to boiling point. With "very hard" water this deposit 
may require removal every three months; in London it fe 
usual to clean out the boiler every six months and the cylinders 
and tanks at longer intervals. For this 
purpose manlids must be provided (figs. 
13 and 14), and pipes should be fitted 
with removable caps at the bends to 
allow for periodical cleaning. The lime 
deposit or " fur " is a poor conductor of 
heat, and it is therefore most detrimental 
to the efficiency of the system to allow 
the interior of the boiler or any other 
portion to become furred up. Further, if 
not removed, the fur will in a short time 
bring about a fracture in the boiler. The use of soft water entails 
a disadvantage of another character — that of corroding iron and 
lead work, soft water exercising a very vigorous chemical actios 




Fia. 16. Fig. 17. 



HEAVEN— HEBBEL 



upon these metals. In districts supplied with soft water, copper 
should be employed to as large an extent as possible. 

The table given below will be useful in calculating the stseof the 
radiating surface necessary to raise the temperature to the extent 
required when the external air is at freezing point (32° Fahr.) :— 



165 



Description of Building 
to be heated. 


Temperature 
required. 


Cubic Feet of Air heated by 

1 sq. ft. of Radiator or 

Pipe Surface. 


Low Pressure 
Water. 


Low Pressure 
Steam. 


Dwelling rooms 

Schools 

Churches and chapels .... 

Office* and shops 

Public halls, workshops, waiting-rooms 
Warehouses, stores .... 


50^55* 


85-^0 
90-100 
100-120 
120-125 
130-150 
140-160 


1 15-125 
120-130 
135-160 
160-170 
175-aoo 
190-320 



In closing this account of heating and the practical methods 
of application of heat, an example may be mentioned to show 
the great capabilities of a carefully planned system. 
At the city of Lockport in New York state, America, 
an interesting example of the direct application of 
steam-heating on a large scale has been carried out 
under the direction of Mr Birdsill Holly of that city. Houses 
within a radius of 3 m. from the boiler house are supplied with 
superheated steam at a pressure of 35 lb to the in. The mains, 
the largest of which are 4 in. in diameter, and the smallest 
2 in., are wrapped in asbestos, felt and other non-conducting 
materials, and are placed m wooden tubes laid under ground 
like water and gas pipes. The house branches pipes are i$ in. 
in diameter, and f-in. pipes are used inside the houses. The 
steam is employed for warming apartments by means of pipe 
radiators, for heating water by steam injections, and for all 
cooking purposes. The steam mains to the houses are laid by 
the supply company; the internal pipes and fittings are paid 
for or rented by the occupier, costing for an installation from 
£30 for an ordinary eight-roomed house to £100 or more for 
larger buildings. With the success of this undertaking in view 
it is a matter of wonder that the example set in this instance 
has not been adopted to a much greater extent elsewhere. 

The principal publications on heating are: Hood, Practical Treatise 
m Worming Buildings by Hot Water; Baldwin, Hot Water Heating 
ami Fittings; Baldwio, Steam Heating for Buildings; Billings, 
Ven til at ion and Heating; Carpenter, Heating ana Ventilating 
Buildings; Jones, Heating by Hot Water, Ventilation and Hot Water 
Supply; Dye, Hot Water Supply. (J. Bt.) 

HEAVEN (O. Eng. hefen, keofon, heofope; this word appears 
in O.S. kevan; the High. Ger. word appears in Gcr. Himmd, 
Dutch kernel; there does not seem to be any connexion between 
the two words, and the ultimate derivation of the word is' 
unknown; the suggestion that it is connected with " to heave, " 
in the sense of something " lifted up," is erroneous), properly 
the expanse, taking the appearance of a domed vault above the 
earth, in which the sun, moon, planets and stars seem to be placed, 
the firmament; hence also used, generally in the plural, of the 
space immediately above the earth, the atmospheric region 
of winds, rain, clouds, and of the birds of the air. The heaven 
and the earth together, therefore, to the ancient cosmographers, 
and still in poetical language, make up the universe. In the 
cosmogonies of many ancient peoples there was a plurality of 
heavens, probably among the earlier Hebrews, the idea being 
elaborated in rabbinical literature, among the Babylonians and 
in Zoroastrianism. The number of these heavens, the higher 
transcending the lower in glory, varied from three to seven. 
Heaven, as In the Hebrew skamayim, the Greek obpavbt, the 
Latin caelum, is the abode of God, and as such in Christian 
eschatology is the place of the blessed in the next world (see 
Eschatolocy and Paradise). 

HEBBEL, CHRISTIAN FRIEDRICH (1813-1863), German 
poet and dramatist, was born at Wesselburen in Ditmarschcn, 
Hoist ein, on the 18th of March 1813. Though only the son of a 
poor bricklayer, he early showed a talent for poetry, which was 



first displayed to the world by the publication, in the Hamburg 
Modezettung, of verses which he had sent to Amalie Schoppe 
(1791-1858), a then popular journalist and author of nursery 
tales. Through the Jdndness of this lady, who interested several 
of her friends on his behalf, he was enabled to go to Hamburg 
and there prepare himself for the university. 
A year later he went to Heidelberg to study 
law, but finding this uncongenial he passed 
on to the university of Munich, where he 
devoted himself to philosophy, history and 
literature. In 1830 Hebbet left Munich and 
wandered back to Hamburg on foot, where 
hi resumed his relations with Ebie Lensing, 
whose self-sacrificing assistance had helped 
him over the darkest days in Munich. In 
the same year he wrote his first tragedy 
Judith (published 1841), which in the 
following year was performed in- Hamburg 
and Berlin and made his name known throughout Germany. 
In 1840 he wrote the tragedy Genoveva, and the following year 
finished a comedy, Der Diamant, which he had begun at Munich, 
In 1842 he visited Copenhagen, where he obtained from the 
king of Denmark a small travelling studentship, which enabled 
him to spend some time in Paris and two years (1844-1846) in 
Italy. In Paris he wrote his fine ** tragedy of common life," 
Maria Magdalene (1844). On his return from Italy Hebbel 
met at Vienna two Polish noblemen, the brothers Zerboni di 
Sposetti, who in their enthusiasm for his genius urged him to 
remain, and supplied him with the means to mingle in the best 
intellectual society of the Austrian capital. The unwonted 
life of ease had its effect. The old precarious existence became 
a horror to him, be made a deliberate breach with it by marrying 
(in 1846) the beautiful and wealthy actress Christine Enghaus, 
ruthlessly sacrificing the girl who had given up all for him and 
who remained faithful till her death, on the ground that " a 
man's first duty is to the most powerful force within him, that 
which alone can give him happiness and be of service to the 
world ": in his case the poetical faculty, which would have 
perished " in the miserable struggle for existence." This " deadly 
sin," which, " if peace of conscience be the test of action," was, 
he considered, the best act of his life, established his fortunes. 
Elise, however, still provided useful inspiration for his art. As 
late as r8ss, shortly after her death, he wrote the Kttk epic 
Mutter und Kind, intended to show that the relation of parent 
and child is the essential factor which makes the quality of 
happiness among all classes and under all conditions equal. 
Long before this Hebbel had become famous. German sovereigns' 
bestowed decorations upon him; and in foreign capitals be 
was ftted as the greatest of living German dramatists. From 
the grand-duke of Saxe-Wdmar he received a Battering invitation 
to take up his residence at Weimar, where several of his plays 
were first performed. He remained, however, at Vienna until 
his death on the 13th of December 1863. 

Besides the* works already mentioned, HebbeTs principal 
tragedies are Her odes und Marianne (1850); Julia (1851); 
Michel Angela (1851); Agnes Bemautr (1855); Gyges und sein 
Ring (1856), and the magnificently conceived trilogy Die 
Nibelungen (1862), his last work (consisting of a prologue, Der 
gehdrnte Siegfried, and the tragedies, Siegfrieds Tad and Kriem- 
hilds Rache), which won for the author the Schiller prize. Of 
his comedies Der Diemant (1847), Der Rubin (1850), and the 
tragicomedy Ein Trauerspiel in Sitilien (1845), are tBe more 
important, but they are heavy and hardly rise above mediocrity. 
All his dramatic productions, however, exhibit skill in character- 
ization, great glow of passion, and a true feeling for dramatic 
situation; but their poetic effect is frequently marred by 
extravagances which border on the grotesque, and by the intro- 
duction of incidents the unpleasant character of which is not 
sufficiently relieved. In many of his lyric poems, and especially 
in Mutter und Kind, published in 1859, Hebbel showed that hit 
poetic gifts were not restricted to the drama. 

His collected works were first published by E. Kuh (12 vols.. 



1 66 



HEBBURN— HEBER, REGINALD 



E 
S* 
2i 

P. 
A. 
«f 
4s 

HEBBURN, an urban district in the Jarrow parliamentary 
division of Durham, England, on the right bank of the Tyne, 
4} m. below Newcastle, and on a branch of the North-Eastern 
railway. Pop. (1881), 11,802; (1001), 20,901. It has extensive 
shipbuilding and engineering works, rope and sail factories, 
chemical, colour and cement works, and collieries. 

HBBDBN BRIDGE, an urban district in the Sowerby parlia- 
mentary division of the West Riding of Yorkshire, England, 
on the Calder and Hebden rivers, 7 m. W. by N. pf Halifax 
by the Lancashire and Yorkshire railway. Pop. (1901), 7536. 
The town has cotton factories, dye-works, foundries and manu- 
factories of shuttles. The upper Calder valley, between Halifax 
and Todmorden, is walled with bold hills, the summits of which 
consist of wild moorland. The vale itself is densely populated, 
but its beauty is not destroyed, and the contrast with its desolate 
surroundings is remarkable. 

HEBE, in Greek mythology, daughter of Zeus and Hera, the 
goddess of youth. In the Homeric poems she is the female 
counterpart of Ganymede, and acts as cupbearer to the gods 
{Iliad, iv. 2). She was the special attendant of her mother, 
whose horses she harnessed {I lied, v. 722). When . Heracles 
was received amongst the gods, Hebe was bestowed upon him in 
marriage (Odyssey, xi. 603). When the custom of the heroic 
age, which permitted female cupbearers, fell into disuse, Hebe 
was replaced by Ganymede in the popular mythology. To 
account for her retirement from her office, it was said that she 
fell down in the presence of the gods while handing the wine, 
and was so ashamed that she refused to appear before them 
again. Hebe exhibits many striking points of resemblance with 
the pure Greek goddess Aphrodite. She is the daughter of Zeus 
and Hera, Aphrodite of Zeus and Dione; but Dione and Hera 
are often identified. Hebe is called Dia, a regular epithet of 
Aphrodite; at Phlius, a festival called KiaaorS/UH. (the days of 
ivy-cutting) was annually celebrated in her honour (Pausanias, 
ii. 13); and ivy was sacred also to Aphrodite. The apotheosis 
of Heracles and his marriage with Hebe became a favourite 
subject with poets and painters, and many instances occur on 
vases. In later art she is often represented, like Ganymede, 
caressing the eagle. 

See R. Kekule, Hebe (1867), mainly dealing with the represen- 
tations of Hebe in art; and P. Decharmc in Daremberg and Saglio's 
Dictionnaire des antiquiUs. 

The meaning of the word* Hebe tended to transform the 
goddess into a mere personification of the eternal youth that 
belongs to the gods, and this conception is frequently met with. 
Then she becomes identical with the Roman Juventas, who is 
simply an abstraction of an attribute of Jupiter Juventus, 
the god of increase and blessing and youth. To Juventas, as 
personifying the eternal youth of the Roman state, a chapel 
was dedicated in very early times in the cetta of Minerva in 
the temple of Jupiter Capitolinus. With this temple is connected 
the legend of Juventas and Terminus, who alone of all the gods 
refused to give way when it was being built — an indication of the 
eternal solidity and youth of Rome. The cult of Juventas did 
not, however, become firmly established until the time of the 
se'eond Punic war. In 218 the Sibylline books ordered a lecti- 
sternium in honour of Juventas and a supplicatio in honour of 
Hercules, and in 191 a temple was dedicated in her honour in 
the Circus Maximus. In later times Juventas became the 
personification, not of the Roman youth, but of the emperor, 
who assumed the attributes of a god (Livy v. 54, xxi. 62, 
xxxvi. 36; Dion. Halic iil 69; G. Wissowa in Roscher's 
Lexikon der MythoUgie). 



HBBBL, JOHANN PETER (1760-1826), German poet and 
popular writer, was bom at Basel on the 10th of May 2760. 
The father dying when the child was little over a year old, he 
was brought up amidst poverty-stricken conditions in the village 
of Hansen in the Wiesental, where he received his earliest 
education. Being of brilliant promise, he found friends who 
enabled him to complete his school education and to study 
theology (1 778-1780) at Erlangen. At the end of his university 
course he was for a time a private tutor, then became teacher at 
the Gymnasium in Karlsruhe, and in 1808 was appointed director 
of the school He was subsequently appointed member of the 
Consistory and " evangelical prelate." He died at Sch wetzingen, 
near Heidelberg, on the 22nd of September 1826. Hebel is one 
of the most widely read of all German popular poets and writers. 
His poeticalnarrativcsand lyric poems, written in the " Alemanic" 
dialect, are " popular " in the best sense. His AUemannisthe 
Gedkhte (1803) " bucolicize," in the words of Goethe, " the 
whole world in the most attractive manner " (vcrbaucrl das game 
Umversum auf die anmutigsU Weise). Indeed, few modern 
German poets surpass him in fidelity, nalveti, humour, and in the 
freshness and vigour of his descriptions. His poem, Die Wiese, 
has been described by Johannes Scherr as the " pearl of German 
idyllic poetry "; while his prose writings, especially the narra- 
tives and essays contained in the SchabkasUein des rkeinischen 
Hausfreundes (Tubingen, 181 1; new edition, Stuttg. 1869, 
1888), belong to the best class of German stories, and according 
to August Friedrich Christian Vilmar (1800-1868) in his Gtsckuhle 
der deutschen Literatur are " worth more than a cartload of 
novels " (vriegen ein games Puder Romane auf). Memorials 
have been erected to him at Karlsruhe, Basel and Sch wetxingen. 

A complete edition of Hebel'a work*—S&mtiick* Wcrjbe— was 
first published at Stuttgart in 8 vols. (1832-1834); subsequent 
editions appeared in 1847 (3 vols.), 1868 (2 vols.), 1873 (edited by 
G. Wendt, 2 vols.). 1 883-1 885 (edited by O. Behaghel, a vols.) and 
1905 (edited by E. Keller, 5 vols.), as well as innumerable reprints. 
Hebels correspondence has been edited by O. Behaghel (1883). 
See G. Langin, J. P. Hebel, ein Lebensbild (1894), and the introduction 
to BehagheTs edition. 

HEBER, REGINALD (1783-1826), English bishop and hymn- 
writer, was born at Malpas in Cheshire on the 21st of April 
1783. His father, who belonged to an old Yorkshire family, 
held a moiety of the living of Malpas. Reginald Heber early 
showed remarkable promise, and was entered in November 1800 
at Brasenose College, Oxford, wnere he proved a distinguished 
student, carrying off prizes for a Latin poem entitled Carmen 
seculare, an English poem on Palestine, and a prose essay on 
The Sense of Honour. In November 1804 he was elected a 
fellow of All Souls College; and, after finishing his distinguished 
university career, he made a long tour in Europe. He was 
admitted to holy orders in 1807, and was then presented to the 
family living of Hodnet in Shropshire. In 1809 Heber married 
Amelia, daughter of Dr Shipley, dean of St Asaph. He was 
made prebendary of St Asaph in 181 2, appointed Bampton 
lecturer for 181 5, preacher at Lincoln's Inn in 1822, and bishop 
of Calcutta in January 1823. Before sailing for India he received 
the degree of D.D. from the university of Oxford. In India 
Bishop Heber laboured indefatigably, not only for the good of 
his own diocese, but for the spread of Christianity throughout 
the East. He undertook numerous tours in India, consecrating 
churches, founding schools and. discharging other Christian 
duties. His devotion to his work in a trying climate told severely 
on his health. At Trichinopoly he was seized with an apoplectic 
fit when in his bath, and died on the 3rd of April 1826. A 
statue of him, by Chantrey, was erected at Calcutta. 

Heber was a pious man of profound learning, literary taste 
and great practical energy. His fame rests mainly on his 
hymns, which rank among the best in the English language. 
The following may be instanced: "Lord of mercy and of 
might "; u Brightest and best of the sons of the morning "; 
" By cool Siloam's shady rill "; " God, that madest earth 
and heaven "; " The Lord of might from Sinai's brow "; 
" Holy, holy, holy, Lord God Almighty "; " From Greenland's 
icy mountains "; " The Lord will come, the earth shall quake "i 



HEBER, RICHARD— HEBREW LANGUAGE 



167 



M The Son of God goes forth to war." Heber's hymns and other 
poems are distinguished by finish of style, pathos and soaring 
aspiration; but they lack originality, and are rather rhetorical 
than poetical in the strict sense. 

Among Heber* led 

the Passage of the r ar 

(1800); a volume of 

the Christian Con on 

Lectures for 1 81 5 ith 

a Life of the Autho i) ; 

Hymns written an ar, 

principally by Bis g); 

Sermons preached j j ; 

Sermons on the La tn 

the Year (1837). *d 
in 1841. 

See the Life of Reginald Heber, D.D. . . ., by his widow, Amelia 



Heber (1834 



hich also contains a number of Heber's 
writings; The Last Days of Bishop Heber, by Thomas Robinson, 
A.M., archdeacon of Madras (1830); T. S. Smyth, The Character 
and Religious Doctrine of Bishop Heber (1831), and Memorials of a 
Quiet Life, by Augustus J. C. Hare (1874). 



HEBER, RICHARD (1773-1833)* English book-collector, 
the half-brother of Reginald Heber, was born in London on 
the 5th of January 1773. As an undergraduate at Brasenose 
College, Oxford, he began to collect a purely rlawiral library, 
but his taste broadening, he became interested in early English 
drama and literature, and began his wonderful collection of rare 
books in these departments. He attended continental book- 
sales, purchasing sometimes single volumes, sometimes whole 
libraries. Sir Walter Scott, whose intimate friend he was, and 
who dedicated to him the sixth canto of Marmion, classed 
Heber's library as " superior to all others in the world "; 
Campbell described him as " the fiercest and strongest of ail the 
bibliomaniacs." He did not confine himself to the purchase 
of a single copy of a work which took his fancy. " No gentleman/' 
be remarked, " can be without three copies of a book, one for 
show, one for use, and one for borrowers." To such a sue did 
his library grow that it over-ran eight houses, some in England, 
some on the Continent. It is estimated to have cost over £100,000, 
and after his death the sale of that part of his collection stored 
in England realised more than £56,000. He is known to have 
owned 1 50,000 volumes, and probably many more. He possessed 
extensive landed property in Shropshire and Yorkshire, and was 
sheriff of the former county in i8*i,was member of Parliament 
for Oxford University from 18x1-1826, and in 182s was made 
a D.C.L. of that University. He was one of the founders of the 
Athenaeum Club, London. He died in London on the 4th of 
October 1833. 

HEBERDEN, WILLIAM (1710-1801), English physician, was 
born in London in 1710. In the end of 17*4 he was sent to St 
John's College, Cambridge, where he obtained a fellowship 
about 1730, became master of arts in 1733, and took the degree 
of M.D. in 1739. He remained at Cambridge nearly ten years 
longer practising medicine, and gave an annual course of lectures 
on materia medica. In 1746 he became a fellow of the Royal 
College of Physicians in London; and two years later he settled 
in London, where he was. elected a fellow of the Royal Society 
in 1749, and enjoyed an extensive medical practice for more 
than thirty years. At the age of seventy-two he partially 
retired, spending his summers at a house which he had taken 
at Windsor, but he continued to practise in London during the 
winter for some years longer. In 1778 he was made an honorary 
member of the Paris Royal Society of Medicine. He died in 
London on the 17th of May 1801. Heberden, who was a good 
classical scholar, published several papers in the Phil. Trans. 
of the Royal Society, and among his noteworthy contributions 
to the Medical Transactions (issued, largely at his suggestion, by 
the College of Physicians) were papers on chicken-pox (1767) 
and angina pectoris (1768). His Commentarii 4e morbomm 
historic et curatione, the result of careful notes made in his 
pocket-book at the bedside of his patients, were published in 
1 80a; in the following year an English translation appeared, 
believed to be from the pen of his son, William Heberden (1767- 



1845), also a distinguished scholar and physician, who attended 
King George III. in his last illness. 

HBBERT. BDMOND (181 2-1890), French geologist, was 
born at Villefargau, Yonne, on the xath of June 1812. He was 
educated at the College de Meaux, Auxerre, and at the ficole 
Normale in Paris. In 1836 he became professor at Meaux, 
in 1838 demonstrator in chemistry and physics at the £cole 
Normale, and in 1841 sub-director of studies at that school and 
lecturer on geology. In 1857 the degree of D. es Sc. was conferred 
upon him, and he was appointed professor of geology at the 
Sorbonne. There he was eminently successful as a teacher, 
and worked with great seal in the field, adding much to the 
knowledge of the Jurassic and older strata. He devoted, how- 
ever, special attention to the subdivisions of the Cretaceous 
and Tertiary formations in France, and to their correlation with 
the strata in England and in southern Europe. To him we owe 
the first definite arrangement of the Chalk into palaeontological 
zones (see Table in Geol. Mag., i860, p. 300). During his later 
years he was regarded as the leading geologist in France. He 
was elected a member of the Institute in 1877, Commander 
of the Legion of Honour in 1885, and he was three times president 
of the Geological Society of France. He died in Paris on the 
4th of April 1800. 

HBBERT, JACQUES REN* (1 757-1704), French Revolutionist, 
called " P£re Duchesne," from the newspaper he edited, was 
born at Alencon, on the 15th of November 2757, where his 
father, who kept a goldsmith's shop, had held some municipal 
office. His family was ruined, however, by a lawsuit while 
he was still young, and Hebert came to Paris, where in his 
struggle against poverty he endured great hardships; the 
accusations of theft directed against him later by Camille 
Desmoulins were, however, without foundation. In 1700 he 
attracted attention by some pamphlets, and became a prominent 
member of the club of the Cordeliers in 1791. On the 20th of 
August 179s he was a member of the revolutionary Commune 
of Paris, and became second substitute of the procureur of the 
Commune on the and of December 179a. His violent attacks 
on the Girondists led to his arrest on the 24th of May 1793, but 
he was released .owing to the threatening attitude of the mob. 
Henceforth very popular, Hubert organized with P. G. Chaumette 
(q.v.) the "worship of Reason," in opposition to the theistic 
cult inaugurated by Robespierre, against whom he tried to excite 
a popular movement. The failure of this brought about the 
arrest of the H&ertists, or enrages, as his partisans were called. 
Hubert was guillotined on the 24th of March 1794. His wife, 
who had been a nun, was execute^ twenty days later. H6bert l s 
influence was mainly due to his articles in his journal Le Pare 
Duchesne, 1 which appeared from 1700 to 1794. These articles, 
while not lacking in a certain cleverness, were violent and 
abusive, and purposely couched in foul language in order to 
appeal to the mob. 

See Louis Daval, " Hubert chez lui," in La Revolution Franeaise, 
revue d'kistoire modeme et eontemporaine, t. xii. and t. xiii. ; D. Mater, 
J. R. Hibert, Vauteur du Pkre Duchesne avant lajournte du 10 aoUt 
1792 (Bourges, Comra. Hist, du Cher, 1888); F. A. Aulard, Le Culte 
de la raison et de I'ttre supreme (Paris, 1892). 

HEBREW LANGUAGE. The name "Hebrew" Is derived, 
through the Greek 'Eftmtor, from 'ibhray, the Aramaic equivalent 
of the Old Testament word 'ibhrl, denoting the people who 
commonly spoke of themselves as Israel or Children of Israel 
from the name of their common ancestor (see Jews). The 
later derivative Yisra'ell, Israelite, from Yisra'el, is not found 
in the Old Testament.* Other names used for the language of 
Israel are speech of Canaan (Isa. xix. 18) and YehUdhUh, Jewish, 
(2 Kings xviii. 26). In later times it was called the holy tongue. 
The real meaning of the word 'ibhri must ultimately be sought 
in the root 'abhor, to pass across, to go beyond, from which is 
derived the noun % ebher, meaning the " farther bank " of a river. 
The usual explanation of the term is that of Jewish tradition 

• There were several journals of this name, the best known of the 
others being that edited by Lemaire. 

1 In 2 Sam. xvii. 25 Israelite should be Ishmaelite, as in the 
parallel passage 1 Chron. n. 17. 



1 68 



HEBREW LANGUAGE 



that 'ibkri means the man " from the other side/' i.e. either of 
the Euphrates or the Jordan. Hence the Scptuagint in Gen. 
liv. 13 render Abram haribkrl by d ircp&np, the " crosser," 
and Aquila, following the same tradition, has © irtpatnp, the 
man " from beyond." This view of course implies that the term 
was originally applied to Abram or his descendants by a people 
living on the west of the Euphrates or of the Jordan. It has 
been suggested that the root 'abhor is to be taken in the sense 
of "travelling," and that Abram the wandering Aramaean 
(Deut. xxvi 5) was called ho-'ibhri because he travelled about 
for trading purposes, his language, 'ibkri, being the lingua 
franca of Eastern trade. The use of the term IfipatOTl for 
biblical Hebrew is first found in the Greek prologue to Ecdesi- 
asticus (c. 130 B.C.). In the New Testament it denotes the native 
language of Palestine (Aramaic and Hebrew being popularly 
confused) as opposed to Greek- In modern usage the name 
Hebrew is applied to that branch of the northern part of the 
Semitic family of languages which was used by the Israelites 
during most of the time of their national existence in Palestine, 
and in which nearly all their sacred writings are composed. As 
to its characteristics and relation to other languages of the same 
stock, see Semitic Languages. It also includes the later forms 
of the same language as used by Jewish writers after the close 
of the Canon throughout the middle ages (Rabbinical Hebrew) 
and to the present day (New Hebrew). 

Before the rise of comparative philology it was a popular 
opinion that Hebrew was the original speech of mankind, from 
which all others were descended. This belief, derived from the 
Jews (cf . Pal Targ. Gen. xi. 1), was supported by the etymologies 
and other data supplied by the early chapters of Genesis. But 
though Hebrew possesses a very old literature, it is not, as we 
know it, structurally as early as, e.g. Arabic, or, in other words, 
it does not come so near to that primitive Semitic speech which 
may be pre-supposed as the common parent of all the Semitic 
languages. Owing to the imperfection of the Hebrew alphabet, 
which, like that of most Semitic languages, has ho means of 
expressing vowel-sounds, it is only partly possible to trace the 
development of the language. In its earliest form it was no 
doubt most closely allied to the Canaanite or Phoenician stock, 
to the language of Moab, as revealed by the stele of Mesha 
(c. 850 B.C.), and to Edomite. The vocalization of Canaanite, 
as far as it is known to us, e.g. from glosses in the Tell-el-Amaraa 
tablets (15th century B.C.) 1 and much later from the Punic 
passages in the Poenulus of Plautus, differs in many respects 
from that of the Hebrew of the Old Testament, as also does the 
Scptuagint transcription of proper names. The uniformity, 
however, of the Old Testament text is due to the labours of 
successive schools of grammarians who elaborated the Massorah 
(see Hebrew Literature), thereby obliterating local or dialectic 
differences, which undoubtedly existed, and establishing the 
pronunciation current in the synagogues about the 7th century 
A.D. The only mention of such dffierencerin the Old Testament 
is in Judges xii. 6, wher.e it is stated that the Ephraimites pro- 
nounced tf (sh) as b or (s). In Neh. xiii. 34, the ** speech 
of Ashdod " is more probably a distinct (Philistine) language. 
Certain peculiarities in the language of the Pentateuch (ma for 
ro, tp for -Tiyj), which used to be regarded as archaisms, 
are to be explained as purely orthographical.' In a series of 
writings, however, extending over so long a period as those of 
the Old Testament, some variation or development in language 
is to be expected apart from the natural differences between the 
poetic (or prophetic) and prose styles. The consonantal text 
sometimes betrays these in spite of the Massorah. In general, 
the later books of the Old Testament show, roughly speaking, 
a greater simplicity and uniformity of style, as well as a tendency 
to Aramaisms. For some centuries after the Exile, the people 
of Palestine must have been bilingual, speaking Aramaic for 
ordinary purposes, but still at least understanding Hebrew. 
Not that they forgot their own tongue in the Captivity and learnt 
Aramaic in Babylon, as used to be supposed. In the western 
1 See Zimmern, in Ztsck.fur Assvriol. (1891), p. 154. 
* See Gesenius-Kautzsch, J&tbr. Gram. {170. 



provinces of the Persian empire Aramaic was the official lan- 
guage, spoken not only in Palestine but in all the surrounding 
countries, even in Egypt and among Arab tribes such as. the 
Nabateans. It is natural, therefore, that it should influence and 
finally supplant Hebrew in popular use, so that translations even 
of the Old Testament eventually appear in it (Targum s) . Mean- 
while Hebrew did not become a dead language— indeed it can 
hardly be said ever to have died, since it has continued in use 
till the present day for the purposes, of ordinary life among 
educated Jews in all parts of the world. It gradually became a 
literary rather than a popular tongue, as appears from the style 
of the later books of the Old Testament (Chron., Dan., Ecdes.), 
and from the Hebrew text of Ecdesiasticus (c. 1 70 B.C.) . During 
the xst century B.C. and the 1st century a.d. we have no direct 
evidence of its characteristics. After that period there is a great 
development in the language of the Mishna. It was still living 
Hebrew, although mainly confined to the schools, with very 
clear differences from the biblical language. In the Old Testa- 
ment the range of subjects was limited. In the Mishna it was 
very much extended. Matters relating to daily life had to be 
discussed, and words and phrases were adopted from what was 
no doubt the popular language of an earlier period. A great 
many foreign words were also introduced. The language being 
no longer familiar in the same sense as formerly, greater definhe- 
ness of expression became necessary in the written style. In 
order to avoid the uncertainty arising from the lack of vowels 
to distinguish forms consisting of the same consonants (for 
the vowel-points were not yet invented), the aramaisJag use of 
the reflexive conjugations (Hithpa'el, Nithpa'd) for the internal 
passives (Pu'al, Hopo'al) became common; particles were used 
to express the genitive and other relations, and in general there 
was an endeavour to avoid the obscurities oLa purely consonantal 
writing. What is practically Mishnic Hebrew continued to be 
used in Midrash for some centuries. The language of both 
Talmuds, which, roughly speaking, were growing contem- 
poraneously with Midrash, is a mixture of Hebrew and Aramaic 
(Eastern Aram, in the Babylonian, Western in the Jerusalem 
Talmud), as was also that of the earlier commentators. As the 
popular use of Aramaic was gradually restricted by the spread 
of Arabic as the vernacular (from the 7th century onwards), 
while the dispersion of the Jews became wider, biblical Hebrew 
again came to be the natural standard both of East and West. 
The cultivation of it is shown and was no doubt promoted by 
the many philological works (grammars, lexicons and masorah) 
which are extant from the xoth century onward. In Spain, 
under Moorish dominion, most of the important works of that 
period were composed in Arabic, and the influence of Arabic 
writers both on language and method may be seen in con- 
temporaneous Hebrew compositions. No other vernacular 
(except, of course, Aramaic) ever had the same influence upoa 
Hebrew, largely because no other bears so close a relation to iL 
At the present day in the East, and among learned Jews else- 
where, Hebrew is still cultivated conversationally, and it is 
widely used for literary purposes. Numerous works on all kinds 
of subjects are produced m various countries, periodicals flourish, 
and Hebrew is the vehide of correspondence between Jews in 
all parts of the world. Naturally its quality varies with the 
ability and education of the writer. In the modern pro nwn cia ti m 
the principal differences are between the Ashkenazim (German 
and Polish Jews) and the Sephardim (Spanish and Portuguese 
Jews),, and concern not only the vowels but also certain con- 
sonants, and in some cases probably go back to early times. As 
regards writing, it is most likely that the oldest Hebrew records 
were preserved in some form of cuneiform script. The alphabet 
(see Writing) subsequently adopted is seen in its earliest form 
on the stele of Mesha, and has been retained, with modifications, 
by the Samaritans. According to Jewish tradition Ezra in- 
troduced the Assyrian character '(**»* ana), a much-debated 
statement which no doubt means that the Aramaic hand in me 
in Babylonia was adopted by the Jews about the 5th centsry 
B.C. Another form of the same hand, allowing for differences of 
material, is found in Egyptian Aramaic papyri of the 5th and 4*h 



HEBREW LITERATURE 



169 



centuries b.c. From this were developed (a) the square character 
used in MSS. of the Bible or important texts, and in most printed 
books, (6) the Rabbinic(ot Rashi) character, used in commentaries 
and treatises of all- kinds, both in MS. and in printed books, 
(c) the Cursive character, used in letters and for informal purposes, 
not as a rule printed. In the present state of Hebrew palaeo- 
graphy it is not possible to determine accurately the date of a 
MS., but it is easy to recognize the country in which H was written. 
The most clearly marked distinctions are between Spanish, 
French, German, Italian, Maghrebi, Greek, Syrian (including 
Egyptian), Yemenite, Persian and Qaraite hands. It is in the 
Rabbinic and Cursive characters that the differences are most 
noticeable. The Hebrew alphabet is also used, generally with 
the addition of some diacritical marks, by Jews to write other 
languages, chiefly Arabic, Spanish, Persian, Greek, Tatar (by 
Qaraites) and in later times German. 

The philological study of Hebrew among the Jews is described 
below, under Hebrew Literature, of which it formed an integral 
part- Among Christian scholars there was no independent 
school of Hebraists before the revival of learning. In the Greek 
and Latin Church the few fathers who, like Origen and Jerome, 
knew something of the language, were wholly dependent on their 
Jewish teachers, and their chief value for us is as depositaries 
of Jewish tradition. Similarly in the East, the Syriac version 
of the Old Testament is largely under the influence of the syna- 
gogue, and the homilies of Aphraates are a mine of Rabbinic 
lore. In the middle ages some knowledge of Hebrew was pre- 
served in the Church by converted Jews and even by non-Jewish 
scholars, of whom the most notable were the Dominican con- 
troversialist Raymundus Martini (in his Putio fidei) and the 
Franciscan Nicoluis of Xyra, on whom Luther drew largely in 
his interpretation of Scripture. But there was no tradition of 
Hebrew study apart from the Jews, and in the 15th century 
when an interest in the subject was awakened, only the most 
ardent aeal could conquer the obstacles that lay in the way. 
Orthodox Jews refused. to teach those who were not of their 
faith, and on the other hand many churchmen conscientiously 
believed in the duty of entirely suppressing Jewish learning. 
Even books were to be had only with the greatest difficulty, 
at least north of the Alps. In Italy things were somewhat 
better. Jews expelled from Spain received favour from the popes. 
Study was facilitated by the use of the printing-press, and some 
of the earliest books printed were in Hebrew. The father of 
Hebrew study among Christians was the humanist ' Johann 
Rcuchlin (1455-1522), the author of the Rudimento Hebraica 
(Pforzheim, 1506), whose contest with the converted Jew 
Pfeflerkora and the Cologne obscurantists, established the claim 
of the new study to recognition by the Church. Interest in the 
subject spread rapidly. Among RcuchHn's own pupils were 
Mdanchthon, Oecolampadius and Cellarius, while Sebastian 
MUnster in Heidelberg (afterwards professor at Basel), and 
Biicblein (Fagius) at I&ny, Strasburg and Cambridge, were 
pupils of the liberal Jewish scholar Elias Levita. France 
drew teachers from Italy. Santes Pagninus of Lucca was at 
Lyons; and the trilingual college of Francis I. at Paris, with 
Vatablus and le Mercier, attracted, among other foreigners, 
Giustiniani, bishop of Nebbio, the editor of the Genoa psalter 
of 1 516. In Rome the converted Jew Felix Pratensis taught 
under the patronage of Leo X., and did useful work in connexion 
with the great Bomberg Bibles. In Spain Hebrew learning 
was promoted by Cardinal Xiroenea, the patron of the Com- 
pfatensian Polyglot. The printers, as J. Froben at Basel and 
fitiennc at Paris, also produced Hebrew books. For a time 
Christian scholars still leaned mainly on the Rabbis. But a more 
independent spirit soon arose, of which le Mercier in the 16th, 
and Drusius early in the 17th century, may be taken as repre- 
sentatives. In the 1 7th century too the cognate languages were 
studied by J. Sddcn, E. Castell (Heptaglott lexicon) and E. 
Pococke (Arabic) in England, Ludovicus de Dieu in Holland, 
S. Bochart in France, J. Ludolf (EthJopic) and J. H. Hottinger 
(Syriac) in Germany, with advantage to the Hebrew grammar 
and lexicon. Rabbinic learning moreover was cultivated at 



Basel by the elder Buxtorf who was the author of grammatical 
Works and a lexicon. With the rise of criticism Hebrew philology 
soon became a necessary department of theology. Cappdhu 
(d. 1658) followed Levita in maintaining, against Buxtorf, the 
late introduction of the vowel-points, a controversy in which 
the authority of the massoretic text was concerned. He was 
supported by J. Morin and R. Simon in France. In the 18th 
century in. Holland A. Schul tens and N. W. Schroeder used the 
comparative method, with great success, rdying mainly on 
Arabic In Germany there was the meritorious J. D. Mkhaelit 
and in France the brilliant S. de Sacy. In the 10th century 
the greatest name among Hebraists is that of Gesenius, at Halle, 
whose shorter grammar (of Biblical Hebrew) first published in 
1813, is still the standard work, thanks to the ability with which 
his pupil E. HOdiger and recently £. Kautxsch have revised 
and enlarged it. Important work was also done by G. H. A. 
Ewald, J. Olshausen and P. A. de Lagarde, not to mention 
later scholars who have utilized the valuable results of Assyrio- 
kimcal research. 

BiBLiootAPHY. — Among the numerous works dealing with the 
study of Hebrew, the following are some of the most practically 
useful. 

Grammars. Introdactory.— D*vi4*on,Introduttoryr7fbrewGrammir 
(oth ed:, Edinburgh. 1888); and Syntax (Edinburgh, 1894). Ad- 
vanced; Gesenius's Hebrdische Grammalik, ed. Kautzsch (28th cd., 
Leipzig, 1909; Eng. trans.. Oxford, 1910); also Driver, Treatise on 
the Use of the Tenses in Hebrew (3rd ed., Oxford, 1892). For post- 
biblical Hebrew, Strack and Siegfried, Lehrbmh d. neuhebrSiuhen 
Spracht (Leipzig, 1884). 

Comparative Grammar. — Wright, Lectures on the Comp.Crammar 
of the $em. Lang. (Cambridge, 1890) ; Brockclmann, Grundriss der 
vertleichenden Crammatik (Berlin, 1907, &c.). 

Lexicons. — Gesenius's Thesaurus pkUoletuu3(Lcipzig r 1829-1858), 
and his Hebr&ischet Handvorterbuch (15th ed. by Zimmern and Buhl, 
Leipzig. 1910) ; Brown, Briggs and Driver, Hebrew and Eng. Lexicon 
(Oxford, 1892-1906). For later Hebrew: Levy, Neuhebraischet 
Wdrterbuch (Leipzig, 1876-1889); Jastrow, Dictionary of the Tar- 
rumi, &c. (New York, 1 886, Ac.) ; Dafman, A ramaisches neuhebtdisches 
Wtrricrbuch (Frankfort a. M., 1897); Kohut, Aruch compktum 
(Vienna, 1878-1890) (in Hebrew) is valuable for the language of the 
Talmud. (A. Cv.) 

HEBREW LITERATURE. Properly speaking, "Hebrew 
Lfterature " denotes all works written in the Hebrew language. 
In catalogues and bibliographies, however, the expression is now 
generally used, conveniently if incorrectly, as synonymous with 
Jewish literature, including all works written by Jews in Hebrew 
characters, whether the language be Aramaic, Arabic or even 
some vernacular not related to Hebrew. 

The literature begins with, as it is almost entirely based upon, 
the Old Testament. There were no doubt in the earliest times 
popular songs orally transmitted and perhaps books qm Tests* 
of annals and laws, but except in so far as remnants meat- 
of them are embedded in the biblical books, they have Scrip* 
entirely disappeared. Thus the Book of the Wars of *"** 
the Lord is mentioned in Num. xxi. 14; the Book of Jashar 
in Josh. x. 13, 2. Sam. i. 18; the Song of the Well is quoted in 
Num. xxi. 17, 18, and the song of Sihon and Moab, ib. 27-30; 
of Lamech, Gen. iv. 23, 24; of Moses, Exod. xv. As in other 
literatures, these popular elements form the foundation on which 
greater works arc gradually built, and it is one function of literary 
criticism to show the way in which the component parts were 
welded into a uniform whole. The traditional view that Moses 
was the author of the Pentateuch in its present form, would 
make this the earliest monument of Hebrew literature. Modern 
inquiry, however, has arrived at other conclusions (see Bible, 
Old Testa ment), which may be briefly summarized as follows: 
the Pentateuch is compiled from various documents, the earliest 
of which is denoted by J (beginning at Gen. ii. 4) from the fact 
that its author regularly uses the divine name Jehovah (Yahweh). 
Its date is now usually given as about 800 B.C. 1 In the next 
century the document E was composed, so called from its using 

* The dating of these documents is extremely difficult, since it i» 
based entirely on internal evidence. Various scholars, while agreeing 
on the actual divisions of the text, differ on the question of priority. 
The dates here given are those which seem to be most generally 
accepted at the present time. They are not put forward as the result 
of an independent review of the evidence. 



170 



HEBREW LITERATURE 



Elohlm (God) instead of Yahweh. Both these documents are 
considered to have originated^ the Northern kingdom, Israel, 
where also in the 8th century appeared the prophets Amos and 
Hosea. To the same period belong the book of Micab, the earlier 
parts of the books of Samuel, of Isaiah and of Proverbs, and 
perhaps some Psalms. In 722 B.C. Samaria was taken and the 
Northern kingdom ceased to exist. Judah suffered also, and it is 
not until a century later that any important literary activity 
is again manifested. The main part of the book of Deuteronomy 
was " found " shortly before 621 B.C. and about the same time 
appeared the prophets Jeremiah and Zephaniah, and perhaps 
the book of Ruth. A few years later (about 600) the two Penta- 
teuchal documents J and E were woven together, the books of 
Kings were compiled, the book of Habakkuk and parts of the 
Proverbs were written. Early in the next century Jerusalem 
was taken by Nebuchadrezzar, and the prophet Ezekiel was 
among the exiles with Jehoiachin. Somewhat later (c. 550) the 
combined document JE was edited by a writer under the influence 
of Deuteronomy, the later parts of the books of- Samuel were 
written, parts of Isaiah, the books of Obadiah, Haggai, Zechariah 
and perhaps the later Proverbs. In the exile, but probably after 
500 b.c, an important section of the Hexateuch, usually called 
the Priest's Code (P), was drawn up. At various times in the 
same century are to be placed the book of Job, the post-exilic 
parts of Isaiah, the books of Joel, Jonah, Malachi and the Song 
of Songs. The Pentateuch (or Hexateuch) was finally completed 
in its present form at some time before 400 B.C. The latest parts 
of the Old Testament are the books of Chronicles, Ezra and 
Nehemiah (e. 330 B.C.), Ecclesiastes and Esther (3rd century) 
and Daniel, composed either in the 3rd century or according 
to some views as late as the time of Antiochus Epiphanes (c. 168 
B.C.). With regard to the date of the Psalms, internal evidence, 
from the nature of the case, leads to few results which are con- 
vincing. The most reasonable view seems to be that the collection 
was formed gradually and that the process was going on during 
most of the period sketched above. 

It is not to be supposed that all the contents of the Old Testa- 
ment were immediately accepted as sacred, or that they were 
ever all regarded as being on the same level. The 
*£° cr,m Torah, the Law delivered to Moses, held among the 
tttrntwr J ews °* tnc * tn century B.C. as it holds now, a pre- 
eminent position- The inclusion of other books in the 
Canon was gradual, and was effected only after centuries of 
debate. The Jews have always been, however, an intensely 
literary people, and the books ultimately accepted as canonical 
were only a selection from the literature in existence at the 
beginning of the Christian era. The rejected books receiving 
little attention have mostly either been altogether lost or have 
survived only in translations, as in the case of the Apocrypha. 
Hence from the composition of the latest canonical books to the 
redaction of the Mishna (see below) in the 2nd century a.d., the 
remains of Hebrew literature are very scanty. Of books of this 
period which are known to have existed in Hebrew or Aramaic 
up to the time of Jerome (and even later) we now possess most 
of the original Hebrew text of Ben Sira (Ecclesiasticus) in a 
somewhat corrupt form, and fragments of an Aramaic text of a re- 
cension of theTestamentsof theTwelve Patriarchs.both discovered 
within recent years. Besides definite works of this kind, there 
was also being formed during this period a large body of ex- 
egetical and legal material, for the most part orally transmitted, 
which only received its literary form much later. As Hebrew 
became less familiar to the people, a system of translating 
the text of the Law into the Aramaic vernacular verse by verse, 
was adopted in the synagogue. The beginnings of it are supposed 
to be indicated in Neh. viii. 8. The translation was no doubt 
originally extemporary, and varied with the individual trans- 
lators, but its form gradually became fixed and was ultimately 
written down. It was called Targum, from the 






Aramaic tar gem, to translate. The earliest to be thus 



edited was the Targum of Onkelos (OnqelOs), the proselyte, on 
the Law. It received its final form in Babylonia probably in the 
3rd century A.D. The Samaritan Targum, of about the same 



date, clearly rests on the tame tradition. Parallel to Onfcdo. 
was another Targum on the Law, generally called pseudo- 
Jonathan, which was edited in the 7th century in Palestine, and 
is based on the same system of interpretation but it fuller and 
closer to the original tradition. There is also a fragmentary 
Targum (Palestinian) the relation of which to the others is 
obscure. It may be only a series of disconnected glosses on 
Onkelos. For the other books, the recognized Targum on the 
Prophets is that ascribed to Jonathan ben Uzziet (4th century ?), 
which originated in Palestine, but was edited in Babylonia, so 
that it has the same history and linguistic character as Onkelos. 
Just as there is a Palestinian Targum on the Law parallel to the 
Babylonian Onkelos, so there is a Palestinian Targum (called 
Ycruskalmi) on the Prophets parallel to that of Ben Uzzkl, but 
of later date and incomplete. The Law and the Prophets being 
alone used in the services of the synagogue, there was no author- 
ized version of the rest of the Canon. There are, however, 
Targumim on the Psalms and Job, composed in the 5th century, 
on Proverbs, resembling the Peshitti version, on the five 
Meghllldth, paraphrastic and agadic (see below) in character, 
and on Chronicles— all Palestinian. There is also a second 
Targum on Esther. There is none on Daniel, Ezra and Nehemiah. 

We must now return to the and century. During the period 
which followed the later canonical books, not only was t ranslat ton, 
and therefore exegesis, cultivated, but even more the „ mtmtrkmt , 
amplification of the Law. According to Jewish teach- 
ing (e.g. Abhoth i. x) Moses received on Mount Sinai not 
only the written Law as set down in the Pentateuch, but also 
the Oral Law, which he communicated personally to the 70 
elders and through them by a "chain of tradition" to succeeding 
ages. The application of this oral law is called Halakhah, the 
rules by which a man's daily " walk " is regulated. The halakhah 
was by no means inferior in prestige to the written Law. Indeed 
some teachers even went so far as to ascribe a higher value to k, 
since it comes into closer relation with the details of everyday 
life. It was not independent of the written Law, still less could 
it be in opposition to it. Rather it was implicitly contained 
in the Torah, and the duty of the teacher was to show 
this. It was therefore of the first importance that the chain of 
tradition should be continuous and trustworthy. The line is 
traced through biblical teachers to Ezra, the first of the Sdpherbn 
or scribes, who handed on the charge to the " men of the Great 
Synagogue," a much-discussed term for a body or succession of 
teachers Inaugurated by Ezra. The last member of it, Simon the 
Just (either Simon I., who died about 300 b.c, or Simon II., who 
died about 200 b.c), was the first of the next series, called Elders, 
represented in the tradition by pairs of teachers, ending with 
Hillel and SJiammai about the beginning of the Christian era. 
Their pupils form the starting-point of the next series, t^e 
Tannllm (from Aram, tend to teach), who occupy the first two 
centuries a.d. 

By this time the collection of halakhic material had become 
very large and various, and after several attempts had been made 
to reduce it to uniformity, a code of oral tradition* was M M , aM ^ m 
finally drawn up in the 2nd century by Judah ha-NasI, 
called Rabbi' par excellence. This was the Mishnah. Its name 
is derived from the Hebrew shanah, corresponding to the Aramaic 
tend, and therefore a suitable name for a tannaitic work, "***T»«^g 
the repetition or teaching of the oral law. It is written in the 
Hebrew of the schools (leshdn hakhamfm) which differs in 
many respects from that of the Old Testament (see Hebrew 
Language). It is divided into six "orders," according to 
subject, and each order is subdivided into chapters. In making 
his selection of halakhoth, Rabbi used the earlier compilations, 
which are quoted as " words of Rabbi 'Aqlba" or of R. Melr, 
but rejected much which, was afterwards collected under the 
title of Tosefta (addition) and Baraita (outside the Mishnah). 

Traditional teaching was, however, not confined to halakhah. 
As observed above, it was the duty of the teachers to show the 
connexion of practical rules with the written Law, g fUllM ^ 
the more so since the Sadducces rejected the authority MU,uM - 
of the oral law as such. Hence arises Midrasb, exposition, from 



HEBREW LITERATURE 



171 



dsrash to " investigate " a scrip tu ral passage. Of this halakhic 
Midrash we possess that on Exodus, called Mekhilta. that on 
Leviticus, called Sifra, and that on Numbers and Deuteronomy, 
called Sifrft. AU of these were drawn up in the period of the 
AaaoraTm, the order of teachers who succeeded the Taimalm, 
from the close of the Mishnah to about a.d. 500. The term 
Midrash, however, more commonly implies agada, ijt. the 
bomilelical exposition of the text, with illustrations designed 
to make it more attractive to the readers or bearer. Picturesque 
teaching of this kind was always popular, and specimens of it 
are familiar in the Gospel discourses. It began, as a method, 
with the SOpherTm (though there are traces in the Old Testament 
itself), and was most developed among theTannilmand Amor- 
Ifm, rivalling even the study of halakhah. As the existing 
halakhoth were collected and edited in the Mishnah, so the 
much larger agadic material was gathered together and arranged 
in the Midrashlm. Apart from the agadic parts of the -earlier 
Mekhilta, Sifra and Sifri, the most important of these collections 
(which are anonymous) form a sort of continuous commentary 
•on various books of the Bible. They were called Rabbdth (great 
Midrashlm) to distinguish them from preceding smaller collec- 
tions. BereshVk Rabba, on Genesis, and Ekhah Rabba 11, on Lamen- 
tations, were probably edited in the 7th century. Of the same 
character and of about the same date are the Pesiqta, on the 
lessons for Sabbaths and feast-days, and Wayyiqra R. on Leviti- 
cus. A century perhaps later is the TankQma, on the sections of 
the Pentateuch, and later still the Pesiqta Rabbet I, Shemdth R. 
(on Exodus), Bemidhbar R. (on Numbers), Dcbkarlm R. (on 
Deuteronomy). There are also Midrashlm on the Canticle, 
Ruth, Ecclesiastes, Esther and the Psalms, belonging to this 
later period, the Pirqi R. EHeter t of the 8th or otb century, a 
sort of history of creation and of the patriarchs, and the Tanna 
debi Etiyaha (an ethical work of the 10th century but containing 
much that is old), besides a large number of minor compositions. 1 
In general, these performed very much the same function as 
the lives of saints in the early and medieval church. Very 
important for the study of Midrashic literature are the YatqUf 
{gleaning) Skim'drti, on the whole Bible, the Yalq&t Mckklrl, 
on the Prophets, Psalms, Proverbs and Job, and the Midrash 
ha-gadhdl,* all of which are of uncertain but late date and 
preserve earlier material. The last, which is preserved in MSS. 
from Yemen, is especially valuable as representing an independent 
tradition. 

Meanwhile, if agadic exegesis was popular in the centuries 
following the redaction of the Mishna, the study of halakhah 
Tatmmd, was bv n0 means neglected. As the discussion of the 
Law led up to the compilation of the Mishnah, so the 
Mishnah itself became in turn the subject of further discussion. 
The material thus accumulated, both halakhic and agadic, 
forming a commentary on and amplification of the Mishnah, 
was eventually written down under the name of Gemara (from 
gemot, to learn completely), the two together forming the 
Talmud (properly " instruction "). The tradition, as in the case 
of the Targums-, was again twofold; that which had grown up 
in the Palestinian Schools and that of Babylonia. The founda- 
tion, however, the Mishnah, was the same in both. Both works 
were due to the Amoraim and were completed by about a.d. 500, 
though the date at which they were actually committed to 
writing is very uncertain. It is probable that notes or selections 
were from time to time written down to help in teaching and 
learning the immense mass of material, in spite of the fact that 
even in Sherira's time (nth century) such aids to memory were 
not officially recognized. Both Talmuds are arranged according 
to the six orders of the Mishnah, but the discussion of the 
Mishnic text often wanders off into Widely different topics. 
Neither is altogether complete. In the Palestinian Talmud 
(Yerushalmt) the gemara of the 5th order (Qodashim) and of 
nearly all the 6th (TohOrOth) is missing, besides smaller parts. 

1 See. especially A. Jellioek's Bet-ka-Midrauh (Leipzig, 1853), for 
these leaser midrashlm. 

'That on Genesis was edited for the first time by Schcchter 
(Cambridge, 190a?. 



In the Babylonian Talmud (BabMJi) there Is no gemara to the 
smaller tractates of Order 1, and to parts of ii., iv., v., vi. The 
language of both gemaras is in the main the Aramaic vernacular 
(western Aramaic in Yerushmlml, eastern in Babhll), but early 
halakhic traditions (e.g. of Tannaitic origin) are given in their 
original form, and the discussion of them is usually also in 
Hebrew. Babhll is not only greater in bulk than Yerushalml, 
but has also received far greater attention, so that the name 
Talmud alone is often used for it. As being a constant object of 
study numerous commentaries have been written on the Talmud 
from the earliest times till the present. The most important of 
them for the understanding of the gemara (Babhll) is that of 
Rashi* (Solomon ben Isaac, d. 1104) with the T6saf6tb (additions, 
not to be confused with the Tosefta) chiefly by the French school 
of rabbis following Rashi. These are always printed in the 
editions on the same page as the Mishnah and Gemara, the whole, 
with various other matter, filling generally about 1 2 folio volumes. 
Since the introduction of printing, the Talmud is always cited by 
the number of the leaf in the first edition (Venice, 1520, &c), 
to which all subsequent editions conform. In order to facilitate 
the practical study of the Talmud, it was natural that abridge- 
ments of it should be made. Two of these may be mentioned 
which are usually found in the larger editions: that by Isaac 
AlfasI (i.e. of Fez) in the nth century, often cited in the Jewish 
manner as Rif; and that by Asher ben Yeblel (d. 13*8) of 
Toledo, usually cited as Rabbenti Asher. The object of both was 
to collect all halakhoth having a practical importance, omitting 
all those which owing to circumstances no longer possess more 
than an academic interest, and excluding the discussions on them 
and all agada. Both add notes and explanations of their own, 
and both have in turn formed the text of commentaries. 

With the Talmud, the anonymous period of Hebrew literature 
may be considered to end. Henceforward important works 
are produced not by schools but by particular teachers, MMankm 
who, however, no doubt often represent the opinions 
of a school. There are two branches of work which partake 
of both characters, the Masorah and the Liturgy. *fhe name 
Masorah (Massorah) is usually derived from masar, to hand on, 
and explained as M tradition." According to others 4 it is the word 
found in Ezek. xx. 37, meaning a " fetter." Its object was to 
fix the biblical text unalterably. It is generally divided into the 
Great and the Small Masorah, forming together an apparatus 
criticus which grew up gradually in the course of centuries and 
now accompanies the text in most MSS. and printed editions to a 
greater or less extent. There are also separate masoretic treat- 
ises. Some system of the kind was necessary to guard against 
corruptions of copyists, while the care bestowed upon it no doubt 
reacted so as to enhance the sanctity ascribed to the text. Many 
apparent puerilities, such as the counting of letters and the 
marking of the middle point of books, had a practical use in 
enabling copyists of MSS. to determine the amount of work 
done. The registration of anomalies, such as the suspended 
letters, inverted nUns and larger letters, enabled any one to test 
the accuracy of a copy. But the work of the Masoretes was much 
greater than this. Their long lists of the occurrences of words 
and forms fixed with accuracy the present (Masoretic) text, 
which they had produced, and were invaluable to subsequent 
lexicographers, while their system of vowel-points and accents 
not only gives us the pronunciation and manner of reading 
traditional about the 7th century a.d., but frequently serves 
also the purpose of an explanatory commentary. (See further 
under Bible.) Most of the Masorah is anonymous, including 
the Massekheth Stfcrtm (of various dates from perhaps the 6th 
to the 9th century) and the Okhlah we-Okhlah, but when the 
period of anonymous literature ceases, there appear (in the 10th 
century) Ben Asher of Tiberias, the greatest authority on the 
subject, and his opponent Ben Naphthali. Later on, Jacob 

'In Hebrew *v\ from the initial letters of Rabbi Shelomoh 
YizhaqT. a convenient method used by Jewish writers in referring 
to well-known authors. The name Jarcm, formerly used for Rashi, 
rests on a misunderstanding. 

4 So Bacber in J.Q.R. iii. 785 «W. 



1 7 2 



HEBREW LITERATURE 



ben tfayyftn arranged the Masorah (or the great Bomberg Bible 
of 1524. Elias Levita's Massoreth ha- Mass or elk (1538) and 
Buxtorfs Tiberias (1620) are also important. 
. We must now turn back to a most difficult subject— the 
growth of the Liturgy. We are not concerned here with indlca- 

tions of the ritual used in the Temple. Of the prayer- 

book as it is at present, the earliest parts are the 
Shema' (Deut. vL 4, &c) and the anonymous blessings commonly 
called Shemoneh 'Esreh (the Eighteen), together with certain 
Fsalms. (Readings from the Law and the Prophets [ Haph (arah] 
also formed part of the service.) To this framework were fitted, 
from time to time, various prayers, and, for festivals especially, 
numerous hymns. The earliest existing codification of the prayer- 
book is the Siddir (order) drawn up by Amrara Gaon of Sura 
about 85a Half a century later the famous Gaon Seadiah, also 
of Sura, issued his StddOr, in which the rubrical matter is in 
Arabic. Besides the SiddQr, or order for Sabbaths and general 
use, there is the MafpOr {cycle) for festivals and fasts. In both 
there are ritual differences according to the Sephardic (Spanish), 
Ashkenazic (German-Polish), Roman (Greek and South Italian) 
and some minor uses, in the later additions to the Liturgy. The 
Mabzor of each rite is also distinguished by hymns (piyyUtim) 
composed by authors (payyclanlm) of the district. The most 
important writers are Yoseh ben Yoseb, probably in the 6th 
century, chiefly known for his compositions for the day of Atone- 
ment, Eleazar Qalir, the founder of the payyetanic style, perhaps 
in the 7th century,- Seadiah, and the Spanish school consisting 
of Joseph ibn Abitur (died in 970), lbn Gabirol, Isaac Gayyath, 
Moses ben Ezra, Abraham ben Ezra and Judah ha-levi, who will 
be mentioned below; later, Moses ben Nafcman and Isaac Luria 
the Kabbalist. 1 

The order of the Amoraim, which ended with the close of the 
Talmud (a.d. 500), was succeeded by that of the Saboralm, who 

merely continued and explained the work of their 
Oeialm. predecessors, and these again were followed by the 

GeOnIm, the heads of the schools of Sura and Pum- 
beditha in Babylonia. The office of Gaon lasted for something 
over 400 years, beginning about A.D. 600, and varied in import- 
ance according to the ability of the holders of it. Individual 
Geonlm produced valuable works (of which later), but what is 
perhaps roost important from the point of view of the develop- 
ment of Judaism is the literature of their Responsa or answers 
to questions, chiefly on halakhic matters, addressed to them from 
various countries* Some of these were actual decisions of 
particular Geonlm - r others were an official summary of the 
discussion of the subject by the members of the School. They 
begin with Mar Rab Sheshna (7th century) and continue to 
Hai Gaon, who died in 1038, and are full of historical and literary 
interest.* The She'iltoth (questions) of Rab Abai (8lh century) 
also belong probably to the school of Pumbeditha, though their 
author was not Gaon. Besides the Responsa, but closely related 
to them, we have the lesser Halakhoth of Yehudai Gaon of Sura 
(8th century) and the great Halakhoth of Simeon Qayyara of 
Sura (not Gaon) in the 9th century. In a different department 
there is the first Talmud lexicon ('Arukh) now lost, by £emah ben 
Paltoi, Gaon of Pumbeditha in the 9th century. The Siddur 
of Amram ben Sheshna has been already mentioned. All these 
writers, however, are entirely eclipsed by the commanding 
personality of the most famous of the Geonlm, Seadiah ben 
Joseph (q.v.) of Sura, often called al-FayyOml (of the Fayuro in 
EgypO, one of the greatest representatives of Jewish learning 
of aU times, who died in 942. The last three holders of the office 
were also distinguished. Sherira of Pumbeditha (d. 098) was 
the author of the famous "Letter" (in the form of a Responsum 
to a question addressed to him by residents in Kairawan), an 
historical document of the highest value and the foundation of 
our knowledge of the history of tradition. His son Hai, last 
Gaon of Pumbeditha (d. 1038), a man of wide learning, wrote 

1 For the history of the very extensive literature of this class, 
Zunz, Literaturgtschichle der synagogalen Pocsie (Berlin, 1865). is 
indispensable. 

'Sec the edition of them in Harkavy, Studien, iv. (Berlin, 1885). 



(partly in Arabic) not only numerous Responsa, but also treatises 
on law, commentaries on the Mishnah and the Bible, a lexicon 
called in Arabic oLffdwl, and poems such as the id usar Hasktl, 
but most of them are now lost Or known only from translations 
or quotations. Though his teaching was largely directed against 
superstition, he seems to have been inclined to mysticism, and 
perhaps for this reason various kabbalistic works were ascribed 
to him in later times. His father-in-law Samuel ben rjophni, 
last Gaon of Sura (d. 1034), was a voluminous writer on law, 
translated the Pentateuch into Arabic, commented on much of 
the Bible, and composed an Arabic introduction to the Talmud, 
of which the existing Hebrew introduction (by Samuel the Nagid) 
is perhaps a translation. Most of his works are now lost. 

In the Geonic period there came into prominence the sect of 
the Karaites (Bent miqrd, " followers of the Scripture ", the pro- 
testants of Judaism, who rejected rabbinical authority, 
basing their doctrine and practice exclusively on tCsnMu. 
the Bible. The sect was founded by 'Anan in the 8th 
century, and, after many vicissitudes, still exists. Their litera- 
ture, with which alone we are here concerned, is largely polemical . 
and to a great extent deals with grammar and exegesis. Of 
their first important authors, Benjamin al-Nehawendi and Daniel 
al-QumisI (both in the oth century), little is preserved. In the 
10th century Jacob al-Qirqisanl wrote his Kitdb aJ-cnwar, on 
law, Solomon ben Yerubam (against Seadiah) and Yefet ben 
'All wrote exegetical works; in the nth century Abr/1-faraj 
Furqan, exegesis, and Yusuf al-BasIr against Samuel ben tfophni. 
Most of these wrote in Arabic. In the 12th century and in 
S. Europe, Judah Hadassi composed his Eshkol ha-Kdphcr, a 
great theological compendium in the form of a commentary on 
the Decalogue. Other writers are Aaron (the elder) ben Joseph, 
13th century, who wrote the commentary Sepher ha-mibhhar; 
Aaron (the younger) of Nicomcdia (14th century), author oi 
*£f IJayyim, on philosophy, Can 'Eden, on law, and the com- 
mentary Kcther Tdrah; in the 15th century Elijah BasfayazI, 
on law (Addereth EliyaJtu), and Caleb Efendipoulo, poet and 
theologian; in the 16th century Moses Bashyaz!, theologian. 
From the 12th century onward the sect gradually declined, 
being ultimately restricted mainly to the Crimea and Lithuania, 
learning disappeared and their literature became merely popular 
and of little interest. Much of it in later times was written in 
a curious Tatar dialect. Mention need only be made further 
of Isaac of Troki, whose anti-Christian polemic llizzUq Emunak 
(1593) was translated into English by Moses Mocatta under the 
title of Faith Strengthened (1851); Solomon of Troki, whose 
Appirydn % an account of Karaism, was written at the request of 
Pufendorf (about 1700); and Abraham Firkovich, who, in spite 
of his impostures, did much for the literature of his people about 
the middle of the 19th century. (See also Qaraites.) 

To return to the period of the Geonlm. While the schools 
of Babylonia were flourishing as the religious head of Judaism, 
the West, and especially Spain under Moorish rule, 
was becoming the home of Jewish scholarship. On the 
breaking up of the schools many of the fugitives fled 
to the West and helped to promote rabbinical learning 
there. The communities of Fez, Kairawan and N. Africa were in 
close relation with those of Spain, and as early as the beginning 
of the 9th century Judah ben Quraish of Tahort had composed 
his Ris&lak (fetter) to the Jews of Fez on grammatical subject* 
from a comparative point of view, and a dictionary now lost. 
His work was used in the 10th century by Menahem ben Saruq, 
of Cordova, in his Mahhcieth (dictionary). Menahcm's system 
of bi-literal and uni-literal roots was violently attacked by 
Dunash ibn Labrat, and as violently defended by the author's 
pupils. Among these was Judah Qayyuj of Cordova, the father 
of modern Hebrew grammar, who first established the principle 
of tri-literal roots. His treatises on the verbs, written in 
Arabic, were translated into Hebrew by Moses Giqatilla 
(nth century), himself a considerable grammarian and com- 
mentator, and by Ibn Ezra. His system was adopted by 
Abu'l-walid ibn Jannib, of Saragossa (died early in the nth 
century), in his lexicon (Kitdb al-Uiiil, in Arabic) and other works. 



HEBREW LITERATURE 



*73 



la Italy appeared tht invaluable Talmud-lexicon CArAkk) by 
Nathan b. Yehiel, of Rome (d. xio6), who was indirectly 
indebted to Babylonian teaching. He does not strictly follow 
the system of IJayyuj. Other works of a different kind also 
originated in Italy about this time: the very popular history 
of the Jews, called Josippon (probably of the 10th or even oth 
century), ascribed to Joseph ben Gorion (Gorionides) 1 } the 
medical treatises of Shabbethai Donnolo (loth century) and his 
commentary on the Sepker Yetfrck, the anonymous and earliest 
Hebrew kabbalistic work ascribed to the patriarch Abraham. 
In North Africa, probably in the 9th century, appeared the 
book known under the name of Bldad ka-Danl, giving an account 
of the ten tribes, from which much medieval legend was derived;* 
and in Kairawan the medical and philosophical treatises of Isaac 
Israeli, who died in 93 a. 

The aim of the grammatical studies of the Spanish school was 
ultimately exegesis. This had already been cultivated in the 

fixcMtk East * ** the otn centur > r EM °t Balkh wrote a 
BX9t9UKm rationalistic treatise* on difficulties in the Bible, 
which was refuted by Seadiah. The commentaries of the Geonim 
have been mentioned above. The impulse to similar work in the 
West came also from Babylonia. In the xoth century Qushlel, 
one of four prisoners, perhaps from Babylonia, though that is 
doubtful, was ransomed and settled at Kairawan, where he 
acquired great reputation as a Talmudist. His son Hananeel 
(d. 1050) wrote a commentary on (probably all) the Talmud, and 
one now lost on the Pentateuch. Hananeel's contemporary Nisslm 
ben Jacob, of Kairawan, who corresponded with Hai Gaon of 
Pumbeditha as well as with Samuel the Nagld in Spain, likewise 
wrote on .the Talmud, and is probably the author of a collection 
of Ma'asiyyMk or edifying stories, besides works now lost. 
The activity in North Africa reacted on Spain. There the most 
prominent figure was that of Samuel ion Nagdela (or Nagrela), 
generally known as Samuel the Nagld or head of the Jewish 
settlement, who died in 1055. As vizier to the Moorish king 
at Granada, he was not only a patron of learning, but himself 
a man of wide knowledge and a considerable author. Some 
of his poems are extant, and an Introduction to the Talmud 
mentioned above. In grammar he followed tfayyuj, whose 
pupu he was. Among others he was the patron of Solomon 
ibn Gabirol (q.v.), the poet and philosopher. To this period 
belong Hafv al-Qutl (the Goth?) who made a version of the 
Psalms in Arabic rhyme, and Babya (more correctly Bebai) 
ibn PaqOda, dayyan at Saragossa, whose Arabic ethical treatise 
has always had great popularity among the Jews in its Hebrew 
translation, jftbtoth ha-Ubhabhdth. He also composed liturgical 
poems. At the end of the nth century Judah ibn BaTam 
wrote grammatical works and commentaries (on the Pentateuch, 
Isaiah, &c.) in Arabic; the liturgist Isaac Gayyath (d. in 1089 
at Cordova) wrote on ritual Moses Giqatilla has been already 
mentioned. 

The French school of the nth century was hardly less im- 
portant. Gershom ben Judah, the " Light of the Exile " (d. 
BmmM in 1040 at Mainz), a famous Talmudist and com- 
mentator, his pupil Jacob ben Yaqar, and Moses of 
Narbonne, called ha-Darshan, the " Exegete," were the fore- 
runners of the greatest of all Jewish commentators, Solomon 
ben Isaac (Rashi), who died at Troyes in 1 105. Rashi was a pupil 
of Jacob ben Yaqar, and studied at Worms and Mainz. Unlike 
his contemporaries in Spain, he seems to have confined himself 
wholly to Jewish learning, and to have known nothing of Arabic 
or other languages except his native French. Yet no commentator 
is more valuable or indeed more voluminous, and for the study 

* Two different texts of it exist : (1) in the ed. pr. (Mantua, 1476) ; 
(a) ed. by Seb. Munster (Basel, 1541). There is also an early Arabic 
recension, but its relation to the Hebrew and to the Arabic 
a Maccabees is still obscure. See /. Q. R„ xi. $55 sqq. The Hebrew 
text was edited with a Latin translation by Breithaupt (Got ha, 1 707). 

■On the various recensions of the text see D. H. Mullcr in the 
Denksehriften of the Vienna Academy {Phil.-hist. CI., xlt. 1 , p. 41 ) and 
Epstein's ed. (Pressburg, 1891). 

* A fragment of such a work, probably emanating from the school 
of Hivi. was found by Scbechter and published in J.Q.R., xiii. 345 sqq. 



of the Talmud he is even now indispensable. He commented 
on all the Bible and on nearly all the Talmud, has been himself 
the text of several super-corn mentaries, and has exercised great 
influence on Christian exegesis. The biblical commentary was 
translated into Latin by Breithaupt (Gotha, 1710-1714), that on 
the Pentateuch rather freely into German by L. Dukes (Prag, 
1838, in Hebrew-German characters, with the text), and parts 
by others. Closely connected with Rashi, or of his school, are 
Joseph Qara, of Troyes (d. about 1130), the commentator, 
and his teacher Menahem ben Qelb6, Jacob ben Melr, called 
Rabbenu Tam (d. 1x71), the most important of the Tosaphists 
(v. sup.), and later in the 1 ath century the liberal and rationalizing 
Joseph Bekhor ShOr, and Samuel ben Me'Ir (d. about 11 74) of 
Ramerupt, commentator and Talmudist. 

In the x ath and 13th centuries literature maintained a high 
level in Spain. Abraham bar Qiyya, known to Christian scholars 
as Abraham Judaeus (d. about 1x36), was a mathematician, 
astronomer and philosopher much studied in the middle ages. 
Moses ben Ezra, of Granada (d. about 1x40), wrote in Arabic 
a philosophical work based on Greek and Arabic as well as 
Jewish authorities, known by the name of the Hebrew translation 
as 'Arugaih ka-bosem, and the Kitdb al-Mabafarah, of great 
value for literary history. He is even better known as a poet, 
for his Dtwd* and the *Anaq, and as a hymn-writer. His 
relative Abraham ben Ezra, generally called simply Ibn Ezra, 4 
was still more distinguished. He was born at Toledo, spent 
most of bis life in travel, wandering even to England and to the 
East, and died in 1167. Yet he contrived to write his great 
commentary on the Pentateuch and other books of the Bible, 
treatises on philosophy (as the Yesddk mfira), astronomy, 
mathematics, grammar (translation of tfayyOj), besides a Dl wan. 
The man, however, who shares with Ibn Gabirol the first place 
in Jewish poetry is Judah Ha-levi, of Toledo, who died in 
Jerusalem about 1140. His poems, both secular and religious, 
contained in his Dlwin and scattered in the liturgy, are all in 
Hebrew, though he employed Arabic metres. In Arabic he 
wrote his philosophical work, called in the Hebrew translation 
Sepker ka-KOiari, a defence of revelation as against non-Jewish 
philosophy and Qaraite doctrine. It shows considerable 
knowledge of Greek and Arabic thought (Avicenna). Joseph 
ibn Mlgash (d. 1141 at Luccna), a friend of Judah Ha-levi 
and of Moses ben Ezra, wrote Responsa and IJiddushln (annota- 
tions) on parts of the Talmud. In another sphere mention must 
be made of the travellers Benjamin of Tudela (d. after XX73), 
whose Massa'6th are of great value for the history and geography 
of his time, and (though not belonging to Spain) Pethahiah of 
Regensburg (d. about 11 00), who wrote short notes of his 
journeys. Abraham ben David, of Toledo (d. about 1x80), 
in philosophy an Aristotelian (through Avicenna) and the 
precursor of Maimonides, is chiefly known for his Sepker ko- 
qabbalak, written as a polemic against Karaism, but valuable 
for the history of tradition. 

The greatest of all medieval Jewish scholars was Moses ben 
Maimon (Rambam), called Maimonides by Christians. He was 
born at Cordova in 1135, fled with his parents from 
persecution in 1148, settled at Fez in 1160, passing 
there for a Moslem, fled again to Jerusalem in 1x65, 
and finally went to Cairo where he died in iaoa. He was dis- 
tinguished in his profession as a physician, and wrote a number 
of medical works in Arabic (including a commentary on the 
aphorisms of Hippocrates), all of which were translated into 
Hebrew, and most of them into Latin, becoming the text-books 
of Europe in the succeeding centuries. But his fame rests mainly 
on his theological works. Passing over the less important, 
these are the Mdreh NebkHkHm (so the Hebrew translation of 
the Arabic original), an endeavour to show philosophically the 
reasonableness of the faith, parts of which, translated into Latin, 
were studied by the Christian schoolmen, and the Miskntk 
Tdrah, also called Yad kahazaqah C-M, the number of the 
parts), a classified compendium of the Law, written in Hebrew 

* See M. Friedlfinder in Publications of the Society of Hebrew Let,, 
1st ser. vol. i., and and scr. vol. iv. 



'74 



HEBREW LITERATURE 



and early translated into Arabic. The latter of these, though 
generally accepted in the East, was much opposed in the West, 
especially at the time by the Talmudist Abraham ben David 
of Posquieres (d. 1108). Maimonides also wrote an Arabic 
commentary on the Mishnah, soon afterwards translated into 
Mmimo» Hebrew, commentaries on parts of the Talmud (now 
mistMMod lost), and a treatise on Logic. His breadth of view 
and his Aristotelianism were a stumbling-block to the 
orthodox, and subsequent teachers may be mostly 
classified as Maimonists or anti-Maimonists. Even 
his friend Joseph ibn 'Aqnin (d. 1226), author of a philosophical 
treatise in Arabic and of a commentary on the Song of Solomon, 
found so much difficulty in the new views that the Mdreh 
Nebh&khlm was written in order to convince him. Maimonides' 
son Abraham (d. 1234), also a great Talmudist, wrote in Arabic 
Ma'aseh Yerishalml, on oaths, and Kitdb ai-Kifdyah, theology. 
His grandson David was also an author. A very different person 
was Moses ben Nafeman (Ramban) or Nahmanides, who was born 
at Gerona in 11 94 and died in Palestine about 1270. His whole 
tendency was as conservative as that of Maimonides was liberal, 
and like all conservatives he may be said to represent a lost 
though not necessarily a less desirable cause. Much of his life 
was spent in controversy, not only with Christians (in 1293 
before the king of Aragon), but also with his own people and on 
the views of the time. His greatest work is the commentary 
on the Pentateuch in opposition to Maimonides and Ibn Ezra. 
He had a strong inclination to mysticism, but whether certain 
kabbalistic works are rightly attributed to him is doubtful. 
It is, however, not a mere coincidence that the two great kabbal- 
istic text-books, the Bahir and the Zohar (both meaning " bright- 
ness "), appear first in the 13th century. If not due to his teaching 
they are at least in sympathy with it . The Bahir, a sort of outline 
of the Zohar, and traditionally ascribed to Nebunya (1st century), 
is believed by some to be the work of Isaac the Blind ben Abraham 
of Posqui&res (d. early in the 13th century), the founder of the 
modern Kabbalah and the author of the names for the 10 
Sephlrotb. The Zohar, supposed to bo by Simeon ben Yofeai 
(2nd century), is now generally attributed to Moses of Leon 
(d. 1305), who, however, drew his material in part from earlier 
written or traditional sources, such as the Sepher Yezlrah. 
At any rate the work was immediately accepted by thekabbalists, 
and has formed the basis of all subsequent study of the subject. 
Though put into the form of a commentary on the Pentateuch, 
it is really an exposition of the kabbalistic view of the universe, 
and incidentally shows considerable acquaintance with the 
natural science of the time. A pupil, though not a follower of 
Nahmanides, was Solomon Adreth (not Addereth), of Barcelona 
(d. 13 10), a prolific writer of Talmudic and polemical works 
(against the Kabbalists and Mahommedans) as well as of responsa. 
He was opposed by Abraham Abulafia (d. about 1291) and his 
pupil Joseph Giqatilla (d. about 1305), the author of numerous 
kabbalistic works. Solomon's pupil Bafeya ben Asher, of 
Saragossa (d. 1340) was the author of a very popular com- 
mentary on. the Pentateuch and of religious discourses entitled 
Kad ha-qemab, in both of which, unlike his teacher, he made 
large use of the Kabbalah. Other studies, however, were not 
neglected. In the first half of the 13th century, Abraham ibn 
Hasdai, a vigorous supporter of Maimonides, translated (or 
adapted) a large number of philosophical works from Arabic, 
among them being the Sepher ha-tapptab* based on Aristotle's 
de A nima, and the Mdteni Zedeq of Ghaxzali on moral philosophy, 
of both of which the originals are lost. Another Mairaonist was 
Shem T/6bh ben Joseph Falaquera (d. after 1290), philosopher 
(following Averroes), poet and author of a commentary on the 
Moreh. A curious mixture of mysticism and Aristotelianism 
is seen in Isaac Aboab (about 1300), whose Menotath ha-Ma'Or, 
a collection of agaddth, attained great popularity and has been 
frequently printed and translated. Somewhat earlier in the 13th 
century lived Judah al-IJarlzI, who belongs in spirit to the time 
of Ibn Gabirol and Judah ha-levi. He wrote numerous transla- 
tions, of Galen, Aristotle, rjarfrl, rjunain ben Isaac and 
Maimonides, as well as several original works, a Sepher % Anaq 



in. imitation of Moses ben Ezra, and treatises on grammar and 
medicine (Rephtath geviyyah), but he is best known for Us 
Taftkemdnl, a diwan in the style of Hariri's MaqdmdL 

Meanwhile the literary activity of the Jews in Spain had its 
effect on those of France. The fact that many of the most 
important works were written in Arabic, the vernacular of the 
Spanish Jews under the Moors, which was not understood in 
France, gave rise to a number of translations into Hebrew, 
chiefly by the family of Ibn Tibbon (or Tabbon). The first of 
them, Judah ibn Tibbon, translated works of Bafeya ibn PaqOdah, 
Judah ha-levi, Seadiah, Aba'lwalld and Ibn Gabirol, besides 
writing works of his own. He was a native of Granada, but 
migrated to Lunel, where he probably died about zioo. His 
son Samuel, who died at Marseilles about 1230, was equally 
prolific. He translated the Mdreh Nebhikhlm during the life 
of the author, and with some help from him, so that this may 
be regarded as the authorized version; Maimonides' commentary 
on the Mishnah tractate Pirqi Abhdlh, and some minor works; 
treatises of Averroes and other Arabic authors. His original 
works are mostly biblical commentaries and some additional 
matter on the Mdreh. His son Moses, who died abqnt the end 
of the 13th century, translated the rest of Maimonides, much of 
Averroes, the lesser Canon of Avicenna, Euclid's BUwuntt 
(from the Arabic version), Ibn al-Jazzar's Viaticum, medical 
works of £unain ben Isaac (Johannitius) and Razi (Rhazes), 
besides works of less-known Arabic authors. His original works 
are commentaries and perhaps a treatise on immortality. His 
nephew Jacob ben Makhlr, of Montpellier (d. about 1304), 
translated Arabic scientific works, such as parts of Averroes and 
Ghazzali, Arabic versions from the Greek, as Euclid's Data, 
Autolycus, Menelaus (ovS-o) and Theodosius on the Sphere, 
and Ptolemy's Almagest. He also compiled astronomical tables 
and a treatise on the quadrant. The great importance of these 
translations is that many of them were afterwards rendered 
into Latin, 1 thus making Arabic and, through it, Greek learning 
accessible to medieval Europe. Another important family 
about this time is that of Qimbi (or Qambi). It also originated 
in Spain, where Joseph ben Isaac Qimbi was born, who migrated 
to S. France, probably for the same reason which caused the 
flight of Maimonides, and died there about 117a He wrote on 
grammar (Sepher ha-galui and Sepher Zikkaron), commentaries 
on Proverbs and the Song of Solomon, an apologetic work, 
Sepher ha-berllh, and a translation of Babya's ffdbhdth 
ha'Ubhabhdih. His son Moses (d. about 1190) also wrote on 
grammar and some commentaries, wrongly attributed to Ibn 
Ezra. A younger son, David (Radaq) of Narbonne (cL 1235) 
is the most famous of the name. His great work, the Mikhlil, 
consists of a grammar and lexicon; his commentaries on various 
parts of the Bible are admirably luminous, and, in spite of his 
anti-Christian remarks, have been widely used by Christian 
theologians and largely influenced the English authorized version 
of the Bible. A friend of Joseph Qimbi, Jacob ben Melr, known 
as RabbenO. Tarn of Ramerupt (d. 1171), the grandson of 
Rashi, wrote the Sepher ha-yashar (biddoshin and responsa) and 
was one of the chief Tosaphists. Of the same school were 
Menahem ben Simeon of Posquieres, a commentator, who died 
about the end of the 12th century, and Moses ben Jacob of Coucy 
(13th century), author of the Semag (book of precepts, positive 
and negative) a very popular and valuable halakhic work. A 
younger contemporary of David Qimbi was Abraham ben Isaac 
Bedersi (i.e. of Beziers), the poet, and some time in the 13th 
century lived Joseph Ezobhi of Perpignan, whose ethical poem, 
Qcarath Ydseph, was translated by Reuchlin and later by 
others. Berachiah,* the compiler of the " Fox Fables " (which 
have much in common with the " Ysopet " of Marie de France), 
is generally thought to have lived in Provence in the 13th century, 
but according to others in England in the 12th century. In 
Germany, Eleazar ben Judah of Worms (d. 1238), besides being 

1 The fullest account of them is to be found in Strintrhnrtdcr's 
Hebr&ische Ubersetzunge* its MiUdalters (Berlin, 1893). 

' See H. Gollancz, The Ethical Treatises of Berachya (London, 
1902). 



HEBREW LITERATURE 



175 



a Talmudtst, was an earnest promoter of kabbalistic studies. 
Isaac ben Moses (d. about 1270), who had studied in France, 
wrote the famous Or ZarOa' (from which he is often called), 
an haJakhic work somewhat resembling Maimonides' Mishneh 

Tdrah, but more diffuse. In the course of his wanderings he 
settled for a time at Wllrzburg, where he bad as a pupil Melr 
of Rothenburg (d. 1293). The latter was a prolific writer of 
great influence, chiefly known for his Responsa, but also for his 
halakhic treatises, biddushln and tosaphoth. He also composed 
a number of piyyutlm. MeVs pupil, Mordecai ben Hillel of 
NOrnberg (d. 1298), had an even greater influence through his 
halakhic work, usually known as the Mordekhai. This is a codi- 
fication of halakhoth, based on all the authorities then known, 
some of them now lost. Owing to the fact that the material 
collected by Mordecai was left to his pupils to arrange, the work 
was current in two recensions, an Eastern (in Austria) and a 
Western (in Germany, France, &c). In the East, Tanhflm ben 
Joseph of Jerusalem was the author of commentaries (not to be 
confounded with the Mid rash Tanjf&ma) on many books of the 
Bible, and of an extensive lexicon (Kitdb al-M unhid) to the 
Mishnah, all in Arabic. 

. With the 13th century Hebrew literature may be said to have 
reached the limit of its development. Later writers to a large 
extent used over again the materials of their predecessors, while 
secular works tend to be influenced by the surrounding civiliza- 
tion, or even are composed in the vernacular languages. From 
the 14th century onward only the most notable names can be men- 
tioned. In Italy Immanud ben Solomon, of Rome (d. about 
1330), perhaps the friend and certainly the imitator of Dante, 
wrote his diwan, of which the last part, " Topheth ve-'Eden," 
is suggested by the Divina Commedia. In Spain Israel Israeli, of 
Toledo (d. 1326), was a translator and the author of an Arabic 
work on ritual and a commentary on Pirqi Abhdth. About the 
same time Isaac Israeli wrote his Yesddk 'Olcm and other astro- 
nomical works which were much studied. Asber ben Jehiel, 
a pupa of Melr of Rothenburg, was the author of the popular 
Talmudic compendium, generally quoted as Rabbenu Asher, on 
the lines of Alfasi, besides other halakhic works. He migrated 
from Germany and settled at Toledo, where he died in 1328. 
His son Jacob, of Toledo (d. 1340), was the author of the TQr 
(or the-four TOrlm), a most important manual of Jewish law, 
serving as an abridgement of the Mishnek Tdrah brought up to 
date. His- pupil David Abudrahim, of Seville (d. after 1340), 
wrote a commentary on the liturgy. Both the 14th and 15th 
centuries in Spain were largely taken up with controversy, as 
by Isaac ibn Pulgar (about 1350). and Shem fobh ibn ShaprQt 
(about 1380), who translated St Matthew's gospel into Hebrew. 
In France Jedaiah Bedersi, i.e. of Beziers (d. about 1340), wrote 
poems {Bt^inath ha-' Mam), commentaries on agada and a defence 
of Maimonides against Solomon Adrcth. Levi ben Gershom 
(d. 1344), called Ralbag, the great commentator on the Bible and 
Talmud, in philosophy a follower of Aristotle and Averroes, 
known to Christians as Leo Hebraeus, wrote also many works 
on halakhah, mathematics and astronomy. Joseph Kaspl, 
it. of Largenti&re (d. 1340), wrote a large number of treatises 
on grammar and philosophy (mystical), besides commentaries 
and piyyutfm. In the first half of the 14th century lived the 
two translators Qalonymos ben David and Qalonymos ben 
Qalonymos, the latter of whom translated many works of Galen 
and Averroes, and various scientific treatises, besides writing 
original works, e.g. one against Kaspl, and an ethical work 
entitled Eben Bdhan. At the end of the century Isaac ben 
Moses, called Profiat Duran (Efodi), is chiefly known as an anti- 
Christian controversialist (letter to Melr Alguadez), but also 
wrote on grammar (Ma'as^h Efod) and a commentary on the 
Mdreh. In philosophy he was an Aristotelian. About the same 
time in Spain controversy was very active. IJasdai Crescas 
(d. 1410) wrote against Christianity and in his Or Addnai 
against the Aristotelianism of the Maimonists. His pupil Joseph 
Albo in his % lqqarhn had the same two objects. On the side of 
the Maimonists was Simeon Duran (d. at Algiers 1444) in his 
Mage* Abhdth and in his numerous commentaries. Shem Tobh 



ibn Shem Tobh, the kabbalist, was a strong antt-Mafmonlst, 
as was his son Joseph of Castile (d. 1480), a commentator with 
kabbalistic tendencies but versed in Aristotle, Averroes and 
Christian doctrine. Joseph's son Shem fdbh was, on the contrary, 
a follower of Maimonides and the Aristotelians. In other 
subjects, Saadyah ibn Dan&n, of Granada (d. at Oran after 1473), 
is chiefly important for his grammar and lexicon, in Arabic; 
Judah ibn Verga, of Seville (d. after 1480), was a mathematician 
and astronomer; Solomon ibn Verga, somewhat later, wrote 
Shebet YdtHdah, of doubtful value historically; Abraham 
Zakkuth or Zakkuto, of Salamanca (d. after 1510), astronomer, 
wrote the Sepket Yuhasin, an historical work of importance. 
In Italy, Obadiah Bertinoro (d. about 1500) compiled his very 
useful commentary on the Mishnah, based on those of Rashi 
and Maimonides. His account of his travels and his letters are 
also of great interest. Isaac Abravanel (d. 1508) wrote com- 
mentaries (not of the first rank) on the Pentateuch and Prophets 
and on the Moreh, philosophical treatises and apologetics, such as 
the Yesk&oth Meshift, all of which had considerable influence. 
Elijah Delraedigo, of Crete (d. 1407), a strong opponent of 
Kabbalah, was the author of the philosophical treatise Behinath 
ka-daih, but most of his work (on Averroes) was in Latin. 

The introduction of printing (first dated Hebrew printed book, 
Rashi, Reggio, 1475) gave occasion for a number of scholarly 
compositors and proof-readers, some of whom were 
also authors, such as Jacob ben QayyTm of Tunis 
(d. about 1530), proof-reader to Bomberg, chiefly 
known for his masoretic work in connexion with the Rabbinic 
Bible and his introduction to it; EHas Levi t a, of Venice (d. 1549), 
also proof-reader to Bomberg, author of the Massordh ha- 
Massorcth and other works on grammar and lexicography; and 
Cornelius AdelkJnd, who however was not an author. In the 
East, Joseph Karo (Qftro) wrote his Biih YSscph (Venice, 1550), 
a commentary on the 7*flr, And his Shulhan 'ArUkh (Venice, 
1564) an halakhic work like the T& r , which is still a standard 
authority. The influence of non- Jewish methods is seen in the 
more modern tendency of Azariah dei Rossi, who was opposed 
by Joseph Karo. In his Me'dr 'Enayim (Mantua, 1573) Dei 
Rossi endeavoured to investigate Jewish history in a scientific 
spirit, with the aid of non-Jewish authorities, and even criticizes 
Talmudic and traditional statements. Another historian living 
also in Italy was Joseph ben Joshua, whose Dibhri ha-yamlm 
(Venice, 1534) is a sort of history of the world, and his 'Emeq 
ha-bakhah an account of Jewish troubles to the year 1575. In 
Germany David Gans wrote on astronomy, and also the historical 
work Zcmab David (Prag, 1592). The study of Kabbalah was 
promoted and the practical Kabbalah founded by Isaac Luria 
in Palestine (d. 1572). Numerous works, representing the 
extreme of mysticism, were published by his pupils as the result 
of his teaching. Foremost among these was flayylm Vital, 
author of the 'Ex hayyim, and his son Samuel, who wrote an 
introduction to the Kabbalah, called Shcmoneh Shfarim. To 
the same school belonged Moses Zakkuto, of Mantua (d. 1697), 
poet and kabbalist. Contemporary with Luria and also living 
at Safed, was Moses Cordovero (d. 1570), the kabbalist, whose 
chief work was the Pardes Rimmdnlm (Cracow, 1591). In the 
17th century Leon of Modena (d. 1648) wrote his Bilk Yckadah, 
and probably Qdl Sakhal, against traditionalism, besides many 
controversial works and commentaries. Joseph Dclmedigo, of 
Prag (d. 1655), wrote almost entirely on scientific subjects. 
Also connected with Prag was Yom Jobh Lipmann Heller, a 
voluminous author, best known for the Tdsaphdlh Ybm Tobh 
on the Mishna (Prag, 1614; Cracow, 1643). Another important 
Talmudist, Shabbethai ben Me'Ir, of Wilna (d. 1662), commented 
on the Shulhan 'Ariikh. In the East, David Conforte (d. about 
1685) wrote the historical work Qdrl ha-ddrdth (Venice, 1746), 
using Jewish and other sources; Jacob ben 5ayylm ?emab, 
kabbalist and student of Luria, wrote Qdl bt-ramah, a com- 
mentary on the Zohar and on the liturgy; Abraham Haycklnl, 
kabbalist, chiefly remembered as a supporter of the would-be 
Messiah, Shabbethai ZebbI, wrote Hid MalhiUh (Constantinople, 
16&) and sermons. In the 18th century the study of the 



178 



HEBREW RELIGION 



Herod, ii. 104, and Barton, Semitic Origins, pp. 98-100. Probably 
the custom was of African origin, and came from eastern Africa 
along with the Semitic race. Respecting Arabia, see Doughty, 
Arabia deserta, L 340 foil. 

It is necessary here to advert to a subject much debated during 
recent years, viz. the effects of Babylonian culture in western 
Asia on Israel and Israel's religion in early times even preceding 
the advent of Moses. The great influence exercised by Babylonian 
culture over Palestine between 2000 and 1400 B.C. (circa), which 
has been clearly revealed to us since 1887 by the discovery of the 
Tell el Amarna tablets, is now universally acknowledged. The 
subsequent discovery of a document written in Babylonian 
cuneiform at Lachish (Tell el Hesy), and more .recently still 
of another in the excavations at Ta'annek, have established 
the fact beyond all dispute. The last discovery had tended to 
confirm the views of Fried. Delitzsch, Jercmias (MonoUieislische 
StrSmungen) and Baentsch, that monotheistic tendencies are 
to be found in the midst of Babylonian polytheism. Page 
Renouf , in his Hibbert lectures, Origin and Growth of Religion 
as illustrated by thai of Ancient Egypt (1879), p. 80 foil., pointed 
out this monotheistic tendency in Egyptian religion, as did 
de Rouge before* him. Baentsch draws attention' to this feature 
in his monograph Altorientalischer u. israelilischet Monotheism us 
(1906). This tendency, however, he, unlike the earlier conserva- 
tive writers, rightly considers to have emerged out of polytheism. 
He ventures into a more disputable region when he penetrates 
into the obscure realm of the Abrahamic migration and finds in 
the Abrahamic traditions of Genesis the higher Canaanite mono- 
theistic tendencies evolved out of "Babylonian astral religion, 
and reflected in the name EKElyon (Gen. xiv. 18, 22). Further 
discoveries like Sellin's find at Ta'annek may elucidate the 
problem. See Baudissin in Theolog. lit* Zeilung (27th October 
1006). 

- 3. The Era of hfoses.—Vft are now on safer ground though 
still obscure. Moses was the first historic individuality who can 
be said to have welded the Israelite clans into a whole. This 
could never have been accomplished without unity of worship. 
The object of this worship was Yahweh. As we have already 
indicated, the document J assumes that Yahweh was worshipped 
by the Hebrew race from the first. On the other hand, according 
to P (Ex. vi. 2), God spake to Moses and .said to him: " I am 
Yahweh. But I appeared to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob as El 
Shaddai and by my name Yahweh I did not make myself known to 
them." According to this later tradition Yahweh was unknown 
till the days of Moses, and under the aegis of His power the 
Hebrew tribes were delivered from Egyptian thraldom. The 
truth probably lies somewhere between these two sharply con- 
trasted traditions. So much is clear. Yahweh now becomes the 
supreme deity of the Hebrew people, and an ark analogous to the 
Egyptian and Babylonian arks portrayed on the monuments 1 
was constructed as embodiment of the nunten of Yah web and was 
borne in front of the Hebrew army when it marched to war. It 
was the signal victory won by Moses at the exodus against the 
Egyptians and in the subsequent battle at Rephidim against 
'Amalek (Ex. xvii.) that consolidated the prestige of Yahweh, 
Israel's war-god. Indications in the Old Testament itself clearly 
point to the celestial or atmospheric character of the Yahweh of 
the Hebrews. The supposition that the name originally con- 
tained the notion of permanent or eternal being, and was derived 
from the verbal root signifying " to be," involves too abstract a 
conception to be probable, though it is based on Ex. iii. 15 (E) 
representing a tradition which may have prevailed in the 8th 
century B.C. Kautzsch, however, supports it (Hastings's D.B., 
extra vol. " Rel. of Isr." p. 625 foil.) against the other derivations 
proposed by recent scholars (see Jehovah). That the name also 
prevailed as that of a god among other Semitic races (or even 

1 These sacred arks were carried in procession accompanied by 
symbolic figures. Wc note in this connexion the form of a sacred 
bark represented in Meyer's HisU of Egypt (Onckcn series), p. 257, 
viz. the procession carrying the sacred ark and the bark of the god 
Amfin belonging to the reign of Rameses II. (Lepsius, Drnkmdler, iii. 
189b). See also Birch, Egypt (S.P.C.K.), p. 151 (ark of Khonsu) ; cf . 
Jeremjas, Das AJT. im Ltchkdcs alien Orients (and ed.), pp. 430-441. 



non-Semitic) b rendered certain by the proper names Jan~bt •<& 
( «■ Ilu-bi'di) of Hamath in Sargon's inscriptions, Afci-jawi (mi) 
in Sellin's discovered tablet at Ta'annek, to say nothing of tbose 
which have been found in the documents of Khammurabi's reign. 
It has generally been held that Stack's supposition has much to 
recommend it, that it was derived by Moses from the Kenites, and 
should be connected with the Sinai-Horeb region. The name 
Sinai suggests moon- worship and the. moon-god Sin; and it also 
suggests Babylonian influence (cf. also Mount Nebo, which was a 
place-name both in Moab and in Judah, and naturally connects 
itself with the name of the Babylonian deity). Several indica- 
tions favour the view of the connexion in the age of Moses between 
the Yahweh-cult at Sinai and the moon-worship of Babylonian 
origin to which the name Sinai points (Sin being the Babylonian 
moon-god). We note (a) that in the worship of Yahweh the 
sacred seasons of new moon and Sabbath are obviously lunar. 
Recent investigations have even been held to disclose the fact 
that the Sabbath coincided originally, i.e. in early pne-exilian 
days, with the full moon. 2 (b) It also accords with the name 
bestowed on Yahweh as " Lord of Hosts " (sebwh) or stars, 
which were regarded as personified beings Gob xxxviii. 7) and 
attendants on the celestial Yahweh, constituting His retinue 
(1 Rings xxii. 19) which fought on high while the earthly armies 
of Israel, His people, contended below (Judges v. 20), 

The atmospheric and celestial character which belonged from 
the first to the Hebrew conception of Yahweh explains to us the 
ease with which the idea of His universal sovereignty arose, 
which the Yahwistic creation account (belonging to the earlier 
stratum of J, Gen. ii. 46 foil.) presupposes. How this came to be 
overlaid by narrow local limitations oi His power and province 
will be shown later. It is probable that Moses held the larger 
rather than the narrower conception of Yahweh's sphere of 
influence. While the ark carried with Israel's host symbolized 
His presence in their midst, He was also known to be present in 
the cloud which hovered before the host and in the lightning 
{'ish Yahweh or " fire of Yahweh ") and the thunder {kdi Yakwek 
or ** voice of Yahweh ") which played around Mount "Sinai. 
Moreover, it is hardly probable that a great leader tike Moses 
remained unaffected by the higher conceptions lending towards 
monotheism which prevailed in the great empires on the Nile and 
on the Euphrates. In Egypt we know that Amenophis IV. 
came under this monotheistic movement, and attempted to 
suppress all other cults except that of the suiwieity, of which he 



tli 



seventh day with" the easily recognized first quarter and full moon 
established its sacred) character as lunar as well as planetary. 



HEBREW RELIGION 



179 



'w*s a devoted ^rorsbipper. We also know that between *ooo 
mad 1400 B.C. the Babylonian language as well as Babylonian 
dvilization and ideas spread over Palestine (as lb« Tell el Amarna 
tables clearly testify). The andent Babylonian psalms clearly 
reveal that the highest minds were moving oat of polytheism to a 
Monotheistic identification of various deities as diverse phases of 
one underlying essence. A remarkable Babylonian tablet dis- 
covered by Dr Pinches represents Marduk, the god of light, as 
Identified in his person with all the chief deities of Babylonia, 
who are evidently regarded as his varying manifestations. 1 

Through the influence of Mosaic teaching and law a definitely 
ethical character was ascribed to Yahweh. It was His " finger " 
that wrote the brief code which has come down to us in the 
decalogue. At first, as Erdmanns suggests, it may have con- 
sisted of only seven commands. So also Kautzsch, ibid. p. 634. 
The most strongly distinguishing feature of the code is the rigid 
exclusion of the worship of other gods than Yahweh. Moreover, 
the definitely ethical character of the religion of Yahweh estab- 
ftshed by Moses is exhibited fn the strict exclusion of all sexual 
impurity in His worship. -Unlike the Canaanite Baal, Yahweh 
hasnofemale consort, and this remained throughout a distinguish- 
ing trait of the original and unadulterated Hebrew religion (see 
Bathgen, Beilrttge, p. 365). Indeed, Hebrew, unlike Assyrian 
or Phoenician, has no distinctive form for " goddess." From 
first to last the true religion of Yahweh was pure of sexual taint. 
The kedeshlm and feedeshoth, the male and female priest attend- 
ants in the Baal and 'Ashtoreth shrines (cf . the kadishiu of the 
temples of the Babylonian Ishtar) were foreign Canaanite 
elements which became imported into Hebrew worship during 
the period of the Hebrew settlement in Canaan. 

Lastly, the earliest codes of Hebrew legislation (Ex. xxi.- 
xxiii.) bear the distinct impress of the high ethical character of 
Yahweh's requirements originally set forth by Moses. Of this 
tradition the Naboth incident in the time of Ahab furnishes a 
dear example which brings to light the contrast between the 
Tyrian Baal-cult, which was scarcely ethical, and of which 
Jezebd and Ahab were devotees, and the moral requirements of 
the religion of Yahweh of which EKjah was the prophet and im- 
passioned exponent. It was this definite basis of ethical Mosaic 
religion to which the prophets of the 8th century appealed, and 
apart from which their denunciations become meaningless. TO 
this early standard of life and practice Ephraim was faithless in 
the days of the prophet Hosea (see his oracles passim — especially 
chaps, i.-iv. and xtv.), and Judah in the time of Isaiah turned a 
deaf ear (Isa. i. 2-4, ?t). 

4. Influence of Canaan. — The entrance of Israel into Canaan 
marks the beginning of a new epoch in the development of 
Israel's religious life. For it involved a t ran sit ion from the simple 
nomadic relations to those of the agricultural and more highly 
civilized Canaanite life, 'this subject has been recently treated 
with admirable clearness by Marti in his useful treatise Die 
Religion des A.T. (1006), pp. 25-41. 

It is in the festivals of the annual calendar that this agricultural 
impress is most fully manifested. To the original nomadic 
Pesah (Passover)— sacrifice of a lamb— there was attached a 
distinct and agricultural festival of unleavened cakes (massdtk) 
which marks the beginning of the corn harvest in the middle of 
die month A bib (the name of which points to its Canaanite and 

1 The tablet is nco-Babylonian and published bv Dr Pinches in the 
Transactions of the Victoria Institute, and is cited by Professor Fried. 
Delitzsch m the notes appended to his first lecture Babel u. Bibd 
(5tb German ed., p. 81 ad An. and p. 8a). On this subject of Baby- 
lonian influence over Israel see Icremia* Monotkeislische Str&mungen 
innerhalb der babyloniscken Religion, and E. Baentsch, Altorienta- 
lisckcT u. israeiittscher Monotheumus. The text and rendering of 
the passage are doubtful in the cuneiform letter discovere d by 
Sellin m Ta'aanek (biblical Ta'anach* near Mesjkldo) addressed by 
Afci'jawi(?Abijah) to lahtar-wasur, in which the following remark* 
able phrases are read: '* May the Lord of the gods protect thy life. 
. . . Above thy head is one who h above the towns. See now 
whether he win show thee good. When he reveals his face, then 
will they be put to shame and the victory will be complete." The 
letter appears to belong to about 1400 B.C. See A. jeremias, pas 
AT. mi Uchte des alien Orients (2nd ed.). pp. 315, 316, 323. Sellin, 1 
Ertrag dor Ansgrabungtn im Orient. \ 



agricultural origin). The dose of the corn-harvest was marked 
by the festival Skabkmh (weeks) or gdslr (harvest) held seven 
weeks after massdth. The last and most characteristic 
festival of Canaanite life was that of Asiph or " ingathering " 
which after the Deuteronomic reformation (6a 1 B.C.) had made 
a single sanctuary and therefore a considerable journey with a 
longer stay necessary, came to be called Succdtk or booths. 
This was the autumn festival held at the dose of September or 
beginning of October.. It marked the close of the year's agricul- 
tural operations when the olives and grapes had been gathered 
(Ex. xxiii. 14-17 (E), xxxiv. 18, as, 23 (J)]; see Feasts, 
Passover, Pentecost and Tabeenacus. Another special 
characteristic of Israel's religion in Canaan was the considerable 
increase of sacrificial offerings. Animal sacrifices became much 
more frequent, and induded not only the bloody sacrifice 
(Zebafc) but also burnt offerings (kaW, 'dlok) whereby the whole 
animal was consumed (see Sacrifice). But we have in addition 
to the animal sacrifices, vegetable offerings of meal, oil and cakes 
(mostflh, asklskak and kawwdn, which last is specially connected 
with the * Ashtoreth cult: Jer. vii. 18, xliv. 19), as well as the 
" bread of the Presence " (lejtem happdnim), 1 Sam. zxi. 6. 
Whether the primitive rite of water-ojfetings (1 Sam. vii. 6; 
a Sam. xxiii. 16) belonged to early nomadic Israel (as seems 
probable) it is not possible to determine with any certainty.' 

Again, the conception of Yahweh suffered modification. 
In the desert be was worshipped as an atmospheric deity, who 
manifested himself in thunder and lightning, whose abode was 
m the sky, whose sanctuary was on the mountain summit of 
Horeb-Sinai, and whose movable palladium was the ark of the 
covenant. But when the nomadic dans of Israel came to occupy 
the settled abodes of the agricultural Canaanite* who had a 
stake in the soil which they cultivated, these conditions evidently 
reacted on their religion. Now the local Baal was* the divine 
owner of the fertile spot where his sanctuary (qodesk) was marked 
by the upright stone pillar, the symbol of his presence, on which 
the blood of the slaughtered victim was smeared. To this Baal 
the productiveness of the soil was due. Consequently it was. 
needful to secure his favour, and in order to gain this, gifts were 
made to him by the local resident population who depended 
on the produce of the land (see Baax, especially ad init.). Now 
when the Hebrews succeeded to these agricultural conditions 
and acquired possession of the Canaanite abodes, they naturally 
fdl into the same cycle of religious ideas and tradition. Yahweh 
ceased to be exclusively regarded as god of the atmosphere, 
worshipped in a distant mountain, Horeb-Sinai, situated in the 
south country (ne|«M),and moving in the clouds of heaven before 
the Israelites in the desert, but he came to be associated with 
Israel's life in Canaan. He manifested His presence either by a 
signal victory over Israel's foes (Josh. x. 10, 1 1 ; 1 Sam. viL 10-1 2) 
or by a thunderstorm (1 Sam. xii. 18) or through a dream (Geo. 
xxviii. 16 foil.; cf. x Kings lit 5 foil.) at a sacred spot like Bethel 
Accordingly, whenever His presence and power were displayed in 
places where the Canaanite Baal had been worshipped, they came 
to be attached to these spots. He bad " put has name," i.e. 
power and presence (numen) there, and the same festivals and 
sacrifices which had previously been devoted to the cult of 
the Canaanite Baal were now annexed to the service of Yahweh, 
the war-god of the conquering race. The process of transference 
was facilitated by two potent causes: (a) Both Canaanite and 
Hebrew spoke a common language; (b) the name Baal is not in 
reality an individual proper name like Kemosh (Chemosb>, 
Rammln or Hadad, but is, like £l (Ira )" god/' an appellative 
meaning "lord," "owner" or "husband." The name Baal 
might therefore be used for any deity such as Milk (Milcom) 
or Shemesh (" sun ") who was the divine owner of the spot. 
It was simply a covering epithet, and like the word " god " 
could be transferred from one deity to another. In this way 
Yahweh came to be called the Baal or " lord" of any sacred 
place where the armies of Israel by their victories attested 
" his mighty hand and outstretched arm." (See Kautzsch in 
Hastings's D.B., extra vol., p. 645 foD.) 

Such was the path of syncretism, and it Iras fraught with 



x8o 



HEBREW RELIGION 



' peril to the older and purer faith. For when Yahweh gradually 
became Israel's local Baal be became worshipped like the old 
Canaanite deity, and all the sensuous accompaniments of 
Kedeshoth, 1 as well as the presence of the ashlrah or sarred 
pole, became attached to his cult. But the symbol carried 
with it the numen of the goddess symbolized, and there can be 
little doubt that Asherah came to be regarded as Yahweh's 
consort. In the days of Manasseh syncretism went on unchecked 
even in the Jerusalem temple and its precincts, and it was not 
till the year of Josiah's reformation (621 b.c.) that the KedeshJm 
and Kedeshoth as well as the Asherah were banished for ever 
from Yahweh's sanctuary (2 Kings xxi. 7, xxiii. 7), which their 
presence had profaned. 

Now local worship means the differentiation of the personality 
worshipped in the varied local shrines, in other words Baalim 
or Baals. Just as we have in Assyria an Ishtar of Arbela and 
«n Ishtar of Nineveh (treated in Assur-bani-pal's (Rassam) 
cylinder 1 like two distinct deities), as we have local Madonnas 
Jin Roman Catholic countries, so must it have been with the cults 
of Yahweh in the regal period carried on in the numerous high 
places, Bethel, Shechem, Sbiloh (till its destruction in the 
days of Eli) and Jerusalem. Each in turn claimed that Yahweh 
had placed his name (i.e. personal presence and power or numen) 
there. Each had a Yahweh of its own. 

On the other hand, old deities still lurked in old spots which 
had been for centuries their abode. It was no easy task to 
establish Yahweh in permanent possession of the new land6 
conquered by the Hebrew settlers. The old gods were not to 
be at once discrowned of might. Of this we have a vivid example 
in the episode 2 Kings xviii. 24-28. The inhabitants of Babylonia 
and other regions whom the Assyrian kings had settled in 
Ephraim after 721 B.C. (cf. Ezra iv. 10) are described as suffering 
from the depredations of lions, and a priest from the deported 
Ephraimites is sent to them to teach them the worship of Yahweh, 
the god of the land. Similarly in the earlier pre-exilian period 
of Israel's occupation of Canaanite territory the Hebrews were 
always subject to this tendency Co worship the old Baal or 
*Ashtoreth(the goddess who made the cattle and flocks prolific). 9 
A few years of drought or of bad seasons would make a Hebrew 
settler betake himself to the old Canaanite gods. Even in the 
days of Hosea the rivalry between Yahweh and the old C anaanite 
Baal still continued. The prophet reproaches his Ephraimtte 
countrymen for going after their " lovers," the old local Baals 
who were supposed to have bestowed on them the bread, water, 
wool, flax and oil, and for not knowing that " it is I (Yahweh) 
who have bestowed on her (i.e. Israel) the com, the new wine 
and the oil, and have bestowed on her silver and gold in abund- 
ance which they have wrought into a Baal image " (Hos. ii. 10). 

External danger from a foreign foe, such as Midian or the 
Philistines, at once brought into prominence the claim and power 
6i Yahweh, Israel's national war-god since the great days of 
the exodus. The religion of Yahweh (as Wellhausen said) 
meant patriotism, and in war-time tended to weld the participat- 
ing tribes into a national unity. The book of Judges with its 
** monotonous tempo— religious declension, oppression, repent- 
ance, peace," to which Wellhausen 4 refers as its ever-recurring 
cycle, makes us familiar with these alternating phases of action 
and reaction. Times of peace meant national disintegration 
and the lapse of Israel into the Canaanite local cults, which is 
interpreted hy the redactor as the prophets of the 8th century 
would have interpreted it, viz. as defection from Yahweh. On 
the other hand, tiroes of war against a foreign foe meant on 
the religious side the unification, partial or complete, of the 

1 The allusion in Amos ii* 7; Hos. iv. 13, 14 is sufficiently explicit; 
cf. Jer. ii. 20-23, iii. 6-11, v, 7, 8. The practice is prohibited in 
Dcut. xxiii. 17. 

•Column i. 15. 16, 42, 43. n. 128. iii. 30, 31, iv. 47, 48, &c 
Probably we should regard them as differentiated hypostases. 

4 Hence the 'Ashtftrfith or offspring of flocks in Deut. vii. 13. 
xxviii. 18. A like function belonged to the Babylonian Ishtar. 
See " Descent of Ishtar to Hades,'* Kcv. lines 6- 10, where universal 
non-intercoUrse of sexes follows Ishtar'* departure from earth to 
Hades. 

*Pfdtg. (ksek. Jstaeb (tnded), p. 240 foil., cf. p. 358- - 1 



Israelite tribes by the rallying cry M tfce* sword 0/ Yahweh n 
(Judges vii. 20). In this way 'Ophrah became the centre of 
the coalition under Gideon in the tribe of Manasseh. Its im- 
portance is attested by Judges vjii. 22-28, and we may disregard 
the "snare" which the Deuteronomic writer condemns is 
accordance with the later canons of orthodoxy. What 'Ophrah 
became on a small scale in the days of Gideon, Jerusalem became 
on a larger scale in the days of David .and his successors. It was 
the religious expression of the unity of Israel which the life aad 
death struggle with the Philistines had gradually wrought out. 

Despite the capture of the ark after the disastrous battle 
of Shiloh, Yahweh had in the end shown himself through a 
destructive plague superior in might to the Philistine Dagoc 
There are indeed abundant indications that prove that in the 
prevalent popular religion of the regal period monotheistic 
conceptions had no place. Yahweh was god only of Israel and 
of Israel's land. An invasion of foreign territory would bring 
Israel under the power of its patron-deity. The wrath with 
which the Israelite armies believed themselves to be visited 
(probably an outbreak of pestilence) when the king of Moab 
was reduced to his last extremity, was obviously the wrath of 
Chemosh the god of Moab, which the king's sacrifice of his only 
son had awakened against the invading army (2 Kings iii. 27). 
In other words, the ordinary Israelite worshipper of Yahweh 
was at this time far removed from monotheism, and stilt remained 
in the preliminary stage of henothcism, which regarded Yahweh 
as sole god of Israel and Israel's land, but at the same time 
recognized the existence and power of the deities of other lands 
and peoples. Of this we have recurring examples is pre-exilian 
Hebrew history. See x Sam. xxvi. 19; Judges xL 2$, 24; 
Ruth L 16. 

5. Characteristics and Constituent Elements. — It is only possible 
here to refer in briefest enumeration to the material and external 
objects and forms of popular Hebrew. religion. These 
were of the simplest character. The upright stone 
(or massibah) was the materia) symbol of deity 
on which the blood of sacrifice was smeared, and in which the 
numen of the god resided. It is probable that in some primitive 
sanctuaries no real distinction was made between this stone- 
pillar and the altar or place where the animal was slaughtered. 
In ordinary pre-exilian high places the custom described in the 
primitive compend of laws (Ex. xx.' 24) would be observed. 
A mound of earth was raised which would serve as a platform 
on which the victim would be slaughtered in the presence of 
the concourse of spectators. In the more important shrines, 
as at Jerusalem or Samaria, there would be an altar of stone 
or of bronze. Another accompaniment of the sanctuary would 
be the sacred tree — most frequently a terebinth (cf. Judges ix> 
37 " terebinth of soothsayers "), or it might be a palm tree 
(cf. " palm tree of Deborah " in Judges iv. 5), or a tamarisk 
('ishel), or pomegranate(rtm»tfft),as at the high place in Cibeah 
where Saul abode. Moreover, we have frequent references to 
sacred springs, as that of Bdr-sheba, 'Enharoa' ('iyn-karod) 
(Judges vii. 1; cf. also Judges 19, 'En-haftdrl ['eyn-haqqdrc'J). 
(On this subject of holy trees, holy waters and holy stones, 
consult article Tree-Worship, and Robertson Smith's Religion 
of the Semites, and ed., pp. 165-197.) 

The wide prevalence of magic and soothsaying may be 
illustrated from the historical books of the Old Testament 
as well as from the pre-exilian prophets. The latter indeed 
tolerated the qdsem (soothsayer) as they did the seer (ro'en), 
The rhabdomancy denounced by Hosea (iv. 12) was associated 
with idolatry at the high places. But the artsof the necromancer 
were always and without exception treated as foreign to the 
religion of Yahweh. The necromancer of ba'al 'fib*' was held 
to be possessed of the spirit who spoke through him with a 
boDow voice. Indeed both necromancer and the spirit that 
possessed him were sometimes identified, and the former was 
simply called dbh. It is probable that necromancy, like the 
worship of Asherah and 'Astttoreth, as well as the cult bf graven 
images, was a Canaanite importation into Israel's religious 
practices. (See Marti, Religion des A.T^ p. 32.) 



HEBREW RELIGION 



181 



Tbo bktory of the rise •* the pdertbood In Ind k exceedingly 
Id the nomadic period and during the earlier years of 
the settlement of Israel in Canaan the head of every 
family could offer sacrifices. In the primitive codes, 
Ex. xx. 22-xxuL 19 (E), xxxiv. xo-28 (J), we have 
no allusion to any separate order of men who were qualified to 
offer sacrifices. In Ex. xxiv. 5 (£) we read that Moses simply 
commissioned young men to offer sacrifices. On the other hand 
the addendum to the book of Judges, chaps, xvii., xviH. (which 
Budde* Moore and other critics consider to belong to the two 
sources of the narratives in Judges, viz. J 1 as well as E), makes 
reference to a Levite of Bethkhem-Judah, expressly stated 
bt xvii. 7 as belonging to a clan of Judau. This man Micah took 
into his household as priest. This narrative has all the marks 
of primitive simplicity. There can bt no reasonable doubt that 
the Levite here was member of a priestly tribe or order, and this 
view is confirmed by the discovery of what is really the same 
word in south Arabian inscriptions. 1 The narrative is of some 
value as it shows that while it was possible to appoint any one 
as a priest, since Micah, like David, appointed one of his own 
sons (xvii. 5), yet a sptdal priest-tribe or order also existed, 
and Micah considered that the acquisition of one of its members 
was for his household a very exceptional advantage: " Now 
I know that Yahweh will befriend me because I have the Levitt 
as priest." * In other words a priest who was a Levite possessed 
a superior professional qualification. He is paid ten shekels 
per annum, together with his food and clothing, and is dignified 
by the appellation " father " (cf . the like epithet of " mother " 
applied to the prophetess Deborah, Judges v. 7; see also 
s Kings K. ra, vi si, xiH. 14). This same narrative dwells upon 
the graven images, ephod and terSphlm, as forming the apparatus 
of religious ceremonial in Mkah's household. Now the ephod 
and teraphim are constantly mentioned together (cf . Hos. in. 4) 
and were used in divination. The former was the plated image 
of Yahweh (cf. Judges viii. 26, 17) and the latter were ancestral 
images (see Marti, op. cil. pp. 27, 29; Harper, Int. Comm. 
" Amos and Hosea," p. 222). In other words the function of 
the priest was not merely sacrificial (a duty which Kautxsch 
unnecessarily detaches from the services which he originally 
rendered), nor did he merely bear the ark of the covenant and 
take charge of God's house; but he was also and mainly (as the 
Arabic name kdhin shows) the soothsayer who consulted the ephod 
and gave the answers required on the field of battle (see 1 Sam. 
and 2 Sam. passim) and on other occasions. This is clearly 
shown in the " blessing of Moses n (Deut. xxxiii. 8), where the 
Levite is specially associated with another apparatus of inquiry, 
viz. the sacred lots, Urim and Tkummlm. The true character 
of Urim (as expressing " aye ") and Tkummlm (as expressing 
" nay " ) is shown by the reconstructed text of x Sam. xiv. 41 
on the basis of the Septuagint. See Driver ad loc. 

The chief and most salient characteristic of the worship of 
the high places was geniality. The sacrifice was a feast of social 
communion between the deity and his worshippers, 
2?iJ2 r *ad knit both deity and dan-members together in 
tttp, the bonds of a close fellowship. This genial aspect 

of Hebrew worship is nowhere depicted more graphic- 
ally than in the old narrative (a J section— Budde's G) x Sam. 
ia. io-m» where a day of sacrifice in the high place is described. 
Saul and his attendant are invited by the seer-priest Samuel 
into the banqueting chamber (lishkah) where thirty persons 
partake of the sacrificial meal. It was the 'dsipk or festival 
of ingathering, when the agricultural operations were brought 
to a dose, which exhibited these genial features of Canaanite- 
Hcbrcw life most vividly. References to them abound in pre- 
exiltan literature: Judges xxi, 21 (cf. ix. 27); Amos viii. x foil.; 
Hos. ix. x foil., Jer. xxxi. 4; Isa. xvi. 10 (Jer. xlviii. 33). 
These festivals formed the veins and arteries of andent Hebrew 

* Internal. Crit. Commentary, Judges, Introd. p. xxx., also p. 367 

ion. , 

* *b "priest,** WnV ••priestess": see Hotmnef, SOd-araoische 
jCkrestomatkie, p. 127; A neunt Hebrew Tradition, p. 278 foil. 

\ * Moore regards this verse ai "belong! oj to the J or older document, 
##.*#. p. 367. 



dan and tribal life. 4 WeOhauaen's chacacteriaation of the 
Arabian kajj* applies with equal force to the Hebrew b*U 
(festival): " They formed the rendezvous of ancient life. Here 
came under the protection of the peace of God the tribes and 
dans which otherwise lived apart from one another and only 
knew peace and security within their own frontiers." x Sam. 
xx. 28 foil, indicates the strong claims on personal attendance 
exercised on each individual member by the local dan festival 
at Bethlehem-Judah. 

It is easy to discern from varied allusions in the Old Testament 
that the Canaanite impress of sensuous life dung to the autumnal 
vintage festivals. They became orgiastic in character and 
scenes of drunkenness, d. Judges ix. 27; x Sam. 14-16; Isa. 
xxviiL 7, 8. Against this tendency the Namrite order and 
tradition was a protest. Cf. Amos ii. 11 foil.; Judges xdli. 7, 14. 
As certain sanctuaries, Sbiloh, Sbechem, Bethel, ftc, grew in 
importance, the priesthoods that officiated at them would acquire 
special prestige. Eli, the bead priest at Sbiloh in the early youth 
of Samuel, held an important position in what was then the 
chief religious and political centre of Ephraim; and the office 
passed by inheritance to the sons in ordinary cases. In the regal 
period the royal residence gave the priesthood of that place an 
exceptional position. Thus Zadok, who obtained the priestly 
office at Jerusalem In the reign of Solomon and was succeeded 
by his sons, was regarded in later days as the founder of the true 
and legitimate succession of the priesthood descended from Levi 
(Ezek. xl. 46, xliii. 19, xliv. 15; d. 1 Kings ii 27, 35). His 
descent, however, from Eleazar, the elder brother of Aaron, 
can only be regarded as the later artificial construction of the 
post-exilian chronicler (x Chron. vi. 4-15, 50-53, xxiv. x foil.), 
who was controlled by the traditions which prevailed in the 4th 
century B.C. and after. 

6. The Prophets.^-Tht rise of the order of prophets, who 
gradually emerged out of and became distinct from the old 
Hebrew " seer " or augur (1 Sam. ix. 9),* marks a new epoch 
in the religious development of the Hebrews. Over the successive 
stages of this growth we pass lightly (see Prophet). The life- 
and-death struggle between Israel and the Philistines in the reign 
of Saul called forth under Samuel's leadership a new order of 
" men of God," who were called " prophets " or divinely inspired 
speakers.* These men were distributed in various settlements, 
and their exercises were usually of an ecstatic character. The 
closest modern analogy would be the orders of dervishes m 
Islam. Probably there was little externally to distinguish the 
prophet of Yahweh in the days of Samuel from the Canaanite- 
Phoenician prophets of Baal and Asherah (1 Kings xviii. 19, 26, 
28), for the practices of both were ecstatic and orgiastic (d. 
x Sam. x. 5 foil, xviii. 10, xix. 23 foil.). The spedal quality which 
distinguished these prophetic gilds or companies was an intense 
patriotism combined with enthusiastic devotion to the cause 
of Yahweh. This necessarily involved in that primitive age an 
extreme jealousy of foreign importations or innovations in 
ritual. It is obvious from numerous passages that these pro- 
phetic gilds recognized the superior position and leadership of 
Samuel, or of any other distinguished prophet such as Elijah 
or Elisha. Thus 1 Sam. xix. 20, 23 et seq. show that Samud 
was regarded as head of the prophetic settlement at Naioth. 
With reference to Elijah and Elisha, see 2 Kings fi. 3, 5, 15, 
iv. x, 38 et seq., vi. x et seq. There cannot be ady doubt that 

•Similarly in andent Greece. See the instructive passage in 
Aristotle. Nic Elk. viii. 9 (a* 5). on the relation of Greek sacrifices 
and festivals to ko***Uu and politics: ml yip 4#x<"*» ftwfucai 
ffrofet tofrorrot ytyptaOat perl tit tQr itaprGeevyuotulkt otar iwapx^l 
d. Grote on Pan-Hellenic festivals, History of Greece, vol. iii. eh. 
28. 

• Wellhaustu, Rest* araeischen Heidentums (and ed.), p. 89. 

• Though this be an interpolated gloss (Thenius, Budde), it states 
a significant truth as Kautzsch dearly shows, op. ciL p. 672. In 
Micah iii. 7 the bduk is mentioned in a sense analogous to the fTU 
or M seer," and coupled with the qpshn or " soothsayer/' via. as 
spurious: d. Deut. xviii. 10. 

7 No better derivation is forthcoming of the word nob*?, 
w prophet," than that it Is a Katil form of the root nJM«Assyr. 
nabu, 



>l62 



HEBREW RELIGION 



such enthusiastic devotees of Yahweh, -in days when religion 
meant patriotism, did much to keep alive the flame of Israel's 
hope and courage in the dark period of national disaster. It is 
significant that Saul in his last unavailing struggle against the 
overwhelming forces of the Philistines sought through the medium 
of a sorceress lor an interview with the deceased prophet Samuel 
It was the advice of Elisha that rescued the armies of Jehocam 
and Jehosbaphat in their war against Moab when they were 
involved in the waterless wastes that surrounded them (2 Kings 
iii, 14 foil). We again find Elisha intervening with effect on 
behalf of Israel in the wars against Syria, so that his fame spread 
to Syria itself (1 Kings v.-viii. 7 foil.). Lastly it was the fiery 
counsel* of the dying prophet, accompanied by the acted magic 
of the arrow shot through the open window, and also of the 
thrice smitten floor, that gave nerve and courage to Joash, king 
of Israel, when the armies of Syria pressed heavily on the northern 
kingdom (2 Kings xiii, 14-19). 

We see that the prophet had now definitely emerged from the 
old position of " seer." Prophetic personality now moved in a 
larger sphere than that of divination, important though that 
function lie in the social life of the ancient state 1 as instrumental 
in declaring the will of the deity when any enterprise was on 
foot. For the prophet's function became in an increasing degree 
a function of mind, and not merely of traditional routine or 
mechanical technique, like that of the diviner with his arrows 
or his lots which he cast in the presence of the ephod or plated 
Yahweh image. The new name nobhV became necessary to 
express this function of more exalted significance, in which human 
personality played its larger role. Even as early as the time of 
David it wquld seem that Nathan assumed this more developed 
function as interpreter of Yahweh's righteous will to David. 
But both in 2 Sam. xii. 1-15 as well as in a Sam. viL we have 
sections which are evidently coloured by the conceptions of a 
later time. We stand on safer ground when we come to Elijah's 
bold intervention on behalf of righteousness when he declared 
in the name of Yahweh the divine judgment on Ahab and his 
house for the judicial murder of Naboth. We here observe a 
great advance in the vocation of the prophet. He becomes the 
interpreter and vindicator of divine justice, the vocal exponent 
of a nation's conscience. For Elijah was in this case obviously 
no originator or innovator. He represents the old ethical 
Mosaism, which had not disappeared from the national con- 
sciousness, but still remained as the moral presupposition on 
which the prophets of the following century based their appeals 
and denunciations. It is highly significant that Elijah, when 
driven from the northern kingdom by the threats of the Tyrian 
Jezebel, retreats to the old sanctuary at. Horeb, whence Moses 
derived his inspiration and his Torah. 

We have hitherto dealt with isolated examples of prophetism 
and its rare and distinguished personalities. The ordinary 
Hebrew nokkf still remained not the reflective visionary, stirred 
at times by music into strange raptures (2 Kings iii. 15), but the 
ecstatic and orgiastic dervish who was mtshuuah or " frenzied," 
a term which was constantly applied to him from the days of 
Elisha to those of Jeremiah (2 Kings ix. n; in Hos. ix. 7 and 
Jer. xxix. 26 it is regarded as a term of reproach). It is only in 
rare instances that some exalted personality is raised to a higher 
level Of this we have an interesting example in the vivid 
episode that preceded the battle of Ramoth-Gilead described 
in x Kings xxii., when Micaiah appears as the true prophet of 
Yahweh, who in his rare independence stands in sharp contrast 
with the conventional court prophets, who prophesied then, as 
their descendants prophesied more than two centuries later, 
smooth things. 

It is not, however, till the 8th century that prophecy attained 
its highest level as the interpreter of God's ways to men. This 
Is due to the fact that it for the first time unfolded the true 
character of Yahweh, implicit in the old Mosaic religion and 
submerged in the subsequent centuries of Israel's life in Canaan, 
but now at length made clear and explicit to the mind of the 

1 In ksa. iii. 2 the soothsayer is placed on a level with the judge, 
prophet and elder. 



It became now detached from the limitations of nation- 
alism and local associa t ion with which it had been hitherto 
circumscribed. 

Even Elisha, the greatest prophet of the oth century, had 
remained within these national limitations which characterized 
the popular conceptions of Yahweh. Yahweh waa Israel's war* 
god. His power waa asserted in and f rota* Canaanile soil. If 
Naaman was to be healed, it could only be in a Palestinian river, 
and two mules' load of earth would be the only permanent 
guarantee of Yahweh's effective blessing on the Syrian general 
in his Syrian home. 

That larger conceptions prevailed in some of the loftier minds 
of Israel, and may be held to have existed events far back at 
the age of Moaes, is a fact which the Yahwktic cosmogony in 
Gen. ii. a>o (which may have been composed in the oth century 
B.c.) clearly suggests, and it is strongly sustained by the over- 
whelming evfdence of the powerful influence of Babylonian 
culture in the Palestinian region -during the centuries 2000- 
1400 B.c* Probably in our modem construction of ancient 
Hebrew history sufficient consideration has not been given to the 
inevitable coexistence of different types and planes of thought, 
each evolved from earlier and more primordial forms. In other 
words we have to deal not with one evolution but with 
evolutions. 

The existence of the purer and larger conception of Yahweh's 
character and power before the advent of Amos indicates that 
the transition from the past was not so sudden as Wellhausen's 
graphic portrayal in the oth edition of this Bmsyelopeedia (art 
Israel) would have led us to suppose. There were pre-existeat 
ideas upon which that prophet's epoch-making, message was 
based. Yet this consideration should in no way obscure the fact 
that the prophet lived and worked in the all-pervading atmosphere 
of the popular syncretic Yahweh religion, intensely national 
and local in its character* In Wellhausen's words, each petty 
state " revolved on its own axis " of social-religious life till the 
armies of Tiglath-Pileser III. broke up the security within the 
Canaanite, borders. According to the dominating popular 
conception, the destruction of the national power by a foreign 
army meant the overthrow of the prestige of the national deity 
by the foreign nation's god. If Assyria finally overthrew Israel 
and carried off Yahweh's shrine, Assur (AsurJ, the tutelary 
deity of Assyria, was mightier than Yahweh. This was precisely 
what was happening among the northern states, and Amos 
foresaw that this might eventually be Israel's doom. Rabshakeh's 
appeal to the besieged inhabitants of Jerusalem was based on 
these same considerations. He argued from past history that 

* Kauttsch, in his profoundly learned article on the " Religion 
of Israel," to which frequent reference has been made, exhibits (pp. 
669-671) an excess of scepticism, in our opinion, towards the views 
propounded by Gunkd in 1895 (Schtphtnt und Ckoot) respecting 
the intimate connexion between the early Hebrew cosmogOfuc Meat 
and those of Babylonia. Stade indeed (ZA.T.W., 1003. pp. 17b 
178) maintained that the conception of Yahweh as creator of the 
world could not have arisen till after the middle of the 6th century 
as the result of prophetic teaching, and that it was not till the time 
of Exekiel that Babylonian conceptions entered the world of Hebrew 
thought' in any fulness. Such a theory appears to ignore the remark- 
able results 01 archaeology since 1887. At that time Stade's position 
might have appeared reasonable. It was the conclusion to which 
Wellhausen's brilliant literary analysis, when not supplemented 
by the discoveries at Tell el-Amarna and Tell et-Hesi, appeared to 
many scholars (by no means all) inevitably to conduct us. But the 
years 1887 to 1891 opened many eyes to the fact that the Hebrews 
lived their life on the great highways of intercourse b e tw ee n Egypt 
on the one hand, and Babylonia, Assyria and the N. Palestinian 
states on the other, and that they could scarcely have escarped the 
all-pervading Babylonian influences of 2000-1400 B.C. It is now 
becoming clearer every day, especially since the discovery of the 
laws of Khammurabi, that, it we are to think sanely about Hebrew 
history bdort as well as after the exile, we can only think of Israel 
as part of the great complex of Semitic and especially Canaanite 
humanity that lived its lue in western Asia between 2000 and 600 
B.C.; and that while the Hebrew race maintained by the aid of 
prophetism its own individual and exalted place, it was not leas 
susceptible iken, than it has been since, to the moulding Influences of 
great adjacent civilizations and ideas. Cf. C. H. W. Johns in Intth 
pteier, pp. 300-304 (in April 1906), on prophetism in Babylonia. 



HEBREW RELIGION 



*8j 



Yahweh would be powerfess fa the pretence of Ashur (a Kings 
**nT 33-35). 

This proMetti of religion wts solved by Amos and by the 
prophets who succeeded him through a more exalted conception 
of Yahweh and His sphere of working* which tended to detach 
Him from His lhntted realm as a national deity. Amoeexhibited 
Him to his countrymen as lord of the universe, who made the 
Seven stars and Orion and turns the deep midnight darkness into 
morning. He calls to the waters of the sea and pours them on 
tbe earth's surface (chap. v. 8). Such a universal God' of the 
world would hardly make Israel His exclusive concern. Thus 
He not only brought the Israelites out of Egypt, but also the 
Philistines from Cephtor and the Syrians from Kir (ix. 7). But 
Amos went beyond this. • Yahweh was not only the lord of the 
universe and possessed of sovereign power. The prophet also 
emphasised with passionate earnestness that Yahweh was a God 
whose character was righteous, and God's demand upon Hit 
people Israel was not for sacrifices but for righteous conduct. 
Sacrifice, as this prophet, like his successor Jeremiah, insisted 
(Amos v. 95; cf. Jer. vii. at) played no part in Mosaic religion. 
In words which evidently impressed his younger contemporary 
Isaiah (cf. esp. Is. chap. t. 11-17), Amos denounced the non- 
ethical ceremonial formalism of his countrymen which then 
prevailed (chap. v. at foil.);— 

" I hate, I contemn your festivals and In your feasts I delight not: 
for when you offer me your burnt-offerings and gifts, I do not regard 
them with favour and jour fatted peace-offerings I will not look at. 
Take away from me the clamour of your songs; and the music cf 
your viols I will not hear. But let judgment roil down like waters 
and justice like a perennial brook." 

In the younger contemporary prophet of Ephraim, Hosea, 
the stress is laid on the relation of love {hestd} between Yahweh, 
the divine husband, and Israel, the faithless spouse. Israel's 
faithlessness is shown in idolatry and the prevailing corruption 
of the high places in which the old Canaanite Baal was worshipped 
instead of Yahweh. It b shown, moreover, in foreign alliances. 
Compacts with a powerful foreign state, under whose aegis 
Israel was glad to shelter, involved covenants sealed by sacrificial 
rites in which the deity or deities of the foreign state were involved 
as welt as Yahweh, the god of the weaker vassal-state. And so 
Yahweh*s honour was compromised. While these aspects of 
Israel's relation to Yahweh are emphasized by the Ephraimfte 
prophet, the larger conceptionsof Yah web's character as universal 
Lord and the God of righteousness, whose government of the 
world is ethical, emphasized by the prophet of Tekoah, are 
scarcely presented. 

In Isaiah both aspects— divine universal sovereignty and 
Justice, taught by Amos, and divine loving-kindness to Israel 
and God's claims on His people's allegiance, taught by Hosea— 
are fully expressed. Yahweh 's relation of love to Israel is 
exhibited under the purer symbol of fatherhood (Isa. i. 2-4), a 
conception which was as ancient and familiar as that of husband, 
though perhaps the latter recurs more frequently in prophecy 
(Isa. i. it; Ezek. xvi. &c). Even more insistently docs Isaiah 
present the great truth of God's universal sovereignty. As with 
his elder contemporary, the foreign peoples— (but in Isaiah's 
oracles Assyria and Egypt as well as the Palestinian races)— 
come within his survey. The "fullness of the earth " is Yahweh*s 
glory ( vi. 3) and the nations of the earth are the instrumentsof His 
irresistible and righteous will. Assyria is the " bee " and Egypt 
the M fly n for which Yahweh hisses. Assyria is the " hired razor " 
(Ua. vii. t8, 19), or the " rod of His wrath," for the chastise- 
ment of Israel (x. 5). But the instrument unduly exalts itself, 
and Assyria itself shall suffer humiliation at the hands of the 
world's divine sovereign (x. 7-15). 

And so the old limitations of Israel's popular religion,— the 
same limitations that encumbered also the religions of all the 
neighbouring races that succumbed in turn to Assyria's in- 
vincible progress, — now began to disappear. Therefore, while 
every other religion which was purely national was extinguished 
in the nation's overthrow, the religion of Israel survived even 
amid exile and dispersion. For Amos and Isaiah were able to 



single out those loftier spiritual and ethical elements which lay 
implicit in Mosaism and to lift them into their due place of 
pro minence . National sacra and the ceremonial requirements 
were made to assume a secondary role or were even ignored. 1 
The centre of gravity in Hebrew religion was shifted from 
ceremonial observance and local sacra to righteous conduct. 
Religion and righteousness were henceforth welded into an 
indissoluble whole. The religion of Yahweh was no longer to 
rest upon the narrow perishable basis of locality and national 
sacra, but on the broad adamantine foundations of a universal 
divine sovereignty over all mankind and of righteousness as 
the essential element in the character of Yahweh and in hia 
claims on man. This was the " corner-stone of precious soKd 
foundation ": " I will make Judgment the measuring-Hoe and 
righteousness the plummet " (Isa. xxviii. 16, 1 7). The religion of 
the Hebrew race—properly the Jews— now enters on a new 
stage, for it should be observed that it was Amos, Isaiah and 
Micah — prophets- of Judah— who laid the actual foundations. 
The latter half of the 6th century, which witnessed a rapid 
succession of reigns in the northern kingdom accompanied by 
dismemberment of its territory and final overthrow, witnessed 
also the humiliating vassaiageandTcMgious decline of the kingdom 
of Judah. Unlike Amos and Micah, Isaiah was not only the 
prophet of denunciation but also the prophet of hope. Though 
Yahweh's chastisements on Ephraim and Judah would continue 
to fall till scarcely a remnant was left (Isa. vi. 13, LXX.), yet all 
was not to be lost. A remnant of the people was to return, ue, 
be converted to Yahweh. The name given to an infant child— 
Immanuel— 'was to become the mystic symbol of a growing hope, 
God's presence was to abide' in Jerusalem, and, as the century 
drew near its dose, " Immanuel " became the watchword and 
talisman of a strong faith that God would never permit Jerusalem 
to be captured by the Assyrians. In fact it is not improbable 
that the words of consolation uttered by the prophet (Isa. viii. 
9-10) m the dark days of Ahaa (735-754 b.c.) were among the 
oracles which God commanded Isaiah " to seal up among hia 
disciples v (verse r6) , and that they were quoted once more with 
effect as the armies of Sennacherib closed around Jerusalem^ 
The talismank name Immanuel became the nucleus out of which 
the later Messianic prophecies of Isaiah grew. To this age alone 
can we probably assign Isa. ix. 1-7, xi. 1-0, xxxii. 1-3. The hopes 
expressed in the word Immanuel, " -God with us,° were to become 
embodied in a personality of the royal seed of David, as ideal 
righteous ruler who was to bring peace to the war-distraught 
realm. Thus Isaiah oecainem that troubled axe the true founder 
I of Jf*wi<wi£ prophecy. The strange contrast between thesucxes* 
sion of dynasties and kings cut off by assassination in the northern 
kingdom, ending in the tragic overthrow of 711 B.C., and the 
persistent succession through three centuries of the seed of David 
on the throne of Jerusalem, as well as the marvellous escape 
of Jerusalem is 701 B.C. from the fate of Samaria, must have 
invested the seed of David in the eyes of all thoughtful observers 
with a mysterious and divine significance. The Messianic 
prophecies of Isaiah, the prophet of faith and deliverance, were 
destined to reverberate through all subsequent centuries. We 
hear the echoes in Jeremiah and Esekiel and lastly in Haggei 
in ever feebler tones, and they were destined to reawaken ia 
the Psalter (Pss. ii. and lxxii.), in the psalms of Solomon and in 
the days of Christ. See Messiah (and also the article " Messiah " 
in Hastings's Diet, of Christ and the Gospels). » 

The next notable contribution to the permanent growth of 
Hebrew prophetic religion was made about a century after the 
lifetime of Isaiah by Jeremiah and Esekiel. The reaction ints> 
idolatry and Babylonian star worship in the long reign of 
Manaaaeh synchronized and was connected with vassalage 

1 There is some danger in too strictly construing the language 
of the prophets and also the psalmists. It is not to be supposed 
that either Amos or Isaiah would have countenanced the total 
suppression of all sacrificial observance. It was the existing cere* 
moiMcbe/maace divorced from Ike ethical pidy that they denounced. 
The speech of prophecy is poetical and rhetorical, not strictly defined 
and logical tike that of a modern essayist See Moore tn Bncyc+ 
BiU.> ,T Sacrifice," col. aaaa. 



i8+ 



HEBREW .RELIGION 



to Assyria, whfle the reformation in the reign of Josuh (6si nx.) 
is conversely associated with the decay of Assyrian power alter 
the death of Assur-bani-pel. That reformation failed to effect 
its purifying mission. The hurt of the daughter of God's people 
was but lightly healed (Jer. vi. 14, 15; cf. viii. 11, is). No 
possibility of recovery now remained to the diseased Hebrew 
state, lite outlook appeared indeed far darker to Jeremiah 
than it seemed more than a century be/ore to Isaiah in the 
evil days of Jotham and Ahas, " when the whole head was sick 
and the whole heart faint" (Isa. i. 5). Jeremiah foresaw 
that there was now no possibility of recovery. The Hebrew 
state wis doomed and even its temple was to be destroyed. This 
involved an entire reconstruction of theological ideas which 
went beyond even the reconstructions of Amos and Isaiah. In 
the old religion the race or dan was the unit of religion as well 
as of social life. Properly speaking, the individual was related 
to God only through the externalities of the dan or tribal life, 
its common temple and its common sacra. But now that these 
external bases of the old religion were to he swept away, a 
reconstruction of religious ideas became necessary. For the 
external supports which had vanished Jeremiah substituted a 
basis which was internal, personal and spiritual (i.e. ethical). 
In place of the old covenant based on external observance, 
which had been violated, there was to be a new covenant which 
was to consist not in Outward prescription, but in the law which 
God would place in the heart (Jer. xxxL 30-33). This was to 
take place by an act of divine grace (Jer. xriy. 5 foil.): " I 
will give them an heart to know me that I am the Lord " (verse 
7). Ezekid, who borrowed both Jeremiah's language and 
ideas, expresses the same thought in the well-known words that 
Yahweh would give the people instead of a heart of stone a heart 
of flesh (Esek. xL 19, 30, xx. 40 foil., xxxvi. 95-27), and would 
shame them by his loving-kindness into repentance, and there 
"shall ye remember your ways and all your doings wherein 
ye have been denied and ye shall loathe yourselves in your 
own sight " (xx. 43). 

' Personal reHgion now became an important dement in Hebrew 
piety and upon this there logically followed the idea of personal 
responsibility. The solidarity of race or family was expressed 
in the old tradition reflected in Deut. v. 9, 10, that God would 
visit the sins of the fathers upon the children, and it lived on 
in later Judaism under exaggerated forms. The hopes of the 
individual Jew were based on the piety of holy ancestors. " We 
have Abraham as our father." But Eukiel expressed the strong 
reaction which had set in against this belief in its older forms. 
He denies that the individual ever dies for the sins of the father. 
"The soul that sinneth, it (the pronoun emphasized in the 
original) shall die" (Exek. xviii. 4). Neither Noah, Darnel 
nor Job could have rescued by his righteous ne ss any but his 
own soul (xiv. 14). And as a further consequence individual 
freedom is strongly asserted. It is possible for every sinner 
to turn to God and escape punishment, and conversely for a 
righteous man to backslide and fall. In the presence of these 
awful truths which Ezekid preached of individual freedom and 
of impending judgment, the prophet is weighted with a heavy 
responsibility. It is his duty to warn every individual, for no 
sinner is to be punished without warning (Ezek. Hi. 16 foil, 
xxxni.). 

The dosing years of the Judaean kingdom and the final 
destruction of the temple (586 B.C.) shattered the Messianic 
ideals cherished in the evening of Isaiah's lifetime and again in 
the opening years of the reign of Josiah. The untimdy death 
of that monarch upon the battlefield of Megiddo (608 B.C.), 
followed by the inglorious reigns of the kings who succeeded 
him, who became puppets in turn of Egypt or of Babylonia, 
silenced for -a while the Messianic hopes for a future king or line 
of kings of Davidic lineage who would rule a renovated kingdom 
in righteousness and peace. Even in the darkness of the exile 
period hopes did not die. Yet tbey no longer remained the same. 
In the Deutero-Isaiah (chaps, xl.-lv.) we have no longer a. 
Jewish but a foreign messiah. The onward progress of the 
Persian Cyrus and his anticipated conquest of Babylonia marked 



him out as Yahweh's anointed instrument for effecting th* 
deliverance of exiled Israd and their restoration to their old homo 
and dty (Isa. xli a, xliv. 14, xlv.). This was, however, but a 
s u b s i dia r y issue and possesses no permanent spiritual sig nifi cance * 
Of far more vital importance is the conception .of Israel as God's 
suffering servant. This is not the place to- enter into the pro- 
longed controversy as to the real significance of this term, 
whether it signifies the nation Israd or the righteous community 
only, or finally an idealised prophetic individual who, like the 
prophet Jeremiah, was destined to suffer for the well-being of 
his people. Duhm, in his epoch-making commentary, distin- 
guishes on the grounds of metre and contents the four servant* 
passages, in the last of which (lii. 13-UiL 12) the ideal suffering 
servant of Yahweh is portrayed most definitely as an individual. 
In the " servant-passages " he is innocent, while in the rest of 
the Deutero-Isaiah be appears as by no means faultless, and 
the personal traits are not prominent. These views of Duhm. 
in which a severe distinction is thus drawn between the repre- 
sentation of Yahweh's servant in the servant-passages, and that 
which meets us in the rest of the Deutero-Isaiah, have been 
challenged by a succession of critics. 1 It is only necessary for 
us to take note of the ideal in its general features. It probably 
arose from the fact that, the calamities from which Israd had 
suffered both before and during the exile had drawn the reflective 
minds of the race to the contemplation of the problem of suffering. 
The " servant of Yahweh * presents one aspect of the problem, 
and its attempted solution, the book of Job another, while in 
the Psalms, e.g. Pas. xxii., xliu-xHii^ hnriiL, lxxvii., other 
phases of the problem are presented. In the Deutero-Isaiah 
the meaning of Israel's sufferings is exhibited as vicarious. Israd 
is suffering for a great end. He suffers, is despised, rejected, 
chastened and afflicted that others may be blessed and be at 
peace through his chastisement. This noble conception of 
Israel's great destiny is conveyed in Isa. xlix. 6, in words which 
may be regarded as perhaps the noblest utterance in Hebrew 
prophecy: " To establish the tribes of Jacob and bring back 
the preserved of Israel is less important than being my servant. 
Yea, I will make you a light to the Gentiles that my salvation 
may be unto the end of the earth."* This passage, which 
bdongs to the second of the brief "servant-songs," sets the 
mission of Israel in its true relation to the world. It is the 
necessary corollary to the teaching of Amos, that God is the 
righteous lord of all the world. If Jerusalem has been chosen 
as His sanctuary and Israd as His own people, it is only that 
Israel may diffuse God's blessings in the world even at the cost 
of Israel's own humiliation, exile and dispersion. 

The Deutero-Isaiah closes a great prophetic succession, which 
begins with Amos, continues in Isaiah in even greater splendour 
with the added elements of hope and Messianic expectation, and 
receives further accession in Jeremiah with his special teaching 
on inward spiritual and personal religion which constituted the 
new covenant of divine grace. Finally the Deutero-Isaiah 
conveyed to captive Israd the message of Yahweh's unceasing 
love and care, and the certainty of their return to Judaea and 
the restoration of the national prosperity which Esekiel bad 
already announced in the earlier period of the exile. To this 
is united the noble ideal of the suffering servant, which serves 
both as a contribution to the great problem of suffering as 
purifying and vicarious and as the interpretation to the mind 
of the nation itself of that nation's true function in the future, 
a lesson which the actual future showed that Israd was slow 
to receive. Nowhere in the Old Testament does the doctrine 
taught by Amos of Yahweh's universal power and sovereignty 

1 Vlx. Budde in Die so-genannlen Ebed-Jahweh Lieder u. die 
BedeutungdesKnechtes Jakwehsin Jes. nl.4». (Giessen, SQ00) ; Karl 
Marti in his well-known commentary on Isaiah, and F. C Wst bie cnt. 
Der Kuccht'Jokms des Deuierojjesaj*. The special servant*sonejft 
which Dvam asserts can be readily eetached from the texture of the 
Deutero-Isaiah without disturbance to its integrity are Isa. xliL 1-4, 
xlix. 1-6. i. 4-9, lit 13-liii. 1 a. 

* We have here fdlowed Dfflmaim's co nstructi o n of a difficult 
passage which Duhm attempts to simplify by omission of the com- 
plicating dause without altering the general sense. 



HEBREW RELIGION 



r8- 5 



receive ampler and more splendid exposition than in the groat 
lyrical passages of chap. xl. It marks the highest point to which 
the Hebrew race attained in its progress from benotheism to 
monotheism. Here again we sec the wholesome influences of the 
exile. The Jew had passed from the narrow confines of his 
homeland into a wider world, and this larger vision of human 
life reacted on the prophet's theology. This closes the evolution 
of Hebrew prophet ism. What immediately follows is on a 
descending slope with some striking exceptions, e.g. the book 
of Job and the book of Jonah. 

7. Dcuteronomic Legalism. — The book of Deuteronomy was 
the product of prophetic teaching operating on traditional 
custom, which was represented m its essential features by 
the two codes of legislation contained in Ex. xx. 24-xxiii. 19 
(E) and Ex. xxxiv. 10-36 (J), but had also become tainted 
and corrupted by centuries of Canaanite influence and practice 
which especially infected the cult of the fngk places. The 
existence of " high places " is presupposed in those two ancient 
codes and is also presumed in the narratives of the documents 
E and J which contain them. But the prevalence of the worship 
of " other gods " and of graven images in these " high places," 
And the moral debasement of life which accompanied these cults, 
made it dear that the •' high places" were sources of grave 
Injury to Israel's social life. In all probability the reformation 
instituted in the reign of Hesckiah, to which 2 Kings xviii. 4 
(cf. verse » a) refers, was only partial. It is hardly possible that 
all the high places were suppressed. The idolatrous reaction 
in the reign of Manassch appears to have restored all the evife 
of the past and added to them. • Another and more drastic 
reform than that which had been previously initiated (probably 
at the instigation of Isaiah and Micah) now became necessary 
to save the state 1 . It is universally held by critics that our present 
book of Deuteronomy (certainly chaps. xH.-xxvi.) is closely 
connected with the reformation in the reign of Josiah. It is 
quite clear that many provisions in the old codes of J and E 
expanded lie at the basis of the book of Deuteronomy. 3ut 
new features were added. We note for the first time definite 
regulations respecting Passover and the close union of that 
celebration with Mats&h or " unleavened bread." We note 
the laws respecting the clean and unclean animals (certainly 
based on ancient custom). Moreover, the prohibitions are 
strengthened and multiplied. In addition to the bare interdict 
of the sorceress (Ex. xxii. 18), of stone pftiars to the Canaanite 
• Baal, of the Ashetah-pole, molten images and the worship of 
other gods than Yahweh (Ex.- xxxiv. 13-17). we now have the 
strict prohibition of any employment whatever of tne* stone- 
symbol (Jtosslbbab), and of all forms of sorcery, soothsaying 
and necromancy (Dent, xviii. 10, 11. Respecting the stone- 
pillar see XvL 22). But of much more far-reaching Importance 
was the low of the central sanctuary which constantly meets us 
in Deuteronomy in the reference to " the place (i.e. Jerusalem) 
which Yahweh your God shall choose out of all your tribes to 
put His name there " (xii. 5, xvi. 5, u, 16, xxvi. 2). There 
alone all offerings of any kind were to be presented (xU. 6, 7, 
xvi. 7). By this positive enactment all the high places outside 
the one sanctuary fat Jerusalem became illegitimate. A further 
consequence directly followed from the limitation as tosanctuary, 
via. limitation as to the officiating ministers of the sanctuary. 
In the " book of the covenant" (Ex. xx. 22-xxii. 10), as we 
have already seen, and in the general practice of the regal 
period* there was no limitation as to the priesthood, but a definite 
order of priesthood, viz. Levites, existed, to whom a higher 
professional prestige belonged. As it was impossible to find a 
place for the officiating priests of the high places, non-levitical 
as well as tevitical, in the single sanctuary, it became necessary 
to restrict the functions of sacrifice to the Levites only as well 
as to the existing official priesthood of the Jerusalem temple 
(see Priest). Doubtless such a reform met with strong resistance 
'from the disestablished and vested interests, but it was firmly 
supported by royal influence and by the Jerusalem priesthood 
as well as by the true prophets of Yahweh who had protested 
against the idolatrous usafcs^uul corruplioasoi the high places. 



The strong impress of Hebrew prophecy Is to be found in 
the deeply marked ethical spirit of the Deuteroaomic legislation. 
Love to God and love to man is stamped on a large number 
of its provisions. Love to God is emphasised in Deut. vi. 5, 
while love to man meets us in the constant reference to the 
fatherless and the widow (cf. especially Deut. xvi.). This note 
of philanthropy is frequently found as a mitigating element 
(e.g. in the laws respecting slavery and war) 1 that subdues or 
even removes the harshness of earlier laws or usages. It should 
be noted, however, that the spirit of brotherly love was confined 
within national barriers. It did not operate as a rule beyond 
the limits of race. 

The book of Deuteronomy, In conjunction with the reformation 
of Josiah's reign (which synchronizes with the rapid decline 
of Assyria and the reviving prestige of Yahweh), appeared to 
mark the triumph of the great prophetic movement. It became 
at once a codified standard of purer religious life and ultimately 
served as a beacon of light for thef uture. But there was shadow 
as well as light. We note (a) that though the book of Deuteronomy 
bears the prophetic impress, the priestly impress is perhaps more 
marked. The writer " evinces a warm regard for the priestly 
tribe; he guards its privileges (xviii. 1-8), demands obedience 
for its decisions (xxiv. 8; cf. xvii. 10-ia) and earnestly commends 
its members to the Israelites' benevolence (xii. 18-19, xiv. 27-20-, 
&c.)."* (0) In many passages Jewish particularism is painfully 
manifest. Yahweh *s care for other peoples does not appear. 
The flesh of a dead (unslaughtered) beast is not to be eaten, but 
it may be given to the " stranger within the gates "I (Deut. 
xiv. ft).* (c) Prophetic religion was a religion of the spirit 
which came to the messenger (Is*, lxi. 1) and expressed itseK 
as a word of instruction of Yahweh (town) ; see Isa. i. 10. Now 
when the Hebrew religion was reduced to written form it began to 
be a book-religion, and since the book consisted of fixed rules and 
enactments, religion began to acquire a stereotyped character. 
It will be seen in the sequel that this was destined to be the grow- 
ing tendency of Jewish religious life — to conform itself to 
prescribed rules. In other words, it became Icfolhm. (i) Last ly , 
the oM genial life of the high places, in which the " new moon ** 
or Sabbath or the annual festival was a sacrificial feast of com- 
munion, in which the members of the local community or clan 
enjoyed fellowship with one another— aH this picturesque 
life ceased to be. And though there was positive gain in the 
removal of idolatrous and corrupt modes of worship, there was 
also positive loss in the disappearance of this old genial phase 
of Hebrew social life and worship. It involved' a vast difference 
to many a Judaean village when the festival pilgrimage was no 
longer made to the familiar local sanctuary with its hoary 
associations of ancient heroic or patriarchal story, bat to a 
distant and comparatively unfamiliar city with its stately 
shrine and priesthood. 

8. Eukiefs Syite*!.— Ezekiel was the successor of Jeremiah 
and inherited his conceptions. But though the younger prophet 
adopted the ideas respecting personal religion and individual 
responsibility from the elder, the characters of the two men 
were very different. Jeremiah, when he foretold the destruction 
of the external state and temple ritual, found no resource save 
in a reconstruction that was internal and spiritual In this 
he was true to his prophetic impulse and genius. But Exeklel 
was, as Wellhausen well describes him, " a priest in prophet's 
mantle." While Jeremiah's tendency was spiritual and ideal, 
Exckiel's was constructive and practical. He was the first to 
foretell with clearness the return of his people from captivity 
foreshadowed by Jeremiah, and he set himself the task even in 

1 Thus in comparison with the " book of the covenant," Deuter- 
onomy adds the stipulation in reference to the release of the tfave; 
that his master was to provide him liberally from his flocks, his corn 
and his wine (Deut. xv. 13, 14). See Hastings's D.B., arts. " Ser- 
vant," " Slave," p. 464, where other examples may be found. In 
war fruit-trees are to be spared (Dent, xxl 19 foil), whereas the 
old universal practice is the barbarous custom Elisha commended 
(2 Kings iii. 19) of ruthlessly destroying them. 

* Driver, Internal. Commentary on Deuleronomy, Introd. p. xxx. 

• It should be noted that in P (Code of Holiness) Lev. xvii. 13 foil 
the resident alien {&) is placed on an equality with the Jaw. 



J86 



HEBREW RELIGION 



the Midnight darkness of Israel's exile to prepare for the nation's 
renewed life. The external bases of Israel's religion had been 
swept away, and in exchange for these Jeremiah had led his 
countrymen to the more permanent internal grounds of a 
spiritual renewal. But a religion could not permanently subsist 
in this world of space and time without some external concrete 
embodiment. It was the task of Ezekiel to take up once more 
the broken threads of Israel's religious traditions, and weave 
tbem anew into statelier forms of ritual and national polity. 
The priest-prophet's keen eye for detail, manifested in the 
elaborate vision of the wheels and living creatures (Ezek. i.) 
and in his lamentation on Tyre (chap, xxvii.), is also exhibited 
in the visions contained in chaps, xl.-xlviii., which describe the 
ideal reconstructed temple and theocracy of the restored Israel. 
The foreground is filled by the temple and its precincts. The 
officiating priests are now the descendants of the line of Zadok 
belonging to the tribe of Levi Thus the priesthood is still 
further restricted as compared with the restriction already 
noted in the Deuteronorhk legislation. It is the sons of Zadok 
only that have any right to offer sacrifice at the altar of burnt 
offering <xliU. 19, xliv. 15 foil.). The Levites, who formerly 
•ministered in the high places, now discharge the subordinate 
offices of gate-keepers and slaughterers of the sacrificial 
victims. 

Another element in this ideal scheme which comes into 
prominence is the sharp distinction between holy and profane. 
The word holiness (qodesh) in primitive Hebrew usage partook 
of the nature of taboo, and came to be applied to whatever, 
whether thing or person, stood in close relation to deity and ' 
belonged to him, and could not, therefore, be used or treated like 
other objects not so related, and so was separated or stood apart. 
The idea underlying the word, which to us is invested with deep 
ethical meaning, had only this non-ethical, ritual significance 
in Ezekiel. Unlike the old temple and city, the ideal temple 
of Eiekiel is entirely separate from the city of Jerusalem. In 
the immediate surroundings of tho temple there is an open space. 
Then come two concentric forecourts of the temple. The temple 
stands in the midst of what is called the gitrah or space severed 
off. The outer court lies higher than the open space, the inner 
court higher still, and the temple-building in the centre highest 
of all* No heathen may tread the outer court, no layman the 
inner court, while the holiest of all may not be trodden even 
by the priest Ezekiel but only by the angel who accompanies 
him. . " The temple-bouse has a graduated series of compartments 
increasing in sanctity inwards " (Davidson). In the innermost 
the presence of Yahwch abides. 

We are here moving in a realm of ideas prevailing in 
ancient Israel respecting holiness, uncleanness and ji«, which are 
ceremonial and not ethical; flee, especially Robertson Smith's 
Religion of the Semites, 2nd ed., p. 446 folL (additional note B.) 
On holiness, uncleanness and taboo. It is, of course, true that 
the ethical conception of sin as violation of righteousness and 
an act of rebellion against the divine righteous will had been 
developed since the days of Amos and Isaiah; but, as we have 
already observed, cult us and prophetic teaching were separated 
by an immense gulf, and in spite of the reformation of 621 B.C. 
still remain separated. In the sacrificial system of sin-offerings 
{kaUdth xud'dsh&m) we have to do with sin as ceremonial violation 
and neglect (frequently involuntary), or violation of holiness in 
the old sense of the term or as personal uncleanness (touching a 
corpse, eating unclean food, sexual impurity, &c). In the 
historical evolution of Hebrew sacrifice it is remarkable how 
Jong this non-ethical and primitive survival of old custom still 
survived, even far into post-exilian times. (See Sacrifice; 
also Moore's art. " Sacrifice " in Bncy. Bibl.) 
■ One conspicuous feature of Ezekiel's system is the predomin- 
ance of piacular sacrifice. It undoubtedly existed in pre-exilian 
Israel, especially in times of crisis or calamity, for the appease- 
ment of an offended deity (3 Sam. xxiv. 18 foil.), and in Deut. 
xxi. 1-9, we have details of the purificatory rite which was 
necessary when human blood was shed; but now and in the 
future propitiatory sacrifice and ideas of propitiation began to 



overshadow all the other forms of sacrifice and their idea*. 
Ezekiel prescribes a half-yearly ritual of sin-offering whereby 
atonement was to be made (xlv. 18-20). We shall *.ee subsequently 
to what great institution this led the way. 

Ezekiel's system constituted an ecclesiastical in place of a 
political organization, a church-state in place of a nation. We 
clearly discern how this reacted on his Messianic conceptions. 
In his earlier oracles (xxxiv. 23 foil.) we find one shepherd ruling 
over united Israel, viz. Yahweh's servant David, whereas in the 
ideal scheme detailed in chap. xL et scq. the role of the prince 
as a ruler is a very shadowy one. The prince, it is true, has a 
central domain, but his functions are ecclesiastical and sub- 
ordinate and his powers strictly limited (xlvL 3-8, it r 16-18). 

Thus the exile period marks the parting of the ways in the 
development of Hebrew religion. In the Deutero-Isaiah we 
reach the highest point in the evolution of prophetism. It is 
true that we have tome noble resounding echoes in the lyrical 
passages lx.-lxii. in the Trito-Isaiah during the post-exilian 
period, and in such psalm literature as Pss. xxik, xxxvil, 1., 
Ixii., cvii., cxlv. o-ia and others; and also in Iaa. xxxv., which 
is obviously a lyrical reproduction of earlier literature. But 
it cannot be said that we possess in later literature any fresh 
contribution to the conception of God ox any presentation of a 
higher ideal of human life 1 or national destiny than that which 
meets us in chap. xl. or in the servant-passages of the Deutero- 
Isaiah. It may with truth be said that after Jeremiah *k 
discern the porting of the ways. The fait is represented by the 
Deutero-Isaiah, who constitutes the climax and dose of Hebrew 
prophetism, which is henceforth (with the possible exception 
of the Trito-Isaiah, Malachi and Jonah, who reproduce some 
features of the earlier prophecy) a virtually arrested development. 
The second path is that which is traced out by the priest-prophet 
Ezekiel, and is that of legalism, which was destined to secure a 
permanent place in the life and literature of the Jewish people. 
It is essentially the path which maybe summed up in the word 
Judaism, though, as will be shown in the sequel, Judaism came 
to include many other factors. The statement, however, remains 
virtually true, since Judaism is mainly constituted by the body 
of legal precepts called the TOrah, and, moreover, by the post- 
exilian Torah. 

9. Post-exilian Law—The PriaUrcodexS— The oracles of 
Malachi clearly reveal the continued influence of the book of 
Deuteronomy in his day. But the new conditions created by 
the return of the exiles and the germinating influence of Ezekiel's 
ideas developed a process of new legislative construction. The 
code of holiness (Lev. xvii.-xxvl) is the most obvious product 
of that influence. The ideas of expiation and atonement so 
prevalent in Ezekiel's scheme, which there find expression in the 
half-yearly sacrificial celebrations, are expressed in Lev. xvi. in 
the single annual great fast of atonement. It is impossible to enter 
here into the numerous details of that impressive ceremonial 
Two special features, however, which characterize the celebration 
should here be noted: (a) The person of the high priest, who is 
throughout the entire drama the chief and indeed the sole actor. 
This supreme official, who was destined ultimately 60 take the 
place of the king in the church-nation of post-exilian Judaism, 
is mentioned for the first time in Zech, iii. 1 * (in the person of 
Joshua). In the Priestercodex he stands at the head of the priests, 
who arc, in the post-exilian system, the sons of Aaron and 
possessed the sole right to offer the temple sacrifices. On the 
great day of atonement the high priest appears in a vicarious 
and representative capacity, and offers on behalf of the whole 
nation which he was considered to embody in his sacred person. 
(b) The rite of the godt devoted to Auad* There can be Htik 

1 We shall have to note the emergence of the doctrine of the 
resurrection of the righteous in later Judaism, which it obviously a 
fresh contribution of permanent value to Hebrew doctrine. On 
the other hand, the doctrine of pre-exisknee is speculative rather than 
religious, and applies to institutions rather than persons. 

2 The legislative portions are mainly comprised in Ex. xxxv> 
end. Leviticus entire and Num. L-x. 

* But this term (literally the chief priest) was already in use 
during the regal period to designate the head priest of an important 
sanctuary such as Jerusalem (a Kings xii* ti). 



HEBREW RELIGION 



*8y 



doubt that Asmal was an evil demon (tike an Anbtc Jinn) of 
the desert. The goat set apart for Azazcl was in the concluding 
part of the ceremonial brought before the high priest, who laid 
both bis hands upon it and confessed over it the sins of the 
people. It was then carried 08 by an appointed person to a 
lonely spot and there set free. 

In later post texilian times this great day of atonement became 
to aji increasing degree a day of humiliation for sin and penitent 
sorrow, accompanied by confession; and the sins confessed were 
not only of e purely ceremonial character, whether voluntary 
or. inadvertent, bet also sins against righteousness end the 
duties which we owe to God and man. This dement of public 
confession for sin became more prominent in the days when 
syaetogal worship developed, and prayer took the place of the 
aacrincml offerings which could only be offered in die Jerusalem 
temple. The development of the priestly code of legislation 
(Pricstercodei) was a gradual process, and probably occupied 
a considerable part of the 5th century B.C. The Hebrew race 
now definitely entered upon the new path of organised Jewish 
legalism which had been originally marked out for it by Ezckicl 
in the preceding century. It became a holy people on holy 
ground. Circumcision and Sabbath, separation from marriage 
with a foreigner, which rendered a Jew unclean, as well as strict 
conformity to the precepts of the T&rah, constituted hence- 
forth an adamantine bond which was to preserve the Jewish 
communities from disintegration. 

10. The later Post-exilian Developments in Jewish Religion.— 
These may be briefly referred to under the following aspects: 

(a) Codified law and the written record of the patriarchal 
history, ae well as the life and work of the lawgiver Moses (to 
whom the entire body of law came to be ascribed), assumed an 
ever greater importance. The reverence felt for the canonized 
Tdrah or law (the Pentateuch or so-called five books of Moses) 
grew even into worship. Of this spirit we find clear expression 
in some of the later psalms, e.g. the elaborate alphabetic Ps. crix. 
and the latter portion of Ps. lii. There were various causes 
which combined to enhance the importance of the written Tdrak 
(the " instruction " par excellence communicated by God through 
Moses). Chief among these were (1) The conception of Cod as 
transcendent We have taken due note of Amos, who unfolded 
the character of Yahweh as universal righteous sovereign; and 
also the sublime portrayal of His exalted nature in Isa. xl. 
(verse 15^ cf. rz-t6, and Job xxxvi. aa-xlii. 6). The intellectual 
influence of Greece, manifested in Alexandrian philosophy, 
tended to remove God still further from the human world of 
phenomena into that of an inaccessible transcendental abstrac- 
tion. LRtle, therefore, was possible for the Jew save strict per- 
formance of the requirements of the Torah, once for all given 
to Moses on Sinai, and, in his approach to the awful and unknown 
mystery, to rely on ceremonial and ascetic performances (see 
Wendt^s Teaching of Jesns, i. 55 foil.). The same tendency 
led the pious worshippers to avoid His awful name and to sub* 
stitute Adonai in their scriptures or to use in the Mishna the 
term " name " {shim) or " heaven." (?) The Uaccabean conflict 
(16s B.C.) tended to accentuate the national sentiment of anta- 
gonism to Hellenic Influence. The tfasldim or pious deyotees, 
who arose at that time, were the originators of the Pharisaic 
movement which was conservative as well as national, and laid 
stress on the strict performance of the law. 

(b) Eschatology in the Judaism of the Greek period began to 
assome a new form. The pre-exWan prophets (especially Isaiah) 
•ipoke of the forthcoming crisis in the world's history as a "day 
of the Lord*" These were usually regarded as visitations of 
chastisement for national sins and vindications of divine 
righteousness or judgments, i.e. assertions of God's power as 
Judge (shtphet)* By the older prophets this judgment of God 
or " day of Yahweh " was never held to be far removed from 
the horizon of the present or t he world in which they lived. But 
now as we enter the Greek period (3*0 B.C and onwards) there 
is a gradual change from prophecy to apocalyptic. " It may be 
asserted m general terms that whereas, prophecy foretells a 
definite future which has Us foundation io the present, apoca- 



lyptic directs its anticipations solely and simply to the future, 
to a new world-period which stands sharply contrasted with the 
present. The classical model for all apocalyptic is to be found in 
Dan. vii. It is only after a great war of destruction, a day of 
Yahweh s great judgment, that the dominion of God will begin " 
(Bousset). Ezck.xxxviiL and xxxix. clearly bear the apocalyptic 
character; so also Isa. xxxiv. and notably Isa. xxiv.-xxvik 
Apocalyptic, as Baldensperger has shown, formed a counterpoise 
to the normal current of conformity to law. It arose from e 
spiritual movement in answer to the yearning of the heart: 
" O that Thou mightest rend the. heavens and come down and 
the mountains quake at Thy presence 1" (Isa. lxiv. 1 [Heb. 
briiL 10D; and it was intended to meet the craving of souls sack 
with waiting and disappointment. The present outlook was 
hopeless, but in the enlarged horizon of time as well as space the 
thoughts of some of the most spiritual mJnda in Judaism were 
directed to the transcendent and ultimate. The present world 
waa corrupt and subject to Satan and the powers of darkness. 
This they called " the present aeon " (age). Their hopes wcrt 
therefore directed to " the coming aeon." Between the two 
aeons there would take place the advent of the Messiah, who 
would lead the struggle with evil powers which was called M the 
agonies of the Messiah." This terrible intermezzo was no longer 
terrestrial, but was a cosmic and universal crisis in which the 
Messiah would emerge victorious from the final conflict with the 
heathen and demonic powers. This victory inaugurates the 
entrance of the " aeon to come," in which the faithful Jews 
would enter their inheritance. In this way we perceive the 
transformation of the old Messianic doctrine through apocalyptic* 
Of apocalyptic literature we have numerous examples extending 
from the znd century B.C. to the znd century a j>« (Sec especially 
Charles's Booh of Enoch.} 

The doctrine of the resurrection of the righteous to life In the 
heavenly world became engrafted on to the old doctrine of SheCU 
or the dark shadowy underworld (Hades), where life was joyless 
and feeble, and from whidb the soul might be for a brief space 
summoned forth by the arts of the necromancer. The most 
vivid portraiture of Sheol is to be found in the exilian passage 
Isa. xiv. o-se (cf. Job x. zi-aa). With this also compare the 
Babylonian Descent of Ishtar to Hades. The added conception 
of the resurrection of the righteous does not appear In the*world 
of Jewish thought till the early Greek period in Isa. wvi. 10, 
R. H. Charles thinks that in this passage the idea of resurrection 
is of purely Jewish and not of Maxdatn (or Zeroastrfan-) origin, 
but it is otherwise with Dan. aii. s; tee his Bschatotogy, Hebrew, 
Jewish and Christian. Corresponding to heaven, the abode of 
the righteous, we have Gi-henna (originally Gi-Bi**um t the 
scene of the Moloch rites of human sacrifice), the place of punish*- 
ment after death for apostate Jews. 

(c) Doctrine of Angels and of Hypostases.— In the writings 
of the pre-exilian period we have frequent references to super* 
natural personalities good and bad. It is only necessary to 
refer to them by name. Sebdfith, or " hosts," attached to the 
name of Yahweh, denoted the heavenly retinue of stars* The 
seraphim were burning serpentine forms who hovered above 
the enthroned Yahweh and chanted the Trisagion in Isaiah's 
consecration vision (Isa. vi.). We have also constant reference* 
to " angels " (maidchim) of God, divine messengers w«o represent 
Him and may be regarded as the manifestation of His power 
and presence. This especially applies to the " angel of Yahweh " 
or angel of His Presence (Ex. xxiii. io, 2$ (E). Note in Ex. 
xxxffi. m (J) be is called "my face" or ♦'presence" 1 <cf 
Isa. Ixiii. 9)]. We also know that from earliest times Israel 
believed in the evil as well as good spirits. Like the Arabs they 
held that demons became incorporate in serpents, as in Gen. til. 
The nephlUm were a monstrous brood begotten of the inter- 
course of the supernatural beings called a sons of God " with the 
women of earth. We also read of the " evil spirit " that came 
upon Saul. Contact with Babylonia tended to stimulate the 

1 Cf. the Phoenician parallel of " Face of Baal," worshipped as 
Tanit, "queen of Heaven" (Bathgon, Beitrdge zvr Semtl. Refigums- 
gtschichie, p. 55 foil,); also the place Penuet (face of God). 



188 



HEBREWS, EPISTLE TO -THE 



angelology and demonology of Israel. The Hebrew word shed or 
" demon " is no more than a Babylonian loan word, and came 
to designate the deities of foreign peoples degraded into the 
position of demons. 1 LUUk, the blood-sucking night-hag of 
the post-exilian Isa. xxxiv. 14, is the Babylonian IM&tu. 
Whether the se'irlm or shaggy satyrs (Isa. xiii. 31 ; Lev. xvii. 7) 
and Aidxil were of Babylonian origin -it is difficult to determine. 
The emergence of Satan as a definite supernatural personality, 
the head or prince of the world of evil spirits, is entirely a pheno- 
menon of post-exilian Judaism. He is portrayed as the arch- 
adversary and accuser of man. It is impossible to deny Persian 
influence in the development of this conception, and that the 
Persian Ahriman (Angromainyu), the evil personality opposed to 
the good, Ahura Mazda, moulded the Jewish counterpart, Satan. 
But in Judaism, monotheistic conceptions reigned supreme, and 
the Satan of Jewish belief as opposed to God stops short of the 
dualism of Persian religion. Of this we see evidence in the 
multiplication of Satans in the Book of Enoch. In the Book of 
Jubilees he is called mastimd. In later Judaism Sammael is 
the equivalent of Satan. Persian influence is also responsible 
for the vast multiplication of good spirits or angels, Gabriel, 
Raphael, Michael, &c, who play their part in apocalyptic works, 
such as the Book of Daniel and the Book of Enoch. 

Probably the transcendent nature of the deity in the Judaism 
of this later period made the interposition of mediating spirits an 
intellectual necessity (cf. Ps. civ. 4). It also stimulated the 
creation of divine hypostases. First among these may be men- 
tioned Wisdom. The roots of this conception belong to pre-exilian 
times, in which the " word " of divine denunciation was regarded 
as a quasi-material thing. (It is hurled against offending 
Israel, Isa. ix. 8.) In the post-exilian cosmogony it is the divine 
word or fiat that creates the world (Gen. i.; cf. Ps. xxxiii. 6, 0). 
Out of these earlier conceptions the idea of the divine wisdom 
(Heb. \wkhmah) gradually arose during the Persian period. 
The expression " wisdom," as it is employed in the locus classic us, 
Prov. .viii., connotes the contents Of the Divine reason — His 
conscious life, out of which created things emerge. This wisdom 
is personified. It dwelt with God (Prov. viii. 22 foil.) before the 
world was made. It is the companion of His throne, and by it 
He made the world (Prov. iii. 19, viii. 27; cf. Ps. civ. 24). It, 
moreover, enters into the life of the world and especially man 
(Prov. viii. 31 ). This conception of wisdom became still further 
bypostatized. It becomes redemptive of man. In the Wisdom 
of Solomon it is the sharer of God's throne (rdpedpos), the 
.effulgence of the eternal light and the outflow of His glory 
(Wisd. vii. 25, viii. 3 foil., ix. 4, 9); u Them that love her the 
Lord doth love " (Ecclesiastic us iv. 14). This group of ideas 
culminated in the Logos of Philo, expressing the world of divine 
ideas which God first of all creates and whkh becomes the 
mediating and formative power between the absolute and trans- 
cendent deity and passive formless matter, transmuted thereby 
into a rational, ordered universe. 

In later Jewish literature we meet with further examples of 
similar hypostases in the form of M intra, Mctatron, Skcchinah, 
Holy Spirit and Bath kdl. 

(d) The doctrine of pre-cxistcncc is another product of the 
speculative tendency of the Jewish mind. The Messiah's pre- 
existent state before the creation of the world is asserted in the 
Book of Enoch (xlviii. 6, 7). Pre-existence is also asserted of 
Moses and of sacred institutions such as the New Jerusalem, the 
Temple, Paradise, the Torah, &c. (ApocaL of Baruch iv. 3-lix. 4; 
Assumptio Mosis i. 14, 17) Edcrsheim's Life and Times of the 
Messiah, i. 175 and footnote 1. 

ti. Christ resumes the Broken Traditim of PropheHsm.—Tht 
Psalms of Solomon and the synoptic Gospels (70 b.C-a.P, 100) 
clearly reveal the powerful revival of Messianic hopes of a 
national deliverer of the seed of David. This Messianic expecta- 
tion had been a fermenting leaven since the great days of Judas 
Maccabaeus. The conceptions of Jesus of Nazareth, however, 
were not the Messianic conceptions of his fellow-countrymen, but 

1 Deut. xxxii, 17: Ps. cv?, 37. Baal ZebOb of the Philistine 
fckron became the Beelzebub who was equivalent to Satan. 



epistle to the Romans, passed into the wider circulation .wWch 



HEBREWS, EPISTLE TO TH1 



189 



feseMtents merited. In a^y^ase the Rotna* Church, where the 
first traces of the epistle occur, about a.o. 06 (t Clement), had 
nothing to contribute to the question of authorship except the 
negative opinion that it was not by Paul (Euseb. Bed, HisL 
iai. 3): yet this central church was in constant connexion with 
provincial churches. 

The earliest positive traditions belong to Alexandria and N. 
Africa. The Alexandrine tradition can be traced back as far as a 
teacher of Clement, presumably Pantaenus (Euseb. Ecrt. Hist* 
vi. 14), who sought to explain why Paul did not name himself as 
usual at the head of the epistle. Clement himself, taking it for 
granted that an epistle to Hebrews must have beeen written in 
Hebrew, supposes that Luke translated it for the Greeks. Origen 
implies that " the men of old " regarded it as Paul's, and that 
some churches at feast in his own day shared this opinion. But 
he feels that the language is un-PauHne, though the " admirable " 
thoughts are not second to those of Paul's unquestioned writings. 
Thus he bled to the view that the ideas were orally set forth by 
Paul, but that the language and composition were due to some one 
giving from memory a sort of free interpretation of Ms teacher's 
mind. According to some this disciple was Clement of Rome; 
others name Luke; but the truth, says Origen, is known to 
God alone (Euseb. vi. 25, cf. iil. 38). Still from the time of 
Origen the opinion that Paul wrote the epistle became prevalent 
In the East. The earliest African tradition, on the other hand, 
preserved by TertuUSan* {De pudicitia, c. ao), but certainly not 
invented by him, ascribed the epistle to Barnabas. Yet it was 
perhaps, like those named by Origen, only an inference from the 
epistle itself, as if a " word of exhortation " (riii. aa) by the Son 
of Exhortation (Acts iv. 36 ; see Barnabas). On the whole, then, 
the earliest traditions in East and West alike agree in effect, via. 
that our epistle was not by Paul, but by one of his associates. 

This is also the twofold result reached by modern scholarship 
with growing clearness. The vacillation of tradition and the 
dissimilarity of the epistle from those of Paul were brought out 
with great force by Erasmus. Luther (who suggests Apollos) 
and Calvin (who thinks of Luke or Clement) followed with the 
decisive argument that Paul, who lays such stress on the fact that 
bis gospel was not taught him by man (Gal. i.), could not have 
written Heb. ii. 3. Yet the wave of reaction which soon over- 
whelmed the freer tendencies of the first reformers, brought 
back the old view until the revival of biblical criticism more than 
a century ago. Since then the current of opinion has set irrevoc- 
ably against anyform of Pauline authorship. Its type of thought 
is quite unique. The Jewish Law is viewed not as a code of 
ethics or M work* of righteousness/ 1 as by Paul, but as a system 
of religious rites (vii. n) shadowing forth the way of access to 
God in worship, of which the Gospel reveals the archetypal 
realities (ix. t, ir, 15, 33 f., x. x ff., 1$ ff.). The Old and the 
New Covenants are related to one another as imperfect (earthly) 
and perfect (heavenly) forms of the same method of salvation, 
each with its own type of sacrifice and priesthood. Thus the 
conception of Christ as High Priest emerges, for the first time, 
as a central point in the author's conception of Christianity. 
The Old Testament is cited after the Alexandrian version more 
exclusively than by Paul, even where the Hebrew is divergent. 
Nor is this accidental. There Is every appearance that the 
author was a Hellenist who lacked knowledge of the Hebrew 
text, and derived his metaphysic and his allegorical method 
from the Alexandrian rather than the Palestinian schools. 
Yet the epistle has manifest Pauline affinities, and can hardly 
have originated beyond the Pauline circle, to which it Is referred 
not only by the author's friendship with Timothy (xlii. t$) t 
but by many echoes of the Pauline theology and even, it seems, 
of passages in Paul's epistles (see Holtxmann, Bhkitung in das 
ff. 7\, 189a, p. ao8). These features early suggested Paul as the 
author of a book which stood in MSS. immediately after the 
epistles of that apostle, and contained nothing in its title to 

*AUo an Codex Garomontanue, the Trodaku de libris (x.), 
Philaftriua of Brescia (c A.D. 480), and a prologue to the Catholic 
Epistles {Roue bi*idicii*e, xxiii. 82 ff.). It is defended in a mono- 
graph by H. H. B. Ayles (Cambridge, 1890). - 



distinguish it from the preceding books with like headings, 
" To the Romans," u To the Corinthians," and the like. A 
similar history attaches to the so-called Second Epistle of Clement 
(see CuMmvnNB LrrutAToas). 

Everything turns, then, on internal criticism of the epistle, 
working on the distinctive features already noticed, together 
with such personal allusions as it affords. As to its first readers, 
with whom the author stood in close relations (xiii. 19, 33, cf. vfc 
10, x. 33-34), it used generally to be agreed that they were 
" Hebrews " or Christians of Jewish birth. But, for a generation 
or so, it has been denied that this can be inferred simply from 
the fact that the epistle approaches all Christian truth through 
Old Testament forms. This, it is said, was the common method 
of proof, since the Jewish scriptures were the Word of God to 
all Christians alike. Still it remains true that the exclusive 
use of the argument from Mosaism, as itself implying the Gospel 
of Jesus the Christ as final cause (rVkoi), does favour the view 
that the readers were of Jewish origin. Further there is no 
allusion to the incorporation of " strangers and foreigners " (Epb. 
ii. 19) with the people of God. Yet the readers are not to be 
sought in Jerusalem (see e.g. ii. 3), nor anywhere in Judaea 
proper. The whole Hellenistic culture of the epistle (let alone 
its language), and the personal references in it, notably that to 
Timothy in xiK. 33, are against any such view: while the doubly 
emphatic " all " in xiU. aa suggests that those addressed were 
but part of a community composed of both Jews and Gentiles. 
Caesarea, indeed, as a city of mixed population and lying just 
outside Judaea proper— a place, moreover, where Timothy might 
have become known during Paul's two years' detention there— 
would satisfy many conditions of the problem. Yet these very 
conditions are no more than might exist among intensely Jewish 
members of the Dispersion, like " the Jews of Asia » (cf . Sir W.M. 
Ramsay, The Letters to the Seven Churches, 1 55 f .), whose seal for 
the Temple and (he Mosaic ritual customs led to Paul's arrest hi 
Jerusalem (Acts xix. 27 f»* cf. ao f.), in keeping both with hit 
former experiences at their hands and with his forebodings re- 
sulting therefrom (xx. 19, a 1-24). Our " Hebrews " had obviously 
high regard for the ordinances of Temple worship. But this was 
the case with the dispersed Jews generally, who kept in touch 
with the Temple, and its intercessory worship for all Israel, in 
every possible way; in token of this they sent with great care 
their annual contribution to its services, the Temple tribute. 
This bond was doubtless preserved by Christian Hellenists, 
and must have tended to continue their reliance on the Temple 
services for the forgiveness of their recurring " sins of ignorance " 
—subsequent to the great initial Messianic forgiveness coming 
with faith in Jesus. Accordingly many of them, while placing 
their hope for the future upon Messiah and His eagerly expected 
return in power, might seek assurance of present forgiveness 
of dairy offences and cleansing of conscience in the old mediatorial 
system. In particular the annual Day of Atonement would be 
relied on, and that in proportion as the expected Parous!* 
tarried, and the first enthusiasm of a faith that was largely 
eschatological died away, while ever-present temptation pressed 
the harder as disappointment and perplexity increased. 

Such was the general situation of the readers of this epistle, 
men who rested partly on the Gospel and partly on Judaism, 
For lack of a true theory as to the relation between the two, 
they were now drifting away (ii. 1) from effective faith in the 
Gospel, as being mainly future in its application, while Judaism 
was a very present, concrete, and impressive system of religious 
aids— to which also their sacred scriptures gave constant witness. 
The points at which it chiefly touched them may be inferred 
from the author's counter-argument, with its emphasis in the 
spiritual ineffectiveness of the whole Temple-system, Its high- 
priesthood and its supreme sacrifice on the Day of Atonement. 
With passionate earnestness he sets over against these his 
constructive theory as to the efficacy, the heavenly yet unseen 
reality, of the definitive " purification of sins " (i. 3) and per- 
fected access to God's inmost presence, secured for Christians as 
such by Jesus the Son of God (x. o-aa), and traces their moral 
feebleness and slackened seal to want of progressi v e insight 



190 



HEBREWS, EPISTLE TO THE 



into the eneiitial nature of the Gospel as a " new covenant," 
moving on a totally different plane of religions reality from the 
now antiquated covenant given by Moses (viii. 13). 

The following plan of the epistle may help to make apparent 
the writer's theory of Christianity as distinct from Judaism, 
which is related to it as " shadow " to reality: 

Tkuls: The finality of the form of religion mediated in God's 
Son. i. 1*4. 

L The supreme excellence of the Son's Person (i. 5-iii. 6), as 
compared with (a) angels, (b) Moses. 
Practical exhortation, tii. 7-tv. 13, leading op to : 
iL The corresponding efficacy of the Son's High-priesthood 



(0 



) ThrSon has the qualifications of all priesthood, especially 



sYmoathv. 



iii. 



fht 

ing 

ny 

«). 

by 
ore 



At lack of insight lay at the root of their troubles, it was not 
enough simply to enjoin the moral fidelity to conviction which 
is three parts of faith to the writer, who has but little sense 
of the mystical side of faith, so marked in Paul There was 
need of a positive theory based on real insight, in order to inspire 
faith for more strenuous conflict with the influences tending to 
produce the aposiasy from Christ, and so from " the living 
God," which already threatened some of them (ui. 12). Such 
" apostasy " was not a formal abjuring of Jesus as Messiah, 
but the subtler lapse involved in ceasing to rely on relation to 
Him for daily moral and religious needs, summed up in purity 
of conscience and peace before God (x. 19-23, xiii. so f.). This 
"falling aside" (vi. 5, cf. xii. 12 f.), rather than conscious 
" turning back," is what is implied in the repeated exhortations 
which show the intensely practical spirit of the whole argument. 
These exhortations are directed chiefly against the dullness of 
spirit which hinders progressive moral insight into the genius 
of the New Covenant (v. n-vi. 8), and which, in its blindness 
to the full work of Jesus, amounts to counting His blood as devoid 
of divine efficacy to consecrate the life (x. 26, 29), and so to a 
personal " crucifying anew " of the Son of God (vi. 6). The 
antidote to such " profane " negligence (ii. x, 3, xii. 12 f., 15-17) 
is an earnestness animated by a fully-assured hope, and sustained 
by a "faith" marked by patient waiting (jMnpotoida) for 
the inheritance guaranteed by divine promise (x. 11 f.). The 
outward expression of such a spirit is "bold confession," a 
glorying in that Hope, and mutual encouragement therein 
(Ui- 6, is (.); while the sign of its decay is neglect to assemble 
together for mutual stimulus, as if it were not worth the odium 
and opposition from fellow Jews called forth by a marked 
Christian confession (x. 23-25, xii. 3) — a very different estimate 
of,the new bond from that shown by readiness in days gone by to 
suffer for it (x. 32 ff.). Their special danger, then, the sin which 
deceived(iii. ijHheraore easily that it represented the line of least 
resistance (perhaps the best paraphrase of tinKpUrrarot Anaprl* 
in xii. x), was the exact opposite of " faith " as the author uses 
it, especially in the chapter devoted to its illustration by Old 
Testament examples. His readers needed most the moral 
heroism of fidelity to the Unseen, which made men "despise 
shame " due to aught that sinners in their unbelief might do to 
them (xii. a-xx, xiii 5 f.) — and of which Jesus Himself 
was at once the example and the inspiration. To quicken this 
by awakening deeper insight into the real objects of " faith," 
as these bore on their actual life, he develops his high argument 
on the lines already indicated. 

Their situation was so dangerous just because it combined 
inward debility and outward pressure, both tending to the same 
result, viz. practical disuse of the distinctively Christian means 
of grace, as compared with those recognized by Judaism, and 



such conformity to the latter as would make the reproach el 
the Cross to cease (xiii. 13, cf. si. so). This might, indeed, 
relieve the external strain of the contest (AfAr xii. x), winch 
had become well-nigh intolerable to them. But the practical 
surrender of what was distinctive in their new faith meant a 
theoretic surrender of the value once placed on that element, when 
it was matter of a living religious experience far in advance of 
what Judaism had given them (vi. 4 ff., x.* 26-20). This twofold 
infidelity, in thought and deed, God, the " living " God of pro- 
gress from the " shadow " to the substance, would require at 
their hands (x. 50 f., xii. 92-29). for it meant fuming away 
from an appeal that had been known as "heavenly," for some- 
thing inferior and earthly <xii 25); from a call sanctioned by 
the incomparable authority of Him in whom it had reached 
men, a greater than Moses and all media of the Old Covenant, 
even the Son of God. Thus the key of the whole exhortation 
is struck in the opening words, which contrast the piecemeal 
revelation " to the fathers " in the past, with the complete and 
final revelation to themselves in the last stage of the existing 
order of the world's history, in a Son of transcendent dignity 
(L 1 ff., cf. iL x ff., x. 28 f., xii. 18 ff.). This goes to the root 
of their difficulty, ambiguity as to the relation of the old and 
the new elements in Judaeo-Christian piety, to that there was 
constant danger of the old overshadowing the new, since national 
Judaism remained hostile. At a stroke the author separates 
the new from the old, as belonging to a new " covenant " or 
order of God's revealed will. It is a confusion, resulting in loss, 
not in gain, as regards spiritual power, to try to combine the 
two types of piety, as bis readers were more and mote apt to do. 
There is no use, religiously, in falling back upon the old forms, 
in order to avoid the social penalties of a sectarian position 
within Judaism, when the secret of religious " perfection " ot 
maturity (vi x, cf. the frequent use of the kindred verb) lies 
elsewhere. Hence the moral of bis whole argument as to the 
two covenants, though it is formulated only incidentally amid 
final detailed counsels (xiii. 13 f.) is to leave Judaism, and adopt 
a frankly Christian standing, on the same footing with their 
non-Jewish brethren in the local church. For this the time 
was now ripe; and in it lay the true path of safety— eternal 
safety as before God, whatever man might say or do (xiii. 5 U- 

The obscure section, xiii. 9 f., is to be taken as "only a symptom 
of the general retrogression of religious energy " (Juticher), 
and not as bearing directly on the main danger of these 
" Hebrews." The " foods " in question probably refer neither 
to temple sacrifices nor to the Levities] laws of dean and unclean 
foods, nor yet to ascetic scruples (as in Rom. xiv., Col. ii. soil.), 
but rather to some form of the idea, found also among the 
Essenes, that food might so be partaken, of as to have the value 
of a sacrifice (see verse 15 foil.) and thus ensure divine favour. 
Over against this view, which might well grow up among the 
Jews of the Dispersion as a sort of substitute for the possibility 
of offering sacrifices in the Temple — but which would be a lame 
addition to the Christianity of their own former. leaders (xiii. 
7 f.) — the author first points his readers to its refutation from 
experience, and then to the fact that the Christian's " altar " 
or sacrifice {i.e. the supreme sin-offering) is of the kind, which 
the Law itself forbids to be associated with "eating." If 
Christians wish to offer any special sacrifice to God, let it be that 
of grateful praise or deeds of beneficence (15 f J. 

In trying further to define the readers addressed in the epistle, 
one must note the stress laid on suffering as part of the divinely 
appointed discipline of sonship (ii. 10, v. 8, xii. 7 f •), and the way 
in which the analogy in this respect between Jesus, as Messianic 
Son, and those united to Him by faith, is set in relief. He is 
not only the inspiring example for heroic faith in the face of 
opposition due to unbelievers (xii. 3 II.), but also the mediator 
qualified by his very experience of suffering to sympathize with 
His tried followers, and so to afford them moral aid (ii. 17 L, 
v. 8 f., cf. iv. 15). This means that suffering for Christianity, 
at feast in respect of possessions (xiii. 5 f., cf. x. 34) and social 
standing, was imminent for those addressed: and it seems 
as if they were mostly men of wealth and position (xiii. 1-6 



HEBRIDES 



191 



vi 10 f., x. 34), who would feel this tort of trial acutely (cf. 
Jas. i. 10). Such men would alio possess a superior mental 
culture (of. v. xi !.), capable of appreciating the form of an 
epistle " far too learned for the average Christian " (JUlkher), 
yet for which its author apologizes to them as inadequate 
(xiii. 22). It was now long since they themselves had suffered 
seriously for their faith (x. 32 f.); but others had recently been 
harassed even to the point of imprisonment (aiii. 3); and the 
writer's very impatience to hurry to their side implies that the 
crisis was both sudden and urgent. The finished form of the 
epistle's argument is sometimes urged to prove that it was 
not originally an epistle at all, written more or less on the spur 
of the moment, but a literary composition, half treatise and half 
homily, to which its author— as an afterthought— gave the 
suggestion of being a Pauline epistle by adding the personal 
matter in eh. xiii. (so W. Wrede, Das lUerariscke RtUsd des 
Hebrforbriefs, 1906, pp. 70-73). The latter part of this theory 
fails to explain why the Pauline origin was not made more 
obvious, e.g. in an opening address. But even the first part 
of h overlooks the probability that our author was here only 
fusing into a fresh form materials often used before in bis oral 
ministry of Christian instruction. 

Many attempts have been made to identify the home of the 
Hellenistic Christians addressed m this epistle. For Alexandria 
fittle can be urged save a certain strain of "Alexandrine" 
idealism and allegorism, mingling with the more Palestinian 
realism which marks the references to Christ's sufferings, as well 
as the eschatology, and recalling many a passage in Philo. 
But Alexandrinism was a mode 'of thought diffused throughout 
the Eastern Mediterranean, and the divergences from Philo's 
spirit are as notable as the affinities (cf. Milligan, til infra, 203 ff.)< 
For Rome there is more to be said, in view of the references to 
Timothy and to " them of Italy " (xiii. 23 f.); and the theory 
has found many supporters. It usually contemplates a special 
Jewish-Christian house-church (so Zahn), like those which Paul 
salutes at the end of Romans, e.g. that meeting in the house of 
Prisca and Aquila (xvi. 5); and Harnack has gone so far as to 
suggest that they, and especially Prisca, actually wrote our 
epistle. There is, however, really little that points to Rome in 
particular, and a good deal that points away from it. The 
words in xii. 4, " Not yet unto blood have ye resisted," would 
01 suit Rome after the Neronian "bath of blood" in a.d. 64 
(as is usually held), save at a date too late to suit the reference 
to Timothy. Nor does early currency in Rome prove that the 
epistle was written to Rome, any more than do the words " they 
of Italy salute you." This clause must in fact be read in the 
light of the reference to Timothy, which suggests that he had 
been in prison in Rome and was about to return, possibly in the 
writer's company, to the region which was apparently the 
headquarters of both. Now this in Timothy's case, as far as 
we can trace his steps, was Ephesus; and it is natural to ask 
whether it will not suit all the conditions of the problem. It 
suits those of the readers, 1 as analysed above; and it has the 
merit of suggesting to us as author the very person of all those 
described in the New Testament who seems most capable of the 
task, Apollos, the learned Alexandrian (Acts xviii. 14 ff.), 
connected with Ephesus and with Paul and his circle (cf. 1 Cor. 
xvi. 1 2), yet having his own distinctive manner of presenting 
the Gospel (1 Cor. iv. 6). That Apollo* visited Italy at any rate 
once during Paul's imprisonment in Rome is a reasonable 
inference from Titus iii. 13 (see Paul); and if so, ft is quite 
natural that he should be there again about the time of Paul's 
martyrdom. With that event it is again natural to connect 
Timothy's imprisonment, his release from which our author 
records in closing; while the news of Jewish success in Paul's 
case would enhance any tendency among Asian Jewish Christians 
to shirk " boldness " of confession (x. 23, 35, 38 f.), in fear of 

1 i\*. a house-church of upper-claw Jewish Christians, not futly 
in touch with the attitude even of their own past and present 
M leaders " (xiii. 7, 17), as distinct from the local church generally 
(xiii. 24). The Gospel had reached them, as also the writer himself 
|d. Acts xviii. 25). through certain bearers o{ the Lord (ii. 3). not 
fly apostles. 



further aggression from their compatriots. On the chronology 
adopted in the article Paul, this would yield as probable date 
for the epistle a.d. 61-62. The place of writing would be some 
spot in Italy (" they of Italy salute you ") outside Rome, probably 
a port of embarkation for Asia, such as Brundisium. 

Be this as it may, the epistle is of great historical importance, 
as reflecting a crisis inevitable in the development of the Jewish* 
Christian consciousness, when a definite choice between the old and 
the new form of Israel's religion had to be made, both for internal 
and externa] reasons. It seems to follow directly on the situation 
implied by the appeal of James to Israel in dispersion, in view 
of Messiah's winnowing-fan in their midst (i. 1-4, ii. 1-7, v. 1-6, 
and especially v. 7-1 1). It may well be the immediate antecedent 
of that revealed in x Peter, an epistle which perhaps shows 
traces of its influence (eg. in L 2, " sprinkling of the blood of 
Jesus Christ," d. Heb. ix. 13 f., x. as, xM. 24). It is also of 
high interest theologically, as exhibiting, along with affinities 
to several types of New Testament teaching (see Stsphbm), a 
type all its own, and one which has had much influence on 
later Christian thought (cf. Milligan, ut infra, ch. ix.). indeed, 
it shares with Romans the right to be styled " the first treatise 
of ~ 

F. 

st< 
a 
Ci 
in 
us 
T< 

B! 

the west coast of Scotland. They are situated between 55° 35' 
and 58° 30' N. and 5 26' and 8° 40' W. Formerly the term 
was held to embrace not only all the islands off the Scottish 
western coast, including the islands in the Firth of Clyde, bun 
also the peninsula of Kintyre, the Isle of Man and the Isle of 
Rathlin, off the coast of Antrim. They have been broadly 
classified into the Outer Hebrides and the Inner Hebrides, the 
Minch and Little Minch dividing the one group from Ae other. 
Geologically, (bey have also been differentiated as the Gneiss 
Islands and the Trap Islands. The Outer Hebrides being almost 
entirely composed of gneiss the epithet suitably serves them, 
but, strictly speaking, only the more northerly of the Inner 
Hebrides may be distinguished as Trap Islands. The chief 
islands of the Outer Hebrides are Lewis-with-Harris (or Long 
Island), North Uist, Benbecula, South Uist, Barra, the Shiants, 
St Kilda and the Flannan Isles, or Seven Hunters, an unin* 
habited group, about 20 m. N.W. of Gallon Head in Lewis. 
Of these the Lewis portion of Long Island, the Shiants and 
the Flannan belong to the county of Ross and Cromarty, and 
the remainder to Inverness-shire. The total length of this 
group, from Barra Head to the Butt of Lewis, is 130 m., the 
breadth varying from less than 1 m. to 30 m. The Inner Hebrides 
are much more scattered and principally include Skye, Small 
Isles (Canna, Sanday, Rum, Eigg and Muck), Coll, Tyree, 
Lismore, MuD, Ulva, Staff a, Iona, Kerrera, the Slate Islands 
(Seil, Easdale, Lutng, Shuna, Torsay), Colonsay, Oronsay, 
Scarba, Jura, Islay and Gigha. Of these Skye and Small Isles 
belong to Inverness-shire, and the rest to Argyllshire. The 
Hebridean islands exceed 500 in number, of which one-fifth are 
inhabited. Of the inhabited islands xx belong to Ross and 
Cromarty, 47 to Inverness-shire, and 44 to Argyllshire, but of 
this total of 102 islands, one-third have a population of only 
10 souls, or fewer, each. The population of the Hebrides in 
1 90 1 numbered 78,047 (or 28 to the sq. m.), of whom 41.031 
were females, who thus exceeded the males by 10%, and 22,733 
spoke Gaelic only and 47.666 Gaelic and English. The most 
populous island is Lewis-with-Harris (32,160), and next to it 
are Skye (13,883). W*y (6857) and Mull (4334). 

Of the total area of r, 800,000 acres, or 28x2 sq. m., only 
one-ninth is cultivated, most of the surface bring moorland 
and mountain. The annual rainfall, particularly in the Inner 



IQ2 



HEBRON 



Hebrides, is heavy (42*6 In. at Stornoway) but the temperature 
is high, averaging for the year 47° F. Potatoes and turnips 
are the only root crops that succeed, and barley and oats are 
grown in some of the islands. Sheep-farming and cattle-raising 
are carried on very generally, and, with the fisheries, provide 
the main occupation of the inhabitants, though they profit not 
a little from the tourists who flock to many of the islands through- 
out the summer. The principal industries include distilling, 
slate-quarrying and the manufacture of tweeds, tartans and 
other woollens. There are extensive deer forests in Lewis-with* 
Harris, Skye, Mull and Jura. On many of the islands there are 
prehistoric remains and antiquities within the Christian period. 
The more populous islands are in regular communication with 
certain points of the mainland by means of steamers fromGlasgow, 
Oban and Mallaig. The United Free Church has a strong hold 
en the poeple, but in a few of the islands the Roman Catholics 
have a great following. In the larger inhabited islands board 
schools have been established. The islands unite with the 
counties to which they belong in returning members to pa r lia m e n t 
(one for each shire). 

History,— The Hebrides are mentioned by Ptolemy under the 
name of 'E&ovdcu and by Pliny under that of Hcbudcs, the modem 
spelling having, it is -said, originated in a misprint. By the 
Norwegians they were called Sudrcyjar or Southern Islands. 
The Latinized form was Sodorcnses, preserved to modern times 
in the title of the bishop of Sodor and Man. The original 
inhabitants seem to have been of the same Celtic race as those 
settled on the mainland. In the 6th century Scandinavian 
hordes poured in with their northern idolatry and lust of plunder, 
but in time they adopted the language and faith of the islanders; 
Mention is made of incursions of the vikings as early as 793 1 
but the principal immigration took place towards the end of 
the 9th century in the early part of the reign of Harald Fairhair, 
king of Norway, and consisted of persons driven to the Hebrides, 
as well as to Orkney and Shetland, to escape from his tyrannous 
rule. Soon afterwards they began to make incursions against 
their mother-country, and on this account Harald fitted out an 
expedition against them, and* placed Orkney, Shetland, the 
Hebrides* and the Isle of Man under Norwegian government. 
The chief seat of the Norwegian sovereignty was Colonsay. 
About the year 1095 Godred Crovan, king of Dublin, Man and 
the Hebrides, died in Islay. His third son, Olaf, succeeded to 
the government about 1103, and the daughter of Olaf was 
married to Somerled, who became the founder of the dynasty 
known as Lords of the Isles. Many efforts were made by the 
Scottish monarchs to displace the Norwegians. Alexander II. 
led a fleet and army to the shores of Argyllshire in 1249. but be 
died on the island of Kerrera. On the other hand, Haakon IV., 
king of Norway, at once to restrain the independence of his 
jarls and to keep in check the ambition of the Scottish kings, 
set sail in 1263 on a great expedition, which, however, ended 
disastrously at Largs. Magnus, son of Haakon, concluded in 
1266 a peace with the Scots, renouncing all claim to the Hebrides 
and other islands except Orkney and Shetland, and Alexander 
IIL agreed to give him a sum of 4000 merks in four yearly 
payments. It was also stipulated that Margaret, daughter of 
Alexander, should be betrothed to Eric, the son of Magnus, 
whom she married in 1281. She died two years later, leaving 
an only daughter afterwards known as the Maid of Norway. 

The race of Somerled continued to rule the islands, and from 
a younger son of the same potentate sprang the lords of Lome, 
who took the patronymic of Macdougall. John Macdonaldof 
Islay, who died about 1386, was the first to adopt the title of 
Lord of the Isles. He was one of the most potent of the island 
princes, and was married to a daughter of the earl of Stratheara, 
afterwards Robert II. His son, Donald of the Isles, was memor- 
able for his rebellion in support of his claim to the earldom of 
Ross, in which, however, he was unsuccessful. Alexander, son 
of Donald, resumed the hereditary warfare against the Scottish 
crown; and in 1462 a treaty was concluded between Alexander's 
son and successor John and Edward IV. of England, by which 
John, his son John, and his cousin Donald Balloch, became 



bound to assist King Edward and James, earl of Douglas, in 
subduing the kingdom of Scotland. The alliance seems to have 
led to no active operations. In the reign of James V. another 
John of Islay resumed the title of Lord of the Isles, but was 
compelled to surrender the dignity. The glory of the lordship 
of the isles— the insular sovereignty — had departed. From 
the time of Bruce the Campbells had been gaining the ascendancy 
in Argyll. The Macleans, Macnaughtons, Maclachlans, Laments, 
and other ancient races had sunk before this favoured family. 
The lordship of Lome was wrested from the Macdougalls by 
Robert Bruce, and their extensive possessions, with Dunstaffnage 
Castle, bestowed on the king's relative, Stewart, and his de- 
scendants, afterwards lords of Lome. The Macdonalds of Sleat, 
the direct representatives of Somerled, though driven from 
Islay and deprived of supreme power by James V., still kept a 
sort of insular state in Skye. There were also the Macdonalds 
of Clanranald and Glengarry (descendants of Somerled), with 
the powerful houses of Madeod of Dun vegan and Madeodof 
Harris, M'Neill of Barra and Maclean of Mull. Sanguinary 
feuds continued throughout the x6th and 17th centuries among 
these rival clans and their dependent tribes, and the turbulent 
spirit was not subdued till a comparatively recent period. James 
VI. made an abortive endeavour to colonize Lewis. William HI. 
and Queen Anne attempted to subsidize the chiefs in order to 
preserve tranquillity, but the wars of Montrose and Dundee, and 
the Jacobite insurrections of 1715 and 1745, showed how futile 
were all such efforts. It was not till 1748, when a decisive 
blow was struck at the power of the chiefs by the abolition of 
heritable jurisdictions, and the appointment of sheriffs in the 
different districts, that the arts of peace and social improvement 
made way in these remote regions. The change was great, and 
at first not unmixed with evil. A new system of management 
and high rents were imposed, in consequence of which numbers 
of the tacksmen, or large tenants, emigrated to North America* 
The exodus continued for many years. Sheep-farming on a large 
scale was next introduced, and the crofters were thrust into 
villages or barren corners of the land. The result was that, 
despite the numbers who entered the army or emigrated to 
Canada, the standard of civilization sank lower, and the popula- 
tion multiplied in the islands. The people came to subsist 
almost entirely on potatoes and herrings; and in 1S46, when 
the potato blight began its ravages, nearly universal destitution 
ensued — embracing, over the islands generally, 70% of the 
inhabitants. Temporary relief was administered in the shape 
of employment on roads and other works; and an emigration 
fund being raised, from 4000 to 5000 of the people in the most 
crowded districts were removed to Australia. Matters, however, 
were not really mended, and in 1884 a royal commission reported 
upon the condition of the crofters of the islands and mainland. 
As a result of their inquiry the Crofters' Holdings Act was passed 
in 1886, and in the course of a few years some improvement was 
evident and has since been sustained. 



Jt 
H 
Si 
Si 
h 

t 

T 

JaunifHiC *» tniKHxam, vviii\.u, tvii.ii iwi ntu nviw, iiuiii otk. «.».j» u* 

the British Museum by Professor P. A. Munch of Christiama (i860). 
HEBRON (mod. Khulil er-Rahmin, i.e. " the friend of the 
Merciful One " — an allusion to Abraham), a city of Palestine 
some 20 m. S. by S. W . of Jerusalem. The city, which lies 3040 ft. 
above the sea, is of extreme antiquity (see Num. xiii. 23,£v,6 
Josephus, War, iv. 9, 7) and until taken by the Calebites (Josh.xv. 
13) bore the name Kirjatn-Arba. Biblical traditions connect it 
closely with the patriarch Abraham and make it a " city of 
refuge." The town figures prominently under David as the 
headquarters of his early rule, the scene of Abner*s murder 



HECATAEUS OF ABBEKA— HECATE 



*93 



and the centre of Absalom's rebellion. In later days the Edouv 

► fees beM it for a time, but Judas Maccsbaeus recovered it.. 

t It was destroyed in the great war under Vespasian. In A.D. 1167 

% Hebron became the see of a Latin bishop, and it was taken in 

5 a 187 by Saladin. In 1854 it joined the rebellion against Ibrahim 
1 Pasba, who took the town and pillaged it. "Modern Hebron rises 

6 on the east slope of a shallow valley— a long narrow town of 
k stone houses, the flat roofs having small stone domes. The 
i main quarter is about 700 yds. long, and two smaller groups of 
'1 houses exist north and south of this. The hill behind is terraced, 
1 and luxuriant vineyards and fruit plantations surround the place, 

1 which is well watered on the north by three principal springs, 
: including the Well Sirab, now *Ain Stra (2 Sam. iii. a6). Three 
■; conspicuous minarets rise, two from the Haram, the other in 

the north quarter. The population (10,000 ) Includes Moslems 

u and about 500 Jews. The Bedouins bring wool and camel's 

>: hair to the market ; and glass bracelets, lamps and leather water- 

;. skins are manufactured in the town. The most conspicuous 

l- building is the Haram built over the supposed site of the cave of 

* Machpelah. It is an enclosure measuring 11a ft. east and west 

t by 108 north and south, surrounded with high rampart walls of 

e masonry- simihar in size and dressing to that of the Jerusalem 
Haram walls. These ramparts are ascribed by architectural 
authorities to the Herodlan period. The interior area is partly 

z occupied by a 12th-century Gothic church, and contains six 

L modern cenotaphs of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Sarah, Rebecca 

y and Leah. The cave beneath the platform has probably not 

E been entered for at least 600 years. The numerous traditional 

, sites now shown round Hebron are traceable generally to medieval 

2 legendary topography; they include the Oak of Mamre (Gen. xiii. 
~ 18 R.V.) which has at various times been shown in different 
J positions from | to a m. from the town. 

1 There are a British medical mission, a German Protestant 

r mission with church and schools, and, near Abraham's Oak, a 

,j Russian mission. Since 1880 several notices of the Haram, 

" within which are the tombs of the Patriarchs, have appeared. 

See C. R. Conder, Pal. Exp. Fund, Memoirs, lit. 353, &c. ; Riant, 
Archives de Portent latm, H. 411. &c; Dalton and Chaplin, P.E.F. 

- Quarterly Statement (1897); Goldxiher, " Das Patriarchcngrab in 
& Hebron/* «* ZeUschrtft d. £>*. Pal, Vereins, xviL (R. A. S. MO 

u i HECATAEUS OP ABDERA (or of Teos), Greek historian and 

Sceptic philosopher, flourished in the- 4th century B.C. He 
c accompanied- Ptolemy I. Soter in an expedition to Syria, and 

•ailed up the Nile with him as far as Thebes (Diogenes Laertius 
L ix. 61). The result of his travels was set down by him in two 

? works— Alyvrrtaxk and Hep! TttpflopiuP, which, were used 

- : by Diodorus Siculus. * According to Suidas, he also wrote a 

** treatise on the poetry of Hesiod and Homer. Regarding his 

- authorship of a work on the Jews (utilised by Josephus in Contra 

- Apionem), it is conjectured that portions of the Myvrrtaxb 
1 were revised by a Hellenistic Jew from his point of view and 
~ published as a special work. 

Fragments in C W. Mailer's Pragma** mistoricomM Craecorum. 

' HECATAEUS OF MILETUS (6th-sth century. B.C.), Greek 

historian, son of Hegesander, flourished during the time of the 

■ Persian invasion. After having travelled extensively, he settled 

la his native city, where he occupied a high position, and devoted 
his time to the composition of geographical and historical works. 
When Aristagoras held a council of the leading Ionian* at 

J Miletus, to organize a revolt against the Persian rule,. Hecataeus 

in vain tried to dissuade his countrymen from the undertaking 
(Herodotus v. 36, 125). In 404, when the defeated lonians were 
obliged to sue for terms, he was one of the ambassadors to the 
Persian satrap Artaphernes, whom he persuaded to restore the 
constitution of the Ionic cities (Died. Sic x. 2 5). He is by some 
credited with a work entitled rijs mplooot ("Travels round the 
Earth "), in two books, one on Europe, the other on Asia, in 
which were described the countries and inhabitants of the 

I* known world, the account of Egypt being especially com- 

prehensive; the descriptive matter was accompanied by a 
map, based upon Ansximander's map of the earth, which he 

•' corrected and enlaiged. The authenticity of the work is, however, 



strongly attacked by J. Wells in the Journal of H#emc Staffer, 
xx£r. pt. L xooo. The only certainly genuine work of Hecataeus 
was the r*rtt)Xoylai or 'Lrropku, a systematic account of the 
traditions and mythology of the Greeks. He was probably the 
first to attempt a serious prose history and to employ critical 
method to distinguish myth from historical fact, though he 
accepts Homer and the other poets as trustworthy authority. 
Herodotus, though he once at least controverts his statements, is 
indebted to Hecataeus not only for facts, but also in regard of 
method and general scheme, but the extent of the debt depends 
on the genuineness of the r$s rtfttooo*. 

See fragment* in C W. Mflller, Pragmenta historteorum GraecorumX ; 
H. Bcrger, Ceschichte der wissenschaftlichen Erdiunde der Griechtn 
(1903); E. H. Bunbury, History of Ancient Geography, i.; W. Mure, 
History of Greek Literature, iv.; especially 1. V. Prajfek, Hehataios 
als Herodots Quelle tur Ceschichte Vorderastens. Beitr&ge tur altem 
Grukkhte (Klio), iv. 193 seq. (1904), and J. Wells la Journ. Hett* 
Stud., as above. 

HECATE (Gr. 'ExariJ, " she who works from afar m ), a goddess 
in Greek mythology. According to the generally accepted view, 
she is of Hellenic origin, but Faraell regards her as a foreign 
importation from Thrace, the home of Bendis, with whom Hecate 
has many points in common. She is not mentioned in the Iliad 
or the Odyssey, but in Hesiod (Thsogony, 409) she is the daughter 
of the Titan Perses and Asterie, in a passage which may be a 
later interpolation by the Orphists (for other genealogies see 
Steuding in Roscher r s Lexikon). She is there represented as a 
mighty goddess, having power over heaven, earth and sea; 
hence she is the bestowcr of wealth and all the blessings of daily 
life. The range of her influence is most varied, extending to war, 
athletic games, the tending of cattle, hunting, the assembly of 
the people and the law-courts. Hecate' is frequently identified 
with Artemis, an identification usually justified by the assump- 
tion that both were moon-goddesses. Faraell, who regards 
Artemis as originally an earth-goddess, while recognizing a 
"genuine lunar element" in Hecate from the 5th century, 
considers her a chtbonian rather than a lunar divinity (see also 
Warr in Classical Renew, ix. 300). He is of opinion that neither 
borrowed much from, nor exercised much influence on, the cult 
and character of the other. 

Hecate is the chief goddess who presides over magic arts and 
spells, and in this connexion she is the mother of the sorceresses 
Circe and Medea. She is constantly invoked, in the well-known 
idyll (ii.) of Theocritus, in the incantation to bring back a woman's 
faithless lover. As a chthonian power, she is worshipped at the 
Samothradan mysteries, and is closely connected with Demeter. 
Alone of the gods besides Helios, she witnessed the abduction of 
Persephone, and, torch in hand (a natural symbol for the moon's 
light, but see Farnell), assisted Demeter in her search for her 
daughter. On moonlight nights she is seen at the cross-roads 
(hence her name rpcotfrit, Lat. Trivia) accompanied by the 
dogs of the Styx and crowds of the dead. Here, on the last day 
of the month, eggs and fish were offered to her. Black puppies 
and she-lambs (black victims being offered to chthonian deities) 
were also sacrificed (Schol. on Theocritus ii. 12). Pillars 
like the Hermae, called Hecataea, stood, especially in Athens, 
at cross-roads and doorways, perhaps to keep away the spirits 
of evil. Like Artemis, Hecate is also a goddess of fertility, 
presiding especially over the birth and the youth of wfld animals, 
and over human birth and marriage. She also attends when the 
soul leaves the body at death, and is found near graves, and on 
the hearth, where the master of the house was formerly buried. 
It is to be noted that Hecate plays little or no part in mythological 
legend. Her worship seems to have flourished especially in the 
wilder parts of Greece, such as Samothrace and Thessaly, in 
Carta and on the coasts of Asia Minor. In Greece proper k 
prevailed on the east coast and especially in Aegina, where 
her aid was invoked against madness. 

In older times Hecate is represented as single-formed, clad in 

1 J. B. Bury, in Classical Review, ill p. 416, suggests that the name 
means " dog," against which see J. H. Vince, %b. iv. p. 47. G. C. 
Warr, ib. ix. 390, takes the Hesiodic Hecate to be a moon-goddess, 
daughter of the sun-god Pemeus. 



19+ 



HECATOMB— HECKER 



a loiig robe, hoidhig burning torches; later slit becomes triformis, 
" triple-formed," with throe bodies standing back to bach—- 
corresponding, according to those who regard her as a moon- 
goddess, to the new, the full and the waning moon. In her six 
hands are torches, sometimes a snake, a key (as wardress of the 
lower world), a whip or a dagger; her favourite animal was 
the dog, which was sacrificed to her^-ao indication of her non- 
Hellenic origin, since this animal very rarely fills this part in 
genuine Greek ritual 

See H. Steudiog in Roscher*a Lexikott, where the functions of 
Hecate are systematically derived from the conception of her as a 
moon-goddess; L. R. Farnell, Cults oj the Creek States, ii., where this 
view is examined; P. Paris in Darembcrg and Saglio's Dictionuair* 
des antiquitis; O. Cruppe, Griuhische liythologie, u. (1906) p. 1*88. 

HECATOMB (Gr. iK&rhnfh from ixarlr, a hundred, and 
pout, an ox), originally the sacrifice of a hundred oxen in the 
religious ceremonies of the Greeks and Romans; later a large 
number of any kind of animals devoted for sacrifice. Figura- 
tively, "hecatomb" is used to describe the sacrifice or destruc- 
tion by fire, tempest, disease or the sword of any large number 
of persons or animals; and also of the wholesale destruction of 
inanimate objects, and even of mental and moral attributes. 

HECATO OP RHODES, Greek Stoic philosopher and #sdple 
of Panactius (Cicero, De officiis, iii. 15). Nothing else is known 
of his life, but it is clear that he was eminent amongst the Stoics 
of the period. He was a voluminous writer, but nothing remains. 
A list Is preserved by Diogenes, who mentions works on Duly, 
Good, Virtues, Ends. The first, dedicated to Tubero, is eulogized 
by Cicero in the De ojficiis, and Seneca refers to him frequently 
in the De beneficiis. According to Diogenes Laertius, he divided 
the virtues into two kinds, those founded on scientific intellectual 
principles (i.e. wisdom and justice), and those which have no 
such basis (e.g. temperance and the resultant health and vigour). 
Cicero shows that he was much interested in casuistical questions, 
as, for example, whether a good man who had received a coin 
which he knew to be bad was justified in passing it on to another. 
On the whole, his moral attitude is cynical, and he is inclined 
to regard self-interest as the best criterion. This he modifies 
by explaining that self-interest is based on the relationships of 
life: a man needs money for the sake of his children, his friends 
and the state whose general prosperity depends on the wealth 
of its citizens. Like the earlier Stoics, Clcanthes and Chrysippus, 
he held that virtue may be taught. (See Stoics and Panactius.) 

HECKER, FRIEDRICH FRANZ KARL (1811-1881), German 
revolutionist, was born at Eichtershcim In the Palatinate on 
the 28th of September 181 1, his father being a revenue official. 
He studied law with the intention of becoming an advocate, 
but soon became absorbed in politics. On entering the Second 
Chamber of Baden in 1842, he at once began to take part m the 
opposition against the government, which assumed a more and 
more openly Radical character, and in the course of which his 
talents as an agitator and his personal charm won him wide 
popularity and influence. A speech, denouncing the projected 
incorporation of Schlcswig and Holstein with Denmark, delivered 
fn the Chamber of Baden on the 6th of February. 1845, spread his 
fame beyond the limits of his own state, and his popularity was 
increased by his expulsion from Prussia on the occasion of a 
journey to Stettin. After the death of his more moderate- 
minded friend Adolf Sander (March 9th, 1845), Hecker's tone 
towards the government became more and more bitter. In 
spite cf the shallowness and his culture and his extremely weak 
character, he enjoyed an ever-increasing popularity. Even before 
the outbreak of the revolution he included Socialistic claims 
In his programme. In 1847 he was temporarily occupied with 
Ideas of emigration, and with this, object made a journey to 
Algiers, but returned to Baden and resumed his former position 
as the Radical champion of popular rights, later becoming 
president of the Volksveretn, where he was destined to fall still 
further under the influence of the agitator Gustav von Strove. 
Id conjunction with Strove he drew up the Radical programme 
carried at the great Liberal meeting held at Orenburg on the 
12th of September 1847 (entitled " Thirteen Claims put forward 



by the Foopie of Badea"). In addition t* the Orenburg nso» 
gramme, the SlnrmpetitUn of the 1st of March 1848 attempted 
to extort from the government the most far-reaching concessions. 
But it was in vain that on becoming a deputy Hecker en- 
deavoured to carry out its impracticable provision*. He bad 
to yield to the more moderate majority, but on this account was 
driven still further towards the Left. The proof lies in the new 
Orenburg demands of the 19th of March, and la the resolution 
moved by Hecker in the preliminary parliament of Frankfort that 
Germany should be declared a republic But neither in Baden 
nor Frankfort did he at any time gain his point. 

This'doubk failure, combined with various energetic measures 
of the government, which were indirectly aimed at him (cj. the 
arrest of theeditor of the Consumer SeMaU, a friend of Hecker's, 
in Karlsruhe station on the 8th of April), inspired Hecker with 
the idea of an armed rising under pretext of the foundation of 
the German republic. The oth to the nth of April was secretly 
spent in preliminaries. On the ixth of April Hecker and Strove 
sent a proclamation to the inhabitants of the Seekrtis and of the 
Black Forest " to summon the people who can bear arms to 
Donaueschingen at mid-day on the 14th, with arms, ammunition 
and provisions for six days." They expected 70,000 men, but 
only a few thousand appeared. The grand-ducal government 
of the Seekrcis was dissolved, and Hecker gradaally gained 
reinforcements. But friendly advisers also joined htm, pointing 
out the risks of his undertaking. Hecker, however, was not at 
all ready to listen to them; on the contrary, he added to violence 
an absurd defiance, and offered an amnesty to the German princes 
on condition of thek retiring within fourteen days into private 
life. The troops of Baden and Hesse marched against him, 
under the command of General Friedrich von Gagcra, and on 
the 20th of April they met near Kandern, where Gagern was 
killed, it is true, but Hecker was completely defeated. 

Like many of the revolutionaries of that period, Hecker retired 
to Switzerland. He was, it is true, again elected to the Chamber 
of Baden by the circle of Thiengen^ but the government, no 
longer willing to respect his immunity as a deputy, refused its 
ratification. On this account Hecker resolved in September 
1848 to emigrate to North America, and obtained possession of 
a farm near Belleville in the state of Illinois. 

During the second rising in Baden in the spring of 1849 be 
again made efforts to obtain a footing in his own state, but with- 
out success. He only came as far as Slrassburg, but had to 
retreat before the victories of the Prussian troops over the Baden 
insurgents. 

, On his return to America he won some distraction during the 
Civil War as colonel of a regiment which he had himself got 
together on the Federal side in i86r and 1864. It was with 
great joy that he heard of the union of Germany brought about 
by the victory over France in 1870-71. It was then that 
he made his famous festival speech at St Louis, in which be 
gave an animated expression to the enthusiasm of the German 
Americans for their newtyuonited fatherland. He received a 
less favourable impression during a jourttcy be made in Germany 
in 1873. He died at St Louis on the 24th of March 1881. 

Hecker was always very much beloved of all the German 
democrats. The song and the hat named after him (the latter 
a broad slouch hat with a feather) became famous as the symbols 
of the middle-classes In revolt. In America, too, he had won 
great esteem, not only On political grounds but also for his 
personal qualities. 

See F. Hecker, Dk Erhebunt des Vclkes in Baden far die deutstU 
RepuUik (Baden, 1848)] F. Hecker, Redtn mnd VotUsnmmen (Neer- 
stadt a. d. H., 18/2); F. v. Weech, Badiscke Bio^rapkUruw. (1891): 
L. Mathy, A us dem Nacklasse von K. Matty t Bruje aus den JaMren 



18*6-1848 (Leipzig, 1898). 



(J.Hm.) 



HECKER, ISAAC THOMAS (1810-1888), American Roman 
Catholic priest, the founder of the "Paulist Fathers/' was 
born in New York City, of German immigrant parents, on the 
18th of December 1819. When barely twelve years of age, 
he had to go to work* and pushed a baker's cart for his elder 
brothers, who had a bakery in Rutgers Street Bat be studied 



tfECfcMONDWIKfc-L-HECfOk 



*9$ 



at every possible opportunity, becoming Immersed in Kant's 
CVstipf* a/ /V« /feownt tnd while still a lad took part in certain 
politico-social movements which aimed at the elevation of the 
working man: It was at this juncture that he met Orestes 
Brownson, who exercised a marked influence over him. Isaac 
was deeply religious, a characteristic for which he gave much 
credit to his prayerful mother, and remained so amid all the 
reading and agitating in which he engaged. Having grown 
into young manhood, he joined the Brook Farm movement, 
and in that colony he tarried some six months. Shortly after 
leaving it (in 1844) ne was baptized into the Roman Catholic 
Church by Bishop McCloskey of New York. One year later 
he was entered in the novitiate of the Redcmptorists in Belgium, 
and there he cultivated to a high degree the spirit of lofty 
mystical piety which marked him through life. 

Ordained a priest in London by Wiseman in 1849, he returned 
to America, and worked until 1857 as a Redemptorist missionary. 
With all his mysticism, Isaac Heckcr bad the wide-awake mind 
of the typical American, and he perceived that the missionary 
activity of the Catholic Church in the United States must 
remain to a large extent ineffective unless it adopted methods 
suited to the country and the age. In this he had the sympathy 
of four fellow Redcmptorists, who like himself were of American 
birth and converts from Protestantism. Acting as their agent, 
and with the consent of his local superiors, Heckcr went to Rome 
to beg of the Rector Major of his Order that a Redemptorist 
novitiate might be opened in the United States, in order thus to 
attract American youths to the missionary life. In furtherance 
of this request, he took with him the strong approval of some 
members of the American hierarchy. The Rector Major, instead 
of listening to Father Hecker, expelled him from the Order for 
having made the journey to Rome without sufficient authoriza- 
tion. Theoutcome of the trouble was that Hecker and the other 
four American Redcmptorists were permitted by Pius IX. in 1858 
to form the separate religious community of the Paulists. Hecker 
trained and governed this community in spiritual exercises and 
mission-preaching until his death in New York City, after 
seventeen years of suffering, on the 92nd of December x888. 
He founded and was the director of the Catholic Publication 
Society, was the founder, and from 1865 until his death the 
editor, of the Catholic World, -and wrote Questions of 4ke Soul 
(1855), Aspirations of Nature (1857), Catholicity in the United 
States (1879) and The Church and the Age (1888). 

The name of Hecker w closely associated with that of " American- 
Ism." To understand this movement it is necessary to comprehend 
the tendency of events in Catholic Europe rather than in America 
Itself. The steady decline in the power and influence of French 
Catholicism since shortly after 1870 is the most remarkable feature 
of the history of the Third Republic Not only did the French State 
pass laws bearing more and more stringently on the Church, under 
each succeeding ministry, but the bulk of the people acquiesced in the 
policy of its legislators. The clergy, if not Catholicism, was rapidly 
losing its hold over the once Catholic nation. Observing this fact, 
and encouraged by the action of Leo XIII., who, in ~ " 'on 

French Catholics loyally to accept the Republic, a be >us 

young French priests set themselves to check the d ey 

studied the Causes which produced it. These causes, t cd 

to be, first, the clergy's predominant sympathy with tl *s, 

and in its undisguised hostility to the Republic; he 

Church's aloofness from modern men, methods and he 

progressive party believed that there was too little of 

individual, independent character, white too much 1 lid 

upon what might be called the mechanical or routine 1 >n. 

The party perceived, too, that Catholicism was m—....* «.—..*ly 
any use of . modern aggressive modes of propaganda ; that, for 
example, the Church took but an insignificant part in social move- 
ments, in the organization of clubs for social study, in the establishing 
of settlements and similar philanthropic endeavour. Lack of 
adaptability to modern needs e xpr es ses in short the deficiencies in 
Catholicism which these men endeavoured to correct. They began 
a domestic apostolate which had for one of its rallying cries, "Alums 
au pxuplt,' — " Let us go to the people." They agitated for the 
inauguration of social works, for a more intimate mingling of priests 
with the people, and for general cultivation of personal initiative, 
both in cfergy and in laity. 

Not unnaturally, they looked for inspiration to America. There 
they saw a vigorous Church among a free people, with priests 
publicly respected, and with a note of aggressive seal in every 



project of Cathobc enterprise. From the American priesthood* 
Father Hecker stood out conspicuous for sturdy courage, deep 
interior piety, an assertive self-initiative and immense love of modern 
times and modern liberty. So they took Father Hecker for a kind 
of patron saint. His biography (New York, 1801 ), written in English 
by the Paulist Father Elliott, was translated into French (1897), 
and speedily became the book of the hour. Under the inspiration 
of Father Becker's life and character, the more spirited section of 
the French clergy undertook the task of persuading their fellow- 
priests loyally to accept the actual political establishment, and then, 
breaking out of their isolation, to put themselves tn touch with the 
intellectual life of the country, and take an active part in the work of 
social amelioration. 

In 1807 the movement received an impetus— and a warning — 
when Mgr O'Connell, former Rector of the American College in 
Rome, spoke on behalf of Father Hecker'* ideas at the Catholic 
Congress in Friburg. The conservatives took alarm at what they 
considered to be symptoms of pernicious modernism or " Liberalism. ' 

Di 
di 



HBCKM0NDW1KE, an urban district tn the Spcn Valley 
parliamentary division of the West Riding of Yorkshire, England, 
8 m. S.S.E. of Bradford, on the Lancashire & Yorkshire, Great 
Northern, and London & Nortb-Westem Tairways. Pop. (xoot), 
04 50. Like the town of Dewsbury, on the south-east, it is an 
important centre of the blanket and carpet manufactures, and 
there are also machine works, dye works and iron foundries. 
Coal is extensivery wrought in the vicinity. 

HECTOR, m Greek mythology, son of Priam and Hecuba, the 
husband of Andromache. Like Paris and other Trojans, he had 
an Oriental name, Darius. In Homer he is represented as an 
ideal warrior, the champion of the Trojans and the mainstay of 
the city. His character is drawn in most favourable colours as 
a good son, a loving husband and father, and a trusty friend. 
His leave-taking of Andromache in the sixth book of the Iliad, 
and his departure to meet Achilles for the last tfme, are most 
touchingly described. He is an especial favourite of Apollo; 
and later poets even describe riim as son of that god. His chief 
exploits during the war Were his defenceof the wounded Sarpedon, 
his fight with Ajax, son of Telamon (Ms particular enemy), and 
the storming of the Greek ramparts. When Achilles, enraged 
with Agamemnon, deserted the Greeks, Hector drove them back 
to their ships, which he almost succeeded in burning. Patrodus, 
the friend of. Achilles, who came to the help of the Greeks, was 
slain by Hector with the help of Apollo. Then Achilles, to 
revenge his friend's death, returned to the war, slew Hector^ 
dragged his body behind his chariot to the camp, and afterwards 
round the tomb of Patrodus. Aphrodite and Apollo preserved 



*9* 



HECUBA— HEDGES AND FENCES 



it from corruption and mutilation. Priam, guarded by Hermes, 
Went to Achilles and prevailed on him to give back the body, 
which was buried with great honour. Hector was afterwards 
worshipped in the Troad by the Boeotian tribe Gephyraei, who 
offered sacrifices at his grave. 

- HBCUBA (Gr. 'E«d0ij), wife of Priam, daughter of the Phrygian 
king Dymas (or of Cisscus, or of the river-god Sangarius). 
According to Homer she was the mother of nineteen of Priam's 
fifty sons. When Troy was captured and Priam slain, she was 
made prisoner by the Greeks. Her fate is told in various ways, 
most of which connect her with the promontory Cynossema, 
on the Thracian shore of the Hellespont. According to Euripides 
(in the Hecuba), her youngest son Polydorus had been placed 
during the siege of Troy under the care of Polymestor, king of 
Thrace. When the Greeks reached the Thracian Chersonese 
on their way home Hecuba discovered that ber son had been 
murdered, and in revenge put out the eyes of Polymestor and 
murdered his two sons. She was acquitted by Agamemnon; 
but, as Polymestor foretold, she was turned into a dog, and her 
grave became a mark for ships (Ovid, Melam. xiii. 390-575; 
Juvenal x. 271 and Mayor's note). According to another story, 
she fell to the lot of Odysseus, as a slave, and in despair threw 
herself into the Hellespont; or, she used such insulting language 
towards her captors that they put her to death (Dictys Cretensis 
v. 13. 16). It is obvious from the tales of Hecuba's trans- 
formation and death that she is a form of some goddess 
to whom dogs were sacred; and the analogy with Scylla is 
Striking. 

' HEDA, WlLLEM CLAASZ (c. 1504-*. 1670), Dutch painter, 
©orn at Haarlem, was one of the earliest Dutchmen who devoted 
himself exclusively to the painting of still life. He was the 
contemporary and comrade of Dirk Hals, with whom he had 
in common pictorial touch and technical execution. But Heda 
was more careful and finished than Hals, and showed consider- 
able skill and not a little taste in arranging and colouring 
chased cups and beakers and tankards of precious and inferior 
metals. Nothing is so appetizing as his " luncheon," with rare 
comestibles set out upon rich plate, oysters— seldom without 
the cut lemon— bread, champagne, olives and pastry. Even 
the commoner " refection " is also not without charm, as it 
comprises a cut ham, bread, walnuts and beer. One of Heda's 
early masterpieces, dated 1623, in the Munich Pihakothek is 
as homely as a later one of 1651 in the Liechtenstein Gallery at 
Vienna. A more luxurious repast is a " Luncheon in the Augsburg 
Gallery," dated 1644. Most of Heda's pictures are on the 
European continent, notably in the galleries of Paris, Parma, 
Ghent, Darmstadt, Gotha, Munich and Vienna. He was a 
man of repute in his native city, and filled all the offices of dignity 
and trust in the gild of Haarlem. He seems to have had con- 
siderable influence in forming the younger Franz Hals. 

HEDDLE, MATTHEW FORSTER (1838-1807), Scottish 
mineralogist, was born at Hoy in Orkney on the 28th of April 
2828. After receiving his early education at the Edinburgh 
academy, he entered as a medical student at the university in 
that city, and subsequently studied chemistry and mineralogy 
at Klausthal and Freiburg. In 1851 he took his degree of M.D. 
at Edinburgh, and for about five years practised there. Medical 
work, however, possessed for him little attraction; he became 
assistant to Prof. Connell, who held the .chair of chemistry at 
St Andrews, and in 1862 succeeded him as professor. This post 
he held until in 1880 he was invited to report on some gold mines 
in South Africa. On his return he devoted himself with great 
assiduity to mineralogy, and formed one of the finest collections 
by means of personal exploration in almost every part of Scotland. 
His specimens are now in the Royal Scottish Museum at 
Edinburgh. It had been hisintention to publish a comprehensive 
work on the mineralogy of Scotland. This he did not live to 
complete, but the MSS. fell into able hands, and The Mineralogy 
of Scotland, \a 2 vols,, edited by J. G. Goodchild, was issued 
in 1 001. Heddlc was one of the founders of the Mineralogical 
Society, and he contributed many articles on Scottish minerals, 
and on the geology of the northern parts of Scotland, to the 



Mineralogical Magatine t as well as to the Transaction* of the 
Royal Society of Edinburgh, He died on the 19th of November 

See Dr Heddte and his Geological Work (with portrait), by J. G. 
Goodchild, Trans. Edin. Geol. Sac. (1898) vii. 317. 

HEDGEHOG, or Urchin, a member of the mammalian order 
Insectivora, remarkable for its dentition, its armature of spines 
and its short tail. The upper jaw is longer than the lower, the 
snout is long and flexible, with the nostrils narrow, and the 
claws are long but weak. - The animal is about xo in. long, 
its eyes are small, and the lower surface covered with hairs of 
the ordinary character. The brain is remarkable for its low 
development, the cerebral hemispheres being small, and marked 
with but one groove, and that a shallow one, on each side. The 
hedgehog has the power of rolling itself up into a ball, from 
which the spines stand out in every direction. The spines are 
sharp, hard and elastic, and form so efficient a defence that 
there are few animals able to effect a successful attack on this 
creature. The moment it is touched, or even hears the report of 
a gun, it rolls itself up by the action of the muscles beneath 
the skin, while this contraction effects the erection of the spines. 
The most important muscle is the orbicularis panniculi, which 
extends over the anterior region of the skull, as far down the body 



The Hedgehog {Erinaceus europaeus), 

as the ventral hairy region, and on to the tail, but three other 
muscles aid in the contraction. 

Though insectivorous, the hedgehog is reported to have a 
liking for mice, while frogs and toads, as well as plants and fruits, 
all seem to be acceptable. It will also eat snakes, and its fond- 
ness for eggs has caused it to meet with the enmity of game- 
preservers; and there is no doubt it occasionally attacks leverets 
and game-chicks. In a state of nature it does not emerge from 
its retreat during daylight, unless urged by hunger or by the 
necessities of its young. During winter it passes into a state 
of hibernation, when its temperature falls considerably; having 
provided itself with a nest of dry leaves, it is well protected 
from the influences of the rain, and rolling itself up, remains 
undisturbed till warmer weather returns. In July or August 
the female brings forth four to eight young, or, according to 
others, two to four at a somewhat earlier period; at birth the 
spines, which in the adult are black in the middle, are white 
and soft, but soon harden, though they do not attain their 
full size until the succeeding spring. 

The hedgehog, which is known scientifically as Erinaceus 
europaeus, and is the type of the family Erinoceidar, is found 
in woods and gardens, and extends over nearly the whole of 
Europe; and has been found at 6000 to 8000 ft. above the level 
of the sea. The adult is provided with thirty-six teeth; in the 
upper jaw are 6 incisors, a canines and 12 cheek-teeth, and in 
the lower jaw 4 incisors, 2 canines and 10 cheek-teeth. The 
genus is represented by about a score of species, ranging over 
Europe, Asia, except the Malay countries, and Africa. (R. L.*) 

HEDGES AND FENCES. The object of the hedge* or fence 
(abbreviation of " defence ") is to mark a boundary or to enclose 

1 Hedge is a Teutonic word, cf. Dutch keg, Ger. Hecke; the root, 
appears in other English words, e.g. " haw," as in " hawthorn." 



H£DONr-«EDCNISM 



197 



an mm of land on- wfiich stock it kept. The hedge, ia • row 
of bushes or small iron, forms a characteristic 'feature oi the 
scenery of England, especially in the midlands and south; it is 
more rarely found in other countries. Its disadvantages as a 
fence arc that it is not portable, that it requires cutting and 
training while young, that it harbours weeds and vermin and 
that it occupies together with the ditch which usually borders 
it a considerable space of ground, the margins of which cannot 
be cultivated. For these reasons it is to some extent superseded 
by the fence proper, especially where shelter for cattle is. not 
required. In Great Britain the hawthorn (?.?.) is by far the most 
important of hedge plants. Holly resembles the hawthorn 
in its amenability to pruning and in its prickly nature and 
closeness of growth , which make it an effective barrier to, and 
shelter for, slock, but it is less hardy and more slow-growing 
than the hawthorn. Hornbeam, beech, myrobalan or cherry 
plum and blackthorn also have their advantages, hornbeam 
being proof against great exposare, blackthorn thriving on poor 
laud and possessing great impenetrability and so on. Box, yew, 
privet and many other plants are used for ornamental "hedging; 
in the United States the osage orange and honey locust are 
favourite hedge plants. As fences, wooden posts and rails and 
Stone walls may be conveniently used in districts where the 
tequiaite materials are plentiful. But the most modern form 
of fence is formed of wire strands either smooth or barbed (see 
Barbed Wise), strained between iron standard* or wooden or 
concrete post*. The wire may be interwoven with vertical strands 
or, it necessary, may be kept apart by iron droppers between the 
Standards. Fences of a lighter description are machine-made 
with pickets of split chestnut or other wood closely set, woven 
with a few strands of wire; they are braced by posts at intervals. 
From the fact that tramps and vagabonds frequently steep 
Under hedges the word has come to be used as a term of contempt, 
as in " hedge-priest," an inferior and illiterate kind of parson 
at one time existing in England and Ireland, and in" hedge- 
school," a low ckss school held in the open air, formerly very 
common in Ireland. From the sense of " hedge " as an enclosure 
or barrier the verb "to hedge 1 ' means to enclose, to form a 
barrier or defence, to bound or limit. As a sporting term 
die word is used in betting to mean protection from loss, by 
betting on both sides, by "laving off " on one side, after laying 
odds on arjotber< or vice versa. The word was early used 
figuratively in the sense of to avoid committing oneself. 



See articles in the Cyclopaedia of American Agriculture, vol. 1., 
ed. by L. H. Bailey (Hew York, 1907); in the Standard Cyclopaedia 
0$ Modem Agrkmmr** ed. by R. P. Wright (London, 1008-1909); 
and in the Encyclopaedia of Agriculture, vol. u., ed. byC E. Green 
and O. Young (Edinburgh. 1908). 

HEDON* a municipal borough m the Hotderness parliamentary 
division of the East Riding of Yorkshire, England, 8 m. E. of 
Hull by a branch of the North-Eastern railway. Pop. (1901), 
ma It stands in a low-lying, flat district bordering the 
Humber. It is i m. from the river, but was formerly reached 
by a navigable inlet, now dry, and was a considerable port. 
TTiere is a small harbour, but the prosperity of the port has passed 
to Hull. The church of St Augustine to a splendid cruciform 
building wflh central tower. It is Early English, Decorated 
arid Perpendicular, the tower being of the last period. The west 
front is particularly fine, and the church, with Its noble pro- 
portions and lofty clerestories, resembles a cathedral in miniature. 
There are a manufacture of bricks and an agricultural trade. 
The corporation consists of a mayor, 3 aldermen and 9 
councillors; and possesses a remarkable ancient mace, of 15th- 
century workmanship. Area, 321 acres. 

According to tradition the men of Hedon received a charter 
of liberties from King j£fhelstan, but there is 'no evidence to 
prove this or indeed to prove any settlement in the town until 
after the Conquest. The manor is not mentioned in the 
Domesday Survey, but formed part of the lordship of Holdemess 
which Waiiam the Conqueror granted to Odo, count of Albemarle. 
A charter of Henry H., which is undated, contains the first certain 
credence of settlement. By ft the king granted to William, 



count of Albemarle, free borough rights in Hedon so that his 
burgesses there might hold of him as freely and quietly as the 
burgesses of York or Lincoln held of the king. An earlier charter 
granted to the inhabitants of York shows that these rights 
included a trade gild and freedom from many dues not only in 
England but also in France. King John in 1200 granted a 
confirmation of these liberties to Baldwin, count of Albemarle, 
and Hawisja his wife and for this second charter the burgesses 
themselves paid 70 marks. In 1272 Henry III. granted to 
Edmund, earl of Lancaster, and Avelina his wife, then lord and 
lady of the manor, the right of holding a fair at Hedon on the 
eve, day, and morrow of the feast of St Augustine and for five 
following days. After the countess's death the manor came to 
the hands of Edward I. In (280 it was found by an inquisition 
that the men of Hedon " were few and poor " and that if tie town 
were demised at a fee-farm rent the town might improve. The 
grant, however, does not appear to have been made until 1346. 
Besides this charter Edward III. also granted the burgesses the 
privilege of electing a mayor and bailiffs every year. At that time 
Hedon was one of the chief ports in the Humber, but its place was 
gradually taken by Hull after that town came into the hands of 
the king. Hedon was incorporated by Charles II. in 1661, and 
James II. in 1680 gave the burgesses another charter granting 
among other privileges that of holding two extra fairs, but of 
this they never appear to have taken advantage. The burgesses 
returned two members' to parliament in 1295, and from 1547 to 
1832 when the borough was disfranchised. 

See Victoria County History, Yorkshire; J. R. Boyle, The Early 
History of Ike Town and Port of Hedon (Hull and York, 1893); G. H. 
Park, Htstmysf the Ancku* &»o*gh of Hedon (HuU, 1895). 

HEDONISM (Gr. ifievf/, pleasure, from ifitn, sweet, pleasant), 
in ethics, a general term for all theories of conduct in which the 
criterion is pleasure of one kind or another. Hedonistic theories 
of conduct have been held from the earliest times, though they 
have been by no means of the same character. Moreover,, 
hedonism has, especially by its critics, been very much mis- 
' represented owing mainly to two simple misconceptions. In the 
first place hedonism may confine itself to the view that, as a 
matter of observed fact, all men do in practice make pleasure the 
criterion of action, or it may go further and assert that men ought 
to seek pleasure as the sole human good. The former statement 
takes no view as to whether or not there is any absolute good: 
it merely denies that men aim at anything more than pleasure. 
The latter statement admits an ideal, summunt bonum— namely, 
pleasure. The second confusion is the tacit assumption that the 
pleasure of the hedonist is necessarily or characteristically of a 
purely physical kind; this assumption is in the case of some 
hedonistic theories a pure-pervcrsibn of the facts. Practically all 
hedonists have argued that what are known as the " lower '• 
pleasures are not only ephemeral in themselves but also pro- 
ductive of so great an amount of consequent pain that the wise 
man cannot regard them as truly pleasurable; the sane hedonist 
will, therefore, seek those so-called " higher " pleasures which 
are at once more lasting and less likely to be discounted by 
consequent pain. It should be observed, however, that this 
choice of pleasures by a hedonist is conditioned not by " moral '* 
(absolute) but by prudential (relative) considerations. 

The earliest and the most extreme type of hedonism is that 
of the Cyrenaic School as stated by Aristippus, who argued that 
the only good for man is the sentient pleasure of the moment. 
Since (following Protagoras) knowledge is solely of momentary' 
sensations, it is useless to try, as Socrates recommended, to make 
, calculations as to future pleasures, and to balance present enjoy- 
ment with disagreeable consequences. The true art of life is to 
crowd as much enjoyment as possible into every moment. This 
extreme or M pure " hedonism regarded as a definite philosophic 
theory practically died with the Cyrenaics, though the same 
spirit has frequently found expression in ancient and. modern, 
especially poetical, literature. 

The confusion already alluded to between "pure** and 
" rational " hedonism is nowhere more clearly exemplified than 
in the misconceptions which have arisen as to the doctrine of 



*9 8 



HEEL-^-HEEMSKERK, Ji VAN 



the Epicureans. To identify Epicureanism with Gyrenaicism 
is a complete misunderstanding. It is true that pleasure is the 
summum bonum of Epicurus, but his conception of that pleasure 
is profoundly modified by the Socratic doctrine of prudence 
and the eudaemonism of Aristotle. The true hedonist will aim 
at a life of enduring rational happiness; pleasure is the end of 
life, but true pleasure can be obtained only under the guidance 
of reason. Self-control in the choice of pleasures with a view 
to reducing pain to a minimum is indispensable. " Of all this, 
the beginning, and the greatest good, is prudence." The negative 
side of Epicurean hedonism was developed to such an extent by 
some members of the school (see Hece&ias) that the ideal life 
is held to be rather indifference to pain than positive enjoyment. 
This pessimistic attitude is far removed from the positive 
hedonism of Aristippus. 

Between the hedonism of the ancients and that of modern 
philosophers there lies a great gulf. Practically speaking 
ancient hedonism advocated the happiness of the Individual: 
the modern hedonism of Hume, Bentham and Mill is based on a 
wider conception of life. The only real happiness is the happiness 
of the community, or at least of the majority: the criterion, is 
society, not the individual. Thus we pass from Egoistic to 
Universalistic hedonism, Utilitarianism, SociU Ethics, more 
especially in relation to the still broader theories of evolution. 
These theories are confronted by the problem of reconciling and 
adjusting the claims of the individual with those of society. 
One of the most important contributions to the discussion is that 
of Sir Leslie Stephen (Science of Ethics), who elaborated a theory 
of the " social organism " in relation to the individual. The end 
of the evolution process is the production of a " social tissue " 
which will be "vitally efficient." Instead, therefore, of the 
criterion of " the greatest happiness of the greatest number," 
Stephen has that of the " health of the organism." Life is not 
" a scries of detached acts, in each of which a man can calculate 
the sum of happiness or misery attainable by different courses." 
Each action must be regarded as directly bearing upon the 
structure of society. 

A criticism of the various hedonistic theories will be found in the 
article Ethics (ad fin.). See also, beside works quoted under 
Cyrbnaics, Epicurus, &c. t and the general histories of philosophy, 
J: S. Mackenzie, Manual of Ethics (3rd ed., 1897); J. H. Muirhead, 
Elaments of Ethics (1892): J. Watson, Hedonistic Theories (1805), 
J. Martineau, Types of Ethical Theory (and ed., 1 886) ; F. H. Bradley, 



Ethical Studies (1876); H. Sidgwick, Methods of Ethics (6th ed., 
1901); J as. Seth, Ethical Principles (3rd ed., 1898); other works 
quoted under Ethics. 

HEEL (1) (0. Eng. hila, cf. Dutch hid; a derivative of 0. stag, 
hdh, hough, hock), that part of the foot in man which is situated 
below and behind the ankle; by analogy, the calcaneal part 
of the tarsus in other vertebrates. The heel proper in digitigrades 
and ungulates is raised off the ground and is commonly known as 
the "knee" or "hock," while the term "heel" is applied to the 
hind hoofs. (2) (A variant of the earlier hidd; ci. Dutch hellen, 
for hclden), to turn over to one side, especially of a ship. It is 
this word probably, in the sense of " tip-up," used particularly 
of the tilting or tipping of a cask or barrel of liquor, that explains 
the origin of the expression " no heel-taps," a direction to the 
drinkers of a toast to drain their glasses and leave no dregs 
remaining. " Tap " is a common word for Hquor, and a cask 
is said to be " heeled " when it is tipped and only dregs or 
muddy liquor are left. This suits the actual sense of the phrase 
better than the explanations which connect it with tapping the 
" heel " or bottom of the glass (see Notes and Queries, ath series, 
vols. xi.-xii., and 5th series, vol i.). 

HBEM, JAKDAVIDSZ VAN (or Johannes de),*(*. xooo-c.1683), 
Dutch painter. He was, if not the first, certainly the greatest 
painter of still life in Holland; no artist of his class combined 
more successfully perfect reality of form and colour with brilliancy 
and harmony of tints. No object of stone or silver, no flower 
humble or gorgeous, no fruit of Europe or the tropics, no twig 
or leaf t with which he was not familiar. Sometimes be merely 
represented a festoon or a nosegay. More frequently he worked 
With a purpose to point a moral or illustrate a motto. Here 



the snake ties coiled under the grass, there a skull rests on 
blooming plants. Gold and silver tankards or cups suggest 
the vanity of earthly possessions; salvation is allegorised m a 
chalice amidst blossoms, death as a crucifix inside a wreath. 
Sometimes de Heem painted alone, sometimes in company with 
men of his school, Madonnas or portraits surrounded by festoons 
of fruit or flowers. At one time he signed with initials, at others 
with Johannes, at others again with the name of his father 
joined to his own. At rare intervals he condescended to a date, 
and when he did the work was certainly of the best. De Heem 
entered the gild of Antwerp in 163 5- 1636, and became a bnrghef 
of that city in 1637. He steadily maintained his residence till 
1667, when he moved to Utrecht, where traces of his presence 
are preserved in records of 166&, 1669 and 1670. It is not known 
when he finally returned to Antwerp, but his death is recorded 
in the gild books of that place. A very carry picture, dated 
1628, in the gallery of Gotha, bearing the signature of Johannes 
in full, shows that de Heem at that time was familiar with the 
technical habits of execution peculiar to the youth of Albert 
Cuyp. In later years he completely shook off dependence, 
and appears in all the vigour of his own originality. 

Out of ico pictures or more to be met with in European 
galleries scarcely eighteen are dated. The earliest after that of 
Gotha is a chased tankard, with a bottle, a silver cup, and a 
lemon on a marble table, dated 1640, in the museum of 
Amsterdam. A similar work of 1645, with the addition of 
fruit and flowers and a distant landscape, is in Lord Radnor's 
collection at Longford. A chalice in a wreath, with the radiant 
host amidst wheatsheaves grapes and flowers, is a masterpiece 
of 1648 in the Belvedere of Vienna. A wreath round a Madonna 
of life size, dated 1650, in the museum of Berlin, shows that de 
Heem could paint brightly and harmoniously on a large scale. 
In the Pinakothek at Munich is the celebrated composition of 
1653, in which creepers, beautifully commingled with gourds 
and blackberries, twigs of orange, myrtle and peach, are 
enlivened by butterflies, moths and beetles. A landscape with 
a blooming rose tree, a jug of strawberries, a selection of fruit, 
and a marble bust of Pan, dated 16*5, is in the Hermitage at 
St Petersburg; an allegory of abundance in a medallion wreathed 
with fruit and flowers, in the gallery of Brussels, is inscribed 
with de Heem's monogram, the date of 1668, and the name of 
an obscure artist called Lambrechts. All these pieces exhibit 
the master in full possession of his artistic faculties. 

Cornelius de Heem, the son of Johannes, was in practice 
as a flower painter at Utrecht in 1658, and was still active in 
his profession in 167 1 at the Hague. His pictures are not equal 
to those of bis father, but they are all well authenticated, and 
most of them in the galleries of the Hague, Dresden, Cassel, 
Vienna and Berlin. In the Staedd at Frankfort is a fruit 
piece, with pot-herbs and a porcelain jug, dated 1658; another, 
dated 1671, is in the museum of Brussels. David or Heem, 
another member of the family, entered the gild of Utrecht in 
1668 and that of Antwerp in 1693. The best piece assigned 
to him is a table with a lobster, fruit and glasses, in the gallery 
of Amsterdam; others bear his signature in the museums of 
Florence, St Petersburg and Brunswick. It is welt to guard 
against the fallacy that David de Heem above mentioned is 
the father of Jan de Heem. We should also be careful not to 
make two persons of the first artist, who sometimes signs 
Johannes, sometimes Jan Davids* or J. D. Heem. 

BEEMSKBRK, JOHAM VAN (1507-1656), Dutch poet, was 
born at Amsterdam in 1597. He was educated as a child at 
Bayonne, and entered the university of Leiden in 1617. In 
1 62 1 he went abroad on the grand tour, leaving behind him his 
first volume of poems, Minnekunst (The Art of .Love), which 
appeared in 162*. He was absent from Holland lour years. He 
was made master of arts at Bourges in 1643, and in 1624 visited 
Hugo Grotius in Paris, On his return in 1635 he published 
Minncpligjt (The Duty of Love), and began to practise as an 
advocate in the Hague. In 1628 be was sent to England in his 
legal capacity by the Dutch East India Company, to settle the 
dispute respecting Amboyna. In the sane year he published 



HEEMSKERK, M. J.— HEEREN 



the poem entitled Mfnnekunde, or tbe Science of Love. He 
proceeded to Amsterdam in 1640, where he married Atida, 
sister of the statesman Van Beuningen. In 1641 be published 
a Dutch version of Corneillc's The Cid, a tragi-comedy, and in 
1647 his snost famous work, the pastoral romance of Balasische 
Arcadia, which he had written ten years before. During the 
last twelve years of his life Heemskerk sat in the upper chamber 
of the states-general. He died at Amsterdam oa the S7U1 of 
February 1656. 

The poetry of Hcemsfcerl 
18th century, is once more r • 

the Balavische Arcadia, whic > 

d*Urf£, enjoyed a great pop I 

passed through twelve edttio » 

able imitations, of which t 
drechlsche Arcadia (1663) of i 

Saanlandsche Arcadia (1658 I 

and the Rotterdam sche A read t 

But the original work of He » 

and shepherds go Out from tl 

in pohse and pastoral discern I 

versatility. 

HEEMSKERK. MARTIN JACOBSZ (1408- 1574), Dutch 
painter, sometimes called Van Veen, was born at Heemskerk in 
Holland in 140*. and apprenticed by his father, a small farmer, 
to Cornelias Willemst, a painter at Haarlem. Recalled after a 
time to the paternal homestead and put to the plough or the 
Bilking of cows, young Heemskerk took the first opportunity 
that offered to run away, and demonstrated his wish to leave 
home for ever by walking in a single day the 50 miles which 
separate his native hamlet from the town of Delft. There be 
studied under a local master whom he soon deserted for John 
Schoreel of Haarlem. At Haarlem be formed what is known as 
ma first manner, which is but a quaint and gauche imitation of the 
florid style brought from Italy by Mabuse and others. He then 
started on a wandering tour, during which he visited the whole of 
northern and central Italy, stopping at Rome, where he had 
letters for a cardinal. It is evidence of the. facility with which be 
acquired tbe rapid execution of a scene-painter that he was 
selected to co-operate with Antonio da San Gallo, Baitista 
Franco and Francesco Salviati to decorate tbe triumphal arches 
erected at Rome in April I 530 in honour of Charles V. Vasari, 
who saw the battle-pieces which Heemskerk then produced, says 
they were well composed and boldly executed.' On his return to 
the Netherlands he settled at Haarlem, where he soon (1540) 
became president of his gild, married twice, and secured a large 
and lucrative practice. In 1 57a he left Haarlem for Amsterdam, 
to avoid the siege which the Spaniards laid to the place* and 
there he made a will which has been preserved, and shows that be 
bad lived long enough and prosperously enough to make a fortune. 
At hit death, which took place on the 1st of October iS74» he left 
money and land in trust to the orphanage of Haarlem, with 
interest to be paid yearly to any couple who should be willing to 
perform tbe marriage ceremony on the abb of his tomb in the 
cathedral of Haarlem. It was a superstition which still exists in 
Catholic Holland that a marriage so celebrated would secure the 
peace of the dead within the tomb. 

The works of Heemskerk are st Ql very numerous. " Adam and 
Eve/' and " St Luke painting the Likeness of the Virgin and 
Child " in presence of a poet crowned with ivy leaves, and a parrot 
in a cage— an altar-piece in the gallery of Haarlem, and the 
"Ecce Homo" in the museum of Ghent, are characteristic works 
of the period preceding Heemskerk s visit to Italy. An altar-piece 
executed for St Laurence of Alkmaar in 1 538-j 54 1 , and composed 
of at least a dozen large panels, would, if preserved, have given 
us a clue to his style after his return from the south. In its 
absence we have a " Crucifixion " executed for tbe Riches Claires 
at Ghent (now in the Ghent Museum) in 1543, and the altar-piece 
of the Drapers Company at Haarlem, now in the gallery of the 
Hague, and finished m 1546. In these we observe that Heems- 
kerk studied and repeated the forms which he had seen at Rome 
In (toe works of Michefangeto and Raphael, and in Lombardy in 
the frescoes of Manlegna and Giulio Romano. But he never forgot 
the while bis Dutch origin or the Models first presented to him by 



199 

Schoreel and Mabuse. As late as 1551 hit memory still served 
him to produce a copy from Raphael's " Madonna di Loretto *' 
(gallery of Haarlem). A " Judgment of Momus," dated 1561, in 
the Berlin Museum, proves him to have been well acquainted 
with anatomy, but incapable of selection and insensible of grace, 
bold of hand and prone to daring though tawdry contrasts of 
colour, and fond of florid architecture. Two altar-pieces which 
be finished for churches at Delft in 1551 and 1 550, one complete, 
the other a fragment, in the museum of Haarlem, a third of 1 551 in 
the Brussels Museum, representing "Golgotha," the "Crucifixion," 
tbe " Flight into Egypt," " Christ on the Mount," and scenes from 
tbe lives of St Bernard and St Benedict, are all fairly representa- 
tive of his style. Besides these we have the " Crucifixion " in the 
Hermitage of St Petersburg, and two "Triumphs of Silen us" in the 
gallery of Vienna, in which the same relation to Giulio Romano 
may be noted as we mark in the canvases of Rinaldo of Mantua. 
Other pieces of varying importance are in the galleries of 
Rotterdam, Munich, Cassel, Brunswick, Karlsruhe, Mainz and 
Copenhagen. In England the master is best known by bit 
drawings. A comparatively feeble picture by him it the 
" Last Judgment " in the palace of Hampton Court, 

HEER, OSWALD (1800-1883), Swiss geologist and naturalist, 
was born at Nieder-UUwyl in Canton St GaHen on the 31st of 
August 1809. He was educated at a clergyman and took holy 
orders, and he also graduated as doctor of philosophy and 
medicine. Early in life hit Interest was aroused in entomology, 
on which subject he acquired special knowledge, and later he took 
up the study of plants and became one of the pioneers in palace* 
botany, distinguished for his researches on the Miocene flora. In 
1851 he became professor of botany in tbe university of Zurich, 
and he directed his attention to the Tertiary plants and insects of 
Switzerland. For some time he was director of tbe botanic 
garden at Zurich. In- 1863 (with W. Pengeily, Phil. Trans., 
186a) he investigated the plant-remains from the lignite-deposits 
of Bovey Tracey in Devonshire, regarding them as of Miocene 
age; but they are now classed at Eocene. Heer also reported 
on the Miocene flora of Arctic regions, on the plants of the 
Pleistocene lignites of Dfirnten 00 lake Zurich, and on the cereals 
of tome of the lake-dwellings (Die Pficiatn der PfaUbauien % 
1866). During a great part of hit career he was hampered by 
slender means and ill-health, but his services to science were 
acknowledged in 1873 when the Geological Society of London 
awarded to him the Wollaston medal. Dr Heer died at Lausanne 
on the 37th of September 1883. He published Flora Terliaria 
Hehetioe (3 vols., 1855-1859) ; Die Unveil der Sc/nben (1865), and 
Flora fossilis Arctic* (1868-1883). 

HBSREM, ARNOLD HERMANN LUDWIO (1760-1842), 
German historian, was born on the 25th of October 1760 at 
A r be r gen, near Bremen. He studied philosophy, theology and 
history at Gdttingen, and thereafter travelled in France, Italy 
and the Netherlands, In 1787 he was appointed one of the 
professors of philosophy, and then of history at GOttingen, and 
he afterwards was chosen aulic councillor, privy councillor, &c, 
the usual rewards of successful German scholars. He died at 
Gdttingen on the 6th of March 1842, Heeren's great merit as an 
historian was that he regarded the slates of antiquity from aS 
altogether fresh point of view. Instead of limiting himself to a 
narration of their political events, he examined their economic 
relations, their constitutions, their financial systems, and thus 
was enabled to throw a new light on the development of the old 
world. He possessed vast and varied learning, perfect calmness 
and impartiality, and great power of historical insight, and is 
now looked back to as the pioneer in the movement for the 
economic interpretation of history. 

Heeren's chief works are : Ideeu tier Politik, den Vtrhehr, und den 
Handel der vornehmsten Vdlher der alien Welt (a vols., Gottiogen. 
1793-1796: 4th ed., 6 vols., 1824-1826; Eng. trans., Oxford. 
1833): Ceschtckte des Studiums der klassischen Litteratur seit dem 
Wtederaufleben der Wi s sense ha f ten (2 vols., Gottingen, 1797-180*: 
new ed.. 1822); Geschichte der Stouten des A Iter turns (Gdttingen, 
1799; Eng. trans., Oxford. 1840); Geschichte des europciuktn 
Slaatensystems (Gdttingen. 1800; 5th ed.. 1830; Eng. trans,, 
1834); Versuch finer Enhrickelung der Poteen der KreuxzQge (06t- 
tingen. 1808; French trans., Paris, 1808). a prixe essay of the 



200 

Eosritate of Prance. Betides these, Hceren wrote brief biographical 
sketches of Johann von M filler (Leipzig, 1809); Ludwig Spittler 
{Berlin, 1812); and Christian Heyne (Gdttingen, 1813). With 
Friedrich August Ukert (1 780-1 851) be founded the famous historical 
collection, GesckickU der europ&tschen Staaten (Gotha, 1819 aeq.), 
and contributed many papers to learned periodicals. 

A collection of his historical works, with autobiographical notice* 
was published in 15 volumes (Gdttingen, 1821-1830). 

HBFBLE, KARL JOSEF VON (1800-1893), German theologian, 
was born at Unterkochen in Wurttemberg on the 15th of March 
1809, and was educated at Tubingen, where in 1859 he became 
professor-ordinary of Church history and patristics in the Roman 
Catholic faculty of theology. From 1842 to 1845 he sat in the 
National Assembly of Wurttemberg. In December 1869 he was 
enthroned bishop of Rottenburg. His literary activity, which 
had been considerable, was in no way diminished by his elevation 
to the episcopate. Among his numerous theological works may 
be mentioned his Well-known edition of the Apostolic Fathers, 
Issued in 1839; his Life of Cardinal Ximenes, published in 1844 
(Eng. trans., i860); and his still more celebrated History of/kg 
Councils of the Church, in seven volumes, which appeared between 
1855 and 1874 (Eng. trans., 1871, 188a). Hefele's theological 
opinions inclined towards the more liberal school m the Roman 
Catholic Church, but be nevertheless received considerable signs 
of favour from its authorities, and was a member of the conn, 
mission that made preparations for the Vatican Council of 1870. 
On the eve of that council he published' at Naples his Causa 
Honorii Papae. which aimed at demonstrating the moral and 
historical impossibility of papal infallibility. About the same 
time he brought out a work in German on the same subject. He 
took rather a prominent part in the discussions at the council, 
associating himself with Felix Dupanloup and with Georges 
Darboy, archbishop of Paris, in bis Opposition to the doctrine 
of Infallibility, and supporting their arguments from his vast 
knowledge of ecclesiastical history. In thepreliminary discussions 
he voted against the promulgation of the dogma. He was absent 
from the important sitting of the 18th of June 1870, and did not 
Send in bis submission to the decrees until 1 87 1 , when he explained 
in a pastoral letter that the dogma " referred only to doctrine 
given forth ex cathedra, and therein to the definitions proper only, 
but not to its proofs or explanations." In 1872 he took part in 
the congress summoned by the Ultramontaneaat Fulda, and by 
his judicious use of minimizing tactics he kept his diocese free 
from any participation in the Old Catholic schism. The last four 
volumes of the second edition of his History of the Councils have 
been described as skilfully adapted to the new situation created 
by the Vatican decrees. During the later yeas of his life he 
undertook no further literary efforts an behalf of his church, but 
retired into comparative privacy* He died on the 6th of June 

bee Herxog-Hauck's IbalencyklopSdie, viL 525. 

HEflBL, GEORG WILHELM FRIEDRICH (1770-1831), 
German philosopher, was "born at Stuttgart on the 27th of August 
1 770. His father, an official in the fiscal service of Wurttemberg, 
is not otherwise known to fame; and of bis mother we hear 
only that she had scholarship enough to teach him the elements 
of Latin. He had one sister, Christiana, who died unmarried, 
and a brother Ludwig, Who served in the campaigns of Napoleon. 
At the grammar school of Stuttgart, where Hegel was educated 
between the ages of seven and eighteen, he was not remarkable. 
His mam productions were a diary kept at intervals during 
eighteen months (1785-1787), and translations of the Antigone, 
the Manual of Epictetus, &c. But the characteristic feature 
of his studies was the copious extracts which from this time 
onward he unremittingly made and preserved. This collection, 
alphabetically arranged, comprised annotations on classical 
authors, passages from newspapers, treatises on morals and 
mathematics from the standard works of the period. In this way 
he absorbed in their integrity the raw materials for elaboration. 
Yet as evidence that he was not merely receptive we have essays 
already breathing that admiration of the classical world which he 
never lost. His chief amusement was cards, and he began the 
habit of taking snuff. 



HEFBL&-HEGEL 



In the autumn of 1788 ho entered at TUbingen as a student 
of theology; but he showed no interest in theology: his sermons 
were a failure, and he found more congenial reading™ the classics, 
on the advantages of studying which his first essay was written. 
After two years he took the degree of Ph.D., and in the autumn 
of 1793 received his theological certificate, Stating him to be of 
good abilities, but of middling industry and knowledge, and 
especially deficient in philosophy. 

As a student, his elderly appearance gained him the title 
" Old man," but he took part in the walks, beer-drinking and 
love-making of his fellows. He gained most from intellectual 
intercourse with his contemporaries, the two best known of 
whom were J. C. F. Holdedin and Schelling. With HdlderHn 
Hegel learned to feel for the old Greeks a love which grew stronger 
as the semi-Kantianfeed theology of his teachers more and more 
failed to interest him. With Schelling like sympathies bound him. 
They both protested, against the political and ecclesiastical 
inertia of their native state, and adopted the doctrines of freedom 
and reason. The story which tells how the two went out one 
morning to dance round a tree of liberty in a meadow is an 
anachronism, though in keeping with their opinions. 

On leaving college, he became a private tutor at Bern and 
lived' in intellectual isolation. He was, however, far from 
inactive. H*compiled a systematic account of the fiscal system 
of the canton Bern, but the main factor hi his mental growth 
came from his study of Christianity. Under the impulse gives 
by .Leasing and Kant he turned to the original records of Chris- 
tianity, and attempted to construe for himself the real significance 
of Christ. He wrote a life of Jesus, In which Jesus was sunpty 
the son of Joseph and Mary. He did not stop to criticize as • 
philologist, and ignored the miraculous. He asked for the secret 
contained in the conduct and sayings of this man which made him 
the hope of the human race. Jesus appeared as revealing the 
unity with God in which the Greeks in their best days unwittingly 
rejoiced, and as lifting the eyes of the Jews from a lawgiver who 
metes out punishment on the transgressor, to thedestiny which 
in the Greek conception falls on the just no less than on the on just. 

The interest of these ideas is twofold. In Jesus Heget finds the 
expression for something higher than mere morafity: he finds 
a noble spirit which rises above the contrasts of virtue and vice 
into the concrete life, seeing the infinite always embracing our 
finitude, and proclaiming the divine which k in man and cannot 
be overcome by error and evil, unless the 1 man dose his eyes and 
ears to the godlike presence within him. In rehgious life, in 
short,* be finds the principle which reconciles the oppositiosi 
of the temporal mind. But, secondly, the general source of the 
doctrine that life is higher than all its incidents is of interest. 
He does not free himself from the current theology either by 
rational moralizing like Kant, or by bold speculative synthesis 
like Fichte and Schelling. He finds his panacea in the concrete 
life of humanity. But although he goes to the Scriptures, and 
tastes the mystical spirit of the medieval saints, the Christ of his 
conception has traits that seem. borrowed from Socrates and 
from the heroes of Attic tragedy, who suffer much and yet 
smile gently on a destiny to which they were reconciled. Instead 
of the Hebraic doctrine of a Jesus, punished for our sins, we 
nave the Hellenic idea of a man who is calmly tranquil in the 
consciousness of his unity with God* 

During these years Hegel kept up a slack correspondence 
with Schelling and HdlderUn. Scheiliug, already on the way 
to fame, kept Hegel abreast with German speculation. Both 
of them were intent on forcing the theologians into the daylight, 
and grudged them any aid they might expect from Kant's 
postulatien of God and immortality to crown the edifice of ethics. 
Meanwhile, Halderlin in Jena had been following Ficbte's career 
with an enthusiasm with which he infected Hegel 

It is pleasing to turn from these vehement struggles of thoaght 
to a tour which Hegel in company with three other tutors made 
through the Bernese Oberland in July and August 1706. Of this 
tour he left a minute diary. He was delighted with the varied 
play of the waterfalls, but no glamour blinded him to the squalor 
of Swiss peasant life. The glaciers and tfie rocks called forth so 



HEGEL 



201 



Uptons. " It* spectacle of these eternally deed masses gave 
me nothing but the monotonous and at last tedious idea, ' Es 
ist so."' 

Towards the dose of his engagement at Bern, Hegel had 
r ecei v ed hopes from ScbeUing of a post at Jena. Fortunately 
his Mend HOtdertin, now tutor in Frankfort, secured a similar 
situation there for Hegel in the family of Herr Gogol, a merchant 
(January 1707) • Hie new post gave him more leisure and the 
society he needed. 

About this time he turned to questions of economics and 
government. He had studied Gibbon, Hume and Montesquieu 
in Switzerland. We now find him making extracts from the 
English newspapers on the Poor-Law .Bill of 1706; criticising 
the Prussian land laws, promulgated about the same time; 
and writing a commentary on Sir James Steuart's Inquiry into 
th* Principles of Political Economy* Here, as in contemporaneous 
criticisms of Kant's ethical, writings, Hegel aims at correcting 
the abstract discussion of a topic by treating it in its systematic 
interconnexions. Church and state, law and morality, com- 
merce and art are reduced to motors in the totality of human 
life, from which the specialists had isolated them. 
- But the best evidence of Hegel's attention to contemporary 
politics is two unpublished essays— one of them written in 1798, 
" On the Internal Condition of Wurttemberg in Recent Times, 
particularly on the Defects in the Magistracy," the other a 
criticism on the constitution of Germany, written, probably, 
not long after the peace of Luaeville (r8ot). Both essays are 
critical rather than constructive. In the first Hegel showed how 
the supineness of the Committee of estates in Wurttemberg had 
favoured the usurpations of the superior officials in whom the 
court had found compliant servants. And though he perceived 
the advantages of change in the constitution of the estates, 
he still doubted if an improved system could work in the actual 
conditions of his native province. The main feature in the 
pamphlet is the recognition that' a spirit of reform is abroad. 
If Wurttemberg suffered from a bureaucracy tempered by 
despotism, the Fatherland in general suffered no less. " Ger- 
many," so begins the second of these unpublished papers, "is 
no longer a state." Referring the collapse of the empire to 
the retention of feudal forms and to the action of religious 
animosities, Hegel looked forward to reorganization by a central 
power (Austria) wielding the imperial army, and by a representa- 
tive body elected by the geographical districts of the empire. 
But such an issue, he saw well, could only be the outcome of 
violence— of " blood and iron. " The philosopher did not pose 
as a practical statesman. He described the German empire in 
Us nullity as a conception without existence in tact. In such a 
state of things it was the business of the philosopher to set forth 
the outlines of the coming epoch, as they were already moulding 
themselves into shape, amidst what the ordinary eye saw only 
as the disintegration of the old forms of social life. 

His old interest in the religious question reappears, but in a 
more philosophical form.. Starting with the contrast between 
. a natural and a positive religion, he regards a positive religion 
as one imposed upon the mind from without, not a natural 
growth crowning the round of human life. A natural religion, 
on the other hand, was not, be thought, the one universal 
religion of every dime and age, but rather the spontaneous 
development of the national conscience varying in varying 
circumstances. A people's religion completes and consecrates 
their whole activity: in it the people rises above its finite life 
in limited spheres to an infinite Ufe where it feels itself all at one. 
Even philosophy with Hegel at this epoch was subordinate to 
religion; for philosophy must never abandon the finite in the 
search for the infinite. Soon, however, Hegel adopted a view 
according to which philosophy is a higher mode of apprehending 
the infinite than, even religion. 

At Frankfort, meanwhile, the philosophic ideas of Hegel 
first assumed the proper philosophic form. In a MS. of 102 
quarto sheets, of which the first three and the seventh arc 
wanting, there is preserved the original sketch of the Hegelian 
System* so far as the logic and .metaphysics and part of the 



phflosophy of nature are concerned. The third part of the 
system—the ethical theory— seems to have been composed 
afterwards; it is contained in its first draft in another MS, 
of 30 sheets. Even these had been preceded by earlier Pytha- 
gorean constructions envisaging the divine life in divine triangles. 

Circumstances soon put Hegel in the way to complete these 
outlines. His father died in January 1790; and the slender 
sum which Hegel received as his inheritance^ 51 54 gulden (about 
£260), enabled him to think once more of a studious life. At 
the close of 1800 we find him asking Schelling for letters of 
introduction to Bamberg, where with cheap living and good beer 
he hoped to prepare himself for the intellectual excitement 
of Jena. The upshot was that Hegel arrived at Jena in January 
1801. An end had already come to the brilliant epoch at Jena, 
when the romantic poets, Tieck, Novalis and the Schlcgels 
made it the headquarters of their fantastic mysticism, and Fkhte 
turned the results of Kant into the* banner of revolutionary 
ideas. Schelling was the main philosophical lion of the time; 
and in some quarters Hegel was spoken of as a new champion 
summoned to help him in his struggle with the more prosaic 
continuators of Kant. Hegel's first performance seemed to 
justify the rumour. It was an essay on the difference between 
the philosophic systems of Fichte and Schelling, tending in the 
main to support the latter. Still more striking was the agreement 
shown in the Critical Journal of Philosophy, which Schelling 
and Hegel wrote conjointly during the years 1802-1803. So 
latent was the difference between them at this epoch that in 
one or two cases it is not possible to determine by whom the 
essay was written. Even at a later period foreign critics like 
Cousin saw much that was alike in the two doctrines, and did not 
hesitate to regard Hegel as a disciple of Scbefling. The disserta- 
tion by which Hegel qualified for the position of Prnatdotent 
(Dc orbUis pianetarum) was probably chosen under the influence 
of Schelling's philosophy of nature. It was an unfortunate 
subject. For while Hegel, depending on a numerical proportion 
suggested by Plato, hinted in a single sentence that it might be 
a mistake to look for a planet between Mars and Jupiter, Giuseppe 
Piazzi (?.v.) bad already discovered the first of Che asteroids 
(Ceres) on the rst of Jamury 1801. Apparently, in August, when 
Hegel 'qualified, the news of the discovery had not yet reached 
him, but critics have made this luckless suggestion the ground 
of attack on a priori philosophy. 

Hegel's lectures, in the winter of i8oi-*t8oa, on logic and 
metaphysics were attended by about eleven students. Later, 
in 1804, we find him with a class of about thirty, lecturing on 
his whole system; but his average attendance was rather less. 
Besides philosophy, he once at least lectured on rnathematksi 
As he taught, he was led to modify his original system, and notice 
after notice of his lectures promised a text-book of philosophy— 
which, however, failed to appear. Meanwhile, after the departure 
of Schelling from Jena in the middle of 1803, Hegel was left 
to work out his own views. Besides philosophical studies, 
where he now added Aristotle to Plato, he read Homer and the 
Greek tragedians, made extracts from books, attended lectures 
on physiology, and dabbled in other sciences. On his own 
representation at Weimar, he was in February 1805 made a 
professor extraordinarius, and in July 1806 drew his first and 
only stipend — 100 thalers. At Jena, though some of his hearem 
became attached to him, Hegel was not a popular lecturer any 
more than K. C. F. Krause (q.v,). The ordinary student found 
J. F. Fries (4.0.) more intelligible. 

Of the lectures of that period there still remain considerable 
notes. The language often had a theological tinge (never 
entirely absent), as when the " idea " was spoken of, or " the 
night of the divine mystery," or the dialectic of the absolute 
called the " course of the divine life. " Still bis view was growing 
clearer, and his difference from Schelling more palpable. Both 
Schelling and Hegel stand in a relation to art, but while the 
aesthetic model of Schelling was found in the contemporary 
world, where art was a special sphere and the artist a separate 
profession in no intimate connexion with the age and nation* 
the model of Hegel was found rather in those works of national 



202 



HEGEL 



tit in which art is net a pan bat an aspect of the common fife, 
and the artist is not a mere individual bat a concentration of the 
passion and power of beauty in the whole community. " Such 
art," says Hegel, " is the common good and the work of all. 
Each generation hands it on beautified to the next; each has 
done something to give utterance to the universal thought. 
Those who are said to have genius have acquired some special 
aptitude by which they render the general shapes of the nation 
their own work, one in one point, another in another. What 
they produce is not their invention, but the invention of the whole 
nation; or rather, what they find is that the whole nation has 
found its true nature. Each, as it were, piles up his stone. 
So too does the artist. Somehow he has the good fortune to 
come last, and when he places his stone the arch stands self- 
supported." Hegel, as we have already seen, was fully aware 
of the change that was coming over the world. " A new epoch," 
he says, " has arisen. It seems as if the world-spirit had now 
succeeded in freeing itself from all foreign objective existence, 
and finally apprehending itself as absolute mind." These words 
come from lectures on the history of philosophy, which laid 
the foundation for his Ph&nomendogit des Ceistes (Bamberg, 
1807). 

On the 14th of October 1806 Napoleon was at Jena. Hegel, 
like Goethe, felt no patriotic shudder at the national disaster, 
and in Prussia he saw only a corrupt and conceited bureaucracy. 
Writing to his friend F. J. Niethammer (2766-1848) on the day 
before the battle, he speaks with admiration of the " world-soul," 
the emperor, and with satisfaction of the probable overthrow 
of the Prussians. The scholar's wish was to see the clouds of 
war pass away, and leave thinkers to their peaceful work. His 
manuscripts were his main care; and doubtful of the safety 
of his last despatch to Bamberg, and disturbed by the French 
soldiers in his lodgings, he hurried off, with the last pages of the 
PhOmmenologie, to take refuge in the pro-rector's house. Hegel's 
fortunes were now at the lowest ebb. Without means, and 
obliged to borrow from Niethammer, he had no further hopes 
from the impoverished university. He had already tried to get [ 
away from Jena. In 1805, when several lecturers left in con- 
sequence of diminished classes, he had written to Johann Heinrich 
Voss Or?.), suggesting that his philosophy might find more 
congenial soil in Heidelberg; but the application bore no fruit. 
He was, therefore, glad to become editor of the Bamberger 
Zeitung (1807-1808). Of his editorial work there is little to tell ; 
no leading articles appeared in his columns. It was not a 
suitable vocation, and be gladly accepted the rectorship of the 
Aegidien-gymnasium in Nuremberg, a post which he held from 
December 1S08 to August 18 16. Bavaria at this time was 
modernizing her institutions. Theschool system was reorganized 
by new regulations, in accordance with which Hegel wrote a 
series of lessons in the outlines of philosophy — ethical, logical 
and psychological. They were published in 1840 by Rosenkranz 
from Hegel's papers. 

As a teacher and master Hegel inspired confidence in his 
pupils, and maintained discipline without pedantic interference 
in their associations and sports. On prize-days his addresses 
summing up the history of the school year discussed some topic 
of general interest. Five of these addresses are preserved. 
The first is an exposition of the advantages of a classical training, 
when it is not confined to mere grammar. " The perfection 
and grandeur of the master-works of Greek and Roman literature 
must be the intellectual bath, the secular baptism, which gives 
the first and unfading tone and tincture of taste and science." 
In another address, speaking of the introduction of military 
exercises at school, he says: "These exercises, while not in- 
tended to withdraw the students from their more immediate 
duty, so far as tbey have any calling to it, still remind them of 
the possibility that every one, whatever rank in society he may 
belong to, may one day have to defend his country and his king, 
or help to that end. This duty, which is natural to all, was 
formerly recognized by every citizen, though whole ranks in 
the state have become strangers to the very idea of it." 

On the 16th of September 181 1 Hegel married Marie von 



Tucher (twenty-two years fait Junior) of Nuremberg: She 
brought her husband no fortune, but the. marriage was entirely 
happy. The husband kept a careful record of income and 
expenditure. His income amounted at Nuremberg to 1500 
gulden (£130) and a house; at Heidelberg, as professor, be 
received about the same sum; at Berlin about 3000 thaiers 
(£300). Two sons were born to them; the elder, Karl, became 
eminent as a historian. . The younger, Imraanuel, was bora on 
the 24th of September 1816. Hegel's letters to his wife, written 
during his solitary holiday tours to Vienna, the Netherlands 
and Paris, breathe of kindly and happy affection. Hegel the 
tourist— recalling happy days spent together; confessing that, 
were it not because of his sense of duty as a traveller, he would 
rather be at home, dividing his time between his books and his 
wife; commenting on the shop windows at Vienna; describing 
the straw hats of the Parisian ladies— is a contrast to the professor 
of a profound philosophical system. But it shows that the 
enthusiasm which in his days of courtship moved him to verse 
had blossomed into a later age of domestic bliss. 

In 1812 appeared the first two volumes of his Wiaeusthafi 
dcr Logik, and the work was completed by a third in 1 816. This 
work, in which his system was for the first time presented in 
what, with a few minor alterations, was its ultimate shape, 
found some audience in the world Towards the dose of bis 
eighth session three professorships were almost simultaneously 
put within his reach — at Erlangen, Berlin and Heidelberg. 
The Prussian offer expressed a doubt that his long absence from 
university teaching might have made htm- rusty, so be accepted 
the post at Heidelberg, whence Fries had just gone to Jena 
(October 1816). Only four hearers turned up for one of bis 
courses. Others, however, on the encyclopaedia of philosophy 
and the history of philosophy drew classes of twenty to thirty. 
While he was there Cousin first made ins acquaintance, but a 
more intimate relation dates from Berlin. Among his pupils 
was Hermann F. W. Hinricha ft.*.), to whose Religion in its 
Inward Relation to Science (1*2 j) Hegel contributed an important 
preface. The strangest of his hearers was an Esthonian baron, 
Boris d'Yrkull, who after serving in the Russian army came to 
Heidelberg to hear the wisdom of Hegel. But his books and 
his lectures were alike obscure to the baron, who betook himself 
by Hegel's advice to simpler studies before he returned to the 
Hegelian system. 

At Heidelberg Hegel was active in a literary way also. In 
1817 he brought out the Bncykhpttdie d. fihihs. Wissenschoften 
im Orundrisse (4th ed., Berlin, 18(7} new ed., 1870) for use at 
his lectures. It is the only exposition of the Hegelian System 
as a whole which we have direct from Hegel's own hand. 
Besides this work he wrote two reviews for the Heidelberg 
J akr backer— the first on F. H. Jacob!, the other a political 
pamphlet which called forth violent criticism. It was entitled 
a Criticism on the Transactions of the Estates of WUrttembtrg im 
1815-1816. On the 15th of March 18*5 Ring Frederick of 
Wurttemberg, at a meeting of the estates of his kingdom, laid 
before them the draft of a new constitution, in accordance with 
the resolutions of the congress of Vienna. Though an improve- 
ment on the old constitution, it was unacceptable to the estates, 
jealous of their old privileges and suspicious of the king's 
intentions. A decided majority demanded the restitution of 
their old laws, though the kingdom now included a large popula- 
tion to which the old rights were strange. Hegel in his essay, 
which was republished at Stuttgart, supported the royal pro- 
posals, and animadverted on the backwardness of the bureaucracy 
and the landed interests. In the main he was right; but he 
forgot too much the provocation they had received, the usurpa- 
tions and selfishness of the governing family, and the unpatriotic 
character of the king. 

In 1818 Hegel accepted the renewed offer of the chair of 
philosophy at Berlin, vacant since the death of Fichte. The 
hopes which this offer raised of a position lees precarious than 
that of a university teacher of philosophy were in one sense 
disappointed; for more than a professor Hegel never became. 
But his influence upon his pupils, and his solidarity with the 



HEGEL 



203 



Pr pasha gwverwaent, gave him 1 position sbch at few professors 
have held. 

In 1 82 1 Hegel published the Grundlittien der Philosophic dcs 
Rechls (and e£, 1840; ed. C. j. B. Bolland, 1901; Eng. trans., 
P/nhfphy of Right, by S. W. Dyde, 1896). It is a combined 
system of moral and political philosophy, or a sociology dominated 
by the idea of the state. It turns away contemptuously and 
fiercely irom the sentimental aspirations oi reformers possessed 
by the democratic doctrine of the rights of the omnipotent 
nation. Fries is stigmatized as one of the "ringleaders of 
shallowness " who were bent on substituting a fancied tie of 
enthusiasm and friendship for the established order of the state. 
The disciplined philosopher, who had devoted himself to the 
task of comprehending the organism of the state, had no patience 
with feebler or more mercurial minds who recklessly laid hands 
on established ordinances, and set them aside where they con- 
travened humanitarian sentiments. With the principle that 
whatever is real is rational, and whatever is rational is real, 
Hegel fancied that he had stopped the mouths of political 
critics and constiUitionrmongers. His theory was not a mere 
formulation of the Prussian state. Much that he construed as 
necessary to a state was wanting in Prussia; and some of the 
reforms already introduced did not find their place in his system. 
Yet, on the whole, he had taken his side with the government. 
Altenstein even expressed his satisfaction with the book. In 
his disgust at the crude conceptions of the enthusiasts, who had 
hoped that the war of liberation might end in a realm of internal 
liberty, Hegel had forgotten his own youthful vows recorded in 
verse to Hokterlin, " never, never to live in peace with the 
ordinance which regulates feeling and opinion.** And yet if 
we look deeper we see that this is no worship of existing powers. 
It is rather due to an overpowering sense of the value of organiza- 
tion — a sense that liberty can never be dissevered from order, 
that a vital Interconnexion between all the parts of the body 
politic is the source of all good, so that while he can find nothing 
but brute weight in an organized public, be can compare the 
royal person in his ideal form of constitutional monarchy to the 
dot upon the letter 1 1. A keen sense of how much is at slake 
in any alteration breeds suspicion of every reform. 

During his thirteen years at Berlin Hegel's whole soul seems 
to have been in his lectures. Between 1823 and 1827 his activity 
reached its maximum. His notes were subjected to perpetual 
revisions and additions. We can form an idea of them from the 
shape in which they appear in his published writings. Those on 
Aesthetics, on the Philosophy of Religion, on the Philosophy of 
History and on the History of Philosophy, have been published 
by his editors, mainly from the notes of his students, under 
their separate heads; while those on logic, psychology and the 
philosophy of nature are appended in the form of illustrative 
and explanatory notes to the sections of his Encyklopitdie. 
During these years hundreds of hearers from all parts of Germany, 
and beyond, came under his influence. His fame was carried 
abroad by eager or intelligent disciples. At Berlin Henning 
served to prepare the intending disciple for fuller initiation by 
the master himself. Edward Cans (q.v.) and Heinrich Gustav 
Hotho (q.%) carried the method into special spheres of inquiry. 
At Halle Hinrichs maintained the standard of Hegebanism amid 
the opposition or indifference of his colleagues. 

Three courses of lectures are especially the product of his 
Berlin period: those on aesthetics, the philosophy of religion 
and the philosophy of history. In the years preceding the 
revolution of 1830, public interest, excluded from political life, 
turned to theatres, concert-rooms and picture-galleries. At 
these Hegel became a frequent and appreciative visitor and 
made extracts from the art-notes in the newspapers. In his 
holiday excursions, the interest in the fine arts more than once 
took him out of his way to see some old painting. At Vienna 
in 1824 he spent every moment at the Italian opera, the ballet 
and the picture-galleries. In Paris, in 1827, he saw Charles 
Kemble and an English company play Shakespeare. This 
familiarity with the facts of art, though neither deep nor histori- 
cal, gave a freshness to his lectures on aesthetics, which, as 



put together from the notes of i8to, 1823, 1826, are in many 

ways the most successful of his efforts. 

The lecture* on the philosophy of religion are another applica- 
tion of his method. Shortly before his death he had prepared 
for the press a course of lectures on the proofs for the existence 
of God. In his lectures on religion he dealt with Christianity, 
as in his philosophy of morals he had regarded the state. On 
the one hand he turned his weapons against the rationalistic 
school, who reduced religion to the modicum compatible with 
an ordinary worldly mind. On the other hand he criticised the 
school of Scnleiermacher, who elevated feeling to a place m 
religion above systematic theology. His middle way attempts 
to show that the dogmatic creed is the rational development 
of what was implicit in religious feeling. To do so, of course.' 
philosophy becomes the interpreter and the superior. To the 
new school of E. W. Hengstenberg, which regarded Revelation 
itself as supreme, such interpretation was an abomination. 

A Hegelian school began to gather. The Hock included 
intelligent pupils, empty-headed imitators, and romantic natures 
who turned philosophy into lyric measures. Opposition and 
criticism only served to define more precisely the adherents of 
the new doctrine. Hegel himself grew more and more into a 
belief in his own doctrine as the one truth for the world. He was 
in harmony with the government, and his followers were on the 
winning side. Though he had soon resigned all direct official 
connexion with the schools of Brandenburg, his real influence in 
Prussia was considerable, and as usual was largely exaggerated 
in popular estimate. In the narrower circle of his friends his 
birthdays were the signal for congratulatory verses. In 1826 a 
formal festival was got up by some of his admirers, one of whom, 
Herder, spoke of his categories as new gods; and be was pre* 
tented with much poetry and a silver mug. In 1S30 the students 
struck a medal in his honour, and in 1831 be was decorated by 
an order from Frederick William III. In 1830 he was rector 
of the university; and in his speech at the tricentenary of the 
Augsburg Confession in that year he charged the Catholic 
Church with regarding the virtues of the pagan world as brilliant 
vices, and giving the crown of perfection to poverty, continence 
and obedience. 

One of the last literary undertakings in which he took part 
was the establishment of the Berlin J akr bucket far wissenuhaft- 
lichc Kritik, in which he assisted Edward Cans and Varnhagen 
von Ease. The aim of this review was to give a critical account, 
certified by the names of the contributors, of the literary and 
philosophical productions of the time, in relation to the general 
progress of knowledge. The journal was not solely in the 
Hegelian interest; and more than once, when Hegel attempted 
to domineer over the other editors, he was met by vehement 
and vigorous opposition. 

The revolution of 1830 was a great blow to him, and the 
prospect of democratic advances almost made him ill. His last 
literary work, the first part of which appeared in the Preussische 
Stoatszcitung, was an essay on the English Reform Bill of 1831. 
It contains primarily a consideration of its probable effects on 
the character of the new members of parliament, and the measures 
which they may introduce. In the. latter connexion he enlarged 
on several points in which England had done less than many 
continental states for the abolition of monopolies and abuses. 
Surveying the questions connected with landed property, with 
the game laws, the poor, the Established Church, especially in 
Ireland, he expressed grave doubt on the legislative capacity 
of the English parliament as compared with the power of re- 
novation manifested in other states of western Europe. 

In 1831 cholera first entered Europe. Hegel and his family 
retired for the summer to the suburbs, and there he finished the 
revision of the first part of his Science of Logic. On the beginning 
of the winter session, however, he returned to his house in the 
Kupfergraben. On this occasion an altercation occurred between 
him and his friend Gans, who in his notfee of lectures on juris*- 
prudence had recommended Hegel's Philosophy if Right. Hegel, 
indignant at what be deemed patronage, demanded that the note 
should be withdrawn. On the 14th of November, after one 



20+ 



HEGEL 



day's illness, he died of cholera and was buried, as he had wished, 
between Fichte and Solger. 

Hegel in his class-room was neither imposing nor fascinating. 
You saw a plain, old-fashioned face, without life or lustre— a 
figure which had never looked young, and was now prematurely 
aged; the furrowed face bore witness to concentrated thought. 
Sitting with his snuff-box before him, and his head bent down, 
he looked ill at ease, and kept turning the folios of his notes. 
His utterance was interrupted by frequent coughing; every 
sentence came out with a struggle. The style was no less ir- 
regular. Sometimes in plain narrative the lecturer would be 
specially awkward, while in abstruse passages he seemed specially 
at home, rose into a natural eloquence, and carried away the 
bearer by the grandeur of his diction. 

Philosophy. — Hegelianism is confessedly one of the most difficult of 
all philosophies. Every one has heard the legend which makes Hegel 
say, " One man has understood me, and even he has not." He 
abruptly hurls us into a world where old habits of thought fail us. 
In three places, indeed, he has attempted to exhibit the transition to 
his own system from other levels of thought; but in none with 
much success. In the introductory lectures on the philosophy of 
religion he gives a rationale of the difference between the modes of 
consciousness in religion and philosophy (between Vorstellung and 
Bcgriff)- In the beginning of the Encyklobadie he discusses the 
detects of dogmatism, empiricism, the philosophies of Kant and 
Jaoobi. In the first case he treats the formal or psychological 
aspect of the difference; in the latter he presents his doctrine less 
in its essential character than in special relations to the prominent 
systems of his time. The Phenomenology of Spirit, regarded as an 
introduction, suffers from a different fault, it is not an introduction 
—for the philosophy which it was to introduce was not then fully 
elaborated. Even to the last Hegel had not so externalized his 
system as to treat it as something to be led up to by gradual steps. 
His philosophy was not one aspect of his intellectual life, to be con- 
templated from others; it was the ripe fruit of concentrated re- 
flection, and had become the one all-embracing form and principle of 
his thinking. More than most thinkers he had quietly laid himself 
open to the influences pf his time and the lessons of history. 

The Phenomenology is the picture oT the Hegelian philosophy in 
the making — at the stage before the scaffolding has been removed 
from the building. For this reason the book is at once ihe 
most brilliant and the most difficult of Hegel's works— the 
most brilliant because it is to some degree an autobiography 
* of Hegel's mind — not the abstract record of a logical 
evolution, but the real history of an intellectual growth; the most 
difficult because, instead of treating the rise of intelligence (from its 
first appearance in contrast with the real world to its final recognition 
of its presence in, and rule over, all things) as a purely subjective 
process, it exhibits this rise as wrought out In historical epochs, 
national characteristics, forms of culture and faith, and philosophical 
systems. The theme is identical with the introduction to the 
Encyklopadie; but it is treated in a very different style. From all 
periods of the world— from medieval piety and stoical pride, Kant 
and Sophocles, science and art, religion and philosophy — with disdain 
of mere chronology, Hegel gathers in the vineyards of the human spirit 
the grapes from which he crushes the wine of thought. The mind 
coming through a thousand phases of mistake and disappointment to 
a sense and realization of its true position in the universe — such is the 
drama which is consciously Hegel's own history, but is represented 
objectively as the process of spiritual history which the philosopher 
reproduces in himself. The Phenomenology stands to the Encyklo- 
pddie somewhat as the dialogues of Plato stand to the Aristotelian 
treatises. It contains almost all his philosophy — but irregularly and 
without due proportion. The personal element gives an undue 
prominence to recent phenomena of the philosophic atmosphere. 
It is the account given by an inventor 01 his own discovery, not 
the explanation of an outsider. It therefore to some extent assumes 
from the first the position which it proposes ultimately to reach, 
and gives riot a proof of that position, but an account of the ex- 
perience {Erfahrung) by which consciousness is forced from one 
position to another til) it finds rest in Absolutes Wissen. 

The Phenomenology is neither mere psychology, nor logic, nor 
moral philosophy, nor history, but is all of these and a great deal 
more. It needs not distillation, but expansion and illustration 
from contemporary and antecedent thought and literature. It 
treats of the attitudes of consciousness towards reality under the 
six heads of consciousness, self-consciousness, reason (Vernunft), 
spirit (Ceist), religion and absolute knowledge. The native attitude 
of consciousness towards existence is reliance on the evidence of 
the senses; but a little reflection is sufficient to show that the 
reality attributed to the external world is as much due to intellectual 
conceptions as to the "senses, and that these conceptions elude us 
when we try to fix them. If consciousness cannot detect a permanent 
object outside it, so self-consciousness cannot find a permanent 
subject in itself. It may, like the Stoic, assert freedom by holding 



Too 



•loot from the entanglements of real life, or like the sceptic regard 
the world as a delusion, or finally, as the " unhappy consciousness 
(Ungliicklkhes Bevmsstseyn). may be a recurrent falling short of a 
perfection which it has placed above it in the heavens. But in this 
isolation from the world, sclf<onsciousness has dosed its gates 
against the stream of life. The perception of this is reason. Rcasoa 
convinced that the world and the soul are alike rational observes the 
external world, mental phenomena, and specially the nervous 
organism, as the meeting ground of body and mind. But reason 
finds much in the world recognising no kindred with her, and so 
turning to practical activity seeks in the world the realUation of 
her own aims. Either in a crude way she pursues her own pleasure, 
and finds that necessity counteracts her cravings; or she endeavours 
to find the world in harmony with the heart, and yet is unwilling 
to see fine aspirations crystallised by the act of realising them. 
Finally, unable to impose upon the world either selfish or humani- 
tarian ends, she folds her arms in pharisaic virtue, with the hope 
that some hidden power will give the victory to righteousness. 
But the world goes on in its life, heedless of the demands of virtue. 
The principle of nature is to live and let live. Reason abandons 
her efforts to mould the world, and is content to let the aims of 
individuals work out their results independently, only stepping in 
to lay down precepts for the cases where individual actions conflict, 
and to test these precepts by the rules of formal logic. 

So far we have seen consciousness on one hand and the seal world 
on the other. The stage of Gent reveals the consciousness no 
longer as critical and antagonistic but as the indwelling spirit of a 
community, as no longer isolated from its surroundings but the 
union of the single and real consciousness with the vital feeling that 
animates the community. This is the lowest stage of concrete 
consciousness— life, and not knowledge; the spirit inspires, but does 
not reflect. It is the age of unconscious morality, when the in- 
dividual's life is lost in the society of which he is an organic member. 
But increasing culture presents new ideals, and the ramd, absorbing 
the ethical spirit of its environment, gradually emancipates itself 



from conventions and superstitions. This AttfeUrumg prepares 
the way for the rule of conscience, for the moral view ol the world 
as subject of a moral law. From the moral world the next step 
is religion ; the moral law gives place to God ; but the idea of God- 
head, too, as it first appears, is imperfect, and has to pass through 
the forms of nature-worship and of art before it reaches a full 
utterance in Christianity. Religion in this shape is the nearest step 
to the stage of absolute knowledge; and this absolute knowledge— 
" the spirit knowing itself as spirit "—is not something which 
leaves these other forms behind but the full comprehension of thesa 
as •■ — ■—- ic constituents of us empire; " they are the memory and 
th e of its history, and at the same time the actuality, truth 

ar y of its throne." Here, according to Hegel, is the field 

of iy. 

ce to the Pkemmemlogy signalled -the separation from 
Sc he adieu to romantic. It declared that a genuine 

pi has no kindred with the mere aspirations of artistic 

mi must earn its bread by the sweat of its brow. It sets 

its linst the idealism which either thundered against th* 

wo,«j ,xm iws deficiencies, or sought something finer than reality. 
Philosophy is to be the science of the actual world— it is the spirit 
comprehending itself in its own extcrnalizations and manifestations. 
The philosophy of Hegel is idealism, but it is an idealism in which 
every idealistic unification has its other face in the multiplicity of 
existence. It is realism as well as idealism, and never quits tts bold 
on facts. Compared with Fichte and Schclling, Hegel has a sober, 
hard, realistic character.. At a later date, with the call of Schclling 
to Berlin in 1841, it became fashionable to speak of Hegelianism as a 
negative philosophy requiring to be complemented by a " positive " 
philosophy which would give reality and not mere ideas. The cry 
was the same as that of Krug (?.»,), asking the philosophers who 
expounded the absolute to construe his pen. It was the cry of the 
Evangelical school for a personal Christ and not a dialectical Logos. 
The claims of the individual, the real, material and historical fact, 
it was said, had been sacrificed by Hegel to the universal, the ideal. 
the spiritual and the logical 

There was a truth in these criticisms. It was the very aim of 
Hegelianism to render fluid the fixed phases of reality — to show 
existence not to be an immovable rock limiting the efforts of thought, 
but to have thought implicit in it, waiting for release from its 
petrifaction. Nature was no longer, as with Fichte, to be a mere 
spring-board to evoke the latent powers of the spirit. Nor was it, 
as in Schelling's earlier system, to be a collateral progeny with 
mind from the same womb of indifference and identity. Nature and 
mind in the Hegelian system — the external and the spiritual world 
—have the same origin, but are not co-equal branches. The natural 
world proceeds from the " idea, the spiritual from the idea and 
nature. It is impossible, beginning with the natural world, to 
explain the mind by any process of distillation or development, 
unless consciousness or its potentiality has been there from the 
first. Reality, independent of the individual consciousness, there 
must be; reality, independent of all mind, is an Impossibility. . At 
the basis of all reality, whether material or mental, there is thought. 
But the thought thus regarded as the basis of all existence is not 



HEGEL So5 

„„...„„ ..„..i «M» fts d 
the stuff of which both 1 
M in the natural world, 
primary form is, as it « 

Said, free and mutually 
fts seraphic scientific lil 

world ; and thought had 

organism. Thought in 

completed, is what Heg 

fundamental, is m anot 

It only appears in con 

the mind. Only with 1 

tcious of itself in its < 

history of philosophy • 

tranches of philosophy I 
The exposition or coi 

Logic A» the total syi 

» .. the system fi 

**** reality, has tl 

two contradictory eleme 

not merely contrary, Ul 

same and different. Tl 

unification, the second a 

synthesis. For exampk 

hie, which when placed 

eonstitutents, and yet in 

elements together, and 

organic union. Or ag! 

threefold chain; the on 

fact) seems to melt awa 

yet no scientific progi 

original unification is t 

and establish a reunifi 

Flchtean formula, is ge 

thought. 
In what we may call 

are known as the abstra 

the dialectical stage, or 

stage, or that oTposi 

attitudes taken alone 

isolated, is scepticism; 

b mysticism. Thus 1 

and mysticism to facte 

thinker believes his 01 

IntelHgible apart from 

and genera were fixed 

the ideal forms in th< 

phenomenal world, wtv 

The dialectic of net* 

Appealing to reality it 

forms are contradict© 

multiplicity, instead ol 

parts. Dialectic is, tl 

solid structures of ms 

latent in such concept 
and change, the enei 

absolute and universa 

these transitions take 

mind they are more 

seems on the side of 1 

while it disintegrates' 1 

new unity with higher 

of effort, requiring neit 

ignoring of the diver! 

contradiction is no dot 

ing it is to shut our ' 

required, therefore, is 1 

to include and give ex 

The universe, then, ' 

philosophy. It is the 

the manifestation of < ► 

is eternally present; 1 

self-unfolding of the i » 

idea, in nature and ui » 

absoluteness in every f 

Cod revealing Himsel ' 

possible deity prior t< [ 

and actuality; in thi > 

forces and forms of lift { 

the legal and moral or • 

and philosophy. J 

This introduction 1 { 

Feuerbach and other * 

illegitimate interpolat ' 

instead of one contin e 

by which in the logic ■ 

of ideas, products of ■ 

logical value of the 1 ■ 



being hi their opinw 

revealing absolute. Tnus tney maae man me cr»»v. «.>««•» 



2o6 HEGEL 



SriH it remains a great^paint to hate even a . 

n tike dark anomalies' which lie under Che normal 
and to have traced the geneaia of the intdketual 
intmal sensitivity. 

■A the mind as objectified in the institutions of lav. 
the state is discussed in the " Philoaophy of Right.'' 
\k the antithesis of a legal system and « L 
I, carrying out the work of Kant, presenta -1^ 
' these elements in the ethical life (SitUich- ±m. 



lily and the state. Treating the family aa 
realisation of the moral life, and not as the result of 
ows bow by the means of wider associations due to 
a the state issues aa the full home of the moral spirit. 
f of interdependence is combined with f r eedo m of 
■owth. The state n the consummation of man aa 
necessary starting-point whence the spirit rises to an 
nee in the spheres of art, religion and philosophy, .la 
1 or. temporal state, religion, as the finite organization 
, like other societies, subordinate to the state. But 
i, as absolute spirit, religion, like art and phuoaophyt 

the state, but belongs to a higher region. 

1 state ia always an individual, and the relations of 
th each other and the " world-spirit " of which they 
eatattona constitute the material of history. The 

FhiUsopky of Hutu 
rl Hegel, ia the most 
world is a scene of j 
\ for awhile the sceptr 
il spirit, till another 
erty— a larger super 
circumstance. Tare 
«d the Germanic — ii 
minant order, and tli 
le history of the wc 

arrangement of iso 
>. i A graver ma**k< 

from giving a law of progress, seems to suggest caw 
the world ia rearing an end, and has merely reduced 
ogical formula. The answer to this charge is partly 
— the idealistic 



; present % b always an 

ictual fact, to the future. 

I the roethoc Aoyment of it- 

. Aristotle i » ethical and 

rises the w « religion and 

he psychok jte . Ar * 

that sens* if) *-** 

a of the i ioa 

' the second nd. 

t, the first *d, 

his conform ;hc 

b it is expn f of nature ia 

ventitious b a beauty born 

the artist i it or; it is not 

of natural mistence, but 

a question, an address to a responding breast, a call 
\ spirit." The perfection of art depends on the decree 
which idea and form appear worked into each other, 
rent proportion between the idea and the shape ia 
zed arise three different forms of art. When the idea, 
, gets no further than a struggle and endeavour for 
; expression, we have the symbolic, which is the 
of art, which seeks to compensate its imperfect ex- 
lossal and enigmatic structures. In the second or 
I art the idea of humanity finds an adequate sensuous 
But this form disappears with the decease of Greek 
id on its collapse follows the romantic, the third form 
the harmony of form and content again grows de* 
; the object of Christian ait — the infinite spirit — b a 
for art. Corresponding to this division b the clasai- 
siagle arts. First comes architecture— in the main, 
then sculpture, the classical art par txcellenu; they 
ever, in all three forms. Painting and music are the 
itic arts. Lastly, aa a union of painting and musk 
where the sensuous element is mora than ever sub- 
spirit. 

on the Philosophy of Art stray largely into the next 
il with seat on the close connexion of art and religion; 
sion of the decadence and rise of religions, of the 
ties of Christian legend, of the age of chivalry, &c., 
iik a book of varied interest, 
on the Philosophy of Religion, though unequal in 
on and belonging to different dates, serve to exhibit 
xion of the system with Christianity. Religion, like 
o philosophy as an exponent of the harmony between 
bsolute. In it the absolute exists as the poetry and 
cart, in the inwardness of feeling. Hegel after ex- 
laturc of religion passes on to discuss its historical 
the immature state of religious science falls into 
„*. At the bottom of the scale of nature-worships ha 



HEGEMON OF THASOS 207 



places the rekgion of sorcery* Thd 

apportioned with tome uncertainty 
East. "With the Persian religion ol 
enigma* we pass to those faiths whei 
a spiritual individuality, i.e. to the ri 
the Creek (of beauty) and the Roman 
absolute religion, in which the myster 
Cod and man is an open doctrine. 
Cod is a Trinity, because He is a s] 
truth is the subject of the Christian 
Cod. in the immediate aspect, ia th 
man, which far from being at one w 
an attitude of estrangement. The h 
reconciliation between man and the 
Christ this union, ceasing to be a met 
the Spirit of Cod which dwells in the 

The lectures on the History of Philc 
with the various epochs, and in some 
of Hegel's career. In trying to subjet 
they sometimes m i sconceive the filiati< 
the history of philosophy as a scienti! 
a philosophical theory is not an accid 
pf its age determined by its antece< 
handing on its results to the future. 

Hefdianitm in England. — On the e 
influence of Hegelianism was compan 
due among other causes to the direct 
science of psychology, partly to the re 
method. In England and Scotland i 
theory and practice it here seemed to 
active to prevailing tendencies towardi 
that was required, la this respect it 
what the same relation that the influc 
ture. This explains the hold which 
English and Scottish thought soon aft 
tury. The first impulse came from I. 
in Edinburgh, and B. Jowett in Oxfo 
there was a powerful school of Englii 
Edward Cajrd and T. H. Green devot< 
of the Hegelian system. With the * 
principle that the real ia the rational, 
more critical examination of the preci 
it and its bearing on the problems of re 
had interpreted it in the sense that tht 
was not only spiritual but self-conscf 
was reflected Inadequately but truly ii 
seemed to come forward in the charei 
critics of the Western belief in Cod, fi 
time went on it became obvious that 
spirit of idealism Hegel's principle v 
Interpretation. Granted that rational 
coherence and self«consistency it the 
and reality, does self-consciousness its 
this criterion? If not, are we not foi 
to personality whether human or 
definitely raised in F. H. Bradley's A 
and ed.. 1897) *ad answered in the nefl 
setf-consistency which our ideal requi 
form of being in which subject and obj 
stand as exclusive oppositcs, from whu 
that the finite self could not be a reality 
On this basis Bradley developed a theoi 
not denying that it must be conceived 
spirituality is of a kind that finds no 
experience. More recently J. M . E. M< 
Dialectic (1896). Studies in Hegelian 
Dogmas of Mihon (1006) have opene 
pretatioa of rfegclianism. Truly pi 
metaphysical problem b. here as ever, t 
Many, McTaggart starts with a defini 
thought upon it can come to rest. He 
for each individual, (b) the whole nat 
for the unity. It follows from such a c 
the whole cannot itself be an individt 
In whom it is realized, in other wort 
Person. But for the same reason — via 
this condition is realized — the indmdv 
ultimate reality reflecting in its inmo 
Leibniz, the complete fulness and han 
to Bradley's argument for the unreal! 
preted as meaning that the opposition 
which it is founded is one that is sell 
transcended. The fuller our knowta 
the object stand out as an invulnera 
but the process by which it is thus set 
is%lso the process by which we underst 
substance of our own thought. Fron 
quencea followed. Seeing that the u 
taken to stand in respect to its inm 
mony with the whole, It must cterna... 



208 



HEGEMONY— HEIBERG 



was also the author of a comedy called Pkilinm (Pkilin/), 
written in the manner of Eupolis and Cratinus, in which he 
attacked a well-known courtesan. Athenaeus (p. 698) , who 
preserves some parodic hexameters of his, relates other anecdotes 
concerning him (pp. 5, 108, 407). 

Fragments in T. Kock, Comicorwn AUicorum fragmenta, I. (1880); 
B. J. Peltier, De parodica Graecorum poesi (1855). 

> HEGEMONY (Gr. irworCa, leadership, from Ify&riai, to 
lead, the leadership especially of one particular state in a group 
of federated or loosely united states. The term was first applied 
in Greek history to the position claimed by different individual 
city-states, e.g. by Athens and Sparta, at different times to a 
position of predominance (primus inter pares) among other equal 
states, coupled with individual autonomy. The reversion of this 
position was claimed by Macedon (see Greece: Ancient History, 
and Delian League). 

HBGESIAS OF MAGNESIA (in Lydia), Greek rhetorician and 
historian, flourished about 300 B.C. Strabo (xiv. 648), speaks 
of him as the founder of the florid style of composition known as 
" Asiatic" (cf. Tikaeus). Agatharchides, Dionysius of Hali- 
carnassus and Cicero all speak of htm in disparaging terms, 
although Varro seems to have approved of his work. He pro- 
fessed to imitate the simple style of Lysias, avoiding long periods, 
and expressing himself in short, jerky sentences, without modula- 
tion or finish. His vulgar affectation and bombast made his 
writings a mere caricature of the old Attic. Dionysius describes 
his composition as tinselled, ignoble and effeminate. It is 
generally supposed, from the fragment quoted as a specimen by 
Dionysius, that Hegesias is to be classed among the .writers of 
lives of Alexander the Great. This fragment describes the 
treatment of Gaza and its inhabitants by Alexander after its 
conquest, but it is possible that it is only part of an epidektic 
or show-speech, not of an historical work. This view is supported 
by a remark of Agatharchides in Photius (cod. 250) that the 
only aim of Hegesias was to exhibit his skill in describing 
sensational events. 

See Cicero, Brutus 83, Orator 67, 69, with J. E. Sandys'* note, ad 
Alt. xii. 6; Dion. Haltc. De verborum comp. iv.; Aulus Gellius ix. 
4; Plutarch, Alexander, 3; C W. Mailer, Scriplores rerum Alexandri 
Mlagni, p. 138 (appendix to Didot ed. of Arrian, 1846); Norden. 
Die antihe Kunstprosa (1898); J. B. Bury, Ancient Creek Historians 
(1900), pp. 160-172, on origin and development of " Asiatic " style, 
with example from Hegesias. 

HEGESIPPUS, Athenian orator and statesman, nicknamed 
Kpu£uXos (" knot "), probably from the way in which he wore 
his hair. He lived in the time of Demosthenes, of whose anti- 
Macedonian policy he was an enthusiastic supporter. In 343 
B.C. he was one of the ambassadors sent to Macedonia to dis- 
cuss, amongst other matters, the restoration of the bland of 
Halonnesus, which had been seised by Philip. The mission was 
unsuccessful, but soon afterwards Philip wrote to Athens, offering 
to resign possession of the island or to submit to arbitration the 
question of ownership. In reply to this letter the oration De 
Halonneso was delivered, which, although included among the 
speeches of Demosthenes, is generally considered to be by 
Hegesippus. Dionysius of Halicarnassus and Plutarch, however, 
favour the authorship of Demosthenes. 

See Demosthenes, De falsa legatione 364, 447, De corona 250, 
Philippics iii. 129; Plutarch, Demosthenes 17, Apophtheemata, 
1870: Dionysius Halic ad Atnmaeum, i.; Grote, History of Greece* 
ch. 90. 

HBGESIPPUS (fl. a.d. 150-180), early Christian writer, was of 
Palestinian origin, and lived under the Emperors Antoninus Pius, 
Marcus Aurelius and Commodus. Like Aristoof Pella he belonged 
to that group of Judaistic Christians which, while keeping the law 
themselves, did not attempt to impose on others the requirements 
of circumcision and Sabbath observance. He was the author of 
a treatise (uroju^/iara) in five books dealing with such subjects 
as Christian literature, the unity of church doctrine, paganism, 
heresy and Jewish Christianity, fragments of which are found in 
Eusebius, who obtained much of his information concerning early 
Palestinian church history and chronology from this source. 
Hegesippus was also a great traveller, and like many other kadera 



of his time came to Rome (having visited Corinth on die way) 
about the middle of the 2nd century. * His journeying* impressed 
him with the idea that the continuity of the church in the cities 
he visited was a guarantee of its fidelity to apostolic orthodoxy: 
" in each succession and in every city, the doctrine is in accordance 
with that which the Law and the Prophets and the Lord [U the 
Old Testament and the evangelical tradition] proclaim." To 
illustrate this opinion be drew up a list of the Roman bishops. 
Hegesippus is thus a significant figure both for the type of 
Christianity taught in the circle to which he belonged, and a& 
accentuating the point of view which the church began to assume 
in the presence of a developing gnosticism. 

HEGESIPPUS, the supposed author of a free Latin adaptation 
of the Jewish War of Josephus under the title De beUo Judaico et 
excidio urbis Hierosolymitanae, The seven books of Josephus 
are compressed into five, but much has been added from the 
A ntiquines and from the works of Roman historians, while several 
entirely new speeches are introduced to suit the occasion. Internal 
evidence shows that the work could not have been written before 
the 4th century a.d. The author, who is undoubtedly a Christian, 
describes it in his preface as a kind of revised edition of Josephus. 
Some authorities attribute it to Ambrose, bishop of Milan (340- 
397), but there is nothing to settle the authorship definitely. The 
name Hegesippus itself appears to be a corruption of Josephus, 
through the stages 'IoxnjTot, losippus, Egesippus, Hegesippus, 
unless H was purposely adopted as reminiscent of Hegesippus, the 
father of ecclesiastical history (and century). 

Best edition by C. F. Weber and J. Caesar (1864); authorities 
in* E. Schurer, History of the Jewish People (Em. trans.), i. 00 «eq.; 
F. Vogel, De Hegesippo, qui dieitur, Jooepki tnUrprel* (Eiianajea, 
1881). 

HEGIUS (VON HEBKL ALEXANDER (c. 1433-1498), German 
humanist, so called from bis birthplace Heek in Westphalia. In 
his youth he was a pupfl of Thomas a Kempis, at that time canon 
of the convent of St Agnes at Zwolle. In 1474 he settled down at 
De venter in Holland, where he either founded or succeeded to the 
headship of a school, which became famous for the number of its 
distinguished alumni. First and foremost of these was Erasmus; 
others were Hermann von dem Busche, the missionary of 
humanism, Conrad Godenius (Gockelen), Conrad Mutianus 
(Muth von Mudt) and pope Adrian VL Hegius died at Deventcr 
on the 7th of December 1498. His writings, consisting of short 
poems, philosophical essays, grammatical notes and letters, 
were published after his death by his pupil Jacob Fabcr. They 
display considerable knowledge of Latin, but less of Greek, on the 
value of which he strongly insisted. Hegius's chief claim to be 
remembered rests not upon his published works, but upon his 
services in the cause of humanism. He succeeded in abolishing 
the old-fashioned medieval textbooks and methods of instruction, 
and led his pupils to the study of the classical authors themselves. 
His generosity in assisting poor students exhausted a considerable 
fortune, and at his death he left nothing but his books and 
clothes. 

See D. Reichling, " Beitrftge zur CharakterUtikde* Alex. Hegins," 
in the Monatsschrift fur Westdeutschland (1877); H. Hamelmaaa, 
Opera geneoiogtco-historua (1711)1 H. A. Erhard, GtschichU dm 
Wiederaufbluhens unssenschaftltcher Bildun^ (1826); C Krafft an* 
W. Crecelius. " Alexander Hegius und seine Schuler," from the 
works of Johannes Batsbach, one of Hegius's pupils, in Zetisckrifl 
des bergischen Ceschtchtswereins, vii. (Bonn, 1871). 

HEIBERG, JOHAN LUDVIG (1791-1860), Danish poet and 
critic, son of the political writer Peter Andreas Heiberg (1758- 
1841), and of the famous novelist, afterwards the Baroness 
Gyllembourg-Ehrensvard, was born at Copenhagen on the 14th 
of December 1791. In 1800 his father was exiled and settled in 
Paris, where he was employed in the French foreign office, retir- 
ing in 1817 with a pension. His political and satirical writings 
continued to exercise great influence over h» fellow-countrymen. 
Johan Ludvig Heiberg was taken by K. L. Rahbek and his wife 
into their house at Bakkehuset. He was educated at the uni- 
versity of Copenhagen, and his first publication, entitled The 
Theatre for Marionettes (181 4), included two romantic drama*. 
This was followed by Christmas Jokes and New Year's Tricks 



HEIDE— HEIDELBERG 



209 



(tSs6), Tkt Initiation of Psycho (1817), and The Prophecy of 
Tycko BrukL, a satire 00 the eccentricities of the Romantic 
writers, especially on the sentimentality of Ingemann. These 
works attracted attention at a time when Baggescn, Ohlen- 
«cbiiger and Ingemann possessed the popular ear, and were 
understood at once to be the opening of a great career. In 1 81 7 
Heiberg took his degree, and jn 1819 went abroad with a grant 
from government. He proceeded to Paris, and spent the next 
three years there with his. father. In 182 2 he published his drama 
of Nina, and was made professor of the Danish language at the 
university of Kiel, where he delivered a course of lectures, com- 
paring the Scandinavian mythology as found in the Edda with 
the poems of OhlenschJager. These lectures were published in 
German in 1827. 

In 182s Heiberg came back to Copenhagen for the purpose of 
introducing the vaudeville on the Danish stage. He composed a 
great number of these vaudevilles, of which the best known are 
King Solomon and George the Hal maker (1825); April Foots 
(1826); A Story in Rosenborg Garden C1827); Kjdge Huskors 
(1831); The Danes in Paris (1833); No (1836); and Yes 
<r83o). He took his models from the French theatre, but showed 
extraordinary skill in blending the words and the music; but the 
subjects and the humour were essentially Danish and even topical. 
Meanwhile he was producing dramatic work of a more serious 
kind; in 1828 he brought out the national drama of ElverhSi; 
in 1830 The inseparables', in 183s the fairy comedy of The Eltes, 
a dramatic version of Tieck's Elfin; and in 1838 Fata Morgana. 
In 1841 Heiberg published a volume of New Poems containing 
" A Soul after Death," a comedy which is perhaps his master- 
piece, " The Newly Wedded Pair," and other pieces. He edited 
from 1827 to 1830 the famous weekly, the Flyvende Post (The 
Flying Post), and subsequently the Inter intsblade (1834-1837) 
and the Inteltigensblade (1842-1843). In bis journalism he 
carried on his warfare against the excessive pretensions of the 
Romanticists, and produced much valuable and penetrating 
criticism of art and literature. In 1831 he married the actress 
Johanne Louise Paetges (1812-1890), herself the author of some 
popular vaudevilles. Heiberg's scathing satires, however, made 
him very unpopular; and the antagonism reached its height 
when, in 1845, ne published his malicious little drama of The 
Nut Crackers. Nevertheless be became in 1847 director of the 
national theatre. He filled the post for seven years, working 
with greatzeal and conscientiousness, but was forced by intrigues 
from without to resign it in 1854. Heiberg died at Bonderap, 
near Ringsted, on the 25th of August i860. His influence upon 
taste and critical opinion was greater than that of any writer of 
his time, and can only be compared with that of Holberg in the 
1 8th century. Most of the poets of the Romantic movement in 
Denmark were very grave and serious; Heiberg added the 
element of humour, elegance and irony. He had the genius of 
good taste, and his witty and delicate productions stand almost 
unique in the literature of his country. 

The poetical works of Heiberg were collected, in 1 1 vols., in 1861- 
1862, and his prose writings (1 1 vols.) in the same year. The last 
volume of his prose work* contains some fragments of autobio- 
graphy. See alio C. Brandos, Essays ( 1 889). For the elder Heiberg 
see monographs by Thaarup (1883) and by Schwanen/tugei (1891). 

HEIDE, a town of Germany, in the Prussian province of 
Schleswig-Holsteln, on a small plateau which stands between 
the marshes and moors bordering the North Sea, 3s m. N.N.W. 
of Glttckstadt, at the junction of the railways Elmshorn- 
Hvklding and NeumOnster-TOnning. Pop.( 1005), 8758; It has an 
Evangelical and a Roman Catholic church, a high-grade school, 
and tobacco and cigar manufactories and breweries. Heide in 
1447 became the capital of the Ditmarsh peasant republic, but 
on the 13th of June 1559 it was the scene of the complete defeat 
of the peasant forces by the Danes. 

HBIDEGGER, JOHANN HBINRICH (1633-1608), Swiss 
theologian, was born at Barenlschweil, in the caqton of Zurich, 
Switzerland, on the 1st of July 1633. He studied at Marburg 
and at Heidelberg, where be became the friend of J. L. Fabricios 
(1632-1696), and was appointed professor extroordinarius of 

XIII 4» 



Hebrew and later of philosophy. In 1659 he was called to 
Stetnfurt to nil the chair of dogmatics and ecclesiastical history, 
and in the same year he became doctor of theology pf Heidelberg. 
In 1660 he revisited Switzerland; and, after marrying, he 
travelled in the following year to Holland, where he made the 
acquaintance of Johannes Cocceius. He returned in 1665 to 
Zurich, where he was elected professor of moral philosophy. 
Two years later he succeeded J. H. Hottinger (1620-1667) in 
the chair of theology, which he occupied till his death on the 
18th of January 1698, having declined an invitation in 1669 
to succeed J. Cocceius at Leiden, as well as a call to Groningen. 
Heidegger was the principal author of the Formula Consensus 
Helvetica in 167 5,which was designed to unite the Swiss Reformed 
churches, but had an opposite effect. W. Gass describes him 
as the most notable of the Swiss theologians of the time. 

His writings are largely controversial, though without being 
bitter, and are in great part levelled against the Roman Catholic 
Church. The chief are De kistoria sacra patriarcharum exereito- 
tioncs selectae ( 1667-167 1); Dissertatio de Peregrinationibus 
religiosis (1670); De ratione sludiorum, opuscula aurea t Sic. 
(1670); Historic papatus (1684; under the name Nicander von 
Hohenegg); Manuductio in viam concordiae Protestantism 
ecclesiasticae (1686); Tumulus concilii Tridentini (1690); 
Exercitationes biblicae (1700), with a life of the author prefixed; 
Corpus theologiae Christianae (1700, edited by J. H. Schweizer); 
Ethicae Christianae elementa (1711); and lives of J. H. Hottinger 
(1667) and J. L. Fabricius (1698). His autobiography appeared 
in 1698, under the title Historia vitae J. H. Heideggeri. 

See the articles in Herrog-Hauck's RealeneyUopddU and the 
Allgemeine deulscke Biografhte; and cf. W. Gass, Gesckukte dcr 
protestantisthen Dogmatik, u. 353 ff. 

HEIDELBERG, a town of Germany, on the south bank of the 
Neckar, 12 m. above its confluence with the Rhine, 13 m. S.E. 
from Mannheim and 54 m. from Frankfort -on-Main by rail. The 
situation of the town, lying between lofty hills covered with 
vineyards and forests, at the spot where the rapid Neckar leaves 
the gorge and enters the plain of the Rhine, is one of great natural 
beauty. The town itself consists practically of one long, narrow 
street — the Hauptstrasse — running parallel to the river, from 
the railway station on the west to the Karlstor on the east 
(where there is also a local station) for a distance of 2 m. To 
the south of this is the Anlage, a pleasant promenade flanked by 
handsome villas and gardens, leading directly to the centre of 
the place. A number of smaller streets intersect the Haupt- 
strasse at right angles and run down to the river, which is crossed 
by two fine bridges. Of these, the old bridge on the east, built 
in 1788, has a fine gateway and* is adorned with statues of 
Minerva and the elector Charles Theodore of the Palatinate; 
the other, the lower bridge, on the west, buSt in 1877, connects 
Heidelberg with the important suburbs of Neuenheim and 
Handschuchshetm. Of recent years the town has grown largely 
towards the west on both sides of the river; but the additions 
have been almost entirely of the better class of residences. 
Heidelberg is an important railway centre, and is connected by 
trunk lines with Frankfort, Mannheim, Karlsruhe, Spires and 
Wtirzburg. Electric trams provide for local traffic, and there 
are also several light railways joining it with the neighbouring 
villages. Of the churches the chief are the Protestant Peters- 
kirche dating from the 15th century and restored in 1873, to 
the door of which Jerome of Prague in 1460 nailed his theses; 
the Heilige Geist Kirche (Church of the Holy Ghost), an imposing 
Gothic edifice of the 15th century; the Jesuitcnkirche (Roman 
Catholic), with a sumptuously decorated interior, and the new 
Evangelical Christuskirche. The town hall and the university 
buildings, dating from 17 12 and restored in 1886, are common- 
place erections; but to the south of the Ludwigsplatz, upon 
which most of the academical buildings lie, stands the new 
university library, a handsome structure of pink sandstone in 
German Renaissance style. In addition to the Ludwigsplatz 
with its equestrian statue of the emperor William I. there are 
other squares in the town, among them being the BbmarckplaU 
with a statue of Bismarck, and the JubUaumsplatt. 



2IO 



HEIDELBERG 



The chief attraction of Heidelberg is the castle, which over- 
hangs the east part of the town, it stands on the Jettenbiihl, 
& spur of the Konigsstuhl (1800 ft.), at a height of 330 ft. above 
the Neckar. Though now a ruin, yet its extent, its magnificence, 
its beautiful situation and its interesting history render it by 
far the most noteworthy, as it certainly is the grandest and 
largest, of the old castles of Germany. The building was begun 
early, in the 15th century. The elector palatine and German 
king Rupert III. (d. 1410) greatly improved it, and built the 
wing, Ruprechtsbau or Rupert's building, that bears his name. 
Succeeding electors further extended and embellished it (see 
Architecture, Plate VII., figs. 78-80); notably Otto Henry 
" the Magnanimous " (d. i55v)» who built the beautiful early 
Renaissance wing known as the Otto-Hcinrichsbau (1556-1559); 
Frederick IV., for whom the fine late Renaissance wing called 
the Fricdrichsbau was built (1601-1607); and Frederick V.. the 
unfortunate " winter king " of Bohemia, who on the west side 
added the Elisabethenbau or Englischebau (1618), named after 
his wife, the daughter of James I. of Great Britain and ancestress 



of the present English reigning family. In 1648, at the peace of 
Westphalia, Heidelberg was given back to Frederick V.'s son, 
Charles Louis, who restored the castle to its former splendour. 
In 1688, during Louis XI V.'s invasion of the Palatinate, the 
castle was taken, after a long siege, by the French, who blew 
part of it up when they found they could not hope to hold it 
(March 2, 1689). In 1693 it was again captured by them and still 
further wrecked. Finally, in 1764, it was struck by lightning 
and reduced to its present ruinous condition. 

Apart from the outworks, the castle forms an irregular square 
with round towers at the angles, the principal buildings being 
grouped round a central courtyard, the entrance to which is 
from the south through a series of gateways. In this courtyard, 
besides the buildings already mentioned, are the oldest parts 
of the castle, the so-called Alte Bau (old building) and the 
Bandhaus. The Fricdrichsbau, which is decorated with statues 
of the rulers of the Palatinate, was elaborately restored and 
rendered habitable between 1807 and 1903. Other noteworthy 
objects in the castle are the fountain in the courtyard, decorated 
with four granite columns from Charlemagne's palace at Ingel- 
hcim; the Elisabcthcntor, a beautiful gateway named after the 
English princess; the beautiful octagonal bell-tower at the N.E. 
angle; the ruins of the Krautturm, now known as the Gesprengte 
Turm, or blown-up tower, and the castle chapel and the museum 
of antiquities in the Fricdrichsbau. In a cellar entered from 
the courtyard is the famous Great Tun of Heidelberg. This 



vast vat was built in I75r, but ha* only been tried on on* or 
two occasions. Its capacity is 49,000 gallons, and it is so ft* 
high and 31 ft. long. Behind the Friedrichsbau is the Allan 
(1610), or castle balcony, from which is obtained a view -of great 
beauty, extending from the town beneath to the heights acmm» 
the Neckar and over the broad luxuriant plain of the Rhine 
to Mannheim and the dim contours of the Hardt Mountains 
behind. On the terrace of the beautiful grounds is a statue of 
Victor von Schcflel, the poet of Heidelberg. 

The university of .Heidelberg was founded by the elector 
Rupert I., in 1385, the bull of foundation being issued by Pope 
Urban VI. in that year. It was constructed after the type of 
Paris, had four faculties, and possessed numerous privileges. 
Marselius von Inghen was its first rector. The electors Frederick 
I., the Victorious, Philip the Upright and Louis V. respectively 
cherished it. Otto Henry gave it a new organisation, further 
endowed it and founded the library. At the Reformation it 
became a stronghold of Protestant learning, the Heidelberg 
catechism being drawn up by its theologians. Then the tide 
turned. Damaged by the Thirty Years' War, it led a struggling 
existence for a century and a half. A large portion of its remain- 
ing endowments was cut off by the peace of Luneville (1801). 
In 1803, however, Charles Frederick, grand-duke of BaoVn, 
raised it anew and reconstituted it under the name of " Ruperto- 
Carola," The number of professors and teachers is at present 
about iso and of students 1700. The library was first kept in 
the choir of the HeHige Geist Kirche, and then consisted of 
3500 MSS. In 1623 it was sent to Rome by Maximilian L, 
duke of Bavaria, and stored as the Bibiiotheca Palatina in the 
Vatican. It was afterwards taken to Paris, and in 1815 was 
restored to Heidelberg. It has more than 500,000 volumes, 
besides 4000 MSS. Among the other university institutions 
are the academic hospital, the maternity hospital, the physio- 
logical institution, the chemical laboratory, the zoological 
museum, the botanical garden and the observatory on the 
Konigsstuhl. 

The other, educational foundations area gymnasium, a modern 
and a technical school. There is a small theatre, an art and 
several other scientific societies. The manufactures of Heidelberg 
include cigars, leather, cement, surgical instruments and beer, 
but the inhabitants chiefly support themselves by supplying 
the wants of a large and increasing body of foreign permanent 
residents, of the considerable number of tourists who during 
the summer pass through the town, and of the university 
students. A funicular railway runs from the Korn-Markt up 
to the level of the castle and thence to the Molkenkur (700 ft. 
above the town). The town is well lighted and is supplied with 
excellent water from the Wolfsbrunnen. Pop. (188*5), 29404, 
(1005), 49.527. 

At an early period Heidelberg was a fief of the bishop of 
Worms, who entrusted it about 1225 to the count palatine of 
the Rhine, Louis I. It soon became a town and the chief 
residence of the counts palatine. Heidelberg was one of the 
great centres of the reformed teaching and was the headquarters 
of the Calvinists. On this account it suffered much during the 
Thirty Years' War, being captured and plundered by Count 
Tilly in 162 2, by the Swedes in 1633 and again by the imperialists 
In 1635. By the peace of Westphalia it was restored to the 
elector Charles Louis. In 1688 and again in 1603 Heidelberg 
was sacked by the French. On the latter occasion the work of 
destruction was carried out so thoroughly that only one house 
escaped; this being a quaintly decorated erection in the Maikt- 
platz, which is now the Hotel zum Ritlcr. In 1720 the elector 
Charles II. removed his court to Mannheim, and in 1803 the 
town became part of the grand-duchy of Baden. On the $th of 
March 1848 the Heidelberg assembly was held here, and at this 
meeting the steps were taken which led to the revolution in 
Germany in that year. 

See Oncken. Stadt. Sckloss und HochscnuJe fJeiddberg; BUdtr 
avt ihrer Vergangmheit (Heidelberg. 1885): OchclhSuser, Da 
Heidelberger Schlos$, bau- und kunstgesckUMkker Fumrer (Heidel- 
berg, 1903); PUff, Ueiddbug und Umgebung (Heidelberg. 1902); 



• HEIDELBERG— HEIDENHEIM 



211 



Loeatsen, Heidelberg und Umgebung <Stuttoart 1902); Dunn, 
Das Bei&eiberger Schloss, eine Sludie (Berlin, 1884); Koch and Seitz, 
Am Heiddberger Schloss (Darmstadt, 1887- 1 891); J. F. Hautz, 
Gexkkkte der UnnersitAt Heidelberg (1863-1864); A. Thorbecke, 
GeubUkteder UniversUat Heidelberg (Stuttgart, f 886); the Urkmuden- 
buck der UnheruUU Heidelberg, edited by Wtnkelmaiui (Heidelberg , 
1886); Bahr, Die Entfuhrung der Heidelberger Bibliotkek nock Rom 



(Leipzig, 1845) : and C. Weber, Heidelberger Erinnerungen (Stuttgart, 
1886). 

HEIDELBERG, t town and district of the Transvaal. The 
district is bounded S. by the Vaal river and includes the south- 
eastern part of the Witwatersrand gold fields. The town of 
Heidelberg is 42 m. S.E. of Johannesburg and 441 m. N.W. of 
Durban by rail. Pop. (1004), 3220, of whom 1837 were white. 
It was founded In 1865, is built on the slopes of the Rand at an 
elevation of 5020 ft-> and is reputed the best sanatorium 
in the colony. It is the centre of the eastern Rand gold- 



HEIDELBERG CATECHISM, THE, the most attractive of 
all the catechisms of the Reformation, was drawn up at the 
bidding of Frederick III., elector of the Palatinate, and published 
on Tuesday the 19th of January 1563. The new religion* in 
the Palatinate had been largely under the guidance of Philip 
MeUnchthon, who had revived the old university of Heidelberg 
and staffed it with sympathetic teachers. One of these.Tiflemann, 
Heshusius, who became general superintendent in 1558, held 
extreme Lutheran views on the Real Presence, and in bis desire 
to force the community into his own position excommunicated 
his colleague Klebitr, who held Zwinglian views. When the 
breach was widening Frederick, " der fromme Kurfilrst," came 
to the succession, dismissed the two chief combatants and 
referred the trouble to Metanchthon, whose guarded verdict 
was distinctly Swiss rather than Lutheran. In a decree of August 
1560 the elector declared for Calvin and Zwingli, and soon after 
he resolved to issue a new and unambiguous catechism of the 
evangelical faith. He entrusted the task to two young men 
who have won deserved remembrance by their learning and their 
character alike. Zacharias (Jrsinus was born at Breslau in July 
1534 and attained high honour in the university of Wittenberg. 
In 1558 he was made rector of the gymnasium in his native 
town, but the incessant strife with the extreme Lutherans drove 
him to Zurich, whence Frederick, on the advice of Peter Martyr, 
summoned him to be professor of theology at Heidelberg and 
superintendent of the Sapientiae Collegium. He was a man of 
modest and gentle spirit, not endowed with great preaching 
gifts, but unwearied in study and consummately able to impart 
his learning to others. Deposed from his chair by the elector 
Louis in 1576, he lived with John Casimir at Ncustadt and 
found a congenial sphere in the new seminary there, dying in 
his 49th year, in March 1583. 

Caspar Olevianus was born at Treves in 1536. He gave up 
law for theology, studied under Calvin in Geneva, Peter Martyr 
in Zurich^ and Bcza in Lausanne. Urged by William Farel he 
preached the new faith in his native city, and when banished 
therefrom found a home with Frederick of Heidelberg, where 
he gained high renown as preacher and administrator. His 
ardour and enthusiasm made him the happy complement of 
Ursinus. When the reaction came under Louis he was befriended 
by Ludwig von Sain, prince of Wittgenstein, and John, count of 
Nassau, in whose city of Herborn he did notable work at the 
high school until his death on the 15th of March 1587. The 
elector could have chosen no better men, young as they were, 
for the task in hand. As a first step each drew up a catechism 
of his own composition, that of (Jrsinus being naturally of a more 
grave and academic turn than the freer production of Olevianus, 
while each made full use of the earlier catechisms already in use. 
But when the union was effected it was found that the spirits 
of the two authors were most happily and harmoniously wedded, 
the exactness and erudition of the one being blended with the 
fervency and grace of the other. Thus the Heidelberg Catechism, 
which was completed within a year of Its inception, has an 
individuality that marks it out from all its predecessors and 
successors. The Heidelberg synod unanimously approved of it, 



It was published In January 1563. and in the same year officially 
turned into Latin by Jos. Lagus and Lambert Pithopoeus. 

The ultra-Lutherans attacked the catechism with great 
bitterness, the assault being led by Heshusius and FUcrus 
Ulyricus. Maximilian IL remonstrated against it as an Infringe- 
ment of the peace of Augsburg. A conference was held at 
Maulbronn in April 1564, and a personal attack was made on the 
elector at the diet of Augsburg in 1566, but the defence was 
well sustained, and the Heidelberg book rapidly passed beyond 
the bounds of the Palatinate (where indeed it suffered eclipse 
from 1376 to 1583, during the electorate of Louts), and gained 
an abundant success not only in Germany (Hesse, Anhah, 
Brandenburg and Bremen) but also in the Netherlands (1588), 
and in the Reformed churches of Hungary, Transylvania and 
Poland. It was officially recognized by the synod of Doit in 
16x9, passed into France, Britain and America, and probably 
shares with the De imitatione Christi and The Pilgrim's Progress 
the honour of coming next to the Bible in the number of tongues 
into which it has been translated. 

This wide acceptance and high esteenuare due largely to an 
avoidance of polemical and controversial subjects, and even 
more to an absence of the controversial spirit. There is no 
mistake about its Protestantism, even when we omit the unhappy 
addition made to answer 80 by Frederick himself (in indignant 
reply to the ban pronounced by the Council of Trent), in which 
the Mass is described as " nothing else than a denial of the one 
sacrifice and passion of Jesus Christ, and an accursed idolatry "^ 
an addition which is the one blot on the Iwuima of the 
catechism. The work is the product of the best qualities of 
head and heart, and its prose is frequently marked by all the 
beauty of a lyric. It follows the plan of the epistle to the Romans 
(excepting chapters ix.-xi.) and falls into three parts: Sin, 
Redemption and the New Life. This arrangement alone would 
mark it out from the normal reformation catechism, which runs 
along the stereotyped lines of Decalogue, Creed, Lord's Prayer, 
Church and Sacraments. These themes are included, but are 
shown as organically related. The Commandments, e.g. " belong 
to the first part so far as they are a mirror of our sin and misery; 
but also to the third part, as being the rule of our new obedience 
and Christian life." The Creed— a panorama of the sublime 
facts of redemption—and the sacraments find their place in 
the second part; the Lord's Prayer (with the Decalogue) in the 
third. 

See The Heidelberg Catechism, the German Text* with a Revised 
Translation and Introduction, edited by A. Smdlie (London, 1900). 

HEIDELOPF, KARL ALEXANDER VON (1788-1865). German 
architect, the son of Victor Peter Heideloff, a painter, was born 
at Stuttgart. He studied at the art academy of his native 
town, and after following the profession of an architect for some 
time at Coburg was in 1818 appointed city architect at Nurem- 
berg. In 1822 he became professor at the polytechnic school, 
holding his post until 1854, and some years later he was chosen 
conservator of the monuments of art. Heideloff devoted his 
chief attention to the Gothic style of architecture, and the 
buildings restored and erected by him at Nuremberg and in its 
neighbourhood attest both his original skill and his purity of 
taste. He abo achieved some success as a painter in water* 
colour. He died at Hassfurt on the 28th of September 186^. 
Among his architectural works should be mentioned the castle 
of Reinhardsbrunn, the Hall of the Knights in the fortress at 
Coburg, the castle of Landsberg.the mortuary chapel in Mciningen, 
the little castle of Rosenburg near Bonn, the chapel of the 
castle of Rhcinstein near Bingen, and the Catholic church in 
Leipzig. His powers in restoration are shown in the castle of 
Lichtenstein, the cathedral of Bamberg, and the Knights* 
Chapel (Ritter Kopdfe) at Hassfurt. 

Among his writings on architecture are Die Lehre von den Sdulen- 



ordnungen (1827): Der Kleine Vignola (1832); Ntirnberet Baudenh- 
maler der Voruit (1838-1843, complete * ' " _ J "" 

Ornamentik des MittelaUers ( 1 838-1842). 



HEIDENHEIM, a town of Germany, in the kingdom of 
Wurttcmberg, 31 m. by rail north by east of Ulm. Pop. (1005)1 
12,173. It has an Evangelical and a Roman Catholic church*, 



a»4 



HEINE 



Heine was atoo fortunate In having access t» the chief 
literary circles of the capital; he was on terms of intimacy 
with Varnhagen von Ease and his wife, the celebrated Rahd, 
at whose house he frequently met such men as the Humboldt*, 
Hegel himself and Schlciermacher; he made the acquaintance 
of leading men of letters like Fouque and Chamisso, and was 
on a still more familiar footing with the most distinguished 
of his co-religionists in Berlin. Under such favourable circum- 
stances his own gifts were soon displayed. He contributed 
poems to the Berliner GesdlHkafttr, many of which were subse- 
quently incorporated in the Buck dcr Lieder, and in December 
i8ai a little volume came from the press entitled Gcdicku, his 
first avowed act of authorship. He was also employed at this 
time as correspondent of a Rhenish newspaper, as well as in 
completing his tragedies- Almonstr and William RaUli J, which 
were published in 1823 with small success. In that same year 
Heine, not in the most hopeful spirits, returned to his family, 
who had. meanwhile moved to Lflneburg. He had plans of 
settling in Paris, but as he was still dependent on his uncle, 
the latter 's consent had to be obtained. As was to be expected, 
Solomon Heine did not favour the new plan, but promised to 
continue his support on the condition that Harry completed 
his course of legal study. He sent the young student for a six 
weeks' holiday at Cuxhaven, which opened the poet's eyes to 
the wonders of the sea; and three weeks spent subsequently 
at his uncle's county seat near Hamburg were sufficient to 
awaken a new passion in Heine's breast — this time for Amalie's 
sister, Theme. In January 1824 Heine returned to Gottingen, 
where, with the exception of a visit to Berlin and the excursion to- 
the Hartz mountains in the autumn of 1824, which Is immortal- 
ised in the first volume of the ReiscbOder, he remained until his 
graduation in the summer of the following year. It was on the 
latter of these journeys that he had the interview with Goethe 
which was so amusingly described by him in later years. A few 
weeks before obtaining bis degree, he took a ste'p which he had 
long meditated; be formally embraced Christianity. This 
" act of apostasy," which has been dwelt upon at unnecessary 
length both by Heine's enemies and admirers, was actuated 
wholly by practical considerations, and did not arise from any 
wish on the poet's part to deny his race. The summer months 
which followed his examination Heine spent by his beloved 
sea in th.e island of Norderney, his uncle having again generously 
supplied the means for this purpose. The question of his future 
now became pressing, and for a time he seriously considered the 
plan of settling as a solicitor in Hamburg, a plan which was 
associated in his mind with the hope of marrying his cousin 
Therese. Meanwhile he had made arrangements for the publica- 
tion of the Reiscbilder, the first volume of which, Die Hanreise, 
appeared m May 1826. The success of the book was instan- 
taneous. Its lyric outbursts and flashes of wit; its rapid 
changes from grave to gay; its flexibility of thought and style, 
came as a revelation to a generation which had grown weary of 
the lumbering literary methods of the later Romanticists. ' 

In the spring of the following year Heine paid a long planned 
visit to" England, where he was deeply impressed by the free 
and vigorous public life, by the sise and bustle of London; above 
all, he was filled with admiration for Canning, whose policy 
had realized many a dream of the young German idealists of 
that age. But the picture had also its reverse; the sordidly 
commercial spirit of English life, and brutal egotism of the 
ordinary Englishman, grated on Heine's sensitive nature; 
he missed the finer literary and artistic tastes of the continent 
and was repelled by the austerity of English religious sentiment 
and observance. Unfortunately the latter aspects of English 
life left a deeper mark on his memory than the bright side. 
In October Baron Cotta, the well-known publisher, offered 
Heine— the second volume of whose Reiscbilder and the Buck 
der Lieder had meanwh&e appeared and won him fresh laurels — 
the joint-editorship of the Neue attgemcine politische Armoltn. 
He gladly accepted the offer and betook himself to Munich. 
Heine did his best to adapt himself and his political opinions to 
the new surroundings", in the hope of coming in for a share of 



the good things whiah Xudwig t of Bavaria was so 1 

distributing among artists and men of letters. But the ating* 
of the Jtdsebilder were not so easily forgotten; the clerical 
party in particular did not leave him long in peace. In Jujy 
1828, the professorship on which he had set his hopes being 
still not forthcoming, he left Munich for Italy, where he remained 
until the following November, a holiday which provided material 
for the third and part of the fourth volumes of the Rdiebilder, 
A blow more serious than the Bavarian king's refusal to establish 
him in Munich awaited him on his return to Germany— the 
death of his father. In the beginning of x8ao Heine took up 
his abode in Berlin, where he resumed old acquaintanceships; 
in summer he was again at the sea, and in autumn he returned 
to the city he now loathed above all others, Hamburg, where U 
virtually remained until May 1831. These years were not a 
happy period of the poet's life; his. efforts to obtain a position, 
apart from that which he owed to his literary work, met with 
rebuffs on every side; his relations with bis uncle were un- 
satisfactory and disturbed by constant friction', and for a time 
he was even seriously ill. His only consolation in these months 
of discontent was the completion and publication of the Reist- 
bildcr. When in 1830 the news of the July Revolution in the 
streets of Paris reached him, Heine hailed it as the beginning 
of a new era of freedom, and his thoughts reverted once more 
to his early plan of settling in Paris; All through the feflowing 
winter the plan ripened, and in May 1831 he finally said farewell 
to his native land. 

Heine's first impressions of the " New Jerusalem of liberalism " 
were jubilantly favourable; Paris, he proclaimed, was the 
capital of the civilised world, to be a citizen of Paris the highest 
of honours. He was soon on friendly terms with many of the 
notabilities of the capital, and there was every prospect of a 
congenial and lucrative journalistic activity as correspondent 
for German newspapers. Two series of his articles were subse- 
quently collected and published under the titles FranzSsuckt 
ZustUndc (1832) and Lukzia (written 1840-1843, published in 
the Vermischte Sckriften, 1854). In December 1835, however, 
the German Bund, incited by W. Menzel's attacks on " Young 
Germany," issued its notorious decree, forbidding the publicatiea 
of any writings by the members of that coterie; the name of 
Heine, who had been stigmatised as the leader of the movement 
headed the list. This was the beginning of a series of literary 
feuds in which Heine was, from now on, involved; but a more 
serious and immediate effect of the decree was to curtail consider- 
ably his sources of income. His Uncle, it is true, had allowed 
him 4000 francs a year when he settled in Paris, but at this 
moment he was not on the best of terms with his Hamburg 
relatives. Under these circumstances he was induced to take 
a step which his fellow-countrymen have found it hard to forgive; 
he applied to the French government for support from a secret 
fund formed for the benefit of "political refugees M . who were 
willing to place themselves at the service of France. Prom 1836 
or 2837 until the Revolution of 1848 Heine was in receipt of 
4800 francs annually from this source. 

In October 1834 Heine made the acquaintance of a yotmg 
Frenchwoman, Eugenie Mirat, a saleswoman in a boot -shop 
in Paris, and before long had fallen passionately in love with 
her. t Although ill-educated, vain and extravagant, she inspired 
the poet with a deep and lasting affection, and in 1841, on the 
eve of a duel in which he had become involved, he madeher 
his wife. " Mathilde," as Heine called her, was not the comrade 
to help the poet in days' of adversity, or to raise him to better 
things, but, in spite of passing storms, he seems to have been 
happy with her, and she nursed him faithfully in his last illness. 
Her death Occurred, in 1883. His relations with' Mathilde 
undoubtedly helped to weaken his ties with Germany; and 
notwithstanding the affection he professed to cherish for bis 
native land, he only revisited it twice, in the autumn of 1843 **d 
the summer of 1847. In 1845 appeared the first unmistakable 
signs of the terrible spinal disease, which, for eight yean, from 
the spring of 1848 till his death, condemned him to a u mnttres* 
grave." These years of suffering— suffering which left hit 



HEINBCCIUS-tHEINBCKEN 



2*5 



fateOect aft dear and vivacious as ev er s e e m to have effected 
that might be called a spiritual purification in Heine 'i nature, 
tad to have brought out all the good sides of his character, 
whereas adversity in earlier years only intensified his cynicism. 
The lyrics of the Romanxero (1851) and the collection of Neueste 
Gedkkle (1853-1854) surpass in imaginative depth aad sincerity 
of purpose the poetry of the Buck der Lieder. Most wonderful 
of all are the poems inspired by Heine's strange mystic passion 
tot the lady he called Die Uoucke, a countrywoman of his own — 
her real name* was Elise von Krienitz, but she had written in 
French under the nom de plume of Camille Seldcn—wbo helped 
to brighten the last months of the poet's life. He died on the 
17th of February 1856, and lies buried in the cemetery jof 
Montmartre. .. * 

Besides the purely journalistic work of Heine's Paris years, 
to which reference has already been made, he published a collec- 
tion of more serious prose writings under the title Der Salon 
(1833-1830). In this collection will be found, besides papers on 
French art and the French stage, the essays " Zur Geschkhte der 
Religion und Philosophic in Deutschland," which he had written 
for the Rewm des deux mondes. Here, too, are the more character- 
otic productions of Heine's genius, Aus den Memoir en des 
Earn ten SckuabeUwopeki, Dew Rabbi von Backtrack and 
FUrentimscke Ndckte. Die romontiscke Sckule (1836), with 
its unpardonable personal attack on the elder Schlegel, is a 
lets creditable essay in literary criticism. In 1839 appeared 
Shakes peares Mddcken und Frown, which, however, was merely 
the text to a series of illustrations; and in 1840, the witty and 
trenchant satire on a writer, who, in spite of many personal 
disagreements, had been Heine's fellow-fighter in the liberal 
cause, Ludwxg Borne. Of Heine's poetical work in these years, 
his most important publications were, besides the Romantero, 
the two admirable satires, Deutsckland, ein. WiniernUtrcken 
(1844), the result of his visit to Germany, and AUa Treli, ein 
Semmernacktstraun (1876), an attack on the political Tendenx- 
liUratur of the 'forties* 

la the case of no other of the greater German poets is it so 
hard to arrive at a final judgment as in that of Heinrich Heine, 
la his Buck der Lieder be unqaestionably Struck a new lyric 
note, not merely for Germany but for Europe. No singer 
before him had been so daring in the use of nature-symbolism 
as he, none had given such concrete and plastic expression to 
the spiritual forces of heart and soul; in this respect Heine 
was clearly the descendant of the Hebrew poets of the Old 
Testament. At times, it is true, his imagery is exaggerated 
to the degree of absurdity, but it exercised, none the less, a 
fasciaation over his generation. Heine combined with a spiritual 
delicacy, a fineness of perception, that firm hold on reality 
which is so essential to the satirist. His lyric appealed with 
particular force to foreign peoples, who had little understanding 
for the intangible, undefinable spirituality which the German 
people regard as an indispensable element in their national 
lyric poetry. Thus his fame has always stood higher in England 
aad France than in Germany itself, where his lyric method, 
his self-consciousness, his cynicism in season and out of season, 
were little in harmony with the literary traditions. As far, 
indeed, as the development of the German lyric is concerned, 
Heine's influence, has been of questionable value. But he 
introduced at least one new and refreshing element into German 
poetry with his lyrics of the North Sea; no other German 
poet has felt and expressed so well as Heine the charm of sea 
and coast. 

As a prose writer, Heine's merits were very great. His work 
was, in the main, journalism, but it was journalism of a high 
order, and, after all, the best literature of the " Young German " 
school to which he belonged was of this character. Heine's 
light fancy, his agile intellect, his straightforward, clear style 
stood him here in excellent stead. The prose writings of his 
French period mark, together with BOrne's Briefe aus Paris, 
the beginning of a new era in German journalism and a healthy 
revolt against the unwieldly prose of the Romantic period. 
Above all things, Heine was great as a wit and a satirist. His 



lyric may not be able to assert itself beside that of the very 
greatest German singers, but as a satirist he bad powers of the 
highest order. He combined the holy zeal and passionate 
earnestness of the " soldier of humanity " with the withering 
scorn and ineradicable sense of justice common to the leaders 
of the Jewish race. It was Heine's real mission to be a reformer, 
to restore with instruments of war rather than of peace " the 
interrupted order of the world." The more's the pity that his 
magnificent Arjstophank genius should have had so little 
room for its exercise, and have been frittered away in the petty 

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HEINECCIUS, JOHAKK GOTTLIEB (1681-1741), German 
jurist, was born on the nth of September 1681 atEisenberg, 
Altenburg. He studied theology at Leipzig, and law at Halle; 
and at the latter university he was appointed in 17 13 professor 
of philosophy, and in 17 18 professor of jurisprudence. He 
subsequently filled legal chairs at Franeker in Holland and at 
Frankfort, but finally returned to Halle in 1733 as professor 
of philosophy and jurisprudence. He died there on the 31st of 
August 1 74 1 . Heineccius belonged to the school of philosophical 
jurists. He endeavoured to treat law as a rational science, and 
not merely as an empirical art whose rules had no deeper 
source than expediency. Thus he continually refers to first 
principles, and he develops his legal doctrines as a system of 
philosophy. - 

His chief works were AnUquilaSum Romanarum jurisprudentiam 
Mlustrontium syntagma- (1718), Historia juris cmlis Romani ac 
Cermanici (1733). Elementa juris Cermanici (1735)1 Elenunta juris 
naturae et gentium (1737; Eng. trans, by Turnbull, a vols., London, 
1763). Besides these works he wrote on purely philosophical sub- 
jects, and edited the works of several of the classical jurists. His 
Opera omnia (9 vols., Geneva, 1771, &c.) were edited by bis son 
Johann Christian Gottlieb Heineccius (171&-1791). 

Heineccius's brother, Johann Michael HeiNecctus (1674- 
1722), was a well-known preacher and theologian, but is re- 
membered more from the fact that he was the first to make a 
systematic study of seals, concerning which he left a book, De 
teteribus Germanerum aliarumque nationum sigiUis (Leipzig, 
1710; 2nd ed. t 1719). 

HBINECKEH, CHRISTIAN HEINRICH (1721-1725), a child 
remarkable for precocity of intellect, was born on the 6th of 
February 1721 at Lubeck, where his father was a painter. 
Able to speak at the age of ten months, by the time he was one 
year old he knew by heart the principal incidents in the 
Pentateuch. At two years of age he had mastered sacred 
history; at three he was intimately acquainted with history 
and geography, ancient and modern, sacred and profane, besides 
being able to speak French and Latin; and in his fourth year 
he devoted himself to the study of religion and church history. 
This wonderful precocity was no mere feat of memory, for the 
youthful savant could reason on and discuss the knowledge 
he had acquired. Crowds of people flocked to Lubeck to see 
the wonderful child; and in 1724 he was taken to Copenhagen 
at the desire of the king of Denmark. On his return to Lubeck 



812 



HEIFER— HEILSBRONN 



and several schools.. Its industrial establishments Include 
cotton, woollen, -tobacco, machinery and chemical factories, 
bleach-works, dye-works and breweries, and corn and cattle 
markets. The town, Which received' municipal privileges m 
1356, is overlooked by the ruins of the castle of Hellenstein, 
standing on a hill 1085 ft. high. Heidenheim is also the name 
of a snail place in Bavaria famous on account of the Benedictine 
abbey which formerly stood therein. Founded in 748 by 
Wilibald, bishop of Eichstatt, this was plundered by the peasantry 
In 1525 and was closed in- 1537. 

HEIFER* a young cow that has not calved. The 0. Eng. heah- 
fore or heafru, from which the word is derived, is of obscure origin. 
It is found in Bede's History (a.d. 900) as kcahforc, and has 
passed through many forms. It is possibly derived from heak r 
high, and /area (fare), to go, meaning " high-stepper." It has 
also been suggested that the derivation is from hea, a stall, and 
fore, a cow. 

HEIOEL, KARL AUGUST VON (1835-1905), German novelist, 
was born, the son of a rigisseur or stage-manager of the court 
theatre, on the 25th of March 1835 at Munich. In this city he 
received his early schooling and studied (1854-1858) philosophy 
at the university. He was then appointed librarian to Prince 
Heinrich su Carolath-Beuthen in Lower Silesia, and accompanied 
the nephew of the prince on travels. In 1 863 he settled in Berlin, 
where from 1865 to 1875 he was engaged in journalism. He 
neat resided at Munich, employed in literary work for the king, 
Ludwig II., who in 1881 conferred upon him a title of nobility. 
On the death of the king in 1886 he removed to Riva on the 
Lago di Garda, where he died on the 6th of September 1005. 
Karl von Heigel attained some popularity with his novels: 
Wohin t (1873), Die Dame ohne Herz (1873), Das Geheimnis 
des Kdnigs (1891), Der Roman einer Stadt (1898), Dcr Maha- 
radsckah (1900), Die nervdse Frau (1900), Die neuen HeiUgen 
(1001), and Brdmds Glilck und Ende (1002). -He also wrote 
some plays, notably Josepkine Bonaparte (1892) and Die Zsrin 
(1883) ; and several collections of short stories, Neue EndJttungen 
(1876), Neueste NovcUcn (1878), and Heilere Endklungm 
(1893). 

HEUERMANS, HERMANN (1864- . ), Dutch writer, of 
Jewish origin, was born on the 3rd of December 1864 at Rotter- 
dam. In the Amsterdam Handdsblad he published a scries of 
sketches of Jewish family life under the pseudonym of " Samuel 
Falkland," which were collected in volume form. His novels 
and tales include TrineUe (1892), Fits (1893), Kamertjcszonde 
(2 vols., 1896), Inttrieurs (1897), Diamanlstadt (2 vols., 1003). 
He created great interest by his play Op Hoop van Zegen (1900), 
represented at the Theatre Antoine in Paris, and in English by 
the Stage Society as The Good Hope. His other plays are: 
Dora Kretner (1893), Ghetto (1898), Het tevende Gebot (1899), 
Het Pantser (1901), Ora el labora (1901), and numerous one-act 
pieces. A Case of Arson, an English version of the one-act play 
Brand in de Jonge Jan, was notable for the impersonation (1904 
and 1905) by Henri de Vries of all the seven witnesses who appear 
as characters. 

HEILBRONN, a town of Germany, in the kingdom of WUrttem- 
berg, situated in a pleasant and fruitful valley on the Ncckar, 
33 m. by rail N. of Stuttgart, and at the junction of lines to 
Jagdsfeld, Crailsheim and Eppingen. Pop. (1005), 40,026. In 
the older part of the town the streets are narrow, and contain 
a number of high turreted houses with quaintly adorned gables. 
The old fortifications have now been demolished, and their site 
is occupied by promenades, outside of which are the more modern 
parts of the town with wide streets and many handsome buildings. 
The principal public buildings are the church of St Kilian 
(restored 1886-1895) in the Gothic and Renaissance styles, begun 
about 1019 and completed in 1529, with an elegant tower 210 ft. 
high, a beautiful choir, and a finely carved altar; the town hall 
(Rathaus), founded in 1540, and possessing a curious clock made 
in 1580, and a collection of interesting letters and other docu- 
ments; the house of the Teutonic knights (Dcfutsches Haus), 
now used as a court of law; the Roman Catholic church of St 
Joseph, formerly the church of the Teutonic Order; the tower 



(Diebsturm or Gotzens Turm) on the Ncckar, in which G6tt : 
von Bcrlichingen was confined in 1519; a fine synagogue; an 
historical museum and several monuments, among them those 
to the emperors William I. and Frederick I., to Bismarck, to 
Schiller and to Robert von Mayer (1814-1878), a native of the 
town, famous for his discoveries concerning heat. The educa- 
tional establishments include a gymnasium, a commercial school 
and an agricultural academy. The town in a commercial point 
of view is the most important in Wiirtteraberg, and possesses 
an immense variety of manufactures, of which the principal are 
gold, silver, steel and iron wares, machines, sugar of lead, white 
lead, vinegar, beer, sugar, tobacco, soap, oil, cement, chemicals, 
artificial manure, glue, soda, tapestry, paper and cloth. Grapes, 
fruit, vegetables and flowering shrubs are largely grown in the 
neighbourhood, and there are large quarries for sandstone and 
gypsum and extensive salt-works. By means of the Ncckar 
a considerable trade is carried on in wood, bark, leather, 
agricultural produce, fruit -and cattle. . 

Heilbronn occupies the site of an old Roman settlement; it 
is first mentioned in 741, and the Carolingian princes had a palace 
here. It owes its name — originally Heiligbronn, or holy spring— 
to a spring of water which until 1857 was to be seen issuing from 
under the high altar of the church of St Kilian. Heilbronn 
obtained privileges from Henry IV. and from Rudolph I. and 
became a free imperial city in 1560. It was frequently besieged 
during the middle ages, and it suffered greatly during the 
Peasants' War, the Thirty Years' War, and the various wars 
with France. In April 1633 a convention was entered into here 
between Oxenstierna, the Swabian and Frankish estates and the 
French, English and Dutch ambassadors, as a result of which the 
Heilbronn treaty, for the prosecution of the Thirty Years' War, 
was concluded. . In 1802 Heilbronn was annexed by Wurttem- 
berg. 

See Jiger, GeschichU von Heilbronn (Heilbronn, 1828); Kuttler, 
Heilbronn, seine Umgebungen und seine GeschichU (Heilbronn, 1859); 
DQrr, HeUbronner Chronik (Halle, 1896); Schliz, Die Enlstshung 
der Stadtgemeinde Heilbronn (Leipzig, 1903); and A. KQjel, Der 
HeUbronner Konvent (Halle, 1878). 

HEILIGENSTADT, a town of Germany, in Prussian Saxony, 
on the Leine, 32 m. E.N.E. of Cassel, on the railway to Halle. 
Pop. ( 1 905) , 7955. It possesses an old castle, formerly belonging 
to the electors of Mainz, one Evangelical and two Roman 
Catholic churches, several educational establishments, and an 
infirmary. The principal manufactures are cotton goods, 
cigars, paper, cement and needles. Heiligenstadt is said to have 
been built by the Frankish king Dagobert and was formerly 
the capital of the principality of Eichsfeld. In 1022 it was 
acquired by the archbishop of Mainz, and in 1103 it came into 
the possession of Henry the Proud, duke of Saxony, but when his 
son Henry the Lion was placed under the ban of the Empire, it 
again came to Mainz. It was destroyed by fire in 1333, and was 
captured in 1525 by Duke Henry of Brunswick. In 1803 it 
came into possession of Prussia. The Jesuits had a celebrated 
college here from 1581 to 1773. 

HEILSBERG, a town of Germany, in the province of East 
Prussia, at the function of the Simser and Alle, 38 m. S. of 
Kdnigsberg. Pop. (1005), 6042. It has an Evangelical and a 
Roman Catholic church, and an old castle formerly the seat of 
the prince-bishops of Ermeland, but now used as an infirmary. 
The principal industries are tanning, dyeing and brewing, and 
there is copsiderable trade in grain.- The castle founded at 
Heilsberg by the Tentonic order m 1240 became in 1306 the scat 
of the bishops of Ermeland, an honour which it retained for 
500 years. On the 10th of Jane X807 a battle took place at 
Heilsberg between the French under Spult and Murat, and the 
Russians and Prussians under Bennigsen. 

HEILSBRONN (or Klostek-Heilsbronn), a village of 
Germany, in the Bavarian province of Middle Franconia, with 
a station on the railway between Nuremberg and Ansbacb, has 
1200 inhabitants. In the middle ages it was the seat of one of 
the great monasteries of Germany. This foundation, which 
belonged to the Cistercian order, owed its origin to Bishop Otto 



HEIM— HEINE 



"J 



of Baatag in 113*, tad continued to wrist tffl 1555- I* 
ggpoMml monuments, many of which are figured by Hoeker, 
BiiUkwnmtcktr AnUquiUtttnsckatz (Ansbach, 1731-1740)* are of 
exceptionally high artistic interest. It was the hereditary 
burial-place of the Hohenxollern family and ten burgraves of 
Nuremberg, five margraves and three electors of Brandenburg, 
and many other penons of note are buried within its walls. 
Tbe buildings of the. monastery have mostly disappeared, with 
the exception of the fine church, a Romanesque basilica, restored 
between 1*51 and i860, and possessing paintings by Albert 
Direr. Tbe " Monk of Heilsbronn " is the ordinary appellation 
of a didactic poet of the 14th century, whose Sieben Graden, 
T*kur Sym and Lebm da kaHgc* Alexius were published by 
j. F. L. T. Merzdorf at Berlin in 1870- 

See Rehm, Etn Gong, dutch uud urn die MvtusUr-Kirch* tu Klostor- 
Heilsbronn (Ansbach, 1875); StiUTried r Klotter-Heilsbronn, ein 
Beitrag tu den HohensotUrnscken Forsckungen (Berlin, I 877); Muck, 
Gesekukurveu Kloiter-HeUsbronn (Ndrdlingen, 1879- 1 880); J. Meyer, 
DU HtktutolltrmUnkmaU in Heilfbronn (Ansbach, 1891); and A. 
Warner, Ober den Uinch von Heilsbronn (Strasaburg, 1876). 

HEW. ALBERT VON ST GALLEN (1840- ), Swiss 
geologist, was born at Zurich on the 12th of April 1849. He was 
educated at Zurich and Berlin universities. Very early in life 
he became interested in the physical features of the Alps, and 
at the age of sixteen he made a model of tbe TOdi group. This 
came under the notice of Arnold Escber von der Linth, to whom 
Heim was indebted for much encouragement and geological 
instruction in the field. In 1873 he became professor of geology 
in the polytechnic school at Zurich, and in 1875 professor of 
geology in tbe university. In 1882 he was appointed director of 
the Geological Survey of Switzerland, and in 1884 the hon. degree 
of Ph.D. was conferred upon him at Berne. He is especially 
distinguished for his researches on the structure of tbe Alps 
and for the light thereby thrown on the structure of mountain 
masses in general. He traced tbe plications from minor to major 
stages, and illustrated tbe remarkable foldings and overthrust 
faulting* in numerous sections and with the aid of pictorial 
drawings. His magnificent work, Mcchanismus der Gebirgs- 
hitdung (1878), is now regarded as a classic, and it served to inspire 
Professor C. Lapworth in his brilliant researches on the Scottish 
Highlands (see Gcol. Mag. 1883). Heim also devoted consider- 
able attention to the glacial phenomena of the Alpine regions. 
The WoUaston medal was awarded to him in 1904 by the 
Geological Society of London. 

HEW, FRANCOIS JOSEPH (1 787-1865), French painter, 
was born at Belfort on the 16th of December 1787. He early 
distinguished himself at the £cole Centrale of Strassburg, and 
in 1803 entered the studio of Vincent at Paris. In 1807 be 
obtained the first prise, and in 181 2 his picture of "The 
Return of Jacob " (Musee de Bordeaux) won for him a gold 
medaj of the first class, which be again obtained in 1817, when 
be exhibited, together with other works, a St John— bought by 
Vlvant Denon. la 18 19 the " Resurrection of Lazarus " 
(Cathedral Autun), the " Martyrdom of St Cyr " (St Gervais), 
and two scenes from the life of Vespasia n (ordered by the king) 
attracted attention. In 1823 the " Re-erection of the Royal 
Tombs at St Denis," tbe " Martyrdom of St Laurence " (Notre 
Dame) and several full-length portraits increased the painter's 
popularity; and in 1824, when he exhibited his great canvas, 
the " Massacre of the Jews " (Louvre), Heim was rewarded with 
tbe legion of honour. In 1827 appeared the " King giving away 
Prises at the Salon of 1824 " (Louvre— engraved by Jazet) — 
the picture by which Heim is best known— and "Saint 
Hyacinthe." Heim was now commissioned to decorate the 
Gallery Charles X. (Louvre). Though ridiculed by the romantists, 
Heim succeeded Regnault at the Institute in 1834, shortly 
after which he commenced a series of drawings of tbe celebrities 
of his day, which are of much interest. His decorations of the 
Conference room of the Chamber of Deputies were completed 
in 1844; and in 1847 his works at the Salon — "Champ de Mai " 
and " Reading a Play at the Theatre Francais "—were the signal 
for violent criticisms. Yet something like a turn of opinion in 
his favour took place at the exhibition of 1851; his powers as a 



draughtsman and the occasional merits of his composition were 
recognized, and toleration extended even to his colour* Heim 
was awarded the great gold medal, audio 1855— having cent to 
tbe Salon no less than sixteen portraits, amongst which may be 
cited those of " Cuvter," " Geoffroy de St Hilaire," and " Madame 
Hersent " — he was made officer of the legion of honour. In 1859 
he again exhibited a curious collection of portraits, sixty-four 
members of the Institute arranged in groups of four. He died . 
on the 29th of September 1865. Besides the paintings already 
mentioned, there is to be seen in Notre Dame de Lorette. (Paris) 
a work executed on' the spot; and the museum of Strassburg 
contains an excellent example of his easel pictures, the subject 
of which is a " Shepherd Drinking from a Spring." 

HEIM DAL, or Heimdall, in Scandinavian mythology, the 
keeper of the gates of Heaven and tbe guardian of the rainbow 
bridge Bifrost. He is the son of Odin by nine virgins, all sisters. 
He is called " the god with the golden teeth." He lives in the 
stronghold of Himinsbiorg at the end of Bifrost. His chief 
attribute is a vigilance which nothing can escape. He sleeps less 
than a bird; sees at night and even in his sleep; can hear the 
grass, and even tbe wool on a lamb's back grow. He is armed 
With Gjallar, the magic horn, with which he will summon the gods 
on the day of judgment. 

HEINE, HEINRICH, (1797-1856), German poet and journalist,' 
was born at Dusseldorf, of Jewish parents, on the 13th of 
December 1 797. His father, after various vicissitudes in business, 
had finally settled in Dusseldorf, and his mother, who possessed 
much energy of character, was the daughter of a physician of 
the same place. Heinrich (or, more exactly, Harry) was the 
eldest of four children, and received his education,- first in private 
schools, then in the Lyceum of his native town; although not an 
especially apt or diligent pupil, he acquired a knowledge of French 
and English, as well as some tincture of tbe classics and Hebrew. 
His early years coincided with the. most brilliant period of 
Napoleon's career, and the boundless veneration which he is never 
tired of expressing for the emperor throughout his writings 
shows that his true schoolmasters were rather the drummers 
and troopers of a victorious army than the masters of the Lyceum. 
By freeing the Jews from many of the political disabilities under 
which they had hitherto suffered, Napoleon became, it may be 
noted, the object of particular enthusiasm in the circles amidst 
which Heine grew up. When be left school in 1815, an attempt 
was made to engage him in business in Frankfort, but without 
success. In the following year his uncle, Solomon Heine, a 
wealthy banker in Hamburg, took him into his office. A passion 
for his cousin Amalie Heine seems to have made the young 
man more contented with his lot in Hamburg, and his success 
was such that his uncle decided to set him up in business for 
himself. This, however, proved too bold a step; in a very few 
months the firm of " Harry Heine & Co." was insolvent. His 
uncle now generously provided him with money to enable him to 
study at a university, with the view to entering the legal profession , 
and in the spring of 1819 Heine became a student of the university 
of Bonn. During his stay there he devoted himself rather to the 
study of literature and history than to that of law; amongst 
bis teachers A. W. von Schlegel, who took a kindly interest in 
Heine's poetic essays, exerted the most lasting influence on him. 
In the autumn of 1820 Heine left Bonn for Gdttingen, where he 
proposed to devote himself more assiduously to professional 
studies, but in February of the following year he challenged to 
a pistol duel a fellow-student who bad insulted him, and was, 
in consequence, rusticated for six months. The pedantic 
atmosphere of the university of Gdttingen was, however, little 
to his taste; the news of his cousin's marriage unsettled him 
still more; and be was glad of the opportunity to seek distraction 
in Berlin. 

In the Prussian capital a new world opened up to him; a 
very different life from that of Gdttingen was stirring in the new 
university there, and Heine, like all his contemporaries, sat at 
the feet of Hegel and imbibed from him, doubtless, those views 
which in later years made the poet the apostle of an outlook 
upon life more modern than that of his romantic predecessors. 



2l8 



HEJIRA— HELDENBDCH 



Tko 
Htjst 



and the* capital Detsiya in Ncjd taken by Ibrahim Pasha in 
1817. Hejas remained in Egyptian occupation until 1845, 
when its administration was taken over directly by Constan- 
tinople, and it was constituted a vilayet under a vali or governor- 
general The population is estimated at 300,000, about hall of 
which are inhabitants of the towns and the remainder Bedouin, 
leading a nomad or pastoral life. The principal tribes are the 
Shcrarat, Beni Atiya and Huwetat in the north; the Juhena 
between Yambu' and Medina, and the various sections of the 
Harb throughout the centre and south; the Ateba also touch 
the Mecca border on the south-east. All these tribes receive 
sun a or money payments of large amount from the Turkish 
government to ensure the safe conduct of the annual pilgrimage, 
otherwise they are practically independent of the Turkish 
administration, which is limited to the large towns and garrisons. 
The troops occupying these latter belong to the xoth (Hejaz) 
division of the Turkish army. 

The difficulties of communication with his Arabian provinces, 
and of relieving or reinforcing the garrisons there, induced the 
sultan Abdul Hamid in 1900 to undertake the con- 
struction of a railway directly connecting the Hejaa 
noway, cities with Damascus without the necessity of leaving 
Turkish territory at any point, as hitherto required 
by the Suez Canal. Actual construction was begun m May xoox 
and on the 1st of September 1904 the section Damascus-Ma*an 
(285 m.) was officially opened. The line has a narrow gauge 
of 1-05 metre =» 41 in., the same gauge as that of the Damascus- 
Beirut line; it has a ruling gradient of 1 in 50 and follows gener- 
ally the pilgrim track, through a desert country presenting no 
serious engineering difficulties. The graver difficulties due to 
the scarcity of water, and the lack of fuel, supplies and labour 
were successfully overcome; in 1006 the line was completed 
to £1 Akhdar, 470 01. from Damascus and 350 from Medina, 
in time to. be used by the pilgrim caravan of that year; and the 
section to Medina was opened in 1008. Its military value was 
shown in the previous year, when it conveyed 28 battalions from 
Damascus to Ma'an, from which station the troops marched to 
Akaba for embarkation en rout* to Hodeda. The length of the line 
from Damascus to Medina is approximately 820 m., and from 
Medina to Mecca 280 m.; the highest level attained is about 
4000 ft. at Dar el Hamra in the section Ma'an- Medina. ' 

Authorities— J. L. Burckhardt, Travels in Arabia (London, 
1820); 'Ali Bey. Travels (London. 1816); R. F. Burton, Pilgrimage 
to Medindh and Mecca (1893); Land of Midian (London, 1870); 

iS. Hurgronje, Mekka (Hague, 1888); C. M. Doughty, Arabia 
eurta (Cambridge, 1888) ; Auler Pasha, Die Hedsckasbahn (Got ha, 
1906). ^ (R.A.W.) 

HEJIRA, 1 or Hsoxra (Arab7 kijro, flight, departure from 
one's country, from ha jar a, to go away), the name of the Mahom- 
medan era. It dates from 022, the year in which Mahomet 
" fled " from Mecca to Medina to escape the persecution of his 
kinsmen of the Koreish tribe. The years of this era are dis- 
tinguished by the initials u km." (anno hegirae). The Mahom- 
medan year is a lunar one, about n days shorter than the 
Christian; allowance must be made for this in translating 
Hegira. dates into Christian dates; thus a.h. 1321 corresponds 
roughly to a.d. 1903. The actual date of the " flight " is fixed 
as 8 Rabia L, i.e. 20th of September 622, by the tradition that 
Mahomet arrived at Kufa on the Hebrew Day of Atonement. 
Although Mahomet himself appears to have dated events by 
his flight, it was not till seventeen years later that the actual 
era was systematized by Omar, the second caliph(see Caliphate), 
as beginning from the 1st day of Muharram (the first lunar 
month of the year) which in that year (639) corresponded to 
July 16. The term hejira is also applied in its more general 
sense to other " emigrations " of the faithful, e.g. to that to 
Abyssinia (see Mahomet), and to. that of Mahomet's followers 
to Medina before the capture of Mecca. These latterare known 
as Muhajirun. 

For the problems of Moslem chronology and comparative tables 
of dates see (beside the articles Calendar*, Chronology and 



MAHO«BT).Wa^^tW.K*fcWdb««jtoWirtAr« 
und ckrisUtcken ZeUrtcknung (2nd edU Leipzig, 1903) ; Mas Lairie, 
Trtsor de chronolop* (Paris, 1889); Durbaneh. Universal Calender 
(Cairo, 1896); Winckler, AUorientalUche Fprsekungen, it 326-330; 
D. Nielson, Die aitorabudu M<mdr*tifion(&tr*mb\ir%, 1904) ; Hughes* 



1 The » in the second syllable is short; 



Dictionary 0/ Islam, 4. v. " Hjjrah." 

HEL> or Hila, in Scandinavian mythology, the goddess of 
the dead. She was a child of Loki and the giantess Angurboda, 
and dwelt beneath the roots of the sacred ash, Yggdrasfl. She 
was given dominion over the nine worlds of Helhefm. In early 
myth all the dead went to her: in later legend only those who 
died of old age or sickness, and she then became synonymous 
with suffering and horror. Her dwelling was Elvidnir (dark 
clouds), her dish Hungr (hunger), her knife SuBi (starvation), 
her servants Ganglale (tardy feet), her bed Kb> (sickness), and 
her bed-curtains Blikiaitdabol (splendid misery). 

HBLDBNBUCH, DAS, the title under which a large body ot 
German epic poetry of the 1 jth century has come down to us. 
The subjects of the' individual poems are taken from national 
German sagas which originated in the epoch of the Migrations 
(Vdlkcrwandenmg), although doubtless here, as in aU purely 
popular sagas, motives borrowed from the forces and phenomena 
of nature were, in course of time, woven into events originally 
historical While the saga of the NIbelungs crystallized in the 
13th century into the Nibdknfcnlicd{q.fk) i and the Low German 
Hilde-saga into the epic of Gudrun (q.v.) the poems of the 
Hcldenbtun, in the more restricted use of that term, belong 
almost exclusively to two cycles, (1) the Ostrogothic saga- of 
Ermanrich, Dietrich von Bern (ue. Dietrich of Verona,Theodorich 
the Great) and Etzel (Attila), and (2) the cycle of Hugdietrich, 
Wotfdietrich and Ortnit, which like the Nibclungtn saga, was 
probably of Franconian origin. The romances of tht Hetdenbudt 
are of varying poetic value; only occasionally do they rise to 
the height of the two chief epics, the Nibeiungentkd and Gudrun. 
Dietrich von Been, the central figure of the first and more im- 
portant group, was the ideal type of German medieval hero, and, 
under more favourable literary conditions, he might have become 
the centre of an epic more nationally German than even the 
Nibdungenliei itself. Of the romances of this group, the chief 
are BUerolf und Dietiieb, evidently the work of an Austrian poet, 
who introduced many elements from the court epic of chivalry 
into a milieu and amongst characters famfliar to as from the 
Nibdungeniied. Der XatengarUn tells of the conflicts which 
took place round Kriemhild's "rose garden** in Worms- 
conflicts from which Dietrich always emerges victor, even when 
he is confronted by Siegfried himself. In Laurin und der fdeim 
Rosengarlen, the Heldensage- is mingled with elements of popular 
fairy-lore; it deals with the adventures of Dietrich and hfs 
henchman Witege with the wily dwarf Laurin, who watches over 
another rose garden, that of the Tyrol. Similar in character 
are the adventures of Dietrich with the giants Ecke (Eckenlied) 
and Sigenot, with the dwarf Goldemar, and the deeds of chivalry 
he performs for queen Virginal (Dietrich* erste yfuj/a*/*)— all 
of these romances being written in the fresh and popular tone 
characteristic of the wandering singers or SpieUeute. Other 
elements of die Dietrich saga are represented by the poems 
Alpharls Tod t Dttlridn Fluchl and Die RabaiscMacht (" Battle 
of Ravenna "). Of these* the first is much the finest poem of 
the entire cycle and worthy of a place beside the best popular 
poetry of the Middle High German epoch. Alphart, a young 
hero in Dietrich's army, goes out to fight single-handed with 
Witege and Heime, who had deserted to Ermanrich) and he fans, 
not in fair battle, but by the treachery of Witege whose life he 
had spared. .The other two Dietrich epics belong to a later 
period, the end of the 13th century*— the author being an Austrian, 
Heinrich der Voglcr— and show only too plainly the decay that 
had by this time set in in Middle High German poetry. 

The second cycle of sagas is represented by several long 
romances, all of them unmistakably " popular" in tone— conflicts 
with dragons, supernatural adventures, the wonderland of the 
East providing the chief features of interest. The epics of thts 
group are Ortnit, Hugdietrich, WolfdhtrUh, the latter with it* 



HELDER— HELENA 



219 



pathetic episode of the unswerving loyalty of Wolfdietrich's 

vassal Dtike Bercbtung and his ten sons. Although many of the 

incidents' and motives of this cycle are drawn from the best 

traditions of the Heldensagt, its literary value is not very high. 
_.„... ^ 

>ut 
by 
ms 
irt 
ed 

t 



! 

. i. 
nd 

id- 

HELDER, a seaport town at the northern extremity of the 
province of North Holland, in the kingdom of Holland, 51 m. 
by rail N.N.W. of Amsterdam. Pop. (1900) 25,842. It is 
situated on the Marsdiep, the channel separating the island of 
Texel from the mainland, and the main entrance to the Zuider 
Zee, and besides being the terminus of the North Holland canal 
from Amsterdam, it is an important naval and military station. 
On the east side of the town, called the Nieuwe Diep, is situated 
the fine harbour, which formerly served, as Ymuidcn now does, 
as the outer port of Amsterdam. In this neighbourhood are the 
naval wharves and magazines, wet and dry docks, and the naval 
cadet school of Holland, the name Willemsoord being given 
to the whole naval establishment. From Nieuwe Diep to Fort 
Erfprins on the west tide of the town, a distance of about 5 m., 
stretches the great sea-dike which here takes the place of the 
denes. This dike descends at an angle of 40 for a distance of 
soo ft into the sea, and is composed of Norwegian granite and 
Belgian limestone, strengthened at intervals by projecting 
jetties of piles and fascines. A circle of forts and batteries 
defends the town and coast, and there is a permanent garrison 
of 7000 to 9000 men, while 39,000 men can be accommodated 
within the lines, and the province flooded from this point. 
Besides several churches and a synagogue, there are a town 
hall (1836), a hospital, an orphan asylum, the " palace " of 
the board of marine, a meteorological observatory, a zoological 
station and a lighthouse. The industries of the town are 
sustained by the garrison and marine establishments. 

HELEN, or Helena (Gt. 'EX£n}),in Greek mythology, daughter 
of Zeus by Leda (wife of Tyndareus, king of Sparta), sister of 
Castor, Pollux and Gytaemnestra, and wife of Menelaus. 
Other accounts make her the daughter of Zeus and Nemesis, 
or of Oceanus and Tethys. She was the most beautiful woman in 
Greece, and indirectly the cause of the Trojan war. When 
a child she was carried off from Sparta by Theseus to Attica, 
but was recovered and taken back by her brothers. When she 
grew up, the most famous of the princes of Greece sought her 
hand in marriage, and her father's choice fell upon Menelaus. 
During her husband's absence she was induced by Paris, son of 
Priam, with the connivance of Aphrodite, to flee with him to 
Troy. After the death of Paris she married his brother Delphobus, 
whom she is said to have betrayed into the hands of Menelaus 
at the capture of the city (Aemid, yi. 517 ff.). Menelaus there- 
upon took her back, and they returned together to Sparta, where 
they lived happily till their death, and were buried at Therapnae 
in Laconia. According to another, story, Helen survived her 



husband, and was driven out by her s t ep so n s. She fled to Rhodes, 
where she was hanged on a tree by her former friend Polyxd, 
to avenge the loss of her husband Tlepolemus in the Trojan 
War (Pausanias iii. 19). After death, Helen waa said' to have 
married Achilles in his home in the island of LetikR. In another 
version, Paris, on his voyage to Troy with Helen, waa driven 
ashore on the coast of Egypt, where King Proteus, upon learning 
the facta of the case, detained the teal Helen in Egypt, while a 
phantom Helen was carried off to Troy. Menelaus on his way 
home was also driven by stress of winds to Egypt, where he 
found his wife and took her home (Herodotus iL xxs-xao; 
Euripides, Helena), Helen was worshipped as the goddess of 
beauty at Therapnae in Laconia, where a festival was held in 
her honour. At Rhodes she was worshipped under the name 
of Dendritis (the tree goddess), where the inhabitants built a 
temple in. her honour to expiate the crime of Polyxo. The 
Rhodian story probably contains a reference to the worship 
connected with her name (cf. Theocritus xvifi. 48 oifau p\ 
'EXivctJ <fmr6v dpi). She was the subject of a tragedy by 
Euripides and an epic by Colluthus. Originally, Helen was 
perhaps a goddess of light, a moon-goddess, who was gradually 
transformed into the beautiful heroine round whom the action 
of the Iliad revolves. Like her brothers, the Dioscuri, she 
was a patron deity of sailors. 

Si 
H 

(1 

£ 
1 

H 

P< 
ca 
sh 
at 

HELENA, ST (e. 247-c 327) the wife of the emperor Const an tius 
I. Chlorus, and mother of Constantine the Great. She was a 
woman of humble origin, born probably at Drepaaum, a town on 
the Gulf of NicomedJa, which Constantine named Helenopolis 
in her honour. Very little is known of her history. It is certain 
that, at an advanced age, she undertook a pilgrimage to Palestine; 
visited the holy places, and founded several churches. .*• She 
was still living at the time of the murder of Crispus (336). Con* 
stantine had coins struck with the effigy of his mother. The 
name of Helena is intimately connected with the commonly 
received story of the discovery of the Cross. But the accounts 
which connect her with the discovery are much later than the 
date of the event. The Pilgrim of Bordeaux (333), Eusebius 
and Cyril of Jerusalem were unaware of this important episode 
In the life of the empress. It was only at the end of the 4th 
century and in the West that the legend appeared. The principal 
centre of the cult of St Helena in the West seems to be the abbey 
of Hautvilliers, near Reims, where since the oth century they 
have claimed to be in possession of her body. In England 
legends arose representing her as the daughter of a prince of 
Britain. Following these Geoffrey of Monmouth makes her 
the daughter of Coel, the king who is supposed to have given 
his name to the town of Colchester. These legends have doubt* 
less not been without influence on the cult of the saint in England, 
where a great number of churches are dedicated either to St 
Helena alone, or to St Cross and St Helena. Her festival is 
celebrated in the Latin Church on the x8th of August. The 
Greeks make no distinction between her festival and that of 
Constantine, the axst of May. 

See Acta sanctorum, August! Hi. 548-580: Tixeront> Let Origin** 
ie I'ttlist d'&Ussc (Paris, 1888); F. Arnold- Forstcr. Studies in 
Church Dedications or England's Patron Saints, I 181 -189, iii. 16, 
365-366 (1899). (H. DE.J 

, HELENA, a city and the county-seat of Phillips county, 
Arkansas, U.S.A., situated on and at the foot of Crowly's 
Ridge, about 150 ft. above sea-level, in the alluvial bottoms of 
the Mississippi river, about 65 m. by rail S.W. of Memphis, 
Tennessee. Pop. (1800) 5x80, (1000). 5550, of whom 3400 



«2* HBUCON— HELIGOLAND 



Set also Clarke, Thmls * Virions Countries (vol viL, 181th 
Dodwell, Classical and Topoerapkual Tour through Grucs (1818k 
W. M. Leake. 7>«wfc %n Northern Grucs (vol. ii., 1835); J. G. 
Fraxer'a edition of Pausatuas, v. 150. 

HELICON (Fr. A&om, bombardon circuLare; Ger. Utlihm), 
the circular form of the Bb contrabass tuba used in military 
bands, worn round the body, with the enormous bell resting on 
the left shoulder and towering above the head of the performer. 
The pitch of the helicon is an octave below that of the euphonium. 
The idea of winding the long tube of the contrabass tuba and of 
wearing it round the shoulders was suggested by the ancient 
Roman buccina and cornu, represented in mosaics and on the 
sculptured reliefs surrounding Trajan's Column. The buccina and 
cornu* differed in the diameter of their respective bores, the 
former haying the narrow, almost cylindrical bore and harmonic 
series of the trumpet and trombone, whereas the cornu, having 
a bore in the form of a wide cone, was the prototype of the bugle 
and tubas. 

HELIGOLAND. (Ger. Helgoland), an island of Germany, in the 
North Sea, lying off the mouths of the Elbe and the Weser, 28 m. 
from the nearest point in the mainland. Pop. (1000) 3507. 
From 1807 to 1890 a British possession, it was ceded in x8oo to 
Germany, and since 189a has formed part of the Prussian 
province of Schleswig-Holstein. It consists of two islets, the 
smaller, the Dunen-rlnsel, a quarter of a mile E. of the main, or 
Rock Island, connected until 1720, when it was severed by a 
violent irruption of the sea, with the other by a neck of land, and 
the main, or Rock Island. The latter is nearly triangular in 
shape and is surrounded by steep red cliffs, the only beach being 
the sandy spit near the south-east point, where the landing-stage 
is situated. The rocks composing the cliffs are worn into caves, 
and around the island are many fantastic arches and columns. 
The impression made by the red cliffs, fringed by a white beach 
and supporting the green Oberland, is commonly believed to have 
suggested the national colours, red, white and green, or, as the 
old Frisian rhyme goes: — 

" Grdn is dat Land, 
Rood is de Kant, 
Witt is de Sand, . 
Dat is de Flagg vun't hilllge Land." 

The lower town of Unterland, on the spit, and the upper town, 
or Oberland, situated on the cliff above, are connected by a 
wooden stair and a lift. There is a powerful lighthouse, and since 
its cession by Great Britain to Germany, the main island has been 
strongly fortified, the old English batteries being replaced by 
armoured turrets mounting guns of heavy calibre. Inside the 
Dilnen-Insel the largest ships can ride safely at anchor, and take 
in coal and other supplies. The greatest length. of the main 
island, which slopes somewhat from west to east, is just a mile, 
and the greatest breadth less than a third of a mile, its average 
height xo8 ft., and the highest point, crowned by the church, with 
a conspicuous spire, 316 ft. The Dunen-Insel is a sand-bank 
protected by groines. It is only about 200 ft above the sea at its 
highest point, but the drifting sands make the height rather 
variable. The sea-bathing establishment is situated here; a 
shelving beach of white sand presenting excellent facilities for 
bathing. Most of the houses are built of brick, but some are of 
wood. There are a theatre, a Kurhaus, and a number of hotels 
and restaurants. In 1892 a biological institute, with a marine 
museum and aquarium (1000) attached, was opened. 

During the summer some 20,000 people visit the island for 
sea-bathing. German is the official language, though among 
themselves the natives speak a dialect of Frisian, barely in- 
telligible to the other islands of the group. There is regular 
communication with Bremen and Hamburg. 

The winters are stormy. May and the early part of June arc 
wet and foggy, so that lew visitors arrive before the middle of 
the latter month. 

* For illustrations of the cornu see the altar of Julius Victor at 
Collegio, reproduced in Bartoli, PicL Ant. p. 76; Bellori, PkL 
antiq. crypl rom. p. 76, pi. viii.; m Daremberg and Saglio, Did. 
des ontiq. rrecques et romaines, under " Cornu," the buccina and coma 
have not Men distin g uished. 



HELIOCENTRIC— HELIOGRAPH 



2Z3 



The generally accepted deri vstfoa of Heligoland (or Helgoland) 
from HeUigeland, i.e. " Holy Land/' seems doubtful According 
to northern mythology, Forseti, a son of Balder and Nanna, 
the god of justice, had a temple on the island, which was sub- 
sequently destroyed by St Lodger. Thfa legend may have given 
rise to the derivation "Holy Land." The more probable 
etymology, however, is that of Hallaglun, or Halligland, i.e. 
"land of banks, which cover and uncover." Here Hertha, 
according to tradition, had her great temple, and hither came 
from the mainland the Angles to worship at her shrine. Here 
also lived King Radbod, a pagan, and on this isle St Willibrord 
in the 7th century first preached Christianity; and for its owner- 
ship, before and after that date, many sea-rovers have fought. 
Finally it became a fief of the dukes of Schleswig-Holstein, 
though often hypothecated for loans advanced to these princes 
by the free city of Hamburg. The island was a Danish possession 
in 1807, when the English seized and held it until it was formally 
ceded to them in 1814. In the picturesque old church there are 
Still traces of a painted Dannebrog. 

In 1800 the island was ceded to Germany, and in 1892 it was 
Incorporated with Prussia, when it was provided that natives 
bom before the year 1880 should be allowed to elect either for 
British or German nationality, and until xooi no additional 
import duties were imposed. 



'2 



HELIOCENTRIC, i.e. referred to the centre of the sun OfXiot) 
as an origin, a term designating especially co-ordinates or heavenly 
bodies referred to that origin. 

HELIODORUS, of Emesa.in Syria, Greek writer of romance. 
According to his own statement his father's name was Theodosius, 
and he belonged to a family of priests of the sun. He was the 
author of the Adhiopka, the oldest and best of the' Greek 
romances that have come down to us. It was first brought to 
light in modern times in a MS. from the library of Matthias 
Corvinus, found at the sack of Buda (Of en) in x 526, and printed 
at Basel in 1534. Other codices have since been discovered. 
The title is taken from the fact that the action of the beginning 
and end of the story takes place in Aethiopia. The daughter of 
Persine, wife of Hydaspes, king of Aethiopia, was born white 
through the effect of the sight of a marble statue upon the queen 
during pregnancy. Fearing an accusation of adultery, the mother 
gives the babe to the care of Sisimithras, a gymnosophist, who 
carries her to Egypt and places her in charge of Charides, a 
Pythian priesL The child is taken to Delphi, and made a priestess 
of Apollo under the name of Charidea. Theagenes, a noble 
Thessalian, comes to Delphi and the two fall in love with each 
other. He carries off the priestess with the help of Calasiris, an 
Egyptian, employed by Persine to seek for her daughter. Then 
follow many perils from sea-rovers and others, but the chief 
personages ultimately meet at Meroe* at the very moment when 
Charidea is about to be sacrificed to the gods by her own father. 
Her birth is made known, and the lovers are happily married. 
The rapid succession of events, the variety of the characters, 
the graphic descriptions of manners and of natural scenery, the 
simplicity and elegance of the style, give the Aethiopica great 
charm. As a whole it offends less against good taste and morality 
than others of the same class. Homer and Euripides were the 
favourite authors of Heliodorus, who in his turn was imitated 
by French, Italian and Spanish writers. The early life of Qorinda 
In Tasso's Jerusalem Delivered (canto xii. 2 x sqq.) is almost identical 
with that of Charidea; Racine meditated a drama on the same 



subject; and It formed the model of the Pertiks y Sigismunda of 
Cervantes. According to the ecclesiastical historian Socrates 
(Hist, eocles. v. at), the author of the AeMopka was a 
certain Heliodorus, bishop of Tricca In Thessaly. it is supposed 
that the work was written in Ins early years before he became 
a Christian, and that, when confronted with the alternative of 
disowning it or resigning his bishopric, he preferred resignation. 
But it is now generally agreed that the real author was a sophist 
of the 3rd century A.r>. 

The best editions are: A. Corals (1804), G. A. HIrschig (1856); 
see also M. Oeftering, H. und seine Bedeutung far die Ziteratur, 
with full bibliographies (1901); J. C. Dunlop, History of Prose 
Fiction (1888); and especially E. Rohde, Der grieckiseke Roman 
(1900). There are translations in almost all European languages: 
in English, in Bohn's Classical Library and the " Tudor " series (v., 
1895, containing the old translation by T. Underdowne, 1587, with 
introduction by C. Wbibley) ; in French by Amyot and Zevort. . 

HELIOGABALUS (ELAGABALUS), Roman emperor (a.d. 
2x8-222), was born st Emesa about 205. His real name was 
Varius Avitus. On the murder of Caracalla (2x7), Julia Maesa, 
Varius's grandmother and Caracalla's aunt, left Rome and 
retired to Emesa, accompanied by her grandsons (Varius and 
Alexander Severus). Varius, though still only a boy, was ap- 
pointed high priest of the Syrian sun-god Elagabalus, one of 
the chief seats of whose worship was Emesa (Horns). His beauty, 
and the splendid ceremonials at which he presided, made him 
a great favourite with the troops stationed in that part of Syria, 
and Maesa increased his popularity by spreading reports that he 
was in reality the illegitimate son of Caracalla. Macrinus, 
the successor and instigator of the murder of Caracalla, was 
very unpopular with the army; an insurrection was easily set 
on foot, and on the x6th of May 218 Varius was proclaimed 
emperor as Marcus Aurelius Antoninus. The troops sent to 
quell the revolt went over to him, and Macrinus was defeated 
near Antioch on the 8th of June. Heliogabalus was at once 
recognized by the senate as emperor. After spending the winter 
in Nicoxnedia, he proceeded in 2x9 to Rome, where he made it 
his business to exalt the ddty whose priest be was and whose 
name he assumed. The Syrian god was proclaimed the chief ddty 
in Rome, and all other gods his servants; splendid ceremonies 
in his honour were celebrated, at which Heliogabalus danced in 
public, and it was believed that secret rites accompanied by 
human sacrifice were performed in his honour. In addition to 
these affronts upon the state religion, he insulted the intelli- 
gence of the community by horseplay of the wildest description 
and by childish practical joking. The shameless profligacy 
of the emperor's life was such as to shock even a Roman 
public His popularity with the army declined 1 , and Maesa, 
perceiving that the soldiers were in favour of Alexander Severus, 
persuaded Heliogabalus to raise his cousin to the dignity of 
Caesar (221), a step of which he soon repented. An attempt 
to murder Alexander was frustrated by the watchful Maesa. 
Another attempt in 2 2 2 produced a mutiny among the praetorians, 
in which Heliogabalus and his mother Soemias (Soaemias) were 
slain (probably in the first half of March). 

AoTROHmBSj*-Life by Aelius Lampridius in Scriptores historiae 
Augustas; Herodian v. 3-8; Dio Cassiua lxxviii. 30 sqq.. Ixxhc. 1-21 ; 
monograph by G. Duvtquet, Hiliogabale (1903), containing a trans- 
lation of the various accounts of Hefaogamttas in Greek and Latin 
authors, notes, bibliography and illustrations; O. F. Butler, Studies 
in the Life of Heliogabalus (New York, 1908); Gibbon, Decline and 
Fall, ch. 6; H. Schiller, Gcschickte der r&misehen Kaiseneit, i. 
pt. ii. (1883). p. 759 ff- On the Syrian god see F. Cumont in Pauly- 
Wissowa's RealencyclopMie, v. pt. U. (1905). 

HELIOGRAPH (from Gr. fXior, sun, and ypLfaw to write), 
an instrument for reflecting the rays of the sun (or the light 
obtained from any other source) over a considerable distance. 
Its main application is in military signalling (see Signal). A 
similar instrument is the heliotrope, used principally for defining 
distant points in geodetic surveys, such as in the triangulation 
of India, and In the verification of the African arc of the meridian. 
It is necessary to distinguish the method of signalling termed 
heliography from the photographic process of the same nam* 
(see Pbotogbavsy). 



226 



HEUOMETER 



J the 

(i) to give automatk- 
u and opposite move- 
eadof wood; to attach 
to place the eye-piece 
i to fix a strong cradle 
-Jk the tube, with the 
ite axis. 

t is originally the idea 
y his son, and it seems 
1 by Strove. But the 
x measured by screws; 
he final motion of turn- 
produce motion of the 
i of time " is apt to be 
.___ j — «« two screws by cog- 
wheels to give them automatic opposite motion is not an available 
method unless the separation of the segments is independently 
measured by scales. 

Struve's second suggestion ha* been adopted in nearly all succeed- 
ing heliometers. It permits complete rotation of the tube and 
measurement of all angles in reversed positions of the circle; the 
handles that move the slides can be brought down to the eye-end, 
inside the tube, and consequently made to rotate with it ; and the 
position circle may be placed at the end of the cradle next the eye- 
end where it is convenient of access. Strove also points out that 
by attaching a fine scale to the focusing slide of the eye-piece, and 
knowing the coefficient of expansion of the metal tube, the means 
would be provided for determining the absolute change of the focal 
length of the obiect-glass at any time by the simple process of 
focusing on a double star. This, with a knowledge ol the tempera- 
ture of the screw or scale and its coefficient of expansion, would 
enable the change of screw-value to be determined at any instant 

It is probable that the Bonn heliometer was in course of con- 
struction before these suggestions of Strove were published or 
discussed, since its construction resembles that of the Kdnigsberg 
and Pulkowa instruments. Its dimensions are similar to those of 
the former instrument. Bessel, having been consulted by the 

f the Radcliffe 
fe Observatory, 
of astronomy, 
s order for the 
rarious circum- 
contributed to 
i not delivered 
vt it was com* 



focal point were provided ; * sjramBetricM 



suring the separation of the segments, and 
by the same micrometer microsco p e; a 
* added to determine the temperature of 
instruments have since done admirahlr 
lur, Hartwig, Kuatner, Elkin, Auwers and 

ant ordered three new heGometers (each of 
ocal length) from the Repeolda, and the 
ion was superintended by Strove, Auwers 




Flo. 9, 

imed making the necessary experiments at 
>nts the resultinc type of instrument which 
constructed by Repiold*. The brass tube, 
ing points by strong truly turned collars, 
cradle 0. attached to the declination axis, 
he optical axis, 6 the micrometer for reading 
telescopes for reading the position circle *, 
rtion in position angle, / the slow motion m 
indie for changing the separation of the 
he bevel-wheel gf (fig. 10). a is a milled 
with *' (fig. 10), for the purpose of mter- 
sm t- in the axis of the reading micrometer; 
to view the graduations on the face of the 
(composed 01 a rod of brass and a rod of 
connected with the wheel «V (fig. to), and 
ing^he screen s (fig. 9), counterpoised by v 
object-glass. * clamps the ' telescope hi 
in right ascension, and the handles ss 
•tion in declination and right ascension 

or mechanism of the " head H will be almost 



Fig. 10. 



1 good time; a 

•pointed, and it 

•was resoivra inmi inc ncuomcicr snouia uc uic muniment chiefly 

relied on. The four long-neglected small heliometers made by Fraun- 
hofer were brought into requisition. Fundamental alterations were 
made upon them : their wooden tubes were replaced by tubes of metal ; 



1 Description de I'observatoire central de Pulkowa, p. 306. 

'Steinheil applied such motion to a double-image micrometer 
made for Strove. This instrument suggested to Strove the above- 
mentioned idea of employing a similar motion for the heliometer. 

* Manuel Johnson, M.A., Radcliffe observer. Astronomical Obser- 
vation* made al the Radckffe Observatory, Oxford, m the Year 1850, 
Introduction, p. iii. 

4 The illumination of these scales is interesting as being the first 
(application of electricity to the illumination of astronomical instru- 
ments. Tbin platinum wire was rendered incandescent by a voltaic 
current; a smaU incandescent electric lamp would now be found 
more satisfactory. 



evident from fig. 10 without description. The screw, turned by 
th *""' at g\ acts in a toothed arc, whence, as shown in the 
si and opposite motion is communicated to the slides by 



rods v, v. The slides are kept firmly down to their bear- 
rollers r, r, r, r, attached to axes which are, in the middle, 
g •prings. Side-shake is prevented by the screws and 
a, k. The scales are at *, * ; they are fastened only at 
and are kept down by the brass pieces f , f. 
r heliometer was made by the Repsolds to the order of 
ay for bis Mauritius expedition in 1874. It differed only 
hree Russian instruments in having a mounting by the 
which the declination circle reads from the eye-end. 1 
iment was afterwards most generously lent by Lord 
Gill for his expedition to Ascension in 1877.* 
jr Repsold heliometers proved to be excellent instruments. 



• For a detailed description of this instrument see Dnneckt P«W- 
cations vol. ii. - 
* Mem. Royal Astronomical Society, xlvi. 1-779, 



HELIOMETER' 



**7 



in 

on 
not all that 



ott 4 radykt<ffafff«Mritsofv«ri'hiftt accuracy I the observer. TV* attention and the new equatorfe! mountia# 

l Thar stow .motion in position angle, how I have been admirably made by Grubb; the result is completely 

~-- M be desired. When small movements | successful, i The instrument so altered was in use at the Cape 

Observatory from March i&l till 1867 in deten 
mining the parallax of some of the more interesting 
southern stars. The instrument then passed, by 
purchase from Gill, to Lord McLaren, by whom 
it was presented to the Royal Observatory, 
Edinburgh. 

Still more recently the Repsolds have completed 
a new bdiometer lor Yale College, New Haven, 
United States. The object-glass is of 6 in, aper- 
ture and 98 in. focal length. The mounting, the 
tube, objective-cell, slides, Ac., are all of. steel 1 
The instrument is shown in fig. 11. The circles 
far position angle and declination are read by 
micrometer-microscopes illuminated by the lamp 
L; the scales are illuminated by the lamp/. T is 
part of the tube proper, and turns with the bead. 
The tube V, on the contrary, is attached to the 
cradle, and merely forms a support for the finder 
Q, the handles at/ and p, and the moving ring P. 
The latter gives quick motion in position angle; 
the handles at p clamp and give slow motion in 
position angle, those at / clamp, and give slow 
motion in right ascension and declination, a it 
the eye-piece, b the handle for moving the seg- 
ments, c the micrometer microscope ior reading 
the scales and scale micrometer, d the micrometer 
readers of the position and declination circles, 
c the handle for routing the large wheel E 
which carries the screens. The hour circle is 
also read by microscopes^ and the instrument 
can be used in both positions (tube preceding 
and following) for elimination of the effect ol 
flexure on the position angles. Elkin found that 
the chief drawbacks to speed and convenience 



FlC 11. 



were communicated to the handle « (fig. 9) by the tangent screw /, 
acting on a small toothed wheel clamped to the rod connected with 
the driving pinion, there was apt to be a torsion of the rod rather 
than an immediate action. Thus the slow motion would take place 



devised the form < 
13. Thismicrom 
fixed pair of web 
is moved by the 



FiO. 12. 

by Jerks instead of with the necessary smoothness and certainty. 
When the heliometer-part of Lord Lindsay's heliometer was acquired 
by GUI in 1879, be changed the manner of imparting the motion in 
question. A square toothed racked wheel was applied to the tube 
at r (fig. 9). This wheel is acted on by a tangent screw whose bear- 
ing* are attached to the cradle; the screw is turned by means of a 
handle supported by bearings attached to the cradle, and coming 
within convenient reach of the observer's hand. The tube turns 
smoothly in the racked wheel, or can be clamped to it at the will of 



Fio. 13. 

the screw attached to the heads. Accordingly, in reading the scales 
A and B (attached to the slides which carry the two halves of the 
object-glass), it is only necessary to turn the screws until the fixed 



1 The primary object was to have the object-glass mounted in 
steel cells, which more nearly correspond in expansion with glass. 
It became then desirable to make the head of steel for sake of 
uniformity of material, and the advantages of steel in lightness and 
rigidity for the tube then became evident. 



a jo 



HELIOPOtlS-^HELIOSTAT 



z 

or 

vo 
he 
ty 




Fig. 18. 




Fio. 19. 



If p is the refracting angle of the prism, and n the magnifying power 
of the eye-piece, then p'/n will be the distance observed. Arago 
made many measures of the diameters of the planets with such a 



Dollond (PktL Trans., 1821, pp. 101-103) describes a double- 
image micrometer of his own invention, in which a sphere of rock* 
crystal b substituted for the eye-lens of an ordinary eye-piece. In 
this instrument (figs. 18, 19) a is the sphere, placed in half-holes on 
the axis bb, so that when its principal axis is parallel to the axis of 
the telescope it gives only one image of the object. In a direction 
perpendicular to that axis it must be so placed that when it is 
moved by rotation of the axis bb the separation of the images shall 
be parallel to that motion. ^ The angle of rotation is measured on 



the graduated circle C. 'The angle between the oh 
is~rcinz#, where r is a constant to be determined for each magni- 
fying power employed, 1 and • the angle through which the sphere 
has been turned from zero (•>. from coincidence of its ptracipnt 
axis with that of the telescope). The maximum separation 1 
ero. Thei 



quently at aj5* from sera. 

of aero for eliminating index error. 



s can be made on both sides 



of construction, but these have been successfully over c ome by 
Dotlond; and in the hands of Dawes.(Jfm. RJlS. xxxv. p. 144 seq.) 
such instruments have done valuable service. They are liable to 
the objection that their employment is limited to the measurement 
of very small angles, viz. t j' or 14* when the magnifying power b 
too, and varying inversely as the power. Yet the beautiful images 
which these micrometers give permit the meas ur ement of very 
difficult objects as a check on measures with the parallel-wire 



On the theory of the heliometer and its use consult Bessel, A st ro uo 
mischt Untersuckungcn, vol. i.; Hansen, Ausfukrlicht Method* mnt 
drm Fraunkoterocken HeliomeUr ansusteUt* CSotha, 1827); Chaa- 
venet. Spherical and Practical Astronomy, vol. ii. (Philadelphia and 
London, 1876}; Seeliger, Tkeorie des HettomeUtt (Leipzig, 1877); 
Lindsay and Gill, Duneckt PnUkqtions, vol iu4Dunecht, for private 
circulation, 1877); Gill, Mem. RA.S. vol. xlvi. pp. 1-172. and 
references, mentioned in the text. (D. Gi.) 

HELIOPOLIS, one of the most ancient cities of Egypt, met 
with in the Bible under its native name On. It stood 5 m. E. 
of the Kile at the apex of the Delta. It was the principal teat 
of sun-worship, and in historic times its importance was. entirely 
religious. There appear to have been two forms of the sun-god 
at Heliopolis in the New Kingdom — namely, Ra-Harakht, or 
R?-Hannakhis, falcon-headed, and Etdtn, human-headed; 
the fotmer was the sun in his mid-day strength, the latter the 
evening sun. A sacred bull was worshipped here under the name 
Mnevis (Eg. Mrcu), and was especially connected with Etom. 
The sun-god Re* (see Egypt: Religion) was especially the royal 
god, the .ancestor of all the Pharaohs, who therefore held the 
temple of Heliopolis in great honour. Each dynasty might 
give the first place to the god of its residence— Ptah of Memphis, 
Ammon of Thebes, Nefth of Sais, Bubastis of Bubastia, but afl 
alike honoured Re*, Hb temple became in a special degree a , 
depository for royal records, and Herodotus states that the 
priests of Heliopolis were the best informed in matters of history 
of all the Egyptians. The schools of philosophy and astronomy 
are said to have been frequented by Plato and other Greek 
philosophers; Strabo, how ev er, found them deserted, and the 
town itself almost uninhabited, although priests were still there, 
anddceronesforthe curious traveller. The Ptolemies probably 
took little interest in their " father " Remand Alexandria had 
edipsed the teaming of Heliopolis; thus with the withdrawal 
of royal favour Heliopolis quickly dwindled, and the student! 
of native lore deserted it for other temples supported by a 
wealthy population of pious dtizens. In Roman times obeo'ska 
were taken from its temples to adorn the northern dties of the 
Delta, and even across the Mediterranean to Rome. Finally 
the growth of Fostat and Cairo, only 6 m. to the S.W., caused 
the ruins to be ransacked for building materials. The site was 
known to the Arabs as % Ayin tsk skems, " the fountain of the 
sun," more recently as Tel Hhm. It has now been brought for 
the most part under cultivation, but the andent dty walls of 
crude brick are to be seen in the fields on all sides, and the position 
of the great temple is marked by an obelisk still standing (the 
earliest known, being one of a pair set up by Senwosri I., the 
second king of the Twelfth Dynasty) and a few granite blocks 
bf^ring the name of Rameses H. 

SeeStrabo xvii cap. 1. 27-28; Baedeker's EgypL (F. Ll. G.) 

HBUOSTAT (from Or. fXios, the sun, «tst6i, fixed, set up), 
an instrument which will reflect the rays of the sun in a fixed 
direction notwithstanding the motion of the sun. The optical 
apparatus generally consists of a mirror mounted on an axis 
parallel to the axis of the earth, and rotated with the same 
angular velodty as the sun. This construction assumes that the 
sun describes daily a small drde about the pole of the celestial 
sphere, and ignores any diurnal variation in the declination. 
This variation is, however, so small that it can be neglected for 
most purposes. 

1 Dollond provides for changing the power by sliding the lens d 
nearer to or farther from a. 



HELIOTROPE 



23* 



llafljrforn 
been describe 
of bis Pky>U 




by reference 
attached rod 
distance. Bj 
routing the a 




Fie. 

BD is anoth 
the rays are 
small rods EJ 
•tidesinaaloi 



rods EF, GF 
that f|y> fall 
along BD. C 



«3+ 



HELIX-^HELLANICUS 



to oxidize when sparked with ttrygen, and on exambririg it 
spectroscopically he saw that the spectrum was not that of 
argon, but was characterized by a bright yellow line near to, 
but not identical with, the D line of sodium. This was after- 
wards identified with the D» line of the solar chromosphere, 
observed in 1868 by Sir J. Norman Lockyer, and ascribed by 
him to a hypothetical element helium. This name was adopted 
for the new gas, 

Helium is relatively abundant in many minerals, all of which 
are radioactive, and contain uranium or thorium as important 
constituents. (For the significance of this fact see Radio- 
activity.) The richest known source is thorianile, which 
consists mainly of thorium oiide, and contains 0*5 cc. of helium 
per gram. Monazite, a phosphate of thorium and other rare 
earths, contains on the average about 1 cc. per gram. Clevcite, 
samarakite and fcrgusonite contain a little more than monazite. 
The gas also occurs in minute quantities in the common minerals 
of the earth's crust. In this case too it is associated with radio- 
active matter, which is almost ubiquitous. In two cases, how- 
ever, it has been found in the absence of appreciable quantities 
of uranium and thorium compounds, namely in beryl, and in 
sylvine (potassium chloride). Helium is contained almost 
universally in the gases which bubble up with the water of thermal 
springs. The proportion varies greatly. In the hot springs of 
Bath it amounts toabouttme-thousandthpart of the gas evolved. 
Much larger percentages have been recorded in some French 
springs (Compt. rend., 1906, 143, p. 795, and 146, p. 435), and 
considerable quantities occur in some natural gas {Jnam. Ame*. 
Chem. See. 99, p. 1594). R. J. Strutt has suggested that helium 
m hot springs may be derived from the disintegration of common 
rocks at great depths. 

Helium is present in the atmosphere, of which it constitutes 
four parts in a million. It is conspicuous by its absorption 
spectrum in many of the white stars. Certain stars and nebulae 
show a bright line helium spectrum. 

Much the best practical source of helium is thorianite, a 
mineral imported from Ceylon for the manufacture of thoria. 
It dissolves readily in strong nitric add, and the helium contained 
is thus liberated. The gas contains a certain amount of hydrogen 
and oxides of carbon, also traces of nitrogen. In order to get 
rid of hydrogen, some oxygen is added to the helium, and the 
mixture exploded by an electric spark. All remaining impurities, 
including the excess of oxygen, can then be taken out of the 
gas by Sir James Dewar's ingenious method of absorption 
with charcoal cooled in liquid air. Helium alone refuses to be 
absorbed, and it can be pumped off from the charcoal in a state 
of absolute purity. In the absence of liquid air the helium must 
be purified by the methods employed for argon (q.v.). If 
thorianite cannot be obtained, monazite, which is more abundant, 
may be utilized. A part of the helium contained in minerals 
can be extracted by heat or by grinding (J. A. Gray, Proc. Roy. 
Soe. t 1909, 82A, p. 301). 

Properties.— AM attempts to make helium enter into stable 
chemical union have hitherto proved unsuccessful. The gas is 
in all probability only mechanically retained in the minerals in 
which it is found. Jacquerod and Perrot have found that 
Quarts-glass is freely permeable to helium below a red-beat 
{CompL rend., 1904, 139, p. 789). The effect is even perceptible 
at a temperature as low as 220° C. Hydrogen, and, in a much 
less degree, oxygen and nitrogen, will also permeate silica, but 
only at higher temperatures. They have made this observation 
the basis of a practical method of separating helium from the 
other inert gases. M. Travers has suggested that ft may explain 
the liberation of helium from minerals by heat, the gas being 
enabled to permeate the siliceous materials in which it is enclosed. 
Thorianite, however, contains no silica, and until it is shown that 
metallic oxides behave in the same way this explanation must 
be accepted with reserve. 

The density of helium has been determined by Ramsay and 
Travers as 198. Its ratio of specific heats has very nearly the 
ideal value 1066, appropriate to a monatomic molecule. The 
accepted atomic weight is accordingly double the density, i.e. 



approximately four times that of hydfegen* The refractivity 
of helium is 0-1238 (air«i). The solubility in water is the 
lowest known, being, at rtf*2*f only -0073 vols, per unit volume 
of water. The viscosity is 06 (air* 1). 

The spectrum of helium as observed in a discharge tube is 
distinguished by a moderate number of brilliant lines, dis- 
tributed over the whole visual spectrum. The following are 
the approximate wave-lengths of the most brilliant lines: 

Red 7066 

Red 6678 

Yelbw 3876 

Green 49" 

Blue 4472 

Violet 4026 

When the discharge passes through helium at a pressure of 
several millimetres, the yellow line 5876 is prominent. At lower 
pressures the green line 4922 becomes more conspicuous. At 
atmospheric pressure the discharge is able to pass through a 
far greater distance in helium than in the common gases. 

M. Travers, G. Senterand A. Jacquerod {Phil. Trans, A. 1903, 
200, p. 105) carefully examined the behavour of a constant 
volume gas thermometer filled with helium. For the pressure 
coefficient per degree, between o° and ioo° C, they give the 
value '00366255, when the initial pressure is 700 mm. This 
value is indistinguishable from that which they find for hydrogen. 
Thus at high temperatures a helium thermometer is of no special 
advantage. At low temperatures, on the other hand, they find, 
using an initial pressure of 1000 mm., that the temperatures on 
the helium scale are measurably higher than on the hydrogen 
scale, owing to the more perfectly gaseous condition of helium. 
This difference amounts to about tV* at the tempexatuce-oi liquid 
; oxygen, and about |° at that of liquid hydrogen. 

The liquefaction of helium was achieved by H. Kameriingh 
Ounce at Leiden in 1908. Affording to him its boiling point 
is 4*3° abs. (-268*7° C), the density of the liquid 0-154, the 
critical temperature 5 abs., and the critical pressure a -3 atmo- 
spheres (Communications from Ike Physical Laboratory at Leiden, 
No. 108; see also Liquid Gases). 

References. — A bibliography and summary of the earlier work 
on helium will be found in a paper by Ramsay, Ann. thim. pkys. 
See also M. Travers, The Stud* •/ Oases 



(1898) t7l. 13. p. 433. 
(1901). 



190O. (R. J- S.) 

HELIX (Gr. *Xi£, a spiral or twist), an architectural term 
for the spiral tendril which is carried up to support the angles 
of the abacus of the Corinthian capital; from the same stalk 
springs a second helix rising to the centre of the capital, its 
junction with one on the opposite side being sometimes marked 
by a flower. Sometimes the term " volute " is given to the angle 
helix, which is incorrect, as it is of a different design and rises 
from the same stalk as the central helices. Its origin is probably 
metallic, that is to say, it was copied from the conventional 
treatment in Corinthian bronze of the tendrils of a plant. 

HELL (O. Eng. hd, a Teutonic word from a root meaning " to 
cover," cf. Ger. Htlle, Dutch *el), the word used in English 
both of the place of departed spirits and of the place of torment 
of the wicked after death. It is used in the* Old Testament 
to translate the Hebrew Shed, and in the New Testament 
the Greek a3ip, Hades, and Tefrro, Hebrew Gehenna (see 
Eschatolocy). 

HELLAKICUS or Lesbos, Greek logographer, flourished 
during the latter half of the 5th century B.C. According to 
Suidas, he lived for some time at the court of one of the kings 
of Macedon, and died at Perperene, a town on the gulf of Adra- 
myttium opposite Lesbos. Some thirty works are attributed 
to him — chronological, historical and episodical. Mention may 
be made of: The Priestesses of Hera at Argos, a chronological 
compilation, arranged according to the order of succession of 
these functionaries; the Carnemihae, a list of the victors in the 
Caraean games (the chief Spartan musical festival), including 
notices of literary events; an Auhis y giving the history of Attica 
from 683 to the end of the Pdoponnesian War (404)* which b 
referred to by Thucydides (i. 97), who says that he treated the 
events of the years 480-431 briefly and superficially, and with 



HELLEBORE 



*35 



Httk regard to chronological sequence: PkcooMs, chiefly 
genealogical, with short notices of events from the times of 
PhoroMus the Argive "first man" to the return of the 
Heraclklae; Trvits and Persic*, histories of Troy and 



H. Kiilir 



Heuanicus marks a real step In the development of historio- 
graphy. He transcended the narrow local limits of the elder 
togograpbers, and was not content to repeat the traditions that 
had gained general acceptation through the poets. He tried to 
give the traditions as they were locally current, and availed 
himself of the few national or priestly registers that presented 
something like contemporary registration. He endeavoured 
to lay the foundations of a scientific chronology, based primarily 
on the list of the Argive priestesses of Hera, and secondarily 
on genealogies, lists of magistrates (e.g. the archons at Athens), 
and Oriental dates, in place of the old reckoning by generations. 
But his materials were insufficient and he often had recourse 
to the older methods. On account of his deviations from common 
tradition, Hellankus Is often called an untrustworthy writer 
by the ancients themselves, and it is a curious fact that be 
appears to have made no systematic use of the many inscriptions 
which were ready to hand. Dionysius of Halicarnassus censures 
him for arranging his history, not according to the natural 
connexion of events, but according to the locality or the nation 
he was describing; and undoubtedly he never, like his contem- 
porary Herodotus, rose to the conception of a single current of 
events wider than the local distinction of race. His Style, like 
Chat of the older logographers, was dry and bakf. 
Fragments m Mutter, Fragtnenia kistorieorumGraeeomnt, I. and fv.; 
one older works L. Preller. De Hellantco Lesbio kutorieo 
Mure, History, of Greek Literature* iv,; late criticism in 
timer. " Helknikos " in Jahrbdtker fUr kloss. Phitologie 
(Supplemcntband, xxvii. 455 sqq.) (1902), which contains new 
edition and arrangement of fragment*: C. F. Lehmann-Haupt, 
" HeJbnikos, Herodot, Thukydides," In KHo vi. 117 sqq. (1906) ; 
J. B. Bury, Ancient Creek Historians (loo9)»-pp. 37 sqq. 

HELLEBORE (Gr. IKMfiopo*: mod. Gr, also oKafa: 
Ger. Nieswurt, Christwun; Fr. hdUbore, and in the district of 
Avranche, kerbe enragie), a genus (Helleborvs) of plants of the 
natural order Ranunculaceae, natives of Europe and western 
Asia. They are coarse perennial herbs with palmately or pedately 
Iobed leaves. The flowers have five persistent petal old sepals, 
within the circle of which are placed the minute honey-containing 
tubular petals of the form of a horn with an irregular opening. 
The stamens are very numerous, and are spirally arranged; and 
the carpels are variable in number, sessile or stipitate and slightly 
united at the base and dehisce by ventral suture. 

Helltborus niger, black hellebore, or, as from blooming in mid- 
winter it is termed the Christmas rose (Ger. Sekwarxe Nieswurz; 
Fr., rose de No& or rose f hirer), is found m southern and 
central Europe, and with other species was cultivated in the time 
of Gerard (see Herbafl, p. 977, cd. Johnson. 1633) in English 
gardens. Its knotty root-stock is blackish-brown externally, 
and, as with other species, gives origin to numerous straight roots. 
The leaves spring from the top of the root -stock, and are smooth, 
distinctly pedate, dark-green above, and lighter below, with 7 to 
9 segments and long petioles. The scapes, which end the 
branches of the rhizome, have a loose entire bract at the base, and 
terminate in a single flower, with two bracts, from the axis of 
one of which a second flower may be developed. The flowers 
have 5 white or pale-rose, eventually greenish sepals, 15 to 18 
lines in breadth; 8 to 13 tubular green petals containing honey; 
and 5 to ro free carpels. There arc several forms, the best being 
maximiis. The Christmas rose is extensively grown in many 
market gardens to provide white flowers forced in gentle heat 
about Christmas time for decorations, emblems, &c 

H. oricntalis, the Lenten rose, has given rise to several fine 
hybrids with Vt. niger, some of the best forms being deaf in 
colour and distinctly spotted. H. fottidus, stinking hellebore, 
is a native of England, where like H. viridis, it is confined chiefly 
to limestone districts; it is common m France and the south 
of Europe. Its leaves have 7- to n -toothed divisions, and the 
flowers are in panicles, numerous, cup-shaped and drooping. 



with many bracti, and green sepals tinged wits purple, alternating 
with the five petals. 

B. vhridis, or green hellebore proper, is probably indigenous 
in some of the southern and eastern counties of England, aad 
occurs also in central and southern Europe. It has* bright 
yellowish-green flowers, 2 to 4 on a stem, with large leaf-like 
bracts. O. Brunfels and H. Bock (16th century) regarded the 
plant as the black hellebore of the Greeks. 

H. Hddus, holly-leaved hellebore, found in the Balearic 
Islands, and in Corsica and Sardinia, is remarkable for the hand- 
someness of its foliage. White hellebore is Veratrum album 
(see Vekatbux), a liliaceous plant. 

Hellebores may be grown in any. ordinary light garden mould, 
but thrive best In a soil of about equal parts of turfy loam and 



r-» 



TV 



Hetleborus niter. 1, Vertical section of flower; 2, Nectary, side 
and front view 

well-rotted manure, with half a part each of fibrous peat and 
coarse sand, and in moist but thoroughly-drained situations, 
more especially where, as at the margins of shrubberies, the 
plants can receive partial shade in summer. For propagation 
cuttings of the rhizome may be taken in August, and placed in 
pans of light soil, with a bottom heat of 6o° to 70° Fahr.; helle- 
bores can also be grown from seed, which must be sown as soon 
as ripe, since it quickly loses its vitality. The seedlings usually 
blossom in their third year. The exclusion of frost favours 
the production of flowers; but the plants, if forced, must be 
gradually inured to a warm atmosphere, and a free supply of 
air must be afforded, without which they are apt to become 
much affected by greenfly. For potting, H. niger and its varieties, 
and H. orientalis, airttrubens and Olympic us have been found 
well suited. After lifting, preferably in September, the plants 
should receive plenty of light, with abundance of water, and once 
a week liquid manure, not over-strong. The flowers are improved 
in delicacy of hue, and are brought well up among the leaves, 
by preventing access of light except to the upper part of the 
plants. Of the numerous species of hellebore how grown, the 
deep-purple-flowered H. colekicus is one of the handsomest; 
by crossing^ with H. guttatus and other species several valuable 
garden forms have been produced, having variously coloured 
spreading or bell-shaped flowers, spotted with crimson, red or 
purple. 

The rhizome of H. niger occurs in commerce in irregular and 
nodular pieces, from about x to 3 in. in length, white and of a 
horny texture within. Cut transversely it presents internally 
a circle of 8 to *2 cuneiform ligneous bundles, surrounded by 
a thick bark. It emits a faint odour when cut or broken, and 
has a bitter and slightly acrid taste. The drug issomctimes 
adulterated with the rhizome of baneberry, Aetata spicoie, 
which, however, may be recognised by the distinctly cruciate 
appearance of the central portion of the attached roots when 



2j6 



HELLENISM 



cat across, and by its decoction giving the- chemical reactions 
for tannin. 1 The rhizome is darker in colour in proportion 
to its degree of dryness, age and richness in oiL A specimen 
dried by Schroff lost in eleven days 6$ % of water. 

H. niger* orientalis, viridis, foetidus, and several other species of 
hellebore contain the glucosides helUborin, C»Ha0«, and kdUboretn, 
CteHuOii, the former yielding glucose and keUeboresin. C«HmO«, 
and the latter glucose and a violet-coloured substance helleboretin, 
^ .. ^ ,. .P L __ s _ , .___..__. s _ 7.,*^, Athirdand 

tidus. Both helleborin 
ut their decomposition- 
1 to be devoid of any 
tement and restlessness, 
r whole body, quickened 
i mucous membranes, 
in, salivation, vomiting 
heart an action similar 
scompanied by at first 
nation; it irritates the 
rat less violently than 
nd swine are killed by 
(On Poisons, p. 876, 
were griping produced 
;" Poisonous doses of 
, vertigo, stupor, thirst, 
he tongue and fauces,' 
ind finally collapse and 
tcr death reveals much 
s, more especially the 
exercise a cumulative 
her's pills, an empirical 
n British medicine the 
/as in past times much 
ended by Bisset {Med. 
rermifuge for children; 
f., March 1769. p. 99): 

T ^ , -ttainly kill the worms; 

but the worst of it is, it will sometimes kill both/' This plant, of 
old termed by farriers ox-heel, setter-wort and setor^grass, as well ; 
as H. viridis (Fr. Her be' d s&on), is employed in veterinary surgery, 



nizedi _ 

including the various species of Heueborus. The former, according 
to Codronchius (Comm..>. it tUeb., 16 to), CasteUus {De heUeb. 
epist., 1622), and others, is the drug usually signified in the writings 
of Hippocrates. Among the hellebores indigenous to Greece and 
Asia Minor, H. orientaRs, the rhizome of which differs from that 
of H. niger and of H. viridis in the bark being readily separable from 
the woody axis, is the species found by Schroff to answer best to the 
descriptions given by the ancients of black hellebore, the IWi&opot 
piXat of Dioscorides. The rhizome of this plant, if identical, as 
would appear, with that obtained by Tournefort at Prusa in Asia 
Minor (Rel. <Tim toy. du Levant, iL 189, 1718), must be a remedy 
of no small toxic properties. According to an early tradition, black 
hellebore administered by the soothsayer and physician Melampus 
(whence its name Melambodium), was the means of curing the mad- 
ness of the daughters of Proctus, king of Argos. The drug was used 
by the ancients in paralysis, gout ana other diseases, more particu- 
larly in insanity, a fact frequently alluded to by classical writers, 
e.g. Horace (Sat. it 3. 80-83, Ep. ad Pis. 300). Various supersti- 
tions were In olden times connected with the cutting of black hellebore 
The best is said by Pliny (Nal. hist. xxv. 21) to grow on Mt Helicon 
Of the three Anticyras that in Phocis was the most famed for its 
hellebore, which, being there used combined with " sesamoides," 
was, according to Pliny, taken with more safety than elsewhere. 

The British Pharmaceutical Conference has recommended 
the preparation which it terms the tinctura veratri viridis, as the 
best form in which to administer this drug. It may be given in 
doses of 5-15 minims. The tincture is prepared from the dried 
rhizome and rootlets of green hellebore, containing the alkaloids 
jervine, veratrine and vcratroidine. It is recommended as a 
cardiac and nervous sedative in cerebral haemorrhage and 
puerperal eclampsia. Black hellebore is a purgative and uterine 
stimulant. 

HELLENISH (from Gr. OdunHfav, to imitate the Greeks, who 
were known as 'EXXnvts, after "EXXn*, the son of Deucalion). 
The term " Hellenism " is ambiguous. It may be used to denote 
ancient Greek culture in all its phases, and even those elements 
in modem civilization which are Greek in origin or in spirit, 
but, while Matthew Arnold made the term popular in the latter 
connexion as the antitheses of " Hebraism/' tie German historian 

1 For the microscopical characters and for figures of transverse 
sections of the rhizome, see Lanessan* Hist, des drogues. L 6 (1878). 



J. G. Droyaen introduced the* fashion (1836) of using it to 
describe particularly the latter phases of Greek culture from the 
conquests of Alexander to the end of the ancient world, when 
those over whom this culture extended were largely not Greek 
in blood, i.e. Hellenes, but peoples who had adopted the Greek 
speech and way of life, HeUenislai. Greek culture had, however, 
both in " Hellenic " and " Hellenistic " times, a common essence, 
just as light is light whether in the original luminous body ox in 
a reflection, and to describe this by the term Hellenism seems most 
natural But whilst using the term in the larger sense, this 
article, in deference to the associations which have come to be 
specially connected with it, will devote its principal attention 
to Hellenism as it appeared in the world after the Macedonian 
conquests. But it will be first necessary to indicate briefly 
what Hellenism in itself implied. 

No verbal formula can really enclose the life of a people or an 
age, but we can best understand the significance of the old 
Greek cities and the life they developed, when, looking at Che 
history of mankind as a whole, we see the part played by reason, 
active and critical, in breaking down the barriers by which custom 
binders movement, in guiding movement to definite ends, in 
dissipating groundless beliefs ami leading onwards to fresh 
scientific conquests— when we see this and then take note that 
among the ancient Greeks such an activity of reason began in an 
entirely novel degree and that its activity in Europe ever since 
is due to their impulsion. When Hellenism came to stand in the 
world for something concrete and organic, it was, of course, no 
mere abstract principle, but embodied in a language, a literature, 
an artistic tradition. In the earliest existing monument of the 
Hellenic genius, the Homeric poems, one may already observe 
that regulative sense of form and proportion, which shaped the 
later achievements of the race In the intellectual and artistic 
spheres. It was not till the great colonizing epoch of the 8th and 
7th centuries B.C., when the name " Hellene " came into use as 
the antithesis of " barbarian," that the Greek race came to be 
conscious of itself as a peculiar people; it was yet some three 
centuries more before Hellenism stood fully declared in art and 
literature, in politics and in thought. There was now a new thing 
in the world, and to see how the world was affected by it is our 
immediate concern. 

I. The Expansion of Hellenish books Alexander.— In 
the 5th century B.C. Greek cities dotted the coasts of the Mediter- 
ranean and the Black Sea from Spain to Egypt and the Cancasns, 
and already Greek culture was beginning to pass beyond the 
limits of the Greek race. Already in the 7th century B.C., when 
Hellenism was still in a rudimentary stage, the citizens of the 
Greek city-states had been known to the courts of Babylon 
and Egypt as admirable soldiers, combining hardihood with 
discipline, and Greek mercenaries came to be in request through- 
out the Nearer East. But as Hellenism developed, its social 
and intellectual life began to exercise a power of attraction. 
The proud old civilizations of the Euphrates and the Nile 
might ignore it, but the ruder barbarian peoples in East and West, 
on whose coasts the Greek colonics had been planted, came in 
various degrees under its spelL In some cases an outlying colony 
would coalesce with a native population, and a fusion of Hellenism 
with barbarian customs Lake place, as at Emporium in Spun 
(Strabo iii. p. 160) and at Locri in S. Italy (Polyb. xii. 5. 10). 
Pcnnthus included a Thracian phyle. The stories of Anacharas 
and Scylas (Herod, iv. 76-80) show how the leading men of the 
tribes in contact with the Greek colonies in the Black Sea might 
be fascinated by the appeal which the exotic culture made to 
mind and to eye. 

The great developments of the century and a half before 
Alexander set the Greek people in a very different light before the 
world. In the sphere of material power the repulse of Xerxes 
and the extension of Athenian or Spartan supremacy in the 
eastern Mediterranean were large facts patent to the most obtuse. 
The kings of the East leant more than ever upon Greek mercen- 
aries, whose superiority to barbarian levies was sensibly brought 
home to them by the expedition of Cyrus- But the developments 
within the Hellenic sphere itself were also of, great consequence 



HELLENISM 



m 



jfor its expansion outwards. The political disunion of the Greeks 
was to some extent neutralized by the rise of Athens to a leading 
position in art, in literature and in philosophy. In Athens 
the Hellenic genius was focussed, its tendencies drawn together 
and combined; nor was it a circumstance of small moment 
that the Attic dialect attained, for prose, a classical authority; 
for if Hellenism was to be propagated in the world at large, 
U was obviously convenient that it should hare some one definite 
form of speech to be its medium. 

x. The Persians.— The ruling race of the East, the Persian, 

was but little open to the influences of the new culture. The 

military qualities of the Greeks were appreciated; and so, too, 

was Greek science, where it touched the immediately useful; 

a Greek captain was entrusted by Darius with the exploration 

of the Indus; a Greek architect bridged the Bosporus for him; 

Greek physicians (e.g. Democedes, Ctesias) were retained ior 

enormous fees at the Persian court. The brisk diplomatic 

intercourse between the Great King and the Greek states in the 

4th century may have produced effects that were not merely 

political We certainly find among those members of the Persian 

aristocracy, who came by residence in Asia Minor into closer 

contact with the Greeks, some traces of interest in the more 

ideal side of Hellenism. A man like the younger Cyrus invited 

Greek captains to his friendship for something more than their 

utility in war, and procured Greek hetaerae for something 

more than sensual pleasure. There is the Mithradates who 

presented the Academy with a statue of Plato by SiUnion, not 

improbably identical (though the supposition implies a correction 

in the text of Diogenes Laertius) with that Mithradates who, 

together with his father Ario b a ra anes, received the citizenship of 

Athens (Dem. xxiii. 141, 30a). Exactly how far Greek influence 

can be traced in the remains of Persian art, such as the royal 

palaces of Persepolis and Susa may be doubtful (see Gayer* 

VArt person; R. Pheni Spiers, Architecture East and West, 

p. 245 f.), but it is certain that the engraved gems for which 

there was a demand in the Persian empire were largely the 

work of Greek artists (Furt wingler, Antike Gemmen, Hi. p. 1 16 (.). 

a. The Phoenicians. — As early as the first half of the 4th century 

we find communities of Phoenician traders established in the 

Peiraeus (CJ.A. ii. 86). In Cyprus, on the frontier between 

the Greek and Semitic worlds, a struggle for ascendancy went on. 

The Phoenician element seems to have been dominant in the 

island when Evagoras made himself king of Salamis in 4* *# 

and restored Hellenism with a strong hand. The words of 

Isocrates (even allowing for their rhetorical colour) give us a 

vivid insight into what such a process meant. " Before Evagoras 

established his rule, they were so hostile and exclusive, that 

those of their rulers were actually held to be the best who were 

the fiercest adversaries of the Greeks; but now such a change 

has taken place, that it is a matter of emulation who shall show 

himself the most ardent phil-hellen, that for the mothers of 

their children most of them choose wives from amongst us, 

and that they take pride in having Greek things about rather 

than native, in following the Greek fashion of life, whilst our 

masters of the fine arts and other branches of culture now resort 

to them in greater numbers than were once to be found in those 

quarters they specially frequented " (Isoc 109- Evag. {« 40, 50). 

Even into the original seats of the Phoenicians Hellenism began to 

intrude. Evagoras at one time (about 3S6) made himself master 

of Tyre (Isoc Eeag. $ 62 ; Diod. xv. 3,4). His grandson Evagoras 

II. is found as governor of Sidon for the Persian king 349-340. 

(Babekm, Parses Achemtnides, p. exxii.; cf. Diod. xvi. 46, 3). 

Abdashtart, king of Sidon (374-362 B.C.), called Straton 
by the Creeks, had already entered into close relations with 
the Greek states, and imitated the Hellenic princes of Cyprus 
(Aiken, xii. 53* » CJ*A. ii. 86; Corp. inscr. Semit. i. 114). 
The Phoenician colonists in Sardinia purchased or imitated the 
work of Greek artists (Furtwangler, Antike Gemmen, iii. 109). 

3„ Tka Cariant and Lycians. — The seats of the Greeks In 
the East touched peoples more or less nearly related to the 
Hellenic stock, with native traditions not so far remote from 
.those of the <?ree)ts in a mora primitive age, the Cariana and the 



Lydane. It i»meal»trt in the last Cemuryprecediiig Alexander 
thai the first of these peoples was organized as a strong state 
under native princes, the line founded by Hecatomnus of Mylasa. 
Hecatomnus made himself master of Caria in the first decade of 
the 4th century, but it was under his son Mausolus, who succeeded 
him in 377-376 that the house rose to its zenith. These Carian 
princes ruled as satraps for the Great King, but they modelled 
themselves upon the pattern of the Greek tyrant. The capital 
of Mausolus was a Greek city, Halicarnassus, and all that we 
can still trace of his great works of construction and adornment 
shows conformity to the pure Hellenic type. His famous 
sepulchre, the Mausoleum (the remains of it are now in the 
British Museum), was a monument upon which the most eminent 
Greek sculptors of the time worked in rivalry (Plin. N.H. xxxvi. 
S» i 30; Vitruv. vn. 13). His court gave a welcome to the vagrant 
Greek philosopher (Diog. Laert. viii. 8, S 87). Even the Carian 
town of Mylasa now shows the forms of a Greek city and records 
its public decrees in Greek (CJ.G. 2691 c,a\e- Michel 471). 
In Lyria, which in spite of " the son of Harpagus " and King 
Pericles, had never been brought under one man's rule, the Greek 
influence is more limited. Here, for the most part in the in- 
scriptions, the native language maintains itself against Greek. 
The proper names are (if not native) mainly Persian. But the 
Greek language makes an occasional appearance; Greek names 
are borne by others beside Pericles. The coins are Greek in type. 
And above all the monumental remains of Lycia show strong 
Greek influence, especially the well-known " Nereid Monument " 
in the British Museum, whose date is held to go back to the 
5th century (Gardner, Handbook oJGk. Sculp, p. 344). 

4. South Jto »a.-~Hellenic influences continued to penetrate 
the Scythian peoples from the Greek colonies of the Black Sea, 
at any rate in the matter of artistic fabrication. Our evidence 
is the actual objects recovered from the soil. (See Scytbia.) 

5. Egypt. — From the time of Psammetichus (d. 6x0 B.C.) 
Greek mercenaries had been used to prop Pharaoh's throne. 
At the same time Greek merchants had begun to find their way 
up the Nile and even to the Oases. A Greek city Naucratis (?.«.) 
was allowed to arise at the Bolbitinic mouth of the Nile. But 
the racial repugnance to the Greek, which forbade an Egyptian 
even to eat an animal which had been carved with a Greek's knife 
(Hdt. ii. 41), probably kept the soul of the people moreshut against 
Hellenic influences than was that of the other races of the East.. 

6. Macedonia. — In Macedonia the native chiefs had been 
attracted by the rich Hellenic life at any rate from the beginning 
of the 5th century, when Alexander L, surnamed " Phil-hellen," 
persuaded the judges at Olympia that the Temenid house was 
of good Argive descent (Hdt. v. 22). And, although their 
enemies might stigmatize them as parbarians, the Macedonian 
kings maintained that they were not Macedonians, but Greeks 
(cf. <Ma "EXXbv Maxtttw ferapxet, Hdt. v. so). It was not 
probably till the reorganization of the kingdom by Archelaus 
(413-399) that Greek culture found any abundant entrance 
into Macedonia. Now all that was most brilliant in Greek 
literature and Greek art was concentrated in the court of Aegae; 
the palace was decorated by Zeuxis; Euripides spent there 
the end of his days. From that time, no doubt, a certain degree 
of literary culture was general among the Macedonian nobility; 
their names in the days of Philip are largely Greek; the 
Macedonian service was full of men from the Greek cities within 
Philip's dominions. The values recognized at the court would 
naturally be recognized in noble families generally, and Philip 
chose Aristotle to be the educator of his son. How far the country 
generally may be regarded. as Hellenized is a problem which 
involves the vexed question what right the Macedonian people 
itself has to be classed among the Hellenes, and Macedonian 
to be considered a dialect of Greek. 1 As the literary and official 
language, Greek alone would seem to have had any status. 

1 See, among recent writers, on one side Kaerst, Gesch. des Hellenist. 
Zcitallers, pp. 97 f., and on the other Beloch, Grieck. Gesch., uL 
(i.J 1-9; Kretschmer, EinUilung in die Gesch. d. griech. SprdcU, 
p. 283 f . ; O. Hoffmann, Die Makedonen, ihre Sprache u. *r Volkslum 
09o4 



z$9 



HELLENISM 



7. In the Week Ike Native Maces of Sia/y.— Italy end the 
south of Gaul had not remained unaffected by the neighbourhood 
of the Greek colonies. Under the rule of the elder and younger 
Dionysius in the 4th century, the hellenization of the Sicels in 
the interior of Sicily teems to have become complete (Freeman, 
History of Sicily, ii. 387, 388, 432-424; Beloch, Grieck. Cesck. 
iii. [1.1 sot). 

The alphabets used by the various Italian races from the 5th 
century were directly or indirectly learnt from the Greeks. 
The peoples of the south (Lucanians, Bruttians, Mamertines) 
show a Greek principle of nomenclature (Mommsen, UnteritaL 
DialeJU, p. 240 f.). The Pythagorean philosophy, whose seat 
was in southern Italy, won adherents among the native chiefs 
(Cic. De smec. is, cf. Dio Chrys. Oral. Car. 37, f 24). From the 
Greeks of southern Gaul Hellenic influences penetrated the Celtic 
races so far that imitations of Greek coins were struck even on 
the coasts of the Atlantic 

II. Am* Alexander the Ghat.— When we review 
generally the extent to which Hellenism had penetrated the 
Outer world in the middle of the 4th century B.C., it must be 
admitted that it had not seriously affected any but the' more 
primitive races which dwelt upon the borders of the Hellenic 
lands, and here it would seem, with the doubtful exception of 
the Macedonians, to have been an affair rather of the courts 
than of the life of the people. On the other hand It must be 
taken into account that Hellenism had as yet only been a very 
short while in the world. What would have happened had it 
continued to depend upon its spiritual force only for propagation 
we cannot say. Everything was changed when by the conquests 
of Alexander C*34-3 2 3) it suddenly rose to material supremacy 
in ell the East as far as India, and when cities of Greek speech 
and constitution were planted by the might of kings at all the 
cardinal points of intercourse within those lands. The values 
honoured by the rulers of the world must naturally impress 
themselves upon the subject multitudes. The Macedonian 
chiefs found their pride in being champions of Hellenism. Of 
Alexander there is no need to speak. The courts of his successors 
in Asia Minor, Syria and Egypt were Greek in language and 
atmosphere. All kings liked to win the good word of the Greeks 
by munificence bestowed upon Greek cities and Greek institutions. 
All of them in some degree patronized Greek art and letters, 
and some sought fame for themselves as authors. Even the 
barbarian courts, their neighbours or vassals, were swayed 
by the dominant fashion to imitation. But by the courts alone 
Hellenism could never have been propagated far. Greek culture 
had been the product of the city-state, and Hellenism could not 
be dissevered from the city. It was upon the system of Greek 
and Macedonian cities, planted by Alexander and his successors, 
that their work rested, and though their dynasties crumbled, 
their work remained. Rome, when it stepped into their place, 
did no more than safeguard its continuance; in the East 
Rome acted as a Hellenistic power, and if, when the legions had 
thundered past, the brooding East " plunged in thought again," 
that thought was largely directed by the Greek schoolmaster who 
followed in the legions' train. From our present point of view 
we may therefore regard this work of Hellenism as one continuous 
process, initiated by the Macedonians and carried on under 
Roman protection, and ask in the first place what the institution 
of a Greek city implied. 

The Character ef Ike New Creek Cite*.— The citizen bodies 
at the outset were really of Greek or Macedonian blood— soldiers 
who bad served in the royal armies, or men attracted from the 
older Greek cities to the new lands thrown open to commerce. 
To fix their European soldiery upon the new soil was an obvious 
necessity for the Macedonian chiefs who had set up kingdoms 
among the barbarians, and the lots of the veterans (except in 
Egypt) were naturally attached to various urban centres. The 
cities, of course, drew in numbers beside of the people of the 
land; Alexander is specially said to have incorporated large 
bodies of natives in some of the new cities of the Eastern provinces 
(Air. iy. 4, 1; Diod. xvii. 83, 2; Curtius ix. 10, 7). It may 
generally be taken for granted ^hat the lower strata of the city* 



populations wis mainly native; to be fncfaded In the dty 
population was not, however, to be included in the citizen body, 
and it remains a question how far the latter admitted members 
of other than European origin (Beloeh in. [i.] 4x4). The 
statements, for instance, of Josephus that the Jews were given 
full citizen rights in the new foundations are probably false 
(Willrich, Juden nnd Griechen tor der mahhabdischen Erhebunt 
1805, p. xo f). The social organization of the dtlzcti-body 
conformed to the regular Hellenic type with a division into 
phyla* and, in Egypt, at any rate, into demi (Liban, Or. xix. 
62; Satyrus, frag. 21-F.H.G. iii. 164; Sir W. M. Ramsay, 
Cities and Bishoprics, I. 60; Kenyon, Archto f. Papyr. ii. 74; 
Jonguet, Butt. corr. hell, xxi., 1897, 184 f.; Liebenam, Stddte- 
9er»altung, 220 f.). The dties appear equally Hellenic in 
their political organs and functions with hotdi and demos tad 
popularly elected magistrates. Life was filled with the universal 
Hellenic interests, which centred In the gymnasium and the 
religious festivals, these last including, of course, not only athletic 
contests but performances of the classical dramas or later 
imitations of them. The wandering sophist and rhetorician 
would find a hearing no less than the musical artist. The 
language of the upper classes was Greek; and the material 
background of building and decoration, of dress and furniture, 
was of Greek design. A greater regularity in the street-plans 
seems to have distinguished the new cities from the older slowly 
grown cities of the Greek lands, just as It distinguishes the cities 
of the New World to-day from those of Europe. Alexandria 
and Antioch were both traversed from end to end by one long 
straight street, crossed by shorter ones at right angles; Ntcaea 
was a square from the centre of which all the four gates could 
be seen at the ends of the intersecting thoroughfares (Strabo 
xii. 565); similar characteristics are noted in the rebuilt Smyrna 
(ft. xiv. 646). 

Sometimes the Greek dry was not an absolutely new founda- 
tion, but an old Oriental dty, re-colonized and transformed. 
And in such cases the old name was often replaced by a Greek 
one. Thus Celaenae in Phrygia became Apamea; Hakb 
(Aleppo) in Syria became Beroea; Nisibb in Mesopotamia, 
Antioch; Rhagae (Rai) in Media, Europus. In some cases 
the old name was left unchallenged, e.g. Thyatira, Damascus 
and Samaria. Even where there was no new foundation the 
older dties of Phoenicia and Syria became transformed from 
the overwhelming prestige of Hellenic culture. In Tyre and 
Sldon, no less than in Antioch or Alexandria, Greek literature 
and philosophy were seriously cultivated, as we may see by the 
great names which they contributed. The process by which 
Hellenism thus leavened an older dty we may trace with peculiar 
vividness in the case of Jerusalem; we see there the younger 
generation captivated by its ideals, the appearance of gymnasium 
and theatre, the eager adoption of Greek political forms (1 
Mace. 1. 13 f.; 2 Mace 4., xo f.). 

A. Characteristics of Hellenism after Alexander.— To the number 
of Greek dty-states existing before Alexander were now therefore 
added those which extended Hellas as far as India. With the 
enormous extension of Greek territory a great shifting took place 
in the old centres of gravity. What changes in the character 
of Greek culture did the new conditions of the world bring 
about? 

Hellenism had been the product of the free fife* of the Greek 
dty-state, and after Chaeronea the great days of the city-state 
were past Not that all liberty was everywhere 
extinguished. Under Alexander himself the Greek 
states were restive, and Aetolia unsubdued; and, 
with the break-up of the empire at Alexander's death, there 
was once more scope for the action of the individual dties among 
the rival great powers. In the history of the next two or three 
centuries the dties are by no means dphers. Rhodes takes 
a great part in Wdtpolisth, as a sovereign ally of one or other 
of the royal courts. In Greece itself the overiordship to which 
the Macedonian king aspires is imperfect in extent and only 
maintained to that extent by continual wars. The Greek 
states on their sideshow that they are capable even of progressive 



HELLENISM 



339 



pontics! development, the need* of the time being net by the* 
federal system, -by larger unions of equal members than the 
fading dties of the past would have tolerated, with their 
extreme unwillingness to forego the least shred of sovereign 
udepeadence. The Achaean and Aetolian Leagues ate inde- 
pendent powers, which the Macedonian can indeed check by 
garrisons in Corinth, Chakis and e ls ew h e r e, but* which keep a 
field clear lor Hellenic freedom within their borders. Sparta 
also is a power which cam cross swords with the Macedonian 
ttag, sod Cleomenes HX aspires to- unite the Peloponnesus 
under his headship* As to the dties outside Greece, within 
or around the royal realms, Seleudd, Ptolemaic or Attalid, their 
degree of freedom probably differed widely according to circum- 
stances. At one end of the scale, cities of old renown, t.g. 
Lamptacns or Smyrna, could stfll make good their independence 
against Antiochus ILL at the beginning of the and century B.C. 
At the other end of the scale the cities which were royal capitals, 
e.g. Alexandria, Antioch and Pergamum, were normally controlled 
altogether by royal nominees. At Pergamum indeed and (at 
any rate after Antiochus IV.) at Antioch, forma of self-govern- 
ment subsisted upon which, of course, the court had its hand, 
whilst at Ale xan dri a even such. forms were wanting. Between 
the two extremes there was variation not only between city 
and city, but, no doubt, in one and the same city at different 
times. In Syria the independent action of the dties greatly 
increased during the last weakness -of the Seleudd monarchy. 
With the extension of the single strong rule of Rome over this 
Hellenistic world, the con d itions were changed. Just as the 
M a c ed oni an conquest, whilst increasing the domain of Greek 
culture, had straitened Greek liberty, so Rome, whilst bringing 
HeHrnitm finally into secure possession of the nearer East, 
extinguished Greek freedom altogether. Even now the old 
forms were long religiously respected. Formally, the most 
ilustrious Greek states, Athens, for instance, or Marseilles, or 
Rhodes, were not subjects of Rome, but free allies. Even in 
the case of tnkaUt stifendiariat (tribute-paying states), jnunldpal 
autonomy, subject Indeed to Interference on the part of the 
Roman governor, was allowed to go on. BtuU and dtm*s long 
continued to function. The old catchword, " autonomy of the 
Helfcns," was still heard and indeed was solemnly proclaimed 
by Nero at the Isthmian games of aj>. 67. But during the first 
centuries of the Christian era, this municipal autonomy, by a 
process which can. only be imperfectly traced in detail, decayed. 
The dmar first sank into poHtkal annihilation and the council, 
no longer popularly elected but an aristocratic order, concen- 
trated the whole administration m its hands. By the end of 
the and century *j> n claims made by the imperial government 
upon the mwnidpal senate are more and more changing member- 
ship of the order from an honour Into an intolerable burden, 
and financial disorganization is calling on imperial officials in 
one place* after another to undertake the business of government. 
After Diocletian and under the Eastern Empire the Greek world 
is organized on the prindples of a vast bureaucracy. 

With this long process of political decline from Alexander to 
Diocletian correspond the inner changes in the temper of the 
Hellenic and Hellenistic peoples. There were, of course, 
marked differences between one legion and another. 
-But certain general characteristics distinguished at 
once Greek society after the Macedonian conquests from the 
society of the earlier age. When the vast field of the East was 
opened to Hellenic enterprise and the bullion of its treasuries 
flung abroad, fortunes were made on a scale before unparalleled. 
A new standard of sumptaousness and splendour was set up in 
the richest stratum of society. This material elaboration of 
life was furthered by the existence of Hellenistic courts, where 
the great ministers amassed fabulous riches (e.g. Dionysius, 
the state-secretary of Antiochus IV., Polyb. wad. 3, 16; Hermiss, 
the chief minister of Seleucus III., and Antiochus III., Polyb. 
v. 50. a; cf. Plutarch, Agis 0), and of huge dties like Alexandria, 
Antioch and the enlarged Ephesus. It is significant that whereas 
the earner Greeks bad used precious stones only as a medium 
for tbe ^engraver's ait, unengraven gems, valuable for their 



mere material,' now came to be used in pr o fusion for adornment; 
Already before Alexander paa-hdlenic feeling had in various 
ways overridden the internal divisions of the Greek race, but 
now, with the vast mingling of Greeks of all sorts in the newly* 
conquered lands, a generalized Greek culture in which the old 
local characteristics were merged, came to overspread the world; 
The gradual supersession of the old dialects by the Kami the 
common speech of the Greeks, a modification of the Attic idiom 
coloured by Ionic, wasone obvious sign of the new order of things 
(see Gbjbek Language). 

In its artistic, its literary, its spiritual products the age after 
Alexander gave evidence of the change. In no department did 
activity immediately stop; but the old freshness and 
creative exuberance was gone. Artistic pleasure, ***** 



grown less delicate, required the stimulus of a more 
sensational effect or a more striking realism, as we 
may see by the Pergamene and Rhodian schools of sculpture, 
by the bas-reliefs with the genre subjects drawn from the life 
of the countryside, or, in literature by the sort of historical 
writing which became popular with Cldtarchus and Duris, by 
the studied emotional or rhetorical point of C&Uimachus, and 
by the portrayal of country life in Theocritus. At the same time, 
artists and men of letters were now addressing themselves in 
most cases, not to their feuow-citizens in a free city, but to kings 
and courtiers, or the educated class generally of the Greek world. 
In those departments of intellectual activity which demand 
no high ideal faculty, in the study of the world of fact, the 
centuries immediately following Alexander witnessed notable 
advance. Scientific research might prosper, just as poetry 
withered, under the patronage of kings, and such research had 
now a vast amount of new material at its disposal and could 
profit by the old Babylonian and Egyptian traditions. The 
medical schools, especially that of Alexandria, really enlarged 
knowledge of the animal frame. Knowledge of the earth gained 
immensely by the Macedonian conquests. The literary schools 
of Alexandria and Pergamum built up grammatical science, 
and brought literary and artistic criticism to a fine point. If 
indeed the earlier ages had been those of creative and spontaneous 
life, the Hellenistic age was that of consdous criticism and 
book-learning. The classical products were registered, studied, 
assorted and commented upon. Men travelled and read more. 
Books were in demand and were multiplied. Libraries became a 
feature of the age, the kings leading the way as collectors, of 
books, especially the rival dynasties of Egypt and Pergamum. 
The library attached to the Museum at Alexandria is said to 
have contained at the time of its destruction in 47 b.c as many 
as 700,000 rolls (Aul. Gell. vi 17. 3). Even smaller dties, like 
Arjhrodisias in Caria, had public libraries for the instruction of 
their youth (Le Bas, III. No. 16x8). 

With the general decay of andent dvitization under the 
Roman empire, even scientific research ceased, and though there 
were literary revivals, like that connected with the new Atticism 
under the Antonine emperors, these were mainly imitative and 
artificial, and even learning became at last under the Byzantine 
emperors a jejune and formal tradition (see Geeex LtTEaATUiE). 

The diffusion of the Greek race far from the former centres of 
its life, the mingling of dtizens of many dties, the close contact 
between Greek and barbarian in the conquered lands- 
all this had made the old sanctions of dvic religion Jjjjjj^. 
and dvic morality of less account than ever. New 90p J^ r 
guides of life were needed. The Stoic philosophy, with 
its cosmopolitan note, Its fixed dogmas and plain ethical precepts, 
came into the world at the time of the Macedonian conquests to 
meet the needs of the new age. Its ideas became popular among 
ordinary men as the older philosophies had never been. The 
Stoic or Cynic preacher, attacking the ways of society, in pungent, 
often coarse, phrase, became a familiar figure of the Greek 
market-place (P. Wendland, Beitrttge %w Cesch. d. gruck. PhUo- 
sopkie, 1895). 

Although the cults of the old Greek deities in the new cities, 
with thdr splendid apparatus of festivals and sacrifice might still 
bold the multitude, men turned ever in large numbers to alien 



?4.o 



HELLENISM 



religions, felt a* more potent became itr a i^ endtltf va ri o us g o ds 
of Egypt and the East began to find larger entrance in the Greek 
world. Even in the old Greek religion before Alexander there bad 
been large elements of foreign origin, and that the Greeks should 
now do honour to the gods of the lands into which they came, as 
we find the Cilidan and Syrian Greeks doing to Baal-tars and Baal- 
marood and the Egyptian Greeks to the gods of Egypt, was only 
in accordance with the primitive way of thinking. But it was a 
sign of the times when Serapis and Isis, Osiris and Anubis began 
to take place among the popular deities in the old Greek lands. 
The origin of the cult of Serapis, which Ptolemy I. found, or 
established, in Egypt is disputed; the familiar type of the god is 
the invention of a Greek artist, but the name and religion came 
from somewhere in the East (see discussion under Serapis). 
Before the end of the and century B.C. there were temples of 
Serapis in Athens, Rhodes, Delos and Orchomenos in Boeotia. 
Under the Roman empire the cult of Isis, now furnished with an 
official priesthood and elaborate ritual, became really popular in 
the Hellenistic world. King Asoka in the 3rd century B.C. sent 
Buddhist missionaries from India to the Mediterranean lands; 
their preaching has, it is true, left little or no trace in our Western 
records. But other religions of Oriental origin penetrated far, 
the worship of the Phrygian Great Mother, and in the 2nd 
century a.d. the religion of the Mithras (Lafaye, CulU des 
divmitis alexandrines, 1884; Roscher, articles " Anubis," " Isis," 
&c; F. Cumont, Mysteres de MUhra, Eng. trans., 1003; Les 
Religions orientates dans It paganisme romain, 1006). 

The Jews, too, by the time of Christ were finding m many 
quarters an open door. Besides those who were ready to go the 
whole length and accept circumcision, numbersadopted particular 
Jewish practices, observing the Sabbath, for instance, or turned 
from polytheism to the doctrine of the One God. The synagogues 
in the Gentile cities had generally attached to them, in more or 
less close connexion a multitude of those " who feared God " and 
frequented the services (Schttrer, Cesck. d. jUd. Votks, iii. 102- 
*35>- 

Among the religions which penetrated the Hellenistic world 
from an Eastern source, one ultimately ove r powered all the rest 
and made that world its own. The inter-action of 
Christianity and Hellenism opens large fields of inquiry. 
The teaching of Christ Himself contained, as it is given 
to us, no Hellenic element ; so far as He built with older material, 
that material was exclusively the sacred tradition of Israel. So 
soon, however, as the Gospel was carried in Greek to Greeks, 
Hellenic elements began to enter into it, in the writings, for 
instance, of St Paul, the appeal to what " nature " teaches would 
be generally admitted to be the adoption of a Greek mode of 
thought. It was, of course, impossible that speaking in Greek 
and living among Greeks, Christians should not to some extent 
use current conceptions for the expression of their faith. There 
was, at the same time, in the early Church a powerful current of 
feeling hostile to Greek culture, to the wisdom of the world. 
What the attitude of the New People should be to it, whether it 
was all bad, or whether there were good things in it which 
Christians should appropriate, was a vital question that always 
confronted them. The great Christian School of Alexandria re- 
presented by Clement and Origen effected a durable alliance 
between Greek education and Christian doctrine. In proportion 
as the Christian Church had to go deeper into metaphysics in the 
formulation of its belief as to God, as to Christ, as to the soul, the 
Greek philosophical terminology, which was the only vehicle then 
available for precise thought, had to become more and more an 
essential part of Christianity. At the same time Christian ethics 
incorporated much of the current popular philosophy, especially 
large Stoical elements. In this way the Church itself , as we shall 
see, became a propagator of Hellenism (see Hatch, Hibberl 
Lectures, 1888; Wendland, " Christentum u. Hellenismus" 
in Neue Jahrb. J. kl. Alt. ix. 1002, p. if.; and Die kellenistisck- 
rdmische Kultur in ihren Bexiehungen zu Judenlum u. Christentum, 
1007). 

B. Effect upon non-Hellenic Peoples. — Hellenism secured by the 
Macedonian conquest points d'appui from the Mediterranean to 



India, and brought the system of commerce and intercbutae into 
Greek hands. What effect did it produce in these various 
countries? What effect again in the lands of the West which fell 
under the sway of Rome? 

(i.) India.— In India (including the valleys of the Kabul and 
its northern tributaries, then inhabited by an Indian, not, as 
now, by an Iranian, population) Alexander planted _. 
a number of Greek towns. Alexandria " under the ^£7 
Caucasus " commanded the road from Bactria over 
the Hindu-Rush; it lay somewhere among the hills to the north 
of Kabul, perhaps at Opian near Charikar (MacCrindle, Ancient 
India, p. 87, note 4); that it is the city meant by " Alasadda 
the capital of the Yona (Greek) country " in the Buddhist 
Mahavanso, as is generally affirmed, seems doubtful (Tarn, 
he, cit. below, p. 269, note 7). We hear of a Nicaea in the Kabul 
valley itself (near Jalalabad?), another Nicaea on the Hydaspes 
(Jhelum) where Alexander crossed it, with Bucephala (see 
Bucephalus) opposite, a city (unnamed) on the Acesinet 
(Chenab) (Arr. vi. 29, 3), and a aeries of foundations strung along 
the Indus to the sea. Soon after 321, Macedonian supremacy 
beyond the Indus collapsed before the advance of the native 
Maury* dynasty, and about 303 even large districts west of the 
Indus were ceded by Seleucus. But the chapter of Greek rule 
in India was not yet closed. The Maurya dynasty broke up about 
180 B.C., and at the same time the Greek rulers of Bactria began 
to lead expeditions across the Hindu-Knsh. Menander in the 
middle of the and century B.C. extended his rule from the Hindu* 
Kush to the Ganges. Then " Scythian " peoples from central 
Asia, Sakas and Yuc-chi, having conquered Bactria, gradually 
squeexed Within ever-narrowing limits the Greek power in India. 
The last Greek prince, Hermaeus, seems to have succumbed 
about 30 B.C. It was just at this time that the Graeco-Roman 
world of the West was consolidated as the Roman Empire, and, 
though Greek rule in India had disappeared, active commercial 
intercourse went on between India and the Hellenistic lands. 
How far, through these changes, did the Greek population settled 
by Alexander or his successors in India maintain their distinctive 
character? What influence did Hellenism during the centuries 
in which it was in contact with India exert upon the native 
mind? Only extremely qualified answers can be given to these 
questions. Capital data are possibly waiting there under 
ground— the Kabul valley for instance is almost virgin soil for 
the archaeologist— and any conclusion we can arrive at is merely 
provisional- If certain statements of classical authors were 
true, Hellenism in India flourished exceedingly. But the phil- 
hellenic Brahmins in Philostraius J life of ApoUonius bad no exist- 
ence outside the world of romance, and the statement of Dio 
Chrysostom that the Indians were fatmKar with Homer in their 
own tongue (Or. hii. 6) is a traveller's tale. India, the sceptical 
observe, has yielded no Greek' inscription, except, of course, on 
the coins of the Greek kings and their Scythian rivals and suc- 
cessors. To what extent can it be inferred from legends on coins 
that Greek was a living speech in India? Perhaps to no large 
extent outside the Greek courts. The fact, however, that the 
Greek character was still used on coins for two centuries alter the 
last Greek dynasty had come to an end shows that the language 
had a prestige in India which any theory, to be plausible, must 
account for. If we argue by probability from what we know 
of the conditions, we have to consider that the Greek rule in 
India was all through fighting for existence, and can have bad 
" little time or energy left for such things as art, science and 
literature " (Tarn, loc. cit. p. 292), and it is pointed out that a 
casual reference to the Greeks in an Indian work contemporary 
with Menander characterizes them as " viciously valiant Yooas.** 
How long is it probable that Greek colonies planted in tbe midst 
of alien races would have remained distinct? Mr Tarn builds 
much upon the fact that the descendants of the Greek Branchidac 
settled by Xerxes in central Asia had become bilingual in six 
generations (Curt. vii. 5, 29). But the Greek race before 
Alexander bad not its later prestige, and we must consider each 
a sentiment as leads the Eurasia* to-day to ding to his Western 
parentage, to that the instance of the Branchidac cannot be 



HELLENISM 



241 



ttttd ottaigfet away for. the tine alter Alexander. Certainly, 
had the Greek cokmes in India been active political bodies, we 
could hardly have failed to. find tome trace of them, in civic 
aachitecture or in inscriptions, by this time. Perhaps we should 
rather think of them as resembling the .Greeks found to-day 
dispersed over the nearer East with interests mainly commercial, 
easily assimilating themselves to their environment. A notice 
derived irom Agatfaarehtdes. (about 14& » c.) possibly refers to 
the activity of these Indian Greeks in the sea-borne trade of the 
Indian Ocean (Mullcr, Geog. Gtatci an*, i. p. 191; cf. Diod. 
iii. 47. 9). As to what India derived from Greece there has been 
a good deal of erudite debate. That the Indian drama took 
its origin from the Greek is .still maintained by some scholars, 
though hardly proved. There is no doubt that Indian astronomy 
shows marked Hellenic features, including actual Greek words 
borrowed. But by Jar the most signal borrowing is in the sphere 
ft of art. The stream of Buddhist art which went oat 

2i eastwards across Asia had its rise in North-West India, 

and the remains of architecture and sculpture un- 
earthed in this region enable us to trace its development back to 
pure Greek types. It remains, of course,, a question whether 
(he tradition was transmitted, by the Greek dynasties from 
Bactria or by intercourse with the Roman empint) the latter 
seems now almost certain.; but the fact of the influence is equally 
striking on either theory. How far to the east the distinctive 
influence of Greece went is shown by the seal-impressions with 
Athena and Eros types found by Dv Stein in the juried cities of 
KhoUn (Sand-buried Ruins of Kkoton t p, 396), and according to 
Mr £. B. HaveJl, there exist " paintings treasured as the most 
precious rejics and rarely shown, to Europeans, which closely 
resemble the Greece-Buddhist art of India? in some of the oldest 



See A. A, MacdoneU, History of Satuknt Littraiun 
and the references on p. 432 ; V. A. Smith, Ea\ 



i*f<rti90o)p v 4"/'. 

r „--. . __-Wy History of India 

(1904); Grunwedel, Buddhist Art in India (Eng. trans., edited by 



temples of Japan (Studio, voL xxvii. 1903, p. 26) 

" * ~ \r\t %%U 

irgess, 1001); W. W. tarn, •• Notes On Hellenism in Bactria 
and India " in Jown> of HeU. Studies* touu (1902); Foucher, 
UArt grtea-boufdhiqu* du Candkdra (1905). 
* (ii. ) Iran and Babylonia. — The colonizing activity of Alexander 
and his- successors found a large field i» Iran, where, up tilt his 
time, hardly any walled towns seem to have existed. 
Cities now arose in all its provinces, superseding in 
many cases native market places and villages, and 
holding thevnata*je*pomts of commerce. Media, Polybius says, 
was de fen ded by a chain of Greek cities from barbarian incursion 
(x. 27. 3) f in the neighbourhood of Teheran seem to have stood 
Heraclea end Eunopus. In Eastern Iran the ckles which are 
its chief places to-day then bore Greek names, and looked upon 
Alexander or some other HeOenk prince as their founder. 
Khojend, Hereto Kandahar were Atexahdrias, Merv was att 
Alexandria till it changed that name for Antioch. When the 
farther province* broke away under independent Greek kings, 
a EucTatidCe and a Dcmetrias attested their glory. Even in a 
town definitely -barbarian like Syrinca in 209 B.C. there was a 
resident mercantile community of Greeks (Polyb. x. 31). The 
bulk of Greek historical literature having perished, and in the 
absence of both archaeological data from Iran, we can only 
speculate on the inner life of these Greek cities under a strange 
sky. One precious document is the decree of Antioch in Persia 
(about 206 ax.) cited in a recently discovered inscription (Kern, 
/mdbv Vi Magnesia, No. 61; Dittenberger, Orient, gr. Inset, i 
No. 253). This shows us the normal organs of a Greek city, 
bevU, sec/esso, prytaneit, fee., in full working, with the annual 
election of magistrates, and ordinary forms of public action. 
Bat more than this, it throws- a remarkable light upon the 
solidarity of the HeHeafk Dispersion. The citizen body had been 
racTeeaedsome generations before by colonists from Magnesia-on- 
Meander sent at the invitation of Antiochus I. The Maghesians 
axe instigated by pan-helleuk enthusiasm. And We see a brisk 
dtpfomatk intercourse between the scattered Greek cities going 
on. It is especially the local religious festivals which bind them 
together. Aatiodt m Persia, of course, sends athletes to the great 
fames of Greece* but in this decree it determines to take part in 
Xtll 5 



the new festrvrfberag'starfed In honour of Artemis at Magnesia. 
The loyalty, too, expressed towards trie Seleucid king implies 
a predominant interest in pan-hellenic unity, natural in colonies 
isolated among barbarians. A list is given (fragmentary) of 
other Greek cities in Babylonia and beyond from which similar 
decrees had come. 

In the middle of the 3rd century B.C. Bactria and Sogdiana 
broke away from the Seleucid empire; independent Greek kings 
reigned there till the country was conquered by 
nomads from 1 Central Asia (Sacae and Yue-chi) a 
century later. Alexander had settled large masses of 
Greeks in these regions (Greeks, ft would seem, not Mace- 
donians), whose attempts to return home in 325 and 323 had 
been frustrated, and it may well be that a racial, antagonism 
quickened trie? revolt against Macedonian rule in 250. The 
history of these Greek dynasties is for us almost a blank, and 
for estimating the amount and quality of Hellenism in Bactria 
during the 180 years or so of Macedonian and Greek rule, we 
are reduced to building hypotheses upon the scantiest data. 
Probably nothing important bearing on the subject has been left 
but of view in W. W. Tarn's learned discussion (Journ. of Heff. 
Stud, xxii, 1902, p. 268 f.), and his result is mainly negative, 
that palpable evidences of an active Hellenism have not been 
found; he incHnes to think that the Greek kingdoms mainly 
took on the native Iranian colour. The coins, of course, ait 
adduced en the other sWe, 1 being not only Greek in type and 
legend, but (in many cases) of a peculiarly fine and vigorous 
execution; and excellence in one branch of art Is thought to 
Imply that other branches flourished in the same milieu. Tarn 
suggests that they maybe a "sport,** a spasmodic outbreak 
of genius (see Bactria and works there quoted). J In these out- 
lying provinces the national Iranian sentiment seems to have 
been most intense, and it interesting tosee that under Alexander 
Hellenism appeared as " belligerent dvinxatfon," m the attempt 
to suppress practices like the exposure of the dying to the dogs 
{an exaggeration of Zoroastrianism) and), possrbry also, abhorrent 
forms of marriage (Strabo xi. 317; Porphyr. De abstin. 4. 2t; 
Fliit. Difori. AL 5). 

The west of Iran slipped from the Seleucids in the course of 
the 2nd century B.C. to be Joined to the Parthian kingdom, or 
fall under petty native dynasties. Soon after 130 Babylonia 
too was conquered by the Parthian, and Mesopotamia before 88. 
Then the reconquest of the neater East by Oriental dynasties 
was checked by the advance of Rome. Asia Minor and Syria 
remained substantial parts of the Roman Empire till the Mahon> 
medan conquests of the 7th century ad. began a new process 
Of recoil on the part of the Hellenistic power. In Babylonia, also, 
in Susiana and Mesopotamia, Hellenism had been established 
in a system of cities for 200 years before the coming of the 
Parthian. The greatest of all of them stood here— almost on 
the site of Bagdad— Seleucia on the Tigris. It superseded 
Babylon as the industrial focus of Babylonia and counted some 
600,000 inhabitants (piebs urbana) according to Pliny, N.H. vi. 
$122 (cf. Joseph. Arch. xvin. $ 372, 374; for coins, probably of 
Seleucia, with the type of Tyche" issued in the years ad. 43-44 
see Wroth, Coins of Partkia, p. xlvi.). The list of other Greek 
cities known to us in these regions is too long to give here (see 
Droysen, toe. cit., and E. Schwartz in Kern's Inschr. v. Afagnesid, 
p. 171 f.). In Mesopotamia, Pliny especially notes how the 
character of the country was changed when the old village life 
was broken in upon by new centres of population in the cities of 
Macedonian foundation (Pliny, N.H. vi. f 117; cf. K. Reglimj, 
" Histor. gebg. d. mesopot. Parallelograms," in Lehmann's 
Beitr&ge, i. p. 442 f.). 

We do not look in vain for notable names m Hellenistic 
literature and philosophy produced on an Asiatic soil. Diogenes, 
the Stoic philosopher (head of the school in 156 B.C.), ^^ 
was a " Babylonian," i.e. a citisen of Seleucia on the jjjjjjjj* 
Tigris; so too was Seleucus, the mathematician and , H Mmm 
astronomer, being possibly a native Babylonian; 
Berosaus, who wrote a Babylonian history in Greek (before 
261 B.C.) was a Hellenized native. Apoltodorus, Strabo'seuthority 

2a 



2+2 



HELLENISM 



for Parthian history (c. 80 B.C. ?}, was from the Greek city of 
Artemita in Assyria. When the Parthians rent away provinces 
from the Seleucid empire, the Greek cities did not cease to exist 
by passing under barbarian rule. Gradually no doubt the 
Greek colonies were absorbed, but the process was a long one. 
In 140 and 130 B.C. those of Iran were ready to rise in support 
Of the Seleucid invader (Joseph. Arth, xiii. § 184, Justin xxxviii. 
10.6-8). Just so, Crassus in 53 b.c found a welcome in the Greek 
cities of Mesopotamia. Seleucia on the Tigris is spoken of by 
Tacitus as being in a.d. 36 " proof against barbarian influences 
and mindful of its founder Seleucus " {Ann. vi. 42). How im- 
portant an element the Greek population of their realm seemed 
to the Parthian kings we can see by the fact that they claimed 
to be themselves champions of Hellenism. From the reign of 
Artabanus I. (128/7-123 B.C.) they bear the epithet of " Phil* 
hellen " as a regular part of their title upon the coins. Under 
the later reigns the Tyche figure (the personification of a Greek 
city) becomes common as a coin type (Wroth, Coins of Partkia, 
pp. liiL, Ixxiv.). The coinage may, of course, give a somewhat 
one-sided representation of the Parthian kingdom, being specially 
designed for the commercial class, in which the population of 
the Greek cities was, we may guess, predominant. The state of 
things which prevails in modern Afghanistan, where trade is in 
the hands of a class distinct in race and speech (Persian in this 
case) from the ruling race of fighters is very probably analogous 
to that which we should have found in Iran under the Parthians,* 
That the Parthian court itself was to some extent Hellenized 
is shown by the story, often adduced, that a Greek company of 
actors was performing the Bacchae before the king when the 
head of Crassus was brought in, This single instance need not, 
it is true, show a Hellenism of any profundity; still it does show 
that certain parts of Hellenism had become so essential to the 
lustre of a court that even an Arsacid could not be without them. 
Artavasdes, king of Armenia (54?~34 B.C.) composed Greek 
tragedies and histories (Plut. Crass. 33)- Then the prestige 
o! the Roman Empire, with its prevailingly Hellenistic culture, 
must have told powerfully. The Parthian princes were in many 
cases the children of Greek mothers who had been taken into the 
royal harems (Plut. Crass. 32). Musa, the queen-mother, whose 
bead appears on the coins of Phraataces (3/2 b.c.-a.d. 4) had 
been an Italian slave-girl. Many of the Parthian princes resided 
temporarily, as hostages or refugees, in the Roman Empire; 
but one notes that the nation at large looked with anything but 
favour upon too liberal an introduction of foreign manners at 
the court (Tac. Ann. ii. 2). 

Such slight notices in Western literature do not give us any 
penetrating view into the operation of Hellenism among the 
Iranians. As an expression of the Iranian mind we have the 
Avesta and the Peblevi theological literature. Unfortunately 
in a question of this kind the dating of our documents is the first 
matter of importance, and it seems that we can only assign 
dates to the different parts of the Avesta by processes of fine- 
drawn conjecture.. And even if we could date the Avesta 
securely, we could only prove borrowing by more or less close 
coincidences of idea, a templing but uncertain method of inquiry. 
Taking an opinion based on such data for what it is worth, we 
may note that Darmesteter believed in the influence of the later 
Greek philosophy (Philonian and Neo-platonic) as one of those 
which shaped the Avesta as we have it (Sacred Books of the East, 
iv. $4 f.), but we must also note that such an influence is 
emphatically denied by Dr L. Mills (Zaralkusktra and the Greeks, 
Leipzig; 1006). Outside literature, we have to look to the 
artistic remains offered by the region to determine Hellenic 
influence. But here, too, the preliminary classification of the 
documents is beset with doubt. In the case of small objects like 
gems the place of manufacture may be far from the place of 
discovery. The architectural remains are solidly in situ, but 
• - * w Ce toot les Tadjik de 1' Afghanistan qui constituent les trente- 
deo* corps de metier, qui tiehnent boutique* expedient les marchaa- 
dt*e*s represented, en un mot, la vie industriclle et commcrciale de 
la nation. Ce sont aussi les Tad/k des villes qui ferment la class* 
lettree, et qui ont empeche les Afghans de retomber dans ta barbaric.'' 
(RecJus, Novell* Giopapk. swap. ix. p. 71.) 



we may have such vast dssngreementas to data as that between 
Dieulaloy and M. de Morgan with respect to domed buildings of 
Susa, a disagreement of at least five centuries, it is enough 
then here to observe that Iran and Babylonia do, as a matter of 
fact, continually yield the explorer objects of workmanship 
cither Greek or influenced by Greek models, belonging to she age 
after Alexander, and that we may hence infer at any rate such 
an influence of Hellenism upon the tastes of the richer dasses 
as would create a demand for these things, 

For gems see " Gobineau " in the Ra* artktei H vols, xxvii., xxviiL 
(1874); Menant, Reakerckes sue la ftafrswae oriental*, ii. 189 f.; 
E. Babclon, Catalogue des tamees de la EM. Nat. (1897). p. 56; 
A. Furtwangler, Die antiktn Gemmen, pp. 165, JdO ff.j Figurines: 
Heucey, Fie. anL dm Lou** (18S3) p. 3; J. P. Peters, Nippur. 
u. 128; Muttary standard: Heaseyv Cample* rendu* de CAcad. 



(Jacquerel, Rev. arcktol., 1897 [ill, 343 f.). and in the relics of the 
temple at Kingavar (Dieulafoy, LAit antique de la Peru, v. p. 10 £). 

If any vestige of Hellenism still survived under the Sassanian 
kings, our records do not -show it* The spirit of the Sassanian 
monarchy was more jealously national than that of the ff MMtM 
Arsacid, and alien grafts could hardly have flourished JSE?"" 
under it. Of course, if Darmesteter was right In seeing 
a Greek element in Zoroastriantsm, Greek influence msst still 
have operated under the new dynasty, which recognised the 
national religion. But, as we saw, the Greek influence has been 
authoritatively denied. At the court a limited recognition 
might be given, as fashion veered, to the values prevalent in the 
Hdlenistie world. The story of Hormtsdaa in ZosSmus is sugges- 
tive in this connexion (Zosim. Hist. not. ii. 97). Chosroes I. 
Interested himself in Greek philosophy and received its professors 
from the West with open arms (Again, ft. sS f.); according to 
one account, be had his palace at Ctesfyhon built by Creeks 
(Theopbylact. Shnocat. v. 6). . 

But the account of Chosroes* mode of action makes it plain 
that the Hellenism once planted m Iran had withered away; 
representatives of Greek learning and skill have all to be imported 
from across the frontier. 

For Hellenism in Babylonia and Iran, see the useful article of 
M. Victor Chapot in the Bull ei memotrtt de As Soc. Nat. des Ami- 
quaires de France for 1002 (published 1904), p. 306 L, which gives 
a conspectus of the relevant literature. 

(iii.) Asia J/mor.^Vcry different were the fortunes of Hefless* 
ism in those lands which became annexed so the Rome* Empire. 

In Asia Minor, we have seen how, even before Alexander, 
Hellenism had begun to affect the native, acts tad Persian 
nobility. Daring Alexander's own reign, we cannot 4*^* 
trace any progress in the HeUsnisatioa of the interior, *mm 
nor can we prove here his activity as a< builder of «***^ 
cities. But under the dynasties of his successors a w *** sML 
great work of city-building and colonization went on. Antigomis 
fixed his capital at the old Phrygian town of Ctiaeose, and the 
famous cities of Nicaea and Alexandria Teoas owed to him 
their first foundation, each as an Antigooia; they* were grounded 
and renamed by Lysimachus (301-181 n.c»). Then we have 
the great system of Seleucid foundations. Serdis* the Seseodd 
capital in Asia Minor, had become a Greek city before the end 
of the 3rd century b.c. The main high road between the Aegean 
coast and the East was held by a secies of new cities, Going 
west from the Cilician Gates we have Laodicea Catacecaumene, 
Apamea, the Phrygian capital which absorbed Gelaenae, Laodicea 
on the Lycus, Antiodwm-Meander, AnUochnNysa, Antioch* 
Tralles. To the south of this high road -we have amojag the 
Seleucid foundations Antioch in Pisidia (colonised with Jkia*> 
nesians from the Meander) and Stratoatcea in Caria; in the 
region to the north of it the most famous Seleucid colony was 
Thyatira. Along the southern coast, where the houses of Sekocos 
and Ptolemy strove for predominance, we find the names of 
Berenice, Arsinoe and Ptolemais confronting those of Antioch 
and Seleucia. With the rise of the Attalid dynasty of Pergamura, 
a system of Pergsmene foundation begins to oppose the Sdeuctd 
in the interior, bearing such names as Attaiia* Phikteeria, 



HELLENISM 



«43 



Bumenia, Apoflonk OT these, one may note for thefr later 
celebrity Philadelphia in Lydia and Attalia on the Pamphylian 
coast. The native Blthynian dynasty became HeUenized in the 
course of the 3rd century, and in the matter of city building 
Pruaias(tfaeoIdChis), Apamea (the old My r lea), probably Prusa, 
and above all Nicomedia attested its activity. While new 
Greek dties were rising m the interior, the older Hellenism of 
the western coast grew in material splendour under the muni- 
ficence of Heltenistic kings. Its centres of gravity to some 
extent shifted. There was a tendency towards concentration 
in large cities of the new type, which caused many of the lesser 
towns, likeLebedus, Myusor Colophon, to sink to insignificance, 
while Ephesus grew in greatness and wealth, and Smyrna rose 
again after an extinction of four centuries. The great importance 
of Rhodes belongs to the days after Alexander, when it received 
the riches of the East from the trade-routes which debouched 
into the Mediterranean at Alexandria and Antioch. In Aeolis, 
of course, the centre of gravity moved to the Attalid capital, 
Pergaraura. It was the irruption of the Celts, beginning ra 
178-177 B.C., which checked the Hellenization of the interior. 
Not only did the Galatian tribes take large tracts towards the 
north of the plateau in possession, but they were an element of 
perpetual unrest, which hampered and distracted the Hellenistic 
monarchies. The wars, therefore, in which the Pergamene 
kings in the latter part of the 3rd century stemmed their aggres- 
sions, had the glory of a Hellenic crusade. 

The minor dynasties of non-Greek origin, the native Bithynian 
and the two Persian dynasties in Pont us and Cappadocia, were 
HeUenized before the Romans drove the Seleucid out 
of the country. In Bithynia the upper classes seem to 
have followed the fashion of the court (Beloch hi. [i.J, 
378); the dynasty of Pontus was philhellenic by ancestral 
tradition; the dynasty of Cappadocia, the most conservative, 
dated its conversion to Hellenism from the time when a Seleucid 
princess came to refgn there early in the 2nd century B.C. as the 
wife of Ariarathes V. (Diod. xxxi. 19. 8). But Hellenism in 
Cappadocia was for centuries to come still confined to the castles 
of the king and the barons, and the few towns. 

When Rome began to interfere in Asia Minor* its first action 
was to break the power of the Gauls (189 B.C.). In 133 Rome 
HtikaUm entered formally upon the heritage of the Attalid 
kingdom and became the dominant power in the 
Anatolian peninsula for 1 200 years. Under Rome the 
process of Hellenization, which the divisions and 
weakness of the Macedonian kingdoms had checked, went forward. 
The coast regions of the west and south the Romans found 
already HeUenized. In Lydia " not a trace " of the old language 
was left in Strata's time (Strabo xiv. 631); in Lycia, the old 
language became obsolete in the early days of Macedonian rule 
(see Kafinka, Tituli Asiae minoris, 1. 8). But inland, in 
Phrygia, Hellenism had as yet made little headway outside 
the Greek cities. Even the Attalids had not effected much here 
(KOrte, A then. Millh. xxiii., 1898, p. 1 52), and under the Romans, 
the penetration of the interior by Hellenism was slow. It was 
not till the reign of Hadrian that city life on the Phrygian plateau 
became rich and vigorous, with its material circumstances of 
temples, theatres and baths. Among the villages of the north 
and east of Phrygia, Hellenism " was only beginning to make 
itself felt in the middle of the 3rd century a.d." (Ramsay in 
Kuhn's Zeilsck. /. vergleich. Sprachj or seining, xxvifi., 1885, 
p. j8t). Gravestones in this region as late as the 4th century 
curse violator* in the old Phrygian speech. The lower classes 
at Lystra in St Pauls time spoke Lycaonian (Acts xiv. 11). 
In that part of Phrygia, which by the settlement of the Celtic 
invaders became Galatia, the larger town seem 10 have becosne 
Hclknued by the time of the Christian era, whilst the Celtic 
speech maintained itself m the country villages tiU the 4th 
century a.0. Jerome, Preface to Comment, in Epist. ad GaL 
book ii.; see J. G. C. Anderson, Jown. of Hell. Stud, xix., 1899, 
p. 31a f.). Cappadocia at the beginning of the Christian era 
was still comparatively townltfss (Strabo til. 537), a country 
of large estates with a servile peasantry. Even in the 4th century 



ft* Heflenisation was stUTfar from complete; but Christianity 
had assimilated so much of the older Hellenic culture that the 
Church was now a main propagator of Hellenism in the backward 
regions. The native languages of Asia Minor all ultimately 
gave way to Greek (unless Phrygian lingered on fn parts till the 
Turkish invasions; see Mordtmann, Sitsungsb. d. baytr. Ak. 
1862, i. p. 30; K. Holl in Hermes, xHii., 1908, p. 240 f.X 
The effective Hellenization of Armenia did not take place till 
the 5th century, when the school of Mesrop and Sahak gave 
Armenia a* literature translated from, or imitating, Greek 
books (Gelzer in I. v. Mulct's Handbuck, vol U. Abt. i. 
p. 9'6.) 

(iv.) Syria.— In Syria, which with Cffltfa and Mesopotamia, 
formed the central part of the Seleucid empire, the new colonies 
were especially numerous. Alexander himself had 
perhaps made a beginning with Alexandrfa-by-fssus 
(mod. Alexandretta), Samaria, PeHa (the later 
Apamea), Carrhae, *c. Antigonus founded Antigonia, which 
was absorbed a few years later by Antioch, and after the faV 
Of Antigonus in 301, the work of planting Syria with Greek 
dties was pursued effectively north of the Lebanon by the house 
of Seleucus, and, less energetically, south of the Lebanon by the 
house of Ptolemy. In the north of Syria four cities stood 
pre-eminent above the rest, (1) Antioch on the Orontes, the 
Seleucrd capital; (2) Seleucia-in-Pieria near the mouth of the 
Orontes, which guarded the approach to Antioch from the seaf 
(3) Apamea (mod. Famia), on the middle Orontes, the military 
headquarters of the kingdom; and (4) Laodicea " on sea M (erf 
mure), which had a commercial importance in connexion with 
the export of Syrian wine. Of the Ptolemaic foundations to 
Coele-Syria only one attained an importance comparable with 
that of the larger Seleucid foundations, Ptolemais on the coast, 
which was the old Semitic Acco transformed (mod. Acre). The 
group of Greek cities east of the Jordan also fell within the 
Ptolemaic realm during the 3rd century B.C., though their 4 
greatness belonged to a somewhat later day. The whole el 
Syria was brought under the Seleucid sceptre, together wilh 
Cnida, by Antiochus III. the Great (223-187 b.c). Under hit 
son, Antiochus IV. Epiphanes (175-164), a fresh impulse was 
given to Syrian Hellenism. In 1 Maccabees he is represented 
as writing an order to all his subjects to forsake the ways of their 
fathers and conform to a single prescribed pattern, and though 
in this form the account can hardly be exact, it does no doubt 
represent the spirit of his action. Other facts there are which 
point the same way. We now find a sudden issue of bronze 
money by a large number of the cities of the kingdom in their 
own name — an indication of liberties extended or confirmed. 
Many of them exchange their existing name for that of Antioch 
(Adana, Tarsus, Gadara, Ptolemais), Seleucia (Mopsuesiia, 
Gadara) or Epiphanea (Oeniandus, Ha math).- At Antioch 
itself great public works were carried out, such as were involved 
in the addition of a new quarter to the city, including, we may 
suppose, the civic council chamber which is afterwards spoke* 
of as being here. With the ever-growing weakness of the Seleucid 
dynasty, the independence and activity of the cities increased, 
although, if, on the one hand, they were less suppressed by a 
strong central government, they were less protected agaios^ 
military adventurers and barbarian chieftains. Accordingly, 
when Pompey annexed Syria in 64 B.C. as a Roman province, 
be found it a chaos of city-states and petty princi- ^^ ' 
palit ies. The Nabataeans and the Jews above all had JJJJJf 
encroached upon the Hellenistic domain; in the 
south the Jewish raids had spread desolation and left many 
cities practically in ruins. Under Roman protection, the cities 
were soon rebuUt and Hellenism secured from the barbarian perflJ 
Greek city life, with its political forms, its complement el 
festivities, amusements and intellectual caercise, went on more 
largely than before. Thegreat majority of the Hellenistic remains 
in Syria belong to the Roman period. Such local dyrffesties as 
were suffered by the Romans to exist had, of course, a Hellenistic 
complexion. Especially was this the case with that of the Herods* 
Not only were such marks of HeUenism as a theatre introduced 



*44 



HELLENISM 



t>y Hood the Great (37-54 *.c.) at Jerusalem, bat iu the work 
•i city-building this dynasty showed iuclf active. : Sebaste 
(the eld Samaria), Caesarea, Antipatris were built by Herod 
the Great, Tiberias by Herod Antipas (4 b.c.-a4). 39). The 
reclaiming of the wild district of Hauran for civilisation and 
Hellenistic tile was due in the first instance to the house of 
Herod (Schttrer, Gesck.d. jiid. Volk, 3rd ed., ii. p. 12 t). In 
Syria, too, Hellenism under the Romans advanced upon new 
ground. Palmyra, of which we hear nothing before Roman times, 
is a notable instance, 

• As to the effect of this network of Greek cities upon, the 
aboriginal population of Syria, we do not find here the same 
fh _ t disappearance of native languages and racial charac- 
2£,» ieristics as in Asia Minor. Still less was this the case 
fa Syria, in Mesopotamia, where a strong native element in such 
a city as Edessa is indicated by its epithet mfagbftfjapos. 
The old cults naturally went on, and at Qirrhae (Harran) even 
survived the establishment of Christianity. The lower classes 
at Antioch, and no doubt in the cities generally, were in speech 
Aramaic or bilingual; we find Aramajc popular nicknames 
of the later Seleucids (K, O. MiiUer, Antiq. Ant. p. 20), The 
villages, of course, spoke Aramaic The richer natives, on the 
other hand, those who made their way into the educated, classes 
of the towns, and attained official position, would become 
Hcllenixed in language and manners, and the " Syrian Code 
shows how far the social structure was modified by the Hellenic 
tradition (Mitteis, Reichsrecht und Volhsrecht in den ost. Pro- 
nnten da rpm. Kaiserrtichs, 1891; Arnold Meyer, Jcsu Mutter* 
spnuhe, 1896). Of the Syrians who made their mark in 
(keek literature, some were of native blood, cj, Lucian of 
Samosata. 

» One may notice the great part taken by natives, of the 
Phoenician cities in the history pf later Greek philosophy, and 
in the poetic movement of the last century B.C., which led to, 
fresh cultivation of the epigram. Greek, in fact, held the 
field as the language of literature and polite society. Possibly 
at places like Edessa, which for some 350 years (till a.d. 216) 
was under a. dynasty of native princes, Aramaic was cultivated 
as a literary language. . There was a Syriac-speaking church here 
as early as the and century, and with the spread qf Christianity 
Syrlac asserted itself against Greek. The Syriac literature 
which we possess is all Christian. 

I But where Greek gave place to Syriac, Hellenism was not thereby 
effaced. It was to some extent the passing over 0/ the Hellenic 
tradition into a new medium. We must remember the marked 
Hellenic elements in Christian theology. The earliest Syriac 
work which we possess, the book " On Fate," produced in the 
circle of the heretic Bardaisan or Bardesanes (end of the 2nd 
century), largely follows Greek models. There was an extensive 
translation of Greek works into Syriac during the next centuries, 
handbooks of philosophy and science for the most part. , The 
version of Homer into Syriac verses made in the 8th century 
has perished, all but a few lines (R. Duval, La Lilt. syriaque x 

looo.p. 3^5)' 

. (v.) The relation of the Jews to Hellenism in the first century 
and a half of Macedonian rule is very obscure, since the state- 
TbtJ*w roents ma dc by later writers like Josephus.as to the 
visit of Alexander to Jerusalem or the privileges con* 
ferred upon the Jews in the new Macedonian realms are justly 
suspected of being fiction. It has been maintained that Greek 
Influence is to be traced in parts of, the Old Testament assigned 
to this period, as, for instance, the Book of Proverbs; but even 
in the case of Ecclcsiastes, the canonical writing whose affinity 
with Greek thought is closest, the coincidence of idea need not 
necessarily prove a Greek source. The one solid fact in this con- 
nexion is the translation of the Jewish Law into Greek in the 3rd 
century B.C., implying a Jewish Diaspora at Alexandria, so far 
Hcllenized as to have forgotten the speech of Palestine. Early 
in the 2nd century B.C. we see that the priestly aristocracy of 
Jerusalem had, like the well-to-do classes everywhere in Syria, 
been carried away by the Hellenistic current, its strength 
being evidenced no less by the intensity of the conservative 



opposition embodied w» the party of the " Pious " (Aasideaas, 
tjasuiim). 

Under. Antiochus IV. Epiphanes (176-165) the Hellenistic 
aristocracy contrived to get Jerusalem converted into a Greek 
city; the gymnasium appeared, and Greek dress became fashion- 
able with the young men. But when Antiochus, owing to 
political developments, interfered violently at Jerusalem, the 
conservative opposition carried the nation with them. The 
revolt under the Hasmonaean family (Judas Maccabaeus and 
his brethren) followed, ending in 143-143 in the .establishment 
of an independent Jewish state under a Hasmonaean prince. 
But whilst the, old Hellenistic party had been crushed the 
Hasmonaean state was of the nature of a compromise* The 
Mosaic Law was respected, but Hellenism still found an entrance 
in various forms. The first Hasmonaean " king," Aristobulus I. 
(104-103), was known to the Greeks as Phil-heQen. He and all 
later kings of the dynasty bear Greek names aa well as Hebrew 
ones, and after Jannaeus Alexander (103-76) the Greek legends 
are common on the coins beside the Hebrew. Herod, who sup- 
planted the Hasmonaean dynasty (37-34 b.c,) made, outside 
Judaea, a display of Phil-hellenism, buDding new Greek dties 
and temples, or bestowing gifts upon the older ones of fame. 
His court, at the same time, welcomed Greek men of letters 
like Nicolaus of Damascus. Even in the neighbourhood of 
Jerusalem, he erected a theatre and an amphitheatre. We have 
already noticed the work done by the Herodian dynasty in 
furthering Hellenism in Syria (see Schurer, Gcsck, dts judistk. 
Volhes, vols. i. and ii,). Meanwhile a great part of the Jewish 
people was living dispersed among the cities of the Greek world, 
speaking Greek as their mother-tongue, and absorbing Greek 
influences in much larger measure than their brethren of Palestine. 
These are the Jews whom we find contrasted as " Hellenists " 
with the " Hebrews " in Acts. They still kept in touch with 
the mother-city, and indeed we hear of special synagogues in 
Jerusalem in which the Hellenists temporarily resident there 
gathered (Acts vi. 9). A large Jewish literature in Greek had 
grown up since the translation of the Law in. the 3rd century. 
Beside the other canonical books of the Old Testament, translated 
in many cases with modifications or additions, it included transla- 
tions of other- Hebrew books (Ecclesiasticus, Judith, kc.\ works 
composed originally in Greek but {nutating to some extent the 
Hebraic style (like Wisdom), works modelled more closely on 
the Greek literary tradition, cither historical, like a Maccabees* 
or philosophical, like the productions of the Alexandrian school, 
represented foe us by Aristobulus and Philo, in which style 
and thought are almost wholly Greek and the reference to the 
Old Testament a mere pretext; or .Greek poems on Jewish 
subjects, like the epic of the elder "Philo and Ezechiel's tragedy, 
Exagogi. It included also a number of forgeries, circulated 
under the names of famous Greek authors, verses fathered upon 
Aeschylus or Sophocles, or books like the false Hecataeus* or 
above ail the pretended prophecies of ancient Sibyls in epic 
verse. These frauds were all contrived for the heathen public, 
as a means of propaganda, calculated to inspire them with respect 
for Jewish antiquity or turn them from idols to God* 

For Jewish Hellenism see Schurer, op. cit. m.; Susemibl, Gcsck. 
der grieck. Lit. in der Atexandriturzeil, ii. 601 f.: WiHrich, Juden 
und Grieehen (1895); Judaka (1900); Hastings' Diet, of Ike Bible, 
art. "Greece;'; Eneyrtop. Biblka, art. " Hellenism " : Pauly- 
Wissowa. art. "Aristobulus (15) "c a1w> the work of P. Weadtaod 
ciied above. 

Through the Hellenistic Jews, Greek influences reached 
Jerusalem itself, though their effect tipon the Atamaic-speakinf 
Rabbinical schools was naturally not so pronounced. The large 
number of Greek words, however, in the language of the Mishnathi 
and the Talmud is a significant phenomenon. The attitude of 
the Rabbinic doctors to a Greek education does not seem ta 
have been hostile till the time* of Hadrian. The sect of the 
Essenes probably shows an intermingling of ihc Greek with 
other lines of tradition among ther Jews of Palestine. 

See Schurer fi. 42-67. 583; S. Krauw, Grieck. u. laftror* 
lehnwbrter im Tulm*d (1398); Jewish Encyclopedia, an. " Gree* 
Language/' , . 



HELLENISMS 



•**n 



, (vL) TnEpttiht F*ta*ieft wefefitaterefityvpedt] rjonstfam- 
tions from building Greek cities after the manner of tbe other 
Macedonian houses. One Creek city they, found 
existing, Naucrati*, Alexander hod called Alexandria 
into being; the first Ptolemy added Ptotemais at 
a- Greek centra for Upper Egypt. They seem to have suffered 
no other community in. the Nile Valley with the inde- 
pendent life of a Greek city, for the, Greek and Macedonian 
soldier-colonies settled in tbe Fayum or elsewhere had no 
political self -existence. And even at Alexandria Hellenism 
was not allowed full development, ptolemais, indeed, enjoyed 
all the ordinary forms of aeif-government, but Alexandria was 
governed despotically by royal officials. In its population; tooj 
Alexandria was only stmi*HellenkH for besides the proportion 
of Egyptian natives in its lpwer suata, its commercial greatness 
drew in elements from every quarter; the Jews, fqr instance, 
formed, a majority of the population in two out of tbe five 
divisions of the city. At the same lime the prevalent tone of 
the populace was, no doubt, Hellenistic, as is shown by the 
fact that the Jews who settled there, acquired Greek, in place 
of Aramaic as their motUerntoague, and . in its apper circles 
Alexandrian society under the Ptolemies was not only 
Hellenistic, but notable among the Hellenes lor its literary and 
artistic ^alliance. The state university, the " Museum," we* 
in close connexion with the court, and gave to Alexandra* 
the same pre-eminence in natural science and literary scholar- 
ship which Athens had in moral philosophy* 
., Probably in no other, country, except Judaea, did Hellenism 
encounter as stubborn a national antagonism as In Egypt. 
The common description o| " the Oriental " as indurated in 
his antagonism to the alien conqueror here perhaps has some 
tfuih in it. The assault made upon the Macedonian' devotee 
in the temple of Serapis at Memphis " because he was a Greek " 
is significant (Papyr. Brit. Mm. i. No* 445 «fv Grenfctl, Amherst 
Papyr.p.4$). And yet even here one must observe qualifications, 
Tbe papyri show us habitual marriage of Greeks and native 
women and a frequent adoption by natives of Greek names. 
It has even beep thought that some developments of the Bjryptaio 
religion are due to Hellenistic influence, such a* the deification 
of Imhotp (Biasing, Deutsche LileraiuruiiuMg, 1002, coL 2330) 
or the practice of forming voluntary religious associations (Otto, 
truster und Tanpel, u 135). The worship of Serapis was 
patronized by the court with the very object of affording a 
mixed cultus in which Greek and native might unite. In Egypt, 
too, the triumph of Christianity brought into being a native 
Christian literature, and if this was in one way the assertion of 
the native against Hellenistic predominance, one must remember 
that Coptic literature, like Syriac, necessarily incorporated 
those Greek elements which had become an essential part of 
Christian theology. 

From the Ptolemaic kingdom Hellenism early travelled up 
tbe Nile into Ethiopia. Ergamenesvthe king of the Et hi opia n s 
BkioptM% in the time of the second Ptolemy, " who had received 
a Greek education and cultivated philosophy," broke 
with tbe native priesthood (Dk>d. iii. 6), and from that time 
traces of Greek influence continue to be found in the monuments- 
of the Upper Nile. When Ethiopia became a Christian country 
in the 4th century, its connexion with the Hellenistic world 
became closer. 

(vii.) HcUmism in the #«#/.— Whilst in the East Hellenism 
had been sustained by the political supremacy of the Greeks, in 
Italy Groecia copfa had only the inherent power and 
charm of her culture wherewith to win her way. At 
fata* Carthage in the 3rd century the educated classes 
JjJJJJ . seem generally to have been familiar with Greek 
culture (Bernhardy, Grundriss d. griech. Lit. f 77). 
The philosopher Clitomachus, who presided over the Academy 
at Athens in the and century, was a Carthaginian. Even before 
Alexander, as we saw, Hellenism had affected the peoples of 
Italy, but it was not till the Greeks of south Italy and Sicily 
were brought under the supremacy of Rome in the 3rd century 
ax. that (he stream, of Qreejt, influence entered Rome in any 



Volume. Tk was riow that tke Owe* freednmii, L. Lfvraa 
Androgens, kid the foundation of a new Latin literature bf 
his translation of the Odyssey, and that the Greek dramas were 
recast in a Latin mould. The first Romans' who *et about 
writing history wrote in Greek. At the end of the 3rd century 
there was a okcle of enthusiastic phft-hellenes among the Rontsa 
aristocracy, led by TitiiaQtnnctiusJOaminmus, who in Rome's 
name proclaimed the autonomy of the Greeks at the Isthmian 
garnet of 196. In the middle of the *nd century Roman Hellen- 
ism centred in; the circle of Sripio Aemilianus, which included 
men like Porybiiis and the philosopher Panaetius. The vhft 
Of the three great philosophers, Diogenes th* * Babylonian* 
Critofcusand Carneades hi 155, was an epodumaldng event m 
the history of Hellenism at Rome. Opposition there could not 
fail to be, and in 161 a sencius •censvkam wdered all Greet 
philosophers end rhetoricians to leave th&dty. The effect of 
such measures .was* of course, transient* Even though the 
opposition found so doughty a champion as the elder Cato 
(censor fat 184), it was ultimately of no avail. The Italians did 
not indeed surrender themselves passively to the Greek tradition. 
In different departments of culture the degree of their inde* 
pendente was different. The system of government framed by 
Rome w«a an original creation* . fiven in the spheres of art and 
literature, the Italians, while so largely guiderf.by Greek canons, 
h&d something of their own to contribute. The mere fact that 
they produced a literature in Latin argues a power of creation 
89 Well as receptivity. The great Latin poets were imitators 
indeed, but mere Imitators they were no more than Petr&rch or 
Milton. On the other hand, even where the creative originality 
of Rome was most pronounced, as in the sphere of Law, there 
were elements of Hellenic origin. It has been often pointed out 
how the Sfoic philosophy especially helped to shape Roman 5 
jurisprudence (Schmekel, Phitos. d. mittl. Stoa, p. 454 f.). 

Whilst the upper classes in Italy absorbed Creek influences 
by their education, by the literary and artistic tradition, the 
lower strata of the population of Rome became largely neHenized 
by the actual mmix on a vast scale of -Greeks and heOenized 
Asiatics, brought in for the most part as slaves, and coalescing 
as freedmen with the citizen body. Of the Jewish inscriptions 
found at Rome some two-thirds are in Greek. So too the early 
Christian church in Rome, to which St Paul addressed hit 
epistle, was Gfceek-speakiiig, and continued to be till far into the 
3rd -century. . 

III. Late* HisiOEY.^-It remains only to glance at tb* 
ultimate destinies of Hellenism in West and East lathe Latin' 
West knowledge of Greek, first-hand acquaintance 
with the Greek classics, became rarer and rarer as **J - 
general culture declined, till in the dark ages (after 1 ^J? 
the 5th century) it existed practically nowhere but in 
Ireland (Sandys, History of Classical Scholarship, i. 438). la 
Latin literature, however, a great mass of Hellenistic tradition 
in a derived form was maintained in currency, wherever, thai is* 
culture of any kind continued to exist. It was a small number 
Of monkish communities whose care of those narrow channels 
prevented their ever drying up altogether. Then the stxeant 
began to rise again, first with the influx of tLe learning of the 1 
Spanish Moors, then with the new knowledge of Greek brought 
from Constantinople in the 14th century. With the Renaissance 
and the new learning, Hellenism came in again in flood, to form 
a chief part of that great river on which the modern world- » 
being carried forward into a future, of which one can only say 
that it must be utterly unlike anything that has gone beforev 
In the East it is popularly thought that HeUenism, as an exotic, 
withered altogether away. This view is superficial During 
the dark ages, in the. Byzantine East, as well as in the West, 
Hellenism had become little more than a dried and shrivelled 
tradition, although the closer study of Byzantine caiture in 
latter years has seemed to discover more vitality than was once 
supposed. Ultimately the Greek East was absorbed by Islam? 
the popular mistake lies in supposing that the Hel- - trti—-' 
lemsttc tradition thereby came to an end; The i 

Mohammedan conquerors found considerable part of it takes 



246 



HELLER— HELMERSEN 



over, as we saw, by the Syrian Christians, and Greek pGIIoaopkioal 
and scientific classics were now translated from Syriac into 
Arabic These were the starting-points for the Mahommedan 
schools in these subjects. Accordingly we find that Arabian 
philosophy (?.».), mathematics, geography, medicine and 
philology are ail based professedly upon Greek works (Brockel- 
mann, Gcsch. d. arabischen Liieralur, 1898, vol. i.; R. A. 
Nicholson, A Literary History of the Arabs, 1007, pp. 358-361). 
Aristotle in the East no less than in the West was the " master 
of them that know "; and Moslem physicians to this day invoke 
the names of Hippocrates and Galen. The Hellenistic strain 
m Mahommedan civilization has, it is true, flagged and failed, 
but only as that civilization as a whole has declined It was 
not that the Hellenistic element failed, whilst the native elements 
in the civilization prospered; the culture of Islam has, as a 
whole (from whatever causes), sunk ever lower during the 
centuries that have witnessed the marvellous expansion of 
Europe. 



>h, 
16- 

. HELLER, STEPHEN (1815-1888), Austrian pianist and 
composer, was born at Pest on the 15th of May 1815. (Fetis's 
dictionary says 1814, but this is almost certainly wrong.) He 
was at first intended for a lawyer, but at nine years of age 
performed so successfully at a concert that he was sent to Vienna 
to study under Czcrny. Halm was his principal master, and 
from the age of twelve he gave concerts in Vienna, and made a 
tour through Hungary, Poland and Germany. At Augsburg 
be had the good fortune to be befriended when ill by a wealthy 
family, who practically adopted him and gave him the oppor- 
tunity to complete his musical education. In 1838 he went to 
Paris, and soon became intimate with Liszt, Chopin, Berlioz 
and their set, among whom was HaUe*, throughout his life an 
indefatigable performer of Heller's music. In 1849 he came to 
England and played a few times, and in 1863 he appeared with 
Halle at the Crystal Palace. He outlived the great reputation 
he had enjoyed among cultivated amateurs for so many years, 
and was almost forgotten when he died at Paris on the 14th of 
January 1888. His pianoforte pieces, almost all of them pub- 
lished in sets and provided with fancy names, do not show very 
startling originality, but their grace and refinement could not 
but make them popular with players and listeners of all classes. 

HELLESPONT (i.e. "Sea of Helle"; variously named in 
classical literature 'EXXfcnrom*, 6 "EXXap rhino*, HeUe- 
spontum Pdagus, and Fretum HeUesponticum), tho .ancient name 
of the Dardanelles (?.v.). It was so-called from Helle, the 
daughter of Athamas (q. *.), who was drowned here. See 
Asgomauts. 

HELLEVOETSLUIS, or Htlvoetslcis, a fortified seaport in 
the province of South Holland, the kingdom of Holland, on the 
south side of the island of Voorne-and-Putten, on the sea-arm 
known as the Haringvliet, 5} m. S. of B rielle. It has daily steam- 
boat connexion with Rotterdam by the Voornsche canal. Pop. 
(1900), 4x5s. Hellevoetsluis is an important naval station, and 
possesses a naval arsenal, dry and wet docks, wharves and a 
naval college for engineers. Among the public buildings axe the 



communal chambers, a Reformed church (1661), a Roman 
Catholic church and a synagogue. 

HELLJN, a town of south-eastern Spain, in the province of 
Albacete, on the Albacete-Murda railway. Pop. (1000), 1 8,558. 
Hcllfn is built on the outskirts of the low bins which line the left 
bank of the river Mundo. It possesses the remains of an old 
Roman castle and a beautiful parish church, the masonry and 
marble pavement at the entrance of which are worthy of special 
notice. The surrounding country yields wine, oil and saffron in 
abundance; within the town there are manufactures of coarse 
doth, leather and pottery. Sulphur is obtained from the cele- 
brated mining dUtrict of Minas del Mundo, 12 m. S., at the junc- 
tion between the Mundo and the Segura; and there are warm 
sulphurous springs in the neighbouring village of Axeraque. 
Hellfn was known to the Romans who first exploited its sulphur 
as I II u num. 

HELLO, ERNE8T (1828-1885), French critic, was bora at 
Treguier. He was the son of a lawyer who held posts of great 
importance at Rennes and in Paris, and was well educated at 
both places, but took to no profession and resided much, for a 
time, in his father's country-house in Brittany. A very strong 
Roman Catholic, he appears to have been specially excited by his 
countryman Renan's attitude to religious matters, and coming 
under the influence of J. A. Barbey d' Aurevilly and Louis Veuxllot, 
the two most brilliant crusaders of the Church in the press, he 
started a newspaper of his own, Le Croisi, in 1859; but it only 
lasted two years. He wrote, however, much in other papers. 
He had very bad health, suffering apparently from spinal or bone 
disease. But he was fortunate enough to meet with a wife, Zee 
Berthier, who, ten years older than himself, and a friend for some 
years before their marriage, became his devoted nurse, and even 
brought upon herself abuse from gutter journalists of the time far 
the care with which she guarded him. He died in 1885. Hello's 
work is somewhat varied in form but uniform in spirit His best- 
known book, Physionomie de saints (1875), which has been trans- 
lated into English (1003) as Studies in Saintship, does not display 
bis qualities best. Conies extraordinaires, published not long 
before his death, is better and more original. But the real HeDo 
is to be found in a series of philosophical and critical essays, 
from Return, PAUemagne et Paihiismi (1861), through V Homme 
(187O and Les Plateau* do la balance (1880), perhaps his chief 
book, to the posthumously published LeSiecle. The peculiarity 
of his standpoint and the originality and vigour of his handling 
make his studies, of Shakespeare, Hugo and others, of abiding 
importance as literary " trfangulations, 1 ' results of object, sub- 
ject and point of view. 

HBLMERS. JAN PRBDERIK (1767-18x3), Dutch poet, was 
born at Amsterdam on the 7th of March x 767. His early poems, 
Night (1788) and Socrates (1790), were tame and sentimental, but 
after 1805 he determined, in company with his brother-in-law, 
Cornells Loots (1765-1834), to rouse national feeling by a burst 
of patriotic poetry. His Poems (t vols., 1 800-1810), bat especially 
his great work The Dutch Nation, a poem in six cantos (x8xa), 
created great enthusiasm and enjoyed immense success. Helmers 
died at Amsterdam on the 26th of February 18x3. He owed his 
success mainly to the integrity of his patriotism and the opportune 
moment at which he sounded his counterblast to the French 
oppression. His posthumous poems were collected in 18x5. 

HELMERSEN, GREGOR VON (1803-1885), Russian geologist, 
was born at Laugut-Duckershof, near Dorpat, on the 99th of 
September (O.S>) 1803 . He received an engineering training and 
became major-general in the corps of Mining Engineers. In 1837 
he was appointed professor of geology in the mining institute at St 
Petersburg. He was author of numerous memoirs on the geology 
of Russia, especially on the coal and other mineral deposits of the 
country; and he wrote also some explanations to accompany 
separate sheets of the geological map of Russia. His geological 
work was continued to an advanced age, one of the later publica- 
tions being Studien tiber die WanderUoche und die DUvialgebUe* 
Russlandt (1869 and 188*). Most Of his memoirs were published 
by the Imperial Academy of Sciences at St Petersburg. He #ed 
at St Petersburg on the 3rd of February (O.S.) i88s> ' 



HELMET 



*47 




FIG. 1.— Casque with 
Neck-guard. 



' (from an obsolete diminutive of 0, Fr. helms, mod. 
heaum; the English word it " helm/' as in 0. Eng., Dutch and 
Cer.; all are from the Teutonic base kal-, pre-Teut. kai~ t to cover; 
d. I*L o/orr, to hide, Eng. " hell," &c), a defensive covering (or 
the head. The present article deals with the helmet during the 
middle ages down to the close of the. period when body armour 
was worn. For the helmet worn by the Greeks and Romans see 
Aims and Armoui. 

The head-dress of the warriors of the dark ages and of the 
earlier feudal period was far from being the elaborate helmet 
which is associated in the imagination with 
the knight in armour and the tourney* It 
was a mere casque, a cap with or without 
additional safeguards for the ears, the nape 
of the neck and the nose (fig. 1). By those 
warriors who possessed the means to equip 
themselves fully, the casque was worn over 
hood of mail, as shown in fig. *. In 
manuscripts, &c, armoured men are some- 
times portrayed fighting in their hoods, without casques, basinets 
or other form of helmet. The casque was, of course, normally of 
plate, but in some instances it was a strong leather cap covered 
with mail or imbricated plates. The most 
advanced form of this early helmet is the 
conical steel or iron cap with nasal (fig. »), 
worn in conjunction with the hood of mail. 
This is the typical helmet of the nth-century 
warrior, and is made familiar by the Bayeux 
Tapestry. From this point however (c 1 100) 
the evolution of war head-gear follows two 
different paths for many years. On the one 
hand the simple casque easily transformed 
itself into the barinet t originally a pointed iron 
skull-cap without nasal, ear-guards, &c On 
the other hand the knight in armour, especially 
Fig. 2.— Casque ^ ltt x ^ t fashion of the tournament set in, 

Man Hood found d* merc «**> ^ nMBl "»umcknt, 

and the keaume <ar "helmet") gradually 
came into vogue. This was in principle a large heavy iron pot 
covering the head and neck. Often a light basinet was worn 
underneath it -or rather the knight usually wore his basinet and 
only pnt the heaume on over it at the 
last moment before engaging. The 
earlier (12th century) war hcaumes arc 
intended to be worn with the mail 
hood and have nasals (fig. 3). Towards 
the end of the 13th century, however, 
the basinet grew in size and strength, 
just as the casque had grown, and 
Fig. 3.-Heaume. early »*•» l0 challenge comparison with the 
13th century. heavy and chimsy heaume. There- 
upon the heaume became, by degrees, 
the special head-dress of the tournament, and grew heavier, 
larger and more elaborate, while the basinet, reinforced with 







Fig. 4. — Heaume. 15th century. Fig. 5.— Heaume, 15th century. 



camail and vizor, was worn in battle. Types of the later, 
purely tilting, heaume are shown in figs. 4 and 5. 

The basinet, then, is the battle head-dress of nobles, knights 
and sergeants in the 14th century. Its development from the 



roth-century rap to the towering helmet of 1350* with its long 
snouted visor and ample drooping " camail," is shown in fig. 6, 
a, o, c and d, the two latter showing the same helmet with visor 
down and up. But the tendency set in daring the earlier years 
of the 15th century to make all parts of the armour thicker. 
Chain " mail " gradually gave way to plate on the body and the 
limbs, remaining only in those parts, such as neck and elbows, 
where flexibility was essential, and even there it was in the end 
replaced by jointed steel bands or small plates. The final step 
was the discarding of the " camail " and the introduction of the 




Fig. &— Basinets. 

" armet. n The latter will be described later. Soon after the 
beginning of the 1 5th century the high-crowned basinet gave place 
to the salade or sallel, a helmet with a low rounded crown and a 
long brim or neck-guard at the back. This was the typical head- 
piece of the last half of the Hundred Years 1 War as the vizored 
basinet had been of the first. Like the basinet it was worn in a 
simple form by archers and pikemen and in a more elaborate 
form by the knights and men-at arms. The larger and heavier 
salades were also often used instead of the heaume in tournaments. 
Here again, however, there is a great difference, bet ween those 
worn by light armed men, foot-soldiers and archers and those of 
the heavy cavalry. The former, while possessing as a rule the 
bowl shape and the lip or brim of the type, altd always destitute 
of the conical point which is the distinguishing mark of the 
basinet, are cut away in front of 
the face (fig. 7 a). In some cases 
this was remedied in part by the 
addition of a small pivoted vizor, 
which, however, could not protect 
the throat. In the larger salades 
of the heavy cavalry the wide 
brim served to protect the whole^ 
head, a slit being 
made in that part 
of the brim which 1 
came in front -of 
the eyes (in some 
examples the whole 
of the front part 
of the brim was 
made movable). 
But the chin and 
neck, directly opposed to the enemy's blows, were scarcely 
protected at all, and with these helmets a large volant-piece 
or beaver (mntonniere)— usually a continuation of the body 
armour up to the chin or even beyond— was worn for this purpose, 
as shown in fig. 7 b. This arrangement combined, in a rough way, 
the advantages of freedom of movement for the head with 
adequate protection for the neck and lower part of the face. 
The armct, which came into use about 147 5-«5<» and com- 
pletely superseded the salade, realized these requirements far 
better, and later at the zenith of the armourer's art (about 1520) 
and throughout the period of the decline of armour it remained 
the standard pattern of helmet, whether for war or for tourna- 
ment. It figures indeed in nearly all portraits of kings, nobles and 





Fig. 7.— Salades or Salleu. 



:*f8 



HECMHOtTZ 



soldiers op to the time of Frederick the Great, either with tlte 
suit of armour or half-armour worn by the Subject of the portrait 
or in allegorical trophies, Ac. The armet was a fairly cfose- 
- fitting rounded shell of iron or steel, with * movable vizor in 
front and complete plating over chin, ears and neck, the latter 
replacing the mentonniere or beaver. The armet was connected 
to the rest of the suit by the gorget, which was usually of thin 
laminated steel plates. With a good armet and gorget there was 
no weak point for the enemy's sword to attack, a roped lower 
edge of the armet generally fitting into a sort of flange round the 
top of the gorget. Thus, and in other and slightly different ways, 




Fig. 8.— Armets. 



was solved the problem which in the early days of plate armour 
had been attempted by the clumsy heaume and the flexible, if 
tough, camail of the vizored basinet, and still more clumsily in 
the succeeding period by the salade and its grotesque mentonniere. 
As far as existing examples show, the wide-brimmed salade itself' 
first gave way to the more rounded armet, the mentonniere 
being carried up to the level of the eyes. Then the use (growing 
throughout the 15th century) of laminated armour for the joints 
of the harness probably suggested the gorget, and once this was 
applied to the lower edge of the armet by a satisfactory joint, it 
was an easy step to the elaborate pivoted vizor which completed 
the new head-dress. Types of armets are shown in fig. 8. 

The burgonet, often confused with the armet, is the typical 
helmet of the late 16th and early 17th centuries. In its simple 
form it was worn by the foot and light cavalry — though the 
latter must not beheld to include the pistol-armed thetaux-ligers 
of the wars of religion, these being clad in half-armour and 





Fig. 9.— Burgoncts. 

vizored bafgonet — and consisted of a (generally rounded) cap , 
with a projecting brim shielding the eyes, a neck-guard and ear- 
pieces. It had almost invariably a crest or comb, as shown in the 
illustrations (fig. 0). Other forms of infantry bead-gear much 
hi Vogue during the 16th century are shown in figs. 10 and it, 
which represent the moribn and cabasset respectively. Both 
these were lighter and smaller than the burgonet; indeed much 
of their popularity was due to the ease with which they were 
worn or put on and off, for in the matter of protection they could 
Hot compare with the burgonet, which in one form or another 
was used by cavalry (and often by ptkemen) up to the final 




disappearance of armour from the field of battle about tf&Ta 
Fig. b gives the general outline of richly decorated roth-century 
Italian burgonet which is preserved in Vienna. The ar ch etype 
of the burgonet is perhaps the casque worn by the Swiss infantry 
(fig. 9 a) at the epoch of Marignan (1515). _ 

This was probably copied by them from 
their former Burgundkn antagonists, whose 
connexion with this helmet is sufficiently 
indicated by its name. The lower part of 
the more elaborate burgoaets worn by 
nobles and cavalrymen is often formed into 
a complete covering for the ears, cheek 
and chin, and connected desety with the 
gorget They therefore resemble the armets 
and have often been confused with them, 
but the distinguishing feature of the bur- 
gonet is invariably the front peak. Various 
forms of vizor were fitted to such helmets; 
these as a rule were either fixed ban 
(fig. 9 c) or mere upward continuations of 
the chin piece. Often a nasal was the only 
face protection (fig. 9 4, a Hungarian type). 
The latest form of the burgonet ased in Fio. 11- 
active service is the familiar Crotnwellian 
cavalry helmet with its straight brim, from which depends the 
slight visor of three bars or stout wires joined together at the 
bottom. 

The above are of course only the main types. Some writers 
class all remaining examples either as casques or as " war-hats," 
the latter term conveniently covering all those helmets which 
resemble in any way the head-gear of civil life. For illustrations 
of many cariosities of this sort, including the famous iron hat 
of King Charles I. of England, and also for examples of Russian, 
Mongolian, Indian and Chinese helmets, the reader is referred to 
pp. 263*269 and 285-986 of Detnmin's Arms and Armour (English 
edition 1894). The helmets in brass, steel or doth, worn by 
troops since the general introduction of ttuferms and the disuse 
of armour, depend for their shape and material solely on con- 
siderations of comfort and good appearance. From time to 
time, however, the readoption of serviceable helmets is advocated 
by cavalrymen, and there is much to be said in favour of ttrfs. 
The burgoneti which was the final type of war helmet evolved by 
the old armourers, would certainly appear to be by far the best 
head-gear to adept should these views prevail, and indeed it is 
still worn, in a modified yet perfectly recognizable form, by the 
German and other cuirassiers. 

HEIMHOLTZ, HBBJttUm UJDWIG FERDINAND V6« 
(1821-1804), German philosopher and man of science, was bom 
on the 31st of August J to i at Potsdam, near Berlin. His father, 
Ferdinand, was a teacher of philology and philosophy in the 
gymnasium, while bis mother was a Hanoverian lady, a lineal 
descendant of the great Quaker Witiiara Penn. Delkate ia 
early life, Helmbalu became by habit a student, and his lather 
at the same time directed his thoughts to natural phenomena. 
He soon showed mathematical powers, but these were not 
fostered by the careful training mathematicians usually receive, 
and it may be said that in after years his attention was directed 
to the higher mathematics mainly by force of circumstances. 
As his parents were poof, and could not afford to allow him to 
follow a purely scientific career, be became a surgeon of the 
Prussian army. In 1842 he wrote a thesis ia which he announced 
the discovery of nerve-cells in ganglia. This was his first work, 
and from 1842 to 1894, the year of his death, scarcely a year 
passed without several important, and in some cases epoch- 
making, papers on scientific subjects coming from his pen. He 
lived in Berlin from 1842 to 1849, when he became professor of 
physiology Sn Konigsberg. There he remained from 1849 to 
1855, when he removed to the chair of physiology id Bonn. In 
1858 he became professor of physiology in Heidelberg, and m 
1 87 1 he was called to occupy the chair of physics in Berlin. To 
this professorship was added in 1887 the post of director of 
the physico-technical institute at* Chariot tenburg, near Berfa, 



HELMOLD^HELMONT 



249 



tnd be* held the two positions together until his death on the 
8th of September 1804. 

His investigations occupied almost the whole field of science, 
including physiology, physiological optics, physiological acoustics, 
chemistry, mathematics, electricity and magnetism, meteorology 
and theoretical mechanics. At an early age he contributed to 
our knowledge of the causes of putrefaction and fermentation. 
In physiological science be investigated quantitatively the 
phenomena of animal heat, and he was one of the earliest in the 
field of animal electricity. He studied the nature of muscular 
contraction, causing a muscle to record its movements on a 
smoked glass plate, and be worked out the problem of the velocity 
of the nervous impulse both in the motor nerves of the frog and 
fai the sensory nerves of man. Is 1847 Hclmholtsreadtothe 
Physical Society of Berlin a famous paper, Ober die ErhaJtutt* 
<kr Kraft (on the conservation of force), which became one of the 
epoch-making papers of the century; indeed, along with J. R. 
Mayer, J. P. Joule and W. Thomson (Lord Kelvin), he may 
be regarded as one of the founders of the now universally received 
law of the conservation Of energy. The year 1851 , while he was 
lecturing on physiology at Konigsberg, saw the brilliant invention 
of the ophthalmoscope, an instrument which has been of in- 
estimable value to medicine. It arose from an attempt to 
demonstrate to his class the nature of the glow of reflected light 
sometimes seen in the eyes of animals such as the cat. When 
the great ophthalmologist,. A. von Grttfe, first saw the fundus 
of the living human eye, with its optic disc and blood-vessels, 
his face flushed with excitement, and he cried, " Helmholtz 
has unfolded to us a new world!" Helmhotts'* contributions 
to physiological optics are of great importance. He investigated 
the optical constants of the eye, measured by his invention, 
the ophthalmometer, the rada of curvature of the crystalline 
lens for near and far vision, explained the mechanism of accom- 
modation by -which the eye can focus within certain limits, 
discussed the phenomena of to lour vision, and gave a luminous 
account of the' movements of the eyeballs so as to secure single 
vision with two eyes. In particular he revived and gave new 
force to the theory of colour- vision associated with the name of 
Thomas Young, showing the three primary colours to be red, 
green and violet, and he applied the theory to the explanation 
of colour-blindness. His great work on Pkysiblopcot Optics 
(1856-1860) is by far the most important book that has appeared 
an the physiology and physics of vision . Equally distinguished' 
were his labours in physiological acoustics. He explained 
accurately the mechanism of the bones of the ea*r, and he discussed 
the physiological action of the cochlea on the principles of sym- 
pathetic vibration. Perhaps his greatest contribution, however, 
was his attempt to account for our perception of quality of 
tone. He showed, both by analysis and by synthesis, that 
quality depends on the order, number and intensity of the over- 
tones or harmonics that may, and usually do, enter into the 
struc tu re of a musical tone. He also developed the theory 
of differential and of summational tones. His work on Sensa* 
tions of Tone (1867) may well be termed the principia of physio- 
logical acoustics. He may also be said to be the founder of the 
fixed-pitch theory of vowel tones, according to which it is 
asserted that the pitch -of a vowel depends on the resonance of 
the mouth, according to the form of the cavity .while singing it, 
and this independently of the pitch of the note on which the 
vtwrd is sung. For (he later years of his life his labours may 
be summed up under the following heads: (1) On the conserva- 
tion of energy, (1) On hydro-dynamics; (3) on electro-dynamics 
and theories of electricity; (4) on meteorological physics; 
(5) on optics; and (6) on the abstract principles of dynamics. 
In all these fields of labour he made important contributions to 
science, and showed himself to be equally great as a mathe- 
matician and a physicist. He studied the phenomena of electrical 
oacillalidns from i860 to 1871, and in the latter year he announced 
that the velocity of the propagation of electromagnetic induction 
was about 3 14,000 metres per second. Faraday had shown that 
tbe passage of electrical action involved time, and he also 
asserted that electrical phenomena are brought about by changes 



in intervening non-conductors or dielectric substances. This 
led Clerk Maxwell to frame his theory of electro-dynamics, in 
which electrical impulses were assumed to be transmitted 
through the ether by waves. G. F. Fitzgerald was the fast to 
attempt to measure the length of electric waves; Helmholtz 
put the problem into the hands of his favourite pupil, Heinrich 
Herts, and the latter finally gave an experimental demonstration 
of electromagnetic waves, the " Hertzian waves," on which 
wireless telegraphy depends, and the velocity of which is the 
same as that of light. The last investigations of Helmholtz 
related to problems in theoretical mechanics, more especially 
as to the relations of matter to the ether, and as to the distribu- 
tion of energy in mechanical systems. In particular he explained 
the principle of least action, first advanced by P. L. m. de 
M&upertuis, and developed by Sir W. R. Hamilton, of quaternion 
fame. Helmholta also wrote on philosophical and aesthetic 
problems. His position was that of an empiricist, denying the 
doctrine of innate ideas and holding that all knowledge is founded 
on experience, hereditarily transmitted or acquired. 

The life of Helmholtz was uneventful in the usual sense. 
He was twice married, first, In 1849, to CHga von Vehen (by whom 
he had two children, a son and daughter), and secondly, in 1861, 
to Anna von Mohl, of a Wurtemberg family of high social position. 
Two children were born of this marriage, a son, Robert, who died 
hi 1880, after showing in experimental physics indications of 
his father's genius, and a daughter, who married a son of Werner 
von Siemens. Helmholtz was a man of simple but refined 
tastes, of noble carriage and somewhat austere manner: His 
life from first to last was one of devotion to science, and he must 
be accounted, on intellectual grounds, one of the foremost men 
of the roth century. 

See L. Konigsberger, Hermann wi» TfdtnhoUt (tooa: English 
translation by F. A. Welby, Oxford, 1906); J. G. M'Kesdrick, 
B. L. F.vcnHdmkoiU (1899). , (J.<*M.> 

HELMOLD, an historian of the zath century, was a priest 
at Bosau near Plon. He was a friend of the two bishops of 
Oldenburg, Vkefcn (d. 1x54) and Gerald (<L 1163), who did 
much to Christianize the Slavs. At Bishop Gerold's instigation 
Helmold wrote Ins Chronica Slowum, a history of the conquest 
and conversion of the Slavonic countries from the time of 
Chat tanagne. For the lifeaad times of Henry the lion, duke of 
Saxony, Helmold 'a chronicle* as that of a contemperarywhohad 
exceptional means for gaining information, is ©£ first-rate 
imnerUmcet The history was continued down to x too by Abbot 
Arnold oILubeck. 

The Chronica were first edited by Steamund Sohorkd (Frankfort 
a. M-, 1556). The best edition is by J. M. Lappenberg in. Mom 
Germ. hist, scriplorcs, xxi. (1869). For critical works on the 
Chronica see A. Potthast, Biotiotheca hid. med. oepi, s. " Helrooldus." 

HELMOND, a town in the province of North Brabant, Holland, 
on the small river Aa, and on the canal (Zuid-Willems Vaart} 
between 'sHcrtogenbosch and Maastricht, 24} m. by rail W.N.W. 
of Venlo. It is connected by steam tramway with 'sHertogen- 
bosch (21 m. N.W.), a branch line northwards to Osch being 
given off at Veghel. Pop. (1900) 11,465. The castle of Helm ond, 
built in 140a, is a beautiful specimen of architecture, and among 
the other buildings of note in the town are the spacious church 
of St Lambert, the Reformed church and the town hall, kdmond 
is one of the industrial centres of the province, and possesses 
over a score of factories for cotton and silk weaving) cotton 
printing, dyeing, iron founding, brewing, soap boiling and 
tobacco dressing, as well as engine works and a .margarine 
factory. There is an art school in the town. 

BELMONT. JEAN BAPTISTS VAN (1577-1644)1 Belgian 
chemist, physiologist and physician, a member of a noble 
family, was born at Brussels in 1577. 1 He was educated at 
Louvain, and after ranging restlessly from one science to another 
and finding satisfaction in none, turned to medicine, in which 
he took his doctor's degree in 1 509. The next few years he spent 
in travelling through Switzerland, Italy, France and England. 
Returning to his own country he was at Antwerp at the time of 

1 An alternative date for his birth is 1579 and for his death 1633 
(see Bull. Roy. Acad. Belg., 19O7, 7, p. 732). 



,25© 



HELMSTEDT— HBLMUND 



the great plague in 1605, and having contracted a rich marriage 
settled in 1609 at Vilvorde, near Brussels, where be occupied 
himself with chemical experiments and medical practice until 
bis death on the 30th of December 1644. Van Helmont presents 
curious contradictions. On the one hand he was a. disciple of 
Paracelsus (though be scornfully repudiates his errors was well as 
those of most other contemporary authorities), a mystic with 
strong leadings to the supernatural, an alchemist who believed 
that with a small piece of the philosopher's stone he had trans- 
muted 2000 times as much mercury into gold; on the other 
hand he was touched with the new learning that was producing 
men like Harvey, Galileo and Bacon, a careful observer of nature, 
and an exact experimenter who in some cases realized that 
matter can neither be created nor destroyed. As a chemist 
he deserves to be regarded as the founder of pneumatic chemistry, 
even though it made no substantial progress for a century after 
his time, and he was the first to understand that there are gases 
distinct in kind from atmospheric air. The very word " gas " 
he claims as his own invention, and he perceived that bis " gas 
sylvestre " (our carbon dioxide) given off by burning charcoal 
is the same as that produced by fermenting must and that 
which sometimes renders the air of caves irrespirable, For 
him air and water are the two primitive elements of things. 
Fire he explicitly denies to be an element, and earth is not one 
because it can be reduced to water. That plants, for instance* 
are composed of water he sought to show by the ingenious 
quantitative experiment of planting a willow weighing 5 lb in 
200 lb of dry soil and allowing it to grow for five years; at the 
end of that time it had become a tree weighing 169 tb> and since 
it had received nothing but water and the soil weighed practically 
(he same as at the beginning, he argued that the increased weight 
of wood, bark and roots had been formed from water alone. 
It was an old idea that the processes of the living body are 
fermentative in character, but he applied it more elaborately 
than any of his predecessors. For him digestion, nutrition and 
even movement are due to ferments, which convert dead food 
into living flesh in six stages. But having got so far with the 
application of chemical principles to physiological problems, 
he introduces a complicated system of supernatural agencies 
hke the archei of Paracelsus, which preside over and direct the 
affairs of the body. A central archeus controls a number of 
subsidiary archei which move through the ferments, and : just 
as diseases are primarily caused by some affection (exorvitalio) 
of the archeus, so remedies act by bringing it back to the normal. 
At the same time chemical principles guided him in the choice 
of medicines — undue acidity of the digestive juices, for example, 
was to be corrected by alkalies and vice versa; he was thus a 
forerunner of the iatrochemical school, and did good service to 
the art of medicine by applying chemical methods to the prepara- 
tion of drugs. Over and above the archeus he taught that there 
is the sensitive soul which is the husk or shell of the immortal 
mind. Before the Fall the archeus obeyed the Immortal mind 
and was directly controlled by it, but at the Fall men received 
also the sensitive soul and with it lost immortality, for when it 
perishes the immortal mind can no longer remain in the body. 
In addition to the archeus, which he described as " aura vitalis 
leminum, vitae directrix," Van Helmont had other governing 
agencies resembling the archeus and not always clearly distin- 
guished from it. From these he invented the term bias, defined 
as the " vis motus tarn alterivi quara localis." Of Way there 
were several lands, e.g. bias humanum and bias mcicorm\ the 
heavens he said " constare gas materia et bias efficiente." He 
was a faithful Catholic, but incurred the suspicion of the Church 
by his tract De magneiica vulnerum curotione (t6ar), which was 
thought to derogate from some of the miracles. His works were 
collected and published at Amsterdam as Ortus medicinae, vel 
opera ei opuscula omnia in 166S by his son Franz Mercurius 
(b. 1618 at Vilvorde, d. r6oo at Berlin), in whose own Writings, 
e.g. Cabbalah Denudata (1677) and Opuscula phUosophica (1600), 
mystical theosophy and alchemy appear in still wilder confusion. 

Sec M. Foster Lectures on the History of Physiology (1901); also 
Chevreul in Jonm. des savants (Feb. ana March 1850), and Cap 



in Joum. /form. Mm, (483a). Other authorities are Foufsiet 

d'Elmoth. Mimoire sur J. B. van Helmont (1817); Rixnerand Siefaer, 
Beitrdge xur Geschichte der Pkysiologie (1819-1826), vol. ii.; Spiers. 



HdmonVs System der Median (1840); Mclscns' Lecons sur 
Helmont (1848) ; Rommelaere, Etudes sur /. B. van Helmont (i860). 

HELMSTEDT, or more rarely HelmstKdt, a town of Germany, 
in the duchy of Brunswick, 30 nt> N.W. of Magdeburg on the 
main line of .railway to Brunswick. Pop. (1905) 15,415. The 
principal buildings are the Juleum, the former university, built 
in the Renaissance style towards the dose of the 16th century, 
and containing a library of 40,00c* volumes; the fine Stephans- 
kirche dating from the 12th century; the Walpurgtskircne 
restored in 1803-1894; the Marieaberger Kirche, a beautiful 
church in the Roman style, and the Roman Catholic church. 
The Augustinian nunnery of Marienberg founded in x 176 it 
now a Lutheran school. The town contains the ruins of the 
Benedictine abbey of St JUtdger, which was secularised in 1803. 
The educational institutions include several schools. The 
principal manufactures are furniture, yarn, soap, tobacco, 
sugar,, vitriol and earthenware. Near the town is Bad Helmstedt, 
which has an iron mineral spring, and the Lunbensteine, two 
blocks of granite cot which sacrifices td Woden are said to have 
been offered. • Near Bad Helmstedt a monument has been ere ct ed 
to those who fell in the Franco-German War; in the town there 
is one to those killed at Waterloo. Helmstedt originated, 
according to legend, in connexion with the monastery rounded 
by Ludgeror Liudger (d. 809), the firs tbisbopof lUlnster. Here 
appears, however, little doubt that this tradition is mythical 
and that Helmstedt was not founded urttiUhout 000. It obtained 
civic rights in 1009 and, although destroyed by the archbishop 
of Magdeburg in 1 ion, k was noon rebuilt. In 1457 it joined the 
Hanseatic League, and in 1400 it came into the possession of 
Brunswick. In 1576 Julius, duke of Brunswick, founded a 
university here, and throughout the 17th century this was one 
of the chief seats of Protestant learning. It was closed by 
Jerome, king of Westphalia, in tSog. 

See Ludewig, Geschichte und Besdtreihung der Stadl Helmstedt 
(Helmstedt, 1821). 

HELM UND, a river of Afghanistan, in length about 600 m. 
The Helmuad, which is identical with the ancient Etyraander, 
is the most important river in Afghanistan, next to the Kabul 
river, which it exceeds both in- volume and length. It rises 
in the recesses of the Koh»i-Baba to the west of Kabul, Its 
infant stream parting the Unas pass from the Irak, the two 
chief passes on the well-known road from Kabul to Bemjan. 
For 50 m. from its source its course is ascertained, but beyond 
that point for the next 50 no European has followed it. About 
I the parallel of $$° N. it enters the Zamindawar province which 
lies to the N.W. of Kandahar, and thenceforward it is a well* 
mapped river to its termination in the lake of Seistan. TiB 
about 40 m. above Girishk the character of the Hehnund is that 
of a mountain river, flowing through valleys which in summer are 
the resort of pastoral tribes. On leaving the hills it enters on a 
flat country, and extends over a gravelly bed. Here also it begins 
to be used in irrigation. At Girishk it is crossed by the principal 
route from Herat to Kandahar. , Forty-five miles below Girishk 
the Helmund receives its greatest tributary, the. Arghandab, 
from the high Ghilzai country beyond Kandahar, and becomes 
a very considerable river,, with a width of 300 or 400 yds. and 
an occasional depth of 9 to 12 it. Even in the dry season it b 
never without a plentiful supply of water. The course of the 
river is more or less south-west from its source till in Seistan 
it crosses meridian 6a°, when it turns nearly north, and so flows 
for 70 or 80 m. till it falls into the Seistan namuns, or swamps, 
by various mouths. In this latter part of its course it forms 
the boundary between Afghan and Persian Seistan, mud owing 
to constant changes in its bed and the swampy nature of its 
porders it has been a fertile source of frontier squabbles* Persian 
Seistan was once highly cultivated by means of a great system 
of canal irrigation; but for centuries, since the country was 
devastated by Timur, it has been a barren, treeless waste oi 
flat alluvial plain. In years of exceptional flood the Seistan 
lakes spread southwards' into an overflow cfcnael called the 



HELM WIND— HELPS, SIR A. 



z$i 



Sadat "hich, naming parallel to the northern course of the 
Hdnmad in the apposite direction, finally loses its waters in 
the Gaod-i-Zirreh swamp, which thus becomes the final bourne 
of the river. Throughout its course from its confluence with the 
Arghandab to the ford of Chahar Burjak, where it bends north- 
ward, the Hdraund valley is a narrow green belt of fertility 
sunk ia the midst of a wide alluvial desert, with many thriving 
village* Interspersed amongst the remains of ancient cities* 
relics of Kaiani rule. The recent political mission to Scsstan 
under Sir Henry M'Mabon (1004-1905) added much information 
respecting the ancient and modem channels of the lower Helmund, 
proving that river to have been constantly shifting its bed over 
a vast area, changing the level of the country by silt deposit*, 
and in conjunction with the terrific action of Seistan winds 
actually altering its configuration. (T, H. H.*) 

HELM WIND, a wind that under certain conditions blows 
over the escarpment of the Pennine*, near Cross Fell from the 
eastward, when a helm (helmet) cloud covers the summit. The 
helm bar is a roll of cloud that forms in front of it* to leeward. 

See " Report on the Helm Wind Inquiry," by W. Marriott, 
QuarU Jomn. Roy. Mct.Socxv. 103. 

1 HELOTS (Gr. &hunt or ttXArcu), the serfs of the andent 
Spartans. The word was derived in antiquity from the town 
of Helot in Laconia, but is more probably connected with IXot, 
a fen, or with the root of &•<*, to capture. Some scholars 
suppose them to have been of Achaean race, but they were 
more probably the aborigines of Laconia who bad been enslaved 
by the Acbaeans before the Dorian conquest. After the second 
Messenian war (see Sfarta) the conquered Messenians were 
reduced to the status of helots, from which Epaminondas 
liberated them three centuries later after the battle of Leuctra 
(371 bx.). The helots were state slaves bound to the soil— 
adscript* glebae— and assigned to individual Spartiates to till 
their holdings (xXijpoi); their masters could neither emancipate 
them nor sell them off the land, and they were under an oath 
sot to raise the rent payable yearly in kind by the helots. In 
time of war they served as light-armed troops or as rowers in 
the fleet; from the Peloponnesian War onwards they were 
occasionally employed as heavy infantry (ox-tfrot), distinguished 
bravery being rewarded by emancipation. That the general 
attitude of the Spartans towards them was one of distrust and 
cruelty cannot be doubted. Aristotle says that the ephors of 
each year on entering office declared war on the helots so that 
they might be put to death at any time without violating religious 
scruple (Plutarch, Lycurgus a8), and we have a well-attested 
record of aooo helots being freed for' service in war and then 
secretly assassinated (Thuc* iv. 80). Bat when we remember 
the value of the helots from a military and agricultural point 
of view we shall not readily believe that the crypteia was really, 
as some authors represent it, an organized system of massacre; 
we shall see in it " a good police training, inculcating hardihood 
and vigour in the young," while at the same time getting rid 
of any helots who were found to be plotting against the sta^e 
(see further Cryftxia). 

Intermediate between Helots and Spartiates were the two 
classes of Neodamodes and Mothones. The former were emanci- 
pated helots, or possibly their descendants, and* were much 
used in war from the end of the 5th century; they served especi- 
ally on foreign campaigns, as those of Thibron (400-399 bx.) 
and Agesilaus (390-304 B.C.) in Asia Minor. The mothones or 
m o t h akes were usually the sons of Spartiates and helot mothers; 
they were free men sharing the Spartan training, but were not 
full citizens, though they might become such in recognition of 
special merit. 

See C O. Mutter, History and Antiquities of th Doric Race (Eng. 
trans.), bk. iii. ch. 3.; G. Gilbert, Creek Constitutional Antiquities 
(Eng. trans.), pp. 30-35; A. H. J. Greenidge, Handbook of Greek 
Constitutional History, pp. 83*85; G. Busolt. Die grieek. Stoats- a. 
Mochtsaliertu'mer, f 84; Griothische Gescktckte*- u* 525-528; G. F. 
Schomaan, Antiquities of Greece: The Slat* (Eng. trani) pp. 104 ff. 

HELPS. SIR ARTHUR (1813-1875), English writer and clerk 
of the Erivy Council, youngest son of Thomas Helps, a London 



merchant, wag born near London on the loth of July 1813. He 
was educated at Eton and at Trinity College, Cambridge, 
coming out 31st wrangler in the mathematical tripos in 1835. He 
was recognised by the ablest of his contemporaries there as a 
man of superior gifts, and likely to make his mark in after life* 
As a member of the Conversazione Society, better known as the 
" Apostles," a society established in 1820 for the purposes of 
discussion on social and literary questions by a few young men 
attracted to each other by a common taste for literature and 
speculation, he was associated with Charles Bullet, Frederick; 
Maurice, Richard Cbenevix Trench, Monckton Mimes, Arthur 
Hallam and Alfred Tennyson. His first literary effort, Thoughts 
in the Cloister and the Crewd-(i&3$), we* a series of aphorisms 
upon life, character* politics and manners. Soon after leaving 
the university- Arthur Helps became private secretary to Spring 
Rice (afterwards Lord Monteagle), then chancellor of the ex- 
chequer. This appointment he filled till 1839, when. he went 
to Ireland as private secretary to Lord Morpeth, (afterwards 
earl of Carlisle), chief secretary for Ireland. In the meanwhile 
(28th October 1836) Helps had married Bessy, daughter of 
Captain Edward Fuller. He was one of the commissioners 
for the settlement of certain Danish claims which dated so far 
back as the siege of Copenhagen; but with the fall of the 
Melbourne administration (1841) his official experience closed 
for a period of nearly twenty years. He was not, however, 
forgotten by his political friends. He .possessed admirable 
tact and sagacity; his fitness for official life was unmistakable, 
and in i860 be "was appointed clerk of the Privy Council, on the 
recommendation of Lord Granville. 

His Essays written i» the Intervals of Business had appeared 
in 1841, and his Claims of labour, an Essay on the Duties of Ike 
Employers to the Employed, in 1&44. Two plays, King Henry 
the Second, an Historical Dromo r *ndCatherine Douglas, a Tragedy, 
published in 1843, have no particular merit. Neither in- these, 
nor in his only other dramatic effort, Oultia the Serf (1858) did 
he show any real qualifications as. a playwright. 

Helps possessed, however, enough dramatic power to give 
life and individuality, to the dialogues with which he enlivened 
many of his other books. In his Friends in Council, a Series 
of Readings and Discourse thereon (1847-1859), Helps varied 
his presentment of social and moral problems by dialogues 
between imaginary personages, who, under the names of Milver- 
ton, EUesmere and Dunsford, grew to be almost as real to 
Helps's readers as they certainly became to himself. The book 
was very popular, and the same expedient was resorted to in 
Conversations on War and General Culture, published in 2871. 
The familiar speakers, with others added, also appeared in his 
Realmah (1868) and in the best of its author's later work*, Talk 
about Animals ami their Masters (1873). 

A long essay on slavery in the first series of Friends in Council 
was subsequently elaborated into a work in two volumes pub- 
lished in 1848 and 1852, called The Conquerors of the New World 
and their Bondsmen. Helps went to Spain in 1847 to examine 
the numerous MSS. bearing upon his subject at Madrid. The 
fruits of these researches were embodied in an historical work 
based upon his Conquerors of the New World, and called The 
Spanish Conquest in America, and its Relation to the History of 
Slavery and the Government of Colonies (4 vols., 1855-1857-1861). 
But in spite of his scrupulous efforts after accuracy, the success 
of the book was marred by its obtrusively moral purpose and 
its discursive ch a r a ct er. 

The Life of Las Casas, the Apostle of the Indians (1868), The 
Life of Columbus (1869), The Life of Pisorro (1869). and The 
Life of Hernando Cortes (1871), when extracted from the work 
and published separately, proved successful. Besides the books 
which have been already mentioned he wrote: Organisation 
in Daily Life, an Essay (1862), Casimir Maremma (1870), Brevia, 
Short Essays and Aphorisms (1871), Thoughts upon Government 
(1872), Life and Labours of Mr Thomas Brassey (1872), Ivan 
de Biron (1874)* Social Pressure (187s). 

His appointment as clerk of the Council brought him into 
personal communication with Queen Victoria and the Prince 



i|a 



ftELSlMGB&RG^HfctST 



Consort, both of whorn cafte to regard hih* with"' coflfidence 
and respect. After the Prince's death, the Queen early tamed 
to Helps to prepare an appreciation of her husband's life and 
character. In his Introduction to the collection (i86t) of the 
Prince Consort's speeches and addresses Helps adequately 
fulfilled his task. Some years afterwards he edited and wrote 
a preface to the Queen's Leaves from a Journal of our Lift in 
(kt Highlands (1868). In 1864 he received the honorary degree 
of D.C.L. from the university of Oxford, tie was made a C.B; 
in 187 1 and K C.B. in the following year. His later years 
were troubled by financial embarrassments, and he died on the 
7th of March 1875. 

HBLSINGBORO, a seaport of Sweden in the district (ten) 
Of Malmohus, 35 m. N. by £. of Copenhagen by rail and water. 
Pop. (i960), 24,670. It is beautifully situated at the narrowest 
part of Oresund, or the Sound, here only 3 in. wide, opposite 
Helsingor (Ehinore) in Denmark. Above the town the bride 
tower of a former castle crowns a hill, commanding a fine view 
over the Sound. On the outskirts are the Oresund Park, gardens 
containing iodide and bromide springs, and frequented sea-baths. 
On the coast to the north is the royal ckdieau of Sofiero; to the 
south, the small spa of Ramldsa. A system of electric trams is 
maintained. North and east of Hebingborg lies the only coal- 
field in Sweden, extending into the lofty KuUen peninsula, 
which forms the northern part of the east shore of the Sound. 
Potter's day is abo found. Hebingborg ranks among the first 
manufacturing towns of Sweden, having copper works, using 
ore from Sulitelma in Norway, india-rubber works and breweries. 
The artificial harbour has a depth of 24 ft., and there are 
extensive docks. The chief exports are timber, butter and iron. 
The town is the headquarters of the first army division. 

The original site of the town is marked by the tower of the 
old fortress, which is first mentioned in 1 135. In the 14th century 
it was several times besieged. From 1370 along with other 
towns in the province of Sk&ne, it was united for fifteen years 
with the Hanseatic League. The fortress was destroyed by fire 
in 14 18, and about 1425 Eric XIII. built another near the sea, 
and caused the town to be transported thither, bestowing upon 
H important privileges. Until 1658 it belonged to Denmark; 
and it was again occupied by the Danes in 1676 and 1677. In 
1684 its fortifications were dismantled. It was taken by Frederick 
IV. of Denmark in November 1700, but on the a8lh of February 
17 10 the Danes were defeated in the neighbourhood, and the 
town came finally into the possession of Sweden, though in 171 x 
it was again bombarded by the Danes. A tablet on the quay 
commemorates the landing of Bernadotte after his election 
as successor to the throne in 1810. 

BEUBfOFORS (Finnish Helsinki), a seaport and the capital 
of Finland and of the province of Nyland, centre of the admini- 
strative, scientific, educational and industrial life of Finland. 
The fine harbour is divided into two parts by a promontory, 
and is protected at its entrance by a group of small islands, on 
one of whfch stands the fortress of Sveaborg. A third harbour 
is situated on the west side of the promontory, and all three 
have granite quays. The city, which in 1810 had only 4065 
inhabitants, Abo the then capital having 10,224, has increased 
with great rapidity, having 22,228 inhabitants in i860, 61,530 
in 1800 and 111,654 in 1004. It is the centre of an active shipping 
trade with the Baltic ports and with England, and of a railway 
system connecting it with aH parts of the grand duchy and with 
St Petersburg. Hclsingfors is handsome and well laid out with 
wide streets, parks, gardens and monuments. The principal 
square contains the cathedral of St Nicholas, the Senate House 
and the university, all striking buildings of considerable archi- 
tect uraf distinction. In the centre b the statue of the Tsar 
Alexander II.; who is looked upon as the protector of the liberties 
• of Finland, the monument being annually decorated with wreaths 
and garlands. The university has a teaching staff of 141 with 
(1006) 1921 students, of whom 328 were women. The university 
b well provided with museums and laboratories and has a 
library of over 250,000 volumes. Other public institutions 
are the Athenaeum, with picture gallery, a Swedish theatre 



arid opera hduJe, 4 Finnish theatre, (he Archives, the Senate 
House, the Nobles' House (Riddarnuset) and the House of the 
Estates, the German (Lutheran) church and the Russian church. 
Some of the scientific societies of Hebingfors have a wide 
repute, such as the academy of sciences, the geographic*/, 
historical, Finno-Ugrfan, biblical, medical, law, arts and forestry 
societies, as abo societies for the 6pread of popular education 
and of alts and crafts. There are a polytechnic, ten high schools, 
navigation and trade schools, institutes for the Mind and the 
mentally deficient, and numerous elementary schools. The 
general standard of education is high, the publication of books, 
reviews and newspapers being very active. The language of 
culture Is Swedish, but owing to -recent manufacturing develop- 
ments the majority of the population is Finnish-speaking. 
Heisingfers displays great manufacturing- and commercial 
activity, the imports being cod, machinery, sugar, grain and 
clothing. The manufactures of the city consist largely of 
tobacco, beer and spirits, carpets, machinery and sugar. 

HELTT, BAftTHOLOMAEUS TAN DBA, Doicb painter, was 
bom In Holland at the. opening of the 17th century, and died 
at Amsterdam in 167a The date and place of iris birth arc 
uncertain; And it is equally difficult to confirm or to deny the 
time-honoured statement that he- was born in 1615 at Amsterdam. 
It has been urged indeed by competent authority that Van der 
Heist was not a native of Amsterdam, because * family of that 
name lived as early as 1607 at Haarlem, and pictures are shown 
as works of Van der Heist in the Haarlem Museum which might 
tend to prove that- he was in practice there before be acquired 
repute at Amsterdam. Unhappily Bartholomew has not beta 
traced amongst the children of Severijn van der Heist, who 
married at Haarlem in 1607, and there is no proof that the 
pictures at Haarlem are really his; though if they were so they 
would show that he learnt his art front Frans Hals and became 
a skilled master as early as 1691. Schelteaam, a very competent 
judge in matters of Dotch'art chronology, supposes that Van 
der Heist was a resident at Amsterdam in 1636. His first great 
picture, representing a gathering of civic guards at a brewery, 
is variously assigned to 1630 and 1643, and stffl adorns the 
town-hall of Amsterdam. His noble portraits of the burge- 
master Bicker and Andreas Bicker the younger, in the gallery of 
Amsterdam, of the same date no doubt as Bicker's wife lately 
in the Ruhl collection at Cologne, were completed in 1641. 
From that time till bis death there is no difficulty in tracing Van 
der Helstls career at Amsterdam. He acquired nnd kept the 
position of a distinguished portrait-painter, producing indeed 
little or nothing besides portraits it any time, but founding, 
in conjunction with Nkokes do Helt Stokade, the painters' 
guild at Amsterdam In r6$a. At some unknown date be marries* 
Const a nce Reynsr, of a good patrician family in the Netherlands, 
bought himself a house in the Doelenstrasse nod ended by 
earning a competence. His Kkeoess of Pant Potter at the Hagae, 
executed in 1654, and his partnership with Backhuysen, who laid 
in the backgrounds of some of bis pictures in 1608, indicate 
a constant companionship with the best artists of the time. 
Wagen has said that his portrait of Admiral Kortenaar, in 
the gallery of Amsterdam, betrays the teaching Of Frans Hals, 
and the statement need not be gainsaid; yet on the whole 
Van der Heist '% career as a painter was mainly a protest Against 
the systems of Hals and Rembrandt. It is needless to dweM 
on the pictures winch p r e ce de d that of 1648, called the Peace 
of MQnster, in the gallery of Amsterdam. The Pence challenges 
comparison at once with the so-called Night Watch by Rembrandt 
and the less important but not Jess characteristic portraits of 
Hals and his wife in a neighbouring room. Sir Joshua Reynolds 
was disappointed by Rembrandt, whilst Van der Heist surpassed 
his expectation. But Bfirger asked whether Reynolds had not 
already been struck with blindness when he ventured on this 
criticism. The question is still an open one. But certainly 
Van der Heist attracts by qualities entirely differing from those 
of Rembrandt and Frans Hals. Nothing can be more striking 
than the contrast between the strong concent tat ed right and the 
deep gloom of * Rembrandt end the contempt of dnarancuja) 



HELSTON— HELVETII 



*53 



peculiar to his rival, except the contrast between the rapid 
sketchy touch of Hals and the careful finish and rounding of 
ran der Heist. " The Peace w is a meeting of guards to celebrate 
. the signature of the treaty of Mttnster. The members of the 
Doele of St George meet to feast and congratulate each other not 
at a formal banquet but in a Spot laid out for good cheer, where 
de Wit, the captain of his company, can shake hands with his 
lieutenant Waveren, yet hold in solemn state the great drinking- 
horn of St George. The Test of the company sit, stand or busy 
themselves around— some eating, others drinking, others 
carving or serving— an animated scene on a long canvas, with 
figures large as life. Well has Bflrger said, the heads are full 
of life and the hands admirable. The dresses and subordinate 
parts are finished to a nicety without sacrifice of detail or loss 
of breadth in touch or impast. But the eye glides from shape to 
shape, arrested here by expressive features, there by a bright 
stretch of colours, nowhere at perfect rest because of the lack 
of a central thought in light and shade, harmonies or composition. 
Great as the qualities of van der Heist undoubtedly are, he 
remains below the line of demarcation which separates the 
second from the first-rate masters of art. 

y His pictures are very numerous, and almost uniformly good} but 
in his later creations he wants power, and though still amazingly 
careful, he becomes erey and woolly in touch. At Amsterdam the 
four regents in the Werkhuys (1650), four syndics in the gallery 
(1656), and four syndics in the town-hall (1657) are masterpieces, 
to which may be added a number of fine single portraits. Rotterdam, 
notwithstanding the fire of 1864, still boasts of three of van der 
Heist's works. The Hague owns but one. St Petersburg, on the 
other hand, possesses ten or eleven, of various shades of excellence. 
The Louvre has three, Munich four. Other pieces are in the galleries 
of Berlin, Brunswick, Brussels, Carlsruhe, CasseU Darmstadt, 
Dresden, Frankfort, Gotha, Stuttgart and Vienna. 

' HELSTON, a market town and municipal borough in the 
Truro parliamentary division of Cornwall, England, ir m. by 
road W.S.W. of Falmouth, on a branch of the Great Western 
railway. Pop. (xooi) 3088. It is pleasantly situated on rising 
ground above the small river Cober, which, a little below the 
town, expands into a picturesque estuary called Looe Pool, the 
water being banked up by the formation of Looe Bar at the 
mouth. Formerly, when floods resulted from this obstruction, 
the townsfolk of Helston acquired the right of clearing a passage 
through it by presenting leathern purses containing three 
halfpence to the lord of the manor. The mining industry on 
which the town formerly depended is extinct, but the district 
is agricultural and dairy fanning is carried on, while the town 
has flour mills, tanneries and iron foundries. As Helston has 
the nearest railway station to the Lizard, with fts magnificent 
coast-scenery, there is a considerable tourist traffic in summer. 
Some trade passes through the small port of Porthleven, 3 m. 
S.W., where the harbour admits vessels of 500 tons. On the 
8th of May a holiday h still observed in Helston and known as 
Flora or Furry day. It has been regarded as a survival of the 
Roman Ploratut, but its origin is believed by some to be Celtic 
Flowers and branches were gathered, and dancing took place in 
the streets and through the nouses, all being thrown open, while 
•a pageant was also given and a special ancient folk-song chanted. 
This ceremony, after being almost forgotten, has been revived 
in modern times. The borough is under a mayor, 4 aldermen 
and xs councillors. Area, 309 acres. 

*"» Helston (Henliston, Ha list on, Helleston), the capital of the 
Meneage district of Cornwall, was held by Earl Harold in the 
time of the Confessor and by King William at the Domesday 
Survey. At the latter date besides seventy-three villeins, bordars 
and serfs there were forty eenisarii, a species of unfree tenants 
who rendered their custom in the form of beer. King John 
(rsoi) constituted Helleston a free borough, established a gild 
merchant, and granted the burgesses freedom from toll and other 
similar dues throughout the rearm, and the cognisance of all 
pleas within the borough except crown pleas. Richard, king of 
the Romans (1260), extended the boundaries of the borough 
and granted permission for the erection of an additional mill. 
Edward I. (1304) granted the pestge of tin, and Edward HX a 



Saturday market and four fairs. Of these the 1 Saturday market 
and a fair on the feast of SS. Simon and Jude are still held, also 
five other fairs of uncertain origin. In 1585 Elisabeth granted 
a charter of incorporation under the name of the mayor and 
commonalty of Helston. This was confirmed in 1641, when it 
was also provided that the mayor and recorder should be ipso 
facta justices of the peace. From x 204 to 183 * Helston returned 
two members to parliament. In 1774 the number of electors 
(which by usage had been restricted to the mayor, aldermen 
and freemen elected by them) had dwindled to six, and m r7oo 
to one person only, whose return of two members, however, 
was rejected and that of the general body of the freemen accepted. 
In 1832 Helston lost one o! its members, and in 188$ ft lost the 
ot her and be came merged in the county. 

HELVETIC CONFESSIONS, the name of two documents 
expressing the common belief of the reformed churches of 
Switzerland. The first, known also as the Second Confession of 
Basel, was drawn up at that city in 1536 by Bulfinger and LeO 
Jud of Zurich, Megandcr of Bern,Oswald Mycomtis and Grynaeus 
of Basel, Bucer and Capito of Strassburg, with other representa- 
tives from Schaffhausen, St Gall, Mfihlhausen and BieL The 
first draft was in Latin- and the Zurich delegates objected to its 
Lutheran phraseology. 1 Leo Jud's German translation was, 
however, accepted by all, and after Myconius and Grynaeus 
had modified the Latin form, both versions Were agreed to and 
adopted on the 26th of February 1536. 

The Second Helvetic Confession was written by Bollinger in 
1562 and revised in 1564 as a private exercise. It came to the 
notice of the elector palatine Friedrich III., who had it translated 
into German and published. It gained a favourable hold on the 
Swiss churches, who had found the First Confession too short 
and too Lutheran. It was adopted by the Reformed Church not 
only throughout Switzerland but in Scotland (1566), Hungary 
(1567), France (1571), Poland (1578), and next to the Heidelberg 
Catechism is the most generally recognized Confession of the 
Reformed' Church. 

See L. Thomas, La Confession hdvitique (Geneva, 1853); P. 
Schaff, Creeds of Christendom^ i. 300*420, in. 234-306; M Oiler, 
Du Btkeu n tmissc k rifUit dtr reformurU* Kirche (Leipzig, 1003). 

HELVETH OEXovrfrrioe, «EX/fymoi), a Cehic people, whose 
original home was the country between the Hercynian forest 
(probably the Rauhe Alp), the Rhine and the Main (Tacitus, 
Germania, 28). In Caesar's time they appear to have been 
driven farther west, since, according to him {Bell. Gall. I. 2. 3) 
their boundaries were on the W. the Jura, on the S. the Rhone 
and the Lake of Geneva, on the N. and E. the Rhine as far as 
Lake Constance. They thus inhabited the western part of 
modern Switzerland. They were divided into four cantons 
(pagi), common affairs being managed by the cantonal assemblies. 
They possessed the elements of a higher civilization (gold coinage, 
the Greek alphabet), and, according to Caesar, were the bravest 
people of Gaul. The reports of gold and plunder spread by the 
Cimbri and Teutones on their way to southern Gaul induced 
the Helvetii to follow their example. In 107, under Divko, two 
of their tribes, the Tougeni and Tigurini, crossed the Jura and. 
made their way as far as Aginnum (Agen on the Garonne), 
where they utterly defeated the Romans under L. Cassius 
Longinus, and forced them to pass under the yoke (Livy, Epti. 
65; according to a different reading, the battle took place near 
the Lake of Geneva). In 102 the Helvetii joined the Cimbri in 
the invasion of Italy, but after the defeat of the latter by Marius 
they returned home. In 58, hard pressed by the Germans and 
incited by one of their princes, Orgetorix, they resolved to found 
a new home west of the Jura. Orgetorix was thrown into prison, 
being suspected of a design to make himself king, but the Helvetii 
themselves persisted in their plan. Joined by the Rauraci, 
Tulingi, Latobrigi and some of the Boii— according to their own 
reckoning 368,000 in all—they agreed to meet on the 28th of 

1 Some' of the delegates, especially Bucer, were anxious to effect 
a union of the Reformed and Lutheran Churches. There was also 
a desire to lay the Confession before the council summoned at 
Mantua by Pope Paul III. 



254 



HELVETIUS 



March at Geneva and to advance through the territory of the 
AUobroges. They were overtaken, however, by Caesar at 
Bibractc, defeated and forced to submit. Those who survived 
were sent back home to defend the frontier of the Rhine against 
German invaders. During the civil wars and for some time 
alter the death of Caesar little is heard of the Helvetii. 

Under Augustus Helvetia (not so called till later times, earlier 
ager HdvcUorum) proper was included under Gallia Belgica. 
Two Roman colonies bad previously been founded at Noviodunum 
(Colonia Julia Equestris, mod. i£y*n) and at Colonia Rauracorum 
((afterwards Augusta Rauracorum, Augst near Basel) to keep 
watch over the inhabitants, who were treated with generosity by 
their conquerors. Under the name of foederaii they retained 
their original constitution and division into four cantons. They 
were under an obligation to furnish a contingent to the Roman 
army for foreign service, but were allowed to maintain garrisons 
of their own, and their magistrates bad the right to call out a 
militia. Their religion was not interfered with; they managed 
their own local affairs and kept their own language, although 
Latin was used officially. Their chief towns were Avcnticum 
(Avenches) and Vindonissa (Windisch). Under Tiberius the 
Helvetii were separated from Gallia Belgica and made part of 
Germania Superior. After the death of Galba (a.d. 69), having 
refused submission to Vitellius, their land was devastated by 
Alienus Caecina, and only the eloquent appeal of one of their 
leaders named Claudius Cossus saved them from annihilation. 
Under Vespasian they attained the height of their prosperity. 
He greatly increased the importance of Avcnticum, where bis 
father had carried on business. Its inhabitants, with those of 
other towns, probably obtained the ius Latinum, had a senate, 
a council of decuriones, a prefect of public works and Aamens of 
Augustus. After the extension of the eastern frontier, the troops 
were withdrawn from the garrisons and fortresses, and Helvetia, 
free from warlike disturbances, gradually became completely 
romanized. Aventicum had an amphitheatre, a public 
gymnasium and an academy with Roman professors. Roads 
were made wherever possible, and commerce rapidly developed. 
The old Celtic religion was also supplanted by the Roman. 
The west of the country, however, was more susceptible to Roman 
influence, and hence preserved its independence against barbarian 
invaders longer than its eastern portion. During the reign of 
Gallienus (260-268) the Alamanni overran the country; and 
although Probus, Constantius Chlorus, Julian, Valcntinian I. 
and Gratian to some extent checked the inroads of the barbarians, 
it never regained its former prosperity. In the subdivision of 
Paul in the 4th century, Helvetia, with the territory of the 
Scquani and Rauraci, formed the Provincia Maxima Sequanorum, 
the chief town of which was Vesontio (Besanion). Under 
Honorius (395-423) it was probably definitely occupied by the 
Alamanni, except in the west, where the small portion remaining 
"~ " ~ k. 



St 
>er 
it, 
R. 
of 
er, 

HELVftriUS, CLAUDE ADRIEN (1715-1771), French philo- 
sopher and litterateur, was born in Paris in January 1715. He 
was descended from a family of physicians, whose original name 
was Schweitzer (latinized as Helvctius). . His grandfather 
introduced the use of ipecacuanha; his father was first physician 
to Queen Marie Leczinska of France. Claude Adrien was 
trained for a financial career, but he occupied his spare time with 
writing verses. At the age of twenty-three, at the queen's 
request, he was appointed farmer-general, a post of great re- 
sponsibility and dignity worth a 100,000 crowns a year. Thus 



provided for, he proceeded to enjoy life to the utmost, with 
the help of his wealth and liberality, his literary and artistic 
tastes. As he grew older, however, his social successes ceased, 
and he began to dream of more lasting distinctions, stimulated 
by the success of Maupertuis as a mathematician, of Voltaire 
as a poet, of Montesquieu as a philosopher. The mathematical 
dream seems to have produced nothing; his poetical ambitions 
resulted in the poem called Le Bonheur (published posthumously, 
with an account of Helvltius's life and works, by C. F. de Saint- 
Lambert, 1773), in which he develops the idea that true happiness 
is only to be found in making the interest of one that of all; 
his philosophical studies ended in the production of his famous 
book De V esprit. It was characteristic of the man that, as soon 
as he thought his fortune sufficient, he gave up his post of farmer* 
general, and retired to an estate in the country, where he 
employed his large means in the relief of the poor, the encourage- 
ment of agriculture and the development of industries. D< 
V esprit (Eng. trans, by W. Mudford, 1807), intended to be the 
rival of Montesquieu's V Esprit des lois t appeared in 1758. It 
attracted immediate attention and aroused the mast formidable 
opposition, especially from the dauphin, son of Louis XV. The 
Sorbonnc condemned the book, the priests persuaded the court 
that it was full of the most dangerous doctrines, and the author, 
terrified at the storm he had raised, wrote three separate re- 
tractations; yet, in spite of his protestations of orthodoxy, 
he had to give up his office at the court, and the book was 
publicly burned, by the hangman. The virulence of the attacks 
upon the work, as much as its intrinsic merit, caused it to be 
widely read; it was translated into almost all the languages 
of Europe. Voltaire said that it was full of commonplaces, and 
that what was original was false or problematical; Rousseau 
declared that the very benevolence of the author gave the lie 
to his principles; Grimm thought that all the ideas in the book 
were borrowed from Diderot; according to Madame du Deffand, 
Helvltius had raised such a storm by saying openly what every 
one thought in secret; Madame de Graffigny averred that all 
the good things in the book had been picked up in her own saUn. 
In 1764 Helvttius visited England, and the next year, on the 
invitation of Frederick II., he went to Berlin, where the king 
paid him marked attention." He then returned to his country 
estate and passed the remainder of his life in perfect tranquillity. 
He died on the 26th of December 17 71. 

His philosophy belongs to the utilitarian school. The four 
discussions of which his book consists have been thus summed 
up: (1) All man's faculties may be reduced to physical sensa- 
tion, even memory, comparison, judgment; our only difference 
from the lower animals lies in our external organization, (a) 
Self-interest, founded on the love of pleasure and the fear of pain, 
is the sole spring of judgment, action, affection; self-sacrifice 
is prompted by the fact that the sensation of pleasure outweighs 
the accompanying pain; it is thus the result of deliberate 
calculation; we have no liberty of choice between good and 
evil; there is no such thing as absolute right— ideas of justice 
and injustice change according to customs. (3) All intellects 
are equal; their apparent inequalities do not depend on a move 
or less perfect organization, but have their cause in the unequal 
desire for instruction, and this desire springs from passions, of 
which all men commonly well organized are susceptible to the 
same degree; and we can, therefore, all love glory with the same 
enthusiasm and we owe all to education. (4) In this discourse 
the author treats of the ideas which are attached to such words 
as genius, imagination, talent, teste, good sense, &c. The only 
original ideas in his system are those of the natural equality of 
intelligences and the omnipotence of education, neither of which, 
however, is generally accepted, though both were prominent in 
the system of J. S. Mill. There is no doubt that his thinking 
was unsystematic; but many of his critics have entirely mis- 
represented him (e.g. Cairns in his Unbelief in the Eighteenth 
Century). As J. M. Robertson (Short History of Free Thought) 
points out, he had great influence upon Bcntham, and C. Beccaria 
states that be himself was largely inspired by Hdv6tius in his 
attempt to modify penal laws. ..The keynote of his thought was 



HELVIDIUS PMSCUS—HELY^HUTCHINSON 



955 



that public ethics has a utilitarian basis, and be insisted strongly 
on the importance of culture in national development. 



HELVIDIUS PRISCUS, Stoic philosopher and statesman, 
lived during the reigns of Nero, Galba, Otho, Vitellius and 
Vespasian. Like his father-in-law, Thrasea Paetus, he was 
distinguished for his ardent and courageous republicanism. 
Although he repeatedly offended his rulers, he held several high 
offices. During Nero's reign he was quaestor of Achaea and 
tribune of the plebs (a.d. 56), he restored peace and order in 
Armenia, and gained the respect and confidence of the pro- 
vincials. His declared sympathy with Brutus and Cassius 
occasioned his banishment in 66. Having been recalled to Rome 
by Calba in 68, he at once impeached Eprius Marcellus, the 
accuser of Thrasea Paetus, but dropped the charge, as the 
condemnation of Marcellus would have involved a number of 
senators. As praetor elect he ventured to oppose Vitellius in the 
senate (Tacitus, Hist. ii. 91), and as praetor (70) he maintained, 
in opposition to Vespasian, that the management of the finances 
ought to be left to the discretion of the senate; he proposed 
that the capitol, which had been destroyed in the Neronian 
conflagration, should be restored at the public expense; he 
saluted Vespasian by his private name, and did not recognize 
him as emperor in his praetorian edicts. At length he was 
(vanished a second time, and shortly afterwards was executed 
by Vespasian's order. His life, in the form of a warm panegyric, 
written at his widow's -request by Herennius Senecio, caused 
it* author's death in the reign of Domilian. 

Tacitus, Hist. W. 5, Dialogus, 5; Dio Cassius lxvl 12, lxvii. 13; 
Suetonius, Vespasian, 15; Pliny, Epp, vii. 19. 

HBLY-HTrrCHlNSON.JOHlf (i724-i794),Iri5hlawyer,states. 
man, and provost of Trinity College, Dublin, son of Francis Hely, 
a gentleman of County Cork, was educated at Trinity College, 
Dublin, and was called to the Irish bar in 1748. He took the 
additional name of Hutchinson on his marriage in 1751 with 
Christiana Nixon, heiress of her uncle, Richard Hutchinson. He 
was elected member of the Irish House of Commons for the 
borough of Lanesborougb in 1750, but after 1761 he represented 
the city of Cork. He at first attached himself to the " patriotic " 
party in opposition to the government, and although he after- 
wards joined the administration he never abandoned his advocacy 
•f popular measures. He was a man of brilliant and versatile 
ability, whom Lord Townshend, the lord lieutenant, described as 
**by far the most powerful man in parliament." William 
Gerard Hamilton said of him that " Ireland never bred a more 
able, nor any country a more honest man." Hely-Hutchinson 
was, however, an inveterate place-hunter, and there was point in 
Lord North's witticism that u \i you were to give him the whole 
of Great Britain and Ireland for an estate, he would ask the Isle 
of Man for a potato garden." Altera session or two in parliament 
lie was made a privy councillor and prime serjeant-at-law; and 
from this time be gave a general, though by no means invariable, 
support to- the government. In 1767 the ministry contemplated 
an increase of the army establishment in Ireland from 13,000 to 
i£,*oo men, but the Augmentation Bill met with strenuous 
opposition, not only from Flood, Ponsonby and the habitual 
opponents of the government, but from the Undertakers, or pro- 
fwfetbrs of boroughs, on whom the government had hitherto 
relied to secure them a majority in the House of Commons. It 



therefore became necessary for Lord Townshend to turn to other 
methods for procuring support. Early in 1768 an English act 
was passed, for the increase of the army, and a message from the 
king setting forth the necessity for the measure was laid before 
the House of Commons in Dublin. An address favourable Co the 
government policy was, however, rejected; and Hely-Hutchinson, 
together with the speaker and the attorney-general, did their 
utmost both in public and private to obstruct the hill. Parlia- 
ment was dissolved in May 1768, and the lord lieutenant set 
about the task of purchasing or otherwise securing a majority in 
the new parliament. Peerages, pensions and places were bestowed 
lavishly on those whose support could be thus secured; Hely- 
Hutchinson was won over by the concession that the Irish army 
should be established by the authority of an Irish act of parlia- 
ment instead of an English one. The Augmentation Bill was 
carried In the session of 1769 by a large majority. Hely 
Hutchinson's support had been so valuable that he received as 
reward an addition of £1000 a year to the salary of his sinecure 
of Alnagar, a major's commission in a cavalry regiment, and a 
promise of the secretaryship of state. He was at this time one of 
the most brilliant debaters in the Irish parliament, and he Was 
enjoying an exceedingly lucrative practice at the bar. This far-' 
come, however, together with his well-salaried sinecure, and his 
place as prime Serjeant, he surrendered in 1774, to become provost 
of Trinity College, although the statute requiring the provost to* 
be in holy orders had to be dispensed with in his favour. 

For this great academic position Hely-Hutchinson was in no 
way qualified, and his appointment to it for purely political 
service to the government was justly criticised with much 
asperity. His conduct in using his position as provost to secure 
the parliamentary representation of the university for his eldest 
son brought him into conflict with Durgenany who attacked hfni 
in Lacrymae academkae, and involved him hi a duel wfth a Mr 
Doyle; while a similar attempt on behalf of his second son in 
1700 led to his being accused before a select committee of the 
House of Commons of impropriety as returning officer. - Bat 
although without scholarship Hdy-Hutchinsori was an efficient 
provost, during whose rule material benefits were conferred on 
Trinity College. He continued to occupy a prominent place in 
parliament, where he advocated free trade, the relief of the 
Catholics from penal legislation, and the reform of parliament. 
He was one of the very earliest politicians to recognise the 
soundness of Adam Smith's views on trade; and he quoted from 
the Wealth of Nations , adopting some of its principles, in his 
Commercial Restraints oj Ireland, published in 1779, which Lecky 
pronounces " one of the best specimens of political literature 
produced in Ireland in the latter half of the 18th century." In the 
same year, the economic condition of Ireland being the cause 
of great anxiety, the government solicited from several leading 
politicians their opinion on the state of the country with sugges- 
tions for a remedy. Hely-Hutchinson's response was a remark- 
ably able state paper(MS. in the Record Office), which also showed 
clear traces of the influence of Adam Smith. The Commercial 
Restraints, condemned by the authorities as seditious, went far to 
restore Hely-Hutchinson's popularity which had been damaged by 
his greed of office. Not less enlightened were his views on the 
Catholic question. In a speech in parliament on Catholic educa- 
tion in 1782 the provost declared that Catholic students were in 
fact to be found at Trinity College, but that he desired their 
presence there to be legalized on the largest scale. 4 * "My opinion,*' 
he said, " is strongly against sending Roman Catholics abroad for 
education, nor would I establish Popish colleges at home. The 
advantage of being admitted into the university of Dublin will be 
very great to Catholics; they need not be obliged to attend the 
divinity professor, they may have one of their own; and I would 
have a part of the public money applied to their use, to the 
support of a number of poor lads as sixars, and to provide 
premiums for persons of merit, for I would have them go into 
examinations and make no distinction between them and the 
Protestants but such as merit might claim." And after sketching 
a scheme for increasing the number of diocesan schools where 
Roman Catholics might receive free education, he went on te 



2$b 



HELYOT— HEMAN$ 



urge that " it is certainly a matter of importance that the educa- 
tion of tbeirpriests should be as perfect as possible, and that if they 
have any prejudices they should be prejudices in favour of their 
own country. The Roman Catholics should receive the best educa- 
tion in the established university at the public expense; but by 
no means should Popish colleges be allowed, for by them we 
should again have the press groaning with themes of controversy, 
and subjects of religious disputation that have long slept in 
oblivion would again awake, and awaken with them all the worst 
passions of the human mind." l 

7 In 1777 Hely~Hutchioson became secretary of state. When 
Grattan in 1782 moved an address to the king containing * 
declaration of Irish legislative independence, Hcly-Hutcbinson 
supported the attorney-general's motion postponing the question; 
but on the 16th of April, after the Easter recess, he read a 
message from the lord lieutenant, the duke of Portland, giving 
the king's permission for the House to take the matter into con- 
sideration, and he expressed his personal sympathy with the 
popular cause which Grattan on the same day brought to a 
triumphant issue (see Grattan, Henry). Hely-Hutchinson 
supported the opposition on the regency question in 1788, and 
one of his last votes in the House was in favour of parliamentary 
reform. In 1 700 he exchanged the constituency of Cork for that 
of Xaghmon in County Wexford, for which borough he remained 
member till his death, at Buxton on the 4th of September 
1704. 

. In 1785 his wife had been created Baroness Donoughmore 
and on her death in 1788, his eldest ton Richard (1756-18*5) 
succeeded to the title. Lord Donoughmore was an ardent, 
advocate of Catholic emancipation. In * 797 he was created 
Viscount Donoughmore, 1 and in 1800 (having voted for the 
Union, hoping to secure Catholic emancipation from the united 
parliament) he was further created earl of Donoughmore. of 
Rnpcklefty, being succeeded first by his brother John Hely- 
Hutchinson (1757-183*) and then by his nephew John, 3rd 
earl (1787-1851), from whom the title descended. 
See W. E. H. Leeky, HisL of Ireland in the Eighteenth Century 



(5 vols.. London, 1897); J. A. Froude, The English t* Ireland in the 
Eighteenth Century (3 vols., London, 1872-1^74); I" " 
tmoirs of (he Lye and Times of ffenry Cral(an^ vc 

<£ a j.M.) 



Memoirs of (he Lye and 
1839-1846); Baratcriana 



vols., London, 1872-1^74); H. G 
Times of Henry Grattan fe vols., L 
i, by various writers (Dublin, 1773). 



London, 



HELYOT, PIpRRE (1660^1716), Franciscan friar and his- 
torian, was born at Paris in January 1660, of supposed English 
ancestry. After spending his youth in Study, he entered in his 
twenty-fourth year the convent of the third order of St Francis, 
founded at Picpus, near Paris, by his uncle Jerome Helyot, 
canon of St Sepulchre. There he took the name of Pete Hip- 
bolyte. Two journeys to Rome on monastic business afforded 
him the opportunity of travelling over most of Italy; and after 
his final return he saw much of France, while acting as secretary 
to various provincials of his order there. Both in Italy and 
France he was engaged in collecting materials for his great work, 
which occupied him about twenty-five years, VHistoire des 
ordrts monasliques, refigieux, el mililaircs, el des congregations 
stculiercs, de Vun el de V autre sexe, gut onl Hi itaUies jusqu'd 
priseni, published in 8 volumes in 1714-1721. Helyot died on 
the 5th of January 17 16, before the fifth volume appeared, but 
his friend Maximilien Bullot completed the edition. Helyot's 
only other noteworthy work is Le Chrilien mourant (1695) 

The Histoire is a work of first importance, being the great repertory 
of information for the general history of the religious orders up to the 
end of the 17th century. It is profusely illustrated by large plates 



1 Irish Pari. Debates, i. 309, 310. 

* It is generally supposed that the title conferred by this patent 
was that of Viscount Suirdalc, and such is the courtesy title by which 
the heir apparent of the earls of Donoughmore is usually styled. 
This, however, appears to be an error. In all the three creations 
(barony 1783. vibcountcy 1797. earldom 1800) the title is 
" Donoughmore of Koocklofty.' In 1821 the 1st earl was further 
created Viscount Hutchinson of Knocklofty in the peerage of the 
United Kingdom. The courtesy titte of the earl's eldest son should, 
therefore, apparently be cither '* Viscount Hutchinson " or " Vis- 
count Knocklofty." , SeeG. B. C, Compute Peerage (London, 1890). 



exhibiting, the dress of the various orders, and in the edition of 179a 
the plates are coloured. It was translated into Italian (1737) and 
into German (1 753). The material has been arranged in dictionary 
form in Migne's Encyzlopidie thiolegique, under the title "Dlctionnake 
des orders religicux (4 vols., 1858). 

HEMANS, FELICIA DOROTHEA (1793-1835), English poet, 
was born in Duke Street, Liverpool, on the 2 5th of September 
1793. Her father, George Browne, of Irish extraction, was a 
merchant in Liverpool, and her mother, whose maiden name 
was Wagner, was the daughter of the Austrian and Tuscan 
consul at Liverpool. Felicia, the fifth of seven children, was 
scarcely seven years old when her father failed in business, and 
retired with bis family to Gwrych, near Abergele, Denbighshire; 
and there the young poet and her brothers and sisters grew 
up in a romantic old house by the sea-shore, and in the very 
midst of the mountains and myths of Wales. Felicja's education 
was desultory. Books of chronicle and romance, and every 
kind of poetry, she read with avidity; and she also studied 
Italian, Spanish, Portuguese and German. She played both 
harp and piano, and cared especially for the simple national 
melodies of Wales and Spain. In 1808, when she was only 
fourteen, a quarto volume of her Juvenile Poems, was published 
by subscription, and was harshly criticized in the Month!} Review. 
Two of her brothers wire fighting in Spain under Sir John Moore; 
and Felicia, fired with military enthusiasm, Wrote England and 
Spain, or Valour and Patriotism, a poem afterwards translated 
into Spanish. Her second volume, The Domestic Affections and 
othtr Poems, appeared in x8i2, on the. eve of her marriage to 
Captain Alfred Hemans. She lived for some time at Daventry,- 
wherc her husband was adjutant of the Northamptonshire 
militia. About this time her father went to Quebec on business 
and died there; and, after the birth of her first son, she and 
her husband went to live with her mother at Bronwylfa, a house 
near St Asaph. Here during the next six years four more 
children— all boys^were born; but in spite of domestic cares 
and failing health she still read and wrote indcfatigably. Her. 
poem entitled The Restoration of Works of Art to Italy was 
published in x8t6, her Modem Ctcece m 181 7, and in 18x8 
Translations front Camoens and other Poets. 

In 1 8 18 Captain Hemans went to Rome, leaving" his wife, 1 
shortly before the birth of their fifth child, with her mother at 
BrOBfwyifa. There seems to have been a tatft agreement, 
perhaps on account of their limited means, that they should 
separate. Lettert were iatcrch^ngeo\ and Captain Henmas was 
often consulted about his children; but the husband and wife 
never mefc again. Many friends-^«mong them the bishop of 
St Asaph and Bishop Heber— gathered round Mrs Hemans and 
her children. ■ In 1819400 published Tales and Historic Scenes**. 
Verse, and gained a prize of £$o oflered lor the best poem on 
The Meeting of Wallace and Brute on the Banks ef the Carre*. 
In 1820 appeared The Sceptic an*l Stomas to the Memory +f <** 
late King. In June s8ar she won the prize awarded by the Royal 
Society of Literature for the best poem on the subject of Deri* 
moor, and began her play, The Vespers iof Palermo. She now 
applied herself to a course of German leading, Kotncr was her 
favourite German poet, and bet lines on the grave erf Kdrner 
were one of the first English tributes to the genius of the yovng 
soldier-poet. In the summer ot 1823 a Volume of^faer poems 
was published by Murray, containing " The- Siege of Valencia/' 
"The Last ConaUntioe" and ? fiefebasear's Feast." The 
Vespers 0} Palermo was acted at Cerent Garden, December 
i7, 1824, and Mes Hemans - received . £000 ~ for the copy* 
right; but, though the leading parts were taken by Young and 
Charles Kemble, the play was a .faUuse, and was withdraws* 
alter the first performance^ It was acted again in Edinburgh 
in the following April with greater success, when an epilogue, 
written /or it by Sir Walter Scott at Joanna BaiUie'a request, 
was spokeaf by Harriet. Siddons, This was the beginning of a 
cordial friendship between Mrs Hemans and Scott. la the same 
year she wrote De Chotilkm, or the Crusaders', but the manu- 
script wasi test, «nd the poem was. published after her death, 
from* rough copy. In 1824 she began"' The Forest Sanctuary, n 



HEMBL HEMPSTEAD4^HEMICH0RDA 



*57 



which appeared a yew kttr with the "Lays of Many Lands" 
and. miscellaneous pieces collected from the New Monthly 
Magazine and other periodicals. 

In the spring of 1825 Mrs Hemans removed from Bronwylfa, 
which had beeo purchased by her brother, to Rhyllon, a house 
on an opposite height across the river Clwyd. The contrast 
between the two houses suggested her Dramatic Scent between 
Bronwylfa and Rhyllon. The house itself was bare and un- 
pkturesque, but the beauty of its surroundings has been cele- 
brated in " The Hour of Romance/' " To the River Clwyd in 
North Wales/' " Our Lad/a Well " and " To a Distant Scene," 
This time seems to have been the most tranquil in Mrs rfrmans's 
life. But the. death of her mother in January 1827 was a second 
great breaking-point in her Kfe. Her heart was affected, and 
she was from this time an acknowledged invalid. In the summer 
of 1828 the Records of Woman was published by Blackwood, 
and in the same year the home in Wales was finally broken up 
by the marriage of Mrs Hemans's sister and the departure of 
her two elder boys to their father in Rome. Mrs Hemans 
removed to Wavertrec, near Liverpool. But, although she had 
a few intimate friends there— among them her two subsequent 
biographers, Henry F. Chorley and Mrs Lawrence of Wavertree 
Hall— ihe was disappointed in her new home. She thought the 
people of Liverpool stupid and provincial; and they, on the 
other hand, found her uncommunicative and eccentric. In the 
following summer she travelled by sea to Scotland with two of 
her boys, to visit the Hamfltons of Chiefewood. 

Here she enjoyed "constant, almost daily, intercourse v 
with Sir Walter Scott, with whom she and her boys afterwards 
stayed some time at Abbotsford. " There are tome whom we 
meet, and should like ever after to daim as kith and kin; and 
you are one of those," was Scott's compliment to her at parting. 
One of the results of her Edinburgh visit was an article, fuU of 
praise, judiciously tempered with criticism, by Jeffrey himself 
for the Edinburgh Renew. Mrs Hemans returned to Wavertree 
to write her Songs of the A fictions, which were published early 
In 1830, In the following June, however, she again left home, 
this time to visit Wordsworth and the Lake country; and in 
August she paid a second visit to Scotland. In 183 1 she removed 
to Dublin. Her poetry of this date is chiefly religious. Early 
in 1834 her Hymns for Childhood, which had appeared some 
years before in America, were published in Dublin. At the same 
time appeared her collection of National Lyrics, and shortly 
afterwards Scenes and Hymns of Life. She was planning also a 
aeries of German studies, one of which, on Goethe's Tasso, 
was completed and published in the New Monthly Magazine 
for January 1834. In intervals of acute suffering she wrote the 
lyric Despondency and Aspiration, and dictated a series of sonnets 
called Thoughts during Sickness, the last of which, "Recovery," 
was written when she fancied she was getting well After three 
months spent at Redesdale, Archbishop Whately's country seat, 
she was again brought into Dublin, where she lingered till spring. 
Her last poem, the Sabbath Sonnet, was dedicated to her brother 
on Sunday April 26th, and she died in Dublin on the x6th of 
May 1835 at the age of forty-one. 

Mrs Hemans's poetry is the production of a fine imaginative 
and enthusiastic temperament, but not of a commanding 
intellect or very complex or subtle nature. It is the outcome 
of a beautiful but singularly circumscribed Hfe, a life spent 
in romantic seclusion, without much worldly experience, and 
warped and saddened by domestic unhappiness and physical 
suffering. An undue preponderance of the emotional is its 
prevailing characteristic. Scott complained that it was "too 
poetical," that it contained " too many flowers " and " too 
little fruit." Many of her short poems, such as " The Treasures 
of the Deep," " The Better Land/' " The Homes of England," 
44 Casablanca," " The Palm Tree," " The Graves of a Household/' 
u The Wreck," " The Dying Improvisatore," and " The Lost 
Pleiad," have become standard English lyrics. It is on the 
strength of these that her reputation must rest. 

Mrs Hemans's Poetical Works were collected in 1 832 ; her Memorials 
Ac, by H. P. Caorky (183*). 



HBMBL HEMPSTEAD, a mara*t~town and ninnidpai borough 
in the Watford parliamentary division of Hcrtfotrishire, England* 
35 m. N.WL from London, with a station on a branch of tht 
Midland railway from Harpenden* and near Boxmoor station 
on the London and North Western main line. Pop. (180*) 
0678; (tool) 11,364. It is pleasantly situated in the steep* 
sided valley of the river Gade, immediately above its junction 
with the Bulbourne, near the Grand Junction canal. The church 
of St Mary is a very fine Norman building with Decorated 
additions. Industries include the manufacture of paper, iron 
founding, brewing and tanning. Boxmoor, within the parish, is 
a considerable township of modern growth. Hemel Hempstead 
is governed by a mayor, 6 aldermen and 18 councillors. Area, 
7184 acres. 

Settlements in the neighbourhood of Hemel Hempstead 
(Hamal am sted e , Hemel Hamfsted) date from pre-Roman times, 
and a Roman villa has bees discovered at Boxmoor. The manor, 
royal demesne in 1086, was granted by Edmund Plantagenet 
in rs8$ tothehomseof Ashridge, and the town developed under 
monastic protection. In 1539 a charter incorporated the bailiff 
and inhabitants. A mayor, aldermen and councillors received 
governing power, by a charter of 1808. The town has never had 
parliamentary representation. A market on Thursday and a 
fair on the feast of Corpus Caristi were conferred in 1530V A 
statute fair, for long a hiring fair, originated in 1803. 

HEM BR0BAPT1ST8, an ancient Jewish sect, so named from 
their observing a practice of daily ablutsop as an essential paet 
of religion. Epiphanfas (Panarion, i 17), who mentions their 
doctrine as the fourth heresy among the Jews, classes the 
Hemesobaptista doctrinally with the Pharisees (q.v.) from whom 
they differed only in, like the Sadduoees, denying the resurrection 
of the dead. Thcnimehns been sometimes given to thcMandacans 
on account of their frequent ablutions; and in the Clementine 
HemUics (ii 13) St John the Baptist is spoken of as a Hemere- 
baptist. Mention of the sect is made by Hegesippus (see Euseb. 
Hisk Beck ir. as) and by Justin Martyr in the Dialogue trilh 
Trypho, f 80. They were probably a division of the Essenes. 1 

HHUCHORDA. or HxsocsonDaia, a ecological term intro- 
duced by W. Bateeon in 1884, without special definition, as 
equivalent to Enteropneusta, which then included the single 
genus Balonoglcssus, and now generally employed to cover a 
group- of marine worm-like animals believed by many zoologists 
to be related to the lower vertebrates and so to represent the 
invertebrate stock from which Vertebrates have been derived. 
Vertebrates, or as they are sometimes termed Chordates, am 
distinguished from other animals by several important features. 
The chief of these is the presence of an elastic rod, the notocbord, 
which forms the longitudinal axis of the body, and which persists 
throughout life in some of the lowest forms, but which appeao 
only in the embryo of the higher forms, being replaced by the 
jointed backbone or vertebral column. A second feature is the 
development of outgrowths of the pharynx which unite with the 
skin of the neck and form a series of perforations leading to the 
exterior. These structures are the gill-slits, which in fishes ase 
lined with vascular tufts, but which in terrestrial breathing 
animals appear only in the embryo. The third feature of 
importance is the position of structure of the central nervous 
system, which in all the Chordates lies dorsally to the alimentary 
canal and is formed by the sinking in of a longitudinal media 
dorsal groove. Of these structures the Vertebrata or Craniata 
possess all three in a typical form; the Cephalochordata (see 
Akpbxoxus) also possess them, but the notocbord extends 
throughout the whole length of the body to the extreme tip of 
the snout; the UrocbordaU (see Tutocata) possess them in a 
larval condition, but the notocbord is present only in the tail, 
whilst in the adult the notochord disappears and the nervous 
system becomes profoundly modified; in the Hemlchorda, the 
respiratory organs very closely resemble gill-slits, and structures 
comparable with the notochord and the tubular dorsal nervous 
system are present. 

The Hemichorda include three orders, the Phoronidea (q.tO, 
the Pterobranchia (f».) and the Enteropneusta (see Balaho* 



358 



HEMICYCLE— HEMIPTERA. 



•fcossus), but the relationship to the Chordata expressed io the 
designation Heraichordata cannot be regarded as more than an 
attractive theory with certain arguments in its favour. (P. C M.) , 
HEMICYCLE (Gr. ^/u*, half, and *u*Xoj, circle), a- semi- 
drcular recess of considerable size which formed one of the most 
conspicuous features in the Roman Thermae, where it was 
always covered with a hemispherical vault. A small example 
exists in Pompeii, in the street of tombs, with a seat round inside, 
where those who came to pay their respects to the departed 
could rest. An immense hemicyele was designed by Bramante 
for the Vatican, where it constitutes a fine architectural effect 
at the end of the great court. 

HEMIMERU8, an Orthopterous or Detmapterous insect, the 
sole representative of the family Hemimcridae, which has affinities 
with both the Porficulidoe (earwigs) and the BlaUidac (cock- 
roaches). Only two species have been discovered, both from 
West Africa. The better known of these (H. kanseni) lives upon 
a large rat-like rodent (Cricetomys gambionus) feeding perhaps 
upon its external parasites, perhaps upon scurf and other dermal 
products. Like many epizoic or parasitic insects, Hemimerus 
is wingless, eyeless and has relatively short and strong legs. 
Correlated also with its mode of life is the curious fact that it is 
viviparous, the young being bom in an advanced stage of growth. 
HBMIMORPHITB, a mineral consisting of hydrous sine 
silicate, H»Zn»SiOs, of importance as an ore of the metal, of 
which it contains 54-4%. It is interesting crystallographically 
by reason of the hemimorphic development of its orthorhomhic 
crystals; these arc prismatic in habit and are 
differently terminated at the two ends. In 
the figure, the faces at the upper end of the 
crystal are the basal plane k and the domes 
o, p, /, m, whilst at the lower end there are 
only the four faces of the pyramid P. Con- 
nected with this polarity of the crystals is 
their pyrodectric character— when a crystal 
is subjected to changes of temperature it 
becomes positively electrified at one end and 
negatively at the opposite end. There are per- 
fect cleavages parallel to theprism faces (a* in the 
figure).' Crystals are usually colourless, some- 
times yellowish or greenish, and transparent; 
they have vitreous lustre. The hardness is 5, and the specific 
gravity 345. The mineral also occurs as stalactitic or botryoidal 
masses with a fibrous structure, or in a massive, cellular or 
granular condition intermixed with calamine and day. It is 
decomposed by hydrochloric add with gelatinization; this 
property affords a ready means ^of distinguishing hemimorphite 
from calamine (zinc carbonate), these two minerals being, when 
not crystallised, very like each other in appearance. The water 
contained in hemimorphite is expelled only at a red heat, and 
the mineral must therefore be considered as a basic metasilicate, 
(ZnOH),SiCH. 

Ihe name hemimorphite was given by G. A. Kenngott fa 1853 
because of the typical hemimorphic devdopment of the crystals. 
The mineral had long been confused with calamine (q.v.) and 
even now this name is often applied to it. On account of its 
pyroelectric properties, it was called electric calamine by J. 
Smithson in 1803. 

Hemimorphite occurs with other ores of zinc (calamine and 
blende), forming veins and beds in. sedimentry limestones. 
British localities are Matlock, Alston, Mendip Hills and Lead- 
hills; at Rougbten Gill, Caldbeck Fells, Cumberland, it occurs as 
■oammillated incrustations of a sky-blue colour. Well-crystallized 
specimens have been found in the zinc mines at Altenberg near 
Aachen in Rhenish Prussia, Nerchinsk mining district in Siberia, 
and Elkhorn in Montana. (L. J. S.) 

HEMIN6BTJRGH, WALTER OP, also commonly, but errone- 
ously, called Walter Hbiongford, a Latin chronider of the 
14th century, was a canon regular of the Austin priory of Gisburn 
in Yorkshire. Hence he is sometimes known as Walter of Gisburn 
(Walterus Gistrarnensts). Bale seems to have been the first to 
give him the name by which he became more commonly known. 



i j 



His chronicle embraces the period of English history fjom in* 
Conquest (1066) to the nineteenth year of Edward IIL, with 
the exception of the years 1316-13*6. It ends with- the title of A 
chapter in which it was proposed to describe the battle of Crecy 
(1346) ; but the chronicler seems to have died before the required 
information reached him. There is, however, some controversy 
as to whether the later portions which are lacking in some of the 
MSS. are by him. In compiling the first part, Hemingburgfe 
apparently used the histories of Eadmer, Hoveden, Henry <rf 
Huntingdon, and William of Newburgb; but the reigns of the 
three Edwards are original, composed from personal observation 
and information. There are several manuscripts of the history 
extant—the best perhaps being that presented to the College of 
Arms by the carl of ArundeL The work is correct and judicious* 
and written ia a pleasing style. One of its special features is the 
preservation in its pages of copies of the great charters, and 
Hemingburgh's versions have more than once supplied deficiencies 
and deared up obscurities in copies from other sources. 

.The first three books were published by Thomas Gale in 1687, ia 
his Historiae Anglicanae scriptores quinque, and the remainder by 
Thomas Heame in 1731. The first portion was again published id 
1848 by the English Historical Society, under the title Chronica* 
Walton dt Hanin&urek, vidto Hemtngford tmncupati, 4m §ttH» 
return Amgtiat, edited by H. C. Hamilton. 

HEMIPTERA (Gr. 4/U-, half and rrtpbr, a wing), the name 
applied in zoological classification to that order of the class 
Hexapeda (q.v.) which indudes bugs, cicads, apbids and scale* 
insects. The name was first used by Linnaeus (1735), who 
derived it from the half-coriaceous and half-membranous con- 
dition of the forcwing in many members of the order. But the 
wings vary considerably in different families, and the most dis* 
tinctivfi feature is the structure of the jaws, which form a beaa> 
like organ with stylets adapted for. pierring and sucking. Hence 
the name Rkyngota (or Rhyndtota), proposed by J. C FabririuB 
(*77S)» >s used by many writers in preference to Hemiptera. 

Structure.— The head varies greatly in shape, and the feelers 
have usually but few segments—often only four or five. The 
arrangement of the jaws is remarkably constant throughout 
the order, if we exdude from it the lice (Atwplura). Taking at 
our type the head of a dead, we find a jointed rostrum or beak 
(figs, z and 2, IV. b, c) with a deep groove on its anterior face; 
this organ is formed by 
the second pair of maxillae 
and corresponds therefore 
to the labium or "lower 
lip" of biting insects. 
Within the groove of the 
rostrum two pairs of 
slender piercers — often 
barbed at the tip— work 
to and fro. One of these 
pairs (fig. 2, II. a, b, c). 
represents the mandibles, 
the other (fig. 2, III. a, b, 
c) the first maxillae. The 
piercing portions of the 
latter—rep res enting their 
inner lobes or lacmiae— DcpcAerT 
lie median to the man- ft&x.— HeadandPiothoraxof Ckad 
dibular piercers in the from side, 

natural position of the £; |™of rnandible. 
organs. These homologies m., Base of first maxillae, 
of the hemipterous jaws IV., S«:oml maxillae lorrningrostrom, 
were determined by J. C. V., Pronotum. 
Savigny in 1816, and though disputed by various subsequent 
writers, they have been lately confirmed by the embryological 
researches of R. Heymons (2890). Vestigial palps have been 
described in various species of Hemiptera, but the true nature 
of these structures is doubtful. In front of the rostrum and the 
piercers lies the pointed flexible labrum and within its base a 
small hypopharynx (fig. 2, IV. d) consisting of paired conical 
processes which lie dorsal to the " syringe " of the salivary 
glands. This latter organ injects a secretion into the p|ant or 




After Marfatt, Butt. 14 (*•£) Dim. EM. VS. 



HEMIPTERA 



259 



•stall time from which the insect it tucking. The point of the 
rostrum it pressed against the surface to be pierced; then the 
stylets come into play and the fluid food is believed to pass into 
the mouth by capillary attraction. 

The prothorax (figs, z and *, V.) in Hemfptera is large and 
free, and the mesothoradc scutellum is usually extensive. The 
number of tarsal segments is reduced; often three, two or only 
one may be present instead of the typical insectan number 
five. The wings will be described in connexion with the various 




After Mufatt, BuO. u (N. SO Di«. £W. US. Dipt. Agt. 

Fig. 2.— Head and Prothorax of Cicad, parts separated. 

. I., a, frons; b, clypeus; c, labrum; d, epipharynx, 
I\, Same from behind. 
II., Mandible. 

III.; 1st maxilla; a, base; b, sheath; c, stylet; c\ muscle. 
1 V. f 2nd maxillae, a, sub-mentum; 6, men turn; c, ligula, forming 
beak; d. hypopharynx (shown also from front <f, and 
. behind <r). 
V-, Prothorax, b, haunch; a, trochanter. 

sub-orders, but an interesting peculiarity of the Hemiptera 
is the occasional presence of winged and wingless races of the 
same species. Eleven abdominal segments can be recognized, 
at least in the early stages; as the adult condition is reached, 
the binder segments become reduced or modified in connexion 
with the external reproductive organs, and show, in some male 
Hemiptera, a marked asymmetry. The typical insectan ovi- 
positor with kg three pairs of processes, one pair belonging to the 
eighth and two pairs to the ninth abdominal segment* can be 
distinguished in the female. 
In the nervous system the concentration of the trunk ganglia 




rrnzr-. 
After M.rUu, Bmlk 4 (N-S.) Dn. EM US, Deft. A p. 

Fig. 3-— <x. Cast-off nympfaai skin of Bed-bug (Ciwux Uetutarius); 
b. Second instar after emergence from a; c, The same after a meal. 

into a single nerve-centre situated in the thorax is remarkable. 
The digestive system has a slender gullet, a large crop and no 
gizzard; in some Hemiptera the hinder region of the mid-gut 
forms a twisted loop with the guIleL Usually there are four 
excretory (Malpighian) tubes; but there are only two in the 
Coccidae and none in the Aphidae. " Stink glands," which 
secrete a nauseous fluid with a defensive function, are present 



in. many Hemiptera. In the adult these b a pair of such glands 
opening ventralry on the hindmost thoracic segment, or at the 
base of the abdomen; bat in the young insect the glands are 
situated dorsally and open to the exterior on a variable number of 
the abdominal terga, 

DndojmtnL—lTL most Hemiptera the young insect (fig. 3) 
resembles its parents except for the absence of wings, and is 
active through all stages of its growth. In all Hemiptera the 
wing-rudiments develop externally on the nymphal cuticle, 
but in some families— the deads for example— the young insect 
(fig. 10) is a larva differing markedly in farm from its parent, 
and adapted for a different mode of life, while the nymph before 
the final moult is sluggish and inactive. In the male Coccidae 
(Scale-insects) the nymph (fig. 4) remains passive and takes no 
food. The order of the Hemiptera affords, therefore, -some 
interesting transition stages towards the complete metamorphosis 
of the higher insects. 

Distribution and Habits.— Hemiptera are widely distributed, 
and are plentiful in most quarters of the globe, though they 
probably have not penetrated as far into remote and inhospitable 
regions as have the Coleoptera, Dijftcra 
and Aptera. They feed entirety by 
suction, and the majority of the species 
pierce plant tissues and suck sap. The 
leaves of plants are for the most part the 
objects of attack, but many aphids and 
scale-insects pierce stems, and some go 
underground and feed on roots. The 
enormous rate at which aphids multiply 
under favourable conditions makes them 
of the greatest economic importance, 
since the growth of immense numbers of 
the same kind of plant in close proximity 
— as in ordinary farm-crops — is especially 
advantageous to the insects that feed on 
them. Several families of bugs are pre* 
daceous in habit, attacking other insects 
— often members of their own order — tej^fi'f 
and sucking their juices. Others are 
scavengers feeding on decaying organic x . FlG *. *• ~7, ? a9siv 2 
matUr; the pond to«», for example. ST&'iJSE* 
live mostly on the juices of dead float- (icerya). 
ing insects. And some, like the bed-bugs, 
are parasites of vertebrate animals, on 
whose bodies they live temporarily or permanently, and whose 
blood they suck. 

The Hemiptera are especially interesting as an order from 
the variety of aquatic insects included therein. Some of these — 
the Hydromeiridae or pond-skaters, for example — move over 
the surface-film, on which they are supported by their elongated, 
slender legs, the body of the insect being raised clear of the water. 
They are covered with short hairs which form a velvet-like pile, 
so dense that water cannot penetrate. Consequently when the 
insect dives, an air-bubble forms around it, a supply of oxygen is 
thus secured for breathing and the water is kept away from the 
spiracles. In many of these insects, while most individuals 
of the species are wingless, winged specimens are now and then 
met with. The occasional development of wings is probably 
of service to the species in enabling the insects to reach new 
fresh-water breeding-grounds. This family of Hemiptera (the 
Hydromeiridae) and the Saldidac contain several insects that 
are marine, haunting the tidal margin. One genus of Hydrome- 
iridae {H debates) is even oceanic in its habit, the species being 
met with skimming over the surface of the sea hundreds of miles 
from land. Probably they dive when the surface becomes 
ruffled. In these marine genera the abdomen often undergoes 
excessive reduction (fig. 5). 

Other families of Hemiptera— «uch as the ° Boatmen" 
{NotonMidae) and the "Water-scorpions" (fig. 6) and their 
allies (Ncpidae) dive and swim through the water. They obtain 
their supply of air from the surface. The Nepidae breathe by 
means of a pair of long, grooved tail processes (really out-growths 




Altar R0<r a»l Ro*m4 

voL i. (US. 



26o 



HEMIPTERA 



of the abdominal pleura) which when pressed together form 
a tube whose point can pierce the surface film and convey 
air to the hindmost spiracles which are alone functional in the 
adult. The NolomcUdac breathe mostly through the thoracic 
spiracles; the air is conveyed to these from the tail-end, winch 
is brought to the surface, along a kind of tunnel formed by 
overlapping hairs. 

Sound-producing Organs. — The Hemiptera are remarkable 
for the variety o< their stridulating organs. In many genera of 




After Carpenter, Prtc R. Dvhlin &&, 
vol. niL 

Fie. 5. — A reef-h aiin ting 
hemipteron (Hermatobotes 
kaddonii) with excessively re- 
duced abdomen. Magnified. 



Fig. 6.— Water-scorpion 
(Nepa cinerea) with raptorial 
fore-legs, heteropterous wings, 
and long siphon for conveying 
air to 6pirades. Somewhat 
magnified, sc, scutellum; co, 
cl, m, corium, clavus and 
membrane of forewing. 



the Penlalomidae, bristle-bearing tubercles on the legs are 
scraped across a set of fine striations on the abdominal sterna. 
In Halobates a comb-like- series of sharp spines on the fore-shin 
can be drawn across a set of blunt processes on the shin of the 
opposite leg. Males of the little water-bugs of the genus Corixa 
make a shrill chirping note by drawing a row of teeth on the 
flattened fore-foot across a group of spines on the haunch of 
the opposite leg. But the loudest and most remarkable vocal 
organs of all insects are those of the male deads, which " sing " 




d e 

From Miffatt. Bull. 14 (N.S.) Div. Ert. VS. DtfL Ap. 

Fig. 7. 

o, Body of male Cicad from c, Section showing muscles which 
below, showing cover-plates vibrate drum (magnified) ; 
of musical organs; d, A' drum .at rest; 

b. From above snowing drums, e, Thrown into vibration, more 
natural size; highly magnified. 

by the rapid vibration of a pair of " drums " or membranes 
within the metathorax. These drums arc worked by special 
muscles, and the cavities in which they lie are protected by 
conspicuous plates visible beneath the base of the abdomen 
(see fig. 7). 



Fossil History.— The Heteroptera can be traced back farther 
than any other winged insects if the fossil Protocimcx s&trica 
Moberg, from the Ordovictan slates of Sweden la rightly regarded 
as the wing of a bug. But according to the recent researches 
Of A. Handlirsch it is not insectan at all. Both Heteropterous 
and Homopterous genera have been described from the Carbon* 
iferous, but the true nature of some of these is doubtful. Eugtrcon 
is a remarkable Permian fossil, with jaws that are typically 
hemipterous except that the second maxillae are not fused and 
with cockroach-like wings. In the Jurassic period many of the 
existing families* such as the Cicodidoe, Fulgoridce, Aphidct, 
Nepidoe, JUduviidoe, HydromMridce, Lygoeidac and Corciddc, 
had already become differentiated. 

Classification. — The number of described species of Hemiptera 
must now be nearly 20,000. The order is divided into two sub- 
orders, the Heteroptera and the Homoptera. The Anoplura or lice 
should not be included among the Hemiptera, but it has been thought 
convenient to refer briefly to. them at the dose of this article. 

Hetexoptera 

In this sub-order are included the various families of bugs and their 
aquatic relations. The front of the head is not in contact with the 
haunches of the fore-legs. There is usually a marked difference between 
the wings of the two pairs. The fore-wing is generally divided into a 
firm coriaceous basal region, occupying most of the area, and a mem- 
branous terminal portion, while the hind-wing is delicate and entirely 
membranous (see fig. 6). In the firm portion of the fore-wing two 




jtrzi:— 

After Marlalt, B«0. 4 (M5-) Dfo. Emt. VS. Dtp. Agr. 

Fig. 8.— Bed-bug (Cimex lettutarius, Linn.). 

a. Female from above r d, Jaws, very highly magnified 

b. From beneath; (tips of mandibles and 1st 

c. Vestigial wing; maxillae still more highly 

magnified). 

distinct regions can usually be distinguished; most of the area is 
formed by the corium (fie. 6, co), which is separated by a longitudinal 
suture from the davus (fig. 6, cl) on its hinder edge, and in some 
families there is also a cuneus (fig. 9 cu) external to and an cmbolium 
in front of the corium. 

Most Heteroptera are flattened in form, and the wings He flat, or 
nearly so, when closed. The young Hcteropteron is hatched from 
the egg in a form not markedly different from that of its parent; 
it is active and takes food through all the stages of its growth. It is 
usual to divide the Heteroptera into two tribes— the Gymnocerata 
and the Cryptocerata. 

Gymnocerata.— Thl» tribe includes some eighteen families of 
terrestrial, arboreal and marsh-haunting bugs, as well as those 
aquatic Heteroptera that live on the surface-film of water. The 
feelers are elongate and conspicuous. The Ptntatomidae (shield- 
bugs), some of which are metallic or otherwise brightly coloured, 
are easily recognized by the great development of the scutellum, 
which reaches at least half-way back towards the tip of the abdomen, 
and in some genera covers the whole of the hind body, and also the 
wings when these are closed. The Coreidac have a smaller scutellum, 
and the feelers are inserted high on the head, while in the Lygaeidae 
they are inserted lower down . These three families have the foot wJth 
three segments. In the curious little Tingidae, whose integuments 
exhibit a pattern of network-like ridges, the feet are two-segmented 
and the scutellum is hidden by the pronotum. The Aradidae have 
two segmented feet, and a large visible scutellum. The Hydro- 
metridae are a large family including the pond-skaters and other 
dwellers on the surface-film of fresh water, aswdl as the remarkable 
oceanic genus Balobatcs already referred to. The Rtduviida* are 



HEMIPTERA 



261 



HOMOYTBtA 
This suborder includes the cicads, lantern-flies, frog-hoppers, 
aphids and scale-insects. The' face has such a marked backward 
slope (see fig. 1) as to bring the beak into close contact with the 
haunches of the fore-legs. The feelers have one or more thickened 
basal segments, while the remaining segments are slender and thread- 
like. The fore-wings are sometimes membranous like the hind-wings, 
usually they arc firmer in texture, but they never show the distinct 
areas that characterize the wings of Heteroptera. When at rest 
the wings of Homoptera slope roof wise across the back of the insect. 
In their life-history the Homoptera are more specialized than the 
Heteroptera; th« young insect often differs markedly from its 




After Weed. RBqr sad Howard, lusut Life, voL iC 

Fig. ii.— Cabbage Aphid (Aphisbrassicae). a, Male; c, female 

(wingless). Magnified, b and 4, Head and feelers of male and 
female, more highly magnified. 

parent and does not live i s in some 
families there is a passive sU 

The Cicadidae are for the n pie wings: 

they are distinguished from >nt thighs 

being thickened and -toothe< carries, in 

addition to the prominent ct res (ocelli) 

on the crown, while the fa I segment, 

followed by five slender set kns °* **** 

serrated ovipositor, lays her of plants. 

The young have simple feek ») adapted 

for digging; they live under] of plants. 



fti 
n 

•I 

a 



After Howard, Ytar Book V. 5. Dtpi. Ar, 1*9+ 

Fig. 12.— Apple Scale Insect (Mytdaspis pomtrum). a, Male; 
e, female ; c, larva magnified — ; b, foot of male ; d, feeder of larva, 
more highly magnified. 

In the case of a North American species it is known that this larval 
life lasts for seventeen years. The " song " of the male cicads ta 
notorious and the structures by which it is produced have already 
been described (see also Cjcada). There are about 900 known 
species, but the family is mostly confined to warm countries; only, 
a single dead is found in England, and that is restricted to the south. 
The Fulgorida* and Membracidae are two allied families most ol 
whose members are also natives of hot regions. The Fvlgorida* 



a62 HEMLOCK 

have the head with two ocetlrand th re e-s egm ented feeler*; frequently 
as in the tropical M lantern-flies " (q.v.) the head is prolonged into a 
conspicuous bladder, or trunk-like process. The Membracidae arc 
remarkable on account of the backward prolongation of the pronotum 



Alter Howd. fW *m* VS. Dipt. Af u 18*4. 

Fio. 13.— Apple Scale Insect (Mytilaspis pomorum). a, Scale from 
beneath showing female and eggs; b, from above, magnified— ; 
c and «, female and male scales on twigs, natural size; d, male 
scale magnified. 

into a process or hood-like structure which may extend far behind the 
tail-end of the abdomen. Two other allied families, the Cercopidae 
and Jasndae, are more numerously represented in our islands. 
The young of many of these insects are green and soft-skinned, 



(r\ 



Osbora (after 
_ Jdtc), BmlL* UV-y.). 
Dtv. EmL US. Dtp. 



Fio. 15. — Pro- 
boscis of Fediculus, 
Highly magnified. 

he mother — is de- 

^.„ ^ „. .'HYLLOXfcRA. The 

Coctidcu have only a single claw to the foot; the males (fig. 1 2 a) 
have the fore-wings developed and the hind-wings greatly reduced, 
while in the female wings are totally absent and the body undergoes 
marked degradation (figs. 12. e, 13, a, b). In the Cooekfo the forma- 



HEMP 



363 



produced on the stem became gradually smaller upwards, the 
branches ate aH terminated by compound many-rayed umbels 
of small white flowers, the general involucres consisting of several, 
the partial ones of about three short lanceolate bracts, the latter 
being usually turned towards the outside of the umbel. The 
flowers are succeeded by broadly ovate fruits, the mericarps 
(half-fruits) having five ribs which, when mature, are waved 
or crenated; and when cut across the albumen is seen to be 
deeply furrowed on the inner face, so as to exhibit in section a 
renifoxm outline. The fruits when triturated with a solution 
of causticrpotasb evolve a most unpleasant odour. 

Hemlock is a virulent poison^ but it varies much in potency 
according to the conditions under which it has grown, and the 
season or stage of growth at which it is gathered. In the first 
year the leaves have little power, nor in the second are their 
properties developed until the flowering period, at which time, 
«r later on. when tbe fruits are fully grown, the plant should be 
gathered. The wild plant growing in exposed situations is to 
a* preferred to garden-grown samples, and is more potent in 
dry warm, summers than in those which are -dull and moist 

The poisonous property of hemlock resides chiefly in the 
alkaloid amine or conia which is found in both the fruits and 
the leaves, though in exceedingly small proportions in the latter. 
Conine resembles nicotine in its deleterious action, but is much 
less powerful. No cherakal antidote for it is known. The 
plant also yields a second less poisonous crystallixable base 
called csphydrine, which may be converted into conine by the 
abstraction of the elements of water.. When collected for 
Bwtirinal purposes, for which both leaves and fruits are used, 
the former should be gathered at the time the plant is in full 
blossom, iriule the latter are said to possess the greatest degree 
of energy just before they ripen. The fruits are the chief source 
whence conine is prepared Tbe principal forms in which hemlock 
hv employed are the extract and juice of hemlock, hemlock 
poultice, and the tincture of hemlock fruits. Large doses 
produce vertigo, nausea and paralysis; but in smaller quantities, 
admimstrred by skilful hands, it has a sedative action on the 
nerves. It has also some reputation as an alterative and resolvent, 
and as an anodyne* 

The acrid narcotic properties of the plant render It of some 
importance that one should be able to identify it, the more so 
ss some of the compound-leaved umbeUifers, which have a 
general similarity of appearance to it, form wholesome food 
for man, and animals. Not only is this knowledge desirable 
to prevent the poisonous plant being detrimentally used in place 
of the wholesome one; it Is equally important in the opposite 
case, namely, to prevent the inert being substituted for the 
remedial agent. The plant with which hemlock is most likely 
to be confounded is Anthriscus syktstris, or tow«parstey, the 
leaves of which are freely eaten by cattle and rabbits; this plant, 
like the hemlock* has spotted sterns but they are hairy, not 
feairtae; it has much-divided teste* of the same general form, 
but they are downy and aromatic, not smooth and nauseous; 
when bruised;* and the ' fruit of Anthriscus ia linear-oblong 
and not ovate. 

HEMP (in 0. Eng. hemp, ct Dutch kennep, Ger. Hanf, cognate 
with Gr. xajwuto ,Lat. cannabis), an annual herb (Cannabis saliva) 
having angular rough steins and alternate deeply lobed leaves. 
The bast fibres -of Cannabis are the hemp of commerce, but, 
unfortunately, the products from many totally different plants 
are often included under the general name of hemp* In some 
cases the fibre is obtained from the. stem, while in others it 
comes from tbe leaf. Sunn hemp, Manila hemp, Sisal hemp, 
and Phonaium (New Zealand flax, which is neither flax nor 
hemp) are treated separately. All these, however, are often 
classed under the above general name, and so are tbe following:— 
Deccan or Ambari hemp. Hibiscus cannobinus, an Indian and 
East Indian malvaceous. plant, the fibre from which is often 
known as brown hemp or Bombay hemp; Pite bemp, which 
is obtained from the American aloe, Agave omeruano; and 
Moorva or bowstring-hemp, Sanscvieria ttylanica* which is 
obtained from an aloe-like plant, and is a native of India and 



Ceylon. Then there, are Canada hemp, Apacymtm tennaHnum, 
Kentucky hemp, Urtica cannabina, and others. 

The hemp plant, like the hop, which is of the same natural 
order, Cannabinaceae, is dioecious, t.r. the mate and female 
flowers are borne on separate plants. Hie female plant grows 
to a greater height than the male, and its foliage is darker and 
more luxuriant, but the plant takes from five to six weeks longer 
to ripen. When the male plants are ripe they are pulled, put 
up into bundles, and steeped in a similar manner to flax, but 
the female plants are allowed to nankin until the seed is perfectly 
ripe. They are then pulled, and after the seed has been removed 
are retted in the ordinary way. The seed is also a valuable 
product; the finest is kept for sowing, a large quantity is sold 
for the food of cage birds, while the remainder is sent to the oil 
mills to be crushed. The extracted oil is used in the manufacture 
of soap, while the solid remains, known as oil-cake, are valuable 
as a food for cattle. The leaves of hemp have five to seven 
leaflets, the form of which is lanceolate-acuminate, with a 
serrate margin. The loose panicles of mate flowers, and the 
short spikes of female flowers, arise from the axils of the upper 
leaves. The height of the plant varies greatly with season, soil 
and manuring; in some districts it varies from 3 to & ft., 
but in the Piedmont province it is not unusual to see them 
from 8 to 16 ft. in height, whilst a variety (Cannabis 
saliva, variety gigantea) has produced specimens over 17 ft, in 
height. 

AU cultivated hemp belongs to the same species, Cannabis 
sothai the special varieties such as Cannabis indiea, Cannabis 
chinensis, &c, owe their differences to climate and soil, and they 
lose many of their peculiarities when cultivated in temperate 
regions. Rumphius (in the 17th century) had noticed these 
differences between Indian and European hemp. 

Wild hemp still grows on the banks of the lower Ural,. and 
the Volga, near # the Caspian Sea. It extends to Persia, the 
Altai range and northern and western China. The authors of 
the Pharmacographio says— M It is found in Kashmir and in 
the Himalaya, growing 10 to is ft. high, and thriving vigorously 
at an elevation of 6000 to 10,000 ft." Wild hemp is, however, 
of very little use as a fibre producer, although a drug is obtained 
from it 

It would appear that the native country of the hemp plant is 
in some part of temperate Asia, probably near the Caspian Sea. 
It spread westward throughout Europe, and southward through 
the Indian peninsula. 

The names given to the plant and to its products in different 
countries are of interest in connexion with the utilization of the 
fibre and resin. In Sans, it is called gam, sana, shanapu, banga 
and ganjiha; in Bengali, ganga; Pen. bang and canna; Arab. 
hinuub or canmtb; Gr. /cannabis; Lat. cannabis; Itai. eanappa 
Ft. chanvre; Span, cdnamo; Portuguese, canamo\ Russ. 
kanbpet; Lettish and Lithuanian, kannapes; Slav, konepi 
Erse, canaib and canab; A. Sax. koemp; Dutch, kennef; 
Ger. Han/; Eng. hemp- Danish and Norwegian, kamp; Icelandic, 
hompr; and in Swed. hampa. ' Tbe English word canvas 
sufficiently reveals its derivation from cannabis. 

Very little hemp is now grown in the British Isles, although 
this variety was considered to be of very good quality, and to 
possess great strength. The chief continental hemp-producing 
countries are Italy, Russia and France; ft is also grown in 
several parts of Canada and the United States and India. The 
Central Provinces, Bengal and Bombay are the chief centres 
of hemp cultivation in India, where the plant is of most use for 
narcotics. The satisfactory growth of hemp demands a light, 
rich and fertile soil, but, unlike most substances, it may be 
reared for a few years in succession. The time of sowing, the 
quantity of seed per acre (about three bushels) and the method 
of gathering and retting are very similar to those of flax; but, 
as a rule, it is a hardier plant than flax, does not possess the same 
pliability, b much coarser and more brittle, and does not require 
the same amount of attention during the first few weeks of its 
growth. 

The very finest hemp, that grown in the province of Piedmont, 



?fc«. 



HEMSTERHUIS, F. 



ttary,ia} howe ¥« , very similar to flax, and in many cages the two 
fibres are mixed in the same material. The hemp fibre has 
always been valuable for the rope industry, and it was at one 
time very extensively used in the production of yarns for the 
manufacture of sail doth, sheeting, cowers, bagging, sacking, &c. 
.Muck of the finer quality is still made into doth, but almost all 
the coarser quality finds its way into ropes and similar material. 
. A large quantity of hemp doth is still made for the British 
navy. The cloth, when finished, is cut up into lengths, made 
into bags and tarred. They are then used as coal sacks. There 
is also a quantity made into sacks which are intended to hold 
very heavy material Hemp yarns are also used in certain 
classes of carpets, for special bags for use in cop dyemg andior 
similar special purposes, bat for the ordinary bagging and 
sacking the employment of hemp yarns has been almost entirely 
supplanted by yarns made from the jute fibre. 

Hemp is grown for three products— (i) the fibre of its stem; 
(2) the resinous secretion which is developed in hot countries 
upon its leaves and flowering heads; (3) its oily seeds. 

Hemp has been employed for its fibre from ancient times. 
Herodotus (iv. 74) mentions the wild and cultivated -hemp of 
Scythia, and describes the hempen garments made by the 
Tkradans as equal to linen in fineness, Hesychius says the 
Taradan women made sheets of hemp. Moschion (about aco 
n.c.) records the use of hempen ropes for rigging the ship 
" Syracusia " built for Hiero II. The hemp plant ha* been 
cultivated in northern India from a considerable antiquity, 
not only as a drug but for its fibre. The Anglo-Saxons were 
well acquainted with the mode of preparing hemp. Hempen 
doth became common in central and southern Europe in the 
' 13th century. 

Hemp-ruin. — Hemp as a drug or intoxicant for smoking 
and chewing occurs in the three forms of bhang, ganja and 
< j»* ras 

1. Bhang, the Hindustani siddhi or sabef, consists of the 
dried leaves and small stalks of the hemp; a few fruits occur in 
it. It is of a ctak brownish-green colour, and has a faint peculiar 
odour and but a slight taste. It is smoked with or without 
tobacco; or it is made into a sweetmeat with honey, - sugar 
and aromatic spices; or it is powdered and infused in cold water, 
yielding a turbid drink, subdscki. Hashish is one o£ the Arabic 
names given to the Syrian and Turkish preparations of the 
resinous hemp leaves. One of the commonest of these prepara- 
tions is made by heating the bhang with water and butter, the 
butter becoming thus charged with the resinous and active 
substances of the plant. 

. 2. Ganja, the guaza of the London brokers, consists of the 
.lowering and fruiting heads of the female pknt. It is brownish- 
green, and otherwise resembles bhang, as in odour and taste. 
Some of the more esteemed' kinds of hashish are prepared from 
this ganja. Ganja- is met with in the Indian bazaars in dense 
bundles of 24 plants or heads apiece. The hashish in such 
extensive use in Central Asia b often seen in the bazaar* of large 
cities in the form of cakes, x to 3 in. thick, 5 to xo in. broad and 
10 to 15 in. long. 

t> 3. Chans, or cburrus, is the resin itself collected, as it exudes 
naturally from the plant, in different ways. The best sort is 
gathered by the hand like Opium; sometimes the resinous 
exudation of the plant is made to stick first of all to doths, or 
to the leather garments of men, or even to their skin, end'is then 
removed by scraping, and afterwards consolidated by kneading, 
pressing and rolling. It contains about one-third or one-fourth 
its weight of the resin. But the churrus prepared by different 
methods and in different countries differs greatly in appearance 
and purity. Sometimes it takes the form of egg-like masses of 
greyish-brown colour, having when of high quality a shining 
resinous fracture. Often it occurs in the form of irregular 
friable rumps* like pieces of impure linseed oil-cake. 

The mrdirrnal and intoxicating properties of bemp have 
probably been known in Oriental countries from a very early 
period. An ancient Chinese herbal, part of which was written 
about the 5th century b.o, while the remainder is of siUl earlier 



date, notices the seed and fewer-hearing kinds of hemp. Other 
early, writers refer to hemp as a remedy- The medicinal and 
.dietetic use of hemp spread through India, Persia and Arabia 
in the early middle ages. The use of hemp (bhang) in India was 
noticed by Garcia d'Orta in 1563. Berhi-in his Treasury of Drmgs 
(1600) describes it as of " an infatuating quality and pernicious 
use." Attention was recalled to this drug, in consequence of 
Napoleon's Egyptian expedition, by de Sacy (1809) and Rouger 
(18 10). Its modern medicinal use is chiefly due to trials by Dt 
0*Shaughnessy in Calcutta (1838- 1843). The plant is grow* 
partly and often mainly for the safceoftUreswin Persia, northern 
India and Arabia, in many parts of Africa and in Brazil. 

Pharmacokgy and Therapeutics.— The composition of this 
drug is still extremely obscure; partly, perhaps, became it 
varies to much in individual specimens.. It appear* to conaaia 
at least two alkaloids— cannabinine and tetano-rsnnaWnr— of 
which the former is volatile. The chief active fmadple may 
possibly be neither of these, but the substance cannabtnoo. 
There are also resins, a volatile oil and several other comcitucnta 
Cannabis indica— - as the drug is termed in the pharmacopoeias*- 
may be given as an extract (dose i-x gr.) or tincture (dose $-15 
minims). 

The drug has no external action. The effects of its absorption, 
whether it be swallowed or smoked, vary within wide limits 
in different individuals and races. So great is this variation at 
to be inexplicable except oa the view that the nature and propor- 
tions of the active principles vary greatly in different specimen* 
But typically the drug in an Intoxicant, resembling alcohol ia 
many features of its action, but differing in others. The early 
symptoms are highly pleasurable, and it is for these, as in the case 
of other stimulants, that the drug is so largely consumed in the 
East. There is a subjective sensation of mental brnKanre, but» 
as in other cases, this is not borne out by the objective result* 
It has been suggested that the incoordination of nervous action 
under the influence of Indian hemp may be due to independent 
and non-concerted action on the part of the two halves of the 
cerebrum. Following on a decided lowering of the pain and 
touch senses/ which may even lead to complete loss of cutaneous 
sensation, there comes a sleep which is often accompanied by 
pleasant dreams. There appears to he no evidence in the case 
of either the lower animals or the human subject that the drug 
is an aphrodisiac Excessive indulgence in cannabis indica it 
very rare, but may lead to geaeml ill-health, aad occasionally to 
insanity. The apparent impossibility of obtainmg pure and 
trustworthy samples of the drug has led to its entire abandon* 
ment in therapeutics. When a good sample is obtained it is a 
safe and efficient hypnotic, at any rate in the cast of a European. 
The tincture should not be prescribed unless precautions are 
taken to avoid the predpitation of the resin which follows its 
dilution with water. 

S&VJ*tt t Dictionary*/ ike EammicPndmistf India. 

HEH8TERHUI5, FRANCOIS (1721-1700), Dutch writer oa 
aesthetics and moral philosophy, son of Tiberius Hemsterhuls, 
was bora at Franeker in Holland, on- the 37th of December lyat. 
He was educated at the university of Leiden, where he studied 
Plato. Failing to obtain a professorship, he entered the service 
of the state, and for many years acted as secretary to the state 
council of the United Provinces. He died at Che Hague on the 
7th of July 1700. Through his philosophical writings he became 
acquainted with many distinguished persons^Goethe, Herder, 
Princess Antaiia of Gallium, and especially Jacob!, with whom 
he had much in common. Both were idealists, and their works 
suffer from a similar lack of arrangement, although distinguished 
by elegance of form and refined sentiment. His most valuabit 
contributions are in the department of aesthetics or the general 
analysis of feeling. His philosophy has been characterized as 
Socratic In content and Platonic in form. Its foundation was 
the desire for self-knowledge and truth, untrammelled by the 
rigid bonds of any particular system* 

His most important works, all of which were written In FVerich, art! 
Leltrt sur la sculpture (1769), in which occurs the well-known defiai* 
tioo of the Beautiful as " that which gives us the greatest number of 



HEMSTERHUIS^T.^HENBANB 



365 



ft. 



HEhWTBRHUIS. TIBERIUS (1*85-1766), Dutch philologist 
and critic, wu born on the 9th of January 1063 at Groniagen 
in Holland. His father, a learned physician, gave him so good 
an early education that, when he entered the university of his 
native town in his fifteenth year, he speedfly proved himself to 
be the best student of mathematics. After a year or two at 
Gmningen, he was attracted to the university of Leiden by the 
fame of Peiizoniu*; and while there he was entrusted with the 
duty of arranging the manuscripts in the library. Though he 
accepted an appointment as professor of mathematics and 
philosophy at Amsterdam in his twentieth year, he had already 
directed his attention to the study of the ancient languages. 
In 1706 he completed the edition of Pollux's Onomastkon begun 
by Lederlin; but the praise he received from his countrymen 
was more than counterbalanced by two letters of criticism from 
Bentley, which mortified hkn so keenly that for two months he 
refused to open a Greek book. In 1717 Hemsterhuis was 
appointed professor of Greek at Franeker, but he did not enter 
on his duties there till 1720. In 1738 be became professor of 
national history also. Two years afterwards he was called to 
teach the same subjects at Leiden, where he died on the 7th of 
April 1766: Hemsterhuis was the founder of a laborious and 
useful Dutch school of criticism, which had famous disciples 
in Vakkenaer, Lenoep and Ruhnken. 

His chief writings at on 

i 1708) 1 Arulopkanu 1 nk 

iphesutm in the Misc nd 

iv.; Obstrvaliones ad [)'• 

a Latin translation of tl >n ; 

notes to Bernard's Ti to 

Eroesti's CaUimackue 1 *m 

r. Hemsterhusii (with nd 

1874) ; also J. & Sandys' Hist. Class. Scholarship, ii. (1908). 

HEMY, CHARLES NAPIER (1841- ). British painter, 
bora at NewcasUe-on-Tyne, was trained in the Newcastle school 
of art, in the Antwerp academy and in the studio of Baron Leys. 
He has produced some figure subjects and landscapes, but is 
best known by his admirable marine paintings. He Was elected 
an associate of the Royal Academy in 1808, associate of the Royal 
Society of Painters in Water Colours in 1800 and member in 
1807. Two of his paintings, " Pilchards. " (1897) and " London 
River " (1904), are in the National Gallery of British Art. 

HEN* a female bird, especially the female of the common fowl 
uj.t .). The O. Eng. fern is the feminine form of kana, the male bird, 
a correlation of words which is represented in other Teutonic 
languages, cf . ttr. Halm, Home, Dutch kacn, ken, Swed. ham, 
htnm, &c. The O. Eng, name for th6 male bird has disappeared, 
its place being taken by " cock," a word probably of onomato- 
poeic origin, being from a base kub- or W*-> seen also in " chicken." 
This word also appears in Fr. eve, and medieval Lau coccus. 

HnHAULX. CHARLES JRftJf FRANCOIS (1685-1770), French 
historian, was born in Paris on the 8th of February 1685. His 
father, a farmer-general of taxes, was a man of literary tastes, 
and young Hentult obtained a good education at the Jesuit 
college. Captivated by the eloquence of Mas&illon, in his fifteenth 
year he entered the Oratory with the view of becoming a preacher, 
but after two years' residence be changed his intention, and, 
inheriting a position which secured him access to the most select 
society of Paris, he achieved distinction at an early period by his 



gay, witty and graceful manners. His literary talent, mani- 
fested in the composition of various light poetical pieces, an 
opera, a tragedy (ConUlie valale, 1 7 10), &c, obtained his entrance 
to the Academy (1723). Petit^nottte as he was, he had also 
serious capacity, for he became councillor of the parlemad of 
Paris (1705), and in 17 10 he was chosen president of the court of 
tnquljcs. After the death of the count de Rieux <sbn of the 
famous financier, Samuel Bernard) he became (1753) super- 
intendent of the household of Queen Marie Leszczynska, whose 
intimate friendship he had previously enjoyed. On his recovery 
in his eightieth year from a dangerous malady (1765) he pro- 
fessed to have undergone religious conversion and retired into 
private life, devoting the remainder of his days to study and 
devotion. His religion was, however, according to the marquis 
d' Algernon, " exempt from fanaticism, persecution, bitterness 
and intrigue "; and it did not prevent him from continuing his 
friendship with Voltaire, to whom it is said he had formerly 
rendered the service of saving the manuscript of La. Henrisdc, 
when its author was about to commit it to the flames. The 
literary work on which Henault bestowed his chief attention was 
the AbH%4 chroitohgique de Vkistoirt de France, first published 
in 1744 without the author's name. In the compass of two 
volumes he comprised the whole history of France from the 
earliest times to the death of Louis XIV. The work has no 
originality* Henault had kept his note-books of the history 
lectures at the Jesuit college, of which the substance was taken 
from Meaeray and P. Daniel He revised them first in 1723* 
and later put them in the form of question and answer on the 
model of P. le Ragois, and by following Dubos and Boulain* 
villiers and with the aid of (heabbeBoudot he compiled his^6r^s\i 
The research is all on the surface and is only borrowed. But 
the work had a prodigious success, and was translated into 
several languages, even into Chinese; This was due partly to 
Henault's popularity and position, partly to the agreeable stylo* 
which made the history readable, He inserted, according •to 
the fashion of the period, moral and political reflections, 
which are always brief and generally as fresh and pleasing as they 
are just A few masterly strokes reproduced the leading features 
of each age and. the characters of its illustrious men; accural* 
chronological tables set forth the most interesting events in the 
history of each sovereign and the names of the great men 
who flourished during his reign; and interspersed throughout 
the work are occasional chapters on the social and civil state of 
the country at the dose of each era in its history. Continuations 
of the work have been made at separate periods by Fantin dee 
Odoards, by Anguis with notes by Walckenaet, and by Michaud* 
He died at Paris on the 24th of November 1770. 



in 
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in 
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a 

HENBANE (Fr. j*sfrtoume> from the Gr. voonUp*, or 
hog's-bean; ItaL giusfmamo*, Ger. Sckwmes BUsenkrauh 
Htiknertod, Sottbohne and Zigeuner-Korn or " gipsies' corn *>, 
the common name of the plant Hyoscyamms nfar, a member 
of the natural order Solanaceae, indigenous to Britain, found 
wild In waste places, on rubbish about villages and old casUes» 
and cultivated for medicinal use in various counties in the south 
and east of England. It occurs also in central and southern 
Europe and in western Asia extending to India and Siberia; 
and has long been naturalised in the United Stales. There 
are two forms of the plant, an annual and a biennial), winch 
spring indifferently from the same crop of seed — the one growing 
on during summer to a height of from x to s ft.* and flowering 
and perfecting seed; the other producing the first season enfe 
a tuft of radical leaves* which disappear in winter, leaving under* 



?66 



HENCHMAN— HENDERSON, ft! 



grand a thick fleshy root, from the crown of Which mites fa 
spring a branched flowering stem, usually much taller and more 
vigorous than the flowering stems of the annual plants. The 
biennial form is that which is considered officinal. The radical 
leaves of this biennial plant spread out flat on all sides from the 
crown of the root; they are ovate*oblong, acute, stalked, and 
more or less indsely-toothed, of a greyish-green colour, and 
covered with viscid hairs; these leaves perish at the approach 
of winter. The flowering stem pushes up from the root-crown 
in spring, ultimately reaching from 3 to 4 ft. in height, and as it 
grows becoming branched, and furnished with, alternate sessile 
leaves, which are stem-clasping, oblong, unequally-lobed, clothed 
with glandular clammy hairs, and of a dull grey-green, the whole 
plant having a powerful nauseous odour. The flowers are shortly- 
stalked, the lower ones growing in the fork of the brandies, 
the upper ones sessile in one-sided leafy spikes which are rolled 
hack at the top before flowering, the leaves becoming smaller 
upwards and taking the place of bracts. The flowers have an 
urn-shaped calyx which persists around the fruit and is strongly 
veined, with five stiff, broad, almost prickly lobes; these, 
when the soft matter is removed by maceration, form very elegant 
specimens when associated with leaves prepared in a similar 
way. The corollas are obliquely funnel-shaped, of a dirty 
yellow or buff, marked with a dose reticulation of purple veins. 
The capsule opens transversely by a convex lid and contain* 
numerous seeds. Both the leaves and the seeds are employed 
in pharmacy. The Mahommedan doctors of India are 
accustomed to prescribe the seeds. Henbane yields a poisonous 
alkaloid* hyoscyamine, which is stated to have properties almost 
identical with those of atropine, from which it differs in being 
more soluble in water. It is usually obtained in an amorphous, 
scarcely ever in a crystalline state. Its properties have been 
investigated in Germany by T. Husemann, Schroff, Hohn, &c 
Hohn finds its chemical composition expressed by CuH*NtO». 
(Compare Hellmann, BtitrHgt tmr Kemtnis da physiology 
Wirktmg its Hyoseyamins, &c, Jena, 1874.) In small and 
repeated doses henbane has been found to have a trane&nl&xing 
effect upon persons affected by severe nervous Irritability. 
In poisonous doses it causes loss of speech, distortion and 
paralysis. In the form of extract or tincture it is a. valuable 
remedy in the hands of a medical man, either as an anodyne, 
a hypnotic or a sedative. The extract of henbane is rich in 
titrate of potassium and other inorganic salts. The smoking 
of the seeds and capsules of henbane is noted in books as a 
somewhat dangerous remedy adopted by .country people for 
toothache. Accidental poisoning from henbane occasionally 
occurs, owing sometimes to the apparent edibility and whole- 
sbmeness of the root. 
See Bentley and Trumeo, Medicinal Plants, 194 (18S0). 

HENCHMAN, originally, probably, one who attended do a 
horse, a groom, and hence, like groom (q.v.), a title of & sub- 
ordinate official in royal or noble households. The first part 
of the word is the O. Eng. hengest, a horse, a word which occurs in 
many Teutonic languages, cf . Gcr. and Dutch hengsL The word 
appears in the name, Hengest, of the Saxon chieftain (see 
Hehgbst and Horsa) and still survives in English in place and 
other names beginning with Hingst- or Hinx-. Henchmen, 
pages of honour or squires, rode or walked at the side of their 
master in processions and the like, and appear in the English 
royal household from the 14th century till Elizabeth abolished 
the royal henchmen, known also as the " children of honour.*' 
The word was obsolete in English from the middle of the 17th 
century, and seems to have been revived through Sir Walter 
Scott, who took the word and its derivation, according to the 
New English Dictionary, from Edward Burt's Letters from a 
Gentleman in the North of Scotland t together with its erroneous 
derivation from " haunch." The word is, in this sense, used as 
synonymous with " gillie," the faithful personal follower of a 
Highland chieftain, the man who stand* at his master's " haunch," 
ready for any emergency. It is> this sense that usually survives 
m modem usage of the word, where it is often used of an out-andV 
out adherent or partisan, ready to do anything. 



HOfMRfO*. ALEXANDER (158^1646), Scottfch ecdest- 
astic, was born in 1583 at Criech, Fifeshire. He graduated at 
the university of St Andrews in 1603, and in 1610 was appointed 
professor of rhetoric and philosophy and questor of the faculty 
of arts. Shortly after this he was presented to the living of 
Leuchars. As Henderson was forced upon his parish by Arch- 
bishop George Gladstones, and was known to sympathise with 
episcopacy, his settlement was at first extremely unpopular; 
but he subsequently changed his, views and became a Presby- 
terian in doctrine and church government, and one of the most 
esteemed ministers in Scotland. He early made his mark as a 
church leader, and took an active part in petitioning against the 
" five acts " and later against the introduction of a service-book 
and canons drawn up on the modal of tjbe Engasbpayer^Dok 
On the 1st of March 1638 the public signing ol the " National 
Covenant" began in Greyfrkn Churchy Edinburgh. Hendtrso* 
was mainly responsible for the final form of this document, 
which consisted of <i) the " king's confession" drawn up in 
1581 by John Craig, f» a recital of the acts of parliament 
against " superstitious and papistical rites/' and (3) an elaborate 
oath to maintain the true reformed religion. Owing ta the skill 
shown on this occasion he seems to have been applied to when 
any manifesto of unusual ability was required. In July of the 
same year he proceeded to the north to debate on the M Covenant " 
with the famous Aberdeen doctors; but he was, not well received 
by them. " The voyd church was made fast, and the keys 
keeped by the magistrate," says Bailee. Henderson's neat 
public opportunity was m the famous Assesabjy which met in 
Glasgow on the axst of November 1634. He was chosen moderator 
by accla m a t ion , bciag, as Baillieeays, " iacomparablie the abtesj, 
man of us all for ak things," James Hamilton) 3rd awrqufsi 
of Hamilton, was the king's cemmfestoner; and when the 
Assembly insisted on proceeding with .the trial of the bishops* 
he formally dissolved the meeting under paiQ of treason. Acting 
on the constitutional principle that the king's right to convene 
did not interfere with the church's independent right to bold 
assemblies, they sat till the aoth of December, deposed all the 
Scottish bishops, excommunicated a number of them, repealed 
all acts favouring episcopacy, and reconstituted the Scottish 
Kirk on thorough Presbyterian principles. During the sitting of 
this Assembly it was carried by a majority of seventy-five votes 
that Henderson should be transferred to Edinburgh. He had 
been at Leuchars for about tweiityHhreeyeacstaadwasextreinely 
reluctant to leave it. >• ' 

While Scotland and England were preparing for the " First 
Bishops' War," Henderson drew up two papers, entitled respec- 
tively The Remonstrance of thi Nobility and Instructions for 
Defensive Arms. The first of these documents he pubsisbed 
himself; the second wan published against his wish by Job* 
Corbet (1603-164XX, a deposed minister. The ** -First Bishops' 
War "did not last long. At the Pacification of Bfefcs the king 
virtually granted all the demands of the Scots. In the oegotiav 
tions for peace Henderson was one of the Scottish comrnlssioaew, 
and made a very favourable impression on the king. In 1640 
Henderson was elected by the town council rector of Edinburgh 
University— an office to which he was annually re-elected till 
his death. The Pacification of Birks had bean wrung from the 
king; and the Scots, sedag that he was 'preparing for the 
" Second Bishops' War," took the initiative, and pressed Into 
England so vigorously that Charles had again t6 yield everything. 
The maturing of the treaty of peace took a- considerable time, 
and Henderson was again active in the negotiations, first at 
Ripon (October 1st) and afterwards in London. While he was 
in London he had a personal interview with- the king, with the 
view of obtaining assistance for the Scottish universities from 
the money formerly applied to the support of the bishops. 
On Henderson's return to Edinburgh In July tiax the Assembly 
was sitting at St Andrews. To suit the convenience ol the 
parliament, however, it removed to Edinburgh; Henderson 
was- elected moderator of the Edinburgh meeting. In this 
Assembly he proposed that " a, confession of faith, a catechism; 
a directory for all the parts of the public worship, and a platform 



HENDBRSOhr/E.^~HEMDERSON, Tfc'K R: 



fc&7 



of go ver nm ent^ whereto possibly England and we might agree," 
should be drawn up. This was unanimously approved of, and 
the laborious undertaking was left in Henderson's hands; but 
the " notable motion " did not lead to any immediate results; 
During Charles's second state-visit to Scotland, in the autumn 
of 1641, Henderson acted as his chaplain, and managed to get 
the funds, formerly belonging to the bishopric of Edinburgh, 
applied to the metropolitan university. In 1*643 Henderson, 
whose policy was to keep Scotland neutral in the war which bad 
sow broken out between tbe king and the parliament, was 
engaged in corresponding with England on ecclesiastical topics; 
and, shortly afterwards, he was -sent to Oxford to mediate 
between tbe king and his parliament; but his mission proved 
a failure. 

A memorable meeting of the General Assembly was held In 
August 1643. >Henderson was elected moderator for tbe third 
time. He presented a drift of the famous " Solemn League and 
Covenant," which- was received with great enthusiasm. Unlike 
the * National Covenant " of 1638, which appKed to Scotland 
only, this document was common to the two kingdoms. 
Henderson, Baillie, Rutherford and others were sent up to 
London to represent Scotland in the Assembly at Westminster. 
The u Solemn League and Covenant/ 1 which pledged both 
countries to the extirpation of prelacy, leaving further decision 
as to church government to be decided by the "example of the 
best reformed churchCT," after undergoing some slight alterations, 
passed the two Houses of ParHamcut and tbe Westminster 
Assembly, and thus became law for the two kingdoms. By 
means of it Henderson has had considerable influence on tbe 
history of Great Britain, As Scottish commissioner to the 
Westminster Assembly, he was in England from August 1643 till 
August 1646 , his principal work was the drafting of the directory 
for public worship. Early fn 1645 Henderson was sent to 
Uxbridge to aid the commissioners of tbe two parliaments in 
negotiating with tbe king; but nothing came of the conference. 
In 1646 the king joined the Scottish army; and, after retiring 
with them to Newcastle, -he sent for Henderson, and discussed 
with him the two systems of church government in a number of 
papers. Meanwhile Henderson was failing in health. He sailed 
to Scotland, and eight days after his arrival died, on the 19th 
of August 1646. He was buried in Greyfriars churchyard, 
Edinburgh , and his death was the occasion of national mourning 
in Scotland. On the 7th of August Baillie had written that he 
had heard that Henderson was dying " most of heartbreak." A 
document was published in London purporting to be a "Declara- 
tion of Mr Alexander Henderson made upon his Death-bed "4 
and, although this paper was disowned, denounced and shown to 
be false in the General Assembly of August 1648, tbe document 
was used by Clarendon as giving the impression that Henderson 
had recanted. Its foundation was probably certain expressions 
lamenting Scottish interference in English affairs. 

Henderson is one of tbe greatest men in the history of Scotland 
and, next to Knox, is certainly the most famous of Scottish 
ecclesiastics. He had great political genius; and his statesman- 
ship was so influential that " he was," as Masson well observes, 
M a cabinet minister without office." He has made a deep mark 
os) the history, not only of Scotland, but of England; and the 
existing Presbyterian churches in Scotland are largely indebted 
to him for the forms of their dogmas and their ecclesiastical 
organisation He is thus justly considered the second founder of 
the Reformed Church in Scotland. 

See M'Crie'i Life of Alexander Henderson O846) : Alton's Life and 
Times of AltxantUr Henderson (1836). The Letters and Journals of 
Robert BasUit (1841-1842) (an exceedingly valuable work, from an 
historical point of view); J. H. Burton's History of Scotland; D. 
Masson s Life of Druntmond of Hawthornden; and, above all, 
Masson's Life of Milton; Andrew Lang, Hist, of Scotland (tgoj), 
vot fit Henderson's own works are chiefly contribution* to current 
controvessies, speeches and sermons. (T. Gl ; D. Mm.) 

HENDERSON, BBENEZER (1784-1858), a Scottish divine, was 
born at the Linn near Dunfermline on the 17th of November 
1784, and died at Mortlake on the 1 7th 6f May 1858. He was tbe 
youngest son of an agricultural labourer, and after three years' 



schooling spent some time at watchmaking and as a sboemasaer's 
apprentice. In 1803 he joined Robert Haidane's theological 
seminary, and in 1805 was selected to accompany tbe Rev. John 
Paterson to India; but as the East India Company would not 
allow British vessels to convey missionaries to India, Henderson 
and his colleague went to Denmark to await the chance of ft 
passage to Serampur, then a Danish port'. Being unexpectedly 
delayed, and having begun to preach in Copenhagen, they 
ultimately decided to settle in Denmark, and in 1806 Henderson 
became pastor at Elsinore. From this time til) about 1817 he 
was. engaged in encouraging the distribution of Bibles in the 
Scandinavian countries, and in the course of his labours he 
visited Sweden and Lapland (1807-1868), Iceland (1814-1813) 
and the mainland of Denmark and part of Germany (t8i6>. 
During most of this time he was ad agent of the British and 
Foreign Bible Society. On the 6th of October 181 1 he formed the 
first Congregational church in Sweden.. In 18x8, after a visit to 
England, he travelled in company with Paterson through Russia 
as far south as Tiflis, but, instead of settling as was proposed al 
Astrakhan, he retraced his steps, having resigned his connexion 
with the Bible Society owing to his disapproval of a translation 
of the Scriptures which had been made in Turkish. In 18? 2 he 
was invited by Prince Alexander (Galium) to assist tbe Russian 
Bible Society in translating tbe Scriptures mtd various languages 
spoken in the Russian empire. After twenty years of foreign 
labour Henderson returned to England, and in 1825 waaappotated 
tutor of the Mission College, Gosport. In 1830 he succeeded Dr 
William Harrison as theological lecturer and professorof Oriental 
languages in Highbury Congregational College. In 1850, on the 
amalgamation of tbe colleges of Homerton, Coward and Highbury, 
he retired on a pension. In 1851-1853 he was pastor of Sheen 
Vale chapel at Mortlake. His last work was a translation of the 
book of Etekiel. Henderson was a man of great linguistic attain- 
ment. He made himself more or lessacquainted, not only with the 
ordinary languages of scholarly accomplishment and the various 
members of the Scandinavian group, but also with Hebrew, 
Syriac, Ethfopic, Russian, Arabic, Tatar, Persian, Turkish, 
Armenian, Manchu, Mongolian and Coptic. He organized the 
first Bible Society in Denmark (1814), and paved the way for 
several others. In 1617 he was nominated by the Scandinavian 
Literary Society a corresponding member; and in C840 he was 
made D.D. by the university of Copenhagen. He was honorary 
secretary for life of the Religious Tract Society, and one of the 
first promoters of the British Society for the Propagation of the 
Gospel among the Jews. The records of his travels in Iceland 
(1818) were valuable contributions to our knowledge of that 
island. His other principal works are: Iceland, or the Journd 
of a Rrsidmce in thai Island (2 vols., 18x8); Biblical Research* 
and Travels in Russia (1826); Elements of Biblical Criticism and 
Interpretation (1830); The Vaudois, a Tow of tko Yal&tys of 
Piedmont (1845). 

See Memoir* of Ebenemr Henderson* by Tmifia S. Henderson (his 
daughter) (London, 1859); Congregational Year Book (1859)* 

HENDERSON, GEORGE FRANCIS ROBERT (1854-1003), 
British soldier and military writer, was born in Jersey in 1*54. 
Educated at Leeds Grammar School, of which his father, after* 
waTds Dean of Carlisle, was headmaster, he was early attracted 
to the study of history, and obtained a scholarship at St John's 
College, Oxford. But he soon left the University for Sandhurst, 
whence be obtained his first commission in 1878. One year 
later, after a few months' service in India, be waa promoted 
lieutenant and returned to England, and in 188s he went on 
active service with his regiment, the York and Lancaster (6 5th/ 
84th) to Egypt. Ho was present at TeU-el-MaUuta and Kassaasin, 
and at Tell-el-Kebir waa the first man of his regiment to eater the 
enemy's works. His conduct attracted the notice of Sir Garnet 
(afterwards Lord) Wolseley, and he received the $th class of the 
Medjidieh order. His name was, further, noted for a brevet- 
majority, which he did not receive till he became captain in 
1886. During these years he had been quietly studying military 
art and history at Gibraltar, in Bermuda and m Nova Scotia, 
in spite of the disnonltks of research, and in 1889 appeared 



«68 



HENDERSON, J.— HENGEBT AND iHORSA 



(anonymously) his first work, The Campaign of Frederichsbnrg. 
In the same year he became Instructor in Tactics, Military Law 
and Administration at Sandmirst. From this poet he proceeded 
as Professor of Military Art and History to the Staff College 
(i8q*-i8q9), and there exercised a profound influence on the 
younger generation of officers. His study on Spicheren had been 
begun tome years before, and in 1808 appeared, as the result of 
eight years' work, his masterpiece, Stonewall Jackson and the 
American Civil War, In the South African War Iieutesant- 
Colonel Henderson served with distinction on the staff el Lord 
Roberta as Director of Intelligence. But overwork and malaria 
broke his health, and he had to return home, being eventually 
selected to write the official history of the war. But failing 
health obliged him to go to Egypt, where he died at Assuan on 
the 5th of March 1003. He had completed the portion of the 
history of the South African War dealing with the events up to the 
commencement of hostilities, amounting to about a volume, but 
the War Office decided to suppress this, and the work was begun 
it now and carried out by Sir F. Maurice. 

Varioua lecture* and papers by Henderson were collected and 
published In 1905 by Captain Malcolm. D.S.O., under the title 
The Science of War; to this collection a memoir was contributed by 
Lord Roberts. See also Journal of the Royal United Service 
Institution*. voL xlvii. No* 302. 

HENDERSON, JOHN (1 747-1785), English actor, of Scottish 
descent, was born in London. He made his- first appearance 
on the stage at Bath on the 6th of October 177a as Hamlet. 
His success in this and other Shakespearian parts led to his 
being called the " Bath Roscius." He had great difficulty in 
getting a London engagement, but finally appeared at the 
Haymarket in 1777 as Shyfock, and his success was a source of 
considerable profit to Colman, the manager. Sheridan then 
engaged him to play at Drury Lane, where he remained for two 
years. When the companies joined forces he went to Covent 
Garden, appearing as Richard HI. in 1778, and creating original 
parts in many of the plays of Cumberland, Shirley, Jephson 
and others. His last appearance was in 1785 as Horatras in 
The Roman Father, and he died on the 25th of November of 
that year and was buried in Westminster Abbey. Garrick was 
very jealous of Henderson, and the tetter's power of mimicry 
separated him also from Colman, but he was always gratefully 
remembered by Mrs. Siddous and others of his profession whom 
he had encouraged. He was a close friend of Gainsborough, 
who painted his portrait, as did also Stewart and Romney. 
He was co-author of Sheridan and Henderson's Practical Method 
of Reading and Writing English Poetry. 

HENDERSON, a dty and the county-seat of Henderson county, 
Kentucky, U.S.A., on the S. bank of the Ohio river, about 
141 m. W.S.W. of Louisville. Pop. (1800), 8835; (1900), 10,97s, 
of whom 4029 were negroes; (1910 census) 11,453. It is 
served by the Illinois Central* the Louisville & Nashville, and 
the Louisville, Henderson & St. Louis railways, and has direct 
communication by steamboat with Louisville, Evansvillc, Cairo, 
Memphis and New Orleans. Henderson is built on the high 
bank of the river, above the flood level; the river is spanned 
here by a fine steel bridge, designed by George W. G. Ferris 
(1850-1806), the designer of the Ferris WheeL The city has a 
public park of 80 acres and a Carnegie library. It is situated 
in the midst of a region whose soil is said to be the best in the 
world for the raising of dark, heavy-fibred tobacco, and is well 
adapted also for the growing of fruit, wheat and Indian com. 
Bituminous coal is obtained from the surrounding country. 
Immense quantities of stemmed tobacco are shipped from here, 
and the city is an important market for Indian corn. The 
manufactures of the city include cotton and woollen goods, 
hominy, meal, flour, tobacco and cigars, carriages, baskets, 
chairs and other furniture, bricks, ice, whisky and beer; the 
value of the city's factory products in 1005 was $1,365, too. 
The municipality owns and operates its water works, gas plant 
and electric-lighting plant* Henderson, named in honour of 
Richard Henderson (1 734-1785), was settled as early as 1784, 
was first known as Red Banks, was laid out as a town by Hender- 
son's company in 1797, was incorporated a* a town ia 1810, and 



was first chartered at a dty m 1854. The ctty boundary fines 
were .extended in 1905 by the annexation- of Audubon and 
Edgewood. Henderson was for some time the home of John 
James Audubon, the ornithologist. 

HENDIADYB, the name adopted from the Gr. to lea M& 
(" one by means of two ") for a rhetorical figure, in which two 
words connected by a copulative conjunction are used of a single 
idea; usually the figure takes the form of two substantives 
Instead of a substantive and adjective, as m 1 he-classical example 
pateris libamus et auto (Virgil, Ctorgies, it 19a), u we- pear 
libations in cups and gold " for " cups of gold." 

HENDON, -an urban district in the Harrow parliamentary 
division of Middlesex, England, on the river Brent, 8 m. N~W„ 
of St Paul's Cathedral, London, served by the Midland raihrayc 
Pop. (1891), 15,843; (iooi), 22,450. The nucleus of the township 
lies on high ground to the east of the Edgware road, which crosses, 
the Welsh Harp reservoir of Regent's Canal, a frrourite fishing 
and skating resort. The church of St Mary is mainly Per- 
pendicular, and contains a Norman font and monuments of the 
18th century. To the north of the village, which has extended 
greatly as a residential suburb of the metropolis,' is Mill Hill, 
with a Roman Catholic Missionary College, opened In 1871, 
with branches at Rosendaal, Holland and Brittn, Austria, and 
a preparatory school at Fresnfield near Liverpool; and a large 
grammar school founded by Nonconformists in 1807. The 
manor belonged at an early date to the abbot of Westminster. 

HENDRICKS, THOMAS ANDREWS {1810*1885), America* 
political leader, vice-president of the United States in 1885, 
was born near ZanesvUle, Ohioy on the 7th of September's 8x0. 
He graduated at Hanover College, Hanover 1 , Indiana, in iSLat, 
and began in 1843 a successful career at the bar. Identifying 
himself with the Democratic party, he served in the state House 
of Representatives in 1848, and was a prominent member of the 
convention for the re vision of the state const Hut ion in 1850-1851, 
a representative in Congress (1851-1855), commissioner of the 
United States General Land Office (1855-1859), a United States 
senator (1863-1860), and governor of Indiana (1873-1877). 
From 1868 until his death he was put forward for nomination 
for the presidency at every national Democratic Convention save 
in 1872. Both in 1876 and 1884, after his failure to receive the 
nomination for the presidency, he was nominated by the Demo- 
cratic National Convention for vice-president, his nomination 
in each of these conventions being made partly, ft seems, with 
the hope of gaining "greenback" votes— Hendricks had opposed 
the immediate resumption of specie payments. In 1876, with 
S. J. TUden, he lost the disputed election by the decision 
of the electoral commission, but he was elected with Grovec 
Cleveland in 1884. He died at Indianapolis on the *$th of 
November 1885. 

HBNGRLO, or Hehgeloo, a town in the province of Overystel, 
Holland, and a junction station 5 m. by rail N.W. of Enscbede. 
Pop. (xooo), 14,968. The castle belonging to the ancient terri- 
torial lords of Hengelo has long since disappeared, and the only 
interest the town now possesses is as the centre of the flourishing 
industries of the Twente district. The manufacture of cottoa 
in all its branches is very actively carried on, and there are 
dye-works and breweries, besides the engineering works of the 
state railway company. 

HEN6E6T and HORSA. the brother chieftains who led the first 
Saxon bands which settled in England. They were apparently 
called in by the British king Vortigern (f.v.)to defend him against 
the Picts. The place of their landing is said to have been 
Ebbsfleet in Kent. Its date is not certainly known, 450-455 
bring given by the English authorities, 428 by the Welsh (see 
Kent). The settlers of Kent are described by Bede as Jutes 
(q.v.), and there are traces in Kentish custom of differences 
from the other Anglo-Saxon kingdoms. Hengest and Horse 
were at first given the island of Thanef as a home, bat soon 
quarrelled with their British allies* and gradtnUy possessed 
themselves of what became the kingdom of Kent. In 455 the 
Saxon Chronicle records a battle between Hengest and Horsa 
and Vortigern at a place called Aegaels threp, in which Hon* 



HENGSTENBERG— HENLE 



269 



vet skin. Thenceforward Hengest reigned in Kent, together 
with Us too Aeac (Oisc). Both the Saxon Chronicle and the 
Historic Brittanum record three subsequent battles, though 
the two authorities disagree as to their issue. There is no doubt, 
however, that the net result was the expulsion of the Britons 
from Kent. According to the Chronicle, which probably 
derived its information from a lost list of Kentish kings, Hengest 
died in 48ft, while his son Aesc continued to reign until 5x2. 
- Bed*. Hist. Red. (Pkimmer, 1896), I 1$, S. 5; Saxon Chronicle 

2 ark and Plummer, 1809L s.a. 449, 4«, 457. 465, 473: Nenoiua, 
tslona BrOtonum (San Marte, 1844), |{ 31, 37* 38* 43*46, 58. 

HHNGSTENBERG, ERNST WILHELH (1803-1869), German 
Lutheran divine and theologian, was born at Frondenberg, a 
Westphahan village, on the aoth of October 1802. He was 
educated by his father, who was a minister of the Reformed 
Church, and head of the Frdndenberg convent of canonesses 
(Friuleinstift). Entering the university of Bonn in 1819, he 
attended the lectures of G. G. Freytag for Oriental languages 
and of F. K. L. Gieseler for church history, but his energies were 
principally devoted to philosophy and philology, and his earliest 
publication was an edition of the Arabic MoaUakat of AmruT- 
Qais, which gained for him the prize at his graduation in the 
philosop h ical faculty. This was followed in 1824 by a German 
translation of Aristotle's Metaphysics. Finding himself without 
the means to complete his theological studies under Neander 
and Tholuck in Berlin, he accepted a post at Basel as tutor in 
Oriental languages to J. J. Stkhelin, who afterwards became 
professor at the university. Then it was that he began to direct 
Ins attention to a study of the Bible, which led him to a conviction, 
lever afterwards shaken, not only of the divine character of 
evangelical religion, but also of the unapproachable adequacy 
of its expression in the Augsburg Confession. In 1824 be joined 
the philosophical faculty of Berlin as a Privatdtaent, and in 
1825 he became a licentiate in theology, his theses being remark- 
able for their evangelical fervour and for their emphatic protest 
against every form of " rationalism," especially in questions of 
Old Testament criticism. In 1826 he became professor extra- 
ordioarius in theology; and in July 1827 appeared, under his 
editorship, the Evangelische KirchenteUung, a strictly orthodox 
journal, which in his hands acquired an almost unique reputation 
as a controversial organ. It did not, however, attain to great 
notoriety until in 1830 an anonymous article (by E. L. von 
Gerlach) appeared, which openly charged Wilhelm Gesenius 
and J. A. L. Wegschdder with Infidelity and profanity, and on 
the ground of these accusations advocated the interposition of 
the civil power, thus giving rise to the prolonged HaUiscke 
StreiL In 1828 the first volume of Hengstenberg's Ckristologie 
dot Alien Testaments passed through the press; in the autumn 
of that year he became professor ordioarius in theology, and 
in 1829 doctor of theology. He died on the 28th of May 1869. 

The follow™ ' ■ * v- .... - 

Alien Testonm 
R. Keith, 1835- 
by T. Meyer « 
the estimate of 
of the individw 
(1831-1839); E 
and Ike Integt 
en Ike Genuint 
traditional vie 
capital is mad 
critics;. Die B 
Bileamx u. seii 
Dissertations o 

and I. Thorn 
and defects of 

also in Qark'i 
Hoke Lied ous\ 
Das Beangeliw 
Eng. trans., 1 
erldulert (1867- 

Passa, tin Von 
Several series < 
oftheApacrypi 



HENKK. HEINRICH PHIUPP KOMRAD (1752-1809), 
German theologian, best known as a writer on church history, 
was bom at Hehlen, Brunswick, on the 3rd of July 1752. He 
was educated at the gymnasium of Brunswick and the university 
of Helmstidt, and from 1778 to 1809 he was professor, first of 
philosophy, then of theology, in that university. In 1803 he 
was appointed principal of the Carolinum in Brunswick as weD. 
He died on the 2nd of May 1809. Henke belonged to the 
rationalistic school His principal work (Attgemeine GtsckUhU 
der chrisU. Kirche, 6 vols., 1 788-1804; 2nd ed., 1795-1806) » 
commended by F. C. Baur for fullness, accuracy and artistic 
composition. His other works are IAneamenta institution** 
fidei Ckristianae historiaxriiicarum (1783), Opuscuta academic* 
(1802) and two volumes of Predigten. He was also editor of 
the Magaxin fir die ReKgionsphilosophie, Bxegese und Kitchen* 
geschichte (1793-1802) and the Archie fiir die neueste Kitchen- 
geschUhte (1794-1799). 

His son, Ebnst Ludwio Thxodoh Hkwxx (1804-1872), after 
studying at the university of Jena, became professor extra* 
ordinarims there in 1833, and professor ordinarius of Marburg 
in 1839. He is known as the author of monographs upon 
Ceorg Calixt u. seine Zeit (1853-1860), Papst Pius VII. (i860), 
Konrad von Marburg (1861), Kaspar Peucer u. Nik KreU 
bS6s) t Jak.Friedr. Fries (1867), Zur ueuern KirchengescMchie 
(1867). 

HENLE, FRIEDRICH OUSTAV JAKOB (1809-1885), 
German pathologist and anatomist, was bom on the 9th of 
July 1809 at Forth, in Franconia. After studying medicine 
at Heidelberg and at Bonn, where he took his doctor's degree 
in 1832, he became prosector in anatomy to Johannes Muller at 
Berlin. During the six years he spent in that position he pub* 
lished a large' amount of work, including three anatomical 
monographs on new species of animals, and papers on the 
structure of the lacteal system, the distribution of epithelium 
in the human body, the structure and development of the hair, 
the formation jof mucus and pus, &c. In 1840 he accepted the 
chair of anatomy at Zurich, and in 1844 he was called to Heidel- 
berg, where he taught not only anatomy, but physiology ami 
pathology. About this period he was engaged on his complete 
system of general anatomy, which formed the sixth volume of 
the new edition of S. T. von S6mmerring's treatise, published 
at Leipzig between 1841 and 1844. While at Heidelberg he 
published a zoological monograph on the sharks and rays, in 
conjunction with his master Muller, and in 1846 m> famous 
Manual of Rational Pathology began to appear; this marked 
the beginning of a new era in pathological study, since in it 
physiology and pathology were treated, in Henle's own words, 
as " branches of one science/' and the facts of disease were 
systematically considered with reference -to their physiological 
relations. In 185a he moved to Gottingen, whence he issued 
three years later the first instalment of his great Handbook 
of Systematic Human Anatomy, the last volume of which was not 
published till 1873. This work was perhaps the most complete 
and comprehensive of its kind that had so far appeared, and 
it was remarkable not only for the fullness and minuteness Of 
the anatomical descriptions, but also for the number and ex> 
cellence of the illustrations with which they were elucidated 
During the latter half of his Hie Henle's researches were mainly 
histological in character, his investigations embracing the 
minute anatomy of the blood vessels, serous membranes, kidney, 
eye, nails, central nervous system, ax. He died at Gottingen 
on. the 23th Of May 1885. 



i 



HBNLBY, JOHN (169S-1750)* English clergyman, commonly 
known as " Orator Henley," was born on the 3rd of August 
t6oa at Melton-Mowbray, where his father was vicar. After 
attending the grammar schools of Melton and Oakham, he 
entered St John's College, Cambridge, and while still an under- 
graduate he addressed in February 171a, under the pseudonym 
of Peter de Quir, a letter to the Spectator displaying no small wit 
and humour. After graduating B.A., he became assistant and 
then headmaster of the grammar school of his native town, 
uniting to these duties those of assistant curate. His abundant 
energy found still further expression in a poem entitled Esther, 
Queen of Persia (17 14), and in the compilation of a grammar 
of ten languages entitled The Complete Linguist (3 vols., London, 
1710-1721). He then decided to go to London, where he obtained 
the appointment of assistant preacher in the chapels of Ormond 
Street and Bloomsbury. In 1723 he was presented to the rectory 
of Cbeimondislon in Suffolk; but residence being insisted on, 
he resigned both hi* appointments, and on the 3rd of July 1716 
opened what he called an " oratory " in Newport Market, which 
be licensed under the Toleration Act. In 1729 he transferred 
the scene of his operations to Lincoln's Inn Fields* Into his 
services he introduced many peculiar alterations: he drew up 
a " Primitive Liturgy," in which he substituted for the Nicene 
and Athanaaian creeds two creeds taken from the Apostolical 
Constitutions; for his " Primitive Eucharist " he made use of 
unleavened bread and mixed wine; be distributed at the price of 
one shilling medals of admission to bis oratory, with the device 
of a sun rising to the meridian, with the motto Ad summa, and 
the words/ffwiiuim viam autfaciam below. But the most original 
element in the services was Henley himself, who is described by 
Pope m the Dunciad as 

" Preacher at once and sany of his age?* 
He possessed some oratorical ability and adopted a very theatrical 
style of elocution, M tuning his voice and balancing his hands "; 
and his addresses were a strange medley of solemnity and 
buffoonery, of clever wit and the wildest absurdity, of able and 
original disquisition and the worst artifices of the oratorical 
Charlatan. His services were much frequented by the " free- 
thinkers," and he himself expressed his determination " to die 
a rational" Besides his Sunday sermons, he delivered Wednes- 
day lectures on social and political subjects; and he also pro- 
jected a scheme for connecting with the " oratory " a university 
on quite a Utopian plan. For some time he edited the Hyp 
Doctor, a weekly paper established in opposition to the Crafts* 
man, and for this service he enjoyed a pension of £100 a year 
from Sir Robert Walpole. At first the orations of Henley drew 

Eeat crowds, but, although he never discontinued his services, 
s audience latterly dwindled almost entirely away. He died 
on the 13th of October 1759. 

Henley is the subject of several of Hogarth's prints. His life, 
professedly written by A. Welstede, but in all probability by himself, 
wa» inserted by him in his Oratory Transactions. See I. B. Nichols, 
History of Leicestershire; 1. Disraeli, Calamities of Authors* 

HBNLBY, WILLIAM ERNEST (1840-1903), British poet, 
critic and editor, was born on the 23rd of August 1849 at Glou- 
cester, and was educated at the Crypt Grammar School in that 
city. The school was a sort of Cinderella sister to the Cathedral 
School, and Henley indicated its shortcomings in his article 
{Pall Mall Magazine, Nov. 1000) on T. E. Brown the poet, who 
was headmaster there for a brief period. Brown's appointment, 
uncongenial to himself, was a stroke of luck for Henley, for whom, 
as he said, it represented a first acquaintance with a man of 
genius. " He was singularly kind to me at a moment when I 
needed kindness even more than I needed encouragement" 
Among other kindnesses Brown did him the essential service 
of lending him books. To the end Henley was no classical 
scholar, but bis knowledge and love of literature were vital. 
Afflicted with a physical infirmity, he found himself in 1874, at 
the age of twenty-five, an inmate of the hospital at Edinburgh. 
From there he sent to the CornkiU Magazine poems in irregular 
rhythms, describing with poignant force bis experiences in 
hospital. Leslie Stephen, then editor, being in Edinburgh, 



HENLEY, J.— HENLEY, W. E. 



visited his contributor in hospital and took Robert Louis Steven- 
son, another recruit of the CornkiU, with him. The meeting 
between Stevenson and Henley, and the friendship of which Si 
was the beginning, form one of the best-known episodes in recent 
literature (see especially Stevenson's letter to Mrs SkwtU, 
Jan. 1875, and Henley's poems " An Apparition " and " Envoy 
to Charles Baxter "). In 1877 Henley went to London and 
began his editorial career by editing London, a journal of a 
type more usual in Paris than London, written for the sake of 
its contributors rather than of the public. Among other dis- 
tinctions it first gave to the world The New Arabian Nights of 
Stevenson. Henley himself contributed to bis journal a series 
of verses chiefly in old French forms. He had been wriUntf 
poetry since 1872, but (to he told the world in his u advertise* 
tnent " to his collected Poems, 1898) he "found himself about 
1877 so utterly unmarketable that he had to own himself beaten 
in art and to addict himself to journalism for the next ten years.'* 
After the decease of London, he edited the Magazine of Art iron* 
1882 to 1886. At the end of that period he came before the public 
as a poet. In 1887 Mr Gleeson White made for the popular series 
of Canterbury Poets (edited by Mr William Sharp) a selection 
of poems in old French forms. In his selection Mr Gleeson White 
included a considerable number of pieces from London, and only 
after he had completed the selection did he discover that the 
verses were all by one hand, that of Henley. In the following 
year, Mr H. B. Donkin in his volume Voluntaries, done for an 
East End hospital, included Henley's unrhymed rhythms 
quintessentialuung the poet's memories of the old Edinburgh; 
Infirmary. Mr Alfred Nutt read these, and asked for more; 
and in 1888 his firm published A Booh of Verse. Henley was 
by this time well known in a restricted literary circle, and the 
publication of this volume determined for them his fame as a 
poet, which rapidly outgrew these limits, two new editions of 
this volume being called for within three years. In this same 
year (1888) Mr Fitzroy Bell started the Scots Observer in Edin- 
burgh, with Henley as literary editor, and early in 1889 Mr Bell 
left the conduct of the paper to him. It was a weekly review 
somewhat on the lines of the old Saturday Review, but inspired 
in every paragraph by the vigorous and combative personality 
of the editor. It was transferred soon after to London as the 
National Observer, and remained under Henley's editorship until 
1893. Though, as Henley confessed, the paper had almost as 
many writers as readers, and its fame was mainly confined to 
the literary class, it was a lively and not tuunfluential feature 
of the literary life of its time. Henley bad the editor's great gift 
of discerning promise, and the " Men of the Scots Observer" as 
Henley affectionately and characteristically called his band of 
contributors, in most instances justified his insight. The papefe 
found utterance for the growing imperialism of its day, and 
among other services to literature gave to the world Mr Kipling's 
Barrack-Roam Ballads. In 1890 Henley published Views and 
Reviews, a volume of notable criticisms, described by himself 
as " less a book than a mosiac of scraps and shreds recovered 
from the shot rubbish of some fourteen years of journalism." 
The criticisms, covering a wide range of authors (except Heine 
and Tolstoy, all English and French), though wilful and often 
one-sided were terse, trenchant and picturesque, and remarkable 
for insight and gusto. In 1892 he published a second volume of 
poetry, named after the first poem, The Seng of Ike Sword, but 
on the issue of the second edition (1893) re-christened London 
Voluntaries after another section. Stevenson wrote that he 
had not received the same thrill of poetry since Mr Meredith's 
" Joy of Earth " and " Love in the Valley," and he did not. know 
that that was so intimate and so deep. " I did not guess yon 
were so great a magician. These are new tunes; this is an 
undertone of the true Apollo. These are not verse; they are 
poetry." In 1892 Henley published also three plays written 
with Stevenson— itazN Austin, Deacon Brodie and Admiral 
Guinea. In 1895 followed Macaire, afterwards published In 
a volume with the other plays. Deacon Brodie was produced In 
Edinburgh in 1884 and later in London. Beerbohm Tree produced 
I Beau Austin at the Haymarket on the 3rd of November 1896 



hbnley;on-thames~henna 



271 



uxf Itaeatre at His Majesty's on th€ and Of May loai. Admiral 
6wfneo also achieved stage performance. In the meantime 
Henley was active in the magazines and did notable editorial 
work for the publishers: the Lyra Heroka, 1891; A Book of 
English Pros* (with Mr Charles WhtWey), 1894; the centenary 
Boms (with Mr T.F. Henderson) in 1896-1897, in which Henley's 
Essay (published separately 1808) roused considerable con- 
troversy. In 1892 he undertook for Mr Nutt the general editor- 
ship of the Tudor Translations; and in 1897 began for Mr 
Heinemaim ah edition of Byron; which did not proceed beyond 
one volume of letters. In 7898 he published a collection of his 
Poems in one volume, with the autobiographical "advertise- 
meat " above quoted; in 1899 London Types\ Quatorsains to 
ECtompariy Mr William Nicolson's designs; and in 1000 during 
the Boer War, a patriotic poetical brochure. For Rutland's 
Sake. In 1001 he published a second volume-of collected poetry 
with the title Hxsurthom and Lavender, uniform with the vohmfe 
of 1898. In 1902 he collected his various articles on painters and 
artists and published them as a companion volume of Views 
and Reviews: Art. These with "A Song Of Speed" printed 
in May 1903 within two months of his death make up his tale 
of work. At the close of bis life he was engaged upon his edition 
of the Authorized Version of the Bible fdr his series of Tudor 
Translations. There remained uncollected sdme of Ms scattered 
articles in periodicals and reviews, especially the series Of literary 
articles contributed to the Pall Mali Magcsine from 1899 until 
his death. These contain the most outspoken utterances of a 
critic never mealy-mouthed, and include the splenetic attack on 
the memory of his dead friend R. L. Stevenson, which aroused 
deep regret and resentment. In 1894 Henley lost his little six- 
year-old daughter Margaret; he had borne the " bludgeoning* 
of chance" with the unconquerable soul " of which he boasted, 
not unjustifiably, in a well-known poem; but this blow broke 
his heart. With the knowledge of this fact, some of these out- 
bursts may be better understood; yet we have the evidence of 
a dear-eyed critic who knew Henley well, that he found him 
more generous, more sympathetic at the close of his life than he 
had been before. He died on the nth of July 1903.' In spit* 
of his too boisterous mannerism and prejudices, he exercised 
by his originality, independence and fearlessness an inspiring 
and inspiriting influence on the higher 7 class of journalism. Thfa 
Influence he exercised by word of mouth as well as by his pen, 
for he was a famous talker, and figures as " Burly " ht Stevenson's 
essay on Talk and Totters. As critic he was a good hater and a 
good fighter. His virtue lay In his vital and vitalising love of good 
literature, and the vivid and pictorial phrases be found to give 
ft expression. But Jris fame must rest on his poetry. He excelled 
alike in his delicate experiments fn complicated metres, and the 
Strong impressionism of Hospital Sketches and London Volun- 
taries. The influence of Heine may be discerned in these " un* 
rhymed rhythms "; but he was perhaps a truer and more 
successful disciple of Heine hi his snatches of passionate song, 
the best of which should retain their place in English literature. 

See also references in Stevenson's Letters', Cornhill Magazine (1003) 
(Sidney Low); Fortnightly Review (August 1892) (Arthur Symons); 
and for bibliography, English Illustrated Magazine, vol. xxix. p. 548. 

HKHLKY-ON-fftAMES, a market town and municipal 
borough in the Hepley parliamentary division of Oxfordshire, 
England, on the left bank of the Thames, the terminus of a 
branch of the Great Western railway, by which 5t is 35! m. W. 
of London, while 1 it is 57! m, by river. Pop. (1901) 5984. It 
occupies one of the most beautiful situations on the Thames, 
at the foot of the finery wooded Chiltern Hills. The river is 
crossed by an elegant stone bridge of five arches, constructed 
in 1786. The parish church (Decorated and Perpendicular) 
possesses a lofty tower of intermingled flint and stone, attributed 
to Cardinal Wolsey, but more probably erected by Bishop 
Longland. The grammar school, founded in 1605, is incorporated 
with a Blue Coat schooL Henley is a favourite summer resort, 
and is celebrated for the annual Henley Royal Regatta, the 
principal gathering of amateur oarsmen in England, first held 



in 1839 and usually taking place in Jury. Henley is governed 
by a mayor, 4 aldermen and it countiUots. Area, 549 acres. 

Henley-on-Thames (Hanlegang, Henle, Handky), , not 
mentioned in Domesday, was a manor or ancient demesne of the 
crown and was- granted (1337) to John de Molyns, whose family 
held it for about 250 years, It is said that members for Henley 
sat in parliaments of Edward I. and Edward III., but no writ* 
lave been found. Henry VIIL having granted the use of the 
titles " mayor " and M burgess," the town was incorporated 
m 1 570-1 571 by the name of the warden, portreeves, burgesses 
and commonalty. Henley suffered from both parties in the Civil 
War. William m. on his march to London (1688) rested here 
and received .a deputation from the Lords. The period el 
prosperity in the 17th and x8th centuries was due to manon 
factures of glass and mali, and to trade in corn and wool. Hie 
existing Thursday market was gmnted by a charter of John 
and the existing Corpus Christ! fair by a charterof Henry VL 

See J. 5. Burn, History of HenUy-on-Thanus (London, 1861). 

HENNA, the Persian name for a small shrub found in India, 
Persia, the Levant and along the African coasts of the Mediter- 
ranean, where k is frequently cultivated. It is the Lamonia 
alba of botanists, and from the fact that young- trees are spineless, 
while older ones have the branchlets hardened into spines, It 
has also received the names of Lasvsenia i n e mi s and L. spincsa. 
It forms a slender shrubby plant of from 8 to 10 ft. high, with 
opposite lance-shaped smooth leaves, which are entire at the 
margins, and bears small white four-petalled sweet-scented 
flowers disposed in panicles. Its Egyptian name is Kkema, 
Its Arabic name Al Kkanne, its Indian name Mtndm, while In 
England it is called Egyptian privet, and in the West* ladies, 
where it is naturalized, Jamaica mignonette: 

Henna or Henne is of ancient repute as a cosmetic. This 
consists of the leaves of the Lowfrnia powdered and made up 
into a paste; this is employed by' the Egyptian women, and 
also by the Mahommedan women in India, to dye their finger* 
hails and other parts of their hands and feet of an orange-ted 
colour, which is considered to add to their beauty. The colour 
lasts for three or four weeks, when it requires to be renewed. 
It is moreover used for dyeing the hair and beard, and even the 
manes of horses; and the same material is employed for dyeing 
skins and morocco-leather a reddish-yellow, but it contains no 
tannin. The practice of dyeing the nails was common amongst 
the Egyptians, and not to conform to it would have been con- 
sidered indecent. It has • descended from very remote ages, 
as is proved by the evidence afforded by Egyptian mummies, 
the nails of which are most commonly stained of a reddish hue. 
Henna is also said to have been held in repute amongst the 
Hebrews, being considered to be the plant referred to as camphire 
in the Bible (Song of Solomon i. 14, tv. 13). " The custom of 
dyeing the nails and palms Of the hands and soles of the feet of 
an iron-rust colour with henna," observes Dr J. Forbes Royle, 
"exists throughout the East from the Mediterranean to the 
Ganges, as well as in northern Africa. In some parts the practice 
is not confined to women and children, but is also followed by 
men, especially in Persia. In dyeing the beard the hair is turned 
to red by this application, which is then changed 1 to black by 
a preparation of indigo. In dyeing the hair of children, and the 
tails and manes of horses and asses, the process is allowed to 
stop at the red colour which the henna produces." Mahomet, 
it is said, used henna as a dye for his beard, and the fash km was 
adopted by the caliphs. u The use of henna, M remarks Lady 
Callcott in her Scripture Herbal, " is scarcely to be called a 
caprice in the East. There is a quality in the drug which gently 
restrains perspiration in the hahds and feet, and produces ah 
agreeable coolness equally conducive to health and comfort. 
She further suggests that if tfie Jewish women were not in the 
habit of using this dye before the time of Solomon, it might 
probably have been introduced amongst them by his wife, the 
daughter of Pharaoh, and traces to this probability the allusion 
to "camphire" in the passages in Canticles above referred to. 

The preparation of henna consists in reducing the leaves 
and young twigs to a fine powder, catechu or lucerne leaves 



273 



HENNEBONT— HENRIETTA MARIA 



In a pahrerized state being sometimes mixed with them. When 
required for use, the powder is made into a pasty mass with hot 
water, and is then spread upon the part to be dyed, where it 
is generally allowed to remain for one night. According to Lady 
Callcott, the flowers are often used by the Eastern women to adorn 
their hair. The distilled water from the flowers is used as a 
perfume. 

HENNEBONT, a town of western France, in the department 
of Morbihan, 6m. N.E. of Lorient by road* Pop. (1006) 7250. 
It is situated about 10 m. from the mouth of the Blavet, which 
divides it into two parts—the VUU Clou, the medieval military 
town, and the VUU Neuvc on the left bank and the VieUU VUU 
on the right bank. The Ville Close, surrounded by ramparts 
and entered by a massive gateway flanked by machicolated 
towers, consists of narrow quiet streets bordered by houses of the 
16th and 1 7th centuries. The Ville Neuve, which lies nearer the 
river, developed during the 17th century and later than the 
Ville Close, while the Vieille Ville is older than either. The only 
building of architectural importance is the church of Notre-Dame 
de Paradis (16th century) preceded by a tower with an orna- 
mented stone spire. There are scanty remains of the old fortress. 
Hennebont has a small but busy river-port accessible to vessels 
of 200 to 300 tons. An important foundry in the environs of 
the town employs 1400 work-people in the manufacture of tin- 
plate for sardine boxes and other purposes. Boat-building, 
tanning, diMilling and the manufacture of earthenware, white 
lead and ch e mical manures are also carried on. Granite is worked 
in the neighbourhood. Hennebont is famed for the resistance 
which it made, under the widow of Jean de Montfort, when 
besieged in 1342 by the armies of Philip of Valois and Charles of 
Blois during the War of the Succession in Brittany (see Brittany). 

HBNNBQUIN, PHILIPPE AUGUSTS (1763-1833), French 
painter, was a pupil of David. He was born at Lyons in 1763, 
distinguished himself early by winning the " Grand Prix," and 
left France for Italy. The disturbances at Rome, during the 
course of the Revolution, obliged him to return to Paris, where 
he executed the Federation of the 14th of July, and he was 
at work on a large design commissioned for the town-hall of 
Lyons, when in July 1704 be was accused before the revolutionary 
tribunal and thrown into prison. Hennequin escaped, only to be 
anew accused and imprisoned in Paris, and after running great 
danger of death, seems to have devoted himself thenceforth 
wholly to his profession. At Paris he finished the picture ordered 
for the municipality of Lyons, and in 1801 produced his chief 
work, " Orestes pursued by the Furies " (Louvre, engraved by 
Laadon, AnnaUs du Uusie, vol. i. p. 105). He was one of the 
four painters who competed when in 1802 Gros carried off the 
official price for a picture of the Battle of Nazareth, and in 1608 
Napoleon himself ordered Hennequin to illustrate a series of 
scenes from his German campaigns, and commanded that his 
picture of the " Death of General Salomon " should be engraved. 
After 181 5 Hennequin retired to Liige, and there, aided by 
subventions from the Government, carried out a large historical 
picture of the " Death of the Three Hundred in defence of Liege ' ' — 
a sketch of which he himself engraved. In 1824 Hennequin 
settled at Tournay, and became director of the academy; he 
exhibited various works at Lille in the following year, and 
continued to produce actively up to the day of bis death in 
May 1833. 

HENNBR, JEAN JACQUES (1820-1005), French painter, was 
born on the 5th Of March 1829 at Dornach (Alsace). At first 
a pupil of Drolling and of Picot, he entered the ficole des Beaux- 
Arts in 1848, and took the Prix de Rome with a painting of 
" Adam and Eve finding the Body of Abel " (1858). At Rome 
he was guided by Flandrin, and, among other works, painted 
four pictures for the gallery at Colmar. He first exhibited at 
the Salon in 1863 a " Bather Asleep," and subsequently contri- 
buted " Chaste Susanna " (1865) ; " Byblis turned into a Spring " 
(1867); " The Magdalene " (1878); " Portrait of M. Hayem n 
(1878); " Christ Entombed " (1879); " Saint Jerome " (1881); 
"Herodias" (1887); "A Study" (1891); "Christ in His 
Shroud," and a " Portrait of Carolus-Duran " (1896); a " Portrait 



^MUeFouquier''(i897); < 'TbeL«viteoftbeTribeofEphr«im' f 
(1898), for which a first-class medal was awarded to him; and 
" The Dream " (1900). Among other professional distinction* 
Henner also took a Grand Prix for painting at the Paris Inter* 
national Exhibition of 1900. He was made Knight of the Legion 
of Honour in 1873, Officer in 1878 and Commander in 1889. 
In 1889 he succeeded Cabanel in the Institut de France. 

See E. Bricon, Piychologk d'ari (Paris, J900); C. PhOfipa, Art 
Journal (1888); F. Wedmore, Mataane of Art (1888). 

HENRIETTA MARIA (1600-1666), queen of Charles I. of 
England, born on the 25th of November 1609, was the daughter 
of Henry IV. of France. When the first serious overtures for 
her hand were made on behalf of Charles, prince of Wales, 
in the spring of 1624, she was little more than fourteen years of 
age. Her brother, Louis XIII,, only consented to the marriage 
on the condition that the English Roman Catholics were relieved 
from the operation of the penal laws. When therefore she set 
out for her new home in June 2625, she had already pledged 
the husband to whom she had been married by proxy on the 
xst of May to a course of action which was certain to bring 
unpopularity on him as well as upon herself. 

That husband was now king of England. The early years of 
the married life of Charles L were most unhappy. He soon 
found an excuse for breaking his promise to relieve the English 
Catholics. His young wife was deeply offended by treatment 
which she naturally regarded as unhandsome. The favourite 
Buckingham stirred the flames of his master's discontent. 
Charles in vain strove to reduce her to tame submission. After 
the assassination of Buckingham in 1628 the barrier between the 
married pair was broken down, and the bond of affection which 
from that moment united them was never loosened. The children 
of the marriage were Charles II. (b. 1630), Mary, princess of 
Orange (b. 1631), James IL (b. 1633), Elizabeth (b. 1636), 
Henry, duke of Gloucester (b. 1640), and Henrietta, duchess of 
Orleans (b. 1644)' 

For some years Henrietta Maria's chief interests lay in hex 
young family, and in the amusements of a gay and brilliant 
court. She loved to be present at dramatic entertainments, and 
her participation in the private rehearsals of the Shtpkerf* 
Pastoral, written by her favourite Walter Montague, probably 
drew down upon her the savage attack of Prynne. With polit ical 
matters she hardly meddled as yet. Even her co-religionists 
found little aid from her till the summer of 1637. She had then 
recently opened a diplomatic communication with the see of 
Rome. She appointed an agent to reside at Rome, and a papal 
agent, a Scotsman named George Conn, accredited to her, 
was soon engaged in effecting conversions amongst the English 
gentry and nobility. Henrietta Maria was well pleased to become 
a patroness of so holy a work, especially as she was not asked 
to take any personal trouble in the matter. Protestant E ngland 
took alarm at the proceedings of a queen who associated herself 
so closely with the doings of " the grim wolf with privy paw." 

When the Scottish troubles broke out, she raised money from 
her fellow-Catholics to support the king's army on the borders in 
1639. During the session of the Short Parliament in the spring 
of 1640, the queen urged the king to oppose himself to the House 
of Commons in defence of the Catholics. When the Long Parlia- 
ment met, the Catholics were believed to be the author* and 
agents of every arbitrary scheme which was supposed to have 
entered into the plans of Strafford or Laud. Before the Long 
Parliament had sat for two months, the queen was urging upon 
the pope the duty of lending money to enable her to restore her 
husband's authority. She threw herself heart and soul into the 
schemes for rescuing Strafford and coercing the parliament. 
The army plot, the scheme for using Scotland against England, 
and the attempt upon the five members we're the fruits of her 
political activity. 

In the next year the queen effected her passage to the Continent. 
In February 1643 she landed at Burlington Quay, placed herself 
at the head of a force of loyalists, and marched through England 
to join the king near Oxford. After little more than a year's 
residence there, on the 3rd of April 1644, she left her husband* 



HENRY-r-HENRY II. 



«73 



to see his face no more. Henrietta Maria found a refuge in 
France. Richelieu was dead, and Anne of Austria, wan com- 
passionate. As long as her husband was alive the queen never 
ceased to encourage him to resistance. 

During her exile in France she had much to suffer, Her 
husband's execution in 1649 was a terrible blow. She brought 
up her youngest child Henrietta in her own faith, but her effects 
to induce her youngest son, the duke of Gloucester, to take the 
same course only produced discomfort in the exiled family. The 
story of her marriage with her attached servant Lord Jexmyn 
needs more confirmation than it has yet received to be accepted, 
but all the information which has reached us of her relations with 
her children points to the estrangement which had grown up 
between them. When after the Restoration she returned to 
England, she found that she had no place' in the new* world. 
She received from parliament a grant of £30,1609 a year in com* 
pensation for the loss of her dower-lands, and the. king added 
a similar sum as a pension from himself. In January s66i she 
returned to France to be present at the marriage of her daughter 
Henrietta to the duke of Orleans. In July 1662 she set out again 
for England, and took up her residence once more at Somerset 
House. Her health failed her, and on the 24th of June 1065, she 
departed in search of the dearer air of her native country. She 
died on the 31st of August 1666, at Colombes, not far from Paris. 

See 1. A, Taylor, The Lift of Q*m* Henrietta Maria (4905). 

HENRY (Fr. Henri; Span. Enrique) Ger. Hmnrick; Mid. 
H. Ger. Heinrteh and Hdmrtchy O.H.G. Haimi- or Hdmittk, 
U. " prince, or chief of the house/' fromrO.H.G. krim, the Eog. 
home, and rtk, Goth, res'fcr; compare Lat. rex "kiag"— " rich, 1 ' 
therefore " mighty," and so "a ruler.*' ■ Compose Sans, rtidsh 
" to shine forth, rule, &e." and mod. raj " role" and raja, 
" king ") t the name of many European sovereigns, the more 
important of whom are noticed below in the following order: 
(t) emperors and German kings; (a) kings of England; (3) 
other kings in the alphabetical order of their states; (4) other 
reigning princes in the same order; (5} non-reigning princes; 
(6) bishops, nobles, chroniclers, ftc. 

HENRY I. (*. 876*0367, Surnamed the " Fowler,'' German king, 
son of Otto the Illustrious, duke of Saxony, grew to manhood 
amidthe disorders which witnessed to the decay of the Carolingkn 
empire^ and in early life shared in various campaigns foe the 
defence of Saxony. He married Hatburgy* daughter of Irwin, 
count of Merseburg, but as she had taken the veil on the death 
of a former husband this onion was declared illegal by the church » 
and in 009 he married Matilda, daughter of a Saxon count named 
Thiederich, and a reputed descendant of the hero Widukind. 
On bis father's death in 91* be became; duke of Saxony, which be 
ruled with considerable success, defending it from the attacks 
of the Slavs and resisting the claims of the German king Conrad I. 
(see Saxon?). He afterwards won the esteem of Conrad to such 
an extent that in 018 the king advised the nobles to make the 
Saxon duke his successor. After Conrad's death the Franks 
an< the Saxons met at Fritxlar in May 010 and chose Henry as 
German king, after which the new king refused to allow his election 
to be sanctioned by the church. His authority, save in Saxony, 
was merely nominal; but by negotiation rather than by warfare 
he secured a recognition of his sovereignty from the Bavarians 
and the Swabkns. A straggle soon took place between Henry 
and Charles III., the Simple, king of France, for the possession 
of Lorraine. In 991 Charles: recognised Henry as king of the East 
Franks, arid when in 9*3 the French king was taken prisoner 
by Herbert, count of Vermandois, Lorraine came under Henry's 
authority, and Giselbert, who married his daughter Gerberga, 
was recognized as duke. Turninghis attention to the east, Henry 
reduced various Slavonic tribes to subjection, took Brennibor, 
the modern Brandenburg, from the Hevelli, and secured both 
banks of the Elbe for Saxony. In 923 he had bought a truce for 
ten years with the Hungarians, by a promise of tribute, but on 
its expiration he gained a great victory over these formidable 
foes in March 9334. The Danes were defeated , and territory as far 
as the Eider secured for Germany; and the king sought further 
to extend his influence by entering into relations with the kings 

XIU5* 



of England, Franco and Burgundy. He is said to have been 
contemplating a journey to Rome, when he died at Vemleben on 
the and of Jury 036, and was buried at Quedlinbnrg. By Ids first 
wife, Hatburg, he left a son, Thankmar, who was excluded from 
the succession as. illegitimate; and by Matilda he left three sons, 
the eldest of whom, Otto (afterwards the emperor Otto the Great), 
succeeded him, and two daughters. Henry- was a successful 
ruler, probably because be was careful to Undertake only such 
enterprises as he was able to carry through. Laying more stress 
on his position as duke of Saxony than king of Germany, he 
conferred great benefitx'on his duchy. The rounder of her town 
life and the -creator of her army, he ruled in harmony with her 
nobles and secured her frontiers from attack. The story that he 
received the surname of " Fowler " because the nobles, sent to 
inform Mm of his election to the throne, found him engaged id 
laying snares for the birds, appears to be mythical 

\ 
i 

1 
< 
I 

1 
J 
i 

HENRY II. (073-1024), surnamed the M Saint, " Roman 
emperor, son of Henry IL, the' Quarrelsome, duke of Bavaria, 
and Gisefe, daughter of Conrad, king of Burgundy, or Aries 
<d. 093)1 nnd great-grandson of the German king Henry I., the 
Fbwler, was born on the 4th of May 973. When his' father was 
driven from his duchy in 076 it was intended that Henry should 
take holy orders, and he received the earlier part of * good 
education at Hildesbeim. This fdea, however, Was abandoned 
when his father was restored to Bavaria in 983; but young 
Henry, whose education was completed at Regensburg, retained 
a lively interest in ecclesiastical affairs. He became duke of 
Bavaria on his father's death in 995, and appears to have 
governed his duchy quietly and successfully for seven years. 
Ho showed a special regard for monastic reform and church 
government, accompanied his kinsman, the emperor Otto HI., 
on two occasions to Italy, and about 1001 married Kunigunde 
(d. io3f), daughter of Siegfried, count of Luxemburg. When 
Otto HI. died childless in 1002, Henry sought to secure the 
German* throne, and seising the imperial insignia made an 
arrangement with Otto I., dake of Carinthia. There was con- 
siderable epposkkm to his claim; but one rival, Ekkard I., 
margrave of Meissen, was murdered, and, hurrying to Mains, 
Henry was chosen German king by the Franks and Bavarians 
on the 7th of June 1002, and subsequently crowned by Willigis, 
archbishop of Mains, who had been largely instrumental in 
securing his election. Having ravaged the lands of another rival, 
Hermann II., duke of Swabia, Henry purchased the allegiance 
of the Thuringians and the Saxons; and when shortly afterwards 
the nobles of Lorraine did homage and Hermann of Swabia 
submitted, he was generally recognized as king. Danger soon 
arose' from Boleslaus 1, the Great, king of Poland, who had 
extended his authority over Meissen andLusatia, seized Bohemia; 
and allied himself with some discontented German nobles-, 
including the king's brother, Bruno, bishop of Augsburg. Henry 
easily crushed his domestic foes; but the incipient War with 
Boleslaus was abandoned in favour of an expedition into Italy, 
where Arduin, margrave of Ivrea, had been elected king. Cross- 
ing the Alps Henry met with no resistance from Arduin, and in 
May 1004 he was chosen and crowned king of the Lombards 
at Pa via; but a tumult caused by the presence of the Germans 
soon arose in the city, and having received the homage of several 
cities of Lombardy the king returned to Germany. He then 
freed Bohemia from the rule of the Poles, led an expedition into 
Friesland, and was successful in compelling BoleslxuS to sue 
for peace in 1005. A struggle with Baldwin IV., count of 
Flanders, in 1006 and 1007 was followed by trouble wtth the 
king's brothers-in-law, Dietrich and Adalbero of Luxemburg, 
who had seised respectively the bishopric of Metx and the 



j 



?7+ 



HENRY TIL 



archbishopric of Trier (Treves). • Henry sought to dislodge them, 
but aided by their elder brother Henry, who had been made 
duke of Bavaria in 1004, they held their own* in a desultory 
warfare in Lorraine. In xooo, however, the eldest of the three 
brothers was deprived of Bavaria, while Adalbero had in the 
previous year given up his claim to Trier, but Dietrich retained 
the bishopric of MeU. < The Polish war had been renewed an 
1007, but it was not until xozo that the king was able to take 
a personal part in these campaigns. Meeting with indifferent 
success, he made peace with Boleslaus early in 1013, when the 
duke retained Lusatia, but did homage to Henry at Merseburg. 

In 1013 the king made a second journey to Italy where two 
popes were contending for the papal chair, And meeting with 
no opposition was received with great honour at Rome. Having 
recognised Benedict VIII. as the rightful pope, he was crowned 
emperor on the 14th of February 1014, and soon returned td 
Germany Laden with treasures from Italian cities. But the 
struggle with the Poles now broke out afresh, and in 10 15 and 
10x7 the king, having obtained assistance from the heathen 
Liu t id, led formidable armies against Boleslaus. During the 
Campaign of 1017 be had as ah ally the grand duke of Russia, 
but his troops suffered considerable loss. And on the 30th of 
January 1018 he made peace at Bautzen with Boleslaus, who 
again retained Lusatia. As early as 1006 Henry had concluded 
a succession treaty with his uncle Rudolph III., the childless 
king of Burgundy, or Aries; but when Rudolph desired to 
abdicate in 1016 Henry's efforts to secure possession of the 
territory were foiled by the resistance of the nobles. In xoao 
the emperor was visited at Bamberg by Pope Benedict, in 
response to whose entreaty for assistance against die Greeks of 
southern Italy he crossed the Alps in 1021 tor the third and last 
time. With the aid of the Normans he captured many fortresses 
and seriously crippled the power of the Greeks, but was compelled 
by the ravages of, pestilence among bis troops to return to 
Germany in 1022. It was probably about this time that Henry 
gave Benedict the diploma which ratified the gifts made by his 
predecessors to the papacy. Spending his concluding years 
in disputes over church reform be died on the 13th of July 1024 
at Grona near GcUUngen, and was buried at Bamberg, where 
he had founded and richly endowed a bishopric. 

Henry was an enthusiast for, church reform, and under the 
influence of his friend Odilo, abbot of Cluny, sought to further 
the principles of the Cluniacs, and seconded the efforts of Benedict 
VIII. to prevent the marriage of the clergy and the sale of 
spiritual dignities. He was energetic and capable, but except 
in his relations with the church was not a strong ruler. But 
though devoted to, the church and a strict observer of religious 
rites, he was by no means the slave of the clergy. . He appointed 
bishops without the formality of an election, and attacked 
clerical privileges although he made clerics the representatives 
of the imperial power. He held numerous diets and issued 
frequent ordinances for peace, but feuds among the nobles were 
common, and the frontiers of the empire were insecure. Henry, 
who was the last emperor of the Saxon house, was the first to 
use the title " King of the Romans. " He died childless, and a 
tradition of the 12th century says he and his wife took vows 
of chastity. He was canonized in 1x46 by Pope Eugeuius III. 

Se le- 

buii w. 

Scni on 

Gies >); 

S. I m, 

Jakt ig, 

W 5 

ism r/. 

(GOl 

HENRY HI. (1017-1056), surnamed the "Black," Roman 
emperor, only son of the emperor Conrad II., and Gisela, widow 
of Ernest I., duke of Swabia, was born on the 28th of October 
ioi7i designated as his father's successor in 1026, and crowned 
German king at Aix-la-Chapelle by Pilgrim, archbishop of 
Cologne, on the 14th of April 1028. In 1927 he was appointed 



duke of Bavaria, and hfe early years were mainly spent in thfa 
country, where he received an excellent education under the 
care of Bruno, bishop of Augsburg and, afterwards, of Egilbert, 
bishop of Freising. He soon began to take part in the business 
of the empire. In 1032 he took part in a campaign in Burgundy; 
in X033 led an expedition against Uklrich, : prince of the 
Bohemians; and in June 1036 was married at Nijmwegcn to 
Gunhilda, afterwards called Kunigunde, daughter Of Canute, 
king of Denmark and England. In 1038 he followed his father 
to Italy, and in the same year the emperor formally handed 
over to him the kingdom of Burgundy, or Aries, and appointed 
him duke of Swabia. In spite of the honours which Conrad 
heaped upon Henry the relations between father and son were 
not uniformly friendly,- as Henry disapproved of the emperor's 
harsh, treatment of some of bis allies and adherents. When 
Conrad died in June 1039, Henry became sole ruler- of the 
empire, and his authority was at once recognized in all parts 
of his dominions. Three of the duchies were under his direct 
rule, no rival appeared to contest his claim, and the outlying 
parts of the empire, as well as Germany, ^rere practically free 
from disorder. This peaceful state of affairs was, however, 
soon broken< by the ambition of BrerJslaus, prince of the 
Bohemians, who revived the idea of an. independent Slavonic 
state, and conquered various Polish towns. Henry took up arms, 
and having suffered two -defeats in 1040 renewed the struggle 
with a stronger force in the following year, when be compelled 
Bretislatts to sue for peace and to do homage for Bohemia at 
Regensburg. In 1042 hereceived the homage of the Burgnodlans 
and his attention was then turned to the Hungarians, who bad 
driven out their king Peter:, and set up in his' stead one Abe 
Samuel, or Ovo, who attacked the eastern border of Bavaria. 

In 1043 and the two following years Henry crushed the 
Hungarians, restored Peter, and brought Hungary completely 
under the power of the German king. In 1038 Queen Kuni- 
gunde had died in Italy, and in 1043 the king was married at 
Ingdheim to Agnes, daughter of William V., -duke of Girienne, 
a union which drew him much nearer to the reforming party in 
the church. In 1044 Gothdon (Gozeb), duke of Lorraine, died, 
and. some disturbance arose over Henry's refusal to grant the 
whole of the duchy to his son Godfrey, called the BeaadceL 
Godfrey took up arms, but after a short imprisonment was 
released and confirmed in the possession of Upper. Lorraine in 
1046 which,, however, he failed to secure. About this time 
Henry was invited to Italy where three popes were contending 
for power, and crossing, the Alps with a large army he searched 
to Rome. Councils held at Sutri and at Rome having declared 
the popes deposed, the king secured the election of Suidger, 
bishop of Bamberg, who took the name of Clement H., and by 
this pontiff Henry was crowned as emperor on the 2$tk oi 
December X046. He was immediately recognised by the Roman* 
as Patricias, an office which carried With it at this time the 
right to appoint the pope. Supreme in church and state alike, 
ruler of Germany, Italy and Burgundy, overlord of Hungary 
and Bohemia, Henry occupied a commanding position, and 
this time may be regarded as 'marking the apogee of the power 
of the Roman empire of the Germans. The emperor assisted 
Pope Clement in his efforts to banish simony. He made a 
victorious progress in southern Italy ,whcr* he restored Pandulph. 
IV. to the principality of Capua, and asserted his authority 
over the Normans in Apulia and Avers*. Returning to Germany. 
m 1047 he appointed, two popes*: Damasus IL and .Leo IX., 
in quick suoession, and turned to face a threatening combination 
in the west of the empire, where Godfrey of Lorraine was again 
in revolt, and with the help of Baldwin V., count of Flanders 
and Dirk IV., count of Holland, who had previously caused 
trouble to Henry, was ravaging the lands of the emperor's 
representatives in Lorraine. Assisted, by the kings of England 
and Denmark, Henry succeeded with some .difficulty in bringing 
the rebels to submission in 1050. Godfrey was deposed; but 
Baldwin soon found an opportunity for a further revolt, which, 
an expedition undertaken by the emperor in 1054 was unable 
to crush. 



HENRY IV. 



*7S 



- Meenwhte * reaction against German rnttaence hi 
place in Hungary. King Peler had been driven oat in 1046 
andhis place taken by Andreas L Inroads into Bavaria followed, 
and in 1051 and 105a Henry led his forces Against the Hungarians, 
and after (he pope had vainly attempted to mediate, peace was 
made in 1053. It was quickly broJten, however t*ad the emperor, 
occupied elsewhere, soon lost most of ma authority in the east; 
although in 1054 he made peace between Srestislav of Bohemia 
and Casimir L, duke of the Poles. Henry had not mat sight of 
affairs in Italy during these, years, and had received several 
visas from the pope, whose aim war to .bring southern Italy 
under his own, dominicn. Henry had sent military assistance 
to Leo, and- had handed over to him thr government of the 
principality of Benevento in return Jor tnebiehopejo of Bamberg. 
But the pope's defeat by the Normans was followed by hb death; 
Henry then nominated Gebherd, bishop of Eichatidt, who took 
the nam* of Victor II., t* the. vacant chair, and promised his 
assistance to the reluctant candidate. Ja xo$$ the emperor; 
went a second time to July, where his authority was threatened 
by Godfrey of Lorraine, who had- married Beatrice, widow of 
BojaUace.IU., margrave of Tuscany, aad waa ruling her vast 
estate*. Godfrey fled, however, on the appearance of Henry, 
who only remained a short time in Italy, during Which he granted 
the duchy of Spoleto to Pope Victor, and negotiated for am 
attack upon the Normans. Before the journey to Italy, Henry 
had found it necessary to depose Conrad HI., duke of Bavaria, 
aad to suppress a rising in southern Germany. During his 
absence Conrad formed an alliance with Welf , duke of Carinthia, 
and GeblMrdIII n bishop of Regensburg. A conspiracy to depose 
the em peror, support for which was found in Lorraine, was 
quickly discovered, aad Henry, leaving Victor as his repre- 
sentative in Italy, returned in 105s to Germany to receive the 
snftnrisatoa of his foes. In 1056, the emperor was viafted by 
the pope; and on the 5th of October in the same year he died 
at Bodfetd and was buried at Spires. Henry was a pious and 
peace-loving prince, who favoured church re form, sought earnestly 
to suppress private warfare, and alone among the early emperors 
b aeid to have been innocent of simony. Although under his 
rok Germany enjoyed considerable tranquillity, and a period 
of wealth and progress set in for the towns, yet his secular and 
ecclesiastical policy showed signs of weakness. Unable, or 
unwitting, seriously to curb the increasing power of the church, 
he alienated the sympathies of the nobles as a class, and by 
allowing the southern duchies to pass into other hands restored 
a power which true to its traditions was not always friendly 
to the royal house. Henry was a patron of learning, a founder 
of schools, and built or completed cathedrals at Spires, Worms 
and Mains. 

The chief original authorities for the life and reign of Henry 
HI. ere the Ckreniam of Herifnadn of Refchenau, the Annaks 
St n& l lm s ts majores t the AtmaUs HildMtmmtmes, all in the 
Uonumenta Gtrmanuu Uutorica. Scriptores (Hanover and Berlin, 
1826 fol). The best modern authorities are W. von Giescbrecht, 
Gtsckkkte der dndscken Kaiserseit, Band n. (Leipzig, 1888); M. 
Perlbach, M Die Kriege Heinrichs III. gegen Bahmen," in the 
frrtchunten sur deutstken Gestkickie, Band x. (Gottingen, i86*~ 
1886): E. Steindorff, Jahrbucbtr its itutscken BcUks uukr Htinrich 
TTI. (Leipzig, 1874-1881); and F. Steinhoff, Das Kiniithum und 
Kaisertkum Heinrichs III. (Gdttingen, I865). 

HENRY IY. (1050-1 106), Roman emperor, son of the emperor 
Henry III. and Agnes, daughter of William V., duke of Guienne, 
was bora on the nth of November 1050, chosen German king 
at Tribur in 105,), and crowned at Aix-la-ChapeQe on the 17th 
of July 1054. In 1055 he was appointed duke of Bavaria, 
and on his father's death in October 1056 inherited the kingdoms 
of Germany, Italy and Burgundy. These territories were 
governed in his name by his mother, who was unable to repress 
the internal disorder or to take adequate measures for their 
defence. Some opposition was soon aroused, and in 1062 Anno, 
archbishop of Cologne, and others planned to seise the person 
of .the young king and to deprive Agnes of power. This plot 
met with complete success. Henry, who was at Kaiserwerth, 
was persuaded to board a boat lying in the .Rhine; it waa 



imme dia te ly anmoored and the king sprang into the stream, but 
was aeacued by one of the conspirators and carried to Cologne. 
Agnes made no serious effort to regain her control, and the 
chief authority was exercised for a time by Anno; but his rule 
proved unpopular, and he waa soon compelled to share his power 
with Adalbert, archbishop of Bremen. The education and 
training ei Henry were supervised by Anno, who was called .his 
ssngMfsr, while .Adalbert was styled p&otms; but Anno waa 
ctfauaed by Henry, and during his absence in Italy the chief 
power passed into the hands of Adalbert. Heriry'a education 
Seems to have jten neglected, and his wilful and headstrong 
nature waa developed by the pnftditions under which his early 
years were ps a s tri . In March 1065 be waa declared of age, and 
in the foHowingi year a powerful coalition of ecclesiastical and 
lay nobles brought about the baabhment>of Adalbert from court 
and the return of Anno to power. In 1066 Henry was persuaded 
to marry Bertha* daughter of O^to, count of Savoy, to whom he 
had been betrothed since 1055. For some time he regarded 
his wife with strong dislike and sought in vain for a divorce; 
but after she had borne him a son in 1071 she gained his affections, 
and became his meat trusted friend and companion, 

In 1060 the king took the reins of government into his own 
hands. He recalled Adalbert to court; fed eipecHtmna against 
the Lhttid, and against Dedo or Dedi IL, margrave of a district 
east of Saxony; and soon afterwards quarrelled with Rudolph, 
duke of Swabia, and Berthotd, duke of Carinthia, Much more 
serious was Henry's struggle with Otto of Nordhcim, duke of 
Bavaria. This prince, who occupied an influential position in 
Germany, was accused in 1070 by a certain Egino of being 
privy to a plot to murder the king. It was decided that a trad 
by battle should take 'place at Goskr, but when the demand 
of Otto for a safe conduct for himself and his followers, to and 
from the place of meeting, was refused, he declined to appear. 
He waa thereupon declared deposed in Bavaria, and his Saxon 
estates were plundered. He obtained sufficient support, however, 
to carry on a struggle with the king in Saxony and Thuringja 
until 1071, when he submitted at Halberstadt. Henry aroused 
the hostility of the Thuringjans by s u ppor ti ng Siegfried, arch- 
bishop of Mains, in hb efforts to exact tithes from them; but 
stiU more formidable was the enmity of the Saxons, who had 
several causes of complaint against the king. He was the son 
of one enemy, Henry III., and the friend of another, Adalbert 
of Bremen. He had ordered a restoration of all crown lands 
in Saxony and had built forts among this people, while the 
country was ravaged to supply the needs of hb courtiers, and 
its duke Magnus was a prisoner in hb bands. AH classes were 
united against him, and when the struggle broke out in 107$ 
the Thuringians joined the Saxons; and the war, which lasted 
with sfight intermissions until 2088, exercised a most potent 
influence upon Henry's fortunes elsewhere (see Saxohy). 

Henry soon found himself confronted by an abler and more 
stubborn antagonist than either Thuringian or Saxon. In 1073 
Hildebrand became pope as Gregory VIL Two years later 
this great ecclesiastic issued hb memorable prohibition of lay 
Investiture, and the blow then struck at the secular power by 
the papacy threatened seriously to undermine the imperial 
authority. Spurred on by hb advisers, Henry did not refuse the 
challenge. Threatened with the papal ban, he summoned a 
synod of German bishops which' met at Worms m January 1076 
and declared Gregory deposed; and ha wrote hb famous letter 
to the pope, in which be referred to him as u not pope, but false 
monk." The king was at once excoramuwratedL Hb adherents 
gradually fell away, the Saxons were again in arms, and Otto of 
Nordhcim succeeded in uniting the malcontents of north and 
south Germany. In October 1076 an important diet met at 
Tribur, and after discussing the deposition of the king, decided 
that he should be judged by an assembly to be held at Augsburg 
in the following February under the presidency of the pope. Thb 
union of the tesaporal and spiritual forces waa too strong for the 
king, and he decided to submit. 

Crossing the Alps, Henry appeared in January 1077 as a 
penitent before the castle of Caaoasa, where Gregory had taken 



2j6 



HENRY IV. 



refuge. The story of this famous occurrence, which represents 
thekingmtandingintheeourtyafdof the castle for throe days in 
the snow, clad as a penitent, and entreating to be admitted to the 
pope's presence, is now regarded as mythical in its details; but 
there is no doubt that the king visited the castle at intervals, and 
prayed for admission for three days until the a8th of January, 
when he was received by Gregory and absolved, after promising 
to submit to the pope's authority and to secure for him a safe 
journey to Germany. No historical incident has more profoundly 
impressed the imagination of the Western world. It marked the. 
highest point reached by papal authority, and presents a vivid 
picture of the awe inspired during the middle ages by the super- 
natural powers supposed to be wielded by the church. 
( Scorned by his Lombard alUes, Henry left Italy to find that in 
his absence Rudolph, duke of Swabia, had been chosen German 
king; and although Gregory had taken no part in this election, 
Henry sought to prevent fbe pope's journey to Germany, and 
Regaining courage, tried to recover his former position. Supported 
by most of the German bishops and by the Lombards, now 
reconciled to him, and recognised in Burgundy, Bavaria and 
Franconia, Henry (who at this time is referred to by Kruno, the 
author of D* beth Saxonict, as exrex) appeared stronger than his 
rival Rudolphs but the ensuing war was waged with varying 
success. He was beaten at Mellrichstadt in 1078, and at 
Flarcnhefm in 1080, but these defeats were due rather to the 
fierce hostility of the Saxons, and the military skill of Otto of 
Nordheim, than to any general sympathy with Rudolph. 
Gregory's attitude remained neutral, in spite of appeals from 
both sides, until March* 1080, when he again excommunicated 
Henry, but without any serious effect on the fortunes of the king. 
At Henry's initiative, Gregory was declared deposed on three 
occasions, and an anti-pope was elected in the person of Wibert, 
archbishop of Ravenna, who took the name of Clement HI. 

The death of Rudolph in October 1080, and a consequent lull in 
the war, enabled the king to go to Italy early in xo8t. He found 
considerable support in Lombardy; placed Matilda, marchioness 
of Tuscany, the faithful friend of Gregory, under the imperial 
ban; took the Lombard crown at Pa via; and secured the 
recognition of Clement by a council. Marching to Rome, he 
undertook the siege of the dty, but was soon compelled to retire 
to Tuscany, where he granted privileges to various cities, and 
obtained monetary astismnrr from a new ally, the eastern 
emperor, Alexias I. A second and equally unsuccessful attack 
on Rome was followed by a war of devastation in northern Italy 
with. the adherents of Matilda; and towards the end of 1082 the 
king made a third attack on Rome. After a siege of seven months 
the Leonine city fell into his hands. A treaty was concluded 
■with the Romans, who agreed that the quarrel between king and 
pope should be decided by a synod, and secretly bound them- 
selves to induce Gregory to crown Henry as emperor, or to choose 
another pope. Gregory, however, shut up in the castle of St 
Angefo, would hear of no compromise; the synod was a failure, 
as Henry prevented the attendance of many of the pope's 
supporters; and the king, in pursuance of his treaty with 
Alexius, marched against the Normans. The Romans soon fell 
away from their allegiance to the pope; and, recalled to the city, 
Henry entered Rome in March 1084, after which Gregory was 
declared deposed and Clement was recognized by the Romans. 
On the 31st of March 1084 Henry was crowned emperor by 
Clement, and received the patrician authority. His next step 
was to attack the fortresses stfll in the hands of Gregory. The 
pope was saved by the advance of Robert Guiscard, duke of 
Apulia, with a large force, which compelled Henry to return 
to Germany. 

Meanwhile the German rebels had chosen a fresh anti-king, 
Hermann, count of Luxemburg, whom Henry's supporters had 
already driven to his last line of defence in Saxony. During the 
campaign of 1086 Henry was defeated near Wurxburg, but in 
1088 Hermann abandoned the struggle and the emperor was 
generally recognized in Saxony, to which country he showed 
considerable clemency. Although Henry's power was in the 
ascendent, a tew powerful nobles adhered to the cause of Gregory's 



successor, Urban TI. Among thorn wasWetf, sort of WeUI.,the 
deposed duke of Bavaria, whom marriage with Matilda of 
Tuscany rendered him too formidable to be neglected. The 
emperor accordingly returned to Italy in 1090, where Mantua 
and Milan were taken, and Pope Clement was restored to Rome. 
Henry's co mm un i cat io ns with Germany were, however,threatened 
by a league of the Lombard cities, and his anxieties were soon 
augmented by domestic troubles. 

Henry's first wife had died in 1087, and in 1089 he had married 
a Russian princess, Fraxedis, afterwards called Adelaide. Her 
conduct soon aroused his suspicions, and his own eldest son, 
Conrad, who bad been crowned German king in 1087, was thought 
to bea partner in her guilt. Escaping from prison, Adelaide fled 
to Henry's enemies and brought • grave charges against her 
husband; while the papal party induced Conrad to desert his 
father and to be crowned' king of Italy at Monca in 1093. 
Crushed by this blow, Henry remained almost helpless and 
inactive in northern Italy for five years, until 1097, when having 
lest every shred of authority ia that country, he returned to 
Germany, where his position was stronger than ever. Weu* had 
submit ted,had forsaken the cause of Matilda and had been restored 
to Bavaria, and in 1008 the diet assembled at Mains declared 
Conrad deposed, and chose the emperor's second son, Henry, 
afterwards the emperor Henry V., as German king. The crusade 
of 1006 had freed Germany from many turbulent spirits, and the 
emperor, meeting with some success in his efforts to restore order, 
could afford to ignore his repeated excommunication. Asuccess- 
ful campaign in Flanders was followed in 1 103 by a diet at Mains, 
where serious efforts were made to restore peace, and Henry 
himself promised to go on crusade. But this plan was shattered 
by the revolt of the younger Henry in 1104, who, encouraged by 
the adherents of the pope, declared he owed no aUegtanm to an 
excommunicated father. Saxony and Tburingia were soon ia 
arms, the bishops held mainly to the younger Henry, while the 
emperor was supported by the towns. A desultory warfare was 
unfavourable, however, to the emperor, who, deceived by false 
promises, became a prisoncrin the hands of his son in 110$. The 
diet met at MainxiriDecember,when he was compelled to abdicate; 
but contrary to the conditions, he was detained at Ingeiheim and 
denied hi* freedom. Escaping to Cologne, he found considerable 
support in theiower RHneland; he entered into negotiations with 
England, France and Denmark, and was engaged in collecting an 
army when he died at Liege on the 7th of August 1 xod. His body 
was buried by the bishop of liege with suitable ceremony, but by 
command of the papal legate it was unearthed, taken to Spirts, 
and placed in an uncoosecrated chapel. After being released from* 
the sentence of excommunication the remains were buried in 
the cathedral of Spires in August xitx. 

Henry IV. was very licentious and in his early years was 
careless and self-willed, but better qualities were developed in 
his later life. He displayed much diplomatic ability, and ms 
abasement at Canossa may fairly be regarded as a move of policy 
to weaken the pope's position at the cost of a personal humiliation 
to himself. He was always regarded as a friend of the lower 
orders, was capable of generosity and gratitude, and snowed 
considerable military skill. Unfortunate in the time in which 
he lived, and in the troubles with which he had to contend, he 
holds an honourable position in history as a monarch who resisted 
the excessive pretensions both of the papacy and of the ambitious 
feudal fords of Germany. 

The authorities for the life and reign of Henry are Lambert of 
Hersfeld, AnnsUr, Bernold of Rdcheoau, Ckronuxm; Ekkehard of 
Aura. Ckronicon; and Bruno, De bclh Saxonico, which gives several 
of the more important letters that passed between Henry and 
Gregory VII. These are all found in the Monument* Gtrmamim 
kistorUa. Scriptons, Binde v. and vL (Hanover and Berlin, 1&36- 
1893). There is an anonymous Vila Hemrici IV., edited by W. 
Wattenbach (Hanover, 1876). The best modern authorities are: 



IV. (KarUrubc, 18&): K. W.'Nittach. *' Das deutsche Rdch un* 
Heinrich IV.," in the Historisch* Zettsckrifi, Band xlv. (Munich. 
1859); H. Ulnrann, ZuM VerstOrffniss der stehslschen Erhebmtg 
ftjtff Hci*rkMIV. (Hanover, 1B86), W. von Gteebrecht, Q-ckkkm 



HINRYV.: 



*77 



^4^09*^ Atotti (UH, satr-ftae); B. <iebhsrdt, HeueV 
s *r otafseam GmskukU (Berlin, 1901). For a h*t of other 
works, especially those on the relations between Henry and Gregory . 
see Dahlmann-Waitx, QutlUnkunde der deutschen Geschichr* (Got- 
tinge*. 1894). (A.W.H.*) 

HURT V. (1081-1x25), Roman emperor, son of the emperor 
Henry IV., was bora on the 8th of January io8r, sad After 
the rtvoit and deposition of his elder brother, the German king 
Conrad (d. 1x01), was chosen ss his successor in xoo& He 
promised to take no part in the bounces of the Empire during 
Us fsthert lifetime, sad was crowned at Ais^Osspene oa 
the otjrof January 1099. la spite ofhit oath Henry waslnduced 
by Ins father's enemies to revolt In r 104, and some oi the princes 
citd aonmge to him rt Maoism January xxoo: in August of the 
swnte year the elder Henry died, when his son became tote ruler 
of the Empire. Order was soon restored in Germany, the citisens 
of Cologne were punished by a fine, and an expedition against 
Robert IL, count of Flanders, brought this rebel to his knees. 
In 1x07 a campaign, which was only partial^ successful, was 
undertaken to restore BoKwoj IL to the dukedom of Bohemia, 
and in the year following the king led hie forces into Hungary, 
where he failed to take Pressburg. In 1109 ho was unable to 
compel the Poles to renew their a ccu s tome d tribute, but in 
uto he succeeded m securing the dukedom of Bohemia for 
LadislausL 

The mam interest of Henry's reign centres in the controversy 
over lay investiture, which had caused * serious dispute during 
the previous reign. The papal party who had supported Henry 
m Ms resistance to his father hoped he would assent to the 
decrees of the pope, which had been renewed by Paschal IL at 
the synod of Goastalla sn noe. The king, however, continued 
to invest the bishops, but wished the pope to hold a council in 
Germany to settle the question. Paschal after some hesltatioa 
pr ef erred France to Germany; and, after holding a council at 
Troyes, renewed his prohibition of lay investiture. The matter 
slumbered until mo, when* negotiations between king and pope 
having failed, Paschal renewed Ins decrees and Henry went to 
Italy with a large army. Tiiestiecgth of his forces bdped hunt© 
secure general recogaitionin Lombsrdy, and at Sutit be concluded 
an arrangement with Paschal by which he renounced the right 
of investiture in return for a promise of coronation, and the 
■estoimtion to the Empireof all lands given by kings, or emperors, 
to the German church since the time of Charlemagne. It was a 
treaty impossible to execute, and Henry, whose consent to it 
b said to have been conditional on its acceptance by the princes 
and bishops of Germany, probably foresaw that it would occasion 
a breach between the German clergy and the pope. Having 
enteted Rome and sworn' the usual oaths, the king presented 
himself at St Peter's on the 12th of February xxu for his 
coronation and the ratification ot the treaty. The words com- 
TY^rKig the clergy to restore the fiefs of the crown to Henry 
were read amid a tumult of indignation, whereupon the pope 
refused to crown the king, who in return declined to hand over 
his renunciation of the right of investiture. Paschal was seised 
by Henry's soldiers and, in the general disorder into which the 
city was thrown, an attempt to liberate the pontiff was thwarted 
in a struggle during which the king himself was wounded. Henry 
then left the dty carrying the pope with him ; and Paschal's failure 
to obtain assistance drew from him a confirmation of the king's 
right of investiture and a promise to crown him emperor. The 
coronation ceremony accordingly took place on the 13th of 
April xxtx, aftef which the emperor returned to Germany, 
where he sought to strengthen his power by granting privileges 
to the inhabitants of the region of the upper Rhine. 

In ma Lothair, duke of Saxony, toso in arms against Henry, 
but was easily quelled: In 11 13, however, a quarrel over the 
succession to the counties of Weimar and Orlamttnde gave, 
occasion for a fresh outbreak on the part of Lothair, whose troops 
were defeated at Warastidt, after which the duke was pardoned. 
Having been married at Mainz on the 7th of January 1114 to' 
Matilda, or Maud, daughter of Henry I., king of England, the 
emperor was confronted with a further rising, initiated by the 



citizens of Cologne, who were soon joined by the Saxons and 
others. Henry failed to take Cologne, his forces were defeated 
at Welf eaholz on the uih of February 1115, and complications 
in Italy compelled him to leave Germany to the care of Frederick 
II. of Hohenstaufen, duke of Swabia, and his brother Conrad, 
afterwards the German king Contod HL After the departure 
of Henry from Rome In 1 1 r x a council had declared the privilege 
of lay investiture, which had been extorted from Paschal, to 
be invalid, and Guido, archbishop ot Vienne, excommunicated 
the emperor and called upon the pope to ratify tins sentence. 
Paschal, however, refused to take so extreme s step; and the 
quarrel entered upon a new stage in xrr$ when Matilda, daughter 
and heiress of Boniface, margrave of Tuscany,- died leaving; hot 
vast estates to the papacy. Crossing the Alps fax xtte Henry 
won the support of town and noble by privileges to the one and 
presents to the other, took possession of Matildas lands, and was 
gladly received in Rome. By this time Paschal had withdrawn 
his consent to lay investiture and the excoottnuracarien had been 
published in Rome; but the pops was compelled to try from the 
dty, Some' of the cardinals withstood the emperor, but by 
means of bribes he broke dewn the opposition* and was crowned 
a second time by Burdraaa, archbishop of Brags, Meanwhile 
the defeat at Welfeahols had given heart to Henry's enemies; 
many of his supporters, especially among the bishops, fell away; 
the excommunication was published at Cologne, and the pope, 
with the assistance of the Normans, began to make war. lb 
January 11 18 Paschal died and was succeeded by Gelasfur H. 
The emperor immediately returned from northern Italy to Rome. 
But as the new pope escaped from the dty, Henry, despairing 
of making a treaty, secured the election of an entCpope who look 
the name of Gregory VHI^ and who was left in possession ef 
Rome when the emperor returned across the Alps m xxiS. 
The opposition in Germany was gradually crushed and a general 
peace declared at Tribur, while the desire for a settlement ef 
the investiture dispute was growing. Negotiations, begun at 
WUrsburg, were continued at Worms, where the new pope, 
Calfattus II., was represented by Cardinal Lambert, bishop ef 
Ostia. In the concordat of Worms, signed in September list. 
Henry renounced the right of investiture with ring and crosier, 
recognised the freedom of election of the clergy and promised 
to restore all church property. The pope agreed to allow elections 
to take place in presence of the imperial envoys, and the investi- 
ture with the sceptre to be granted by the emperor as a symbol 
that the estates of the church were held under the crown. Henry, 
who had been solemnly excommunicated at Reims by Calixtus 
in October xxxo, was received again into the communion of the 
church, after he had abandoned his nominee, Gregory, to defeat 
and banishment. The emperor's concluding years were occupied 
with a campaign in Holland, and with a quarrel over the succes- 
sion to the margraviate of Meissen, two disputes m which bis 
enemies were aided by Lothair of Saxony. In 1134 he led an 
expedition against King Louis VI. of France, turned his arms 
against the citisens of Worms, and on the 23rd of May ir*s 
died at Utrecht and was burled at Spires. Having no children, 
he left his possessions to his nephew, Frederick II. of Hohen- 
staufen, duke of Swabia, and on his death the line of Franconias, 
or Salisn, emperors became extinct. 

The character of Henry is unattractive. His love of power 
was. inordinate; he was wanting in generosity, and he did not 
shrink from treachery in pursuing his ends. 

The chief authority for the life and reign of Henry V. if Ekkehard 
of Aura, Chronicon, edited by G. Waits in the Monvmenta 
Germaniae historica. Scriptures, Band vL /Hanover and Berlin, 
1826-1892). See also W. von Gwsebrecht, GesekiekU ier imttmhn 
Kaiseneit, Band ill <Lfip*ig. 1881-1800); L. von l^tntoe, Weft- 



gesrhiehte, pt, vii. (l^pilgTi886 j ; M. Manitius, Deutsche Geschichte 
(Stuttgart, r88o); G. Meyer von Knonau, Jahrb&cher des deutschen 
Reiches unter Heiurich IV. und Heinrick K. (Leipzig, l8co)r B. 
Gervais, Pohtbch* GexMchH DemtsckUnds Unter dtr Retmun? der 



Kauer Hefrrich V, und JLotkar UL q>ip«g, 1841-1043) ; G» P<Ucr. 
Der devtsche Investiturstreit unter Katser Hewnch V. (Berlin, 188a); 
C. Stutzer, M Zur KritJk der Investiturverhandlangen Jkn Jahre 
tito," in the Forschungen sur deutschen Gesthilhu, Band xvid. 
(Gottingee, 1862-1886); T. von Sickd and H. Bresstan* u Ofe 



J 



278 



HENRY Vt-VII. 



katserliche Ausfertifung des Wo/maer KoakonUu," in the 
tungen des Institute fit EsUrreicUschi GtsckickUf orrtkunr (In 
1880); B. Gebhardt. Handbuck der deutscken GeuMckie. Band L 
(Berlin, 1901), and E. Beraheim, Zmr GexkickH des Wormier 
Konkordats (Gouingen, 1876). 



KEHRT VI. (1165-1x97), Roman emperor, sod of the emperor 
Frederick I. and Beatrix, daughter, of Renaud III., count of 
upper Burgundy, was born at Nijmwegen, and educated under 
the care of Conrad of Querfurt, afterwards bishop of HUdesheim 
and Wuraburg. Chosen German king, or king of the Romans, 
at Bamberg in June 1169, he was crowned at Au-la-Chapclle 
on the 15th of August 1169, invested with lands in Germany 
in 1 179, and at Whitsuntide 1184 his knighthood was celebrated 
in the most magnificent manner at Mains. Frederick was anxious 
to associate his son with himself in the government of theempire, 
and when he left Germany in 1x84 Henry remained behind as 
regent, while his father sought to procure his coronation from 
Pope Lucius III, The pope was hesitating when he heard that 
the emperor had arranged a marriage between Henry and 
Constance, daughterof the late king of Sicily, Roger I., and aunt 
and heiress of the reigning king, William IL; and this step, 
which threatened to unite Sicily with Germany, decided him to 
refuse the proposal. This marriage took place at Milan on the 
37th of January 1186, and soon afterwards Henry was crowned 
king of Italy. The claim of Henry and his wife on Sicily was 
recognised by the barons of that kingdom; and having been 
recognized by the pope as Roman emperor elect, Henry returned 
to Germany, and was again appointed regent when Frederick 
set out on crusade in May x 189. His attempts to bring peace to 
Germany were interrupted by the return of Henry the Lion, 
duke of Saxony, in October 1x89, and a campaign against him 
was followed by a peace made at Fulda in July 1 100. 

Henry's desire to make this peace was due to the death of 
William of Sicily, which was soon followed by that of the emperor 
Frederick. Germany and Italy alike seemed to need the king's 
presence, but for him, like all the Hohenstaufen, Italy bod the 
greater charm, and having obtained a promise of his coronation 
from Pope Clement III. he crossed the Alps in the winter of 
, 1 xoo. He purchased the support of the cities of northern Italy, 
but on reaching Rome he found Clement was dead and his 
su c cessor, Celestine III., disinclined to carry out the engagement 
of his predecessor. The strength of the German army and a 
treaty made between the king and the Romans induced him, 
however, to crown Henry as emperor on the 14th of April 1191. 
The aid of the Romans had been purchased by the king's promise 
to place in their possession the city of Tusculum, which they bad 
attacked in vain for three years. After the ceremony the 
emperor fulfilled this contract, when the city was destroyed and 
many of the inhabitants massacred. Meanwhile a party in Sicily 
had chosen Tancred, an illegitimate son of Roger, son of King 
.Roger II. r as their king, and he had already won considerable 
authority and was favoured by the pope. Leaving Rome Henry 
met with no resistance until he reached Naples, which he was 
unable to take, as the ravages of fever and threatening news 
from Germany, where his death was reported, compelled him to 
raise the siege. In December uoi he returned to Germany. 
Disorder was general and a variety of reasons induced both the 
Welfs and their earlier opponents to join in a general league 
against the emperor. Vacancies in various bishoprics added to 
the confusion, and Henry's enemies gained in numbers and 
strength when it was suspected that he was implicated in the 
murder of Albert, bishop of Liege. Henry acted energetically 
in fighting this formidable combination, but his salvation came 
from the captivity of Richard I., king of England, and the skill 
with which he used this event to make peace with his foes; and, 
when Henry the Lion came to terms in March 1194, order was 
restored to Germany. 

In the following May, Henry made his second expedition to 
Italy, where Pope Celestine had definitely espoused the canse of 
Tancred. The ransom received from Richard enabled him to 
equip a large army, and aided by a fleet fitted out by Genoa and 
Pisa he aeon secured a complete mastery over the Italian main- 



Wfcev he reached SfcaVh*-f«*nd Taocttd dead, and) 

meeting with very little resistance, he entered Palermo, where 
he was crowned king on Christmas day 1 194. A stay of a few 
months' duration enabled Henry to settle the affairs of the 
kingdom; and leaving his wife, Constance, as regent, and 
appointing many Germans to positions of influence, h* rettscoed 
to Germany in June 1193. 

Having established his position in Germany and Italy, Henry 
began to cherish ideas of universal empire. Richard off 
hod already owned bis supremacy, and dtHaring 
compel the king of France to do the tone Henry sought to Mat 
up strife between France and England. Nor did the Spanish 
kingdoms escape his notice. Tunis and Tripoli went -Hmimri. 
and when the eastern emperor, Isaac Angelas, naked his help, 
he demanded in return the cession of the Balkan prninswai 
The kings of Cyprus and Armenia asked for Investiture at his 
hands; and in general Henry, in the words of a Byaanrine 
chronicler, put forward his demands an * the lord of alliordi, 
the king of all longs." To oomplete this scheme two step* wen 
necessary, a esconcusmtian with the pope and the recognition of 
his young son, Frederick, as his successor in the Empire. The 
first was easily accomplished; the second was more dixlcuxt* 
After attempting to suppress the renewed disorder in Germany* 
Henry met the princes at Worms in December 1195 and put ins 
proposal before them. In spite of promises they disliked too 
suggestion as tending to draw them into Sicilian troubles, and 
avoided the emperor's displeasure by postponing their answer* 
By threats or negotiations, however, Henry won the consent of 
about fifty princes; but though the diet which met *t Wuxzborg 
in April 1x96 agreed to the scheme, the vigorous opposition of 
Adolph, archbishop of Cologne, and others rendered it inopera* 
live.- In June 1x96 Henry went again to Italy, sought vainly 
to restore order in the north, and tried to persuade the pope to 
crown his son who hod been chosen king of the Romans at 
Frankfort. Celestine, who had many causes of complaint against 
the emperor and his vassals, refused. The emperor then went 
to the south, where the oppression of his German officials had 
caused an insurrection, which was put down with terrible cruelty* 
At Messina on the 28th of September 1x97 Henry died from 
a cold caught whilst hunting, and was buried at Palermo, 
He was a man of small frame and delicate constitution, but 
possessed considerable mental gifts and was skilled in knightly 
exercises. His ambition was immense, and to attain hi 
ends be often resorted deliberately to cruelty and treachery. 
His chief recreation was hunting, and he also found pleasure 
in the society of the Minnesingers and in writing poems* 
which appear in F. H. von der Hagen's Minnesinger (Leipzig, 
1838). He left an only son Frederick, afterwards tha emperor 
Frederick II. 

The chief authorities for the life and reign of Henry Vt. are Otto of 
Freising, Ckronicon, continued by Otto of St Blatius; Godfrey of 
Viterbo, Gtsta Friderici J. and Gesta Heinrici VI.; Giaelbert of 
Mons, Ckronicon Hanoniense, all of which appear in the Monu- 
ment* Cer maniac historicc Scriptores, B&ode xx.. xxi., x%Ti. 
(Hanover and Berlin, 1826-1892), and the various annats of the time. 

The best modern authorities are: W. von Gieaebrecht, GosckichM 
der deutscken KaiseneU, Band iv. (Brunswick. 1877); T. Toccfae, 
Kaiser Hnnrick VI. (Utpsig, 1867); H. Bloch, JForschnnmrn zuw 
Politik Kaiser Heinricks V/T (Berlin. 180*). and K. A. Kncller, 
Des Richard Lowenkerx deutstke Gejanrenschafl (Freiburg, 1893). 

HENRY VTI. (c. 1269-13x3), Roman emperor, son of Henry 
III., count of Luxemburg, was knighted by Philip IV., kins «f 
France, and passed his early day* under French intact***, 
while the French language was his mother-tongue. His: fathjer 
was killed in battle in x a88, and Henry: ruled his tiny inheritance 
with justice and prudence, but came into collision with the 
citizens of Trier over a question of tolls. In xsos he married 
Margaret (d. 1311), daughter of John L, duke of Brabant, and 
after the death of the German king, Albeit I., he wot elected to 
the vacant throne on the S7U1 of November 1308. Recognised 
at once by the German priacesaod by Pope Clement V., theospinv 
tlons of the new king turned to Italy, where he hoped by restoring 
the imperial authority to prepare the way for the conquest of 



HENRY VII.— HENRY RASPE 



a*9 



the Holy Land. Meanwhile be strove to secure hit position in 
Germany. The Rhenish archbishops were pacified by the 
restoration of the Rhine tolls, negotiations were begun with 
Philip IV., king of France, and with Robert, king of Naples, 
and the Habsburgs were confirmed in their possessions. At 
this time Bohemia was ruled by Henry V., duke of Carinthia, 
hut the terrible disorder which prevailed induced some of the 
Bohemians to offer the crown, togetherwith thehand of Elisabeth, 
daughter of the late king Wenceslas II., to John, the son of the 
German king. Henry accepted the offer, and in August 1310 
John was invested with Bohemia and his marriage was cdo- 
fcrated. Before John's coronation at Prague, however, in 
February 13x1, Henry had crossed the Alps. His hopes of re- 
uniting Germany and Italy and of restoring the empire of the 
Hobenstaufen were nattered by an appeal from the Ghibellines 
to come to their assistance, and by the fact that many Italians, 
sharing the sentiments expressed by Dante in his De Monarchic, 
looked eagerly for a restoration of the imperial authority. In 
October 1310 he reached Turin where, on receiving the homage 
of the Lombard dties, he declared that he favoured neither 
Guelphs nor Ghibellines, but only sought to impose peace. 
Having entered Milan he placed the Lombard crown upon his 
head on the 6th of January 1311. But trouble soon showed 
itself. His poverty compelled him to exact money from the 
dtisens; the peaceful professions of the Guelphs were insincere, 
and Robert, king of Naples, watched his progress with suspicion. 
Florence was fortified against him, and the mutual hatred of 
Guelph and GbibeHine was easily renewed. Risings took place 
in various places and, after the capture of Brescia, Henry 
marched td Rome only to find the city in the hands of the Guelphs 
and the troops of King Robert. Some street fighting ensued, 
and the king, unable to obtain possession of St Peter's, was 
drowned emperor On the tot h of June 131s In the church of St 
John Lateran by some cardinals who declared they only acted 
under compulsion. Failing to subdue Florence, the emperor 
from bis headquarters at Pisa prepared to attack Robert of 
Naples, for which purpose he had allied himself with Frederick 
III., king of Sicily. But Clement, anxious to protect Robert, 
threatened Henry with excommunication. Undeterred by the 
threat the emperor collected fresh forces, made an alliance with 
the Venetians, and set out for Naples. On the march he was, 
however, taken ill, and died at Buoneonvento near Siena on the 
*4th of August 1313, and was buried at Pisa. His death was 
attributed, probably without reason, to poison given him by a 
Dominican friar in the sacramental wine. Henry is described 
by his contemporary Albertino Mussate, in the Historic A ugusta, 
as a handsome man, of well-proportioned figure, with reddish 
hair and arched eyebrows, but disfigured by a squint. He adds, 
among other details, that he was slow and laconk in his speech, 
magnanimous and devout, but impatient of any compacts 
with his subjects, loathing the mention of the Guelph and 
GMbelline factions, and insisting on the absolute authority 
of the Empire over all (cuncta absdufo eompketens Imferio). 
He was, however, a lover of justice, and as a knight both bold 
and skilful. He was hailed by Dante as the deliverer of Italy, 
and in the Paradise the poet reserved for him* a place marked 
by a crown. 

The contemporary da 
are \cry numerous. M 
carum striptores, edtte< 
others in FonUs rerun 
(Stuttgart. 1843-1868), 
Vartett, Bande 79 end 
works may also be < 
Romonormm, edited by 
Acts Heurici VII. R* 
Lindner, Deutsche Gcst 
karjem (Stuttgart, 188 
Heinrichs von Luxem 
GeschichU, Band xi. ( 
Rtotitswakl des Graf em . 
D. KAnfe, KriHuke B 
f*r die Gesckuhie des Ri 
S74); IC Wenck. Oet 
¥. W. Bar ' ~ 



Barthold, Der 



(Kfinigsbenf, l*a*-l*3»)i R. Pohlmaan. Der AAaferswj Kdnde 
Hetnruks VII. und dXe Poliiik der Curie (Nuremberg. 1875): \K 
Donniges, Krittk der QuMen fUr die GescJnckte Heinrichs VII. des 
Uuentimrgprs (Berim, 1841), and G. Sommerfeldt, Die Romfokrt 
Kaiser Hemrieks VIL (KflVgsberg, 1888). 

HENRY VH. (1911-1342), German king, son of the emperor 
Frederick II. and his first wife Constance, daughter of Alphonso 
II., king of Aragon, was crowned Iring of Sicily in 1 21 2 and made 
duke of Swabia in 1216. Pope Innocent HI. had favoured his 
coronation as king of Sicily in the hope that the union of this 
island with the Empire would be dissolved, and had obtained a 
promise from Frederick to this effect. In spite of this, however, 
Henry was chosen king of the Romans, or German king, at 
Frankfort in April 1220, and crowned at Air-la-Cbapelle on the 
8th of May z 222 by his guardian Engelbert, archbishop of Cologne. 
He appears to have spent most of his youth in Germany, and 
on the 1 8th of November 1225 was married at Nuremberg to 
Margaret (d. 1267), daughter of Leopold VI., duke of, Austria. 
Henry's marriage was the occasion of some difference of opinion 1 , 
ss Engelbert wished him to marry an English princess, and the 
name of a Bohemian princess was also mentioned in this con* 
nexkm, but Frederick insisted upon the union with Margaret. 
The murder of Engelbert in 122s was followed by an increase of 
disorder in Germarfy in which Henry soon began to participate, 
and in 1227 he took part in a quarrel which had arisen on the 
death of Henry V., the childless count palatine of the Rhine. 
About this time the relations between Frederick and his soft 
began to be somewhat strained. The emperor bad favoured the 
Austrian marriage because Margaret's brother, Duke Frederick 
II:, was childless; but Henry took up a hostile attitude toward* 
his brother-in-law and wished to put- away his wife and 
marry Agnes, daughter of Wenceslaus I., king of Bohemia. 
Other causes of trouble probably existed, for in 1231 Henry not 
only refused to appear at the diet at Ravenna, but opposed 
the privileges granted by Frederick to the princes at Worms. In 
X232, however, he submitted to Ms father, promising to ado^t 
the emperor's policy and to obey his commands. He did not 
long keep his word and was soon engaged in thwarting Frederick's 
wishes in several directions, until in 1233 he took the decisive 
step of issuing a manifesto to the princes, and the following year 
raised the standard of revolt at Boppard. He obtained yery 
little support in Germany, however, while the suspicion that be 
favoured heresy deprived him of encouragement from the pope'. 
On the other hand, be succeeded in forming an alliance with the 
Lombards in December 1234, but his few supporters fell away 
when the emperor reached Germany in 1*35, and, after a vain 
attack on Worms, Henry submitted and was kept for some time 
as a prisoner in Germany, though his formal deposition as German 
king was not considered necessary, as he had broken the oath 
taken in 1232. He was soon removed to San Felice in Apulia, 
and afterwards to Martirano in Calabria, where he died, prob- 
ably by his own hand, on the 12th of February 1242, and was 
buried at Cosensa. He left two sons, Frederick and Henry, 
both of whom died in Italy about 1251. 

See J. Rohden, Der Stun ffeinruks VI J. (GGttingcu, 1883) -,F.W. 
Schirrmacher, Die letsten Hohenstaufcn (Gottingen, 1871), and E. 
Wutkelmaim, Kedser Friedruk II. (Leipzig, z88o>. . 

HBNRT RASPB (c. r 101-1147), German king and landgrave 
of Thuringia, was the second surviving son of Hermann l. f 
landgrave of Thuringia, and Sophia, daughter of Otto I:, duke of 
Bavaria. When his brother the landgrave Louis IV. died fft 
Italy in September 1127, Henry seised the government of 
Thuringia and expelled his brothers widow, St Elisabeth of 
Hungary, and her son Hermann. With some trouble Henry 
made good his position, although his nephew Hermann H. was 
nominally the landgrave, arid was declared of age in 1237. 
Henry, who governed with a seaknis regard for his own interests, 
remained loyal to the emperor Frederick II. during his quarrel 
with the Lombards and the revolt of his son Henry. Hi 1236 
he accompanied the emperor on a campaign against Frederick 
II., duke of Austria, and took part in the c Wet ion of his son 
Conrad as German king at Vienna in r 237. He appears, however, 
to have become somewhat estranged from Frederick after this 



a8o 



HENRY-i-HENRY L : 



expedition, for he did not appear at the diet of Verona to 1238; 
and it is not improbable that he disliked, the betrothal of his 
nephew Hermann to the emperor's daughter Margaret. At 
all events, when the projected marriage bad. been broken off 
the landgrave. publicly showed his loyalty to the emperor in 
1239 in opposition to a plan formed by various princes to elect 
an anti-king. Henry, whose attitude at this time was very 
important to Frederick, was probably kept loyal by the in- 
fluence which his brother Conrad, grand-master of the Teutonic 
Order, exercised over him, for after the death of this brother 
in 1 24 1 Henry's loyalty again wavered, and he was himself 
mentioned as a possible anti-king. Frederick's visit to Germany 
in 1242 was successful in preventing this step for a time, and in 
May of that year the landgrave was appointed administrator of 
Germany for King Conrad; and by the death of his nephew 
in this year he became the nominal, as well as the actual, ruler 
of Thuringia. Again he contemplated deserting the cause of 
Frederick, and in April 1246 Pope Innocent IV. wrote to the 
German princes advising them to choose Henry as their king 
in place of Frederick who had just been declared deposed. Acting 
on these instructions, Henry was elected at Veitahochheim on 
the 22nd of May 1246, and owing to the part played by the 
spiritual princes in this election was called the PJafenkdnig, or 
parsons,' king. Collecting an army, he defeated King Conrad 
near Frankfort on the 5th of August 1246, and then, after holding 
a diet at Nuremberg, undertook the siege of Ulm. But he was 
soon compelled to give up this, enterprise, and returning to 
Thuringia died- at the Wartburg on the 17th of February 1247. 
Henry married Gertrude, sister of Frederick II., duke of Austria, 
but left no children, and on his death the male line of his family 
became extinct. 
See F. Reuss, 
A. RQbesamen 

1885); F. W. J -.-.--_, 

187O; E. Wmfcdmano. Kaiser Friedrkh II, (Leipxig, 1889), and 
T. Knochenhauer, CeschickU Thurtng&ts sur Zeil its erstc* Land' 
pafenhauses (Gotha, 187 1). 

t HENRY (c. 1174-12x6), emperor of Romania, or Constan- 
tinople, was a younger son of Baldwin, count of Flanders and 
Hainaut (d x 19s). Having joined the Fourth Crusade about 1 201, 
he distinguished himself at the siege of Constantinople in 1204 
and elsewhere, and soon became prominent among the princes 
of the new Latin empire of Constantinople. When his brother, 
the emperor Baldwin I., was captured at the battle of Adrianople, 
in April 1205, Henry was chosen regent of the empire, succeeding 
to the throne when the news of Baldwin's death arrived. He 
was crowned on the 20th of August 1205. Henry was a wise 
ruler, whose reign was largely passed in successful struggles 
with the Bulgarians and with his rival, Theodore Lascaris I., 
emperor of Nicaea. Henry appears to have been brave but not 
cruel, and tolerant but, not weak; possessing " the superior 
courage to oppose, in a superstitious age, the pride and avarice 
of the clergy." The emperor died, poisoned, it is said, by his 
Greek wife, on the nth of June 1216. 

See Gibbon's Dtdine and Fail of tht Roman Empire, vol. vi. (ed. 
J. B. Bury. 1898). , 

HENRY I» (1068-1135), king of England, nicknamed Beau- 
clerk, the fourth and youngest son of William I. by his queen 
Matilda of Flanders, was born in 1068 on English soil. Of his 
life before 1086, when he was solemnly knighted by his father 
at Westminster, we know little. He was his mother's favourite, 
and she bequeathed to him her English estates, which, however, 
he was not permitted to hold in his father's lifetime. Henry 
received a good education, of which in later life he was proud; 
he is credited with the saying that an unlettered king is only a 
crowned as** His attainments included Latin, which he could 
both read and write; he knew something of the English laws 
and language,, and it may have been from an interest in natural 
history that he collected, during his reign, the Woodstock 
menagerie which was the admiration of his subjects. But 
from 1087 his life was one of action and vicissitudes which left 
bim little leisure. Receiving, under the Conqueror's last dis- 
positions., a legacy of five thousand pounds of silver, but »o Und, 



he traded upon the pecuniary needs of Duke Robert of Normandy, 
from whom he purchased, for Che saoall sum of £3000, the 
district of the Cotentin. He negotiated with Rufus to obtain 
the possession of their mother's inheritance, but only Incurred 
thereby the suspicions of the duke, who threw him into prison. 
In 1000 the prince vindicated his loyalty by suppressing, on 
Robert's behalf, a revolt of the citisens of Rouen wkkb Ruius 
had fomented. But when his. elder brothers were reconciled 
in the next year they combined to evict Henry from the 
Cotentin. He dissembled his resentment for a time, and lived 
for nearly two years in the French Vexin in great poverty. He 
then accepted from the citizens of Domfront an invitation to 
defend them against Robert of Bettfaoe; and subsequently, 
onming to an agreement with Rufus, assisted the king in making 
wax. on their elder brother Robert. When Robert's departure 
for the First Crusade left Normandy in the hands el Rufus 
(1006) Henry took service under the latter, and he was in 
the royal hunting train on the day of Rufus's death (August and, 
1 1 00). Had Robert been in Normandy Che daim of Henry to 
thd English, crown might have been .effectually opposed. But 
Robert only: returned to Ute duchy a month alter Henry's 
coronation. In the meantime the new. king, by issuing hli 
famous charter, by recalling Anselm, and by choosing the: 
A^o-Scottish princess Edith-Matilda, daughter of Malcolm III., 
king of the Scots, as his future <jueen, had cemented that alliance 
with the church end with the native English which was the 
foundation of Jus gteatocss. Anselm preached in. his favour, 
English levies marched under the royal banner both .to repel 
Robert's invasion (noxX-and to crush the revolt of the Mentn 
gotneries headed iby Robert of. BeUftme (1102). The alliance 
oS crown and church was subsequently imperilled by the question 
of Investitures (1103^1106). Henry was sharply criticised for 
his ingratitude <to Anselm (4,*.), in rspite of the marked respect 
which be showed to the jarchbishopv . At this juncture a sentence 
of encommtmicatioA would have been a dangerous blow to Henry's 
power in England. But the king's diplomatic skill enabled bim 
to satisfy the church without surrendering; any rights of conse- 
quence. (1106); and he skilfully threw the blajne-of his previous 
conduct upon his counsellor* Robert of , MeuJajv ; Although the 
Peterborough Chronicle accuses Henry ..of oppression in his 
early yearvthe nation soon learned to regard bim with respect. 
WHUam of Mofoesbury, about u*& ^already,, treats Tinchebraf 
(1106) as an English » victory and the. revenge for Hastings, 
Henry was disliked but feared by the baronage, towards, whom 
he showed gross toad faith in his disregard of bis coronation 
promises. In xxio he banished the more conspicuous mal- 
contents, and from- that date was sale against the plots of his 
English feudatories. 

With uNDrmandy he had more trouble, and the military skiU 
which he had displayed St Tinchebrai was more than once put 
to the teat against Norman rebels. His Norman, like his English 
administration, was popular with the npn-feudal classes, but 
doubtless oppressive towards the barons. The latter had 
abandoned the cause of Duke Robert, who remained a prisoner 
in England till his death (1134); but they embraced that of 
Robert's son William the Clito, whom Henry in ant of generosity 
had allowed to go free after Tinchebrai. The Norman con- 
spiracies of 11 12, 11 18, and 1123-24 were all formed in the 
Clito's interest. 'Both France and Anjou supported this pre- 
tender's cause from time to time; he was always a thorn ift 
Henry's side till his untimely death at Aloet (11*8), but more 
especially after the catastrophe of the White Ship (t I tc) deprived 
the king of his only lawful son. But Henry emerged from these 
complications with enhanced prestige. His campaigns had 
been uneventful, his chief victory (Bresaule, 1110) was Utile 
more than a skirmish. But he bad held his own as a general, 
and as a diplomatist he bad shown surpassing skfll The chief 
triumphs of his foreign policy were the marriage of his daughter 
Matilda to the emperor Henry V. (1 1 14) which saved Normandy 
in U24; the detachment of the pope, Cahxtus H., from the 
side of France and the Cfiio (it to), and the Angevin Carriages 
which be arranged for his son William ,Aetheling (xlj$) and for 



HEMRVIL 



281 



the widowed empress Matilda (1129) after her* brother's death. 
This latter match, though unpopular in England and Normandy; 
was a fatal blow to the designs of Louis VI., and prepared the 
way for the expansion of English power beyond the Loire. ' 
After 1 1 24 the disaffection of Normandy was crushed. The 
severity with which Henry treated the last rebels was regarded 
as a blot upon his fame; but the only case of merely vindictive 
punishment was that of the poet Luke de la Barre, who was 
sentenced to lose his eyes for a lampoon upon the king, and only 
escaped the sentence by committing suicide. ' 

Henry's English government was Severe and grasping; bat 
he " kept good peace " and honourably distinguished himself 
among contemporary statesmen in an age when administrative 
reform was in the air. He spent more time in Normandy than 
m England. But he showed admirable judgment in his choice 
of subordinates; Robert of Meulan, who died in 11 18, ami 
Roger of Salisbury, who survived his master, were statesmen 
of no common order; and Henry was free from the mania of 
attending in person to every detail, which was the besetting 
sin of medieval sovereigns. As a legislator Henry was con- 
servative. He issued few ordinances; the unofficial compilation 
known as the Leges Henrici shows that, like the Conqueror, 
he made it his ideal to maintain the " law of Edward.** His 
itinerant justices were not altogether a novelty in England or 
Normandy. It is characteristic of the man that the exchequer 
should be the chief institution created in his reign. The eulogies 
of the last Peterborough Chronicle on his government were 
written after the anarchy of Stephen's reign had invested his 
predecessor's " good peace v with the glamour of a golden age. 
Henry was respected and not tyrannous. He showed a lofty 
indifference to criticism such as that of Eadmer in the Historia 
novorum, which was published early in the reign. He showed, 
on some occasions, great deference to the opinions of the magnates. 
But dark stories, some certainly unfounded, were told of his 
prison-houses. Men thought him more cruel and more despotic 
than he actually was. • 

Henry was twice married. Alter the death of his first wife, 
Matilda ( 1080- n 18), he took to wife Adelaide, daughter of 
Godfrey, count of Louvain (11 21), in the hope of male issue. 
But the marriage proved childless, and the empress Matilda; 
was designated as her father's successor, the English baronage • 
being compelled to do her homage both in ti*6, and again, 
after the Angevin marriage, in ri3i. He had many illegitimate 
sons and daughters by various mistresses. Of these bastards the 
most important is Robert, earl of Gloucester, upon whom fen* the 
main burden of defending Matilda's title against Stephen. 

Henry died near Gisors on the 1st of December, 113c, in the 
thirty-sixth year of his reign, and was buried in the abbey of 
Reading which he himself had founded. 



Modern Authorities.— E. A. Freeman, Httlory of the Norman 
Coneucst, voL v.; J. M Lappenberfc, History of England under the 
Norman Kings (tr. Thorpe, Oxford, 1857); Kate Norgate. England 
under Ae Angevin Kings, vol. i. (1887); Sir James Ramsay, Founda- 
tions of England, vol. n. : W. Stubbs, Constitutional History, vol. i. ; 
H. W> C. Davis, England under the Normans and An%toins\ Hunt 
and Poote. Political HUlory of England, vol. ik (H. W C D.) 

HEHRY II. (1133-1180), king of England, son of Geoffrey 
Plantagenet, count of Anjou, by Matilda, daughter of Henry 
I., was born at Le Mans on the 25th of March 1133. He was 



brought to- England during his mother's conflict with Stephen 
(114a), and was placed under the charge of a tutor at Bristol 
He returned to Normandy in 1 146. He next appeared on English 
soil in 1 140 l when he came to court the help of Scotland and the 
English baronage against King Stephen. The second visit was of 
short duration. In 1150 he was invested with Normandy by his 
father, whose death in the next year made him also count of 
Anjou. In 115* by a marriage with Eleanor of Aquitaine, the 
divorced wife of the- French king Louis VII., he acquired 
Poilou, Guienne and Gascony; but in doing so incurred the 
ill-will of his suzerain from which he suffered not a little in the 
future. Lastly in 1153 be was able, through the aid of the 
Church and his mother's partisans, to extort from Stephen the 
recognition of his daim to the English succession; and this 
claim was asserted without opposition immediately after Stephen's 
death (25th of October 1154). Matilda retired into seclusion, 
although she possessed, until her death (1167), great influence 
with her son. 

The first years of the reign were largely spent in restoring the 
public peace and recovering for the crown the lands and pre- 
rogatives which Stephen had bartered away. Amongst the 
older partisans of the Angevin house the most influential were 
Archbishop Theobald, whose good will guaranteed to Henry 
the support of the Church, and Nigel, bishop of Ely, who presided 
at the exchequer. But Thomas Becket, archdeacon of Canter- 
bury, a younger statesman whom Theobald had discovered 
arid promoted, soon became all-powerful. Becket lent himseK 
entirely to his master's ambitions, which at this time centred 
round schemes of territorial aggrandizement. In 1155 Henry 
asked and obtained from Adrian IV- a licence to invade Ireland, 
which the king contemplated bestowing upon his brother, 
William of Anjou. This plan was dropped; but Malcolm of 
Scotland was forced to restore the northern counties which had 
been ceded to David; North Wales Was invaded In 1157; and 
in ti so Henry made an attempt, which was foiled by the inter- 
vention of Louis VII:, to assert his wife's claims upon Toulouse. 
After vainly invoking the aid of the emperor Frederick L, the 
young king came to terms with Louis (it6d), whose daughter 
was betrothed to Henry's namesake and heir. The peace proved 
unstable, and there was desultory skirmishing In ltd. The 
following year was chiefly spent tn reforming the government of 
the continental provinces. In 1163 Henry returned to England, 
and almost immediately embarked' on that quarrel with the 
Church which is the keynote to the middle period of the reign; 

Henry had good cause to complain of the ecclesiastical courts, 
and had only awaited a convenient season to correct abuses 
which were admitted by all reasonable men. But be allowed 
the question to be complicated by personal issues. He was 
bitterly disappointed that' Becket, on whom he bestowed the 
primacy, left vacant by the death of Theobald <it6oD, at once 
became the champion of clerical privilege; he and the archbishop 
were no longer on speaking terms when the Constitutions of 
Clarendon came up for debate. The king's demands were not 
intrinsically irreconcilable with the canon law, and the papacy 
would probably have allowed them to take effect sub silentie, 
if Becket (q.v.) had not been goaded to extremity by persecution 
in the forms of law. After Becket 's flight (1164), the king pat 
himself still further in the wrong by impounding the' revenues 
of Canterbury and banishing at one stroke a number of the 
archbishop's friends and connexions. He shewed, however, 
considerable dexterity in playing off the emperor against 
Alexander HI. and Louis VII., and contrived for five yean, 
partly by these means, partly by insincere negotiations wfth 
Becket, to stave off a papal interdict upon his dominions. When, 
in July 1x70, he was forced by Alexander's threats to make 
terms with Becket, the king contrived that not a werd should 
be said of the Constitutions. He Undoubtedly hoped that in 
this matter he would have his way when Becket should be more 
in England and within his grasp. For the murder of Becket 
(Dec. 29, 1170) the king cannot be held responsible, though the 

• For a supposed visit In 1 147. see J. H Round in English ffistoHAl 
toxic*, v. 747. 1 



j2«? 



HENRY III. 



^eed was suggested by hi* impatioir words. , It was a misfortune 
to the royal cause; and Henry was compelled to purchase the 
papal absolution by a complete surrender on the question of 
criminous derks (117a). When he heard of the murder be was 
panic-stricken; and his expedition to Ireland (1171), although so 
momentous for the future, was originally a mere pretext for 
placing himself beyond the reach of Alexander's censures. 

Becket's fate, though it supplied an excuse, was certainly not 
the real cause of the troubles with his sons which disturbed the 
king's later years (1173-1189). But Henry's misfortunes were 
largely of his own making. Queen Eleanor* whom he alienated 
by his faithlessness, stirred up her sons to rebellion ; and they 
had grievances enough to be easily persuaded. Henry was an 
affectionate but a suspicious and dose-handed father. The 
titles which he bestowed on them carried little power, and served 
chiefly to denote the shares of the paternal inheritance which 
were to be theirs after his death. The excessive favour which 
he showed to John, his youngest-born, was another cause of 
heart-burning; and Louis, the old enemy, did his utmost to 
foment all discords. It must, • however, be remembered in 
Henry's favour* that the supporters of the princes, both in 
England and in the foreign provinces, were animated by resent- 
ment. against the soundest features of the king's administration; 
and that, in the rebellion of 1 173, he received from the English 
commons such hearty support that any further attempt to 
Taise a rebellion in England was considered hopeless. Henry, 
like his grandfather, gained in popularity with every year of his 
reign. In 1183 the death of Prince Henry, the heir-apparent, 
while engaged in a war against his brother Richard and their 
father, secured a short interval of peace. But in 1184 Geoffrey 
of Brittany and John combined with their father's leave to make 
war upon Richard, now the heir-apparent. After Geoffrey's 
death (ti86) the feud between John and Richard drove the 
Utter into an alliance with Philip Augustus of France. The 
ill-success of the old king in. this war aggravated the disease from 
which he was suffering; and bis heart was broken by the dis- 
covery that John, for whose sake he had alienated Richard, was 
in secret league with the victorious allies. Henry died at Chinon 
■on the 6th of July 1180, and was buried at Fontevraud. By 
Eleanor of Aqukaine the king had five sons and three daughters. 
His eldest son, William, died young; his other sons, Henry, 
Richard, Geoffrey and John, are all mentioned above. . His 
daughters were: Matilda (ris6-Ei8o), who became the wife of 
Henry the Lion, duke of Saxony; Eleanor {1162-1214), who 
married Alpbonso III., king of Castile; and Joanna, who, after 
the deatlrof William of Sicily in 11 89, became the wife of Ray- 
round VI., count of Toulouse, having previously accompanied 
her brother, Richard, to Palestine. He had also three illegiti- 
mate sons: Geoffrey, archbishop of York; Morgan; and 
•William Longsword, eari of Salisbury. 

Henry's power impressed the imagination of his contem- 
poraries, who credited him with aiming at the conquest of France 
and the acquisition of the imperial title. But his ambitions 
of conquest were comparatively moderate in his later 
years. He attempted to secure Maurienne and Savoy for John 
by a marriage-alliance, for which a treaty was signed in 11 73. 
But. the project failed through the death of the intended bride; 
nor did the marriage of his third daughter, the princess Joanna 
(t 165-1190), with William II., king of Sicily (1 177) lead to English 
intervention in Italian politics. Henry once declined an offer 
of the Empire, made by the opponents of Frederick Barbarossa; 
.and he steadily supported the young Philip Augustus against 
the intrigues of French feudatories. The conquest of Ireland 
was carried out independently of his assistance, and perhaps 
against his wishes. He asserted his suzerainty over Scotland 
by the treaty of Falaise (1175). but not so stringently as to pro- 
voke Scottish hostility. This moderation was partly due to the 
embarrassments produced by the ecclesiastical question and 
the rebellions of the princes. But Henry, despite a violent and 
capricious temper, had a strong taste for the work of a legislator 
and administrator. He devoted infinite pains and thought to 
the reform of government both in England and Normandy. 



years> But Henry was ambitions to recover the 



HENRY IV. 



283 



flotwiom wMch Ms father had lost. Against the wishes of 
the justiciar he planned And carried out an expedition to the 
west of France (1230); when it failed he laid the blame upon 
his minister. Other differences arose soon afterwards. Hubert 
was accused, with some reason, of enriching himself at the ex- 
pense of the cr*wn,and of encouraging popular riots against the 
alien clerks far whom the papacy was providing at the expense 
of the English Church. He was disgraced in 133a; and power 
passed for a time into the hands of Peter des Roches, who filled 
the administration with Poitevins. So began the period of 
misrule by which Henry III. is chiefly remembered in history. 
The Poitevins fell in 1134; tbey were removed at the demand 
of the barons and the primate 1 Edmund Rich, who held them 
responsible for the tragic fate of the rebellious Richard Marshal. 
But the king replaced them with a new clique of servile and 
rapacious favourites. Disregarding the wishes of the Great 
Council, and excluding all (he more important of the barons and 
bishops from office, ho acted as his own chief minister and never 
condescended to justify his policy except when be stood in need 
of subsidies. When these were refused, he extorted aids from 
the towns, the Jews or the clergy, the three most defenceless 
interests in the kingdom. Always in pecuniary straits through 
his extravagance, he pursued a foreign policy which would have 
been expensive under the most careful management. He 
hoped not only to regain the French possessions but to establish 
members of his own family as sovereigns in Italy and the Empire. 
These plans were artfully fostered by the Savoyard kinsmen 
of Eleanor, daughter of Raymond Berenger, count of Provence, 
whom he married at Canterbury in January 1136, and by his 
half-brothers, the sons of Queen Isabella and Hugo, count of la 
Marche. These favourites, not content with pushing their 
fortunes in the English court, encouraged the king in the wildest 
designs. In 124 a he led an 1 expedition to Gascony which ter- 
minated disastrously with the defeat of Taillebourg; and 
hostilities with France were intermittently continued for seven- 
teen years. The Savoyards encouraged his natural tendency to 
support the Papacy against the Empire; at an early date in the 
period of misrule he entered into a close alliance with Rome, 
which resulted in heavy taxation of the clergy and gave great 
umbrage to the barons: A cardinal-legate was sent to England 
at Henry's request, and during four years (1*37-1441) admini- 
stered the English Church in a manner equally profitable to the 
king and to the pope. After the recall of the legate Otho the 
alliance was less open And less cordial. Still the pope continued 
to share the spoils of the English clergy with the king, and the 
king to enforce the demands of Roman tax-collectors. 

Circumstances favoured Henry's schemes. Archbishop 
Edmund Rich was timid and inexperienced; his successor, 
Boniface of Savoy, was a kinsman of the queen; Grosseteste, 
the most eminent of the bishops, died in 1253, when he was on 
the point of becoming a popular hero. Among the lay barons, 
the first place naturally belonged to Richard of Cornwall who, 
as the king's brother, was unwilling to take any steps which 
might impair the royal prerogative; while Simon de Montfort, 
earl of Leicester, the ablest man of his order, was regarded with 
suspicion as a foreigner, and linked to Henry's cause by his 
marriage with the princess Eleanor. Although the Great Council 
repeatedly protested against the king's misrule and extravagance, 
U}dr remonstrances came to nothing for want of leaders and a 
dear-cut policy. But between 1248 and 1*52 Henry alienated 
Monifort from his cause by taking the side of the Gascons, 
whom the earl had provoked to rebellion through his rigorous 
administration of their duchy. A little later, when Mont fort 
was committed to opposition, Henry foolishly accepted from 
Innocent IV. the crown of Sicily for his second son Edmund 
Crouchback (1255). Sicily was to be conquered from the 
Hohenstaufen at the expense of England; and Henry pledged 
his credit to the papacy for enormous subsidies, although years 
of comparative inactivity had already overwhelmed him with 
debts. On the publication of the ill-considered bargain the 
baronage at length took vigorous action. Tbey forced upon the 
king the Provisions of Oxford (1258), which placed the govern- 



ment in the hands of a feudal oligarchy; they reduced expendi- 
ture, expelled the alien favourites from the kingdom, and 
insisted upon a final renunciation of the French claims. The 
king submitted for the moment, but at the first opportunity 
endeavoured to cancel his concessions. He obtained a papal 
absolution from his promises; and he tricked the opposition 
into accepting the arbitration of the French king, Louis IX., 
whose verdict was a foregone conclusion. But Henry was 
incapable of protecting with the strong hand the rights which 
he had recovered by his double-dealing. Ignominiously defeated 
by Montfort at Lewes (1264) he fell into the position of I 
cipher, equally despised by his opponents and supporters. He 
acquiesced in the earl's dictatorship; left to his eldest son, 
Edward, the difficult task of reorganising the royal party; 
marched with the Montfortians to Evesham; and narrowly 
escaped sharing the fate of his gaoler. After Evesham he is 
hardly mentioned by the chroniclers. The compromise with 
the surviving rebels was arranged by bis son in concert with 
Richard of Cornwall and the legate Ottobuono; the statute 
of Marlborough (1267), which purchased a lasting peace by 
judicious concessions, was similarly arranged between Edward 
and the earl of Gloucester. Edward was king in afl but name 
for some years before the death of his father, by. whom he was 
alternately suspected and adored. 

Henry had in him some of the elements of a fine character. 
His mind was cultivated; he was a discriminating patron of 
Rterature, and Westminster Abbey is an abiding memorial of 
his artistic taste. His personal morality was irreproachable, 
except that he inherited the Plantagenet taste for crooked 
courses and dissimulation in political affairs; even in this 
respect the king's reputation has suffered unduly at the hands 
of Matthew Paris, whose literary skill is only equalled by his 
malice. The ambitions which Henry cherished, if extravagant, 
were never sordid; his pitriotism, though seldom attested by 
practical measures, was thoroughly sincere, Some of his worst 
actions as a politician were due to a sincere; though exaggerated, 
gratitude for the support which the Papacy had given him dining 
his minority. But he had neither the training nor the temper 
of a statesman. His dreams of autocracy at home and far- 
reaching dominion abroad were anachronisms fn a century of 
constitutional ideas and national differentiation. Above all he 
earned the contempt of. Englishmen and foreigners alike by 
the instability of his purpose. Matthew Paris said that he bad 
a heart of wax; Dante relegated him to the limbo of ineffectual 
souls; and later generations have endorsed these scathing 
judgments. 

Henry died at Westminster on the r6th of November 127*5 
bis widow, Eleanor, took the veil in 1276 and died at Atnesbury 
on the 25th of June t20i. Their children were: the future king 
Edward I.; Edmund, carl of Lancaster; Margaret (x24c*-i27$y, 
the wife of Alexander HI., king of Scotland; Beatrice; and 
Katherine. ' 



•< 



Gaunt, by Blanche, daughter of Henry, duke of Lancaster, was 
born on the 3rd of April 1367, at Bolirigbroke in Ltncolnsmre. 
As early as 1 377 he is styled earl of Derby, and in i38oh*marrled 



?H 



.HENRYS.: 



Mary de Bohun (d. 1394) one of the co-heiresses of the last earl 
of Hereford, la 1387 he supported his uncle Thomas, duke of 
Gloucester, in his armed opposition to Richard II. and his 
favourites, Afterwards, probably through his father's influence, 
he changed sides. He was already distinguished for his knightly 
prowess, and for some years devoted himself to adventure. 
He thought of going on the crusade to Barbary; but instead, in 
July 1390, went to serve with the Teutonic knights in Lithuania. 
He came home in the following spring, but next year went 
again to Prussia, whence, he journeyed by way of Venice to 
Cyprus and Jerusalem. After his return to England he sided 
with his father and the king against Gloucester, and in 1397 
was made duke of Hereford. In January 1398 be quarrelled 
with the duke of Norfolk, who charged him with treason. The, 
dispute was to have been decided in the lists at Coventry in 
September; but at the last moment Richard intervened and 
banished them both. 

When John of Gaunt died in February 1399 Richard, contrary 
to his promise, confiscated the estates of Lancaster. Henry 
then felt himself free, and made friends with the exiled Arundel 
Early in July, whilst Richard was absent in Ireland, he landed 
at Ravenspur in Yorkshire. He was at once joined by the 
Percies, and Richard, abandoned by his friends, surrendered 
at Flint on the 19th of August. In the parliament, which 
assembled on the 30th of September, Richard 'was forced to 
abdicate. Henry then made his claim as coming by right line 
of blood from King Henry III., and through his right to recover 
the realm which was in point to be undone for default of govern* 
ance and good law. Parliament formally accepted him, and thus 
Henry became king, " not so much by title of blood as by popular 
election " (Capgrave)* The new dynasty had consequently a 
constitutional basis. With this Henry's own political sympathies 
well accorded. But though the revolution of 1399 was popular 
in form, its success was due to an oligarchical faction. From 
the start Henry was embarrassed by the power and pretensions 
of the Perries. Nor was his hereditary title so good as that of the 
Mortimers. To domestic troubles was added the complication 
of disputes with Scotland and France. The first danger came 
from the friends of Richard, who plotted prematurely, and were 
crushed in January 1400. During the summer of 1400 Henry 
made a not over-successful expedition to. Scotland. The French 
court would not accept his overtures, and it* was. only in the 
summer of 1401 that a truce was patched up by the restoration 
of Richard's child-queen, Isabella of Valois. Meantime a more 
serious trouble had arisen through the outbreak of the Welsh 
revolt under Owen Glendower (q.v.). In 1400 and again in each 
of the- two following autumns Henry invaded Wales in vain, 
the success of the Percies over the Scots at Homildon Hill 
(Sept. 1402) was no advantage. Henry Percy (Hotspur} and 
his father, the carl of Northumberland, thought their services 
ill-requited, and finally made common cause with the partisans 
of Mortimer and the Welsh. The plot was frustrated by Hotspur's 
defeat at Shrewsbury (21st of July 1403V; and Northumberland 
for the time submitted. Henry had, however, no one on whom 
he could rely outside his own family, except Archbishop Arundel. 
The Welsh were unsubdued; the French were plundering the 
southern coast; Northumberland was fomenting trouble in the 
north. The crisis came in 1405; A plot to carry off the young 
Mortimers was defeated; but Mowbray, the earl marshal, who 
had been privy to it, raised a rebellion in the north supported 
by Archbishop Scrope of York. Mowbray and Scrope were 
taken and beheaded; Northumberland escaped into Scotland. 
For the execution of the archbishop Henry w^as personally 
responsible, and he could never free himself from its odium. 
Popular belief regarded his subsequent illness as a judgment for 
bis impiety. Apart from ill-health and unpopularity Henry had 
succeeded — relations with Scotland were secured by the 
capture of James, the heir to the crown; Northumberland was at 
last crushed at Bramham Moor (Feb. 1408); and a little later the 
Welsh revolt was mastered , 

Henry, stricken with sore disease, was unable to reap the 
Advantage, His necessities had all along enabled the Commons 



to extort concessions in parliament, until in 1406 he was forced 
to nominate a council and govern by its advice. However, with 
Archbishop Arundel as his chancellor, Henry still controlled 
I be government.; But in January 1410 Arundel had to give way 
to the king's half-brother, Thomas Beaufort , Beaufort and bb 
brother Henry, bishop of Winchester, were opposed to Arundel 
and supported by. the prince of Wales. Foe two .years the real 
government rested, with the prince and the oouaciL Under 
the prince's influence the English intervened in France in 1411 
on the side of Burgundy. In this, and in some matters of home 
politics, the king disagreed with his ministers, There is good 
reason to suppose that the Beauforts had gone so far. as to con- 
template a forced abdication' on the score of the king's ill-health. 
However, in November 1411 Henry showed that he was still 
capable of vigorous action, by discharging the prince and his sup- 
porters. Arundel again became chancellor, and the king's 
second son, Thomas* took his brother's place, The change was 
further marked by the sending, of an expedition U> France in 
support of Orleans. But Henry's health was failing steadily. 
On the 20th of March 1413, whilst praying, in Westminster 
Abbey he was seised with a fainting fit, and died that same 
evening in the Jerusalem Chamber. At the time he was believed 
to have been a leper, but as it "wo aid appear without sufficient 
season, 

As a young man Henry had been chivalrous and adventurous, 
and in politics anxious lor good government and justice. As 
king the loss and failure of friends made him cautious, suspicions 
and cruel. The persecution of the Lollards, which, began with 
the burning statute of 1401, may be accounted for by Henry's 
own orthodoxy, or by the influence of Archbishop Arundel, his 
one faithful friend. But that political ^ollardry was strong is 
shown by the proposal in the parliament of 1410 for a wholesale 
confiscation of ecclesiastical property. Henry's faults may be 
excused by his difficulties. Throughout he was practical and 
steadfast, and he deserved credit for maintaining his principles 
as a constitutional ruler* So after all his troubles he founded 
his dynasty firmly, and passed on the crown to his son with a 
better title. He is buried under a fine tomb at Canterbury. 

By Mary Bohun Henry had four sons; his successor Henry V„ 
Thomas, duke of Clarence, John, duke of Bedford, and Humphrey, 
duke of Gloucester; and two daughters, Blanche, who married 
Louis III., elector palatine of the Rhine, and PhUippa, who 
married Eric XIII., king of Sweden. Henry's secood wife was 
Joan, or Joanna, (c. 1370-1437). daughter of Charles the Bad, 
king of Navarre, and widow qf John \V. or V., duke of Brittany, 
who survived until July 1437. By her he had no children. 

The chief contemporary authorities are the Annates Henna Quarti 
and T. Walongham's Historic An&ican* (Rolls Series^ Adam of 
Vsk's ChronuU and the various Chronicles of London, The life by 
John Capgrave (Dk itlustribus Henrittt) Is of little value. Some 
personal matter is contained in Wardrobe Accounts. of Henry, Earl of 
Derby (Camden Soc. ). For document* consult T~ Rymer's Fotdtra ; 
Sir N. H. Nicolas, Procudingj and Ordinances- of tip Prhy Council-, 
Sir H. Ellis, Original Letters illustrative of English History (London, 
1825-1846); Rous of Parliament; Royal and Historical Letters, 
Henry IV. (Rolls Series) and the Calendars of Patent Roils. Of 
modern authorities the foremost ii J. H. Wyhe'* minute mod learned 
/r..C4 voU., 



Hist, of £neland under Henry , 



, London. 1884-189*). 



See also W. Suibbs. Constitutional History; Sir]. Ramsay. Lancaster 
and York (2 vols., Oxford, 1892), and C. W. C. Oman, The Polilim 
History of England, vol. iv. (C. L. K.) 

HENRY V. (1387-1422), Hng of England, son of Henry IV, 
by Mary de Bohun, was born at Monmouth, ia August 1387. 
On his father's exile in. 1308 Richard II, took the boy into his 
own charge, and treated him kindly. Next year the Lancastrian 
revolution forced Henry into precocious prominence as heir to 
the throne. Frdm October 1409 th<? administration of Wales 
was conducted in his, name; less than three years later be was 
in actual command of the Engjish forces and fought against 
the Percies at Shrewsbury. The Welsh revolt absorbed his 
energies till 1408. Then through the king's ill-health he began 
to take a wider share in politics, from January 1410J helped by 
his uncles Henry and Thomas Beaufort, he had practical control 
of the, government. Both in foreign, and domestic policy he 



HENRY VL 



Z85 



differed from the king, who in November 141s discharged the 
prince from the council. The quarrel ol lather and ton was 
political only, though it is probable that the Beauforts had 
discussed the abdication of Henry IV., and their opponents 
certainly endeavoured to defame the prince. It may be that to 
political enmity the tradition of Henry's riotous youth, immortal- 
ized by Shakespeare, is partly due. To that tradition Henry's 
strenuous life in war and politics is a sufficient general contradic- 
tion. The most famous incident, his quarrel with the chief- 
justice, has no contemporary authority and was first related by 
Sir Thomas Elyot in 1 531. The story of ,Falstaff originated partly 
in Henry's early friendship for Oldcastle (?.«.). That friendship, 
and the prince's political opposition to Archbishop Arundel, 
perhaps encouraged Lollard hopes. If so, their disappointment' 
may account for the statements of ecclesiastical writers, like 
Walsingham, that Henry on becoming king was changed suddenly 
into a new man. 

Henry succeeded his father on the *oth of March 1413. With 
no past to embarrass him, and with no dangerous rivals, his 
practical experience had full scope. He had to deal with three 
main problems — the restoration of domestic peace, the healing 
of schism in the Church and the recovery of English prestige m 
Europe. Henry grasped them all together, and gradually built 
upon them a yet wider policy. From the first be made it clear 
that he would rule England as the head of a united nation, 
and that past differences were to be forgotten. Richard II. 
was honourably reinterred; the young Mortimer was taken 
into favour; the heirs of those who had suffered in the last reign 
were restored gradually to their titles and estates. With Old- 
castle Henry used his personal influence in vain, and the gravest 
domestic danger was Lollard discontent. But the king's firmness 
nipped the movement in the bud (Jan. 14x4)1 and made his own 
position as ruler secure. Save for the abortive Scrope and 
Cambridge plot in favour of Mortimer in July 141 5*, the Mat of 
his reign was free from serious trouble at home. Henry could 
now turn his attention to foreign affairs. A writer of the neat 
generation was the first to allege that Henry was encouraged 
by ecclesiastical statesmen to enter on the French war as a means 
of diverting attention from home troubles. For this story there 
is no foundation. The restoration of domestic peace was the 
king's first care, and until it was assured be could not embark 
on any wider enterprise abroad. Nor was that enterprise one of 
idle conquest. Old commercial disputes and the support which 
the French had lent to Glendower gave a sufficient excuse for 
war, whilst the disordered state of France afforded no security 
for peace. Henry may have regarded the assertion of his own 
claims as part of his kingly duty, but in any case a permanent 
settlement of the national quarrel was essential to the success 
of his world policy. The campaign of 1415* with its brilliant 
conclusion at Agincourt (October 15), was only the first step. 
Two years of patient preparation followed. The command of tie 
lea was secured by driving the Genoese allies of the French out 
of the Channel. A successful diplomacy detached the emperor 
Sigismund from France, and by the Treaty of Canterbury paved 
the way to end the schism in the Church. So in S417 the war 
was renewed on a larger scale. Lower Normandy was quickly 
conquered, Rouen cut off from Paris and besieged. The French 
were paralysed by the disputes of Burgundians and Armagnacs. 
Henry skilfully played them off one against the other, without 
relaxing his warlike energy. In January 1410 Rouen fell. By 
August the English were outside the wallsof Paris. Theintrigues 
of the French parties culminated in the assassination of John 
of Burgundy by the dauphin's partisans at Montereau (Septem- 
ber 10, 1410). Philip, the new duke, and the French court 
threw themselves into Henry's arms. After six months' negotia- 
tion Henry was by the Treaty of Troves recognized as heir and 
regent of France, and on the and of June 14a© married Catherine, 
the king's daughter. He was now at the height of his power. 
His eventual success in France seemed certain. He shared with 
Sigismund the credit of having ended the Great Schism by obtain* 
ing the election of Pope Martin V. All the states of western 
Europe were being; brought within the web of his diplomacy. 



The headship of Christendom waam his grasp, and schemes for 1 
a new crusade began to take shape, He actually sent an envoy 
to collect information in the East; but his plans were out short 
by death. A visit to England in 14U was interrupted by the 
defeat of Clarence at BsugeV The hardships of the longer winter 
siege of Meaux broke down bis health, and he died at Boas do 
Vincennes on the list of August 1422. 

Henry's last words were a wish that he might live to rebuild the 
wallsof Jerusalem. Tneyareaigninamt. His ideal wasfounded 
consciously on the models of Arthur and Godfrey as national 
long and leader of Christendom. So he is the typical medieval 
hero. For that very reason his schemes were doomed to end in 
disaster, smce the time was come tor a new departure. Yet he 
was not reactionary. His policy was constructive: a firm 
central government supported by parliament; church, reform on 
conservative lines; commercial de vel opment; and the mainten- 
ance of national prestige. Hie aims in some respects anticipated 
those of his Tudor successors, but he would have sccoxsphshed 
them on medieval ltaes as a ctostttutioiud ruler. Hissuccesswas 
due to the power of his personality. He could train able heu- 
tenantft, but at his death there was no one who could take his 
place as leader. Wat, diplomacy and chril administration wen 
all dependent on his guidance. His daaalmg achievements as a 
general have obscured his more sober qualities as a ruler, and 
oven the sound strategy, with which he aimed to be master of, the 
xuurowseas. Uhewasrjot the founder of tneEnghahnavy he was 
one of the first to realise its true importance. Henry had so high 
a sense of -his own rights that he was merciless to disloyalty. 
•But lie was scrupulous of the rights of others, and it was his eager 
desire to further the cause of justice that impress! d his French - 
contemporaries. He ha* been charged with cruelty as a religious 
persecutor; but in lact he had as prince opposed the harsh 
policy of Archbishop Arundel, and ss king sanctioned a more 
moderate course. Lollard executions during his reign had more 
often a political than a religious reason, Tebe just with sternness 
was in bis eyes a duty. So m his warfare, though he kept strict 
discipline and allowed no wanton violence, he treated severely all 
who had in bis opinion transgressed. In his personal conduct 
he was chaste, temperate and sincerely pious. He delighted in 
sport and all manly exercises. At the same time be was cultured, 
with a taste for literature, art and music Henry lies buried in 
Westminster Abbey. His tomb was stripped of its splendid 
adornment during the Reformation. The shield, helmet and: 
saddle, which formed part of the original funeral eqniftmrnt, 
still hang above it. 

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HBNRT VI. (1431-147 1), king of England, son of Henry V. and 
Catherine of Valoia, was bom at Windsor on throthof December 
14*1. He became king of England on the 1st of September 142a, 
and a few weeks later, ou the death of his grandfather Charles VL, 
was proclaimed king of France also. Henry V. had directed that 
Richard Beauchamp, earl of Warwick fov.), should be his son's 
preceptor; Warwick took up his charge in 14*8; he trained his 
pupil -to be a good man and refined gentleman, but be could not* 
teach him kingship. As early as 1433 the baby king was made to • 
appear at public functions and take his place in parliament. 
He was knighted by his node Bedford at Leicester in May 1416, 
and on the 6th of November 1429 was crowned at Westminster.. 



286 



HENRY VII. 



Early is the next year he wis taken over to France, and after 
long delay crowned in Paris on the 16th of December 1431- His 
return to London on the 14th of February 143* was celebrated 
with a great pageant devised by Lydgate. 

Daring these early years Bedford ruled France wisely and at 
first with success, but he could not prevent the mischief which 
Humphrey of Gloucester (q.v.) caused both at home and abroad, 
Even in France the English lost ground steadily after the victory 
of Joan of Arc before Orleans in 1499. The climax came with the 
death of Bedford, and defection of Philip of Burgundy in 1435. 
This closed the first phase of Henry's reign. There followed 
fifteen years of vain struggle in France, and growing disorder at 
borne. The determining factor in politics was the conduct of the 
war. Cardinal Beaufort, and after him Suffolk, sought by work- 
ing for peace to secure at least Gutenne and Normandy. 
Gloucester courted popularity by opposing them throughout; 
with him war Richard of York, who stood next in succession to 
the Crown. Beaufort controlled the council, and it was under his 
guidance that the king began to take part in the government. 
Thus it was natural that -as Henry grew to manhood he seconded 
heartily the peace policy. That policy was wise, but national pride 
made it unpopular and difficult. Henry himself had not the 
strength or knowledge to direct it, and was unfortunate in his 
advisers. The cardinal was old, his nephews John and Edmund 
Beaufort were incompetent, Suffolk, though a man of noble char- 
acter, was tactless. * Suffolk, however, achieved a great success 
by negotiating the marriage of Henry to Margaret of Anjou {q.v.) 
in 1445. Humphrey of Gloucester and Cardinal Beaufort both 
died early in 1447. Suffolk was now ail-powerful in the favour of 
the king and 4ueen. . Buthishomeidmmistration was unpopular, 
whilst the incapacity of Edmund Beaufort ended in the loss of all 
Normandy and Guienne. - Suffolk's fall in 14 50 left Richard of 
York the foremost man in England. Henry* reign then entered 
on its last phase of dynastic struggle. Cade's rebellion suggested 
first that popular discontent might result in a change of rulers. 
But York, as heir to the throne, could abide his time. The situa- 
tion was altered by the mental derangement of the king, and the 
birth of his son in 1453. York after a struggle secured the 
protectorship, and for the next year ruled England. Then Henry 
was restored to sanity, and the queen and Edmund Beaufort, 
now Duke of Somerset, to power. Ooen war followed, with the 
defeat and death of Somerset at St Albans on the 22nd of May 
1455. Nevertheless a hollow peace was patched up, which con- 
tinued during four years with lack of all governance. In 14 50 war 
broke out again. On the 10th of July 1460 Henry was taken 
prisoner at Northampton, and forced to acknowledge York as 
heir, to the exclusion of his own son. Richard of York's death at 
Wakefield (Dec so, 1400), and the queen's victory at St 
Albans (Feb. 17, 1461), brought Henry his freedom and no 
more. Edward of York had himself proclaimed king, and by his 
decisive victory at Towton on the 29th of March, put an end to 
Henry's reign. For over three years Henry was a fugitive in 
Scotland. He returned to take part in an abortive rising in 1464. 
A year later he was captured in the north, and brought a prisoner 
to the Tower. For six months in 1470-1471 he emerged to bold 
a shadowy kingship as Warwick's puppet. Edward's final 
victory at Tewkesbury was followed by Henry's death on the 21st 
of May 147 1, certainly by violence, perhaps at the hands of 
Richard of Gloucester. 

Henry was the most hapless of monarchs. He was so honest 
and welMneaniag that he might have made a good mler in quiet 
times. But he was crushed by the burden- of his inheritance. 
He had not the genius to find a way out of the French entangle- 
ment or the skill to steer a constitutional monarchy between 
rival factions. So the system and policy which were the creations 
of Henry IV. and Henry V. led under Henry VI. to the ruin of 
their dynasty.' Henry's very virtues added to his difficulties. 
He was so trusting that any one could influence him, so faithful 
that he would not give Up a minister who had become impossible. 
Thus even in the middle period he had no real control of the 
government. In his latter years he was mentally too weak for 
independent action. At his best he was a " good and gentle 



creature," but too kihefly and generous to rule others. Rettgfoui 
observances and study were his chief occupations. His piety 
was genuine; simple and pure, he was shocked at any suggestion 
of impropriety, but his rebuke was only " Fie, for shame I forsooth 
ye are to blame." For education he was really zealous. Even 
as a boy he was concerned for the upbringing of his half-brothers, 
his mother's children by Owen Tudor. Later, the planning of 
his great foundations at Eton and King's College, Cambridge, 
was the one thing which absorbed his interest. To both he was 
more than a' royal founder, and the credit of the whole scheme 
belongs to him. The charter for Eton was granted on the nth 
of October 1440,. and that for Ring's College in the following 
February. Henry himself laid the foundation-stones of both 
buildings. He frequently Visited Cambridge to superintend the 
progress of the work. When at Windsor he loved to send for the 
boys from bis school sad give them good advice. 

Henry's only son was Edward, prince of Wales ^453-1471), 
who, having shared the many journeys and varying fortunes of 
his mother, Margaret, was killed after the battle of Tewkesbury 
(I* 

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HENRY VII. (i457-»5<>9), king of England, was the first 
of the Tudor dynasty. His daim to the throne was through 
his mother from John of Gaunt and Catherine Swynford, whose 
issue born before their marriage had been legitimated by 
parliament. This, of course, was only a Lancastrian claim, 
never valid, even as such, till the direct male line 0/ John of 
Gaunt had become extinct. By his father the genealogists 
traced his' pedigree to Cadwallader, but this only endeared him 
to the Welsh when he had actually become king. His grand- 
father, Owen Tudor, however, had married Catherine, the widow 
of Henry V. and daughter to Charles VI. of France. Their 
son Edmund, being half brother of Henry VI., was created by 
that king earl of Richmond, and having married Margaret 
Beaufort, only daughter of John, duke of Somerset, died more 
than two months before their only child, Henry, was born in 
Pembroke Castle in January r457- The fatherless child bad 
sore trials. Edward IV. won the crown when he was four years 
old, and while Wales partly held out against the conqueror, 
ha was carried for safety from one castle to another. Then 
for a time he was made a prisoner; but ultimately he was taken 
abroad by his uncle Jasper, who found refuge in Brittany. At 
one time the duke of Brittany was nearly induced to surrender 
him to Edward IV.; but he remained safe in the duchy till 
the cruelties of Richard III. drove more and more Englishmen 
abroad to join him. Aa invasion of England was planned in 
1483 in concert with the duke of Buckingham's rising; but 
stormy weather at sea and an inundation in the Severn defeated 
the two movements. A second expedition, two years later, 
aided this time by France, was more successful. Henry landed 
at Milford Haven among his Welsh allies and defeated Richard 
at the battle of Bosworth (August 22, 1485). He was crowned 
at Westminster on the 30th of October following. Then, in 
fulfilment of pledges by which he had procured the adhesion 
of many Yorkist supporters, he was married at Westminster to 
Elizabeth (1465-1503), eldest daughter and heiress of Edward IV. 
(Jan. x8, i486), whose two brothers had both been murdered by 
Richard III. Thus the Red and White Roses were united and 
the pretexts for civil war done away with. 

NevertbelesSyHenry's reign wm much disturbed by a succession 



HENRY VIII. 



2$7 



of Yorkist conspiracies and pretender* Of tbe two roost not- 
ible impostors, the first, Lambert Simnel, personated the earl 
of Warwick, son of the duke of Clarence, a youth af seventeen 
whom Henry had at bis accession taken care to imprison in the 
Toner. Simnel,. who was but a boy, was taken over to Ireland 
to perform his part, and the farce was wonderfully successful. 
He was crowned as Edward VI. in Cbristchurch Cathedral, 
Dublin, and received the allegiance of every one — bishops, 
nobles and judges, alike with others. From Ireland, accom- 
panied by some bands of German- mercenaries procured for him 
in the Low Countries, he invaded England; but tbe (rising was 
put down at Stoke near Newark in Nottinghamshire, and, 
Simnel being captured, the king made him a menial of his 
kitchen. 

This movement had been greatly assisted by Margaret, duchess 
dowager of Burgundy, sister of, Edward IV., who cpuld not 
endure to see the House of York supplanted by that of Tudor. 
Hie second pretender, Perlin Warbeck, was also much indebted 
to her support; but he seems to have entered on bis career 
at first without it. And his story, which was more prolonged, 
had to do with tbe attitude of many countries towards England. 
Anxious as Henry was to avoid being involved in foreign wars, 
it was not many years before he was committed to a war with 
France, partly by bis desire of an alliance with Spain, and partly 
by the indignation of his own subjects at the way in which the 
French were undermining the independence of Brittany. Henry 
gave Brittany defensive aid; but after the duchess Anne had 
married Charles VIII. of France, he felt bound to fulfil his 
obligations to Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain, and also to the 
German king Maximilian, by an invasion of France in 149a. 
His allies, however, were not equally scrupulous or equally 
able to fulfil their obligations to him; and after besieging 
Boulogne for some little time, he received very advantageous 
offers from the French king and made peace with nim. 

Now Perkin Warbeck had first appeared, in .Ireland in 1401, 
and had somehow been- persuaded there to personate Richard, 
duke of York, the younger, of the two princes murdered in the 
Tower, pretending that he had. escaped, though his brother 
had been killed. - Charles VIII., then expecting, war with England, 
called him to France, recognized his pretensions. and gave him 
a retinue; but after the peace he dismissed him. Then 
Margaret of Burgundy received him as her nephew,; and Maxi- 
milian, now estranged from Henry, recognized him as king of 
England. With a fleet given him by Maximilian he attempted 
to land at Deal, but sailed away. to Ireland ancVnet succeeding 
very well there either, sailed farther to Scotland, where James IV. 
received him with open Anna, married him to an earl's daughter 
and made a brief and futile invasion of England along with him. 
But in 1497 be thought best to dismiss him, and Perkin, after 
attempting something again an Ireland, landed, in Cornwall 
with a small body of men. 

Already Cornwall bad risen in insurrection that year, nqt 
liking the taxation imposed for. the purpose of repelling the 
Scotch invasion. A host of the country people, led first by a 
blacksmith, but afterwords by a nobleman* marched up towards 
London and were only defeated at Blackheath. But the Cornish- 
men were quite ready for another revolt, and indeed had invited 
Perkin to their shores. Ha had little fight in him, however, 
and after a futile siege of Exeter and an advance to Taunton 
he stole away and took sanctuary at Beaulieu in Hampshire. 
Bat, being assured of his life, he surrendered, was brought to 
London, and was only executed two years later, when, being 
imprisoned near the earl of Warwick in the Towet, be inveigled 
that simple-minded youth into a project of. escape. For this 
Warwick, too, was tried, condemned and executed— no doubt 
to deliver Henry from repeated conspiracies in his favour. 

Henry had by this time several children, of whom the eldest, 
Arthur, had been proposed in infancy for a bridegroom to 
Catherine, daughter of Ferdinand of Aragon. The match had 
always been kept in view, but its completion depended greatly 
•o tbe assurance Ferdinand and Isabella could feel of Henry's 
secure position upon, the throne. At last Catherine was brought 



to England and was married to Prince Arthur rat St Paul's on 
the 14th of November 1501. The lad was just over fifteen and 
the co-habitation of the couple was wisely delayed; but be 
died on the 2nd of April following. Another match was presently 
proposed for Catherine with the king's second son, Henry, which 
only took effect when tbe latter had became king himself. Mean- 
while Henry's eldest daughter Margaret was married to James IV. 
of Scotland— a match distinctly intended to promote inter- 
national peace, and make possible that ultimate union which 
actually resulted from it. The espousals had taken place at 
Richmond in 150*. and tbe marriage was celebrated in Scotland 
the year after. In the interval between these two events Henxy 
lost his. queen, who died on the nth of February 1503, and 
during the remainder of bis reign he made proposals in various 
quarters for a second inarriage**-proposal» in which political 
objects were always the chief consideration; but none of them 
led to any result. In bis latter yearn be became unpopular. from 
tbe extortions practised by his two instruments, Empson and 
Dudley, under the authority, of antiquated statuses. From 
the beginning of his reign he had been accumulating money, 
mainly for his own security against Intrigues and conspiracies, 
and avarice bad grown upon him with success. He died in April 
1500, undoubtedly the richest prince in Christendom. He was 
not a- niggard, however, in his expenditure. Before his death 
he had finished tjie hospital of the Savoy and made provision for 
the magnificent chapel at Westminster which bears his name. 
His money-getting was but part of his statesmanship, and for 
his statesmanship his country owes, him not a little gratitude. 
He not only terminated a disastrous civil war and brought 
under control the spirit of ancient feudalism, but with a clear 
survey of the conditions of foreign powers he secured England in 
almost uninterrupted peace while he developed her commerce, 
strengthened her slender navy and buijt, apparently for the first 
time, a naval dock at Portsmouth. 

In addition to his sons Arthur and Henry, Henry VII. had 
several daughters, one of whom, jMavaret, married James JV., 
lungof Scotland, and another ( Mary, became the wife of LouiaXIJ. 
of France, and afterwards of Charles Brandon, duke of Suffolk. 

Thepopular /view of Henry VI I. 's reign has always been derived 
from * w ' k ' ' at king. This has been, edited by J. $. 

Lum But daring the last half century large 

ace?- Ige have been made from' foreign aim 

dom sources of Bacon's work have been mote 

criti< t <compltte account , of Ujote aourccs. the 

read W. Busch's England under Uu. Tudor s, 

publ [892 and, in an English translation m 

**93 nation of a special kind will be found in 

M. \cc9unis and hmntmes*. published; by 

the in 1896. See also J. Qairdoer's Hsnry 

VII. .. (J.GaT^ 

HENRY VIH. (1491-1547), king of England and Ireland, the 
third child and second son of Henry VII. and Elizabeth of 
York, was born on the 48th of June 1401 and, like all the Tudor 
sovereigns except Henry VII., at Greenwich. His two brothers, 
Prince Arthur and Edmund, duke of Somerset, , and two of 
his sisters predeceased their father; Henry was the only son, 
and Margaret, afterwards queen of Scotland, and Mary, after- 
wards queen of France and duchess of Suffolk, were the only 
daughters who survived. Henry is said,, on authority which 
has not been traced farther back, than Paolo Sarpi, to have 
been destined for the church; but the story is probably a mere 
surmise from his theological accomplishments, and from bis 
earliest years high secular posts such as the vicexoyalty of Ireland 
were conferred upon the child* He was the first English monarch 
to be educated under the influence of the Renaissance, and his 
tutors included the poet Skelton; he became an accomplished 
scholar, linguist, musician and athlete, and when by tbe death 
of his brother Arthur in 150a and of his father on the 22nd of 
April 1500 Henry VIII. succeeded to the throne, his accession 
was hailed with universal acclamation. 

He had been betrothed to his brother's widow Catherine of 
Aragon, and In spite of tbe protest which he had been made to 
register against the marriage, and of the doubts expressed by 
Julius IL and Archbishop Warham as to its validity, it was 



■zte 



HENRY Vllt 



completed in the first few month* of Ml reign. 'This step was 
largely due to the pressure brought to bear by Catherine's father 
Ferdinand upon Henry's council; be regarded England as a 
tool in his hands and Catherine as his resident ambassador. 
The young king himself at first tool little interest in politics, 
and for two years affairs were managed by the pacific Richard 
Fox (q.v.) and Warham. Then Wolsey became supreme, 
while Henry was immersed in the pursuit of sport and other 
amusements. He took, however, the keenest interest from the 
first in learning and in the navy, and his inborn pride easily 
led him to support Wolsey's and Ferdinand's war-like designs 
on France. He followed an English army across the Channel 
in 15x3, and personally took part in the successful sieges of 
Therouanne and Tournay and the battle of Guinegate which 
led to the peace of 15x4. Ferdinand, however, deserted the 
English alliance, and amid the consequent irritation against 
everything Spanish, there was talk of a divorce between Henry 
and Catherine (1514), whose issue had hitherto been attended 
with fatal misfortune. But the renewed antagonism between 
England and France which followed the accession of Francis I. 
(1515) led to a rapprochement with Ferdinand; the birth of 
the lady Mary (1516) held out hopes of the male issue which 
Henry so much desired ; and the question of a divorce was 
postponed. Ferdinand died in that year (1 5x6) and the emperor 
Maximilian in 1 5 ro. Their grandson Charles V. succeeded them 
both in all their realms and dignities in spite of Henry's hardly 
serious candidature for the empire; and a lifelong rivalry broke 
out between him and Francis I. Wolsey used this antagonism 
to make England arbiter between them; and both monarchs 
sought England's favour in 1520, Francis at the Field of Cloth 
of Gold and Charles V. more quietly in Kent. At the conference 
of Calais in 1521 English influence reached its zenith; but the 
alliance with Charles destroyed the balance on Which that 
influence depended. Francis was overweighted, and his defeat 
at Pavia in 1525 made the emperor supreme. Feeble efforts 
to challenge his power in Italy provoked the sack of Rome in 
1517; and the peace of Cambrai in 1529 was made without 
any reference to Wolsey or England's interests. 

Meanwhile Henry had been developing a serious interest in 
politics, and he could brook no superior in whatever sphere 
he wished, to shine. He began to adopt a more critical attitude 
towards Wolsey 1 * policy, foreign and domestic; and to give 
ear to the murmurs against the cardinal and his ecclesiastical 
rule. Parliament had been kept at arm's length .since 15 15 lest 
k should attack the church; but Wolsey's expensive foreign 
policy rendered recourse to parliamentary subsidies indispensable. 
When it met in 1523 it refused Wolsey's demands, and forced 
loans were the result which increased the cardinal's unpopularity. 
Nor did success abroad nowblunt the edge of domestic discontent. 
His fate, however, was sealed by his failure to obtain a divorce 
for Henry from the papal court. The king's hopes of male 
issue had been disappointed, and by 1526 it was fairly certain 
that Henry could have no male heir to the throne while Catherine 
remained his wife. There was Mary, but no queen regnant had 
yet ruled in England; Margaret Beaufort had been passed over 
in favour of her son in 1485, and there was a popular impression 
that women were excluded from the throne. No candidate 
living could have secured the succession without a recurrence of 
dvil War. Moreover the unexampled fatality which had attended 
Henry's issue revived the theological scruples which had always. 
existed abdut the marriage; and the breach with Charles V. 
in 1527 provoked a renewal of the design of 1514. All these 
considerations were magnified by Henry's passion for Anne 
Boleyn, though she certainly was not the sole or the main cause 
of the divorce. That the succession was the mam point is proved 
by the fact that Henry's efforts were all directed to securing a 
wife and not a mistress. Wolsey persuaded him that the 
necessary divorce could be obtained from Rome, as it had been 
m the case of Louis XII. of France and Margaret of Scotland. 
For a time Clement VII. was inclined to concede the demand, 
and Campeggio in 1528 was given ample powers. But the 
'prospect of French success in Italy which had encouraged the 



pope proved delusive, and in 1519 be had to submit to the yoke 
of Charles V. This involved a rejection of Henry's suit, not 
because Charles cared anything for his aunt, but because a 
divorce would mean disinheriting Charles's cousin Mary, and 
perhaps the eventual succession of the son of a French princess 
to the English throne. 

Wolsey fell when Campeggio was recalled, and his fall involved 
the triumph of the anti-ecclesiastical party in England. Lay- 
men who had resented their exclusion from power were now 
promoted to offices such as those of lord chancellor and lord 
privy seal which they had rarely held before; and parliament 
was encouraged to propound lay grievances against the church. 
On the support of the laity Henry relied to abolish papal jurisdic- 
tion and reduce clerical privilege and property in England; 
and by a dose alliance with Francis L he insured himself against 
the enmity of Charles V. But it was only gradually that the 
breach was completed with Rome. Henry had defended the 
papacy against Luther in 1521 and had received in return the 
title " defender of the faith." He never liked Protestantism, 
and he was prepared for peace with Rome on his own terms. 
Those terms Were impossible of acceptance by a pope in Clement 
VTI.'s position; but before Clement bad made up his mind 
to reject them, Henry had discovered that the papacy was hardly 
worth conciliating. His eyes were opened to the extent of his 
own power as the exponent of national antipathy to papal 
jurisdiction and ecclesiastical privilege; and his appetite for 
power grew. With Cromwell's help he secured parliamentary 
support, and its usefulness led him to*extead parliamentary re- 
presentation to Wales and Calais, to defend the privileges 
of Parliament, and to yield rather than forieit it* con- 
fidence. He had little difficulty in securing the Acts of Annates, 
Appeals and Supremacy which completed the separatkm from 
Rome, or the dissolution of the monasteries which, by tronsferrrag 
enormous wealth from the church to the crown, really, in Cecil's 
opinion, ensured the reformation. 

The abolition of the papal jurisdiction removed oil obstacles 
to the divorce from Catherine and to the legalization of Henry's 
marriage with Anne Boleyn (1533). But the recognition of the 
royal supremacy could only be enforced at the cost of the heads 
of Sir Thomas More, Bishop Fisher and a number of monks 
and others among whom the Carthusians signalized themselves 
by their devotion (1535-1536). Anno Boleyn fared no better 
than the Catholic martyrs; she failed to produce a mole heir 
to the throne, and her conduct afforded a jury of peers, over 
which her uncle, the duke of Norfolk, presided, sufficient excuse 
for condemning her to death on a charge of adultery (1536). 
Henry then married Jane Seymour, who was obnoxious to no 
one, gave birth to Edward VI., and then died (1537). The 
dissolution of the monasteries had meanwhile evoked a popular 
protest in the north, and it was only by skilful and unscrupulous 
diplomacy that Henry was enabled to suppress so easily the 
Pilgrimage- of Grace: Foreign intervention was avoided through 
the renewal of war ^bet ween Fronds and Charles; and the 
insurgents were hampered by having no rival candidate for the 
throne and no means of securing the execution of their 
programme. 

Nevertheless their rising warned Henry against further 
doctrinal change. He had authorized the English Bible and 
some approach towards Protestant doctrine in the Ten Articles. 
He also considered the possibility of a political and theological 
alliance with the Lutheran princes of Germany. But in 1538 
he definitely rejected their theological terms, while in 1539-1540 
they rejected his political proposals. By the statute of Six 
Articles (r539> he took his stand on Catholic doctrine; and 
when the Lutherans had rejected his alliance, and Cromwell's 
nominee, Anne of Cleves, hod proved both distasteful on personal 
grounds and unnecessary because Charles and Francis were not 
really projecting a Catholic crusade against England, Anne was 
divorced and Cromwell beheaded. The new queen Catherine 
Howard represented the triumph of the reactionary party under 
Gardiner and Norfolk; but there was no idea of returning to the 
papal obedience, and even Catholk orthodoxy as represented 



HBNRY VIII. 



a$9 



by the Six Article* was only enforced by spasmodic outbursts 
of persecution and vain attempts to get rid of Cranmer. 

The secular importance of Henry's activity has been somewhat 
obscured by his achievements in the sphere of ecclesiastical 
politics; but no small part of his energies was devoted to the 
task of expanding the royal authority at the expense of temporal 
competitors. Feudalism was not yet dead, and in the north and 
west there were medieval franchises in which the royal writ and 
common law hardly nan at alL tyales and its marches were 
brought into legal union with the rest of England by the statutes 
of Wales (1534-1536); and after the Pilgrimage of Grace the 
Council of the North was set up to bring into subjection the 
extensive jurisdictions of the northern earls. Neither tbey nor 
the lesser chiefs who flourished on the lack of common law and 
order could be reduced by ordinary methods, and the Councils of 
Wales and of the North were given summary powers derived 
from the Roman civil law sirnihar to those exercised by the Star 
Chamber at Westminster and the court of Castle Chamber at 
Dublin. Ireland had been left by Wolsey to wallow in its own 
disorder; but disorder was anathema to Henry's mind, and in 
1535 Sir William SkefEngton was sent to apply English methods 
and artillery to the government of Ireland. Sir Anthony St 
Lcger continued his policy from 1540; Henry, instead of being 
merely lord of Ireland dependent on the pope, was made by an 
Irish act of parliament king, and supreme head of the Irish 
church. Conciliation was also tried with some lucceee; planta- 
tion schemes were rejected in favour of an attempt U> Anglicize 
the Irish; their chieftains were created earls and endowed with 
monastic lands; and so peaceful was Ireland in 154s that the 
lord-deputy could send Irish kernes and gallowglasses to ight 
against the Scots. 

Henry, however, seems to have, believed as much in the 
coercion of Scotland as in the conciliation of Ireland. Margaret 
Tudor's marriage had not reconciled the realms; and as soon 
as James V. became a possible pawn in the hands of Charles V., 
Henry bethought himself of his old claims to suzerainty over 
Scotland. At hxst he was willing to subordinate them to an 
attempt to win over Scotland to his anti-papal policy, and he 
made various efforts to bring about an interview with rnVnephew. 
But James V. was held aloof by Beaton and two French 
marriages; and France was alarmed, by Henry's growing 
friendliness with Charles V., who was nullified by hi* cousin 
Mary's restoration to her place in the succession to the throne. 
In 154a James madly sent a Scottish army to ruin at Solwmy 
Moss; his death a few weeks later left the Scottish throne to 
his infant daughter Mary Stuart, and Henry set to work to 
secure her hand for his son Edward and the recognition of his 
own suzerainty. A treaty was signed with the Scottish estate ; 
but it was torn up a few months later under the influence of 
Beaton and the queen-dowager Mary of Guise, and Hertford was 
sent in 1544 to punish this breach of promise by sacking Edin 
burgh. 

Perhaps to prevent French intervention in Scotland Henry 
joined Charles V. in invading France*, and captured Boulogne 
(Sept. x 544). But Chariea left his ally in the lurch and concluded 
the peace of Crepy that same month; and in t$45 Henry had to 
fact alone a French invasion of the Isle of Wight. This attack 
proved abortive, and peace between England and France was 
made in 1546. Charles V.'s desertion inclined Henry to listen 
to the proposals of the threatened Lutheran princes, and the 
last two years of hia reign were marked by a renewed tendency 
to advance in a Protestant direction. Catherine Howard had 
been brought to the block (1549) on charges in which there was 
probably a good deal of truth, and her successor, Catherine Parr, 
was a patroness of the new learning). An act of 1 545 dissolved 
chantries, colleges and other, religious .foundations; and in the 
autumn of 1546 the Spanish ambassador was anticipating further 
anti-ecclesiastical measures: Gardner had almost been sent 
to the Tower, and Norfolk and Surrey were condemned to death, 
white Creamer asserted that it was Henry's intention to convert 
the mass into a communion service. • An opportunist to the last, 
ha would readily have sacrificed -any theological convictions he> 



may have had in the interests of national uniformity. He died 
on the 38th of January 1547, and was buried in St George's 
Chapel, Windsor. 

The atrocity of many of Henry's acts, the novelty and success 
of his religious policy, the apparent despotism of his methods, 
or all combined, have made it difficult to estimate calmly the 
importance of Henry's work or the conditions which made if 
possible. Henry's egotism was profound, send personal motives 
undexlay his public action. While political and ecclesiastical 
conditions made the breach wfith Home possible— and ra the 
view of most Englishmen desirable— Henry VIII. was led to 
adopt the policy by private considerations. He worked for the 
good of the state because be thought his interests were bound up 
with those of the nation; and it was the real coincidence of this 
private and public point of view that made it possible for so. 
selfish a man to achieve so much for his country. The royal 
supremacy ever the church and the means by which, it was 
enforced were harsh and violent expedients; but it was of the 
highest importance that England should be saved from religious 
civil war, and it could only be saved by a despotic government. 
It was necessary for the future development of England that its 
governmental system should be centralized and unified, that the. 
authority of the monarchy should be more firmly extended over 
Wales and the western and northern borders, and that the stiH 
existing feudal franchises should be crushed; and these objects' 
were worth the price paid in the methods of the Star Chamber 
and Of the Councils of the North and of Wales. Henry's work 
on the navy requires no apology; without it Ehcabcth's victory 
'over the Spanish Armada, the liberation of the Netherlands 
and the development of English colonies would have been 
impossible; and " of all others the year 1545 best marks the 
birth of the English naval power " (Corbett, Drake % i. 59). Hat 
judgment was more at fault when he conquered Boulogne and 
sought by violence to bring Scotland into union with England. 
But at least Henry appreciated the necessity of union within 
the British Isles; and his work in Ireland relaid the foundations' 
of English rule. No 14a* important was his development of the 
.parliamentary system. Representation was extended to Wales, 
Cheshire, Berwick and Calais; and parliamentary authority 
was enhanced, largely that it might deal with the church/ until 
men began to complain of this new par! amentary Infallibility. 
The privileges oft be twe Hemes were encouraged and expanded, - 
and parliament was: led' to exercise ever wider powers. Thai- 
policy was not due to any belief on Henry's part in parliamentary 
government,, but to opportunism, to the circumstance that 
parliament was willing to do most of the things which Henry 
desired, while competing authorities, the church and the old 
nobility, were not. Nevertheless, to the encouragement gtvw 
by Henry VIII. parliament owed not a Ik tie of its future growth, ' 
and to the asd ren d er ed by parliament Henry owed his success. 

He has been described as a M despot under the forms of law "; 
and it is apparently true that he committed no illegal act. His 
despotism consists not in any attempt to rule unconstitutionally, 
but in the extraordinary degree to which he was able to use 
constitutional means in the .furtherance of his own personal 
ends. His industry, his remarkable political insight, his lack ef 
scruple, and his combined strength of will and subtlety of Intellect • 
enabled bun to utilize all the forces which tended at that time 
towards strong government throughout western Europe. In 
Mkhelet's words, "fe nouveau Messie est k rol"; and- the 
monarchy alone seemed capable of gutting the state through 
the social and political anarchy which threatened alt nations in < 
their transition from medieval U> modern organization. The 
king was the emblem, the focus and the bond of national Unity; 
and to preserve it men were ready to put up with vagaries which ■ 
to other ages seem intolerable. Henry could thus behead 
ministers and divorce wives with comparative impunity, because 
the individual appeared to be of little importance compared' 
with the state. This impunity provoked a licence which is 
responsible for the unlovely features of Henry's reiga and 
character. The elevation, and the isolation of his poslthM 
fostered m detachment from ordinary virtues and compassion, 



zqo 



HENRY I. 



and, be was a remorseless incarnation of Machiavelli's Prince. 
He had an elastic conscience which was always at the beck and 
call of his desire, and he cared little for principle. But he had a 
passion for efficiency, and for the greatness of England and 
himself. His mind, in spite of its clinging to the outward forms 
of the old faith, was intensely secular; and he was as devoid 
of a moral sense as he was of a genuine religious temperament. 
His greatness consists in his practical aptitude, in his political 
perception, and in the self-restraint which enabled him to 
confine within limits tolerable to his people an insatiable appetite 

liography are practically 
and Papers of the Reign 
and Gairdncr and corn- 
few further details may 
:es as Hall's Chronicle, 
"he Pilftim and others; 
e documentary sources 
it works, such as Ehses' 
and Letters of Thomas 
fe and Reign of Henry 
sed upon a very partial 
ntiquated principles of 
ortraiturc of Henry is 
istory which the author 
Kits in Lingard, R. W. 
y VIII. and the Monas- 
discriminating estimate 
srs Longmans' Political 
numerous paintings of 
, executed the striking 
ich, and the famous but 
The well-known three- 
ed to Holbein, is by an 
i portraits was exhibited 
td the catalogue of that 
them; several are re- 
\ (1902), the letterpress 
cheaper edition (1905). 
1 extant; his only book 
a M. Lutherum (1521), 

r , _. . -t, , , . is at Windsor. Several 

anthems composed by him are extant; and one at feast, O Lord, 
the Maker of off Things, is still occasionally rendered in English 
cathedrals. (A. F. P.) 

HENRY I. (1214-1217), king of Castile, son of Alphonso VIII. 
of Castile, and his wife Eleanor of Aquitaine, daughter of Henry 
II. of England, after whom he was named, was born about 
1207. He was killed, while still a boy, by the nil of a tile from 
a roof. 

. Hxnky II. of Trastamara (1360-1379), king of Castile, founder 
of the dynasty known as " the new kings," was the eldest son of 
Alphonso XI. and of bis mistress Leonora de Guzman. He 
was born in 1533. His father endowed him with great lordships 
in northern Spain, and made him count of Trastamara. After 
the death of Alphonso XI. in 1350, Leonora was murdered to 
satisfy the revenge of the king's neglected wife. Several of the 
numerous children she had borne to Alphonso were slain at 
different times by Peter the Cruel, the king's legitimate son and 
successor. Henry preserved his life by submissions and by 
keeping out of the king's way. At last, after taking part in 
several internal commotions, he fled to France in 1356. In 
1366 he persuaded the mercenary soldiers paid off by the kings 
of England and France to accompany him on an expedition to 
upset Peter, who was driven out. The Black Prince having 
intervened on behalf of Peter, Henry was defeated at Najera 
(3rd of April 1367) and had again to flee to Aragon. When the 
Black Prince was told that " the Bastard " had neither been 
slain nor taken, he said that nothing bad been done. And so it 
turned out; for, when the Black Prince had left Spain, Henry 
came back with a body of French soldiers of fortune under du 
Guesclin, and drove his brother into the castle of Montiel in La 
Mancha. Peter was tempted out by du Guesclin, and the half 
brothers met in the Frenchman's tent. They rushed at one 
another, and Peter, the stronger man, threw Henry down, and fell 
on him. One of Henry's pages seized the king by the leg and 
threw him on his back. Henry then pulled up Peter's hauberk 
apd stabbed him mortally in the stomach, on the 23rd of March 



1360. He reigned for ten years,, with some success both in 
pacifying the kingdom and in war with Portugal. But as bit 
title was disputed he was compelled to purchase support by vast 
grants to the nobles and concessions to the cities, by which he 
gained the title of Bide las Mercedes— -he of the largesse. Henry 
was a strong ally of the French king in his wars with the English, 
who supported the claims of Peter's natural daughters. He 
died on the 30th of May 1379. 

Hkniv HI. (1390-1406) king of Castile, called El Doliente, 
the Sufferer, was the son of John I. of Castile and Leon, and of 
his wife Beatrice, daughter of Ferdinand of Portugal. He was 
born in 1379. The period of minority was exceptionally anarchi- 
cal, even for Castile, but as the cities, always the best supporters 
of the royal authority, were growing in strength, Henry was able 
to reduce his kingdom to obedience, and, when he took the 
government into his own hands after 1393, to compel his nobles 
with comparative ease to surrender the crown lands they had 
seized. The meeting of the Cortes summoned by him at Madrid 
in 1394 marked a great epoch in the establishment of a practically ' 
despotic royal authority, based on the consent of the commons, 
who looked to the* crown to protect them against the excesses 
of the nobles. Henry strengthened his position still further 
by his marriage with Catherine, daughter of John of Gaunt and 
of -Constance, elder daughter of Peter the Cruel and Maria de 
Padilla. This union combined the rival claims of the descendants ' 
of Peter and of Henry of Trastamara. The king's bodily weak- 
ness limited hit real capacity, and his early death on the 25th 
of December 1406 cut short the promise of his reign. 

Henry IV. (1453-1474), kiAfof Castile, sornamed the Impotent, 
or the Spendthrift, was -the son of John 17. of Castile and Leon, 
and of his wife, Mary, daughter of Ferdinand I. of Aragon and 
Sicily. He was bom at Valladotid on the 6th of January 1425. 
The surnames given to this king by his subjects are of much more 
than usual accuracy. His personal character was one of mere 
weakness, bodily and mental. Henry was an vndutiful son, and 
his reign was one long period of confusion, marked by incidents 
of the most ignominious kind. He divorced his first wife Blanche 
of Navarre in. 14SJ on the ground of •' mutual impotence." 
Yet in 146& he married Joan off Portugal, and when she bore a 
daughter, first repudiated her as adulterine; and then claimed 
her for his own. : In 1469' he was solemnly deposed in favour 
of his brother Alphonso, on whose death m the same year his 
authority was again recognized. The' last years of his life were ' 
spent in vain endeavours, first to force his half-sister Isabella, 
afterwards queen, to marry his favourite, the Master of Santiago, 
and then to exclude her from the throne, Henry died at Madrid 
on the rsth of December 1474. 

HEMRY I. (1008-1060), king of France, son of King Robert and 
his queen, Constance of Aquitaine, and grandson of Hugh Capet, 
came to the throne upon the death of his father in 1631, although 
in 1027. he had been anointed king at Reims and associated 
in the government with his father. His mother, who favoured 
her younger son Robert, and had retired from court upon 
Henry's coronation, formed a powerful leagne against him, and 
he was forced to take refuge with Robert II., duke of Normandy. 
In the civil war which resulted, Henry was able to break up the 
league of his opponents in XO32. Constance died in 1034, and 
the rebel brother Robert was given the duchy of Burgundy, • 
thus founding that great collateral Hne which was -to rival the 
kings of France for three centuries* Henry atoned for this by 
a reign marked by unceasing struggle against the great barons. 
From 1033 to 1043 he was involved in a- life and death contest 
with those nobles whose territory adjoined the- royal domains, 
especially with the great house of BlOis, whose count, Odo II., 
had been the centre of the league of Constance, and with the 
counts of Champagne. Henry's success in these wars was largely 
due to the help given him by Robert of Normandy, but upon the 
accession of Robert's son William (the Conqueror), Normandy 
itself became the chief danger. From 1047 Id the year t>f his 
death, Henry was almost constantly at war with' William, who 
held his own against the king's formidable Itams and beat 
back two xoyai invasions, in -1055 and 1058. Henry's rejfcB 



HENRY II.— HENRY III. 



291 



nirb the bright of feudalism. The Normana were independent 
o( him, with their frontier barely 25 m. west of Paris; to the 
south his authority was really bounded by the Loire; in the cast 
the count of Champagne was little more than nominally his 
subject, and the duchy of Burgundy was almost entirely cut off 
from the king. Yet Henry maintained the independence of the 
clergy against the pope Leo IX., and claimed Lorraine from the 
emperor Henry 111. In an interview at Ivois, he reproached 
the emperor with the violation of promises, and Henry III. 
challenged him to a single combat. According to the German 
chronicle — which French historians doubt — the king of France 
declined the combat and fled from Ivois during the night. In 
1059 he had his eldest son Philip crowned as joint king, and died 
the following year. Henry's first wife was Maud, niece of the 
emperor Henry HI., whom he married in 1043. She died child- 
less in 1044. Historians have sometimes confused her with 
Maud (or Matilda), the emperor Conrad II.'s daughter, to whom 
Henry was affianced in 1053, but who died before the marriage. 
In 1051 Henry married the Russian princess Anne, daughter of 
Varoslav I., grand duke of Kiev. She bore him two sons, Philip, 
bis successor, and Hugh the great, count of Vermandois. 

See the Historuu of Rudolph Glaber. edited by M. Pre* (Paris, 
i8§6): F. Sochnee, Catalogue dts actes a" Henri I" (1907); de Cau 
de Saint Aymour. Anne de Rustic, reine de trance (1&96) ; t. Lavissc, 
Htstoire de France, tome H. (tool), and the article on Henry I. in 
La Grand* Encyclopidii by M. Pron. 

HENRY IL (1510-1559), king of France, the second son of 
Francis I. and Claude, succeeded to the throne in 1 $47. When 
only seven years old he was sent by his father, with his brother 
the dauphin Francis, as a hostage to Spain in 1526, whence they 
returned after the conclusion of the peace of Cambrai in 1530. 
Henry was too young to have carried away any abiding impres- 
sions, yet throughout his life his character, dress and bearing 
were far more Spanish than French. In 1533 his father married 
him to Catherine de' Medici, from which match, as he said, 
Francis hoped to gain great advantage, even though it might 
be somewhat of a misalliance. In 1536 Henry, hitherto duke of 
Orleans, became dauphin by the death of his elder brother 
Francis. From that time he was under the influence of two 
personages, who dominated him completely for the remainder 
of his life — Diane de Poitiers, his mistress, and Anne de Mont- 
morency, his mentor. Moreover, his younger brother. Charles 
of Orleans, who was of a more sprightly temperament, was his 
father's favourite; and the rivalry of Diane and the duchesse 
d'£tampes helped to make still wider the breach between the 
king and the dauphin. Henry supported the constable Mont- 
morency when he was disgraced in 1541; protested against 
the treaty of Crepy in 1544; and at the end of the reign held 
himself completely aloof. His accession in 1547 gave rise to a 
veritable revolution at the court. Diane, Montmorency and the 
Guises were all-powerful, and dismissed Cardinal de Tournon, 
de Longueval, the duchesse d'foampes and all the late king's 
friends and officials. At that time Henry was twenty-eight years 
old. He was a robust man, and inherited his father's love of 
violent exercise; but his character was weak and his intelligence 
mediocre, and he had none of the superficial and brilliant gifts 
of Francis I. He was cold, haughty, melancholy and dull. 
He was a bigoted Catholic, and showed to the Protestants even 
less mercy than his father. During his reign the royal authority 
became more severe and more absolute than ever. Resistance to 
the financial extortions of the government was cruelly chastised, 
and the " Chambre Ardente " was instituted against the* Re- 
formers. Abroad, the struggle was continued against Charles V. 
and Philip II., which ended in the much-discussed treaty of 
Cateau-Cambresis. Some weeks afterwards high feast was held 
00 the occasion of the double marriage of the king's daughter 
Elizabeth with the king of Spain, and of his sister Margaret 
with .the duke of Savoy. On the 30th of June 1559, when 
tilting with the count of Montgomery, Henry was wounded in 
the temple by a lance. In spile of the attentions of Ambroise 
Pari be died on the 10th of July. By his wife Catherine de' 
Medici be had seven children living: Elizabeth, queen of Spain; 



Claude, duchess of Lorraine; Francis (II.), Charles (IX.) and 
Henry (IIL), all of whom came to the throne; Marguerite, 
who became queen of Navarre in 2572; and Francis, duke of 
Alencon and afterwards of Anjou, who died in 1584. 



HENRY III. (1551-1 589), king of France, third son of Henry II. 
and Catberiac de' Medici, was bora at Fontainebleau on the 
10th of September 1551, and succeeded to the throne of France 
on the death of his brother Charles IX. in 1574, In bis youth) 
as duke of Anjou, he was warmly attached to the Huguenot 
opinions, as we learn from his sister Marguerite de Valois; but 
his unstable character soon gave way before his mother's will, 
and both Henry and Marguerite remained choice ornaments 
of the Catholic Church. Henry won, under the direction of 
Marshal de Tavannes, two brilliant victories at Jarnac and 
Moncontour ( 1 560). He was the favourite son of bis mother, and 
took part with her in organizing the massacre of St Bartholomew. 
In 1573 Catherine procured his election to the throne of Poland. 
Passionately enamoured of the princess of Condi, he set out 
reluctantly to Warsaw, but, on the death of his brother Charles 
IX. in 1 574, he escaped from bis Polish subject!, who endeavoured 
to retain him by force, came back to France and assumed the 
crown. He returned to a wretched kingdom, torn with civil 
war. In spite of his good intentions, he was incapable of govern- 
ing, and abandoned the power to his mother and his favourites, 
Yet he was no dullard. He was a man of keen intelligence and 
cultivated mind, and deserves as much as Francis I. the title of 
patron of letters and art. But his incurable indolence and love 
of pleasure prevented him from taking any active part in affairs. 
Surrounded by his mignons, he scandalized the people by his 
effeminate manners. He dressed himself in women's clothes, 
made a collection of little dogs and hid in the cellars when it 
thundered. The disgust aroused by the vices and effeminacy 
of the king increased the popularity of Henry of Guise. After 
the " day of the barricades " (the 12th of May 1588), the king, 
perceiving that his influence was lost, resolved to rid himself 
of Guise by assassination; and on the 23rd of December 1588 
his faithful bodyguard, the " forty-five," carried out his design 
at the chateau of Blois. But the fanatical preachers of the League 
clamoured furiously for vengeance, and on the 1st of August 1580, 
while Henry III. was investing Paris with Henry of Navarre, 
Jacques Clement, a Dominican friar, was introduced into bis 
presence on false letters of recommendation, and plunged a 
knife into the lower part of his body. He died a few hours 
afterwards with great fortitude. By his wife Louise of Lorraine, 
daughter of the count of Vaudlmont, he had no children, and on 
his deathbed he recognized Henry of Navarre as his successor. 

Sec the memoirs and chronicles of 1'Estoile, Vflleroy, Ph. Hurault 
de Cheverny, Brantome, Marguerite de Valois, la Huguerye, du 
Plesms-Mornay. Ac; Archives curieuses of Cimber and Danjou, 
vols. x. and xi.; Mbnoitts de la Ligue (new ed.. Amsterdam, 1758): 
the histories of T. A. d'Aubigne and J. A. de Thou; Correspondence 
of Catherine de' Medici and of Henry IV. (in the Collection de docu> 
ments inidits), and of the Venetian ambassadors, &c.; P. Matthieu, 
Htstoire de France, vol. i. (1631); Scipion Dupleix, Htsttnre de Henri 
Hi (1633); Robiquet. Paris ei la Litue (1886); and J. H. Mariljol, 
" La RcTorme et la Ligue." in the Htstoire de France, by E. Lavtsse 
(Paris, 1904), which contains a more complete bibliography. 



i<)2 



HENRY 1V; 



HENRY IV. (155J-1610), king o! France, the son of Antoine 
de Bourbon, duke of Vendome, head of (he younger branch of 
the Bourbons*, descendant of Robert of Clermont, sixth son of 
St Louis and of Jeanne d'Albret, queen of Navarre, was born 
at Pau (Basses Pyrenees) on the 14th of December X553. He 
was educated as a Protestant, and in 1557 was sent to the court 
at Amiens. In 1 561 hi entered the College de Navarre at Paris, 
returning in 1565 to Beam. During the third war of religion 
in Prance (1568-15 70) he was taken by his mother to Gaspard 
de Coligny, leader of the Protestant forces since the death of 
Louis I., prince of Cond6, at Jarnac, and distinguished himself 
at the battle of Arnay-le-Duc in Burgundy in 1569. On the 9th 
of June 1572, Jeanne d'Albret died and Henry became king of 
Navarre, marrying Margaret of Valois, sister of Charles IX. of 
France, on the 18th' of August of that year. He escaped the 
massacre of St Bartholomew on the 34th of August by a feigned 
abjuration. Qn the and of February 1576, after several vain 
attempts, he escaped from the court, joined the combined forces 
of Protestants and of opponents of the king, and obtained by 
the treaty of Beaulicu (1576) the government of Guienne. In 
1577 he secured the treaty of Bergcrac, which foreshadowed 
the edict of Nantes. As a result of quarrels with his unworthy 
wife, and the unwelcome intervention of Henry III., he undertook 
the seventh war of religion, known as the " war of the lovers " 
(des omonreux), seized Cahorson the 5th of May 1580, and signed 
the treaty of Fleix on the 26th of November 1580. On the 10th 
ot June 1584 the death of Monsieur, the duke of Anjou, brother 
of King Henry III., made Henry of Navarre heir presumptive 
to the throne of France. Excluded from it by the treaty of 
Nemours (1585) he began the " war of the three Henrys " by a 
campaign in Guienne (1586) and defeated Anne, due dc Joyeuse, 
at Coutras on the 20th of October 1587. Then Henry III., 
driven from Paris by the League on account of his murder of the 
duk e of Guise at Blois ( 1 58S) , sought the aid of the king of Navarre 
to win back his capital, recognizing him as his heir. The assassi- 
nation of Henry III. on the 1st of August 1589 left Henry king 
of France; but he had to- struggle for ten more years against the 
League and against Spain before he won his kingdom. The 
mam events in that long struggle were the victory of Arques 
over Charles, duke of Mayenne, on the 28th of September 1589; 
of Ivry, on the 14th of March 1500* the siege of Paris (1590); 
of Rouen (1 592) ; the meetingof the Estates of the League ( 1 593), 
which the Satire Minippie turned to ridicule; and finally the 
conversion of Henry IV. to Catholicism in July 1593 — an act of 
political wisdom, since it brought about the collapse of all 
opposition. Paris gave in to him on the 22nd of March 1594 
and province by province yielded to arms or negotiations; 
while the victory of Fontaine-Fsancaise (1595) and the capture 
of Amiens forced Philip H. of Spain to sign the peace of Vervins 
on the 2nd of May 1598. On the 13th of April of that year 
Henry IV. had promulgated the Edict of Nantes. 
■ Then Henry set to work to pacify and restore prosperity 
to his kingdom. Convinced by the experience of the wars that 
France needed an energetic central power, be pushed at times 
his royal prerogatives to excess, raising taxes in spite of the 
Estates, interfering in the administration of the towns, reforming 
their constitutions, and holding himself free to reject the advke 
of the notables if he consulted them. Aided by his faithful 
friend Maxirailien de Btthune, baron de Rosny and due de 
Sully (?.».), he reformed the finances, repressed abuses, suppressed 
useless offices, extinguished the formidable debt and realized 
a reserve of eighteen millions. To alleviate the distress of the 
people he undertook to develop both agriculture and industry: 
planting colonies of Dutch and Flemish settlers to drain the 
marshes of Saintonge, issuing prohibitive measures against the 
importation of foreign goods (1 597), introducing the silk industry, 
encouraging the manufacture of cloth, of glass-ware, of tapestries 
(Gobelins), and under the direction of Sully — named grand -voycr 
de France — improving and increasing the routes for commerce. 
A complete system of canals was planned, that of Briare partly 
dug. New capitulations were concluded with the sultan Ahmed 
L (1604) and treaties of commerce with England (1606), with 



Spain and Holland. Attempts were made ut 1604 and 1608 In 
colonize Canada (see Champlain, Samuel de). The army was 
reorganized, its pay raised and assured, a school of cadets formed 
to supply it with officers, artillery constituted and strongholds 
on the frontier fortified. While lacking the artistic tastes of the 
Valois, Henry beautified Paris, building the great gallery of the 
Louvre, finishing the Tuileries, building, the Pont Netrf, the 
H6tel-de-ViIle and the Place Royafe. 

The foreign policy of Henry W. was directed against the 
Habsburgs. Without declaring war, he did all possible harm 
to them by alliances and diplomacy. In Italy he gained the 
grand duke of Tuscany — marrying his niece Marie de* Medici 
in 1600— the duke of Mantua, the republic of Venice and Pope 
Paul V. The duke of Savoy, who had held back from the treaty 
of Vervins fn 1598, signed the treaty of Lyons In 1601; in ex- 
change for the marquisate of Saluzzo, France acquired Bresse, 
Bugey, Valromey and the bailtiageof Gex. In the Low Countries, 
Henry sent subsidies td the Dutch in their struggle against 
Spain. He concluded alliances with the Protestant princes in 
Germany, with the duke of Lorraine, the Swiss cantons (treaty 
of Soleure, 1602) and with Sweden. 

The opening on the a 5th of March 1609 of the question of the 
succession of John William the Good, duke of Cleves, of Jfllich 
and of Berg, led Henry, in spite of his own hesitations and those 
of his German allies, to declare war an the emperor Rudolph II. 
But he was assassinated by Ravaillac (9.9.) on the, 14th of May 
x6io, upon the eve of his great enterprise, leaving his nolicy to 
be followed up later by Richelieu. Sully in his Economics 
royalcs attributes to his master the " great design " of constitut- 
ing, after having defeated Austria, a vast European confedera- 
tion of fifteen states— a " Christian Republic "—directed by a 
general council of sixty deputies reappointed eyery three years. 
But this " design " has been attributed rather to the imagination 
of Sully himself than to the more practical policy of the king. • 

No figure in France has been more popular than that of 
" Henry the Great." He was affable to the point of familiarity, 
quick-witted like a true Gascon, good-hearted, indulgent, yet 
skilled in reading the character of those around him, and he 
could at times show himself severe and unyielding. His courage 
amounted almost to recklessness. He was a better soldier than 
strategist. Although at bottom authoritative he surrounded 
himself with admirable advisers (Sully, Sillery, Vllleroy, Jcannin) 
and profited from their co-operation. His love affairs, un- 
doubtedly too numerous (notably with Gabrielle d'Estrees and 
Henriette d'Entragues), if they in hire his personal reputation, 
had no bad effect on his policy as king, in which be was guided 
only by an exalted ideal of his royal office, and by a sympathy 
for the common people, his reputation for which has perhaps 
been exaggerated somewhat in popular tradition by the circum- 
stances of his reign. 

Henry IV. had no children by his first wife, Margaret of 
Valois. By Marie de' Medici he had Louis, later Louis XIDL; 
Gaston, duke of Orleans; Elizabeth, who married Philip IV. of 
Spain; Christine, duchess of Savoy; and Henrietta, wife of 
Charles I. of England. Among his bastards the most famous 
were the children of Gabrielle dTSstrees— Caesar, duke of 
Venddme, Alexander of Vendome, and Catherine Henriette, 
duchess of Elbeuf. 

Several portraits of Henry are preserved at Paris, In the 
Bib!ioth£que Nationale (cf. Bouchot, Portraits an crayon, p. 189), 
at the Louvre (by Probus, bust by Barthelemy Prieur) at 
Versailles, Geneva (Henry at the age of fifteen), at Hampton 
Court, at Munich and at Florence. 

The works dealing with Henry IV. and his reign are too numerous 
to be enum e rated here. For sources, see the RecwU des lettres 
missives de Henri IV, published from 1834 to 1853 by B. de Xivrey, 
in the CdUctiou de documents inMSts relatifs a Yhutoirt 4e Fromt. 
and the various researches of Galitxin, Bautiot, Halpben, Dusskux 
and others. Besides their historic interest, the letters written 
personally by Henry, whether love notes or letters of state, reveal a 
charming writer. Mention shoald be made of- August* Ptoirsoa't 
Hiskwed* rhtnede Henri IV fcnd.ed- 4 vols-, ftaria, 1860-1867) 
and of J. H. Manejol'a volume (vL) in the Hisioue de Frame, edited 
by Ernest Lavisse (Paris, 1905), where main sources and literature 



HENRY I^HENRY THE PROUD 



_ ^ wh|rfcach<^««w i A «**•« H—ri IY has toon foonded 
at racu (1905). Finally, a complete survey of the sources for the 

Fcriod 1494-16 10 is given by Henri Hauscr in vol. vii. of Sources dt 
hisloM de France (Paris, 1906J in continuation of A. Molinier's 
ooUectioo of the sources for French history during the middle 
a«es. 

-HENRY J. (c i3io-i»74>, amnained It Grts, king of Navarre 
and count of Champagne, was the youngest son of Theobald L 
king of Navaat by Margaret oi Foix, and succeeded his eldest 
brother Theobald 111. as kingoi Navarte andcaunt of Champagne 
in December 1270. His prochuewrtioh at Pamplona, however, 
did not take place till March of the following year, and bis 
coronation was delayed until May 1*73. After * brief reign, 
characterized, It is said, by dignity and talent, he died In July 
12*4, suffocated, according to the generally received accounts, by 
his own fat. In him the maleine of the counts of Champagne 
and kings of Navarre, became extinct. He married in 1269 
Blanche, daughter oi Robert, count of Artois,*nd niece of King 
Louis IX. and was succeeded by bis only legitimate child, Jeanne 
or Joanna, by whose marriage to Philip IV. afterwards king of 
France in 1364, the crown of -Navarre became united to that of 
France. 

HENRY II. ( 1 503-1555), titular king of Navarre, was the 
eldest son of Jean d'Albret (d. 1516) by his wife Catherine de 
Foix, sister and heiress of Francis Phoebus, king of Navarre, 
and was born at Sanquesa in April 1 503. When Catherine died 
in exile in 1517 Henry succeeded her in her claim on Navarre, 
which was disputed by Ferdinand I. king of Spain; and under 
the protection of Francis I. of France he assumed the title of 
king. After ineffectual conferences at Noyon in 1516 and at 
Montpellier in 1518, an active effort was made in 1 52 1 to establish 
him in the 4e facto sovereignty; but the French troops which 
had sewed the country were ultimately expelled by the Spaniards. 
In 1525 Henry was taken prisoner at the battle of Pavia, but 
he contrived td escape, and in 1526 married Margaret, the sister 
of Francis I. and widow of Charles, duke of Alencon. By her 
he was the father of Jeanne d'Albret (d. i$7*)i and was conse- 
quently the grandfather of Henry IV. of France. Henry, who 
had some sympathy with the Huguenots, died at Pau on the 
15th of May 155$. 

HENRY 1. (r 51 2-1580), king of Portugal, third son of Emanuel 
the Fortunate, was born in Lisbon, on the 31st of January 1512. 
He was destined for the church, and in 1532 was raised to the 
archiepiscopal see of Braga. In 1542 he received the cardinal's 
hat, and in 1578 when he was called to succeed his grandnephew 
Sebastian on the throne, he held the archbishoprics of Lisbon 
and Coimbra as well as that of Praga, in addition to the wealthy 
abbacy of Akobazar. As an ecclesiastic he was pious, pare, 
simple in his mode of life, charitable, and a learned and liberal 
patron of letters; but as a sovereign he proved weak, timid 
and incapable. On his death in 1580, after a brief reign of 
seventeen months, the male line of the royal family which traced 
its descent from Henry, first count of Portugal {c. 1100), came 
to an end; and all attempts to fix the succession during his 
lifetime having ignominiously failed, Portugal became an easy 
prey to Philip II. of Spain. 

HENRY II. (1480-1568), duke 6f Brunswick- WolfenbQttd, 
was a son of Duke Henry I., and was born on the rothof November 
1489. He began to reign In 1514, but his brother William 
Objected to the indivisibility of the duchy which had been 
decreed by the elder Henry, and it was only in 1 5*3 5, after an im- 
prisonment of eleven years, that William recognized his brother's 
title. Sharing in an attack on John, bishop of Hjldesheim, 
Henry was defeated at the battle of Soltau in June 15 19, but 
afterwards he was more successful, and when peace was made 
received some lands from the bishop. In 1515 he assisted 
Philip, landgrave of Hesse, to crush the rising of the peasants 
fa north Germany, and iri 1528 took help to Charles V. in Italy, 
where he narrowly escaped capture. As a pronounced opponent 
of the reformed doctrines, he joined the Catholic princes in 
concerting measures for defence at Dessau and elsewhere, but 
on the other hand promised Philip of Hesse to aid him in restoring 
his oww brother-in-law XJlrith, duke of WuTttemberg, to nis 



293 

duchy. However he' gave no tnafafaw* when chte enterprise 
was undertaken in 1534, and subsequently the hostility between 
Philip and himself was very marked. Henry was attacked 
by Luther with unmeasured violence in a writing Wider Hani 
Worst ; but more serious was his isolation in north Germany 
The duke soon came into collision with the Protestant towns of 
Goslar and Brunswick, against the former of which a sentence 
of restitution had been pronounced by the imperial court 0! 
justice (Rcichskammcrgerickt). To conciliate the Protestants 
Charges V. had suspended the execution of this sentence, a 
proceeding which Henry declared was ultra vires. The league 
of Schmalkaiden, led by Philip of Hesse and John Frederick; 
elector of Saxony, then took up arms to defend the towns; and 
in 1 54 a Brunswick was overrun and the duke forced to flee. In 
September 1545 he made an attempt to regain his duchy, but 
was taken dritoner by Philip, and only released after the victor^ 
of Charles V. at Muhlberg in April 1 547. Returning to Brunswick, 
where he was very unpopular, he soon quarrelled with his subject! 
both on political and religious questions, while his duchy was 
ravaged by Albert Alcibiades, prince of Bayr euth. Henry was 
among the princes who banded themselves together to crash 
Albert, and after the death of Maurice, elector of Saxony, at 
Sievershausen in July 1553, he took command of the allied troops 
and defeated Albert in two engagements. In his later years 
he became more tolerant, and was reconciled with his Protestant 
subjects. He died at WblfenbUttd on the nth of June 15681 
The duke was twice married, firstly in 151 5 to Maria (d. 1541)1 
sister of Ubich of Wurttemberg, and secondly in 155O to Sophia 
(d. 1 573) daughter of Sigismund I., king of Poland. He attained 
some notoriety through his romantic attachment to Eva von 
Trott, whom he represented as dead and afterwards kept con- 
cealed at Staufenburg. Henry was succeeded by his only 
surviving son, Julius (1528-1589). 

See F. Koldewey, Heint ton WdfenbdUel (Halle, 1883); and 
F. Brans, Die Vertrcibung Hertog Heiuricks von Braumxkimtg dunk 
den SchtmU k aidisckm Bund (Marburg* 1689). 

HENRY (e." 1108-1139), surnamed the "Proud," duke of 
Saxony and Bavaria, second son of Henry the Black, duke 
of Bavaria, and Wulfhild, daughter of Magnus Billung, duke of 
Saxony, was a member of the Welf family. His father and 
mother both died in 11 r6, and as Ms elder brother Conrad had 
entered the Church, Henry became duke of Bavaria and shared 
the family possessions in Saxony, Bavaria and Swabia with his 
younger brother, Welf. At Whitsuntide n 27 he was married 
to Gertrude, the only child of the German king, Lothair the 
Saxon, and at once took part in the warfare between the king 
and the Hohenstaufen brothers, Frederick II., duke of Swabia, 
and Conrad, afterwards the German king Conrad HI. White 
engaged in this struggle Henry was also occupied in suppressing 
a rising in Bavaria, led by Frederick, count of Bo gen, during 
which both duke and count sought to establish their own candi- 
dates in the bishopric of Regensburg. After a war of devastation, 
Frederick submitted in 1133, and two years later the Hohen- 
staufen brothers made their peace with Lothair. In 1136 
Henry accompanied his father-in-law to Italy, and taking 
command of one division of the German army marched into 
sout hern Italy, devastating the land as he went. It was probably 
about this time that he was invested with the margraviate of 
Tuscany and the lands of Matilda, the late margravine. Having 
distinguished himself by his military genius during this campaign 
Henry left Italy with the German troops, and was appointed 
by the emperor as his successor in the dukedom of Saxony. 
When Lothair died in December 1 137 Henry's wealth and position 
made him a formidable candidate for the German throne, but 
the same qualities which earned for him the surname of •' Proud,'* 
aroused the jealousy of the princes, and so prevented his erection. 
The new king> Conrad III., demanded the imperial Hnti&tia 
which were in Henry's possession, and the duke in return asked 
for his investiture with the Saxon duchy. But Conrad, who 
feared his power, refused to assent to this on the pretext thsit 
it was unlawful for two duchies to be in one hand. Attempts 
at a settlement failed, and in July 1138 the duke was placed 



294 



HENRY THE LION 



under the ban, tod Saxony was given to Albert the Bear, alter* 
wards margrave of Brandenburg. War broke out in Saxony 
and Bavaria, but was out snort by Henry's sudden death at 
QuedUnburg on the aoth of October njo. He was buried at 
Kdnigslutter. Henry was a man of great ability, and his early 
death alone prevented him from playing an important part in 
German history. Conrad the Priest, the author of the Rolands* 
lied, was in Henry's service, and probably wrote this poem 
at the request of the duchess, Gertrude. 

See S. Riesler. Gesckkhl* Btytrm, Band i. (Got ha. 1878); W. 
Bernhardt Loihar van Suppknburt (Leipzig, 1879); W. von Gtese- 
brccht, GtsckichU dtr dcuUchtn Kaiserzat, Band tv. (Brunswick, 
1877). 

. HENRY (1120-1105), surnamed the " Lion," duke of Saxony 
and Bavaria, only son of Henry the Proud, duke of Saxony and 
Bavaria, and Gertrude, daughter of the emperor Lolhair the 
Saxon, was born at Ravensburg, aad was a member of the family 
of Welf. In 1x38 the German king Conrad 111. had sought to 
deprive Henry the Proud of his duchies, and when the duke died 
in the following year the interests of his young son were 
maintained in Saxony by his mother, and his grandmother 
Richenza, widow of Lothair, and in Bavaria by his uncle, Count 
Y«tU. VI. This struggle ended in May 1142 when Henry 'was 
invested as duke of Saxony at Frankfort, and Bavaria was given 
to Henry II., Jasomirgott, margrave of Austria, who married 
his mother Gertrude. In 1147 he married dementia, daughter 
of Conrad, duke of Z&hringen (d. 115a), and began to take an 
active part in administering his dukedom and extending its 
area. He engaged in a successful expedition against the Abo- 
trites, or Obot rites, in 1 147, and won a considerable tract of land 
beyond the Elbe, in which were re-established the bishoprics of 
Mecklenburg, 1 Oldenburg* and Ratzeburg. Hart wig. arch- 
bishop of Bremen, wished these sees to be under his authority, 
but Henry contested this claim, and won the right to invest 
these bishops himself, a. privilege afterwards confirmed by the 
emperor Frederick I. Henry, meanwhile, had not forgotten 
Bavaria. In 1147 he made a formal claim on this duchy, and 
in usx sought to take possession, but failing to obtain the aid 
of his uncle Welf, did not effect his purpose. The situation was 
changed in his favour when Frederick L, who was anxious to 
count the duke among his supporters, succeeded Conrad as 
German king in February 1 1 52. Frederick was unable at first to 
persuade Henry Jasomirgott to abandon Bavaria, but in June 
1 1 54 he recognized the claim of Henry the Lion, who accom- 
panied him on his first Italian campaign and distinguished 
himself in suppressing a rising at Rome, Henry's formal in- 
vestiture as duke of Bavaria taking place in September 11 56 
on the emperor's return to Germany. Henry soon returned to 
Saxony, where he found full scope for his untiring energy 
Adolph II., count of Holstein, was compelled to cede Liibeck 
to him in X158; campaigns in 1163 and 1164 beat down further 
resistance of the Aboirites; and Saxon garrisons were estab- 
lished in the conquered lands. The duke was aided in this work 
by the alliance of Valdemar L, king of Denmark, and, it is said, 
by engines of war brought from Italy. During these years he 
had also helped Frederick I. in his expedition of 1157 against 
the Poles, and in July 1150 had gone to his assistance in Italy, 
where he remained for about two years. 

The vigorous measures taken by Henry to increase his power 
aroused considerable opposition. In 1 166 a coalition was formed 
against him at Merscburg under the leadership of Albert the Bear, 
margrave of Brandenburg, and Archbishop Hart wig. Neither 
side met with much success in the desultory warfare that ensued, 
and Frederick made peace between the combatants at Wurzburg 
in June 1168. Having obtained a divorce from his first wife in 
1 16a, Henry was married at Minden in February 1 168 to Matilda 
(1156-1189), daughter of Henry II., king of England, and was 
soon afterwards sent by the emperor Frederick I. on an embassy 
to the kings of England and France. A war with Valdemar of 
Denmark, caused by a quarrel over the booty obtained from 

1 The see was transferred to Sehwerin by Henry in 1167. 

* Transferred to Lubeck to 1 163. 



the conquest of RUgen, engaged Hatty's activity onid Jane 
xt7i, when, in pursuance of a treaty which restored peace, 
Henry's daughter, Gertrude, married the Danish prince, Canute. 
Henry, whose position was now very strong, made a pilgrimage 
to Jerusalem in 117a, was received with great respect by the 
eastern emperor Manuel Comneous at Consuatmople, and 
returned to Saxony in 1173. 

A variety of reasons were lending to a rupusre in the bar* 
mooioua relations between Frederick and Henry, whose- increasing 
power could not escape the «s*peror's notice, and who showed 
little inclination to sac rif ice his interest* in Germany in order 
to help the imperial cause in Italy. He was not pleased when 
be heard that his uncle, Welf, had bequeathed his Italian and 
Swabian lands to the emperor, and the crisis came after 
Frederick's check before Alessandria in 1175. The emperor 
appealed personally to Henry for help in February, or March 
1 1 76, but Henry made no move in response, and his defection 
contributed in some measure to the emperor's defeat at Lcgnano, 
The peace of Venice provided for the restoration of Ulalrich 
to his see of HalberstadL Henry, however, refused to give up 
the lands which he had seized belonging to the bishopric, and 
this conduct provoked * war in which UUlricb was soon Joined 
by Philip, archbishop of Cologne-. No attack on Henry appears 
to have been contemplated by Frederick to whom both parties 
carried their complaints, and a day was fixed for the settlement 
of the dispute at Worms. But neither then, nor on two further 
occasions, djd Henry appear to answer the charges preferred 
against him; accordingly in January 1180 he was placed under 
the imperial ban at Wurzburg, and was declared deprived of 
all his lands. 

Meanwhile the war with Ulalrich continued, but after his 
victory at Weissensee Henry's allies began to fall away, and his 
cause to decline. When Frederick took the field in June lift! 
the struggle was soon over. Henry sought for peace, and the 
conditions were settled at Erfurt in November 1181, when he 
was granted the counties of LUneburg and Brunswick, but was 
banished under oath not to return without the emperor's per- 
mission. In July 118a he went to his father-in-law's court in 
Normandy, and afterwards to England, returning to Germany 
with Frederick's permission in x 185. He was soon regarded once 
more as a menace to the peace of Germany, and of the three 
alternatives presented to him by the emperor in 118S he rejected 
the idea of making a formal renunciation of bis claim, or of 
participating in the crusade, and chose exile, going again to 
England in 1180. In October of the same year, however, be 
returned to Saxony, excusing himself by asserting that his lands 
had not been defended according to the emperor's promise. 
He found many allies, took Lubeck, and soon almost the whole 
of Saxony was in his power. King Henry VI. was obliged to 
take the field against him, after which the duke's cause declined, 
and in July 1 100 a peace was arranged at Fulda, by which he 
retained Brunswick and LUneburg, received half the revenues of 
Lubeck, and gave two of his sons as hostages. Still hoping to 
regain his former position, he took advantage of a league against 
Henry VI. in 11 93 to engage in a further revolt, but the cap* 
tivity of his brother-in-law Richard I., king of England, led to a 
reconciliation. Henry passed his later years mainly at his 
castle of Brunswick, where he died on the 6th of August 1195, 
and was buried in the church of St Blasius which he bad founded 
in the town. He had by his first wife a son and a daughter, and 
by his second wife five sons and a daughter. One of his sons 
was Otto, afterwards the emperor Otto IV., and another was 
Henry (d. 1227) count palatine of the Rhine. 

Henry was a man of great ambition, and won his surname of 
" Lion " by his personal bravery. His influence on the fortunes 
of Saxony and northern Germany was very considerable. He 
planted Flemish and Dutch settlers in the land between the Elbe 
and the Oder, fostered the growth and trade of Lubeck, and in 
other ways encouraged trade and agriculture. He sought to 
spread Christianity by introducing the Cistercians, founding 
bishoprics, and building churches and monasteries* In 1874 A 
colossal statue was erected to his memory at Brunswick. 



HENRY OF BATTENBERG— HENRY STUART 



295 



The authorities for the life of Henry the Lion are thorn dealing 
with the reign of the emperor Frederick U and the early yean of 
his ion King Henry VI. The chief modern works are H. Pruu, 
Heinruh dtr Lowe (Leipzig, 1865); M - Philippson. Ceschichte 
Hetnrteks da Lowen (Leipzig. 1867); and L. Weibnd. Das sachnsche 
Hertogthnm mtitr Loihar vndUeinrtck demUwen (Greifswald, 1806). 

HENRY, Pmnce o? Battekberc (185*8-18106), was the third 
son of Prince Alexander of Hesse and his morganatic wife, the 
beautiful Countess Julia von Hauke, to whom was granted -in 
1858 the title of princess of Battenberg; which her children 
inherited. He was born at Milan on the 5th of October 1858, 
was educated with a special view to military service, and in due 
time became a lieutenant in the first regiment of Rhenish 
hussars. By their relationship to the grand dukes of Hesse the 
princes of Battenberg were brought into close contact with the 
English court, -and Prince Henry paid several visits to England, 
where he soon became popular both in public and in private 
drdes. It therefore created but little surprise when, towards 
the close of 1884, it was announced that Queen Victoria had 
sanctioned his engagement to the Princess Beatrice. The 
wedding took place at Whippingham on the 23rd of July 1885, 
and after the honeymdon the prince and princess settled down 
to a quiet home life with the queen, being seldom absent from 
the court, and accompanying her majesty in her annual visits 
to the continent. Three sons and a daughter were the issue 
of the marriage. On the 31st of July 1885 a bill to naturalize 
Prince Henry was passed by the House of Lords, and he received 
the title of royal highness. He was made a Knight of the Garter 
and a member of the Privy Council, and also appointed a colonel 
in the army, and afterwards captain-general and governdr of the 
Isle of Wight afnd governor of Carkbrooke Castle. He adapted 
himself very readily to English country life, for he was an excellent 
shot and an enthusiastic yachtsman; Coming of a martial race, 
the prince would gladly have embraced an active military career, 
and when the Ashanti expedition was organized in November 
1895 nc volunteered to join it. But when the expedition reached 
Prahsu, about 30 m. from Kumasi, he was struck down by fever, 
and being promptly conveyed back to the coast, was placed 
on board H.M.5. " Blonde." On the 17th of January he seemed 
to recover slightly, but a relapse occurred on the 19th, and he 
died on the evening of the 20th off the coast of Sierra Leone. 

HENRY PITZ HENHY (1155-1183), second son of Henry II., 
king of England, by Eleanor of Aquitatne, became heir to the 
throne on the death of his brother William (n$6), and at the 
age of five was married to Marguerite, the infant daughter of 
Louis VII. In 11 70 he was crowned at Westminster by Roger 
of York. The protests of Becket against this usurpation of 
the rights of Canterbury were the ultimate cause of the primate's 
murder. The young king soon quarrelled with his father, who 
allowed him no power and a wholly inadequate revenue, and 
headed the great baronial revolt of 1173. He was assisted by his 
father-in-law, to whose court he had repaired; but, failing 
to shake the old king's power either in Normandy or England, 
made peace in 1174. Despite the generous terms which he 
received, he continued to intrigue with Louis VII., and was 
in consequence jealously watched by his father. In 1182 he 
and his younger brother Geoffrey took up arms, on the side of 
the Poitevin rebels, against Richard Cceur de Lion; apparently 
from resentment at the favour which Henry II. had Shown to 
Richard in givirig him the government of Poitou while they 
were virtually landless. Henry II. took the field 'in aid of 
Richard; but the young king and Geoffrey had no scruples 
about withstanding their father, and continued to aid the 
Aquitanian rising until the young king felt ill of a fever which 
proved fatal to him (June n, 1183). His death was bitterly 
regretted by his father and by all who had known him. Though 
of a fickle and treacherous nature, he had all ihe personal fascina- 
4k>n of his family, and is extolled by his contemporaries as a 
mirror of chivalry. His tram was full of knights who served 
him without pay for the honour of being associated with his 
exploits in the tUting-lists and in war. 

The original authorities for Henry's life are Robert de Torigni, 
Chronica; Giratdus Cambrensis, De instruction* principum, Guxl- 



laumtle Marickal (ed. P. Meyer, Paris. 1891. id.): Benedict, Cista 
tUnrui, William of Newburf h. See alto Kate Norgatc, England 
under ihe Angevin Kings (1887); Sir James Ramsay, Angevin Empire 
(1963); and C. E. Hodgson, Jung Hanruh, Kontg von England 
(Jena, 1906). 

HENRY, or in full, Henry Benedict Maria Clement 
Stuart (1725-1807), usually known as Cardinal York, the 
last prince of the royal house of Stuart, was the younger son 
of James Stuart, and was born in the Palazzo Muti at Rome 
on the 6th of March 1725. He was created duke of York by his 
father soon after his birth, and by this title he was always 
alluded to by Jacobite adherents of his house. British visitors 
to Rome speak of him as a merry high-spirited boy with martial 
instincts; nevertheless, he grew up studious, peace-loving and 
serious. In order to be of assistance to his brother Charles, 
who was then campaigning in Scotland, Henry was despatched 
in the summer of 1745 to France, where he was placed in nominal 
command of French troops at Dunkirk, with which the marquis 
d'Argenson had some vague idea of invading England. Seven 
months after Charles's return from Scotland Henry secretly 
departed to Rome and, with the full approval of his father, 
but to the intense disgust of his brother, was created a cardinal 
deacon under the title of the cardinal of York by Pope Benedict 
XIV. on the 3rd of Tuly 1747. In the following year he was 
ordained priest, and nominated arch-priest ot the Vatican 
Basilica. In 1759 he was consecrated archbishop of Corinth 
tnparlibus, and in 1761 bishop of Frascati (the ancient Tus- 
culum) in the Alban Hills near Rome. Six years later he was 
appointed vice-chancellor of the Holy See. Henry Stuart 
likewise held sinecure benefices m France, Spain and Spanish 
America, so that he became one of the wealthiest churchmen of 
the period, his annual revenue being said to amount to £30,000 
sterling. On the death of his father, James Stuart (whose 
affairs he had managed during the last five years of his life), 
Henry made persistent attempts to induce Pope Clement XIII. 
to acknowledge his brother Charles as legitimate king of Great 
Britain, but his efforts were defeated, chiefly through the adverse 
influence of Cardinal Alessandro Albani, who was bitterly 
opposed to the Stuart cause. On Charles's death in 1 788 Henry 
issued a manifesto asserting his hereditary right to the British 
crown, and likewise struck a medal, commemorative of the event, 
with the legend " Hen. IX. Mag. Brit. Fr. et Hib. Hex. Fid. 
Def . Card. Ep. fuse: " (Henry the Ninth of Great Britain, France 
and Ireland; King, Defender of the Faith, Cardinal, Bishop of 
Frascati). In February 1708, at the approach of the invading 
French forces, Henry was forced to fly from Frascati to Naples, 
whence at the close of the same year he sailed to Messina. From 
Messina he proceeded by sea in order to be present at the ex- 
pected conclave at Venice, where he arrived in the spring Of 
1 709, aged, ill and almost penniless. His sad plight was now 
made known by Cardinal Stefano Borgia to Sir John Coxe 
Hipplsley (d. 1825), who had formerly acted semi-offirially on 
behalf of the British government at the court of Pius VI. Sir 
John Hippisley appealed to George III., who on the warm 
recommendation of Prince Augustus Frederick, duke of Sussex, 
gave orders for the annual payment of a pension of £4000 to the 
last of the Royal Stuarts. Henry received the proffered assist- 
ance gratefully, and in return for the king's kindness subsequently 
left by his will certain British crown jewels in his possession to 
the prince regent. In 1800 Henry was able to return to Rome, 
and in 1803, being now senior cardinal bishop, he became ipsp 
facto dean of the Sacred College and bishop of Ostia and Velletri. 
He died at Frascati on the 13th of July 1807, and was buried in 
the Croite Vatican* of St Peter's in an urn bearing ihe title 
of "Henry IX."*,. he is also commemorated in Canova's well- 
known monument to the Royal Stuarts (see Jams). The 
Stuart archives, once the property of Cardinal York, were 
subsequently presented by Pope Pius VII. to the prince 
regent, who placed, them in the royal library at Windsor 
Castle. 

Sec B. W. Kelly. Life of Cardinal York: H. M. Vaughan. Last of 
the Royal Stuarts; and A. Shield, Henry Stuart, Cardinal of Yorti, 
and kk Times {1*8). IH xt **' 



f of Yor% 
M. V.) 



296 



HENRY OF PORTUGAL 



HENRY OF PORTUGAL, suntamed the " Navigator " (1394- 
1460), duke of Viseu, governor of the Algarve, was born at Oporto 
on the 4th of March 1304. He was the third (or, counting 
children who died in infancy, the fifth) son of John Qo&q) I., 
the founder of the Aviz dynasty, under whom Portugal, victorious 
against Castile and against the Moors of Morocco, began to take 
a prominent place among European nations, his mother was 
Philippa, daughter of John of Gaunt. When Ceuta, the " African 
Gibraltar," was taken in 1415, Prince Henry performed the most 
distinguished service of any Portuguese leader, and received 
knighthood; he was now created duke of Viseu and lord of 
Covilham, and about the same time began his explorations, 
which, however, limited in their original conception, certainly 
developed into a search for a better knowledge of the western 
ocean and for a sea-way along the unknown coast of Africa to 
the supposed western Nile (our Senegal), to the rich negro, lands 
beyond the Sahara desert, to the half -true, half -fabled realm 
of Prester John, and so ultimately to the Indies. 

Disregarding the traditions which assign 141 2 or even 1410 
as the commencement of these explorations, it appears that in 
1415, the year of Ceuta, the prince sent out one John de Trasto 
on a voyage which brought the Portuguese to Grand Canary. 
There was no discovery here, for the whole Canarian archipelago 
was now pretty well known to French and Spanish mariners, 
especially since the conquest of 1402-06 by French adventurers 
under CastUian overlordship; but in 1418 Henry's captain, 
Joao Goncalvez Zarco rediscovered Porto Santo, and in 1420 
Madeira, the chief members of an island group which had 
originally been discovered (probably by Genoese pioneers) 
before 1351 or perhaps even before 1339, but had rather faded 
from Christian knowledge since. The story of the rediscovery 
of Madeira by the Englishman Robert Machim or Machin, 
eloping from Bristol with bis lady-love, Anne d'Arfct, in the reign 
of Edward III. (about 1370), has been the subject of much con- 
troversy; in any case it does not affect the original Italian 
discovery, nor the first sighting of Porto Santo by Zarco, who, 
while exploring the west African mainland coast, was driven by 
storms to this island. In 1424-1425 Prince Henry attempted 
to purchase the Canaries* and began the colonization of the 
Madeira group, both in Madeira itself and in Porto Santo; 
to aid this latter movement he procured the famous charters of 
1430 and 1433 fr° m tne Portuguese crown- In 1427, again, 
with the co-operation of his father King John, he seems to have 
sent out the royal pilot Diogo de SevilJ, followed in 143 * by 
Goncalo Velho Cabral, to explore the Azores, first mentioned 
and depicted in a Spanish treatise of 1345 (the Cono$(imicnlo. 
dt lodos los Reynos) and in an Italian map of 1351 (the Laurentian 
Portolano, also the first cartographical work to give us the 
Madeiras with modern names), but probably almost un visited 
from that time to the advent of Sevill. This rediscovery of the 
far western archipelago, and the expeditions which, even within 
Prince Henry's life (as in 1452) pushed still deeper into the 
Atlantic, seem to show that the infante was not entirely iorgetful 
of the possibility of such a western route to Asia as Columbus 
attempted in 1492, only to find America across his path. Mean- 
time, in 1418, Henry had gone in person to relieve Ceuta from an 
attack of Morocco and Granada Mussulmans; had accomplished 
his task, and had planned, though he did not carry out, a seizure 
of Gibraltar. About this time, moreover, it is probable that he 
had begun to gather information from the Moors with regard to 
the coast of " Guinea " and the interior of Africa. In 1419, 
after his return to Portugal, he was created governor of the 
'.* kingdom " of Algarve, lhe southernmost province of Portugal; 
and his connexion now appears to have begun with what after- 
wards became known as the " Infante's Town " ( Villa do If ante) 
at Sagres, close to Cape St Vincent; where, before 1438, a 
Terccna Nabal or naval arsenal grew up; where, from 1438, 
after the Tangier expedition, the prince certainly resided for 
a great pah of his later life; and where he died in 1460. 

In 1433 died King John, exhorting, his. son not to. abandon 
those schemes which were now, in the long-continued failure 
to round Cape Bojador, ridiculed by many as costly absurdities; 



and in 1434 one of the prince's ships, commanded by Gfl Eanaes, 
at length doubled the cape. In U35 Alfonso Goncalvez Baldaya, 
the prince's cup-bearer, passed fifty league* beyond; and before 
the close of 1436 the Portuguese had almost reached Cape Blanco. 
Plans of further conquest in Morocco, resulting in 1437 in the. 
disastrous attack upon Tangier, and followed in 1438 by the death 
of King Edward (Duarte) and the domestic troubles of the 
earlier minority of Alfonso V., bow interrupted Atlantic and 
African exploration down to 144 1, except only, in the Azores, 
Here rediscovery and colonization both progressed, as is shown 
by the royal licence of the 2nd o f July 1439, to people " the seven 
islands " of the group then known. In 1441 exploration began 
again in earnest with the venture of Antam Goocarvez, who 
brought to Portugal the first slaves and goki-dust from the 
Guinea coasts beyond Bojador; while Nuno Tristam in the same 
year pushed on to Cape Blanco. These successes produced a great 
effect; the cause of discovery, now connected with boundless 
hopes of profit, became popular; and many volunteers, especially 
merchants and seamen from Lisbon and Lagos, came forward. 
In 1443 Nuno Tristam reached the Bay or Bight of Arguim, 
where the infante erected a fort in 1448, and where for years the 
Portuguese carried on vigorous slave-raiding. Meantime the 
prince, who had now, in 1443, been created by Henry VI. a 
knight of the Garter of England, proceeded with his Sagres 
buildings, especially the palace, church and. observatory (the 
first in Portugal) which formed the nucleus of the " Infante's 
Town," and which were certainly commenced soon after the 
Tangier fiasco (1437). if not earlier. In 1444-1446 there was an 
immense purst of maritime and exploring activity; more than 
f 30 ships sailed with Henry's licence to Guinea; and several of 
their commanders achieved notable success. Thus Diniz Diaz, 
Nuno Tristam, and others reached- the Senegal in 1445; Dial 
rounded Cape Verde in the same year; and in 1446 Alvarq 
Fernandez pushed on almost to our Sierra Leone, to a point 
no leagues beyond Cape Verde. This was perhaps the most 
distant point reached before 1461. In 1444, moreover, the 
island of St Michael in the Azores was sighted (May 8), and 
in 1445 its colonization was begun. During this latter year 
also John Fernandez (q.v.) spent seven months among the natives , 
of the Arguim coast, and brought back, the first trustworthy 
first-hand European account of the Sahara hinterland. Slave- 
raiding continued ceaselessly; by 1 446 the Portuguese had carried 
off nearly a thousand captives from the newly surveyed coasts; 
but between this time and the voyages of Cadamosto {a-v.) 
in 1455-1456, the prince altered hispolicy , forbade the kidnapping 
of the natives (which had brought about fierce reprisals, causing 
' the death of Nuno Tristam in 1446, and of other pioneers in 144 Si 
1448, &c),.and endeavoured to promote their peaceful inter* 
course with his men. In 1445-1446, again, Dom Henry renewed 
bis earlier attempts (which had failed in 1424-1425) to purchase 
or seize the Canaries for Portugal; by these be brought his 
country to the verge of war with Castile; but the home govern- 
ment refused to support him, and the project was again 
abandoned. After 1446 our most voluminous authority, Azurara, 
records but little; his narrative ceases altogether in 1448; one 
of the latest expeditions noticed by him is that of a foreigner in 
the prince's service, " Vallartc the Dane," which ended in utter 
destruction near the Gambia, after passing Cape Verde in 1448. 
After this the chief matters worth notice in Dom Henry's life 
are, first, the progress of discovery and colonization in the Azores 
—where Terceir* was discovered before 1450, perhaps in 1445, 
and apparently by a Fleming, called " Jacques de Bruges " 
in the prince's charter of the 2nd of March 1450 (by -this charter 
Jacques receives the captaincy of this isle as, its intending 
colonizer) ; secondly, the rapid progress of civilization in Madeira, 
evidenced by its timber trade to Portugal, by its sugar, corn and 
honey, and above all by its wine, produced from the Malvotsie 
or Malmsey grape, introduced from Crete; and thirdly, the 
explorations of Cadamosto and Diogo Gomez (q.v.).. Of these 
the former, in his two voyages of 1455 and 1456. explored part 
of the courses of the Senegal and the Gambia, discovered the Cape 
Verde Islands (J456), named and mapped more carefully thka 



HENRY lOF ALMAIN— HENRY OP BfLOIS 



297 



8 considerable section 'of the African littoral beyond 
Cape Verde, and gave much new 1 information on the trade-routes 
of north-west Africa and on the native races? while Gome*, 
in 'his. first important venture tafter'1448 and before- 1458), 
though not accomplishing the full Indian purpose of his voyage 
(be took a native interpreter with him for use u in the event of 
reaching India ♦•), explored and observed in the Gambia valley 
and along the adjacent coasts with fully as much care and profit. 
As a result of these expeditions the. infante seems to have sent 
out in 1458 a mission to convert the Gambia negroes. Gome** 
second voyage, resulting in another ♦♦ discovery " of the Cape 
Verde Islands, was probably in 1462, after the death of Prince 
Henry; it is likely that among the infante's last occupations 
were the necessary measures for the equipment and despatch 
of this venture, as well as of Pedro de Sintra's important expedi- 
tion of 1461. 

The infante's share in home politics was considerable, especially 
in the years of Afflonso V.'s minority (1438* &c<) when he helped 
to make his eider brother Pedro regent, reconciled him with the 
queen-mother, and worked together with them both in a council 
of regency. But when Dora Pedro rose in revolt (1447), Henry 
stood by the king and allowed his brother to be crushed. In the 
Morocco campaigns' of his last years, especially at the capture of 
Alcazar the Little (1458), he restored the military fame which he 
bad founded at Ceuta and compromised at Tangier, and which 
brought him invitations from the pope, the emperor and the 
kings of Castile and. England, to take command of their armies. 
The prince was also grand master of the Order of Christ, the 
successor of the Templars in Portugal; and most of his Atlantic 
and African expeditions sailed under the flag of his order, whose 
revenues were at the service of his explorations, in whose name 
he asked and 'obtained the official recognition of Pope Eugeniu* 
IV. for his work, and on which he bestowed many privileges in the 
new-won lands— the tithes of St Michael rn the Azores and one- 
half of its sugar revenues, the tithe of all merchandise from 
Guinea, the ecclesiastical dues of Madeira, &c As u protector of 
Portuguese studies,"- Dons Henry is credited with having founded 
nprofeasorshipoi theology, and perhaps alsochairsoimathematics 
and medicine 1 , in Lisbon — where also, in 143 r, he is said to have 
provided house-room for the university teachers and students. 
To instruct his captains, pilots and other pioneers more fully in 
Che art of navigation and the making of maps and instruments he 
procured, says Barres, the aidof one Master Jacomefrom Majorca, 
together with that of certain Arab and Jewish mathematicians. 
We hear also of one Master Peter, who inscribed and illuminated 
maps for the infante; the mathematician Pedro Nunes declares 
that the prince's mariners were' well taught and provided with 
instruments and rules of astronomy and geometry " which all 
map-makers shouM know *'; Cadamosto tells us that the 
Portuguese caravels in his day were the best sailing ships afloat; 
while, from several matters recorded by Henry's biographers, it 
is dear that he devoted great attention to' the study of earlier 
Charts and of any available information he could gain upon the 
trade-routes of north-west Africa. Thus we find an Oran 
merchant corresponding with him about events happening in the 
negro-world of the Gambia basin in 1458. Even if there were 
never a formal ° geographical school " at Sagres, or elsewhere in 
Portugal, founded by Prince Henry, it appears certain that his 
court was the centre of active and useful geographical study, as 
well as the source of the best practical exploration of the time. 

The prince died on the 13th Of November 1460, in his town 
near Cape St Vincent, and was buried in the church of St Mary in 
Lagos, but a year later his body was removed to the superb 
monastery of Batalha. His great-nephew, King Dom Manuel, 
had a statue of him placed over the centre column of the side 
gate of the church of BelCm. On the 24th of July 1840, a monu- 
ment was erected to him at Sagres at the instance of the marquis 
de Sa da Bandeira. 

The glory attaching to the name of Prince Heary does not rest 
merely on the achievements effected during his own lifetime, but 
on the subsequent results to which his genius and perseverance 
had lent the primary inspiration. To him the human race is 



Indebted, in large measure; for the maritime exploration; within 
one century (i4«o-is«), of more than half the globe, and 
especially of the great waterways from Europe to Asia botn by 
east and by west. His own life only sufficed for the accomplish- 
ment of a small portion of his task. The complete opening out Of 
the African or south-east route to the Indies needed nearly forty 
years of somewhat intermittent labour after his death (1460- 
1498), and the prince's share has often been forgotten in that of 
pioneers who were really his executors — Diogo Cam, Bartholomew 
Diaz or Vasco da Gama. Less directly, other sides of his activity 
may be considered as fulfilled by the Portuguese penetration of 
inland Africa, especially of Abyssinia, the land of the " Prester 
John " for whom Dom Henry sought, and even by the finding of 
a western route to Asia through the discoveries of Columbus, 
Balboa and Magellan. 



HKHRY OP ALMAIN (1235-itfO. *> called from bis father's 
German connexion*, was the son of Richard, earl of Cornwall aad 
king of the Romans. As a nephew of both Henry III. and Simon 
de Montfort he wavered between the two at the beginning of the 
Barons' War, but finally took the royalist side and was among the 
prisoners taken by Montfort at Lewes (1064). In 116& be took 
the cross with his cousin Edward, who, however, sent him back 
from Sicily to pacify the unruly province ol Gaacoay. . Henry 
took the land route with the kings of France and Sicily. While 
attending mass at Vitcrbo (13 March 1271) be was attacked by 
Guy and Simon de Montfort, sons of Earl Simon, and foully 
murdered. This revenge was the more, outrageous since Henry 
had personally exerted himself on behalf of the Montfort* -after 
Evesham. The deed is mentioned by Dante, who put Guy de 
Montfort in the seventh circle of helL 

See W. H. Blaauw's The Banm* War (ed. 1871); Ch^Bamont's 
Simon de Montfort (1884), . 

HEKRY OF BLOIS, bishop of Winchester (ixoi-rx7i), was the 
son of Stephen, count of Blois, by Adela, daughter of William I., 
and brother of King Stephen. He was educated at Cluny, and 
consistently exerted himself Tor the principles of Cluniac reform. 
If these involved high claims of independence and power for the 
Church, they also asserted a high standard of devotion aad 
discipline. Henry was brought to England by Henry L and 
made abbot of Glastonbury. In 1 1 29 he was given the bishopric 
of Winchester and allowed to hold his abbey in conjunction with 
it. His hopes of the see of Canterbury were disappointed, but 
be obtained in 1 130 a legattne commission which gave him a 
higher rank than the primate. In fact as well as in theory be 
became the master of the Church in England. He even con- 
templated the erection of a new province, with Winchester as its 
centre, which was to be independent of Canterbury. Owing both 
to local and to general causes the power of the Church in England 
has never been higher than in the reign of Stephen (1135-1154). 
Henry as its leader and a legate of the pope was the real " lord of 
England," as the chronicles call him. Indeed, one of the ecclesi- 
astical councils over which he presided formally declared that the 
election of the king in England was the special privilege of the 



-ag8 



HENRY OF GHENT— HENRY OF -LAUSANNE 



clergy. Stephen owed his crown to Henry (iijs). but they 
quarrelled when Stephen refused to give Henry the primacy; 
and the bishop took up the cause of Roger of Salisbury (1130). 
After the batdc of Lincoln (1x41) Henry declared for Matilda; 
but finding his advice treated with contempt, rejoined his 
brother's side, and his successful defence of Winchester against 
the empress (Aug.-Sept. 1 141) was the turning«point of the civil 
war. The expiration of his legalise commission of x 144 deprived 
him of much of his power. He spent the rest of Stephen's reign in 
trying to procure its renewal. But his efforts were unsuccessful, 
though he made a personal visit to Rome. At the accession of 
Henry II. (U54) he retired from the world and spent the rest of 
his life in works of charity and penitence. He died in 1171. 
Henry seems to have been a man of high character, great courage, 
resolution and ability. Like most great bishops of his age he had 
a passion for architecture. He built, among other castles, that 
of Farnham;and he began the hospital of St Cross at Winchester. 
Authorities.— Original: William of Matmesbury, De testis 
regum; the Gesta Stephani. Modern: Sir James Ramsay, Founds 
tions of England, vol. ii.; Kate Norgate's AngeHn Kings; 
Kitchin • Winchester. 

HENRY OF GHENT [Henricus a Gandavo] (c. 12x7-1293), 
scholastic philosopher, known as " Doctor Solennis," was born 
in the district of Mude, near Ghent, and died at Tournai (or 
Paris). He is said to have belonged to an Italian family named 
Bonicolli, in Flemish Gocthals, but the question of his name 
has been much discussed (see authorities below). He studied 
at Ghent and then at Cologne under Albertus Magnus. After 
obtaining the degree of doctor he returned to Ghent, and is 
said to have been the first to lecture there publicly on philosophy 
and theology. Attracted to Paris by the fame of the university, 
he took part in the many disputes between the orders and the 
secular priests, and warmly defended the latter. A contemporary 
of Aquinas, he opposed several of the dominant theories of the 
time, and united with the current Aristotelian doctrines a strong 
infusion of Platonism. He distinguished between knowledge 
of actual objects and the divine inspiration by which we cognize 
the being and existence of God. The first throws no light upon 
the second. Individuals are constituted not by the material 
element but by their independent existence, i.e. ultimately by 
the fact that they are created as separate entities. Universals 
must be distinguished according as they have reference to our 
minds or to the divine mind. In the divine intelligence exist 
exemplars or types of the genera and species of natural objects. 
On this subject Henry is far from clear; but he defends Tlato 
against the current Aristotelian criticism, and endeavours to 
show that the two views are in harmony. In psychology, his 
view of the intimate union of soul and body is remarkable. 
The body he regards as forming part of the substance of the 

nd 



lie 

HENRY OP HUNTINGDON, English chronicler of the mh 
century, was born, apparently, between the years 1080 and 1000. 
His father, by name Nicholas, was a clerk, who became archdeacon 
of Cambridge, Hertford and Huntingdon, in the time of Remigius, 
bishop of Lincoln (d. 1092). The celibacy of the clergy was not 
strictly enforced in England before 1x02. Hence the chronicler 
makes no secret of his antecedents, nor did they interfere with 
his career. At an early age Henry entered the household of 
Bishop Robert Bloet, who appointed him, immediately after 
the death of Nicholas (11 10), archdeacon of Hertford and 
Huntingdon. Henry was on familiar terms with his patron; 



and afeo, it would sews, with Bloet's successor, by whom h* 
was encouraged to undertake the writing of an English history 
from the time of Julius Caesar. This work, undertaken before 
1130, was first published in that year; the author subsequently 
published in succession four more editions, 0/ which the last 
ends in 1 x 54 with the accession of Henry IL The only r ecorded 
fact of the chronicler's later life is that he went with Archbishop 
Theobald to Rome in 1 139. On the way Henry halted at Bee* 
and there made the acquaintance of Robert de Torigoi, who 
mentions their encounter in the preface to his Chronicle. 

The Historic Angler urn was first printed in ! 
carum scriptores post Beiam (London, 1596). 
excepting the third, which is almost entirely t 
given in Monumenta historica Britannica, vol. 
J . Sharpe, London, 1848). The standard edicio 
in the Rolls Series (London, 1879). There is 
Forester in Bonn's Antiquarian Library (L 
Historia is of little independent value before 11; 
the author compiles from Eutropius, Aurefitis V 
and the English chronicles, particularly that of Peterboroogfc ; In 
some cases he professes to supplement these sources from oral 
tradition; but most of his amplifications are pure rhetoric (see 
F. Liebermann in Forschungen zur deutscken CeschuhU for 1878, 

Hi. 265 acq.). Arnold prints, in an appendix, a minor work from 
enry s pen, the Epistola ad WalUrum de eomtemptn mundi, which 
was written in 1135. It is a moralising tract, but contains some 
interesting anecdotes about contemporaries. Henry also wrote 
epistles to Henry I. (on the succession of kings and emperors in the 
great monarchies of the wortd) and to " Warinus, a Briton " (on the 
early British kings, after Geoffrey of Monmouth). A book, De 
miraeulis, composed of extracts from Bedc, was appended along 
with these three epistles to the later recensions of the Historia. 
Henry composed eight books of Latin epigrams; two books survive 
in the Lambeth MS., No. 118. His value as a historian, formerly 
much overrated, is discussed at length by Liebermann and in T« 
Arnold's introduction to the Rolls edition of the Historic. 

(H. W. C. D.) 
HENRY OF LAUSANNE (variously known as of Brays, el 
Cluny, of Toulouse, and as the Deacon), French beresiarch of 
the first half of the 1 21b century, practically nothing is knows 
of his origin or early life. He may have been one of those 
hermits who at that lime swarmed. in the forests of western 
Europe, an<f particularly in France, always surrounded by 
popular veneration, and sometimes the founders of monasteries 
or religious orders, such as those of Premontre or Fontevraulu 
If St Bernard's reproach (£>. aax) be well founded, Henry was 
an apostate monk— a " black monk " (Benedictine) according 
to the chronicler Alberic de Trois Fontaines. The information 
we possess as to his degree of instruction is scarcely more precise 
or less conflicting. When he arrived at Le Mans in x 101, hie 
terminus a quo was probably Lausanne. At that moment 
Hildebert, the bishop of Le Mans, was absent from his episcopal 
town, and this is one of the reasons why Henry was granted 
permission to preach (March to July 1 101), a function jealously 
guarded by the regular clergy. Whether by his prestige as a 
hermit and ascetic or by his personal charm, he soon acquired 
enormous influence over the people. .His doctrine at that date 
appears to have been very vague; he seemingly rejected the 
invocation of saints and also second marriages, and preached 
penitence. Women, inflamed by his words, gave up their jewels 
and luxurious apparel, and young men married courtesans in 
the hope of reclaiming them. Henry was peculiarly fitted for 
a popular preacher. In person he was tall and had a long 
beard; his voice was sonorous, and his eyes flashed fire. He 
went bare-footed, preceded by a man carrying a staff surmounted 
with an iron cross; he slept on the bare ground, and lived by 
alms. At his instigation the inhabitants of Le Mans soon began 
to slight the clergy of their town and to reject all ecclesiastical 
authority. On his return from Rome, Hildebert had a public 
disputation with Henry, in which, according to the bishop's 
Acta episcoporum Cenomannensium, Henry was shown to be 
less guilty of heresy than of ignorance. He, however, was forced 
to leave Le Mans, and went probably to Poitiers and afterwards 
to Bordeaux. Later we find him in the diocese of Aries, where 
the archbishop arrested him and had his case referred to the 
tribunal of the pope. In 11 34 Henry appeared before Pope 
Innocent III. at the council of Pisa, where be was compelled 



HENRY, E. L.— HENRY, 'J. 



to tbjoie hte error* tad wit sentenced to rropris o n m eut. It 
appear* that St Bernard offend him an asylum at Oarrvaux; 
but it is not known if he reached Clairvaux, nor do we know 
when or in what circumstances he resumed his activities. 
Towards 1130, however, Peter the Venerable, abbot of Cluny, 
wrote a treatise called Bpistota sen tractatu* adwerens Petroorn- 
nemos (MJgne, Patr. Lai. clxxxix*) against the disciples 
of Peter of Bruys and Henry of Lausanne, whom be calls Henry 
of Brays, and whom, at the moment of writing, he accuses of 
preaching, in all the dioceses in the south of France, errors which 
be had inherited from Peter of Bruys. According to Peter the 
Venerable, Henry's teaching is summed up as follows: rejection 
of the doctrinal and disciplinary authority of the church: 
recognition or* the Gospel freely interpreted as the sole rule of 
faith; condemnation of the baptism of infants* of the eucharist, 
of the sacrifice of the mass, of the communion of saints, and of 
prayers for the dead; and refusal to recognize any form of 
worship or liturgy. The success of this teaching spread very 
rapidly in the south of France. Speaking of this region, St 
Bernard (Ep. 241) says: " The churches ore without flocks, 
the flocks without priests, the priests without honour; in a 
word, nothing remains save Christians without Christ.** On 
several occasions St Bernard was begged to fight the innovator 
on the scene of his exploits, and in 1 MS. *t the instance of the 
legate Alberic, cardinal Mshopof Ost ia, he set out , passing through 
the diocese of Angouleme and Umoges, sojourning/for some time 
at Bordeaux, and finally reaching the heretical towns of Bergerac, 
Perigueux, Sarlat, Cahorsand Toulouse. At Bernard * approach 
Henry quitted Toulouse, leaving there many adherents, both of 
noble and humble birth, and especially, among the weavers* 
Bat Bernard's eloquence and miracles made many converts, 
and Toulouse and Albi were quickly restored to orthodoxy. 
After inviting Henry Co a disputation, which he refused to attend, 
St Bernard returned to Clairvaux. Soon afterwards the beresi- 
arch was arrested, brought before the bishop of Toulouse, and 
probably imprisoned for .life. In a letter to the people of 
Toulouse, undoubtedly written at the end of 1146, St Bernard 
calls upon them to extirpate the last remnants of the heresy. .In 
1151, however, some Henricians still remained in Lahguedoc, for 
Matthew Paris relates (Ckron* moj., at dale 1151) that a young 
girl, who gave herself out to be miraculously inspired by the 
Virgin Mary, was reputed to have converted a great number 
of the disciples of Henry of Lausanne. It is impossible to 
designate definitely as Henricians one of the two sects discorered 
at Cologne and described by Everwin, provost of SteinfeW, in 
his letter to St Bernard (Migne, Patr. Let., clxxxii. 676*680), 
or the heretics of Pfrtgord mentioned by a certain monk Heribert 
(Mart in Bouquet , Recutti des historiens des Caults tide la France, 

See " Let Origines de I'herewe slbiaeoise." by Vacandard in the 
Jtoat des questions hisuwiques (Paris, 1894. pp. 6743)- (P» A.) 

HENRY. EDWARD LAMSOM (1841- >. American genre 
painter, was born in Charleston, South Carolina, on the 12th of 
January 1841. He was a pupil of the schools of the Pennsylvania 
Academy of Fine Arts in Philadelphia, and of Gleyre and Courbet 
in Paris, and in 1870 was elected to the National Academy of 
Design, New York. As a painter of colonial and early American 
themes and incidents of rural life, he displays a quaint humour 
and a profound knowledge* of human nature. Among his best- 
known compositions are some of early railroad travel, incidents 
of stage coach and canal boat journeys, rendered with much 
detail on a minute scale. 

HENRY, JAMES (1708-1876). Irish classical scholar, was born 
in Dublin on the 13th of December 1708. He was educated at 
Trinity College, and until 184s practised as a physician in the 
city. In spite of his unconventionally and unorthodox views 
on religion and his own profession, be was very successful. His 
accession to a large fortune enabled him to devote himself 
entirely to the absorbing occupation of his life— the study of 
Virgil. Accompanied by his wife and daughter, he visited all 
those parts of Europe where he was likely to find rare editions 
or MSS. of the poet. He died near Dublin on the 14th of July 



2.99 

1876. As a commentator on Virgil Henry will always deserve 
to be remembered, notwithstanding the occasional ecce nt ricity 
of his notes and remarks. The first fruits of his researches were 
published at Dresden In 1853 under the quaint title Notes of a 
Twthe Years 1 Voyage of DUeotery in toe first sit Books of the 
Eneis. These were embodied, with alterations and additions, 
in the Aeneideo, or Critical, Exegdicol and Aestketkal Remarks 
on the Aernis (1873-1802), of which only the notes on the first 
hook were published during the author's lifetime. As a textual 
critic Henry was exceedingly conservative. His notes, written 
m a racy and interesting style, are especially valuable for their 
wealth of tlhsstratldn and references to the less-known classical 
aat hors. Henry was also the author of several poems, some of 
them descriptive accoontsoi bis travels, and of various pamphlets 
of a satirical nature. 

See obituary nortoe by I. P. Mahafry in the rfcsdri** of the tith 
of August 1870. where a fist of his works, aearly all 01 which were* 
privately printed, is given. 

HENRY, JOSEPH (1707-1878), American physicist, was born 
in Albany. N.Y., on the 17th of December 1707. He received 
his education at an ordinary school, and afterwards at the 
Albany Academy, which enjoyed considerable reputation for 
the thoroughness of its classical and mathematical courses. 
On finishing his academic studies he contemplated adopting the 
medical profession, and prosecuted his studies In chemistry, 
anatomy and physiology with that view. He occasionally 
contributed papers to the Albany Institute, in the yean 1894 
and 1895, on chemical and mechanical subjects; and in the 
latter year, having been un e xp ec te dly appointed assistant 
engineer outhe survey of a route for a state roadfrom the Hudson 
river to Lake Erie, a distance somewhat over 300 »., be at once 
embarked with teal and success In the new enterprise. This 
diversion from his original bent gave him an inclination to the 
career of civil and mechanical engineering; and in the spring 
of t8a6 be was elected by the trustees of the Albany Academy 
to. the chair of mathematics and natural philosophy in that 
institution. In the latter part of 18 s 7 he read before the Albany 
Institute his first ImportamcoMributiom," On Some Modifications 
of the Electro-Magnetic Apparatus." Struck with the great 
improvements then recently introduced into such apparatus 
by WiHiam Sturgeon of Woolwich, he had stiH further 
extended their efficiency, with considerable reduction of battery- 
power, by adopting In all the experimental circuits (where 
applicable) the principle of J. S. C Schwefgger's " multiplier," 
that is, by substituting for single wire circuits, voluminous coils 
{Trans. Albany Institute, 1827, 1, p. S2). In June i8t8 and in 
March 1820 he exhibited before the institute small electro- 
magnets closely and repeatedly wound with silk-covered wire, 
which had a far greater lifting power than any then known! 
Henry appears to have been the first to adopt Iniulated or silk- 
covered wire for the magnetic coil; and also the first to employ 
what may be called the " spool " winding for the limbs of the 
magnet. He was also the first to demonstrate experimentally 
the difference of action between what he called a " quantity H 
magnet excited by a " quantity *' battery of a single pair, and ail 
" intensity " magnet with long fine wire coil excited by an 
" intensity " battery of many elements, having their resistances 
suitably proportioned. Hepeinted out that the latter form alone 
was applicable to telegraphic purposes. A detailed account 
of these experiments and exhibitions was not, however, published 
till 183 1 tSitt. Jouru., 10. p. 400). Henry's " quantity " magnets 
acquired considerable celebrity at the time, from their un- 
precedented attractive power— one (August 1830) lifting 750 lb, 
another (March 1831) 2300. and a third (1834) 350a 

Early in 1831 be arranged a small office- bell to be tapped by 
the polarised armature of an " intensity " magnet, whose coil 
was in continuation of a mile of insulated copper wire, suspended 
about one of the rooms of his academy. This was the first 
instance of magnetising iron at a distance, or of a suitable 
combination of magnet and battery being so arranged as to be 
capable of such action. It was. therefore, the earliest example 
of a true u magnetic " telegraph, all preceding experiments to 



$oo 



[HENRY, 'M^J-HENKY, P. 



U&ift end having bean on the galvanometer or needle* principle. 
About the tame time he devised and constructed the first 
electromagnetic engine with automatic polechaager (Sill. Journ*, 
1831, 20, Dv34o; and Sturgeon's Annals Ekdr., 1839, 3, p. 554). 
Early in 1&32 he- discovered the induction of * current on itself, 
in a long helical wire, giving greatly increased intensity of 
discharge (Sill. Jo urn., 1832, aa, p. 408). In 1833 he was deleted 
to the chair of natural philosophy, in the New Jersey college 
at Princeton. In 1834 he continued and extended hia resea rc h e s 
" On the Influence of a Spiral Conductor in increasing the 
Intensity of Electricity from a Galvanic Arrangement of a Single 
Pair," a memoir of which was read before the American Philo- 
sophical Society on the 5th of February 1835. In 1835 he 
combined the short circuit of bis monster magnet (of 1834) with 
the small "intensity" magnet of an experimental telegraph 
wire, thereby establishing the fact that very powerful mechanical 
effects could be produced at a great distance by the agency 
of a very feeble magnet used as a circuit maker and breaker, 
or as a " trigger "—the precursor of later forms of relay and 
receiving magnets. In 1837 he paid his fiat visit to England 
and Europe. In 1638 he made important investigations in 
regard, to the conditions and range of induction from electrical 
currents— showing that induced currents, although merely 
momentary, produce still other or tertiary currents, and thus on 
through successive orders of induction, with alternating signs, 
and with reversed initial and terminal signs. He also discovered 
similar successive orders of induction in the case of the passage 
of frictional electricity (Trans. Am* Phil. Soe., 6, pp. 303-337). 
Among many minor observations, he discovered in 184s the 
oscillatory nature of the electrical discharge, magnetizing about 
a thousand needles in the Course of his experiments {Proc Am. 
Phil. Soc , 1, p. 301). He traced the influence of induction to sur- 
prising dista nce s, magnetising needles in the lower story of ft 
house through several intervening floors by means of electrical 
discha r ges in the upper story, and also by the secondary current 
in a wire 2*0 ft. distant from the wire of the primary circuit. 
The five numbers of his Contributions to' Electricity and Maptetism 
(1835-1844) were separately republished from the Transactions. 
In 1843 he made some interesting original observations on 
"Phosphorescence" (ProcAm.PhiLSoc,$, pp.38-44). In 1844, 
by experiments on the tenacity of soap-bubbles, he showed that 
the molecular cohesion of water is equal (if not superior) to that 
of ice, and hence, generally, that solids and their liquids have 
practically the same amount of cohesion (Proc. Am. PMl. Soc, 4, 
pp. 56 and 84). In 1845 he showed, by means of a thermc~galvano+ 
meter, that the solar spots radiate less heat than the general 
solar surface (Proc. Am. Phil. Soc., 4, pp. 173-176). 

In December 1846 Henry was elected secretary and director of 
the Smithsonian Institution, then just established. While closely 
occupied with the exacting duties of that office, he still found time 
to prosecute many original. inquiries — as into the application of 
acoustics *to public buildings, and the best Construction -and 
arrangement of lecture-rooms, into the strength of various 
building materials, &c. Having early devoted much attention 
to meteorology, both in observing and in reducing and discussing 
observations, he (among his first administrative acts) organized 
a large and widespread corps of observers, and made arrange- 
ments, for simultaneous reports by means of the electric telegraph, 
which was yet in its infancy (Smithson. Report for 1847, pp. 146, 
147)* He was the first to apply the telegraph to meteorological 
research, to have the atmospheric conditions daily indicated 
on a large map, to utilize the generalizations made in weather 
forecasts, and to embrace a continent under a single system—* 
British America and Mexico being included in the field of observa- 
tion. In 1&52, on the reorganization of the American lighthouse 
system, he was appointed a member of the new board; and 
m 1871 he became the presiding officer of the establishment— 
a position he continued to hold during the rest of his life. His 
diligent investigations into the efficiency of various illuminants 
in differing circumstances, and into the best conditions for 
developing their several maximum powers of brilliancy, while 
greatly improving the usefulness pi the Hne of beacons along the 



extensive coast of the United States, effected at the 1 
a great economy of administration. His equally careful « 
meats on various acoustic instruments also resulted in giving t* 
his country the most serviceable system of log-signals known to 
maritime powers. In the course of these varied and p ro l o ng ed 
researches from 1865 to 1877, he also made important contribn* 
lions to the science of acoustics; and he established by several 
series of laborious observations, extending over many years and 
along a wide coast range, the correctness of G. G. Stokes's 
hypothesis (Report BriL Assoc, 1857* part iL 27) that the wind 
exerts a very marked influence in refracting sound-beams. 
From x868 Henry continued to be annually chosen as president 
of the National Academy of Sciences; and he was also president 
of the Philosophical Society of Washington from the date of its 
organization in 1871. 

Henry was by general concession the foremost of American 
physicists. He was a man of varied culture, of large breadth and 
liberality of views, of generous impulses, of great gentleness and 
courtesy of manner, combined with equal firmness of purpose and 
energy of action. He died at Washington on the 13th of May 
1878. (S.F.B.) 

HENRY, MATTHBW (166*- 1^14), English nonconformist 
divine, was born at Broad Oak, a farm-house on the amines of 
Flintshire and Shropshire, on the ifith of October 1662. He 
was the son of Philip Henry, who had, two months earlier, been 
ejected by the Act of Uniformity. Unlike most of his fellow-* 
sufferers, Philip Henry possessed -some private means, and was 
thus enabled to .give a good education to his son, who went first 
to a school at Islington, and then to Gary's Inn. He soon 
r el i nqu is h ed his legal studies for theology, and in 1087 became 
minister of a Presbyterian congregation at Chester, removing 
in 17x3 to Mare Street, Hackney. Two years later (sand of June 
1714). he died suddenly of apoplexy at Nan t with while on a 
journey from Chester to London. Henry's welkJtnown Expos* 
Hon of the Old and New Testaments (1 706-1710) is a commentary 
of a practical and devotional rather than of a critical kind, 
Covering the whole of the Old Testament, and the Gospels and 
Acts in the New. Here it was broken off by the author's death, 
but the work was finished by a number of ministers, and edited 
by G. Burder and John Hughes in 18x1. Of no value as criticism, 
its unfailing good sense, its discriminating thought, its high moral 
tone, its simple piety and its singular felicity of practical 
application, combine with the well-sustained flow of its racy 
English style to secure for it the foremost place among works 
of its class. 

His Miscellaneous Writings, including a Uje of Mr Philip 
Henry, The Communicants Companion, Directions for Dairy 
Communion ioith Qod, A Method for Prayer, A Scriptural Cate- 
chism, and numerous sermons, were edited in 1809 and m 1830. 
See biographies by W. Tong (1816), C. Chapman (1850), J. B. 
Williams (1828, new ed. 1865); and M. H. Lee's Diartts and 
Letters of Philip Btnry (1883). 

HENRY, PATRICK (1736-^1700), American statesman and 
orator, was born at Studley, Hanover county, "Virginia, on the 
29th of May 1736. He was the son of John Henry, a well- 
educated Scotsman, among whose relatives was the historian 
William Robertson, and who served hi Virginia as county 
surveyor, colonel and judge of a county court. ' His mother 
was one of a family named Winston, of Welsh descent, noted for 
conversational and musical talent. At the age of ten Patrick 
was making slow progress in the study of reading, writing and 
arithmetic at a small country school, when his father became 
his tutor and taught him Latin, Greek and mathematics for 
five years, but with limited success. His school days being 
then terminated; he was employed as a store-clerk for one year. 
Within the seven years next following he failed twice as a store* 
kedper and once as a fanner; but in the meantime acquired a 
taste for reading, of history especially, and read and re-read the 
history of Greece and Rome, of England, and of her American 
colonies. Then, poor but not discouraged, be resolved to be 
a lawyer, and after reading Coke upon Littleton and the Virginia 
laws for a few- weeks only, he strongly impressed one of his 



HENRY, R.-nH?NRY, Y. 



JOT 



examiners, and was admitted to the bar at the age of twenty- 
four, on condition that be spend more time in study before 
beginning to practise. He rapidly acquired a considerable 
practice, his fee, books shewing that for tha first three years he 
charged fees in 1185 cases. Then in 1763 was delivered bis 
speech in " The Parson's Cause "—a suit brought by a clergy- 
man, Rev. James Maury, in the Hanover County Court, to 
secure restitution for money considered by him. to be due on 
account of his salary (16,000 pounds of tobacco by law) having 
been paid in money calculated at a rate less than the current 
market price of tobacco. This speech, which, according to 
reports, was extremely radical and denied the right of the king 
to disallow acts of the colonial legislature, made Henry the idol 
of the common people of Virginia and procured for him an 
eaormous practice, In 1765 he was elected a member of the 
Virginia legislature, where he became in the same year the author 
of the " Virginia Resolutions," which were no less than a declara- 
tion of resistance to the Stamp Act and an assertion -of the right 
of the colonies to legislate for themselves independently of the 
cantrol of the British parliament, and gave a most powerful 
impetus to the movement resulting in the War of Independence. 
In a speech urging their adoption appear the often-quoted 
words! " Tarquin and Caesar had each his Brutus, Charles the 
First his Cromwell, and George the Third [here he was interrupted 
by cries of ft Treason "1 and George the Third may profit by 
their example! If this be treason, make the most of it." Until 
1775 he continued to sit in the House of Burgesses, as a leader 
during all that eventful period. He was prominent as a radical 
in all measures in opposition to the British government, and was 
a member of the first 'Virginia committee ot correspondence, 
la 1774 and 1775 h* was a delegate to the Continental Congress 
and served on, three ot its most important committees; that on 
colonial trade and manufactures, that for drawing up an address 
to the king, and that for stating the rights of the colonies. In 

1775, in the second revolutionary convention of Virginia, Henry, 
regarding war as inevitable* presented resolutions for arming the 
Virginia militia. The more conservative members strongly 
opposed them as premature, whereupon Henry supported them 
in a speech familiar to the American school-boy for several 
generations following, closing with the words, " Is life so dear 
or peace so sweet as to be purchased at the price of chains and 
slavery? Forbid it, Almighty God I I know not what course 
others may take, but as for me, give me liberty or give me 
death ! " The resolutions were passed and their author was made 
chairman of the committee for which they provided* The chief 
command of the newly organized army, was also* given to him, 
but previously, at the head of a body of militia, he had demanded 
satisfaction for powder removed from the public store by order 
of Lord Dunrnore, the royal governor, with the result that £550 
was paid in compensation. But his military appointment 
required obedience to the Committee of Public Safety, *nd this 
body, largely dominated by Edmund Pendleton, so restrained bim 
from active service that he resigned on the 28th of .February 

1776. In the Virginia convention of 1776 he favoured the 
postponement of a declaration of independence, until a firm 
union of the colonies and the friendship of France and Spain had 
been secured. In the same convention he served on the com- 
mittee which draftee! the first constitution for Virginia, and was 
elected governor of the State— *to which office he was re-elected 
is 1777 and 1778, thus serving' as long as the; new constitution 
allowed any man to serve continuously. As governor he gave 
Washington able support and sent out the expedition under 
George Rogers Clark (?.».) into the Illinois country. In x 7 78 he 
was chosen a delegate to Congress, but declined to serve. From 
1780 to 1784 and from 1787 to 1700 he was again, a member of 
his State legislature; and from 1784 to 1786 was again governor. 
Until 1786 he was a leading advocate of a stronger central 
government but when chosen a delegate to. the Philadelphia 
constitutional convention of r787, he had become cold in the 
cause and declined to serve. Moreover, in the state convention 
csUed to decide whether Virginia should ratffy the Federal 
Constitution he led the opposition, contending tbatthe proposed 



Constitution* because of its cetrtraBzing character, was dangerous 
to the liberties of the country. This change of attitude hi 
thought to have been due chiefly to his suspicion of the North 
aroused by John Jay's proposal to surrender to Spain for twenty* 
five or thirty years the navigation of the Mississippi From 
1704 until 'his death he declined in succession the following 
offices: United States senator (1704), secretary of state in 
Washington's cabinet (170s), chief justice of the United States 
Supreme Court (1795)* governor of Virginia (1706), to which 
office he had been elected by the Assembly, and envoy to France 
(1709). In 1700, however, he consented to serte again in his 
State legislature, where he wished to combat the Virginia 
Resolutions; he never took his seat, since he died, on his Red 
Hill estate in Charlotte county, Virginia, on the 6th of June of 
that year. Henry was twice married, first to Sarah Skelton, and 
second to Dorothea Spot&wood Dandridge, a grand-daughter 
of Governor Alexander Spotswood. 
See Moses Coit Tyler, Patrick Henry (Boston, 1887; new ed.« 
Wirt " * * ~ ' " 



Sketches of the Life and Character of Patnck Henry (Philadelphia, 
1817X See- also George Morgan, The True Patrick Henry (Phila* 
dciphia, 1907). (N. £>. M.) 

HENRY, ROBERT (17x8-1700), British historian, was the 
son of James Henry, a farmer of Muktoh, near Stirling. Bora 
on the x8th of February 17x8 he waft educated at the parish 
school of St Ninians, and at the grammar school of Stirling, and, 
after completing his course at Edinburgh University, became 
master of the grammar school at Annan. In 1746 he, was 
licensed to preach, and in 1748 was chosen minister of a Presby* 
terian congregation at Carlisle, where he rcmairred until 1760, 
when he removed to a similar charge at Berwich-on-Tweed. 
In 1768 be became minister of the New Greyfriars' Church, 
Edinburgh, and having received the degree of D.D. from Edin- 
burgh University in 1771, and served as moderator of the 
general assembly of the church of Scotland in 1774, he was 
appointed one of the ministers of the Old Greyfriars' Church, 
Edinburgh, in 1776, remaining in this charge until his death 
on the 94th of November 1 700. During his residence in Berwick, 
Henry commenced his. History of Groat Britain, written on a na* 
plan,', but, owing to the difficulty of consulting the original 
' authorities, be did not make much progress with the work until 
bis removal to Edinburgh in 1768. The first five volumes 
appeared between 1771 and 1785, and the sixth, edited 'and 
completed by Malcolm Laing, was published three years after the 
author's death. A life of Henry was prefixed to tms volume. 
The History covers the years between the Roman invasioA and 
the death of Henry VIH., and the " new plan " is the termina- 
tion of an account of the domestic life and commercial and social 
progress of the people with the narrative of the political events 
of each period. The work was virulently assailed by Dr Gilbert 
Stuart (1742-1786), who appeared anxious to damag* the sale 
of the book; but the injury thus effected was only slight, as 
Henry received £3300 for the volumes published during his 
lifetime. In 1781, through the influence of the' earl of Mana* 
field, he obtained a pension of £100 a year fromthe British 
government. 

The History of Great Britain has been translated into Fr en c h ^ ao d 
has passed into several English editions. An account of. Stuart's 
attack on Henry is given in Isaac Disraeli's Calamities of Authors. 

HENRY, VICTOR (1850- ), French philologist, was bora 
at Colmax in Alsace, Having held appointments at Douai and 
Lille, he was appointed professor of Sanskrit and comparative 
gramsaar in the university of Paris. A prolific and versatile 
writer, he is probably best known by the English translations 
of his Precis do Grammaire compor&t da Pom^ais at dt VoMmond 
and Precis 4 . . du Grec el du Latin. Important works by him 
on India and. Indian languages, are: Manuel pom 4tudier 1$ 
SansceU ftdiqueiwHh A. Bergaigne, 1800); AUmmisd* Sanscrit 
elajsique (190a); Precis it granmaire PAHs (1004); Us LUUNh 
tares do Vlnde: Sanscrit, P6li t Priorit (1904); La Mafia «t*wt 
a*4e.*nti&0 (i#>*);U Potskm (1005); VAgniHama, (i0°°>-; 



3°» 



HENRY, W.~ HENSELT 



Obscure languages (such as Innok, QuJehua, Oreenland) and 
local dialects (Lcxique etymologique dm Breton modern*; Lt 
DiateeU Ataman do Colmar) also claimed his attention. Lt 
Langage Martien is a curious book. It contains a discussion of 
some 40 phrases (amounting to about 300 words), which a certain 
Mademoiselle Helene Smith (a well-known spiritualist medium 
of Geneva), while on a hypnotic visit to the planet Mars, learnt 
and repeated and even wrote down during her trance as specimens 
of a language spoken there, explained to her by a disembodied 
interpreter. 

HENRY, WILLIAM (1775-1836), English chemist, son of 
Thomas Henry (1734-1816), an apothecary and writer on 
chemistry, was born at Manchester on the rath of December 
1775. He began to study medicine at Edinburgh in 1705, 
taking his doctor's degree ia 1807, but ill-health interrupted his 
practice as a physician, and he devoted his time mainly to 
chemical research, especially in regard to gases. One of his 
best-known papers {Phil. Trans., 1803) describes experiments 
on the quantity of gases absorbed by water at different tempera- 
tures and under different pressures, the conclusion he reached 
(" Henry's law ") being that " water takes up of gas condensed 
by one, two or more additional atmospheres, a quantity which, 
ordinarily compressed, would be equal to twice, thrice, &c. the 
volume absorbed under the common pressure of the atmosphere." 
Others of his papers deal with gas-analysis, fire-damp, illuminating 
gas, the composition of hydrochloric acid and of ammonia, 
urinary and other morbid ' concretions, and the disinfecting 
powers of heat. His Elements of Experimental Chemistry (1 700) 
enjoyed considerable vogue in its day, going through 11 editions 
in 30 years. He died at Pendlebury, near Manchester, on the 
and of September 1836. 

HRNRYSON, ROBERT (e. 14 »S-c. 1500), Scottish poet, was 
born about 1425- 1* "** been surmised that he was connected 
with the family of Henderson of Fordell, but of this there is 
no evidence. He is described, on the title-page of the 1570 
edition of his Fables, as " scholemaister of Dunfermeling," 
probably of the grammar-school of the Benedictine Abbey 
there. There is no record of his having studied at St Andrews, 
the only Scottish university at this time; but in 1462 a " Master 
Robert Henryson " is named among those incorporated in the 
recently founded university of Glasgow. It is therefore likely 
that his first studies were completed abroad, at Paris or Louvain. 
He would appear to have been in lower orders, if, in addition 
to being master of the grammar-school, he is the notary Robert 
Henryson who subscribes certain deeds in 1478. As Dunbar 
(q.i.) refers to him as deceased in his Lament for the Makaris, 
his death may be dated about 1500. 

Efforts have been made to draw up a chronology of his poems; 
but every scheme of this kind, is, in a stronger sense than in the 
case of Dunbar, mere guess-work. There are no biographical 
or bibliographical facts to guide us, and the M internal evidence " 
is inconclusive. 

Henryson's longest, and in many respects his most original 
and effective work, is his Morall Fabillis of Esope, a collection 
of thirteen fables, chiefly based on the versions of Anonymus, 
Lydgate and Carton. The outstanding merit of the work 
is its freshness of treatment. The old themes are retold with 
such vivacity, such fresh lights on human character, and with 
so much local "atmosphere," that they deserve the credit of 
original productions. They are certainly unrivalled in English 
fatalistic literature. The earliest available texts are the Char- 
teris text printed by Lekpreuik in Edinburgh in 1570 and the 
Harleian MS. No. 3865 in the British Museum. 

In the Testament of Cresseid Henryson supplements Chaucer's 
tale of Troilus with the story of the tragedy of Cresseid, Here 
again his literary craftsmanship saves him from the disaster 
which must have overcome another poet in undertaking to con- 
tinue the part of the story which Chaucer had intentionally 
left untold. The description of Cresseid's leprosy, of her meeting 
with Troilus, of his sorrow and charity, and of her death, give 
the poem a high place in writings of this genre. 

The poem entitled Orpheus and EurydUe, which is drawn from 



Boethras, contains some good passages, especially the lyrical 
lament of Orpheus, with the refrains "Quhar art thow gane, 
my luf Erudices?" and " My lady quene and raf, Ensdkes." 
It is followed by a long moralUas, in the manner of the Fables. 

Thirteen shorter poems have been ascribed to Henryson. 
Of these the pastoral dialogue 4 ' Robene and Makync," perhaps 
the best known of his work, is the most successful. Its model 
may perhaps be found In the pastourtlles, but ft stands safely 
on its own merits. Unfike most of the minor poems it is inde- 
pendent of Chaucerian tradition. The other pieces deal with die 
conventional 15th-century topics, Age: Death, Hasty Credence, 
Want of Wise Men and the like. The verses entitled " Sum 
Practysjs of Medecyne," in which some have failed to see Henry- 
son's hand, Is an example of that boisterous aHfteratfve burlesque 
which is represented by a single specimen in the work of the 
greatest makers, Dunbar, Douglas and Lyndsay. For this 
reason, if not for others, the difference of Its manner is no argu- 
ment against its authenticity. 

The MS. authorities for the text are the Astoan, Bannatyne. 
Maklaud Folio, Maketi!lech« Gray and Riddell. Chepman and 
Myllar'e Prints (1508) have preserved two of the minor poems and a 
fragment of Orpheus and EurydUe. The first cooulete edition was . 
prepared by David Laing (j vol., Edinburgh, 1805). A more ex-. 
haustive edit ran in three volumes, containing ail the texts, was 
undertaken by the Scottish Text Society (cd. G. Gregory Smith), 
the first volume of the text (voL ii< of the work) appearing in 1007. 
For a critical account of Henryson* see living's History of Scottish 
Poetry } Henderson's Vernacular Scottish Literature, Gregory Smith's 
Transition Period, J. H. Millar's Literary History of Scotland, and 
the second volume of the Cambridge Htstory of English Literal** 
(1008). (G. G. &) 

HENSCnU 6B0R0B (Iodor GEOtc] (1850- ), Engfth 
musician (naturalised 1890), of- German family, was bom at 
Breslau, and educated as m pianist, making his first public 
appearance in Berlin in 186s. He subsequently, however, took 
up singing, having developed a fine baritone voice; and in 1868 
he sang the part of Hans Sachs in MeisUr singer at Munich. 
In 1877 he began a successful career in England, singing at the 
principal concerts; and in 1881 he married the American 
soprano, Lilian Bailey (d. toot), who was associated with him 
in a number of vocal recitals. He was also prominent mm a con* 
ductor, starting the London symphony concerts in t886, and both 
in England and America (where he was the first conductor of 
the Boston symphony concert*; x88i) he took a leading fcart in 
advancing his art. He composed a number of instrumental 
works, a fine Stabat Mater (Bmnmgham festival, 1894). &c, 
and an opera, Nubia (Dresden, 1800). 

HENSBLT, ADOLF VON {1814-1880), German composer, 
was born at Schwabach, in Bavaria, on the nth of May 1814. 
At three years old he began to learn the vlotm, and at five the 
pianoforte under Frau v. Fladt. On obtaining financial help 
from King Louis I. he went to study under Hummel in Weimar, 
and thencein 183a to Vienna, Where, besides studying composition 
under Simon Scchter, he made a great success as a concert 
pianist. In order to recruit his health he made a prolonged tour 
in 1836 through the chief German towns. In 1837 he settled 
at Breslau, where he had married, but in the following year he 
migrated to St Petersburg, where previous visits had made him 
persona grata at Court. He then became court pianist and 
inspector of musical studies in the Imperial Institute of Female 
Education, and was ennobled. In 1852 and again in 1867 he 
visited England, though in the latter year he made no public 
appearance. St Petersburg was his home practically untH Ms 
death, which took place at Warmbrunn on the 10th of October 
1 880. The characteristic of Henselt 's playing was a combination 
of Liszt's sonority with Hummers smoothness. It was full of 
poetry, remarkable for the great use he made of extended 
chords, and for his perfect technique. He excelled in his own 
works and in those of Weber and Chopin. His concerto in P 
minor is frequently played on the continent; and of his many 
valuable studies, Si oiseau fildis'1% very familiar. His A minor 
trio deserves to be better known. At one rime HenseK was 
second to Rubinstein in the direction of the St Petersburg 
Conservatorium. 



HENSLOW— HENWOOD 



303 



HEB6L0W, JOBX STK9BIS < 1706-1841), English botanist 
and geologist, was bora at Rochester on the 6th of February 
1796. From his father, who was a solicitor in that clly, he 
imbibed a love of natural history which largely influenced his 
career. He was educated at St John's College, Cambridge, 
where he graduated as sixteenth wrangler in 1818, the year in 
which Sedgwick became Woodwardian professor of geology. 
He accompanied Sedgwick in 1819 during a tour in the Isle 
of Wight, and there he learned his first lessons in geology. He 
also studied chemistry under Professor James Cumming and 
mineralogy under £. D. Clarke. In the autumn of 18x9 he made 
tome valuable observations on the geology of the Isle of Man 
{Trans. Geol. Soci, i8ai), and in i8at be investigated the geology 
of parts of Anglesey, the results being printed in the first volume 
of the Transections of the Cambridge Philosophical Society (1821), 
the foundation of which society was originated by Sedgwick 
and Henslow. Meanwhile, Henslow had studied mineralogy 
with considerable seal, so that on the death of Clarke he was in 
18 a a appointed professor of mineralogy in the university at 
Cambridge. Two years later be took holy orders. Botany, how- 
ever, had claimed much of his attention, and to this science he 
became more and more attached, so that he gladly resigned the 
chair of mineralogy in 1825, to succeed to that of botany. As 
a teacher both in the class-room and in the field he was eminently 
successful. To him Darwin largely owed hisaltachment to natural 
history, and also his introduction to Captain Fitzroy of H.M.S. 
" Beagle." In 1832 Henslow was appointed vicar of Chobe^y- 
cum-Moulsford in Berkshire, and in 1837 rector of Hitcham in 
Suffolk, and at this latter parish he lived and laboured, endeared 
to all who knew him, until the dose of his life. His energies were 
devoted to the improvement of his parishioners, but his influence 
was felt far and wide. In 1843 he discovered nodules of coprolitic 
origin in the Red Crag at Felixstowe in Suffolk, and two years 
later he called attention to those abo in the Cambridge Greensand 
and remarked that they might be of use in agriculture. Although 
Henslow derived no benefit, these discoveries led to the establish- 
ment of the phosphate industry in Suffolk and Cambridgeshire-, 
and the works proved luceative, until toe introduction of foreign 
phosphates. The museum at Ipswich, which was established 
in 18474 owed much to Henslow, who was elected president in 
1850, and then superintended Che arrangement of the collection*. 
He died at Hitcham on the ifitb of May t86i . His publications 
included A Catalog** 0/ Stilish Plant* (1829; ed. a, 1835); 
Principles of Dtscriptm and Physiological Botany (1835); 
Flora oJSuffolh (with E. Skepper) (i860). 

Mtmoir* by the Rev. Leonard Jeayas (1862). 

HEVSLOWB, PHILIP (d.,1616), English theatrical manager, 
was the son of Edmund Henslowe erf Lindfield, Susses, master of 
the game in Ashdown Forest and Broil Pack. He was originally 
a servant in the employment of the bailiff to Viscount* Montague, 
whose property included Montague House in Southwark, and his 
duties led him to settle there before 1577. He subsequently 
married the bailiff's widow, and, with the fortune he got with her, 
he developed into a clever business man and became a consider- 
able owner of Southwark property. He started his connexion 
with the stage when, on the 24th of March 1584, be bought land 
near what is now the southern end of Southwark Bridge, on 
which stood the Little Rose playhouse, afterwards rebuilt as the 
Rose. Successive companies played in it under Henslowe's 
financial management between isoa and 1603. The theatre at 
Newingtou Butts was also under him in 1504. A share of the 
control in* the Swan theatre, which tike the Rose was on the 
Bankside, fell to Henslowe before the dose of the 16th century. 
With the actor Edward Alleyn, who married his step-daughter 
Joan Woodward, he built in Golden dtane, Cripplegate Without, 
the Fortune Playhouse, opened in November rooo. In December 
of ,rS94i they had secured the Paris Garden, a place for bear- 
bahinc, on the Ba nk s i de, and in 1604 they bought rhe office of 
master of the royal 0une of bears; bulls and mastiffs from the 
holder, and obtained a patent, AHeyn sold his share to Henslowe 
In February 1610, and three years later Henslowe formed a new 
partnership with Jacob Meade and built the Hope playhouse, 



designed tor stage performances as well as bufl and bear-baiting, 
and managed by Meade. 

In Henslowe's theatres were first produced many plays by the 
famous Elizabethan dramatists. What is known as " Henslowe's 
Diary " contains some accounts referring to Asbdown Forest 
between 1576 and 1581, entered by John Henslowe, while the 
later entries by Philip Henslowe from 1592 to 1609 am those 
which throw light on the theatrical matters of the time, and which 
have been subjected to much controversial criticism as a result of 
injuries done to the manuscript. " Henslowe's Diary " passed 
into the hands of Edward Alleyn, and thence into the Library of 
Dulwich College, where the manuscript remained intact for more 
than a hundred and fifty years. In 1 780 Malone tried to borrow 
ii t but it bad been mislaid; in 1790 it was discovered and given 
into his charge. He was then at work on his Variorum Shake- 
speare, Malone had a transcript made of certain portions, and 
collated it with the original; and this transcript, with various 
notes and corrections by Malone, is now in the Dulwich 
Library. An abstract of this transcript he also published 
with his Variorum Shakespeare. The MS. of the diary was 
eventually returned to the library in 1812 by Malone's executor. 
In 1840 it was lent to J. P. Collier, who in 1845 printed for the 
Shakespeare Society what purported to be a fall edition, but k 
was afterwards shown by G. F. Warner {Catalogue of the Dulwich 
Library, 1S81) that a number of forged interpolations have been 
made, the responsibility for which rests on Collier. 

The complicated hirtory of the forgeries and their detection has 
been exhaustively treated in Walter W. Greg's edition of Htnslowe's 
Diary (London, 1904; enlarged 1908). 

HENTT, GEORGE ALFRED (183S-X902), Enghth war- 
correspondent and author, was born at Trumpington, a>ear 
Cambridge, in December 1832, and educated at Westminster 
School and Caius.College, Cambridge. He served in the Crimea 
in the Purveyor's department, and after the peace filled various 
posts in the department in England and Ireland, but he found the 
routine little to his taste, and drifted into journalism tor the 
London Standard, He volunteered as Special Correspondent for 
the AustroJtalian War of x866, accompanied Garibaldi in Ms 
Tirolese Campaign, followed Lord Napier through the mountain 
gorges to Magdala, and Lord Wolseiey across bush and swamp to 
K umassu Next he report ed the Franco-German War, starved in 
Paris through the siege of the Commune, and then turned south to 
rough it in the Pyrenees during the Carlist insurrection* He was 
in Asiatic Russia at the time of the Khiva expedition, and later 
saw the desperate hand-to-hand fighting of the Turks in the 
Servian War. He found his real vocation in middle life. Invited 
to edit a magazine for boys called the Union Jack, he became the 
mainstay of the new periodical, to which he contributed several 
serials in succession. The stories pleased their public, and had 
ever increasing circulation in book form, until Henty became 
a name to conjure with in juvenile circles. Altogether he wrote 
about eighty of these books. Henty was an enthusiastic yachts- 
man, having spent at least six months afloat each year, and be 
died on board bis yacht in Weymouth. Harbour on the 16th 
of November 190a. 

HENWOOD. WILLIAM JORY (1805-1875), English mining 
geologist, was born at Perron Wharf, Cornwall, on the 16th of 
January 1805. In 182 2 he commenced work asa clerk in a mining 
office, aad soon took an active interest in the working of mines 
and in the metalfiferdus deposits. In 183a he was appointed to the 
office of assay-master and supervisor of tin in the duchy of 
CotnwaB, a post from which he retired in 1838. Meanwhile he 
had commenced in 1826 to communicate papers on mining sub- 
jects to the Royal Geological Society of Cornwall, and the 
Geological Society of London, and in 1840 he was elected F.R.S. 
In 1643 he went to take charge of the Congo- Soco mines in Braefl »; 
afterwards he proceeded to India to report on certain meraUUcrous 
deposits for the Indian government; and in* 1838, impaired in 
health, he retired and settled at Penzance. His most important 
memoirs on the metalliferous deposits of Cornwall and Devon 
were published in 1843 by the Royal Geological Society of 
ComwalL At a much later data he communicated with enlarged 



',39.4 



HENZADA—HEFHAESTUS 



experience a second sows of Oksenatxons on Metalliferous 
Deposits, and on Subterranean Temperature (reprinted from 
Trans. R. Geot. Soc. Cornwall, a vols., 187 1). In 1874 be «on- 
. tributed a paper on the Detrilal Tin-ore of Cornwall (Journ. R. 
Inst. Cornwall). The Murchison medal of the Geological Society 
was awarded to him in 1875, and the mineral Henwoodite was 
named after him. He died at Penzance on the 5th of August 

i87S. 

HENZADA, a district of Lower Burma, formerly in the Pegu, 
but now in the lrrawaddy division. Area, 2870 sq. m. Pop. 
(1001) 484,558. It stretches from north to south in one vast 
plain, forming the valley of the lrrawaddy, and is divided by 
that river into two nearly equal portions. This country is 
protected from inundation by immense embankments, so that 
almost the whole area is suitable for rice cultivation. The chief 
mountains are the Arakan and Pegu Yoma ranges. The greatest 
elevation of the Arakan Yomas in Henzada, attained in the 
latitude of Myan-aung, is 4003 ft. above sca4eveL Numerous 
torrents pour down from the two boundary ranges, and unite 
in the plains to form large streams, which fall into the chief 
streams of the district, which are the lrrawaddy, Hlaing and 
Bassein, all of them branches of the lrrawaddy. The forests 
comprise almost every variety of timber found in Burma. 
The bulk of the cultivation is rice, but a number of acres are 
under tobacco. The chief town of the district is Henzada, 
which had in xooi a population of 24,756. It is a municipal 
town, with ten elective and three ex-officio members. Other 
municipal towns in the district arc Zalun, with a population of 
6642; Myan-aung, with a population of 6351; and Kyangin, with 
a population of 7183, according to the 1901 census. The town 
of Lemyethna had a population of 5831. The steamers of the 
lrrawaddy Flotilla Company call at Henzada and Myan-aung. 

The distnkt was once a portion of the Talaing kingdom of 
Pegu, afterwards annexed to the Burmese empire in 1753, and has 
no history of its own. During the second Burmese war, after 
Promo had been seized, the Burmese on the right bank of the 
lrrawaddy crossed the river and offered resistance to the British, 
but were completely routed. Meanwhile, in Tharawaddy, or 
the country cast of the lrrawaddy, and in the south of Hensada, 
much disorder was caused by a revolt, the leaders of which were, 
however, defeated by the British and their gangs dispersed. 

HEPBURN, 8IR JOHN (c. 1 598-1636), Scottish soldier in 
the Thirty Years' War, was a son of George Hepburn of Alhel- 
sUnefonJ near Haddington. In 1620 and in the following years 
Be served in Bohemia, on the lower Rhine and in the Netherlands, 
and. in 1623 he entered the service of Gustavos Adolphus, who, 
two years later, appointed htm colonel of a Scottish regiment 
of his army. He took part with his regiment in Gustavus's 
Polish wars, and in 1631, a few months before the battle of 
Brettenfdd be was placed in command of the " Scots " or 
" Green " brigade of the Swedish army. At Breitenfeld H was 
Hepburn's brigade which delivered the decisive stroke, and 
after this he remained with the king, who placed the fullest 
reliance on his skill and courage, until the battle of the Alee 
Veste near Nuremberg. He then entered the French service, 
and raised two thousand men in Scotland for the French army, 
to which force was added in France the historic Scottish archer 
bodyguard of the French kings. The existing Royal Scots 
(Lothian) regiment (late 1st Foot) represents in the British army 
of to-day Hepburn's French regiment, and indirectly, through 
the amalgamation referred to, the Scottish contingent of the 
Hundred Years' War. Hepburn's claim to the right of the line 
of battle was bitterly resented by the senior French regiments. 
Shortly after this, in 1633. Hepburn was under a marichal de 
camp, and he took part in the campaigns in Alsace and Lorraine 
(1634-36). In 1635 Bernbard of Saxe- Weimar, on entering the 
French service, brought with him Hepburn's former Swedish 
regiment, which was at once amalgamated with the French 
'* regiment d'Hebron," the latter thus attaining the unusual 
strength of 8300 men. Sir John Hepburn was killed shortly 
afterwards during the siege of Saverne -(Zabern) on the 8th of 
July 1636. He was buried in Tool calhedraL With his friend 



Sir Robert Monro, Hepburn was the foremost of the Scottish 
soldiers of fortune who bore so conspicuous a part in the Thirty 
Years' War. He was a sincere Roman Catholic. It Is stated 
that he left Gustavus owing to a jest about his religion, and at 
any rate he found in the French service, in which he ended his 
days, the opportunity of reconciling his beliefs with the desire 
of military glory which had led him into the Swedish army, and 
with the patriotic feeling which had first brought him out to the 
wars to fight for the Stuart princess, Queen Elizabeth of Bohemia. 

See James Grant, Memoirs of Sir John Hepburn. 

HEPHAESTION, a Macedonian general, celebrated as the 
friend of Alexander the Great, who, comparing himself with 
Achilles, called Hephaestion his Patroclus. In the later cam- 
paigns in Bactria and India, be was entrusted with the task of 
founding cities and colonies, and built the fleet intended to sail 
down the Indus. He was rewarded with a golden crown and the 
hand of Drypetis, the sister of Alexander's wfTe Sutcira (324)* 
In the same year he died suddenly at Ecbataha. A general 
mourning was ordered throughout Asia; at Babylon a funeral 
pile was erected at enormous cost, and temples were built in 
his honour (see Alexander the Great). 

HEPHABSTTON, a grammarian of Alexandria, who nourished 
in the age of the Antonines. He was the author of a manual 
(abridged from a larger work in 48 books) of Greek metres 
('Eyx&pttto* *vpl nhpo)*), which is most valuable as the 
only complete treatise on the subject that has been preserved. 
The concluding chapter (tttpl irotfoumw) discmssea the various 
kinds of poetical composition. It is written in a dear and simple 
style, and was much used as a school-book. 

Editions by T. Geirford (4855, with the valuable scholia), R. 
Westphal (1886. in Scriptures metrici Grate*) and M* Coocbruca 
(1906); translation by T. F. Barbam (1843); see also W. Christ; 
(kick, der griech. Litt. (1808); M. Consbruch, De tttcrum n*t 
vmtMarot d oclrin a (1890) ; J. E. Sandys, HisU Class. Skkol. I (1906). 

HEPHAESTUS, in Greek mythology, the god of fire, analogous 
to, and by the ancients often confused with, the Roman god 
Vulcan (q.9.); the derivation of the name is uncertain, but it 
may well be of Greek origin. The elemental character of 
Hephaestus is far more apparent than is the case with the 
majority of the Olympian godsj the word Hephaestus was used 
as a synonym for fire not only in poetry (Homer, //. ii. 426 and 
later), but also in common speech (Diod. v. 74). It is doubtful 
whether the origin of the god can be traced to any specific form 
of fire. As all earthly fire was thought to have come from heaven, 
Hephaestus has been identified with the lightning. This is 
supported by the myth of his f aU from heaven, and by the fact 
that, according to the Homeric tradition, his father was Zeus, 
the heaven-god. On the other hand, the lightning is not 
■ssoriatcd with him in literature or cult, and his connexion with 
volcanic fires is so dose as to suggest that be was originally a 
volcano-god. The connexion, however, though it may be early, 
is probably not primitive, and it seems reasonable to conclude 
that Hephaestus was a general fire-god, though some of his 
characteristics were due to particular manifestations of tat 
element. 

In Homer the fire-god was the son of Zeus and Hera, and 
found a place in the Olympian system as the divine smith. The 
Iliad contains two versions of his fall from heaven. In one 
account (i. 590) he was cast out by Zeus and fell on Lernnos; 
in the other, Hera threw him down immediately after his birth 
in disgust at his lameness, and he was received by the sea-god- 
desses Eurynome and Thetis. The Lemnian version is due to 
the prominence of his cult at Lemnos in very early times; and 
his faU into the sea may have been suggested by vokank 
activity in Mediterranean Islands, as at Lipara and Then. 
The subsequent return of Hephaestus to Olympus is a favourite 
theme in early art. " His wife was Chads, one of the Graces 
(in the Iliad) or Aphrodite (In the Odyssey). The connexion of 
the rough Hephaestus with these goddesses is curious; k may 
be due to the beautiful works of the smith-god (xap&v* tpymL 
but it is possibly derived from the supposed fertOiaing and 
productive power of fire, in which case Hephaestus is a natural 
mate of Charis, a goddess of spring, and Aphrodite the isilihai 



HEPFENHEIM— HEPPLEWHITE 



305 



of love. In Homer, the skill of Hephaestus in metallurgy is 
often mentioned; his forge was on Olympus, where be was 
served by images of golden handmaids which he had animated. 
Similar myths are found in relation to the Finnish smith-god 
Ilmarinen, who made a golden woman, and the Teutonic Wicland; 
a belief in the magical power of metal-workers is a common 
survival from an age in which their art was new and mysterious. 
In epic poetry Hephaestus is rather a comic figure, and his 
Umping gait provokes " Homeric laughter " among the gods. 
In Vedic poetry Agni, the fire-god, is footless; and the ancients 
themselves attributed this lameness to the crooked appearance 
of flame (Servius on Aen. viii. 814), and possibly no better 
explanation can be found, though it has been suggested that in 
an early stage of society the trade of a smith would be suitable 
for the lame; Hephaestus and the lame Wieland would thus 
conform to the type of their human counterparts. 

Except in Lemnos and Attica, there are few indications of 
any cult of Hephaestus. His association with Lemnos can be 
traced from Homer to the Roman age. A town in the island was 
called Hephaestia, and the functions of the god must have been 
wide, as we are told that his Lemnian priests could cure snake- 
bites. Once a year every fire was extinguished on the island for 
nine days, during which period sacrifice was offered to the gods 
of the underworld and the dead. After the nine days were passed, 
new fire was brought from the sacred hearth at Ddos. The 
significance of this and similar customs is' examined by J. G. 
Frazer, Golden Bough, iii. ch. 4. The close connexion of 
Hephaestus with Lemnos and especially with its mountain 
Mosychlus has been explained by the supposed existence of a 
volcano; but no crater or other sign of volcanic agency is now 
apparent, and the " Lemnian fire "—a phenomenon attributed 
to Hephaestus — may have been due to natural gas (see LeiiNOS). 
In Sicily, however, the volcanic nature of the god is prominent 
in his cult at Etna, as well as in the neighbouring Liparaean 
isles. The Olympian forge had been transferred to Etna or 
some other volcano, and Hephaestus had become a subterranean 
rather than a celestial power. 

The divine smith naturally became a "culture-god"; In 
Crete the invention of forging in iron was attributed to him, 
and he was honoured by all metal-workers. Bot we have little 
record of his cult in this aspect, except at Athens, where his 
worship was of real importance, belonging to* the oldest stratum 
of Attic religion. A tribe was called after his name, and Erich- 
thonius, the mythical father of the Attic people, was the son of 
Hephaestus. Terra-cotta statuettes of the god seem to have been 
placed before the hearths of Athenian houses. This temple has 
been identified, not improbably, with the so-called " Tbeseum "; 
it contained a statue of Athena, and the two deities are often 
associated, in literature and cult, as the joint givers of civilisation 
to the Athenians. The class of artisans was under their special 
protection; and the joint festival of the two divinities— the 
Chakeia— commemorated the invention of bronze-working by 
Hephaestus. In the Hephaesteia (the particular festival of the 
god) there was a torch race, a ceremonial not indeed confined 
to fire-gods like Hephaestus and Prometheus, but probably 
in its origin connected with them, whether its object was to 
purify and quicken the land, or (according to another theory) 
to transmit a new fire with all possible speed to places where the 
fire was polluted. If the latter view is correct, the torch race 
would be closely akin to the Lemnian fire-ritual which has been 
mentioned. The relation between Hephaestus and Prometheus 
is in some respects close, though the distinction between these 
gods is clearly marked. The fire, as an element, belongs to the 
Olympian Hephaestus; the Titan Prometheus, a more human 
character, steals it for the use of man. Prometheus resembles 
the Polynesian Maul, who went down to fetch fire from the 
volcano of Mahuika, the fire-god. Hephaestus is a culture-god 
mainly in his secondary aspect as the craftsman, whereas 
Prometheus originates all civilization with the gift of fire. But 
the importance of Prometheus is mainly mythological; the 
Titan belonged to a fallen dynasty, and in actual cult was largely 
superseded by Hephaestus. 
XUX 6 



In archaic art Hephaestus is generally represented as bearded, 
though occasionally a younger beardless type is found, as on a 
vase (in the British Museum), on which he appears as a young 
man assisting Athena in the creation of Pandora. At a later 
time the bearded type prevails. The god is usually clothed in a 
short sleeveless tunic, and wears a round close-fitting cap. His 
face is that of a middle-aged man, with unkempt hair. He is 
in fact represented as an idealized Greek craftsman, with the 
hammer, and sometimes the pincers. Some mythologists have 
compared the hammer of Hephaestus with that of Trior, and 
have explained it as the emblem of a thunder-god; but it is 
Zeus, not Hephaestus, who causes the thunder, and the emblems 
of the latter god are merely the signs of his occupation as a 
smith. In art no attempt was made, as a rule, to indicate the 
lameness of Hephaestus; but one sculptor (Alcamenes) is said 
to have suggested the deformity without spoiling the statue. 

Authorities.— L. PrcUer (ed. C. Robert), Crieeh. liytholot.it, 
I 174 f. (Berlin, 1694); W. H. Roscher, Lex. der grieck. u. torn. 
Myikologie. s.v. " Hcphaisto* " (Leipzig. 1884-1806); Harrison, 
Myth, and Hon. of Ancient Athens, p. 119 f. (London, 1890); O. 
Gruppe, Crieeh. Mythologie u. Religionsjtesch. p. 1104 f. (Munich, 
1906); O. Schradcr and F. B. levons, Prehistoric Antiquities of the 
Aryan People, p. 161, dec, (London, 1890); L. R. Famed, Cults of the 
Creek States, v. (1909). (E. E. S.) 

HBPPEMHBIM, a town of Germany, in the grand-duchy of 
Hesse-Darmstadt, on the Bergstrasse, between Darmstadt 
and Heidelberg, 21 m. N. of the latter by rail. Pop. (1005), 6364. 
It possesses a parish church, occupying the site of one reputed to 
have been built by Charlemagne about 805, an interesting town 
hall and several schools. On an isolated hill close by stand the 
extensive rains of the castle of Starkenburg, built by the abbot, 
Ulrich von Lorsch, about 1064 and destroyed during the Seven 
Years* War, and another h)ll, the Landberg, was a place of 
assembly in the middle ages. Hcppcnheim, at first the property 
of the abbey of Lorsch, became a town in 1318. After belonging 
to the Rhenish Palatinate, it came into the possession of Hesse- 
Darmstadt in 1803. Hops, wine and tobacco are grown, and 
there are large stone quarries, and several small industries 
in the to wn. " 

HEPPLEWHITE, GEORGE (tf. 1786), one of the most famous 
English cabinet-makers of the x8th century. There is practically 
no biographical material relating to Hepplewhite. The only 
facts that are known with certainty are that he was apprenticed 
to Gillow at Lancaster, that he carried on business in the parish 
of Saint Giles, Cripplegate, and* that administration of his estate 
was granted to his widow Alke on the 27th of June 1786. The 
administrator's accounts, which were filed in the Prerogative 
Court of Canterbury a year later, indicate that his property was 
of considerable value. After his death the business was continued 
by his widow under the style of A. Hepplewhite 8c Co. Our only 
approximate means of identifying his work are The Cabinet- 
Maker and Upholsterer's Guide, which was first published in 
1788, two years after his death, and ten designs in The Cabinet- 
maker's London Book of Prices (1788), issued by the London 
Society of Cabinet-Makers. It is, however, exceedingly difficult 
to earmark any given piece of furniture as being- the actual work 
or design of Hepplewhite, since it is generally recognized that to 
a very large extent the name represents rather a fashion than 
a man. Lightness, delicacy and grace are the distinguishing 
characteristics of Hepplewhite work. The raassfveness of 
Chippendale had given place to conceptions that, especially in 
regard to chairs— which had become smaller as hoops went out 
of fashion — depended for their effect more upon inlay than upon 
carving. In one respect at hast the Hepplewhite style was 
akin to that of Chippendale— in both cases the utmost ingenuity 
was lavished upon the chair, and if Hepplewhite was not the 
originator he appears to have been the most constant and success- 
ful user of the shield back. This elegant form was employed by 
the school in a great variety of designs, and nearly always in 
a way artistically satisfying. Where Chippendale, his contem- 
poraries and his immediate successors had used the cabriole 
and the square leg with a good deal of carving, the Hepplewhite 
1 manner preferred a slighter leg, plain, fluted or reeded, tapering to 

2a 



3<>6 



HEPTARCHY—HERA 



a spade foot which often became the " spider leg " that character- 
ized much of the late 18th-century furniture; ibis form of leg 
was indeed not confined to chairs but was used also for tables 
and sideboards. Of the dainty drawing-room grace of the style 
there can be no question. The great majority of modern chairs 
are of Hepplewhite inspiration, while he, or those who worked 
with him, appears to have a clear claim to have originated, or 
at all events popularized, the winged easy-chair, in which the 
sides are continued to the same height as the back. This is 
probably the most comfortable type of chair that has ever been 
made. The backs of Hepplewhite chairs were often adorned 
with galleries and festoons of wheat-ears or pointed fern leaves, 
and not infrequently with the prince of Wales's feathers in some 
more or less decorative form. The frequency with which this 
badge was used has led to the suggestion either that A. Hepple- 
white & Co. were employed by George IV. when prince of Wales, 
or that the feathers were used as a political emblem. The former 
suggestion is obviously the more feasible, but there is little doubt 
that the feathers were used by other makers working in the same 
style. Jt has been objected as an artistic flaw in Hepplewhite 's 
chairs that they have the appearance of fragility. They are, 
however, const ructionally sound as a rule. The painted and 
japanned work has been criticized on safer grounds. This 
delicate type of furniture, often made of satinweod, and painted 
with wreaths and festoons, with amorini and musical instruments 
or floral motives, is the most elegant and pleasing that can be 
imagined. It has, however, no elements of decorative perman- 
ence. With comparatively little use the paintings wear off 
and have to be renewed. A piece of untouched painted satin- 
wood is almost unknown, and one of the essential charms of 
old furniture as of all other antiques is that it should retain the 
patina of time. A large proportion of Hepplewhite furniture 
is inlaid with the exotic woods which had come into high favour 
by the third quarter of the 18th century. While the decorative 
use upon furniture of so evanescent a medium as paint is always 
open to criticism, any form of marquetry is obviously legitimate, 
and, if inlaid furniture be less ravishing to the eye, its beauty 
is but enhanced by time. It was not in chairs alone that 
the Hepplewhite manner excelled. It acquired, for instance, a 
speciality of seats for the taO, narrow Georgian sash windows, 
which in the Hepplewhite period had almost entirely superseded 
the more picturesque forms of an earlier time. These window- 
seats had ends rolling over outwards, and no backs, and despite 
their skimpincss their elegant simplicity is decidedly pleasing. 
Elegance, in fact, was the note of a style which on the whole was 
more distinctly English than that which preceded or immediately 
followed it. The smaller Hepplewhite pieces are much prized 
by collectors. Among these may be included urn-shaped knife- 
boxes in mahogany and sat in wood, charming in form and 
decorative in the extreme; inlaid tea-caddies, varying greatly 
in shape and material, but* always appropriate and coquet; 
delicate little fire-screens with shaped poles; painted work- 
tables, and inlaid stands. Hepplewhite's bedsteads with carved 
and fluted -pillars were very handsome and attractive. The 
evolution of the dining-room sideboard made rapid progress 
towards the end of the 18th century, but neither Hepplewhite 
nor those who worked in his style did much to advance it. Indeed 
they somewhat retarded its development by causing it to revert 
to little more than that side-table which had been its original 
form. It was, however, a very delightful table with its undulat- 
ing front, its many elegant spade-footed legs and its delicate 
carving. If we were dealing with a less elusive personality it 
would be just to say that Hepplewhite's work varies from the 
extreme of elegance and the most delicious simplicity to an 
unimaginative commonplace, and sometimes to actual ugliness. 
As it is, this summary may well be applied to the style as a whole 
— a style which.was assuredly not the creation of any one man, 
but owed much alike of excellence and of defect to a school 
of cabinet-makers who were under the influence of conflicting 
tastes and changing ideals. At its best the taste was so fine and 
so full of distinction, so simple, modest and sufficient, that it 
amounted to genius. On its lower planes it was clearly influenced 



by commercialism and the desire to make what tasteless people 
preferred. Yet this is no more than to say that the Hepplewhite 
style succumbed sometimes, perhaps very often, to the eternal 
enemy of all art—the uninspired banality of the average 
man. (J. P.-B.) 

HEPTARCHY (Gr. «rra seven, and ipxi rule), a word 
which is frequently used to designate the period of English 
history between the coming of the Anglo-Saxons in 449 and the 
union of the kingdoms under Ecgbert in 828. It was first used 
during the 16th century because of the belief held by Camden 
and other older historians, that during this period there were 
exactly seven kingdoms in England, these being Northumbria, 
Mercia, East Anglia, Essex, Kent, Sussex and Wessex. This 
belief is erroneous, as the number of kingdoms varied consider- 
ably from time to time; nevertheless the word still serves a 
useful purpose to denote the period. 

HERA, in Greek mythology, the sister and wife of Zeus and 
queen of the Olympian gods; she was identified by the Romans 
with Juno. The derivation of the name is obscure, but there 
is no reason to doubt that she was a genuine Greek deity. There 
are no signs of Oriental influence in her cults, except at Corinth, 
where she seems to have been identified with Astarte. It is 
probable that she was originally a personification of some depart- 
ment of nature; but the traces of her primitive significance are 
vague, and have been interpreted to suit various theories. Some 
of the ancients connected her with the earth; Plato, followed 
by the Stoics, derived her name from &rjp, the air. Both theories 
have been revived in modern times, the former notably by F. G. 
Welckcr, the latter, by L. Preller. A third view, that Hera is 
the moon, is held by W. H. Roscher and others. Of these' 
explanations, that advanced by Preller has little to commend it, 
even if, with 0. Gruppe, we understand the air-goddess as a 
storm deity; some of the arguments in support of the two other 
theories will be examined in this article. 

Whatever may have been the origin of Hera, to the historic 
Greeks (except a few poets or philosophers) she was a purely 
anthropomorphic goddess, and. had no close relation to any 
province of nature. la literature, from the times of Homer 
and Hesiod, she played an important part, appearing most 
frequently as the jealous and resentful wife of Zeus. In this 
character she pursues with vindictive hatred the heroines, such 
as Akmene, Leto and Semele, who were beloved by Zeus. She 
visits his sins upon the children born of his intrigues, and is 
thus the constant enemy of Heracles and Dionysus. This char- 
acter of the offended wife was borrowed by later poets from the 
Greek epic; but it belongs to literature rather than to cult, in 
which the dignity and power of the goddess is naturally more 
emphasized. 

The worship of Hera is found, in different degrees of promi- 
nence, throughout the Greek world. It was especially important 
in the ancient Achaean centres, Argos, Mycenae and Sparta, 
which she claims in the Iliad (iv. 51) as her three dearest cities. 
Whether Hera was also worshipped by the early Dorians is un- 
certain; after the Dorian invasion she remained the chief deity of 
Argos, but her cult at Sparta was not soconspioious. She received 
honour, however, in other parts of the Peloponoese, particularly 
in Olympia, where her temple was the oldest, and in Arcadia. 
In several Boeotian cities she seems to have been one of the 
principal objects of worship, while the neighbouring island of 
Euboea probably derived its. name from a title of Hera, who 
was "rich in cows "(ECpote). Among the islands of the Aegean, 
Samoa was celebrated for the cult of Hera; according to the 
local tradition, she was bom in the island. As Hera Lacinia 
(from her Lacinian temple near Croton) she was extensively 
worshipped in Magna Graecia. 

The connexion of Zeus and Hera was probably not primitive, 
since Dione seems to have preceded Hera as the wife of Zeus 
at Dodona. The origin of the connexion may possibly* be due 
to the fusion of two " Pelasgic ".tribes, worshipping Zeus and 
Hera respectively; but speculation on the earliest cult of the 
goddess, before she became the wife of Zeus, must be largely 
conjectural. The close relation of the two deities appears in a 



HERA 



3°7 



frequent community of altars and sacrifice*, and abo in the 
Upot ytyof, * dramatic representation of their sacred marriage. 
The festival, which was certainly ancient, was held not only 
in Argos, Samoa, Euboea and other centres of Hera-worship, 
but also in Athens, where the goddess was obscured by the 
predominance of Athena. The details of the fepfe ybpoi may 
have varied locally, but the main idea of the ritual was the same. 
In the Daedala, as the festival was called at Plataea, an effigy 
was made from an oak-tree, dressed in bridal attire, and carried 
in a cart with a woman who acted as bridesmaid. The image 
was called Daedale, and the ritual was explained by a myth: 
Hera had left Zeus in her anger; in order to win her back, 
Zeus announced that he was about to marry, and dressed up a 
puppet to imitate a bride; Hera met the* procession, tore the 
veil from the false bride, and, on discovering the ruse, became 
reconciled to her husband. The image was put away after each 
occasion; every sixty years a large number of such images, 
which had served in previous celebrations, were carried in 
procession to the top of Mount Cithaeron, and were burned on 
an altar together with animals and the altar itself. As Frazer 
notes (Goldon Bough* i. 227), this festival appears to belong 
to the large class of mimetic charms designed to quicken the 
growth of vegetation; the marriage of Zeus and Hera would 
in this case represent the union of the king and queen of May. 
But it by no means follows that Hera was therefore originally 
a goddess of the earth or of vegetation. When the real nature 
of the ritual had become lost or obscured, it was natural to 
explain it by the help of an aetio logical myth; in European 
folklore, images, corresponding to those burnt at the Daedala, 
were sometimes called Judas Iscariot or Luther (Golden Bough* 
iii. 315). At Samos the Upby&iu* was celebrated annually; 
the image of Hera was concealed on the sea-shore and solemnly 
discovered. This rite seems to reflect an actual custom of 
abduction; or it may rather refer to the practice of intercourse 
Between the betrothed before marriage. Such intercourse was 
sanctioned by the Samians, who excused it by the example of 
Zeus and Hera (schol. on //. xiv. too). There is nothing in the 
Samian Updt yo-pot to suggest a marriage of heaven and earth, 
or of two vegetation-spirits; as Dr Farnell points out, the 
ritual appears to explain the custom of human nuptials. The 
sacred marriage, therefore, though connected with vegetation 
at the Daedak, was not necessarily a vegetation-charm in its 
origin; consequently, it does not prove that Hera was' an earth- 
goddess or tree-Spirit. It is at least remarkable that, except 
at Argos, Hera had little to do with agriculture, and was not 
closely associated with such deities as Cybele, Demeter, Perse- 
phone and Dionysus, whose connexion with the earth, or with 
its fruits, is beyond doubt. 

In her general cult Hera was worshipped in two mam capa- 
cities: (1) as the consort of Zeus and queen of heaven; (2) as 
the goddess who presided over marriage, and, in a wider sense, 
over the various phases of a woman's life. Dionysius of Hali- 
carnassus (Ars rhef. iL 2) calls Zeus and Hera the first wedded 
pair, and a sacrifice to Zeus r Actor and Hera rtXtla was a 
regular feature of the Greek weddjng. Girls offered their hair 
or veils to Hera before marriage. In Aristophanes (rtam.073) 
she " keeps the keys of wedlock." The marriage-goddess 
naturally became the protector of women in childbed, and bore 
the title of the birth-goddess (Eileithyia), at Argos and Athens. 
In Homer (//. xi. 270) and Hesiod (Thcog. 922) she is the mother 
of the Eifcithyiae, or the single Eileithyia. Her cult-titles 
rapShot (or iraTt ), rcXela and xijpa the ** maiden," *' wife," 
and " widow " (or " divorced ") have been interpreted as 
symbolical of the earth in spring, summer, and winter; but they 
may well express the different conditions in the lives of her 
human worshippers. The Argfves believed that Hera recovered 
her virginity every year by bathing in a certain spring (Paus. 
viii. 22, 2), a belief which probably reflects the custom of cere- 
monial purification after marriage (see Frazer, Adonis, p. 176). 
Although Hera was not the bestower of feminine charm to the 
same extent as Aphrodite, she was the patron of a contest 
for beauty in a Lesbian festival (KaXWrcta). This intimate 



relation with women has been held a proof that Hera was 
originally a moon-goddess, as the moon is often thought to 
influence childbirth and other aspects of feminine life. But 
Hera's patronage of women, though undoubtedly ancient, is 
not necessarily primitive. Further, the Greeks themselves, 
who were always ready to identify Artemis with the moon, 
do not seem to have recognized any lunar connexion in 
Hen. 

Among her particular worshippers, at Argos and Samos, 
Hera was much more than the queen of heaven and the marriage- 
goddess. As the patron of these cities (roXiovxot) she held a 
-place corresponding to that of Athena in Athens. The Argives 
are called " the people of Hera " by Pindar; the Heraeum, 
situated under a mountain significantly called Mu Euboea, 
was the most Important temple in Argous. Here the agricultural 
character of her ritual is well marked; the first oxen used in 
ploughing were, according to an Argive myth, dedicated to her 
as frvtttta; and the sprouting ears of corn were called u the 
flowers of Hera." She was worshipped as the goddess of flowers 
(AWWa); girls served in her temple under the name of u flower* 
bearers," and a flower festival ('llpooopdtia, 'Hpoavfai) was 
celebrated by Peloponnerian women in spring. These rites 
recall our May day observance, and give colour to the earth- 
goddess theory. On the other hand it must be remembered that 
the patron deity of a Greek state had very wide functions; and 
it is not surprising to find that Hera (whatever her origin may 
have been) * assumed an agricultural character among her own 
people whose occupations were largely agricultural. So, although 
the warlike character of Hera was not elsewhere prominent, 
she assumed a militant aspect fn her two chief cities; a festival 
called the Shield (tariff, in Pindar 6yC* x&X««o*) was part of the 
Argive cult, and there was an armed procession. in her honour 
at Samos. The city-goddess, whether Hera or Athena, must be 
chief alike in peace and war. 

The cow was the animal specially sacred to Hera both in ritual 
and in mythology. The story of Io, metamorphosed into a cow, 
is familiar; she was priestess of Hera, and was originally, no 
doubt, a form of the goddess herself. The Homeric epithet 
jSobhrif may have meant " cow-faced " to the earliest worshippers 
of Hera, though by Homer and the later Greeks it was understood 
as " large-eyed," like the cow. A car drawn by oxen seems to 
have been widely used in the processions of Hera, and the cow 
was her most frequent sacrifice. The origin of Hera's association 
with the cow is uncertain, but there is no need to see in it, with 
Roscher, a symbol of the moon. The cuckoo was also sacred 
to Hera, who, according to the Argive legend, was wooed by 
Zeus in the form of the bird. In later times the peacock, which 
was still unfamiliar to the Greeks in the 5th century, was her 
favourite, especially at Samos. 

The earliest recorded images of Hera preceded the rise of 
Greek sculpture; a log at Thespiae, a plank at Samos, a pillar 
at Argos served to represent the goddess. In the archaic period 
of sculpture the (Aaror or wooden statue of the Samian Hera 
by Smilis was famous. In the first half of the 5th century the 
sacked marriage was represented on an extant metope from a 
temple at Selinus. The most celebrated statue of Hera was the 
chryselephantine work of Polyditus, made for the Heraeum at 
Argos soon after 423 B.C. It is fully described by Pausanias, 
who says that Hera was seated on a throne, wearing a crown 
(tfrtyavot ), and carrying a sceptre in one hand and a pomegranate 
In the other. Various ancient writers testify to the beauty and 
dignity of the statue, which was considered equal to the Zeus 
of Pheidias. Polyclitus seems to have fixed the type of Hera 
as a youthful matron, but unfortunately the exact character 
of her head cannot be determined. A majestic and rather 
severe beauty marks the conception of Hera in later art, of 
which the Farnese bast at Naples and the Ludovisi Hera are 
the most conspicuous examples. 

Authorities.— F. G, Welcker, Griech. GdtuH. L 362 f. 
(Gottingen. 1857-1863); L. Preller (ed. C. Robert). Griech. Mvtho- 
togie, i. 160 1. (Berlin. 1804); W. H. Roscher, Ixx. der triech. n. 
rdm. Mythoiogie, s.v. (Leipzig. 1884); C. Daremberg and £. Sagtio, 



3©8 



HERACLEA— HERACLIDAE 



Diet. 4es ant. trecqmes et ram. s.v. "Juno" (Pari*. 1877); L. R, 
Farnell, Ctdls of the Creek States, I 179 f. (Oxford, ^896) ; A. B. 
Cook in Class. Rev. xx. 365 f. 416 f.; O. Gruppe, Crtech. Myiho- 
fogic u. ReligionsgeSch. p. 1 121 I. (Munich, 1903). In the article 
Greek Art. fig. 24, wilt be found a roughly executed head of Hera, 
from the pediment of the treasury of the Megarians. (E. £. S.) 

HERACLEA, the name of a large number of ancient cities 
founded by the Greeks. 

x. Heraclea (Gr. 'HpoxXeta), an ancient city of Lucania, 
situated near the modern Poiicoro, 3 m. from the coast of the gulf 
of Tarentum, between the rivers Aciris (Agri) and Siris (Sinni) 
about 13 m. S.S.W. of Metapontum* It was a Greek colony 
founded by the Tarentines and Thurians m 432 B.C., the former 
being predominant. It was chosen as the meeting-place of the 
general assembly of the Italiot Greeks, which Alexander of 
Epirus, after his alienation from Tarentum, tried to transfer to 
Thurii. Here Pyrrhus, king of Epirus, defeated the consul 
Laevinus in 280 B.C., after he had crossed the river Siris. In 
278 B.C., or possibly in 282 B.C., probably in order to detach it 
from Tarentum, the Romans made a special treaty with Heraclea, 
on such favourable terms that in 89 B.C. the Roman citizenship 
given to the inhabitants by the Lex Plautia Papiria was only 
accepted after considerable hesitation. We hear that Heraclea 
surrendered under compulsion to Hannibal in 212 B.C. and that 
in the Social war the public records were destroyed by fire. 
Cicero in his defence of the poet Archias, an adopted citizen of 
Heraclea, speaks of it as a flourishing town. As a consequence 
of its having accepted Roman citizenship, it 'becnmcsununuipium; 
part of a copy of the Lex Iulia Municipals of. 46 B.C. (engraved 
on the back of two bronze tablets, on the front of which is a Greek 
inscription of the 3rd century B.C. defining the boundaries of 
lands belonging to various temples), which was found between 
Heraclea and Metapontum, is of the highest importance for our 
knowledge of that law. It was still a place of some importance 
under the empire; a branch road from Venusia joined the coast 
road here. The circumstances of its destruction and abandon- 
ment was unknown; the site is now marked by a few heaps of 
ruins. Its medieval representative was Anglona, once a bishopric, 
but now itself a heap of ruins, among which are those of an 
xith-century church. 

2. Heraclea Minoa, an ancient town on the south coast of 
Sicily, at the mouth of the river Halycus, near the modern 
Montallegro, some 20 m. N.W. of Girgenti. It was at first an 
outpost of Selinus (Herod, v. 46), then overthrown by Carthage, 
later a border town of Agrigentum. It passed into Carthaginian 
hands by the treaty of 405 B.C., was won back by Dionysius in 
bis first Punic war, but recovered by Carthage in 383. From this 
date onwards coins bearing its Semitic name, Ras Mdkart, 
become common, and.it was obviously an important border 
fortress. It was here that Dion landed in 357 B.C., when he 
attacked Syracuse. The Agrigentines won it back in 309, but 
it soon fell under the power of Agathodes. It was temporarily 
recovered for Greece by Pyrrhus. (T. As.) 

3. Heraclea Pontica (mod. Bender EregJi), an ancient city 
on the coast of Bithynia in Asia Minor, at the mouth of the 
Kilijsu. It was founded by a Megarian colony, which soon 
subjugated the native Mariandynians and extended its power 
over a considerable territory. The prosperity of the city, rudely 
shaken by the Galatians and the Bithynians, was utterly 
destroyed in the Mithradatic war. It was the birthplace of 
Heraclides Pontkus. The modern town is best known for its 
lignite coal-mines, from which Constantinople receives a food 
part of its supply. 

4. Heraclea Sintica, a town in Thracian Macedonia, to the 
south of the Strymon, the site of which is marked by the village 
Of Zervokhori, and identified by the discovery of local coins. 

5. Heraclea, a town on the borders of Caria and Ionia, near 
the foot of Mount Latmus. In its neighbourhood was the 
burial cave of Endymion. 

6. Heraclea-Cybistra (mod. Ercgli in the vilayet of Konia), 
under the name Cybistra, had some importance in Hellenistic 
times owing to its position near the point where the road to the 
Cilician Gates enters the hills. It lay in the way of armies and was 



more than once sacked by the Arab invaders of Asia Minor 
(a j>. 805 and 832). It became Turkish (Sdjuk) in the nth 
century. Modern Ercgli had grown from a large village to a 
town since the railway reached it from Konia and Karaman 
in 1004; and it has now an hotel and good shops. Three hours* 
ride S. is the famous "Hitlite" rock-relief of Ivriz, representing 
a king (probably of neighbouring Tyana) adoring a god (see 
Hittttes). This was the first " Hittite " monument discovered 
in modern times (early 18th century, by the Swede Otter, an 
emissary of Louis XIV.). 

For Heraclea Trachinia see Trachis, and for Heraclea Perinthua 
see Perinthus. 

Heraclea was also the name of one of the Sporades, between 
Naxos and Ios, which is still called Raklia,and bears traces of a 
Creek township with temples to Tyche and Zeus Lophites. 

(D. G. H.) 

HERACLEON, a Gnostic who flourished about ad. 125, 
probably in the south of Italy or in Sicily, and is generally 
classed by the early heresiologists with the Valentinian school 
of heresy. In his system he appears to have regarded the 
divine nature as a vast abyss in whose pUroma were aeons of 
different orders and degrees,— emanations from the source of 
being. Midway between the supreme God and the material 
world was the Demiurgus, who created the latter, and under 
whose jurisdiction the lower, animal soul of man proceeded after 
death, while his higher, celestial soul returned to the pleroma 
whence at first it issued. Though conspicuously uniting faith 
in Christ with spiritual maturity, there are evidences that, like 
other Valentinians, Hcracleon did not sufficiently emphasize 
abstinence from the moral laxity and worldliness into which his 
followers fell. He seems to have received the ordinary Christian 
scriptures; and Origen, who treats him as a notable cxegete, 
has preserved fragments of a commentary by him on the fourth 
gospel (brought together by Grabe in the second volume of his 
SpuiUgium), while Clement of Alexandria quotes from him 
what appears to be a passage from a commentary on Luke. 
These writings are remarkable for their intensely mystical and 
allegorical interpretations of the text. 

HERACLEONAS, east-Roman emperor (Feb.- Sept. 641), was 
the son of Hecaclius (q.v.) and Martina. At the end of Heradius* 
reign he obtained through his mother's influence the title of 
Augustus (638), and after his father's death was proclaimed 
joint emperor with his half-brother Constantine III. The 
premature death of Constantine, in May 641, left Heradeonas 
sole ruler. But a suspicion that he and Martina had murdered 
Constantine led soon after to a revolt, and to the mutilation 
and banishment of the supposed offenders. Nothing further is 
known about Heradeonas subsequent to 641. 

HERACUDAE, the general name for the numerous descend- 
ants of Herades (Hercules), and specially applied in a narrower 
sense to the descendants of Hyllus, the eldest of his four sons 
by Dclaneirathe, conquerors of Pdoponnesus. Herades, whom 
Zeus bad originally intended to be ruler of Argos, Lacedaemon 
and Messenian Pylos, bad been supplanted by the cunning of 
Hera, and his intended possessions had fallen into the hands of 
Eurystheus, king of Mycenae. After the death of Heracles, 
his children, after many wanderings, found refuge from Eurys- 
theus at Athens. Eurystheus, on his demand for their surrender 
being refused, attacked Athens, but was defeated and slain. 
Hyllus and his brothers then invaded Peloponnesus, but after 
a year's stay were forced by a pestilence to quit. They with- 
drew to Tbessaly, where Aegimius, the mythical ancestor of the 
Dorians, whom Herades had assisted in war against the Lapithae, 
adopted Hyllus and made over to him a third part of his territory. 
After the death of Aegimius, his t wo sons, Pamphilus and Dy mas, 
voluntarily submitted to Hyllus (who was, according to the 
Dorian tradition in Herodotus v. 72, really an Achaean), who 
thus became ruler of the Dorians, the three branches of that 
race being named after these three heroes. Being desirous 
of reconquering his paternal inheritance, Hyllus consulted the 
Delphic oracle, which told him to wait for " the third fruit," 
and then enter Pdoponnesus by •' a narrow passage by sea.'* 



HERACLIDES— HERACLITUS 



Accordingly, after three years, Hyllus marched across the 
isthmus of Corinth to attack Atreus, the successor of Eurystheus, 
but was slain in single combat by Echemus, king of Tegea. This 
second attempt was followed by a third under Cleodaeus and 
a fourth under Aristomachus, both of which were equally un- 
successful. At last, Temenus, Cresphontes and Aristodemus, 
the sons of Aristomachus, complained to the oracle that its 
instructions had proved fatal to those who had followed them. 
They received the answer that by the " third fruit " the " third 
generation " was meant, and that the " narrow passage " was not 
the isthmus of Corinth, but the straits of Rhium. They ac- 
cordingly built a fleet at Naupactus, but before they set sail, 
Aristodemus was struck by lightning (or shot by Apollo) and 
the fleet destroyed, because one of the Heraclidae had slain an 
Acarnanian soothsayer. The oracle, being again consulted by 
Temenus, bade him offer an expiatory sacrifice and banish 
the murderer for ten years, and look out for a man with three 
eyes to act as guide. On his way back to Naupactus, Temenus 
fell in with Oxylus, an Aetolian, who had lost one eye, riding 
on a horse (thus making up the three eyes) and immediately 
pressed him into his service. According to another account, 
a mule on which Oxylus rode had lost an eye. The Hera- 
clidae repaired their ships, sailed from Naupactus to Antirrhium, 
and thence to Rhium in Peloponnesus. A decisive battle was 
fought with Tlsamenus, son of Orestes, the chief ruler in the 
peninsula, who was defeated and slain. The Heraclidae, who 
thus became practically masters of Peloponnesus, proceeded to 
distribute its territory among themselves by lot. Argos fell to 
Temenus, Lacedaemon to Procles and Ettrysthenes, the twin sons 
of Aristodemus ; and Messene to Cresphontes. The fertile district 
of Elis had been reserved by agreement for Oxylus. The Hera- 
clidae ruled in Lacedaemon till sax B.C., but disappeared much 
earlier in the other countries.. This conquest of Peloponnesus 
by the Dorians, commonly called the " Return of the Heraclidae," 
b represented as the recovery by the descendants of Heracles 
of the rightful inheritance of their hero ancestor and his sons. 
The Dorians followed the custom of other Greek tribes in claiming 
as ancestor for their ruling families one of the legendary heroes, 
but the traditions must not on that account be regarded as 
entirely mythical. They represent a joint invasion of Pelopon- 
nesus by Aetohans and Dorians, the latter having been driven 
southward from their original northern home under pressure 
from the Thessalians. It is noticeable that there is no mention 
of these Heraclidae or their invasion in Homer or Hesiod. 
Herodotus (vi: 52) speaks of poets who had celebrated their 
deeds, but these were limited v to events immediately succeeding 
the death of Heracles. The story was first amplified by the Greek 
tragedians, who probably drew their inspiration from local 
legends, which glorified the services rendered by Athens to the 
rulers of Peloponnesus. 



lOHIwail, M*—*vij vj wreeve, vii. Tin. \Jiuw, *** - „ - - . 

ch. xviii. ; Butolt, Gruckische Gtsckichte, Lcb.iL sec 7, where a list 
of modern authorities is given. 

HERACLIDES PQMTICUS, Greek philosopher and miscel- 
laneous writer, born at Heradea in Pontus, flourished in the 4th 
century B.C. He studied philosophy at Athens under Speusippus, 
Plato and Aristotle. According to Suidas, Plato, on his departure 
for Sicily, left his pupils in charge of Heradides. The latter 
part of his life was spent at Heradea. He is said to have been 
vain and fat, and to have been so fond of display that he was 
nicknamed Pompicus, or the Showy (unless the epithet refers 
to his literary style) . Various idle stories are related about him. 
On one occasion, for instance, Heradea was afflicted with famine, 
and the Pythian priestess at Delphi, bribed by Heradides, 
assured his inquiring townsmen that the dearth would be stayed 
if they granted a golden crown to that philosopher. This was 
done; but just as Heradides was receiving his honour in a 
crowded assembly, he was seized with apoplexy, while the 
dishonest priestess perished at the same moment from the bite 
of a serpent. On his death-bed he is said to have requested a 



309 

friend to hide his ibody as soon as life was extinct, and, by putting 
a serpent in its place, induce his townsmen to suppose that he 
had been carried up to heaven. The trick was discovered, 
and Heradides recdved only ridicule instead of divine honours 
(Diogenes Laertius v. 6). Whatever may be the truth about 
these stories, Heradides seems to have been a versatile and 
prolific writer on philosophy, mathematics, music, grammar, 
physics, history and rhetoric Many of the works attributed 
to him, however, are probably by one or more persons of the 
tame name. 

The extant fragment of a treatise On Constitutions (C.W. Mailer. 
F.H.G. U. 197-207) U probably a compilation from the Politics of 
Aristotle by Heradides Lembos, who lived in the time of Ptolemy 
VL Philometor (181-146). See Otto Voss, D§ Htraclidis Pontici tita 
Hstriptis (1S96). 

HERACUTUS ('Hp&xXetros; c 540-47$ BX.), Greek philo- 
sopher, was born at Ephesus of distinguished parentage 
Of his early life and education we know nothing; from the 
contempt with which he spoke of all his fellow-philosophers and 
of his fellow-dtixens as a whole we may gather that he regarded 
himself as self-taught and a pioneer of wisdom. So intensdy 
aristocratic (hence his nickname oxtaXotfopo*, " be who rails 
at the people ") was his temperament that he declined to exercise 
the regal-hieratic office of paaiKeOi which was hereditary in his 
family, and presented it to his brother. It is probable, however, 
that he did occasionally intervene in the affairs of the dty at 
the period when the rule of Persia had given place to autonomy; 
it is said that he compelled the usurper Melancomas to abdicate. 
From the lonely life he led, and still more from the extreme 
profundity of Ids philosophy and his contempt for mankind in 
general, he was called the " Dark Philosopher " (6 OKor**tx) t 
or the " Weeping Philosopher,** in contrast to Democritus, the 
" Laughing Philosopher." 

Heraditus is in a real sense the founder of metaphysics. 
Starting from the physical standpoint of the Ionian physicists, 
he accepted their general idea of the unity of nature, but entirely 
denied their theory of being. The fundamental uniform fact 
in nature is constant change (rdrra xwpc? xal ottlv pera); 
everything both is and is not at the same time He thus arrives 
at the prindple of Relativity; harmony and unity consist in 
diversity and multiplidty. The senses are "bad witnesses" 
(Kami jiaprvpef); only the wise man can obtain knowledge. 

To appreciate the significance of the doctrines, of Heraditus, 
it must be borne in mind that to Greek philosophy the sharp 
distinction between subject .and object which pervades modern 
thought was foreign, a consideration which suggests the conclusion 
that, while it is a great mistake to reckon Heraditus with the 
materialistic cosmologists of the Ionic schools, it is, on the other 
hand, going too far to treat his theory, with Hegd and L assal le, 
as one of pure Panlogism. Accordingly, when he denies the 
reality of Being, and declares Becoming, or eternal flux and 
change, to be the sole actuality, Heraditus must be understood 
to enunciate not only the unreality of the abstract notion of being, 
except as the correlative of that of not-being, but also the 
physical doctrine that all phenomena are x in a state of continuous 
transition from non-existence to existence) and vice versa, without 
dther ^Mfrg^hfag these propositions or qualifying them by 
any reference to the relation of thought to experience. "Every 
thing is and is not "; all things are, and nothing remains. So 
far be is in general agreement with Anarimander (f.t.), but he 
differs from him in the solution of the problem, disliking, as a 
poet and a mystic, the primary matter which satisfied the patient 
TftfST^hfT, und df™f»F"*"»ff * "m*^ ^Ivid and pidureaqng dement. 
Naturally be selects fire, according to him the most complete 
embodiment of the process of Becoming, as the prindple of 
empirical existence, out of which all things, induding even the 
soul,, grow by way of a quasi condensation, and into which all 
things must in course of time be again resolved. But this 
primordial fire is in itself that divine rational process, the 
harmony of which constitutes the law of the universe (see Logos). 
Real knowledge consists in comprehending this all-pervading 
harmony as embodied in the muni fold of perception, and the 
senses are " bad-witnesses," because they apprehend phenomena. 



3io 



HERACLIUS— HERALD 



which bis son Constantine had successfully defended against 
renewed incursions by the Avars, Heraclius resumed his attacks 
upon the Persians (627). Though deserted by the Khazars, 
with whom he had made an alliance upon entering into Pontus, 
he gained a decisive advantage by a brilliant march across the 
Armenian highlands into the Tigris plain, and a hard-fought 
victory over Chosroes' general, Shahrbaraz, in which Heraclius 
distinguished himself by his personal bravery. A subsequent 
revolution at the Persian court led to the dethronement of 
Chosroes in favour of his son Kavadh II. (?.t.), the new king 
promptly made peace with the emperor, whose troops were 
already advancing upon the Persian capital Ctesiphon (628). 
Having thus secured his eastern frontier, Heraclius returned 
to Constantinople with ample spoils, including the true cross, 
which in 629 be brought back in person to Jerusalem. On the 
northern frontier of the empire he kept the Avars in check by 
inducing the Serbs to migrate from the Carpathians to the 
Balkan lands so as to divert the attention of the Avars. 

The triumphs which Heraclius had won through his own 
energy and skill did not bring him lasting popularity. In bis 
civil administration he followed out his own ideas without 
deferring to the nobles or the Church, and the opposition which 
he encountered from these quarters went far to paralyse his 
attempts at reform. Worn out by continuous fighting and 
weakened by dropsy, Heraclius failed to show sufficient energy 
against the new peril that menaced his eastern provinces towards 
the end of his reign. In 620 the Saracens made their first in- 
cursion into Syria (see Caliphate, section A, f x); in 636 they 
won- a notable victory on the Yermuk (Hieromax), and in the 
following years conquered all Syria, Palestine and Egypt. 
Heraclius made no attempt to retrieve the misfortunes of his 
generals, but evacuated his possessions in sullen despair. Hie 
remaining years of his life he devoted to theological speculation 
and ecclesiastical reforms. His religious enthusiasm led him to 
oppress his Jewish subjects; on the other hand he sought to 
reconcile the Christian sects, and to this effect propounded in 
his EctheHs a conciliatory doctrine of monothelism. Heraclius 
died of his disease in 642. He had been twice married; his 
second union, with his niece Martina, was frequently made a 
matter of reproach to him. In spite of his partial failures, 
Heraclius must be regarded as one of the greatest of Byzantine 
emperors, and his early campaigns were the means of saving the 
realm from almost certain destruction. 



Authorities.— G. Finlay, History *>/ Greece (Oxford, 1877) L 
"- * B. Bury.^T** Later Roman Empire (Londoi 

tow 'Bvfwfioi/' (Odea 



Ion, 



3"-3l , _ .. ....... 

1889), u. 207-273; T. £. Evangdides, 'H^mXcmc * aimupkrvp 
~ unlov (Odessa, 1903); A. Pernice, V Imperalore Eradta 
e, 1905). On the Persian campaigns: the epic of George 
(ed. 1836, Bonn); F. Maclcr, Histoire tfHtracliMS Jtar 
I'evique Sebeos [Paris, 1004); E. Gcrland in Bymntinisch* Zeit- 
schnft, iii. (1894) 330- 337; N. H. Baynes in the English Historual 
Rnicw (i9<M)i W> 694-703. (M. a B. C> 

HERALD (0. Ff. htraui, herautt; the origin is uncertain, but 
O.H.G. her en, to call, or kariwald, leader of an army, have been 
proposed; the Gr. equivalent is «$pt>£: Lat. praeco, caduceaior, 
fetialis), in Greek and Roman antiquities, the term for the 
officials described below; in modern usage, while the word 
" herald " is Often used generally in a sense analogous to that 
of the ancients, it is more specially restricted to that dealt with 
in the article Hekaidey. 

The Greek heralds, who claimed descent from Hermes, the 
messenger of the gods, through his son Keryx, were public 
functionaries of high importance in early times. Like Hermes, 
they carried a staff of olive or laurel wood surrounded by two 
snakes (or with wool as messengers of peace); their persons 
were inviolable; and they formed a kind of priesthood or corpora- 
tion. In the Homeric age, they summoned the assemblies of 
the people, at which they preserved order and silence; pro- 
claimed war; arranged the cessation of hostilities and the 
conclusion of peace; and assis t ed at public sacrifices and 
banquets. They also performed certain menial offices for the 
kings (mixing and pouring out the wine for the guests), by whom 
they were treated as confidential servants. In later times. 



HERALDRY 



3" 



their position was a less honourable one; they were recruited 
from the poorer classes, and were mostly paid servants of the 
various officials. Pollux in his OnomasUcon distinguishes four 
classes of heralds: (1) the sacred heralds at the Eleusinian 
mysteries; 1 (2) the heralds at the public games, who announced 
the names of the competitors and victors; (3) those who super- 
intended the arrangements of festal processions; (4) those 
who proclaimed goods for sale in the market (for which purpose 
they mounted a stone), and gave notice of lost children and run- 
away slaves. To these should be added (5) the heralds of the 
boulS and demos, who summoned the members of the council and 
ecdesia, recited the solemn formula of prayer before the opening 
of the meeting, called upon the orators to speak, counted the 
votes and announced the results; (6) the heralds of the law courts, 
who gave notice of the time of trials and summoned the parties. 
The heralds received payment from the state. and free meals 
together with the officials to whom they were attached. Their 
appointment was subject to some kind of examination, probably 
of the quality of their voice. Like the earlier heralds, they were 
also employed in negotiations connected with war and peace. 

Among the Romans the praecones or " criers " exercised 
their profession both in private and official business. As private 
criers they were especially concerned with auctions; they adver- 
tized the time, place and conditions of sale, called out the various 
bids, and like the modern auctioneer varied the proceedings with 
jokes. They gave notice in the streets of things that bad been 
lost, and took over various commissions, such as funeral arrange- 
ments. Although the calling was held in little estimation, some 
of these criers amassed great wealth. The state criers, who were 
mostly freedmen and well paid, formed the lowest class of 
apparilorcs (attendants on various magistrates). On the whole, 
their functions reseniblcd thoseof the Greek heralds. They called 
the popular assemblies together, proclaimed silence and made 
known the result of the voting; in judicial cases, they summoned 
the plaintiff, defendant, advocates and witnesses; in criminal 
executions they gave out the reasons for the punishment and 
called on the executioner to perform his duty; they invited the 
people to the games and announced the names of the victors. 
Public criers were also employed at state auctions in the municipia 
and colonies, but, according to the lex Julia munkipalis of 
Caesar, they were prohibited from holding office. 

Amongst the Romans the settlement of matters relating to 
war and peace was entrusted to a special class of heralds called 
Fetkdes (not Fcciales), a word of uncertain etymology, possibly 
connected with fateor, fart, and meaning " the speakers." They 
formed a priestly college of 20 (or 15) members, the institution 
of which was ascribed to one of the kings. They were chosen from 
the most distinguished families, held office for life, and filled up 
vacancies in their number by co-optation. Their duties were to 
demand redress for insult or injury to the state, to declare war 
unless satisfaction was obtained within a certain number of days 
and to conclude treaties of peace. A deputation of four (or two) , 
one of whom was called pater pairatus, wearing priestly garments, 
with sacred herbs plucked from the Capitoline hill borne in front, 
proceeded to the frontier of the enemy's territory and demanded 
the surrender of the guilty party. This demand was called 
darigatio (perhaps from its being made in a loud, clear voice). 
If no satisfactory answer was given within 30 days, the deputa- 
tion returned to Rome and made a report. If war was decided 
upon, the deputation again repaired to the frontier, pronounced 
a solemn formula, and hurled a charred and blood-stained javelin 
across the frontier, in the presence of three witnesses, which 
was tantamount to a declaration of war (Livy i. 24, 32). With 

1 These heralds are regarded by some as a branch of the Eumol- 
pidae, by others as of Athenian origin. They enjoyed great prestige 
and formed a hieratic caste like the Eumolpidae, with whom they 
shared the most important liturgical functions. From them were 
selected the ifMnotn or torch-bearer, the ItporijpvS, whose chief 
duty was to proclaim silence, and 6 irl 0up$, an official connected 
with the service at the altar (see L. R. Farncll, Cults of the Creek 
States, iii. 161; J. Tdpffer, Attische Geneatogie (1889); Ditten- 
berger in Hermes, xx.; P. Foucart, " Lcs Grands Mystdres 
d'tleusb " in Mhn. dc I'lnstitut National <U France, axxviL (1904). 



2 



the extension of the Roman empire, it became impossible to 
carry out this ceremonial, for which was substituted the hurling 
of a javelin over a column near the temple of Bellona in the 
direction of the enemy's territory. When the termination of 
a war was decided upon, the fetiales either made an arrangement 
for the suspension of hostilities for a definite term of years, 
after which the war recommenced automatically or they con- 
cluded a solemn treaty with the enemy. Conditions, of peace or 
alliance proposed by the general on his own responsibility 
(sponsio) were not binding upon the people, and in case of 
rejection the general, with hands bound, was delivered by the 
fetiales to the enemy (Livy ix. 10). But if the terms were 
agreed to, a deputation carrying the sacred herbs and the flint 
stones, kept in the temple of Jupiter Feretrius for sacrificial 
purposes, met a deputation of fetiales from the other side. 
After the conditions of the treaty had been read, the sacrificial 
formula was pronounced and the victims slain by a blow from a 
stone (hence the expression focdus ferire). The treaty was then 
signed and handed over to the keeping of the fetial college. 
These ceremonies usually took place in Rome, but in 201 a 
deputation of fetiales went to Africa to ratify the conclusion of 
peace with Carthage. From that time little is heard of the fetiales, 
although they appear to have existed till the end of the 4th 
century a.d. The caduceator (from caduceus, the latinized form 
of inipvKHov) was the name of a person who was sent to treat for 
peace. His person was considered sacred; and like the fetiales he 
carried the sacred herbs, instead of the caduceus, which was not 
in use amongst the Romans. 

Ch. Ostermann, De praeamibus Grae- 
co an Praecones, Mommsen, Rdniisches 

St , 1887); also article Praecones in 

P« 52 edition); for the Fetiales, mono- 

gr , containingall the necessary material), 

Atti deliaR. Accad. dei Ltncei, series 
t, Rdmische StaatsverwaUunf, iii. 415 
n Darembcrg and Saglio's Jhctionnaire 
(J. H. F.) 

HERALDRY. Although the word Heraldry properly belongs 
to all the business of the herald (?.».), it has long attached itself 
to that which in earlier times was known as armory, the science 
of armorial bearings. 

History of Armorial Bearings.— In all ages and in all quarters, 
of the world distinguishing symbols have been adopted by tribes 
or nations, by families or by chieftains. Greek and Roman poets 
describe the devices borne on the shields of heroes, and many 
such painted shields are pictured on antique vases. Rabbinical 
writers have supported the fancy that the standards of the tribes 
set up in their camps bore figures devised from the prophecy of 
Jacob, the ravening wolf for Benjamin, the lion's whelp for 
Judah and the ship of Zebulon. In the East we have such ancient 
symbols as the five-clawed dragon of the Chinese empire and the 
chrysanthemum of the emperor of Japan. In Japan, indeed, the 
systematized badges borne by the noble clans' may be regarded as 
akin to the heraldry of the West, and the circle with the three 
asarum leaves of the Tokugawa shoguns has been made as 
familiar to us by Japanese lacquer, and porcelain as the red pellets 
of the Medici by old Italian fabrics. Before the landing of the 
Spaniards in Mexico the Aztec chiefs carried shields and banners, 
some of whose devices showed after the fashion of a phonetic 
writing the names of their bearers; and the eagle on the new 
banner of Mexico may be traced to the eagle that was once carved 
over the palace of Montezuma. That mysterious business of 
totemism, which students of folk-lore have discovered among 
most primitive peoples, must be regarded as another of the fore- 
runners of true heraldry, the totem of a tribe supplying a badge 
which was sometimes displayed on the body of the tribesman in 
paint, scars or tattooing. Totemism so far touches our heraldry 
that some would trace to its symbols the white horse of West- 
phalia, the bull's head of the Mecklenburgers and many other 
ancient armories. 

When true heraldry begins in Western Europe nothing is more 
remarkable than the suddenness of its development, once the 
idea of hereditary armorial symbols was taken by the nobles and 



3^2 



HERALDRY 



knights. Its earliest examples are probably still to be discovered 
by research, but certain notes may be made which narrow the 
dates between which we must seek its origin. The older writers 
on heraldry, lacking exact archaeology, were wont to carry back 
the beginnings to the dark ages, even if they lacked the assurance 
of those who distributed blazons among the angelic host before 
the Creation. Even in our own times old misconceptions give 
ground slowly. Georg Ruexner's Thurnicr Buck of 1522 is still 
cited for its evidence of the tournament laws of Henry the Fowler, 
by which those who would contend in tournaments were forced to 
show four generations of arms-bearing ancestors. Yet modem 
criticism has shattered the elaborated fiction of Ruexner. In 
England many legends survive of arms borne by the Conqueror 
and his companions. But nothing is more certain than that 
neither armorial banners nor shields of arms were borne on either 
side at Hastings. The famous record of the Bayeux tapestry 
shows shields which in some cases suggest rudely devised armorial 
bearings, but in no case can a shield be identified as one which is 
recognized in the generations after the Conquest. So far is the 
idea of personal arms from the artist, that the same warrior, seen 
in different parts of the tapestry's history, has his shield with 
differing devices. A generation later, Anna Comnena, the 
daughter of the Byzantine emperor, describing the shields of the 
French knights who came to Constantinople, tells us that their 
polished faces were plain. 

Of all men, kings and princes might be the first to be found 
bearing arms. Yet the first English sovereign who appears on 
his great seal with arms on his shield is Richard I. His.seal of 
1 1 89 shows his shield charged with a lion ramping towards the 
sinister side. Since one half only is seen of the rounded face of the 
shield, English antiquaries have perhaps too hastily suggested 
that the whole bearing was two lions face to face. But the 
mounted figure of Philip of Alsace, count of Flanders, on his seal 
of 1 164 bears a like shield charged with a like lion, and in this case 
another shield on the counterseal makes it clear that this is the 
single lion of Flanders. Therefore we may take it that, in 11 89, 
King Richard bore arms of a lion rampant, while, nine years later, 
another seal shows him with a shield of the familiar bearings 
which have been borne as the arms of England by each one of his 
successors. 

That seal of Philip of Alsace is tbe'earliest known example of 
the arms of the great counts of Flanders. The ancient arms of 
the kings of France, the blue shield powdered with golden fieurs- 
de-lys, appear even later. Louis le Jeune, on the crowning of his 
son Philip Augustus, ordered that the young prince should be 
clad in a blue dalmatic and blue shoes, sewn with golden fleurs- 
de-lys, a flower whose name, as " Fleur de Loys," played upon 
that of his own, and possibly upon his epithet name of Floras. A 
seal of the same king has the device of a single lily. But the first 
French royal seal with the shield of the lilies is that of Louis VIII. 
(1 223- x 226). The eagle of the emperors may well be as ancient 
a bearing as any in Europe, seeing that Charlemagne is said, as 
the successor of the Caesars, to have used the eagle as his badge. 
The emperor Henry III. (1030-1056) has the sceptre on his seal 
surmounted by an eagle; in the 12th century the eagle was 
embroidered upon the imperial gloves. At Molsen in 1080 the 
emperor's banner is said by William of Tyre to have borne the 
eagle, and with the beginning of regular heraldry this imperial 
badge would soon be displayed on a shield. The double-headed 
eagle is not seen on an imperial seal until after 1414, when the. 
bird with one neck becomes the recognized arms of the king of the 
Romans. 

There are, however, earlier examples of shields of arms than 
any of these. A document of the first importance is the descrip- 
tion by John of Martaousticr of the marriage of Geoffrey of Anjou 
with Maude the empress, daughter of Henry I., when the king is 
said to have hung round the neck of his son-in-law a shield with 
golden " lioncels." Afterwards the monk speaks of Geoffrey in 
fight, " pictos leones preferens in clypeo." Two notes may be 
added to this account. The first is that the enamelled plate now 
in the museum at Le Mans, which is said to have been placed over 
the tomb of Geoffrey alter his death in 1151, shows him bearing a 



long shield of azure with six golden noncels, thus confirming tbe 
monk's story. The second is the well-known fact that Geoffrey's 
bastard grandson, William with the Long Sword, undoubtedly 
bore these same arms of the six lions of gold in a blue field, even 
as they are still to be seen upon his tomb at Salisbury. Some ten 
years before Richard I. seals with the three leopards, his brother 
John, count of Mortain, is found using a seal upon which he bears 
two leopards, arms which later tradition assigns to the ancient 
dukes of Normandy and to their descendants the kings of Eagland 
before Henry II., who is said to have added the third leopard in 
right of his wife, a legend of no value. Mr Round has pointed out 
that Gilbert of Clare, earl of Hertford, who died in 11 52, bears on 
his seal to a document sealed after x 138 and not later than 1x46, 
the three cheverons afterwards so well known in England as the 
bearings of his successors. An old drawing of the seal of his unde 
Gilbert, earl of Pembroke (Lansdowne US. 203), shows a chever- 
onny shield used between 1 1 38 and x 148. At some date between 
1x44 and 1x50, Walcran, count of Median, shows on his seal a 
pennon and saddle-cloth with a checkered pattern: the bouse of 
Warenne, sprung from his mother's son, bore shields cheeky of 
gold and azure. If we may trust the inventory of Norman seals 
made by M. Demay, a careful antiquary, there is among the 
archives of the Manche a grant by Elides, seigneur du Pont, 
sealed with a seal and counterseal of arms, to which M. Demay 
gives a date as early as 1 1 28. The writer has not examined tins 
seal, the earliest armorial evidence of which he has any knowledge, 
but it may be remarked that the arms are described as varying on 
the seal and counterseal, a significant touch of primitive armory. 
Another type of seal common in this 12th century shows 
the personal device which had not yet developed into an armorial 
charge. A good example is that of Enguerrand de Candavdne, 
count of St Pol, where, although the shield of the horseman 
is uncharged, sheaves of oats, playing on his name, are strewn at 
the foot of the seal. Five of these sheaves were the arms of 
Candavene when the house came to display arm?. In the same 
fashion three different members of the family of Annenteres in 
England show one, two or three swords upon their seals, but hete 
the writer has no evidence of a coat of arms derived from these 
devices. 

From the beginning of the 13th century arms upon shields 
increase in number. Soon the most of the great houses of the 
west display them with pride. Leaders in the field, whether 
of a royal army or of a dozen spears, saw the military advantage 
of a custom which made shield and banner things that might 
be recognized in the press. Although it is probable that armorial 
bearings have their first place upon the shield, the charges of 
the shield are found displayed on the knight's long surcoat, 
his " coat of arms," on his banner or pennon; on the trappers 
of his horse and even upon the peaks of his saddle. An attempt 
has been made to connect the rise of armory with the adoption 
of the barrel-shaped dose hdm; but even when wearing the 
earlier Norman helmet with its long nasal the knight's face was 
not to be recognized. The Conqueror, as we know, had to 
bare his head before he could persuade his men at Hastings that 
he still lived. Armory satisfied a need which had long been 
fdt. When fully armed, one galloping knight was like another; 
but friend and foe soon learned that the gold and blue checkers 
meant that Warenne was in the field and that the gold and 
red vair was for Ferrers. Earl Simon at Evesham sent up his 
barber to a spying place and, as the barber named in turn the 
banners which had come up against him, he knew that his last 
fight was at hand. In spite of these things the growth of the 
custom of sealing deeds and charters had at least as much in- 
fluence in the development of armory as any military need. 
By this way, women and clerks, citizens and men of peace, 
corporations and colleges, came to share with the fighting man 
in the use of armorial bearings. Arms in stone, wood and brass 
decorated the tombs of the dead and the houses of the living; 
they were broidered in bed-curtains, coverlets and copes, painted 
on the sails of ships and enamelled upon all manner of gold- 
smiths' and silversmiths' work. And, even by warriors, the 
full splendour of armory was at all times displayed more f ulty 



UI7Q AT T^O V 



ip iWllimm C*W. 



*L. 



HERALDRY 



3*3 



In the fantastic magnificence of the tournament than m the 
rougher business of war. 

There can be little doubt that ancient armorial bearings were 
chosen at will by the man who bore them, many reasons guiding 
his choice. Crosses in plenty were taken. Old writers have 
asserted that these crosses commemorate' the badge of the 
crusaders, yet the fact that the cross was the symbol of the 
faith was reason enough. No symbolism can be found in such 
charges as bends and fesses; they are on the shield because a 
broad band, aslant or athwart, b a charge easily recognised. 
Medieval wisdom gave every nobje and magnanimous quality 
to the lion, and therefore this beast is chosen by hundreds of 
knights as their bearing. We have already seen how the arms 
of a Candavene play upon his name. Such an example was 
imitated on all sides. Salle of Bedfordshire has two ro/amanders 
w/tircwise; Belet has his namesake the weasel. In ancient 
shields almost all beasts and birds other than the lion and the 
eagle play upon the bearer's name. No object is so humble 
that it is unwelcome to the knight seeking a pun for his shield. 
Trivet has a three-legged trivet; Trumpington two trumps; and 
Montbocher three pots. The legends which assert that certain 
arms were " won in the Holy Land " or granted by ancient 
kings for heroic deeds in the field are for the most part 
worthless fancies. 

Tenants or neighbours of the great feudal lords were wont to 
make their arms by differencing the lord's shield or by bringing 
some charge of it into their own bearings. Thus a group of 
Kentish shields borrow lions from that of Leyborne, which is 
azure with six lions of silver. Shiriand of Minster bore the same 
arms differenced with an ermine quarter. Dctling had the 
silver lions in a sable field. Rokesle's lions are azure in a golden 
field with a fesse of gules between them; while Wateringbury 
has six sable lions in a field of silver, and Tilmanstone six 
ermine lions in a field of azure. The Vipont ring or annelet is 
in several shields of Westmorland knights, and the cheverons 
of Clare., the dnquefoil badge of Beaumont and the sheaves of 
Chester can be traced in the coats of many of the followers of 
those houses. Sometimes the lord himself set forth such arms 
in a formal grant, as when the baron of Grcystock grants to 
Adam of Blencowe a shield in which his own three chaplets 
are charges. The Whitgreave family of Staffordshire still show 
a shield granted to their ancestor in 1442 by the earl of Stafford, 
in which the Stafford red cheveron on a golden field is four 
times repeated. 

Differences.— By the custom of the middle ages the " whole 
coat," which is the undifferenced arms, belonged to one man 
only and was inherited whole only by his heirs. Younger 
branches differenced in many ways, following no rule. In modern 
armory the label is reckoned a difference proper only to an eldest 
son. But in older times, although the label was very commonly 
used by the son and heir apparent, he often chose another distinc- 
tion during his father's lifetime, while the label is sometimes found 
upon the shields of younger sons. Changing the colours or varying 
the number of charges, drawing a bend or baston over the shield 
or adding a border are common differences of cadet lines. 
Beauchamp, earl of Warwick, bore " Gules with a fesse and six 
crosslets gold." His cousins are seen changing the crosslets for 
martlets or for billets. Bastards difference their father's arms, 
as a rule, in no more striking manner than the legitimate cadets. 
Towards the end of the 14th century we have the beginning of 
the custom whereby certain bastards of princely houses differenced 
the paternal arms by charging them upon a bend, a fesse or a 
chief, a cheveron or a quarter. Before his legitimation the eldest 
son of John of Gaunt by Katharine Swinford is said to have 
borne a shield party silver and azure with the arms of Lancaster 
on a bend. After his legitimation in 1397 he changed his bearings 
to the royal arms of France and England within a border gobony 
of silver and azure. Warren of Poynton, descended from the 
last earl Warenne and his concubine, Maude of Neirford, bore 
the checkered shield of Warenne with a quarter charged with the 
ermine lion of Neirford. By the end of the middle ages the 
baston under continental influence tended to become a bastard's 




difference in England and the jingle of the two words may have 
helped to support the custom. About the same time the border 
gobony began to acquire a like character. The " bar sinister " 
of the novelists is probably the baston sinister, with the ends 
couped, which has since the time of Charles II. been familiar 
on the arms of certain descendants of the royal house. But 
it has rarely been seen in England over other shields; and, 
although the border gobony surrounds the arms granted to a 
peer of Victorian creation, the modern heralds have fallen into 
the habit of assigning, in nineteen cases out of twenty, a wavy 
border as the standard difference for illegitimacy. 

Although no general register of arms was maintained it is 
remarkable that there was little conflict between persons who 
had chanced to assume the same arms. The famous suit in 
which Scrope, Grosvenor and Carminow all claimed the blue 
shield with the golden bend is well known, and there are a few 
cases in the 14th century of like disputes which were never 
carried to the courts. But the men of the middle ages would 
seem to have had marvellous memories for blazonry; and we 
know that rolls of arms for reference, some of them the records 
of tournaments, existed in great numbers. A few examples of 
these remain to us, with painted shields or descriptions in French 
blazon, some of them containing many hundreds of names and 
arms. 

To women were assigned, as a rule, the undifferenced arms 
of their fathers. In the early days of armory married 
well-born spinsters of full age were all 
but unknown outside the walls of re- 
ligious houses— have seals on which appear 
the shield of the husband or the father 
or both shields side by side. But we have 
some instances of the shield in which two 
coats of arms are parted or, to use the 
modern phrase, "impaled." Early in 
the reign of King John, Robert de Pinkeny D Shield, f rora seal of 
seals with a parted shield. On the right **fj * a^S? ft 
or dexter side — the right hand of a shield parted arms, 
is at the right hand of the person covered 
by it — are two fusils of an indented fesse: on the left or 
sinister side are three waves. The arms of Pinkeny being an 
indented Jesse, we may see in this shield the parted arms of 
husband and wife— the latter being probably a Basset. In 
many of the earliest examples, as in this, the dexter half of the 
husband's shield was united with the sinister half of that of 
the wife, both coats being, as modern antiquaries have it, 
dimidiated. This " dimidiation," however, bad its incon- 
venience. With some coats it was impossible. If the wife bore 
arms with a quarter for the only charge, her half of the shield 
would be blank. Therefore the 
practice was early abandoned 
by the majority of bearers of 
parted shields although there 
is a survival of it in the fact 
that borders and tressures con- 
tinue to be "dimidiated" in 
order that the charges within 
them shall not be cramped. 
Parted shields came into com- 
mon use from the reign of 
Edward II., and the rule is 
established that the husband's 
arms should take the dexter 
side. There are, however, 

several instances of the con- Shield of Joan atte Pole, 
trary practice. On the seal* widow of Robert of Hemenhale, 
(13 10) of Maude, wife of John froni her teal (1403). showing 
Boutetort of Halstead, the P arted * rm »- 
engrailed saltire of the Boutetorts "takes the sinister place. A 
twice-married woman would sometimes show a shield charged 
with her paternal arms between those of both of her husbands, as 
did Beatrice Stafford in 1404, while in 141s Elizabeth, Lady of 
Clinton, scab with a shield paled with five coats— her anas 



3M- 



HERALDRY 




of la Plaunche between those of four husbands. In most 
cases the parted shield is found on the wife's seal alone. Even 
in our own time it is recognized that the wife's arms should not 
appear upon the husband's official seal, upon his banner or 
surcoat or upon his shield when it is surrounded by the collar 
of an order. Farted arras, it may be noted, do not always repre- 
sent a husband and wife. Richard II. parted with his quartered 
arms of France and England 
those ascribed to Edward 
the Confessor, and parting is 
often used on the continent 
where quartering would serve in 
England. In 1497 the seal of 
Giles Daubeney and Reynold 
Bray, fellow justices in eyre, 
shows their arms parted in one 
shield. English bishops, by a 
custom begun late in the 14th 
century, part the see's arms 
with their own. By modern 
English custom a husband and 
wife, where the wife is not 
Shield of Beatrice Stafford an heir, use the parted coat 
fromher seal (1404), showing her on a shield, a widow bearing 
c^t^S^Th^rUrl the same up^n the lozenge 
Root, and Sir Richard Burlcy. °° which, when a spinster, 
she displayed her father's 
coat alone. When the wife is an heir, her arms are now borne in 
a little scocheon above those of her husband. If the husband's 
arms be in an unquartered shield the central charge is often 
hidden away by this scocheon. 

The practice of marshalling arms by quartering spread in 
England by reason of the example given by Eleanor, wife of 
Edward I., who displayed the castle of Castile quartered with the 
lion of Leon. Isabel of France, wife of Edward II., seals with a 
shield in whose four quarters are the arms of England, France, 
Navarre and Champagne. Early in the 14th century Simon de 
Montagu, an ancestor of the carls of Salisbury, quartered with his 
own arms a coat of azure with a golden griffon. In 1340 we 
have Laurence Hastings, earl of Pembroke, quartering with the 
Hastings arms the arms of Valence, as heir of his great-uncle 
Aymer, earl of Pembroke. In the preceding year, the king had 
already asserted his claim to another kingdom by quartering 
France with England, and after this quartered shields became 
common in the great houses whose sons were carefully matched 
with heirs female. When the wife was an heir the husband 
would quarter her arms with his own, displaying, as a rule, 
the more important coat in the 
first quarter. Marshalling be- 
comes more elaborate with shields 
showing both quartering* and 
partings, as in the seal (1368) of 
Sibil Arundel, where Arundel 
(Fitzalan) is quartered with 
Warenne and parted with the 
arms of Montagu. In all, save 
one, of these examples the quart- 
ering is in its simplest form, 
with one coat repeated in the 
first and fourth quarters of the 
shield and another in the second 
Shield of John Talbot, first and third. But to a charter of 1434 
earl of Shrewsbury (d. i 4 53>. Sir Henry Bromflete sets a seal 
showing four coats quartered, upon which Bromflete quarters 
3fesd in the second quarter, Aton 
in the third and St John in the fourth, after the fashion of the 
much earlier seal of Edward II. 's queen. Another development 
is that of what armorists style the " grand quarter," a quarter 
which is itself quartered, as in the shield of Reynold Grey of 
Ruthyn, which bears Grey in the first and fourth quarters and 
Hastings quartered with Valence in the third and fourth. 
Humphrey Bourchier, Lord Cromwell, in 1469, bears one grand 



1 



quarter quartered with another, the first having Bourchier 
and Lovaine, the second Tatcrshall and Cromwell. 

The last detail to be noted in medieval marshalling is the 
introduction into the shield of another surmounting shield 
called by old armorists the " innerscochcon " and by modern 
blazoners the " inescutcheqn." John the Fearless, count of 
Flanders, marshalled his arms in 1409 as a quartered shield 
of the new and old coats of Burgundy. Above these coats a 
little scocheon, borne over the crossing of the quartering lines, 
had the black lion of Flanders, the arms of his mother. Richard 
Beauchamp, the adventurous earl of Warwick, who had seen 
most European courts during his wanderings, may have had 
this shield in mind when, over his arms of Beauchamp quartering 
Newburgh, he set a scocheon of Clare quartering Despenser, 
the arms of his wife Isabel Despenser, co-heir of the earls of 
Gloucester. The seal of his son-in-law, the Ring-Maker, shows 
four quarters — Beauchamp quartering Clare, Montagu quartering 
Monthcrmer, Kevill alone, and Newburgh quartering Despenser. 
An interesting use of the scocheon en surtoul is that made by 
Richard Wydvile, Lord Rivers, 
whose garter stall-plate has a 
grand quarter of Wydvile and 
Prouz quartering Beauchamp of 
Hache, the whole surmounted 
by a scocheon with the arms of 
Rcviers or Rivers, the house 
from which he took the title 
of his barony. On the continent 
the common use of the scocheon 
is to bear the paternal arms of a 
sovereign or noble, surmounting 
the quarterings of his kingdoms, 
principalities, fiefs or seigniories. 
Our own prince of Wales bears 

the arms of Saxony above those Shield of Richard Beaochamp. 
of the United Kingdom differ- earl of Warwick, from his garter 
enced with his silver label. Mar- stall-plate (after 1423). The 
shying uk« its most cUbora.e ^XSST^SViSSSS^ 
form, tne most removed irom Clare quartering Despenser. 
the graceful simplicity of the . 

middle ages, in such shields as the " Great Arms " of the 
Austrian empire, wherein are nine grand quarters each marshal- 
ling in various fashions from three to eleven coats, six of the 
grand-quarters bearing scocheons en surtout, each scocheon 
ensigned with a different crown. 

Crests. — The most important accessory of the arms is the 
crested helm. Like the arms it has its pre-heraldic history in 
the crests of the Greek helmets, the wings, the wild boar's and 
bull's heads of Viking headpieces. A little roundel of the arms 
of a Japanese house was often borne as a crest in the Japanese 
helmet, stepped in a socket above the middle of the brim. The 
12th-century seal of Philip of Alsace, count of Flanders, shows 
a demi-lion painted or beaten on the side of the upper part of 
his helm, and on his seal of 1x08 our own Richard Coeur de 
Lion's barrel-helm has a leopard upon the semicircular comb- 
ridge, the edge of which is set off with feathers arranged as 
two wings. Crests, however, came slowly into use in England, 
although before 1250 Roger de Quincy, earl of Winchester, 
is seen on his seal with a wyver upon his helm. Of the long roll 
of earls and barons sealing the famous letter to the pope in 1301 
only five show true crests on their seals. Two of them are the 
earl of Lancaster and bis brother, each with a wyver crest like 
that of Quincy. One, and the most remarkable, is John St John 
of Halnaker, whose crest is a leopard standing between two 
upright palm branches. Ralph de Monthermer has an eagle 
crest, while Walter de Money's helm is surmounted by a fox-like 
beast. In three of these instances the crest is borne, as was often 
the case, by the horse as well as the rider. Others of these 
seals to the barons' letter have the tan-shaped crest without 
any decoration upon it. But as the furniture of tournaments 
grew more magnificent the crest gave a new field for display, 
and many strange shapes appear in painted and gilded wood* 



HERALDRY 



315 



metal, leather or parchment above the helms of the jousters. 
The Berkeley*, great patrons of abbeys, bore a mitre as their 
crest painted with their arms, like crests being sometimes seen 
on the continent where the wearer was advocatus of a bishopric 
or abbey. The whole or half figures or the heads and necks 
of beasts and birds were employed by other families. Saracens' 
heads topped many helms, that of the great Chandos among them. 
Astley bore for his crest a silver harpy standing in marsh-sedge, 
a golden chain fastened to a crown about her neck. Dymoke 
played pleasantly on his name with a long-eared moke's scalp. 
Stanley took the eagle's nest in which the eagle is lighting 
down with a swaddled babe in his claws. Burnell had a burdock 
bush, la Vache a cow's leg, and Lisle's strange fancy was to 
perch a huge millstone on edge above his head. Many early 
helms, as that of Sir John Loterel, painted in the Loterel psalter, 
repeat the arms on the sides of a fan-crest. Howard bore for a 
crest his arms painted on a pair of wings, while simple " bushes " 
or feathers are seen in great plenty. The crest of a cadet is often 
differenced like the arms, and thus a wyver or a leopard win 
have a label about its neck. The Montagu griffon on the helm 
of John, marquess of Montagu, holds in its beak the gimel ring 
with which he differenced his father's shield. His brother, 



Ralph de Monthermer (13OT), showing shield of arms, helm with 
crest and mantle, horse-crest and armorial trappers, 
the King-Maker, following a custom commoner abroad than at 
home, shows two crested helms on his seal, one for Montagu 
and one for Beauchamp — none for his father's house of Nevill. 
It is often stated that a man, unless by some special grace or 
allowance, can have but one crest. This, however, is contrary 
to the spirit of medieval armory in which a man, inheriting the 
coat of arms of another house than his own, took with it all its 
belongings, crest, badge and the like. The heraldry books, 
with more reason, deny crests to women and to the clergy, but 
examples are not wanting of medieval seals in which even this 
rule is broken. It is perhaps unfair to cite the case of the bishops 
of Durham who ride in full harness on their palatinate seals; but 
Henry Despenser, bishop of Norwich, has a helm on which the 
winged griffon's head of his house springs from a mitre, while 
Alexander Nevill, archbishop of York, seals withshield, supporters 
and crowned and crested helm like those of any lay magnate. 
Richard Holt, a Northamptonshire clerk in holy orders, bears 
on his seal in the reign of Henry V. a shield of arms and a mantled 
helm with the crest of a collared greyhound's head. About the 
middle of the same century a seal cut for the wife of Thomas 
Chetwode, a Cheshire squire, has a shield of her husband's arms 
parted with her own and surmounted by a crowned helm with the 
crest of a demi-lion; and this is not the only example of such 
bearings by a woman. 
Before passing from the crest let us note that in England the I 




juncture of crest and helm was commonly covered, especially 
after the beginning of the x 5th century, by a torse or " wreath n 
of silk, twisted with one, two or three colours. Coronets or 
crownaand"h*tsof estate "often take the place of the wreath as 
a base for the crest, and there are other curious variants. With 
the wreath may be considered the 
mantle, a hanging doth which, in its 
earliest form, is seen as two strips of 
silk or sendal attached to the top of the 
helm below the crest and streaming 
like pennants as the rider bent his head 
and charged. Such strips are often 
displayed from the conical top of an 
uncreated helm, and some ancient ex- 
amples have the air of the two ends of 
a stole or of the infulae of a bishop's 
mitre. The general opinion of anti- 
quaries has been that the mantle 
originated among the crusaders as a 
protection for the steel helm from the 
rays of an Eastern sun; but the fact that 
mantles take in England their fuller 
form after our crusading days were over 

seems against this theory. When the Cl . , . , t . 

Uritfon for .littering the edge, of J^rVaHSd 
clothing came in, the edges of the mantle of Thomas of 
mantle were slittered like the edge Hengrave (1401). 
of the sleeve or skirt, and, flourished 
out on either side of the helm, it became the delight of 
the painter of armories and the seal engraver. A worthless 
tale, repeated by popular manuals, makes the slittered edge 
represent the shearing work of the enemy's sword, a fancy 
which takes no account of the like developments in civil dress. 
Modern heraldry in England paints the mantle with the principal 
colour of the shield, lining it with the principal metal. This in 
cases where no old grant of arms is cited as evidence of another 
usage. 'The mantles of the king and of the prince of Wales are, 
however, of gold lined with ermine and those of other members 
of the royal house of gold lined with silver. In ancient examples 
there is great variety and freedom. Where the crest is the head 
of a griffon or bird the feathering of the neck will be carried on 
to cover the mantle. Other mantles will be powdered with 
badges or with charges from the shield, others checkered, barred 
or paled. More than thirty of the mantles enamelled on the 
stall-plates of the medieval Garter-knights are of red with an 
ermine lining, tinctures which in most cases have no reference 
to the shields below them. 

Supporters. — Shields of arms, especially upon seals, are 
sometimes figured as hung round the necks of eagles, lions, 
swans and griffons, as strapped between the horns of a hart or to 
the boughs of a tree. Badges may fill in the blank spaces at 
the sides between the shield and the inscription on the rim, but 
in the later 13th and early 14th centuries the commonest objects 
so serving are sprigs of plants, lions, leopards, or, still more 
frequently, lithe-necked wyvers. John of Segrave in 1301 flanks 
his shields with two of the sheaves of the older coat of Segrave: 
William Marshal of Hingham does the like with his two marshal's 
staves. Henry of Lancaster at the same time shows on his seal 
a shield and a helm crested with a wyver, with two like wyvers 
ranged on either side of the shield as "supporters." It is 
uncertain at what time in the 14th century these various fashions 
crystallize Into the recognized use of beasts, birds, reptiles, men 
or inanimate objects, definitely chosen as " supporters " of the 
shield, and not to be taken as the ornaments -suggested by the 
fancy of the seal engraver. That supporters originate in the 
decoration of the seal there can be little doubt. Some writers, 
the learned Menelrfer among them, will have it that they were 
first the fantastically clad fellows who supported and displayed 
the knight's shield at the opening of the tournament. If the 
earliest supporters were wild men, angels or Saracens, this theory 
might be defended; but lions, boars and talbots, dogs and trees 
are guises into which a man would put himself with difficulty. 



3*6 



HERALDRY 



By the middle of the 14th century we find what are clearly 
recognizable as supporters. These, as in a lesser degree the 
crest, are often personal rather than hereditary, being changed 
generation by generation. The same person is found using more 



Arms of William, Lord Hastings, from his seal (1477), showing 
shield, crowned and crested helm with mantle and supporters. 

than one pair of them. The kings of France have had angels as 
supporters of the shield of the flcurs de lys since the 15th century, 
but the angels have only taken their place as the sole royal 
supporters since the time of Louis XIV. Sovereigns of 
England from Henry IV. to Elizabeth changed about between 
supporters of harts, leopards, antelopes, bulls, greyhounds, boars 
and dragons. James I. at his accession to the English throne 
brought the Scottish unicorn to face the English leopard rampant 
across his shield, and, ever since, the " lion and unicorn " have 
been the royal supporters. 

An old herald wrote as his opinion that "there is little or 
nothing in precedent to direct the use of supporters." Modern 
custom gives them, as a rule, only to peers, to knights of the 
Garter, the Thistle and St Patrick, and to knights who are " Grand 




Badge of John of Whethamstede, 
abbot of St Albans (d. 1465). from 
his tomb in the abbey church. 



Rudder badge of 
Willoughby. 



Crosses" or Grand Commanders of other orders. Royal 
warrants are sometimes issued for the granting of supporters 
to baronets, and, in rare cases, they have been assigned to un- 
titled persons. But in spite of the jealousy with which official 
heraldry hedges about the display of these supporters once 
assumed so freely, a few old English families still assert their 



right by hereditary prescription to use these ornament* as their 
forefathers were wont to use them. 

Badges .— The badge may claim, a greater antiquity and a 
wider use than armorial bearings. The " Planlagenet " broom 
is an early example in England, sprigs 
of it being figured on the seal of 
Richard I. In the 14th and 15th cen- 
turies every magnate had his badge, 
which he displayed on his horse- 
furniture, on the hangings of his bed, S 
his wall and his chair of state, besides * 
giving it as a " livery " to his servants 
and followers. Such were the knots of 
Stafford, Bourchier and Wake, the 
scabbard - crampet of La Warr, the 
sickle of Hungerford, the swan of 

Toesni, Bohun and Lancaster, the dun- Bf d S* of Dacre of 
bull of Nevfll, the blue boar of Vere and North. "* 

the bear and ragged staff of Beaucbamp, 
Nevill of Warwick and Dudley of Northumberland. So weU 
known of all were these symbols that a political ballad of 1449 
sings of the misfortunes of the great lords without naming one 
of them, all men understanding what signified the Falcon, the 
Water Bowge and the Cresset and the other badges of the 
doggerel. More famous still were the White 
Hart, the Red Rose, the White Rose, the . 
Sun, the Falcon and Fetterlock, the Port- \ 
cuHis and the many other badges of the 
royal house. We still call those wars that 
blotted out the old baronage the Wars of 
the Roses, and the Prince of Wales's feathers 
are as well known to-day as the royal arms. 
The Flint and Steel of Burgundy make a 
collar for the order of the Golden Fleece. 

Mottoes. — The motto now accompanies 
every coat of arms in these islands. Few of 
these Latin aphorisms, these bald assertions 
of virtue, high courage, patriotism, piety and 
loyalty have any antiquity. Some few, how- 
ever, like the "Esperance" of Percy, were 
the war-cries of remote ancestors. " I mak' 
sicker" of Kirkpatrick recalls pridefully a 
bloody deed done on a wounded man, 
and the "Bicu Ayde," "Agincourt" and 
" D'Accomplir Agincourt " of the Irish 
" Montmorencys " and the English Wode- Ostrich feather 
houses and Dalisons, glorious traditions badge of Beaufort, 
based upon untrustworthy genealogy. The S^oft^ 5 ^ 
often-quoted punning mottoes may be illus- silver feather has 
trated by that of Cust, who says " Qui a quill sobony 
Cust-odit caveat," a modern example and a silver and azure, 
fair one. Ancient mottoes as distinct from 
the war or gathering cry of a house are often cryptic sentences 
whose meaning might be known to the user and perchance 10 
his mistress. Such are the " Plus est en vous " of Louis de 
Bruges, the Flemish earl of Winchester, and the " So have I 
cause " and " Till then thus " of two Englishmen. The word 
motto is of modern use, our forefathers speaking rather of their 
" word " or of their " reason." 

Coronets of Rank. — Among accessories of the shield may now 
be counted the coronets of peers, whose present form is post- 
medieval. When Edward III. made dukes of his sons, gold 
circlets were set upon their heads in token of their new dignity. 
In 1385 John de Vere, marquess of Dublin, was created in the 
same fashion. Edward VI. extended the honour of the gold 
circle to earls. Caps of honour were worn with these circles or 
coronets, and viscounts wore the cap by appointment of James L, 
Vincent the herald stating that " a verge of pearls on top of 
the circulet of gold " was added at the creation of Robert Cecil 
as Viscount Cranborne. At the coronation of Charles I. the 
viscounts walked in procession with their caps and coronets. 
A few days before the coronation of Charles II. the privilege 



HERALDRY 



3»7 



of the cap of honour was given to the lowest rank of the peerage, 
tod letters patent of January 1661 assign, to them both cap and 
coronet. The caps of velvet turned up with miniver, which are 
now always worn with the peer's coronet, are therefore the ancient 
caps of honour, akin to that " cap of maintenance " worn by 
English sovereigns on their coronation days when walking to the 
Abbey Church, and borne before them on occasions of royal state. 
The ancient circles were enriched according to the taste of 
the bearer, and, although used at creations as symbols of the 
rank conferred, were worn in the 14th and 15th centuries by men 
and women of rank without the use signifying a rank in the 
peerage. Edmund, earl of March, in his will of 1380, named his 
strcU oh rests, emcraudes el rubies d'olisaundre en les roses, and 
bequeathed it to his daughter. Modern coronets are of-silver-gili, 
without jewels, set upon caps of crimson velvet turned up with 
ermine, with a gold tassel at the top. A duke's coronet has the 
circle decorated with eight gold " strawberry leaves "; that of 
a marquess has four gold strawberry leaves and four silver balls. 
The coronet of an earl has eight silver balls, raised upon points, 
with gold strawberry leaves between the points. A viscount's- 
coronet has on the circle sixteen silver balls, and a baron's coronet 
six silver balls. On the continent the modern use of coronets 
is not ordered in the precise English fashion, men of gentle birth 
displaying coronets which afford but slight indication of the 
bearer's rank. 

Lines. — Eleven varieties of lines, other than straight lines, 
which divide the shield, or edge our cheverons, pales, bars and 
the like, are pictured in the heraldry books and named as en- 
grailed, embattled, indented, invected, wavy or undy, nebuly, 
dancetty, raguly, potentfi, dovetailed and urdy. 

As in the case of many other such lists of the later armorists 
these eleven varieties need some pruning and a new explanation. 
The most commonly found is the line engrailed, which for the 
student of medieval armory must be associated with the line 
indented. In its earliest form the line which a roll of arms will 
describe indifferently as indented or engrailed takes almost 
invariably the form to which the name indented is restricted 
by modern armorists. 

The cross may serve as our first example. A cross, engrailed 
or indented, the words being used indifferently, is a cross so 
deeply notched at the edges that it seems made up of so many 
lozenge-shaped wedges or fusils. About the middle of the 14th 
century begins a tendency, resisted in practice by many conserva- 
tive families, to draw the engrailing lines in the fashion to which 
modern armorists restrict the word "engrailed," making 
shallower indentures in the form of lines of half circles. Thus 
the engrailed cross of the 
1 Mohuns takes either of the 
I two forms which we illustrate. 
V Bends follow the same fashion, 
' early bends engrailed or in- 
dented being some four or 
more fusils joined bendwise by 
their blunt sides, bends of less 
Mohun. than four fusils being very rare. 

Thus also the engrailed or in- 
dented saltires, pales or cheverons, the exact number of the fusils 
which go to the making of these being unconsidered. Forthefesse 

then is another law. Th^ (*&*+ in/W»d nr »n|pniWI it m»H f up 

Of fusils as is the engrailed bend. But although early rolls of 
arms sometimes neglect this detail in their blazon, the fusils 
making a fesse must always be of an ascertained number. 
Montagu, earl of Salisbury, bore a fesse engrailed or Indented 
of three fusih only, very few shields imitating this. Medieval 
armorists will describe his arms as a fesse indented of three 
indentures, as a fesse f usilly of three pieces, or as a fesse engrailed 
of three points or pieces, all of these blazons having the same 
value. The indented, fesse on the red shield of the Dynhams 
has four such fusils of ermine. Four, however, is almost as rare 
a number as three, the normal form of a fesse indented being that 
of five fusils as borne by Percys, Pinkenys, Newmarches and 
many other ancient houses. Indeed, accuracy of blazon is served 




if the number of fusils in a lease be named in the oases of threes 
and fours. Fesses of six fusils are not to be found. Note that 
bars indented or engrailed are, for a reason which will be evi- 
dent, never subject to this counting of fusils. Fauconberg, for 
example, bore "Silver with two bars engrailed, or indented, 
sable." Displayed on a shield of the flat-iron outline, the 
lower bar would show fewer fusils than the upper, while on a 
square banner each bar would have an equal number— usually 
five or six. 

While bends, cheverons, crosses, saltires and pales often 
follow, especially in the 15th century, the tendency towards the 




Montagu. Dynham. Percy. Fauconberg. 

rounded " engrailing," fesses keep, as a rule, their bold indentures 
— neither Percy nor Montagu being ever found with his bearings 
In aught but their ancient form. Borders take the newer fashion 
as leaving more room for the charges of the field. But indented 
chiefs do not change their fashion, although many saw-teeth 
sometimes take the place of the three or four strong points of 
early arms, and parti-coloured shields whose party line is indented 
never lose the bold zig-zag. 

While bearing in mind that the two words have no distinctive 
force in ancient armory, the student and the herald of modern 
times may conveniently allow himself to blazon the sharp and 
saw-toothed line as "indented" and. the scolloped line as 
** engrailed," especially when dealing with the debased armory 
in which the distinction is held to be a true one and one of the 
first importance. One error at least he must avoid, and that 
is the followjng of the heraldry-book compilers in their use of the 
word " dancetty." A " dancetty M line, we are told, is a line 
having fewer and deeper indentures than the line indented. But 
no dancetty line could make a bolder dash across the shield than 
do the lines which the old armorists recognized as " indented." 
In old armory we have fesses dancy — commonly 
called ° dances " — bends dancy, or cheverons 1 
dancy; there are no chiefs dancy nor borders 
dancy, nor are there shields blazoned as parted I 
with a dancy line. Waved lines, battled lines ' 
and ragged lines need little explanation that a 
picture cannot give. The word invecked or 
invected is sometimes applied by old-fashioned 
heraldic pedants to engrailed lines; later ^Vest. 

pedants have given it to a line found in 
modern grants of arms, an engrailed line reversed. Dove- 
tailed and urdy lines are mere modernisms. Of the very 
rare nebuly or clouded line we can only say that the ancient 
form, which imitated the conventional cloud-bank of the old 
painters, is now almost forgotten, while the bold " wavy " lines 
of early armory have the word " nebuly " misapplied to them. 

The Ordinary Charges.— - The writers upon armory have given 
the name of Ordinaries to certain conventional figures commonly 
charged upon shields. Also they affect to divide these into 
Honourable Ordinaries and Sub-Ordinaries without explaining 
the reason for the superior honour of the Saltire or for the 
subordination of the Quarter. Disregarding such distinctions, 
we may begin with the description of the M Ordinaries " most 
commonly to be found. 

From the first the Cross was a common bearing on English 
shields, " Silver a cross gules " being given early to St George, 
patron of knights and of England, for his arms; and under St 
George's red cross the English were wont to fight. Our armorial 
crosses took many shapes, but the "crosses innumerabill " 
of the Book of St Albans and its successors may be left to the 
heraldic dictionary makers who nave devised them. It is mom 




3«8 



HERALDRY 



Important to define those form* in use during the middle ages, 
and to name them accurately after the custom of those who bore 
them in war, a task which the heraldry books have never as yet 
attempted with success. 

The cross in its simple form needs no definition, but it witt.be 
noted that it is sometimes borne " voided " and that in a very 
few cases it appears as a lesser charge with its endscut off square, 
in which case it must be clearly blasoned as " a plain Cross." 

Andrew Harcla, the march-warden, whom Edward II. made an 
earl and .executed at a traitor, bore the arms of St George with a 
martlet sable in the quarter. 

Crevequer of Kent bore " Cold a voided cross gules." 

NewBom (4th century) bore " Azure a fesse silver with three plain 
Crosses gules. 

Next to the plain Cross may be taken the Cross paty, the 
croi* poke or pate of old rolls of arms. It has several forms, 
according to the taste of the artist and the age. So, in the 
13th and early 14th centuries, its limbs curve out broadly, while 
at a later date the limbs become more slender and of even breadth, 
the ends somewhat resembling fleurs-de-lys Each of these forms 
has been seized by the heraldic writers as the type of a distinct 
cross for which a name must be found, none of them, as a rule, 
being recognized as a cross paty, a word which has its misapplica- 




St George. 



Harcla. 



Crevequer. 



Latimer. 



tion elsewhere. Thus the books have " cross patonce " for the 
earlier form, while " cross dechee " and " cross fleurie " serve 
for the others. But the true identification of the various crosses 
is of the first importance to the antiquary, since without it 
descriptions of the arms on early seals or monuments must needs 
be valueless. Many instances of this need might be cited from 
the British Museum catalogue of seals, where, for example, 
the cross paty of Latimer is described twice as a " cross flory," 
six times as a " cross patonce," but not once by its own name, 
although there is no better known example of this bearing in 
England. 

Latimer bore " Gules a cross paty gold." 

The cross formy follows the lines of the cross paty save that its 
broadening ends are cut off squarely. 

Chetwode bore " Quarterly silver aad gules with four crosses formy 
countercolourcd " — that is to say, the two crosses in the gules are 
of silver and the two in the silver of gules. 

The cross flory or flowered cross, the " cross with the ends 
flowered "—od Us bovtes Jbretes as some of the old rolls have 
it— is, like the cross paty, a mark for the misapprehension of 
writers on armory, who describe some shapes of the cross paty 
by its name. Playing upon discovered or fancied variants of the 
word, they bid us mark the distinctions between crosses " fleur- 
de-lisee," " fleury " and " fleurettee," although each author has 
his own version of the value which must be given these precious 
words. But the facta of the medieval practice are dear to those 
who take their armory from ancient examples 
and not from phrases plagiarized from the 
hundredth plagiarist. The fioweeed cross is one 
whose limbs end in fleur-de-lys, which spring 
sometimes from a knop or bud but more fre- 
quently issue from the square ends of across of 
the u formy " type. 
Swynnerton bore" Silver a flowered cross sable/' 
The miO-rind, which takes its name from the 
Iron of a mill-stone— fer de mofc'*e— must be set with the 
crosses. Some of the old rolls call it crob recereeU, from which 
armorial writers have leaped to imagine a distinct type. Also 
they call the miU-rind itself a " cross moline " keeping the word 



V 


tf 


Vl 




V 




\t 


m 


y 



MiU-rinds. 



mill-rind for a charge having the same origin but of somewhat 
differing form. Since this charge became common in Tudor 
armory it is perhaps better that the original mill-rind should 
be called for distinction a mill-rind cross. 
Wittoughby bore " Gules a mill-rind cross silver." 
The crosslet, cross botonny or cross crosletted, is a cross whoa* 
limbs, of even breadth, end as trefoils or treble buds. It is 
rarely found in medieval examples in the shape—that of a cross 
with limbs ending in squarely cut plain crosses— which it took 




Chetwode. Swynnerton. Willoughby. Brerelegh. 

during the 16th-century decadence. As the sole charge of a 
shield it is very rare; otherwise it is one of the commonest of 
charges. 

Brerelegh bore " Silver a crosslet gules." . 

Within these modest limits we have brought the greater part 
of that monstrous host of crosses which cumber the dictionaries.' 
A few rare varieties may be noticed. 

Dukinfield bore " Silver a voided cross with sharpened ends. 1 * 

Skirlaw, bishop of Durham (d. 1406), the son of a basket-weaver, 
bore " Silver a cross of three upright wattles sable, crossed and 
interwoven by three more." 

Drury bore " Stiver a chief vert with a St Anthony's cross gold 
between two golden molets, pierced gules." 

Brytton bore " Gold a patriarch's cross set upon three degrees or 
steps of gules." 

tf urlestone of Cheshire bore " Silver a cross of four ermine tails 
sable." 

Melton bore " Silver a Toulouse cross gules." By giving this cross 




Skirlaw. 



Drury. St Anthony's Cross. Brytton. 



a name from the counts of Toulouse, its best-known bearers, some 
elaborate blazonry is spared. 

The crosses paty and formy, and more especially the crosslets, 
are often borne fitchy, that Js to say, with the lower Hmb some- 
what lengthened and ending in a point, for which reason the 
15th-century writers call these " cresses fixabilL" In the lath* 
century rolls the word M potent " is sometimes used for these 
crosses fitchy, the long foot suggesting a potent or staff. From 
this source modern English armonsts derive many of their 
" crosses potent," whose four arms have the T heads of old- 
fashioned walking staves. 
Howard bore " Silver a bead between six crosslets fitchy gules." 
Scott of Congerhurat in Kent bote " Silver a crosslet fitchy sable.'' 
The Saltire is the cross in the form of that on which St Andrew 




Hurlestone. 



Melton. 



Howard. 



Scott. 



suffered, whence it is borne on the banner of Scotland, and by 
the Andrew family of Northamptonshire. 

Nevile of Raby bore " Gules a saltire silver." 

Nicholas Upton, the 15th-century writer on armory, bore " Silver 
a saltire sable with the ends couped and five golden rings 1 



HERALDRY 



319 



Aynho bore " Sable a saltire silver having the ends flowered between 
four leopards sold." 

" Mayster Elwett of Yorlce chyre " in a 15th-century roll bears 
" Silver a saltire of chain* sable with a crescent in the chief." 




Nevile. 



Upton. 



Aynho. 



Elwett. 




Fenwick. 



Restwolde bore " Party saltirfwite of gules and ermine.'* 

The chief it the upper part of the shield and, marked out by a 
line of division, it is taken as one of the Ordinaries. Shields 
with a plain chief and no more are rare in England, but Tichborne 
of Tichborne has borne since the 13th century " Vair a chief 
gold." According to the heraldry books the 
chief should be marked of! as a third part of 
the shield, but its depth varies, being broader 
when charged with devices and narrower 
when, itself uncharged, it surmounts a charged 
field. Fenwick bore " Silver a chief gules 
with six martlets countercoloured," and in this 
case the chief would be the half of the shield. 
Ginging to the belief that the chief must not 
fill more than a third of the shield, the heraldry 
books abandon the word in such cases, blazoning them as " party 
per fesse." 

Haetang bore " Azure a chief gules and a lion with a forked tail 
over all." 

Walter Kingston seals in the 13th century with a shield of " Two 
rings or annelets in the chief." 

Hilton of Westmoreland bore " Sable three rings gold and two 
saltires silver in the chief." 

With the chief may be named the Foot, the nether part of the 
shield marked off as an Ordinary. So rare is this charge that 
we can cite but one example of it, that of the shield of John 
of Skipton, who in the 14th century bore " Silver with the foot 
indented purple and a lion purple." The foot, however, is a 
recognized bearing in France, whose heralds gave it the name 
of champagne. 

The Pale is a broad stripe running the length of the shield. 
Of a single pale and of three pales there are several old examples. 
Foot red pales in a golden shield were borne by Eleanor of 
Provence, queen of Henry III.; but the number did not com- 




Restwolde. 



Hasting. 



Hilton. 



Provence. 



mend itself to English armorists. When the field is divided 
evenly into six pales it is said to be paly; if into four or eight 
pales, it is blazoned as paly of that number of pieces. But paly 
of more or less than six pieces is rarely found. 

The Yorkshire house of Gascoigne bore " Silver a pale sable with 
a golden conger's head thereon, cut off at the shoulder." 
Ferlmgtonbore " Gules three pales vair and a chief gold." 
Strelley bore " Paly silver and azure." 
Rothinge bore " Paly silver and gules of eight pieces." 

When the shield or charge is divided palewise down the middle 
Into two tinctures it is said to be "party." "Party silver 
and gules " are the arms of the Waldegraves. fiermiogham 
bore M Party silver and sable indented." Caldecote bore " Party 
silver and azure with a chief gules." Such partings of the 
field often cut through charges whose colours change about on 



either side of the parting line. Thus Chaucer the poet bore 
" Party silver and gules with a bend countercoloured." 

The Fesse is a band athwart the shield, filling, according to the 
rules of the heraldic writers, a third part of it. By ancient use, 
however, as in the case of the chief and pale, its width varies 
with the taste of the painter, narrowing when set in a field full 
of charges and broadening when charges are displayed on itself. 





Gascoigne. Ferttngtoo. 



Strehey. 



Rothinge. 



When two or three fesses are borne they are commonly called 
Bars. " Ermine four bars gules " is given as the shield of Sir 
John Sully, a utb-century Garter knight, on his stall-plate 
at Windsor: but the plate belongs to a later generation, and 
should probably have three bars only. m Little bars borne in 
couples are styled Gemels (twins). The field divided into an 
even number of bars of alternate colours is said to be barry, 




Bermingham. 



Caldecote. 



Colevile, 



Faucoaberg. 



barry of six pieces being the' normal number. If four or eight 
divisions be found the number of pieces must be named; but with 
tea or more divisions the number is unreckoned and " burely " 
is the word. 

Colevile of Bitham bore " Gold a fesse gules." 
West bore ** Silver a dance (or fesse dancy) sable." 
Fauoonberg bore " Gold a fesse azure with three pales gules in the 
chief." 
Cayvile bore " Silver a fesse gules, flowered on both sides." 




Cayvile 



Devereux. Chamberlayne. Harcourt. 



Devereux bore " Gules a fesse silver with three roundels silver in 
the chief." 

Chamberlayne of Northamptonshire bore " Gules a fesse and three 
scallops gold. 

Harcourt bore " Gules two bars gold." 

Manners bore " Gold two bars azure and a chief gules." 

Wake bore " Gold two bars gules with three roundels gules in the 
chief." 

Bussy bore " Silver three bars sable." 

Badleamere of Kent bore " Silver a fesse between two gemels 
gules." 

Melsanby bore " Sable two gemels and a chief silver." 




Manners. Wake. Melsanby. 



Grey. 



Grey bore " Barry of silver and 1 

Fitzala* of Bedale bore " Barry of eight pieces gold and gules." 

Stutevile bore " Burely of silver and gules. * w 



380 



HERALDRY 



The Bend is a band traversing the thkkl aslant, arms with 
one, two or three bends being common during the middk ages 
in England. Bendy shields follow the rule of shields paly and 
barry, but as many as ten pieces have been counted in them. 
The bend is often accompanied by a narrow bend on either 
side, these companions being called Cotices. A single narrow 
bend, struck over all other charges, is the Baston, which during 
the 13th and 14th centuries was a common difference for the 
shields of the younger branches of a family, coming in later 
times to suggest itself as a difference for bastards. 

The Bend Sinister, the bend drawn from right to left beginning 
at the " sinister " corner of the shield, is reckoned in the heraldry 
books as a separate Ordinary, and has a peculiar significance 




Fitxalan of Bedale. Mauley. 



Harley. 



Wallop. 



accorded to it by novelists. Medieval English seals afford 
a group of examples of Bends Sinister and Bastons Sinister, 
but there seems no reason for taking them as anything more 
than cases in which the artist has neglected the common rule. 

Mauley bore " Gold a bend sable." 

Harley bore " Cold a bend with two cotices sable." 

Wallop bore " Silver a bend wavy table.*' 

Ralegh bore " Gules a bend indented, or engrailed, silver." 




Ralegh. 



Tracy. 



Bodrugan. 



StPhilibert. 



Tracy bore " Gold two bends gules with a scallop sable in the chief 

between the bends." 
Bodrugan bore " Gules three bends sable." 
St Philibert bore " Bendy of six pieces, silver and azure." 
Bishopsdon bore " Bendy of six pieces, gold and azure, with a 

quarter ermine;" 
Montfort of Whitchurch bore M Bendy of ten pieces gold and 

azure." 
Henry of Lancaster, second son of Edmund Crouchback, bore the 




Bishopsdon. Montfort. Lancaster. Fraunceys. 

arms of his cousin, the long of England, with the difference of "a 
baston azure." 

Adam Fraunceys (14th century) bore " Party gold, and sable 
bendwiae with a lion countercoloured." The parting fine is here 
commonly shown as " sinister." 

The Cheveron, a word found in medieval building accounts 
for the barge-boards of a gable, is an Ordinary whose form is 
explained by its name. Perhaps the very earliest of English 
armorial charges, and familiarized by the shield of the great 
house of Clare, it became exceedingly popular in England. 
Like the bend and the chief, Its width varies in different examples. 
Likewise its angle varies, being sometimes so acute as to touch 
the top of the shield, while in post-medieval armory the point 
is often blunted beyond the right angle. One, two or three 
cheverons occur in numberless shields, and five cbeverons have 
been found. Also there are some examples of the bearing of 
cbeveronny. 



The earls of Gloucester of the house of Qare bore M Geld three 
cheverons gules " and the Staffords derived from them their shield of 
" Gold a cheveron gules.' 

Cha worth bore 'Azure two cheverons gold." 

Peytevyn bore " Cbeveronny of ermine and gules." 

St Quint in of Yorkshire bore " Gold two cheverons gules and a 
chief vair." 

Sheffield bore " Ermine a cheveron gules between three sheaves 
gold." 

Cobham of Kent bore " Gules a cheveron gold with three flews* 
de-lys azure thereon." 

Fttswalter bore " Gold a feste between two cheverons gules." 




Peytevyn. 



Shields parted cheveronwise are common in the 15th century, 
when they are often blazoned as having chiefs " enty " or 
grafted. Aston of Cheshire bore " Party sable and silver chever* 
onwise " or " Silver a chief enty sable." 

The Pile or stake (estache) is a wedge-shaped figure jutting 
from the chief to the foot of the shield, its name allied to the 
pile of the bridge-builder. A single pile is found in the notable 
arms of Chandos, and the black piles in the ermine shield of 
Hollis are seen as an example of the bearing of two piles. Three 
piles* are more easily found, and when more than one is represented 
the points are brought together at the foot. In ancient armory 
piles in a shield are sometimes reckoned as a variety of pales, 
and a Basset with three piles on his shield is seen with three 
pales on his square banner. 

Clpndos bore M Gold a pile gules." 
Brycne bore " Gold three pile* azure." 

The Quarter is the space of the first quarter of the ehfeM 
divided crosswise into four parts. As an Ordinary it is an 
ancient charge and a common one in medieval England, although 
it has all but disappeared from modern heraldry books, the 
" Canton," an alleged " diminutive," unknown to early armory, 
taking its place. Like the other Ordinaries, its size is found 
to vary with the scheme of the shield's charges, and this has 
persuaded those annorista who must needs call a narrow bend 
a " bendlet," to the invention of the " Canton," a word which 
in the sense of a quarter or small quarter appears for the first 
time in the latter part of the 15th century. Writers of the 
14th century sometimes give it the name of the Cantel, but this 
word is also applied to the void space on the opposite side of 
the chief, seen above a bend. 




Aston. 



Hoffia. 



Bryene. 



Blencowe bore ° Gules a quarter silver. 

Basset of Drayton bore " Gold three piles (or pates) gules with a 
quarter ermine.* 

WydvOe bore "Silver a fesseaod a quarter gules. . 

OoUngsdes bore "Silver a fesse gules with a motet gules in the 
quarter." ^ 

Robert Dene of Sussex (14th century) bore " Gutes a Quarter 
azure * embefif,' or aslant, and thereon a sleeved arm and hand of 
silver." 

Shields or charges divided crosswise with a downward line 
and a line athwart are said to be quarterly. An ancient coat 
of this fashion is that of Say who bore (13th century) M Quarterly 
gold and gules "—the first and fourth quarters being gold and 
the second and third red. Ever or Eure bore the same with the 



HERALDRY 



321 



addition of " a bend sable with three silver scallops thereon." 
Plwlip, Lord Bardoif, bore " Quarterly gules and silver with an 
eagle grid in the quarter." 

With tot x$th century came a fashion of dividing the shield 
into more than four squares, six and nine divisions being often 
(bund in arms of that age. The heraldry books, eager to work 




Basset. Wydvile. Odingseles. Ever. 

out problems of blazonry, decide that a shield divided into 
six squares should be described as " Party per fesse with a pale 
countercbanged," and one divided into nine squares as bearing 
"a cross quarter-pierced." It seems a simpler business to 
follow a f-sth-century fashion and to blazon such shields as 
being of six or nine " pieces." Thus John Garther (1 5th century) 
bore " Nine pieces erminees and ermine " and Whitgreave of 
Staffordshire " Nine pieces of azure and of Stafford's arms, 
which are gold with a cheveron gules." The Tallow Chandlers 
of London had a grant in 1456 of " Six pieces azure and silver 
with three doves in the azure, each with an olive sprig in her 
beak." 

Squared into more than nine squares the shield becomes 
cheeky or checkered and the number is not reckoned. Warenne's 
checker of gold and azure is one of the most ancient coats in 
England and checkered fields and charges follow in great numbers. 
Even lions have been borne checkered, 
Wacenne bore " Cheeky sold and azure." 
Clifford bore the like who " a fesse gules." 
Cobbam bone " Silver a lion cheeky gold and sable." 
Arderne bore " Ermine a fesse cheeky gold and gules." 

Such charges as this fesse of Arderne's an£ other checkered 
fesses, bars, bends, borders and the like, win commonly beat but 




PheUp Whitgreave. 

Lard Bardoif. 

two rows of squares, or three at the most. The heraldry writers 
are ready to note that when two rows are used ** counter- 
compony" is the word in place Of cheeky, and "compony- 
counter-compony " in the case of three rows. It is needless to 
say that these words have neither practical value nor antiquity 
to commend them. But bends and bastons, labels, borders 
and the rest are often coloured with a single row of alternating 
tincture*. In this case the pieces are said to be a gobony." 
Tbus}ohn Cromwell (14th century) bore " Silver a chief gules 
with a baston gobony of gold and azure-'* 

The scocheon or shield used as a charge is found among the 
earliest arms. Itself charged with arms, it served to indicate 
alliance by blood ot by tenure with another house, as in the 
bearings of St Owen whose-shield of " Gulos with a cross silver " 
has a scocheon of Clare in the quarter. In the latter half of the 
1 5th century it plays an important part in the curious marshalling 
of the arms of great houses and lordships. 

Erpingham bore " Vert a scocheon silver with an orte (or border) 
of silver martlets." 

Davillers bore at the battle of Boroughbridge " Silver three 
scochcona gules." 

The scocheon was often borne voided or pierced, itȣeld cut 
away to a narrow hordes. Especially was this the case in the. 
far North, where the Balliols, who bora such a voided scocheon,: 
Jan. r 



were powerful. Hie voided scocheon is wrongly named In all 
the heraldry books as an orle, a term which belongs to a number 
of small charges set round a central charge. Thus the martlets 
in the shield of Erpingham, already described, maybe called an 
orle of martlets or a border of martlets. This misnaming of the 
voided scocheon has caused a curious misapprehension of its 
form, even Dr Woodward, in his Heraldry, British and Foreign, 
describing the " orle " as " a narrow border detached from the 
edge of the shield." Following this definition modern armorial 
artists will, in the case of quartered arms, draw the " orle " in 
a first or second quarter of a quartered shield as a rectangular 
figure and in a third or fourth quarter as a scalene triangle 
with one arched side. Thereby the original voided scocheon 
changes into forms without meaning. 

Balliol bore " Gules a voided scocheon silver." 

Suitces bore " Ermine with a quarter of the arms of Balliol." 

The Tressure or flowered tressure is a figure which is correctly 
described by Woodward's incorrect description of the orle as 
cited above, being a narrow inner border of the shield. It is 
distinguished, however, by the fleurs-de-lys which decorate it> 




Clifford. 



Arderne. 



Cromwell. Erpingham. 



setting off its edges. The double tressure which surrounds the 
lion in the royal shield of Scotland, and which is borne by many 
Scottish houses who have served their kings well or mated with 
their daughters, is carefully described by Scottish heralds as 
" flowered and counter-flowered," a blazon which is held to 
mean that the fleurs-de-lys show head and tail in turn from the 
outer rim of the outer tressure and from the inner rim of the 
innermost. But this seems to have been no essential matter 
with medieval armorists and a curious 15th-century enamelled 
roundel of the arms of Vampage shows that in this English 
case the flowering takes the more convenient form of allowing 
all the lily heads to sprout from the outer rim. 

Vampage bore " Azure an eagle silver within a flowered tressure 
silver. 

The king of Scots bore " Gold a Hon within a double tressure 
flowered and coUnterflowered gules." 

Felton bore " Gules two lions passant within a double tressure 
flory silver." 

The Border of the shield when 
is counted as- an Ordinary. Plai 
used as a difference. As the pi 
very rare, so rare that in most c 




Davillers. Balliol. Suitces. Vampage* 

we may, perhaps, be following medieval custom in blazoning 
the shield as one charged with a scocheon and not with a border. 
Thus Hondescote bore " Ermine a border gules " or " Gules a 
scocheon ermine." 

Somerville bore " Burely silver and gules and a border asure with' 
golden martlets." 

Paynel bore " Silver two bare sable with a border, or orle, of 
martlets gules." 

The Flaunches are the flanks of the shield which, cut off by 
rounded lines, are borne in pairs as Ordinaries. These charges 
are found in many coats devised by i$th -century armorists. 

2a 



323 



HERALDRY 



"Ermine two flaunchcs azure with six golden wheat-cars" 
was borne by John Greyby of Oxfordshire (15th century). 

The Label is a narrow fillet across the upper part of the chief, 
from which hang three, four, five or more pendants, the pendants 
being, in most old examples, broader than the fillet. Reckoned 
with the Ordinaries, it was commonly used as a means of differenc- 
ing a cadet's shield, and in the heraldry books it has become the 
accepted difference for an eldest son, although the cadets often 
bore it in the middle ages. John of Hastings bore in 1300 before 
Cariaverock " Gold a sleeve (or maunche) gules," while Edmund 
his brother bore the same arms with a sable label. In modern 
armory the pendants are all but invariably reduced to three, 
which, in debased examples, are given a dovetailed form while 
the ends of the fillet are cut off. 

The Fret, drawn as a voided lozenge interlaced by a slender 
saltire, is counted an Ordinary. A 'charge in such a shape is 
extremely rare in medieval armory, its ancient form when the 
field is covered by it being a number of bastons— three being 
the customary number— interlaced by as many more from the 
sinister side. Although the whole is described as a fret in certain 
English blazons of the 15th century, the adjective "fretty" 




Scotland. 



Hondescote. 



Greyby. 



Hastings. 



is more commonly used. Trussel's fret is remarkable for its 
tjezants at the joints, which stand, doubtless, for the golden 
nail-heads of the " trellis " suggested by his name. Curwen, 
Wyvile and other northern houses bearing a fret and a chief 
have, owing to their fashion of drawing their frets, often seen 
them changed by the heraldry books into "three cheverons 
braced or interlaced." 

Hoddlestone bore " Gules fretty stiver." 
Tnisael bore " Silver fretty gules, the ioints bezanty." 
Hugh Giffard (14th century) bore " Gules with an engrailed fret 
of ermine." M ... 

Wyvile bore "Gules fretty vair with a chief gold." 
Boxhull bore " Gold a lion azure fretty silver." 

Another Ordinary is the Giron or Gyron— a word now com- 
monly mispronounced with a hard " g." It may be defined as the 




TrusseL 



Giffard. 



Wyvile. 



Mortimer. 



lower half of a quarter which has been divided bendwise. No 
old example of a single giron can be found to match the figure 
in the heraldry books. Gironny, or gyronny, is a manner of 
dividing the field into sections, by lines radiating from a centre 
point, of which many instances may be given. Most of the 
earlier examples have some twelve divisions although later 
armory gives eight as the normal number, as Campbell bears 
them. 

Basdngbourne bore "Gironny of gold and azure of twelve 
pieces." 

William Stoker, who died Lord Mayor of London in 1484? bore 
" Gironny of six pieces azure and silver with three popinjays in the 
silver pieces." 

A pair of girons on either side of a chief were borne in the strange 
shield of Mortimer, commonly blazoned as " Barry azure and gold 
of six pieces, the chief azure with two pales and two girons gold, a 
scocheon silver over all." An early example shows that this shield 
began as a plain field with a gobony border. 



With the Ordinaries we may take the Roundels or Pellets, 
disks or balls of various colours. Ancient custom gives the name 
of a bezant to the golden roundel, and the folly of the heraldic 
writers has found names for all the others, names which may 
be disregarded together with the belief that, while bezants and 
silver roundels, as representing coins, most be pictured with a 
fiat surface, roundels of other hues must needs be shaded by 
the painter to represent rounded balls. Rings or Annelets 
were common charges in the North, where Lowthers, Musgraves 




Campbell. Bassmgoounie. 



Stoker. 



Burtay. 



and many more, differenced the six rings of Vipont by bearing 
them in various colours. 

Buriay of Wharfdale bore " Gules a bezant." 
Courtenay, carl of Devon, bore " Gold three roundels gules with 
a ?* K -' •••— *• 

>re "Silver three roundels azure, each with three 
ch es." 

: " Gold six annelets gules." 
i " Silver a fesse and six annelets (aunds) gules." 
f Stapleford bore " Silver a bend sable charged with 
th ' a mail hawberk, each of three linked rings of gold.** 

>re " Sable a bend gold between six fountains." The 
fo "oundel charged with waves of white and blue. 

The Lozenge is linked in the heraldry book with the Fusfl. 
This Fusil is described as a lengthened and sharper lozenge. But 




Courtenay. 



Caraunt. 



Vipont 



A vend. 



it will be understood that the Fusil, other than as part of 
an engrailed or indented bend, pale or fesse, is not known to 
true armory. Also it is one of the notable achievements of 
the English writers on heraldry that they should have allotted 
to the lozenge, when borne voided, the name of Masde.. This 
" mascle " is the word of the oldest armorists for the unvoided 
charge, the voided being sometimes described by them as a 
lozenge, without further qualifications. Fortunatdy the difficulty 
can be solved by following the late 14th-century custom in 
distinguishing between " lozenges " and " voided lozenges " and 
by abandoning altogether this misleading word Mascle. 

Thomas of Merstone, a clerk, bore on his seal in 1359 "Ermine a 
lozenge with a pierced molet thereon." 




Hawberk. 



Stourtoa, 



FitzwiUiam. 



Braybroke bore " Silver seven voided lozenges gules.** 
Charles bore " Ermine a chief gules with five golden lozenges 
thereon." 
FitzwiUiam bore " Lozengy silver and gules." 

Billets are oblong figures set upright. Black billets in the 
arms of Ddves of Cheshire stand for " delves " of earth and the 
gads of steel in the arms of the London Ironmongers 1 Company 
took a somewhat similar form. 



HERALDRY 



323 



Sir Ralph Mounchensy bore in the 14th century "Silver a cheveron 
between three billets table. " 

Haggereton bore " Azure a bend with cot ices silver and three billets 
»able on the bend." 

With the Billet, the Ordinaries, uncertain as they are in number, 
may be said to end. But we may here add certain armorial 
charges which might well have been counted with them. 

First of these is the Molet, a word corrupted in modern heraldry 
to Mullet, a fish-like change with nothing to commend it. This 
figure is as a star of five or six points, six points being perhaps 
the commonest form in old examples, although the sixth point is, 
as a rule, lost during the later period. Medieval armorists are 
Dot, it seems, inclined to make any distinction between molds 
of five and six points, but some families, such as the Harpedcns 
and Assbetons, remained constant to the five-pointed form. It 
was generally borne pierced with a round hole, and then represents, 
as its name implies, the rowel of a spur. In ancient rolls of arms 
the word Rowel is often used, and probably indicated the pierced 
molet. That the piercing was reckoned an essential difference 
is shown by a roll of the time of Edward II., in which Sir John 
of Pabenham bears " Barry azure and silver, with a bend gules 
and three molets gold thereon," arms which Sir John his son 
differences by piercing the molets. Beside these names is that 
of Sir Walter Baa with " Gules a cheveron and three rowels 
silver/' rowels which are shown on seals of this family as pierced 
motets. Probably an older bearing than the molet, which would 
be popularized when the rowelled spur began to take the place 
of the prick-spur, is the Star or Estoile, differing from the 
molet in that its five or six points are wavy. It is possible that 
several star bearings of the 13th century were changed in the 
14th for molets. The star is not pierced in the fashion of the 
molet; but, like the molet, it tends to lose its sixth point in armory 
of the decadence. Suns, sometimes blazoned in old rolls as Sun- 
rays— rayr de soleU— are pictured as unpicrced molets of many 
points, which in rare cases are waved. 

Harpcdcn bore M Silver a pierced molet gules." 

Gentil bore *' Gold a chief sable with two molets goles pierced 
gules." 

# Grimston bore " Silver a fease sable and thereon three molets silver 
pierced gules." 

Inglcby of Yorkshire bore " Sable a star silver." 

Sir John de la Haye of Lincolnshire bore " Silver a sun gules." 

The Crescent is a charge which has to answer for many idle 
talcs concerning the crusading ancestors of families who bear 




Mounchensy. Haggerstoa. Harpeden. 



Gentil. 



H. It is commonly borne with both points uppermost, but when 
representing the waning or the waxing moon — decrescent or 
increscent — its horns are turned to the sinister or dexter side 
of the shield. 

Peter de Marines (13th century) bore on his seal a shield charged 
with a crescent in the chief. 

William Gobioun (14th century) bore "A bend between two 
waxing moons." 

Longchamp bore " Ermine three crescents gules, pierced silver." 

Tinctures. — The tinctures or hues of the shield and its charges 
are seven in number— gold or yellow, silver or white, red, blue, 
black, green and purple. Medieval custom gave, according to 
a rule often broken, " gules," " azure " land " sable " as more 
high-sounding names for the red, blue and black. Green was 
oiten named as " vert," and sometimes as " synobill," a word 
which as " sinople " is used to this day by French armorists. 
The song of the siege of Carlaverock and other early documents 
have red, guks or " vermeil," sable or black, azure or blue, but 
gules, azure, sable and vert came to be recognized as armorisu' 



adjectives, and an early 1 sth-century romance Histoids the simple 
words deliberately, telling us of its hero that 

" His shield was black and blue, sanz fable, 
Barred of azure and of sable. 

But gold and silver served as the armorists* words for yellows 
and whites until late in the 16th century, when, gold and silver 
made way for " or " and " argent," words which those for whom 
the interest of armory lies in its liveliest days will not be eager 
to accept. Likewise the colours of " sanguine " and " tenn6 • 
brought in by the pedants to bring the tinctures to the mystical 
number of nine may be disregarded. 

A certain armorial chart of the duchy of Brabant, published 
in 1600, is the earliest example of the practice whereby later 
engravers have indicated colours in uncoloured plates by the 
use of lines and dots. Gold is indicated by a powdering of dots; 




Grimston. 



Ingilby. 



Gobioun. 



Longchamp. 



silver is left plain. Azure is shown by horizontal shading lines} 
gules by upright lines; sable by cross-hatching of upright and 
horizontal lines. Diagonal lines from sinister to dexter indicate 
purple; vert is marked with diagonal lines from dexter to 
sinister. The practice, in spite of a certain convenience, has been 
disastrous in its cramping effects on armorial art, especially 
when applied to seals and coins. 

Besides ths two " metals " and five " colours," fields and 
charges are varied by the use of the furs ermine and vair. Ermine 
is shown by a white field flecked with black ermine tails, and vair 
by a conventional representation of a fur of small skins sewn in 
rows, white and blue skins alternately. In the 15th century 
there was a popular variant of ermine, white tails upon a black 
field. To this fur the books now give the name of " ermines " — 
a most unfortunate choice, since ermines is a name used in old 
documents lor the original ermine. " Erminees," which has 
at least a x sth-century authority, will serve for those -who are 
not content to speak of "sable crmined with silver." Vair, 
although silver and blue be its normal form, may be made up 
of gold, silver or ermine, with sable or gules or vert, but in these 
latter cases the colours must be named in the blazon. To the 
vairs and ermines of old use the heraldry books have added 
" crminois," which is a gold field with black ermine tails, " pean," 
which is "crminois" reversed, and " erminites," which is 
ermine with a single red hair on either side of each black tail. 
The vairs, mainly by misunderstanding of the various patterns 
found in old paintings, have been amplified with " countervail", " 
" potent," " counter-potent " and " vair-en-point," no one of 
which merits description. 

No shield of a plain metal or colour has ever been borne by 
an Englishman, although the knights at Carlaverock and Falkirk 
saw Amaneu d'Albret with bis banner all of red having no 
charge thereon. Plain ermine was the shield of the duke of 
Brittany and no Englishman challenged the bearing. But 
Beauchamp of Hatch bore simple vair, Ferrers of Derby " Vajry 
gold and gules," and Ward " Vairy silver and sable." Gresley 
had M Vairy ermine and gules," and Beche " Vairy silver and 
gules." 

Only one English example has hitherto been discovered of a 
field covered not with a fur but with overlapping feathers. 
A 15th-century book of arms gives "Pluxnetty of gold and 
purple " for " Mydlam in Coverdale." 

Drops of various colours which variegate certain fields and 
charges are often mistaken for ermine tails when ancient seals 
are deciphered. A simple example of such spattering is in the 
shield of Grayndore, who bote " Party ermine and vert, the vert 



32+ 



HERALDRY 



dropped with gold." Sir Richard le Bran (14th century) bore 
14 Azure a silver lion dropped with gules." 

A very common variant of charges and fields is the sowing 
or " powdering " them with a small charge repeated many times. 
Mortimer of Norfolk bore "gold powdered with fleurs-de-lys 
sable " and Edward III. quartered for the old arms of France 
"" Azure powdered with fleurs-de-lys gold," such fields being often 




Brittany. 



Beauchamp. 



Mydlam. Grayndorge. 



described as flowered or flory. Golden billets were scattered 
in Cowdray's red shield, whkh is blazoned as " Gules billety 
gold," and bezants in that of Zcmche, which is " Gules bezanty 
with a quarter ermine." The disposition of such charges varied 
with the users. Zouche as a rule shows ten bezants placed four, 
three, two and one on his shield, while the old arms of France 
in the royal coat allows the pattern of flowers to run over the 
edge, the shield border thus showing halves and tops and stalk 
ends of the fleurs-de-lys. But the commonest of these powderings 
is that with crosslcts, as in the arms of John la Warr " Gules 
exusily silver with a silver lion." 

Trees, Leaves and Flowers.— Sir Stephen Cheyndut, a 13th- 
century knight, bore an oak tree, ihe J cheyne of his first syllable, 
while for like reasons a Piriton had a pear tree on his shield. 
Three pears were borne (temp. Edward III.) by Nicholas Stivecle 
of Huntingdonshire, and about the same date is Applegarth's 




Mortimer. 



Cowdray. 



Zouche. 



La Warr. 



shield of three red apples in a silver field. Leaves of burdock 
are in the arms (14th century) of Sir John de Lisle and mulberry 
leaves in those of Sir Hugh de Morieus. Three roots of trees 
are given to one Richard Rotour in a 14th-century roll. Mal- 
herbe (13th century) bore the "evil herb" — a teazle bush. 
Pineapples are borne here and there, and it will be noted that 
armorists have not surrendered this, our ancient word for the 
" fir-cone," to the foreign ananas. Out of the cornfield English 
armory took the sheaf, three sheaves being on the shield of an 
earl of Chester early in the 13th century and Sheffield bearing 
sheaves for a play on his name. For a like reason Peverers 
sheaves were sheaves of pepper. Rye bore three ears of rye on a 
bend, and Graindorge had barley-cars. Flowers are few in this 




Cheyndut. Applegarth. Chester. 



Rye. 



field of armory, although lilies with their* stalks and leaves are 
In the grant of arms to Eton College. Ousethorpe has water 
flowers, and now and again we find some such strange charges 
as those in the 15th-century shield of Thomas Porthelyne who 
bore " Sable a cheveron gules between three * popyeboUes,' or 
peppy-heads vert." 
Tbe flenr-de-lys, a conventional form from the beginnings of 



armory, might well be taken amongst the "ordinaries." In 
England as in France it is found in great plenty. 

Aguylon bore " Gules a fleur-dc-lys silver." 

Peyfcrer bore ** Silver three fleur-de-lys sable." 

Trefoils are very rarely seen until the 1 5th century, although 
Hervey has them, and Gausill, and a Bosville coat seems to have 
borne them. They have always their stalk left 
hanging to them. Vincent, Hattectioe and 
Massingberd all bore the quatrefoil, while 
the Bardolfs, and the Quincys, earls of Win- 
chester, had cinqfoils. The old rolls of arms 
made much confusion between cinqfoils and 
sixfoils (quintefoiUcs e sisfoilles) and the rose. 
It is still uncertain how far that confusion 
extended amongst the families which bore Eton College. 
these charges. The dnqfoil and sixfoil, how- 
ever, are all but invariably pierced in tbe middle like 
the spur rowel, and the rose's blunt-edged petals give ft 
definite shape soon after the decorative movement of the 
Edwardian age began to carve natural buds and flowers in stone 
and wood. 

Hervey bore " Gules a bend silver with three trefoils vert thereon." 

Vincent bore M Azure three quatrefoila silver." 





Aguylon. 



Peyferer. 



Hervey. 



Vincent. 



Quiocy 
Bardotf 



bore " Gules a cinqfoil silver.' 



f of Wormegay bore " Gules three cinqfoils silver." 
Cosington bore " Azure three roses gold." 
Hilton bore '-' Silver three chaplcts or garlands of red roses." 
Beasts and Birds.— The book of natural history as studied in 
the middle ages lay open at the chapter of the lion, to whkh 
royal beast all the noble virtues were set down. What is the 
oldest armorial seal of a sovereign prince as yet discovered bears 
the rampant lion of Flanders. In England we know of no royal 
shield earlier than that first seal of Richard I. which has a like 
device. A long roll of our old earls, barons and knights wore the 




Quincy. 



Baidolf. 



Cosmgton. 



Hilton. 



lion on their coats— Lacy, Marshal, Fitzalan and Montfort, 
Percy, Mowbray and Talbot. By custom the royal beast is 
shown as rampant, touching the ground with but one foot and 
clawing at the air in noble rage. So far is this the normal 
attitude of a lion that the adjective " rampant " was often 
dropped, and we have leave and good authority for blazoning 
the rampant beast simply as " a Hon," leave which a writer on 
armory may take gladly to the saving of much repetition. In 
France and Germany this licence has always been the rule, and 
the modern English herald's blazon of " Gules a lion rampant 
or" for the arms of Fitzalan, becomes in French de puuUs an 
lion d'or and in German in Rot em goldener Loew. Other 
positions must be named' with care and the prowling " lion 
passant " distinguished from the rampant beast, as well as from 
such rarer shapes as the couchant lion, the lion sleeping, sitting 
or leaping. Of these the lion passant is the only one commonly 
encountered. The lion standing with his forepaws together is 
not a figure for the shield, but for the crest, where he takes tins 
position for greater sUbleness upon the helm, and the sitting 
lion is also found rather upon helms than in shields. For a 



HERALDRY 



3*5 



coucbant Hod or a dormant lion one must search far afield, 
although there are some medieval instances. Toe leaping lion 
is in so few shields that no maker of a heraldry book has, it 
would appear, discovered an example. In the books this " lion 
salient " is described as with the bind paws together on the 
ground and the fore paws together in the air, somewhat after the 
fashion of a diver's first movement. But examples from seals 
and monuments of the Felbrigges and the Merks show that the 
leaping lion differed only from the rampant in that be leans 
somewhat forward in bis eager spring. The compiler of the 
British Museum catalogue of medieval armorial seals, and others 
equally unfamiliar with medieval armory, invariably describe 
this position as " rampant/' seeing no distinction from other 
rampings. As rare as the leaping lion is the lion who looks 
backward over his shoulder. This position is called " regardant " 
by modern armorist*. The old French blazon calls it ten 
regardant or tumaunU U visage arere, " regardant " alone meaning 
simply "looking," and therefore we shall describe it more 
reasonably in plain English as " looking backward." The two- 
headed lion occurs in a 15th-century coat of Mason, and at the 
same period a monstrous lion of three bodies and one head is 
borne, apparently, by a Sharingbury. 

The lion's companion is the leopard. What might be the 
true form of this beast was a dark thing to the old armorist, yet 
knowing from the report of grave travellers that the leopard 
was begotten in spouse-breach between the lion and the paid, 
it was felt that his shape would favour his sire's. But nice 
distinctions of outline, even were they ascertainable, are not to be 
marked on the tiny seal, or easily expressed by the broad strokes 
of the shield painter. The leopard was indeed leaser than the 
lion, but in armory, as in the Noah's arks launched by the old 
yards, the bear is no bigger than the badger. Then a happy 
device came to the armorist. He would paint the leopard like 
the lion at all points. But as the lion looks forward the leopard 
should look sidelong, showing his whole face. The matter was 
arranged, and until the end of the middle ages the distinction 
held and served. The disregarded writers on armory, Nicholas 
Upton, and his fellows, protested that a lion did not become a 
leopard by turning his face sidelong, but none who fought in the 
field under lion and leopard banners heeded this pedantry from 
cathedral closes. The English king's beasts were leopards in 
blazon, in ballad and chronicle, and in the mouths of liegeman 
and enemy. Henry V.'s herald, named from his master's coat, 
was Leopard Herald; and Napoleon's gazettes 
never fail to speak of the English leopards. In 
our own days, those who deal with armory as 
antiquaries and students of the past will observe 
the old custom for convenience' sake. Those 
for whom the interest of heraldry lies in the 
nonsense-language brewed during post-medieval 
years may correct the medieval ignorance at 
their pleasure. The knight who saw the king's 
banner fly at Falkirk or Crecy tells us that it 
Gules with three leopards of gold." The modern 
will shame the uninstructed warrior with " Gules 
three lions passant gardant in pale or." 

As the lion rampant is the normal lion, to the normal leopard 
is the leopard passant, the adjective being needless. In a few 
cases only the leopard rises up to ramp in the lion's fashion, 
and here he must be blazoned without fail as a leopard rampant. 
Parts of the lion and the leopard are common charges. Chief 
of these are the demi-lion and the demi-leopard, beasts com- 
plete above their slender middles, even to the upper parts of 
their lashing tails. Rampant or passant, they folbw the customs 
of the un maimed brute. Also the heads of lion and leopard 
are in many shields, and here the armorist of the modern hand- 
books stumbles by reason of his refusal to regard clearly marked 
medieval distinctions. The instructed will know a lion's head 
because it shows but half the face and a leopard's head because 
it is seen full-face. But the handbooks of heraldry, knowing 
naught of leopards, must judge by absence or presence of a 
mane, speaking uncertainly of leopards' faces and lions' heads 




England. 



bore 
armorist 



and faces. Here again the old path Is the straightar. The head 
of a lion, or indeed of any beast, bird or monster, is generally 
painted as " razed," or torn away with a ragged edge which 
is pleasantly conventionalized. Less often it is found " couped " 
or cut off with a sheer line. But the leopard's head is neither 
razed nor couped, for no neck is shown below it. Likewise the 
lion's fore leg or paw—" gamb " is the book word— may be 
borne, razed or coupled. Its normal position is raided upright, 
although Newdegate seems to have borne " Gules three lions' 
legs razed silver, the paws downward." With the strange 
bearing of the lion's whip-like tail cut off at the rump, we may 
end the list of these oddments. 
"* "of Arundel, bore " Gules a lion gold." 

itfort bore " Gules a silver lion with a forked tail." 
* Sable a lion silver crowned gold." 
\ " Silver a lion rampant gules with a forked tail, 
ha zurc. 

elbrigge bore " Gold a leaping lion gules." 
" Silver a lion sable (or purple) looking backward." 
" Gules a lion vair." 
Silver a two-headed lion gules." 
Silver a lion parted athwart of sable and gules." 
1 bore " Vert a lion gold "—the arms of Wakelln 
of ith a fesse gules on the lion." 

' r Azure three lions gold." 
'ent bore "Azure six lions silver." 




Lcyburne. 



Fitzalan. Felbrigge. Fiennes. 

Carew bore " Gold three lions passant sable." 

Forheringhay bore " Silver two lions passant 'sable, looking back- 
ward." 

Richard Norton of Waddeworth (1357) scaled with arms of. " A 
lion dormant." 

Lisle bore " Gules a leopard silver crowned gold." 

Ludlowe bore " Azure three leopards silver. 

Brocas bore " Sable a leopard rampant gold." 




Lisle. 



sitting; 



Carew. Fotheringhay. Brocas. 

John Hardrys of Kent seals in 1372 with arms of 

John Northampton, Lord Mayor of London in 1381, bore " Azure 
a crowned leopard gold with two bodies rampant against each other.", 

Ncwenham bore " Azure three demi-Hons silver." 

A deed delivered at Lapworth in Warwickshire in 1466 is scaled 
with arms of " a molet between three dcmi-lcopards." 

Kenton bore " Gules three lions' heads razed sable." 




Kenton. Pole. Cantclou. Pynchebek. 

Pole, earl and duke of Suffolk, bore " Azure a fesse between three 
leopards' heads gold." 

Cantelou bore " Azure three leopards' heads silver with silver 
flcurs-dc-lys issuing from them." 

Wederton bore Gules a cheveron between three lions' legs razed 
silver." 

Pynchebek bore " silver three forked tails of lions sable." 

The tiger is rarely named in collections of medieval arms. 
Deep mystery wrapped the shape of him, which was never during 



326 



HERALDRY 



the middle ages standardized by artists. A crest upon a 15th- 
century brass shows him as a lean wolf-like figure, with a dash 
of the boar, gazing after his vain wont into a looking-glass; 
and the 16th-century heralds gave him the body of a lion with the 
head of a wolf, head and body being tufted here and there with 
thick tufts of hair. But it is noteworthy that the arms of Sir 
John Norwich, a well-known knight of the 14th century, are 
Masoned in a roll of that age as " party azure and gules with a 
tiger rampant ermine." Now this beast in the arms of Norwich 
has been commonly taken for a lion, and the Norwich family 
seem in later times to have accepted the lion as their bearing. 
But a portion of a painted roll of Sir John's day shows on careful 
examination that his lion has been given two moustache-like 
tufts to the nose. A copy made about 1600 of another roll gives 
the same decoration to the Norwich lion, and it is at least possible 
we have here evidence that the economy of the medieval armor- 
ist allowed him to make at small cost bis lion, his leopard and 
his tiger out of a single beast form. 

Take away the lions and the leopards, and the other beasts 
upon medieval shields are a little herd. In most cases they 
are here to play upon the names of their bearers. Thus Swin- 
burne of Northumberland has the beads of swine in his coat 
and Bacon has bacon pigs. Three white bears were borne by 
Barlingham, and a bear ramping on his hind legs is for Barnard. 
Lovett of Astwell has three running wolves, Videlou three 
wolves' heads, Colfoz three foxes' heads. 

Three hedgehogs were in the arms of Heria. Barnewall 
reminds us of extinct natives of England by bearing two beavers, 
and Otter of Yorkshire had otters. Harcwell had hares* beads, 




Lovett. 



Talbot. 



Saunders. 



Cunliffe conies, Mitford moles or moldiwarps. A Talbot of 
Lancashire had three purple squirrels in a silver shield. An 
elephant was brought to England as early as the days of Henry 
III., but he had no immediate armorial progeny, although 
Saunders of Northants may have borne before the end of the 
middle ages the elephants' heads which speak of Alysaundcr 
the Great, patron of all Saunderses. Bevil of the west had a red 
bull, and Bulkeley bore three silver bulls' heads. The heads 
in Neteham's 14th-century shield are neat's heads, ox heads 
are for Oxwyk. Calves are for Vccl, and the same mild beasts 
are in the arms of that fierce knight Hugh Calvcley. Stansfeld 
bore three rams with bells at their necks, and a 14th-century 
LechefoTd thought no shame to bear the head of the ram who 
is the symbol of lechery. Lambton had lambs. Goats were 
borne by Chevercourt to play on his name, a leaping goat by 
Bardwell, and goats' heads by Gateshead. Of the race of dogs 
the greyhound and the talbot, or mastiff, are found most often. 
Thus Talbot of Cumberland had talbots, and Mauleverer, running 
greyhounds or ** levercrs " for his name's sake. The alaund, 
a big, crop-eared dog, is in the 15th-century shield of John Woode 
of Kent, and " kencts," or little tracking dogs, in a 13th-century 
coat of Kenet. The horse isnot easily found as an English charge, 
but Moyle's white mule seems an old coat; horses' heads are 
in Horslcy's shield, and ass heads make crests for more than 
one noble house. Askew has three asses in his arms. Three bats 
or flittermice are in the shield of Burainghiil and in that of 
Heyworth of Whethamstede. 

As might be looked for in a land where forest and greenwood 
once linked from sea to sea, the wild deer is a common charge 
in the shield. Downes of Cheshire bore a hart " lodged " or 
lying down. Hertford had harts* heads, Malebis, fawns' heads 
(kites dc bis), Bukingham, heads of bucks. The harts in Rother- 
bam's arms are the rocs of his name's. first syllable. Reindeer 



beads were borne by Bowet in the 14th century. Antelopes, 
fierce beasts with horns that have something of the ibex, show 
by their great claws, their lion tails, and their boar muzzles 
and tusks that they are mid way between the hart and the 
monster, 

Of the outlandish monsters the griffon is the oldest and the 
chief. With the hinder parts of a Hon, the rest of him is eagle, 
head and shoulders, wings and fore legs. The 
long tuft under the beak and his pointed ears 
mark him out from the eagle when his head 
alone is borne. At an early date a griffon 
rampant, his normal position, was borne by 
the great house of Montagu as a quartering, 
and another griffon played upon Griffin's name. 

The wyver, who becomes wyvern in* the 16th 
century, and takes a new form under the 
care of inventive heralds, was in the middle 




Griffin. 




Drake. 



ages a lizard-like dragon, generally with small wings. Sir 
Edmund Mauley in the 14th century is found differencing the 
black bend of lib elder brother by charging it with three wyvers 
of silver. During the middle ages there seems small distinction 
between the wyver and the still rarer dragon, which, with the 
coming of the Tudors, who bore it as their 
badge, is seen as a four-legged monster with 
wings and a tail that ends like a broad 
arrow. The monster in the arms of Drake, 
blazoned by Tudor heralds as a wyvern, is 
clearly a fire-drake or dragon in his origin. 

The unicorn rampant was borne by Harlyn 
of Norfolk, unicorn's heads by the Cambridge- 
shire family of Paris. The mermaid with her 
comb and looking-glass makes a 14th-century 
crest for Byron, while " Silver a bend gules with three silver 
harpies thereon " is found in tbe 15th century for Entyrdene. 

Concerning beasts and monsters the heraldry books have 
many adjectives of blazonry which may be disregarded. Even 
as it was once the pride of the cook pedant to carve each bird 
on the board with a new word for the act, so it became the 
delight of the pedant herald to order that the rampant hone 
should be " foreen6," the rampant griffon " segreant," 
the passant hart " trjppant "; while the same hart must 
needs be " attired " as to its horns and '* unguled " as to 
its hoofs. There is ancient authority for the nice blazonry 
which sometimes gives a separate colour to the tongue and claws 
of the lion, but even this may be set aside. Thoegh a black lion 
in a silver field may be armed with red claws, and a golden 
leopard in a red field given blue claws and tongues, these trifles 
are but fancies which follow the taste of the painter, and are never 
of obligation. The tusks and hoofs of the boar, and often the 
horns of the hart, are thus given in some paintings a colour of 
their own which elsewhere is neglected. 

As the lion is among armorial beasts, so is the eagle among 
the birds. A bold convention of the earliest shield painters 
displayed him with spread wing and claw, the feat of a few 
strokes of the brush, and after this fashion he appears on many 
scores of shields. Like the claws and tongue of the lion, the beak 
and claws of the eagle are commonly painted of a second colour 
in all bnt very small representations. Thus the golden eagle of 
Lymesey in a red field may have blue beak and claws, and golden 
beak and claws wiH be given to Jorce's silver eagle upon red. 
A lure, or two wings joined and spread like those of an eagle, 
is a rare charge sometimes found. When fitted with the cord by 
which a falconer's lure is swung, the cord must be named. 
Monthcrmcr bore *' Gold an eagle vert." 
Siggeston bore " Silver a two-headed eagle sable." 
Gavaston, earl of Cornwall, bore " Vert six eagles gold." 
Bayforde of Fordinzbridge scaled (in 1388) with arms of " An eagle 
bendwise, with a border engrailed and a baston." 

Graunson bore " Paly silver and azure with a bend gules and three 
golden eagles thereon. 
Seymour bore " Gules a lure of two golden wings." 
Commoner than the eagle as a charge is the martlet, a humbler 
bird which is never found as the sole charge of a shield. In afl 



HERALDRY 



327 



but t few early repreaentttlotis the feathers of the legs are seen 
without the legs or claws. The martlet indicates both swallow 
and martin, and in the arms of the Cornish Arundeb the martlets 
most stand for " hirundels " or swaHows. 

The falcon or hawk is borne as a rule with close wfngs, so that 
be may not be taken for the eagle. In most cases he is there 




Monthermer. Siggeston. Gevaston. Grauasoa. 

to play on the bearer's name* and thk may be 
said of most of the flight of lesser birds* 
Naunton bore " Sable three martlets silver." 
Heron bore " Azure three herons silver." 
Fauconer bore " Silver three falcons gules.** 
Hauvile bore "Azure a dance between three 
hawks gold." 

Twengc bore "Silver a fesse gvles between 
three popinjays (or parrots) vert." 
Arundel* Cranes Icy bore " Silver a cheveron gules be-, 

tween three cranes azure." 
Asdale bore " Gules a swan silver." 

Dalston bore " Silver a cheveron engrailed between three daws' 
heads razed sable." 
Corbet bore " Gold two corbies sable." 




Seymour. 



Naunton. 



Fauconer. 



Twengc. 



Cockfield bore " Silver three cocks gules." 
Burton bore " Sable a cheveron sable between three silver owls." 
Rokeby bore " Silver a cheveron sable between three rooks." 
Duffclde bore " Sable a cheveron silver between three doves.'* 
Pclham bore " Azure three pelicans silver." 




Cockfield. 



Burton. 



Sumeri (13th century) sealed with arms of " A peacock with his 
tail spread.' 

John Pyeshale of Suffolk (14th ternary) sealed with arms of 
" Three magpies." 

Fishes, Reptiles aud Jnjeefr.— Like the birds, the fishes are 
borne for the most part to call to mind their bearers' names. 
Unless their position be otherwise named, they are painted as 
upright in the shield, as though rising towards the water surface. 
The dolphin is known by his bowed back, old artists making 
him a grotesquely decorative figure. 

Lucy bore " Gules three luces (or pike) silver." . 

Henngaud bore " Azure, crustily fold, with six golden herrings." 

Fishacre bore " Gules a dolphin silver." 

La Roche bore " Three roach swimrniof." 

John Samon (14th century) scaled with arms of " Three salmon 
swimming," 

Sturgeon bore " Azure three sturgeon swimming gold, with a fret 
gules over all." 

Whalley bore " Silver three whales' heads rated sable.* 

Shell-fish would hardly have place in English armory were 
it not for the abundance of scallops which have followed their 
appearance in the banners of DaCrc and Scales. The crest 




of the Yorkshire Scropes, playing npon their name, was a pair 
of crabs' claws. 

Dacre bore " Gules three scallops silver." 
Shelley bore " Sable a fesse engrailed between three whelk-shells 
gold." 

Reptiles and insects are barely represented. The lizards 
in the crest and supporters of the Ironmongers of London belong 
to the 15th century. Gawdy of Norfolk may have borne the 
tortoise in his shield in the same age. "Silver three toads 
sable " was quartered as a second coat for Botreaux of Cornwall 




Rokeby. 



Pelham. 



Lucy. 



Fishacre. 



in the 16th century— Botereau or Botercl 
signifying a little toad in the old French 
tongue — but the arms do not appear on the 
old Botreaux seals beside their ancient bearing 
of the griffon. Beston bore "Silver a bend 
between six bees sable" and a 15-century 
Harbottle seems to have sealed with arms of 
three bluebottle flies. Three butterflies are in 
the shield of Prcsfen of Lancashire in 1415, while 






Roche. 



the winged insect shown on the seal of John Mayre, a King's* 
Lynn burgess of the age of Edward I., is probably a mayfly. 

Human Charges.— Mm and the parts of him play but a small 
part in English shields, and we have nothing to put beside such 
a coat as that of the German Mancssen, on which two armed 
knights attack each other's hauberks with their teeth. But 
certain arms of religious houses and the like have the whole 
figure, the see of Salisbury bearing the Virgin and Child in a 




Dacre. 



Shelley. See of Salisbury. Isle of Man. 



blue field. And old crests have demi-Saracens and falchion 
men, coal-miners, monks and blackamoors. Sowdan bore in his 
shield a turbaned soldan's head; Eady, three old men's " 'eads "I 
Heads of maidens, the " winsome marrows " of the ballad, am 
in the arms of Marow. The Stanleys, as kings of Man, quartered 
the famous three-armed legs whirling mill-sail fashion, and 
Tremayne of the west bore three men's arms in like wise. " Gules 
three hands silver" was for Malmeyns as early as the 15th century, 
and Tynte of Colchester displayed hearts. 

Miscellaneous Charges. — Other charges of the shield are less 
frequent but are found in great variety, the reason for most of 
them being the desire to play upon the bearer's name. 

Weapons and the like are rare, having regard to the military 
associations of armory. Daubeney bore three helms; Philip 
Marmion took with his wife, the coheir of Kilpek, the Kilpek 
shield of a sword (espek). Tuck had a stabbing sword or " tuck." 
Bent bows were borne by Bowes, an arblast by Arblaster, arrows 
by Archer, birding-bolts or besouns by Bosun, the mangonel 
by Mangnall. The three lances of Amherst is probably a medieval 
coat; Leweston had battle-axes. 

A scythe was in the shield of Praers; Pkot had picks; Bilsby 
a hammer or " beal "; Malet showed mallets. The chamberlain's 
key is in the shield of a Chamberlain, and the Spenser's key 
in that of a Spenser. Porter bore the porter's bell, Boteter 
the butler's cup. Three-legged pots were borne by Monbochet 



3*8 



HERALDRY 



Crowns are for Coroun, Yard* had yard-wands; Bordoun a 
burdon or pilgrim's staff. 

Of horse-furniture we have the stirrups of Scudamorc and 
Giflard, the horse- barnacles of Bernake, and the horse-shoes 
borne by many branches and tenants of the house of Ferrers. 

Of musical instruments there are pipes, trumps and harps 
for Pipe, Trumpinglon and Harpesfcld. Hunting horns are 
common among families bearing such names as Forester or 
Home. * Remarkable charges arc the three organs of Grcnville, 
who held of the house of Clare, the lords of Glamorgan. 

Combs play on the name of Tunstall, and gloves (wauns or 
tauns} on (hat of -Wauncy. Hose were borne by Hoese; buckles 
by a long list of families. But the most notable of the charges 
derived from clothing is tbe hanging sleeve familiar in the arms 
Of Hastings, Conyersand Manse I. 

Chess-rooks, hardly to be distinguished from the roc or roquet 
at the head of a joust in g-lance, were borne by Rokewode and 
by many more. Topcliffc had pegtops in his shield, while 
Ambesas had a cast of three dice which should each show tbe 
point of one, for " to throw ambesace "ban ancient phrase 
used of those who throw three aces. 

Although we are a sea-going people, there arc few ships in our 
armory, most of these in the arms of sea-ports. Anchors are 
Commoner. 

Castles and towers, bridges, portcullises and gates have all 
examples, and a minster-church was the curious charge borne 
by the ancient house of Musters of Kirklington. 

Letters of t he alphabet are very rarely found in ancient armory; 
but three capital T's, in old English script, were borne by Toft 
of Cheshire in the 14th century. In the period of decadence 
whole words or sentences, commonly the names of military or 
naval victories, arc often seen. 

Blazonry.— An ill-service has been done to the students of 
armory by those who have pretended that the phrases in which 
the shields and their charges are described or blazoned must 
follow arbitrary laws devised by writers of the period of armorial 
decadence. One of these laws, and a mischievous one, asserts 
that no tincture should be named a second time in the blazon 
of one coat. Thus if gales be the hue of the held any charge of 
that colour must thereafter be styled " of the first." Obeying 
this law the blazoncr of a shield of arms elaborately charged 
may find himself sadly involved among " of the first," " of the 
second," and " of the third." It is needless to say that no such 
law obtained among armorists of the middle ages. The only 
rule that demands obedience is that tbe brief description should 
convey to the reader a true knowledge of the arms described. 

The examples of blazonry given in that part of this article 
which deals with armorial charges will be more instructive to the 
student than any elaborated code of directions. It will be 
observed that the description of the field is first set down, the 
blazoner giving its plain tincture or describing it as burely, 
party, paly or barry. as powdered or sown with roses, crosslets 
or flcurs-de-lys. Then should follow the main or central charges, 
the lion or griffon dominating the field, the cheveron or the pale, 
the fesse, bend or bars, and next the subsidiary charges in the 
field beside the " ordinary " and those set upon it. Chiefs and 
quarters are blazoned after the field and its contents, and the 
border, commonly an added difference, is taken last of all. 
Where there arc charges both upon and beside a bend, fesse or 
the like, a curious inversion is used by pedantic blazoners. 
The arms of Mr Samuel Pepys of the Admiralty Office would 
have been described in earlier times as " Sable a bend gold bet ween 
two horses' heads razed silver, with three fieurs-de-lys sable on the 
bend." Modern heraldic writers would give the sentence as 
" Sable, on a bend or between two horses' heads erased argent, 
three flcurs-de-lys of the first." Nothing is gained by this 
inversion but the precious advantage of naming the bend but 
once. On the other side it may be said that, while the newer 
blazon couches itself in a form that seems to prepare for tbe 
naming of the fleurs-de-lys as the important element of the shield, 
the older form gives the flcurs-de-lys as a mere postscript, and 
rightly, seeing that charges in such a position are very commonly 



the last additions to a shield by way of difference. In like 
manner when a crest is described it is better to say " a lion's 
head out of a crown " than " out of a crown a lion's bead." 
The first and last necessity in blazonry is lucidity, which is cheaply 
gained at the price of a few syllables repealed. 

Modern Heraldry.— With the accession of the Tudors armory 
began a rapid decadence. Heraldry ceased to play its part in 
military affairs, tbe badges and banners under which the medieval 
noble's retinue came into the field were banished, and even tbe 
tournament in its later days became a renascence pageant which 
did not need the painted shield and armorial trappers. Treatises 
on armory had been rare in the days before the printing press, 
but even so early a writer as Nicholas Upton had shown himself 
as it were unconcerned with the heraldry that any man might 
see in the camp and the street. From the Book of St Albans 
onward the treatises on armory are informed with a pedantry 
which touches the point of crazy mysticism in such volumes 
as that of Sylvanus Morgan. Thus came into the books those 
long lists of " diminutions of ordinaries/' the closets and escarpes, 
the endorses and ribands, the many scores of strange crosses 
and such wild fancies as the rule, based on an early German 
pedantry, that the tinctures in peers shields should be given the 
names of precious stones and those in the shields of sovereigns 
the names of planets. Blazon became cumbered with that 
vocabulary whose French of Stratford atte Bowe has driven 
serious students from a business which, to use a phrase as true 
as it is hackneyed, was at last *' abandoned to the coachpainter 
and the undertaker." 

With the false genealogy came in the assumption or assigning 
of shields to which the new bearers had often no better claim 
than lay in a surname resembling that of the original owner. 
The ancient system of differencing arms disappeared. Now and 
again we see a second son 1 obeying the book-rules and putting 
a crescent in his shield or a third son displaying a molet, but 
long before our own times the practice was disregarded, and the 
most remote kinsman of a gentle bouse displayed the " whole 
coat " of the head of his family. 

The art of armory had no better fate. An absurd rule current 
for some three hundred years has ordered that the helms of 
princes and knights should be painted full-faced and those of 
peers and gentlemen sidelong. Obeying this, the herald painters 
have displayed the crests of knights and princes as sideways 
upon a full-faced helm; the torse or wreath, instead of being, 
twisted about the brow of the balm, has become a sausage^sbaped 
bar tec-sawing above the helm; and upon this will be balanced 
a crest which might puzzle the ancient craftsman to mould in 
hb leather or parchment. A ship on a lee-shore with a thunder- 
storm lowering above its masts may stand as an example of such 
devices. '* Tastes, of course, differ," wrote Dr Woodward, " but 
the writer can hardly think that the epcrgne given to Lieut.- 
General Smith by his friends at Bombay was a fitting ornament 
for a helmet." As with the crest, so with the shield. It became 
crowded with ill-balanced figures devised by those who despised 
and ignored the ancient examples whose painters had followed 
instinctively a simple, and pleasant convention. Landscapes 
and seascapes, musical lines, military medals and corrugated 
boiler-flues have all made their appearance in the shield. Even 
as on the signs of public bouses, written words have taken the 
place of figures, and the often-cited arms exemplified to the first 
Earl Nelson marked, it may be hoped, the high watermark of 
these distressing modernisms* Of late years, indeed, official 
armory in England has shown a disposition to follow the lessons 
of the archaeologist, although the recovery of medieval use has 
not yet been as successful as in Germany, where for a long 
generation a school of vigorous armorial art has flourished. 

OJjkers of Arms.— Officers of arms, styled kings of arms, 
heralds and pursuivants, appear at an early period of the history 
of armory as the messengers in peace and war of princes and 
magnates. It is probable that from the first they bore in some 
wise their lord's arms as the badge of their office. In the 14th 
century we have heralds with tbe arms on a short mantle, witness 
the figure of the duke of Geldcrland's herald painted in the 



HERALDRY 



329 



Armorial dc Gdrc. The title of Bhie Mantle pursuivant, as old 
m the reign of Edward HI., suggests a like usage in England. 
When the tight -laced coat of arms went out of fashion among the 
knighthood the loose tabard of arms with iu wide sleeves was 
at once taken in England as the armorial dress of both herald 
and cavalier, and the fashion of it has changed bat little; since 
those days. Glad in such a coat the herald was the image of his 
master and, although he himself was rarely chosen from any 
sank above that of the lesser gentry, his person, as a messenger, 
acquired an almost priestly sacredness. To Injure or to insult 
htm was to affront the coat that he wore. 

We hear of kings of arms in the royal household of the 13th 
century, and we may compare their title with those of such 
officers as the King of the Ribalds and the King of the Minstrels; 
but it is noteworthy that, even in modern warrants for heralds' 
patents, the custom of the reign of Edward III. is still cited as 
giving the necessary precedents for the officers' liveries. Officers 
of arms took their titles from their provinces or from the titles 
and badges of their masters. Thus we have Garter, Norroy 
and Clarenceux, March, Lancaster, Windsor, Leicester, Leopard, 
Falcon and Blanc Sanglier as officers attached to the royal house; 
Chandos, the herald of the great Sir John Chandos; Vert Eagle 
of the Nevill earls of Salisbury, Esperance and Crescent of the 
Percys of Northumberland. The spirit of Henry VII. "s legislation 
was against such usages in baronial houses, and in the age of the 
Tudors the last of the private heralds disappears. 

In England the royal officers of arms were made a corporation 
by Richard III. Nowadays the members of this corporation, 
known as the College of Arms or Heralds' College, are Garter 
Principal King of Arms, Clarenceux King of Arms South of 
Trent, Norroy King of Arms North of Trent, the heralds Windsor, 
Chester, Richmond, Somerset, York and Lancaster, and the 
pursuivants Rouge Croix, Bluemantle, Rouge Dragon and 
Portcullis. Another king of arms, not a member of this corpora- 
tion, has been attached to the order of the Bath since the reign 
of George I., and an officer of arms, without a title, attends the 
order of St Michael and St George. 

There is no college or corporation of heralds in Scotland or 
Ireland. In Scotland " Lyor^king-of-arms," " Lyon rex arm- 
orum," or " Leo fedalis," so catled from the Bon on the royal 
shield, is the head of the office of arms. When first the dignity 
was constituted is not known, but Lyon was a prominent figure 
in the coronation of Robert II. in 1371. The office was at first, 
as in England, attached to the earl marshal, but it has long 
been conferred by patent under the great seal, and is held direct 
from the crown. Lyon is also king-okarms for the national 
order of the Thistle. He is styled " Lord Lyon," and the office 
has always been held by men of family, and frequently by a 
peer who would appoint a " Lyon depute." He is supreme 
in ad matters of heraldry In Scotland. Besides the " Lyon 
depute," there are the Scottish heralds, Albany, Ross and 
Rothesay, with precedence according to date of appointment; 
and the pursuivants, Carrick, March and Unicorn. Heralds 
snd pursuivants are appointed by Lyon. 

In Ireland also there is but one king-of-arms, Ulster. The 
office was instituted by Edward VI. in 1553. The patent is 
given by Rymer,and refers to certain emoluments as " praedicto 
offido . . . ab antiquo spectantibus." The allusion is to an 
Ireland king-of-arms mentioned in the reign of Richard II. and 
superseded by Ulster. Ulster holds office by patent, during 
pleasure; under him the Irish office of arms consists of two 
heralds, Cork and Dublin; and a pursuivant, Athlone. Ulster 
is king-of-arms to the order of St Patrick. He held visitations 
in parts of Ireland from 1 568 to 1620, and these and other records, 
including all grants of arms from the institution of the office, are 
kept in the Birmingham Tower, Dublin. 

The armorial duties of the andent heralds are not clearly 
defined. The patent of Edward IV., creating John Wrythe 
king of arms of England with the style of Garter, speaks vaguely 
of the care of the office of arms and those things which belong to 
that office. We know that the heralds had their part in the 
ordering of tournaments, wherein armory played its greatest 



part, and that their expert knowledge of arms gave them such 
duties as reckoning the noble slain on a battlefield. But it is 
not until the 15th century that we find the heralds following 
a recognized practice of granting or assigning arms, a practice 
on which John of Guildford comments, saying that such arms 
given by a herald are not of greater authority than those which 
a man has taken for himself. The Book of St Albans, put forth 
in i486, speaking of arms granted by princes and lords, is careful 
to add that " armys bi a mannys proper auctorite take, if an 
other man have not borne theym afore, be of strength enogh," 
repeating, as it seems, Nicholas Upton's opinion which, in thh 
matter, docs not conflict with the practice of his day. It is 
probable that the earlier grants of arms by heralds were made 
by reason of persons uncunning in armorial lore applying 
for a suitable device to experts in such matters — and that such 
setting forth of arms may have been practised even in the 14th 
century. 

The earliest known grants of arms in England by sovereigns 
or private persons are, as a rule, the conveyance of a right in a 
coat of arms already existing or of a differenced version of it 
Thus in 1301 Thomas Grendale, a squire who had inherited 
through his grandmother the right in the shield of Beaumeys,. 
granted his right in it to Sir William Moigne, a knight who seems 
to have acquired the whole or part of the Beaumeys manor 
in Sawtry. Under Henry VI. we have certain rare and curious 
letters of the crown granting nobility with arms " in signum 
kujusmodi nobilitatis " to certain individuals, some, and perhaps 
all of whom, were foreigners who may have asked for letters Which 
followed a continental usage. After this time we have a regular 
series of grants by heralds who in later times began to assert 
that new arms, to be valid, must necessarily be derived from 
their assignments, although andent use continued to be recog- 
nized. 

An account of the genealogical function of the heralds, so 
closely connected with their armorial duties will be found in the 
article Genealogy. In spite of the work of such distinguished 
men as Camden and Dugdale they gradually fell in public 
estimation until Blackstone could write of them that the marshal- 
ling of coat-armour had fallen into the hands of certain officers 
called heralds, who had allowed for lucre such falsity and con- 
fusion to creep into tbdr records that even their common seal 
could no longer be received as evidence in any court of justice. 
From tins low estate they rose again when the new archaeology 
included heraldry in its interests, and several antiquaries of 
repute have of late years worn the herald's tabard. 

In spite of the vast amount of material which the libraries 
catalogue under the head of " Heraldry," the subject has as yet 
received Httle attention from antiquaries working in the modern 
spirit. The old books are as remarkable for thdr detachment 
from the facts as for thdr folly. The work of Nicholas Upton, 
De studio mUitari, although written in the first half of the 15th 
century, shows, as has been already remarked, no attempt to 
recondle the conedts of the author with the armorial practice 
which he must have seen about him on every side. Gerard Ldgh, 
Bossewell, Feme and Morgan carry on this bad tradition, each 
adding his own extravagances. The Display of Heraldry, first 
published in 1610 under the name of John Guillim, is more 
reasonable if not more learned, and in its various editions gives 
a valuable view of the decadent heraldry of the 17th century. 
In the 10th century many important essays on the subject are 
to be found in such magazines as the Genealogist, the Herald and 
Genealogist and the Ancestor, whOe Planche's Pursuivant of 
Arms contains some slight but suggestive work which attempts 
original enquiry. But Dr Woodward's Treatise on Heraldry, 
British and Foreign (1806), in spite of many errors arising from 
the author's reliance upon unchecked material, must be counted 
the only scholarly book in English upon a matter which has 
engaged so many pens. Among foreign volumes may be died 
those of Menestrier and Spener, and the vast compilation of the 
German Siebmacher. Notable ordinaries of arms are those of 
Papworth and Renesse, companions to the armorials of Burke and 
Rictstap. The student may be advised to turn his attention to 



33° 



HERAT 



all works dealing with the effigies, brasses and other monuments 
of the middle ages, to the ancient heraldic seals and to the 
heraldry of medieval architecture and ornament (O. Ba.) 

HERAT, a city and province of Afghanistan. The city of 
Herat lies in 34* 20' 30* N., and 6a 4 u' o* E., at an altitude 
of 2500 ft. above sea-level. Estimated pop. about 10,000. It 
is m city of great interest historically, geographically, politically 
and strategically, but in modern days it has quite lost its ancient 
commercial importance. .From this central point great lines 
of communication radiate in all directions to Russian, British, 
Persian and Afghan territory. Sixty-six miles to the north lies 
the terminus of the Russian railway system; to the south-east 
is Kandahar (360 m.) and about 70 m. beyond that, New Chaman, 
the terminus of the British railway system. Southward lies 
Seistan (200 m.), and eastward Kabul (550 m.); while on the 
west four routes lead into Persia by Turbet to Meshed (2x5 m.), 
and by Birjend to Kerraan (400 m.), to Yezd (500 m.)» or to 
Isfahan (600 m.). The city forms a quadrangle of nearly 1 m. 
square (more accurately about 1600 yds. by 1500 yds.); on 
the western, southern and eastern faces the line of defence is 
almost straight, the only projecting points being the gateways, 
but on the northern face the contour is broken by a double 
outwork, consisting of the Ark or citadel, which is built of sun- 
dried brick on a high artificial mound within the enceinte, 
and a lower work at its foot, called the Ark-i-nao t or " new 
citadel," which extends 100 yds. beyond the line of the city 
walL That which distinguishes Herat from all other Oriental 
cities, and at the same time constitutes its main defence, is the 
stupendous character of the earthwork upon which the city wall 
is built. This earthwork averages 250 ft. in width at the base 
and about 50 ft. in height, and as it is crowned by a wall 25 ft. 
high and 14 ft. thick at the base, supported by about 150 semi- 
circular towers, and is further protected by a ditch 45 ft. in 
width and 16 in depth, it presents an appearance of imposing 
strength. When the royal engineers of the Russo-Afghan 
Boundary Commission entered Herat in 1885 they found its 
defences in various stages of disrepair. The gigantic rampart 
was unflanked, and the covered ways in the face of it subject to 
enfilade from end to end. The ditch was choked, the gates were 
unprotected; the tumbled mass of irregular mud buildings 
which constituted the city clung tightly to the walls; there 
were no gun emplacements. Outside, matters were almost 
worse than inside. To the north of the walls the site of old 
Herat was indicated by a vast mass of d6bris— mounds of bricks 
and pottery intersected by a network of shallow trenches, 
where the only semblance of a protective wall was the irregular 
line of the Tal-i-Bangi. South of the city was a vast area filled 
in with the graveyards of centuries. Here the trenches dug by 
the Persians during the last siege were still in a fair state of 
preservation; they were within a stone's-throw of the walls. 
Round about the city on all sides were similar opportunities 
for close approach; even the villages stretched out long irregular 
streets towards the city gates. To the north-west, beyond the 
Tal-i-Bangi, the magnificent outlines of the Mosalla filled a wide 
space with the glorious curves of dome and gateway and the 
stately grace of tapering minars, but the impressive beauty 
of this, by far the finest architectural structure in all Afghanistan, 
could not be permitted to weigh against the fact that the position 
occupied by this pile of solid buildings was fatal to the interests 
of effective defence. By the end of August 1885, when a political 
crisis had supervened between Great Britain and Russia, under 
the orders of the Amir the Mosalla was destroyed; but four 
minars standing at the corners of the wide plinth still remain 
to attest to the glorious proportions of the ancient structure, 
and to exhibit samples of that decorative tilework, which for 
intricate beauty of design and exquisite taste in the blending 
of colour still appeals to the memory as unique. At the same time 
the ancient graveyards round the city were swept smooth and 
levelled; obstructions were demolished, outworks constructed, 
and the defences generally renovated. Whether or no the strength 
of this bulwark of North- Western Afghanistan should ever be 
practically tested, the general result of the most recent in- 



vestigations into the value of Herat as a strategic centre hat 
been largely to modify the once widely-accepted view that the 
key to India lies within it. Abdur Rahman and his successor 
Habibullah steadfastly refused the oner of British engineers 
to strengthen its defences; and though the Afghans themselves 
have occasionally undertaken repairs, it is doubtful whether 
the old walls of Herat are maintained in a state of efficiency. 
The exact position of Herat, with reference to the Russian 
station of Kushk (now the terminus of a branch railway from 
Merv), is as follows: From Herat, a gentle ascent northwards 
for 3 m. reaches to the foot of the Koh-i-Mulla Khwaja, crossing 
the Jul Nao or " new " canal, which here divides the gravel- 
covered foot hills from the alluvial flats of the Hari Rud plain. 
The crest of the outer ridges of this subsidiary range is about 
700 ft above the city, at a distance of 4 m. from it. For 28 tn. 
farther the road winds first amongst the broken ridges of the 
Koh-i-Mulla Khwaja, then over the intervening dashi into the 
southern spurs of the Paropamisus to the Ardewan pass. This 
is the highest point it attains; and it has risen about 2150 ft- 
from Herat. From the pass it drops over the gradually decrees* 
ing grades of a wide sweep of Choi (which here happens to be 
locally free from the intersecting network of narrow ravines 
which is generally a distinguishing feature of Turkestan loess 
formations) for a distance of 35 m. into the Russian railway 
station, falling some 2700 ft. from the crest of the Paropamisus. 
To the south the road from Herat to India through Kandahar 
lies across an open plain, which presents no great engineering 
difficulties, but is of a somewhat waterless and barren character. 
The city possesses five gates, two on the northern face, the 
Kutab-chak near the north-east angle of the wall, and the Malik 
at the re-entering angle of the Ark-i-nao; and three others 
in the centres of the remaining faces, the Irak gate on the west, 
the Kandahar gate on the south and the Kushk gate on the 
east face. Four streets called the Ckahar-sHk, running from the 
centre of each face, meet in the centre of the town in a small 
domed quadrangle. The principal street runs from the south 
or Kandahar gate to the market in front of the citadel, and is 
covered in with a vaulted roof through its entire length, the 
shops and buildings of this bazaar being much superior to those 
of the other streets, and the merchants' caravanserais, several 
of which are spacious and well built, all opening out on this 
great thoroughfare. Near the central quadrangle of the city 
is a vast reservoir of water, the dome of which is of bold and 
excellent proportions. The only other public building of any 
consequence in Herat is the great mosque or Mtsjid-i-Juma, 
which comprises an are£ of 800 yds. square, and must have been 
a most magnificent structure. It was erected towards the dose 
of the 15th century, during the reign of Shah Sultan Hussein 
of the family of Timur, and is said when perfect to have been 
465 ft. long by 275 ft. wide, to have had 408 cupolas,i30 windows, 
444 pillars and 6 entrances, and to have been adorned in the 
most magnificent manner with gilding, carving, precious mosaics 
and other elaborate and costly embellishments. Now, however, 
it is falling rapidly into ruin, the ever-changing provincial 
governors who administer Herat having neither the means 
nor the inclination to undertake the necessary repairs. Neither 
the palace of the Charbagh within the city wall, which was the re- 
sidence of the British mission in 1840-1841, nor the royal quarters 
in the citadel deserve any special notice. At the present day, 
with the exception of the Ckah*r-silk, where there is always 
a certain amount of traffic, and where the great diversity of race 
and costume imparts much liveliness to the scene, Herat presents 
a very melancholy and desolate appearance. The mud houses 
in rear of the bazaars are for the most part uninhabited and in 
ruins, and even the burnt brick buildings are becoming every- 
where dilapidated. The city is also one of the filthiest in the 
East, as there are no means of drainage or sewerage, and garbage 
of every description lies in heaps in the open streets. 

Along the slopes of the northern hills there is a space of some 

4 m. in length by 3 m. in breadth, the surface of the plain, strewn 

over its whole extent with pieces of pottery and crumbling 

I bricks, and also broken here and there by earthen mounds and 



HERAT 



33» 



mined waits, the debris of palatial structures which at one time 
were the glory and wonder of the East. Of these structures 
indeed some have survived to the present day in a sufficiently 
perfect state to bear witness to the grandeur and beauty of the 
old architecture of Herat. Such was the mosque of the Mosaila 
before its destruction. Scarcely inferior in beauty of design 
and execution, though of more moderate dimensions, is the tomb 
of the saint Abdullah Ansari, in the same neighbourhood. This 
building, which was erected by Shah Rukh Mirxa, the grandson 
of Tiorar, over 500 years ago, contains some exquisite specimens 
of sculpture in the best style of Oriental art. Adjoining the tomb 
abo are numerous marble mausoleums, the sepulchres of princes 
of the house of Timur; and especially deserving of notice is a 
royal building tastefully decorated by an Italian artist named 
Geraldi, who was in the service of Shah Abbas the Great. The 
locality, which is further enlivened by gardens and running 
streams, is named Gm-gAh, and is a favourite resort of the 
Hera lis. It is held indeed in high veneration by all classes, and 
the famous Dost Mahommed Khan is himself buried at the foot 
of the tomb of the saint. Two other royal palaces named 
respectively Bagh-i-SkaM and TakhLi-Sefer, are situated on the 
same rising ground somewhat farther to the west. The buildings 
are now in ruins, but the view from the pavilions, shaded by 
splendid plane trees on the terraced gardens formed on the 
slope of the mountain, is said to be very beautiful. 

The population of Herat and the neighbourhood is of a very 
mixed character. The original inhabitants of AridBut were bo 
doubt of the Aryan family, and immediately cognate with the 
Persian race, but they were probably intermixed at a very early 
period with the Sacae and Massagetae, who seem to have held 
the mountains from Kabul to Herat from the first dawn of 
history, and to whom must be ascribed— rather than to an 
infusion of Turco-Tartaric blood introduced by the armies of 
Jcnghiz and Timur— the peculiar broad features and flattish 
countenance which distinguish the inhabitants of Herat, Sei&tan 
and the eastern provinces of Persia from their countrymen 
farther to the west. Under the government of Herat, however, 
there are a very large number of tribes, ruled over by separate 
and semi-independent chiefs, and belonging probably to different 
nationalities. The principal group of tribes is. called the Outhar- 
Aimdk, or " four races," the constituent parts of which, however, 
axe variously stated by different authorities both as to strength 
and nomenclature. The Heratis are an agricultural race, and 
are not nearly so warlike as the Pathans from the neighbourhood 
of Kabul or Kandahar. 

The long narrow valley of the Hari Rud, starting from the 
western slopes of the Koh-i-Baba, extends almost due west 
nj-jujj * or 3 °° ra * ^ orc * l ta * tes * ls 8 reat northern bend at 
itnuwL Kuhsan, *nd passes northwards through the broken 
ridges of the Siah Bubuk (the western extremity Of the 
range which we now call Paropamisus) towards Sarakhs. For 
the greater part of its length it drains the southern slopes only 
of the Paropamisus and the northern slopes of a parallel range 
called Koh-i-Safed. The Paropamisus forms the southern face 
of the Turkestan plateau, which contains the sources of the 
Murghab river; the northern face of the same plateau is defined 
by the Band-i-Turkestan. On the south of the plateau we find a 
similar succession of narrow valleys dividing parallel flexures, 
or antidinals, formed under similar geological conditions to 
those which appear to be universally applicable to the Himalaya, 
the Hindu Kush, and the Indus frontier mountain systems. 
From one of these long lateral valleys the Hari Rud receives its 
principal tributary, which joins the main river below Obeh, 180 
m. from its source; and it b this tributary (separated from the 
Hari Rud by the narrow ridges of the Koh-i-Safed and Band-i- 
Baian) that offers the high road from Herat to Kabul, and not 
the Hari Rud itself. From its source to Obeh the Hari Rud is a 
valley of sandy desolation. There are no glaciers near its sources, 
although they must have existed there in geologically recent 
times, but masses of melting snow annually give rise to floods, 
which rush through the midst of the valley in a turbid red stteam, 
frequently rendering the river impassable and cutting off the 



crazy brick bridges at Herat and Tfrpul. It is impossible, 
whilst watching the rolling, seething volume of flood-water 
which swirls westwards in April, to imagine the waste stretches 
of dry river-bed which in a few months' time (when every 
available drop of water is carried off for irrigation) will represent 
the Hari Rud. The soft shales or clays of the hills bounding 
the valley render these hills especially subject to the action 
of denudation, and the result, in rounded slopes and easily 
accessible crests, determines the nature of the easy tracks and 
passes which intersect them. At the same time, any excessive 
local rainfall Is productive of difficulty and danger from the 
floods of liquid mud and loose boulders which sweep like an 
avalanche down the hill sides. The intense cold which usually 
accompanies these sudden northern blizzards of Herat and 
Turkestan is a further source of danger. 

From Obeh, 50 m. east of Herat, the cultivated portion of the 
valley commences, and it extends, with a width which varies 
from 8 to 16 m., to Kuhsan, 60 m. west of the dly. But the 
great stretch of highly irrigated and valuable fruit-growing 
land, which appears to spread from the walls of Herat east and 
west as far as the eye can reach, and to sweep to the foot of the 
hills north and south with an endless array of vineyards and 
melon-beds, orchards and villages, varied with a brilliant patch* 
work of poppy growth brightening the width of green wheat-fields 
with splashes of scarlet and purple — all this is really comprised 
within a narrow area which does not extend beyond a ten-miles* 
radius from the city. The system of irrigation by which these 
agricult ural results are attained is most elaborate. The despised 
Herati Tajik, in blue shirt and skull-cap, and with no instrument 
better than a three-cornered spade, is as skilled an agriculturist 
as is the Ghilsai engineer, but he cannot effect more than the 
limits of his water-supply will permit. He adopts the kares 
(or, Persian, karUl) system of underground irrigation, as does the 
Ghilzai, and brings every drop of water that he can find to the 
surface; but it cannot be said that he is more successful than 
the Ghitsai. It is the startling contrast of the Herati oasis with 
the vast expanse of comparative sterility that encloses it which 
has given such a fictitious value to the estimates of the material 
wealth of the valley of the Hari Rud. 

The valley about Herat includes a flat alluvial plain which 
might, for some miles on any side except the north, be speedily 
reduced to an impassable swamp by means of flood- water from 
the surrounding canals. Three miles to the south of the city 
the river flows from east to west, spanned by the Pal-i-Malun, 
a bridge possessing grand proportions, but which was in 1885 in 
a state of grievous disrepair and practically useless. East and 
west stretches the long vista of the Hari Rud. Due north the 
hilb called the Koh-i-Mulla Khwaja appear to be close and 
dominating, but the foot of these hills is really about 3 m. distant 
from the city. This northern line of barren, broken sandstone 
hiHs is geographically no part of the Paropamisus range, from 
which it is separated by a stretch of sandy upland about 20 m. 
in width, called the Dasht-i-Hamdamao, or Dasht-i-Ardewan, 
formed by the talus or drift of the higher mountains, whkh, 
washed down through centuries of denudation, now forms long 
sweeping spurs of gravel and sand, scantily clothed with worm* 
wood scrub and almost destitute of water. Through this stretch 
of dashl the drainage from the main water-divide breaks down- 
wards to the plains of Herat, where it is arrested and utilised 
for irrigation purposes. To the north-east of the dty a very 
considerable valley has been formed between the Paropamisus 
and the subsidiary Koh-i-MulU Khwaja range, called Korokh. 
Here there are one or two important villages and a well-known 
shrine marked by a group of pine trees whkh is unique in this 
part of Afghanistan. The valley leads to a group of passe* 
across the Paropamisus into Turkestan, of which the Zirreast b 
perhaps the best known. The main water-divide between Herat 
and the Turkestan Choi (the loess district) has been called 
Paropamisus for want of any wcU-recognixed general name. 
To the north of the Korokh valley it exhibits something of the 
formation of the Hindu Kush (of which it b apparently a geo* 
logical cxlenatoa), hut as it passes westwards it becomes broken 



33* 



HERAULT 



into fragments by processes of denudation, until it is hardly 
recognisable as a distinct range at all. The direct passes across 
it from Herat (the Baba and the Ardewin) wind amongst masses 
of disintegrating sandstone for some miles on each side of the 
dividing watershed, but farther west the rounded knolls of the 
rain-washed downs may be crossed almost at any point without 
difficulty. The names applied to this dtbris of a once formidable 
mountain system are essentially local and hardly distinctive. 
Beyond this range the sand and clay loess formation spreads 
downwards like a tumbled sea, hiding within the folds of its 
many-crested hills the twisting course of the Kushk sad its 
tributaries. 

History.— The origin of Herat is lost in antiquity. The name 
first appears in the list of primitive Zoroastrian settlements 
contained in the Vendiddd Sadt, where, however, like most of 
the names in the same list,— such as Sugkudu (Sogdiana), Mow* 
(Merv or Margus), HaraquUi (Arachotus or Arghand-ab), Haetu- 
mant (Etymander or Helmund), and Ragka (or Argha-stan),— 4% 
seems to apply to the river or river-basin, which was the special 
centre of population. This name of Haroyu, as it Is written in 
the Vendiddd } or Horiwo,&s it appears in the inscriptions of Darius, 
is a cognate form with the Sanskrit Sarayu, which signifies " a 
river," and its resemblance to the ethnic title of Aryan (Sans. 
Arya) is purely fortuitous; though from the circumstance of 
the city being named " Aria Metropolis " by the Greeks, and 
being also recognized as the capital of Ariana, " the country of 
the Arians," the two forms have been frequently confounded. 
Of the foundation of Herat (or Heri, as it is still often called) 
nothing is known. We can only infer from the colossal character 
of the earth- works which surround the modern town, that, like 
the similar remains at Bost on the Helmund and at Ulan Robat 
of Arachosia, they belong to that period of Central-Asian history 
which preceded the rise of Achaemenlan power, and which in 
Grecian romance is illustrated by the names of Bacchus, of 
Hercules and of Semiramis. To trace in any detail the fortunes 
of Herat would be to write the modern history of the East, for 
tjierc has hardly been a dynastic revolution, or a foreign invasion, 
or a great civil war in Central Asia since the time of the prophet, 
in which Herat hasviot played a conspicuous part and suffered 
accordingly. Under the Tahirids of Khorasan, the Saffarids 
of Seistan and the Samanids of Bokhara, it flourished for some 
centuries in peace and progressive prosperity; but during the 
succeeding rule of the Ghaznevid kings hs metropolitan 
character was for a time obscured by the celebrity of the neigh- 
bouring capital of Ghazni, until finally in the reign of Sultan 
San jar of Merv about 1157 the city was entirely destroyed by 
an irruption of the Ghuzz, the predecessors, in race as well as in 
habitat, of the modern Turkomans. Herat gradually recovered 
under the enlightened Ghorid kings, who were indeed natives 
of the province, though they preferred to hold their court amid 
their ancestral fortresses in the mountains of Ghor, so that at the 
time of Jenghiz Khan's invasion it equalled or even exceeded 
in populousness and wealth its sister capitals of Balkh, Merv 
and Nishapur, the united strength of the four cities being 
estimated at three millions of inhabitants. But this Mogul 
visitation was most calamitous; forty persons, indeed, are 
stated to have alone survived the general massacre of 123 a, and 
as a similar catastrophe overtook the city at the hands of Timur 
in 1 3Q*, when the local dynasty of Kurt, which bad succeeded 
the Ghoridcs in eastern Khorasan, was put an end to, it is 
astonishing to find that early in the 1 5th century Herat was again 
flourishing and populous, and the favoured seat of the art and 
literature of the East. It was indeed under the princes of the 
bouse of Tirhur that most of the noble buildings were erected, 
of which the remains still excite our admiration at Herat, while 
all the great historical works relative to Asia, such as the Rout- 
eS'Scfd, the Hablb-ts-seir, Ha fit Abri's Tarikh, the Mat Id' a-es- 
Sa'odin, &c, date from the same place and the same age. 
Four times was Herat sacked by Turkomans and Usbegs during 
the centuries which intervened between the Timuride princes 
and the rise of the Afghan power, and it has never in modem 
times attained to anything like its old importance. Afghan 



tribes, who had originally dwelt far to the east, were first settled 
at Herat by Nadir Shah, and from that time they have mono- 
polised the government and formed the dominant element in the 
population. It will be needless to trace the revolutions and 
counter-revolutions which have followed each other in quick 
succession at Herat since Ahmad Shah Durairi founded the 
Afghan monarchy about the middle of the 18th century. Let 
it suffice to say that Herat has been throughout the seat of aa 
Afghan government, sometimes in subordination to Kabul and 
sometimes independent. Persia indeed for many years showed 
a strong disposition to reassert the supremacy over Herat which 
was exercised by the Safawtd kings, but great Britain, dis- 
approving of the advance of Persia towards the Indian frontier, 
steadUy resisted the encroachment; and, indeed, after helping 
the Herstis to beat off the attack of the Persian army in 1838, 
the British at length compelled the shah in 1857 at the close of 
his war with them to sign a treaty recognizing the further in- 
dependence of the place, and pledging Persia, against any further 
interference with the Afghans. In 1863 Herat, which for fifty 
years previously had been independent of Kabul, was incor- 
porated by Dost Mahomed Khan in the Afghan monarchy, and 
the Amir, Habibullah of Afghanistan, like his father Abdar 
Rahman before him, remained Amir of Herat and Kandahar, as 
well as Kabul. 

See Holdich. India* Borderland (tool); C E. Yate, Northern 
AJtk+nuta* (1888). (T. H. H.*) 

HftRAULT, a department in the south of France, formed 
from Lower Languedoc Pop. (1006) 481,779. Area, 3403 sq.m. 
It is bounded N.E. by Gard, N.W. by Aveyron and Tarn, and 
S. by Aude and the Golfe du Uon. The southern prolongation 
of the Cevennes mountains occupies the north-western zone of 
the department, the highest point being about 4250 ft. above 
the sea-level. South-east of this range comes a region of hSs 
and plateaus decreasing in height as they approach the sea, 
from which they are separated by the rich plains at the mouth 
of the Orb and the Herault and, farther to the north-east, by 
the line of intercommunicating salt lagoons (Etang de Thau, &c) 
which fringes the coast. The region to the north-west of Mont* 
pellier comprises an ex t e nsive tract of country known as the 
Garrigues, a district of dry limestone plateaus and hills, which 
stretches into the -neighbouring department of Gard. The 
mountains of the north-west form the watershed between the 
Atlantic and Mediterranean basins. From them flow the 
Herault, its tributary the Lergtie, and more to the south-west 
the Livron and the Orb, which are the main rivers of the depart- 
ment. Dry summers, varied by occasional violent storms, are 
characteristic of Herault. The climate is naturally colder and 
more rainy in the mountains. 

A third of the surface of Herault is planted with vines, which 
are the chief source of agricultural wealth, the department 
ranking first in France with respect to the area of its vineyards; 
the red wines of St Georges, Cszouls-les-Beziers, Picpoul and 
Maimnssan, and the white wines of Frontignan and Lund (pop. 
in 1006, 6709) are held in high estimation. The area given over 
to arable land and pasture is small in extent. Fruit trees of 
various kinds, but especially mulberries, olives and chestnuts 
flourish. The rearing of silk-worms is largely carried on. Con- 
siderable numbers of sheep are raised, their milk being utilised 
for the preparation of Roquefort cheeses. The mineral wealth 
of the department is considerable. There are mines of lignite, 
coal in the vicinity of Graissessac, iron, calamine and copper, 
and quarries of building-stone, limestone, gypsum, &c.; 
the marshes supply salt. Mineral springs are numerous, the 
most important being those of Lamalon-lcs-Bains and Balaruc- 
les-Bains. • The chief manufactures are woollen and cotton 
cloth, especially for military use, silk (Ganges), casks, soap and 
fertilizing stuffs. There are also oil-works, distilleries (Beziers) 
and tanneries (Btdarieux). Fishing is an important industry. 
Cette and Meze (pop. in 1006, 5574) are the chief ports. Herault 
exports salt fish, wine, liqueurs, timber, salt, building-material, 
&c It imports cattle, skins, wool, cereals, vegetables, coal and 
other commodities. The railway lines belong chiefly to the 



HfiRAULT DE SfcCHELLES— HERBARIUM 



333 



Southern and Paris-LyoivMMheTiarjee companies. The Canal 
do Midi iravenea the south of the department (or 44 m. and 
terminates at Cette. The Canal des fttangs traverses the 
department for about 20 m., forming part of a line of com- 
munication between Cette and Aignes-Morte*. MontpeUicr, the 
capital, is the seat of a bishopric of the province of Avignon, and 
of a court of appeal and centre of an academie (educational 
division). The department belongs to the 16th military region, 
which has its headquarters at Montpeflier. It is divided into 
the arrondissements of Montpeflier, Beziera, Lodeve and St 
Pons, with 36 cantons and 340 communes. 

Montpellier, Bezicrs, Lodeve, Bedarieux, Cette, Agde, Pexenas, 
Lamalou'les- Bains and Clermont-l'He'rault are the more note- 
worthy towns and receive separate treatment. Among the other 
interesting places in the department arc St Pons, with a church 
of the 12th century, once a cathedral, Villemagne, which has 
several old houses and two ruined churches, one of the 13th, the 
other of the 14th century; Pignan, a medieval town, near which 
is the interesting abbey-church of Vignogoul in the early Gothic 
style; and St Guilhenvle-Desert, which has a church of the 
1 1 lb and 1 2th centuries. Maguelonne, which in the 6th century 
became the seat of a bishopric transferred to MontpeUier in 1536, 
has a cathedral of the 1 2th century. 

H&tAULT DB SfiCHELUS, MARIE JEAN (17 50-1794), 
French politician, was born at Paris on the 20th of September 
1750, of a noble family connected with those of Contades and 
Polignac He made his debut as a lawyer at the Chatelet, and 
delivered some very successful speeches; later he was await 
fjtniral to the parlement of Parts. His legal occupations did not 
prevent him from devoting himself also to literature, and after 
I789 he published an account of a visit he had made to the comttf 
de Buffon at Montbard. Herault 's account is marked by a 
delicate irony, and it has with some justice been called a master- 
piece of interviewing, before the day of journalists. Herault, 
who was an ardent champion of the Revolution, took part in 
the taking of the Bastille, and on the 8th of December 1789 
was appointed judge of the court of the* first arrondisscment 
in the department of Paris. From the end of January to April 
179 1 Herault was absent on a mission in Alsace, where he had 
been sent to restore order. On his return he was appointed 
commtssaire du roi in the court of cassation. He was elected 
as a deputy for Paris to the Legislative Assembly, where he 
gravitated more and more towards the extreme left; he was a 
member of several committees, and, when a member of the 
diplomatic committee, presented a famous report demanding 
that the nation should be declared to be in danger (nth June 
1793), After the revolution of the 10th of August 1792 (see 
French Revolution), he co-operated with Danton, one of the 
organizers of this rising, and on the 2nd of September was 
appointed president of the Legislative Assembly. He was a 
deputy to the National Convention for the department of 
Seine-ct-Oise, and was sent on a mission to organize the new 
department of Mont Blanc He was thus absent during the 
trial of Louis XVI., but he made it known that he approved 
of the condemnation of the king, and would probably haVe 
voted for the death penalty. On his return to Paris, Herault was 
several tiroes president of the Convention, notably on the 2nd of 
June 1793, the occasion of the attack on the Girondins, and 
on the 10th of August 1793, on which the passing of the new 
constitution was celebrated. On this occasion Herault, as 
president of the Convention, had to make several speeches. It 
was he, moreover, who, on the rejection of the projected constitu- 
tion drawn up by Condorcet, was entrusted with the task of 
preparing a fresh one; this work he performed within a few days, 
and bis plan, which, however, differed very little from that of 
Coadorcet, became the Constitution of 1793, which was passed, 
but never applied. As a member of the Committee of Public 
Safety, it was with diplomacy that Herault was chiefly concerned, 
and from October to December 1793 he was employed on a 
diplomatic and military mission in Alsace. But this mission 
helped to make him an object of suspicion to the other members 
ot the Committee of Public Safety, and especially to Robespierre, 



who as a deist and a fanatical follower of the ideas of Rousseau, 
hated Herault, the follower of the naturalism of Diderot. He 
was accused of treason, and after being tried before the revolu- 
tionary tribunal, was condemned at the same time as Danton, 
and executed on the 16th Germinal in the year II. (5th April 
1794). He was handsome, elegant and a lover of pleasure, and 
was one of the most individual figures of the Revolution. 

See the Voyaged. Montbard, published by A. Aulard (Paris, 1890); 
A. Aubrd, LesOrateurs de la Legislative ef de la Convention, 2nd cd, 
(Paris. 1006); J. Clarctic, Camille Deswwulins . . . tiude sur Us 
Danlonisiet (Paris, 1875); Dr Robtnet, Le Prods des Danlonistes 
(Paris. 1879); " Herault de S6chcUe$, sa premiere mission en 
Alsace " in the review La Revolution Francaise, tome 22: E. Daudet, 
Le Roman d*un tonventionnel. Hiratdl de Sickelles et les dames dk 



Bellegarde (1904). 
by E. Dard. 



His (Euvres littiraires were edited (Paris, 1907) 
(R. A.*) 



HERB (Lat. htrba, grass, food for cattle, generally taken to 
represent the Old Lat. forbta, Gr. dtopfih, pasture, #p0«v, to feed, 
Sans, blurb, to eat), in botany, the name given to those plants 
whose stem or stalk dies entirely or down to the root each year, 
and does not become, as in shrubs or trees, woody or permanent, 
such plants are also called " herbaceous." The term " herb " 
is also used of those herbaceous plants, which possess certain 
properties, and are used for medicinal purposes, for flavouring 
or garnishing in cooking, and also for perfumes (see Horti- 
culture and Pharmacology). 

HERBARIUM, or Hortus Siccus, a collection of plants so 
dried and preserved as to illustrate as far as possible their 
characters. Since the same plant, owing to peculiarities of climate, 
soil and situation, degree of exposure to light and other influences 
may vary greatly according to the locality in which it occurs, 
it is only by gathering together for comparison and study ft 
large series of examples of each species that the flora of different 
regions can be satisfactorily represented. ' Even in the best 
equipped botanical garden it is impossible to have, at one and 
the same time, more than a very small percentage of the repre- 
sentatives of the flora of any given region or of any large group 
of plants. Hence a good herbarium forms an indispensable part 
of a botanical museum or institution. There are large herbaria 
at the British Museum and at the Royal Gardens, Kew, and 
smaller collections at the botanical institutions at the principal 
British universities. The original herbarium of Linnaeus is in 
the possession of the Lmnaean Society of London. It was 
purchased from the widow of Linnaeus by Dr (afterwards SJr> 
J. E. Smith, one of the founders of the Linnaean Society, and 
after his death was purchased by the society. Herbaria are also 
associated with the more important botanic gardens and museums 
in other countries. The value of a herbarium is much enhanced 
by the possession of n types," that is, the original specimens 
on the study of which a species was founded. Thus the herbarium 
at the British Museum, which is especially rich in the earlier 
collections made in the 18th and early 19th centuries, contains 
the types of many species founded by the earlier workers in 
botany. It is also rich in the types of Australian plants in the 
collections of Sir Joseph Banks and Robert Brown, and contains 
in addition many valuable modern collections. The Kew 
herbarium, founded by Sir William Hooker and greatly increased 
by his son Sir Joseph Hooker, is also very rich in types, especially 
those of plants described in the Flora of British India and 
various colonial floras. The collection of Dillenius fs deposited 
at Oxford, and that of Professor W. H. Harvey at Trinity 
College, Dublin. The collections of Antoine Laurent de Jussieu, 
his son Adrien, and of Auguste de St Hllairc, are included m the 
large herbarium of the Jardin des Plantes at Paris, and in the 
same city is the extensive private collection of Dr Ernest Cosson. 
At Geneva are three large collecUons— Awgustin Pyrame de 
CandouVs, containing the typical specimens of the Prodromus; 
a large series of monographs of the families of flowering plants, 
Benjamin Delcssert's fine series at the Botanic Garden, and the 
Baissier Herbarium, which is rich in Mediterranean and Oriental 
plants. The university of GOttingen has had bequeathed to ft 
the largest collection (exceeding 40,000 specimens) ever made 
by a single individual— that of Professor Grisebaco. At the 



334 



HERBARIUM 



herbarium in Brussels arc the specimens obtained by the traveller 
Karl Fricdrich Philipp von Martius, the majority of which 
formed the groundwork of his Flora Brasiliensts. The Berlin 
herbarium is especially rich in more recent collections, and other 
national herbaria sufficiently extensive to subserve the require- 
ments of the systematic botanist exist at St Petersburg, Vienna, 
Leiden, Stockholm, Upsala, Copenhagen and Florence. Of 
those in the United States of America, the chief, formed by Asa 
Gray, is the property of Harvard university; there is also a 
large one at the New York Botanical Garden. The herbarium 
at Melbourne, Australia, under Baron Muller, attained large 
proportions; and that of the Botanical Garden of Calcutta is 
noteworthy as the repository of numerous specimens described 
by writers on Indian botany. 

Specimens of flowering plants and vascular cryptograms 
are generally mounted on sheets of stout smooth paper, of 
uniform quality; the size adopted at Kew is 17 in. long by n in. 
broad, that at the British Museum is slightly larger; the palms 
and their allies, however, and some ferns, require a larger size. 
The tough but flexible coarse grey paper (German Flics spa pier), 
upon which on the Continent specimens are commonly fixed by 
gummed strips of the same, is less hygroscopic than ordinary 
cartridge paper, but has the disadvantage of affording harbourage 
in the inequalities of its surface to a minute insect, Atropas 
pulsatoria, which commits great havoc in damp specimens, 
and which, even if noticed, cannot be dislodged without difficulty. 
The majority of plant specimens are most suitably fastened on 
paper by a mixture of equal parts of gum tragacanth and gum 
arabic made into a thick paste with water. Rigid leathery 
leaves are fixed by means of glue, or, if they present too smooth 
a surface, by stitching at their edges. Where, as in private 
herbaria, the specimens are not liable to be handled with great 
frequency, a stitch here and there round the stem, tied at the 
back of the sheet, or slips of paper passed over the stem through 
two slits in the sheet and attached with gum to its back, or 
simply strips of gummed paper laid across the stem, may be 
resorted to. 

To preserve from insects, the plants, after mounting, are 
often brushed over with a liquid formed by the solution of 
J lb. each of corrosive sublimate and carbolic acid in 1 gallon 
of methylated spirits. They are then laid out to dry on shelves 
made of a network of stout galvanized iron wire. The use of 
corrosive sublimate is not, however, recommended, as it forms 
on drying a fine powder which when the plants are handled 
will rub off and, being carried into the air, may prove injurious 
to workers. If the plants are subjected to some process, before 
mounting, by which injurious organisms are destroyed, such 
as exposure in a dosed chamber to vapour of carbon bisulphide 
for some hours, the presence of pieces of camphor or naphthalene 
in the cabinet will be found a sufficient preservative. After 
mounting are written — usually in the right-hand corner of the 
sheet, or on a label there affixed— the designation of each species, 
the date and place of gathering, and the name of the collector. 
Other particulars as to habit, local abundance) soil and claim 
to be indigenous may be written on the back of the sheet or on 
a slip of writing paper attached to its edge. It is convenient 
to place in a small envelope gummed to an upper corner of the 
sheet any flowers, seeds or leaves needed for dissection or 
microscopical examination, especially where from the fixation 
of the specimen it is impossible to examine the leaves for oil- 
receptacles and where seed is apt to escape from ripe capsules 
and be lost. The addition of a careful dissection of a flower 
greatly increases the value of the specimen. To ensure that 
all shall lie evenly in the herbarium the plants should be made 
to occupy as far as possible alternately the right and left sides 
of their respective sheets. The species of each genus are then 
arranged cither systematically or alphabetically in separate 
covers of stout, usually light brown paper, or, if the genus be 
large, in several covers with the name of the genus clearly in- 
dicated in the lower left-hand corner of each, and opposite 
it the names or reference numbers of the species. Undetermined 
species are relegated to the end of the genus. Thus prepared, 



it intervals 
side of the 
suspended 

fbaria. In 
I flowering 
i Hooker's 
rangement 
. In non- 
us, Hooker 
i Synopsis 
1 el species 

lor algae, 
•indenberg 
plemcnted 
Saccardo's 
tograph of 
Piper and 
iidely di&- 
pouping is 
p receiving 
5 ordinary 
ige, in the 
fes of any 
lied to it. 
ned in the 

would be 
pff with a 

arranging 
to see at a 
ariumand 

BCted when 



Uustrate 
root-lea vet 
ariably be 
1 oven at a 
in the sheet 
las-covered 
ire mode of 
ent species 
sculiarities. 
1 supply of 
c sheets (or 
i to twelve 
ier; and to 
-ness of the 
bttonwool, 
em. as also, 
ween these 
sheets will 
1 a crowded 
ble weight 
to keep up 
rtheOrdb- 
its, require 
f placed in 
tttween the 
thick hard 
f removing 
ttttonwool 
ichment to 
omitted to 
Desponding 
od or wires 
other mode 
in a warm 
flag paper. 
R bibulous 
pf coarsely 
i plates are 
wed before 
ethods the 
1 leaves are 



r; but the 
fl the sheet 
be moved. 
IB, may be 
quantity of 



HERBART 



335 



bibulous paper. It offer* the advantage of fitting closely to thick- 
stemmed specimens and of rapidly drying. A light but strong 
portfolio, to which pressure by means of straps can be. applied, and 
• lew quires of this paper, if the paper be changed night and morning, 
will be usually sufficient to dry all except very succulent plants. 
When a specimen is too large for one sheet, and it is necessary, in 
order to show its habit, &c, to dry the whole of it, it may be divided 
into two or three portions, and each placed on a separate sheet for 
drying. Specimens may be judged to be dry when they no longer 
cause a cold sensation when applied to the cheek, or assume a 
.rigidity not evident in the earlier stages of preparation. 

Each class of flowerless or cryptogamic plants requires special 
treatment for the herbarium. 

Marine algae are usually mounted on tough smooth white cartridge 
paper in the following manner. Growing specimens of good colour 
end in fruit are if possible selected, and cleansed as much as practic- 
able from adhering foreign p— : -' : ** — : - * u L ol. 

Some species rapidly chani ny 

others with which they com tse 

with the Eclocarpi, Desmat ild 

therefore be brought home he 

specimen is floated out in a so 

that foreign matter may be < ale 

size is placed under it, suppc nd 

or by a palette. It is then r. de 

of branching, and is spreai he 

right hand. For this purp ell 

for the coarse species, and a ite 

ones. The paper with the i >m 

the water by sliding it over as 

much as possible. If duri un 

together, the beauty of the ng 

the edge into water, so as to de 

naturally on the paper. Tl is 

then lata on bibulous paper as 

possible of the superfluous of 

water it is laid on a sheet ol ce 

of smooth washed calico is pk nt 

of its " facing," adheres to tl ig- 

papcr is then laid over it, _. _ _. _, ns 

being formed into a pile, the whole is submitted to pressure, the paper 
being changed every hour or two at first. The pressure is increased, 
and the papers are changed less frequently as the specimens become 
dry, which usually takes place in thirty-six hours. Some species, 
especially those of a thick or leathery texture, contract so much in 
drying that without strong pressure the edges of the paper become 

puckered. Other species of a gelatinous nature, like Nemalion and 
J^ w t - _...___.. ._ , . . ___ .. _.. te 

submit 



appear 
and La 
for son 
species 
paper, 
carcfut 
andwa 
glue-pc 
effectcf 
is next 
For ua 
means < 
is then 
as the 
small fi 
mica o! 
dry. ' 



waters 
be plac 
scum, I en 

be mot. — rr —m - r — •» -• »t 

to dry. Oscilfaloruu may be mounted by laying a portion on a silver 
coin placed on a piece of paper in a plate, and pouring in water until 
the edge of the coin is just covered. The alga by its own peculiar 
movement will soon form a radiating circle, perfectly free from dirt, 
around the coin, which may then be removed. There b considerable 
difficulty in removing mounted specimens of algae from paper, and 
therefore a small portion preserved on mica should accompany each 
specimen, enclosed for safety in a small envelope fastened at one 
corner of the sheet of paper. Filamentous diatoms may be mounted 
like ordinary seaweeds, and, as well as all parasitic algae, should 
whenever possible be allowed to remain attached to a portion of the 
alga on which they grow, some species being almost always found 
found parasitical on particular plants. Ordinary diatoms and 
desmids may be mounted on mica, as above described, by putting 
a portion in a vessel of water and exposing it to sunlight, when they 
rise to the surface, and may be thus removed comparatively free 
from dirt or impurity. Owing to their want of adhesiveness, they are, 
however, usually mounted on glass as microscopic slides, either in 
glycerin jelly, Canada balsam or some other suitable medium. 



Lichens are generally mounted on sheets of paper of the ordinary 
size, several specimens from different localities being laid upon one 
sheet, each specimen having been first placed on a small square of 
paper which is gummed on the sheet, and which has the locality, 
date, name of collector, &c., written upon it. This mode has some 
disadvantages attending it; such sheets are difficult to handle; 
the crustaceous species are liable to have their surfaces rubbed; 
the foliaceous species become so compressed as to lose their character- 
istic appearance; and the spaces between the sheets caused by the 
thickness of the specimen permit the entrance of dust. A plan which 
has been found to answer well is to arrange them in cardboard boxes, 
either with glass tops or in sliding covers, in drawers — the name being 
placed outside each box and the specimens gummed into the boxes. 
Lichens for the herbarium should, whenever possible, be sought for 
on a slaty or laminated rock, so as to procure them on flat thin pieces 
of the same, suitable for mounting. Specimens on the bark of trees 
require pressure until the bark is dry, lest they become curled; 
and those growing on sand or friable soil, such as ConiocyUfurfuraua, 
should belaid carefully on a layer of gum in the box in which they 
are intended to be kept. Many lichens, such as the Vtrrucariat and 
CoUemaceae, are found in the best condition during the winter 
months. In mounting collemas it is advisable to let the specimen 
become dry and hard, and then to separate a portion from adherent 
mosses, earth, &c, and mount it separately so as to show the branch- 
ing of the thallus. Pcrtusariae should be represented by both fruiting 
and sorediate specimens. 

The larger species of fungi, such as the Agarkini and Polyporci, 
&c, are prepared for the herbarium by cutting a slice out of the 
centre of the plant so as to show the outline of the cap orpileus, the 
attachment of the gills, and the character of the interior of the stem. 
The remaining portions of the pileus arc then lightly pressed, as well 
as the central slices, between bibulous paper until dry, and the whole 
is then " poisoned," and gummed on a sheet of paper in such a manner 
as to show the under surface of the one and the upper surface of the 
other half of the pileus on the same sheet. A " map " of the spores 
should be taken by separating a pileus and placing it flat on a piece 
of thin paper for a few hours when the spores will fall and leave a 
nature print of the arrangement of the gills which may be fixed by 
gumming the other side of the paper. As it is impossible to preserve 
the natural colours of fungi, the specimens should, whenever possible, 
be accompanied by a coloured drawing of the plant. Microscopic 
fungi are usually preserved in envelopes, or simply attached to sheets 
of paper or mounted as microscopic slides. Those fungi which are 
of a dusty nature, and the MyxomyceUs or Mycetotoa may, like the 
lichens, be preserved in small boxes and arranged in drawers. 
Fungi under any circumstances form the least satisfactory portion 
of an herbarium. 

Mosses when growing in tufts should be gathered just before the 
capsules have become brown, divided into small flat portions, and 
pressed lightly in drying paper. During this process the capsules 
ripen, and are thus obtained in a perfect state. They are then pre- 
served in envelopes attached to a sheet of paper of the ordinary size, a 
single perfect specimen being washed, and spread out under the 
envelope so as to show the habit of the plant. For attaching it to the 
paper a strong mucilage of gum tragacanth, containing an eighth 
of its weight of spirit of wine, answers best. If not preserved man 
envelope the calyptra and operculum arc very apt to fall off and 
become lost. Scale-mosses are mounted in the same way, or may 
be floated out in water like sea-weeds, and dried in white blotting 
paper under strong pressure before gumming on paper, but are best 
mounted as microscopic slides, care being taken to show the stipules. 
The specimens should be collected when the capsules are just appear- 
ing above or in the colesulc or calyx; if kept in a damp saucer they 
soon arrive at maturity, and can then be mounted in better condition* 
the fruit-stalks being too fragile to bear carriage in a botanical tin 
case without injury. 

Of the Characeae many are so exceedingly brittle that it is best 
to float them out like sea-weeds, except the prickly species, which 
may be carefully laid out on bibulous paper, and when dry fastened 
on sheets of white paper by means of gummed strips. Care should 
be taken in collecting charae to secure, in the case of dioecious 
species, specimens of both forms, and also to get when possible the 
roots of those species on which the small granular starchy bodies or 
gemmae are found, as in C. fragifera. Portions of the fructification 
may be preserved in small envelopes attached to the sheets. 

HERBART, JOHANN FRIEDRICH (1776-1841)* German 
philosopher and educationist, was born at Oldenburg on the 
4th of May 1776. After studying under Fichle at Jena he gave 
his first philosophical lectures at Gottingen in 1805, whence 
he removed in 1809 to occupy the chair formerly held by Kant 
at Kbnigsbcrg. Here he also established and conducted a 
seminary of pedagogy till 1633, when he returned once mora to 
Gdttingen, and remained there as professor of philosophy tHl 
his death on the 14th of August 1841. 

Philosophy, according to Hcrbart, begins with reflection upon our 
empirical conceptions, and consists in the reformation and elabora- 
tion of t h e s e its three primary divisions being determined by as 



33& 



HERBART 



many distinct forms of elaboration. Logic, which standi first, has 
to render our conceptions and the judgments and reasonings arising 
from them clear and distinct. But some conceptions are such that 
the more distinct they art made the more contradictory their elements 
become; so to change and supplement these as to make them at 
length thinkable is the problem of the second part of philosophy. 

».~»..,.. M tk.« .- „#.;n « ,-iajj f conceptions requiring more 

nine from the last in not involving 
I independent of the reality of then- 
embody our judgments of approval 
c treatment of these conceptions 

ives comparatively meagre, notice; 
y formal character, and cxpr — J 



tantians such as Fries and Krug. 
from what he terms " the higher 
n sphere of thought, the beginnings 
plexity about the idea of. substance, 
ty of even the /ormi of experience 
f the contradictions they are found 
•rms are " given " to us, as truly as 
iubt when we consider that we are 
he other. To attempt at this stage 
rigin of these conceptions would be 
1 have to use these unlegitimatcd 
and the task of clearing up their 
whether we succeeded in our enquiry 
iut this task? We have given to us 
constituent marks two that prove 
; and we can neither deny the unitv 
>ry members. For to do either ts 
to do nothing is forbidden by logic, 
iption that the conception is con- 
tut how are we to supplement it? 
' to what we want, or our procedure 
»rts that M is the same (».*. a mark 
e logic denies it; and so — it being 
M to sustain these contradictory 
open to us; we must posit several 
f one of these Ms is the same as N, 
be both thinkable and valid. We 
may, however, take the Ms not singly but together; and again, no 
other course being open to us, this is what we must do; we must 
assume that N results from a combination of Ms. This is Herbart's 
method of relations, the counterpart in his system of the Hegelian 
dialectic. 

In the Ontology this method is employed to determine what in 
reality corresponds to the empirical conceptions of substance and 
cause, or rather of inherence and change. But first we must analyse 
this notion of reality itself, to which our scepticism had already led 
us, for, though we could doubt whether " the given " is what it 
appears, we cannot doubt that it is something; the conception of the 
real thus consists of the two conceptions of being and quality. That 
which we are compelled to " posit," which cannot be sublated, is 
that which is, and in the recognition of this lies the simple conception 
of being. But when is a thing thus posited? When it is posited 
as we are wont to posit the things we see and taste and handle. 
If wc were without sensations, i.e. were never bound against our will 
to endure the persistence of a presentation, we should never know 
what being is. Keeping fast hold of this idea of absolute position, 
Herbart leads us next to the quality of the real, (i) This must 
exclude everything negative; for non-A sublates instead of positing, 
and is not absolute, but relative to A. (2) The real must be absolutely 
simple; for if it contain two determinations, A and B, then either 
these are reducible to one, which is the true quality, or they are not, 
when each is conditioned by the other and their position is no longer 
absolute. (3) All quantitative conceptions are excluded, for quantity 
implies parts, and these are incompatible with simplicity. (4) But 
there may be a plurality of " reals," albeit the mere conception of 
being can tell us nothing as to this. The doctrine here developed 
is the first cardinal point of Herbart's system, and has obtained 
for it the name of " pluralistic realism." 

The contradictions he finds in the common-sense conception of 
inherence, or of " a thing with several attributes," will now become 
obvious. Let us take some thing, say A, having n attributes, a, 6, 
c . , .: we are forced to posit each of these because each is presented 
in intuition. But in conceiving A we make, not n positions, still less 
n + l positions, but one position simply; for common sense removes 
the absolute position from its original source, sensation. So when wc 
ask, What is the one posited? we are told— the possessor oi a, b, c 
... t or in other words, their scat or substance. But if so, then 
A, as a real, being simple, must=a; similarly it must =6; and so 
on. Now this would be possible if a, b, c . . . were but " contingent 
aspects " of A, as e.g. 2*^64, 4+3+1 are contingent aspects of 8. 
Such; of course, is not the case, and so we have as many contradic- 
tions as there arc attributes; for we must say A is a, is not a, is b, 
is not b, &c. There must then, according to the method of relations, 
be several As. For a let us assume A1+A1+A1 . . . ; for b, 
Ai+A»+Ai...; and so on for the rest. But now what relation 
can there be among these several As. which wall restore to us 



the unity of our original A or substance? There is but owe; we 
must assume that the first A of every series is identical, just as the 
centre is the same point in every radios. By way of concrete 
illustration Herbart instances " the common observation that the 
I ' things exist only under external conditions. Bodies, we 

1 lured, but colour is nothing without light, and nothing 

1 u They sound, but only in a vibrating mediom, and 

i ears. Colour and tone present the appearance of lav 

I on looking closer we find they are not really immanent 

i lit rather presuppose a communion among severaL" 

ten is briefly thus: In place of the one absolute position, 
1 me unthinkable way the common understanding sub- 

1 he absolute positions of the n attributes, we have really 

l . wo or more positions for each attribute, every series, 

however, beginning with the same (as it were, central) real (hence 
the unity of substance in a group of attributes), but each bens* 
continued by different reals (hence the plurality and difference of 
attributes in unity of substance). Where there is the appearance of 
inherence, therefore, there is always a plurality of reals; no such 
correlative to substance as attribute or accident can be admitted 
at all. Substantiality is impossible without causality, and to thin 
as its true correlative we now turn. 

The common-sense conception of change involves at bottom the 
same contradiction of opposing qualities in one real. The same A 
that was a, b, € ... becomes a, b. d . . .; and this, which experi- 
ence thrusts upon us, proves on reflection unthinkable. The meta- 
physical supplementing is also fundamentally as before. Since c 
depended on a series of reals Ai+Ai+Aj ... in connexion with 
A, and d may be said similarly to depend on a series A<+ A ( + A 4 . . ., 
then the change from c to d means, not that the central real A or 
any real has changed, but that A is now in connexion with A«, &c, and 
no longer in connexion with A 2 , &c 

But to think a number of reals " in connexion " {Zusammmseim) 
will not suffice as an explanation of phenomena; something or other 
must happen when they are in connexion; what is it? The answer 
to this question is the second hinge-point of Herbart's theoreti ca l 
philosophy. What " actually happens " as distinct from all that 
seems to happen, when two reals A and B are together is that, 
assuming them to differ in quality, they tend to disturb each other 
to the extent of that difference, at the same time that each p r eser ve s 
itself intact by resisting, as it were, the other's disturbance. And 
so by coming into connexion wkh different reals the " self-preserva- 
tions " of A will vary accordingly, A remaining the same through 
all ; just as, by way of illustration, hydrogen remains the same m 
water and in ammonia, or as the same line may be now a normal 
and now a tangent. But to indicate this opposition in the qualities 
of the reals A+B, we must substitute for these symbols others, 
which, though only " contingent aspects " of A and B, \jt. repre- 
senting their relations, not themselves, yet like similar devices in 
mathematics enable thought to advance. Thus we may put A — 
•+0— y, B— m+n+r; y then represents the character of the self- 
preservations in this case, and a+0+m+* represents all that could 
be observed by a spectator who did not know the simple qualities, 
but was himself involved in the relations of A to B ; and such is 
exactly our position. 

Having thus determined what really is and what actually happens, 
our philosopher proceeds next to explain synthetically the objective 
semblance (der objective Sckein) that results from these. But sT 
this construction is to be truly objective, i.e. valid for all intelligences, 
ontology must furnish us with a clue. This we have in the forms of 
Space, Time and Motion which are involved whenever we think the 
reals as being in, or coming into, connexion and the opposite. 
These forms then cannot be merely the products of our psychological 
mechanism, though they may turn out to coincide with these. 
Meanwhile let us call them " intelligible," as being valid for all who 
comprehend the real and actual by thought, although no such forms 
are predicablc of the real and actual themselves. The elementary 
spatial relation Herbart conceives to be " the contiguity (A ncinauder) 
of two points," so that every " pure and independent line " b discrete. 
But an investigation of dependent lines which are often incommensur* 
able forces jis to adopt the contradictory fiction of partially over* 
lapping, i.e. divisible points, or in other words, the conception of 
Continuity. 1 But the contradiction here is one we cannot eliminate 
by the method of relations, because it does not involve anything 
real ; and in fact as a necessary outcome of an " intelligible ' form, 
the fiction of continuity is valid for the " objective semblance." 
and no more to be discarded than say V —I. By its help we are 
enabled to comprehend what actually happens among reals to 
produce the appearance of matter. When three or more reals are 
together, each disturbance and self-preservation will (in general) 
be imperfect, it. of less intensity than when only two reals are 
together. But "objective semblance" corresponds with reality; 
the spatial or external relations of the reals in this case must, there* 
fore, tally with their inner or actual states. Had the self -preservations 
been perfect, the coincidence in space would have been complete, 
and the group of reals would have been Inextended ; or had the several 
reals been simply contiguous, i.e. without connexion, then, as nothing 



1 Hence Herbart gave the name Synechology to this branch of 
metaphysics, instead o< the usual one, Cosmology. 



HBRBART 



337 



would actually have happened, nothing would appear. A* it in 

we shall find a continuous molecule manifesting attractive and 
repulsive forces; attraction corresponding to the tendency of the 
self-preservations to become perfect, repulsion to the frustration of 
this. Motion, even more evidently than space, implicates the con- 
tradictory conception of continuity, and cannot, therefore, be a real 
predicate, though valid as an intelligible form and necessary to the 
comprehension of the objective semblance. For we have to think 
of the reals as absolutely independent and yet as entering into con- 
nexions. This we can only do by conceiving them as originally 
moving through intelligible space in rectilinear paths and with 
uniform velocities. For such motion no cause need be supposed; 
motion, in fact, is no more a state of the moving real than rest is, 
both alike being but relations, with which, therefore, the real has no 
poocenv The changes in this motion, however, for which we should 
require a cause, would be the objective semblance of the self-preserva- 
tions that actually occur when reals meet. Further, by means of such 
motion these actual occurrences, which are in themselves timeless, 
fall for an observer in a definite time — a time which becomes con- 
tinuous through the partial coincidence of events. 

But in all this it has been assumed that we are spectators of the 
objective semblance; it remains to make good this assumption, or. 
In other words, to show the possibility of knowledge; this is the 
problem of what Herbert terms Eidolology, and forms the transition 
from metaphysic to psychology. Here, again, a contradictory con- 
ception, blocks the way, that, via. of the Ego as the identity of 
knowing and being, and as such the stronghold of idealism. The 
contradiction becomes more evident when the ego is defined to be 
a subject (and so a real) that is its own object. As real and not 
merely formahthis conception of the ego is amenable to the method 
of relations. The solution this method furnishes is summarily that 
there are several objects which mutually modify each other, and so 
constitute that ego we take for the presented real. But to explain 
this modification is the business of psychology; it is enough now to 
see that the subject like all reals is necessarily unknown, and that, 
therefore, the idealist's theory of knowledge is unsound. But though 
the simple quality of- the subject or soul is beyond knowledge, we 
know what actually happens when it is in connexion with other's 
reals, for its self-preservations then arc what we call sensations. 
And these sensations are the sole material of our knowledge; but 
they are not given to us as a chaos but in definite groups and series, 
whence we come to know the relations of those reals, which, though 
themselves unknown, our sensations compel us to posit absolutely. 

In his Psychology Herbert rejects altogether the doctrine of mental 
faculties as one refuted by bis metaphysics, and tries to show that 
all psychical phenomena whatever result from the action and inter- 
action of elementary ideas or presentations (VorsUliungen). The 
soul being one and simple, its separate acts of self-preservation 
or primary presentations must be simple too, and its several presenta- 
tions must become united together. And this they can do at once 
and completely when, as is the case, for example, with the several 
attributes of an object, they are not of opposite quality. But other- 
wise there ensues a conflict in which the opposed presentations 
comport themselves like forces and mutually suppress or obscure 
each other. The act of presentation (VorsUlUn) then becomes 
partly transformed into an effort, and its product, the idea, becomes 
In the same proportion less and less intense til) a position of equili- 
brium is reached; and then at length the remainders coalesce. 
We have thus a statics and a mechanics of mind which investigate 
respectively the conditions of equilibrium and of movement among 
ntatkras. In the statics two magnitudes have to be determined 



j) the amount of the suppression or inhibition (Hemmungssumme), 
and (2) the ratio in which this is shared among the opposing presenta- 
tions. The first must obviously be as small as possible; thus for 
two totally-opposed presentations a and b, of which a it trie greater, 
the inkibendum-b. For a given degree of opposition this burden 
will be shared between the conflicting presentations in the inverse 
ratio of their strength.. When its remainder after inhibition— 0, 
a presentation is said to be on the threshold of consciousness, for on 
a small diminution of the inhibition the " effort " will become actual 
presentation in the seme proportion. Such total exclusion from 
consciousness is, however, manifestly impossible with only two 
presentations, 1 though with three or a greater number the residual 
value of one may even be negative. The first and simplest law in 
psychological mechanics relates to the " sinking " of inhibited 
presentations. Aa the presentations yield to the pressure, the 
pressure itself diminishes, so that the velocity of sinking decreases, «.«. 
we have the equation (S— o) dt «-aV. where S is the total inhibendum, 
and 9 the intensity actually inhibited after the time U Hence 

'-log £~» and a -S(i -«"*)• From this law it follows, for example, 
that equilibrium is never quite obtained for those presentations 
which continue above the threshold of consciousness, while the rest 



1 Thus, taking the case above supposed, the share of the inhibendum 
falling to the smaller presentation b is the fourth term of the pro- 
portion a+b-a: '•b:^p t ; and so e's remainder is e-j^j-j^p 
which only »Owhena-«. 



which cannot so. continue are very apeedfly driven beyond the 
threshold. More important is the law according to which a presenta- 
tion freed from inhibition and rising anew into consciousness tends 
to raise the other presentations with which it is combined. Suppose 
two presentations b and r united by the residua r and p; then the 
amount of p'% " help " to r is r, the portion of which appropriated by 

» is given by the ratio p: w; and thus the initial help is ~ 

But after a time /, when a portion of p represented by u has been 
actually brought into consciousness, the help afforded in the next 
instant will be found by the equation 

from which by integration we have the value of ml 



*»-p 



(■--*) 



So that If there are several r% connected with p by smaller and 
smaller pnru, there will be a definite " serial " order in which they 
wiUberevivedbyp;andonthbfactHerbartrestsall the phenomena 
of the so-called faculty of memory, the development of spatial and 
temporal forms and much besides. Emotions and volitions, he 
holds, are not directly seir-preservations of the soul, as our presenta- 
tions are, but variable states of such presentations resulting from 
their interaction when above the threshold of consciousness. Thus 
when some presentations tend to force a presentation into con- 
sciousness, and others at the same time tend to drive it out. that 
presentation is the seat of painful feeling: when, on the other hand, 
its entrance is favoured by all, pleasure results. Desires are presenta- 
ble— -, 1: — s_» ^ciousness against hindrances, and when 

tit ion of success become volitions. Tran- 



tJons struggling into consciousness against hindrances, and when 
ipanled by the supposition of success become volitions. Tran- 
scendental freedom of will in Kant's sense is an impossibility. 



accom panic 



Self-consciousness is the result of an interaction essentially the same 
in kind as that which takes place when a comparatively simple 
pn 1 finds the field of consciousness occupied by a long- 

fa I well-consolidated " mass " of presentations—**. #.{. 

ess or garden, the theatre, ftc., which promptly inhibit 
I presentation if incongruent, and unite it to themselves 
tat we call Self is, above all, such a central mass, and 
ska to show with great ingenuity and detail now this 
xcupted at first chiefly by the body, then by the seat of 
lesires, and finally by that first-personal Self which re- 
past and resolves concerning t he future. But at a ny stage 
constituents of this "complexion are variable; the 

refore, 
>nt, we 
eh the 

lion of 
r them 
Xfe) b 

useful 
'hereas 
» have' 
nch of 
among 
or dis- 
lich do 

areas 
m, the 
Igment 
ilitions 
»n;<3) 
nd the 
t with 
or evH 
mnish- 
and a 
equity, 

result 

is the 
> single 

arises 
lie. A 
e sub- 
»f tact, 
to the 
Utkrt), 

s valid 
super- 
neither 

ranks 
ccount- 
. His 
e term 
pter of 



338 



HERBELOT DE MOLAINVILLE— HERBERT 



the chief influence he has exerted upon succeeding thinkers of his 
own and other schools. His criticisms are worth more than his 
constructions; indeed for exactness and penetration of thought fee 
is quite on a level with Hume and Kant. His merits in this respect, 
however, can only be appraised by the study of his works at first 
hand. But we are most of all indebted to Herbart for the enormous 
advance psychology has been enabled to make, thanks to his fruitful 
treatment of it, albeit as yet but few among the many who have 
appropriated and improved his materials have ventured to adopt 
hts metaphysical and mathematical foundations. (J- W.*) 

led 

at 
on 
he 
ew 
:ke 
hie 

t 



HERBELOT DE MOLAIHVILLE, BARTHBLEMY D* (1625- 
1695), French orientalist, was born on the 14th of December 
1625 at Paris. He was educated at the university of Paris, 
and devoted himself to the study of oriental languages, going 
to Italy to perfect himself in them by converse with the orientals 
who frequented its sea-ports. There he also made the acquaint- 
ance of Holstenius, the Dutch humanist (1596-1661), and Leo 
Allatius, the Greek scholar (1586-1669), On his return to 
France after a year and a half, he was received into the house 
of Fouquet, superintendenrof finance, who gave him a pension 
of 1500 livres. Losing this on the disgrace of Fouquet in 1 661, 
he was appointed secretary and interpreter of Eastern languages 
to the king. A few years later he again visited Italy, when the 
grand-duke Ferdinand II. of Tuscany presented him with a 
large number of valuable Oriental MSS., and tried to attach him 
to his court. Herbelot, however, was recalled to France by 
Colbert, and received from the king a pension equal to the one 
he had lost. In 1692 he succeeded D'Auvergne in the chair of 
Syriac, in the College dc France. He died in Paris on the 8th 
of December 169$. His great work is toe Bibtieiheaue oriental^ 



ou dietionnairt untversd canlenanl tout ce qui regard* la counois- 
sance des peuplcs de I'Orient, which occupied him nearly all his 
life, and was completed in 1697 by A. Galland.' It is based 
on the immense Arabic dictionary of Hadji Khalfa, of which 
indeed ft fa largely an abridged translation; but it also contains 
the substance of a vast number of other Arabic and Turkish 
compilations and manuscripts. 

The Bibliotkoque was reprinted at Maestricht (fol. 1776), and at the 
Hague (4 vols, ato, I777~»799). The latter edition is enriched with 
the contributions of the Dutch orientalist Schultens, Johann Jakob 
Reiske (1716- 1774), and by a supplement provided by Visdctow 
and Galland. Herbdot's other works, none of which have been 
published, comprise an Oriental Anthology, and aa Arabic, Portion, 
Turku* and Latin Dictionary* 

HERBERAY DES ESSART3, NICOLAS DE (d. about is 57), 
French translator, was born in Picardy. He served in the 
artillery, and at the expressed desire of Francis I. he translated 
into French the first eight books of Amadis de Caul (1 540-1 548). 
The remaining books were translated by other authors. His 
other translations from the Spanish include L'Amant maUraiti 
de sa mye (1559); Le Premier Litre de la chronique de dam Flares 
de Grece (1552); and LHorloge des princes (155s) from Guevara. 
He also translated the works of Josephus (1557). He died 
about 1557. The Amadis de Caul was translated into English 
by Anthony Munday in 1619. 

HERBBRT (Family). The sudden rising of this English 
family to great wealth and high place is the more remarkable 
in that its elevation belongs to the 15th century and not to 
that age of the Tudors when many new men made their way 
upwards into the ranks of the nobility. Earlier generations of 
a pedigree which carries the origin of the Herberts to Herbert 
the Chamberlain, a Domesday tenant, being disregarded, their 
patriarch may be taken to be one Jenkin ap Adam (temp. 
Edward III.), who had a small Monmouthshire estate at Llan- 
vapley and the office of master sergeant of the lordship of 
Abergavenny, a place which gave him precedence after the 
steward of that lordship. Jenkin's son, Gwilim ap Jenkin, who 
followed his father as master sergeant, is given six sons by the 
border genealogists, no less than six score pedigrees finding their 
origin in these six brothers. Their order is uncertain, although 
the Progers of Werndee, the last of whom sold bis ancestral 
estate in 1780, are reckoned as the senior line of Gwilim *s 
descendants. But Thomas ap Gwilim Jenkin, called the fourth 
son, is ancestor of all those who bore the surname of Herbert. 

Thomas's fifth son, William or Gwilim ap Thomas, who died 
in 1446, was the first man of the family to make any figure in 
history. This Gwilim ap Thomas was steward of the lordships 
of Usk and Caerleon under Richard, duke of York. Legend 
makes him a knight on the field of Agincourt, but his knighthood 
belongs to the year 1426. He appears to have married twice, 
his first wife being Elizabeth Bluet of Raglan, widow of Sir 
James Berkeley, and his second a daughter of David Gam, a 
valiant Welsh squire slain at Agincourt. Royal favour enriched 
Sir William, and he was able to buy Raglan Castle from the Lord 
Berkeley, his first wife's son, the deed, which remains among 
the Beaufort muniments, refuting the pedigree-maker's state- 
ment that he inherited the castle as heir of his mother " Maude, 
daughter of Sir John Morlcy." His sons William and Richard, 
both partisans of the White Rose, took the surname of Herbert 
in or before 1461. Playing a part in English affairs remote from 
the Welsh Marches, their lack of a surname may well have 
inconvenienced them, and their choice of the name Herbert 
can only be explained by the suggestion that their long pedigree 
from Herbert the Chamberlain, absurdly represented as a bastard 
son of Henry I., must already have been discovered for them. 
Copies exist of an alleged commission issued by Edward IV. 
to a committee of Welsh bards for the ascertaining of the true 
ancestry of William Herbert, earl of Pembroke, whom "the 
chiefest men of skill " in the province of South Wales declare 
to be the descendant of "Herbert, a noble lord, natural son to 
King Henry the first," and it is recited that King Edward, after 
the creation of the earldom, commanded the earl and Sir Richard 
his brother to " take their surnames after their first progenitor 



HERBERT GEORGE 



339 



Herbert fits Roy and to forego the British order and manner." 
But this commission, whose date anticipates by some years the 
true date of the creation of the earldom, is the work of one 
of the many genealogical forgers who flourished under the 
Tudors. 

Sir William Herbert, called by the Welsh Gwilim Ddu or 
Black William, was a baron in 1461 and a Knight of the Garter 
in the following year. With many manors and castles on the 
Marches he had the castle, town and lordship of Pembroke, and 
after the attainder of Jasper Tudor in 1468 was created earl of 
Pembroke. When in July 1469 he was taken by Sir John Conyers 
and the northern Lancastrians on Hedgecote, he was beheaded 
with his brother Sir Richard Herbert of Coldbrook. The second 
earl while still a minor exchanged at the king's desire in 1479 
his earldom of Pembroke for that of Huntingdon. In 1484 this 
son of one whom Hall not unjustly describes as born " a mean 
gentleman " contracted to marry Katharine the daughter of 
King Richard III., but her death annulled the contract and the 
earl married Mary, daughter of the Earl Rivers, by whom he had 
a daughter Elizabeth, whose descendants, the Somersets, lived 
in the Herbert's castle of Raglan until the cannon of the parlia- 
ment broke it in ruins. With the second earl's death in 1491 
the first Herbert earldom became extinct. No claim being set 
up among the other descendants of the first earl, it may be taken 
that their lines were illegitimate. One of the chief difficulties 
which beset the genealogist of the Herberts lies in their Cambrian 
disregard of the marriage tie, bastards and legitimate issue 
growing up, it would seem, side by side in their patriarchal 
households. Thus the ancestor of the present earls of Pembroke 
and Carnarvon and of the Herbert who was created marquess 
of Powis was a natural son of the first earl, one Richard Herbert, 
whom the restored inscription on his tomb at Abergavenny 
incorrectly describes as a knight. He was constable and porter 
of Abergavenny Castle, and his son William, " a mad fighting 
fellow " in his youth, married a sister of Catherine Parr and thus 
in 1543 became nearly allied to the king, who made him one of 
the executors of his will. The earldom of Pembroke was revived 
for him in 1551. It is worthy of note that all traces of illegiti- 
macy have long since been removed from the arms of the noble 
descendants of Richard Herbert. 

The honours and titles of this dan of marchmen make a long 
list. They include the marquessate of Powis, two earldoms 
with the title of Pembroke, two with that of Powis, and the 
earldoms of Huntingdon and Montgomery, Torrington and 
Carnarvon, the viscounties of Montgomery and Ludlow, fourteen 
baronies and seven baronetcies. Seven Herberts have worn the 
Garter. The knights and rich squires of the stock can hardly 
be reckoned, more especially as they must be sought among 
Raglans, Morgans, Parrys, Vaughans, Progers, Hugheses, 
Thomases, Philips, Powels, Gwyns, Evanses and Joneses, as 
well as among those who have borne the surname of Herbert, a 
surname which in the 19th century was adopted by the Joneses 
of Uanarth and Clytha, although they claim no descent 
from those sons of Sir William ap Thomas for whom it was 
devised. (O. Ba.) 

HERBERT, GEORGE (1 593-1633), English poet, was born at 
Montgomery Castle on the 3rd of April 1593. He was the fifth 
son of Sir Richard Herbert and a brother of Lord Herbert of 
Cherbury. His mother, Lady Magdalen Herbert, a woman of 
great good sense and sweetness of character, and a friend of 
John Donne, exercised great influence over her son. Educated 
privately until 1605, he was then sent to Westminster School, 
and in 1609 he became a scholar of Trinity College, Cambridge, 
where he was made B.A. in 1613, M.A. and major fellow of the 
college in 1616. In 1618 he became Reader in Rhetoric, and in 
1619 orator for the university. In this capacity he was several 
times brought into contact with King James. From Cambridge 
be wrote some Latin satiric verses ' in defenc* of the universities 
and the English Church against Andrew Melville, a Scottish 
Presbyterian minister. He numbered among his friends Dr 

'Printed in 1662 as an appendix to J. Vivian's Ecclesioste* 



Donne, Sir Henry Wotton, Ixaak Walton, Bishop Andrewes 
and Francis Bacon, who dedicated to him his translation of the 
Psalms. Walton tells us that " the love of a court conversation, 
mixed with a laudable ambition to be something more than he 
was, drew him often from Cambridge to attend the king whereso- 
ever the court was," and James I. gave him in 1623 the sinecure 
lay rectory of Whhford, Flintshire, worth £120 a year. The 
death of his patrons, the duke of Richmond and the marquess 
of Hamilton, and of King James put an end to his hopes of 
political preferment; moreover he probably distrusted the 
conduct of affairs under the new reign. Largely influenced 
by his mother, he decided to take holy orders, and in July 1626 
he was appointed prebendary of Layton Eccksia (Leighton 
Bromswold), Huntingdon. Here he was within two miles of Little 
Gidding, and came under the influence of Nicholas Ferrar, 
It was at Ferrar's suggestion that he undertook to rebuild the 
church at Layton, an undertaking carried through by his own 
gifts and the generosity of his friends. There is little doubt 
that the dose friendship with Ferrar had a large share in Herbert's 
adoption of the religious life. In 1630 Charles I., at the instance 
of the earl of Pembroke, whose kinsman Herbert was, presented 
him to the living of Fugglestone with Bemerton, near Salisbury, 
and he was ordained priest in September. A year before, after 
three days' acquaintance, he had married Jane Danvers, whose 
father had been set on the marriage for a long time. He had 
often spoken of his daughter Jane to Herbert, and " so much 
commended Mr Herbert to her, that Jane became so much a 
Platonic as to fall in love with Mr Herbert unseen." The story 
of the poet's life at Bemerton, as told by Walton, is one of 
the most exquisite pictures in literary biography. He devoted 
much time to explaining the meaning of the various parts of the 
Prayer-Book, and held services twice every day, at which many 
of the parishioners attended, and some " Jfct their plough rest 
when Mr Herbert's saints-bell rung to prayers, that they might 
also offer their devotions to God with him." Next to Christianity 
itself he loved the English Church. He was passionately fond 
of music, and his own hymns were written to the accompaniment 
of his lute or viol. He usually walked twice a week to attend 
the cathedral at Salisbury, and before returning home, would 
" sing and play his part " at a meeting of music lovers. Walton 
illustrates Herbert's kindness to the poor by many touching 
anecdotes, but he had not been three years in Bemerton when 
he succumbed to consumption. He was buried beneath the 
altar of his church on the 3rd of March 1633. 

None of Herbert's English poems was published during his 
lifetime. On his death-bed he gave to Nicholas Ferrar a manu- 
script with the title The Temple: Sacred Poems and Private 
Ejaculations. This was published at Cambridge, apparently for 
private circulation, almost immediately after Herbert's death, 
and a second imprint followed in the same year. On the title-page 
of both Is the quotation " In his Temple doth every man speak 
of his honour." The Temple is a collection of religious poems 
connected by unity of sentiment and inspiration. Herbert 
tried to interpret his own devout meditations by applying 
images of all kinds to the ritual and beliefs of the Church. 
Nothing in his own church at Bemerton was too commonplace 
to serve as a starting-point for the epigrammatic expression of 
his piety. The church key reminds him that " it is my sin that 
locks his handes," and the stones of the floor are patience and 
humility, while the cement that binds them together is love and 
charity. The chief faults of the book are obscurity, verbal 
conceits and a forced ingenuity which shows itself in grotesque 
puns, odd metres and occasional want of taste. But the quaint 
beauty of Herbert's style and its musical quality give The 
Temple a high place. " The Church Porch," " The Agony," 
41 Sin," " Sunday," " Virtue," " Man," " The British Church," 
" The Quip," " The Collar," " The Pulley," " The Flower." 
" Aaron " and M The Elixir " are among the best known of 
these poems. Herbert and Keblc are the poets of Anglican 
theology. No book is fuller of devotion to the Church of England 
than The Temple, and no poems in our language exhibit more 
of the spirit of true Christianity. Every page is marked by 



34-0 



HERBERT, H. W.— HERBERT OF CHERBURY 



transparent sincerity, and reflects the beautiful character of 
" holy George Herbert." 

Nicholas Ferrar's tra nd 

Ten Considerations ... nd 

notes by Herbert. I w, 

Sundry Pieces of that S\ rt. 

This included A Priest tis 

Character, and Rule a) a 

collection of proverbs i ch 

had appeared in a sh o; 

and some miscellancoi its 

works is that by Dr A. 1 :al 

works being reproduce he 

English Works of Geor\ in 

much detail by G. H. Pi t*s 

life by Barnabas Oley i he 

classic authority is Iza b- 

lishcd in 1670, with soi iee 

also A. G. Hyde, Ceo _ .... he 

" Oxford " edition of his poems by A. Waugh (1908). 

HERBERT, HENRY WILLIAM [" Frank Forester "] (1807- 
1858), English novelist and writer on sport, son of the Hon. and 
Rev. William Herbert, dean of Manchester, a son of the first carl 
of Carnarvon, was born in London on the 3rd of April 1807. He 
was educated at Eton and at Caius College, Cambridge, where 
he graduated B.A. in 1830. Having become involved in debt, 
he emigrated to America, and from 1831 to 1839 was teacher 
of Greek in a private school in New York. In 1833 he started 
the American Monthly Magazine, which he edited, in conjunction 
with A. D. Patterson, till 1835. In 1834 he published his first 
novel, The Brothers: a Tale of the Fronde, which was followed 
by a number of others which obtained a certain degree of popu- 
larity. He also wrote a scries of historical studies, including The 
Cavaliers of England (1852), The Knights of England, France 
and Scotland (1852), The Chevaliers of France (1853), and The 
Captains of the Old World (1851); but he is best known for his 
works on sport, published under the pseudonym of " Frank 
Forester." These include The Field Sports of the United States 
and British Provinces (1849), Franh Forester and his Friends 
(1849), The Fish and Fishing of the United States (1850), The 
Young Sportsman 1 s Complete Manual (1852), and The Horse and 
Horsemanship in the United States and British Provinces of North 
America (1858). He also translated many of the novels of 
Eugene Sue and Alexandre Dumas. Herbert was a man of 
varied accomplishments, but of somewhat dissipated habits. 
He died by his own hand in New York on the 17th of May 1858. 

HERBERT, SIR THOMAS (1606-16S2), English traveller 
and author, was born at York in 1606. Several of his ancestors 
were aldermen and merchants in that city — e.g. his grandfather 
and benefactor, Alderman Herbert (d. 1614) — and they traced 
a connexion with the earls of Pembroke. Thomas became a 
commoner of Jesus College, Oxford, in 1621, but afterwards 
removed to Cambridge, through the influence of his uncle 
Dr Ambrose Akroyd. In 1627 the earl of Pembroke procured 
his appointment in the suite of Sir Dodmore Cotton, then 
starting as ambassador for Persia with Sir Robert Shirley. 
Sailing in March they visited the Cape, Madagascar, Goa and 
Surat; landing at Gambrun (10th of January 1627-1628), 
they travelled inland to Ashraf and thence to Kazvih, where 
both Cotton and Shirley died, and whence Herbert made exten- 
sive travels in the Persian Hinterland, visiting Kashan, Bagdad, 
&c. On his return voyage he touched at Ceylon, the Coromandel 
coast, Mauritius and St Helena. He reached England in 1629, 
travelled in Europe in 1630-1631, married in 1632 and retired 
from court in 1634 (his prospects perhaps blighted by Pembroke's 
death in 1630); after this he resided on his Tintern estate and 
elsewhere till the Civil War, siding with the parliament till his 
appointment to attend on the king in 1646. Becoming a devoted 
royalist, he was rewarded with a baronetcy at the Restoration 
(1660). He resided mainly in York Street, Westminster, till 
the Great Plague (1666), when he retired to York, where he died 
(at Petergate House) on the 1st of March 1682. 

Herbert's chief work is the Description of the Persian Monarchy 
now btinte: the Orientall lndyes, lies and other parts of the Greater 
Asia and Africk (1634), reissued with additions, &c., in 1638 as 



Some Yeares Travels into Africa and Asia the Great (al. into diem 
parts of Asia and Afrique); a third edition followed in 1664, and a 
fourth in 1677. ( This is one of the best records of 17th-century 
travel. Among its illustrations are remarkable sketches of the dodo, 
cuneiform inscriptions and Perscpolis. Herbert's Threnodia Carolina; 
or, Memoirs of lie two last years of the reign of that unparatleWd prince 
of ever blessed memory King Charles /., was in great part printed at 
the author's request in Wood's Alhenae Oxonienses: in full by Dr C. 
Goodall in his Collection of Tracts (1702, repr. G. & W. Nicof, 1613). 
Sir William Dugdale is understood to have received assistance from 
Herbert in the Ifonasticon A nglicanum, vol. iv. ; see two of Herbert's 
papers on St John's, Beverley and Ripon collegiate church, now 
cathedral, in Drake's Eboracum (appendix). Cf . also Robert Davits' 
account of Herbert in The Yorkshire Archaeological and Topographical 
Journal, part Hi., pp. 182-214 (1870), containing a facsimile of the 
inscription on Herbert's tomb; Wood's Alhenae, iv. 15-41; and 
Fasti, ii. 26, 131, 138, 143-144. 150. 

HERBERT OF CHERBURY, EDWARD HERBERT, Bason 
(1 583-1648), English soldier, diplomatist, historian and religious 
philosopher, eldest son of Richard Herbert of Montgomery Castle 
(a member of a collateral branch of the family of the carls of 
Pembroke) and of Magdalen, daughter of Sir Richard Newport, 
was born at Eyton-on-Severn near Wroxeter on the 3rd of 
March 1583. After careful private tuition he matriculated 
at University College, Oxford, as a gentleman commoner, in' 
May 1596. On the 28th of February 1599 he married his cousin 
Mary, daughter and heiress of Sir William Herbert (d. 1593). 
He returned to Oxford with his wife and mother, continued 
his studies, and obtained proficiency in modern languages aa 
well as in music, riding and fencing. On the accession of James I. 
he presented himself at court and was created a knight of the 
Bath on the 24th of July 1603. In 1608 he went to Paris, en- 
joying the friendship and hospitality of the old constable de 
Montmorency, and being entertained by Henry IV. On his 
return, as he says himself with naive vanity, he was " in great 
esteem both in court and city, many of the greatest desiring 
my company." In 1610 he served as a volunteer in the Low 
Countries under the prince of Orange, whose intimate friend 
he became, and distinguished himself at the capture of Juliers 
from the emperor. He offered to decide the war by engaging 
in single combat with a champion chosen from among the 
enemy, but his challenge was declined. During an interval 
in the fighting he paid a visit to Spinola, in the Spanish camp 
near Wezel. and afterwards to .the elector palatine at Heidelberg, 
subsequently travelling in Italy. At the instance of the duke 
of Savoy he led an expedition of 4000 Huguenots from Languedoc 
into Piedmont to help the Savoyards against Spain, but after 
nearly losing his life in the journey to Lyons he was imprisoned 
on his arrival there, and the enterprise came to nothing. Thence 
he returned to the Netherlands and the prince of Orange, arriving 
in England in 1617. In 1619 he was made by Buckingham am- 
bassador at Paris, but a quarrel with de Luynes and a challenge 
sent by him to the latter occasioned his recall in 1621. After 
the death of de Luynes Herbert resumed his post in February 
1622. He was very popular at the French court and showed 
considerable diplomatic ability, his chief objects being to 
accomplish the union between Charles and Henrietta Maria and 
secure the assistance of Louis XIII. for the unfortunate elector 
palatine. This latter advantage he could not obtain, and he 
was dismissed in April 1624. He returned home greatly in 
debt and received little reward for his services beyond the Irish 
peerage of Castle island in 1624 and the English barony of 
Cherbury, or Chirbury, on the 7th of May 1629. In 1632 he 
was appointed a member of the council of war. He attended 
the king at York in 1639, and in May 1642 was imprisoned by 
the parliament for urging the addition of the words " without 
cause " to the resolution that the king violated his oath by 
making war on parliament. He determined after this to take 
no further part in the struggle, retired to Montgomery Castle, 
and declined the king's summons. On the 5th of September 
1644 he surrendered the castle to the parliamentary forces, 
returned to London, submitted, and was granted a pension 
of £20 a week. In 1647 he paid a visit to Gassendi at Paris, 
and died in London on the 20th of August 1648, being buried 
in the church of St Giles's in the Fields. 



HERBERT OP LEA 



34? 



' Lord Herbert left tw6 sons, Richard (c. 1600-1655), who 
succeeded htm as and Lord Herbert of Cherbury, and Edward, 
the title becoming extinct in the person of Henry Herbert, the 
4th baron, grandson of the zst Lord Herbert in 1601. In 1604, 
however, it was revived in favour of Henry Herbert (1654-1 709), 
son of Sir Henry Herbert (1595-1673), brother ol the zst Lord 
Herbert of Cherbury. Sir Henry was master of the revels to 
Charles I. and Charles II., being busily employed in reading 
and licensing plays and in supervising all kinds of public enter- 
tainments. He died in April 1673; bis son Henry died in 
January 1709, when the tatter's son Henry became and Lord 
Herbert of Cherbury of the second creation. He died without 
issue in April 1738, and again the barony became extinct. In 
1743 it was revived for Henry Arthur Herbert (c. 1703-1772), 
who five years later was created earl of Powis. This nobleman 
was a great-grandson of the and Lord Herbart of Cherbury of 
the first creation, and since his time the barony has been held 
by the carls of Powis. 

Lord Herbert's cousin, Sir Edward Herbert (c. 1591-1657), 
was a member of parliament under James I. and Charles I. 
Having become attorney-general be was instructed by Charles 
to take proceedings against some members of parliament who 
had been concerned in the passing of the Grand Remonstrance; 
the only result, however, was Herbert's own impeachment by 
the House of Commons and his imprisonment. Later in life 
he was with the exiled royal family in Holland and in France, 
becoming lord keeper of the great seal to Charles II., an office 
which he bad refused in 1645. He died in Paris in December 
2657. One of Herbert's son was Arthur Herbert, earl of Torring- 
ton, and another was Sir Edward Herbert (c. 1648-1698), 
titular earl of Portland, who was made chief justice of the king's 
bench in 1685 in succession to Lord Jeffreys. It was Sir Edward 
who declared for the royal prerogative in the case of Godden v. 
Halts, asserting that the kings of England, being sovereign 
princes, could dispense with particular laws in particular cases. 
After the escape of James II. to France this king made Herbert 
his lord chancellor and created him earl of Portland, although 
he was a Protestant and had exhibited a certain amount of 
independence during 1687. 

The first Lord Herbert's real claim to fame and remembrance is 
derived from his writings. Herbert's first and most important work 
u the De verilaU proul distinguitur a revelatione, a verisimtii, a 
Ppssibiii, et a /also (Paris, 1624; London, 1633; translated into 
French 1639, but never into English: a MS. in add. MSS. 7081. 
Another, Sloane MSS. 3957, has the author's dedication to his brother 
George in his own hand, dated 162a). It combines a theory of 
knowledge with a partial psychology, a methodology for the investiga- 
tion of truth, and a scheme of natural religion. The author's 
method is prolix and often far from clear; the book is no compact 
system, but it contains the skeleton and much of the soul of a com- 
plete philosophy. Giving up all past theories as useless, Herbert 
professedly endeavours to constitute a new and true system. Truth, 
which he defines as a just conformation of the faculties with one 
another and with their objects, he distributed into four classes or 
stages: (1) truth in the thing or the truth <'' ' — '-' * ith 
of the appearance; (3) truth of the ap t); 

{4) truth of the intellect.' The faculties of th >us 

as the differences of their objects, and are a< le; 

bat they may be arranged in four groups. Tl tal 

and most certain group is the Natural Insti\ he 



Mtrol Ivfomu, the notuiae communis, whic 
origin and indisputable. The second group 
U the sensus internus (under which head He jst 

-others love, hate, fear, conscience with its nd 

free will); the third is the sensus exler is 

discursus, reasoning, to which, as being th* ive 

recourse when the other faculties fail. Th ies 

proceed by division and analysis, by qucsrit nd 

gradual in their movement; they take aid I es, 

those of the instinct us naluralis being always t's 

categories or questions to be used in investig >er 

whether (a thing is), what, of what sort, how >n, 

how, when, where, whence, wherefore. No U , . -„.„ .an 

err "even m dreams"; badly exercised, reasoning becomes the 
source of almost all our errors. The discussion of the hotittae com- 
munes is the most characteristic part of the book. The exposition 
of them, though highly dogmatic, is at times strikingly Kantian in 
substance. "So far are these elements or sacred principles from 
being derived from experience or observation that without some 
of them, or at least some one of them, we can neither experience 



religious views are throughout distinguished by the highest originality 
and provoked considerable controversy. His achievements in histori- 
cal writing are vastly inferior, and vitiated by personal aims and his 
preoccupation to gain the royal favour. Herbert's first historical 
work is the Expeditio Buckingham* dutis (published in a Latin 
translation in 1636 and in the original English by the earl of Powis 
for the Philobiblon Society in i860), a defence of Buckingham's 
conduct of the ill-fated expedition of 1627. The Life and Kaigne 
of King Henry VIII. (1649) derives its chief value from its com- 
position from original documents, but is ill-proportioned, and the 
author judges the character and statesmanship of Henry with too 
obvious a partiality. 

His poems, published in 166 
Collins in 1881). show him in 
obscure and uncouth. His si 
a few of his lyrical verses shoi 
tion, while his use of the met 
in his " In Memoriam " is p 
Latin poems are evidence of 
appeared together with the I 
works must be added 



(1768; 



A Ok 

a treatise on educatk 



treatise on the king's suprema 

Office and at Queen's College, „ „„.. _,..,. 

biography, first published by Horace Walpole in 1764, a naive and 
amusing narrative, too much occupied, however, with his duels and 
amorous adventures, to the exclusion of more creditable incidents 
in his career, such as his contributions to philosophy and history, 
his intimacy with Donne, Ben Jonson, Selden and Carew, Casaubon, 
Gassendi and Grot i us, or his embassy in France, in relation to which 
he only described the splendour of his retinue and his social triumphs. 



HERBERT OF LEA, SIDNEY HERBERT, ist Bason (1810- 
1861), English statesman, was the younger son of the nth earl 
of Pembroke. Educated at Harrow and Oriel, Oxford, be 
made a reputation at the Oxford Union as a speaker, and entered 
the House of Commons as Conservative member for a division 
of Wiltshire in 183 a. Under Peel he held minor offices, and in 
1845 was included in the cabinet as secretary at war, and again 
held this office in 1852-1855, being responsible for the War 
Office during the Crimean difficulties, and in 1859. It was 
Sidney Herbert who sent Florence Nightingale out to the Crimea, 
and he led the movement for War Office reform after the war, 



342 



HERBERTON-— HERCULANEUM 



the ban! work entailed causing his breakdown in health, so that 
in July i86x, having been created a baron, he had to resign office, 
and died on the 2nd of August 1861. His statue was placed 
in front of the War Office in Pall Mall. He was succeeded in the 
title by his eldest son, who later became 13th earl of Pembroke, 
and the barony is now merged in that earldom; his second son 
became 14th earl. Another son, the Hon. Michael Herbert 
(1857-1004), was British Ambassador at Washington in succes- 
sion to Lord Pauncefote. 

A life of Lord Herbert by Lord Stanmore was published in 1906. 

HERBERTON, a mining town of Cardwell county, Queensland, 
Australia, 55 m. S.W. of Cairns. Pop. (1001) 2806. Tin was 
discovered in the locality in 1879, and to this mineral the town 
chiefly owes its prosperity, though copper, bismuth and some 
silver and gold are also found. Atherton, 12 m. from the town, 
is served by rail from Cairns, which is the port for the Herberton 
district 

HERCULANEUM, an ancient city of Italy, situated about 
two-thirds of a mile from the Portici station of the railway from, 
Naples to Pompeii. The ruins are less frequently visited than 
those of Pompeii, not only because they are smaller in extent 
and of less obvious interest, but also because they are more 
difficult of access. The history of their discovery and explora- 
tion, and the artistic and literary relics which they have yielded, 
are worthy, however, of particular notice. The small part of 
the city, which was investigated at the spot called Cli scavi 
nuovi (the new excavations) was discovered in the 19th century. 
But the more important works were executed in the x8th century ; 
and of the buildings then explored at a great depth, by means of 
tunnels, none is visible except the theatre, the orchestra of 
which lies 85 ft. below the surface. 

The brief notices of the classical writers inform us that Hercu- 
laneum 1 was a small city of Campania between Neapolis and 
Pompeii, that it was situated between two streams at the foot 
of Vesuvius on a hill overlooking the sea, and that its harbour 
was at all seasons safe. With regard to its earlier history nothing 
is known. The account given by Dionysius repeats a tradition 
which was most natural for a city bearing the name of Hercules. 
Strabo follows up the topographical data with a few brief 
historical statements— "Oaten. eTxor ml raOrtjp xai rhv Itfwtf}* 
llottrrjlap . . . §tra Tvfitnpol koI U&aoyol, jierd raDra Samurai. 
But leaving the questions suggested by these names (see Etkubia, 
&c.), s as well as those which relate to the origin of Pompeii (?.«.), 
it is sufficient here to say that the first historical record about 
Herculaneum has been banded down by Livy (viii. 25), where he 
relates how the city fell under the power of Rome during the 
Samnite wars. It remained faithful to Rome for a long time, but 
it joined the Italian allies in the Social War. Having submitted 
anew in June of the year 665 (88 B.C.), it appears to have been less 
severely treated than Pompeii, and to have escaped the imposition 
of a colony of Sulla's veterans, although Zumpt has suspected 
the contrary {Comm. epigr. i. 259). It afterwards became a 
municipium, and enjoyed great prosperity towards the close of 
the republic and in the earlier times of the empire, since many 
noble families of Rome selected this pleasant spot for the con- 
struction of splendid villas, one of which indeed belonged to 
the imperial house( Seneca, De ira, fii.), and another to the 

1 A fragment of L. Sisenna calls it " Oppidum tumulo in excebo 
toco propter mare, parvis moenibus, inter duas fluvias, infra Vesuvium 
eoHocatum " (Kb. iv., fragm. 53, Peters). Of one of these riven this 
historian again makes mention in the passage where probably he 
related the capture of Herculaneum by Minatius Magiusand T. Didius 
(Velleius Paterculus ii. 16). Further topographical details are sup- 
plied by Strabo, who, after speaking abbot Naples, continues — 

f X0r, i*T+nnbumwp Atfil 8«Lvn*orSt StoO' fatAon}* Tout* n)e *o.Toudm». 
Dionysius of Halicarnassus relates that Heracles, in the place where 
he stopped with his fleet on the return voyage from Iberia, founded 
a little city (voXim*), to which he gave his own name: and he adds 
that this city was in his time inhabited by the Romans, and that, 
situated between Neaoolis and Pompeii, it had A*U»«« ** va»r2 



Kaipy fhfiatmn fi. 44). 

•See also Ntebuhr, 
untentdHschm Dialekte (1850]!, p. 314; 
OtcA Lingua, Pi lasgia ms , 



Hist of Rome, i. 76, and Mommsen, Die 
'~~ ; tor later discussions see 



family of CaJpurnius Piso. By means of the Via rampant it 
had easy communication north-westward with Neapolis, Puteott 
and Capua, and thence by the Via Appta with Rome; and 
southwards with Pompeii and Nuceria, and thence with Lucania 
and the Bruttii. In the year a.d. 63 it suffered terribly from 
the earthquake which, according to Seneca, " Canrpaniam 
nunquam securam huius mali, indemnem tamen, et toties 
defunctao metu magna strage vastavit. Nam et Herculanensis 
oppidi pars ruit dubieque stant etiam quae relicts sunt " (NaL 
quacst. vi. 1). Hardly had Herculaneum completed the restora- 
tion of some of its principal buildings (cf. Mommsen, IJf. n. 
2584; Catalogo del Museo National* di Napoli, n. 1151) when 
it fell beneath the great eruption of the year 79, described by 
Pliny the younger (Ep. vi. 16, 20), in which Pompeii also was 
destroyed, with other flourishing cities of Campania. According 
to the commonest account, on the 23rd of August of that year 
Pliny the elder, who bad command of the Roman fleet at Misenum, 
set out to render assistance to a young lady of noble family 
named Rectina and others dwelling on that coast, but, as there 
was no escape by sea, the little harbour having been on a sudden 
filled up so as to be inaccessible, he was obliged to abandon to their 
fate those people of Herculaneum who had managed to flee from 
their houses, overwhelmed in a moment by the material poured 
forth by Vesuvius. But the text of Pliny the younger, where 
this account is given, has been subjected to various interprets* 
tions; and from the comparison of other classical testimonies 
and the study of the excavations it has been concluded that it is 
impossible to determine the date of the catastrophe, though 
there are satisfactory arguments to justify the statement that 
the event took place in the autumn. The opinion that immedi- 
ately after the first outbreak of Vesuvius a torrent of lava 
was ejected over Herculaneum was refuted- by the scholars of 
the 1 8th century, and their refutation is confirmed by Benjt 
(Le Drome du Visuve, p. 240 seq.). And the last recensiona of 
the passage quoted from Pliny, aided by an inscription,' prove 
that Rectina cannot have been the name of the harbour described 
by Beule* (ib. pp. 122, 247), but the name of a lady who had 
implored succour, the wife of Caesius Bassus,or rather Tascius 
(cf. Pliny, ed. Keil, Leipzig, 1870; Aulus Persius, ed. Jahn, 
Sat. vi.). The shore, moreover, according to the accurate studies 
of the engineer Michele Ruggiero, director of the excavations, was 
not altered by the causes adduced by Beule* (p. 125), but by a 
simpler event. " It is certain," he says (Pompei e la rtgione 
sotterrala dal Vesuvio Vanno 79, Naples, 1879, p. 21 seq.), " that 
the districts between the south and west, and those between the 
south and east, were overwhelmed in two quite different ways. 
From Torre Annunziata (which is believed to be the site of the 
ancient Oplontii) to San Giovanni a Teduccio, for a distance of 
about 9 m., there flowed a muddy eruption which in Herculaneum 
and the neighbouring places, where it was most abundant, 
raised the level of the country more than 65 ft. The matter 
transported consisted of soil of various kinds— sand, ashes, 
fragments of lava, pozzolana and whitish pumice, enclosing 
grains of uncalcined lime, similar in every respect to those of 
Pompeii. In the part of Herculaneum already excavated the 
corridors in the upper portions of the theatre are compactly 
filled, up to the head of the arches, with pozzolana and pumice 
transformed into tufa (which proves that the formation of this 
stone may take place in a comparatively short time). Tufa is 
also found in the lowest part of the city towards the sea in front 
of the few houses that have been discovered; and in the very 
high banks that surround them, as also in the lowest part of the 
theatre, there are plainly to be seen earth, sand, ashes, fragments 

» C.I.L ii. No. 3866. This Spanish inscription refers to a Rectina 
who died at the age of 18 and was the wife of Voconius Romania*. 
It is quite possible that she was the Rectina whom Pliny the elder 
wished to assist during the disaster of Vesuvius, for her husband, 
Voconius Romanus, was an intimate friend of Pliny the younger. 
The latter addressed four letters to Voconius (i. 5, ii. lAiu 13, ix. 28), 
in another letter commended him to the emperor Trajan (x. 3), 
and in another (ii. 13) says of him: " Hunc ego cum sirmil studere* 

mus arte familiariterque dilexi; ille meus in urbe, ille in 1 

oontubernalisi cum hoc seria et jocos miacui." 



HERCULANEUM 



343 



of lara a 
always co 
to spot in 
congeries i 
those 5 n 
intervals 
arrested a 
been born 
which ma] 
choking u 
parts of tl 
which wal 
that enotif 
Thetorren 
or lagoon < 
ships appi 
made thei 
the fall of 
comparati 
laaeum, ai 
inscription 
/.AT.n.24« 
where the; 
(Suetomui 
primaria 
Herculane 
site of the 
in the cow 

101719. 
of the arm 
plaster for 
that there ' 
quarried ei 
course of y 
ia*7). In 
the works 
he received 
to begin ex 
king that tl 
that a tern 
proved that 
greatest coi 
them haste 
and the pai 
as the gove 
the monum 
Rome and ■ 
being collet 



: iearni 
abundant c 
and court* 
having bee 
Ercolanete, 
(Le PtUuri 
Hants itago 
prima, 17$ 
academiciai 
consequent! 
best schola 
Among tin 
notices of t 
visit on sei 
Symbolaett 
Dtscritumt 
Maffei. 7>< 
Theexcava 
1780). wen 
AJcubierre ( 
Rorro and 
Francesco 
last-named 
from that t 
and the rest 
in 1827. tli 
pended. no 
bestowed fa 
impeded by 
The meagr 
executed in 
unfortunate 
rise to the < 
by tunnels 



344 



HERCULANQ DE CARVALHO E ARAUJO 



villa, giving the plan, executed by Webe? and r ecovered by _. 

by the director of excavations, M/ichele Ruggiero. # This plan, which 
is here reproduced from de Petri l is the only satisfactory document 
for the topography of Herculaneum; for the plan of the theatre 
published in the ButUttino arekeologito italiano (Naples, iBdi, i. 
p. 53. tab. iii.) was executed in 1747, when the excavations were not 
completed. And even for the history of the " finds " made in the 
Villa Suburbana the necessity for further studies makes itself felt, 
since there is a lack of agreement between the accounts given by 
AJcubierre and Weber and those communicated to the PkUotopkieal 
Transactions (London, vol. x.) by CamiWo Pademi, conservator of 

th* Pnrtiri Milium. 

tY 

n 

<k 




(1810-1877), Portuguese historian, was born in Lisbon of humble 
stock, his grandfather having been a foreman stonemason in the 
royal employ. He received his early education, comprising 
Latin, logic and rhetoric, at the Necessidades Monastery, and 
spent a year at the Royal Marine Academy studying mathematics 
with the intention of entering on a commercial career. In 1828 
Portugal fell under the absolute rule of D. Miguel, and Herculano, 
becoming involved in the unsuccessful military pronuiuiam—l» 
of August 1831, had to leave Portugal clandestinely and take 
refuge in England and France. In 183a he accompanied the. 
Liberal expedition to Terceira as a volunteer, and was one of 
D. Pedro's famous army of 7500 men who landed at the Mindello 
and occupied Oporto. He took part in all the actions of the great 
siege, and at the same time served as a librarian in the city 
archives. He published his first volume of verses, A Vox di 
Prophet a, in 183a, and two years later another entitled A Harp* 
do Crente. Privation had made a man of him, and in these 
little books he proves himself a poet of deep feeling and consider- 
able power of expression. The stirring incidents in the political 
emancipation of Portugal inspired his muse, and he describes 
the bitterness of exile, the adventurous expedition to Terceira, 
the heroic defence of Oporto, and the final combats of liberty. 
In 1837 he founded the Panorama in imitation of the English 
Penny Magazine, and there and in lUusirafao be published the 
historical tales which were afterwards collected into Lend** e 
Narratives; in the same year he became royal librarian at the 
Ajuda Palace, which enabled him to continue his studies 
of the past. The Panorama had a large circulation and in- 
fluence, and Herculano's biographical sketches of great men 
and his articles of literary and historical criticism did much to 
educate the middle class by acquainting them with the story 
of their nation, and with the progress of knowledge and the 
state of letters in foreign- countries. On entering parliament 
in 1840 he resigned the editorship to devote himself to history, 
but he still remained its most important contributor. 

Up to the age of twenty-five Herculano had been a poet, but 
he then abandoned poetry to Garrett, and after several essays 
in that direction he definitely introduced the historical novel 
into Portugal in 1844 by a book written in imitation of Walter 
Scott. Eurico treats of the fall of the Visigothic monarchy 
and the beginnings of resistance in the Asturias which gave 

* The diagram shows the arrangement and proportions of the Villa 
Ercolanese. The dotted lines show the course taken by the excava- 
tions, which began at the lower part of the plan. 



HERCULES 



'345 



birth to the Christian kingdoms of the Peninsula, while the 
Uonge de Osier, published in 1848, describes the time of King 
John I., when the, middle class and the municipalities first 
asserted their power and elected a. king in opposition to the 
nobility. From an artistic standpoint, these stories are rather 
laboured productions, besides being ultra-romantic in tone; 
but it must be remembered that they were written mainly with 
an educational object, and, moreover, they deserve high praise 
for their style. Herculano had greater book learning than 
Scott, but lacked descriptive talent and skill in dialogue. His 
touch is heavy, and these novels show no dramatic power, which 
accounts for his failure as a playwright, but their influence was 
as great as their followers were many, and they still find readers. 
These and editions of two old chronicles, the Chronica de D. 
Sebastido (1839) and the Annaes dd rci D. Joio III (1844)1 
prepared Herculano for his life's work, and the year 1846 saw 
the first volume of his History of Portugal pom the Beginning 
of the Monarchy to tha end of the Reign of Affanso III., a book 
written on critical lines and based on documents. The difficulties 
be encountered in producing it were very great, for the founda- 
tions had been ill-prepared by his predecessors, and he was 
obliged to be artisan and architect at the some time. He had to 
collect MSS. from all parts of Portugal, decipher, classify and 
weigh them before he could begin work, and then he found it 
necessary to break with precedents and destroy traditions. 
Serious students in Portugal and abroad welcomed the book 
as an historical work of the first rank, for its evidence of careful 
research, its able marshalling of facts, its learning and its painful 
accuracy, while the sculptural simplicity of the style and the 
correctness of the diction have made it a Portuguese classic 
The first volume, however, gave rise to a celebrated controversy, 
because Herculano had reduced the famous battle of Ouriquc, 
which was supposed to have seen the birth of the Portuguese 
monarchy, to the dimensions of a mere skirmish, and denied the 
apparition of Christ to King Affoaso, a fable first circulated in 
the 15th century. Herculano was denounced from the pulpit 
and the press for his lack of patriotism and piety, and after 
hearing the attack for some time his pride drove him to reply. 
In a letter to the cardinal patriarch of Lisbon entitled En e 
Clcro (1850), he denounced the fanaticism and ignorance of the 
clergy in plain terms, and this provoked a fierce pamphlet war 
marked by much personal abuse. The professor of Arabic in 
Lisbon intervened to sustain the accepted view of the battle, 
and charged Herculano and his supporter Gayangos with 
ignorance of the Arab historians and of their language. The 
conduct of the controversy, which lasted some years, did credit 
to none of the contending parties, but Herculano 's statement 
of the facts is now universally accepted as correct. The second 
volume of his history appeared in 1847, the third in 1849 and the 
fourth in 1853. In his youth, the excesses of absolutism had 
made Herculano a Liberal, and the attacks on his history turned 
this man, full of sentiment and deep religious conviction, into an 
anti-clerical who began to distinguish between political Catho- 
licism and Christianity. His History of the Origin and Establish- 
ment of tite Inquisition (1854-1855), relating the thirty years* 
struggle between King John III. and the Jews— he to establish 
the tribunal and they to prevent him — was compiled, as the 
preface showed, to stem the Ultramontane reaction, but none 
the less carried weight because it was a recital of events with 
little or no comment or evidence of passion in its author. Next 
to these two books his study, Do Estado das classes servos na 
Peninsula desde o VII. att XII. scculo, is Hcrculano's most 
valuable contribution to history. In 1856 he began editing a 
series of Portugalliae monumenta historica, but personal differ- 
ences between him and the keeper of the Archive office, which 
he was forced to frequent, caused him to interrupt his historical 
studies, and on the death of his friend King Pedro V. he left the 
Ajuda and retired to a country house near Santarcm. 

Disillusioned with men and despairing of the future of his 
country, he spent the rest of his life devoted to agricultural 
pursuits, and rarely emerged from his retirement; when he 
did so t it was to fight political and religious reaction. Once he 



had defended the monastic orders, advocating their reform and 
not their suppression, supported the rural clergy and idealized 
the village priest in his Parocho da Aldeia, after the manner of 
Goldsmith in the Vicar of Wakefield. Unfortunately, however, 
the brilliant epoch of the alliance of Liberalism and Catholicism, 
represented on its literary side by Chateaubriand and byLamar- 
tine, to whose poetic school Herculano had belonged, was past, 
and fanatical attacks and the progress of events drove this 
former champion of the Church into conflict with the ecclesiastical 
authorities. His protest against the Concordat of the axst of 
February 1857 between Portugal and the Holy See, regulating 
the Portuguese Padroado m the East, his successful opposition 
to the entry of foreign religious orders, and his advocacy of civil 
marriage, were the chief landmarks in his battle with Ultra- 
montanism, and his Esludos sobre o Casamenlo Civil were put on 
the Index. Finally in 1871 he attacked the dogmas of the 
Immaculate Conception and papal infallibility, and. fell into 
line with the Old Catholics. In the domain of letters he remained 
until his death a veritable pontiff, and an article or book of his 
was an event celebrated from one end of Portugal to the other. 
The nation continued to look up to him for mental leadership, 
but, in his later years, lacking hope himself, he could not stimulate 
others or use to advantage the powers conferred upon him. In 
politics he remained a constitutional Liberal of the old type, 
and for him the people were the middle classes in opposition to 
the lower, which be saw to have been the supporters of tyranny 
in all ages, while he considered Radicalism to mean a return vis 
anarchy to absolutism. However, though he conducted a political 
propaganda in the newspaper press in his early days, Herculano 
never exercised much influence in politics. Grave as most of 
his writings are, they include a short description of a crossing 
from Jersey to Granville, in which he satirizes English character 
and customs, and reveals an unexpected sense of humour. 
A rare capacity for tedious work, a dour Catonian rectitude, a 
passion for truth, pride, irritability at criticism and independence 
of character, are the marks of Herculano as a man. He could 
be broken but never bent, and his rude frankness accorded 
with his hard, sombre face, and alienated men's sympathies 
though it did not lose him their respect. His lyrism is vigorous, 
feeling, austere and almost entirely subjective and personal, 
while his pamphlets are distinguished by energy of conviction, 
strength of affirmation, and contempt for weaker and more 
ignorant opponents. His History of Portugal is a great but 
incomplete monument. A lack of imagination and of the 
philosophic spirit prevented him from penetrating or drawing 
characters, but his analytical gift, joined to persevering toil 
and honesty of purpose enabled him to present a faithful account 
of ascertained facts and a satisfactory and lucid explanation 
of political and economic events. His remains lie in a majestic 
tomb in the Jeronymos at Belcm, near Lisbon, which was raised 
by public subscription to the greatest modern historian, of 
Portugal and of the Peninsula. His more important works have 
gone through many editions and bis name is still one to conjure 
with. 

Authorities. — Antonio de Scrpa Plmcntel, Alexandre Herculano 
e ten tempo (Lisbon, 1881); A. Romero Ortiz, La Lilteratura 
Portuguese en el agio XIX. (Madrid, 1869); Monk Barret o, RevisU 
de Portugal (July 1889). (E. PR.) 

HERCULES (O. Lat. H Creoles, Herclcs), the latinized form 
of the mythical Heracles, the chief national hero of Hellas. 
The name f HpaicXifrC'Hp«» and «X4w— glory) is explained as" re- 
nowned through Hera " (J«e. in consequence of her persecution) 
or •• the glory of Hera " i.e. of Argos. The thoroughly national 
character of Heracles is shown by his being the mythical ancestor 
of the Dorian dynastic tribe, while revered by Ionian Athens, 
Lelegian Opus and Aeolo-Phocnician Thebes, and closely 
associated with the Achaean heroes Peleus and Telamon. The 
Perseid Alcmena, wife of Amphitryon of Tiryns, was Hercules' 
mother, Zeus his father. After his father he is often called 
Amphitryoniades, and also Alcides, after the Perseid Alcacus, 
father of Amphitryon. His mother and her husband lived at 
Thebes in exile as guest* of King Creon. By the craft of Hera, 



34-6 



HERCULES 



his foe through life, his birth was dVlayedTand that of Eurystheus, 
son of Sthenelus of Argos, hastened, Zeus having in effect sworn 
that the elder of the two should rule the realm of Perseus. Hera 
sent two serpents to destory the new-born Hercules, but be 
strangled them. He was trained in all manly accomplishments 
by heroes of the highest renown in each, until in a transport 
of anger at a reprimand he slew Linus, his instructor in musk, 
with the lyre. Thereupon he was sent to tend Amphitryon's 
oxen, and at this period slew the lion of Mount Cithaeroa. By 
freeing Thebes from paying tribute to the Minyansof Orchomenus 
he won Creon's daughter, Megara, to wife. Her children by him 
he killed in a frenzy induced by Hera. After purification he 
was sent by the Pythia to serve Eurystbeui Thus began the 
cycle of the twelve labours.. 

1. Wrestling with the Nemean lion. 

2. Destruction of the Lernean hydra. 

3. Capture of the Arcadian hind (a stag in art). 

4. Capture of the boar of Erymanthus, while chasing which he 
fought the Centaurs and killed his friends Chiron and Pholus, this 
homicide leading to Demetcr's institution of mysteries 

5. Cleansing of the stables of Augeas. 

6. Shooting the Stymphalian birds. 

7. Capture of the Cretan bull subsequently slain by Theseus at 
Marathon. 

8. Capture of the man-eating mares of the Thracian Dtomedcs. 

9. Seizure of the girdle of Hippolyte, queen of the Amazons. 

10. Bringing the oxen of Geryoncs from Ervthia in the far west, 
which errand involved many adventures in the coast lands of the 
Mediterranean, and the setting up of the M Pillars of Hercules " at 
the Straits of Gibraltar. 

11. Bringing the golden apples from the garden of the Hesperides. 

12. Carrying Cerberus from Hades to the upper world. 

Most of the labours lead to various adventures called wAptprya. 
On Hercules' return to Thebes he gave his wife Megara to his 
friend and charioteer Iolaus, son of Iphicles, and by beating 
Eurytus of Oechalia and his sons in a shooting match won a 
claim to the hand of his daughter Iole, whose family, however, 
except her brother Ipbitus, withheld their consent to the union. 
Iphitus persuaded Hercules to search for Eurytus* lost oxen, 
but was killed by him at Tiryns in a frenzy. He consulted the 
Pythia about a cure for the consequent madness, but she declined 
to answer him. Whereupon he seized the oracular tripod, 
and so entered upon a contest with Apollo, which Zeus stopped 
by sending a flash of lightning between the combatants. The 
Pythia then sent him to serve the Lydian queen Omphale. He 
then, with Telamon, Peleus and Theseus, took Troy. He next 
helped the gods in the great battle against the giants. He 
destroyed sundry sea-monsters, set free the bound Prometheus, 
took part in the Argonautic voyage and the Calydonian boar 
hunt, made war against Augeas, and against Nestor and the 
Pylians, and restored Tyndareus to the sovereignty of Lacedae- 
mon. He sustained many single combats, one very famous 
struggle being the wrestling with the Libyan Antaeus, son of 
Poseidon and Ge (Earth), who had to be held in the air, as he 
grew stronger every time he touched his mother, Earth. 
Hercules withstood Ares, Poseidon and Hera, as well as Apollo. 
The close of his career is assigned to Aetolia and Trachis. He 
wrestles with Achelous for Deianeira (" destructive to husband "), 
daughter of Oeneus, king of Calydon, vanquishes the river 
god, and breaks off one of his horns, which as a born of plenty 
is found as an attribute of Hercules in art. Driven from Calydon 
for homicide, he goes with Deianeira to Trachis. On the way 
he slays the centaur Nessus, who persuades Deianeira that 
his blood is a love-charm. From Trachis he wages successful 
war against the Dryopes and Lapithae as ally of Aegimius, king 
of the Dorians, who promised him a third of his realm, and after 
bis death adopted Hyllus, his son by Deianeira. Finally Hercules 
attacks Eurytus, takes Oechalia and carries off lola. Thereupon 
Deianeira, prompted by love and jealousy, sends him a tunic 
dipped in the blood of Nessus, and the unsuspecting hero puts 
it on just before sacrificing at the headland of Cenaeum in 
Euboea. (So far the dithyramb of Bacchylides xv. [xvi.], 
agrees with Sophocles' Trackiniae as to the hero's end.) Mad 
with pain, he seizes Lichas, the messenger who had brought 
the fatal garment, and hurls him on the rocks; and than be 



wanders in agony to Mount Oeta, where be mounts a pyre, whkb, 
however, no one will kindle. At last Poeas, father of Phuoctetes, 
takes pity on him, and is rewarded with the gift of his bow and 
arrows. The immortal part of Hercules passe* to Olympus, 
where he is reconciled to Hera and weds her daughter Hebe. 
This account of the hero's principal labours, exploits and crimes 
is derived from the mythologists ApoUodorus and Dfodorus, 
who probably followed the Heradcia, by Pdsander of Rhodes 
as to the twelve labours or that of Panyasui of HalJcarnasanH, 
but sundry variations of order and incident are found in classical 
literature. 

In one aspect Hercules is clearly a sun-god, being identified, 
especially in Cyprus arid in Thasos (as Makar), with the Tyrten 
Melksrth. The third and twelfth labours may be solar, the horned 
hind representing the moon, and the carrying of Cerberus to the 
upper world an eclipse, while the last episode of the hero's tragedy 
is possibly a complete solar myth developed at Trachis. The 
winter sun is seen rising over the Cenaean promontory to tofl 
across to Mount Oeta and disappear over it in a bank of fiery 
cloud. But more important and less speculative is the hero's aspect 
as a national type or an amalgamation of tribal types of physical 
force, of dauntless effort and endurance, of militant civilization; 
and of Hellenic, enterprise, " stronger than everything except 
his own passions," and " at once above and below the noblest 
type of man " (Jebb). The fifth labour seems to symbolize 
some great improvement in the drainage of Elis. Strenuous 
devotion to the deliverance of mankind from dangers and 
pests is the " virtue " which, in Prodicus' famous apologue on 
the Choice of Hercules, the hero preferred to an easy and happy 
life. Ethically, Hercules symbolizes the attainment of glory 
and immortality by toil and suffering. 

The Old-Dorian Hercules is represented in three cycles of 
myth, the Argive, the Boeotian and the Thcssalian; the legends 
of Arcadia, Aetolia, Lydia, &c, and Italy are either local or 
symbolical and comparatively late. The fatality by which 
Hercules kills so many friends as well as foes recalls the destroying 
Apollo; while his career frequently illustrates the Delphic views 
on blood-guiltiness and expiation. As Apollo's champion 
Hercules is Daphnephoros, and fights Cycnus and Amyntor 
to keep open the sacred way from Tempe to Delphi As the 
Dorian tutelar he aids Tyndareus and Aegimius. As patron 
of maritime adventure (jrw<oirto*) he struggles with Nereus 
and Triton, slays Eryx and Busiris, and perhaps captures the 
wild horses and oxen, which may stand for pirates. As a god of 
athletes he is often a wrestler (*a\alna)v), and founds the Olympian 
games. In comedy and occasionally in myths he is depicted 
as voracious (fbwp&yas). He is also represented as the com- 
panion of Dionysus, especially in Asia Minor. The " Resting " 
(avarav6psu*x) Hercules is, as at Thermopylae and near Himera, 
the natural tutelar of hot springs in conjunction with his 
protectress Athena, who is usually depicted attending him oa 
ancient vases. The glorified Hercules was worshipped both 
as a god and a hero. In the Attic deme Melita he was invoked 
as £kc(t«cups (" Helper in ills "), at Olympia as xoXXfruos 
(" Nobly-victorious "), in the rustic worship of the Oetaeans 
as Koprorlup (k^wtw, "locusts"), by the Erythraeans of 
Ionia as tVo/rrowt (" Canker-worm-slayer "). He was otarlip 
(" Saviour "), i.e. a protector of voyagers, at Thasos and 
Smyrna. Games in his honour were held at Thebesand Marathon 
and annual festivals in every deme of Attica, in Sicyon and 
Agyrium (Sicily). His guardian goddess was Athena (Homer, 
//. viii. 638; Bacchylides v. 91 f.). In early poetry, as often 
in art, he is an archer, afterwards a dub-wiclder and fully- 
armed warrior. In early art the adult Hercules, is bearded, 
but not long-haired. Later he is sometimes youthful and beard- 
less, always with short curly hair and thick neck, the lower 
part of the brow prominent. A lion's skin is generally worn 
or carried. Lysippus worked out the finest type of sculptured 
Hercules, of which the Farnese by Glycon is a grand specimen. 
The infantine struggle with serpents was a favourite subject. 

Quite distinct was the Idaean Hercules, a Cretan Dactyl con- 
nected with the cult of Rhea or Cybete. The Greeks recognized 



HERCULES— HERDER 



3+7 



Hercules in an Egyptian deity Ckons and an Indian Dorsanea, 
not to mention personages of other mythologies. 

Hercules is supposed to have visited Italy on his return from 
Erythia, when he slew Cacus, son of Vulcan, the giant of the 
Avcntine mount of Rome, who had stolen his oxen. To this 
victory was assigned the founding of the Ara maxima by Evander. 
His worship, introduced from the Greek colonies in Etruria 
and in the south of Italy, seems to have been established in Rome 
from the earliest times, as two old Patrician genles were associated 
with his cult and the Fabii claimed him as their ancestor. The 
tithes vowed to him by Romans and men of Sora and Reatc, 
for safety on journeys and voyages, furnished sacrifices and (in 
Rome) public entertainment (poUuelum). Tibur was a special 
seat of his cult. In Rome he was patron of gladiators, as of 
athletes in Greece.- ' With respect to the Roman relations of 
the hero, it is manifest that the native myths of Recaranus, 
or Sancus, or Dius Fidius, were transferred to the Hellenic 
Hercules. (C. A; M. FJ 

See L. Preiler, Grieckische Mytholope (4th ed., Berlin, 1900); 
W. H. Roschcr, A usfuhrliches Lexikon der griechischen und rdmischen 
Mrlhahgie (1884); Sir R. C. lebb, Trachimae of Sophocles (lntrod.), 
(1892); Ch. Daretnberg and E. Saglio, Dictionnaire des antifuith 
greeques et romaines; Brdal, Hercule et Cacus, 1863; J* G. Winter, 
Myth of Hermits at Rom* (New York, 1910). 

In the article Greek Art, fig. 16 represents Heracles wrestling 
with the river-god Achclous; fig. 20 (from a small pediment, possibly 
of a shrine of the hero) the slaying of the Hydra; fijj. 35 Heracles 
holding up the sky on a cushion. 

Hercules was a favourite figure in '.French medieval literature. 
In the romance of Alexander the tent of the hero is decorated with 



\es 
rill 
7h 
>ze 
dc 
ch 
he 
he 

HERCULES, in astronomy, a constellation of the northern 
hemisphere, mentioned by Eudoxus (4th century B.C.) and 
Aratus (3rd century B.C.) and catalogued by Ptolemy (29 stars) 
and Tycho Brahe (28 stars). Represented by a man kneeling, 
this constellation was first known as " the man on his knees," 
and was afterwards called Cethcus, Theseus and Hercules 
by the ancient Greeks. Interesting objects in this constellation 
are: a Her cutis, a fine coloured double star, composed of an 
orange star of magnitude 2 J, and a blue star of magnitude 6; 
f Herculis, a binary star, discovered by Sir William Herschel 
in 1782; one component is a yellow star of the third magnitude, 
the other a bluish, which appears to vary from red to blue, of 
magnitude 6; g and u Herculis, irregularly variable stars; 
and the cluster U. 13 Herculis, the finest globular cluster in the 
northern hemisphere, containing at least 5000 stars and of the 
1000 determined only 2 are variable. 

HERD (a word common to Teutonic languages; the O. Eng. 
form was heard; cf. Ger. Hcrde, Swed. and Dan. hjord; the 
Sans, cardhas, which shows the prc-Teutonic form, means 
a troop), a number of animals of one kind driven or fed together, 
usually applied to cattle as "flock " is to sheep, but used also 
of whales, porpoises, &c, and of birds, as swans, cranes and 
curlews. A "herd-book" is a book containing the pedigree 
and other information of any breed of cattle or pigs, like the 
" flock-book " for sheep or " stud-book " for' horses.- Formerly 
the word " herdwick " was applied to. the pasture ground, under 
the care of a shepherd, and it is now used of a special hardy 
breed of sheep in Cumberland and Westmorland. The word 
" herd " is also applied in a disparaging sense to a company- of 
people, a mob or rabble, as " the vulgar herd." As the name 
for a keeper of a herd or flock of domestic animals, the herdsman, 
it Is usually qualified to denote the kind of animal under his 



protection, as swine-herd, shepherd, &c, but in Ireland, Scotland 
and the north of England, " herd " alone is commonly used. 

HERDER, JOHANN GOTTFRIED VON (1 744-1803), one of 
the most prolific and influential writers that Germany has pro- 
duced, was born in Mohrungen, a small town in East Prussia, 
on the 25th of August 1744. Like his contemporary Lessing, 
Herder had throughout his life to struggle against adverse 
circumstances. His father was poor, having to put together a 
subsistence by uniting the humble offices of sexton, choir-singer 
and petty schoolmaster. After receiving some rudimentary 
, instruction from his father, the boy was sent to the grammar 
school of his native town. The mode of discipline practised 
by the pedantic and irritable old man who stood at the head of 
this institution was not at all to the young student's liking, 
and the impression made upon him stimulated him later on to 
work out his projects of school reform. The hardships of his 
early years drove him to introspection and to solitary communion 
with nature, and thus favoured a more than proportionate 
development of the sentimental and poetic side of his mind. 
When quite young he expressed a wish to become a minister 
of the gospel, but his aspirations were discouraged by. the 
local clergyman. In 1762, at the age of eighteen, he went up 
to Kdnigsberg with the intention of studying medicine, but 
finding himself unequal to the operations of the dissecting-room, 
he abandoned this object, and, by the help of one or two friends 
and his own self-supporting labours, followed out his earlier 
idea of the clerical profession by joining the university. There 
he came under the influence of Kant, who was just then passing 
from physical to metaphysical problems. Without becoming 
a disciple of Kant, young Herder was deeply stimulated to fresh 
critical inquiry by that thinker's revolutionary ideas in pbilo? 
sopfay. To Kant's lectures and conversations he further owed 
something of his large interest in cosmological and anthropolo- 
gical problems. Among the writers whom he most carefully read 
were Plato, Hume, Shaftesbury, Leibnitz, Diderot and Rousseau* 
Another personal influence under which he fell at Kdnigsberg, 
and which was destined to be far more permanent, was that of 
J. G. Hamann, " the northern Mage." This writer had already 
won a name, and in young Herder he found a mind well fitted 
to be the receptacle and vehicle of his new ideas on literature. 
From this vague, incoherent, yet gifted writer our author acquired 
some of his strong feeling for the naive clement in poetry, and for 
the earliest developments of national literature. .Even before 
he went to Konigsberg he had begun to compose verses, and at 
the age of twenty he took up the pen as a chief occupation* 
His first published writings were occasional poems and reviews 
contributed to the K&rigsbergiscke Zeiiung. Soon after this he 
got an appointment at Riga, as assistant master at the cathedral 
school, and a lew years later, became assistant pastor. In 
this busy commercial town, in somewhat improved pecuniary 
and social circumstances, he developed the main ideas 
of his writings. In the year 1767 he published his first 
considerable work Fragment* Uber die neuere daUsche Uieraiur, 
which at once made him widely known and secured for him the 
favourable interest of Lessing. From this time he continued 
to. pour forth a number of critical writings on literature, art; &c. 
His bold ideas on these subjects, which were a great advance 
even on Lessing's doctrines, naturally excited hostile criticism, 
and in consequence of this opposition, which took the form of 
aspersions on his religious orthodoxy, he resolved to leave 
Riga. He was much carried away at this time by the idea of 
a radical reform of social life in Livonia, .which (after the example 
of Rousseau) he thought to effect by means of a better method 
of school-training. With this plan in view he began (1700) a 
tour through France, England, Holland, &c., for the purpose of 
collecting information respecting their systems of education. 
It wa« during the solitude of his voyage to France, when on deck 
at night, that he first shaped his idea of the genesis of primitive 
poetry, and of the gradual evolution of humanity. Having 
received an offer of an appointment as travelling tutor and chap- 
lain to the young prince of Eutin-Holstein, he abandoned his 
somewhat visionary scheme of a social reconstruction of a 



3+8 



HERDER 



Russian province. He has, however, left a curious sketch of 
his projected school reforms. His new duties led him to S trass- 
burg, where he met the young Goethe, on whose poetical develop- 
ment he exercised so potent an influence. At Darmstadt he 
made the acquaintance of Caroline Flachsland, to whom he soon 
became betrothed, and who for the rest of his life supplied him 
with that abundance of consolatory sympathy which his sensitive 
and rather querulous nature appeared to require. The engage- 
ment as tutor did not prove an agreeable one, and he soon threw 
H up (1771) in favour of an appointment as court preacher 
and member of the consistory at Btickcburg. Here he had to 
encounter bitter opposition from the orthodox clergy and their 
followers, among whom be was regarded as a freethinker. His 
health continued poor, and a fistula in the eye, from which he 
had suffered from early childhood, and to cure which he had 
undergone a number of painful operations, continued to trouble 
him. Further, pecuniary difficulties, from which he never 
long managed to keep himself free, by delaying his marriage, 
added to his depression. Notwithstanding these trying circum- 
stances he resumed literary work, which his travels had inter- 
rupted. For some time he had been greatly interested by the 
poetry of the north, more particularly Percy's Rdiquts, the 
poems of " Ossian" (in the genuineness of which he like many 
others believed) and the works of Shakespeare. Under the 
influence of this reading he now finally broke with classicism 
and became one of the leaders of the new Sturm und Drang 
movement. He co-operated with a band of young writers at 
Darmstadt and Frankfort, including Goethe, who in a journal 
Of their own sought to diffuse the new ideas. His marriage took 
place in 1773. In 1776 he obtained through Goethe's influence 
the post of general superintendent and court preacher at Weimar, 
where he passed t he rest of his life. There he-enjoyed the society 
of* Goethe, Wieland, Jean Paul (who came to Weimar in order 
to be near Herder), and others, the patronage of the court, with 
whom as a preacher he was very popular, and an opportunity 
of carrying out some of his ideas of school reform. Yet the social 
atmosphere of the place did not suit him. His personal relations 
with Goethe again and again became embittered. This, added 
to ill-health, served to intensify a natural irritability of tempera- 
ment, and the history of his later Weimar days is a rather 
dreary page in the chronicles of literary life. He had valued 
more than anything else a teacher's influence over other minds, 
and as he began to feel that he was losing it he grew jealous of 
the success of those who had outgrown this influence. Yet 
while presenting these unlovely traits, Herder's character was 
on the whole a worthy and attractive one. This seems to be 
sufficiently attested by the fact that he was greatly liked and 
esteemed, not only in the pulpit but in private intercourse, 
by cultivated women like the countess of Buckeburg, the duchess 
of Weimar and Frau von Stein, and, what perhaps is more, 
was exceedingly popular among the gymnasium pupils, in whose 
education he took so lively an interest. While much that Herder 
produced after settling in Weimar has little value, he wrote 
also some of his best works, among others hiscoUection of popular 
poetry on which he had been engaged for many years, Stimmen 
der Voiktr in Licdern (1778-1770); his translation of the Spanish 
romances of the Cid (1805); his celebrated work on Hebrew 
poetry, Vom Gcist der hcbr&iscltcn Poesie (1782-1783); and his 
opns magnum, the Idem zur Philosophic der Geschichte der 
ifemchhcil ( 1 784-1 791). Towards the close of his life he occupied 
himself, like Leasing, with speculative questions in philosophy 
and theology. The boldness of some of his ideas cost him some 
valuable friendships, as that of Jacobi, Lavater and even of 
his early teacher Hamann. He died on the 18th of December 
1803, full of new literary plans upto the very last. 

Herder's writings were for a long lime regarded as of temporary 
value only, and fell into neglect. Recent criticism, however, 
has tended very much to raise their value by tracing out their 
wide and far-reaching influence. His works are very voluminous, 
and to a large extent fragmentary and devoid of artistic finish; 
nevertheless they are nearly always worth investigating for the 
brilliant suggestions in which they abound. . His place in German 



literature has already been Indicated in tracing his mental 
development. Like Lessing, whose work he immediately 
continued, he was a pioneer of the golden age erf this literature. 
Lessing had given the first impetus to the formation of a national 
literature by exposing the folly of the current imitation of 
French writers. But in doing this be did not so much call bis 
fellow-countrymen to develop freely their own national senti- 
ments and ideas as send them back to classical example and 
principle. Lessing was the exponent of German classicism; 
Herder, on the contrary, was a pioneer of the romantic movement. 
He fought against all imitation as such, and bade German 
writers be true to themselves and their national antecedents. 
As a sort of theoretic basis for this adhesion to national type 
in literature, he conceived the idea that literature and art, 
together with language and national culture as a whole, are 
evolved by a natural process, and that the intellectual and 
emotional life of each people is correlated with peculiarities of 
physical temperament and of material environment. In this 
way he became the originator of that genetic or historical 
method which has since been applied to all human ideas and 
institutions. Herder was thus an evolutionist, but an evolutionist 
still under the influence of Rousseau. That is to say, in tracing 
back the later acquisitions of civilization to impulses which are 
as old as the dawn of primitive culture, he did not, as the modern 
evolutionist does, lay stress on the superiority of the later to 
the earlier stages of human development, but rather became 
enamoured of the simplicity and spontaneity of those early 
impulses which, since they are the oldest, easily come to look 
like the most real and precious. Yet even in this way he helped 
to found the historical school in literature and science, for it was 
only after an excessive and sentimental interest in primitive 
human culture had been awakened that this subject would 
receive the amount of attention which was requisite for the 
genetic explanation of later developments. This historical idea 
was carried by Herder into the regions of poetry, art, religion, 
language, and finally into human culture as a whole. It colours 
all his writings, and is Intimately connected with some of the 
most characteristic attributes of his mind, a quick sympathetic 
imagination, a fine feeling for local differences, and a scientific 
instinct for seizing the sequences oicause and effect. 

Herder's works may- be arranged in an ascending series, corre- 
sponding to the way in which the genetic or historical idea was 
developed and extended. First come the works on poetic literature, 
art, language and religion as special regions of development. 
Secondly, we have in the Ideen a general account of the process of 
human evolution. Thirdly, there are a number of writings which, 
though inferior in interest to the others, may be said to supply the 
philosophic basis of his leading ideas. 

1. In the region of poetry Herder sought to persuade his country- 
men, both by example and precept, to return to a natural and 

Biontanepus form of utterance. His own poetry has but little value; 
erder was a skilful verse-maker but hardly a creative poet. He 
was most successful in his translation of popular song, in which he 
shows a rare sympathetic insight into the various feelings and ideas 
of peoples as unlike as Green landers and Spaniards, Indians and 
Scots. In the Fragment* he aims at nationalizing German poetry 
and freeing it from all extraneous influence. He ridicules the ambi- 
tion of GiTman writers to be classic, as Lessing had ridiculed their 
eagerness to be French. He looked at poetry as a kind of " proteus 
among the people, which changes its form according to language, 
manners, habits, according to temperament and climate, nay, even 
according to the accent of different nations. This fact of the 
idiosyncrasy of national poetry he illustrated with great fulness and 
richness in the case of Homer, the nature of whose works he was one 
of the first to elucidate, the Hebrew poets, and the poetry of the 
north as typified in " Ossian." This same idea of necessary relation 
to national character and circumstance is also applied to dramatic 
poetry, and more especially to Shakespeare. Lessing had done much 
to make Shakespeare known to Germany, but he had regarded hia 
in contrast to the French dramatists with whom he also contrasted 
the Greek dramatic poets, and accordingly did not bring out his 
essentially modern and Teutonic character. Herder does this, and 
in doing so shows a far deeper understanding of Shakespeare's 
genius than his predecessor had shown. 

2. The views 00 art contained in Herder's Kritische Wdlder (1769). 
Plastik (1778), &c. are chiefly valuable as a correction of the excesses 
into which reverence for Greek art had betrayed Winckelmann and 
Lessing. by help of his fundamental idea of national idiosyncrasy. 
He argues against the setting up of classic art as an unchanging type, 



HEREDIA 349 



wHd for «B peoples and all times. He was one of the fin 
light the characteristic excellences of Gothic art. Beyi 
eloquently pleaded the cause of painting as a distinct 
Leasing in his desire to mark off the formative arts from 
music had confounded with sculpture. He regarded thi 
of the eye, while sculpture was rather the art of the org] 
Painting being less real than sculpture, because lacktn 
dimension of space, and a kind of dream, admitted of re 
freedom of treatment than this last. Herder had a genuii 
tion for early German painters, and helped to awaken 
interest in Aibrecht Durer. 

3- By his work on language Ober den Ursprung dtr Spr 
Herder may be said to nave laid the first rude founaai 
science of comparative philology and that deeper science 
mate nature and origin of language. It was specialty diret 
the supposition of a divine communication of languai 
Its main argument is that speech is a necessary outcc 
special arrangement of mental forces which distinguishc 
more particularly from his habits of reflection. " if," r 
" it is incomprehensible to others how a human mind c 
language, it is as incomprehensible to me how a human 
be what it is without discovering language for itself," 
does not make that use of the fact of man s superior orgj 
ments which one might expect from his general conccp 
relation of the physical and the mental in human developi 

4. Herder's services in laying the foundations of a c 
science of religion and mythology are even of greater val 
somewhat crude philological speculations. In opposit 
general spirit of the 18th century he saw, by means of 
sense, the naturalness of religion, its relation to man's 
impulses. Thus with respect to early religious beliefs 
Hume's notion that religion sprang out of the fears 
men, in favour of the theory that it represents the first i 
our species to explain phenomena. He thus intimately 
religion with mythology and primitive poetry. As to lat 
religion, he appears to have held that they owe their vital 
embodiment of the deep-seated moral feelings of ou 
humanity. His high appreciation of Christianity, whic 
with the contemptuous estimate of the contemporary r 
rested on a firm belief in its essential humanity, to whic 
not to conscious deception, he attributes its success. Hi* 
of this -religion in. his sermons and writings was simply *< 
of its moral side. 1 n his later life, as we shall presently se 
his way to a speculative basis for his religious beliefs. 

5. Herder's masterpiece, the Ideen tur Philosophic der 
has the ambitious aim of explaining the whole of human dt 
in dose connexion with the nature of man's physical en 
Man is viewed as a part of nature, and all his widely diffi 
of development as strictly natural processes. It thus star 
contrast to the anthropology of Kant, which opposes hunv 
ment conceived as the gradual manifestation of a grow 
of rational free will to the operations of physical natur 
defines human history as " a pure natural history of hum 
actions and propensities, modified by time and place." 
shows us that Herder is an evolutionist after the manner < 
and not after that of more modern evolutionists. The I 
of life prefigure man in unequal degrees of imperfection; 
for his sake, but they are not regarded as representing 
antecedent conditions of human existence. The genetic 
applied to varieties of man, not to man as a whole. I 
noting, however, that Herder in his provokingly tentat 
thinking comes now and again very near ideas made famili 
Spencer and Darwin. Thus in a passage in book xv. chaj 
unmistakably foreshadows Darwin's idea of a struggle foi 
we read: "Among millions of creatures whatever coul 
itself abides, and still after the lapse of thousands of yet 
in the great harmonious order. Wild animals and tame, c 
and graminivorous, insects, birds, fishes and man arc adap 
other." With this may be compared a passage in the t/i 
Sprache, where there Is a curious adumbration of Spencer 
intelligence, as distinguished from instinct, arises from 
complexity of action, or, to use Herder's words, from the s 
of a more for a less contracted sphere. Herder is mom 
in tracing the early developments of particular peoples tl 
structing a scientific theory of evolution. Here he may be s 
laid the foundations of the science of primitive culture i 
His account of the first dawnings of culture, and of the rud 
civilizations, is marked by genuine insight. On the othe 
development of classic culture is traced with a less sk 
Altogether this work is rich in suggestion to the philosophi 
and the anthropologist, though marked by much vaguer 
ception and hastiness of generalization. t ■ ■■ 

6. Of Herder's properly metaphysical speculations littl 
be said. He was too much under the sway of {ccUur an 
imagination to be capable of great things in abstract thoc 
generally admitted that he had no accurate knowledge 
Spinoza, whose monism he advocated, or of Kant, whi 
philosophy he so fiercely attacked. Herder's Spinozisrr 
set forth in his little work. Vom JLrkenntn und Emf, 
mcnuhluktn SetU (1778}, is much less logically conct 



35<> 



HEREDIA Y CAMPUZANO— HEREDITY 



characteristic scene in man's long history. The verse is flawless, 
polished like a gem; and its sound has distinction and fine 
harmony. If one may suggest a fault, it is that each picture 
is sometimes too much of a picture only, and that the poetical 
line, like that of M. de Heredia's master, Leconte de Lisle 
himself, is occasionally overcrowded. M. de Heredia was none 
the less one of the most skilful craftsmen who ever practised 
the art of verse. In 1901 he became librarian of the BibUotheque 
de 1' Arsenal at Paris. He died at the Chateau de Bourdonnt 
(Seine-et-Oise) on the 3rd of October 1005, having completed 
his critical edition of Andre* Chenier's works. 

HEREDIA Y CAMPUZANO, Jdsft MARIA (1803-1839), 
Cuban poet, was born at Santiago de Cuba on the 31st of 
December 1803, studied at the university of Havana, and was 
called to the bar in 1823. In the autumn of 1823 he was arrested 
on a charge of conspiracy against the Spanish government, and 
was sentenced to banishment for life. He took refuge in the 
United States, published a volume of verses at New York in 
1825, and then went to Mexico, where, becoming naturalized, he 
obtained a post as magistrate. In 1832 a collection of his poems 
was issued at Toluca, and in 1836 he obtained permission to visit 
Cuba for two months. Disappointed in his political ambitions, 
and broken in health, Heredia returned to Mexico in January 
1837, and died at Toluea on the axst of May 1830. Many of his 
earlier pieces are merely dever translations from French, English 
and Italian; but his originality is placed beyond doubt by such 
poems as the Himno del dtslcrrado, the epistle to Emilia, Desen- 
gahos, and the celebrated ode to Niagara. Bello may be thought 
to excel Heredia in execution, and a few lines of Olmedo's Canto 
& Junin vibrate with a virile passion to which the Cuban poet 
rarely attained; but the sincerity of his patriotism and the 
sublimity of his imagination have secured for Heredia a real 
supremacy among Spanish-American poets. 

The best edition of his works is that published at Paris in 1893 
with a preface by Elias Zerolo. 

HEREDITAMENT (from Lat. hereditary to inherit, kens, 
heir), in law, every kind of property that can be inherited. 
Hereditaments are divided into corporeal and incorporeal; 
corporeal hereditaments are " such as affect the senses, and may 
be seen and handled by the .body; incorporeal are not the 
subject of sensation, can neither be seen nor handled, are creatures 
of the mind, and exist only in contemplation " (Blackstone, 
Commentaries). An example of a corporeal hereditament is land 
held in freehold, of incorporeal herdHaments, tithes, advowsons, 
pensions, annuities, rents, franchises, &c* It is still used in the 
phrase " lands, tenements and hereditaments " to describe 
property in land, as distinguished from goods and chattels or 
movable property. 

HEREDITY, in biological science, the name given to the 
generalization, drawn from the observed facts, that animals 
and plants closely resemble their progenitors. (That the 
resemblance is not complete involves in the first place the 
subject of variation (see Variation and Selection); but it 
must be clearly stated that there is no adequate ground for the 
current loose statements as to the existence of opposing " laws " 
or " forces " of heredity and variation.) In the simplest cases 
there seems to be no separate problem of heredity. When a 
creeping plant propagates itself by runners, when a 'Nais or 
Myrianido, breaks up into a series of similar segments, each of 
which becomes a worm like the parent, we have to do with the 
general fact that growing organisms tend to display a symmetrical 
repetition of equivalent parts, and that reproduction by fission 
is simply a special case of metamerism. When we try to answer 
the question why the segments of an organism resemble one 
another, whether they remain in association to form a segmented 
animal, or break into different animals, we came to the conclusion, 
which at least is on the way to an answer, that it is because they 
are formed from pieces of the same protoplasm, growing under 
similar conditions. It is apparently a fundamental property 
of protoplasm to be able to multiply by division into parts, 
the properties of which are similar to each other and to those 
of the parent. 



This leads us directly to the cases of reproduction where there* 
is an obvious problem of heredity. In the majority of cases 
among animals and plants the new organisms arise from portions 
of living matter, separated from the parents, but different from 
the parents in size and structure. These germs of the new 
organisms may be spores, reproductive cells, fused reproductive 
cells or multicellular masses (see Reproduction). For the 
present purpose it is enough to state that they consist of portions 
of the parental protoplasm. These pass through an embryo- 
logical history, In which by growth, multiplication and specializa- 
tion they form structures closely resembling the parents. Now, 
if it could be shown that these reproductive masses arose directly 
from the reproductive masses which formed the parent body, 
the problems of heredity would be extremely simplified. If the 
first division of a reproductive cell set apart one mass to lie 
dormant for a time and ultimately to form the reproductive 
cells of the new generation, while the other mass, exactly of the 
same kind, developed directly into the new organism, then 
heredity would Simply be a delayed case of what is called organic 
symmetry, the tendency of similar living material to develop 
in similar ways under the stimulus of similar external conditions. 
The cases in which this happens are very rare. In the Diptera 
the first division of the egg-ceil separates the nuclear material 
of the subsequent reproductive cells from the material that is 
elaborated into the new organism to contain these cells. In the 
Daphmdae and in Sagitta a similar separation occurs at slightly 
later stages; in vertebrates it occurs much later; while in some 
hydroids the germ-cells do not arise in the individual which Is 
developed from the egg-cell at all, but in a much later generation, 
which is produced from the first by budding. However, it is not 
necessary to dismiss the fertile idea of what Moritz Nussbatrm 
and August Weismann, who drew attention to it, called '* con- 
tinuity of the germ-plasm. 1 ' Weismann has shown that an 
actual series of organic forms might be drawn up in which the 
formation of germ-cells begins at stages successively more remote 
from the first division of the egg-cell. He has also shown 
evidence, singularly complete in the case of the hydroids, for 
the existence of an actual migration of the place of formation 
of the germ-cells, the migration reaching farther and farther 
from the egg-cell. He has elaborated the conception of the 
germ-track, a chain of cell generations in the development 
of any creature along which the reproductive material saved 
over from the development of one generation for the germ-cells 
of the next generation is handed on in a latent condition to its 
ultimate position. And thus he supposes a real continuity of 
the germ-plasm, extending from generation to generation in 
spite of the apparent discontinuity in the observed cases. The 
conception certainly ranks among the most luminous and most 
fertile contributions of the 19th century to biological thought, 
and it is necessary to examine at greater length the superstructure 
which Weismann has raised upon it. 

Weismann' s Theory of the Germ-plasm. — A living being takes 
its individual origin only where there is separated from the stock 
of the parent a little piece of the peculiar reproductive plasm, 
the so-called germ-plasm. In sexless reproduction one parent 
is enough; in sexual reproduction equivalent masses of germ* 
plasm from each parent combine to form the new individual. 
The germ-plasm resides in the nucleus of cells, and Weismann 
identifies it with the nuclear material named chromatin. Like 
ordinary protoplasm, of which the bulk of cell bodies is composed, 
germ-plasm is a living material, capable of growing in bulk, 
without alteration of structure when it is supplied with appro- 
priate food. But it is a living material much more complex 
than protoplasm. In the first place, the mass of germ-plasm 
which is the starting-point of a new individual consists of several, 
sometimes of many, pieces named " idants," which are either 
the chromosomes Into a definite number of which the nuclear 
material of a dividing cell breaks up, or possibly smaller units 
named chromomeres. These idants are a collection of " ids," 
which Weismann tentatively identifies with the microsomata 
contained in the chromosomes, which are visible after treatment 
with certain reagents. Each id contains all the possibilities— 



HEREDITY 



35« 



ftneric, specific, individual-- of ft new onanism, or rather 
the directing substance which in appropriate surroundings of 
food, &c, forms a new organism. Each id is a veritable micro- 
cosnit possessed of an historic architecture that has been elaborated 
slowly through the multitudinous series of generations that 
stretch backwards in time from every Irving individual. This 
microcosm, again, consists of ft number of minor vital units 
called M determinants/' which cohere according to the architec- 
ture of the whole id. The determinants are hypothetical units 
corresponding to the number of parts of the organism inde- 
pendently variable. Lastly, each determinant consists of a 
number of small hypothetical units, the " biopborcs." These 
are adaptations of a conception of H. de Vries, and are supposed 
to become active by leaving the nucleus of the cell in which they 
lie, passing out into the general protoplasm of the cell and ruling 
its activities. Each new individual begins life as a nucleated 
cell, the nucleus of which contains germ-plasm of this complex 
structure derived from the parent. The reproductive cell gives 
rise to the new individual by continued absorption of food, by 
growth, cell-divisions and cell -specializations. The theory 
supposes that the first divisions of the nucleus are " doubling," 
or homogeneous divisions. The germ-plasm has grown in 
bulk without altering its character in any respect, and, when it 
divides, each resulting mass is precisely alike. From these 
first divisions a chain of similar doubling divisions stretches 
along the " germ-tracks," so marshalling unaltered germ-plasm 
to the generative organs of the new individual, to be ready to 
form the germ-cells of the next generation. In this mode the 
continuity of the germ-plasm from individual to individual is 
maintained. This also is the intmortality of the germ-cells, 
or rather of the germ-plasm, the part of the theory which has 
laid so large a hold on the popular imagination, although it is 
really no more than a reassertion in new terms of biogenesis. 
With this also is connected the celebrated denial of the inheritance 
of acquired characters. It seemed a clear inference that, if the 
hereditary mass for the daughters were separated off from the 
hereditary mass that was to form the mother, at the very first, 
before the body of the mother was formed, the daughters were 
in all essentials the sisters of their mother, and could take from 
her nothing of any characters that might be impressed on her 
body in subsequent development. In the later elaboration of his 
theory Weisraann has admitted the possibility of some direct 
modification of the germ-plasm within the body of the individual 
acting as its host. 

Hie mass of germ-plasm which is not retained in unaltered 
form to provide for the generative cells is supposed to be employed 
for the elaboration of the individual body. It grows, dividing 
and multiplying, and forms the nuclear matter of the tissues of 
the individual, but the theory supposes this process to occur in 
a peculiar fashion. The nuclear divisions are what Wcismann 
calls "differentiating" or heterogeneous divisions. In them 
the microcosms of the germ-plasm are not doubled, but slowly 
disintegrated in accordance with the historical architecture 
of the plasm, each division differentiating among the determinants 
and marshalling one set into one portion, another into another 
portion. There are differences in the observed facts of nuclear 
division which tend to support the theoretical possibility of two 
sorts of division, but as yet these have not been correlated 
definitely with the divisions along the germ-tracks and the 
ordinary divisions of embryological organogeny. The theoretical 
conception is, that when the whole body is formed, the cells 
contain only their own kind of determinants, and it would follow 
from this that the cells of the tissues cannot give rise to structures 
containing gerro-p(asm less disintegrated than their own nuclear 
material, and least of all to reproductive cells which must contain 
the undisintegrated microcosms of the germ-plasm. Cases of 
bud-formation and of reconstructions of lost parts (see Rc- 
GCNEftATiOM or Lost Parts) are regarded as special adaptations 
made possible by the provision of latent groups of accessory 
determinants, to become active only on emergency. 

It is to be noticed that Weismaon's conception of the processes 
of ontogeny is strictly evolutionary, and in so for is ft reversion 



to the general opinion of biologists of Ike 17th and x&hcatttmes. 
These supposed that the germ-cell contained an image-in-litUe 
of the adult, and that the process of development was a mere 
unfolding or evolution of this, under the influence of favouring 
and nutrient forces. Hartsoeker, indeed, went so far as to 
figure the human, sptrmatoaoon with a mannikln seated within 
the " bead," and similar extremes of imagination were indulged 
in by other writers for the spermatosoon or ovum, according 
to the view they took of the relative importance of these two 
bodies. C. F. Wolff, in his Thmria tauraiumis (1759)', was 
the first distinguished anatomist to make assault on these 
evolutionary views, but his direct observations on the process 
of development were not sufficient in bulk nor in clarity of 
interpretation to convince his contemporaries. Naturally the 
improved methods and vastly greater knowledge of modern 
days have made evolution in the old sense an impossible con- 
ception; we know that the egg is morphologically unlike the 
adult, that various external conditions are necessary for its 
subsequent progress through a slow series of stages, each of 
which is unlike the adult, but gradually approaching it until 
the final condition is reached. None the less, Weismann's 
theory supposes that the important determining factor in these 
gradual changes lies in the historical architecture of the germ- 
plasm, and from the theoretical point of view his theory remains 
strictly an unfolding, a becoming manifest of bidden complexity. 

Her twig's View.— The chief modern holder of the rival view, 
and the writer who has put together in most cogent form the 
objections to Weismann's theory, is Oscar Hertwig. He points 
out that there is no direct evidence for the existence of differ- 
entiating as opposed to doubling divisions of the nuclear matter, 
and, moreover, he thinks that there is very generally diffused 
evidence as to the universality of doubting division. In the first 
place, there is the fundamental fact that single-celled organisms 
exhibit only doubling division, as by that the persistence of 
species which actually occurs alone is possible. In the case of 
higher plants, the widespread occurrence of tissues with power 
of reproduction, the occurrence of budding in almost any part 
of the body in lower animals and in plants, and the widespread 
powers of regeneration of lost parts, are easily intelligible if 
every cell like the egg-cell has been formed by doubling division, 
and so contains the germinal material for every part of the 
organism, and thus, on the call of special conditions, can become 
a germ-cell again. He lays special stress on those experiments in 
which the process of development has been interfered with in 
various ways at various stages, as showing that the cells which 
arise from the division of the egg-cell were not predestined 
unalterably for a particular rile, according to a predetermined 
plan. He dismisses Weismann's suggestion of the presence of 
accessory determinants which remain latent unless they happen 
to be required, as being too complicated a supposition to be 
supported without exact evidence, a view in which he has 
received strong support from those who have worked most at 
the experimental side of the question. From consideration of a 
Urge number of physiological facts, such as the results of grafting, 
transplantations of tissues and transfusions of blood, he con- 
cludes that the cells of an organism possess, in addition to their 
patent microscopical Characters, latent characters peculiar to 
the species, and pointing towards a fundamental identity of the 
germinal substance in every ceO. 

The N.udcar Matter.— Apart from these two characteristic 
protagonists of extreme and opposing views, the general consensus 
of biological opinion does not take us very far beyond the plainest 
facts of observation. The resemblances of heredity are due to 
the fact that the new organism takes its origin from a definite 
piece of the substance of its parent or parents. This piece always 
contains protoplasm, and as the protoplasm of every animal 
and plant appears to have its own specific reactions, we cannot 
exclude this factor; Indeed many, following the views of 
M. Verworn, and seeing in the specific metabolisms of proto- 
plasm a large part of the meaning of life, attach an increasing 
importance to the protoplasm in the hereditary mass. Next, 
it always contains nuclear matter, and, in view of the extreme 



352 



HEREDITY 



specialization of the nuclear changes in the process of matura- 
tion and fertilization of the generative cells, there is more than 
sufficient Teason for believing that the nuclear substance, If not 
actually the specific germ-plasm, is of vast importance in heredity. 
The theory of its absolute dominance depends on a number of 
experiments, the interpretation of which is doubtful. Moritz 
Nussbaum showed that in Infusoria non-nucleated fragments 
of a cell always died, while nucleated fragments were able to 
complete themselves; but it may be said with almost equal 
confidence that nuclei separated from protoplasm also Invariably 
die— at least, aU attempts to preserve them have failed. Hcrtwig 
and others, in their brilliant work on the nature of fertilization, 
showed that the process always involved the entrance into the 
female cell of the nucleus of the male cell, but we now know 
that part of the protoplasm of the spermatozoon also enters. 
T. Bovcri made experiments on the cross-fertilization of non- 
nucleated fragments of the eggs of Spkaereckinus gramdaris 
with spermatozoa of Echinus mtcrotuberculttus, and obtained 
dwarf larvae with only the paternal characters; but the nature 
of his experiments was not such as absolutely to exclude doubt. 
Finally, in addition to the nucleus and the protoplasm, another 
organism of the cell, the centrosome, is part of the hereditary 
mass. In sum, while most of the evidence point* to a pre- 
ponderating importance of the nuclear matter, it cannot be said 
to be an established proposition that the nuclear matter is the 
germ-plasm. Nor are we yet definitely in a position to say that 
the germinal mass (nuclear matter, protoplasm, &c, of the repro- 
ductive cells) differs essentially from the general substance of 
the organism — whether, in fact, there is continuity of germ-plasm 
as opposed to continuity of living material from individual 
to individual. The origin of sexual cells from only definite places, 
in the vast majority of cases, and such phenomena as the phylo- 
genetic migration of their place of origin ameng the Hydro- 
medusae, tell strongly in favour of Weismann's conception. 
Early experiments on dividing eggs, in which, by separation or 
transposition, cells were made to give rise to tissues and parts 
of the organism which in the natural order they would not have 
produced, tell strongly against any profound separation between 
germ-plasm and body-plasm. It is also to be noticed that the 
failure of gcravcclls to arise except in specific places may be 
only part of the specialized ordering of the whole body, and does 
not necessarily involve the interpretation that reproductive 
material is absolutely different in kind. 

Amphimixis. — Hitherto we have considered the material 
bearer of heredity apart from the question of sexual union, and 
we find that the new organism takes origin from a portion of 
living matter, forming a material which may be called germ- 
plasm, in which resides the capacity to Correspond to the same 
kind of surrounding forces as stimulated the parent germ-plasm 
by growth of the same fashion. In many cases (cj. asexual 
spores) the piece of germ-plasm comes from one parent, and 
from an organ or tissue not associated with sexual reproduction; 
in other cases (parthenogenctic eggs) it comes from the ovary 
of a female, and may have the apparent characters of a sexual 
egg, except that it develops without fertilization; here also arc 
to be included the cases where normal female ova have been 
induced to develop, not by the entrance of a spermatozoon, but 
by artificial chemical stimulation. In such cases the problem 
of heredity does not differ fundamentally from the symmetrical 
repetition of parts. In most of the higher plants and animals, 
however, sexual reproduction is the normal process, and from 
our present point of view the essential feature of this is that the 
germ-plasm which starts the new individual (the fertilized egg) 
is derived from the male (the spermatozoon) and from the female 
parent (the ovum). Although it cannot yet be set down sharply 
as a general proposition, there is considerable evidence to show 
that in the preparation of the ovum and spermatozoon for 
fertilization the nuclear matter of each is reduced by half (reduc- 
ing division of the chromosomes), and that fertilization means 
the restoration of the normal bulk in the fertilized cell by equal 
contributions from male and female. So far as the known facts 
Of this process of union of germ-plasms go, they take us no 



farther than to establish such * relation between the offispefssj 
and two parents as exists between the offspring and one parent 
in the other cases. Amphimixis has a vast importance is the 
theory of evolution (Weismann, for instance, regards it as the 
chief factor in the production of variations); for its relation to 
heredity we are as yet dependent on empirical observations. 

Heredity and Development.— The actual process by which the 
germinal mass slowly assumes the characters of the adult— that 
is, becomes like the parent— depends on the interaction of two 
sets of factors: the properties of the germinal material itself, 
and the influences of substances and conditions external to the 
germinal material. Naturally, as K. W. von Nageh' and Hertwig 
in particular have pointed out, there is no perpetual sharp 
contrast between the two sets of factors, for, as growth proceeds, 
the external is constantly becoming the internal; the results 
of influences, which were in one stage part of the environment, 
are in the next and subsequent stages part of the embryo. The 
differences between the exponents of evolution and epigenesis 
offer practical problems to be decided by experiment. Every 
phenomenon in development that is proved the direct result of 
cpigcnctic factors can be discounted from the complexity of the 
germinal mass* If, for instance, as H. Dricsch and Hertwig have 
argued, much of the differentiation of cells and tissues is a 
function of locality and is due to the action of different external 
forces on similar material, then just so much burden is removed 
from what evolutionists have to explain. That much remains 
cannot be doubted. Two eggs similar in appearance develop 
side by side in the same sea-water, one becoming a mollusc, the 
other an Amphioxus. Hertwig would say that the slight differ- 
ences in the original eggs would determine slight differences in 
metabolism and so forth, with the result that the segmentation 
of the two is slightly different; in the next stage the differences 
in metabolisms and other relations will be increased, and so on 
indefinitely. But in such cases c*est U premier pas qui c*Mt y and 
the absolute cost in theoretical complexity of the germinal 
material can be estimated only after a prolonged coarse of 
experimental work in a field which is as yet hardly touched. 

Empirical Study of Heredity, — The fundamental basis of 
heredity is the separation of a mass from the parent (germ-plasm) 
which under certain conditions grows into an individual resem- 
bling the parent. The goal of the study of heredity will be 
reached only when all the phenomena can be referred to the 
nature of the germ-plasm and of its relations to the conditions 
under which it grows, but we have seen how far our knowledge 
is from any attempt at such references. In the meantime, the 
empirical facts, the actual relations of the characters in the 
offspring to the characters of the parents and ancestors, are 
being collected and grouped. In this inquiry it at once becomes 
obvious that every character found in a parent may or may not 
be present m the offspring. When any character occurs in both, 
it is generally spoken of as transmissible and of having been 
transmitted. In this broad sense there is no character that is 
not transmissible. In all kinds of reproduction, the characters 
of the class, family, genus, species, variety or race, and of the 
actual individual, are transmissible, the certainty with which 
any character appears being almost in direct proportion to its 
rank in the descending scale from order to individual. The 
transmitted characters are anatomical, down to the most minute 
detail; physiological, including such phenomena, as diatheses, 
timbre of voice and even compound phenomena, such as gam- 
cherie and peculiarity of handwriting; psychological; patho- 
logical; teratological, such as syndactylism and all kinds of 
individual variations. Either sex may transmit characters 
which in themselves are necessarily latent, as, for instance, a 
bull may transmit a good milking strain. In forms of asexual 
reproduction, such as division, budding, propagation by slips and 
so forth, every character of the parent may appear in the 
descendant, and apparently even in the descendants produced 
from that descendant by the ordinary, sexual processes. In 
reproduction by spore formation, in .parthenogenesis and in 
ordinary sexual modes, where there is an cmbryological history 
between the separated mass and the new adult, k is accessary 



HEREDITY 1 



353 



aw 
*: 

is 



* to Attempt a diflSniU ditcrimination between acqirired and innate 
< characters. 

* Acquired Ganders s— Every character is the result of two 

* sets of factors, those resident in the germinal material and those 

* imposed from without. Our knowledge has taken as far beyond 
any such idea as the formation of a germinal material by the 

'* collection of particles from the adult organs and tissues (gem- 

* mules of C Darwin). The inheritance of any character means 

* the transmission in the germinal material of matter which, 
t. brought under the necessary external conditions, develops into 
'< the character of the parent. There is necessarily an acquired 
** or epigenetic side to every character; but there is nothing in 
ts our knowledge of the actual processes to make necessary or 

even probable the supposition that the result of that factor in 
a, one generation appears in the germ- plasm of the subsequent 

t generations, in those cases where an embryological development 

"j separates parent and offspring. The development of any normal, 

£% . so-called " innate," character, such as, say, the assumption of 

r the normal human shape and relations of the frontal bone, 

* : requires the co-operation of many factors external to the develop- 

h ing embryo, and the absence of abnormal distorting factors. 

t* When we say that such an innate character is transmitted, we 

r mean only that the germ-plasm has such a constitution that, 

£1 in the presence of the epigenetic factors and the absence of 

t- v abnormal epigenetic factors, the bone will appear in due course 

and in due form. If an abnormal epigenetic factor be applied 
during development, whether to the embryo in vitro, to the 
developing child, or in after life, abnormality of some kind wfl] 
appear in the bone, and such an abnormality is a good type of 
what is spoken of as an " acquired " character. Naturally such 
a character varies with the external stimulus and the nature of 
the material to which the stimulus is applied, and probability 
and observation lead us to suppose that as the germ-plasm of 
the offspring is similar to that of the parent, being a mass 
___ separated from the parent, abnormal epigenetic influences 

at would produce results on the offspring similar to those which 

they produced on the parent. Scrutiny of very many cases 
ai of the supposed inheritance of acquired characters shows that 

PJa they may be explained in this fashion — that is to say, that they 

m do not necessarily involve any feature different in kind from 

.- 5 what we understand to occur in normal development. The 

, ;) effects of increased use or of disuse on organs or tissues, the 

_ reactions of living tissues to various external influences, to 

_Vj bacteria, to bacterial or other toxins, or to different conditions 

^ of respiration, nutrition and so forth, we know empirically to 

be different in the case of different individuals, and we may 
a " expect that when the living matter of a parent responds in a 

" certain way to a certain external stimulus, the living matter of 

= ' the descendant will respond to similar circumstances in a similar 

^ fashion. The operation of similar influences on similar material 

: _~ accounts for a large proportion of the facts. In the important 

: ' case of the transmission of disease from parent to offspring it is 

~ l plain that three sets of normal factors may operate, and other 

v ' cases of transmission must be subjected to similar scrutiny: 

:I (i) a child may inherit the anatomical and physiological con- 

r: - stitution of either parent, and with that a special liability of 

failure to resist the attacks of a wide-spread disease; (a) the 
- ' actual, bacteria may be contained in the ovum or possibly in the 

^ spermatozoon; (3) the toxins of the disease may have affected 

- 1 * the ovum, or the spermatozoon, or through the placenta the 

f growing embryo. Obviously in the first two cases the offspring 

^ cannot be said in any strict sense to have inherited the disease; 

^ : in the last case, the theoretical nomenclature is more doubtful, 

gs but it is at least plain that no inexplicable factor is involved. 

a-' • It k to be noticed, however, that " Lamarckians " and '* Neo- 

^- Lamarckians " in their advocacy of an inheritance of " acquired 

?f characters " make a theoretical assumption of a different kind, 

r : which applies equally to " acquired " and to " innate " char- 

-c acters. They suppose that the result of the epigenetic factors 

5 ' is reflected on the germ-plasm in such a mode that in develop- 
::: : menl the products would display the same or a similar character 
t. - without the co-operation of the epigenetic factors on the new 

6 xm. 7* 



individual, or would display the result hi an accentuated form 
if with the renewed co-operation of the external factors. Such 
an assumption presents its greatest theoretical difficulty if, with 
Weismann, we suppose the germ-plasm to he different in kind 
from the general soma-plasm, and its least theoretical difficulty 
if> with Hertwig, we suppose the essential matter of the repro- 
ductive cells to be similar in kind to the essential substance of 
the general body cells. But, apart from the differences between 
such theories, it supposes, in all cases where an embryological 
development lies between parent and descendant, the existence 
of a factor towards which our present knowledge of the actual 
processes gives us no assistance. The separated hereditary 
mass docs not contain the organs of the adult; the Lamarckian 
factor would involve the translation of the characters of the adult 
back into the characters of the germ-cell in such a fashion that 
when the germ-cell developed these characters would be re- 
translated again into those which originally had been produced 
by cooperation between germ-plasm characters and epigenetic 
factors. In the present state of our knowledge the theoretical 
difficulty is not fatal to the Lamarckian supposition; it does 
no more than demand a much more careful scrutiny of the 
supposed cases. Such a scrutiny has been goingon since Weismann 
first raised the difficulty, and the present result is that no known 
case has appeared which cannot be explained without the 
Lamarckian factor, and the vast majority of cases have been 
resolved without any difficulty into the ordinary events of which 
we have full experience. Taking the empirical data in detail, 
it would appear first that the effects of single mutilations are 
not inherited. The effects of long-continued mutilations are 
not inherited, but Darwin cites as a possible case the Mahom* 
medans of Celebes, in whom the prepuce is very small. C E< 
Brown-Sequard thought that he had shown in the case of guinea- 
pigs the inheritance of the results of nervous lesions, but analyses 
of his results leave the question extremely doubtful. The 
inheritance of the effects of use and disuse is not proved. The 
inheritance of the effects of changed conditions of life Is quite 
uncertain. Nigel! grew Alpine plants at Munich, but found 
that the change was produced at once and was not increased 
in a period of thirteen years. Alphonse de Candolle starved 
plants, with the result of producing belter blooms, and found 
that seedlings from these were also above the average in luxuri- 
ance of blossom, but in these experiments the effects of selection 
during the starvation, and of direct effect on the nutrition of the 
seeds, were not eliminated. Such results are typical of the 
vast number of experiments and observations recorded* The 
empirical issue is doubtful, with a considerable balance against 
the supposed inheritance of acquired characters. 

Empirical Study of Effects of Amphimixis,— Inheritance Is 
theoretically possible from each parent and from the ancestry 
of each. In considering the total effect it is becoming customary 
to distinguish between " blended " inheritance, where the off-' 
spring appears in respect of any character to be intermediate 
between the conditions in the parents; " prepotent " inheritance,' 
where one parent is supposed to be more effective than theotber 
in stamping the offspring (thus, for instance, Negroes, Jews 
and Chinese are stated to be prepotent in crosses); " exclusive** 
inheritance, where the character of the offspring is definitely 
that of one of the parents. Such a classification depends on the 
interpretation of the word character, and rests on no certain 
grounds. An apparently blended character or a prepotent 
character may on analysis turn out to be due to the inheritance 
of a certain proportion of minuter characters derived exclusively 
from either parent. H. de Vries and later on a number of other 
biologists have advanced the knowledge of heredity in crosses 
by carrying out further the experimental and theoretical work 
of Gregor Mendel (see Mendelism and Hybridism), and results 
of great practical importance to breeders have already been 
obtained. These experiments and results, however, appear 
to relate exclusively to sexual reproduction and almost entirely 
to the crossing of artificial varieties of animals and plants. So 
far as they go, they point strongly to the occurrence of alternate 
inheritance instead of blended inheritance in the case of artificial 



35+ 



HEREFORD 



varieties. On the other hind, in the case of natural varieties 
il appears that blended inheritance predominates. The diffi- 
culty of the interpretation of the word "'character " still remains 
and the Mendelian interpretation cannot be dismissed with regard 
to the behaviour of any " character " in inheritance until it is 
certain that it is a unit and not a composite. There is another 
fundamental difficulty in making empirical comparisons between 
the characters of parents and offspring. At first sight it seems 
as if this mode of work were sufficiently direct and simple, and 
involved no more than a mere collection of sufficient data. The 
cranial index, or the height of a human being and of so many 
of his ancestors being given, it would seem easy to draw an 
inference as to whether or no in these cases brachycephaly or 
stature were inherited. But our modern conceptions of the 
individual and the race make it plain that the problems are not 
so simple. With regard to any character, the race type is not a 
particular measurement, but a curve of variations derived from 
statistics, and any individual with regard to the particular 
character may be referable to any point of the curve. A tall 
race like the modern Scots may contain individuals of any height 
within the human limits; a dolichocephalic race like the modern 
Spaniards may contain extremely round-headed individuals. 
What is meant by saying that one race is tall or the other dolicho- 
cephalic, is merely that if a sufficiently large number be chosen 
at random, the average height of the one race will be great, 
the cranial index of the other low. It follows that the study 
of variation must be associated with, or rather must precede, 
the empirical study of heredity, and we are beginning to know 
enough now to be certain that in both cases the results to be 
obtained are practically useless for the individual case, and of 
value only when large masses of statistics are collected. No 
doubt, when general conclusions have been established, they must 
be acted on for individual cases, but the results can be predicted 
not for the individual case, but only for the average of a mass 
of individual cases. It is impossible within the limits of this 
article to discuss the mathematical conceptions involved in the 
formation and applications of the method, but it is necessary 
to insist on the fact that these form an indispensable part of any 
valuable study of empirical data. One interesting conclusion, 
which may be called the " ancestral law " of heredity, with regard 
to any character, such as height, which appears to be a blend 
of the male and female characters, whether or no the apparent 
blend is really due to an exclusive inheritance of separate com* 
ponents, may be given from the work of F. Calton and K. Pearson. 
Each parent, on the average, contributes \ or (o-s) 1 , each grand- 
parent tV or (o-s) 4 , and each ancestor of n lh place (0*5)*. But 
this, like all other deductions, is applicable only to the mass 
of cases and not to any individual case. 

Regression.— An important result of quantitative work brings 
into prominence the steady tendency to maintain the type 
which appears to be one of the most important results of am- 
phimixis. In the tenth generation a man has 1024 tenth grand- 
parents, and is thus the product of an enormous population, 
the mean of which can hardly differ from that of the general 
population. Hence this heavy weight of mediocrity produces 
regression or progression to type. Thus in the case of height, 
a large number of cases being examined, it was found that 
fathers of a stature of 72 in. had sons with a mean stature of 
708 in., a regression towards the normal stature of the race. 
Fathers with a stature of 66 in. had sons with a mean of 683 in., 
a progression towards the normal. It follows from this that where 
there is much in-and-in breeding the weight of mediocrity will 
be less, and the peculiarities of the breed will be accentuated. 

Alansm. — Under this name a large number of ordinary cases 
of variation are included. A,tall man with very short parents 
would probably be set down as a case of atavism if the existence 
of a very tall ancestor were known. He would, however, simply 
be a case of normal variation, the probability of which may be 
calculated from a table of stature variations in his race. Less 
marked cases set down to atavism may be instances merely 
of normal regression. Many cases of more abnormal structure, 
which are really due to abnormal embryonic or post -embryonic 



development, am set down to atavism, as, fat iastance, the 
cervical fistulae, which have been regarded as atavistic per- 
sistences of the gill clefts. It is alio used to imply the reversion 
that takes place when domestic varieties are set free and when 
spedes or varieties are crossed (see Hybridism). Atavism b, 
in fact, a misleading name covering a number of very different 
phenomena. 

Tekgony is the name given to the supposed fact that offspring 
of a mother to one sire may inherit characters from a sire with 
which the mother had previously bred. Although breeders 
of stock have a strong belief in the existence of this, there are 
no certain facts to support it, the supposed cases being more 
readily explained as individual variations of the kind generally 
referred to as "atavism." None the less, two theoretical 
explanations have been suggested: (1) that spermatozoa, or 
portions of spermatozoa, from the first sire may occasionally 
survive within the mother for an abnormally long period; (a) 
that the body, or the reproductive cells of the mother, may be 
influenced by the growth of the embryo within her, so that 
she acquires something of the character of the sire. The first 
supposition has no direct evidence to support it, and is made 
highly improbable from the fact that a second impregnation s 
always necessary. Against the second supposition Pearson 
brings the cogent empirical evidence that the younger children 
of the same sire show no increased tendency to resemble him. 
(See Telegont.) 

Authorities.— The following books contain a fair proportioa 
UMmterioU 



for the Study of Variation (1894) : Y. Delate, La Structure du proSo- 
plasma et les thiories sur VhtreaiU (a very full discussion and fist of 
literature); G. H. T. Eimer, Organic Evolution, Eng. trans, by 



Cunningham (1800); J. C. Ewart, the Penycuih Experiments (1899); 
F. Gallon, Natural Inheritance (1887); O. Hertwig, Evolution or 
Epigenesis? Eng. trans, by P. C. Mitchell (1896): K. Pearson. The 
Grammar of Science (1900) ; Verworn, General Physiology, Eng. trans. 
(1899); A. Wcismann, The Germ Plasm, Ens. trans, by Parker 
(1893). Lists of separate papers are given in the annual volumes of 
the Zoological Record under heading " General Subject." (P.C M .) 

HEREFORD, a city and municipal and parliamentary borough, 
and the county town of Herefordshire, England, on the river 
Wye, 144 m. W.N.W. of London, on the Worcester-Cardiff line 
of the Great Western railway and on the west-and-north joint 
line of that company and the North-Western. It is connected 
with Ross and Gloucester by a branch of the Great Western, 
and i* the terminus of a line from the west worked by the Mid- 
land and Neath & Brecon companies. Pop. (root) 21,382. It is 
mainly on the left bank of the river, which here traverses a 
broad valley, well wooded and pleasant. The cathedral of St 
Ethclbert exemplifies ail styles from Norman to Perpendicular. 
The see was detached from Lichfield in 676, Putta being its first 
bishop; and the modern diocese covers most of Herefordshire, a 
considerable part of Shropshire, and small portions of Worcester- 
shire, Staffordshire and Monmouthshire; extending also a short 
distance across the Welsh border. The removal of murdered 
Aethelbert's body from Marden to Hereford led to the foundation 
of a superior church, reconstructed by Bishop Athelstane, and 
burnt by the Webb in 1055. Begun again in 1079 by Bishop 
Robert Xosinga, it was carried on by Bishop Reynelm and 
completed in 1148 by Bishop R. de Betun. In 1786 the great 
western tower fell and carried with it the west front and the first 
bay of the nave, when the church suffered much from unhappy 
restoration by James Wyatt , but his errors were partly corrected 
by the further work of Lewis Cottingham and Sir Gilbert Scott 
in 1841 and 1863 respectively, while the present west front is 
a reconstruction completed in 1005. The total length of the 
cathedral outside is 342 ft., inside 327 ft. 5 in., the nave being 
158 ft. 6 in., the choir from screen to reredos 75 ft. 6 in. and 
the lady chapel 93 ft. 5 in. Without, the principal features are 
the central tower, of Decorated work with ball-flower ornament, 
formerly surmounted by a timber spire; and the north porch, 
rich Perpendicular with parvise. The lady chapel has a bold 
east end with five narrow lancet windows. The bishop's cloisters, 
of which only two walks remain, are Perpendicular of curious 
design, with heavy tracery in the bays. A picturesque tower 



HEREFORDSHIRE 



355 



at the south-east corner, in the tame style, it calkd the " Lady 
Arbour," but the origin of the name is unknown. Of the former 
ine decagonal Decorated chapter-house, only the doorway and 
alight traces remain. Within, the nave has Norman arcades, 
showing the wealth of ornament common to the work of this 
period in the church. Wyatt shortened it by one bay, and the 
clerestory is his work. There is a fine late Norman font, springing 
from a base with the rare design of four lions at the corners. 
The south transept is also Norman, but largely altered by the 
introduction of Perpendicular work. The north transept was 
wholly rebuilt in 1287 to contain the shrine of St Thomas de 
Cantilupe, bishop of Hereford, of which there remains the 
magnificent marble pedestal surmounted by an ornate arcade. 
The fine lantern, with its many shafts and vaulting, was thrown 
open to the floor of the bell-chamber by Cottingham. The choir 
screen is a florid design by Sir Gilbert Scott, in light wrought 
iron, with a wealth of ornament in copper, brass, mosaic and 
polished stones. The dark choir is Norman in the arcades and 
the stage above, with Early English clerestory and vaulting. 
At the east end is a fine Norman arch, blocked until 1841 by 
a Grecian screen erected in 1717. The choir stalls are largely 
Decorated. The organ contains original work by the famous 
builder Renatus Harris, and was the gift of Charles II. to the 
cathedral. The small north-east and south-east transepts are 
Decorated but retain traces of the Norman apsidal terminations 
eastward. The eastern lady chapel, dated about iaao, shows 
elaborate Early English work. On the south side opens the 
fittle Perpendicular chantry of Bishop Audley (1 492-1 502). 
In the north choir aisle is the beautiful fan-vaulted chantry 
of Bishop Stanbury (1470). The crypt is remarkable as being, 
like the lady chapel. Early English, and is thus the only cathedral 
crypt in England of a later date than the nth century. The 
ancient monastic library remains in the archive room, with its 
heavy oak cupboards. Deeds, documents and several rare 
manuscripts and relics are preserved, and several of the precious 
books are still secured by chains. But the most celebrated relic 
is in the south choir aisle. This is the. Map of the World, dating 
from about 13x4, the work of a Lincolnshire monk, Richard of 
Hakfingham. It represents the world as surrounded by ocean, 
and embodies many ideas taken from Herodotus* PHny and other 
writers, being filled with grotesque figures of men, beasts, birds 
and fishes, together with representations of famous cities and 
scenes of scriptural classical story, such as the Labyrinth of 
Crete, the Egyptian pyramids, Mount Sinai and the journeyings 
of the Israelites. The map is surmounted by representations of 
Paradise and the Day of Judgment. 

From the south-east transept of the cathedral a cloister leads 
to the qnadrangular college of the Vicars-Choral, a beautiful 
Perpendicular building. On this tide of the cathedral, too, 
the bishop's palace, originally a Norman hall, overlooks the Wye, 
and near it lies the castle green, the site of the historic castle, 
which is utterly effaced. There is here a column (1809) com- 
memorating the victories of Nelson. The church of All Saints 
is Early English and Decorated, and has a lofty spire. Both 
this and St Peter's (originally Norman) have good carved stalls, 
but the fabric of both churches is greatly restored. One only of 
the six gales and a few fragments of the old walls are still to be 
seen, but there are ruins of the Black Friars' Monastery in 
Widemarsh, and a mile out of Hereford on the Brecon Road, 
the White Cross, erected in 1347 by Bishop Louis Charlton, and 
restored by Archdeacon Lord Saye and Sale, commemorates 
the departure of the Black Plague. Of domestic buildings the 
" Old House " is a good example of the picturesque half-timbered 
style, dating from 1621, and the Coningsby Hospital (almshouses) 
date from 1614. The inmates wear a remarkable uniform of 
red, designed by the founder, Sir T. Coningsby. St Ethelbert's 
hospital is an Early English foundation. Old-established schools 
are the Cathedral school (1384) and the Blue Coat school (17x0); 
there is also the County College (1880). The public buildings 
are the shire hall in St Peter's Street, in the Grecian Doric style, 
with a statue in front of it of Sir George Cornewall Lewis, who 
represented the county m parliament from 184? to 1852, the 



town hall (1904), the corn-exchange (1858), the free library and 
museum in Broad Street; the guildhall and mansion house. 
A musical festival of the choirs, of Hereford, Gloucester and 
Worcester cathedrals is held annually in rotation at these cities. 

The government is in the hands of a municipal council con- 
sisting of a mayor, 6 aldermen and 18 councillors. Area, 
5031 acres. 

Hereford {Hereforiumi), founded after the crossing of the 
Severn by the West Saxons early in the 7th century, had a 
strategic importance due to its proximity to the Welsh March. 
The foundation of the castle is ascribed to Earl Harold, afterwards 
Harold IL The castle was successfully besieged by Stephen, 
and was the prison of Prince Edward during the Barons' Wars. 
The pacification of Wales deprived Hereford of military signifi- 
cance until it became a Royalist stronghold during the Civil Wars. 
It surrendered easily to Waller in 1643; but was reoccupied 
by the king's troops and received Rupert on his march to Wales 
after Naseby. It was besieged by the Scots during August 
1645 and relieved by the king. It fell to the Parliamentarians 
in this year. In 1086 the town included fees of the bishop, the 
dean and chapter, and the Knights Hospitallers, but was other- 
wise royal demesne. Richard I. in 1189 sold their town to 
the citizens at a fee farm rent, which grant was confirmed by 
John, Henry III., Edward II., Edward III., Richard 11., Henry 
IV. and Edward IV. Incorporation was granted to the mayor, 
aldermen and citizens in 1597, and confirmed in 1620 and 
1697-1008. Hereford returned two members to parliament 
from 1295 until 1885, when the Redistribution Act deprived it of 
one representative. In 1116-1117 a fair beginning on St Ethel- 
berta's day was conferred on the bishop, the antecedent of the 
modern fair in the beginning of May. A fair beginning on St 
Denis' day, granted to the citizens in 1226-1227, is represented 
by that held in October. Hie fair of Easter Wednesday was 
granted in 1682. In 1792 the existing fairs of Candlemas week 
and the beginning of July were held. Market days were, under 
Henry VIII. and in 1792, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday; 
the Friday market was discontinued before 1835. Hereford was 
the site of a provincial mint in 1086 and later. A grant of an 
exclusive merchant gild, in 1215-1216, was several times con- 
firmed. The trade in wool was important in 1 202, and eventually 
responsible for gilds of tailors, drapers, mercers, dyers, fullers, 
doth workers, weavers and haberdashers; It brought into the 
market Welsh friezes and white cloth; but declined in the 1 6th 
century, although it existed in 1835. The leather trade was 
considerable in the 13th century. In 1835 the glove trade had 
declined. The city anciently bad an extensive trade in bread 
with Wales. It was the birthplace of David Garrick, the actor, 
in 1 716, and probably of Nell Gwyn, mistress of Charles II., to 
whose memory a tablet was erected in 1883, marking the supposed 
site of her house. 

See R. Johnson, Aneient Customs of Hereford (London, 1882): 
[. Duncumbe, History oj Hertford (Hereford, 1882); Journal of 
3rit, Arch. Assoc, xxvu 

HEREFORDSHIRE, an inland county of England on the 
south Welsh border, bounded N. by Shropshire, E. by Worcester- 
shire, S. by Monmouthshire and Gloucestershire, and W. by 
Radnorshire and Brecknockshire. The area is 839-6 sq. m. 
The county is almost wholly drained by the Wye and its tribu- 
taries, but on the north and east includes a small portion of the 
Severn basin. The Wye enters Herefordshire from Wales at Hay, 
and with a sinuous and very beautiful course crosses the south* 
western port of the county, leaving it close above the town of 
Monmouth. Of its tributaries, the Lugg enters in the north-west 
near Presteign, and has a course generally easterly to Leominster, 
where it turns south, receives the Arrow from the west, and 
joins the Wye 6 m. below Hereford, the Frome flowing in from 
the east immediately above the junction. The Monnow rising 
in the mountains of Brecknockshire forms the boundary between 
Herefordshire and Monmouthshire over one-half of its course 
(about 20 m.), but it joins the main river at Monmouth. Its 
principal tributary in Herefordshire is the Dore, which traverses 
the picturesque Golden Valley. The Wye is celebrated for its 



35$ 



HEREFORDSHIRE 



salmon fishing, which is carefully preserved, while the Lugg, 
Arrow and Frome abound in trout and grayling, as does the 
Teme. This last is a tributary of the Severn, and only two short 
reaches lie within this county in the north, while it also forms 
parts of the northern and eastern boundary. The Leddon, also 
flowing to the Severn, rises in the east of the county and leaves 
it in the south-east, passing the town of Ledbury. High ground, 
of an elevation from 500 to 800 ft., separates the various valleys, 
while on the eastern boundary rise the Malvern Hills, reaching 
1 104 ft. in the Herefordshire Beacon, and 1305 ft. in the 
Worcestershire Beacon, and on the boundary with Brecknock- 
shire the Black Mountains exceed 2000 ft. The scenery of the 
Wye, with its wooded and often precipitous banks, is famous, 
the most noteworthy point in this county being about Symond's 
Yat, on the Gloucestershire border below Ross. 
! Geology.— The Archcan or Pre-Cambrian rocks, the most ancient 
in the county, emerge from beneath the newer deposits in three small 
isolated areas. On the western border. Stanncr Rock, a picturesque 
craggy hill near Kington, consists of igneous materials (granitoid 
rock, feist one, dolerite and gabbro), apparently of intrusive origin 
and possibly of Uriconian age. , In Brampton Bryan Park, a few 
miles to the north-east, some ancient conglomerates emerge and may 
be of Longrayndian age. On theeast of the county the Herefordshire 
Beacon in the Malvern chain consists of gneisses and schists and 
Uriconian volcanic rocks; these have been thrust over various 
members of the Cambrian and Silurian systems, and owing to their 
hard and durable nature they form the highest ground in the county. 
The Cambrian rocks (Tremadoc Beds) come next in order of age and 
consist of quartzitcs, sandstones and shales, well exposed at the 
southern end of the Malvern chain and also at Pcdwardine near 
Brampton Bryan. The Silurian rocks are well developed in the 
north-west part of the county, between Presteign and Ludlow; also 
along the western flanks of the Malvern Hills and in the eroded dome 
of Woolhope. Smaller patches come to light at Westhide cast of 
Hereford and at May Hill near Ncwent. They consist of highly 
fossiliferous sandstones, mudstones, shales and limestones, known 
as the Llandovery, Wenlock and Ludlow Series; the Woolhope. 
Wcnlock and Aymcstry Limestones are famed for their rich fossil 
contents. The remainder and by far the greater part of the county 
is occupied by the Old Red Sandstone, through which the rocks 
above described project in detached areas. The Old Red Sandstone 
consists of a great thickness of red sandstones and marls, with 
impersistcnt bands of impure concretionary limestone known as 
corn st ones, which by their superior hardness give rise to scarps and 
rounded ridges; they have yielded remains of Ashes and crustaceans. 
Some of the upper beds are conglomeratic On its south-eastern 
margin the county just reaches the Carboniferous Limestone cliffs 
of the Wye Valley near Ross. Glacial deposits, chiefly sand and 
gravel, are found in the lower ground along the river-courses, while 
caves in the Carboniferous Limestone have yielded remains of the 
hyena, cave-lion, rhinoceros, mammoth and reindeer. 

Apiculture and I ndustrUs. -~Tht soil is generally marl and 
clay, but in various parts contains calcareous earth in mixed 
proportions. Westward the soil is tenacious and retentive of 
water; on the east it is a stiff and often reddish clay. In the 
south is found a light sandy loam. More than four-fifths of the 
total area of the county is under cultivation and about two-thirds 
of this is in permanent pasture. Ash and oak coppices and 
larch plantations clothe its hillsides and crests. The rich red 
soil of the Old Red Sandstone formation is famous for its pear 
and apple orchards, the county, notwithstanding its much 
smaller area, ranking in this respect next to Devonshire. The 
apple crop, generally large, is enormous one year out of four. 
Twenty hogsheads of cider have been made from an acre of 
orchard, twelve being the ordinary yield. Cider is the staple 
beverage of the county, and the trade in cider and perry is large. 
Hops are another staple of the county, the vines of which are 
planted in rows on ploughed land. As early as Camden's day a 
Herefordshire adage coupled Weobley ale with Leominster 
bread, indicating the county's capacity to produce fine wheat 
and barley, as Well as hops. 

Herefordshire is also famous as a breeding county for its 
cattle of bright red hue, with mottled or white faces and sleek 
silky coats. The Hereford* are stalwart and healthy, and, 
though not good milkers, put on more meat and fat at an early 
age, in proportion to food consumed, than almost any other 
variety. They produce the finest beef, and are more cheaply 
fed than Devons or Durhams, with which they are advantageously 
crossed. As a dairy county Herefordshire does not rank high. 



Its small, white-faced, hornless, symmetrical breed of sheep 
known as " the Ryelands," from the district near Ross, where 
it was bred in most perfection, made the county long famous 
both for the flavour of its meat and the raerino-hke texture of 
its wool. Fuller says of this that it was best known as " Lempster 
ore," and the finest in all England. In its original form the 
breed is extinct, crossing with the Leicester having improved 
site and stamina at the cost of the fleece, and the chief breeds 
of sheep on Herefordshire farms at present axe Shropshire 
Downs, Cotswolds and Radnors, with their crosses. Agricultural 
horses of good quality are bred in the north, and saddle and 
coach horses may be met with at the fairs. Breeders' names 
from the county are famous at the national cattle shows, and 
the number, size and quality of the stock are seen In their supply 
of the metropolitan and other markets. Prize Hereiords are 
constantly exported to the colonies. 

Manufacturing enterprise is small. There are some iron 
foundries and factories for agricultural implements, and some 
paper is made. There are considerable limestone quarries, as 
near Ledbury. 

Communications.— Hereford is an important railway centre. 
The Worcester and Cardiff line of the Great Western railway 
entering on the east, runs to Hereford by Ledbury and then 
southward. The joint line of the Great Western and North- 
western companies runs north from Hereford by Leominster, 
proceeding to Shrewsbury and Crewe. At Leominster a Great 
Western branch crosses, connecting Worcester, Bromyard and 
New Radnor. From Hereford a Great Western branch follows 
the Wye south to Ross, and thence to the Forest of Dean and 
to Gloucester; a branch connects Ledbury with Gloucester, 
and the Golden Valley is traversed by a branch from Pontrflas 
on the Worcester*Cardiff line. From Hereford the Midland sod 
Neath and Brecon line follows the Wye valley westward. None 
of the rivers* is commercially navigable and the canals are out 
of use. 

Population and Administration.— The area of the ancient 
county is 537,363 acres, with a population in 1891 of 115,040 
and in 1001 of 114,380. The area of the administrative county 
i* 538,921 acres. The county contains 12 hundreds. It k 
divided into two parliamentary divisions, Leominster (N.) and 
Ross (S.), and it also includes the parliamentary borough of 
Hereford r each returning one member. There are two municipal 
boroughs— Hereford (pop. 21,382) and Leominster (5836). 
The other urban districts are Bromyard (1663), Kington (1044)1 
Ledbury (3259) and Ross (3303). The county is in the Oxford 
circuit, and assizes are held at Hereford. It has one court of 
quarter sessions and is divided into it petty sessional divisions. 
The boroughs of Hereford and Leominster have separate com- 
missions of the peace, and the borough of Hereford has m 
addition a separate court of quarter sessions. There ere 260 
civil parishes. The ancient county, which is almost entirely 
in the diocese of Hereford, with small parts in those of Gloucester, 
Worcester and Llandaff, contains 222 ecclesiastical parishes or 
districts, wholly or in pan. 

History.— M some time in the 7th century the West Saxons 
pushed their way across the Severn and established themselves 
in the territory between Wales and Mcrcia, with which kingdom 
they soon became incorporated. The district which is now 
Herefordshire was occupied by a tribe the Hecanas, who con- 
gregated chiefly in the fertile area about Hereford and in die 
mining districts round Ross. . In the 8th century Offa extended 
the Mercian frontier to the Wye, securing it by the earthwork 
known as Offa's dike, portions of which. are visible at Knighton 
and Moorhampton in this county.. In 91 5 the Danes made their 
way op the Severn to the district of Archenfidd, where they 
took prisoner CyfeHJawg bishop of Llandaff, and in 921 they 
besieged Wigmore, which had been rebuilt in that year by Edward. 
From the time of its first settlement the district was the scene 
of constant border warfare with the Welsh, and Harold, whose 
earldom included this county, ordered that any Welshman 
caught trespassing over the border should lose his right hand. 
In the period preceding the Conquest much disturbance was 



HEREFORDSHIRE 



357 



caused by tike outrages of the Norman colony planted fn this 
county by Edward the Confessor. Richard's castle hi the north 
of the county was the first Norman fortress erected on English 
soil, and Wigmore, Ewyas Harold, Clifford, Weobiey, Hereford, 
Donnington and Caldecot were all the sites of Norman strong- 
holds. The conqueror entrusted the subjugation of Hereford- 
shire to William FitxOsbern, but Edric the Wild in conjunction 
with the Welsh prolonged resistance against him for two years. 

In the wars of Stephen's reign Hereford and Weobiey castles 
were held against the king, but were captured in x 138. Edward, 
afterwards Edward I., was imprisoned in Hereford Castle, and 
made his famous escape thence in 1 365. In 13 26 the parliament 
assembled at Hereford which deposed Edward II. In the 14th 
and 15th centuries the forest of Deerfold gave refuge to some 
of the most noted followers of Wycliffe. During the Wars of 
the Roses the influence of the Mortimers led the county to 
support the Yorkist cause, and Edward, afterwards Edward 
IV:, raised 93,000 men in this neighbourhood. The battle 
of Mortimer's Cross was fought in 1461 near Wigmore. Before 
the outbreak of the dvfl war of the 17th century, complaints 
of illegal taxation were rife in Herefordshire, but a strong anti- 
puritan feeling induced the county to favour the royalist cause. 
Hereford, Goodrich and Ledbury all endured sieges. 

The earldom of Hereford was granted by William I. to William 
FttxOsbern, about 1067, but on the outlawry of his son Roger 
in 1074 the title lapsed until conferred on Henry de Bohun 
about 1909. It remained in the possession of the Bohun* until 
the death of Humphrey de Bobun in 1373; in 1397 Henry, 
earl of Derby, afterwards Ring Henry IV., who had married 
Mary Bohun, was created duke of Hereford. Edward VI. 
created Walter Devereux, a descendant of the Bohun family, 
Visoount Hereford, in 1550, and his grandson, the famous earl 
of Essex, was born in this county. , Since this* date the viscounty 
has been- held by the Devereux family, and the holder- ranks 
as the premier viscount of England. The families of Clifford, 
Giffard and Mortimer figured prominently in the warfare on 
the Welsh border, and the Talbots, Lacys, Crofts and Scuda- 
mores also had important seats in the county, Sir James Scuda- 
more of Holme Lacy being the original of the Sir Scudamore of 
Spenser's Faery Queen. Sir John Oldcastle, the leader of the 
Lollards, -was sheriff of Herefordshire in 1406. 

Herefordshire probably originated as a shire in the time of 
Athefstan, and b mentioned in the Saxon Chroncile in 1051. 
In the, Domesday Survey parts of Monmouthshire and Radnor- 
shire are assessed under Herefordshire, and the western and 
southern -borders remained debatable ground until with the 
incorporation of the Welsh marches in 1 535 considerable territory 
was restored to Herefordshire and formed into the hundreds of 
Wigmore, Ewyas Lacy and Huntingdon, while Ewyas Harold 
was united to. Webtree. At the time of the Domesday Survey 
the divisions of the county were very unsettled. As many as 
nineteen hundreds are mentioned, but these were of varying 
extent, some containing only one manor, some from twenty 
to thirty. Of the twelve modem hundreds, only Grey tree, 
Radlow, Stretford, Wolphy and Wormclow retain Domesday 
names. Herefordshire has been included in the diocese of 
Hereford since its foundation in 676. ■ In 1291 it comprised the 
deaneries of Hereford, Weston, Leominster, Weobiey, Frome, 
Archonfield and Ross in the archdeaconry of Hereford, and the 
deaneries of fiurford, Stottesdon, Ludlow, Pontesbury, Clun 
and Wenfock, in the archdeaconry of Shropshire. In 1877 the 
name of the archdeaconry of Shropshire was changed to Ludlow, 
and in- 1809 the deaneries of Abbey Dote, Bromyard, Kingsland, 
Kington and Ledbury were created in the archdeaconry of 
Hereford. 

Herefordshire was governed by a sheriff as early as the reign 
of Edward the Confessor, the shire-court meeting at Hereford 
where later the assizes and quarter sessions were also held. In 
1606 an act was passed declaring Hereford free from the juris- 
diction of the council of Wales, but the county was hot finally 
relieved from the interference of the Lords Marchers until the 
reign of William and Mary. 



Herefordshire has always been esteemed an exceptionally 
rich agricultural area, the manufactures being unimportant, 
with the sole exception of the woollen and the cloth trade which 
flourished soon after the Conquest. Iron was worked in Wormclow 
hundred in Roman times, and the Domesday Survey mentions 
iron workers in Marde. At the time of Henry VIIL the towns 
had become much impoverished, and Elizabeth in order to 
encourage local industries, insisted on her subjects wearing 
English-made caps from the factory of Hereford. Hops were 
grown in the county soon after their introduction into England 
in 1524. In 1580 and again in 1637 the county was severely 
visited by the plague, but in the 17th century it had a nourishing 
timber trade and was noted for its orchards and cider. 

Herefordshire was first represented in parliament in 1295, 
when it returned two members, the boroughs of Ledbury, Here- 
ford, Leominster and Weobiey being also represented. Hereford 
was again represented in 1200, and Bromyard and Ross in 1304, 
but the boroughs made very irregular returns, and from 1306 
until Weobiey regained representation in 1627, only Hereford 
and Leominster were represented. Under the act of 1832 the 
county returned three members and Weobiey was disfranchised. 
The act of 1868 deprived Leominster of one member, and under 
the act of 1885 Leominster was disfranchised, and Hereford 
lost one member. 

Antiquities.— Them are remains of several of the strongholds 
which Herefordshire possessed as a march county, some of whkh 
were maintained and enlarged, after the settlement of the border, 
to serve in later wars. To the south of Ross are those of Wilton 
and Goodrich, commanding the Wye on the right bank, the 
latter a ruin of peculiar magnificence, and both gaining pictur- 
esqucness from their beautiful situations. Of the several castles 
in the valleys of the boundary-river Mormow and its tributaries, 
those in this county include Pembridge, Kilpeck and Long town; 
of which the last shows extensive remains of the strong keep and 
thick walls. In the north the finest example is Wigmore, 
consisting of a keep on an artificial mound within outer) walls, 
the seat of the powerful family of Mortimer. 

Beside the cathedral of Hereford, and the fine churches of 
Ledbury; Leominster and Ross, described under separate 
headings, the county contains some churches of almost unique 
interest. In that of Kilpeck remarkable and unusual Norman 
work is seen. It consists of the three divisions of nave, choir 
and chancel, divided by ornate arches, the chancel ending in 
an apse, with a beautiful and elaborate west end and south 
doorway. The columns of the choir arch are composed of 
figures. A similar plan is seen in Peterchurcb in the Golden 
Valley, and in Moccas church, on the Wye above Hereford. 
Among the large number of churches exhibiting Norman details 
that at Bromyard is noteworthy. At Abbey Dorc, the Cistercian 
abbey church, still in use, is a large and beautiful specimen of 
Early English work, and there are slight remains of the monastic 
buuMmgs. At Madley, south of the Wye 5 m. W. of Hereford, 
is a fine Decorated church (with earlier portions), with the 
rare feature of a Decorated apaidal chancel over an octagonal 
crypt. Of the churches in mixed styles those in the larger 
towns are the most noteworthy, together with that of Weobiey. 

The half-timbered style of domestic architecture, common in 
the west and midlands 0/ England in the 16th and 17th centuries, 
beautifies many of the towns and villages. Among country 
homes, that of Treago, 9 m. W. of Ross, is a remarkable example 
of a fortified mansion of the 13th century, in a condition little 
altered. Rudball and Suftoo Court, between Ross and Hereford, 
are good, specimens of r^th-century work, and portions ctf 
Hampton Court, 8 ro. N. of Hereford, are of the same period, 
built by Sir Rowland Lenthall, * favourite of Henry IV. Holme 
Lacy, 5m. S.E. of Hereford, is a fine mansion of the latter part 
of the 17th century,- with picturesque Dutch gardens, and much 
wood»carving by Grinling Gibbons within. This was formerly 
the seat of the Scudamores, from whom it was inherited by 
the Stanhopes, earls of Chesterfield, the 9th earl of Chester- 
field taking the name of Scudarnore-Stanhope. His son, the 
10th earl, has recently (1909) sold Holme Lacy to Sir Robert 



35* 



HERERO— HERESY 



Lucas-Tooth, Bart. Downton Castle possesses historical interest 
in having been designed in 1774, in a strange mixture of Gothic 
and Greek styles, by Richard Payne Knight (1750-1824), a 
famous scholar, numismatist and member of parliament for Leo- 
minster and Ludlow; while Eaton Hall, now a farm, was the 
seat of the family of the famous geographer Richard Hakluyt. 



HERERO, or Ovahereko (" merry people "), a Bantu people 
of German South- West Africa, living in the region known as 
Damaraland or Hereroland. They call themselves Ovaherero 
and their language Otshi-herero. Sometimes they are described 
as Cattle Damara or " Damara of the Plains " in distinction 
from the Hill Damara who are of mixed blood and Hottentots 
in language. The Hereto, whose main occupation is that of 
cattle-rearing, are a warlike race, possessed of considerable mili- 
tary skill, as was shown in their campaigns of 1904-5 against 
the Germans. (See further German South-West Africa.) 

HERESY, the English equivalent of the Greek word olptavs 
which is used in the Septuagint for " free choice," in later 
classical literature for a philosophical school or sect as " chosen " 
by those who belong to it, in Philo for religion, in Josephus for 
a religious party (the Sadducecs, the Pharisees and the Essenes). 

It is in this last sense that the term is used in the New Testa- 
ment, usually with an implicit censure of the factious spirit to 
which such divisions are due. The term is applied 
f^, to the Sadducecs (Acts v. *iy) and Pharisees (Acts xv. 
meat 5. xxvi. 5). From the standpoint of opponents, 
Christianity is itself so described (Acts xxiv. 14, xxviii. 
22). In the Pauline Epistles it is used with severe condemnation 
of the divisions within the Christian Church itself. Heresies 
with "enmities, strife, jealousies, wraths, factions, divisions, 
envyings " are reckoned among " the works of the flesh " 
(Gal v. 20). Such divisions, proofs of a carnal mind, are censured 
in the church of Corinth (1 Cor. ill. 3, 4); and the church of 
Rome is warned against those who cause them (Rom. xvi. 17). 
The term " schism," afterwards distinguished from " heresy," 
is also used of these divisions (z Cor. i. 10). The estrangements 
of the rich and the poor in the church at Corinth, leading to 
a lack of Christian fellowship even at the Lord's Supper, is 
described as " heresy " (r Cor. xi. 19). Breaches of the law of 
love, not errors about the truth of the Gospel, are referred to in 
{these passages. But the first step towards the ecclesiastical 
use of the term is found already in 2 Peter ii. 1, " Among you 
also there shall be false teachers who shall privily bring in 
destructive heresies (R.V. margin " sects of perdition "), denying 
even the Master that bought them, bringing upon themselves 
swift destruction." The meaning here suggested is "falsely 
chosen or erroneous tenets. Already the emphasis is moving 
from persons and their temper to mental products— from the 
sphere of sympathetic love to that of objective truth " (Bart let, 
art. " Heresy," Hastings's Bible Dictionary). As the parallel 
passage in Jude, verse 4, shows, however, that these errors had 
immoral consequences, the moral reference is not absent even 
from this passage. The first employment of the term outside 
the New Testament is also its first use for theological error. 
Ignatius applies it to Docetism (Ad Trail. 6). As doctrine came 
to be made more important, heresy was restricted to any de- 
parture from the recognised creed. Even Constantine the Great 
describes the Christian Church as " the Catholic heresy," " the 
most sacred heresy " (Eusebius, Ecclesiastical History, x. c 5, 
the letter to Chrestus, bishop of Syracuse); but this use was 
very soon abandoned, and the Catholic Church distinguished 
itself from the dissenting minorities, which it condemned as 
" heresies." The use of the term heresy in the New Testament 
cannot be regarded as denning the attitude of the Christian 



Church, even in the Apostolic age, towards errors in befits*. 
The Apostolic writings show a vehement antagonism towards all 
teaching opposed to the Gospel. Paul declares anath ema the 
Judaiaer, who required the circumcision of the Gentiles (Gal L 4), 
and even calls them the " dogs of the concision " and " evil 
workers" (Phil. iii. 2). The elders of Ephesus are warned 
against the false teachers who would appear in the church alter 
the apostle's death as " grievous wolves not sparing the flock " 
(Acts xx. 29) ; and the speculations of the Gnostics are denounced 
as " seducing spirits and doctrines of devils " (z Tim. iv. 1), as 
" profane babblings and oppositions of the knowledge which is 
falsely so called " (vi. 20). John's warnings are as earnest and 
severe. Those who deny the fact of the Incarnation are described 
as " antichrist," and as " deceivers " (z John iv. 3; a John 7). 
The references to heretics in 2 Peter and Jude have already been 
dealt with. This antagonism is explicable by the character of 
the heresies that threatened the Christian Church in the Apostolic 
age. Each of these heresies involved such a blending of the 
Gospel with either Jewish or pagan elements, as would not only 
pollute its purity, but destroy its power. In each of these the 
Gospel was in danger of being made of none effect by the environ- 
ment, which it must resist in order that it might transform (see 
Burton's Bampton Lectures on The Heresies of Ike Apostolic Age). 

These Gnostic heresies, which threatened to paganises the 
Christian Church, were condemned in no measured terms by the 
fathers. These false teachers are denounced as 0amttmm 
" servants of Satan, beasts in human shape, dealers itmm 
in deadly poison, robbers and pirates." Polycarp, 
Ignatius, Justin Martyr, Irenaeus, Hippolytus, Tertullian and 
even Clement of Alexandria and Origen are as severe in con- 
demnation as the later fathers (cf. Matt. xiii. 35-43; Tertullian, 
Praescr. 31). While the necessity of the heresies is admitted in 
accordance with z Cor. xi. 19, yet woe is pronounced on those 
who have introduced them, according to Matt, xviri. 7. (This 
application of these passages, however, is of altogether doubtful 
validity.) " It was necessary," says Tertullian (ibid. 30), M that 
the Lord should be betrayed; but woe to the traitor." The 
very worst motives, "pride, disappointed ambition, sensual 
lust, and avarice," are recklessly imputed to the heretics; and 
no possibility of morally innocent doubt, difficulty or difference 
in thought is admitted. Origen and Augustine do, however, 
recognize that even false teachers may have good motives. 
While we must admit that there was a very serious peril to the 
thought and life of the Christian Church in the teaching thus 
denounced, yet we must not forget that for the most part these 
teachers are known to us only in the ex parte representation that 
their opponents have given of them; and we must not assume 
that even their doctrines, still less their characters, were so bad 
as they are described. 

The attitude of the church in the post-Nicene period differs 
from that in the ante-Nicene in two important respects, (z) 
As has already been indicated, the earlier heresies threatened to 
introduce Jewish or pagan elements into the faith of the church, 
and it was necessary that they should be vigorously resisted 
if the church was to retain its distinctive character. Many of 
the later heresies were differences in theinterpretation of Christian 
truth, which did not in the same way threaten the very life of 
the church. No vital interest of Christian faith justified the 
extravagant denunciations in which theological partisanship 
so recklessly and ruthlessly indulged. (2) In the ante-Nkeoe 
period only ecclesiastical penalties, such as reproof, deposition 
or excommunication, could be imposed. In the post-Nicene the 
union of church and state transformed theological error into 
legal offence (see below). 

We must now consider the definition of heresy whkh was 
gradually reached in the Christian Church. It is " a religious 
error held in wilful and persistent opposition to the 
truth after it has been defined and declared by the 222?** 
church in an authoritative manner," or " pertinax tmm. 
defensio dogmatis ecclesiae universalis judicio con- 
demnati" (Schaff's Ante-Nicene Christianity, ii. 512-516). 
(i.) It "denotes an opinion antagonistic to a fundamental 



H5RESY 



359 



artfcWof tfceCairistUnfaith/'duetotbeinuodoclionof " foreign 
elements " and resulting in * perversion of Christianity, and an 
amalgamation with it of ideas discordant with its nature (Fisher's 
History of Christian Doctrine t p. 9). It has been generally 
assumed that the ecclesiastical authority was always competent 
to determine what are the fundamental articles of the Christian 
faith, and to detect any departures from them; but it is necessary 
to admit the possibility that the error was in the church, and the 
truth was with the heresy, (u.) There cannot be any heresy 
where there is no orthodoxy, and, therefore, in the definition 
k is assumed that the church has declared what is the truth 
or the error in any matter. Accordingly "heresy is to be 
distinguished from defective stages of Christian knowledge. 
For example, the Jewish believers, including the Apostles 
themselves, at the outset required the Gentile believers to be 
circumcised. They were not on this account chargeable with 
heresy. Additional light must first come in, and be rejected, 
before that earlier opinion could be thus stigmatized. Moreover, 
heresies are not to be confounded with tentative and faulty 
hypotheses broached in a period prior to the scrutiny of a topic 
of Christian doctrine, and before that scrutiny has led the general 
mind to an assured conclusion. Such hypotheses— for example, 
the idea that in the person of Christ the Logos is substituted 
for a rational human spirit— are to be met with in certain early 
fathers " (ibid. p. zo). Origan indulged in many speculations 
which were afterwards condemned, but, as these matters were 
still open questions in his day, he was not reckoned a heretic. 
(jaL) In accordance with the New Testament use of the term 
heresy, it is assumed that moral defect accompanies the intel- 
lectual error, that the false view is held pertinaciously, in spite 
of warning, remonstrance and rebuke; aggressively to win 
over others, and so factiously, to cause division in the church, 
a breach in its unity. 

A distinction is made between "heresy" and "schism" 
(from Gr. trxlfwr, rend asunder, divide). "The fathers 
Scugat. commonly use ' heresy ' of false teaching in opposition 
to Catholic doctrine, and * schism ' of a breach of 
discipline, in opposition to Catholic government " (Schaff). But 
as the claims of the church to be the guardian through its 
episcopate of the apostolic tradition, of the Christian faith 
itself, were magnified, and unity in practice as well as in doctrine 
came to be regarded as essential, this distinction became a 
theoretical rather than a practical one. While severely condemn- 
ing, both Irenaeus and Tertullian distinguished schismatics 
from heretics. " Though we are by no means entitled to say 
that they acknowledged orthodox schismatics they did not yet 
venture to reckon them simply as heretics. If it was desired 
to get rid of these, an effort was made to impute to them some 
deviation from the rule of faith; and under this pretext the 
church freed herself from the Montanists and the Monarchians. 
Cyprian was the first to proclaim the identity of heretics and 
schismatics by making a man's Christianity depend on ms 
belonging to the great episcopal church confederation. But 
m both East and West, this theory of his became established 
only by very imperceptible degrees, and indeed, strictly speaking, 
the process was never completed. The distinction between 
heretics and schismatics was preserved because it prevented a 
public denial of the old principles, because it was advisable 
on political grounds to treat certain schismatic communities 
with indulgence, and because it was always possible in case of 
need to prove heresy against the schismatics." (Harnack's 
History of Dogma, ii. 92-93). 

There was considerable controversy in the early church as 
to the validity of heretical baptism. As even " the Christian 
^ . virtues of the heretics were described as hypocrisy 
1^ 1.,, and love of ostentation," so no value whatever was 
attached by the orthodox party to the sacraments 
performed by heretics. Tertullian declares that the church 
can have no communion with the heretics, for there is nothing 
common; as they have not the same God, and the same Christ, 
10 they have not the same baptism (Do bapt. 15). Cyprian 
agreed with him. The validity of heretical baptism was denied 



by the church of AsU Minor as wen as c4 Africa; but the practice 
of the Roman Church was to admit without second baptism 
heretics who bad been baptized with the name of Christ, or of 
the Holy Trinity. Stephen of Rome attempted to force the 
Roman practice on the whole church in 253. The controversy 
his intolerance provoked was closed by Augustine's controversial 
treatise Dt Baptismo, in which the validity of baptism ad- 
ministered by heretics is based on the objectivity of the sacra- 
ment. Whenever the name of the three-one God is used, the 
sacrament is declared valid by whomsoever it may be performed. 
This was a triumph of sacramentarianism, not of charity. 

Three types of heresy have appeared in the history of the 
Christian Church. 1 The earliest may be called the syncretic; 
it is the fusion of Jewish or pagan with Christian 
elements. Ebionitism asserted " the continual obliga- jwwv. 
lion to observe the whole of the Mosaic law," and 
" outran the Old Testament monotheism by a barren rnonarchian* 
ism that denied the divinity of Christ " (Kurtz, Church History* 
i. 1 ao). Gnosticism was the result of the attempt to blend 
with Christianity the religious notions of pagan mythology, 
mysterology, thcosophy and philosophy ;> (p. 98). The Judaizing 
and the paganizing tendency were combined in Gnostic Ebionitism 
which was prepared for in Jewish Essenim. In the later heresy 
of Manichaeism there were affinities to Gnosticism, but it was 
a mixture of many elements, Babylonian-Chaldaic theosophy, 
Persian dualism and even Buddhist ethics (p. 126). 

The next type of heresy may be called evolutionary oxformatory. 
When the Christian faith is being formulated, undue emphasis 
may be put on one aspect, and thus so partial a statement of 
truth may result in error. Thus when in the ante-Nicene age 
the doctrine of the Trinity was under discussion, dynamic 
Monarchianism " regarded Christ as a mere man, who, like the 
prophets, though in a much higher measure, had been endued 
with divine wisdom and power"; modal Monarchianism saw 
in the Logos dwelling in Christ " only a mode of the activity of 
the Father"; Patripassianism identified the Logos with the 
Father; and SabeUianism regarded Father, Son and Spirit 
as "the rdles which the God who manifests Himself in the world 
assumes in succession" (Kurtz, Church History, i. 175-181), 
When Arius asserted the subordination of the Son to the Father, 
and denied the eternal generation, Athanasius and his party 
asserted the Homoousia, the (^substantiality of the Father and 
the Son. This assertion of the divinity of Christ triumphed, 
but other problems at once emerged. How was the relation 
of the humanity to the divinity in Christ to be conceived? 
Apollmaris denied the completeness of the human nature, and 
substituted the divine Logos for the reasonable soul of man. 
Nestorius held the two natures so far apart as to appear to sacrifice 
the unity of the person of Christ. Eutyches on the contrary 
" taught not only that after His incarnation Christ had only 
one nature, but also that the body of Christ as the body of God 
is not of like substance with our own " (Kurtz, Church History, 
>• 330*334)- The Church in the Creed of Chalcedon in a.d. 451 
affirmed " that Christ is true God and true man, according to 
His Godhead begotten from eternity and like the Father in 
everything, only without sin; and that after His incarnation 
the unity of the person consists in two natures which are con- 
joined without confusion, and without change, but also without 
rending and without separation." The problem was not solved, 
but the inadequate solutions were excluded, and the data to be 
considered in any adequate solution were affirmed. After this 
decision the controversies about the Person of Christ degenerated 
into mere hair-splitting; and the interference of the imperial 
authority from time to time in the dispute was not conducive 
to the settlement of the questions in the interests of truth alone. 
This problem interested the East for the most part; in the 
West there was waged a theological warfare around the nature 
of man and the work of Christ. To Augustine's doctrine of man's 
total depravity, his incapacity for any good, and the absolute 
sovereignty of the divine grace in salvation according to the 
divine election, Pelagius opposed the view that " God's grace 
» For fuller details tee separate articles. 



3*6 



HERESY 



h destined for *aB men, but men must make himself worthy 
of it by honest striving after virtue " (Kurtz, Chunk History, 
1. 348). While Pelagius was condemned, it was only a modified 
Augustiniamsm which became the doctrine of the church. It is 
not necessary in illustration Of the second type of heresy — that 
which arises when the contents of the Christian faith are being 
defined — to refer to the doctrinal controversies of the middle 
ages. It may be added that after the Reformation Arianism 
was revived m Socinianism, and Pelagfanism in Arminianism; 
but the conception of heresy in Protestantism demands sub- 
sequent notice. 

The third type of heresy is the revolutionary or reformatory. 
This is not directed against doctrine as such, but against the 
ch urcht its theory and its practice. Such movements of antagon- 
ism to the errors or abuses of ecclesiastical authority may be 
so permeated by defective conceptions and injurious influences 
as by their own character to deserve condemnation. But on 
the other hand the church in maintaining its place and power 
may condemn as heretical genuine efforts at reform by a return, 
though partial, to the standard set by the Holy Scriptures or the 
Apostolic Church. On the one hand there were during the 
middle ages sects, like the Catharists and Albigenses, whose 
" opposition as a rule developed itself from dualistic or panthe- 
istic premises (surviving effects of old Gnostic or Manichaean 
views) " and who " stood outside of ordinary Christendom, 
and while no doubt affecting many individual members within 
it, had no influence on church doctrine." On the other hand 
there were movements, such as the Waldensian, the Wydiffite 
and Hussite, which are often described as" reformations anticipat- 
ing the Reformation " which " set out from the Augustinian 
conception of the Church, but took exception to the develop- 
ment of the conception," and were pronounced by the medieval 
church as heretical for (1) " contesting the hierarchical gradation 
of the priestly order; or (2) giving to the religious idea of the 
Church implied in the thought of predestination a place superior 
to the conception of the empirical Church; or (3) applying to 
the priests, and thereby to the authorities of the Church, the 
test of the law of God, before admitting their right to exercise, 
as holding the keys, the power of binding and loosing " (Harnack s 
History of Dogma, vi. 136-137). The Reformation itself was 
from the standpoint of the Roman Catholic Church heresy and 
schism. 

" In the present divided state of Christendom," says Schaff 
{Ante-Nicene Christianity* ii. 513-514), "there arc different 
kinds of orthodoxy and heresy. Orthodoxy is con- 
formity to the recognized creed or standard of public 
doctrine; heresy is a wilful departure from it. The 
Greek Church -rejects as heretical, because contrary 
to the teaching of the first seven ecumenical councils, the Roman 
dogmas of the papacy, of the double procession of the Holy 
Ghost, the immaculate conception of the Virgin Mary, and the 
infallibility of the Pope. The Roman Church anathematized, 
In the council of Trent, all the distinctive doctrines of the Pro- 
testant Reformation. Among Protestant churches again there 
are minor doctrinal differences, which are held with various 
degrees of exclusivencss or liberality according to the degree 
of departure from the Roman Catholic Church. Luther, for 
instance, would not tolerate Zwingli's view on the Lord's Supper, 
while Zwingli was willing to fraternize with him notwithstanding 
this difference." At the colloquy of Marburg " Zwingli offered 
his hand to Luther with the entreaty that they be at least 
Christian brethren, but Luther refused it and declared that the 
Swiss were of another spirit. He expressed surprise that a man 
of such views as Zwingli should wish brotherly relations with the 
Wittenberg reformers" (Walker, The Reformation, p. 174). 
A difference of opinion on the question of the presence of Christ 
in the elements at the Lord's Supper was thus allowed to divide 
and to weaken tlte forces of the Reformation. On the problem 
of divine election Lutheranism and Calvinism remained divided. 
The Formula of Concord (1 5 77), which gave to the whole Lutheran 
Church of Germany a common doctrinal system, declined to 
accept the Cataaistic position that man'* c onde mnation as well 



as his salvation Is an object of divine predestxsmtioft* ' WKMa 
Calvinism itself Pelagianism was revived in Armmiaiusm* 
which denied the irresistibility, and alarmed the universality 
of grace. This heresy was condemned by the synod of Dort 
(1619). The standpoint of the Reformed churches was the 
substitution of the authority of the Scriptures for the authority 
of the church. Whatever was conceived as contrary to the 
teaching of the Bible was regarded as heresy. The position is 
well expressed in the Scotch Confession (1550). " Protestiag; 
that if any man will note in this our Confession any arttde or 
sentence repugning to God's Holy Word, that it would please 
him, of his gentleness, and for Christian charity's sake, to ad* 
monish us of the same in writ, and we of our honour and fidelity 
do promise unto him satisfaction from the mouth of God; that 
is, from His Holy Scripture, or else reformation of that which 
he shall prove to be amiss. In God we take to record in our 
consciences that from our hearts we abhor all sects of heresy, 
and all teachers of erroneous doctrines; and that with all 
humility we embrace purity of Christ's evangel, wfakb is the only 
food of our souls " (Preface). 

Although subsequently to the Reformation period the Pro- 
testant churches for the most part relapsed into the dogmatism 
of the Roman Catholic Church, and were ever ready with 
censure for ^vtrf departure from orthodoxy — yet to-day a spirit 
of diffidence in regard to one's own beliefs, and of tolerance 
towards the beliefs of others, is abroad. The enlargement of 
the horizon of knowledge by the advance of science, the recogni- 
tion of the only relative validity of human opinions and belief a as 
determined by and adapted to each stage of human development, 
which is due to the growing historical sense, the alteration of 
view regarding the nature of inspiration, and the purpose of the 
Holy Scriptures, the revolt against all ecclesiastical authority, 
and the acceptance of reason and conscience as alone authorita- 
tive, the growth of the spirit of Christian charity, the clamorous 
demand of the social problem for immediate attention, all com- 
bine in making the Christian churches less anxious about the 
danger, and less zealous in the discovery and condemnation 
of heresy. 

Having traced the history of opinion m the Christian churches 
on the subject of heresy, we must new return to resume a sub- 
ject already mentioned, the persecution of heretics. 
According to the Canon Law, which " was the ecclesi- 
astical law of medieval Europe, and is still the law of 
the Roman Catholic Church," heresy was denned as 
" error which is voluntarily held in contradiction to a doctrine 
which has been clearly stated in the creed, and has become part 
of the denned faith of the church," and which is " persisted in by 
a member of the church." It was regarded not only as an error, 
bat also as a crime to be detected and punished. As it belongs, 
However, to a man's thoughts and not his deeds, it often can be 
proved only from suspicions. The canonists define the degrees 
of suspicion as " light " calling foe vigilance, " vehement " 
demanding denunciation, and " violent " requiring punishment* 
The grounds of suspicion have been formulated " Pope Innocent 
III. declared that to lead a solitary life, to refuse to accommodate 
oneself to the prevailing manners of society, and to frequent 
unauthorized religious meeting* were abundant grounds of 
suspicion; while later canonists were accustomed to give lists 
of deeds which made the doers suspect; a priest who did not 
celebrate mass, a layman who was seen in clerical robes, those 
who favoured heretics, received them as guests, gave them safe 
conduct, tolerated them, trusted them, defended them, fought 
under them or read their books were all to be suspect " (T.M. 
Lindsay in article " Heresy," Ency, BriL oth edition). That 
the dangers of heresy might be avoided, laymen were forbidden 
to argue about matters of faith by Pope Alexander IV., an oath 
" to abjure every heresy, and to maintain in its completeness 
the Catholic faith " was required by the council of Toledo (1 1 so), 
the reading of the Scriptures in the vulgar tongue was not allowed 
to the laity by Pope Pius IV. The reading of books was restricted 
and certain books were prohibited. Regarding heresy is a crime, 
the church was not content with inflicting its spiritual penaluo., 



HS&SSV 



36* 



rich as excommunication and sticn civil disabuses as iu own 
organization allowed it to impose (#.£, the heretics were forbidden 
to give evidence in ecclesiastical courts, fathers were forbidden 
to allow a son or a daughter to marry a heretic, and to hold 
social intercourse with a heretic was an offence). It regarded 
itself as justified in invoking the power of the state to suppress 
heresy by civil pains and penalties, including even torture and 
death. 

The story of the persecution of heretics by the state must be 
briefly sketched. 

As long as the Christian Church was itself persecuted by the 
pagan empire, it advocated freedom of conscience, and insisted 
that religion could be promoted only by instruction and per- 
suasion (Justin Martyr, TertuUian, Lactantius); but almost 
immediately after Christianity was adopted as the religion of 
the Roman empire Che persecution ot men for religious opinions 
began. While Constantine at the beginning of his reign (313) 
declared complete religious liberty, and kept on the whole to 
this declaration, yet he confined bis favours to the orthodox 
hierarchical church, and even by an edict of the year 326 formally 
asserted the exclusion from these of heretics and schismatics. 
Arianiaro, when favoured by the reigning emperor, showed itself 
even more intolerant than Catholic Orthodoxy. Theodosius 
the Great, in 380, soon after his baptism, issued, with his co- 
emperors, the following edict: " We, the three emperors, will 
that all our subjects steadfastly adhere to the religion which was 
taught by St Peter to the Romans, which has been faithfully 
preserved by tradition, and which is now professed by the pontiff 
Damasus of Rome, and Peter, bishop of Alexandria, a man of 
apostolic holiness. According to the institution of the Apostles, 
and the doctrine of the Gospel, let us believe in the one Godhead 
of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost, of equal majesty 
in the Holy Trinity. We order that the adherents of this faith 
be called Catholic Christians; we brand all the senseless followers 
of the other religions with the infamous name of heretics, and 
forbid their conventicles assuming the name of churches. Besides 
the condemnation of divine justice, they must expect the heavy 
penalties which our authority, guided by heavenly wisdom, 
shall think proper to inflict " (Schaff's Nicent and Post-N kerne 
Christianity, i. 142). The fifteen penal laws which this emperor 
issued in as many years deprived them of all right to the exercise 
of their religion, "excluded them from all civil offices, and 
threatened them with fines, confiscation, banishment and even 
in some cases with death." In 385 Maxim us, his rival and 
colleague, caused seven heretics to be put to death at Treves 
(Trier). Many bishops approved the act, but Ambrose of Milan 
and Martin of Tours condemned it. While Chrysostom dis- 
approved of the execution of heretics, he approved " the pro- 
hibition of their assemblies and the confiscation of their churches " 
Jerome by an appeal to Deut. xiii 6-10 appears to defend even 
the execution of heretics. Augustine: found a justification for 
these penal measures in the "compel them to come in* of 
Luke xiv. 23, although his personal leanings were towards 
clemency. Only the persecuted themselves insisted on toleration 
as a Christian duty. In the middle ages the church showed no 
hesitation about persecuting unto death all who dared to con- 
tradict her doctrine, or challenge her practice, or question her 
authority. The instruction and persuasion which St Bernard 
favoured found little imitation. Even the Dominicans, who 
began as a preaching order to convert heretics, soon became 
persecutors. In the < Albigensian Crusade (aj>. 1200-1229) 
thousands were slaughtered. As the bishops were not zealous 
enough in enforcing penal laws against heretics, the Tribunal of 
the Inquisition was founded in 1232 by Gregory IX., and was 
entrusted to the Dominicans who " as Domini cams subjected 
to the most cruel tortuves all on whom the suspicion of heresy 
fell, and alt the resolute were handed over to the ctvfl authorities, 
who readily undertook their execution " (Kurtz, Church History, 
fi. X37-138). 

At (he Reformation Luther hud down the principle that the 
dvfl government is concerned with the province of the external 
tod temporal life, and has nothing to do with faith and conscience. 



" How could the emperor gain the right," be asks, " to rule my 
faith?" With that only the Word of God is concerned. 
" Heresy is a spiritual thing," he says, " which one cannot hew 
with any iron, bum with any fire, drown with any water. The 
Word of God alone is there to do it." Nevertheless Luther 
assigned to the state, which he assumes to be Christian, the 
function of maintaining the Gospel and the Word of God in 
public Bfe. He was not quite consistent in carrying out his 
principle (see Luthard's Geschichte der ekristtithen Ethik, H. 
33). In the Religious Peace of Augsburg the principle " cujus 
regio ejus religto " was accepted; by it a ruler's choice between 
Catholicism and Lutheranism bound his subjects, but any 
subject unwilling to accept the decision might emigrate without 
hindrance. 

In Geneva under Calvin, wMle tjie Consistotre, or ecclesiastical 
court, could inflict only spiritual penalties, yet the medieval 
idea of the duty of the state to co-operate with the church to 
maintain the religious purity of the community in matters of 
belief as well as of conduct so far survived that the dvil authority 
was sure to punish those whom the ecclesiastical had censured. 
Calvin consented to the death of Servctus, whose views on the 
Trinity he regarded as most dangerous heresy, and whose denial 
of the full authority of the Scriptures he dreaded as overthrow- 
ing the foundations of all religious authority. Protestantism 
generally, it is to be observed, quite approved the execution of 
the heretic. The Synod of Dort (16 19) not only condemned 
Arminianism, but its defenders were expelled from the Nether- 
lands; only in 1625 did they venture to return, and not till 1630 
were they allowed to erect schools and churches. In modern 
Protestantism there is a growing disinclination to deal even with 
errors of belief by ecclesiastical censure; the appeal to the civH 
authority to inflict any penally is abandoned. During the 
course of the xoth century in Scottish Presbyterianism the ' 
affirmation of Christ's atoning death for all men, the denial of 
eternal punishment, the modification of the doctrine of the 
inspiration of the Scriptures by acceptance of the results of the 
Higher Criticism, were all censured as perilous errors. 

The subject cannot be left without a brief reference to the 
persecution of witches. To the beginning of the r3th century 
the popular superstitions regarding sorcery 1 , witchcraft, and 
compacts with the devil were condemned by the ecclesiastical 
authorities as heathenish, sinful and heretical. But after the 
establishment of the Inquisition *' heresy and sorcery were 
regarded as correlates, like two agencies resting on and service- 
able to the demoniacal powers, and were therefore treated in 
the same way as offences to be punished with torture and the 
stake " (Kurt*, Church History, ii. 193)- While the Franciscans 
rejected the belief in witchcraft, the Dominicans were most 
zealous in persecuting witches. In the 1 5th century this delusion, 
fostered by the ecclesiastical authorities, took possession of the 
mind of the people, and thousands, mostly old women, but also 
a number of girls, were tortured and burned as witches. Pro- 
testantism took over the superstition from Catholicism. It 
was defended by James L of England. As late as the i8tH 
century death was inflicted in Germany and Switzerland on men, 
women and even children accused of this crime. This superstition 
dominated Scotland. Not till 1736 were the statutes against 
witchcraft repealed; an act which the Associate Presbytery 
at Edinburgh in 1743 declared to be " contrary to the express 
law of God, for which a holy God may be provoked in a way of 
righteous judgment." 

The recognition and condemnation of errors hi religious 
belief is by no means confined to the Christian Church. Only 
a few instances of heresy in other religions can be 
given. In regard to the fetishism of the Gold Coast 2jJJ" /toa 
of Africa, Jevons (Introduction U the History of r*Hgha$. 
Religion, pp. 165-166) maintains that " public opinion 
does not approve of the worship by an individual of a suhman, 
or private tutelary deity, and that his dealings with it are 
regarded in the nature of * black art ' as it is not a god of 
the community." In China there is a " classical or canonical, 
primitive and * therefore alone orthodox (tsching) and true 



362 



HERESY 



religion," Confucianism and Taoism, while the "heterodox 
{sic)" Buddhism especially, is " partly tolerated, but generally 
forbidden, and even cruelly persecuted" (Chantepie de la 
Saussaye, Rdigionsgesckichte, i. 57). In Islam "according 
to an unconfirmed tradition Mahomet is said to have foretold 
that his community would split into seventy-three sects (see 
Mahommeoan Religion, $ Seels), of which only one would 
escape the flames of helL" The first split was due to uncertainty 
regarding the principle which should rule the succession to the 
Caliphate. The Arabic and orthodox party {i.e. the Sunnites, 
who held by the Koran and tradition) maintained that this 
should be determined by the choice of the community. The 
Persian and heterodox party (the Shiites) insisted on heredity. 
But this political difference was connected with theological 
differences. The sect of the Mu'taxilites which affirmed that the 
Koran had been created, and denied predestination, began to 
be persecuted by the government in the 9th century, and 
discussion of religious questions was forbidden (see Cauphate, 
sections B and C). The mystical tendency in Islam, Sufism, is 
also regarded as heretical (see Kuerten's Hibbert Lecture, pp. 
45-50). Buddhism is a wide departure in doctrine and practice 
from Brahmanism, and hence after a swift unfolding and quick 
spread it was driven out of India and had to find a home in 
other lands. Essenism from the standpoint of Judaism was 
heterodox in two respects, the abandonment of animal sacrifices 
and the adoration of the sun. 

Although in Greece there was generally wide tolerance, yet 
in 399 B.C. Socrates "was indicted as an irreligious man, a 
corrupter of youth, and an innovator in worship." 

Besides tli e- 

Uitsch* Kirc n, 

1740). A vi al, 

. is given in B ge 

(1829). Tb be 

studied in L> JJ- 

1856 aEng. t }es 

in the works tes 

in Hahn's < nd 

Prcger's Gtn t'% 

Cesckickte d in 

Palmer's G he 

Reformation is- 

tieum el entl t). 

Bdhmer's J an 

Espen's Jus >ns 

of heresy to im 

of heretics es, 

" Baptism, 1 ics \ 

into the chi De f 

peenitentia. I 

Heresyau ed t 

by the cede w* \ 

comburendo \ rit 1 

of that nam [fit f 

be arrested V. \ 

enabled the >d, I 

to pronounc ite \ 

it by burnir he \ 

following reigns, and the statute 1 Eli*, c 1 is regarded by lawyers as I 

limiting lor the first time the description of heresy to tenets declared I 

heretical either by the canonical Scripture or by the first four general I 

councils, or such as should thereafter be so declared by parliament 1 
with the assent of Convocation. The writ was abolished by 29 Car. II. 

c. 9, which reserved to the ecclesiastical courts their jurisdiction over \ 
heresy and similar offences, and their power of awarding punishments 
not extending to death. Heresy became henceforward a purely 
ecclesiastical offence, although disabling laws of various kinds 

continued to be enforced against Jews, Catholics and other dissenters. \ 
The temporal courts have no knowledge of any offence known as I 
heresy, although incidentally (e.g. in questions of copyright) they ' 
have refused protection to persons promulgating irreligious or i 
blasphemous opinions. As an ecclesiastical offence it would at this I 
moment be almost impossible to say what opinion, in the case of a I 
layman at least, would be deemed heretical. Apparently, if a proper I 
case could be made out, an ecclesiastical court might still sentence ) 
a layman to excommunication for heresy, but by no other means \ 
could his opinions be brought under censure. The last case on the r 
subject (Jenkins v. Cook, L.R. t P.D. 80) leaves the matter in the > 
same uncertainty. In that case a clergyman refused the communion I 
. — , 

1 Stephen's Commentaries, bk. iv. ch. 7. ....,._..,,_ * 



HEREWARD— HERIOT, G. 



363 



e9AlftWai.IILc.35. If any person wfefco* 

been educat e d in or has professed the Christian religion shall, by writing, 
printing, teaching, or advised speaking, assert or maintain that there 
are more Gods than one, or shall deny any of the persons of the Holy 
Trinity to be God, or shall deny the Christian religion to be true or the 
Holy Scriptures of the Old and New Testament to be of divine 
authority, he shall for the first offence be declared incapable of 
holding any ecclesiastical, civil, or military office or employment, 
and for the second incapable of bringing any action, or of being 
guardian, executor, legatee, or grantee, and shall suffer three years' 
imprisonment without bail. Unitarians were saved from these 
atrocious penalties by a later act (53 Geo. HI. c 160), which permits 
Christians to deny any of the persons in the Trinity without penal 
consequences. 

HEREWARD, usually but erroneously styled " the Wake " 
(an addition of later days), an Englishman famous for his re- 
sistance to William the Conqueror. It is now established that 
he was a tenant of Peterborough Abbey, from which he held 
fends at Witham-on-the-Hill and Barholme with Stow in the 
south-western corner of Lincolnshire, and of Crowland Abbey 
at Rippingale in the neighbouring fenland. His first authentic 
act is the storm and sacking of Peterborough in 1070, in company 
with outlaws and Danish invaders. The next year he took part 
in the desperate stand against the Conqueror's rule made in 
the isle of Ely, and, on its capture by the Normans, escaped 
with bis followers through the fens. That his exploits made 
an exceptional impression on the popular mind is certain from 
the mass of legendary history that clustered round his name; 
be became, says Mr" Davis, " in popular eyes the champion of 
the English national cause." The Hereward legend has been 
fully dealt with by him and by Professor Freeman, who observed 
that " with no name has fiction been more busy." 

See E. A. Freeman, History of the Norman Conquest, vol. iv.; 
I. H. Round. Feudal England; H. W. C. Davis, England under the 
Normans and A ngmins . (J. H. R.) 

HERFORD, a town in the Prussian province of Westphalia, 
situated at the confluence of the Werre and Aa, on the Minden 
ft Cologne railway, 9 m. N.E. of Bielefeld, and at the junction 
of the railway to Detmold and Ahenbeken. Pop. (1 885) 1 5,002 ; 
(1005) 34,82 1 . It possesses six Evangelical churches, notably the 
Munsterkirche, a Romanesque building with a Gothic apse of the 
15th century; the Marienkirche, in the Gothic style; and the 
Johanniskircbe, with a steeple 280 ft. high. The other principal 
buildings are the Roman Catholic church, the synagogue, the 
gymnasium founded in 1540, the agricultural school and the 
theatre. There is a statue of Frederick William of Brandenburg. 
The industries include cotton and flax-spinning, and the manu- 
facture of linen doth, carpets, furniture, machinery, sugar, 
tobacco and leather. 

Herford owes its origin to a Benedictine nunnery which is 
said to have been founded in 832, and was confirmed by the 
emperor Louis the Pious in 839. From the emperor Frederick 
I. the abbess obtained princely rank and a seat in the imperial 
diet. Among the abbesses was the celebrated Elizabeth (1618- 
1680), eldest daughter of the elector palatine Frederick V., who 
was a philosophical princess, and a pupil of Descartes. Under 
her rule the sect of the Labadists settled for some time in Herford. 
The foundation was secularized in 1803. Herford was a member 
of the Hanseatic League, and its suzerainty passed in 1547 from 
the abbesses to the dukes of Juliers. In 163 1 it became a free 
imperial town, but in 1647 it was subjugated by the elector of 
Brandenburg. It came into the possession of Westphalia in 
1807, and in 1813 into that of Prussia. 

See L. H6lscher, Reformationsgesckkhte der Stadt Herford (Guters- 
feh. 1888). 

HBROERR0THER, JOSEPH VON (1824-1800), German 
theologian, was bom at Wttrzburg in Bavaria on the 15th of 
September 1824. He studied at Wurzburg and at Rome. 
After spending a year as parish priest at Zellingen, near his 
native city, be went, in 1850, at his bishop's command, to the 
university of Munich, where he took his degree of doctor of 
theology the same year, becoming in 1851 Prhatdotent, and in 
1855 professor of ecclesiastical law and history. At Munich 
he gained the reputation of being one of the most learned 
theologians 00 the Ultramontane side of the Infallibility question, 



A in 1868 he wu tent to 
the Vatican Council. He 
>ility dogma; and an 1870 
r he Pope and Ik* Council, 
ich), which made a great 
was made prelate of the 
deacon in 1879, and was 
am archives. He died in 

was a dissertation on the 
wy Nasian*en(Regensburg, 
rary activity was immense, 
ippolytus and the question 
, he turned to the study of 
d the history of the Greek 
aged upon this work, the 
Uriarck von Constaniinopel. 
eckiscke Schisma (3 vols., 
volume (1869) gave, under 

. . pertinentia, a collection 
he work was largely based. 
: important are his history 
, (Der Kirchenstaal stil der 

i860; Fr. trans.. Leipzig, 
lurch and state (Katkofisch* 

H, 2 parts, Freiburg L B* 
ins., London, 1876, Balti- 
itory (Handbuch der allge- 
urg i. B., 1876-1880; 2nd 
th ed., by Peter Kksch, 
fee.). He also found time 
ctzerand Welte's Kircken- 
ition of part of the Regesla 
and to add two volumes to 
1 1890). 

Germany, in the Prussian 
i coast of the island of 
nde. It is surrounded by 
st popular seaside resort 
cing frequented by some 

he founder of He riot's 
from an old Haddington 

Edinburgh, represented 
George was born in 1563, 

was apprenticed to his 
le daughter of a deceased 
ustance of her patrimony 
. At first he occupied a 
icr of St Giles's church, 
>p at the west end of the 
tnith he joined that of a 
quired such a reputation 
Queen Anne, consort of 

to the king, and followed 
tc the Exchange. Heriot 

> the extravagance of the 
ivagance by the nobility, 
isiness as a jeweller that 
mation was issued calling 
m to aid him in securing 
n London on the 10th of 
s time previously lost his 
ose, daughter of James 
of Rosebery, but she died 

any issue. The surplus 

> to his nearest relations 
was bequeathed to found 
en's sons of the town of 
ncreased so greatly as to 
veral Heriot foundation 



novel. The Fortunes of Nigel 
of Heriot' s Hospital, with 
feeven, D.D., appeared io 



3&4 



HERJOT— HERLEN 



HERIOT, by derivation' the urns and equipment (gMtoa) of ft 
soldier or army (We); the O. £ng. word is thus kere-gtatwa. 
The lord of a fee provided his tenant with arms and a horse, 
either as a gift or loan, which he was to use in the military 
service paid by him. On the death of the tenant the lord claimed 
the return of the equipment. When by the ioth century land 
was being given instead of arms, the faieriot was still paid, but 
more in the nature of a " relief " fc.t.). There seems to have 
been some connexion between the payment of the heriot and 
the power of making a will (F. W. Maitland, Domesday Book 
and Beyond, p. 208). By the 13th century the payment was 
made either in money or in kind by the handing over of the best 
beast or of the best other chattel of the tenant (see Pollock and 
Maitland, History of English Lav, i. 270 sq.). For the 
manorial law relating to heriots, see Copyhold. 

HER1SAU, the largest town in the entire Swiss canton of 
Appenxell, built on the Glatt torrent, and by light railway 
7 m. south-west of St Gall or 13} m. north of Appenzell. In 
xooo it had 13,407 inhabitants, mainly Protestant and German- 
speaking. The lower portion of the massive tower of the parish 
church (Protestant) dates from the nth century or even earlier. 
It is a prosperous Utile industrial town in the Ausser Rhoden 
half of the canton, especially busied with the manufacture of 
embroidery by machinery, and of muslins. Near it is the 
goats' whey cure establishment of Heinrichsbad, and the two 
castles of Rosenberg and Rosenburg, ruined in 1403 when the 
land rose against its lord, the abbot of St Gall. About 5 m. 
to the south-east is Hundwil, a village of 1523 inhabitants, 
where the Landsgtmeinde of Ausser Rhoden meets in the odd 
years (in other years at Trogen) on the last Sunday in April 

HERITABLE JURISDICTIONS, in the law of Scotland, grants 
of jurisdiction made to a man and his heirs. They were a usual 
accompaniment to feudal tenures, and the power which they 
conferred on great families, being recognized as a source of 
danger to the state, led to frequent attempts being made by 
statute to restrict them, both before and after the Union, They 
were all abolished in 1746. 

HERKIMER, a village and the county-seat of Herkimer 
county, New York, U.S.A., in the township of the same name, 
on the Mohawk river, about 15 m. S.E. of Utica. Pop. (1900) 
5555 (724 being foreign-born); (1005, state census) 6596; (1010) 
7520. It is served by the New York Central & Hudson River 
railway, a branch of which (the Mohawk & Malorie railway) 
extends through the Adirondack^ to Malone, N.Y.; by inter- 
Urban electric railway to Little Falls, Syracuse, Richfield Springs, 
Cooperstown and Oneonta, and by the Erie canal. The village 
has a public library, and is the seat of the Foils Mission Institute 
(opened 1893), * training school for young women, controlled 
by the Women's Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist 
Episcopal Church. Herkimer is situated in a rich dairying 
region, and has various manufactures. The municipality owns 
and operates its water-supply system and electric-lighting 
plant. Herkimer, named in honour of General Nicholas Herkimer 
(c. 1728-1777), who was mortally wounded in the Battle of 
Oriskany, and in whose memory there is a monument (unveiled 
on the 6th of August 1007) in the village, was settled about 1725 
by Palatine Germans, who bought from the Mohawk Indians 
a large tract of land including the present site of the village 
and established thereon several settlements which became 
known collectively as the " German Flats." In 1756 a stone 
house, built in 1740 by General Herkimer's father, John Jost 
Herkimer (d. 1775) — apparently one of the original group of 
settlers — a stone church, and other buildings, standing within 
what is now Herkimer village, were enclosed in a stockade and 
ditch fortifications by Sir William Johnson, and this post, at 
first known as Fort Kouari (the Indian name), was subsequently 
called Fort Herkimer. Another fort (Ft. Dayton) was built 
within the limits of the present village in 1776 by Colonel Eh'as 
Dayton (1737-1807), who later became a brigadier-general 
(1783) and served in the Confederation Congress in 1787-17B8. 
During the French and Indian War the settlement was attacked 
(»ath November 1757) and practically destroyed, many of the 



settlers being killed or taken prisoners; and ft? 
on the 30th of April 1758. In the War of Independence General 
Herkimer assembled here the force which on the 6th of August 
1777 was ambushed near Oriskany on its march from Ft. Dayton 
to the relief of Ft. Schuyler (see Oriskany); and the settlement 
was attacked by Indians and M Tories " in September 1778 and 
in June 1782, The township of Herkimer was organised in 1 788, 
and in 1807 the village was incorporated. 

See Nathaniel I. Benton, History of Herkimer County (Albany, 
1856) ; and Phoebe S. Cowcn, Tht Herkimers and Schuylcrs. 1903). 

HERKOMER, SIR HUBERT VON (1849- ), British painter, 
was born at Waal, in Bavaria, and eight years later was brought 
to England by his father, a wood-carver of great ability. Ha 
lived for some time at Southampton and in the school of art 
there began his art training; but in 1866 he entered upon a 
more serious course of study at the South Kensington Schools, 
and in 1869 exhibited for the first time at the Royal Academy. 
By his picture, " The Last Muster," at the Academy in 1875, he 
definitely established his position as an artist of high distinction. 
He was elected an associate of the Academy in 1879, and academi- 
cian in 1890; an associate of the Royal Society 0/ Painters in 
Water Colours in 1803, and a full member in 1894; and in 1885 
he was appointed Slade professor at Oxford. He exhibited a 
very large number of memorable portraits, figure subjects and 
landscapes, in oil and water colour; he achieved marked succesa 
as a worker in enamel, as an etcher, mezzotint engraver and 
illustrative draughtsman; and he exercised wide influence upon 
art education by means of the Herkomer School (Incorporated), 
at Bushey, which he founded in 1883 and directed gratuitously 
until 1004 ,when he retired. It was then voluntarily wound up, and 
is now conducted privately. Twoof his pictures, " Found " ( 1 885) 
and "TheChapelof the Charterhouse" (1889), are in the National 
Gallery of British Art. In the year 1007 he received the honorary 
degree of D.CX. at Oxford, and a knighthood was conferred upon 
him by the king in addition to the commandership of the Royal 
Victorian Order with which he was already decorated. 



See Hubert von Herkomer, RA., a Study and a Biography, by 
A. L. BaJdry (London, 1901); Professor Hubert Herkomer, Royal 
Academician, His Life and Work, by W. L. Courtney (London, 1 892). 

HERLEN (or Hekltn), FRITZ, of Ndrdlingen, German artist of 
the early Swabian -school, in the 15th century. The date and 
place of his birth are unknown, but his name is on the roll of the 
tax-gatherers of Uim in 1449; and in 1467 he was made citizen 
and town painter at Nordlingen, " because of bis acq u aint an ce 
with Flemish methods of painting." One of the first of his 
acknowledged productions is a shrine on one of the altars of 
the church of Rothenburg on the Tauber, the wings of which 
were finished in 1466, with seven scenes from the lives of 
Christ and the Virgin Mary. In the town-hall of Rothenburg is a 
Madonna and St Catherine of 1467 ; and in the choir of Nfrdlingen 
cathedral a triptych of 1488, representing the " Nativity " and 
" Christ amidst the Doctors," at the side of a votive Madonna 
attended by St Joseph and St Margaret as patrons of a family. 
In each of these works the painter's name certifies the picture, 
and the manner is truly that of an artist "acquainted with 
Flemish methods." We are not told under whom Herlen 
laboured in the Netherlands, but he probably took the same 
course as Schongauer and Hans Holbein the elder, who studied in 
the school of van der Weyden. His altarpiece at Rothenburg 
contains groups and figures, as well as forms of action and drapery, 
which seem copied from those of van der Weyden 's or Memlinc's 
disciples, and the votive Madonna of 1488, whilst characterized 
by similar features, only displays such further changes as may 
be accounted for by the master's constant later contact with 
contemporaries in Swabia* Herlen had none of the genius of 
Schongauer. He failed to acquire the delicacy even of the 
second-rate men who handed down to Matsys the traditions of the 
15th century, but his example was certainly favourable to the 
development of art in Swabia. By general consent critics have 
assigned to him a large altar-piece, with scenes from the gospels 
and figures of St Florian and St Jftoriana, and a Crucifixion, the 
principal figure of which ia carved in high relief on the surface of 



HERMAB— HERMAN DE VALENCIENNES 



363 



t large panel in the church of DinkelsbuhL A Crad&Bon, with 
eight scenes from the New Testament, is shown as his in the 
cathedral, a " Christ in Judgment, with Mary and John," and the 
" Resurrection of Souls " in the town-hall of Nordlingcn. A small 
Epiphany, once in the convent of the Minorites of Ulm, is in 
the Holzschuhcr collection at Augsburg, a Madonna and Circum- 
cision in the National Museum at Munich, Hcrten's epitaph, 
preserved by Raihgcbcr, stales that he died on the 12th of 
October 1491, and was buried at Nordlingen* 

HERMAE, in Creek antiquities, quadrangular pillars, broader 
above than at the base, surmounted by a head or bust, so called 
either because the head of Hermes was most common or from 
their etymological connexion with the Creek word fatara (blocks 
of stone), which originally had no reference to Hermes at alL In 
the oldest times Hermes, like other divinities, was worshipped in 
the form of a heap of stones or of an amorphous block of wood or 
stone, which afterwards took the shape of a phallus, the symbol 
of productivity. The next step was the addition o» a head to this 
phaUic column which became quadrangular (the number 4 was 
sacred to Hermes, who was born on the fourth day of the month), 
with the significant indication of sex still prominent. In this 
shape the number of herms rapidly increased, especially those of 
Hermes, for which the distinctive name of Hermhcrmae has been 
suggested. In Athens they were found at the corners of streets; 
before the gates and in the courtyards of houses, where they 
were worshipped by women as having the power to make them 
proline; before the temples; in the gymnasia and palaestrae. On 
each side of the road leading from the Stoa Toikile to the Stoa 
Basilctos, rows of Hermae were set up in such numbers by the 
piety of private individuals or public corporations, that the Stoa 
Basileios was called the Stoa of the Hermac. The function of 
Hermes as protector of the roads, of merchants and of commerce, 
explains the number of Hermae that served the purpose of sign- 
posts 00 the roads outside the city. It is stated in the pseudo- 
Platonic Hipparchus that the son of Peisistratus had set up 
aaarble pillars at suitable places on the roads leading from the 
different country districts to Athens, having the places connected 
with the roads inscribed on the one side in a hexameter verse, 
and on the other a pentameter containing a short proverb or 
moral precept for the edification of travellers. Sometimes they 
bote inscriptions celebrating the valour of those who had fought 
ior their country. Just as it was customary for the passer-by to 
show respect to the rudest form of the god (the heap of stones) by 
contributing a stone to the heap or anointing it with oil, in like 
manner small offerings, generally of dried figs, were deposited 
near the Hermae, to appease the hunger of the necessitous way- 
farer. Garlands of flowers were also suspended on the two arm- 
like tenons projecting from either side of the column at the top 
(for the oracle at Pbarac see Hermes). These pillars were also 
used to mark the frontier boundaries or the limits of different 
estates. The great respect attaching to them is shown by the 
excitement caused in Athens by the " Mutilation of the Hermae " 
just before the departure of the Sicilian expedition (May 41 5 ■•c). 
They formed the object of a special industry, the makers of them 
being called Hermoglyphi. The surmounting heads were not, 
however, confined to those of Hermes; those of other gods and 
heroes, and even of distinguished mortals, were of frequent 
occurrence. In this case a compound was formed: Hermathena 
(a herm of Athena), Hcnnares, Hermaphroditus, Hcrmanubis, 
Hcrmalcibiades, and so on. In the case of these compounds it is 
disputed whether they indicated a herm with the head of Athena, 
or with a Janus-like head of both Hermes and Athena, or a 
figure compounded of both deities. The Romans not only 
borrowed the Hermes pillars for their deities which at an early 
period they assimilated to those of the Greeks (as Heracles- 
Hercules) but also for the indigenous gods who preserved their 
individuality. Thus herms of Jupiter Terminals (the hermae 
being identified with the Roman termini) and of Silvanus occur. 
. Under the empire, the function of the hermae was rather archi- 
tectural than religious. They were used to keep up the draperies 
in the interior of a house, and in the Circus Maximus they were 
used to support (he barriers. 



See the article with bibliography by Pierre Paris in Daromberg 

id SagUo's Diclionnaire des anliquiles\ for the mutilation of the 
Hermac, Thucydidcs vi. 27; Andocides, De myslcriis; Grote, 



and SagUo's Diclionnaire des anliquiles\ for the mutilation of the 
Hermac, Thucydidcs vi. 27; Andocides, De myslcriis; Grote, 
HisL oj Greece, ch. 38; H. Weil, Eludes sur I'anliquiU grtcque (1900); 



Burok, Grtexk. Gesck* (cd. 1904), HI. ii. p. 1287. 

HERMAGORAS, of Temnos, Greek rhetorician of the Rhodian 
school and teacher of oratory in Rome, flourished during the 
first half of the 1st century B.C. He obtained a great reputation 
among a certain section and founded a special school, the members 
of which called themselves Hermagorei. His chief opponent 
was Posidonius of Rhodes, who is said to have contended with 
him in argument in the presence of Pompey (Plutarch, Pom pcy, 
42). Hecmagoras devoted himself particularly to the branch of 
rhetoric known as ouovojtta (invcntio), and is said* to have 
invented the doctrine of the four orhotts (status) and to have 
arranged the parts of an oration differently from his predecessors. 
Cicero held an unfavourable opinion of his methods, which were 
approved by Quintilian, although he considers that Hcrmagoras 
neglected the practical side of rhetoric for 'the theoretical 
According to Suidas and Strabo, he was the author of rixra* 
fairopual (rhetorical manuals) and of other works, which should 
perhaps be attributed to his younger namesake, surnamed 
Canon, the pupil of Theodorus of Gadara. 

Sec Strabo xiii. p. 621; Cicero, De invenlione, i. 6. 8, Brutus, 
76, 263. 78, 271; Quintilian, Instil, iii. 1. 16, 3. 9. 11. 22: 
C. W. Pidcrit, De Hermagora rhetore (1839): G. Thicle, Hermagoras 
Ein Btitrag sur Gesehichte dcr Rketorik (1893). 

HERM AHDAD (from hermano, Lat. germanus, a brother), a 
Castilian word meaning, strictly speaking, a brotherhood. In 
the Romance language spoken on the east coast of Spain in 
Catalonia it is written germandat or gcrmania. In the form 
germanU it has acquired the significance of " thieves' Latin " 
or " thieves' cant," and is applied to any jargon supposed to be 
understood only by the initiated. But the typical "ger mania" 
is a mixture of slang and of the gipsy language. The herman- 
dades have played a conspicuous part in the history of Spain. 
The first recorded case of the formation of an hermandad 
occurred in the rath century when the towns and the peasantry 
of the north united to police the pilgrim road to Santiago in 
Galicia, and protect the pilgrims against robber knights. 
Throughout the middle ages such alliances were frequently 
formed by combinations of towns to protect the roads connecting 
them, and were occasionally extended to political purposes. 
They acted to some extent like the Fchmic courts of Germany. 
The Catholic sovereigns, Ferdinand and Isabella, adapted an 
existing hermandad to the purpose of a general police acting 
under officials appointed by themselves, and endowed wilh 
large powers of summary jurisdiction even in capital cases. 
The hermandad became, in fact, a constabulary, which, however, 
fell gradually into neglect. In Catalonia and Valencia the 
"germanias" were combinations of the peasantry to resist 
the exactions of the feudal lords. 

HERMAN DE VALENCIENNES, 12th-century French poet, 
was born at Valenciennes, of good parentage. His father and 
mother, Robert and Hcrembourg, belonged to Hainault, and 
gave him for god-parents Count Baldwin and Countess Yoland— 
doubtless Baldwin IV. of Hainault and his mother Yoland. 
Herman was a priest and the author of a verse Histoire de Its 
Bible, which includes a separate poem on the Assumption of the 
Virgin. The work is generally known as Lc Roman de sapience, 
the name arising from a copyist's error in the first line of the 
poem: 

•' Comens de saptense, ce est la cremors de Dcu " 
the first word being miswritten in one MS. Romens, and in 
another Romanz, His work has, indeed, the form of an ordinary 
romance, and cannot be regarded as a translation. He selects 
such stories from the Bible as suit his purpose, and adds freely 
from legendary sources, displaying considerable art in the 
selection and use of his materials. This scriptural poem, very 
popular in its day, mentions Henry II. of England as already 
dead, and must therefore be assigned to a date posterior to 1189. 

See Nedicts el extraits des manuscrits (Paris, vol. 34). and Jean 
Bonnard, Lis Traductions de la Bible en vert JranyUs an moytn dge 



366 



HERMANN I.— HERMANN, F. B. W. VON 



HERMANN I. (d. 1217), landgrave of Thuringia and count 
palatine of Saxony, was the second son of Louis II. the Hard, 
landgrave of Thuringia, and Judith of Hohenstaufen, sister of 
the emperor Frederick I. Little is known of his early years, 
but in 1 1 80 he joined a coalition against Henry the Lion, duke 
of Saxony, and with his brother, the landgrave Louis III., 
suffered a short imprisonment after his defeat at Weissensee by 
Henry. About this time he received from his brother Louis the 
Saxon pajalinate, over which he strengthened his authority by 
marrying Sophia, sister of Adalbert, count of Sommcrschenburg, 
a former count palatine. In iroo Louis died and Hermann 
by his energetic measures frustrated the attempt of the emperor 
Henry Vt. to seize Thuringia as a vacant fief of the Empire, 
and established himself as landgrave. Having joined a league 
against the emperor he was accused, probably wrongly, of an 
attempt to murder him. Henry was not only successful in 
detaching Hermann from the hostile combination, but gained 
his support for the scheme to unite Sicily with the Empire. In 
1 197 Hermann went on crusade. When Henry VI. died in 1108 
Hermann's support was purchased by the late emperor's brother 
Philip, duke of Swabia, but as soon as Philip's cause appeared 
to be weakening he transferred his allegiance to Otto of Bruns- 
wick, afterwards the emperor Otto IV. Philip accordingly 
invaded Thuringia in 1204 and compelled Hermann to- come to 
terms by which he surrendered the lands he had obtained in 1 198. 
After the death of Philip and the recognition of Otto he was 
among the princes who invited Frederick of Hohenstaufen, 
afterwards the emperor Frederick II., to come to Germany and 
assume the crown. In consequence of this step the Saxons 
attacked Thuringia, but the landgrave was saved by Frederick's 
arrival in Germany in 1212. After the death of his first wife in 
1 195 Hermann married Sophia, daughter of Oito I., duke of 
Bavaria. By her be had four sons, two of whom, Louis and 
Henry Raspe, succeeded their father in turn as landgrave. 
Hermann died at Gotha on the 25th of April 121 7, and was 
buried at Reinhardsbrunn. He was fond of the society of men 
of letters, and Walther von der Vogelweide and other Minne- 
singers were welcomed to his castle of the Wartburg. In this 
connexion he figures in Wagner's TannhUuser. 

See E. Winkclmana, PhUipp von Schv/aben und Otto IV. von 
Bran nsckweit (Leipzig, 1873-1878); T. Knochenhaucr, Ceschichte 
Thilringens (Gotha, 1871); and F. Wachter, ThQringische und ober- 
s&chsische Geschiehte (Leipzig, 1826). 

HERMANN OF REICHENAU (Herimannus Auciensis), 
commonly distinguished as Hermannus Contractus, i.e. the Lame 
(1013-1054), German scholar and chronicler, was the son of 
Count Wolfcrad of Alshausen in Swabia. Hermann, who 
became a monk of the famous abbey of Reichenau, is at once one 
of the most attractive and one of the most pathetic figures of 
medieval monasticism. Crippled and distorted by gout from 
his childhood, he was deprived of the use of his legs, but, in 
spite of this, he became one of the most learned men of his time, 
and exercised a great personal and intellectual influence on the 
numerous band of scholars he gathered round him. He died on 
the 24th of September 1054, at the family castle of Alshausen near 
Biberach. Besides the ordinary studies of the monastic scholar, 
he devoted himself to mathematics, astronomy and music, 
and constructed watches and instruments of various kinds. 

His chief work is a Chronicon ad annum 10*4, which furnishes 
important and original material for the history of the emperor Henry 
III. The first edition, from a MS. no longer extant, was printed by 
J. Sichard at Basel in 1529, and reissued by Hcinrich Peter in 1549; 
another edition appeared at St Blaise in 1790 under the supervision 
of Ussermann; and a third, as a result of the collation of numerous 
MSS., forms part of vol. v. of Pertz's Monument* Cermamae historica. 
A German translation of the last is contributed by K. F. A. Nobbe 
to Die Ceschichtsschreiber der deutschen Vorseit (1st ed., Berlin, 
1851: 2nd ed., Leipzig, 1893). The separate lives of Conrad 11. 
and Henry 111., often ascribed to Hermann, appear to have perished. 
His treatises De mrusura aslrotabii and De utUitatibus astrolabii 
(to be found, on the authority of Salzburg MSS., in Pez, Thesaurus 
anecdotorum novissimus, iii.) being the first contributions of moment 
furnished by a European to this subject, Hermann was for a time 
considered the inventor of the astrolabe. A didactic poem from his 
pen, De octo vitiis principalibus, U printed in Haupt's Zeitsckrift 
fir drutsches AlUrifum (vol. xiii.); and he is sometimes credited 



with the composition of the Latin hymns Veni Sonde Spiritus. SoJm 
Retina, and Alma Rudemptoris. A martyroloiium by Hermann was 
discovered by E. Dummlcr in a MS. at Stuttgart, and was published 
by him in " Das Martyrologium Notkcrs und seine Vcrwandten ** 
in Forschungen tur deulschen Ceschichte, xxv. (GOttingen, 1883). 

See H. Hansiakob, Herimann der Lahme (Mainz, 1875); Pottfcast, 
Btbttotheca med. aev. s. " Herimannus Augiensis." 

HERMANN OP WIED (1477-1552), elector and archbishop 
of Cologne, was the fourth son of Frederick, count of Wied 
(d. 1487), and was born on the 14th of January 1477. Educated 
for the Church, he became elector and archbishop in ist$, and 
ruled his electorate with vigour and intelligence, taking up at 
first an attitude of hostility towards the reformers and their 
teaching. A quarrel with the papacy turned, or helped to turn, 
his thoughts in the direction of Church reform, but he hoped 
this would come from within rather than from without, and with 
the aid of his friend John Gropper (1 503-1559), began, about 
1536, to institute certain reforms in his own diocese. One step led 
to another, and as ail efforts at union failed the elector invited 
Martin Bucer to Cologne in 1542. Supported by the estates 
of the electorate, and relying upon the recess of the diet of 
Regensburg in 1541, he encouraged Bucer to press on with 
the work of reform, and in 1543 invited Melanchthon to his 
assistance. His conversion was hailed with great joy by the 
Protestants, and the league of Schmalkalden declared they were 
resolved to defend him; but the Reformation in the electorate 
received checks from the victory of Charles V. over William, 
duke of Cleves, and the hostility of the citizens of Cologne. 
Summoned both before the emperor and the pope, the elector 
was deposed and excommunicated by Paul III. in 1546. ^fe 
resigned his office in February 1547, and retired to Wied. 
Hermann, who was also a bishop of Padcrborn from 1532 to 
1547, died on the 15th of August 1552. 

See C. Varrcntrapp, Heaftamn von Wied (Leipzig, 1878). 

HERMANN, FRIEDRICH BENEDICT wTLHBLM VON (179s* 
1868), German economist, was born on the sth of December 
1795, at Dinkclsbuhl in Bavaria. After finishing his primary 
education he was for some time employed in a draughtsman's 
office. He then resumed his studies, partly at the gymnasium 
in his native town, partly at the universities of Erlangen and 
Wiiraburg. In 181 7 he took up a private school at Nuremberg, 
where he remained for four years. After filling an appointment 
as teacher of mathematics at the gymnasium of Ertangen, he 
became in 1823 Ptivatdoxent at the university in that town. 
His inaugural dissertation was on the notions of political economy 
among the Romans (Dissertatio exhibens sentential Romanorum 
ad oeconomiam potiticam pcrtinentes, Erlangen, 1823). He after- 
wards acted as professor of mathematics at the gymnasium 
and polytechnic school in Nuremberg, where he continued til 
1827. During his stay there he published an elementary 
treatise on arithmetic and algebra {Lchrbuch der A nth. u. Algeb., 
1826), and made a journey to France to inspect the organization 
and conduct of technical schools in that country. The results 
of his investigation were published in 1826 and 1828 (Ober 
tecknische Unterrickts-AnstaHen). Soon after .his return from 
France he was made professor cxtraordinoriut of political 
science of the university of Munich, and in 1833 he was advanced 
to the rank of ordinary professor. In 1832 appeared the first 
edition of his greal work on political, economy, Stwlswth- 
schefttkhe U tUasuchunftn. In 1 83 5 he was made member of the 
Royal Bavarian Academy of Sciences. From the year 1836 he 
acted as inspector of technical instruction in Bavaria, and made 
frequent journeys to Berlin and Paris in order to study the 
methods there pursued. In the state service of Bavaria, to which 
he devoted himself, he rose rapidly. In 1837 be was placed on 
the council for superintendence of church and school work; in 
1839 he was entrusted with the direction of the bureau of 
statistics; in 1845 he was one of the councillors for the interior; 
in 1848 he sat as member for Munich in the national assembly 
at Frankfort. In this assembly Hermann, with Johann Heckscher 
and others, was mainly instrumental In organizing the so-called 
" Great German " party, and was selected as one of the represen- 
tatives of their views at Vienna. Warmly supporting tht customs 



HERMANN, J. G. J.— HERMAS, SHEPHERD OF 



367 



vnlon (ZoUverein), be acted in 1851 as one of its 
at tbe great industrial exhibition at London, and published 
an elaborate report on the woollen goods. Three years later 
be was president of the committee of judges at the similar 
exhibition at Munich, and the report of its proceedings was 
drawn up by him. In 1855 he became councillor of state, the 
highest honour in the service. From 1 835 to 1847 he contributed 
a long series of reviews, mainly of works on economical subjects, 
to the Uiinckener gtlekrte Antigen and also wrote for Rau's 
Arckiv der pdiiiscken Okonomic and the Augsburger oUgemeine 
Zeilung. As head of the bureau of statistics he published a 
series of valuable annual reports (Betir&ge tut Statistic aUs 
Konigreichs Bayern, Hefte 1-17, 1850-1867). He was engaged 
at tbe time of his death, on the 33rd of November 1868, upon 
a second edition of his Staatsvrirtkschaftliche Unkrsuehuugxn, 
which was published in 1870. 

Hermann's rare technological knowledge gave him a great 
advantage in dealing with some economic questions. He 
reviewed the principal fundamental ideas of the science with 
great thoroughness and acutcness. "His strength," says 
Roscher, " lies in his dear, sharp, exhaustive distinction between 
the several elements of a complex conception, or the several 
steps comprehended in a complex. act." For keen analytical 
power his German brethren compare him with Ricardo. But 
he avoids several one-sided views of the English economist. 
Thus he places public spirit beside egoism as an economic motor, 
regards price as not measured by labour only but as a product 
of several factors, and habitually contemplates the consumption 
of the labourer, not as a part of the cost of production to the 
Capitalist, but as the main practical end of economics. 

See Kautz, Geich. Entwickiung d. Natioruji-Okonomilt, pp. 633-638 ; 
Roacher, Geuh. d. NaL-Okon. in DeutscUand, pp. 860-879. 

HERMANN. JOHANN GOTTFRIED JAKOB (1772-1848), 
German classical scholar and philologist, was born at Leipzig on 
the 28th of November 1772. Entering the university of his 
native city at the age of fourteen, Hermann at first studied law, 
which he soon abandoned for the classics. After a session at 
Jena in 1 703-1704, he became a lecturer on classical literature in 
Leipzig, in 1 708 professor exlroordiuetius of philosophy in the 
university, and in 1803 professor of eloquence (and poetry, 1809). 
He died on the 31st of December 1848. Hermann maintained 
that an accurate knowledge of the Greek and Latin languages was 
the only road to a clear understanding of the intellectual life of the 
ancient world, and the chief, if not the only, aim of philology. 
As the leader of this grammatico-critical school, he came into 
collision with A. Bockh and Otfried Mttller, the representatives of 
the hislorico-antiquarian school, which regarded Hermann's view 
of philology as inadequate and one-sided. 

Hermann devoted his early attention to the. classical poetical 
metres, and published several works on that subject, the most 
important being Elcmenta doetrino* metricae (18 16), in which he 
set forth a scientific theory based on the Kantian categories. 
His writings on Greek grammar are also valuable, especially De 
emendanda ratione Graecat grammaticae (1801), and notes and 
excursus on Vigor's treatise on Greek idioms. His editions of 
the classics include several of the plays of Euripides; the Clouds 
of Aristophanes (1709); THnummus of Plautus (1800); PoSlica 
of Aristotle (1802); Orphica (1805); tbe Homeric Hymns 
(1806); and tht LexUonot Photios (1808). In 1825 Hermann 
finished the edition of Sophocles begun by Erfurdt. His edition 
of Aeschylus was published after hte death in 1852. The Opuuula, 
a collection of his smaller writings In Lathi, -appeared in seven 
volumes between 1827 and 1839. 

See monographs by O. Jahn (1849) and H. KSchly (1874): C. 
Bursian, Geschichte der klassischen Philologie in Oeutschland (1883); 
art. in Allgem. deutsche Biog.; Sandys, Htst. Class. Schol. in. 

HERMANN, KARL FRIEDRICH (1804-1855). German classical 
scholar and antiquary, was born on the 4th of August 1804, at 
Frankfort -on-Main. Having studied at the universities of 
Heidelberg and Leipzig, he went for a tour in Italy, on his return 
from which he lectured as Pr'natdotent in Heidelberg. In 1832 
he was called to Marburg as professor ordtnarius of classical 



literature; and in 1842 he was transferred to Gottiogen to the 
chair of philology and archaeology, vacant by tbe death of 
Otfried Mttller. He died at Gdttingen on the 31st of December 
1855. His knowledge of all branches of classical learning was 
profound, but he was chiefly distinguished for his works on Greek 
antiquities and ancient philosophy. Among these may be 
mentioned the Lekrbuck dcr griechischtn AntiquiUUcn (new ed., 
1889) dealing with political, religions and domestic antiquities; 
the GeschUhU und System dcr Plolonischeu Philosophic (1839), 
unfinished; an edition of the Platonic Dialogues (6 vols., 1851- 
1853); *°d CuUurgtsckickte der GrUekcn und Rdmer (1857- 
1858), published after his death by C. G. Schmidt. He also 
edited the text of Juvenal and Persius (1854) and Lucia n 'a 
De conscribenda historic (i8a8). A collection of Abkondtungen 
und Beurdge appeared in 1849. 

See M. Lechner, Zur Brinmrung an K. F. Hermann (1864), and 
article by C. Halm in AUgemeine deutxke Biogrophu, xn\ (1880). 

HERMAPHRODITUS, in Greek mythology, a befog, partly male, 
partly female, originally worshipped as a divinity. The conception 
undoubtedly had its origin in the East, where deities of a similar 
dual nature frequently occur. The oldest traces of the cult in 
Greek countries are found in Cyprus. Here, according to 
Macrobius (Saturnalia, iii. 8) there was a bearded statue of a 
male aphrodite, called Aphroditos by Aristophanes (probably m 
his Nio/3oj, a similar variant). Philochorus in his At this (a p. 
Macrobius loc. iit.) further identified this divinity, at whose 
sacrifices men and women exchanged garments, with the moon. 
This double sex also attributed to Dionysus and Priapus— the 
union in one being of the two principles of generation and con- 
ception—denotes extensive fertilizing and productive powers. 
This Cyprian Aphrodite is the same as the later Hermaphro- 
dilos, which simply means Aphroditos in the form of a herm 
(see Hexmae), and first occurs in the Ckaracieres (16) of 
Theophrastus. After its introduction at Athens (probably in the 
5th century B.C.), the importance of this being seems to have 
declined. It appears no longer as the object of especial cuH , but 
limited to the homage of certain sects, expressed by superstitious 
rites of obscure significance. The still later form of the legend, a 
product of the Hellenistic period, is due to a mistaken etymology 
of the name. In accordance with this, Hermaphroditus is the son 
of Hermes and Aphrodite, of whom the nymph of the fountain of 
Salmacis in Carta became enamoured while he was bathing. When 
her overtures were rejected, she embraced him and entreated 
the gods that she might be for ever united with him. The result 
was the formation of a being, half man, half woman. This story 
is told by Ovid (Metam. iv. 285) to explain the peculiarly enervat- 
ing qualities of the water of the fountain. Strabo (xiv. p. 656) 
attributes its bad reputation to the attempt of the inhabitants of 
the country to find some excuse for the demoralization caused by 
their own luxurious and effeminate habits of life. There was a 
famous Statue of Hermaphroditus by Polycles of Athens, probably 
the younger of the two statuaries of that name. In later Greek 
art he was a favourite subject. 

See articles in Daremberg and Sagtio, Dictionnaire des ontiquiMs* 
aad Roscher's Lexikon der Mylhotogte; and for art, A. Baumcuter, 
Denkmtkr des Uauischen AUertums (1884-1888). 

HERMAS, SHEPHERD OP, one of the works representing tbe 
Apostolic Fathers (?.».), a hortatory writing which " holds the 
mirror up " to the Church in Rome during the 3rd Christian 
generation. This is the period indicated by the evidence of the 
Muratorian Canon, which assigns it to the brother of Pius, 
Roman bishop c. 130-154. Probably it was not the fruit of a 
single effort of its author. Rather its contents came to him 
piecemeal and at various stages in his ministry as a Christian 
"prophet," extending over a period of years; and, like certain 
Old Testament prophets, he shows us how by his own experiences 
he became the medium of a. divine message to his church and to 
God's " elect " people at large. 

In its present form it falls under three heads: Visions, Mandates, 
Similitudes. But these divisions are misleading. The personal 
and preliminary revelation embodied in Vision i. brings the 
prophet a new sense of sin as essentially a matter of the Jieart* 



3*i8 



HERMAS/ SHEPHERD OF 



and an awakened conscience as before the " glory of God," the 
Creator and Upholder of all things. His responsibility also for the 
sad state of religion at home is emphasized, and he is given a 
mission of repentance to his erring children. How far in all this 
and in the next vision the author is describing facts, and how far 
transforming his personal history into a type ( after the manner of 
Bun van's Pilgrim's Progress), the better to impress his moral 
upon his readers, is uncertain. But the whole style of the work, 
with its use of conventional apocalyptic forms, favours the more 
symbolic view. Vision ii. records his call proper, through revela- 
tion of his essential message, to be delivered both to his wife and 
children and to " all the saints who have sinned unto this day " 
(*. 4). It contains the assurances of forgiveness even for the 
gravest sins after baptism (save blasphemy of the Name and 
betrayal of the brethren, Sim. ix. to)," if they repent with their 
whole heart and remove doubts from their minds. For the Master 
hath sworn by His glory (' His Son,' below) touching His elect, 
that if there be more sinning after this day which He hath 
limited, they shall not obtain salvation. For the repentance of 
the righteous hath an end; the days of repentance for all saints 
are fulfilled. . . . Stand fast, then, ye that work righteousness and 
be not of doubtful mind. . . . Happy are all ye that endure the 
great tribulation which is to come. ... The Lord is nigh unto 
them thai turn to Him, as it is written in the book of Eldad and 
Mod ad, who prophesied to the people in the wilderness." 

Here, in the gist of the " booklet " received from the hand of 
a female figure representing the Church, we have in germ the 
message of The Shepherd. But before Hermas announces it to the 
Roman Church, and through " Clement "* to the churches 
abroad, there are added two Visions (iii. iv.) tending to heighten 
Us impressrveness. He is shown the " holy church " under the 
similitude of a tower in building, and the great and final tribu- 
lation (already alluded to as near at hand) under that of a 
devouring beast, which yet is innocuous to undoubting faith. 

Hermas begins to deliver the message of Vis. i.-iv., as bidden. 
But as be docs so* it is added to, in the way of detail and illustra- 
tion, by a fresh series of revelations through an angel in the 
guise of a Shepherd, who in a preliminary interview announces 
himself as the Angel of Repentance, sent to administer the 
special " repentance " which it was Hermas's mission to declare. 
This interview appears in our MSS. as Vis. v.,' but is really a 
prelude to the Mandates and Similitudes which form the bulk of 
the whole work, hence known as " The Shepherd." The relation of 
this second part to Vis. i.-iv. is set forth by the Shepherd himself. 
" I was sent, quoth he, to show thee again all that thou sawest 
before, to wit the sum of the things profitable for thee. First of 
all write thou my mandates and similitudes; and the rest, as I 
will show thee, so shall thou write." Thi« programme is fulfilled 
in the xii. Mandates — perhaps suggested by the Teaching of the 
Twelve Apostles (see Didache), which Hermas knows— and 
Similitudes i,-viii., while Simil* ix. is " the rest " and constitutes 
a distinct " book " (Sim. ix. r. t, x. 1. 1). In this latter the 
building of the Tower, already shown in outline in Vis. iii., is 
shown " more carefully " in an elaborate section dealing with the 
same themes. One may infer that Sim. ix. represents a distinctly 
later stage in Hermas's ministry— during the whole of which he 
seems to have committed to writing what he received on each 
occasion, 3 possibly for recital to the church (cf. Vis. ii. Jin.). 
Finally came Sim. x., really an epilogue in which Hermas is 
" delivered " afresh to the Shepherd, for the rest of his days. 
He is " to continue in this ministry " of proclaiming the Shepherd's 

'More than one interpretation, typical or otherwise, of this 
M Clement " is possible; but none justifies us in assigning even to 
this Vision a date consistent with that usually given to the tradi- 
tional bishop of this name (see Clement I.). Yet we may haw to 
correct the dubious chronology of the first Roman bishops by this 
datum, and prolong his life to about a.d. 110. This is Harnack's 
date for the nucleus of Vis. n., though he places our Vis. i.-iii. later 
in Trajan's reign, and thinks Vis. iv. later still. 

* That a prior vision in which Hermas was " delivered " to the 
Shepherd's charge, has dropped out, seems implied by Vis. v. 3 f„ 
Sim. x. 1. 1. 

• Harnack places " The Shepherd " proper mostly under Hadrian 
(1 17-138), and the completed work c. 140-145. 



teaching, u so that they who have repented or are about to repent 
may have the same mind with thee," and so receive a good report 
before God {Sim. x. * a-4). Only they must " make haste to do 
aright," test while they delay the tower be finished (4. 4), and the 
new aeon dawn (after the final tribulation: cf. Vis. iv. 3. 5). 

The relation here indicated between the Shepherd's instruction 
and the initial message of one definitive repentance, open to those 
believers who have already* "broken" their "seai" of baptism by 
deadly sins, as announced in Visions i.-iv. is made yet plainer by 
Sim. vi. 1. 3 f. " These mandates are profitable to such as are 
about to repent; for except they walk in them their repentance 
is in vain." Hermas sees that mere repentance is not enough to 
meet the backsliding condition in which so many Christians then 
were, owing to the recoil of inveterate habits of worldlfness 4 
entrenched m society around and within. It is-, alter alt, too 
negative a thing to stand by itself or to satisfy God." " Cease, 
Hermas," says the Church, " to pray all about thy sins. Ask for 
righteousness also " ( Vis. iii. 1. 6). The positive Christian ideal 
which " the saints " should attain, " the Lord enabling," it is the 
business of the Shepherd to set forth. 

Here lies a great merit of Hermas's book, his insight into 
experimental religion and the secret of failure in Christians about 
him, to many of whom Christianity bad come by birth rather than 
personal conviction. They shared t he worldly spirit in its various 
forms, particularly the desire for wealth and the luxuries it 
affords, and /or a place in " good society "—which meant a pagan 
atmosphere. Thus they were divided in soul between spiritual 
goods and worldly pleasures, and were apt to doubt whether the 
rewards promised by God to the life of " simplicity " (all Christ 
meant by the childlike spirit, including generosity in giving and 
forgiving) and self-restraint, were real or not. For while the 
expected " end of the age " delayed, persecutions abounded. 
Such " doubled-souled " persons, like Mr Facing-bothvways, 
inclined to say, " The Christian ideal may be glorious, but is it 
practicable?" It is this most fatal doubt which evokes the 
Shepherd's sternest rebuke; and he meets it with the ultimate 
religious appeal, viz. to " the glory of God." He who made man 
" to rule over all things under heaven," could He have given 
behests beyond man's ability? If only a man " hath the Lord in 
his heart," be "shall know that there is nothing easier nor 
sweeter nor gentler than these mandates" (Mend. xii. 3-4). 
So in the forefront of the Mandates stands the secret of all: 
"First of all believe that there bone God. . . . Believe therefore 
in Him, and fear Him, and fearing Him have self-mastery. For 
the fear of the Lorddwcllethin the good desire," and to" put on " 
this master-desire is to possess power to curb " evil desire " in all 
its shapes (Maud. xii. 1-2). Elsewhere " good desire " is analysed 
into the " spirits." of the several virtues, which yet are organically 
related, Faith being mother, and Self-mastery her daughter, and 
so on ( Vis. iii. 8. 3 seq. ; cf . Sim. ix. 1 5). These are the specific 
forms of the Holy Spirit power, without whose indwelling the 
mandates cannot be kept (Sim. x. 3; cf. ix. 13. 2, 14. *)- 

Thus the " moraltsm " sometimes traced in Hermas is apparent 
rather than real, for he has a deep sense of the enabling grace oC 
God. His defect lies rather in not presenting the historic Christ 
as the Christian's chief inspiration, a fact which connects itself 
with the strange absence of the names " Jesus " and " Christ." 
He uses rather M the Son of God," in a peculiar Adoptianist 
sense, which, as taken for granted ia a work by the bishop's own 
brother, must be held typical of the Roman Church of his day. 
But as it is implicit and not part of his distinctive message, it did 
not hinder his book iroro enjoying wide quasi-canonical honour 
during most of the Ante-Nicene period. 

The absence of the historic names, " Jesus " and " Christ," may 
be due to the form of the book as purporting to quote angefic com- 
munications. This would also explain the absence of explicit 
scriptural citations generally, though knowledge both of the Okf 
Testament and of several New Testament books—^inchaluig the 
congenially symbolic Gospel of John— is clear (cf. The New Testa- 
ment in the Apostolic Fathers, Oxford. 1905, 105 seq). The one exctp. 
tion is a prophetic writing, the apocryphal Book of Eldad and Mow, 



A careful study of practical Christian ethics at Rome as implied 
in the Shepherd, will be found in E. von DobschQtz, Christian Life 
M the Primitmm Chunk (1904). 



HERMENKUTICS^HBRMES 



$&) 



which it cited apparently at bring • 

Among its non-scriptural sources m 
of human life known as Tabula Ceb 
Didaehl, and perhaps certain * Sib 

Hennas regarded Christians as 
Angel " (».*. the pre-cxistcnt Hoi 
Christ's " flesh "), in baptism, the " 
saints had to receive in Hades (5, 
* life." Yet the degree of " hon( 
iii. 2: Sim. ix. 28). the exact place 
church (the Tower), is given as re 
beyond the minimum requisite ir 
doctrine of works of supcrcrog^ati 
perfection, on lines already seen tn i 
in the two types of Christian rocogi 
in later Catholicism. Again his doc 
of a current opus oPerqium concq 
•' keeping a watch (statio) in th; '.). 

The Shepherd enjoins instead, fit 1st 

"from every evil word and ever :he 

vanities of this world-age " (3.6; c ,- „ ius 

Saying, " except ye fast from the world "); and next, as a counsel 
of perfection, a fast to yield somewhat for the relief of the widow 
ana orphan, that this extra " service " may be to God for a 
a sacrifice." 

Generally speaking, Hermas's piety, especially in its language, 
adheres closely to Old Testament forms. But it is doubtful {pact 
Spitta and Volter, who assume a Jewish or a proselyte basis) whether 
this means more than that the Old Testament was still the Scriptures 
of the Church. In this respect, too, Hcrmas faithfully reflects the 
Roman Church of the early 2nd century (cf. the language of 1 Clem., 
esp. the liturgical parts, and even the Roman Mass). Indeed tiia 

Snme value of the Shepherd is the light it casts on Christianity at 
lome in the otherwise obscure period e. 110-140, when It had as 
yet hardly felt the influences converging on it from other centres 
of tradition and thought. Thus Hermas's comparatively mild 
censures on Gnostic teachers in Sim, ix, suggest that the greater 

S stems, like the Valcntinian and Marcionite, nad not yet made an 
iprcssion there, as Harnack argues that they must have done by 
e. 145. This date, then, is a likely lower Kmit for Hermas's revision 
of his earlier prophetic memoranda, and their publicati ' ' rle 
homogeneous work, such as the Shepherd appears to I fer 

historic significance — it was felt by its author to be at he 

needs of the Church at large, and was generally welcor — 

is great but hard to determine in detail. 1 VVhat is its 

influence on the development of the Church's policy a< nc 

tn grave cases, like apostasy and adultery — a burning for 

some generations from the end of the 2nd century, p in 

Rome and North Africa. Indirectly, too, Hermas tc cp 

alive the idea of the Christian prophet, even after M< ad 

helped to discredit it. 

Literature.— The chief modern edition is by O. von Gebhardt 
and A. Harnack, in Fasc. iii. of their Pair, apost. opera (Leipzig, 
I877I: it is- edited less fully by F. X. Funk, Pair, apost. (Tubingen, 
1901), and in an English trans., with Introduction and occasional 
notes, by Dr C. Taylor (S.P.C.K., 2 vols., 1903-1906). For the wide 
literature of the subject, see the two former editions, also Harnack's 
Chronologie der altchr. Lit. i. 257 seq., and 0. Bardenhewer, Gesck. 
itr alikirrhl. Lit. i. 557 seq. For the authorship sec Apocalyptic 
Literature, sect. III. (J. V. B.) 

HERMENEUTICS (Gr. ^pjtnyevruh}, sc. T*xn?, Lat. ars 
hermtneutica, from ipfirpnUtv, to interpret, from Hermes, the 
messenger of the gods), the science or art of interpretation or 
explanation, especially of the Holy Scriptures (see Theolocy). 

HERMES, a Greek god, identified by the Romans with 
Mercury. The derivation of his name and his primitive character 
are very uncertain. The earliest centres of his cult were Arcadia, 
where Mt. Cyllcnc was reputed to be his birthplace, the islands 
of Lemnos, Imbros and Samothrace, in which he was associated 
with the Cabciri and Attica. In Arcadia he was specially 
worshipped as the god of fertility, and his images were ithyphallic, 
as also were the " Hermac " at Athens. Herodotus (ii. 51) 
states that the Athenians borrowed this type from the Pelasgians, 
thus testifying to the great antiquity of the phallic Hermes. At 
Cyllenc in Elis a mere phallus served as his emblem, and was 
highly venerated in the time of Pausanias (vi. 26. 3). Both in 
literature and cult Hermes was constantly associated with the 
protection of cattle and sheep; at Tanagra and elsewhere his 
title was Kpio<p6pos, the ram-bearer. As a pastoral god he was 
often closely connected with deities of vegetation, especially Pan 
and the nymphs. His pastoral character is recognized in the 

1 Note the prestige of martyrs and confessors, the ways of true and 
false prophets in Mand. xi., and the different types of evil and good 
" walk " among Christians, e.g. in Vis. iii. 5-7; Mand. viii. ; Sim. vim. 



Iliad (xbr. 490) and the later, epte hymn to Hermes; and his 
Homeric titles ojedofra, Ipcofaot, ICmap 4Aa», probably refer to 
Jrim as the giver of fertility. In the Odyssey, however, he appears' 
mainly as the messenger of the gods, and the conductor of the 
dead to Hades. Hence in later times he is often represented m 
art and mythology as a herald. The conductor of souls was 
naturally a chthonian god; at Athens there was a festival in 
honoar of Hermes and the souls of the dead, and Aeschylus 
(Persoe, 628) invokes Hermes, with Earth and Hades, in sum- 
moning a spirit from the underworld. The function of a messenger- 
god may have originated the conception of Hermes as a. dream- 
god; he is called the " conductor of dreams " (ffr^P Mpur), 
and the Greeks offered to him the last libation before sleep. As a 
messenger he may also have become the god of roads and door- 
ways; he was the protector of travellers and his images were 
used for boundary-marks (see Hermae). It was a custom to 
make a cairn of stones near the wayside statues of Hermes, each 
passer-by adding a stone; the significance of the practice, 
which is found in many countries, is discussed by Frazer (Golden 
Bough, 2nd ed., iii. 10 f.) and Hartland (Legend of Perseus, ii. 228J. 
Treasure found in the road (Ipfiatov) was the gift of Hermes, and 
any stroke of good luck was attributed to him; but it may be 
doubted whether bis patronage of luck in general was developed 
from his function as a god of roads. As the giver of luck he 
became a deity of gain and commerce (KipSwot, ayopaux), aa 
aspect which caused his identification with Mercury, the Roman 
god of trade. From this conception his thievish character may 
have been evolved. The trickery and cunning of Hermes is a. 
prominent theme in literature from Homer downwards, although 
k is very rarely recognized in official cult.* In the hymn to 
Hermes the god figures as a precocious child (a type familiar in 
folk-lore), who when a new-born babe steals the cows of Apollo. 
In addition to these characteristics various other functions were 
assigned to Hermes, who developed, perhaps, into the most 
complete type of the versatile Greek. In many respects he was a 
counterpart of Apollo, less dignified and powerful, but more 
human than his greater brother. Hermes was a patron of music, 
like Apollo, and invented the cithara; he presided over the 
games, with Apollo and Heracles, and his statues were common in 
the stadia and gymnasia. He became, in fact, the ideal Greek 
youth, equally proficient in the " musical" and " gymnastic'' 
branches of Greek education. On the " musical " side he was 
the special patron of eloquence (Xbytos); in gymnastic, he was 
the giver of grace rather than of strength, which was the province 
of Heracles. Though athletic, he was one of the least militant of 
the gods; a title irp6/iax<*. the Defender, is found only in con- 
nexion with a victory of young men (" ephebes ") in a battle at 
Tanagra. A further point of contact bet ween Hermes and Apollo 
may here be noted: both had prophetic powers, although 
Hermes held a place far inferior to that of the Pythian god, and 
possessed no famous oracle. Certain forms of popular divination 
were, however, under his patronage, notably the world-wide 
process of divination by pebbles (Bptat) . The " Homeric " Hymn 
to Hermes explains these minor gifts of prophecy as delegated by 
Apollo, who alone knew the mind of Zeus. Only a single oracle is 
recorded for Hermes, in the market-place of Pharae in Achaea, 
and here the procedure was akin to popular divination. An altar, 
furnished with lamps, was placed before the statue; the inquirer, 
after lighting the lamps and offering incense, placed a coin in the 
right hand of the god; he then whispered his question into the 
car of the statue, and, stopping his own ears, left the market 
place. The first sound which he heaid outside was an omen. 

From the foregoing account it will be seen that it is difficult to 
derive the many-sided character of Hermes from a single ele- 
mental conception. The various theories which identified him 
with the sun, the moon or the dawn, may be dismissed, as they do 
not rest on evidence to which value would now be attached. The 
Arcadian or " Pelasgic " Hermes may have been an earth-deity, 
as his connexion With fertility suggests; but his symbol at Cyllene 

'We only hear of a Hermes ttXtot at Pellene (Paus. vii. 37. 1) 
and of the custom of allowing promiscuous thieving during the 
festival of Hermes at Samos (Plut. Quaest. Grace. 55). 



■37° 



HERMES, G.— HERMES TRISMEGISTUS 



rather points to a mere personification of reproductive powers. 
According to Plutarch the ancients " set Hermes by the side of 
Aphrodite," i.t. the male and female principles of generation; 
and the two deities were worshipped together in Argos and else- 
where. But this phallic character does not explain other aspects 
of Hermes, as the messenger-god, the master-thief or the ideal 
Creek ephebe. It is impossible to adopt the view that the 
Homeric poets turned the rude shepherd-god of Arcadia into a 
messenger, in order to provide him with a place in the Olympian 
circle. To their Achaean audience Hermes must have been more 
than a phallic god. It is more probable that the Olympian 
Hermes represents the fusion of several distinct deities. Some 
scholars hold that the various functions of Hermes may have 
originated from the idea of good luck which is so closely bound up 
with his character. As a pastoral god he would give luck to the 
flocks and herds; when worshipped by townspeople, he would 
give luck to the merchant, the orator, the traveller and the 
athlete. But though the notion of luck plays an important part 
in early thought, it seems improbable that the primitive Creeks 
would have personified a mere abstraction. Another theory, 
which has much to commend it, has been advanced by Roscher, 
who sees in Hermes a wind-god. His strongest arguments are 
that the wind would easily develop into the messenger of Che 
gods (AiAs ovpot), and that it was often thought to promote 
fertility in crops and cattle. Thus the two aspects of Hermes 
which seem most discordant are referred to a single origin. The 
Homeric epithet 'A/nr«'46rnp, which the Greeks interpreted as 
" the slayer of Argus," inventing a myth to account for Argus, is 
explained as originally an epithet of the wind (ojryetrHp), which 
clears away the mists (dpYos, 4oi*b>). The uncertainty of the 
wind might well suggest the trickery of a thief, and its whistling 
might contain the germ from which a god of music should be 
developed. But many of Roscher's arguments are forced, and 
his method of interpretation is not altogether sound. For 
example, the last argument would equally apply to Apollo, and 
would lead to the improbable conclusion that Apollo was a 
wind-god. It must, in fact, be remembered that men make 
their gods after their own likeness; and, whatever his origin, 
Hermes in particular was endowed with many of the qualities and 
habits of the Greek race. If he was evolved from the wind, his 
character had become so anthropomorphic that the Creeks 
had practically lost the knowledge of his primitive significance; 
nor did Greek cult ever associate him with the wind. 

The oldest form under which Hermes was represented was that 
of the Hermae mentioned above. Alcamenes, the rival or pupil 
of Pheidias, was the sculptor of a herm at Athens, a copy of which, 
dating from Roman times, was discovered at Pergamum in 1003. 
But side by side with the Hermae there grew up a more anthropo- 
morphic conception of the god. In archaic art he was portrayed 
as a full-grown and bearded man, clothed in a long chiton, and 
often wearing a cap (ftvrif) or a broad-brimmed hat (s-eroffos), 
and winged boots. Sometimes he was represented in his pastoral 
character, as when he bears a sheep on his shoulders; at other 
times he appears as the messenger or herald of the gods with the 
xifpuKctbir, or herald's staff, which is his most frequent attribute. 
From the latter part of the 5th century his art-type was changed 
in conformity with the general development of Greek sculpture. 
He now became a nude and beardless youth, the type of the 
young athlete. In the 4th century this t " ted 

by Praxiteles in his statue of Hermes at 

Authorities. — F. G. Welcker, Criech. Gi en, 

I857-1863) ; L. Preller, ed. C. Robert, Griet eq. 

(Berlin, 1804); W. H. Roscher, Lex. der p pie, 

t.v. (Leipzie. 1884-1886); A. Lang, My on, 

ii. 225 seq. (London, 1887); C. Dareraberj ies 

ant. grecques et rom.; Farnell, Cults v. (19 xh. 

Mytnologie u. Religions tesck. p. 1318 seq. the 

article Greer Art, figs. 43 and 82 (Plate \ ties 

of Praxiteles; fig. 57 (Plate II.), a profess* 1 of 

Alcamenes. ) 

HERMES, GBORO (177S-1831), German Roman Catholic 
theologian, was born on the 22nd of April 1775, at Dreyerwalde, 
in Westphalia, and was educated at the gymnasium and univer- 
sity of Mtinster, in both of which institutions he afterwards 



taught. In 1820 he was appointed professor of theology -at 
Bonn, where he died on the 26th of May 1831. Hermes bad 
a devoted band of adherents, of whom the most notable was 
Peter Josef Elvenich (1706-1886), who became professor, at 
Breslau in 1829, and in 1870 threw in his lot with the Old Cathotfc 
movement. His works were Untersuchungen Ubtr die inner* 
Wahrkeit des Christcnlkums (Mtinster, 1805), and Einkitung in 
die chrisikalkoliscke Theologie, of which the first part, a philo- 
sophical introduction, was published in 18 10; the second party 
on positive theology, in 1829. The Einlcilung was never com- 
pleted. His ChrislkaUioliscke Dogmatik was published, from 
his lectures, after his death by two of his students, Achterfcld 
and Braun (3 vols., 1831— 1834). 

The Einlcilung is a remarkable work, both in itself and in its 
effect upon Catholic theology in Germany. Few works of modem 
times have excited a more keen and bitter controversy. Hermes 
himself was very largely under the influence of the Kantian and 
Fichtean ideas, and though in the philosophical portion of his 
Einkilung he criticizes both these thinkers severely, rejects 
their doctrine of the moral law as the sole guarantee for the 
existence of God, and condemns their restricted view of the 
possibility and nature of revelation, enough remained of purely 
speculative material to render bis system obnoxious to his church. 
After bis death, the contests between his followers and their 
opponents grew so bitter that the dispute was referred to the 
papal see. The judgment was adverse, and on the 25th of 
September 1835 a papal bull condemned both parts of the 
Einlatung and the first volume of the Dogmatik. Two months 
later the remaining volumes of the Dogmatik were likewise 
condemned. The controversy did not cease, and in 1845 a 
systematic attempt was made anonymously by F. X. Werner to 
examine and refute the Hermesian doctrines, as contrasted with 
the orthodox Catholic faith (Der Hermcsianumms, 1845). la 
1847' the condemnation of 1835 was confirmed by Pius IX. 

See K. Werner, Cesckukle der kalkoliscken Tkeohgie (1866),, 
pp. 405 sqq. 

HERMES TRISMEGISTUS ("the thrice greatest Hermes "), 
an honorific designation of the Egyptian Hermes, i.e. Thoth 
(q.v.) , the god of wisdom. In late hieroglyphic the name of 
Thoth often has the epithet " the twice very great," sometimes 
" the thrice very great "; in the popular language (demotic) 
the corresponding epithet is " the five times very great," found 
as early as the 3rd century B.C. Greek translations give 6 phyes 
xal ikkyas and pkyumti rplafteyas occurs in a late magical 
text, o T/Mcpkyumis has not yet been found earlier than the 
2nd century a.d., but there can now be no doubt of its origin in 
the above Egyptian epithets. 

Thoth was " the scribe of the gods," " Lord of .divine words,*! 
and to Hermes was attributed the authorship of all the strictly 
sacred books generally called by Creek authors Hermetic 
These, according to Clemens Alcxandrinus, our sole ancient 
authority {Strom, vi. p. 268 et seq.), were forty-two in number, 
and were subdivided into six divisions, of which the first, con- 
taining ten books, was in charge of the " prophet " and dealt 
with laws, deities and the education of priests; the second, 
consisting of the ten books of the stolisUs, the official whose 
duly it was to dress and ornament the statues of the gods, 
treated of sacrifices and offerings, prayers, hymns, festive 
processions; the third, of the " hierogrammatist," also in ten 
books, was called "hieroglyphics," and was a repertory of 
cosmographical, geographical and topographical information; 
the four books of the " horoscopus " were devoted to astronomy 
and astrology; the two books of the "chanter" contained 
respectively a collection of songs in honour of the gods and a 
description of the royal life and its duties; while the sixth and 
last division, consisting of the six books of the " pastophorus," 
was medical. Clemens's statement cannot be contradicted. 
Works are extant in papyri and on temple walls, treating of 
geography, astronomy, ritual, myths, medicine, &c. It is 
probable that the native priests would have been ready to 
ascribe the authorship or inspiration, as well as the care and 
protection of all their books of sacred lore to Thoth, although 



HERMESIANAX— HERMON 



37' 



there were * goddess of writing (Seshit), and the ancient deified 
scribes Imuthes and Amenophis, and later inspired doctors 
Petosiris, Nechepso, &c., to be reckoned with; there are indeed 
some definite traces of such an attribution extant in individual 
cases. Whether a canon of such books was ever established, 
even in the latest times, may be seriously doubted. We know, 
however, that the vizier of Upper Egypt (at Thebes) in the 
eighteenth dynasty, had 40 (not 42) parchment rolls laid before 
him as he sat in the hall ol audience. Unfortunately we have 
no hint of their contents. Forty-two was the number of divine 
assessors at the judgment of the dead before Osiris, and was 
the standard number of the nones or counties in Egypt. 

The name of Hermes seems during the 3rd and following 
centuries to have been regarded as a convenient pseudonym 
to place at the head of the numerous synergistic writings in 
which it was sought to combine Neo- Platonic philosophy, 
Philonic Judaism and cabalistic theosophy, and so provide the 
world with some acceptable substitute for the Christianity 
which had even at that time begun to give indications of the 
ascendancy it was destined afterwards to attain. Of these 
pseudepigraphic Hermetic writings some have come down to 
us in the original Greek; others survive in Latin or Arabic 
translations; but the majority appear to have perished. That 
which is best known and has been most frequently edited is the 
Dot/dM/nft sive De poUsiatc et tapienlia divina (notjtovo/np 
being the Divine Intelligence, roqi^v 6*8pur), which consists 
of fifteen chapters treating of such subjects as the nature of God, 
the origin of the world, the creation and fall of man, and the 
divine illumination which is the sole means of his deliverance. 
The editio prince ps appeared in Paris in 1554; there is also 
an edition by G. Parthey (1854); the work has also been trans- 
lated into German by D. Ticdemann (1781). Other Hermetic 
writings which have been preserved, and which have been 
for the most part collected by Patricius in the Nova de uni- 
tents pkilosopkia (1503), are (in Greek) 'Iarpopa0i;pari«a irpfe 
'Afuujra hlyinmov, Uepl jraraicXfcrccirt voaoitrrour -rtptyvoxjTuca, 
"B* riff pa&HiaruoTf krurrqfjnfi irpot'A/i/icava: (in Latin) Aphorismi 
she Centiioquium, Cyranides ; (in Arabic, but doubtless from a 
Greek original) an address to the human soul, which has been 
translated by H. L. Fleischer (An die mensdUiche Seek, 1870). 

The connexion of the name of Hermes with alchemy will 
explain what is meant by hermetic scaling, and will account for 
the use of the phrase " hermetic medicine " by Paracelsus, as 
also for the so-called " hermetic freemasonry " of the middle ages. 

Besides Thoth, Anubis (9.*.) was constantly identified with 

1); 



school, flourished about 330 B.C. His chief work was a poem 
in three books, dedicated to his mistress Leontion. Of this 
poem a fragment of about one hundred lines has been preserved 
by Athenaeus (xiii. 597). Plaintive in tone, it enumerates 
instances, mythological and historical, of the irresistible power 
of love. Hermesianax, whose style is characterized by alternate 
force and tenderness, was exceedingly popular in his own times, 
and was highly esteemed even is the Augustan period. 

Many separate editions have been published of the fragment, 
the text of which Is in a very unsatisfactory condition : by F. W. 
Schneidewtn (1838), J. Bailey (1839, with notes, glossary, and 
Latin and English versions), and others; R. Schulzc s Qtuuslitmes 
Herwusianacteae (1858), contains an account of the life and writings 
of the poet and a section on the identity of Leontion. 

HERNIAS, (x) A Greek philosopher of the Alexandrian 
school. A disciple of Proclus, he was known best for the lucidity 
of his method rather than for any original ideas. His chief works 



were a study of the Is+togt of Porphyry and a commentary on 
Plato's Phaedrus. Unlike the majority of logicians of the time, he 
admitted the absolute validity of the second and third figures of 
the syllogism. 

(a) A Christian apologist and philosopher who flourished 
probably in the 4th and 5th centuries. Nothing is known about 
his life, but there has been preserved of his writings a small thesis 
entitled Aiaaup/xoj ru»'t£«0i\o<7o0wi'. In this work he attacked 
pagan philosophy for its lack of logic in dealing with the root 
problems of life, the soul, the cosmos and the first cause or vital 
principle. There is an edition by von Otto published in the 
Corpus apohgetamm (Jena, 1872). It is interesting, but without 
any claim to profundity of reasoning. 

Two minor philosophers of the same name arc known. Of these, 
one was a disciple of Plato and a friend of Aristotle; he became 
tyrant of Atarncus and invited Aristotle to his court. Aristotle 
subsequently married Pythias, who was cither niece or sister of 
Hernias. Another Hcrmias was a Phoenician philosopher of the 
Alexandrian school; when Justinian dosed the school of Athens, 
he was one of the five representatives of the school who took refuge 
at the Persian court. 

HERMIPPUS, " the one-eyed," Athenian writer of the Old 
Comedy, flourished during the Peloponnesian War. He is said 
to have written 40 plays, of which the titles and fragments 
of nine are preserved. He was a bitter opponent of Pericles, 
whom he accused (probably in the Moipoc) of being a bully and a 
coward, and of carousing with his boon companions while the 
Lacedaemonians were invading Attica. He also accused Aspasia 
of impiety and offences against morality, and her acquittal was 
only secured by the tears of Pericles (Plutarch, Pericles, 32). In 
the 'AprorwXt&s (" Bakeresses ") he attacked the demagogue 
Hypcrbolus. The Qopnojbpot (Mat-carriers) contains many 
parodies of Homer. Hermippus also appears to have written 
scurrilous iambic poems after the manner of Archilochus. 

Fragments in T. Kock, Comicorum Alticorum fragmenta, i. (1880), 
and A. Meinckc, PeitarumGraecorum comicorum fragment* (1835). 

HERMIT, a solitary, one who withdraws from all intercourse 
with other human beings in order to live a life of religious con- 
templation, and so marked off from a " coenobite " ( Gr. ftotvot, 
common, and (Has, life), one who shares this life of withdrawal 
with others in a community (see Asceticism and Monasticisii). 
The word " hermit " is an adaptation through the O. Fr. ermite 
or hertniU, from the Lat. form, eremite, of the Gr. kpqtlnp, a 
solitary, from ifintda, a desert. The English form " eremite," 
which was used, according to the New English Dictionary, quite 
indiscriminately with "hermit" till the middle of the 17th 
century, is now chiefly used in poetry or rhetorically, except with 
reference to the early hermits of the Libyan desert, or sometimes 
to such particular orders as the eremites of St Augustine (see 
Augusti man Hermits). Another synonym is " anchoret " or 
" anchorite." This comes through the French and Latin forms 
from the Gr. draxowr^f, from toaxw/xtv, to withdraw. A 
form nearer to the Greek original, " anachoret," is sometimes 
used of the early Christian recluses in the East. 

HERMOGENEStof Tarsus, Greek rhetorician, sumamed Zvcrifp 
(the polisher), flourished in the reign of Marcus Aurelius (a.o. 
161-180). His precocious ability secured him a public appoint- 
ment as teacher of his art while as yet he was only a boy; but 
at the age of twenty-five his faculties gave way, and he spent the 
remainder of his long life in a state of intellectual impotence. 
During his early years, however, he bad composed a series of 
rhetorical treatises, which became popular text-books, and the 
subject of subsequent commentaries. Of his Tlx"! foroAUtft we 
still possess the sections Uepi ru* araatut> (on legal issues), 
ITfpi cvperart (on the invention of arguments), Utpl &&* (on the 
various kinds of style) JIcpl fuB66ov &ny&njrm (on the method of 
speaking effectively), and npoyvpyaxjuara rhetorical exercises). 

Editions by C. Walz (1832). and by L. Spengel (1854). in their 
Rketores Graeci; bibliographical note on the commentaries in 
W. Christ, GeschtehU der grUchischen Literalur (1898). 

HERMON, the highest mountain in Syria (estimated at 9050 
to 9200 ft.), an outlier of the Anti-Lebanon. As the Hebrew name 
(l*TC, " belonging to a sanctuary," " separate ") shows, it was 
always a sacred mountain. The Sidonians called it Sir ion, and the 



■378 



HERMSDORF— HERNIA 



Amorites Shenir (Detit. ill. ©). According to one theory it is the 
" high mountain " near Caesarea Philippi, which was the scene of 
the Transfiguration (Mark ix. 2). A curious reference in Enoch 
vi. 6, says that in the days of Jared the wicked angels descended 
on the summit of the mountain and named it Hermon. The 
modern name is Jebel ts-Sheihh, or " mountain of the chief or 
elder." It is also called Jebel eih-Thdj, " snowy mountain/' 
The ridge of Hermon, rising into a dome-shaped summit, is 20 m. 
long, extending north-east and south-west. The formation of the 
lower part is Nubian sandstone, that of the upper part is a hard 
dark-grey crystalline limestone belonging to the Neooomian 
period, and full of fossils. The spurs consist in some cases of 
white chalk covering the limestone, and on the south there are 
several basaltic outbreaks. The view from Hermon is very ex- 
tensive, embracing all Lebanon and the plains east of Damascus, 
with Palestine as far as Carmcl and Tabor. On a clear day Jaffa 
abo may be seen. The mountain in spring is covered with snow, 
but in autumn there is occasionally none left, even in the ravines. 
To the height of 500 ft. it is clothed with oaks, poplars and 
brush, while luxuriant vineyards abound. Foxes, wolves and 
Syrian bears are not infrequently met with, and there is a heavy 
dew or night mist. Above the snow-limit the mountain is bare 
and covered with fine limestone shingle. The summit is a 
plateau from which three rocky knolls rise up, that on the west 
being the lowest, that on the south-east the highest. On the 
south slope of the latter are remains of a small temple or saceUum 
described by St Jerome. A semicircular dwarf wall of good 
masonry runs round this peak, and a trench excavated in the 
rock may perhaps indicate the site of an altar. On the plateau 
is a cave about 25 ft. sq. with the entrance on the east A rock 
column supports the roof, and a building (possibly a Milhraeum) 
once stood above. Other small temples are found on the sides of 
Hermon, of which twelve in all have been explored. They face 
the east and are dated by architects about aj>. 200. The most 
remarkable are those of Deir el 'Ashaiyir, Hibbariyeh, Hosn 
Nina and Tell Thatha. At Che ruined town called Rukleh on the 
northern slopes are remains of a temple, the stones of which have 
been built into a church. A large medallion, 5 ft. in diameter, 
with a head supposed to represent the sun-god, is built into the 
wall Several Greek inscriptions occur among these ruins. In 
the 1 ath century Psalm Ixxirix. 12 was supposed to indicate the 
proximity of Hermon to Tabor. The conical bill immediately 
south of Tabor was thus named Little Hermon, and is still so 
called by some of the inhabitants of the district. 

HERMSDORF, a village of Germany, in the Prussian province 
of SUesfa. Pop. (1000) 10,075. There are coal and iron mines 
and lime quarries in the vicinity, and in the town there are large 
Iron-works. Hcrmsdorf is known as Niederhermsdorf to dis- 
tinguish it from other places of the same name. Perhaps the 
most noteworthy of these is a village in Silesia at the foot of the 
Riesengebirge, chiefly famous for the ruins of the castle of KynasL 
This castle, formerly the seat of the Schaffgotsch family, was 
destroyed by lightning in 1675. A third Herrnsdorf is* a viflage 
in Saxe-Altenburg, where porcelain is made. 

HBRNB, JAMBS A. [originally AherneJ (1840-1901), American 
actor and playwright, was born in Troy, New York, and after 
theatrical experiences in various companies produced bis own 
first play, Hearts of Oak, in 1878, and his great success Shore 
Acres in 1882. It was in rural drama that his humour and pathos 
found their proper setting, and Short Acres was seen throughout 
the United States almost continuously for six seasons, being 
followed by the less successful Sag Barber, 1000. 

HERNS, a town of Germany, in the Prussian province of 
Westphalia, 15 m. by rail NAV. of Dortmund. Pop. (1005) 
33,258. It has coal mines, boiler-works, gunpowder mills, &c 
Heme was made a town in 1897. 

HBRNB BAT, a seaside resort in the St Augustine's parlia- 
mentary division of Kent, England, 8 m. N. by E. of Canterbury, 
on the South Eastern and Chatham railway. Pop. of urban 
district (1001) 6726. It has grown up since 1830, above a 
sandy and pebbly shore, and has a pier \ m. long. The 
Church of St Martin in the village of Heme, x| m. inland, 



is Early English and later; the living was held by Nicholas 
Ridley (1538), afterwards Bishop of London. At Recurver, 
3 m. E. of Heme Bay on the coast, Is the site of the Roman 
station of Regulbmm. The fortress occupied about 8 acres, but 
only traces of the south and east walls remain. In Saxon times 
it was converted into a palace by King Ethel bert, and in 669 a 
monastery was founded here by Egbert. The Early English 
church was taken down early in the 19th century owing to the 
encroachment of the sea, and pans of its fabric were preserved 
in the modern church of St Mary. But its twin towers, known 
as the Sisters from the tradition that they were built by a 
Benedictine abbess of Faversham in memory of her sister, were 
preserved by Trinit y Ho use as a conspicuous landmark. 

HBRNB THE HUNTER, a legendary huntsman who was aOcged 
to haunt Windsor Great Park at night, especially asouod an 
aged tree, long known as Heme's oak, said to be nearly 700 
years old. This was blown down in r863, and a young oak was 
planted by Queen Victoria on the spot. Heme has his French 
counterpart in the Grand Veneur of Fontainebleau. Mention 
is made of Heme in The Uerry Wives §f Windsor and m Harrison 
Ainsworth's Windsor Castle. Nothing definite is known of the 
Heme legend. It is suggested that it originated in the life- 
story of some keeper of the forest; but more probably it is only 
a variant of the " Wild Huntsman" myth common to folk-lore, 
which (E. B. Tylor, Primitive Culture, 4th ed. pp. 361-362) is 
al most certainly the modem form of a prehistoric storm- myth. * 

HERNIA (Lat. hernia, perhaps from Gr. loves, a sprout), in 
surgery, the protrusion of a viscus, or part of a viscus, from its 
normal- cavity; thus, hernia cerebri is a protrusion of brain* 
substance, hernia pulmenvm, a protrusion of a portion of lung, 
and hernia iridis, a protrusion of some of the iris through an 
aperture in the cornea. But, used by itself, hernia implies a ' 
protrusion from the abdominal cavity, or, in common language, 
a " rupture/' A rupture may occur at any weak point in the 
abdominal wall. The common situations are the groin (inguinal 
hernia), the upper part of the thigh (femoral hernia), and the 
navel (umbilical hernia). The more movable the viscus the 
greater the liability to protrusion, and therefore one commonly 
finds some of the small intestine, or of the fatty apron (omentum), 
in the hernia. The tumour may contain intestine alone (entero- 
cele), omentum alone (epiplocele), or both intestine and omentum 
(entero-epiplocele). The predisposing cause of rupture is 
abnormal length of the suspensory membrane of the bowel 
(the mesentery), or of the omentum, in conjunction with some 
weak spot in the abdominal wall, as in an inguinal hernia, which 
descends along the canal in which the spermatic card lies in the 
male and the round ligament of the womb in the female. A 
femoral hernia comes through a weak spot in the abdomen to 
the inner side of the great femoral vessels; a ventral hernia takes 
place by the yielding of the scar tissue left after an operation 
for appendicitis or ovarian disease. The exciting cause of 
hernia is generally some ovcr-cxertlon, as in lifting a heavy 
weight, jumping off a high wall, straining (as in difficult micturi- 
tion), constipation or excessive coughing. The pressure of the 
diaphragm above and the abdominal wall in front acting on the 
abdominal viscera causes a protrusion at the weakest point. 

Rupture is either congenital or acquired. A child may be 
born with a hernia in the inguinal or umbilical region, the result 
of an arrest of development fn these parts; or the rupture may 
be acquired, first appearing, perhaps, in adult life as the resuk 
of a strain or hurt. Men suffer more frequently than women, 
because of their physical labours, because they are more liable 
to accidents, and because of the passage for the spermatic cord 
out of the abdomen being more spacious than that for the round 
ligament of the womb. 

At first the rupture is small, and it gradually increases in bulk. 
It varies from the size of a marble to a child's head. The swelling 
consists of three parts—the coverings, sac and contents. The 
" coverings " are the structures which form the abdominal wall 
at the' part where the rupture occurs. In femoral hernia the 
coverings are the structures at the upper part of the thigh which 
are stretched, thinned and matted together as the result of 



HERNIA 



37* 



pressure; in other cases there it an increase fn their thickness, 
the result of repeated attacks of inflammation. The * sac " is 
composed of the peritoneum or membrane lining the abdominal 
cavity; in some rare cases the sac is wanting. The neck of the 
sac is the narrowed portion where the peritoneum forming the 
sac becomes continuous with the general peritoneal cavity. 
The neck of the sac is often thickened, indurated and adherent 
to surrounding parts, the result of chronic Inflammation. The 
" contents " are bowel, omental fat, or, in children, an ovary. 

The hernia may be reducible, irreducible or strangulated. 
A "reducible" hernia is one in which the contents can be 
pushed back into the abdomen. In some cases this reduction is 
effected with ease, in others it is a matter of great difficulty. 
At any moment a reducible hernia may become " irreducible," 
that is to say, it cannot be pushed back into the abdominal 
cavity, perhaps because of inflammatory adhesions in and 
around the fatty contents, or because of extra fullness of the 
bowd in the sac A " strangulated " hernia is one in which the 
circulation of the blood through the hernial contents is interfered 
with, by the pinching at the narrowest pact of the passage. 
The interference is at first slight, but it quickly becomes more 
pronounced; the pinched bowel in the hernial sac swells as a 
finger does when a string is tightly wound round it* base. At first 
there is congestion, and tins may go on Co inflammation, to 
infection by micro-organisms and to mortification. The rapidity 
with which the change from simple congestion to mortification 
takes place depends on the tightness of the constriction, and on 
the virulence of the bacterial infection from the bowel. As a 
rule, the more rapidly a hernia forms the greater the rapidity 
of serious change in the conditions of the bowel or omentum, 
and the more urgent am the symptoms. The constricting band 
may be one of the structures which form the boundaries of the 
openings through which the hernia has travelled, or it may be 
the neck of tbe sac, which has become thickened in consequence 
of inflammat io n e sp ec ia lly is .this the case in an inguinal hernia. 

Rtduciblc Hernia — With a reducible hernia there is a soft 
compressible tumour (elastic when it contains intestine, doughy 
when it contains omentum), its sire increasing in the erect, and 
araunishing in the horizontal posture. As a rule, it causes no 
trouble during the night It gives an impulse on coughing, and 
when the intestinal contents are pushed back into the abdomen 
a gurgling sensation is perceptible by the fingers. Such a tumour 
may be met with in any part of the abdominal wall, but the chief 
situations are as follows. The ingute&l region, in which the neck 
of the tumour Kes immediately above Poupart's ligament (a 
cord-like ligamentous structure which can be felt stretching 
from the front of the hip-bone to a ridge of bone immediately 
above the genital organs); the femoral region, in tbe upper part 
of the thigh, in which the neck of the sac lies immediately below 
the inner end of Poupart's ligament; the umbilical region, 
in which the tumour appears at or near the navel As the 
inguinal hernia increases in size it passes into the scrotum in the 
male, into the labium in the female; while the femoral henna 
gradually pushes upwards to the abdomen. 

The palliative treatment of a reducible hernia consists in 
pushing back the contents of the tumour into the abdomen 
and applying a truss or elastic bandage to prevent their again 
escaping. The younger the patient the more chance there is 
of the truss acting as a curative agent. The truss may generally 
be left off at night, but it should be put on in the morning 
be/ore tbe patient leaves bis bed. If, after the hernia has been 
once returned, it is not allowed again to come down* there is a 
probability of an actual cure taking place; but if it is allowed 
to come down occasionally, as it may do, even during the night,, 
in consequence of a cough, or from the patient turning suddenly, 
in bed, the weak spot is again opened out, and the improvement 
which might have been going on fox weeks is undone. It is 
sometimes found impossible to keep up a hernia by means of a 
truss, and an operation becomes necessary. The operation is 
spoken of as " the radical treatment of hernia," in contra- 
distinction to the so-called "palliative treatment" by means 
of a trass. It should not be spoken of as the radical cure, for 



skilfully as the operation may have been performed it is not 
always a cure. The principles involved in the operation are the 
emptying of tbe sac and its entire removal, and the closure of the 
opening into the abdomen by strong sutures; and, in this way, 
great advance has been made by modern surgery. Without 
tiresome delay, and the tedious and sometimes disappointing 
application of trusses, the weak spot in the abdominal wall is 
exposed, the sac of the hernia is tied and removed, and the canal 
by which the rupture descended is blockaded by buried sutures, 
and with no material risk to life. Thus the patient's worries 
become a thing of the past, and he is rendered a fit and normal 
member of society. Experience has shown that very few ruptures 
are unsuited for successful treatment by operation. No boy 
should now be sent to school compelled to wear a truss, and so 
hindered In his games and rendered an object of remark. 

Irreducible Hernia.— The main symptom is a tumour in one 
of the situations already referred to, of long standing and 
perhaps of large size, in which the contents of the tumour, in 
whole or in part, cannot be pushed back into the abdomen. 
The irredudbility is due either to its large siae or to changes 
which have taken place by indurations or adhesions. Such a 
tumour is a constant source of danger: its contents are liable, 
from their exposed situation, to injury from external violence; 
it has a constant risk of increase; it may at any time become 
strangulated, or the contents may inflame, and strangulation 
may occur secondarily to tbe inflammation. It gives rise to 
dragging sensations (referred to the abdomen), colic, dyspepsia 
and constipation, which may lead to obstruction, that is to say, a 
stoppage may occur of the passage of the contents of that portion 
of the Intestinal canal which lies in the hernia. When an ir- 
reducible hernia becomes painful and tender, a local peritonitis 
has occurred, which resembles in many of its symptoms a case 
of strangulation, and must be regarded with suspicion and 
anxiety. Indeed, the only safe treatment is by operation. 

The treatment of irreducible hernia may be palliative; a 
" bag truss " may be worn in the hope of preventing the hernia 
getting larger; the bowels must be kept open, and all irregu- 
larities of diet avoided. A person with such a hernia is In constant 
danger, and if his general condition does not contra-indicate it 
he should be submitted to operative treatment That is to say, 
the surgeon should cut down on the hernia, open the sac, divide 
any omental adhesions, tie and cut away indurated omentum, 
return the bowel, and complete the radical operation by closing 
the aperture by strong sutures. 

In Strangulated Hernia the bowd or omentum is being nipped 
at the neck of the sac, and the flow of blood into and from the 
delicate tissues is stopped. The symptoms are — nausea .vomiting ■' 
of bilious matter, and after a time of faecal-smdlmg matter; 
a twisting, burning pain generally referred to the region of the 
navel, intestinal obstruction; a quick, wiry pulse and pain on 
pressure over the tumour; the expression grows anxious, the 
abdomen becomes tense and drum-like, and there is no impulse 
in the tumour on coughing, because Its contents are practically 
pinched off from the general abdominal cavity. Sometimes there 
is complete absence of pain and tenderness in the hernia itself, 
and in an aged person all the symptoms may be very slight. 
Sooner or later, from eight hours to eight days, if the strangula- 
tion is unrelieved, the tumour becomes livid, crackling with gas, 
mortification of the bowel at tbe neck of the sac takes place, 
followed by extravasation of the intestinal contents into tbe 
abdominal cavity; the patient has hiccough; he becomes 
collapsed; and dies comatose from blood-poisoning. . 

The treatment of a strangulated hernia admits of no delay; 
if the hernia does not " go back " on the surgeon trying to reduce 
it, it must be operated on at once, the constriction being relieved, 
the bowel returned and the opening dosed. There should he 
no treatment by hot-bath or ice-bag: operation is urgently 
needed. An anaesthetic should be administered, and perhaps 
one gentle attempt to return the contents by pressure (termed 
" taxis") may be made, but no prolonged attempts are justi- 
fiable, because the condition of the hernial contents may be 
such that they cannot bear the pressure of the fingers, "Think 



37+ 



HERNICI—HERO 



well of the hernia," says the aphorism, " which has been little 
bandied." 

The taxis to be successful should be made in a direction 
opposite to the one in which the hernia has come down. The 
inguinal heinia should be pressed upwards, outwards and 
backwards, the femoral hernia downwards, backwards and 
upwards. The larger the hernia the greater is the chance of 
success by taxis, and the smaller the hernia the greater the risk 
of its being injured by manipulation and delay. In every case 
the handling must be absolutely gentle. If taxis does not succeed 
the surgeon must at once cut down on the tumour, carefully 
dividing the different coverings until he reaches the sac The 
sac is then opened, the constriction divided, care being taken 
not to injure the bowel. The bowel must be examined before it 
b returned into the abdomen, and if its lustreless appearance, 
its dusky colour, or its smell, suggests that it is mortified, or is 
on the point of mortifying, it must not be put back or perforation 
would give rise to septic peritonitis which would probably have 
a fatal ending. In such a case the damaged piece of bowel must 
be resected and the healthy ends of the bowel joined together 
by fine suturing. Matted or diseased omentum must be tied off 
and removed. Should peritonitis supervene after the operation 
on account of bacillary infection, the bowels should be quickly 
made to act by repeated doses of Epsom salts in hot water. 

A person who is the subject of a reducible hernia should take 
great care to obtain an accurately fitting truss, and should 
remember that whenever symptoms resembling in any degree 
those of strangulation occur, delay in treatment may prove 
fatal. A surgeon should at once be communicated with, and he 
should come prepared to operate. (E. 0.*) 

HBRJHCI, an ancient people of Italy, whose territory was 
in Latium between the Fucinc Lake and the Trcrus, bounded 
by the Volsdan on the S., and by the Aequian and the Marsian 
on the N. They long maintained their independence, and in 
486 B.C. were still strong enough to conclude an equal treaty 
with the Latins (Dion, Hal. viii. 64 and 68). They broke away 
from Rome in 362 (Livy vil 6 ff.) and in 306 (Ltvy ix» 42), when 
their chief town Anagnia (q.v.) was taken and reduced to a 
prefecture, but Fercntinum, Aletrium and Verulae were 
rewarded for their fidelity by being allowed to remain free 
municipia, a position which at that date they preferred to the 
civitas. The name of the Hecnici, like that of the Volsci, is 
missing from the list of Italian peoples whom Poly bi us (ii. 24) 
describes as able to furnish troops in 225 B.C.; by that date, 
therefore, their territory cannot have been distinguished from 
Latium generally, and it seems probable (Beloch, Ital. Bund, 
p. 123) that they had then received the full Roman citizenship. 
The oldest Latin inscriptions of the district (from Ferentinum, 
C/X. x. 5837-5840) are earlier than the Social War, and present 
no local characteristic 

For further details of their history tee CLL. %. 572. 

There is no evidence to show that the Hernid ever spoke a 
really different dialect from the Latins; but one or two glosses 
indicate that they had certain peculiarities of vocabulary, such 
as might be expected among folk who clung to their local customs. 
Their name, however, with its Co-termination, classes them 
along with the Co-tribes, like the Volsci, who would seem to have 
been earlier inhabitants of the west coast of Italy, rather than 
with the tribes whose names were formed with the Afo-suifix. 
On this question see Volsci and Sabtni. 

See Conway's Italic Dialects (Camb. Univ. Press, 1897), p. 306 ff., 
where the glosses and the local and personal names of the district 
will be found. (R. S. C.) 

HERNtiSAND, a seaport of Sweden, chief town of the district 
(ten) of Vesternorrland on the Gulf of Bothnia. Fop. (xoeo) 
7800. It stands on the island of Herntt (which is connected 
with the mainland by bridges) near the mouth of the Angerman 
river, 423 m. N. of Stockholm by rail. It is the seat of a bishop 
and possesses a fine cathedral. There are engine-works, timber- 
yards and saw-mills. The harbour is good, but generally ice- 
bound from December to May. Timber, iron and wood-pulp are 
exported. There are a school of navigation and an institute for 
pisciculture. Hernosand was founded in 1584, and received its 



first towa-privfleges from John m. in 1587. It was the first 
town in Europe to be lighted by electricity (1885). The poet 
Fransen (?.».), Bishop of Herntisand, is buried here. 

HERO (Gr. 4pus)» a term specially applied to warriors of 
extraordinary strength and courage, and generally to all who 
were distinguished from their fellows by superior moral, physical 
or intellectual qualities. No satisfactory derivation of the 
word has been suggested. 

Ancient Creek Heroes. 

In ancient Greece, the heroes were the object of a special cult, 
and as such were intimately connected with its religious life. 
Various theories have been put forward as to the nature of these 
heroes. According to some authorities, they were idealized 
historical personages; according to others, symbolical repre- 
sentations of the forces of nature. The view most commonly 
held is that they were degraded or M depotentiated " gods, 
occupying a position intermediate between gods and men. 
According to E. Robxfe (in Psyche) they are souls of the dead, 
which after separation from the body enter upon a higher, 
eternal existence. Bat it is only a select minority who 
attain to the rank of heroes after death, only the distinguished 
men of the past. The worship of these heroes la in reality an 
ancestor worship, which existed in pre-Uomeric times, and was 
preserved in local cults. Instances no doubt occur of gods being 
degraded to the ranks of heroes, but these are not the real 
heroes, the heroes who are the object of a culL The cult-heroes 
were all persons who had lived the life of man on earth, and it 
was necessary for the degraded gods to pass through this stage. 
They did not at once become cok-heroes, but only after they had 
undergone death like other mortals. Only one who has been a 
man can become a hero. The heroes are spirits of the dead, not 
demi-gods; their position is not intermediate between gods and 
men, but by the side of these they exist as a separate class. 

In Homer the term is applied especially to warrior princes, to 
kings and kings' sons, even to distinguished persons of lower 
rank, and free men generally. In Heskxl it is chiefly con- 
fined to those who fought before Troy and Thebes; in view 
of their supposed divine origin, he calls them demi-gods 
(4/iJtot )• This name is also given them in an interpolated 
passage in the lliai (xii. 93), which is quite at variance with the 
general Homeric idea of the heroes, who are no more than men, 
even if of divine origin and of superior strength and prowess. 
But neither in Homer nor in Hesiod is there any trace of the idea 
that the heroes after death had any power for good or evil over 
the lives of those who survived them; and consequently, no 
cult. Nevertheless, traces of an earlier ancestor worship 
appear, #.g. in funeral games in honour of Patrodus and other 
heroes, while the Hesiodic account of the five ages of man b a 
reminiscence of the belief in the continued existence of souls in a 
higher life This pre-historic worship and belief, for a time 
obscured, were subsequently revived. According to Porphyry 
(De abstincntia, iv. 22), Draco ordered the inhabitants of Attica 
to honour the gods and heroes of their country "in accordance 
with the usage of their fathers " with offerings of first fruits and 
sacrificial cakes every year, thereby clearly pointing to a custom 
of high antiquity. Solon also ordered that the tombs of the 
heroes should be treated whh the greatest respect, and Cleis- 
thenes (q.v.) sought to create a pan-Athenian enthusiasm by 
calling his new tribes after Attic heroes and setting up their 
statues in the Agora. Heroic honours were at first bestowed upon 
the founders of a colony or city, and the ancestors of families; if 
their name was not known, one was adopted from legend. In 
many cases these heroes were purely fictitious; such were the 
supposed ancestors of the noble and priestly families of Attica 
and elsewhere (Butadae at Athens, B r a nch lda c at Miletus 
Ceryces at Eleusis), of the eponymi of the tribes and demes. 
Again, side by side with gods of superior rank, certain heroes 
were worshipped as protecting spirits of the country or state; 
such were the Aeaddae amongst the Aeginetans, Ajax son of 
Olleus amongst the Epizephyrian Locrians and Hector at 
Thebes.. Neglect of the worship of these heroes was held to be 



HERO 



rtspona&le for pestilence, bad crops and other misfortunes, 
while, on the other hand, if duly honoured, their influence was 
equally beneficent. This belief was supported -by the Delphic 
oracle, which was largely instrumental in promoting hero-worship 
and keeping alive its due observance. Special importance was 
attached to the grave of the hero and to his bodily remains, with 
which the spirit of the departed was inseparably connected. The 
grave was regarded as his place of abode, from which ht could 
only be absent for a brief period; hence his bones were fetched 
from abroad (e.t. Cimon brought those of Theseus from Scyros), 
or if they could not be procured, at least a cenotaph was erected 
in his honour. Their relics also were carefully preserved: the 
house of Cadmus at Thebes, the but of Orestes at Teftca, the stone 
on which Telamon had sat at Salamis (in Cyprus). Special 
shrines (4*4**) were also erected in their honour, usually over their 
graves. In these shrines a complete set of armour was kept, in 
accordance with the idea that the hero was essentially a warrior, 
who on occasion came forth from his grave and fought at the 
head of his countrymen, putting the enemy to flight as during his 
lifetime. Like the gods, the cult heroes were supposed to exercise 
an influence on human affairs, though not to the same extent, 
their sphere of action being confined to their own localities* 
Amongst the earliest known historical examples of the elevation 
of the dead to the rank of heroes are Timesius the founder of 
Abdera, Miliiadcs, son of Cypselus, Harmodius and Aristogiton 
and Brasidas, the victor of Amphipolis, who ousted the local 
Athenian hero Hagnon. In course of time admission to the rank 
of a hero became far more common, and was even accorded to the 
living, such as Lysimachus in Samot brace and the tyrant Nicias 
Of Cos. Antiochus of Commagent instituted an order of priests 
to celebrate the anniversary of his birth and coronation in a 
special sanctuary, and the kings of Pergamum claimed divine 
honours for themselves and their wives during their lifetime. 
The birthday of Eumenes was regularly kept, and every month 
sacrifice was offered to him and games held in his honour. In 
addition to persons of high rank, poets, legendary and others 
(Linus, Orpheus, Homer, Aeschylus and Sophocles), legislators 
and physicians (Lycurgus, Hippocrates), the patrons of various 
trades or handicrafts (artists, cooks, bakers, potters), the beads of 
philosophical schools (Plato, Democritus, Epicurus) received the 
honours of a cult. At Teos incense was offered before the statue 
of a flute-player during his lifetime. In some countries the 
honour became so general that tvtry man after death was 
described as a hero in his epitaph— in Thessaly even slaves. 

The cult of the heroes exhibits points of resemblance with that 
of the chthonian divinities and of the dead, but differs from that 
of the ordinary gods, 'a further indication that they were not 
" depotentiated " gods. Thus, sacrifice was offered to them at 
night or in the evening; not on a high, but on a low altar (fextpa), 
surrounded by a trench to receive the blood of the victim, which 
was supposed to make its way through the ground to the 
occupant of the grave; the victims were black male animals, 
whose heads were turned downwards, not upwards; their blood 
was allowed to trickle on the ground to appease the departed 
(minamupla); the body was entirely consumed by fire and no 
mortal was allowed to eat of it; the technical expression for the 
sacrifice was not 6im* but hoylfnw (less commonly hntpm*). 
The chthonian aspect of the hero is further shown by his attribute 
the snake, and in many cases he appears under that form himself. 
On special occasions a sacrificial meal of cooked food was set out 
for the heroes, of which they were solemnly invited to partake. 
The fullest description of such a festival is the account given by 
Phatarch (Aristida, ai) of the festival celebrated by the Plataeans 
in honour of their countrymen who bad fallen at the battle of 
Plataca. On the 16th of the month Maimacterion, a long pro- 
cession, headed by a trumpeter playing a warlike air, set out for 
the graves; wagons decked with myrtle and garlands of flowers 
followed, young men (who must be of free birth) carried jars of 
wine, milk, oil and perfumes; next cuine the black bull destined 
for the sacrifice, the rear being brought up by the archon, who 
wore the purple robe of the general, a naked sword in one hand, 
fejhe other an urn. When be came near the tombs, be drew 



375 



some water with which ht washed the gravestones, afterwards 
anointing them with perfume; he then sacrificed the bull on the 
altar calling upon Zeus Chthonios and Hermes Psychopompos, and 
inviting them in company with the heroes to the festival of blood. 
Finally, he poured a libation of wine with the words: u I drink 
to those who died for the freedom of the Hellenes." 

Sejeeapeciallv E. Rohde, Psych* (1903) and in Rkeinisckes Museum, 
fc. l l f&'~ 2 S} P * Stengel 0w piechisd** KuUusaltermmer 
(Munich, 1898), p. 124; C. F. Sch6mann, Grieckixh* Alter turner, 
"1 S\*Wh. '.».; J^Wassner, De htroum apud Cratcos cultu (Kiel. 



Dktumnaire des atUiquitU. 

Teutonic Legend, 
Many of the chief characteristics of the ancient Greek 
heroes are reproduced in those of the Teutonic North, the 
parallel being in some cases very striking; Siegfried, for instance, 
like Achilles, is vulnerable only in one spot, and Wayknd Smith, 
like Hephaestus, is lame. Superhuman qualities and powers, 
too, are commonly ascribed to both, an important difference, 
however, being that whatever worship may have been paid to the 
Teutonic heroes never crystallized into a cult. This applies 
equally to those who have a recognised historical origin and to 
those who are regarded as purely mythical. Of the latter the 
number has tended to diminish in the light of modem scholarship. 
The fashion during the 10th century set strongly in the other 
direction, and the " degraded gods " theory was applied not 
only to such conspicuous heroes as Siegfried, Dietrich and 
Beowulf, but to a host of minor characters, such as the good 
marquis Rudeger of the Nibelungenfced and our own Robin 
Hood (both identified with Woden Hruodperaht). The reaction 
from one extreme has, indeed, tended to lead to another, until 
not only the heroes, but the very gods themselves, are being 
traced to very human, not to say commonplace, origins. Thus 
M. Henri de Tourville, in his Histoirede la formation partkulariste 
(1903), basing his argument on the Ynglinga Sago, interpreted 
in the light of " Social Science," reveals Odin, M the traveller," 
as a great " caravan-leader " and warrior, who, driven from 
Asgprd— a trading city on the borders of the steppes east of the 
Don— by "the blows that Porapey aimed at Mitfaridates," 
brought to the north the arts and industries of the East. The 
argument is developed with convincing ingenuity, but k may be 
doubted whether it has permanently " rescued Odin from the 
misty dreamland of mythology and. restored bhn to history." 
It is now, however, admitted that, whatever influence the one 
may have from time to time exercised on the other, Teutonic 
myth and Teutonic heroic legend were developed on independent 
lines. The Teutonic heroes are, in the main, historical personages, 
never gods; though, like the Greek heroes, they are sometimes 
endowed with semi-divine attributes or interpreted as symbolical 
representations of natural forces. 

The origin of Teutonic heroic saga, which may be regarded 
as including that of the Germans, Goths, Anglo-Saxons and. 
Scandinavians, is to be looked for in the period of the so-called 
migration of nations (aj>. 350-650). It consequently rests 
upon a distinct basis of fact, the saga (in the older and wider 
sense of any story said or sung) being indeed the oldest form 
of historical tradition; though this of course does not exclude 
the probability of the accretion of mythical elements round 
persons and episodes from the very first. As to the origin of the 
heroic sagas as we now have them, Tacitus tells us that the deeds 
of Arminras were still celebrated in song a hundred years after 
his death (Annals, H. 88) and in the Germania be speaks of " old 
songs" as the only kind of " annals " which the ancient Germans 
possessed ; but, whatever relics of the old songs may be embedded 
in the Teutonic sagas, they have left no recognizable mark on the 
heroic poetry of the German peoples. The attempt to identify 
Arminius with Siegfried is now generally abandoned. Teutonic 
heroic saga, properly so-called, consists of the tradit ions connected 
with the migration period, the earliest traces of which are found 
in the works of historical writers such as Ammianus MarcelHnus 
and Cassiodorus. According to Jordancs (the epKomator of 



■3T 6 



HERO 



Caattodoro't HtiUry of Iki Goths) U the funeral of AttiTa his 
vassals, as they code round the corpse, sang of his glorious deeds. 
The nest step in the development of epic narrative was the 
single lay of an episodic character, sung by a single individual, 
who was frequently a member of a distinguished family, not 
merely a professional minstreL Then, as different stories grew 
up round the person of a particular hero, they formed a connected 
cycle of legend, the centre of which was the person of the hero 
{e.g. Dietrich of Bern). The most important figures of these 
cycles are the following. 

(i) Beowulf, king of the Gemtas (Jutland), whose story in its 
present form was probably brought from the continent by the 
Angles. It is an amalgamation of the myth of Beowa, the 
slayer of the water-demon and the dragon, with the historical 
legend of Beowulf, nephew and successor of Hygelac (Chochil- 
akus), king of the Geatas, who was defeated and slain (c. 520) 
while ravaging the Frisian coast. The water-demon Grendel 
and the dragon (probably), by whom Beowulf is mortally 
wounded, have been supposed to represent the powers of autumn 
and darkness, the floods which at certain seasons overflow the 
low-lying countries on the coast of the North Sea and sweep 
away all human habitations; Beowulf is the hero of spring and 
light who, after overcoming the spirit of the raging waters, 
finally succumbs to the dragon of approaching winter. Others 
regard him as a wind-hero, who disperses the pestilential vapours 
of the fens. Beowulf is also a culture-hero. His father Sceaf- 
Scyld (i.e. Scyld Scefing," the protector with the sheaf ") lands 
on the Anglian or Scandinavian coast when a child, in a rudder- 
less ship, asleep on a sheaf of grain, symbolical of the means 
whereby his kingdom shall become great; the son indicates 
the blessings of a fixed habitation, secured against the attacks 
of the sea. (2) Hildebrand, the hero of the oldest German epic. 
A loyal supporter of Theodoric, he follows his master, when 
threatened by Odoacer, to the court of Attila. After thirty 
years' absence, he returns to his home in Italy; his son Hadu- 
brand, believing his father to be dead, suspects treachery and 
refuses to accept presents offered by the father in token of 
good-will. A fight takes place, in which the son is slain by the 
father. In a later version, recognition and reconciliation take 
place. Well-known parallels are Odysseus and Telegonis, 
Rustem and Sohrab. (3) Ermanaric, the king of the East Goths, 
who according to Ammianus Marcellinus slew himself (c. 375) 
in terror at the invasion of the Huns. With him is connected 
the old German Dioscuri myth of the Harhingen. (4)Dictrich 
of Bern (Verona), the legendary name of Theodoric the Great. 
Contrary to historical tradition, Italy is supposed to have been 
bis ancestral inheritance, of which he has been deprived by 
Odoacer, or by Ermanaric, who in his altered character of a 
typical tyrant appears as his uncle and contemporary. He takes 
refuge in Hungary with Elzel (Attila), by whose aid he finally 
recovers his kingdom. In the later middle ages he is represented 
as fighting with giants, dragons and dwarfs, and finally disappears 
on a black horse. Some attempts have been made to identify 
him as a kind of Donar or god of thunder. (5) Siegfried (M.H. 
Gen SIvrit), the hero of the NUbelungenlied, the Sigurd of the 
related northern sagas, is usually regarded as a purely mythical 
figure, a hero of light who is ultimately overcome by the powers 
of darkness, the mist-people (Niebelungen). He is, however, 
closely associated with historical characters and events, e.g. 
with the Burgundian king Gundahari (Gunther, Gunnar) and the 
overthrow of his house and nation by the Huns; the scholars 
have exercised considerable ingenuity in attempting to identify 
him with various historical figures. Theodor Abeling {Das 
Nibdungenlied, Leipzig, 1007) traces the Nibelung sagas to 
three groups 'of Burgundian legends, each based on fact: the 
Frankish-Burgundian tradition of the rouider of Segeric, son 
of the Burgundian king Sigimund, who was slain by his father 
at the instigation of his stepmother; the Frankish-Burgundian 
story, as told by Gregory of Tours (iii. 11), of the defeat of the 
Burgundian kings Sigimund and Godomar, and the captivity 
and murder of Sigimund, by the sons of Clovis, at the instigation 
of their mother Chrothildis, in revenge for the murder of her 



father Chllperich and of her mother, by Godomar; the Rhenish- 
Burgundian 6tory of the ruin of Gundahari's kingdom by AttnVs 
Huns. Herr Abeling identifies Siegfried (Sigurd) with Segeric, 
while— according to him— the heroine of the Nibelung sagas, 
Kriemhild (Gudrun), represents a confusion of two historical 
persons: Chrothildis, the wife of Clovis, and lldico (Hade), 
the wife of Attila. (See also the articles Ksiemhtud, Nibelcw- 
genlxed). 

(6)Hugdietrich, Wolfdietrich and Ortnit, whose legend, file 
that of Siegfried, is of Frankish origin. It is preserved m four 
versions, the best of which is the oldest, and has an historical 
foundation. Hugdietrich is the " Frankish Dietrich " (-Hugo 
Theodoric), king of Australia (d. 534), who like his son and 
successor Theodebert, was illegitimate; both had to fight for 
their inheritance with relatives. The transference of the scene to 
Constantinople is a reminiscence of the events of the Crusades 
and Theodebcrt's projected campaign against that city. The 
version in which Hugdietrich gains access to his future wife by 
disguising himself as a woman has also a foundation in fact. As 
the myth of the Harlungen is connected with Ermanaric, so 
another Dioscuri myth (of the Hartungen) is combined with the 
Ortnit-Wolfcketrich legend. The Hartungen are probably 
identical with the divine youths (mentioned in Tacitus as 
worshipped by the Vandal Naharvali or Nahanarvali), from 
whom the Vandal royal family, the Asdingi, claimed descent. 
Asdingi ("Aorrwoc) would be represented in Gothic by Hasdiggos, 
" men with women's hair " (cf. mnliebri onwtu in Tacitus), and 
in middle high German by Hartungen. (7)Rother, king of 
Lombardy. Desiring to wed the daughter of Constantine, king of 
Constantinople, he sends twelve envoys to ask her in marriage. 
They are arrested and thrown into prison by the king. Rother, 
who appears under the name of Dietrich, sets out with an army, 
liberates the envoys and carries off the princess. One version 
places the scene in the land of the Huns. The character of 
Constantine in many respects resembles that of Alexius Com- 
nenus; the slaying of a tame lion by one of the gigantic followers 
of Rother is founded on an incident which actually took place at 
the court of Alexius during the crusade of xxox under duke Well 
of Bavaria, when King Rother was composed about 1 160 by a 
Rhenish minstreL Rother may be the Lombard king Rothari 
(636-650), transferred to the period of the Crusades. (8) Walther 
of Aquitaine, chiefly known from the Latin poem Waltkarhs, 
written by Ekkehard of St Gall at the beginning of the 10th 
century, and fragments of an 8th-century Anglo-Saxon Epic 
W alder e. Walther is not an historical figure, although the legend 
undoubtedly represents typical occurrences of the migration 
period, such as the detention and flight of hostages of noble 
family from the court of the Huns, and the rescue of captive 
maidens by abduction. (o)Wieland (Volundr), Wayland the 
Smith, the only Teutonic hero (his original home was tower 
• Saxony) who firmly established himself in England. There is 
absolutely no historical background for his legend. He is a fire- 
spirit, who is pressed into man's service, and typifies the advance 
from the stone age to a higher stage of civilization (working in 
metals). As the lame smith he reminds us of Hephaestus, and in 
his flight with wings of Daedalus escaping from Minos. (10) Hogm 
(Hagen) and Hedin (Hetel), whose personalities are overshadowed 
by the heroines Hilde and Gudrun (Kudrun, Kutrun). In one 
version occurs the incident of the never-ending battle between 
the forces of Hagen and Hedin. Every night Hilde revives tHe 
fallen, and " so will it continue till the twilight of the gods." The 
battle represents the eternal conflict between light and darkness, 
the alternation of day and night. Hilde here figures as a typical 
Valkyr delighting in battle and bloodshed, who frustrates a 
reconciliation. Hedin hod sent a necklace as a peace-offering to 
Hagen, but Hilde persuades her father that it is Only a ruse. 
This necklace occurs in the story of the goddess Freya (Frigg), 
who is said to have caused the battle to conciliate the wrath of 
Odin at her infidelity, the price paid by her for the rwssesMoii cf 
the necklace Brisnigamen; again, the light god Hcimdal is said to 
have fought with Loki for the necklace (the sun) stolen by the 
latter. He n ce the batik has been explained as the necklace 



HERO 



377 



myth in epic form. The historical background fa the raids of the 
Teutonic maritime tribes on the coasts of England and Ireland. 
Famous heroes who are specially connected with England are 
Alfred the Great. Richard Cceur-deLion, King Horn, Havelok 
the Dane, Guy of Warwick, Sir £evls of Hampton (or South* 
ampton), Robin Hood and his companions. 

Celtic Heroes. 

The Celtic heroic saga in the British islands may be divided into 
the two principal groupsof Gaelic (Irish) and Brython (Welsh), the 
nest, excluding the purely mythological, into the Uttonian (cdn- 
necied with Ulster) and the Ossianic* The UUonianls grouped 
round the oaoesof hang Coachobarand the neroCuchulatiin, u the 
Irish Achilles," the defender of Ulster against aU Ireland, regarded 
bysorac as a solar hero. The second cycle contains the epics 
of Finn (Fioiin, Fingal) mac Cumhail, and his sen Oisin (Ossian), 
the bard'and war dor, chiefly known from the supposed Oisianic 
poems of Macpherson. (See Celt, sec Celtic Literal era.) 

Of Brython origin is the cyck of King Arthur (Arrus), the 
adopted national hero of the mixed nationalities of whom the 
" English " people was composed. Here he appears as a chiefly 
mythical personality, who slays monsters, such as the giant of 
St Michel, the boar Troit, the demon cat, and goes down to the 
underworld. The original Welsh legend was spread by British 
refugees in Brittany, and was thus celebrated by both English and 
French Celts. From a literary point of view, however, it is 
chiefly French and forms " the matter of Brittany. " Arthur, 
the leader (comes Britonniat, dux bcllomm) of the Siluri or 
Dumnonii against the Saxons, flourished at the beginning of the 
6th century. He is first spoken of in Nennius's History of the 
Britons (oth century), and at greater length m Geoffrey of 
Monmouth's History of the Kings of Britain (tath century), 
at the end of which the French Breton cycle attained its fullest 
development in the poems of Chretien de Troyes and others. 

Speaking generally, the Celtic heroes are differentiated from 
the Teutonic by the extreme exaggeration of their superhuman, 
or rather extra-human, qualities. Teutonic legend does not 
lightly exaggerate, and what to us seems incredible in it may be 
easily conceived as credible to those by whom and for whom the 
tales were told; that Sigmund and his son Sinfiotli turned them- 
selves into wolves would be but a sign of exceptional powers to 
those who believed in werewolves; Fafnir assuming the form of 
a serpent would be no more incredible to the barbarous Teuton 
than, the similar transformation of Proteus to the Greek. But in 
the characterization of their heroes the Celtic imagination runs 
riot, and the quality of their persons and their acts becomes 
exaggerated beyond the bounds of any conceivable probability. 
Take, for instance, the description of some of Arthur's knights in 
the Welsh taleof KUkwch end Otven (in the Habinogiou). Along 
with Kat and Bedwyr (Bcdivere), Peredur (Perceval), Gwalchmai 
(Gawain), and many others*, we have such figures as Sgtttl 
Yscandroed, whose way through the wood by along the topsof the 
trees, and whose tread was so light that no blade of grass bent 
beneath his weight; Sol, who could stand all day upon one leg; 
Sugyn the son of Sugncdydd, who was '* broad-chested "to such 
a degree that he could suck up the sea on which were three 
hundred ships and leave nothing but dry land; Gweyyl, the son of 
Gwestad, who when he was sad would let one of his lips drop 
beneath his waist and turn up the other like a cap over his head; 
and Uchtry Varyf Draws, who spread his red unlrimmed beard 
over the eight-and -forty rafters of Arthur's hall. Such figures as 
these make no human impression, and criticism has busied itself 
in tracing them to one or other of the Shadowy divinities of the 
Celtic pantheon. However this may be, remnants of their 
primitive superhuman qualities cling to the Celtic heroes long 
after they have been transfigured, under the influence of Christi- 
anity and chivalry, into the heroes of the medieval Arthurian 
romance, types— 'for the most part— of the knightly virtues as 
these were conceived by the middle ages; while shadowy 
memories of early myths live on, strangely disguised, in certain of 
the episodes repeated uncritically by the medieval poets. So 
Merlin preserves his diabolic origin; Arthur his mystic coming and 



his mystic passing; while Gawain,«nd after him Lancelot', journey 
across the river, as the Irish hero Bran had done before them to 
the island of fair women — the Celtic viskm of the realm of death. 
The chief heroes of the medieval Arthurian romances are 
the following. Arthur himself, who tends however to become 
completely overshadowed by his knights, who make his court 
the starting-point of their adventures. Merlin (Myrddin), the 
famous wiaard, bard and warrior, perhaps an historical figure, 
first introduced by Geoffrey of Monmouth, originally called 
Ambrose from the British leader Ambrosius Aurehanus, under 
whom he is said to have first served. Perceval (Parzival, 
Parsifal), the Welsh Peredur, u the seeker of the basin," the most 
intimately connected with the quest of the Grail (e .».). Tristan 
(Tristram), the ideal lover of the middle ages, whose name is 
inseparably asso c ia ted with that of Iseult. Lancelot, son of 
Ban king of Brittany, a creation of chivalrous romance, who 
only appears in Arthurian literature under French Influence, 
known chiefly from his amour with Guinevere, perhaps in 
imitation of the story of Tristan and Iseult. Gawain (Wetwain, 
Welsh Gwalchmai), Arthur's nephew, who in medieval romance 
remains the type of knightly courage and' chivalry, until his 
character is degraded in order to exalt that of Lancelot. Among 
less important, but still conspicuous, figures may be mentioned 
Kay (the Kai of the MioMnoiUtt), Arthur's foster-brother and 
sensechal, the type of the bluff and boastful warrior, and Bedivere 
(Bedwyr), the type of brave knight and faithful retainer, who 
alone is with Arthur at his passing, and afterwards becomes 
"a hermit and a holy man.' 1 (See Arthur, Merlin, Perceval, 
Tristan, Lancelot, Gawain.) 

Heroes of Romance. 

Another series of heroes, forming the central figures of stories 
variously derived but developed in Europe by the Latin-speaking 
peoples, may be conveniently grouped under the heading 
of "romance." Of these the most important are Alexander, 
of Macedon and Charlemagne, while alongside of them Priam 
and other heroes of the Trojan war appear during the middle ages 
in strangely altered guise. Of all heroes of romance Alexander 
has been the most widely celebrated. His name, in the form of 
Iskander, is familiar In legend and story all over the East to this 
day; to the West he was introduced through a Latin translation 
of the original Greek romance (by the pseudo-Callisthenes) 
to which the innumerable Oriental versions are likewise traceable? 
(see Alexander III., King or Macedon; sec The Romance of 
Alexander). More important in the West, however, was the 
cycle of legends gathering round the figure of Charlemagne, 
forming what was known as " the matter of France." The 
romances of this cycle, of Germanic (Prankish) origin and 
developed probably in the north of France by the French 
(probably in the north of France) contain reminiscences 
of the heroes of the Merovingian period, and in their later 
development were influenced by the Arthurian cycle. Just 
as Arthur was eclipsed by his companions, so Charlemagne's 
vassal nobles, except in the Chanson de Roland, are exalted at 
the expense of the emperor, probably the result of the changed 
relations between the later emperors and their barons. The 
character of Charlemagne himself undergoes a change; in the 
, Chanson de Roland he is a venerable figure, mild and dignified, 
while later he appears as a cruel and typical tyrant (as is also the 
case with Ermanaric). The basis of his legend is mainly histori- 
cal, although the story o( his journey to Constantinople and the 
East is mythical, and incidents have been transferred from the 
reign of Charles Mattel to bis. Charlemagne is chiefly venerated as 
the champion of Christianity against the heathen and the Saracens. 
(See Charlemagne, ad fin. " The Charlemagne Legends.") 

The most famous heroes who are associated with him are 
Roland, praefect of the inarches of Brittany, the Orlando of 
Ariosto, slain at Roncevaux (Roncevalles) m the Pyrenees, 
and his friend and rival Oliver (Olivier); Ogicr the Dane, the 
Holger Danske of Hans Andersen, and Huon of Bordeaux, 
probably both introduced from the Arthurian cycle; Renaud 
pUnaldo) tf Montauban, one of the lour sons of Aymon, la 



378 HERO AND LEANDER— HERO OF ALEXANDRIA 



whom the wonderful horse Bayard was presented by Charlemagne; 
the traitor Doon of Mayence; Ganelon, responsible for the 
treachery that led to the death of Roland; Archbishop Turpin, 
a typical specimen of muscular Christianity; William Ficrabras, 
William au court nea, William of Toulouse, and William of 
Orange (all probably identical), and Vivien; the nephew of the 
latter and the hero of Aliscans. The late Charlemagne romances 
originated the legends, in English form, of Sovd one of Babytonc, 
Sir Olnd, Sir Firumbras and Huov. of Bordeaux (in which Obcron, 
the king of the fairies, the son of Julius Caesar and Morgan the 
Fay, was first made known to England). 

The chief remains of the Spanish heroic epic are some poems 
on the Cid, on the seven Infantes of Lara, and on Fernan 
Gonzalez, count of Castile. The legend of Charlemagne as told 
in the Cr&nica general of Alfonso X. created the desire for a 
national hero distinguished for his exploits against the Moors, 
apd Roland was thus supplanted by Bernardo del Carpio. 
Another famous hero and centre of a 14th-century cycle of 
romance was Amadis of Gaul; its earliest form is Spanish, 
although the Portuguese have claimed it as a translation from 
their own language. There is no trace of a French original. 

Slavonic' Heroes*— The Slavonic heroic saga of Russia centres 
round Vladimir of Kiev (080-1015), the first Christian ruler 
of that country, whose personality is edipsed by that of Ilya 
(Elias) of Mourom, the son of a peasant, who was said to have 
saved the empire from the Tatars at the urgent request of his 
emperor. It is not known whether he was an historical personage \ 
many of the achievements attributed to him border on the 
miraculous. A much-discussed work is the Talc of Igor, the oldest 
of the Russian medieval epics. Igor was the leader of a raid 
against the heathen Polovtsi in 1185; at first successful, he was 
afterwards defeated and taken prisoner, but finally managed 
to escape. Although the Finns are not Slavs, on topographical 
grounds mention may here be made of Wainamoinen, the great 
magician and hero of the Finnish epic Kalcvala ("land of 
heroes "). The popular hero of the Servians and Bulgarians is 
Marko Kralycvkh (q.v.), son ol Vuknshin, characterized by 
Goethe as a counterpart of the Greek Heracles and the Persian 
Rustem. For the Persian, Indian, &c, heroes see the articles on 
the literature and religions of the various countries. 

.T.Grassc.Die 

forming part of 
ten Volker des 
., 1908), Teu- 
in H. Paul's 
trg, looo), 2nd 
L Grimm, Die 
>e of the most 
hen Heldensage 
der griechischeri 
icaek, Deutsche 
che *Heldensare 
1 Saussaye, The 
, 1902); j. G. 
i also Helden- 



CelTIC— M. H. d'Arbois de Jubainville, Cours di liUerature 




on Introduction to Celtic Myth and Romance (1005); J. Rhys, Celtic 
Britain (3rd ed., 1904). Slavonic. — A. N. Rambaud, La Runic 
ipique (1876); W. Wollner, Untersuchunieh Uber die Volksepik der 
Orossrussen (1879); W. R. Morfill, Slavonic Literature (1883). 

HERO AND LEANDER, two lovers celebrated in antiquity. 
Hero, the beautiful priestess of Aphrodite at Sestos, was seen by 
Leander, a youth of Abydos, at the celebration of the festival 
of Aphrodite and Adonis. He became deeply enamoured of 
her; but, as her position as priestess and the opposition of her 
parents rendered their marriage impossible they agreed to carry 
On a clandestine intercourse. Every night Hero placed a lamp 
in the top of the tower where she dwelt by the sea, and Leander, 
guided by it, swam across the dangerous Hellespont. One 
stormy night the lamp was blown out and Leander perished. 
On finding his body next morning on the shore, Hero flung 



herself into the waves. The story is referred to by Virgil {Cearg . 
iii. a$£),- Statius (Tkob. vL. 535) and Ovid (Her. xviii. and six.). 
The beautiful little epic of Musacus has been frequently trans- 
lated, and is expanded in the Hero and Leander of C. Marlowe 
and G. Chapman. It is also the subject of a ballad by Schiller 
and a drama by F. Grillparzcr. 

See M. H. Jellinak, Die Sage von Hero und Leander in der Dichtung 
(1890), and G. Knaack " Hero und Leander " in Fctifabefur From 
Susemihl (1898). A careful collection of materials will be found in 
F. KOppncr, Die Sage von Hero und Leander in der LiteroJur und 
Kunst des Alter turns (1894). 

HERO OP ALEXANDRIA, Greek geometer and writer oa 
mechanical and physical subjects, probably flourished in the 
second .half of the 1st century. This is the more modern view, 
in contrast to the earlier theory most generally accepted, according 
to which he flourished about 100 B.C. The earlier theory started 
from the superscription of one of his works, "Hpwuot Krrpi&to* 
/feXoraiKa, from which it was inferred that Hero was a*pupil of 
Ctesibius. Martin, Hultsch and Cantor took this Ctesibius to be 
a barber of that name who lived in the reign of Ptolemy Euergetes 
II. (d. 1x7 B.C.) and is credited with having invented an improved 
water-organ. But this identification is far from certain, as a 
Ctesibius mechanicus is mentioned by Athenaeus as having lived 
under Ptolemy II. Philadelphia (285-247 B.C.). Nor can the 
relation of master and pupil be certainly inferred from the super- 
scription quoted (observe the omission of any article), which 
really asserts no more than that Hero re-edited an earlier treatise 
by Ctesibius, and implies nothing about his being an immediate 
predecessor. Further, it is certain that Hero used physical and 
mathematical writings by Posidonius, the Stoic, of Apamca, 
Cicero's teacher, who lived until about the middle of the xst 
century b.c. The positive arguments for the more modern view 
of Hero's date are (1) the use by him of Latinisms f rom which 
Diels concluded that the 1st century a.d. was the earliest pos- 
sible date, (2) the description in Hero's Mechanics iii. of a small 
olive-press with one screw which is alluded to by Pliny (NaL 
Hist, viii.) as having been introduced since a.d. 55, (3) an 
allusion by Plutarch (who died a.d. 120) to the proposition that 
light is reflected from a surface at an angle equal to the angle of 
incidence, which Hero proved in his Caloptrica, the words used 
by Plutarch fitting well with the corresponding passage of that 
work (as to which see below). Thus we arrive at the latter half of 
the 1st century a.d. as the approximate, date of Hero's activity. 

The geometrical treatises which have survived (though not 
interpolated) in Greek are entitled respectively Definiliana t 
Ceometria, Ccodacsia, Stereometric* (i. and ii.), Me'nsurac, Liber 
Gcoponicus, to which must now be added the Metrica recently dis- 
covered by R. Schdne in a MS. at Constant inoplc. These books, 
except the Dcfinitiones, mostly consist of directions for obtaining, 
from given parts, the areas or volumes, and other parts, of plane 01 
solid figures. A remarkable feature is the bare statement of a 
number of very close approximations to the square roots of 
numbers which are not complete squares. Others occur in the 
Metrica where also a method of finding such approximate square, 
and even approximate cube, roots is shown. Hero's expressions 
for the areas of regular polygons of from 5 to 1 2 sides in terms of 
the squares of the sides show interesting approximations to the 
values of trigonometrical ratios. Akin to the geometrical works 
is that On the Dioptra, a remarkable book on land-surveying/ 
so called from the instrument described in it, which was used for 
the same purposes as the modern theodolite. It is in this book 
that Hero proves the expression for the area of a triangle in 
terms of its sides. The Pneumatica in two books is also extant in 
Greek as is also the Amtomalopoietica. In the former will be 
found such things as siphons," Hero's fountain," " penny-in-the- 
slot " machines, a fire-engine, a water-organ, and arrangements 
employing the force of steam. Pappus quotes from three books 
of Mechanics and from a work called Barukus t both by Hero. 
The three books on Mechanics survive in an Arabic translation 
which, however, bears a title "Oa the lifting of heavy objects." 
This corresponds exactly to Bar ulcus t and it is probable that 
Bar ulcus and Mechanics were only alternative titles for one, and 
the same work. It is indeed not credible that Hero wrote two 



HERO— HEROD 



379 



separate treatises on the subject of the' mechanical powers, 
-'• which Are fully discussed in the Mechanics, ii., lit The Belopoiica 

*■'; (on engines of war) is extant in Greek, and both this and the 

-> Mechanics contain Hero's solution of the problem of the two 

U mean proportionals. Hero also wrote Catoptrica (on reflecting 

s. surfaces), and it seems certain that we possess this in a Latin 

work, probably translated from the Greek by Wilhelm van 

Moerbeek, which was long thought to be a fragment of 
r Ptolemy's Optics, because it bore the title PtoUmaei de speculis 

a, in the MS. But the attribution to Ptolemy was shown to be 

wrong as soon as it was made dear (especially by Martin) that 
- another translation by an Admiral Eugenius Siculus (lath 

century) of an optical work from the Arabic was Ptolemy's 
i» Optics. Of other treatises by Hero only fragments remain. One 

^ was four books on Water Clocks (Ilcpt toplur upooKDfnUjv), of 

* which Proclus (Hypotyp. astron., ed. Halma) has preserved a 
*. fragment, and to which Pappus also refers. Another work was a 
•t commentary on Euclid (referred to by the Arabs as " the book of 

* > the resolution of doubts in Euclid ") from which quotations-bavfe 
f? survived in an-Nairbl's commentary. 

»* The Pneumalha, Automatopoietiea, Belopoiica and Ckeirobatlislra 

: , of Hero were published in Greek and Latin in Thdvenot's Veterum 

t matkematicorum opera grout tt latin* pteraque nunc primum edita 

(Paris, 1693): the first important critical researches on Hero 
*'• were G. B. Venturi's Commentari sobra la storia c la teoria del- 

& toUica (Boloena, 1814) and H. Martin s " Rcchcrches stir la vie et les 

,- ouvrages d'Hcron d'Alexandrie disciple de Ctesibius ct sur tous les 

., ouvra|e»math<5matique«grecs conserves ou perdus,publiesouinc<lits, 

?ui ont et6 attribuds " i 

Academic des Inscrii e 

geometrical works (e> Ic 

c only) by F. Hulcsch >- 

r , metrUorum reliquiae, s 

manuscrits retattfs dl s 

! des mannscrits de l* e 

* treatises on Engines < , 
Paris, 1867). The Me t 

t in the Journal asiat c 

publication in Teubi e 

K snpersunt omnia. V< s 

the Pnewnatica and c 

t De ingeniis spiritual n 

\ Pneumatics by Vitnr , 

contains the Mechani e 

2 Catoptrica in Latin w >, 

5 Vitruvius, Pliny, titc. e 

: Metrica (in three boo s 

r added throughout. rr , . a 

has been the subject of papers too numerous to mention. But 

1 reference should be made to the exhaustive studies on Hero's 

1 arithmetic by Paul Tannery, " L'Arithmdttque des Grecs dans Heron 

r d'Alexandrie " {Mem. deta Sac. des sciences pkys. et math, de Bordeaux, 

it. sorie, iv.. 1882), " La Stereomeuie d'Heron d'Alexandrie " and 

"£tudes HeV s" 

{Bulletin des s les 

■ Mcrriqucs d*U >4; 

Bulletin des si int 

of Hero's worl ■«- 

matik, i.« (189 Le 

'Scienu esattc 1 0), 

pp. 103-128. I 

HERO, THl _ , :nt 

reason to a Byzantine land-surveyor who wrote (about a.d. 938) 
a treatise on land-surveying modelled on the works of Hero of 
Alexandria, especially the Dioptra. 

See •• Geodesic de He>on de Byzance." published by Vincent In 
Notices et extrails des mannscrits de la Bibltotheque Imphiale, xix. 2 

i Paris. 1858). and T. H. Martin in Mhnoires prisentis a V Acadimic 
es Inscriptions, tse series, iv. (Paris, 1854). 

HBROD, the name borne by the princes of a dynasty which 
reigned in Judaea from 40 B.C. 

Herod (surnamed the Great), the son of Antipater, who 
supported Hyrcanus II. against Aristobulus II. with the aid first 
of the Nabataean Arabs and then of Rome. The family seems to 
have been of Idumaean origin, so that its members were liable to 
the reproach of being half* Jews Or even foreigners. Justin Martyr 
has a tradition that they were originally Philistines of Ascalon 
{Dial. c. 52), and on the other hand Nicola us of Damascus {a pud 
Jos. Ant. xiv. 1. 3) asserted that Herod, his royal patron, was 
descended from the Jews who first returned from* the Babylonian I 



Captivity; The tradition tnd the assertion are in all probability 
equally fictitious and proceed respectively from the foes and the 
friends of the Herodian dynasty. 

Antipas (or Antipater), the father of Antipater, had been 
governor of Idumaea tinder Alexander Jannaeus. His son allied 
himself by marriage with the Arabian nobility and .became the 
real ruler of Palestine under Hyrcanus II. When Rome inter- 
vened in Asia in the person of Pompcy, the younger Antipater 
realized her inevitable predominance and secured the friendship 
of her representative. After the capture of Jerusalem in 63 B.C. 
Pompey installed Hyrcanus, who was little better than a 
figurehead, in the high-priesthood; and when in 55 B.C. the son 
of Aristobulus renewed the civil war in Palestine, the Roman 
governor of Syria in the exercise of his jurisdiction arranged a 
settlement " in accordance with the wishes of Antipater " (Jos. 
Ant. xiv. 6. 4). To this policy of dependence upon Rome 
Antipater adhered, and he succeeded in commending himself to 
Mark Antony and Caesar in turn. After the battle of Pharsalia 
Caesar made him procurator and a Roman citizen. 

At this point Herod appears on the scene as ruler of Galilee 
(Jos. Ant. xiv. 9. 2) appointed by his father at the age of fifteen 
or, since he died at seventy, twenty-five. In spite of his youth he 
soon found an opportunity of displaying his mettle; for he 
arrested Hesekiah the arch-brigand, who had overrun the Syrian 
border, and put him to death. The Jewish nobility at Jerusalem 
seized upon this high-handed action as a pretext for satisfying 
their jealousy of their Idumaean rulers. Herod was dted in the 
name of Hyrcanus to appear before toe Sanhedrin, whose pre- 
rogative he had usurped in executing Hezekiah. He appeared 
with a bodyguard, and the Sanhedrin was overawed. Only 
Sameas, a Pharisee, dared to insist upon the legal verdict of con- 
demnation. But the governor of Syria had sent a demand for 
Herod's acquittal, and so Hyrcanus adjourned the trial and 
persuaded the accused to abscond. Herod returned with an 
army, but his father prevailed upon him to depart to Galilee 
without wreaking his vengeance upon his enemies. About this 
time (47-46 B.C.) he was created stralegus of Coelesyria by the 
provincial governor. The episode is important for the light 
which it throws upon Herod's relations with Rome and with 
the Jews. 

In 44 b.c Cassius arrived in Syria for the purpose of filling 
his war-chest: Antipater and Herod collected the sum of money 
at which the Jews of Palestine had been assessed. In 43 b.c. 
Antipater was poisoned at the instigation of one Malichus, who 
was perhaps a Jewish patriot animated by hatred of the Herods 
and their Roman patrons. 

With the connivance of Cassius Herod had Malichus assassin- 
ated; but the country was in a state of anarchy, thanks to the 
extortions of Cassius and the encroachments of neighbouring 
powers. Antony, who became master of the East after Phifippf , 
was ready to support the sons of his friend Antipater; but he 
was absent in Egypt when the Parthians invaded Palestine to 
restore Ant igonus to the throne of bis father Aristobulus (40 b.c*). 
Herod escaped to Rome: the Arabians, his mother's people, had 
repudiated him. Antony had made him tetrarch, and now with 
the assent of Octavian persuaded the Senate to declare him king 
of Judaea. 

In 39 b.c. Herod returned to Palestine and, when the presence 
of Antony put the reluctant Roman troops entirely at his disposal, 
he was able to lay siege to Jerusalem two years later. Secure of 
the support of Rome he was concerned also to legitimize his 
position m the eyes of the Jews by taking, for love as well as 
policy, the Hasmonaean princess Mariamne to be his second wife. 
Jerusalem was taken by storm; the Roman troops withdrew 
to behead Antigonus the usurper at Anttoch. In 37 B.C. Herod 
was king of Judaea, being the client of Antony and the husband 
of Mariamne. 

The Pharisees, who dominated the bulk of the Jews, were 
content to accept Herod's rule as a judgment of God. Hyrcanus 
returned from his prison : mutilated, he could no longer hold 
office as high-priest; but his mutilation probably gave him the 
prestige of a martyr, and his infl u e n ce whatever it was worth— 



3*o 



HERODAS 



seems to have been favourable to the new dynasty. On the other 
hand Herod's marriage with Mariamne brought some of his 
enemies into his own household. He had scotched the faction 
of Hasmonaean sympathizers by killing forty-five members of 
the Sanhedrin and confiscating their possessions. But so long 
as there were representatives of the family alive, there was always 
a possible pretender to the throne which he occupied; and the 
people had not lost their affection for their former deliverers. 
Mariamne's mother used her position to further her plots for the 
overthrow of her son-in-law; and she found an ally in Cleopatra 
of Egypt, who was unwilling to be spumed by him, even if she 
was not weary of his patron, Antony. 

The events of Herod's reign indicate the temporary triumphs 
of his different adversaries. His high-priest, a Babylonian, 
was deposed in order that Aristobulus €11., Mariamne's brother, 
might hold the place to which he bad some ancestral right. 
But the enthusiasm with which the people received him at the 
Feast of Tabernacles convinced Herod of the danger; and the 
youth was drowned by order of the king at Jericho. Cleopatra 
had obtained from Antony a grant of territory adjacent to 
Herod's domain and even part of it. She required Herod to 
collect arrears of tribute. So it fell out that, when Octavian and 
the Senate declared war against Antony and Cleopatra, Herod 
was preoccupied in obedience to her commands and was thus 
prevented from fighting against the future emperor of Rome. 

After the battle of Actium (ji B.C.) Herod executed Hyrcanus 
and proceeded to wait upon the victorious Octavian at Rhodes. 
His position was confirmed and his territories were restored. 
On his return he took in hand to heal with the Hasmonaeans, 
and in 25 B.C. the old intriguers, their victims like Mariamne, 
and all pretenders were dead. From this time onwards Herod 
was free to govern Palestine, as a client-prince of the Roman 
Empire should govern his kingdom. In order to put down the 
brigands who still infested the country and to check the raids 
of the Arabs on the frontier, he built or rebuilt fortresses, which 
were of material assistance to the Jews in the great revolt against 
Rome. Within and without Judaea he erected magnificent 
buildings and founded cities. He established games in honour 
of the emperor after the ancient Greek model in Caeaarea and 
Jerusalem and revived the splendour of the Olympic games. 
At Athens and elsewhere he was commemorated as a benefactor; 
and as Jew and king of the Jews he restored the temple at 
Jerusalem. The emperor recognized his successful government 
by putting the districts of Ulatha and Panias under him in 30 B.C. 

But Herod found new enemies among the members of his 
household. His brother Pberoras and sister Salome plotted for 
their own advantage and against the two sons of Mariamne. 
The people still cherished a loyalty to the Hasmonaean lineage, 
although the young princes were also the sons of Herod. The 
enthusiasm with which they were received fed the suspicion, 
which their uncle instilled into their father's mind, and they 
were strangled at Scbaste. On his deathbed Herod discovered 
that his eldest son, Antipater, whom Josepbus calls a " monster 
of iniquity," had been plotting against him. He proceeded to 
accuse him before the governor of Syria and obtained leave 
from Augustus to put him to death. The father died five days 
after his son in 4 B.C. He had done much for the Jews, thanks 
to the favour he had won and kept in spite of all from the 
successive heads of the Roman state; he had observed the 
Law publicly— in fact, as the traditional epigram of Augustus 
says, " it was better to be Herod's twine than a.«m of Herod." 

Josephus, Ant. xv., xvl, xvii. i-8» B.J. u 18-33; Schurer, Gtsck. 
tLjud. VMk., 4th ed., I pp. 360-418. 

Herod Antipas, son of Herod the' Great by the Samaritan 
Matlhace, and full brother of Archelaus, received as his share 
of his father's dominions the provinces of Galilee and Peraca, 
with the title of tetrarch. Like his father, Antipas had a turn 
for architecture: he rebuilt and fortified the town of Sepphoris 
in Galilee; he also fortified Betharamptha in Peraea, and called 
it Julias alter the wife of the emperor. Above all he founded the 
important town of Tiberias on the west shore of the Sea of Galilee, 
with institutions of a distinctly Greek character. He reigned 



4 b.c.-a.d. 30. In the gospels he is mentioned aa Herod. Be 
it was who was called a " fox " by Christ (Luke xiii. 33). He is 
erroneously spoken of as a king in Mark vi. 14. It was to bin 
that Jesus was sent by Pilate to be tried. But it is in connezioa 
with his wife Herodias that he is best known, and it was through 
her that his misfortunes arose. He was married first of all to a 
daughter of Aretas, the Arabian king; but, making the acquaint- 
ance of Herodias, the wife of his brother Philip (not the tetrarch), 
during a visit to Rome, he was fascinated by her and arranged 
to marry her. Meantime his Arabian wife discovered the plan 
and escaped to her father, who made war on Herod, and com- 
pletely defeated his army. John the Baptist condemned his 
marriage with Herodias, and in consequence was put to death 
in the way described in the gospels and in Josephus. When 
Herodias's brother Agrippa was appointed king by Caligula, she 
was determined to see her husband at tain- to an equal eminence, 
and persuaded him, though naturally of a quiet and unambitious 
temperament, to make the journey to Rome to crave a crows 
from the emperor. Agrippa, however, managed to influence 
Caligula against him. Antipas was deprived of his dominion* 
and banished to Lyons, Herodias voluntarily sharing his exile. 

Herod Philip, son of Herod the Great by Cleopatra of 
Jerusalem, received the tetrarchate of Ituraca and other district! 
to E. and N.E. of the Lake of Galilee, the poorest part of his 
father's kingdom. His subjects were mainly Greeks or Syrians, 
and his coins bear the image of Augustus or Tiberius. He is 
described as an excellent ruler, who loved peace and was careful 
to maintain justice, and spent his time in his own territories. 
He was also a builder of cities, one of which was Caesarca Philippi, 
and another was Bcthsaida, which he called Julias. He died after 
a reign of thirty-seven years (4 b.c.-a.d. 34); and his dominions 
were incorporated in the province of Syria. (J. H. A. H.) 

HERODAS (Gr. *Hp<#as), or Hekondas (the name is spdt 
differently in the few places where he is mentioned), Greek poet, 
the author of short humorous dramatic scenes in verse, written 
under the Alexandrian emprre in the 3rd century B.C. Apart 
from the intrinsic merit of these pieces, they are interesting in the 
history of Greek literature as being a new species, illustrating 
Alexandrian methods. They are called Mt/ilafuSot, "Mime- 
iambics." Mimes were the Dorian product of South Italy and 
Sicily, and the most famous of them — from which Plato is said 
to have studied the drawing of character— were the work of 
Sophron. These were scenes in popular life, written in the 
language of the people, vigorous with racy proverbs such as vt 
get in other reflections of that region — in Petronius and the 
Pcnlameroue. Two of the best known and the most vital 
among the Idylls of Theocritus, the and and the 1 5th, we know 
to have been derived from mimes of Sophron. What Theocritus 
is doing there, Herodas, his younger contemporary, is doing 
in another manner — casting old material into novel form, upon a 
small scale, under strict conditions of technique. The method 
is entirely Alexandrian: Sophron had written in a peculiar kind, 
of rhythmical prose; Theocritus uses the hexameter and Doric, 
Herodas the scaxon or " lame " iambic (with a dragging spondee- 
at the end) and the old Ionic dialect with which that curious 
metre was associated. That, however, hardly goes beyond the 
choice and form of words; the structure of the sentences is 
close-knit Attic. But the grumbling metre and quaint language 
suit the tone of common life which Herodas aims at realizing; 
for, as Theocritus may be called idealist, Herodas is a realist 
unflinching. His persons talk in vehement exclamations and 
emphatic turns of speech, with proverbs and fixed phrases; 
and occasionally, where it is designed as proper to the part, with 
the most naked coarseness of expression. 

The scene of the second and the fourth is laid at Cos, and the 
speaking characters in each are never more than three. In 
Mime I. the old nurse, now the professional go-between or bawd, 
calls on Metriche, whose husband has been long away in Egypt, 
and endeavours to excite her interest in a roost desirable young 
man, fallen deeply in love with her at first sight. After hearing 
all the arguments Metriche declines with dignity, but consoles the 
old woman with an ample glass of wine, this kind being always 



HEROWANS—HBR0DOTUS 



3«t 









jtpresenied with the taste of Mn Gamp. II. is a monologue by 
the UopvoPootAis ("Whoremonger") prosecuting a merchant- 
trader for breaking into his establishment at night and attempt- 
ing to carry off one of the inmates, who is produced in court. 
The vulgar blackguard, who is a stranger to any sort of shame, 
remarking that he has no evidence to call, proceeds to a perora- 
tion in the regular oratorical style, appealing to the Coan judges 
not to be unworthy of their traditional glories. In fact, the 
whole oration is also a burlesque in every detail o£ an Attic 
speech at law; and in this case we have the material from which 
to estimate the excellence of the parody. In III. a desperate 
mother brings to the schoolmaster a truant urchin, with whom 
neither she nor his incapable old father can do anything. In a 
voluble stream of interminable sentences she narrates his mis- 
deeds and implores the schoolmaster to flog him. The boy 
accordingly is hoisted on another's back and flogged; but his 
spirit does not appear to be subdued, and the mother resorts 
to the old man after all. IV. is a visit of two poor women with 
an offering to the temple of Asclepius at Cos. While the humble 
cock is being sacrificed, they turn, like the women in the Ion of 
Euripides, to admire the works of art; among them a small boy 
strangling a vulpanser — doubtless the work of Boethus that we 
know— and a sacrificial procession by Apelles, " the Ephesian," 
of whom we have an interesting piece of contemporary eulogy. 
The oily sacristan is admirably painted in a few slight strokes. 
V. brings us very close to some unpleasant facts of ancient life. 
The jealous woman accuses one of her slaves, whom she has 
nade ber favourite, of infidelity; has him bound and sent 
degraded through the town to receive 2000 lashes; no sooner is 
he out of sight than she recalls him to be branded " at one job." 
The only pleasing person in the piece is the little maidservant — 
permitted liberties as a vcrna brought up in the house — whose 
ready tact suggests to her mistress an excuse for postponing 
execution of a threat made in ungovernable fury. VI. is a 
friendly chat or a private conversation. The subject is an ugly 
one, but the dialogue is as clever and amusing as the rest, with 
some delicious touches. Our interest is engaged here in & certain 
Kerdon, the artistic shoemaker, to whom we are introduced in 
VII. (the name had already become generic for the shoemaker 
as the typical representative of retail trade), a little bald man with 
a fluent tongue, complaining of hard times, who bluffs and 
wheedles by turns. VII. opens with a mistress waking up her 
maids to listen to her dream; but we have only the beginning, 
and the other fragments are very short. 

Within the limits of 100 lines or less Herodas presents us with 
a highly entertaining scene and with characters definitely drawn. 
Some of these had been perfected no doubt upon the Attic stage, 
where the tendency in the 4th century had been gradually to 
evolve accepted types— not individuals, but generalizations 
from a class, an art in which Menaader's was esteemed the 
master-band. The IlopvofkcKte and the Maarporte we can 
piece together from succeeding literature, and see hpvr skilfully 
the established traits are indicated here. This is achieved by 
true dramatic means, with touches never wasted and the more 
delightful often because they do not clamour for attention. 
The execution has the qualities of first-rate Alexandrian work 
in miniature, such as the epigrams of Asclepiades possess, the 
finish and firm outlines; and these little pictures bear the test 
of all artistic work— they do not lose their freshness with 
familiarity, and gain in interest as one learns to appreciate their 
subtle points. 

The papyrus MS., obtained from the Fayum, is in the possession of 
the British Museum, and was first printed by F. G. Kenyoo in 1801 



Editions by 6. Crusius (1905, text only, in Teubner series) and 
I. A. Nairn (1904), with introduction, notes and bibliography. 
There is an English verse translation of the mimes by H. Sharpley 
(1906) under the title A Realist of the Aegtan. (W. G. H.) 

HERODIANS f Hpuo'tat'oO, a sect or party mentioned in 
Scripture as having on two occasions — once in Galilee, and again 
in Jerusalem— manifested an unfriendly disposition towards 
Jesus (Mark iii. 6, xii 13; Matt. xxn. 6; cf. also Mark via*. 15). 
In each of these cases their name is coupled with that Of the 
Pharisees. According to many interpreters the courtiers or 



soldiers of Herod Amines (" MilHes Hetodia,'' Jerome) ate 
intended; but mote probably the Herodians were a public 
political party, who distinguished themselves from the two great 
historical parlies of post -exilian Judaism by the fact that they 
were and had been sincerely friendly to Herod the Great and to 
his dynasty (cf. such formations as " Caesariani," " Pom- 
peiani "}. It is possible that, to gain adherents, the Herodian 
party may have been in the habit of representing that the 
establishment of a Herodian dynasty would be favourable to 
the realization of the theocracy; and this in turn may account 
for Tertullian's (De proescr) allegation that the Herodians 
regarded Herod himself as the Messiah. The sect was called 
by the Rabbis Boethusians as being friendly to the family of 
Boethus, whose daughter Mariamne was one of Herod the 
Great's wives. (J H A. H ) 

HER0D1ANUS, Greek historian, flourished during the third 
century A.Q. He is supposed to have been a Syrian Greek. 
In ao3 he was in Koine, where he held some minor posts. He does 
not appear to have attained high official rank; the statement 
that he was imperial procurator and legate of the Sicilian pro- 
vinces rests upon conjecture only. His historical work ('Hptioto- 
voC lift lurk Mopm? fiatnXdas loropuar £t£Ma <Wr«) narrates 
the events of the fifty-eight years between the death of Marcus 
Aurelius and the proclamation of Gordianus III. (180-138). 
The narrative is of special value as supplementing Dion Cassius, 
whose history ends with Alexander Severus. His work has 
the value that attaches to a record written by one chronicling 
the events of his own times, gifted with ordinary powers of 
observation, indubitable candour and independence of view. 
But while he gives a livery account of external events*— such as 
the death of Commodus and the assassination of Pertinax— 
the barbarian invasions, the spread of Christianity, the extension 
of the franchise by CaracaUa are unnoticed. The dates are often 
wrong, and little attention is paid to geographical details, which 
makes the narrative of military expeditions beyond the borders 
of the empire difficult to understand. Herodian has been accused 
of prejudice against Alexander Severus. His style, modelled 
on that of Thucydides and unreservedly praised by Photiua, is 
on the whole pure, though somewhat rhetorical and showing a 
fondness for T«atinhms. 

Extensive use has been made of Herodtaoua by later chroniclers, 
especially the " Scriptorc* hutoriae AupusUe " and John of Antioch. 
His history was first translated into Latin at the end of the 15th 
century by Politian. The most complete edition is by G. W. Irmisch 
(1789-180$), with elaborate indices, but the notes are very diffuse; 
critical editions by I. Bekker (1855), 1- Mendelssohn (1863); ate 
also C. Dandliker. 



HERODIANUS. AELIU9. called d «x>«fe, Alexandrian 
grammarian, flourished in the and century aj>. He early took 
up his residence at Rome, where he enjoyed the patronage of 
Marcus Aurelius (161-180), to whom he dedicated has great 
treatise on prosody. This work in twenty-one books (Ksufotab) 
vfxxr&l*) included also an account of the etymological part of 
grammar. The work itself is lost, but several epitomes of k have 
been preserved. His 'Emjieptajiot dealt with difficult words 
and peculiar forms in Homer. Herodianua also wrote rfumeroaa 
grammatical treatises, of which only one ha* come down toua iaa 
complete form (Ilepl jtortgpouf X*£eo», on peculiar style), articles 
on exceptional or anomalous words. > Numerous quotations ana 
fragments still exist, chiefly in the Homeric scholiasts and 
StcphanuaofByxauatium. Herodianus enjoyed ai great reputation 
aa a grammarian, and Prisdan stylet him " maarimus auctor 
artis grammatical" 

The best edition is by A. Lenta, Htto&i&ni Ttcknici reNguiat 
(1867-1870)1 a supplementary volume is included in Uhling's Corpus 
grammaticorum Craecorum; for further bibliographical imormatioo 
ace W. Christ, Cesckkktc dcr gricckischen Likralur (1898). 

HERODOTUS (c. 484-425 B.C.), Greek historian, called the 
Father of History, was born at HalicarnaasuB in Asia Minor, then 
dependent upon the Persians, in or about the year 484 B.C. 
Herodotus was thus born a Persian subject, and such he con' 
tinued until he was thirty or five-and-thirty years of age. At the 
time of his birth Hslicamamis was under the rule of a qaeen 



382 



HERODOTUS 



Artemisia {q.v.). The year of her death is unknown; but she 
left her crown to her ton Pisindelis (born about 408 B.C.), who 
was succeeded upon the throne by his son Lygdamis about the 
time that Herodotus grew to manhood. The family of Herodotus 
belonged to the upper rank of the citizens. His father was 
named Lyxes, and his mother Rhaeo, or Dryo. He had a brother 
Theodore, and an uncle or cousin Panyasis (q.v.), the epic poet, 
a personage of so much importance that the tyrant Lygdamis, 
suspecting him of treasonable projects, put him to death. 
It is probable that Herodotus shared his relative's political 
opinions, and either was exiled from Halicarnassus or quitted 
it voluntarily at the time of his execution. 

Of the education of Herodotus no more can be said than that it 
was thoroughly Greek, and embraced no doubt the three subjects 
essential to a Greek liberal education— grammar, gymnastic 
training and music His studies would be regarded as completed 
when he attained the age of eighteen, and took rank among the 
epkebi or events of his native city. In • free Greek state he 
would at once have begun his duties as a citizen, and found 
therein sufficient employment for his growing energies. But in a 
city ruled by a tyrant this outlet was wanting; no political life 
worthy of the name existed. Herodotus may thus have had his 
thoughts turned to literature as furnishing a not unsatisfactory 
career, and may well have been encouraged in his choice by the 
example of Panyasis, who had already gained a reputation by his 
writings when Herodotus was still an infant. At any rate it is 
clear from the extant work of Herodotus that he must have 
devoted himself early to the literary life, and commenced that 
extensive course of reading which renders him one of the most 
instructive as well as one of the most charming of ancient writers. 
The poetical literature of Greece was already large; the prose 
literature was more extensive than, is generally supposed; yet 
Herodotus shows an intimate acquaintance with the whole of it. 
The Iliad and the Odyssey are as familiar to him as Shakespeare to 
the educated Englishman. He is acquainted with the poems of 
the epic cycle, the Cypria, the Epigoni % &c. He quotes or other- 
wise shows familiarity with the writings of Hesiod, Olen, Musaeus, 
Bads, Lysistratus, Arcmlochus of Paros, Alcaeus, Sappho, Solon, 
Aesop, Aristeas of Proconnesus, Simonides of Ceos, Phrynichus, 
Aeschylus and Pindar. He quotes and criticises Hecataeus, the 
best of the prose writers who had preceded him, and makes 
numerous allusions to other authors of the same class. 

It must not, however, be supposed that he was at any time a 
mere student. It is probable that from an early age his inquiring 
disposition led him to engage in travels, both in Greece and in 
foreign countries. He traversed Asia Minor and European 
Greece probably more than once; he visited aU the most im- 
portant islands of the Archipelago—Rhodes, Cyprus, Delos, Paros, 
Thasos, Samothrace, Crete, Samoa, Cytbera and Aegina. He 
undertook the long and perilous journey from Sardis to the 
Persian capital Susa, visited Babylon, Colchis, and the western 
shores of the Black Sea as far as the estuary of the Dnieper; he 
travelled in Scythia and in Thrace, visited Zante and Magna 
Graecia, explored the antiquities of Tyre, coasted along the shores 
of Palestine, saw Gaza, and made a long stay in Egypt. At the 
most moderate estimate, his travels covered a space of thirty-one 
degrees of longitude, or 1700 miles, and twenty-four of latitude, 
or nearly the same distance. At all the more interesting sites he 
took up his abode for a time; he examined, he inquired, he made 
measurements, he accumulated materials. Having in his mind 
the scheme of his great work, he gave ampfe time to the elabora- 
tion of all its parts, and took care to obtain by personal observation 
a full knowledge of the various countries. 

The travels of Herodotus seem to have been chiefly accomplished 
between his twentieth and his thirty-seventh year (464-447 B c.). 1 
It was probably in his early manhood that as a Persian subject 
he visited Susa and Babylon, taking advantage of the Persian 
system of posts which he describes in his fifth book. His residence 

1 The date of his travels is difficult to determine. E. Meyer 
inclines to put all the longer journeys, except the Scythian, between 
440 and 430 B.C. The journey to Susa and Babylon is put by 
C.F. Lehman* c. 450 i.e., and by H. Sttio before 450. 



in Egypt must, on the other hand, have been subsequent to 460 
B.C., since he saw the skulls of the Persians slain by Inarus in that 
year. Skulls are rarely visible on a battlefield for more than two 
or three seasons after the fight, and we may therefore presume 
that it was during the reign of Inarus (460-454 B.C.),* when the 
Athenians had great authority in Egypt, that he visited the 
country, making himself known as a learned Greek, and therefore 
receiving favour and attention on the part of the Egyptians, who 
were so much beholden to his countrymen (see Athens, Cdion, 
Pericles). On his return from Egypt, as be proceeded along the 
Syrian shore, he seems to have landed at Tyre, and from thence 
to have gone to Thasos. His Scythian travels are thought to have 
taken place prior to 4 so B.C. 

It is a question of some interest from what centre or centra 
these various expeditions were made. Up to the time of the 
execution of Panyasis, which is placed by chronologists in or about 
the year 457 B.C., there is every reason to believe that Herodotus 
lived at Halicarnassus. His travels in Asia Minor, in European 
Greece, and among the islands of the Aegean, probably belong to 
this period, as also his journey to Susa and Babylon. We are 
told that when he quitted Halicarnassus on account of the 
tyranny of Lygdamis, in or about the year 457 B.C., he took up 
his abode in Samos. That island was an important member of the 
Athenian confederacy, and in making it his home Herodotus 
would have put himself under the protection of Athens. The 
fact that Egypt was then largely under Athenian influence (see 
Cimon, Pericles) may have induced him to proceed, in 457 or 
456 B.C., to that country. The stories that he had heard in Egypt 
of Sesostris may then have stimulated him to make voyages from 
Samos to Colchis, Scythia and Thrace. He was thus acquainted 
with almost all the regions which were to be the scene of his 
projected history. 

After Herodotus had resided for some seven or eight years in 
Samos, events occurred in his native city which induced him to 
return thither. The tyranny of Lygdamis had gone from bad 
to worse, and at last he was expelled. According to Suidas, 
Herodotus was himself an actor, and indeed the chief actor, in the 
rebellion against him; but no other author confirms this state* 
ment, which is intrinsically improbable. It is certain, however, 
that Halicarnassus became henceforward a voluntary member of 
the Athenian confederacy. Herodotus would now naturally 
return to his native city, and enter upon the enjoyment of those 
rights of free citizenship on which every Greek set a high value. 
He would also, if he had by this time composed his history, or any 
considerable portion of it, begin to make it known by recitation 
among his friends. There is reason to believe that these first 
attempts were not received with much favour, and that it was 
in chagrin at his failure that he precipitately withdrew from his 
native town, and sought a refuge In Greece proper (about 447 
B.C.).* We learn that Athens was the place to which he went, and 
that he appealed from the verdict of his countrymen to Athenian 
taste and judgment. His work won such approval that in the 
year 445 B.C., on the proposition of a certain Anytus, he was voted 
a sum of ten talents (£2400) by decree of the people. At one of 
the recitations, it was said, the future historian Thucydides was 
present with his father, Olorus, and was so moved that he burst 
into tears, whereupon Herodotus remarked to the father— 
" Olorus, your son has a natural enthusiasm for letters." 4 

Athens was at this time the centre of intellectual life, and 
could boast an almost unique galaxy of talent — Pericles, 
Thucydides the son of Melcsias, Aspasia, Antiphon, the musician 
Damon, Phcidias, Protagoras, Zeno, C rati mis, Crates, Euripides 
and Sophocles. Accepted into this brilliant society, on familiar 
terms with all probably, as he certainly was with Olorus, 

• Most recent critics (e.f . Stein, Meyer, Busolt) put the visit to 
Egypt after the suppression of the revolt under Inarus and Amyrtaeot 
(i.e. after 449 DC ), on the strength of Herod. 2. 30, which implies 
the restoration of Persian authority 

'Stein, Meyer, Busolt, and other recent writers attribute his 
departure from Halicarnassus to political causes, «.f . the ascendancy 
of the anti-Athenian party in the state. 

* This story is on chronological grounds rejected by all recent 
critics. 



HERODOTUS 



383 



Thucydides and Sophocles, he must have been tempted, fflte many 
another foreigner, to make Athens his permanent home. It is to 
his credit that he did not yield to this temptation. At Athens 
he must have been a dilettante, an idler, without political rights 
or duties. As such he would have soon ceased to be respected 
fn a society where literature was not recognized as a separate 
profession, where a Socrates served in the infantry, a Sophocles 
commanded fleets, a Thucydides was general of an army, and an 
Antiphon was for a time at the head of the state, Men were not 
men according to Greek notions unless they were citizens; and 
Herodotus, aware of this, probably sharing in the feeling, was 
anxious, having lost his political status at Halicarnassus, to 
obtain such status elsewhere. At Athens the franchise, jealously 
guarded at this period, was not to be attained without great 
expense and difficulty. Accordingly, in the spring of the follow- 
ing year he sailed from Athens with the colonists who went out 
to found the colony of Thurii (see Pericles), and became a 
dtizen of the new town. 

From this point of his career, when he had reached the age 
of forty, we lose sight of him almost wholly He seems to have 
made but few journeys, one to Crotona, one to Metapontum, 
and one to Athens (about 430 b c.) being all that his work 
Indicates. 1 No doubt he was employed mainly, as Pliny testifies, 
in retouching and elaborating his general history. He may also 
have composed at Thurii that special work on the history of 
Assyria to which he twice refers in his first book, and which is 
quoted by Aristotle. It has been supposed by many that he 
lived to a great age, and argued that " the never- to-be-mist aken 
fundamental tone of his performance is the' quiet talkativeness 
of a highly cultivated, tolerant , intelligent, old man " (Dahlmann). 
But the indications derived from the later touches added to his 
work, which form the sole evidence on the subject, would rather 
lead to the conclusion that his Kfe was not very prolonged 
There is nothing in the nine books which may not have been 
written as early as 430 B.C.; there is no touch which, even 
probably, points to a later date than 424 B.C. As the author was 
evidently engaged in polishing his work to the last, and even 
promises touches which he does not give, we may assume that 
be did not much outlive the date last mentioned, or in other 
words, that he died at about the age of sixty. The predominant 
voice of antiquity tells us that he died at Thurii, where his tomb 
was shown in later ages. 

The History. — In estimating the great work of Herodotus, 
and his genius as its author, it is above all things necessary to 
conceive aright what that work was intended to be. It has 
been called "a universal history," "a history of the wars 
between the Greeks and the barbarians," and "a history of 
the struggle between Greece and Persia." But these titles are all 
of them too comprehensive. Herodotus, who omits wholly 
the histories of Phoenicia, Carthage and Etruria, three of the 
most important among the states existing in his day, cannot have 
intended to compose a " universal history," the very idea of 
which belongs to a later age. He speaks in places as if his object 
was to record the wars between the Greeks and the barbarians; 
but as he omits the Trojan war, in which he fully believes, 
the expedition of the Teucrians and Mysians against Thrace 
and Thessaly, (he wars connected with the Ionian colonization 
of Asia Minor and others, it is evident that he does not really 
aim at embracing in his narrative all the wars between Greeks 
and barbarians with which he was acquainted. Nor does it 
even seem to have been his object to give an account of the 
entire struggle between Greece and Persia. That struggle was 
not terminated by the battle of Mycale and the capture of Sestos 
in 470 B.C. It continued for thirty years longer, to the peace 
of Callus (but see Calli as and Ciuon). The fact that Herodotus 
ends his history where be does shows distinctly that his intention 

1 Opinion is divided as to this visit to Athens after his settlement 
at Thurii. Stein, Meyer and Busolt hold that much of hb work 
(especially the later books) was composed at Athens soon after 430 
•X. See further Wachsmuih. Rheinisches Afuseun, Ivi. (1901) 
215-218, Macan, Herodotus VII.-JX. (Introduction* pp. xlv.-lxvi., 
seeks to prove that the last three books were the first part of the 
Histories to be composed. He is followed in this view by Bury. 



wis, not to give an account of the entire long contest between 
the two countries, but to write the history of a particular war— 
the great Persian war of invasion. His aim was as definite as 
that of Thucydides, or Schuler, or Napier or any other writer 
who has made his subject a particular war; only he determined 
to treat it in a certain way. Every partial history requires 
an " introduction "; Herodotus, untrammelled by examples, 
resolved to give his history a magnificent introduction. Thucy- 
dides b content with a single introductory book, forming little 
more than one-eighth of his work; Herodotus has six such books, 
forming two-thirds of the entire composition. 

By thb arrangement he b enabled to treat bb subject in 
the grand way, which b so characteristic of him. Making it hb 
main object in hb " introduction " to set before hb readers the 
previous history of the two nations who were the actors in the 
great war, he is able in tracing their history to bring into his 
narrative some account of almost all the nations of the known 
world, and has room to expatiate freely upon their geography, 
antiquities, manners and customs and the like, thus giving hb 
work * "universal" character, and securing for it, without 
trenching upon unity, that variety, richness and fulness which 
are a principal charm of the best histories, and of none more than 
hb. In tracing the growth of Persia from a petty subject 
kingdom to a vast dominant empire, he has occasion to set out 
the histories of Lydia, Media, Assyria, Babylon, Egypt, Scythia, 
Thrace, and to describe the countries and the peoples inhabiting 
(hem, thefr natural productions, climate, geographical position, 
monuments, &c.; while, in noting the contemporaneous changes 
in Greece, he is led to tell of the various migrations of the Greek 
race, their colonies, commerce, progress in the arts, revolutions, 
internal struggles, wars with one another, legislation, religious 
tenets and the like. The greatest variety of episodical matter 
b thus introduced; but the propriety of the occasion and the 
mode of introduction are such that no complaint can be made; 
the episodes never entangle, encumber or even unpleasantly 
interrupt the main narrative. 

It has been questioned, both in ancient and in modern times, 
whether the history of Herodotus possesses the essential requisite 
of trustworthiness. Several ancient writers accuse him of 
intentional untruthfulness. Modems generally acquit hhn of thb 
charge; but hb severer critics still urge that, from the inherent 
defects of hb character, hb credulity, hb love of effect and hb 
loose and inaccurate habits of thought, he was unfitted for the 
historian's office, and has produced a work of but small historical 
value. Perhaps it may be sufficient to remark that the defects 
in question certainly exist, and detract to some extent from the 
authority of the work, more especially of those parts of it which 
deal with remoter periods, and were taken by Herodotus on 
trust from hb informants, but that they only slightly affect 
the portions which treat of later times and form the special 
subject of hb history. In confirmation of thb view, it may be 
noted that the authority of Herodotus for the circumstances 
of the great Persian war, and for all local and other details which 
come under his immediate notice, b accepted by even the most 
sceptical of modern historians, and forms the basis of their 
narratives. 

Among the merits of Herodotus as an historian, the most 
prominent are the diligence with which he collected hb materials, 
the candour and impartiality with which he has placed hb facts 
before the reader, the absence of party bias and undue national 
vanity, and the breadth of hb conception of the historian's 
office. On the other hand, be has no claim to rank as a critical 
historian; he has no conception of the philosophy of history, 
no insight into the real causes that underlie political changes, 
no power of penetrating below the surface, or even of grasping; 
the real interconnexion of the events which he describes. He 
belongs distinctly to the romantic school; hb forte b vivid and 
picturesque description, the Kvely presentation of scenes and 
actions, characters and states of society, not the subtle analysis 
of motives, the power of detecting the undercurrents or the 
generalizing faculty 

But it b as a writer that the merits of Herodotus are most 



3«+ 



HEROET— HEROIC ROMANCES 



conspicuous. " that I were in a condition, says Lucian, 
" to resemble Herodotus, if only in some measure! I by no means 
say in all his gifts, but only in some single point; as, for instance, 
the beauty of his language, or its harmony, or the natural and 
peculiar grace of the Ionic dialect, or his fulness of thought, or by 
whatever name those thousand beauties are called which to 
the despair of his imitator are united in him," Cicero calls 
his style "copious and polished," Quintilian, "sweet, pure 
and flowing "; Longinus says he was " the most Homeric of 
historians "; Dionysius, his countryman, prefers him to Thucy- 
dides, and regards him as combining in an extraordinary degree 
the excellences of sublimity, beauty itnd the true historical 
method of composition. Modern writers are almost equally 
complimentary. u The style off Herodotus," says one, " is 
universally allowed to be remarkable for its harmony and 
sweetness." " The charm of his style," argues another, " has 
so dazzled men as to make them blind to his defects." Various 
attempts have been made to analyse the charm which is so 
universally felt; but it may be doubted whether any of them 
are very successful. All, however, seem to agree that among 
the qualities for which the style of Herodotus is to be admired 
are simplicity, freshness, naturalness and harmony of rhythm. 
Master of a form of language peculiarly sweet and euphonical, 
and possessed of a delicate car which instinctively suggested 
the most musical arrangement possible, he gives his sentences, 
without art or effort, the most agreeable flow, is never abrupt, 
never too diffuse, much less prolix or wearisome, and being 
himself simple, fresh, naif (if we may use the word), honest and 
somewhat quaint, he delights us by combining with this melody of 
sound simple, clear and fresh thoughts, perspicuously expressed, 
often accompanied by happy turns of phrase, and always 
manifestly the spontaneous growth of his own fresh and un- 
sophisticated mind. Reminding us in some respects of the 
quaint medieval writers, Froissart and Philippe de Comines, 
he greatly excels them, at once in the beauty of his language 
and the art with which he has combined his heterogeneous 
materials into a single perfect harmonious whole. See also 
Greece, section History, " Authorities." 

Bibliography. — The history of Herodotus has been translated 
by many persons and into many languages. About 1450, at the time 
of the revival or learning, a Latin version was made and published 
by Laurentius Valla. This was revised in 1537 by Heusbach, and 
accompanies the Greek text of Herodotus in many editions. The 
first complete translation into a modem language was the English 
one of Littlebury, published in 1737. This was followed in 1786 
by the French translation of Larcher, a valuable work, accompanied 
by copious notes and essays. Bcloc, the second English translator, 
based his work on that of Larcher. His first edition, in 1791, was 
confessedly very defective; the second, in 1806, still left much to 
be desired. A good German translation, but without note or com- 
ment , was brought out by Fricdrich Lange at Berlin in 1 81 1 . Andrea 
Mustoxidi, a native of Corfu, published an Italian version in 1820. 
In 1822 August* Miot endeavoured to improve on Larcher; and in 
1 828- 1 832 Dr Adolf Scholl brought out a German translation with 
copious notes (new ed.. 1855), which has to some extent superseded 
the work of Lange. About the same time a new English version 
was made by Isaac Taylor (London, 1829). In 1858-1 860, the history 
of Herodotus was translated by Canon G. Rawlinson, assisted in 
the copious notes and appendices accompanying the work by 
Sir Gardner Wilkinson and Sir Henry Rawlinson. More recently 
we have translations in English by G. C Macaulay (2 vols., 1890), 
in German by Bahr (Stuttgart, 1867) and Stein (Oldenburg. 1875); 
in French by Giguet (1857) and Talbot (1864), in Italian by Ricci 
(Turin, 1871-1876), Grandi (Asti, 1872) and Bertini (Naples, 1871- 
1872I. A Swedish translation by F. Carlstadt was published at 
Stockholm in 1871. 

The best of the older editions of the Greek text are the following :— 
Hrtodoti historiae, ed. Schweigh&user (5 vols., Strassburg, 1816); 
Herodott Haluamassei kistoriarum libri JX. (ed. Gaisford, Oxford, 
1840), Herodotus, with a Commentary, by J. W. Blakeslcy (2 vols., 
London, 1854); Herodoti musae (ed. Bahr, 4 vols., Leipzig, 1856- 
1861, 2nd ed.); and Herodoti htstortae (cd. Abicht, Leipzig, 1869). 

The most recent editions of the text, or of portions of it, with 
and without commentaries are the following: — H. Stem, Herodoli 
Hulona* (ed. Major, 2 vols., Berlin, 1869-1871, with apparatus 
crxticus; still the best edition of the text); H. Kcllenbcrg, Hislo- 
riarnm libri IX. (2 vols., Leipzig, 1887); van Herwcrdcn, 'laropiai 
<Leiden, 1885); H. Stein, Herodotus, erklart (Berlin, 1856-1861, 
and several editions since; the best short commentary and intro- 
duction)! A. H. Sayce, The Ancient Emfara oj ike East, Herodotus 



HEROIC VERSE 



3«S 



Impossible valow devoted to a pursuit of the impossible beauty, 
bat the whole clothed in the language and feeling and atmosphere 
of the age la which the books were written. In order to give 
point to the chivalrous actions of the heroes, it was always 
hinted that they were well-known public characters of the day 
in a romantic disguise. 

In the Asirie of Honore d'Urtt, which was a pure pastoral, 
in the religious romances of Pierre Camus (1 582-1 653), in the 
comic Francion of Charles Sorel, piquancy had been given to 
the recital by this belief that real personages could be recognized 
under the disguises. But in the CarilhU of Gombervillc (1621) 
we have a pastoral which is already beginning to be a heroic 
romance, and a book in which, under a travesty of Roman 
history, an appeal is made to an extravagantly chivalrous 
enthusiasm. A further development was seen in the Pdyxene 
(1623) of Francois de Moliere, and the Bndymian (1624) of 
Gombauld; in the latter the elderly queen, Marie de' Medici, 
was celebrated under the disguise of Diana, for whom a beautiful 
shepherd of Caria (the author himself) nourishes a hopeless 
passion. The earliest of the Heroic Romances, pure and simple, 
is, however, the celebrated Polexandre (1629) of Gomberville. 
The author began by intending his hero to represent Louis XIII., 
but he changed his mind, and drew a portrait of Cardinal 
Richelieu. In this novel, for the first time, the romantic char- 
acter proper to this class of books is seen undiluted; there is no 
Intrusion of a personage who is not celebrated for his birth, his 
beauty or his exploits. The story deals with the adventures of 
a hero who visits all the sea-coasts of the world, the most remote 
as well as the roost fabulous, in search of an ineffable princess, 
Alddiane. This absurd and pretentious, yet very original piece 
of invention enjoyed an immense success, and historical romances 
of a 'similar class competed for the favour of the pubKc There 
was an equal amount of geography and more of ancient history 
in the Ariane (1632) of Desmarets de Saint-Sortin (1595-1676)', 
a book which, long neglected, has in late years been rediscovered, 
and which has been greeted by M. Paul Morillot as the most 
readable and the least tiresome of all the Heroic Romances. 
The type of that class of literature, however, has always been 
found in the highly elaborate writings of Gauthier de Coste de 
la Calprenede (1600-1663), which enjoyed for a time a prodigious 
celebrity, and were read and imitated all over Europe. La 
Calprenede was a Gascon soldier, imbued with all the extrava- 
gance of his race, and in full sympathy with the audacity and 
violence of the aristocratic society of France in his day. His 
Cassandre, which appeared in ten volumes between 1642 and 1645, 
fa perhaps the most characteristic of all the Heroic Romances. 
It deals with a highly romantic epoch of ancient history, the 
decline of the empire of Alexander the Great. The wars of the 
Persians and of the Scythians are introduced, and among the 
characters arc discovered such personages as Artaxerxes, Roxana 
and Ephcstion. It must not be supposed, however, that la 
Calprenede makes the smallest effort to deal with the subject 
accurately or realistically. The figures are those of his own day; 
they are seigneurs and great ladies of the court of Louis XIII., 
masquerading in Macedonian raiment. The passion of love is 
dominant throughout, and it is treated in the most exalted and 
hyperbolical spirit. The central heroes of the story, Oroondate 
and Lysimachus, are dignified, eloquent and amorous; they 
undergo unexampled privations in the quest of incomparable 
ladies whose beauty and whose nobility is only equalled by their 
magnificent loyalty. These books were written with an aim 
that was partly didactic Their object was to entertain the 
ladies and to gratify a taste for endlessly wire-drawn sentimen- 
tality, but it was also to teach fortitude and grandeur of soul 
and to inculcate lessons of practical chivalry. La Calprenede 
followed up the success of his Cassandre with a CUofdtre (1647) 
in twelve volumes, and a Paramond (1661) which he did not live 
to finish. He became more extravagant, more rhapsodical as 
he proceeded, and he lost all the little hold on history which he 
had ever held. CUopdtre, nevertheless, enjoyed a prodigious 
popularity, and it became the fashion to emulate as far as 
possible the prowess of its magnificent hero, the proud Artabai*. 
XIIL S 



It should be said that la Calprenede objected to his books befog 
styled romances, and insisted that they were specimens of 
"history embellished with certain inventions." He may, in 
opposition to his wishes, claim the doubtful praise of being, in 
reality, the creator of the modern historical novel. He was 
immediately imitated or accompanied by a large number of 
authors, of whom two have achieved a certain immortality, 
which, unhappily, must be confessed to be partly of ridicule. 
The vogue of the historical romance was carried to its height by 
a brother and a sister, Georges de Scudery (1 601-1667) and 
Madeleine de Scudery (1608-1701), who represented in their 
own person! all the extravagant, tempestuous and absurd 
elements of the age, and whose elephantine romances remain as 
portents in the history of literature. These novels— there 
are five of them— were signed by Georges de Scudery, but it is 
believed that all were in the main written by Madeleine. The 
earliest was Ibrahim, ou FlUustre Basse (1641); it was followed 
by Le Grand Cyrus (1648-1653) and .the final, and most pre- 
posterous member of the series was CUlk 0640-1654). The 
romances of Mile de Scudery (for to her we rrmy safely attribute 
them) arc much inferior in style to those of la Calprenede* They 
are pretentious, affected and sickly. The author abuses the 
element of analysis, and pushes a psychology, which was beyond 
the age in penetration, to a wearisome and excessive extent. 
Nothing, it is probable, in the whole evolution of the Historical 
Romances has attracted so much attention as the M Carte de 
Tendre" which occurs in the opening book of CUlk. This 
celebrated map, drawn by the heroine in order to show the route 
from New Friendship to Tender, and a geographical symbol, 
therefore, of the progress of love, with its city of Tendcr-upon* 
Esteem, its sea of Enmity, its river of Inclination, its rock-built 
citadel of Pride, its cold lake of Indifference, is a miracle of 
elaborate and incongruous ingenuity. But, amusing as it is, 
it shows into what depths of puerility the amorous casuistry of 
these romances had fallen. These novels formed the chief 
topic of conversation and of correspondence in the literary 
society which gathered at and around the Hotel de Rambouillet, 
and in the personages of Mile de Scudery 's romances could be 
recognized all the famous leaders of that society. Jhe mawkish 
love-making and the false heroism of these monstrous novels 
went rapidly out of fashion in France soon after 1660, when the 
epoch of the Heroic Romance came to an end. In England the 
Heroic Romance had a period of nourishing popularity. All 
the principal French examples were very promptly translated, 
and " he was not to be admitted into the academy of wit who 
had not read Astrea and The Grand Cyrus." The great vogue 
of these books in England lasted from about 1645 to x66o. 
It led, of course, to the composition of original works in imitation 
of the French. The most remarkable and successful of these 
was Parlhenissa, published in 1654 by Roger Boyle, Lord 
Broghill and afterwards Earl of Orrery (1621-1670), which was 
greatly admired by Dorothy Osborne and her correspondents. 
Addison speaks in the " Spectator " of the popularity of all 
these huge books, " the Grand Cyrus, with a pin stuck in one of 
the middle leaves, Clilie, which opened of itself in the place that 
describes two lovers in a bower." When the drama, and in 
particular tragedy, was reinstituted in England, sentimental 
readers found a field for their emotions on the stage, and the 
heroic romances immediately began to go out of fashion. They 
lingered, however, for a quarter of a century more, and M. 
Jusserand has analysed what may be considered the very 
latest of the race, Pandion and Ampfngenia, published in 1665 
by the dramatist, John Crowne. 

See Gordon de Percel, De Fusagt des romans (1734); Andre* Le 
Breton, Le Roman an X VII* Steele (1890) : Paul Morillot, Le Roman 
en France depuis 1610 (1894); J. J. Jusserand, Le Roman anglais mm 
XVII' sihde (1888). (E.G.) 

HEROIC VBRSE, a term exclusively used in English to 
indicate the rhymed iambic line or Heroic Couplet. In ancient 
literature, the heroic verse, fipontdp uhrpor, was synonymous 
with the dactylic hexameter. It was in this measure that those 
typically heroic poems, the Wad and Odyssey and the Aemtd, 

2a 



386 



HAROLD— HERON 



were written. In English, however, it was not enough to 
designate a single iambic line of five beats as heroic verse, because 
it was necessary to distinguish blank verse from the distich, 
which was formed by the heroic couplet. This had escaped the 
notice of Dryden, when he wrote " The English Verse, which we 
call Heroic, consists of no more than ten syllables." If that 
were the case, then Paradise Lost would be written in heroic 
verse, which is not true. What Dryden should have said is 
" consists of two rhymed lines, each of ten syllables." In French 
the alexandrine has always been regarded as the heroic measure 
of that language. The dactylic movement of the heroic line in 
ancient Greek, the famous fiv6i*b$ 4p9« of Homer) is expressed 
in modern Europe by the iambic movement. The consequence 
is that much of the rush and energy of the antique verse, which 
at vigorous moments was like the charge of a battalion, is lost. 
It is owing to this, in part, that the heroic couplet is so often 
required to give, in translation, the full value of a single Homeric 
hexameter. It is important to insist that it is the couplet, not 
the single line, which constitutes heroic verse. It is interesting 
to note that the Datin poet Ennius, as reported by Cicero, called 
the heroic metre of one line versum longum, to distinguish it 
from the brevity of lyrical measures. The current -form of 
English heroic verse appears to be the invention of Chaucer, 
who used it in his Legend of Good Women and afterwards, with 
still greater freedom, in the Canterbury Tales. Here is an 
example of it in its earliest development: — 

" And thus the IongS day in fight they spend, 
Till, at the last, as everything hath end, 
Anton is shent, and put him to the flight, 
And all his folk to go, as best go might." 

This way of writing was misunderstood and neglected by Chaucer's 
English disciples, but was followed nearly a century later by the 
Scottish poet, called Blind Horry (c. 1475), whose Wallace holds 
an important place in the history of versification as having 
passed on the tradition of the heroic couplet. Another Scottish 
poet, Gavin Douglas, selected heroic verse for his translation of 
the Aencid (1513), and displayed, in such examples as the follow- 
ing, a skill which left little room for improvement at the hands of 
later poets: — 



" One sang, * The ship sails over the salt foam, 
Will bring the merchants and my leman homi 
Some other sings, ' I will be blithe and light, 



Will bring the merchants and my leman home' 
Some other sings, ' I will be blithe and Ugh 
Mine heart is leant upon so goodly wight.' 

The verse so successfully mastered was, however, not very 
generally used for heroic purposes in Tudor literature. The early 
poets of the revival, and Spenser and Shakespeare after them, 
greatly preferred stanzaic forms. For dramatic purposes blank 
verse was almost exclusively used, although the French had 
adopted the rhymed alexandrine for their plays. In the. earlier 
half of the 17th century, heroic verse was often put to somewhat 
unheroic purposes, mainly in prologues and epilogues, or other short 
poems of occasion; but it was nobly redeemed by Marlowe in his 
Hero and Leander and respectably by Browne in his Britannia's 
Pastorals. It is to be noted, however, that those Elizabethans 
who, like Chapman, Warner and Drayton, aimed at producing a 
warlike and Homeric effect, did so in shambling fourtccn-syllable 
couplets. The one heroic poem of that age written at considerable 
length in the appropriate national, met re is the Boswortk Field of 
Sir John Beaumont (1582-1628). Since the middle of the 17th 
century, when heroic verse became the typical and for a while 
almost the solitary form in which serious English poetry was 
written, its history has known many vicissitudes. After having 
been the principal instrument of Dryden and Pope, it was almost 
entirely rejected by Wordsworth and Coleridge, but revised, 
with various modifications, by Byron, Shelley (in Julian and 
Maddalo) and Keats (in Lamia). In the second half of the 19th 
century its prestige was restored by the brilliant work of Swin- 
burne in Tristram and elsewhere. (E. G.) 

HftROLD, LOUIS JOSEPH FERDINAND (1791-1833), French 
musician, the son of Francois Joseph H6rold, an accomplished 
pianist, was born in Paris, on the 28th of January 1791. It was 
not till after his father's death that Herold in 1806 entered the 
Paris conservatoire, where he studied under Catal and MenuL 



In 1812 he gained the grand prix de Rome with the cantata 
La Duchesse de la Vallicrc, and started for Italy, where be re- 
mained till 1815 and composed a symphony, a cantata and 
several pieces of chamber music. During his stay in Italy also 
Herold for the first time ventured on the stage with the opera 
La Gioventu di Enrico V. t first performed at Naples in 1815 with 
moderate success. During a short stay in Vienna he was much 
in the society of Saheri. Returning to Paris he was invited by 
Boieldieu to collaborate with him on an opera called Charles de 
France , performed in 18 16, and soon followed by Heboid's first 
French opera, Les Rositres (1817), which was received very 
favourably. Herold produced numerous dramatic works for the 
next fifteen years in rapid succession. Only the names of some of 
the more important need here be mentioned: — La Clockette (18x7), 
L'Auteur mart et vivant (1820), Marie (1826), and the ballets La 
Fille mat gardie (1828) and La Belle au bois dormant (1829). 
Herold also wrote a vast quantity of pianoforte music, in spite of 
his time being much occupied by his duties as accompanist at the 
Italian opera in Paris. In 1831 he produced the romantic opera 
Zampa, and in the following year Le Pri aux clcrcs (first perform- 
ance December 15, 1832), in which French esprit and French 
chivalry find their most perfect embodiment. These two operas 
secured immortality for the name of the composer, who died on 
the i8th of January 1833, of the lung disease from which he had 
suffered for many years, and the effects of which he had accelerated 
by incessant work. Herald's incomplete opera Ludevie was 
afterwards printed by J. F. F. Halevy. 

HERON (Fr. hlron\ Ital. agkirone, airone; Lat. ardea; 
Gr. ifiu&tAs: A.-S. hragra; Icelandic, Megre; Swed. h&ger; 
Dan. keire; Ger. Heiger t Reiher, Heergans; Dutch, reiger), a 
long-necked, long-winged and long-legged bird; the typical 
representative of the group Ardcidae. It is difficult or even im- 
possible to estimate with any accuracy the number of species of 
*Ardeidae which exist. Professor Hermann Schlegel in 1863 
enumerated 61, besides 5 of what he terms " conspedes," as 



Fie. 1.— Heron 

contained in the collection at Leyden (Mus. des Pays-Bat, 
Ardeae, 64 pp.),— on the other hand, G. R. Gray in 1871 
(Handlist, &c iiL 26-34) admitted above 00, while Dr Anton 
Reichenow (Journ.fUr Ornilhologie, 1877, pp. 232-275) recognizes 
67 as known, besides 15 " subspecies " and 3 varieties, arranging 
them in 3 genera, Nyciicorax, Bolaurus and Ardea, with 17 sub- 
genera. But it is difficult to separate the family, with any 
satisfactory result, into genera, if structural characters have to 
be found for these groups, for in many cases they run almost 
insensibly into each other — though in common language it is 
easy to speak of herons, egrets, bitterns, night-herons and 



HERON 



3«7 



bettbUb* With the exception of the last, Professor Schlegel 
retains all in the genus Ardea, dividing it into eight sections, the 
names of which may perhaps be Englished — great herons, small 
herons, egrets, semi-egrets, rail-like herons, little bitterns, bitterns 
and night-herons. 

The common heron of Europe, Ardea einerta of Linnaeus, is 
universally allowed to be the type of the family, and it may also 
be regarded as that of Professor Schlegel's first section. The 
species inhabits suitable localities throughout the whole of 
Europe, Africa and Asia, reaching Japan, many of the islands 
of the Indian Archipelago and even Australia. Though by no 
means so numerous as formerly in Britain, it is still sufficiently 
common, 1 and there must be few persons who have not seen it 
rising slowly from some river-side or marshy fiat, or passing over- 
head in its lofty and leisurely flight on its way to or from its 
daily haunts; while they are many who have been enter- 
tained by watching it as it sought its food, consisting chiefly 
of fishes (especially eels and flounders) and amphibians— though 
young birds and small mammals come not amiss — wading midleg 
in the shallows, swimming occasionally when out of its depth, or 
standing motionless to strike its prey with its formidable and sure 
beak. When sufficiently numerous the heron breeds in societies, 
known as heronries, which of old time were protected both by law 
and custom in nearly all European countries, on account of the 
sport their tenants afforded to the falconer. Of late years, partly 
owing to the withdrawal of the protection they had enjoyed, and 
still more, it would seem, from agricultural improvement, which, 
by draining meres, fens and marshes, has abolished the feeding- 
places of a great population of herons, many of the larger 
heronries have broken up — the birds composing them dispersing 
to neighbouring localities and forming smaller settlements, most 
of which are hardly to be dignified by the name of heronry, though 
commonly accounted such. Thus the number of so-called 
heronries in the United Kingdom, and especially in England and 
Wales, has become far greater than formerly, but no one can 
doubt that the number of herons has dwindled. The sites chosen 
by the heron for its nest vary greatly. It is generally built in the 
top of a lofty tree, but not unfrequentry (and this seems to have 
been much more usual in former days) near or on the ground 
among rough vegetation, on an island in a lake, or again on a 
rocky cliff of the coast. It commonly consists of a huge mass of 
sticks, often the accumulation of years, lined with twigs, and in it 
are laid from four to six sea-green eggs. The young are clothed 
in soft flax-coloured down, and remain in the nest for a consider- 
able time, therein differing remarkably from the " pipers " of the 
crane, which are able to run almost as soon as they are hatched. 
The first feathers assumed by young herons in a general way 
resemble those of the adult, but the pure white breast, the 
black throat-streaks and especially the long pendent plumes, 
which characterize only the very old birds, and arc most beautiful 
in the cocks, arc subsequently acquired. The heron measures 
about 3 ft. from the bill to the tail, and the expanse of its wings is 
sometimes not less than 6 ft., yet it weighs only between 3 and 
4 lb. 

Large as is the common heron of Europe, it is exceeded in 
size by the great blue heron of America {Ardea hcrodias), which 
generally resembles it in appearance and habits, and both are 
smaller than the A. sumairana or A. typhon of India and the 
Malay Archipelago, while the A. goliath, of wide distribution in 
Africa and Asia, is the largest of all The purple heron, A. 
purpurea, as a well-known European species having a great 
range over the Old World, also deserves mention here. The 
species included in Professor Schlcgcl's second section inhabit the 
tropical parts of Africa, Australasia and America. The egrets, 
forming his third group, require more notice, distinguished as they 
arc by their pure white plumage, and, when in breeding-dress, by 

1 In many parts of England it is generally called a " hernser " — 
being a corruption of " heronscwe," which, as Professor Skeat states 
{Etymol. Dictionary, p. 264), is a perfectly distinct word from 
•* heronshaw," commonly confounded with it The further corrup- 
tion of " hernser " into handsaw," as in the well-known proverb, 
was easy in the mouth of men to whom hawking the heronaewc was 
unfamiliar. 



the beautiful dorsal tufts of decomposed feathers that ordinarily 
droop over the tail, and are so highly esteemed as ornaments by 
Oriental magnates. The largest species is A. occidentals, only 
known apparently from Florida and Cuba; but one not much 
less, the great egret (A. alba), belongs to the Old World, breeding 
regularly in south-eastern Europe, and occasionally straying to 
Britain. A third, A. egretta, represents it in America, while much 
the same may be said of two smaller species, A. garutta, the little 
egret of English authors, and A. candidissima; and a sixth, 
A. intermedia, is common in India, China and Japan, besides 
occurring in Australia. The group of semi-egrets, containing 
some nine or ten forms, among which the buff-backed heron 
(A. bubukus), is the only species that is known to have occurred in 
Europe, is hardly to be distinguished from the last section except 
by their plumage being at certain seasons varied in some species 
with slaty-blue and in others with rufous. The rail-like herons 
form Professor Schlegel's next section, but it can scarcely be 
satisfactorily differentiated, and the epithet is misleading, for its 
members have no rail-like affinities, though the typical species, 



Fla 2.— Bittern. 

which inhabits the south of Europe, and occasionally finds its 
way to England, has long been known as A. ralloides} Nearly 
all these birds arc tropical or subtropical. Then there is the 
somewhat better denned group of little bitterns, containing 
about a dozen species— the smallest of the whole family. One 
of them, A. minuta, though very local in its distribution, is a 
native of the greater part of Europe, and has bred in England. 
It has a close counterpart in the A. exilis of North America, and 
is represented by three or four forms in other parts of the world, 
the A. pusilla of Australia especially differing very slightly from 
it. Ranged by Professor Schlegel with these birds, which are all 
remarkable for their skulking habits, but more resembling the true 
herons in their nature, are the common green bittern of America 
(A, virescens) and its very near ally the African A. otricapUla, 
from which last it is almost impossible to distinguish the A. 
javanica, of wide range throughout Asia and its islands, while 
other species, less closely related, occur elsewhere as A.fiaticoUis 
—one form of which, A. gouidi, inhabits Australia. 

The true bitterns, forming the genus Botaurus of most authors, 
seem to be fairly separable, but more perhaps on account of their 
wholly nocturnal habits and correspondingly adapted plumage 
than on strictly structural grounds, though some differences of 
proportion are observable. The common bittern (q.v.) of 

•It is the " Squacco-Heron " of modem British authors— the 
distinctive name, given " Sguacco " by Willughby and Ray from 
Aldrovaodus, having been misspelt by Latham. 



388 



HERPES— HERRERA 



Europe (B. slcHaris), is widely distributed over the eastern 
hemisphere. 1 Australia and New Zealand have a kindred species, 
B. poeciloptilus, and North America a third, B. mugitans* or 
B. lenliginosus. Nine other species from various parts of the 
world are admitted by Professor Schlegel, but some of them 
should perhaps be excluded from the genus Bolaurus. 

Of the night-herons the same author recognizes six species, all 
of which may be reasonably placed in the genus Nyclicorax, 
characterized by a shorter beak and a few other peculiarities, 
among which the large eyes deserve mention. The first is N. 
griscus, a bird widely spread over the Old World, and not un- 
frequently visiting England, where it would undoubtedly breed if 
permitted. Professor Schlegel unites with it the common night- 
heron of America; but this, though very closely allied, is generally 
deemed distinct, and is the N. naevius or N. gardeni of most 
writers. A clearly different American species, with a more 
southern habitat, is the JV. violaceusoxN. cayennensis, while others 
are found in South America, Australia, some of the Asiatic Islands 
and in West Africa. The Galapagos have a peculiar species, 

N. pauper, and 
another, so far 
as is known, 
peculiar to 
Rodriguez, N. 
ntegacephalus, 
existed in that 
island at the 
. timeof its being 
' first colonized, 
I b'ut is now 
. extinct. 
' Theboatbill, 
\ of which only 
; one species is 
known, seems 
to be merely 
a night-heron 
with an ex- 
aggerated bill, 
—so much 
widened as to 
suggest its 
Fie. 3.— Boatbill. English name, 

— but has al- 
ways been allowed generic rank. ~ This curious bird, the 
Cancroma cocklearia of most authors, is a native of tropical 
America, and what is known of its habits shows that they are 
essentially those of a Nyclicorax.* 

■ Bones of the common heron and bittern are not uncommon in 
the peat of the East- Anglian fens. Remains from Sansan and 
Langy in France have been referred by Alphonsc Milne-Edwards 
to herons under the names of Ardea perplexa and A.formosa; a 
tibia from the Miocene of Steinheim am Albuch by Dr Fraas to an 
A. similis, while Sir R. Owen recognized a portion of a sternum 
from the London Clay as most nearly approaching this family. 
It remains to say that the herons form part of Huxley's section 
Pelargomorphae, belonging to his larger group Desmcgnathae, and 
to draw attention to the singular development of the patches 
of " powder-down " which in the family Ardtidae attain a 
magnitude hardly to be found elsewhere. Their use is utterly 
unknown. (A. N.) 

1 The last-recorded instance of the bittern breeding in England 
was in 1868, as mentioned by Stevenson (Birds of Norfolk, ii. 
164). 

8 Richardson, a most accurate observer, asserts (Fauna Boreali- 
Americana, ii 374) that its booming (whence the epithet) exactly 
resembles that of its Old- World congener, but American ornitholo- 

Sists seem only to have heard the croaking note it makes when 
isturbed. 

* The very wonderful shoe-bird (Balaenicepst has been regarded by 
many authorities as allied to Cancroma ; but there can be little doubt 
that it is more nearly related to the genua Scopus belonging to the 
storks. The sun-bittern (Eurypyga) forms a family of itself, allied 
to the rails and cranes. 



HERPES (from the Gr. tpimv, to creep), an inflammation of 
the true skin resulting from a lesion of the underlying nerve or 
its ganglion, attended with the formation of isolated or grouped 
vesicles of various sizes upon a reddened base. They contain a 
clear fluid, and either rupture or dry up. Two well-marked 
varieties of herpes are frequently met with, (a) In herpes 
labialis el nasalis the eruption occurs about the lips and nose. 
It is seen in cases of certain acute febrile ailments, such as fevers, 
inflammation of the lungs or even in a severe cold. It soon passes 
off. (b) In the herpes toiler, zona or " shingles " the eruption 
occurs in the course of one or more cutaneous nerves, often on one 
side of the trunk, but it may be on the face, limbs or other parts. 
It may occur at any age, but is probably more frequently met 
with in elderly people. The appearance of the eruption is usually 
preceded by severe stinging neuralgic pains for several days, and, 
not only during the continuance of the herpetic spots, but long 
after they have dried up and disappeared, these pains sometimes 
continue and give rise to great suffering. The disease seldom 
recurs. The most that can be done for its relief is to protect the 
parts with cotton wool or so me. dusting powder, while the pain 
may be allayed by opiates or bromide of potassium. Quinine 
internally is often of service. 

HERRERA, FERNANDO DE (c. 1534-1507), Spanish lyrical 
poet, was born at Seville. Although in minor orders, he addressed 
many impassioned poems to the countess of Gelvcs, wife of Alvaro 
Colon de Portugal; but it is suggested that these should be 
regarded as Platonic literary exercises in the manner of Petrarch. 
As is shown by his Anotaciones d las obras de GarcUaso de la Vega 
(1580), Herrera had a boundless admiration for the Italian 
poets, and continued the work of Bosc&n in naturalizing the 
Italian metrical system in Spain. His commentary on Garcilaso 
involved him in a scries of literary polemics, and his verbal 
innovations laid him open to attack. But, even if his amatory 
sonnets are condemned as insincere in sentiment, their work- 
manship is admirable, while his odes on the battle of Lepanto, on 
Don John of Austria, and the elegy on King Sebastian of Portugal 
entitle him to rank as the greatest of Andalusian poets and as the 
most important of the followers of Garcilaso de la Vega (see 
Vega). His poems were published in 1582, and reprinted with 
additions in 1619; they are reissued in the Biblioteca de autores 
espafloles, vol. xxxii. Of Herrera's prose works only the Vida y 
mucrla de Tomas Moro (1592) survives; it is a translation of the 
life in Thomas Stapleton's Tres Thomae (1588). 

Bibliography. — E. Bourcicz, " Les Sonnets de Fernando de 
Herrera," Annales de la FaculU des Lettres de Bordeaux (1891): 
Fernando de Herrera, controversia sobre sus anotaciones d les obras 
de Garcilaso de la Vega (Seville, 1670); A. Morel-Fatio, L'Hymne 
sur Lipante (Paris, 1893). 

HERRERA, FRANCISCO (1576-1656), surnamed el Vicjo (the 
old), Spanish historical and fresco painter, studied under Luis 
Fernandez in Seville, his native city, where he spent most of bis 
life. Although so rough and coarse in manners that neither 
scholar nor child could remain with him, the great talents of 
Herrera, and the promptitude with which be used them, brought 
him abundant commissions. He was also a skilful worker in 
bronze, an accomplishment that led to his being charged with 
coining base money. From this accusation, whether true or 
false, he sought sanctuary in the Jesuit college of San Hermcne- 
gildo, which he adorned with a fine picture of its patron saint. 
Philip IV., on his visit to Seville in 1624, having seen this picture, 
and learned the position of the artist, pardoned him at once, warn- 
ing him, "however, that such powers as his should not be degraded. 
In i65oHerrcra removed to Madrid,whcre he lived in great honour 
till his death in 1656. Herrera was the first to relinquish the 
timid Italian manner of the old Spanish school of painting, and 
to initiate the free, vigorous touch and style which reached such 
perfection in Velazquez, who had been for a short time his pupil. 
His pictures are marked by an energy of design and freedom of 
execution quite in keeping with his bold, rough character. He is 
said to have used very long brushes in his painting; and it is also 
said that, when pupils failed, his servant used to dash the colours 
on the canvas with a broom under his directions, and that he 
worked them up into his designs before they dried. The drawing 



HERRERA Y TORDESILLAS— HERRICK 



389 



in bis pictures is correct, and the colouring original and skflfnlly 
managed, so that the figures stand out in striking relief. What 
has been considered his best easel-work, the " Last Judgment," in 
the church of San Bernardo at Seville, is an original and striking 
composition, showing in its treatment of the nude how ill-founded 
the common belief was that Spanish painters, through ignorance 
of anatomy* understood only the draped figure. Perhaps his best 
fresco is that on the dome of the church of San Buenaventura; 
but many of his frescoes have perished, some by the effects of the 
weather and others by the artist's own carelessness in preparing 
his surfaces. He has. however, preserved several of his own 
designs in etchings. For his easel-works Herrera often chose such 
humble subjects as fairs, carnivals, ale-houses and the like. 

His son Francisco Hekrera (1622-1685), surnamed d Mozo 
(the young), was also an historical and fresco painter. Unable to 
endure his father's cruelty, the younger Herrera, seizing what 
money he could find, fled from Seville to Rome. There, instead 
of devoting himself to the antiquities and the works of the old 
Italian masters, he gave himself up to the study of architecture 
and perspective, with the view of becoming a fresco-painter. He 
did not altogether neglect easel-work, but became renowned for 
his pictures of still-life, flowers and fruit, and from his skill in 
painting fish was called by the Italians Lo Spognuolo degli pad. 
In later life he painted portraits with great success. He returned 
to Seville on hearing of his father's death, and in j66o was 
appointed subdirector of the new academy there under Murillo. 
His vanity, however, brooked the superiority of no one; and 
throwing up his appointment he went to Madrid. There he was 
employed to paint a San Hermcnegildo for the barefooted 
Carmelites, and to decorate in fresco the roof of the choir of San 
Felipe el Real. The success of this last work procured for him a 
commission from Philip IV. to paint in fresco the roof of the 
Atocha church. He chose as his subject for this the Assumption 
of the Virgin. Soon afterwards he was rewarded with the title of 
painter to the king, and was appointed superintendent of the 
royal buildings. He died at Madrid in 16S5. Herrera el Mozo 
was of a somewhat similar temperament to his father, and offended 
many people by his inordinate vanity and suspicious jealousy. 
His pictures are inferior to the older Herrcra's both in design and 
in execution; but in some of them traces of the vigour of his 
father, who was his first teacher, are visible. He was by no 
means an unskilful colourist, and was especially master of the 
effects of Chiaroscuro. As his best picture Sir Edmund Head in 
his Handbook names his " San Francisco, 1 ' in Seville Cathedral. 
An elder brother, known as Herrera el Rubio (the ruddy), who 
died very young, gave great promise as a painter. 

HERRERA Y TORDESILLAS, ANTONIO DB (1540-1625). 
Spanish historian, was born at Cuellar, in the province of Segovia 
in Spain. His father, Roderigo de Tordesillas, and his mother, 
Agnes de Herrera, were both of good family. After studying for 
some time in his native country, Herrera proceeded to Italy, and 
there became secretary to Vespasian Gonzago, with whom, on 
his appointment as viceroy of Navarre, he returned to Spain. 
Gonzago, sensible of his secretary's abilities, commended him to 
Philip II. of Spain; and that monarch appointed Herrera first 
historiographer of the Indies, and one of the historiographers of 
Castile. Placed thus in the enjoyment of an ample salary, 
Herrera devoted the rest of his life to the pursuit of literature, 
retaining his offices until the reign of Philip IV., by whom he was 
appointed secretary of state very shortly before his death, 
which took place at Madrid on the 20th of March 1625. Of 
Herrcra's writings, the most valuable is his Historic general de 
los kechos de los Castellanos en las isles y tierra firme del Mar 
Ouano (Madrid, 1601- 161 5, 4 vols.), a work which relates the 
history of the Spanish- American colonies from 1492 to 1554. 
The author's official position gave him access to the state papers 
and to other authentic sources not attainable by other writers, 
while he did not scruple to borrow largely from other MSS., 
especially from that of Bartolome de Las Casas. He used his 
facilities carefully and judiciously; and the result is a work on 
the whole accurate and unprejudiced, and quite indispensable 
to the student either of the history of the early colonies, or of Ihe 



institutions and customs of the aboriginal American peoples. 
Although it is written in the form of annals, mistakes are not 
wanting, and several glaring anachronisms have been pointed 
out by M. J. Quiotana. "If," to quote Dr Robertson, 
" by attempting to relate the various occurrences in the New 
World in a strict chronological order, the arrangement of events 
in his work had not been rendered so perplexed, disconnected 
and obscure that it is an unpleasant task to collect from different 
parts of his book and piece together the detached shreds of a 
story, he might justly have been ranked among the most eminent 
historians of his country." This work was republished in 1730, 
and has been translated into English by J. Stevens (London, 
1740), and into other European languages. 

Herrcra's other works are the following: Hisioria do to sucedido 
en Escocia I Inglalerra en quarenta y quatro aHos que vkiS la reyna 
Maria Estuarda (Madrid, 1589)* Ctnco libros de la historia de 
Portugal, y conquista de las istas de los Azores, 1582-1583 (Madrid, 
1501); Historia de lo sucedido en Francia, 1585-1594 (Madrid, 
1598); Historia general del mundo del iiempo del rey Felipe II. 
desde 1559 kasla su muerte (Madrid, 1601-1612, 3 vols.); Tratado, 
relation, y discurso historico de los movimienlos de Aragon (Madrid, 
1612); Comentorios de los kechos de los Espafloles, Franceses, y 
Veneeianos en Italia, fire, 1281-1559 (Madrid, 1624, seq.). See W. H. 
Preacott, History of the Conquest of Mexico, vol. U. 

HERRICK, ROBERT (1 501-1674), English poet, was born at 
Cheapside, London, and baptized on the 24th of August 1501. 
He belonged to an old Leicestershire family which bad settled in 
London. He was the seventh child of Nicholas Herrick, gold- 
smith, of the city of London, who died in 1592, under suspicion 
of suicide. The children were brought up by their uncie, Sir 
William Herrick, one of the richest goldsmiths of the day, to 
whom in 1607 Robert was bound apprentice. He had probably 
been educated at Westminster school, and in 1614 he proceeded to 
Cambridge; and it was no doubt during his apprenticeship that 
the young poet was introduced to that circle of wits which he was 
afterwards to adorn. He seems to have been present at the first 
performance of The Alchemist in 16 10, and it was probably about 
this time that Ben Jonson adopted him as his poetical " son." 
He entered the university as fellow-commoner of St John's 
College, and he remained there until, in 1616, upon taking his 
degree, he removed to Trinity Hall. A lively series of fourteen 
letters to his uncle, mainly begging for money, exists at Beau- 
manoir, and shows that Herrick suffered much from poverty at 
the university. He took his B.A. in 1617, and in 1620 he became 
master of arts. From this date until 1627 we entirely lose sight of 
him; it has been variously conjectured that he spent these years 
preparing for the ministry at Cambridge, or in much looser 
pursuits in London. In 1629 (September 30) he was presented by 
the king to the vicarage of Dean Prior, not far from Totnes in 
Devonshire. At Dean Prior he resided quietly until 1648, when 
he was ejected by the Puritans. The solitude there oppressed 
him at first; the village was dull and remote, and he felt very 
bitterly that he was cut off from all literary and social associa- 
tions; but soon the quiet existence in Devonshire soothed and 
delighted him. He was pleased with the rural and semi-pagan 
customs that survived in the village, and in some of his most 
charming verses he has immortalized the morris-dances, wakes 
and quintains, the Christmas mummers and the Twelfth Night 
revellings, that diversified the quiet of Dean Prior. Herrick 
never married, but lived at the vicarage surrounded by a happy 
family of pets, and tended by an excellent old servant named 
Prudence Baldwin. His first appearance in print was in some 
verses he contributed to A Description of the King and Queen 
of Fairies, in 1635. In 1650 a volume of Wit*s Recreations 
contained sixty-two small poems afterwards acknowledged by 
Herrick in the Hesperides, and one not reprinted until our own 
day. These partial appearances make it probable that he visited 
London from time to time. We have few hints of his life as a 
clergyman. Anthony Wood says that Herricks's sermons were 
florid and witty, and that he was " beloved by the neighbouring 
gentry." A very aged woman, one Dorothy Ring, stated that 
the poet once threw his sermon at his congregation, cursing them 
for their inattention. The same old woman recollected his 
favourite pig* which be taught to drink out of a tankard. He 



390 

was a devotedly loyal supporter of the king daring the Civil 
War, and immediately upon his ejection in 1648 he published his 
celebrated collection of lyrical poems, entitled Hcs per ides; or tke 
Works both Human and Divine of Robert Uerrick. The " divine 
works " bore the title of Noble Numbers and the date 1647. 
That he was reduced to great poverty in London has been stated, 
but there is no evidence of the fact. In August 1662 Herrick 
returned to Dean Prior, supplanting his own supplanter, Dr 
John Syms. He died in his eighty-fourth year, and was buried 
at Dean Prior, October 1 5, 1674. A monument was erected to his 
memory in the parish church in 1857, by Mr Perry Herrick, a 
descendant of a collateral branch .of the family. The Hesperides 
(and Noble Numbers) is the only volume which Herrick published, 
but he contributed poems to Lachrymae Musarum (1649) and to 
Wit's Recreations. 

As a pastoral lyrist Herrick stands first among English poets. 
His genius is limited in scope, and comparatively unambitious, 
but in its own field it is unrivalled. His tiny poems — and of the 
thirteen hundred that he has left behind him not one is long — 
are like jewels of various value, heaped together in a casket. 
Some are of the purest water, radiant with light and colour, 
some were originally set in false metal that has tarnished, some 
were rude and repulsive from the first. Out of the unarranged, 
heterogeneous mass the student has to select what is not worth 
reading, but, after he has cast aside all the rubbish, be is astonished 
at the amount of excellent and exquisite work that remains. 
Herrick has himself summed up, very correctly, the themes of his 
sylvan muse when he says: — 

" I sing Of brooks, of blossoms, birds and bowers, 
Of April, May, of June and July flowers, 
1 sing of May-poles, hock-carts, wassails, wakes, 
9f bridegrooms, brides and of their bridal-cakes." 

He saw the picturesqueness of English homely life as no 
one before him had seen it, and he described it in his verse 
with a certain purple glow of Arcadian romance over it, in 
tones of immortal vigour and freshness. His love poems are 
still more beautiful; the best of them have an- ardour and 
tender sweetness which give them a place in the forefront of 
modern lyrical poetry, and remind us of what was best in Horace 
and in the poets of the Greek anthology. 

After suffering complete extinction for more than a century, the 
fame of Herrick was revived by John Nichols, who introduced his 

B)cms to the readers of the Gentleman's Magazine of 1796 and 1797. 
r Drake followed in 1798 with considerable enthusiasm. By 1810 
interest had so far revived in the forgotten poet that Dr Nott ventured 
to print a selection from his poems, which attracted the favourable 
notice of the Quarterly Review. In 1823 the Hester ides and the 
Noble Numbers were for the first time edited by Mr T. Maitland, 
afterwards Lord Dundrennan. Since then the reprints of Herrick'a 
have been too numerous to be mentioned here; there arc few 
English poets of the 17th century whose writings are now more 
accessible. See F. W. Moorman, Robert Herrick (1910). (E. C.) 

HERMES, JOHN CHARLES (1778-1855), English politician, 
son of a London merchant, began his career as a junior clerk 
in the treasury, and became known for his financial abilities 
as private secretary to successive ministers. He was appointed 
commissary-in-chief (1811), and, on the abolition of that office 
(1816), auditor of the civil list. In 1823 he entered parliament 
as secretary to the treasury, and in 1827 became chancellor of the 
exchequer under Lord Goderich; but in Consequence of internal 
differences, arising partly out of a slight put upon Herries, the 
ministry was broken up, and in 1828 he was appointed master 
of the mint. In 1830 he became president of the board of trade, 
and for the earlier months of 1835 he was secretary at war. 
From 1841 to 1847 he was out of parliament, but during 1852 
he was president of the board of control under Lord Derby. 
He was a consistent and upright Tory of the old school, who 
carried weight as an authority on financial subjects. His eldest 
son, Sir Charles John Herries (1815-1882), was chairman 
of the board of inland revenue. 

See the Life by his younger son, Edward Herries (1880). 

HERRIES, JOHN MAXWELL, 4 th Lord (<r. 1512-1583). 
Scottish politician, was the second son of Robert Maxwell, 4th 
Lord Maxwell (d. 1546). In 1547 he married Agnes (d. 1504). 



HERRIES, J. C— HERRING 



daughter of William Herries, 3rd Lord Herries (d. 1543), * 
grandson of Herbert Herries (d. c. 1500) of Terreglcs, Kirkcud- 
brightshire, who was created -a lord of the Scottish parliament 
about 1400, and in 1567 he obtained the title of Lord Hemes. 
But before this event Maxwell had become prominent among 
the men who rallied round Mary queen of Scots, although 
during the earlier part of his public life he had been associated 
with the religious reformers and bad been imprisoned by the 
regent, Mary of Lorraine. He was, moreover— at least until 
1503— very friendly with John Knox, who calls him "a man 
zealous and stout in God's cause," But the transition from one 
party to the other was gradually accomplished, and from March 
1566, when Maxwell joined Mary at Dunbar after the murder 
of David Rizzio and her escape from Holyrood, be remained one 
of her staunchest friends, although he disliked her marriage with 
Bothwell. He led her cavalry at Langside, and after this battle 
she committed herself to his care. Herries rode with the queen 
into England in May 1568, and he and John Lesley, bishop of 
Ross, were her chief commissioners at the conferences at York. 
He continued to labour in Mary's cause after returning to 
Scotland, and was imprisoned by the regent Murray; he also 
incurred Elizabeth's displeasure by harbouring the rebel Ironard 
Dacres, but he soon made his peace with the English queen. 
He showed himself in general hostile to the regent Morton, bat 
he was among the supporters of the regent Lennox until his 
death on the 20th of January 1583. His son William, 5th Lord 
Herries (d. 1604), was, like his father, warden of the west marches. 

William's grandson John, 7th Lord Herries (d. 1677), became 
3rd earl of Nithsdale in succession to his cousin Robert Maxwell, 
the and earl, in 1667. John's grandson was William, 5th earl of 
Nithsdale, the Jacobite (see Nithsdale). William was d e pri ved 
of his honours in 1716, but in 1858 the House of Lords decided 
that his descendant William Constable-Maxwell (1804-1876) was 
rightly Lord Herries of Terreglcs. In 1876 William's son Manna- 
duke Constable-Maxwell (b. 1837) became 12th Lord Herries, 
and in 1884 he was created a baron of the United Kingdom. 

HERRING (Clupca karengus, Hiring in German, le hartmg 
in French, sill in Swedish), a fish belonging to the genus Clupca, 
of which more than sixty different species are known in various 
parts of the globe. The sprat, pilchard or sardine and shad 
are species of the same genus. Of all sea-fishes Clupeae are the 
most abundant; for although other genera may comprise a 
greater variety of species, they are far surpassed by Clupea 
with regard to the number of individuals. The majority of the 
species of Clupca are of greater or less utility to man; it is only 
a few tropical species that acquire, probably from their food, 
highly poisonous properties, so as to be dangerous to persons 
eating them. But no other species equals the common herring 
in importance as an article of food or commerce. It inhabits in 
incredible numbers the North Sea, the northern parts of the 
Atlantic and the seas north of Asia. The herring inhabiting 
the corresponding latitudes of the North Pacific is another 
species, but most closely allied to that of the eastern hemisphere. 
Formerly it was the general belief that the herring inhabits 
the open ocean close to the Arctic Circle, and that it migrates 
at certain seasons towards the northern coasts of Europe and 
America. This view has been proved to be erroneous, and we 
know now that this fish lives throughout the year in the vicinity 
of our shores, but at a greater depth, and at a greater distance 
from the coast, than at the time when it approaches land for 
the purpose of spawning. 

Herrings are readily recognized and distinguished from the 
other species of Clupca by having an ovate patch of very small 
teeth on the vomer (that is, the centre of the palate). In the 
dorsal fin they have from 17 to 20 rays, and in the anal fin from 
16 to 18; there are from 53 to 59 scales in the lateral line and 
54 to 56 vertebrae in the vertebral column. They have a 
smooth gill-cover, without those radiating ridges of bone which 
are so conspicuous in the pilchard and other Clupeae. The 
sprat cannot be confounded with the herring, as it has no teeth 
on the vomer and only 47 or 48 scales in the lateral line. 

The spawn of the herring is adhesive, and is deposited on 



HERRING-BONE— HERSCHEL, SIR F. W. 



391 



rough gravelly ground at varying distances from the coast and 
always in comparatively shallow water. The season of spawning 
is different in different places, and even in the same district, e.g. 
the east coast of Scotland, there are herrings spawning in spring 
and others in autumn. These are not the same fish but different 
races. Those which breed in winter or spring deposit their 
spawn near the coast at the mouths of estuaries, and ascend the 
estuaries to a considerable distance at certain times, as in the 
Firths of Forth and Clyde, while those which spawn in summer or 
autumn belong more to the open sea, e.g. the great shoals that 
visit the North Sea annually. 

Herrings grow very rapidly; according to H. A. Meyer's 
observations, they attain a length of from 17 to 18 mm. during 
the first month after hatching, 34 to 36 mm. during the second, 
45 to 50 mm. during the third, 55 to 61 mm. during the fourth, 
and 65 to 72 mm. during the fifth. The size which they finally 
attain and their general condition depend chiefly on the abund- 
ance of food (which consists of crustaceans and other small 
marine animals), on. the temperature of the water, on the season 
at which they have been hatched, &c Their usual size is 
about 12 in., but in some particularly suitable localities they 
grow to a length of 15 in., and instances of specimens measuring 

17 in. are on record. In the Baltic, where the water b gradually 
losing its saline constituents, thus becoming less adapted for 
the development of marine species, the herring continues to 
exist in large numbers, but as a dwarfed form, not growing 
either to the size or to the condition of the North-Sea herring. 
The herring of the American side of the Atlantic is specifically 
identical with that of Europe. A second species (Clufca leackii) 
has been supposed to exist on the British coast; but it comprises 
only individuals of a smaller size, the produce of an early or 
late spawn. Also the so-called " white-bait " is not a distinct 
species, but consists chiefly of the fry or the young of herrings 
and sprats, and is obtained "in perfection" at localities where 
these small fishes find an abundance of food, as in the estuary 
of the Thames. 

Several excellent accounts of the herring have been published, 
as by Valenciennes in the 20th vol of the Histoirc natmrelle des 
poissons, and more especially by Mr J. M. Mitchell, The Herring, 
tts Natural History and National Importance (Edinburgh, 1864). 
Recent investigations arc described in the Reports of the Fishery 
Board for Scotland, and in the reports of the German Komvttsxion 
tur UnUrsuchnngder Deuischen Meere (published at Kiel). (J* T. C.) 

HERRING-BONE, a term in architecture applied to alternate 
courses of bricks or stone, which arc laid diagonally with binding 
courses above and below: this is said to give a better bond to 
the wall, especially when the stone employed is stratified, such 
as Stonefield stone, and too thin to be laid in horizontal courses. 
-Although it is only occasionally found in modern buildings, it 
was a type of construction constantly employed in Roman, 
Byzantine and Romanesque work, and in the latter is regarded 
as a test of very early date. It is frequently found in the Byzan- 
tine walls in Asia Minor, and in Byzantine churches was employed 
decora tively to give variety to the wall surface. Sometimes the 
diagonal courses are reversed one above the other. Examples 
in France exist in the churches at Qucrqucville in Normandy 
and St Christophc at Sucvrcs (Loir et Cher), both dating from 
the 10th century, and in England herring-bone masonry is 
found in the walls of castles, such as at Guildford, Colchester and 
Tarn worth. The term is also applied to the paving of stable 
yards with bricks laid flat diagonally and alternating so that the 
head of one brick butts against the side of another; and the 
effect is more pleasing than when laid in parallel courses. 

HERRINGS. BATTLE OF THE, the name applied to tl.e 
action of Rouvray, fought in 1420 between the French (and 
Scots) and the English, who, under Sir John Falstolfe (or 
Falsi aft), were convoying Lenten provisions, chiefly herrings, 
to the besiegers of Orleans. (See Orleans and Hundred 
Years' War.) 

HERRNHUT, a town of Germany, in the kingdom of Saxony, 

18 m. S.E. ol Bautzen, and situated on the Lttbau-Zittau rail- 
way. Pop. 1200. It is chiefly known as the principal seat of 
the Moravian or Bohemian brotherhood, the members of which 



are called Hermkuter. A colony of these people, fleeing from 
persecution in Moravia, settled at Herrnhut in 1722 on a site 
presented by Count Zinxendorf. The buildings of the society 
include a church, a school and houses for the brethren, the sisters 
and the widowed of both sexes, while it possesses an ethno- 
graphical museum and other collections of interest. The town 
is remarkable for its ordered, regular life and its scrupulous 
cleanliness. Linen, paper (to varieties of which Herrnhut gives 
its name), tobacco and various minor articles are manufactured. 
The Hutberg, at the foot of which the town lies, commands a 
pleasant view. Berthclsdorf, a village about a mile distant, has 
been the seat of the directorate of the community since about 
1780. 

HERSCHEL, CAROLINE LUCRETM (1750-1848), English 
astronomer, sister of Sir William Herschel, the eighth child and 
fourth daughter of her parents, was born at Hanover on the 
16th of March 1 7 50. On account of the prejudices of her mother, 
who did not desire her to know more than was necessary for 
being useful in the family, she received in youth only the first 
elements of education. After the death of her father in 1767 she 
obtained permission to learn millinery and dressmaking with a 
view to earning her bread, but continued to assist her mother 
in the management of the household until the autumn of 1772, 
when she joined her brother William, who had established himself 
as a teacher of music at Bath. At once she became a valuable 
co-operator with him both in his professional duties and in the 
astronomical researches to which he had already begun to devote 
all his spare time. She was the principal singer at his oratorio 
concerts, and acquired such a reputation as a vocalist that she 
was offered an engagement for the Birmingham festival, which, 
however, she declined. When her brother accepted the office 
of astronomer to George III., she became his constant assistant 
in his observations, and also executed the laborious calcula- 
tions which were connected with them. For these services 
she received from the king in 1787 a salary of £50 a year. Her 
chief amusement during her leisure hours was sweeping the 
heavens with a small Newtonian telescope. By this means she 
detected in 1783 three remarkable nebulae, and during the 
eleven years 1 786-1 707 eight comets, five of them with un- 
questioned priority. In 1707 she presented to the Royal 
Society an Index to Flamsteed's observations, together with a 
catalogue of 561 stars accidentally omitted from the " British 
Catalogue," and a list of the errata in that publication. Though 
she returned to Hanover In 1822 she did not abandon her astro- 
nomical studies, and in 1828 she completed the reduction, to 
January 1800, of 2500 nebulae discovered by her brother. In 
1828 the Astronomical Society, tc mark their sense of the benefits 
conferred on science by such a scries of laborious exertions, 
unanimously resolved to present her with their gold medal, and 
in 183 s elected her an honorary member of the society. In 1846 
she received a gold medal from the king of Prussia. She died on 
the oth of January 1848. 

See Tke Memoir and Correspondence of Caroline HerscM, by Mrs 
John Herschel (1876). 

HERSCHEL, SIR FREDERICK WILLIAM (1738-1822), 
generally known as Sir WilUam Herschel, English astronomer, 
was born at Hanover on the 15th of November 1738. His 
father was a musician employed as hautboy player in the 
Hanoverian guard. The family had quitted Moravia for Saxony 
in the early part of the 17th century on account of religious 
troubles, they themselves being Protestants. Hcrschel's earlier 
education was necessarily of a very limited character, chiefly 
owing to the warh'ke commotions of his country; but being at 
all times an indomitable student, he, by his own exertions, more 
than repaired this deficiency. He became a very skilful musician, 
both theoretical and practical; while his attainments as a 
self-taught mathematician were fully adequate to the prosecution 
of those branches of astronomy which he so eminently advanced 
and adorned. Whatever he did he did methodically and 
thoroughly; and in this methodical thoroughness lay the secret 
of what Arago very properly termed his astonishing scientific 
success. 



392 



HERSCHEL, SIR F. W. 



In 1752, at the age of fourteen, he joined the band of the 
Hanoverian guard, and with his detachment visited England 
in 1755, accompanied by his father and eldest brother; in the 
following year he returned to his native country; but the 
hardships of campaigning during the Seven Years' War imperil- 
ling his health, his parents privately removed him from the 
regiment, and on the 36th of July 1757 despatched him to 
England. There, as might have been expected, the earlier part 
of his career was attended with formidable difficulties and much 
privation. We find him engaged in several towns in the north 
of England as organist and teacher of music, which were not 
lucrative occupations. But the tide of his fortunes began to 
flow when he obtained in 1766 the appointment of organist to 
the Octagon chapel in Bath, at that time the resort of the wealth 
and fashion of the city. 

During the next five or six years he became the leading musical 
authority, and the director of all the chief public musical enter- 
tainments at Bath. His circumstances having thus become 
easier, he revisited Hanover for the purpose of bringing back 
with him his sister Caroline, whose services he much needed in 
his multifarious undertakings. She arrived in Bath in August 
1772, being at that time in her twenty-third year. She thus 
describes her brother's life soon after her arrival: " He used 
to retire to bed with a bason of milk or a glass of water, with 
Smith's Harmonics and Ferguson's Astronomy, &c, and so went 
to sleep buried under his favourite authors; and his first thoughts 
on waking were how to obtain instruments for viewing those 
objects himself of which he had been reading." It is not without 
significance that we find him thus reading Smith's Harmonics; 
to that study loyalty to his profession would impel him; as a 
reward for his thoroughness this led him to Smith's Optics-, 
and this, by a natural sequence, again led him to astronomy, 
for the purposes of which the chief optical instruments were 
devised. It was in this way that be was introduced to the 
writings of Ferguson and Keill, and subsequently to those of 
Lalande, whereby he educated himself to become an astronomer 
of undying fame. In those days telescopes were very rare, very 
expensive and not very efficient, for the Dollonds had not as yet 
perfected even their beautiful little achromatic* of 2} in. aperture. 
So Herschel was obliged to content himself with hiring a small 
Gregorian reflector of about a in. aperture, which he had seen 
exposed for loan in a tradesman's shop. Not satisfied with this 
implement, he procured a small lens of about 18 ft. focal length, 
and set his sister to work on a pasteboard tube to match it, so as 
to make him a telescope. This unsatisfactory material was soon 
replaced by tin, and thus a sorry sort of vision was obtained of 
Jupiter, Saturn and the moon. He then sought in London for 
a reflector of much larger dimensions; but no such instrument 
was on sale; and the terms demanded for the construction of a 
reflecting telescope of 5 or 6 ft. focal length he regarded as too 
exorbitant even for the gratification of such desires as his own. 
So he was driven to the only alternative that remained; he 
must himself build a large telescope. His first step in this 
direction was to purchase the debris of an amateur's implements 
for grinding and polishing small mirrors; and thus, by slow 
degrees, and by indomitable perseverance, be in 1774 had, as' 
he says, the satisfaction of viewing the heavens with a Newtonian 
telescope of 6 ft. focal length made by his own hands. But he 
was not contented to be a mere star-gazer; on the contrary, 
he had from the very first conceived the gigantic project of 
surveying the entire heavens, and, if possible, of ascertaining 
the plan of their general structure by a settled mode of procedure, 
if only he could provide himself with adequate instrumental 
means. For this purpose he, his brother and his sister toiled 
for many years at the grinding and polishing of hundreds of 
specula, always retaining the best and recasting the others, until 
the most perfect of the earlier products had been surpassed. 
This was the work of the daylight in those seasons of the year 
when the fashionable visitors of Bath had quitted the place, and 
had thus freed the family from professional duties. After 1774 
every available hour of the night was devoted to the long-hoped- 
for scrutiny of the skies. In those days no machinery had been 



invented for the' c on struction of telescopic mirrors; the man 
who had the hardihood to undertake polishing them doosned 
himself to walk leisurely and uniformly round an upright post 
for many hours, without removing his hands from the mirror, until 
his work was done. On these occasions Herschel received his food 
from the hands of his faithful sister. But his reward was nigh. 

In May 1780 his first two papers containing some results of his 
observations on the variable star " Mira " and the mountains of 
the moon were communicated to the Royal Society through 
the influential introduction of Dr William Watson. Herschel 
had made his acquaintance in a characteristic manner. In order 
to obtain a sight of the moon the astronomer had taken bis 
telescope into the street opposite his bouse; the celebrated 
physician happening to pass at the time, and seeing his eye 
removed for a moment from the instrument, requested permission 
to take his place. The mutual courtesies and intelligent conversa- 
tion which ensued soon ripened this casual acquaintance into a 
solid and enduring regard. 

The phenomena of variable stars were examined by Herschel 
as a guide to what might be occurring in our own sun. The sun, 
he knew, rotated on its axis, and he knew that dark spots often 
exist on its photosphere; the questions that he put to himself 
were — Are there dark spots also on variable stars? Do the stars 
also rotate on their axes? or are they sometimes partially 
eclipsed by the intervention of opaque bodies? And be went on 
to enquire, What are these singular spots upon the sun? and 
nave they any practical relation to the inhabitants of this planet? 
To these questions he applied bis telescopes and his thoughts; 
and he communicated the results to the Royal Society in no less 
than six memoirs, occupying very many pages in the Philosophical 
Transactions* and extending in date from 1780 to 1801. It was 
in the latter year that these remarkable papers culminated in Use 
inquiry whether any relation could be traced in the recurrence of 
sun-spots, regarded as evidences of solar activity, and the varying 
seasons of our planet, as exhibited by the varying price of corn. 
Herschel's reply was inconclusive; nor has a final solution of the 
related problems yet been obtained. 

In 1 781 he communicated to the Royal Society the first of a 
series of papers on the rotation of the planets and of their several 
satellites. The object which he had in view was not so much to 
ascertain the tiroes of their rotation as to discover whether 
those rotations are strictly uniform. From the result he expected 
to gather, by analogy, the probability of an alteration in the 
length of our own day. These inquiries occupy the greater part of 
seven memoirs extending from 1781 to 1797. While engaged on 
them he noticed the curious appearance of a white spot near to 
each of the poles of the planet Mars. On investigating the inclina- 
tion of its axis to the plane of its orbit, and finding that it differed 
little from that of the earth, he concluded that its changes of 
climate also would resemble our own, and that these white 
patches were probably polar snow. Modern researches have con- 
firmed bis conclusion. He also discovered that, as far as his 
observations extended, the times of the rotations of the various 
satellites round their axes conform to the analogy of our moon by 
equalling the times of their revolution round their primaries. 
Here again we perceive that his discoveries arose out of the 
systematic and comprehensive nature of his investigation. 
Nothing with such a man is accidental. 

In the same year (1781) Herschel made a discovery which 
completely altered the character of his professional life. In the 
course of a methodical review of the heavens he lighted on an 
object which at first he supposed to be a comet, but which, by 
its subsequent motions and appearance, averred itself to be a 
new planet, moving outside the orbit of Saturn. The name of 
Georgium Sidus was by him assigned to it, but has by general 
consent been laid aside in favour of Uranus. The object was 
detected with a 7 -ft. reflector having an aperture of 6J in.; sub- 
sequently, when he had provided himself with a much more 
powerful telescope, of 20 ft. focal length, he discovered, as he 
believed, no less than six Uranian satellites. Modem observations, 
while abolishing four of these supposed attendants, have added 
two others apparently not observed by Herschel Severn 



HERSCHEL, SIR J. F. W. 



on the subject were communicated by him to the Royal Society, 
extending from the date of the discovery in 1781 to 181 5. A 
noteworthy peculiarity in Hersehel's mode of observation led to 
the discovery of this planet. He had observed that the spurious 
diameters of stars are not much affected by increasing the magni- 
fying powers; but that the case is different with other celestial 
objects; hence if anything in his telescopic field struck him as 
unusual in aspect, he immediately varied the magnifying power 
in order to decide its nature. Thus Uranus was discovered ; and 
had a similar method been applied to Neptune, that planet 
would have been found at Cambridge some months before it was 
recognized at Berlin. 

We now come to the beginning of Herschel's most important 
series of observations, culminating in what ought probably to be 
regarded as his capital discovery. A material part of the task 
which he had set himself embraced the determination of the 
relative distances of the stars from our sun and from each other. 
Now, in the course of his scrutiny of the heavens, he had observed 
many stars in apparently* very close contiguity, but often 
differing greatly in relative brightness. He concluded that, on 
the average, the brighter star would be the nearer to us, the 
smaller enormously more distant; and considering that an 
astronomer on the earth, in consequence of its immense orbital 
displacement of some 180 millions of miles every six months, 
would see such a pair of stars under different perspective aspects, 
he perceived that the measurement of these changes should lead 
to an approximate determination of the stars' relative distances. 
He therefore mapped down the places and aspects of all the 
double stars that he met with, and communicated in 1782 and 
1785 very extensive catalogues of the results. Indeed, his very 
last scientific memoir, sent to the Royal Astronomical Society in 
the year 1822, when he was its first president and already in the 
eighty-fourth year of his age, related to these investigations. 
In the memoir of 1 782 he threw out the hint that these apparently 
contiguous stars might be genuine pairs in mutual revolution; 
but he significantly ad^ed that the time had not yet arrived for 
settling the question. Eleven years afterwards (1703). he re- 
measured the relative positions of many such couples, and we 
may conceive what his feelings must have been at finding his 
prediction verified. For he ascertained that some of these stars 
circulated round each other, after the manner required by the 
laws of gravitation, and thus demonstrated the action among the 
distant members of the starry firmament of the same mechanical 
laws which bind together the harmonious motions of our solar 
system. This sublime discovery, announced in 1802, would of 
itself suffice to immortalize his memory. If only he had lived 
long enough to learn the approximate distances of some of 
these bihary combinations, he would at once have been able to 
calculate their masses relative to that of our own sun; and the 
quantities being, as wc now know, strictly comparable, he would 
have found another of his analogical conjectures realized. 

In the year 1782 Herschel was invited to Windsor by 
George III., and accepted the king's offer to become his private 
astronomer, and henceforth devote himself wholly to a scientific 
career. His salary was fixed at £200 per annum, to which an 
addition of £50 per annum was subsequently made for the 
astronomical assistance of his sister. Dr Watson , to whom alone 
the amount was mentioned, made the natural remark, " Never 
before was honour purchased by a monarch at so cheap a rate." 
In this way the great astronomer removed from Bath, first to 
Datchet and soon afterwards permanently to Slough, within easy 
access of his royal patron at Windsor. 

The old pursuits at Bath were soon resumed at Slough, but 
with renewed vigour and without the former professional 
interruptions. The greater part, in fact, of the papers already 
referred to are dated from Datchet and Slough; for the magnifi- 
cent astronomical speculations in which he was engaged, though 
for the most part conceived in the earlier portion of his philo- 
sophical career, required years of patient observation before 
they could be fully examined and realized. 

It was at Slough in 1783 that he wrote his first memorable 
paper on the " Motion of the Solar System in Space,"— a sublime 



393 

speculation, yet through his genius realized by considerations 
of the utmost simplicity. He returned to the same subject 
with fuller details in 1805. It was also after his removal to 
Slough that he published his first memoir on the construction 
of the heavens, which from the first had been the inspiring idea 
of his varied toils. In a long series of remarkable papers, 
addressed as usual to the Royal Society, and extending from 
the year 1 784 to 1818, when he was eighty years of age, he demon- 
strated the fact that our sun is a star situated not far from the 
bifurcation of the Milky Way, and that all the stars visible to 
us lie more or less in clusters scattered throughout a comparatively 
thin, but immensely extended stratum. At one time he imagined 
that his powerful instruments had pierced through this stellar 
stratum, and that he had approximately determined tne form 
of some of its boundaries. In the last of his memoirs, having 
convinced himself of his error, he admitted that to his telescopes 
the Milky Way was " fathomless." On either side of this 
assemblage of stars, presumably in ceaseless motion round their 
common centre of gravity, Herschel discovered a canopy of 
discrete nebulous masses, such as those from the condensation 
of which he suppose^ the whole stellar universe to have been 
formed, — a magnificent conception, pursued with a force of 
genius and put to the practical test of observation with an 
industry almost incredible. 

Hitherto we have said nothing about the great reflecting 
telescope, of 40 ft. focal length and 4 ft. aperture, the construction 
of which is often, though mistakenly, regarded as his chief 
performance. The full description of this celebrated instrument 
will be found in the 85th volume of the Transactions of the Royal 
Society: On the day that it was finished (August 28, 1780) 
Herschel saw at the first view, in a grandeur not witnessed 
before, the Saturnian system with six satellites, five of which 
had been discovered long before by C. Huygens and G. D. 
Cassini, while the sixth, subsequently named Enceladus, he had, 
two years before, sighted by glimpses in his exquisite little 
telescope of 6| in. aperture, but now saw in unmistakable 
brightness with the towering giant he had just completed. On 
the 17th of September he discovered a seventh, which proved 
to be the nearest to the globe of Saturn. It has since received 
the name of Mimas. It is somewhat remarkable that, notwith- 
standing his long and repeated scrutinies of this planet, the 
eighth satellite, Hyperion, and the crape ring should have 
escaped him. 

Herschel married, on the 8th of May 1788, the widow of Mr 
John Pitt, a wealthy London merchant, by whom he had an 
only son, John Frederick William. The prince regent conferred 
a Hanoverian knighthood upon him in 1816. But a far more 
valued and less tardy distinction was the Copley medal assigned 
to him by his associates in the Royal Society in 1781. 

He died at Slough on the 25th of August 1822, in the eighty- 
fourth year of his age, and was buried under the tower of St 
Laurence's Church, Upton, within a few hundred yards of the 
old site of the 40-ft. telescope. A mural tablet on the wall of 
th " " 

Di 

E. 
77 
C. 
Hi 
M 
B\ 
M 



HERSCHEL, 8IR JOHN FREDERICK WILLIAM, Bait. 
(1703-1871), English astronomer, the only son of Sir William 
Herschel, was born at Slough, Bucks, on the 7th of March 1702. 
His scholastic education commenced at Eton, but maternal 
fears or prejudices soon removed him to the house of a private 
tutor. Thence, at the early age of seventeen, he was tent to 
St John's College, Cambridge, and the form and method of the 



HERSCHEL, SIR J. F. W. 



39+ 

mathematical instruction he there received exercised a material 
influence on the whole complexion of his scientific career. In 
due time the young student won the highest academical distinc- 
tion of his year, graduating as senior wrangler in 1813. It was 
during his undergraduateship that he and two of his fellow- 
students who subsequently attained to very high eminence, 
Dean Peacock and Charles Babbage, entered into a compact 
that they would " do their best to leave the world wiser than they 
found it/' — a compact loyally and successfully carried out by 
all three to the end. As a commencement of this laudable 
attempt we find Herschel associated with these two friends in 
the production of a work on the differential calculus, and on 
cognate branches of mathematical science, which changed the 
style and aspect of mathematical learning in England, and brought 
it up to the level of the Continental methods. Two or three 
memoirs communicated to the Royal Society on new applica- 
tions of mathematical analysis at once placed him in the front 
rank of the cultivators of this branch of knowledge. Of these 
his father had the gratification of introducing the first, but the 
others were presented in his own right as a fellow. 

With the intention of being called to fhe bar, he entered his 
name at Lincoln's Inn on the 24th of January 1814, and placed 
himself under the guidance of an eminent special pleader. 
Probably this temporary choice of a profession was inspired 
by the extraordinary success in legal pursuits which had attended 
the efforts of some noted Cambridge mathematicians. Be that 
as it may, an early acquaintance with Dr Wollaston in London 
soon changed the direction of his studies. He experimented 
in physical optics; took up astronomy in 1816; and in 1820, 
assisted by his father, he completed for a reflecting telescope a 
mirror of 18 in. diameter and 20 ft. focal length. This, subse- 
quently improved by his own hands, became the instrument 
which enabled him to effect the astronomical observations 
forming the chief basis of his fame. In 1821-1823 we find him 
associated with Sir James South in the re-examination of his 
father's double stars, by the aid of two excellent refractors, of 
7 and 5 ft. focal length respectively. For this work he was 
presented in 1826 with the Astronomical Society's gold medal; 
and with the Lalande medal of the French Institute in 1825; 
while the Royal Society had in 182 1 bestowed upon him the 
Copley medal for his mathematical contributions to their 
Transactions. From 1824 to 1827 he held the responsible post 
of secretary to that society; and was in 1827 elected to the chair 
of the Astronomical Society, which office he also filled on two 
subsequent occasions. In the discharge of his duties to the last- 
named society he delivered presidential addresses and wrote 
obituary notices of deceased fellows, memorable for their 
combination of eloquence and wisdom. In 1831 the honour of 
knighthood was conferred on him by William IV., and two years 
later he again received the recognition of the Royal Society by 
the award of one of their medals for his memoir " On the In- 
vestigation of the Orbits of Revolving Double Stars." The 
award significantly commemorated his completion of his father's 
discovery of gravitational stellar systems by the invention of a 
graphical method whereby the eye could as it were see the 
two component stars of the binary system revolving under the 
prescription of the Newtonian law. 

Before the end of the year 1833, being then about forty years 
of age, Sir John Herschel had re-examined all his father's double 
stars and nebulae, and had added many similar bodies to his 
own lists; thus accomplishing, under the conditions then pre- 
vailing, the full work of a lifetime. For it should be remembered 
that astronomers were not as yet provided with those valuable 
automatic contrivances which at present materially abridge 
the labour and increase the accuracy of their determinations. 
Equatorially mounted instruments actuated by clockwork, 
electrical chronographs for recording the times of the phenomena 
observed, were not available to Sir John Herschel; and he had 
no assistant. 

His scientific life now entered upon another and very char- 
acteristic phase. The bias of his mind, as he subsequently was 
wont to declare, was towards chemistry and the phenomena 



of light, rather than towards astronomy. Indeed, very shortly 
after taking his degree at Cambridge, he proposed himself as a 
candidate for the vacant chair of chemistry in that university; 
but, as he said with some humour, the result of the election was 
to leave him in a glorious minority of one. In fact Herschel 
had become an astronomer from a sense of duty, and it was by 
filial loyalty to his father's memory that he was now impelled 
to undertake the completion of the work nobly begun at Slough. 
William Herschel had searched the northern heavens; John 
Herschel determined to explore the southern, besides re-explor- 
ing northern skies. " I resolved," he said, " to attempt the 
completion of a survey of the whole surface of the heavens; 
and for this purpose to transport into the other hemisphere the 
same instrument which had been employed in this, so as to give 
a unity to the results of both portions of the survey, and to 
render them comparable with each other." In accordance with 
this resolution, he and his family embarked for the Cape on the 
13th November 1833; they arrived in Table Bay on the 15th 
January 1834; and proceedings, he says, " were pushed forward 
with such effect that on the 22nd of February I was enabled to 
gratify my curiosity by a view of * Cruris, the nebula about 9 
Argus, and some other remarkable objects in the ao-f t. reflector, 
and on the night of the 4th of March to commence a regular 
course of sweeping." 

To give an adequate description of the vast mass of labour com- 
pleted during the next four busy years of his life at Feldhausea 
would require the transcription of a considerable portion of the 
Cate Observations, a volume of unsurpassed interest and importance; 
although it might perhaps be equalled by a judicious selection from 
Sir William's " Memoirs," now scattered through some thirty 
volumes of the Philosophical Transactions, It was published, at 
the sole expense of the late duke of Northumberland, but not till 
1847, nine years after the author's return to England, for the cogent 
reason, that as he said, " The whole of the observations, as well 
as the entire work of reducing, arranging and preparing them for 
the press, have been executed by myself. There are 164 pages of 
catalogues of southern nebulae and clusters of stars. There are then 
careful and elaborate drawings of the great nebula in Orion, and of 
the region surrounding the remarkable star in Argo. The labour 
and the thought bestowed upon some of these objects are almost 
incredible; several months were spent upon a minute spot in the 
heavens containing 1216 stars, but which an ordinary spangle, held 
at a distance of an arm's length, would eclipse. These catalogues 
and charts being completed, he proceeded to discuss their significance. 
He confirmed his father's hypothesis that these wonderf ulmasaes of 
glowing vapours are noj irregularly scattered over the visible heavens, 
but are collected in a sort of canopy, whose vertex is at the pole of 
that vast stratum of stars in which our solar system finds itself buried, 
as Herschel supposed, at a depth not greater than that of the average 
distance from us of an eleventh magnitude star. Then follows tus 
catalogue of the relative positions and magnitudes of the southern 
double stars, to one of which, y Virginia, he applied the beautiful 
method of orbital determination invented by himself, and he had 
the satisfaction of witnessing the fulfilment of his prediction that the 
components would, in the course of their revolution, appear to close up 
into a single star, inseparable by any telescopic power. In the next 
chapter he proceeded to describe his observations on the varying 
and relative brightness of the stars. It has been already detailed 
how his father began his scientific career by similar observations on 
stellar light-fluctuations, and how his remarks culminated years 
afterwards in the question whether the radiative changes of our 
sun, due to the presence or absence of sun-spots, affected our harvests 
and the price of corn. Sir John carried speculation still farther. 
pointing out that variations to the extent of half a magnitude ia 
the sun s brightness would account for those strange alternations 
of semi-arctic and semi-tropical climates which geological researches 
show to have occurred in various regions of our globe. 

Herschel returned to his English home in the spring of 1838. 
As was natural and right, he was welcomed with an enthusiastic 
greeting. By the queen at her coronation -he was created a 
baronet; and, what to him was better than all such rewards, 
other men caught the contagion of his example, and laboured 
in fields similar to his own, with an adequate portion of his success. 

Herschel was a highly accomplished chemist. His discovery 
in 1810 of the solvent power of hyposulphite of soda on the 
otherwise insoluble salts of silver was the prelude to its use 
as a fixing agent in photography; and he invented in 1839, 
independently of Fox Talbot, the process of photography on 
sensitized paper. He was the first person to apply the now 
well-known terms positive and negative to photographic i 



HERSCHELL, BARON 



395 



tod to imprint them upon glass prepared by the deposit of a 
sensitive film. He also paved the way for Sir George Stokes's 
discovery of fluorescence, by his addition of the lavender rays to 
the spectrum, and by his announcement in 1845 of " epipolic dis- 
persion," as exhibited by sulphate of quinine. Several other 
important researches connected with the undulatory theory of 
light are embodied in his treatise on " Light " published in the 
Encyclopaedia metropolitan*!. 

Perhaps no man can become a truly great mathematician or 
philosopher if devoid of imaginative power. John Herschel 
possessed this endowment to a large extent; and he solaced 
his declining years with the translation of the Iliad into verse, 
having earlier executed a similar version of Schiller's Walk. But 
the main work of his later life was the collection of all his father's 
catalogues of nebulae and double stars combined with his own 
observations and those of other astronomers each into a single 
volume. He lived to complete the former, to present it to ihe 
Royal Society, and to see it published in a separate form in the 
Philosophical Transactions, vol ch'v). The latter work he left 
unfinished, bequeathing it, in its imperfect form, to the Astro- 
nomical Society. That society printed a portion of it, which 
serves as an index to the observations of various astronomers on 
double stars up to the year 1866. 

A complete list of his contributions to learned societies will 
be found in the Royal Society's great catalogue, and from them 
may be gathered most of the records of his busy scientific life. 
Sir John Herschel met with an amount of public recognition 
which was unusual in the time of his illustrious father. Naturally 
he was a member of almost every important learned society in 
both hemispheres. For five years he held the same office of 
master of the mint, which more than a century before had 
belonged to Sir Isaac Newton; his friends also offered to propose 
him as president of the Royal Society and again as member of 
parliament for the university of Cambridge, but neither position 
was desired by him. 

In private life Sir John Herschel was a firm and most active 
friend; he had no jealousies; he avoided all scientific feuds; 
he gladly lent a helping hand to those who consulted him in 
scientific difficulties; he never discouraged, and still less dis- 
paraged, men younger than or inferior to himself; he was 
pleased by appreciation of his work without being solicitous for 
applause; it was said of him by a discriminating critic, and 
without extravagance, that " his was a life full of serenity of Ihe 
sage and the docile innocence of a child." 

He died at Collingwood, his residence near Hawkhurst in 
Kent, on the nth of May 1871, in the seventy-ninth year of his 
age, and his remains are interred in Westminster Abbey close to 
the grave of Sir Isaac Newton* 

Besides the laborious Cap* Observations, Sir John Herschel was 
the author of several books, one of which at feast. On the Study 
of Natural Philosophy (1830), possesses an interest which no future 
advances of the subjects on which he wrote can obliterate. In 
1849 came the Outlines of Astronomy, a volume still replete with 
charm and instruction. His articles, " Meteorology," Physical 
Geography," and " Telescope," contributed to the 8th edition of 
the Encyclopaedia Britannka, were afterwards published separately. 
When he was at the Cape he was more than once assisted in the 
attempts there made to diffuse a love of ^knowledge amon£ men not 

ies 

tiy 

ts, 
ch 



HERSCHELL, FARRER HERSCHELL, ist Bason (1837- 
1809), lord chancellor of England, was born on the and of 
November 1837. His father was the Rev. Ridley Haim Herschell, 
a native of Stxzelno, in Prussian Poland, who, when a young 
man, exchanged the Jewish faith for Christianity, took a leading 
part in founding the British Society for the Propagation of the 
Gospel among the Jews, and, after many journeying*, settled 
down to the charge of a Nonconformist chapel near the Edgware 
Road, in London, where he ministered to a large congregation. 
His mother was a daughter of William Mowbray, a merchant of 
Leith. He was educated at a private school and at University 
College, London. In 1857 he took his B.A. degree at the Uni- 
versity of London. He was reckoned the best speaker in the 
school debating society, and he displayed there the same command 
of language and lucidity of thought which were his characteristics 
during his official life. The reputation which Herschell enjoyed 
during his school days was maintained after he became a law- 
student at Lincoln's Inn. In 1858 he entered the chambers of 
Thomas Chitty, the famous common law pleader, father of the 
late Lord Justice Chitty. His fellow pupils, amongst whoa 
were A. L. Smith, afterwards master of the rolls, and Arthur 
Charles, afterwards judge of the queen's bench division, gave 
him the sobriquet of " the chief baron" in recognition of his 
superiority. He subsequently read with James Hannen, after- 
wards Lord Hannen. In i860 he was called to the bar and 
joined the northern circuit, then in its palmy days of undivided- 
ness. For four or five years he did not obtain much work. 
Fortunately, he was never a poor man, and so was not forced 
into journalism, or other paths of literature, in order to earn a 
living. Two of his contemporaries, each of whom achieved 
great eminence, found themselves in like case. One of these, 
Charles Russell, became lord chief justice of England; the other, 
William Court Gully, speaker of the House of Commons. It is 
said that these three friends, dining together during a Liverpool 
assise some years after they had been called, agreed that their 
prospects were anything but cheerful. Certain it is that about 
this time Herschell meditated quitting England for Shanghai and 
practising in the consular courts there. Herschell , however, soon 
made himself useful to Edward James, the then leader of the 
northern circuit, and to John Richard Quain, the leading stuff- 
gownsman. For the latter he was content to note briefs and 
draft opinions, and when, in 1866, Quain donned " silk," it was 
on Herschell that a large portion of his mantle descended. 

In 1872 Herschell was made a queen's counsel. He had all the 
necessary qualifications for a leader— a dear, though not resonant 
voice; a calm, logical mind; a sound knowledge of legal prin- 
ciples; and (greatest gift of all) an abundance of common sense. 
He never wearied the judges by arguing at undue length, and 
he knew how to retire with dignity from a hopeless cause. His 
only weak point was cross-examination. In handling a hostile 
witness he had neither the insidious persuasiveness of a Hawkins 
nor the compelling, dominating power of a Russell. But he 
made up for all by his speech to the jury, marshalling such facts 
as told in his client's favour with the most consummate skill. 
He very seldom made use of notes, but trusted to his memory, 
which he had carefully trained. By this means be was able to 
conceal his art, and to appear less as a paid advocate than as an 
outsider interested in the case anxious to assist the jury in 
arriving at the truth. By 1874 Herschell's business had become 
so good that he turned his thoughts to parliament. In February 
of that year there was a general election, with the result that the 
Conservative party came into power with a majority of fifty. 
The usual crop of petitions followed. The two Radicals (Thompson 
and Henderson) who had been returned for Durham city were 
unseated, and an attack was then made on the seats of two other 
Radicals (Bell and Palmer) who had been returned for Durham 
county. For one of these last Herschell was briefed. He made 
so excellent an impression on the local Radical leaders that they 
asked him to stand for Durham city; and after a fortnight's 
electioneering, he was elected as junior member. Between 1874 
and 1880 Herschell was most assiduous in his attendance in the 
House of Commons. He was not a frequent speaker, but a few 



39* 



HERSCHELL, BARON 



great efforts sufficed in his case" to gain for him a reputation as a 
debater. The best examples of his style as a private member 
will be found in Hansard under the dates 18th February 1876, 
23rd May 1878, 6th May 1879. On the last occasion he carried a 
resolution in favour of abolishing actions for breach of promise of 
marriage except when actual pecuniary loss had ensued, the 
damages in such cases to be measured by the amount of such 
loss. The grace of manner and solid reasoning with which he 
acquitted himself during these displays obtained for him the 
notice of Gladstone, who in 1880 appointed HerscheU solicitor- 
general. 

HerscheU's public services from 1680 to 1885 were of great 
value, particularly in dealing with the " cases for opinion " 
submitted by the Foreign Office and other departments. He was 
also very helpful in speeding government measures through the 
House, notably the Irish Land Act 1881, the Corrupt Practices 
and Bankruptcy Acts 1883, the County Franchise Act 1884 and 
the Redistribution of Seats Act 1885. This last was a bitter pill 
for HerscheU, since it halved the representation of Durham city, 
and so gave him statutory notice to quit. Reckoning on the 
local support of the Cavendish family, he contested the North 
Lonsdale division of Lancashire; but in spite of the powerful 
influence of Lord Hartington, he was badly beaten at the poll, 
though Mr Gladstone again obtained a majority in the country. 
HerscheU now thought he saw the solicitor-generalship slipping 
away from him, and along with it all prospect of high promotion. 
Lord Selborne and Sir Henry James, however, successively 
declined Gladstone'st>ffer pf the Woolsack, and in 1886 HerscheU, 
by a sudden turn of fortune's wheel, found himself in his forty* 
ninth year lord chancellor* 

HerschelTs chancellorship lasted barely six months, for in 
August 1886 Gladstone's Home Rule Bill was rejected in the 
Commons and his administration fell. In August 1892, when 
Gladstone returned to power, HerscheU again became lord 
chancellor. In September 1893, when the second Home Rule 
BiU came on for second reading in the House of Lords, HerscheU 
took advantage of the opportunity to justify the " sudden con- 
version " to Home Rule of himself and his colleagues in 1885 by 
comparing it to the duke of Wellington's conversion to Catholic 
Emancipation in 1829 and to that of Sir Robert Peel to Free 
Trade in 1846. In 1895, however, his second chancellorship 
came to an end with the defeat of the Rosebery ministry. 

Whether sitting at the royal courts in the Strand, on the 
judicial committee of the privy council, or in the House of Lords, 
Lord HerschelTs judgments were distinguished for their acute 
and subtle reasoning, for their grasp of legal principles, and, 
whenever the occasion arose, for their broad treatment of con- 
stitutional and social questions. He was not a profound lawyer, 
bnt his quickness of apprehension was such that it was an 
excellent substitute for great learning. In construing a real 
property will or any other document, bis first impulse was to 
read it by the light of nature, and to decline to be influenced by 
the construction put by the judges on similar phrases occurring 
elsewhere. But when he discovered that certain expressions had 
acquired a technical meaning which could not be disturbed with- 
out fluttering the dovecotes of the conveyancers, he would yield 
to the established rule, even though he did not agree with it. He 
w,as perhaps seen at his judicial best in Vagliano v. Bank of 
England (1891 ) and Allen v. Flood (1898). Latterly he showed a 
tendency, which seems to grow on some judges, to interrupt 
counsel overmuch. The case last mentioned furnishes an 
example of this, The question involved was what constituted a 
molestation of a man in the pursuit of bis lawful calling. At the 
close of the argument of counsel, whom he had frequently 
interrupted, one of their lordships, noted for his pretty wit, 
observed that although there might be a doubt as to what 
amounted to such molestation in point of law, the House could 
well understand, after that day's proceedings, what it was in 
actual practice. In addition to his political and judicial work, 
HerscheU rendered many public services. • In 188S he presided 
over an inquiry directed by the House of Commons with regard to 
the Metropolitan Board of Works. He acted as chairman of two 



royal commissions, one on Indian currency, the other on \ 
tion. He took a great interest in the National Society for the 
Prevention of Cruelty to Children, not only promoting the acts 
of 1889 and 1894, but also bestowing a good deal of time in 
sifting the truth of certain allegations which had been brought 
against the management of that society. In June 1893 be was 
appointed chancellor of the university of London in succession to 
the earl of Derby, and he entered on his new duties with the 
usual thoroughness. "His views of reform," according to 
Victor Dickins, the accomplished registrar of the university, 
" were always most liberal and most frankly stated, though at 
first they were not altogether popular with an important section 
of university opinion. He disarmed opposition by his intellectual 
power, rather than conciliated it by compromise, and sometimes 
was perhaps a little masterful, after a fashion of his own, in his 
treatment of the various burning questions that agitated the 
university during his tenure of office, His characteristic power 
of detachment was well illustrated by his treatment of the 
proposal to remove the university to the site of the Imperial 
Institute at South Kensington. Although he was at that time 
chairman of the Institute, the most irreconcilable opponent of the 
removal never questioned his absolute impartiality." With the 
Imperial Institute HerscheU had been officially connected from 
its inception. He was chairman of the provisional committee 
appointed by the prince of Wales to formulate a scheme for its 
organization, and he took an active part in the preparation of its 
charter and constitution in conjunction with Lord Thring, Lord 
James, Sir Frederick Abel and Mr John Hollams. He was the 
first chairman of its council, and, except during his tour in India 
in 1 888, when he brought the Institute under the notice of the 
Indian authorities, he was hardly absent from a single meeting. 
For his special services in this connexion he was made G.C3. in 
1893, this being the only instance of a lord chancellor being 
decorated with an order. 

In 1897 he was appointed, jointly with Lord Justice CoUins, to 
represent Great Britain on the Venezuela Boundary Commission, 
which assembled in Paris in the spring of 1899. So complicated a 
business involved a great deal of preparation and a careful study 
of maps and historic documents. Not content with this, he 
accepted in 1898 a seat on the joint high commission appointed to 
adjust certain boundary and other important questions pending 
between Great Britain and Canada on the one hand and the 
United States on the other hand. He started for America in 
July of that year, and was received most cordially at Washington. 
His feUow commissioners elected him their president. In 
February 1899, while the commission was in full swing, he had 
the misfortune to slip in the street and in falling to fracture a hip 
bone. His constitution, which at one time was a robust one, 
had been undermined by constant hard work, and proved unequal 
to sustaining the shock. On the 1st of March, only a fortnight 
after the accident, he died at the Shoreham Hotel, Washington, 
a post-mortem examination revealing disease of the heart. Mr 
Hay, secretary of state, at once telegraphed to Mr Choate, the 
United States ambassador in London, the "deep sorrow" felt by 
President McKinley; and Sir Wilfred Laurier said the next day, 
in the parliament chamber at Ottawa, that he regarded HerschelTs 
death " as a misfortune to Canada and to the British Empire." 
A funeral service held in St John's Episcopal Church, Washington, 
was attended by the president and vice-president of the United 
States, by the cabinet ministers, the judges of the Supreme 
Court, the members of the joint high commission, and a large 
number of senators and other representative men. The body 
was brought to London in a British man-of-war, and a second 
funeral service was held in Westminster Abbey before it was 
conveyed to its final resting-place at Tindeton, Dorset, in the 
parish church of which he had been married. HerscheU left a 
widow, granddaughter of Vice-Chancellor Kindersley; a son," 
Richard Farrer (b. 1878), who succeeded him as second baron; 
and two daughters. 

A H reminiscence " of HerscheU by Mr Speaker Gully (Lord Setby) 
will be found in The Lav Quarterly Review for April 1800. 7%* 
Journal of the Society of Comparative Legislation (of which he had been 



.HERSENT— HERTFORD, EARLS OF 



pmfcfcni from to formation ill 1 893) contains, in its part far July 
if the same year, notice* of him by Lord James of Hereford, Lord 
pavey, Mr Victor Williamson (his executor and intimate friend), 
and also by Mr Justice D. J. Brewer and Senator C. W. Fairbanks 
(both of the United States). (M. H. C.) 

HBRSBNT, LOUIS (1777-1860), French painter, was born at 
Paris on the 10th of March 1777, and becoming a pupil of David, 
obtained the Prix de Rome in 1797; in the Salon of 1802 
appeared his 4 * Metamorphosis of Narcissus/' and he continued to 
exhibit with rareinterruptions upto 1831. His most considerable 
works under the empire were " Achilles parting from Briseis," and 
" Atala dying in the arms of Chactas" (both engraved in Laodon's 
Annates iu Mvsie); an "Incident of the Kfe of Fenelon," painted 
in 18 to, found a place at Malmaison.and " Passage of the Bridge 
at Landshut," which belongs to the same date, is now at Versailles. 
Hersent's typkal works, however, belong to the period of the Re- 
storation; " Louis XVI. relieving the Afflicted" (Versailles) and 
" Daphnis and Chloe" " (engraved by Langier and by Gelee) wete 
both in the Salon of 1817; at that of 1819 the " Abdication of 
Gustavus Vasa " brought to Hersent a medal of honour, but the 
picture, purchased by the duke of Orleans, was destroyed at the 
Palais Royal in 1848, and the engraving by Henriquel-Dupont is 
now its sole record. " Ruth," produced in 1822, became the 
property of Louis XVIII., who from the moment that Hersent 
rallied to the Restoration jealously patronised him, made him 
officer of the legion of honour, and pressed his claims at the 
Institute, where he replaced van Spaendonck. He continued in 
favour under Charles a., for whom wasexecuted " Monks of Mount 
St Gotthard," exhibited in 1824. In 1831 Hctsent made his last 
appearance. at the Salon with portraits of Louis Philippe, Marie- 
Am* lie and the duke of Montpensier; that of the king though 
good, is not equal to the portrait of Spontini (Berlin), which is 
probably Hersent's chcj-d'cnmc After this date Hersent ceased 
to exhibit at the yearly salons. Although in 1846 he sent an 
excellent likeness of Delphine Gay and one or two other works to 
the rooms of the Sociite d' Artistes, he could not be tempted 
from his usual reserve even by the international contest of 1855. 
He died on the 2nd of October i860. 

HBRSFELD, a town of Germany, in the Prussian province of 
Hesse-Nassau, is pleasantly situated at the confluence of the 
Gets and Haun with the Fulda, on the railway from Frankfort- 
on-Main to Bebra, 24 ro. N.N.E. of Fulda. Pop. (1905) 8688. 
Some of the old fortifications of the town remain, but the ramparts 
and ditches have been laid out as promenades. The principal 
buildings are the Stadl Kirctte, a beautiful Gothic building, 
erected about 1320 and restored in 1809, with a fine tower and a 
large bell; the old and interesting town hall (Rathaus) and the 
ruins of the abbey church. This church was erected on the site of 
the cathedral in the beginning of the 12th century; it was built 
in the Byzantine style and was burnt down by the French in 1 761 . 
Outside the town are the Frauenberg and the Johannesberg, on 
both of which are monastic ruins. Among the public institutions 
are a gymnasium and a military school. The town has important 
manufactures of doth, leather and machinery: it has also dye- 
works, worsted mills and soap-boiling works. 

Hersfefd owes its existence to the Benedictine abbey (see 
below). It became a town in the 12th century and in 1370 the 
'burghers, having meanwhile shaken off the authority of the 
abbots, placed themselves under the protection of the landgraves 
of Hesse. It was taken and retaken during the Thirty Years' 
War and later it suffered from the attacks of the French. 

The Benedictine abbey of Hersfeld was founded by Lullus, 
afterwards archbishop of Mainz, about 760. It was richly 
endowed by Charlemagne and became an ecclesiastical princi- 
pality in the 12th century, passing under the protection of the 
landgraves of Hesse tn 1423. It was secularized in 1648, having 
been previously administered for some years by a member of the 
ruling family of Hesse. As a secular principality Hersfeld passed 
to Hesse, and with electoral Hesse was united with Prussia in 
1866. In the middle ages the abbey was famous for its library. 

See VfeeNus, Denkmurditkeiten von Hersfeld (Hersfeld, 1888); 
Demote, Naehrichlen umd Urkunden tur Ckrontk von Hersfeld (Hersfeld, 
1891-1901). and P. Hafncr, Die Reicksabtei Hersfeld bis zur Mittc 
des Jjten Jahrkunderts (Hersfeld, 1889). 



397 

HEKJfTAL, or Hbkistal, a town of Belgium, less than 2 m. N. 
of Liege and practically one of iU suburbs. The name is supposed 
to be derived from HeersteUe, i.e. " Permanent Camp." The 
second Pippin was born here, and this mayor of the palace 
acquired the control of the kingdom of the Franks. His grand- 
ton, Pippin the Short, died at Herstal in a.d. 768, and it disputes 
with Aix la Chapelk the honour of being the birthplace of 
Charlemagne. It is now a very active centre of iron and steel 
manufactures. The Belgian national small arms factory and 
cannon foundry are fixed here. Pop. (1004) 20,114. 

HERTFORD, EARLS AND MARQUESSES OP. The English 
earldom of Hertford was held by members of the powerful family 
of Clare from about 1138, when Gilbert de Clare was created 
earl of Hertford, to 1314 when another earl Gilbert was killed 
at Bannockburn. In 1537 Edward Seymour, viscount Beau- 
champ, a brother of Henry VIII.'s -queen, Jane Seymour, was 
created carl of Hertford, being advanced ten years later to the 
dignity of duke of Somerset and becoming protector of England. 
His son Edward (e. 1540-1621) was styled earl of Hertford from 
1547 until the protector's attainder and death in January 1552, 
when the title was forfeited; in 1559, however, he was created 
earl of Hertford. In 1560 he was secretly married to Lady 
Catherine Grey (e. 1 538-1 568), daughter of Henry Grey, duke of 
Suffolk, and a descendant of Henry VII. Queen Elizabeth 
greatly disliked this union, and both husband and wife were 
imprisoned, while the validity of their marriage was questioned. 
Catherine died on the 27th of January 1568 and Hertford on the 
6th of April 1621. Their son Edward, Lord Beauchamp (1561- 
161 2), who inherited his mother's title to the English throne, 
predeceased his father; and the latter was succeeded in the 
earldom by his grandson William Seymour (1588-1660), who 
was created marquess of Hertford in 1640 and was restored to his 
ancestor's dukedom of Somerset in 1660. The title of marquess 
of Hertford became extinct when John, 4th duke of Somerset, 
died in 1675, and the earldom when Algernon, the 7th duke, 
died in February 1750. 

In August 1750 Francis Seymour Conway, 2nd Baron 
Conway (1718-1794), who was a direct descendant of the 
protector Somerset, was created earl of Hertford; this noble- 
man was the son of Francis Seymour Conway (1679-1732), who 
had taken the name of Conway in addition to that of Seymour! 
and was the brother of Field -marshal Henry Seymour Conway. 
Hertford was ambassador to France from 1763 to 1765; was lord- 
lieutenant of Ireland in 1765 and 1766; and lord chamberlain of 
the household from 1766 to 1782. Horace Walpole speaks of bis 
" decorum and piety " and refers to him as a " perfect courtier," 
but says that he had " too great propensity to heap emoluments 
on his children." In 1793 ne became earl of Yarmouth and 
marquess of Hertford, and he died on the 14th of June 1704. His 
son, Francis Ingram Seymour Conway (1743-1822), who was 
known during his father's lifetime as Lord Beauchamp, took a 
prominent part ir the debates of the House of Commons from 
1766 until he succeeded to the marquessate in 1794. He was 
sent as ambassador to Berlin and Vienna in 1 793 and from 1812 
to 1821 he was lord chamberlain. His son Francis Charles, 
the 3rd marquess (1777-1842), was an intimate friend of the 
prince regent, afterwards George IV., and is the original of the 
" Marquis of Steyne " in Thackeray's Vanity Fair and of " Lord 
Monmouth ** in Disraeli's Coningsby. The 4th marquess was his 
son, Richard (1800-1870), whose mother was the great heiress, 
Maria Emily Fagniani, and whose brother was Lord Henry 
Seymour (1805-18 59), the founder of the Jockey Club at Paris. 
When Richard died unmarried in Paris in August 1870 his title 
passed to his kinsman, Francis Hugh George Seymour (1812- 
1884), a descendant of the 1st marquess, whose son, Hugh de 
Grey (b. 1843) became 6th marquess in 1884. The 4th mar- 
quess left his great wealth and his priceless collection of art 
treasures to Sir Richard Wallace (1818-1890), his reputed hatt- 
brother, and Wallace's widow, who died in 1897, bequeathed 
the collection to the British nation. It is now in Hertford 
House, formerly the London residence of the marquesses Of 
Hertford. 



39* 



HERTFORD— HERTFORDSHIRE 



HERTFORD, a market-town and municipal borough, and the 
county town of Hertfordshire, England, in the Hertford parlia- 
mentary division of the county, 24 m. N. from London, the 
terminus of branch lines of the Great Eastern and Great 
Northern railways. Pop. (1901) 9322. It is pleasantly situated 
in the valley of the river Lea. The chief buildings are the modern 
churches of St Andrew and of All Saints, on the sites of old 
ones, a town hall, corn exchange, public library, school of art and 
the old castle, which retains the wall and part of a tower dating 
from the Norman period, and is represented by a picturesque 
Jacobean building of brick, largely modernized. There are 
several educational establishments, including the preparatory 
school for Christ's Hospital, a picturesque building (in great part, 
however, rebuilt) at the east end of the town, Hale's grammar 
school, the Cowper Testimonial school, and a Green-coat school 
for boys and girls. Two miles S.E. is Haileybury College, one of 
the principal public schools of England, founded in 1805 by the 
East India Company for their civil service students, who were 
then temporarily housed in Hertford Castle. The school lies 
high above the Lea valley, towards Hoddesdon, in the midst of a 
stretch of finely-wooded country. Hertford has a considerable 
agricultural trade, and there are makings, breweries, Iron 
foundries, and oriental printing works. The town is governed 
by a mayor, 5 aldermen and 15 councillors. Area, 1x34 
acres. 

Hertford (Hcrutford, Heorotford, Hurtford) was the scene of a 
synod in 673. Its communication with London by way of the 
Lea and the Thames gave it strategic importance during the 
Danish occupation of East Anglia. In 1066 and later it was a 
royal garrison and burgh. It made separate payments for aids 
to the Norman and Angevin kings; and in 1331 was governed by 
a bailiff annually elected by the commonalty. A charter in- 
corporated the bailiffs and burgesses in 1555, and was confirmed 
under Elizabeth and in 1606. A charter of 1680 to the mayor, 
aldermen and commonalty was effective until the Municipal 
Corporation Act. Hertford returned two burgesses to the 
parliament of 1298, and to others until, after 1375/6, such 
right became abeyant, to be restored by order of parliament in 
1623/4. One representative was lost by the Representation 
Act in 1868, and separate representation by the Redistribution 
Act in 1885. A grant of fairs in 1226 probably originated or 
confirmed those held in 133 1 on the feasts of the Assumption and 
of St Simon and St Jude, their vigils and morrows, which fairs 
were confirmed by Elizabeth and Charles II. Another on the 
vigil, morrow and feast of the Nativity of the Virgin was granted 
by Elizabeth: its date was changed to May-day under James I. 
Modern fairs are on the third Saturday before Easter, the 12th of 
May, the 5th of July and the 8th of November. Markets were 
held in 1331 on Wednesday and Saturday; after 1368 on 
Thursday and Saturday; and they returned to Wednesdays and 
Saturdays in 1680. 

HERTFORDSHIRE [Herts], a county of England, bounded 
N. by Cambridgeshire, N.W. by Bedfordshire, E. by Essex, 
S. by Middlesex, and S.W. by Buckinghamshire. The area is 
634-6 sq. m., the county being the sixth smallest in England. 
Its aspect is always pleasant, the surface generally undulating, 
while in some parts, where these undulations form a quick 
succession of hills and valleys, the woodland scenery becomes 
very beautiful, as in the upper Lea valley, in the neighbourhood 
of Tewin near Hertford, and elsewhere. To the north-west and 
north considerable elevations are reached, a line of hills, facing 
north-westward with a sharp descent, crossing this portion of 
the county, and overlooking the flat lands of Bedfordshire and 
Cambridgeshire. They continue the line of the Chiltem Hills 
under the name of the East Anglian Ridge. They exceed 800 ft. 
near Dunstable, sinking gradually north-eastward. These 
uplands are generally bare, and in parts remarkably sparsely 
populated as compared with the home counties at large. In the 
greater part of the county, however, rich arable lands are inter- 
mingled with the parks and woodlands of numerous fine country 
seats, which impart to the county a peculiar luxuriance. Of the 
principal rivers, the Lea, rising beyond Luton in Bedfordshire, 



Clay which occupy the r 

southern part oT the county. On the northern boundary, at the foot 
of the chalk hills, a small strip of Gault Clay and the Upper Greensand 
above it falls Just within the county. The lowest subdivision of the 



enters Hertfordshire near East Hyde, flows SJE. to near Hatfield, 
then E. by N. to Hertford and Ware, whence it bends S. and 
passing along the eastern boundary of the county falls into the 
Thames below London. It receives in its course the Maran, or 
Mimram, the Beane, the Rib and the Stort, all joining oa the 
north side; the Stort for some distance forming the county 
boundary with Essex. The Colne flows through the south- 
western part of the county, to fall into the Thames at Staines. 
It receives the Ver, the Bulbornc and the Chess. The Ivel, 
rising in the N.W. soon passes into Bedfordshire to join the 
Great Oose. To the south of Hatfield, near North Minims, two 
streams of moderate size are lost in pot-holes, except in the 
highest floods. The New River, one of the water supplies of 
London, has its source near Ware, and runs roughly parallel 
with the Lea. Most of the rivers are full of fish, including trout 
in the upper parts (of the Lea and Colne especially), which are 
carefully preserved. 

Geology.— The rocks of Hertfordshire belong to the shallow 
•ynclinc known as the London basin, the beds dipping in a south- 
easterly direction. The two roost important formations are the 
Chalk, which forms the high ground in the north and west; and the 
"* ~ London C" 

y. On tl 

tripofGai 
siust within the county, 
chalk is the Chalk Marl, which with the Totternhoe Scone above it. 
lies at the base of the Chalk escarpment, by Ashwell, Pirtoo and 
Mtswell to Tring. Above these beds, the Lower Chalk, without 
flints, rises up sharply to form the downs which are the easterly 
continuation of the Chiltern Hills. Next comes the Chalk Rock, 
which being a hard bed, lies near the hilltops by Boxmoor, Apotev 
End and near Baldoclc The Upper Chalk slopes southward towards 
the Eocene boundary previously mentioned. The Reading beds 
consist of mottled and yellow clays and sands, the latter are frequently 
hardened into masses made up of pebbles in a siliceous cement* 
known locally as Hertfordshire puddingstone. The London Clay, a 
stiff blue clay which weathers brown, rests nearly everywhere upon the 
Reading beds. Outliers of Eocene rocks rest on the chalk at Mkkle- 
field Green, Sarrat, Bcdmont, &c. The Chalk is often cover e d by 
the Clay- wit h-flints, a detrital deposit, formed of the remnants of 
Tertiary rocks and Chalk. Glacial gravels, clays and loams cover a 
great deal of the whole area, and the Upper Chalk itself has been 
disturbed at Reed and Barley by the .same agency. Chalk was 
formerly used for building purposes; it is now burned for lime. 
Reading beds and London clay are dug for brickmaking at Watford, 
Hertford and Hatfield. Phosphatic nodules have been excavated 
from the base of the Chalk Marl at several places along the outcrop; 
the Marl is worked for cement. 

Climate and Agriculture. — The climate Is mild, dry and 
generally healthy. On this account London physicians were 
formerly accustomed to recommend the county to persons in 
weak health, and it was so much coveted by the noble and 
wealthy as a place of residence that It was a common saying that 
" he who buys a home in Hertfordshire pays two years' purchase 
for the air." Of the total area about four-fifths is under cultiva- 
tion, and of this more than one-third is in permanent pasture. 
The principal grain crop is wheat, occupying about two-fifths of 
the area under corn, but gradually decreasing. The varieties 
mostly grown are white, and they are unsurpassed by those of 
any English county. Wheathampstead on the upper Lea 
receivesJts name from the fine quality of the wheat grown in that 
district. Barley is largely used in the county for malting 
purposes. Vetches are grown for the London stables, and the' 
greater part of the permanent grass is used for hay. There are 
some very rich pastures on the banks of the Stort, and also near 
Rickmansworth on the Colne. Some two-thirds of the area 
occupied by green crops is under turnips, swedes and mangolds, 
many cows being kept for the supply of milk and butter to 
London. The quantity of stock is generally small, but increasing 
except in the case of sheep, of which the numbers have greatly 
decreased. Of cows the most common breed is the Suffolk 
variety; of sheep, Soutbdowns, Wilt shires and a cross between 
Cotteswolds and Leicesters. In the south-west large quantities 
of cherries, apples and strawberries are grown for the London 
market; and on the best soils near London vegetables are forced 
by the aid of manure, and more than one crop is sometimes 
obtained in a year. A considerable industry lies in the growth of 
watercresscs in the pure water of the upper parts of the rivers and 



HERTFORDSHIRE 



399 



the smaller streams. There are a number of rose-gardens and 
nurseries. 

Other Industries. — The manufacturing industries are slight; 
though the great brewing establishments at Watford may be 
mentioned, and straw-plaiting, paper-making, coach-building, 
tanning and brick-making are carried on in various towns. 

Communications. — Owing to its proximity to the metropolis, 
Hertfordshire is particularly well served by railways. On the 
eastern border there is the Great Eastern (Cambridge line) 
with branches to Hertford and to Buntingford. The main line 
of the Great Northern passes through the centre by Hatfield, 
Stevenage and. Hitchin, with branches from Hatfield to Hertford, 
to St Albans and to Luton and Dunstable, and from Hitchin to 
BaJdock, Royston and so to Cambridge. The Midland passes 
through St Albans and Harpenden, with a branch to Hemel 
Hempstead. The London & North-Western traverses the south- 
west by Watford, Berkhampstead and Tring, with branches to 
Rickmans worth and to St Albans. The Metropolitan & Great 
Central joint line serves Rickmansworth, and suburban lines 
of the Great Northern the Barnet district. The existence of 
these communications has combined with the natural attractions 
of the county to cause many villages to become large residential 
centres. Water communications arc supplied from Hertford, 
Ware and Bishop S tort ford, southward to the Thames by the 
Lea and Stort Navigation; and the Grand Junction canal from 
London to the north-west traverses the south-western corner 
of the county by Rickmansworth and Berkhampstead. Three 
great highways from London to the north traverse the county. 
The Holyhead Road passes Chipping Barnet, South Mimms and 
St Albans, quitting the county near Dunstable. The Great 
North Road branches from the Holyhead Road at Barnet, and 
passes Potter's Bar, Hatfield, Stevenage and Baldock, with a 
branch from Welwyn to Hitchin and beyond. Another road 
follows the Lea valley to Ware, whence it runs to Royston, 
being here coincident with the Roman Ermine Street and known 
as. the Old North Road. 

Papulation and Administration. — The area of the ancient 
county is 406,157 acres with a population in 1891 of 320,162, 
and in 1901 of 250,1 52. The area of the administrative county 
is 404,518 acres. The county comprises eight hundreds. The 
municipal boroughs are: Hcmcl Hempstead (11,264), Hertford 
9322), St Albans, a city (16, dig). The other urban districts are: 
Baldock (2057), Barnet (7876), Berkhampstead (Great Berk- 
hampstead, 5140), Bishop Stort ford (7143)* Bushey (4564), 
Cbeshunt (12,292), East Barnet Valley (10,004), Harpenden 
(47'5)i Hitchin (10,072), Hoddesdon (4711), Rickmansworth 
(5627), Royston (3 5 1 7) .Saw bridge worth (2085), Stevenage (3957), 
Tring (4340), Ware (5573) and Watford (29,327). The county 
is in the home circuit, and assizes are held at Hertford. It has 
two courts of quarter-sessions, and is divided into 15 petty- 
sessional divisions. The boroughs of Hertford and St Albans 
have separate commissions of the peace. The total number 
of civil parishes is 158. All the civil parishes within 12 m. of, 
or in which no portion is more than 15 m. from, Charing Cross, 
London, are included in the metropolitan police district. The 
county contains 170 ecclesiastical parishes or districts, wholly or 
in part; it is nearly all in the diocese of St Albans, but small 
parts are in the dioceses of Ely, Oxford and London. It is 
divided into four parliamentary divisions — Northern or Hitchin, 
Eastern or Hertford, Mid or St Albans, Western or Watford, 
each returning one member. There is no parliamentary borough 
within the county. 

History.— Relics of Saxon occupation have been found in 
Hertfordshire for the most part near St Albans and Hitchin. 
The diocesan limits show that part of the shire was included in 
the West Saxon kingdom. The East Saxons, as early as the 
6th century, were settled about Hertford, which in 673 was 
sufficiently important to be the meeting-place of a synod con- 
vened by Theodore, archbishop of Canterbury, while in 675 the 
Witcnagemot assembled at a place which has been identified with 
Hatfield. In the 9th century the district was frequently visited 
by the Danes; and after- the peace of Wed more the country east 



of the Lea was included in the Danelaw; in 9x1 Edward the 
Elder erected forts on both sides of the river at Hertford. 

After the battle of Hastings William advanced on Hertford- 
shire and ravaged as far as Berkhampstead, where the Conquest 
received its formal ratification. In the sweeping confiscation 
of estates which followed, the church was generously endowed, 
the abbey of St Albans alone holding 172 hides, while Count 
Eustace of Boulogne, the chief lay tenant, held a vast fief in the 
north-east of the county. Large estates were held by Geoffrey 
dc Mandeville, and the barony of Peter de Valognes, sheriff of the 
county in 1086, though extending over six counties in the east 
of England, was returned in- 1166 as a Hertfordshire barony. 
Bcrkhampfttead was the head of an honour carved from the 
fief of Robert of Mortain. The Hertfordshire estates, however, 
for the most part changed hands very frequently and the county 
is noticeably lacking in historic families. Edmund Langiey, 
fifth son of Edward III., was born at King's Langiey in this 
county. 

During the war between John and his barons, William, earl of 
Salisbury and FaJkes de Breaut£ had the king's orders to ravage 
Hertfordshire, and in 1216 Hertford Castle was captured and 
Berkhampstead Castle besieged by Louis of France, who had 
come over by invitation of the barons. At the time of the rising 
of 1381 the abbot's tenants broke into the abbey of St Albans and 
forced the abbot to grant them a charter. During t he Wars of 1 he 
Roses, Henry VI. was defeated at St Albans in 1459; at the 
second battle of St Albans the earl of Warwick was defeated by 
Queen Margaret; and in 1471 Edward IV. again defeated the 
earl at Barnet. On the outbreak of the Civil War of the 17th 
century, Hertfordshire joined with Bedfordshire and Essex in 
petitioning for peace, and St Albans again played an important 
part in the struggle, being at different times the headquarters 
of Essex and Fairfax. 

As a shire Hertfordshire is of purely military origin, being the 
district assigned to the fortress which Edward the Elder erected 
at Hertford. It is first mentioned in the Saxon Chronicle in 101 1 . 
At the time of the Domesday Survey the boundaries were ap- 
proximately those of the present day, but part of Mcppershall in 
Bedfordshire formed a detached portion of the shire and is still 
assessed for land and income tax in Hertfordshire. Of the nine 
Domesday hundreds, those of Danaisand Tring were consolidated 
about 1200 under the name of Dacorum; the modern hundred of 
Cashio, from being held by the abbots of St Albans, was known 
as Alba nest on, while the remaining six hundreds correspond 
approximately both m name and extent with those of the present 
day. 

Hertfordshire was originally divided between the dioceses of 
London and Lincoln. In 1291 that part included in the Lincoln 
diocese formed part of the archdeaconry of Huntingdon) and 
comprised the deaneries of Berkhampstead, Hitchin, Hertford and 
Baldock, and the archdeaconry and deanery of St Albans; while 
that part within the London diocese formed the deanery of 
B roughing within the archdeaconry of Middlesex. In 1535 
the jurisdiction of St Albans had been transferred to the Lohdpn 
diocese, the division being otherwise unchanged. In 1846 the 
whole county was placed within the diocese of Rochester and 
archdeaconry of St Albans, and in the next year the deaneries of 
Welwyn, Bennington, Buntingford, Bishop Stortford and Ware 
were created, and that of Braughing abolished. In 1864 the 
archdeaconries of Rochester and St Albans were united under 
the name of the archdeaconry of Rochester and St Albans. In 
1878 the county was placed in the newly created diocese of St 
Albans, and formed the archdeaconry of St Albans, the deaneries 
being unchanged. 

Hertfordshire was closely associated with Essex from the time 
of its first settlement, and the counties paid a joint fee-farm and 
were united under one sheriff until 1 565, the shire-court being held 
at Hertford. The hundred of St Albans was at an early date 
constituted a separate liberty, with independent courts and 
coroners under the control of the abbot; it preserved a separate 
commission of the peace until 1874, when by act of parliament 
the county was arranged in two divisions, the eastern division 



400 



HERTHA— HERTZ, H. R. 



being named Hertford, and the western the liberty of St Albans. 
These divisions have since been abolished. 
. Hertfordshire has always been an agricultural county, with few 
manufactures, and at the time of the Domesday Survey its wealth 
was derived almost entirely from its rural manors, with their 
water meadows, woodlands, fisheries paying rent in eels, and 
water-mills, the shire on its eastern side being noticeably free from 
waste land. In Norman times the woollen trade was considerable, 
and the great corn market at Royston has been famous since the 
reign of Elizabeth. At the time of the Civil War the malting 
industry was largely carried on, and saltpetre was produced in 
the county. In the 17th century Hertfordshire was famous 
for its horses, and the 18th century saw the introduction of 
several minor industries, such as straw-plaiting, paper-making 
and silk weaving. 

In x ago Hertfordshire returned two members to parliament, 
and in 1208 the borough of Hertford was represented. St 
Albans, Bishop Stortford and Bcrkhampstead acquired repre- 
sentation in the 14th century, but from 1375 to 1553 no returns 
were made for the boroughs. St Albans regained representation 
in 1553 and Hertford in 1623. Under the Reform Act of 1832 
the county returned three members. St Albans was dis- 
franchised on account of bribery in 1852. Hertford lost one 
member in 1868, and was disfranchised by the act of 1885. 

Antiquities. — Among the objects of antiquarian interest may 
be mentioned the cave of Royston, doubtless once used as a 
hermitage; Waltham Cross, erected to mark the spot where 
rested the body of Eleanor, queen of Edward I., on its way to 
Westminster for interment; and the Great Bed of Ware referred 
to in Shakespeare's Twelfth NiglU and preserved at Rye House. 
The principal monastic buildings are the noble pile of St Albans 
abbey; the remains of Sopwell Benedictine nunnery near St 
Albans, founded in 1140; the remains of the priory of Ware, 
dedicated to St Francis, and originally a cell to the monastery of 
St Ebrulf at Utica in Normandy; and the remains of the priory 
at Hit chin built by Edward II. for the Carmelites. Among the 
more interesting churches may be mentioned those of Abbots 
Langley and Hemel Hempstead, both of Late Norman archi- 
tecture; Baldock, a handsome mixed Gothic building supposed 
to have been erected by the Knights Templars in the reign of 
Stephen; Royston, formerly connected with the priory of canons 
regular; Hitchin of the 15th century; Hatfield, dating from the 
13th century but in the main later; Bcrkhampstead, chiefly in 
the Perpendicular style, with a tower of the 16th century. 
Sandridgc church shows good Norman work with the use of 
Roman bricks; Wheat hampstead church, mainly very fine 
Decorated, has pre-Norman remains. The remains of secular 
buildings of importance are those of Bcrkhampstead castle, 
Hertford castle, Hatfield palace of the bishops of Ely, the slight 
traces at Bishop Stortford, and the earthworks at Anstey. 
Among the numerous mansions of interest, Rye House, erected in 
the reign of Henry VI., was tenanted by Rumbold, one of the 
principal agents in the plot to assassinate Charles II. Moor 
Park, Rick mans worth, once the property of St Albans abbey, 
was granted by Henry VII. to John de Vere, earl of Oxford, and 
was afterwards the property of the duke of Monmouth, who 
built the present mansion, which, however, was subsequently 
cased with Portland stone and received various other additions. 
Knebworth, the scat of the Lyttons, was originally a Norman 
fortress, rebuilt in the time of Elizabeth in the Tudor style and 
restored in the 19th century. Hatfield House is the scat of the 
marquis of Salisbury; but its earlier history is of great interest, 
as is that of Theobalds near Chcshunt. Panshanger House, until 
recently the principal seat of the Cowpers, is a splendid mansion 
in Gothic style erected at the beginning of the 19th century. The 
manor of Cashiobury House, the scat of the earls of Essex, was 
formerly held by the abbot of St Albans, but the mansion was 
rebuilt in the beginning of the 19th century from designs by 
Wyalt. Gorhambury House, near St Albans, the seat of the earl 
of Verulam, formerly the seat of the Bacons, and the residence of 
the great chancellor, was rebuilt at the close of the 18th century. 
At Kings Langley and Hunsdon were also former royal residences. 



ncy. Historical A ntiquities of Hertfordshire (London. 
1 iishop Stortford, 1826); N. Salmon, History of 

1 mdon, 1728); R. Clutterbuck, History and 

a i County of Hertford (London, 1815-1827); W. 

I of the Hertfordshire Families (London, 1*44); 

\ History of Hertfordshire (London, 1870- 1 Ml); 

History, Hertfordshire (London, 1902, &c); see 
1 1 Hertfordshire, 1572-1634," in HarUian Society's 

i nd various papers in Middlesex and Hertfordshire 

i (1895-1896). which in January 1699 was incor- 

I me Counties Matatine. 

HERTHA, or Nekthus, in Teutonic mythology, the goddess 
of fertility, "Mother Earth." Tacitus states that many Teutonic 
tribes worshipped her with orgies and mysterious rites celebrated 
at night. The chief seat of her cult was an island which has not 
been identified. A single priest performed the service. Her 
veiled statue was moved from place to place by sacred cows on 
which none but the priest might lay hands. At the conclusion of 
the rites the image, its vestments and its vehicle were bathed in 
a lake. 

HERTZ, HEINRICH RUDOLF (1857-1894), German physicist, 
was born at Hamburg on the 2 2nd of February 1 857. On leaving 
school he determined to adopt the profession of engineering, and 
in the pursuance of this decision went to study in Munich in 1877. 
But soon coming to the conclusion that engineering was not his 
vocation he abandoned it in favour of physical science, and in 
October 1878 began to attend the lectures of G. R. Kirchhoff and 
H. von Helmholtz at Berlin. In preparation for these he spent 
the winter of 1877-1878 in reading up original treatises like those 
of Laplace and Lagrange on mathematics and mechanics, and in 
attending courses on practical physics under P. G. von Jolly and 
J. F. W. von Bezold; the consequence was that within a few days 
of his arrival in Berlin in October 1878 he was able to plunge into 
original research on a problem of electric inertia. For the best 
solution a prize was offered by the philosophical faculty of the 
University, and this he succeeded in winning with the paper 
which was published in 1880 on the " Kinetic Energy of Electricity 
in Motion." His next investigation, on " Induction in Rotating 
Spheres," he offered in 1880 as his dissertation for his doctor's 
degree, which he obtained with the rare distinction of summa 
cum laudc. Later in the same year he became assistant to 
Helmholtz in the physical laboratory of the Berlin Institute. 
During the three years he held this position he carried out 
researches on the contact of elastic solids, hardness, evaporation 
and the electric discharge in gases, the last earning him the 
special commendation of Helmholtz. In 1883 he went to Kiel, 
becoming Privatdaenl, and there he began the studies in Maxwell's 
electro-magnetic theory which a few years later resulted in the 
discoveries that rendered his name famous. These were actually 
made between 1885 and 1889, when he was professor of physics 
in the Carlsruhe Polytechnic He himself recorded that their 
origin is to be sought in a prize problem proposed by the Berlin 
Academy of Sciences in 1879, having reference to the experi- 
mental establishment of some relation between electromagnetic 
forces and the dielectric polarization of insulators. Imagining 
that this would interest Hertz and be successfully attacked by 
him, Helmholtz specially drew his attention to it, and promised 
him the assistance of the Institute if he decided to work on the 
subject; but Hertz did not take it up seriously at that time, 
because be could not think of any procedure likely to prove 
effective. It wasof course well known, as a necessity of Maxwell's 
mathematical theory, that the polarization and depolarization of 
an insulator must give rise to the same electromagnetic effects in 
the neighbourhood as a voltaic current in a conductor. The ex- 
perimental proof, however, was still lacking, and though several 
experimenters had come very near its discovery, Hertz was l he first 
who actually succeeded in supplying it, in 1887. Continuing his 
inquiries for the next year or two, he was able to discover the pro- 
gressive propagation of electromagnetic action through space, to 
measure the length and velocity of electromagnetic waves, and to 
show that in the transverse nature of their vibration and their sus- 
ceptibility to reflection, refraction and polarization they are in 
complete correspondence with the waves of light and heat. The 
result^ was in Helmholtz's words, to establish beyond doubt thai 



HERTZ, H.— HERTZBERG 



401 



efdmary light consists of electrical vibrations in an all-pervading 
ether which possesses the properties of an insulator and of a 
magnetic medium. Hertz himself gave an admirable account of 
the significance of his discoveries in a lecture on the relations 
between light and electricity, delivered before the German Society 
for the Advancement of Natural Science and Medicine at Heidel- 
berg in September 1889. Since the time of these early experi- 
ments, various other modes of detecting the existence of electric 
waves have been found out in addition to the spark-gap which 
be first employed, and the results of his observations, the earliest 
interest of which was simply that they afforded a confirmation of 
an abstruse mathematical theory, have been applied to the 
practical purposes of signalling over considerable distances 
(see Telegraphy, Wireless). In 1889 Herts was appointed to 
succeed R. J. E. Clausius as ordinary professor of physics in the 
university of Bonn. There he continued his researches on the 
discharge of electricity in rarefied gases, only just missing the 
discovery of the X-rays described by W. C. ROntgen a few years 
later, and produced his treatise on the Principles of Mechanics. 
This was his last work, for after a long illness he died at Bonn on 
the 1st of January 1 894. By his premature death science lost one 
of her most promising disciples. Helmholtz thought him the one 
of all his pupils who had penetrated farthest into his own circle of 
scientific thought, and looked to him with the greatest confidence 
for the further extension and development of his work. 
' Hertz's scientific papers were translated Into English by Professor 
D. E. Jones, and published in three volumes: Electric Waves (1893), 
Miscellaneous Papers (1896), and Principles of Mechanics (1899). 
The preface contributed to the first of these by Lord Kelvin, and the 
introductions to the second and third by Professors P. E. A. Lenard 
and Helmholtz, contain many biographical details, together with 
statements of the scope and significance of his investigations. 

* HERTZ, HBNIUK (1797-1870), Danish poet, was born of 
Jewish parents in Copenhagen on the 25th of August 1798. In 
1817 he was sent to the university. His father died in his 
infancy, and the family property was destroyed in the bombard- 
ment of 1807. The boy was brought up by his relative, M. L. 
Nathanson, a well-known newspaper editor. Young Hertz 
passed his examination in law in 1825. But his taste was all for 
polite literature, and in 1826-1827 two plays of his were produced, 
A/> Burchardi and his Famtly and Love and Policy; in 1828 
followed the comedy of Flyttedogen, In 1830 be brought out 
what was a complete novelty in Danish literature, a comedy in 
rhymed verse, A mor's Strokes of Genius. In the same year Hertz 
published anonymously Gengangerbrevene, or Letters from a 
Ghost, which he pretended were written by Baggescn, who had 
died in 1826. The book was written in defence of J. L. Heiberg, 
and was full of satirical humour and fine critical insight. Its 
success was overwhelming; but Hertz preserved his anonymity, 
and the secret was not known until many years later. In 2832 
he published a didactic poem, Nature and Art, and Pour Poetical 
Epistles. A Day on the Island of Als was his next comedy, followed 
in 1835 by The Only Fault. Hertz passed through Germany and 
Switzerland into Italy in 1833; he spent the winter there, and 
returned the following autumn through France to Denmark. In 
1836 his comedy of The Savings Bank enjoyed a great success. 
But it was not till 1837 that he gave the full measure of his genius 
in the romantic national drama of Svend Dyrings Hus, a beautiful 
and original piece. His historical tragedy Valdcmar Atterdag was 
not so well received in 1839; but in 1845 he achieved an immense 
success with bis lyrical drama Kong Rent's Datter (Ring Rene's 
Daughter), which has been translate?* into almost every European 
language. To this succeeded the tragedy of Ninon in 1848, the 
romantic comedy of TonieUa in 1849, A Sacrifice m 1853, The 
Youngest in 1854.- His lyrical poems appeared in successive 
collections, dated 1832, 1840 and 1844. From 1858 to 1859 he 
edited a literary journal entitled Weekly Leaves. His last drama, 
Three Days in Padua, was produced in 1869, and he died on 
the 25th of February of the next year. 

«■ Hertz is one of the first of Danish lyrical poets. His poems 
are full of colour and passion, his versification has more witch- 
craft in it than any other poet's of his age, and his style is grace 
itself. He has all the sensuous fire of Keats without his proclivity 



to the antique. As a romantic dramatist he is scarcely less 
original. He has bequeathed to the Danish theatre, in Svend 
Dyrings Hus and King Renfs Daughter, two pieces which have 
become classic. He is a troubadour by instinct; he has little 
or nothing of Scandinavian local colouring, and succeeds best 
when he is describing the scenery or the emotions of the glowing 
south. _ 

His Dramatic Works (18 vols.) were "published at Copenhagen in 
1854-1873; and hi* Poems (4 vols.) in 1851-1869. 

HERTZBERG, EWALD FRIEDRICH, Count von (1725-1795), 
Prussian statesman, who came of a noble family which had been 
settled in Pomerania since the .13th century, was born at Lottin, 
in that province, on the 2nd of September 1725. After 1739 he 
studied, chiefly classics and history at the gymnasium at Stettin, 
and in 1742 entered the university of Halle as a student of juris- 
prudence, becoming in due course a doctor of laws in 1745. In 
addition to this principal study, he was also interested while at 
the university in historical and philosophical (Christian Wolff) 
studies. A first thesis for his doctcrate, entitled Jus publicum 
Brandenburgicum, was not printed, because it contained a 
criticism of the existing condition of the state. Shortly after- 
wards Hertzberg entered the government service, in which hi 
was first employed in the department of the state archives (of 
which he became director in 1750), soon after in the foreign 
office, and finally in 1763 as chief minister (Cabinet sminister). 
In 1752 he married Baroness Marie von Knyphausen, a marriage 
which was happy, but childless. _ 

For more than forty years Hertzberg played an active part 
in the Prussian foreign office. In this capacity he had a decisive 
influence on Prussian policy, both under Frederick the Great and 
Frederick William II. At the beginning of the Seven Years' 
War (1756) he took part as a political writer in the HohcnzoIIcnr- 
Habsburg quarrel, both in his Ursachen, die S.K.M. in Preussen 
bewogen haben, sick wider die Absichten des Wienerischen Hofes 
zu setstn und deren AusfUhrung zuvorzukommen (" Motives which 
have induced the king of Prussia to oppose the intentions of the 
court of Vienna, and to prevent them from being carried into 
effect "), and in hhMemoireraisonnSsurlaconduitedescours de 
Vienne et de Saxe, based on the secret papers taken by Frederick 
the Great from the archives of Dresden. After the defeat at 
Kolin (1757) he hastened to Pomerania in order to organize the, 
national defence there and collect the necessary troops for the 
protection of the fortresses of Stettin and Colberg. In the 
same year he conducted the peace negotiations with Sweden, 
and was of great service in bringing about the peace of Huberts- 
burg (1763), on the conclusion of which the Ling received him 
with the words, " I congratulate you. *. You have made peace 
as I made war, one against many." 

In the later years, too, of Frederick the Great's reign, Hertzberg 
played a considerable part in foreign policy. In 1772, in a 
memoir based upon comprehensive historical studies, he defended 
the Prussian claims to certain provinces of Poland. He also took 
part successfully as a publicist in the negotiations concerning the 
question of the Bavarian succession (1 778) and those of the peace 
of Teschen (1779)- But in 1780 he failed to uphold Prussian 
interests at the election of the bishop of Munster. In 1784 
appeared Hertzberg's memoir containing a thorough study of the 
Fiirstenbund. He championed this latest creation of Frederick 
the Great's mainly with a view to an energetic reform of the 
empire, though the idea of German unity was naturally still 
far from his mind. In 1785 followed " An explanation of the 
motives which have led the king of Prussia to propose to the other 
high estates of the empire an association for the maintenance of 
the system of the empire" {ErklSrung der Ursachen, welche S.M. 
in Preussen bewogen haben, ihren hohen MitsltLnden des Reichs 
cine Association zur Erhaltung des Rcichssy stems antutragen). 
By upholding the Fttrstenbund Hertzberg made many enemies, 
prominent among whom was the king's brother, Prince Henry. 
Though the Fiirstenbund failed to effect a reform of the empire, 
it at any rate prevented the fulfilment of Joseph II.'s old desire 
for the incorporation of Bavaria with Austria. The last act of 
state in which Hertzberg took part under Frederick the Great 



402 



HERTZEN 



was the commercial treaty concluded in 1785 between Prussia 
and the United States. 

With Frederick, especially in his later years, Hertzberg stood 
in very intimate personal relations and was often the king's guest 
at Sans-Souci. Under Frederick William II. his influential 
position at the court of Berlin was at first unshaken. The king 
at once received him with favour, as is clearly proved by HerU- 
berg's elevation to the rank of count in 1786; and Mirabeau would 
never have attacked him with such violence in his Secret History 
of the Court of Berlin, which appeared in 1788, if he had not 
seen in him the most powerful man after the king. In this attack 
Mirabeau seems to have been influenced by Hertzberg's personal 
enemies at the court. Hertzberg's political system remained 
on the whole the same under Frederick William II. as it had 
been under his predecessor. It was mainly characterized by a 
sharp opposition to the house of tfabsburg and by a desire to 
win for Prussia the support of England, a policy supported by 
him in important memoirs of the years 1786 and 1787. His 
diplomacy was directed also against Austria's old ally, France. 
Hence it was chiefly owing to Hertzberg that in 1787, in spite of 
the king's unwillingness at first, Prussia intervened in Holland 
in support of the stadtholder William V. against the demo- 
cratic French party (see Holland: History). The success of 
this intervention, which was the practical realization of a plan 
very characteristic of Hertzberg, marks the culminating point in 
his career. 

But the opposition between him and the new king, which had 
already appeared at the time of the conclusion of the triple 
alliance between Holland, England and Prussia, became more 
marked in the following years, when Hertzberg, relying upon this 
alliance, and in conscious imitation of Frederick II.'s policy at the 
time of the first partition of Poland, sought to take advantage of 
the entanglement of Austria with Russia in the war with Turkey 
to secure for Prussia an extension of territory by diplomatic 
intervention. According to his plan, Prussia was to offer ber 
mediation at the proper moment, and in the territorial readjust- 
ments that the peace would bring, was to receive Danzig and 
Thorn as her portion. Beyond this he aimed at preventing the 
restoration of the hegemony of Austria in the Empire, and 
secretly cherished the hope of restoring Frederick the Great's 
Russian alliance. 

. With a curious obstinacy he continued to pursue these aims 
even when, owing to military and diplomatic events, they were 
already partly out of date. His personal position became 
increasingly difficult, as deep-rooted differences between him and 
the king were revealed during these diplomatic campaigns. 
Hertzberg wished to effect everything by peaceful means, while 
Frederick William II. was for a time determined on war with 
Austria. As regards Polish policy, too, their ideas came into 
conflict, Hertzberg having always been openly opposed to the 
total annihilation of the Polish kingdom. The same is true of the 
attitude of king and minister towards Great Britain. At the con- 
ferences at Rcichenbach in the summer of 1700, this opposition 
became more and more acute, and Hertzberg was only with 
difficulty persuaded to come to an agreement merely on the 
basis of the status quo, as demanded by Pitt. The king's renuncia- 
tion of any extension of territory was in Hertzberg's eyes 
impolitic, and this view of his was later endorsed by Bismarck. 
A letter which came to the eyes of the king, in which 
Hertzberg severely criticized the king's foreign policy, and 
especially his plans for attacking Russia, led to his dismissal on 
the 5th of July 1791. He afterwards made several attempts to 
exert an influence over foreign affairs, but in vain. The king 
showed himself more and more personally hostile to the ex- 
minister, and in later years pursued Hertzberg, now quite 
embittered, with every kind of petty persecution, even ordering 
his letters to be opened. 

Even in his literary interests Hertzberg found an adversary in 
the ungrateful king, for Frederick William, to give one instance, 
made it so difficult for him to use the archives that in the end 
Hertzberg entirely gave up the attempt. He found, however, 
some recompense for all his disillusionment and discouragement 



in learning, and, Wilhelm von Humboldt excepted, he was the 
most learned of all the Prussian ministers. As a member of the 
Berlin Academy especially, and, from 1 786 onwards, as its curator, 
Hertzberg carried on a great and valuable activity in the world of 
learning. His yearly reports dealt with history, statistics and 
political science. The most interesting is that of 1784: Sur U 
forme (Us gouvernt$iumts t et quelle est la mtilUure. This is directed 
exclusively against the absolute system (following Montesquieu), 
upholds a limited monarchy, and is in favour of extending to 
the peasants the right to be represented in the diet. He spoke 
for the last time in 1 793 on Frederick the Great and the advantages 
of monarchy. After 1783 these discourses caused a great sensa- 
tion, since Hertzberg introduced into them a review of the 
financial situation, which in the days of absolutism seemed an 
unprecedented innovation. Besides this, Hertzberg exerted 
himself as an academician to change the strongly Frenchcharacter 
of the Academy and make it into a truly German institution. He 
showed a keen interest in the old German language and literature. 
A special " German deputation " was set aside at the Academy 
and entrusted with the drawing up of a German grammar and 
dictionary. He also stood in very dose relations with many of 
the German poets of the time, and especially with Daniel 
Schubart. Among the German historians in whom he took a great 
interest, he had the greatest esteem for Pufendorf. He was 
equally concerned in the improvement of the state of education. 
In 1780 he boldly took up the defence of German literature, 
which had been disparaged by Frederick the Great in his famous 
writing Dc la lilUrature allemande. 

Hertzberg's frank and honourable nature little fitted him to be 
a successful diplomatist; but the course of history has justified 
many of his aims and ideals, and in Prussia his memory is 
honoured. He died at Berlin on the 22nd of May 1705. 



Pi h 

nil t 

for 1903. Q. Hx.) 

HERTZEN, ALEXANDER (1813-1870), Russian author, was 
born at Moscow, a very short time before the occupation of that 
city by the French. His father, Ivan Yakovlef , after a personal 
interview with Napoleon, was allowed to leave, when the invaders 
arrived, as the bearer of a letter from the French to the Russian 
emperor. His family attended him to the Russian lines. Then 
the mother of the infant Alexander (a young German Protestant 
of Jewish extraction from Stuttgart, according to A. van 
Wurzbach), only seventeen years old, and quite unable to apeak 
Russian, was forced to seek shelter for some time in a peasant's 
hut. A year later the family returned to Moscow, where Hertaen 
passed his youth— remaining there, after completing his studies 
at the university, till 1834, when he -was arrested and tried on a 



HERULI 



+03 



charge of having assisted, with some other* youths, at a festival 
during which verses by Sokolovsky, of a nature uncomplimentary 
to the emperor, were sung. The special commission appointed to 
try the youthful culprits found him guilty, and in 1835 he was 
banished to Viatka. There he remained till the visit to that 
city of the hereditary grand-duke (afterwards Alexander II.), 
accompanied by the poet Joukofsky, led to his being allowed to 
quit Viatka for Vladimir, where he was appointed editor of the 
official gazette of that city. In 1S40 he obtained a post in the 
ministry of the interior at St Petersburg; but in consequence of 
having spoken too frankly about a death due to a police officer's 
violence, he was sent to Novgorod, where he led an official life, 
with the title of " state councillor," till 184a. In 1846 his father 
died, leaving him by his will a very large property. Early in 
i«47 he left Russia, never to return. From Italy, on hearing of 
the revolution of 1848, he hastened to Paris, whence he after- 
wards went to Switzerland. In 1852 he quitted Geneva for 
London, where he settled for some years. In 1864 he returned to 
Geneva, and after some time went to Paris, where he died on the 
2 1 st of January 1870. 

His literary career began in 1842 with the publication of an 
essay , in Russian, on Dilettantism in Science, under the pseudonym 
of " Iskander," the Turkish form of his Christian name — con- 
victs, even when pardoned, not being allowed in those days to 
publish under their own names. His second work, also in Russian, 
was his Letters on the Study of Nature (1845-1846). In 1847 
appeared his novel Kto Vinovat? (Whose Fault?), and about the 
same time were published? in Russian periodicals the stories 
which were afterwards collected and printed in London in 1854, 
under the title of Prervannuie Rasskazui (Interrupted Tales). 
In 1850 two works appeared, translated from the Russian 
manuscript, Vom anderen Ufer (From another Shore) and Lettres 
dt France el d 1 1 talk. In French appeared also his essay Du 
Developpement des idles ftvolutionnaires en Russie, and his 
Memoirs, which, after being printed in Russian, were translated 
under the title of Le Monde russe el la Revolution (3 vols., i860- 
1862), and were in part translated into English as My Exile to 
Siberia (a vols., 1855). From a literary point of view his most 
important work is Kto Vinovat? a story describing how the 
domestic happiness of a young tutor, who marries the unacknow- 
ledged daughter of a Russian sensualist of the old type, dull, 
ignorant and genial, is troubled by a Russian sensualist of the 
new school, intelligent, accomplished and callous, without there 
being any possibility of saying who is most to be blamed for the 
tragic termination. But it was as a political writer that Hertzen 
gained the vast reputation which he at one time enjoyed. Having 
founded in London his " Free Russian Press," of the fortunes of 
which, during ten years, he gave an interesting account in a 
book published (in Russian) in 1863, he issued from it a great 
number of Russian works, all levelled against the system of 
government prevailing in Russia. Some of these were essays, 
such as his Baptized Property, an attack on serfdom; others were 
periodical publications, the P.olyarnaya Zvyezda (or Polar Star), 
the Kolokol (or Bell), and the Colosa iz Rossii (or Voices from 
Russia). The Kolokol soon obtained an immense circulation, and 
exercised an extraordinary influence. For three years, it is 
true, the founders of the " Free Press " went on printing, " not 
only without selling a single copy, but scarcely being able to get 
a single copy introduced into Russia "; so that when at last a 
bookseller bought ten shillings' worth of Baptized Property, the 
half-sovereign was set aside by the surprised editors in a special 
place of honour. But the death of the emperor Nicholas in 1855 
produced an entire change. Hertzes 's writings, and the journals 
he edited, were smuggled wholesale into Russia, and their words 
resounded throughout that country, as well as all over Europe. 
Their influence became overwhelming. Evil deeds long hidden, 
evil-doers who had long prospered, were suddenly dragged into 
light and disgrace. His bold and vigorous language aptly 
expressed the thoughts which had long been secretly stirring 
Russian minds, and were now beginning to find a timid utterance 
at home. For some years his influence in Russia was a living 
force, the circulation of his writings was a vocation zealously 



pursued. Stories tell how on one occasion a merchant, who had 
bought several cases of sardines at Nijni-Novgorod, found that 
they contained forbidden print instead of fish, and at another 
time a supposititious copy of the Kolokol was printed for the 
emperor's special use, in which a telling attack upon a leading 
statesman, which had appeared in the genuine number, was 
omitted. At length the sweeping .changes introduced by 
Alexander II. greatly diminished the need for and appreciation 
of Hertzen's assistance in the work of reform. The freedom he 
had demanded for the serfs was granted, the law-courts he had so 
long denounced were remodelled, trial by jury was established, 
liberty was to a great extent conceded to the press. It became 
clear that Hertzen's occupation was gone. When the Polish 
insurrection of 1863 broke out, and he pleaded the insurgents' 
cause, his reputation in Russia received its death-blow. From 
that time it was only with the revolutionary party that he was in 
full accord. 

In 1873 a collection of his works in French was commenced in 
Paris. A volume of posthumous works, in Russian, was published 
at Geneva in 1870. His Memoirs supply the principal information 
about his life, a sketch of which appears also in A. von Wurabach's 
Zeilgenossen. pt. 7 (Vienna, 1871). See also the Revue des deux 
mondes for July 15 and Sept. 1, 1854. Kto Vinovat? has been trans- 
lated into German under the title of Wet ist schuld ? in Wolffsohn's 
Russlands Nowellendichter, vol. iii. The title of My Exile in Siberia 
is misleading; he was never in that country. (W. R. S.-R.) 

HERULI, a Teutonic tribe which figures prominently in the 
history of the migration period. The name does not occur in 
writings of the first two centuries a.d. Where the original home 
of the Heruli was situated is never clearly stated. Jordanes says 
that they had been expelled from their territories by the Danes, 
from which it may be inferred that they belonged either to what 
is now the kingdom of Denmark, or the southern portion of the 
Jutish peninsula. They are mentioned first in the reign of 
Gallienus (260-268), when we find them together with the Goths 
ravaging the coasts of the Black Sea and the Aegean. Shortly 
afterwards, in a.d. 289, they appear in the region about the mouth 
of the Rhine. During the 4th century they frequently served 
together with the Batavi in the Roman armies. In the 5th 
century we again hear of piratical incursions by the Heruli In the 
western seas. At the same time they had a kingdom in central 
Europe, apparently in or round the basin of the Elbe. Together 
with the Thuringi and Warni they were called upon byTheodoric 
the Ostrogoth about the beginning of the 6th century to form 
an alliance with him against the Frankish king Clovis, but very 
shortly afterwards they were completely overthrown in war by 
the Langobardi. A portion of them migrated to Sweden, where 
they settled among the Gdtar, while others crossed the Danube 
and entered the Roman service, where they are frequently 
mentioned later in connexion with the Gothic wars. After the 
middle of the 6th century, however, their name completely 
disappears. It is curious that in English, Frankish and Scandin- 
avian works they are never mentioned, and there can be little 
doubt that they were known, especially among the western 
Teutonic peoples, by some other name. Probably they are 
identical either with the North Suabi or ^'th the Iuti. The 
name Heruli itself is identified by many with the A.S. eorlas 
(nobles), O.S. erlos (men), the singular of which (erilaz) frequently 
occurs in the earliest Northern inscriptions, apparently as a title 
of honour. The Heruli remained heathen until the overthrow 
of their kingdom, and retained many striking primitive customs. 
When threatened with death by disease or old age, they were 
required to call in an executioner, who stabbed them on the pyre. 
Suttee was also customary. They were entirely devoted to war- 
fare and served not only in the Roman armies, but also in 
those of all the surrounding nations. They disdained the use of 
helmets and coats of mail, and protected themselves only with 
shields. 

SeeGeorgiusSyncellus; Mamertinus Paneg. Maximi; Ammianus 
Marcelltnus; Zosimus i. 39; Idatius, Chronica; Jordanes, De 
origine Getarum; Procopius, esp. BeUum Goticum, ii. 1 4 f.; Bettum 
Persteum, K. 25; Paufus Diaconus. Hist. Langobardorum, i. 20; 
K. Zeuss, Die Deutscken und die Nachbarstamme, pp. 476 ff. (M unich, 
1837). ' fr C. M. B.) 



4°+ 



HERVAS Y PSNDURO— HERVEY OF ICKWORTH 



HBRVAs Y PANDURO, LORENZO (1735-1809). Spanish 
philologist, was born at Horcajo (Cuenca) on the xotb of May 
1735. He joined the Jesuits on the 20th of September 174s 
and in course of time became successively professor of philosophy 
and humanities at the seminaries of Madrid and Murcia, When 
the Jesuit order was banished from Spain in 1767, Herv&s settled 
at Forli, and devoted himself to the first part of his Idea &d- 
V Universo (22 vols., 1778-1792). Returning to Spain in 1708, 
he published his famous Catdlogo de las lenguas de las nacioncs 
conociias (6 vols., 1800-1805), in which he collected the philo- 
logical peculiarities of three hundred languages and drew up 
grammars of forty languages. In 1802 he was appointed 
librarian of the Quirinal Palace in Rome, where he died on the 24th 
of August x 809. Max M Oiler credits him with having anticipated 
Humboldt, and with making " one of the most brilliant dis- 
coveries in the history of the science of language " by establishing 
the relation between the Malay and Polynesian family of speech. 

HERVEY, JAMES (1714-1758), English divine, was born at 
Hardingstone, near Northampton, on the 26th of February 1714, 
and was educated at the grammar school of Northampton, and. 
at Lincoln College, Oxford. Here he came under the influence 
of John Wesley and the Oxford methodists; ultimately, however, 
while retaining his regard for the men and his sympathy with 
their religious aims, he adopted a thoroughly Calvinistic creed, 
and resolved to remain in the Anglican Church. Having taken 
orders in 1737, he held several curacies, and in 1752 succeeded 
his father in the family livings of Weston Fa veil and Collingtree. 
He was never robust, but was a good parish priest and a zealous 
writer. His style is often bombastic, but he displays, a rare 
appreciation of natural beauty, and his simple piety made him 
many friends. His earliest work, Meditations and Contempla- 
tions, said to have been modelled on Robert Boyle's Occasional 
Reflexions on various Subjects, within fourteen years passed 
through as many editions, 'f heron and Aspasio, or a series of 
Letters upon the most important and interesting Subjects, which 
appeared in 1 755, and was equally well received, called forth some 
adverse criticism even from Calvinists, on account of tendencies 
which were considered to lead to antinomianiam, and was strongly 
objected to by Wesley in his Preservative against unsettled Notions 
in Religion. Besides carrying into England the theological 
disputes to which the Marrow of Modern Divinity had given rise 
in Scotland, it also led to what is known as the Sandemanian 
controversy as to the nature of saving faith. ^Hervey died on 
the 25th of December 1758. ; 

A " new and complete " edition of his Works, with a memoir, 
appeared in 1797. See also Collection of the Letters of James Heryey, 
to which is prefixed an account of his Life and Death, by Dr Birch 
(1760). 

HERVEY DE SAINT DENYS, MARIE JEAN LEON, Maxquxs 
o' (1823-1892), French Orientalist and man of letters, was born 
in Paris in 1823. He devoted himself to the study of Chinese, 
and in 1 85 1 published his Recherches sur V agriculture et V horti- 
culture des Chinois, in which he dealt with the plants and animals 
that might be acclimatized in the West. At the Paris Exhibition 
of 1867 he acted as commissioner for the Chinese exhibits; in 
1874 be succeeded Stanislas Julien in the chair of Chinese at 
the College de France; and in 1878 he was elected a member of 
the Academie des Inscriptions ct de Belles-Let trcs. His works 
include Poisies de Vtpoque des Tang (1862), translated from the 
Chinese; Ethnographic des peuples Strangers d la Chine, translated 
from Ma-Touan-Lin (1876-1883); Li-Sao (1870), from the 
Chinese; Mtmoires sur les doctrines religieuse; de Confucius 
et de Vicole des lettres (1887); and translations of some Chinese 
stories not of classical interest but valuable for the light they 
throw on oriental custom. Hervey de Saint Denys also trans- 
lated some works from the Spanish, and wrote a history of the 
Spanish drama. He died in Paris on the 2nd of November 1892. 

HERVEY OP ICKWORTH, JOHN HERVEY, Baron (1606- 
i743)i 1 English statesman and writer, eldest son of John, 1st earl 
of Bristol, by his second marriage, was bom on the 13th of 
October 1606. He was educated at Westminster school and at 
Clare Hall, Cambridge, where he took his M.A. degree in 1715. 



In 17x6 his father sent him to Paris, and thence to Hanover to 
pay his court to George I. He was a frequent visitor at the 
court of the prince and princess of Wales at Richmond, and in 
1720 he married Mary Lepell, who was one of the princess's 
ladies-in-waiting, and a great court beauty. In x 7 23 he received 
the courtesy title of Lord Hervey on the death of his half-brother 
Carr, and in 1725 he was elected M.P. for Bury St Edmunds. He 
had been at one time on very friendly terms with Frederick,' 
prince of Wales, but from 2731 he quarrelled with him, apparently 
because they were rivals in the favour of Anne Vane. These 
differences probably account for the scathing picture he draws 
of the prince's callous conduct. Hervey had been hesitating 
between William Pulteney (afterwards earl of Bath) and Walpole, 
but in 1730 he definitely took sides with Walpole, of whom be 
was thenceforward a faithful adherent. He was assumed by 
Pulteney to be the author of Sedition and Defamation iisplay'd 
with a Dedication to the patrons of The Craftsman ( 1 73 1 ) . Pulteney, 
who, up to this time, had been a firm friend of Hervey, replied 
with A Proper Reply to a late Scurrilous Libel, and the quarrel 
resulted in a duel from which Hervey narrowly escaped with his 
life. Hervey is said to have denied the authorship of both the 
pamphlet and its dedication, but a note on the MS. at Ick worth, 
apparently in his own hand, states that he wrote the latter. He 
was able to render valuable service to Walpole from his influence 
over the queen. Through him the minister governed Queen 
Caroline and indirectly George II. Hervey was vice-chamberlain 
in the royal household and a member of the privy council. In 
1733 he was called to the House of Lords by writ in virtue of his 
father's barony. In spite of repeated requests he received no 
further preferment until after 1740, when he became lord privy 
seal. After the fall of Sir Robert Walpole he was dismissed 
(July 1742) from his office. An excellent political pamphlet, 
Miscellaneous Thoughts on the present Posture of Foreign end 
Domestic Affairs, shows that he still retained his mental vigour, 
but he was liable to epilepsy, and his weak appearance and rigid 
diet were a constant source of ridicule to his enemies. He 
died on the 5th of August 2743. He predeceased his father, .but 
three of his sons became successively earls of Bristol. 

Hervey wrote detailed and brutally frank memoirs of trie court 
of George II. from 1727 to 1737. He gave a most unflattering 
account of the king, and of Frederick, prince of Wales, and their 
family squabbles. For the queen and her daughter, Princess 
Caroline, he had a genuine respect and attachment, and the 
princess's affection for him was commonly said to be the reason 
for the close retirement in which she lived after his death. The 
MS. of Hervey's memoirs was preserved by the family, but his son, 
Augustus John, 3rd earl of Bristol, left strict injunctions that 
they should not be published until after the death of George HX 
In 1848 they were published under the editorship of J. W. Croker, 
but the MS. had been subjected to a certain amount of mutilation 
before it came into his hands. Croker also softened in some cases 
the plainspokenness of the original. Hervey's bitter account of 
court life and intrigues resembles in many points the memoirs of 
Horace Walpole, and the two books corroborate one another in 
many statements that might otherwise have been received with 
suspicion. 

Until the publication of the Memoirs Hervey was chiefly known 
as the object of savage satire on the part of Pope, in whose work* 
he figured as Lord Fanny, Sponts, Adonis and Narcissus. Th* 
quarrel is generally put down to Pope's jealousy of Hervey's 
friendship with Lady Mary Wortiey Montagu. In the first of the 
Imitations of Horace, addressed to William Fortescuc, "Lord 
Fanny " and " Sappho " were generally identified with Hervey 
and Lady Mary, although Pope denied the personal intention. 
Hervey had already been attacked in the Dunciad and the 
Bathos, and he now retaliated. There is no doubt that he had a 
share in the Verses to the Imitator of Horace (1732) *nd it b 
possible that he was the sole author. In the Letter from a noble- 
man at Hampton Court to a Doctor of Divinity (1733), he scoffed at 
Pope's deformity and humble birth. Pope's reply was a Letter to 
a Noble Lord, dated November 1733, and the portrait of Sponts in 
the Epistle to Dr Arbuthnol (1735), which forms the prologue to 



HERVIEU— HBRZL 



40$ 



the satire*. Many of the insinuation* and intuits contained in it 
are borrowed from Pultency's libel. The malicious caricature of 
Sponis does Hervey great injustice, and he is not much better 
treated by Horace Walpole, who in reporting his death in a letter 
(14th of August 1743) to Horace Mann, said he bad outlived his 
last inch of character. Nevertheless his writings prove him to 
have been a man of real ability, condemned by Walpole 's tactics 
and distrust of able men to spend his life in court intrigue, the 
weapons of which, it must be owned, he used with the utmost 
adroitness. His wife Lady Hervey (Molly Lepell] (1 700-1 768), 
of whom an account is to be found in Lady Louisa Stuart's 
AnetdoUs, was a warm partisan of the Stuarts. She retained her 
wit and charm throughout her life, and has the distinction of 
being the recipient of English verses by Voltaire. 

See Hervey '• Memoirs of Ike Court of George II., edited by J. W. 
Croker (1848); and an article by G. F. Russell Barker in the Diet. 
Nat. Biog. (vol. xxvi, 1891). Besides the Memoirs he wrote numerous 
p olitica l pamphlets, and some occasional verses. 

HBRVIBU. PAUL ( 1857- - ), French dramatist and novelist, 
was born at. NeuiUy (Seine) on the 2nd of November 1857. He 
was called to the bar in 1877, and, after serving some time in the 
office of the president of the council, he qualified for the diplomatic 
service, but resigned on his nomination in 1881 toa secretaryship 
in the French legation in Mexico. He contributed novels, tales 
and essays to the chief Parisian papers and reviews, and published 
a series of clever novels, including Ulnccmnu (1887), FHrt ( 1800), 
L'ExorcisU (1891), Feints for e«*-«i£f»ei( 1893), an ironical study 
written in the form of letters, and V Armature (1805), dramatized 
in 1005 by Eugene Brieux. But his most important work con- 
sists of a series of plays: Lex ParoUs ratent (Vaudeville, 17th of 
November 189a); Les Tenailtes (Theatre Francais, 28th of 
September 1805); LaLeide Vhomm (Theatre Francais, 15th of 
February 1897); La Course du flambeau (Vaudeville, 17th of 
April 1 001); Point de lendemain (Odeon, 18th of October 1001), a 
dramatic version of a story by Vhraut Denon; U£nir-.ne (Theatre 
Francais, 5th of November 1901); TfUreigne de Mirieourt 
(Theatre Sarah Bernhardt, 23rd of September 1902); Le Dtdole 
(ThsAtre Francais, 19th of December 1003), and Le RtocU (Thefttre 
Francais, 18th of December 1005). These plays are built upon a 
severely logical method, the mechanism of which is sometimes so 
evident as to destroy the necessary sense of iHuaion. The dosing 
words of La Course du flambeau— "Pour mafiOe, faihUma mere " 
— are an example of his selection of a plot representing an extreme 
theory. The riddle in L*£ngme (staged at Wyndham's Theatre, 
London, March tst 1902, as Caesar** W ife) is, however, worked out 
with great art, and Le Dtdale, dealing with the obstacles to the 
remarriage of a divorced woman, is reckoned among the master- 
pieces of the modern French stage. He was elected to the 
French Academy in 1000. 

See A. Binet, in L' Annie psyehologique, vol. x. Hervicu*s ThUtre 
was published by Lcmcrre (3 vols., 1900-1904)* 

HERWARTH VON BITTENFELD, KARL EBERHARD (1796- 
1884), Prussian general field-marshal, came of an aristocratic 
family which had supplied many distinguished officers to the 
Prussian army. He entered the Guard infantry in 181 z, and 
served through the War of Liberation (1813-15), distinguishing 
himself at Llitxen and Paris. During the years of peace he rose 
slowly to high command. In the Berlin revolution of 1848 
be was on duty at the royal palace as colonel of the 1st Guards. 
Major-general in 1852, and lieutenant-general in 1856, he received 
the grade of general of infantry and the command of the VHth 
( Westphalian) Army Gups in i860. In the Danish War of 1864 
he succeeded to the command of the Prussians when Prince 
Frederick Charles became commander-in-chief of the Allies, 
and it was under his leadership that the Prussians forced the 
passage into Alsen on the 29th of June. In the war of 1866 
Herwarth commanded the " Army of the Elbe " which overran 
Saxony and invaded Bohemia by the valley of the Elbe and Iser. 
His troops won the actions of HOhnerwasser and Mttnchengriitz, 
and at Kdniggr&tz formed the right wing of the Prussian army. 
Herwarth himself directed the battle against the Austrian left 
flank. In 1870 he was not employed in the field, but was in 
charge of the scarcely less important business of 01 



and forwarding aH the reserves and material required for the 
armies in France. In 1871 his great services were recognized 
by promotion to the rank of field-marshaL The rest of his life 
was spent in retirement at Bonn, where he died in 1884. Since 
1889 the 13th (ut Westphalian) Infantry has borne his name. 

See G. F. M. Herwarth von BiUenfetd (Munster, 1896). 

HERWEGH, OEORO (1817-1875), German political poet, was 
born at Stuttgart on the 31st of May 1817, the son of a restaurant 
keeper. He was educated at the gymnasium of his native city, 
and in 1835 proceeded to the university of Tubingen as a theo- 
logical student, where, with a view to entering the ministry, 
he entered the protestant theological seminary. But the strict 
discipline was distasteful; he broke the rules and was expelled 
in 1836. He next studied law, but having gained the interest 
of August Lewald (1 793-1871) by his literary ability, he returned 
to Stuttgart, where Lewald obtained for him a journalistic post. 
Called out for military service, he had hardly joined his regiment 
when he committed an act of flagrant insubordination, and fled 
to Switzerland to avoid punishment. Here he published his 
Cedichte eines Lebendigen (1841), a volume of political poems, 
which gave expression to the fervent aspirations of the German 
youth of the day. The work immediately rendered him famous, 
and although confiscated, it soon ran through several editions. 
The idea of the book was a refutation of the opinions of Prince 
Piickler-Muskau (q.v.) in his Briefe eines Verstorbcnen. He 
next proceeded to Paris and in 1842 returned to Germany, 
visiting Jena, Leipzig, Dresden and Berlin — a journey which was 
described as being a " veritable triumphal progress." His 
military insubordination appears to have been forgiven and 
forgotten, for in Berlin King Frederick William IV. had him 
introduced to him and used the memorable words: " ick liebe 
einc gesinnungsvoUe Opposition" ("I admire an opposition, when 
dictated by principle.") Herwcgh next returned to Paris, where 
he published in 1844 the second volume of* his GedichU eines 
Lebendigcn, which, like the first volume, was confiscated by the 
German police.- At the head of a revolutionary column of German 
working men, recruited in Paris, Herwcgh took an active part 
in the South German rising in 1848; but his raw troops were 
defeated on the 27th of April at Schopfheim in Baden and, after 
a very feeble display of heroism, he just managed to escape to 
Switzerland, where he lived for many years on the proceeds of his 
literary productions. He was later (1866) permitted to return to 
Germany, and died at Lichtenthal near Baden-Baden on the 7th 
of April 1875. A monument was erected to his memory there 
in 1904. Besides the above-mentioned works, Herwegh pub- 
lished Einttndzwanxig Bogen aus der Schweiz (1843), and transla- 
tions into German of A. de Lamartine's works and of seven of 
Shakespeare's plays. Posthumously appeared Neue Ccdichie 
(1877). 

Herwejjh's correspondence was published by his son Marcel in 
1898. See also Johannes Scherr, Ceorg Herwegh', literarische 
nnd poliHsche Blaster (1843); and the article by Franz Muncker in 
the AUgcmeine deutsche Biographie. 

HERZBERG, a town of Germany, in the Prussian province of 
Hanover, situated under the south-western declivity of the Harz, 
on the Sieber, 25 m. N.W. from Nordhausen by the railway to 
Osterode-Hildesheim. Pop. (1905) 3896. It contains an Evan- 
gelical and a Roman Catholic church, and a botanical garden, 
and has manufactures of cloth and cigars, and weaving and 
dyeing works. The breeding of canaries is extensively carried on 
here and in the district. On a hill to the south-west of the town 
lies the castle of Herzberg, which in 1 157 came into the possession 
of Henry the Lion, duke of Saxony, and afterwards was one of 
the residences of a branch of the house of Brunswick. 

HERZBERG, a town of Germany, in the Prussian province 
of Saxony, on the Schwarze Elster, 25 m. S. from Juterbog 
by the railway Berlin-Roderau-Dresden. It has a church 
(Evangelical) dating from the 13th century and a medieval 
town hall. Its industries include the founding and turning of 
metal, agricultural machinery and boot-making. Pop. (1905) 
4043. 

HERZL, THEODOR (1860-1904), founder of modern political 
Zionism (f*.)» was bora in Budapest on the and of May i860. 



406 



HERZOG, H— HESILRIGB 



and died at Edlach on the 3rd of July 1004. The greater part of 
his career was associated with Vienna, where he acquired high 
repute as a literary journalist. He was also a dramatist, and 
apart from his prominence as a Jewish Nationalist would have 
found a niche in the temple of fame. All his other claims to 
renown, however, sink into insignificance when compared with his 
work as the reviver of Jewish hopes for a restoration to political 
autonomy. Heral was stirred by sympathy for the misery of 
Jews under persecution, but be was even more powerfully moved 
by the difficulties experienced under conditions of assimilation. 
Modern anti-Semitism, he felt, was both like and unlike the 
medieval. The old physical attacks on the Jews continued in 
Russia, but there was added the reluctance of several national 
groups in Europe to admit the Jews to social equality. Herzl 
believed that the humanitarian hopes which inspired men at the 
end of the 18th and during the larger part of the 19th centuries 
had failed. The walls of the ghettos had been cast down, but 
the Jews could find no entry into the comity of nations. The 
new nationalism of 1848 did not deprive the Jews of political 
rights, but it denied them both the amenities of friendly inter- 
course and the opportunity of distinction in the university, the 
army and the professions. Many Jews questioned this diagnosis, 
and refused to see in the new anti-Semitism (q.v.) which spread 
over Europe in 188 1 any more than a temporary reaction against 
the cosmopolitanism of the French Revolution. In 1806 Herzl 
published his famous pamphlet " Der Judenstaat." Holding 
that the only alternatives for the Jews were complete merging 
by intermarriage or self-preservation by a national re-union, 
he boldly advocated the second course. He did not at first insist 
on Palestine as the new Jewish home, nor did he attach himself 
to religious sentiment. The expectation of a Messianic restora- 
tion to the Holy Land has always been strong, if often latent, 
in the Jewisn consciousness. But Herzl approached the subject 
entirely on its secular side, and his solution was economic and 
political rather than sentimental. He was a strong advocate for 
the complete separation of Church and State. The influence 
of Herzl's pamphlet, the progress of the movement he initiated, 
the subsequent modifications of his plans, are told at length in 
the article Zionism. 

His proposals undoubtedly roused an extraordinary enthusiasm, 
and though he almost completely failed to win to hiscaust the 
classes, he rallied the masses with sensational success. He un- 
expectedly gained the accession of many Jews by race who were 
indifferent to the religious aspect of Judaism, but he quite failed 
to convince the leaders of Jewish thought, who from first to last 
remained (with such conspicuous exceptions as Nordau and 
Zangwill) deaf to his pleading. The orthodox were at first cool 
because they had always dreamed of a nationalism inspired by 
messianic ideals, while the liberals had long come to dissociate 
those univcrsalistic ideals from all national limitations. Herzl, 
however, succeeded in assembling several congresses at Basel 
(beginning in 1897), and at these congresses were enacted remark- 
able scenes of enthusiasm for the cause and devotion to its leader. 
At all these assemblies the same ideal was formulated: " the 
establishing for the Jewish people a publicly and legally assured 
home in Palestine." Herzl's personal charm was irresistible. 
Among his political opponents he had some close personal friends. 
His sincerity, his eloquence, his tact, his devotion, his power, 
were recognized on all hands. He spent his whole strength in the 
furtherance of his ideas. Diplomatic interviews, exhausting 
journeys, impressive mass meetings, brilliant literary propa- 
ganda — all these methods were employed by him to the utmost 
limit of self-denial. In 1001 he was received by the sultan; the 
pope and many European statesmen gave him audiences. The 
British government was ready to grant land for an autonomous 
settlement in East Africa. This last scheme was fatal to Herzl's 
peace of mind. Even as a temporary measure, the choice of an 
extra- Palestinian site for the Jewish state was bitterly opposed 
by many Zionists; others (with whom Herzl appears to have 
sympathized) thought that as Palestine was, at all events 
momentarily, inaccessible, it was expedient to form a settlement 
elsewhere. Herzl's health had been failing and he did not long 



survive the initiation of the somewhat embittered " territorial " 
controversy. He died in the summer of 1904, amid the con- 
sternation of supporters and the deep grief of opponents of his 
Zionistic aims. 

Herzl was beyond question the most influential Jewish person- 
ality of the 19th century. He had no profound insight into the 
problem of Judaism, and there was no lasting validity in his 
view that the problem — the thousands of years' old mystery- 
could be solved by a retrogression to local nationality. But he 
brought home to Jews the perils that confronted them; he 
compelled many a " semi-detached " son of Israel to rejoin the 
camp; he forced the "assimilationists " to realize their position 
and to define it; his scheme gave a new impulse to "Je*isb 
culture," including the popularization of Hebrew as a living 
speech; and he effectively roused Jews all the world over to an 
earnest and vital interest in their present and their future. 
Herzl thus left an indelible mark on his time, and his renown is 
assured whatever be the fate in store for the politica] Zionism 
which he founded and for which he gave his life. (I. A.) 

HERZOG, HANS (1810-1894), Swiss general, was born at 
Aarau. He became a Swiss artillery lieutenant in 1840, and then 
spent six years in travelling (visiting England among other 
countries), before he became a partner in his father's business in 
1846. In 1847 he saw his first active service (as artillery captain) 
in the short Swiss Sonderbund war. In i860 he abandoned 
mercantile pursuits for a purely military career, becoming 
colonel and inspector-general of the Swiss artillery. In 1870 he 
was commander-in-chief of the Swiss army, which guarded the 
Swiss frontier, in the Jura, during the Franco-German War, and 
in February 1871, as such, concluded the Convention of Verrieres 
with General Clinchant for the disarming and the interning of the. 
remains of Bourbaki's army, when it took refuge in Switzerland. 
In 1875 he became the commander-in-chief of the Swiss artillery, 
which he did much to reorganize, helping also in the reorganiza- 
tion of the other branches of the Swiss army. He died in 1804 at 
his native town of Aarau. (W. A. B. C.) 

HERZOG, JOHAKN JAKOB (1805-1882), German Protestant 
theologian, was born at Basel on the 12th of September 1805. 
He studied at Basel and Berlin, and eventually (1854) settled at 
Erlangen as professor of church history. He died there on the 
30th of September 1882, having retired in 1877. His most note* 
worthy achievement was the publication of the RealencyUop&di* 
fiir protesUtntiscke Tkeotcgie und Kirckt (1853-1868, 22 vols.), 
of which be undertook a new edition with G. L. PUtt (1836- 
1880) in 1877, and after Plitt's death with Albert Hauck 
(b. 1845). Hauck began the publication of the third edition in 
1806 (completed in 22 vols., 1909). 

HU other works include Jok. Cabin (1843), Leben Okotampads 

^1843), Die romaniscken Waldenser (1853), Abriss der gesamten 
ZirckengesckickU (3 vols., 1876-1882, and ed., G. Koffmane, Leipzig, 
1890-1892). 

HBSBKIEL, JOHAHN GEORG LUDWIG (1810-1874), German 
author, was born on the 12th of August 18x9 > n Halle, where his 
father, distinguished as a writer of sacred poetry, was a Lutheran 
pastor. Hesekiel studied history and philosophy in Halle, Jena 
and Berlin, and devoted himself in early life to journalism and 
literature. In 1848 he settled in Berlin, where he lived until his 
death on the 26th of February 1874, achieving a considerable re- 
putation as a writer and as editor of the Neue Preussisehe Zeiiung, 
He attempted many different kinds of literary work, the most 
ambitious being perhaps his patriotic songs Preussenlieder,o('whidkk 
he published a volume during the revolutionary excitement of 
1848-1849. Another collection— Neue Prcussenlieder—ippcattd 
in 1864 after the Danish War, and a third in t&jo—Gegcn die 
Frotuosen, Preussisehe Kriegs- und Kimgslicder. Among his 
novels may be mentioned Unter dem Eisemakn (1864) and Der 
SckuUkciss vom Zeyst (1875). The best known of his works is his 
biography of Prince Bismarck (Das Buck vom Ftirsten Bismarck) 
(3rd ed.,1873; English trans, by R. H. Mackenzie). 

HESILRIGB (or Heselsjc), 8IR ARTHUR, 2nd Bart. (d. 1661), 
English parliamentarian, was the eldest son of Sir Thomas 
HesUrige, 1st baronet (c. 1622), of Nosdey, Leicestershire, t 



HESIOD 



407 



member of a very indent family settled in Northumberland 
and Leicestershire, and of Frances, daughter of Sir William 
Gorges, of Aldcrton, Northamptonshire. He early imbibed 
strong puritanical principles, and showed a special antagonism 
to Laud. He sat for Leicestershire in the Short and Long 
Parliaments in 1640, and took a principal part in Strafford's 
attainder, the Root and Branch Bill and the Militia Bill of the 
7th of December 1641, and was one of the five members im- 
peached on the 3rd of January 264a. He showed much activity 
in the Great Rebellion, raised a troop of horse for Essex, fought 
at EdgehiU, commanded in the West under Waller, being nick- 
named his fidus Achates, and distinguished himself at the head 
of his cuirassiers, " The Lobsters/' at Lansdown on the 5th 
of July 1643, at Roundway Down on the 13th of July, at both 
of which battles be was wounded, and at Cheriton, March 29th 
1644. On the occasion of the breach between the army and 
the parliament, Hesilrige supported the former, took Cromwell's 
part in his dispute with Manchester and Esses, and on the passing 
of the Self-denying Ordinance gave up his commission and 
became one of the leaders of the Independent party in parlia- 
ment. On the 30th of December 1647 he was appointed 
governor of Newcastle, which he successfully defended, besides 
defeating the Royalists on Jhe 2nd of July 1648 and regaining 
Tynemouth. In October he accompanied Cromwell to Scotland, 
and gave him valuable support in the Scottish expedition in 
1650. Hesilrige, though he approved of the king's execution, 
had declined to act as judge on his triaL He was one of the 
leading men in the Commonwealth, but Cromwell's expulsion 
of the Long Parliament threw him into antagonism, and he 
opposed the Protectorate and refused to pay taxes. He was 
returned for Leicester to the parliaments of 2654, 1656 and 
1659, but was excluded from the two former. He refused a 
seat in the Lords, whither Cromwell sought to relegate him, 
and succeeded in again obtaining admission to the Commons 
in January 1658. On Cromwell's death Hesilrige refused support 
to Richard, and was instrumental in effecting his downfall. 
He was now one of the most influential men in the council 
and in parliament. He attempted to maintain a republican 
parliamentary administration, " to keep the sword subservient 
to the civil magistrate," and opposed Lambert's schemes. 
On the latter succeeding in expelling the parliament, Hesilrige 
turned to Monk for support, and assisted his movements by 
securing Portsmouth on the 3rd of December 1650. He marched 
to London, and was appointed one of the council of state on the 
2nd of January 1660, and on the 1 ith of February a commissioner 
for the army. He was completely deceived by Monk, and trust- 
ing to bis assurance of fidelity to " the good old cause " consented 
to the retirement of his regiment from London. At the Restora- 
tion his life was saved by Monk's intervention, but be was 
imprisoned in the Tower, where he died on the 7th of January 
1661. Clarendon describes Hesilrige as " an absurd, bold man." 
He was rash, "hare-brained," devoid of tact and had Utile 
claim to the title of a statesman, but his energy in the field 
and in parliament was often of great value to the parliamentary 
cause. He exposed himself to considerable obloquy by his 
exactions and appropriations of confiscated landed property, 
•though the accusation brought against him by John Lilburne 
was examined by a parliamentary committee and adjudged 
to be false. Hesilrige married U) Frances, daughter of Thomas 
Elmes of LUford, Northamptonshire, by whom he had two sons 
and two daughters, and (2) Dorothy, sister of Robert Grcville, 
and Lord Brooke, by whom he had three sons and five daughters. 
The family was represented in 1007 by his descendant Sir Arthur 
Grey Hazlerigg of Noseley, 13th Baronet. 

Authorities,— Article on Hesilrige by C. H. Firth in the Diet, 
of Nat. Biography, and authorities there quoted; Early History 
of the Family of Hesilrige. by W. G. D. Fletcher; Col. of State Papers, 
Domestic. 1631-1664. where there are a large number of important 
references, as also in Hist, MSS.. Comm. Series. MSS. of Earl 
Cowper, Duke of Leeds and Duke of Portland-, Egerton MSS. 2618, 
Harleian 7001 f. 198, and in the Sloane, Stowe and Additional collec- 
tions in the British Museum; also S. R. Gardiner, Hist, of England, 
Hist, of the Great Civil War and Commonwealth; Clarendon's History, 
Stats Papers and Col. of State Papers, J. L. Sanford's Studies of the 



Great Rebellion. His life is written by Noble in \b* House of Cromwell, 
i. 403. For his public letters and speeches in parliament see tat 
catalogue of the British Museum. 

HESIOD, the father of Greek didactic poetry, probably 
flourished during the 8th century B.C. His father had migrated 
from the Aeolic Cyme in Asia Minor to Boeotia; and Hesiod 
and his brother Penes were born at Ascra, near mount Helicon 
(Works and Days, 635). Here, as he fed his father's flocks, 
he received his commission from the Muses to be their prophet 
and poet — a commission which he recognized by dedicating to 
them a tripod won by him in a contest of song (see below) at 
some funeral games at Chalcis in Euboea, still m existence at 
Helicon in the age of Pausanias {Theogony, 20-34, W. and D., 
656; Pausanias ix. 38. 3). After the death of his father Hesiod 
is said to have left his native land in disgust at the result of a 
law-suit with his brother and to have migrated to Naupactus. 
There was a tradition that he was murdered by the sons of his 
host in the sacred enclosure of the Nemean Zeus at Oeneon in 
Locris (Thucydides fix. 96; Pausanias ix. 31); his remains 
were removed for burial by command of the Delphic oracle to 
Orchomenus in Boeotia, where the Ascraeans settled after the 
destruction of their town by the Thespians, and where, according 
to Pausanias, his grave was to be seen. 

Hesiod *s earliest poem, the famous Works and Days, and accord- 
ing to Boeotian testimony the only genuine one, embodies the 
experiences of his daily life and work, and, Interwo ve n with 
episodes of fable, allegory, and personal history, forms a sort 
of Boeotian shepherd's calendar. The first portion is an ethical 
enforcement of honest labour and dissuasive of strife and idle- 
ness (1-383); the second consists of hints and rules as to hus- 
bandry (384-764); and the third is a religious calendar of the 
months, with remarks on the days most lucky or the contrary 
for rural or nautical employments. The connecting link of the 
whole poem is the author's advice to his brother, who appears 
to have bribed the corrupt judges to deprive Hesiod of his already 
scantier inheritance, and to whom, as he wasted his substance 
lounging in the agora, the poet more than once returned good 
for evil, though he tells him there will be a limit to this un- 
merited kindness. In the Works and Days the episodes which 
rise above an even didactic level are the " Creation and Equip- 
ment of Pandora," the " Five Ages of the World "and the much- 
admired " Description of Winter " (by some critics judged post- 
Hesiodic). The poem also contains the earliest known fable 
in Greek literature, that of " The Hawk and the Nightingale." 
It is in the Works and Days especially that we glean indications 
of Hesiod's rank and condition in life, that of a stay-at-home 
farmer of the lower class, whose sole experience of the sea was 
a single voyage of 40 yds. across the Euripus, and an old-fashioned 
bachelor whose misogynic views and prejudice against matrimony 
have been conjecturaJly traced to bis brother Perses having 
a wife as extravagant as himself. 

The other poem attributed to Hesiod or his school which 
has come down in great part to modern times is The Theogony, 
a work of grander scope, inspired alike by older traditions and 
abundant local associations. It is an attempt to work into 
system, as none had essayed to do before, the floating legends of 
the gods and goddesses and their offspring. This task Herodotus 
(ii. 53) attributes to Hesiod, and he is quoted by Plato in 
the Symposium (178 b) as the author of the Theogony. The 
first to question his claim to this distinction was Pausanias, 
the geographer (a.d. 200). The Alexandrian grammarians had 
no doubt on the subject; and indications of the hand that 
wrote the Works and Days may be found in the severe strictures 
on women, in the high esteem for the wealth-giver Plutus 
and in coincidences of verbal expression. Although, no doubt, 
of Hesiodic origin, in its present form it is composed of different 
recensions and numerous later additions and interpolations. 
The Theogony consists of three divisions — (1) a cosmogony, 
or creation; (2) a theogony proper, recounting the history of 
the dynasties of Zeus and Cronus; and (3) a brief and abruptly 
terminated heroogony, the starting-point not improbably of 
the supplementary poem, the jcardXcyot, or " Lists of Women " 



408 



HESPERIDES^HESS 



who wedded immortals, of which all bat a few fragments are 
lost.' The proem (i-i 1 6) addressed to the Heliconian and Pierian 
muses, is considered to have been variously enlarged, altered 
and arranged by successive rhapsodists. The poet has inter- 
woven several episodes of rare merit, such as the contest of 
Zeus and the Olympian gods with the Titans, and the description 
of the prison-house in which the vanquished Titans are confined, 
with the Giants for keepers and Day and Night for janitors 
(735 seq.). 

The only other poem which has come down to us under Hesiod's 
name is the Shield of Heracles, the opening verses of which are 
attributed by a nameless grammarian to the fourth book of 
Eoiai. The theme of the piece is the expedition of Heracles 
and Iolaus against the robber Cycnus; but its main object 
apparently is to describe the shield of Heracles U4*-3*7)« It 
is clearly an imitation of the Homeric account of the shield of 
Achilles (Iliad, xviii. 479) and is now generally considered 
spurious. Titles and fragments of other lost poems of Hesiod 
have come down to us: didactic, as the Maxims of C heir on; 
genealogical, as the Aegimius, describing the contest of that 
mythical ancestor of the Dorians with the Lapithae; and 
mythical, as the Marriage of Ceyx and the Descent of Theseus 
to Hades. 

Recent editions of Hesiod include the 'Ky&v *Ofttfoov koX 
*H<no5ov, the contest of song between Homer and Hesiod at the 
funeral games held in honour of King Amphidamas at Chalcis. 
This little tract belongs to the time of Hadrian, who is actually 
mentioned as having been present during its recitation, but is 
founded on an earlier account by the sophist Alcidamas (7.9.). 
Quotations (old and new) are made from the works of both 
poets, and, in spite of the sympathies of the audience, the judge 
decides in favour of Hesiod. Certain biographical details of 
Homer and Hesiod are also given. 

A strong characteristic of Hesiod's style is his sententious 
and proverbial philosophy (as in Works and Days, 94-25, 40, 
218, 345, 371). There is naturally less of this in the Theogony, 
yet there too not a few sentiments take the form of the saw or 
adage. He has undying fame as the first of didactic poets 
(see Didactic Poetry), the accredited systematizer of Greek 
mythology and the rough but not unpoetical sketcher of the 
lines on which Virgil wrought out his exquisitely finished 
Ceorgics. 

Bibliography. — Complete works: .Editio princeps (Milan, 1493) ; 
Gottling-Flach (1878), with full bibliography up to date of publica- 
tion; C. Sittl (1889), with introduction and critical and explanatory 
notes in Greek; F. A. Paley (1883): A. Rzach (1902), including 
the fragments. Separate works: Works and Days: Van Lennep 
(1847); A. Kirchhoff (1889); A. Steitz, Die Werke und Tage des 
Hestodos (1869), dealing chiefly with the copi posit ion and arrange- 
ment of the poem; G. Wlastoff, Promilhie, Fandore, el la ligende 
des stocks (1883). Theogony. Van Lennep (1843); F. G. Welcker 
(1865), valuable edition; G. F. SchOmann (1868), with text, critical 
notes and exhaustive commentary; H. Flach, Die Hesiodische 
Theogonie (1873), with prolegomena dealing chiefly with the digamma 
in Hesiod, System der Hesiodischen Kosmogonie (1874), and Clossen 
\olien zur Theogonie (1876); Meyer, De compost 



und Scholien 



compositions 

"'an 

lei 



\er 



1 Part of the poem was called Eoiai, because the description of 
each heroine began with 4 tfv, " or like as." (See Bibliography.) 



There arc translations of the Hesbdic poems in English by Cooke 
(1728), C. A. Elton (1815), J. Banks (18*6), and soecially by A. W. 
Mair, with introduction and appendices (Oxford Lib-ary of Transla- 
tions, 1908); in German (metrical version) with valuable intro- 
ductions and notes by R. PeppmuUer (1896) and in other modern 
languages. (J- Da.; J. H. F.) 

HESPERIDES, in Greek mythology, maidens who guarded 
the golden apples which Earth gave Hera on her marriage to 
Zeus. According to Hesiod (Theogony, 2x5) they were the 
daughters of Erebus and Night; in later accounts, of Atlas and 
Hesperis, or of Phorcys and Ceto (schol. on ApoIL Rhod. iv. 
1309: Diod. Sic. iv. 27) They were usually supposed to be 
three in number— Aegle, Erytheia, Hesperis (or Hesperethusa); 
according to some, four, or even seven. They lived far away 
in the west at the borders of Ocean, where the sun sets. Hence 
the sun (according to Mimnermus op. Athenaeum xi. p. 470) 
sails in the golden bowl made by Hephaestus from the abode 
of the Hesperides to the land where he rises again. According 
to other accounts their home was among the Hyperboreans. 
The golden apples grew on a tree guarded by Ladon, the ever- 
watchful dragon. The sun is often in German and Lithuanian 
legends described as the apple that hangs on the tree of the 
nightly heaven, while the dragon, the envious power, keeps the 
light back from men till some beneficent power takes it from 
him. Heracles is the hero who brings back the golden apples 
to mankind again. Like Perseus, he first applies to the Nymphs, 
who help him to learn where the garden is. Arrived there he 
slays the dragon and carries the apples to Argos; and finally, 
like Perseus, he gives them to Athena. The Hesperides are, 
like the Sirens, possessed of the gift of delightful song. The 
apples appear to have been the symbol of love and fruitfulnesa, 
and are introduced at the marriages of Cadmus and Harmoma 
and Peleus and Thetis. The golden apples, the gift of Aphrodite 
to Hippomencs before his race with Atalanta, were also plucked 
from the garden of the Hesperides. 

HESPERUS (Gr. "Etnrcpor, Lat. Vesper), the evening star, 
son or brother of Atlas. According to Diodoras Siculus (iii. 
60, iv. 27), be ascended Mount Atlas to observe the motions of 
the stars, and was suddenly swept away by a whirlwind. Ever 
afterwards he was honoured as a god, and the most brilliant star 
in the heavens was called by his name. Although as a mytho- 
logical personality he is regarded as distinct from Phosphoros 
or Heosphoros (Lat. Lucifer), the morning star or bringer of 
light, the son of Astraeus (or Cephalus) and Eos, the two stars 
were early identified by the Greeks. 

Diog. Laert. viiL 1. 14; Cicero, De not. deontm, u. 30; Pliny, 
Nat. Hist. ii. 6 [8J. 

HESS, the name of a family of German artists. 

Heinrich Mama Hess (1708- 1863)— von Hess, after he 
received a patent of personal nobility — was born at Dusseldorf 
and brought up to the profession of art by his father, the engraver 
Karl Ernst Christoph Hess ( 1 755-1828). Karl Hess had already 
acquired a name when in 1806 the elector of Bavaria, having been 
raised to a kingship by Napoleon, transferred the Dusseldorf 
academy and gallery to Munich. Karl Hess accompanied the 
academy to its new home, and there continued the education 
of his children. In time Heinrich Hess became sufficiently 
master of his art to attract the attention of King Maximilian. 
He was sent with a stipend to Rome, where a copy which he made 
of Raphael's Parnassus, and the study of great examples of 
monumental design, probably caused him to become a painter 
of ecclesiastical subjects on a large scale. In 1828 he was made 
professor of painting and director of all the art collections at 
Munich. He decorated the Aukircbe, the Glyptothek and the 
Allerheiligencapelle at Munich with frescoes; and his cartoons 
were selected for glass windows in the cathedrals of Cologne 
and Regensburg. Then came the great cycle of frescoes in the 
basilica of St Boniface at Munich, and the monumental picture 
of the Virgin and Child enthroned between the four doctors, 
and receiving the homage of the four patrons of the Munich 
churches (now in the Pinakothek). His last work, the *' Lord's 
Supper," was found unfinished in his atelier after his death in 
1863. Before testing his strength as a composer Heinrich Hess 



HBSS— HESSE 



409 



cried genre, en example of which it the Pilgrims ejecting Rome, 
bow in the Munich gallery. He also executed portraits, and 
twice had sittings from Tnorwaldsen (Pinakothek and Schack 
collections). But his lame rest* on the frescoes representing 
scenes from the Old and New Testaments in the Allerheiligen- 
capelle, and the episodes from the life of St Boniface and other 
German apostles in the basilica of Munich. Here he holds 
rank second to none but Overbeck in monumental painting, 
being always true to nature though mindful of the traditions 
of Christian art, earnest and simple in feeling, yet lifelike and 
powerful in expression. Through himand his pupils the sentim e n t 
of religious art was preserved and extended in the Munich school. 
Peter Hess (1792-1871)— afterwards von Hess— was born 
at Dttsseldorf and accompanied his younger brother Heinrkh 
Maria to Munich in 1806. Being of an age to receive vivid 
impressions, he fek the stirring impulses of the time and became a 
painter of skirmishes and battles. In 1813-1815 he was alio wed to 
join the staff of General Wrede, who commanded the Bavarians in 
the military operations which led to the abdication of Napoleon; 
and. there he gained novel experiences of war and a taste for 
extensive travel. In the course of years he successively visited 
Austria, Switzerland and Italy. On Prince Otho's election to 
the Greek throne Ring Louis sent Peter Hess to Athens to gather 
materials for pictures of the war of liberation. The sketches 
which he then made were placed, forty in number, in the Pina- 
kothek, after being copied in wax on a large scale (and little to 
the edification of German feeling) by Nilsen, in the northern 
arcades of the Hofgarten at Munich. King Otho's entrance 
into Nauplia was .the subject of a large and crowded canvas now 
in the Pinakothek, which Hess executed in person. From these, 
and from battlepieces on a scale of great size in the Royal 
Palace, as well as from military episodes executed for the czar 
Nicholas, and the battle of Waterloo now in the Munich Gallery, 
we gather that Hess was a clever painter of horses. His con- 
ception of subject was Hf dike, and his drawing invariably correct, 
but his style is not so congenial to modern taste as that of the 
painters of touch. He finished almost too carefully with thin 
medium and pointed tools; and on that account he lacked to a 
certain extent the boldness of Horace Vernet, to whom he was 
not unaptly compared. He died suddenly, full of honours, 
at Munich, in April 1871. Several of his genre pictures, horse 
hunts, and brigand scenes may be found in the gallery of Munich. 
' Kail Hess (1 801-1874), the third son of Karl Christoph Hess, 
born at Dflsseldorf , was also taught by his father, who hoped 
that he would obtain distinction as an engraver. Karl, however, 
after engraving one plate after Adrian Ostade, turned to painting 
under the guidance of Wagenbauer of Munich, and then studied 
under his elder brother Peter. But historical composition 
proved to be as contrary to his taste as engraving, and he gave 
himself exclusively at last to illustrations of peasant Hfe In the 
hill country of Bavaria. He became clever alike in representing 
the people, the animals and the landscape of the Alps, and with 
constant means of reference to nature in the neighbourhood 
of Reichenhall, where be at last resided, he never produced 
anything that was not impressed with the true stamp of a kindly 
realism. Some of his pictures in the museum of Munich will 
serve as examples of his manner. He died at Reichenhall on 
the 16th of November 1874. 

HBSS. HE1KRICH HERMANN JOSEF, Frzihem von 
(178^-1870), Austrian soldier, entered the army in 1805 and was 
soon employed as a staff officer on survey work. He distinguished 
himself as a subaltern at Aspera and Wagram, and in 1813, as a 
captain, again served on the staff. In 181 5 he was with Schwars- 
enberg. He had in the interval between the two wars been 
employed as a military commissioner in Piedmont, and at the 
peace resumed this post, gaming knowledge which later proved 
invaluable to the Austrian army. In 183 1, when Radetzky 
became commander-in-chief in Austrian Italy, he took Hess as 
his chief-of-staff, and thus began the connexion between two 
famous soldiers which, like that of Blucher and Gneisenau, is a 
classical example of harmonious co-operation of commander and 
Ctief-ef -staff Hess put into shape Radetsky's military ideas, in 



the form of new drffl for each arm, and, under their^ guidance, 
the Austrian army in North Italy, always on a war footing, 
became the best in Europe. From 1834 to 1848 Hess was 
employed in Moravia, at Vienna, &c, but, on the outbreak of 
revolution and war in the latter year, was at once sent out to 
Radetaky as chief-of-staff. In the two campaigns against King 
Charles Albert which followed, eliminating in the victory of 
Novara, Hess's assistance to his chief was made still more 
valuable by bis knowledge of the enemy, and the old field-marshal 
acknowledged his services in general orders. Lieut. -Fieldmarshal 
Hess was at once promoted FcMseugitmsUr, made a member of 
the emperor's council, and PreUurr, assuming at the same time 
the duties of the quartermaster-generaL Next year he became 
chief of the staff to the emperor. He was often employed in 
missions to variouscapkals, and he appeared in the field in 1854 at 
the head of the Austrian army which intervened so effectually 
in the Crimean war. In 1859 he was sent to Italy after the early f 
defeats. He became field-marshal in i860, and a year later, on 
resigning his position as chief-of-staff, he was made captain of the 
Trabant guard. He died in Vienna in 1870. 

See " General Hess " in Libenstesckichtlkktn Rbrissm (Vienna,' 
1855). 

HBSBB (Lat. Hestia> Ger. H*ucn),K grand duchy forming a 
state of the German empire. It was known until 1866 as Hesse- 
Darmstadt, the history of which is given under a separate heading 
below. It consists of two main parts, separated from each other 
by a narrow strip of Prussian territory. The northern part is the 
province of Oberhessen; the southern consists of the contiguous 
provinces of Starkenburg and Rheinhessen. There are also 
eleven very small exclaves, mostly grouped about Homburg to 
the south-west of Oberhessen; but the largest is Wimpfen on 
the north-west frontier of Wurttemberg. Oberhessen is hilly; 
though of no great elevation it extends over the water-parting 
between the basins of the Rhine and the Weser, and in the 
Voge Isberg it has as its culminating point the Taufstein (2533 ft .). 
In the north-west It includes spurs of the Taunus. Between 
these two systems of hills Hes the fertile undulating tract known 
as the Wettercu, watered by the Wetter, a tributary of the 
Main. Starkenburg occupies the angle between the Main and 
the Rhine, and in its south-eastern part includes some of the 
ranges of the Odenwald, the highest part being the Sddenbucher 
Holie (1965 ft.). Rheinhessen is separated from Starkenburg by 
the Rhine, and has that river as its northern as well as its eastern 
frontier, though it extends across it at the north-east corner, 
where the Rhine, on receiving the Main, changes its course 
abruptly from south to west. The territory consists of a fertile 
tract of low hills, rising towarthvthe south-west into the northern 
extremity of the Hardt range, but at no point reaching a height of 
more than 1050 ft. 

The' area and population of the three provinces of Hesse are 
as follow: 



Oberhessen 

Starkenburg 

Rheinhessen 

Total 


Area. 


Population. 


aq. m. 


1895. 


1905. 


1267 
1169 
530 


271,5*4 
444,563 
322,934 


296,755 
542.996 
369424 


3966 


1, 039,020 


1,209,175 



The chief towns of the grand duchy are Darmstadt (the 
capital) and Offenbach in Starkenburg, Mainz and Worms in 
Rheinhessen and Giessen in Oberhessen. More than two-thirds 
of the inhabitants are Protestants-, the majority of the remainder 
are Roman Catholics, and there are about 95,000 Jews. The 
grand duke is head of the Protestant church. Education is 
compulsory, the elementary schools being communal, assisted by 
state grants. There are a university at Giessen and a technical 
high school at Darmstadt. Agriculture is important, more than 
three-fifths of the total area being under cultivation. The 
largest grain crops are rye and barley, and nearly 40,000 acres 
are under vines. Minerals, in which Oberhessen is mv* K « ~ 



4io 



HESSE-CASSEL 



than the two other provinces, include iron, manganese, salt and 
some coal 

The constitution dates from x8ao, but was modified in 1856, 
1862, 187 a and 1900. There are two legislative chambers. The 
upper consists of princes of the grand-ducal family, heads of 
mediatized houses, the head of the Roman Catholic and the 
superintendent of the Protestant church, the chancellor of the 
university, two elected •representatives of the land-owning 
nobility, and twelve members nominated by the grand duke. 
The lower chamber consists of ten deputies from large towns and 
forty from small towns and rural districts. They are indirectly 
elected, by deputy electors (Waklm&mur) nominated by the 
electors, who must be Hessians over twenty-five years old, paying 
direct taxes. The executive ministry of state is divided into the 
departments of the interior, justice and finance. The three 
provinces are divided for local administration into 18 circles and 
080 communes. The ordinary revenue and expenditure amount 
each to about £4,000,000 annually, the chief taxes' being an 
income-tax, succession duties and stamp tax. The public debt, 
practically the whole of which is on Railways, amounted to 
£10,007,468 in 1007. 

History. — The name of Hesse, now used principally for the 
grand duchy formerly known as Hesse-Darmstadt, refers to a 
country which has had different boundaries and areas at different 
times. The name is derived from that of a Frankish tribe, the 
HessL The earliest known inhabitants of the country were the 
Chatti, who lived here during the xst century a.d. (Tacitus, 
Germania, c. 30), and whose capital, Mattium on the Eder, was 
burned by the Romans about a.d. 15. " Alike both in race and 
language," says Walther Schultze, " the Chatti and the Hessi are 
identical" During the period of the VMkerwanderung many of 
these people moved westward, but some remained behind to give 
their name to the country, although it was not until the 8th 
century that the word Hesse came into use. Early Hesse was 
the district around the Fulda, the Werra, the Eder and the Lahn, 
and was part of the Frankish kingdom both during Merovingian 
and during Carolingian times. Soon Hessegau is mentioned, and 
this district was the headquarters of Charlemagne during his 
campaigns against the Saxons. By the treaty of Verdun in 843 
it fell to Louis the German, and later it seems to have been partly 
in the duchy of Saxony and partly in that of Franconia. The 
Hessians were converted to Christianity mainly through the 
efforts of St Boniface; their land was included in the arch- 
bishopric of Mainz; and religion and culture were kept alive 
among them largely owing to the foundation of the Benedictine 
abbeys of Fulda and Hersfeld. Like other parts of Germany 
during the 9th century Hesse felt the absence of a strong central 
power, and, before the time of the emperor Otto the Gre*t, 
several counts, among whom were Giso and Werner, had made 
themselves practically independent, but after the accession of 
Otto in 936 the land quietly accepted the yoke of the medieval 
emperors. About 1x20 another Giso, count of Gudcnsberg, 
secured possession of the lands of the Werners; on his death in 
1 137 his daughter and heiress, Hedwig, married Louis, land- 
grave of Tburingia; and from this date until 1247, when the 
Thuringian ruling family became extinct, Hesse formed part of 
Thuringia. The death of Henry Raspe, the last landgrave of 
Thuringia, in 1247, caused a long war over the disposal of his 
lands, and this dispute was not settled until 1264 when Hesse, 
separated again from Thuringia, was secured by his niece Sophia 
(d. x 284), widow of Henry II., duke of Brabant In the following 
year Sophia handed over Hesse to her son Henry (1 244-1308), 
who, remembering the connexion of Hesse and Thuringia, took 
the title of landgrave, and is the ancestor of all the subsequent 
rulers of the country In 1292 Henry was made a prince of the 
Empire, and with him the history of Hesse properly begins. 

For nearly 300 years the history of Hesse is comparatively 
uneventful. The land, which fell into two main portions, upper 
Hesse round Marburg, and lower Hesse round Cassel, was twice 
divided between two members of the ruling family, but no per- 
manent partition took place before the Reformation. A Landtag 
was first called together in 1387, and the landgraves were con- 



stantly at variance with the electors of Mainz, who had large 
temporal possessions in the country. They found time, however, 
to increase the area of Hesse. Giessen, part of Schmalkalden, 
Ziegenhain, Nidda and, after a long struggle, Katxenelnbogen 
were acquired, while in 1432 the abbey of Hersfeld placed itself 
under the protection of Hesse. The most noteworthy of the 
landgraves were perhaps Louis I. (d. 1458), a candidate for the 
German throne in X440, and William II. (d 1509), a comrade of 
the German king, Maximilian I. In 1509 William's young son, 
Philip (q.v.), became landgrave, and byhis vigorous personality 
brought his country into prominence during the religious troubles 
of the x6th century. Following the example of his ancestors 
Philip cared for education and the general welfare of his land, 
and the Protestant university of Marburg, founded in 1527, owes 
to him its origin. When he died in 1567 Hesse was divided 
between his four sons into Hesse-Cassel, Hesse-Darmstadt, 
Hesse-Marburg and Hesse-Rheinfels. The lines ruling in Hesse- 
Rheinfels and Hesse-Marburg, or upper Hesse, became extinct 
in 1583 and X604 respectively, and these lands passed to the two 
remaining branches of the family The small landgraviate of 
Hesse-Homburg was formed in 1622 from Hesse-Darmstadt 
After the annexation of Hesse-Cassel and Hesse-Homburg by 
Prussia in 1866 Hesse-Darmstadt remained the only independent 
part of Hesse, and it generally receives the common name. 

Hesse-Philippsthal is an offshoot of Hesse-Cassel, and was 
founded in 1685 by Philip (d 1721), son of the Landgrave 
William VL In 1909 the representative of this family was the 
Landgrave Ernest (b. 1846). Hesse-Barchfeld was founded 
in 1721 by Philip's son, William (d 1761), and in 1009 its repre- 
sentative was the Landgrave Clovis (b. 1876). The lands of both 
these princes are now mediatized. Hesse-Nassau is a province 
of Prussia formed in.*866 from part of Hesse-Cassel and part of 
th 

ifl 
F. 
a 
Li 
(I 



now the government district of Cassel in the Prussian province 
of Hesse-Nassau. It was till 1866 a. landgraviate and electorate 
of Germany, consisting of several detached masses of territory, 
to the N.E. of Frankfort-on-the-Mafn. It contained a superficial 
area of 3699 sq. m., and its population in 1864 was 745,063. 

History— The line of Hesse-Cassel was founded by William 
IV., surnamed the Wise, eldest son of Philip the Magnanimous. 
On his father's death in 1567 he received one half of Hesse, with 
Cassel as his capital, and this formed the landgraviate of Hesse- 
Cassel Additions were made to it by inheritance from his 
brother's possessions. His son, Maurice the Learned (x 592-X627), 
turned Protestant in 1605, became involved later in the Thirty 
Years' War, and, after being forced to cede some of his territories 
to the Darmstadt line, abdicated in favour of his son William V. 
(1627-XO37), his younger sons receiving apanages which created 
several cadet lines of the house, of which that of Hesse- Rheinfels- 
Rotenburg survived till 1834. On the death of William V., 
whose territories had been conquered by the Imperialists, his 
widow Amalie Elizabeth, as regent for her son William VL 
(1637-1663), reconquered the country and, with the -aid of the 
French and Swedes, held it, together with part of Westphalia. 
At the peace of Westphalia (1648), accordingly, Hesse-Cassel 
was augmented by the larger part of the countahip of Schaum- 
burg and by the abbey of Hersfeld, secularized as a principality 
of the Empire. The Landgravine Amalie Elizabeth introduced 
the rule of primogeniture William VI., who came of age in 1650, 
was an enlightened patron of learning and the arts. He was 
succeeded by his son William VII , an infant, who died in 1670, 
and was succeeded by his brother Charles ( 1670-x 730). Charles's 
chief claim to remembrance is that he was the first ruler to adopt 



HESSE-CASSEL 



+11 



the system of hiring has soldiers oat to foreign powers as mer- 
cenaries, as a means of improving the national finances. Frederick 
I., the next landgrave (1730-1751), had become by marriage king 
of Sweden, and on his death was succeeded in the landgraviate 
by his brother William VIII. (1751-1760), who fought as an ally 
of England during the Seven Years' War From his successor 
Frederick II (1760-1785), who had become a Roman Catholic, 
12 poo Hessian troops were hired by Englandforabout£3, 191,000, 
to assist in the war against the North American colonies. This 
action, often bitterly criticized, has of late years found apologists 
(cf . v. Werthern, Die kcssiscken Hilfstrupptn im nordamerika- 
nischcn UimbhdngtgiuUskrUge, Cassel, 1895). It is argued that 
the troops were in any case mercenaries, and that the practice 
was quite common. Whatever opinion may be held as to 
this, it is certain that Frederick spent the money well* he did 
much for the development of the economic and intellectual 
improvement of the country. The reign of the next landgrave, 
William IX. (1 785-1821), was an important epoch in the history 
of Hesse-Cassel. Ascending the throne in 1785, he took part 
in the war against France a few years later, but in 1795 peace 
was arranged by the treaty of Basel. For the loss in 1801 
of his possessions on the left bank of the Rhine he was in 1803 
compensated by some of the former French territory round 
Mainz, and at the same time was raised to the dignity of Elector 
(Kurfursl) as William I. In 1806 he made a treaty of neutrality 
with Napoleon, but after the battle of Jena the latter, suspect- 
ing William's designs, occupied his country, and expelled him. 
Hesse-Cassel was then added to Jerome Bonaparte's new kingdom 
of Westphalia, but after the battle of Leipzig in 1813 the 
French were driven out and on the a 1st of November the elector 
returned in triumph to his capital. A treaty concluded by 
him with the Allies (Dec. 2) stipulated that he was to receive 
back all his former territories, or their equivalent, and at the 
same time to restore the ancient constitution of his country. 
This treaty, so far as the territories were concerned, was carried 
out by the powers at the congress of Vienna. They refused, 
however, the elector's request to be recognized as "King of 
the Chatti " {Konig dor KaUen), a request which was again 
rejected at the conference of Aix-la-Chapelle (1818). He 
therefore retained the now meaningless title of elector, with 
the predicate of " royal highness." 

The elector had signalized his restoration by abolishing 
with a stroke of the pen all the reforms introduced under the 
French regime, repudiating the Westphalian debt and declaring 
null and void the sale of the crown domains. Everything was 
set back to its condition on the 1st of November 1806; even 
the officials had to descend to their former rank, and the army 
to revert to the old uniforms and powdered pigtails. The 
estates, indeed, were summoned in March 181 5, but the attempt 
to devise a constitution broke down; their appeal to the federal 
diet at Frankfort to call the elector to order in the matter of 
the debt and the domains came to nothing owing to the inter- 
vention of Metternich; and in May 1816 they were dissolved, 
never to meet again. William I. died on the 27th of February 
182 1, and was succeeded by his son, William H. Under him 
the constitutional crisis in Hesse-Cassel came to a head. He 
was arbitrary and avaricious like his father, and moreover 
shocked public sentiment by his treatment of his wife, a popular 
Prussian princess, and his relations with his mistress, one 
Emilie 0rtl5pp, created countess of Reichenbach, whom be 
loaded with wealth. The July revolution in Paris gave the 
signal for disturbances; the elector was forced to summon 
the estates; and on the 5th of January 1831 a constitution 
on the ordinary Libera] basis, was signed. The elector now 
retired to Hanau, appointed his son Frederick William regent, 
and took no further part in public affairs. 
» The regent, without his father's coarseness, had a full share 
of his arbitary and avaricious temper. Constitutional restric- 
tions were intolerable to him; and the consequent friction with 
the diet was aggravated when, in 1832, HassenpfTug (q.v.) was 
placed at the head of the administration. The whole efforts of 
the elector and his minister were directed to nullifying the 



constitutional control vested in the diet; and the Opposition was 

fought by manipulating the elections, packing the judicial 
bench, and a vexatious and petty persecution of political 
" suspects," and this policy continued after the retirement of 
Hassenpflug in 1837. The situation that resulted issued in the 
revolutionary year 1848 in a general manifestation of public 
discontent; and Frederick William, who had become elector 
on his father's death (November 20, 1847)^ was forced to dismiss 
his reactionary ministry and to agree to a comprehensive pro- 
gramme of democratic reform. This, however, was but short- 
lived. After the breakdown of the Frankfort National Parlia- 
ment, Frederick William joined the Prussian Northern Union, 
and deputies from Hesse-Cassel were sent to the Erfurt parlia- 
ment. But as Austria recovered strength, the elector's policy 
changed. On the 23rd of February 1850 Hassenpflug was again 
placed at the head of the administration and threw himself 
with renewed zeal into the struggle against the constitution and 
into opposition to Prussia. On the 2nd of September the diet 
was dissolved, the taxes were continued by electoral ordinance; 
and the country was placed under martial law. It was at once 
clear, however, that the elector could not depend on his officers 
or troops, who remained faithful to their oath to the constitution. 
Hassenpflug persuaded the elector to leave Cassel secretly with 
him, and on the 15th of October appealed for aid to the recon- 
stituted federal diet, which willingly passed a decree of " inter- 
vention. " On the 1st of November an Austrian and Bavarian 
force marched into the electorate. 

This was a direct challenge to Prussia, which under conventions 
with the elector had the right to the use of the military roads 
through Hesse that were her sole means of communication with 
her Rhine provinces. War seemed imminent, Prussian troops 
also entered the country, and shots were actually exchanged 
between the outposts. But Prussia was in no condition to take 
up the challenge; and the diplomatic contest that followed 
issued in the Austrian triumph at Olmtttz (1851). Hesse was 
surrendered to the federal diet; the taxes were collected by the 
federal forces, and all officials who refused to recognize the new 
order were dismissed. In March 1852 the federal diet abolished 
the constitution of 1831, together with the reforms of 1848, and 
in April issued a new provisional constitution. The new diet 
had, under this, very narrow powers; and the elector was free 
to carry out his policy of amassing money, forbidding the con- 
struction of railways and manufactories, and imposing strict 
orthodoxy on churches and schools. In 1855, however, Hassen* 
pflug — who had returned with the elector — was dismissed; and 
five years later, after a period of growing agitation, a new 
constitution was granted with the consent of the federal diet 
(May 30, i860). The new chambers, however, demanded the 
constitution of 183 1 ; and, after several dissolutions which always 
resulted in the return of the same members, the federal diet 
decided to restore the constitution of 1831 (May 24, 1862) 
This had been due to a threat of Prussian occupation; and it 
needed another such threat to persuade the elector to reassemble 
the chambers, which he had dismissed at the first sign of opposi- 
tion; and he revenged himself by refusing to transact any 
public business. In 1866 the end came. The elector, full of 
grievances against Prussia, threw in his lot with Austria; the 
electorate was at once overrun with Prussian troops, Cassel 
was occupied (June 20); and the elector was carried a prisoner 
to Stettin. By the treaty of Prague Hesse-Cassel was annexed 
to Prussia. The elector Frederick William (d. 1875) had been, 
by the terms of the treaty of cession, guaranteed the entailed 
property of his house. This was, however, sequestered in 1868 
owing to his intrigues against Prussia; part of the income was 
paid, however, to the eldest agnate, the landgrave Frederick 
(d. 1884), and part, together with certain castles and palaces, 
was assigned to the cadet lines of Philippsthal and Philippsthal- 
Barchfeld. 

See K. W. Wippermann, Kurhtssen sett den Freihtitsltrieten 
(Cassel, 1850); Rdth, GtschicUe won Hessen-Kasstl (Cassel, 1856; 
2nd ed. continued by Stamford, 1 883-1 885); H. Grife, Dtr Ver- 
fassungskampf in Kurlussen (Leipzig, 1851) and works under 



412 



HESSE-DARMSTADT— HESSE-HOMBURG 



tiESSE-DARMSTADT, a grand-duchy in Germany, the history 
of which begins with the partition of Hesse in 1567. George I. 
(1547-1597), the youngest son of the landgrave Philip, received 
the upper county of Ratzenelnbogen, and, selecting Darmstadt 
as his residence, became the founder of the Hesse-Darmstadt 
line. Additions to the landgraviate were made both in the 
reigns of George and of his son and successor, Louis V. (1577- 
1626), but in 1622 Hesse-Homburg was cut off to form an apanage 
for George's youngest son, Frederick (d. 1638). Although Louis 
V., who founded the university of Giessen in x 607, was a Lutheran, 
he and his son, George H. (1605-1661), sided with the im- 
perialists in the Thirty Years' War, during which Hesse-Darm- 
stadt suffered very severely from the ravages of the Swedes. 
In this struggle Hesse-Cassel took the other side, and the rivalry 
between the two landgraviates was increased by a dispute over 
Hesse-Marburg, the ruling family of which had become extinct 
in 1604. This quarrel was interwoven with the general thread 
of the Thirty Years' War, and was not finally settled until 1648, 
when the disputed territory was divided between the two claim- 
ants. Louis VL (d. 1678), a careful and patriotic prince, followed 
the policy of the three previous landgraves, but the anxiety of 
his son, Ernest Louis (d. 1739), to emulate the French court 
under Louis XIV. led his country into debt. Under Ernest 
Louis and his son and successor, Louis VIII. (d. 1768), another 
dispute occurred between Darmstadt and Cassel; this time 
it was over the succession to the county of Hanau, which was 
eventually divided, Hesse-Darmstadt receiving Lichtcnberg. 
During the 18th century the War of the Austrian Succession and 
the Seven Years' War dealt heavy blows at the prosperity of 
the landgraviate, which was always loyal to the house of Austria. 
Louis IX. (1710-1790), who served in the Prussian army under 
Frederick the Great, is chiefly famous as the husband of Caroline 
(1721-1774), "the great landgravine," who counted Goethe, 
Herder and Grimm among her friends and was described by 
Frederick the Great asfeinina sexu, ingenio vir. In April 1790, 
just after the outbreak of the French Revolution, Louis X. 
(1 753-1 830), an educated prince who shared the tastes and 
friendships of his mother, Caroline, became landgrave. In 1792 
he joined the allies against France, but in 1709 he was compelled 
to sign a treaty of neutrality. In 1803, having formally sur- 
rendered the part of Hesse on the left bank of the Rhine which 
had been taken from him in the early days of the Revolution, 
Louis received in return a much larger district which had formerly 
belonged to the duchy of Westphalia, the electorate of Mainz 
and the bishopric of Worms. In 1806, being a member of the 
confederation of the Rhine, he took the title of Louis I., grand- 
duke of Hesse; he supported Napoleon with troops from 1805 
to 1813, but after the battle of Leipzig he joined the allies. 
In 1815 the congress of Vienna made another change in the 
area and boundaries of Hesse-Darmstadt. Louis secured again 
a district on the left bank of the Rhine, including the cities of 
Mainz and Worms, but he made cessions of territory to Prussia 
and to Bavaria and he recognized the independence of Hesse- 
Homburg, which had recently been incorporated with his lands. 
However, his title of grand-duke was confirmed, and as grand- 
duke of Hesse and of the Rhine .he entered the Germanic con- 
federation. Soon the growing desire for liberty made itself 
felt in Hesse, and in 1820 Louis gave a constitution to the land, 
various forms were carried through, the system of government 
was reorganized, and in 1828 Hcssc-Darmstadt joined the 
Prussian Zollverdn. Louis I., who did a great deal for the 
welfare of his country, died on the 6th of April 1830, and was 
followed on the throne by his son, Louis II. (1 777-1848). This 
grand-duke had some trouble with his Landtag, but, dying on 
the 16th of June 1848, he left his son, Louis III. (1806-1877), 
to meet the fury of the revolutionary year 1848. Many conces- 
sions were made to the popular will, but during the subsequent 
reaction these were withdrawn, and the period between 1850 
and 1871, when Karl Fricdrich Reinhard, Frciherr von Dalwigk 
(1802-1880), was chiefly responsible for the government of Hesse- 
Darmstadt, was one of repression, although some benefits were 
conferred . upon the people. Dalwigk was one of Russia's 



enemies, and during the war of 1866 the grand-duke* fought cm 
the Austrian side, the result being that he was compelled to 
pay a heavy indemnity and to cede certain districts, including 
Hesse-Homburg, which he had only just acquired, to Prussia. 
In 1867 Louis entered the North German Confederation, but only 
for his lands north of the Main, and in 1871 Hesse-Darmstadt 
became one of the states of the new German empire, After the 
withdrawal of Dalwigk from public life at this time a more 
liberal policy was adopted in Hesse. Many reforms in ecclesi- 
astical, educational, financial and administrative matters were 
introduced, and in general the grand-duchy may be said to have 
passed largely under the influence of Prussia, which, by an 
arrangement made in 1896, controls the Hessian railway system. 
The constitution of 1820, subject to four subsequent modifica- 
tions, is still the law of the land, the legislative power being 
vested in two chambers and the executive power being exercised 
by the three departments of the ministry of state. Since the 
annexation of Hesse-Cassel by Prussia in 1866 the grand-ducby 
has been known simply as Hesse. Louis III. died on the 13th 
of June 1877, and was succeeded by his nephew, Louis IV. 
(1837-1892), a son-in-law of Queen Victoria; he died on the 
13th of March 1892, and was succeeded by his son, Ernest 
Louis (b. 1868). This grand-duke's marriage with Victoria 
(b. 1876), daughter of Alfred, duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, 
was dissolved in 1001 . Theunion was childless, and consequently 
in 1002 a law regulating the succession was passed. By this 
the landgrave Alexander Frederick (b. 1863), the representative 
of the family which ruled Hesse-Cassel until 1866, was declared 
the heir to Hesse in case the grand-duke died without sons. 
However, in 1005 Ernest Louis married Elenore, princess of 
Solms-Hohensolms-Lich (b. 1871), by whom he had a sofa George 
(b. 1906). 
See L. Baur, Urkunden tttr hesriseken Landes~. Orts- und Fam3%cH~ 



side of the Rhine, and the district of Meisenhcim, which • 
added in 1815, on the left side of the same river. Its ■ 
was about 100 sq. m., and its population in 1864 was 27,374. 
Homburg now forms part of the Prussian province of Hesse- 
Nassau, and Meiscnheim of the province of the Rhine. Hesse- 
Homburg was formed into a separate landgraviate in 1622 
by Frederick I. (d. 1638), son of George I., landgrave of Hesse- 
Darmstadt, although it did not become independent of Hesse- 
Darmstadt until 1768. By two of Frederick's sons it was divided 
into Hesse-Homburg and Hcsse-Homburg-Bingcnheim; but 
these parts were again united in 1681 under the 1 ule of Frederick's 
third son, Frederick n. (d. 1708). In 1806, during the long reign 
of -the landgrave Frederick V., which extended from 1751 to 
1820, Hesse-Homburg was mediatized, and incorporated with 
Hesse-Darmstadt; but in 1815 by the congress of Vienna the 
latter state was compelled to recognize the independence of 
Hesse-Homburg, which was increased by the addition of Meisen- 
hcim. Frederick V. joined the German confederation as a 
sovereign prince in 1817, and after his death his five sons in 
succession filled the throne. The last of these, Ferdinand, 
who succeeded in 1848, granted a liberal constitution to his 
people, but cancelled it during the reaction of 1852. When he 
died on the 24th of March 1866, Hesse-Homburg was inherited 
by Louis III., grand-duke of Hesse-Darmstadt, while Meiscnheim 
fell to Prussia. In the following September, however, Louil 



HESSE-NASSAU— HESSUS 



4*3 



was forced to cede his new possession to Prussia, as he had 
supported Austria during the war between these two powers. 

See R. Schwartz, Landgraf Fritdrkh V. von Heszcn-Homburtund 
seine Femilie (1878); and von Herget, Das londgr&Jticke ttnus 
Honbwri (Homburg, 1903). 

HESSE-NASSAU (Ger. Hesstn-Nassau), a province of Prussia, 
bounded, from N. to E., S. and W., successively by Westphalia, 
Waldeck, Hanover, the province of Saxony, the Thuringian 
States, Bavaria, Hesse and the Rhine Province. There are 
small detached portions in Waldeck, Thuringia, &c.; on the 
other hand the province enclaves the province of Oberhessen 
belonging to the grand-duchy of Hesse, and the circle of Wetxlar 
belonging to the Rhine Province. Hesse-Nassau was formed 
in 1 86 7- 1 868 out of the territories which accrued to Prussia after 
the war of 1866, namely, the landgraviate of Hessc-Cassel and 
the duchy of Nassau, in addition to the greater part of the 
territory of Frankfort-on-Main, parts of the grand-duchy of 
Hesse, the territory of Homburg and the countship of Hesse- 
Homburg, together with certain small districts which belonged 
to Bavaria. It is now divided into the governments of Cassel 
and Wiesbaden, the second of which consists mainly of the former 
territory of Nassau (q.v.). 

The province has an area of 6062 sq. m., and had a population 
in 1905 of 2,070,052, being the fourth most densely populated 
province in Prussia, after Berlin, the Rhine Province and 
Westphalia. The east and north parts lie in the basin of the 
river Fulda, which near the north-eastern boundary joins with 
the Werra to form the Weser. The Main forms part of the 
southern boundary, and the Rhine the south-western; the 
western part of the province lies mostly in the basin of the 
Lahn, a tributary of the Rhine. The province is generally hilly, 
the highest hills occurring in the cast and west. The Fulda 
rises in the Wasscrkuppe (31 17 ft.), an eminence of the Rhttngc- 
birge, the highest in the province. In the south-west are the 
Taunus, bordering the Main, and the Wcsterwald, west of the 
Lahn, in which the highest points respectively are the Grosser 
Feldbcrg (2887 ft.) and the Fuchskauten (215s ft.). The 
congeries of small groups of lower hills in the north are known as 
the Hessische Bergland. 

• The province is not notably well suited to agriculture, but 
in forests it is the richest in Prussia, and the timber trade is 
large. The chief trees arc beech, oak and conifers. Cattle- 
breeding is extensively practised. The vine is cultivated 
chiefly on the slopes of the Taunus, in the south-west, where 
the names of several towns are well known for their wines — 
Schicrstein, Erbach (Marcobrunner), Johannisbcrg, Geisenheim, 
Rttdesheim, Assmannshausen. Iron, coal, copper and manganese 
are mined. The mineral springs are important, including those 
at Wiesbaden, Homburg, Langenschwalbach, Nenndorf, Schlan- 
genbad and Soden. The chief manufacturing centres are Cassel, 
Diez, Eschwegc, Frankfort, Fulda, Gross Al me rode, Hanau and 
Hersfeld. The province is divided for administration into 
42 circles (Kreise), 24 in the government of Cassel and 18 in that 
of Wiesbaden. It returns 14 representatives to the Reichstag. 
Marburg is the seat of a university. 

HESSE-ROTENBURO, a German landgraviate which was 
broken up in 1834. In 1627 Ernest (1623-1603), a younger son 
of Maurice, landgrave of Hesse-Cassel (d. 1632), received Rheins- 
fels and lower Katzenelnbogen as his inheritance, and some years 
later, on the deaths of two of his brothers, he added Escbwege, 
Rotenburg, Wanfried and other districts to hh possessions. 
Ernest, who was a convert to the Roman Catholic Church, was 
a great traveller and a voluminous writer. About 1700 his two 
sons, William (d. 1725) and Charles (d. 1711), divided their 
territories, and founded the families of Hesse*Rotenburg and 
Hesse~Wanfried. The latter family died out in 1755, when 
William's grandson, Constantine (d. 1778), reunited the lands 
except Rheinfels, which bad been acquired by Hesse-Cassel in 
'735* And ruled them as landgrave of Hesse-Rotenburg. At 
the peace of Luneville in 1801 the part of the landgraviate on 
the left bank of the Rhine was surrendered to France, and in 
1815 other parts were ceded to Prussia, the landgrave Victor 



Amadeus being compensated by the abbey of Cbrvey and the 
Silesian duchy of Ratibor. Victor was the last male member 
of his family, so, with the consent of Prussia, he bequeathed 
his allodial estates to his nephews the princes Victor and Chlodwig 
of Hoheiriohe-Waldenburg-SchiUingsf first (see Hohenlohe). 
When the landgrave died on the x 2th of November 1834 the 
remaining parts of Hesse-Rotenburg were united with Hesse- 
Cassel according to the arrangement of 1627. It may be noted 
that Hesse-Rotenburg was never completely independent of 
Hesse-Cassel Perhaps the most celebrated member of this 
family was Charles Constantine (1752-1821), a younger son of 
the landgrave Constantine, who was called " citoyen Hesse," 
and who took part in the French Revolution. / 

HESSIAN, the name of a jute fabric made as a plain doth* 
in various degrees of fineness, width and quality. The common, 
or standard, hessian is 40 in. wide, weighs 10$ ox. per yd., 
and in the finished state contains about xa threads and ia| 
picks per in. The name is probably of German origin, and the 
fabric was originally made from flax and tow. Small quantities 
of doth are still made from yarns of these fibres, but the jute 
fibre, owing to its comparative cheapness, has now almost 
supplanted all others. 

This useful doth is employed in countless ways, especially for 
packing all kinds of dry goods, while large quantities, of different 
qualities, are made up into bags for sugar, flour, coffee, grain, 
ore, manure, sand, potatoes, onions, &c. Indeed, bags made 
from one or other quality of this doth, or from sacking, bagging 
or tarpaulin, form the most convenient, and at the same time 
the cheapest covering for any kind of goods which are' not 
damaged by being crushed. 

Certain typed are specially treated, dyed black, tan or other 
colour, or left in their natural colour, stiffened and used for 
paddings and linings for cheap dothing, boots, shoes, bags 
and other articles. When dyed in art shades the doth forms 
an attractive decoration for stages and platforms, and generally 
for any temporary erection, and in many cases it is stencilled 
and then used for wall decoration. 

The great linoleum industry depends upon certain types of this 
fabric for the foundation of its products, while large quantities 
are used for the backs of fringe rugs, spring mattresses and the 
upholstery of furniture. 

The great centres for the manufacture of this fabric are 
Dundee and Calcutta, and every variety of the doth, and all 
kinds of hand- and machine-sewn, as well as seamless bags, axe 
made in the former dty. The American name for hessian is 
burlap; this particular kind is 40 in. wide, and is now largdy 
made in Calcutta as well as in Dundee and other places. 

HESSUS, HBUUS EOBANUS (148S-1540), German Latin 
poet, was born at HaJgehausen in Hesse-Cassel, on the 6th of 
January 1488. His family name is said to have been Koch; 
Eoban was the name of a local saint; Hessus indicates the land of 
his birth, Helius the fact that he was born on Sunday. In x 504 
he entered the university of Erfurt, and soon after his graduation 
was appointed rector of the school of St Severus. This post he 
soon lost, and spent the years 1500-1513 at the court of the bishop 
of Riesenburg. Returning to Erfurt, he was reduced to great 
straits owing to his drunken and irregular habits. At length 
(in 1 51 7) he was appointed professor of Latin in the university. 
He was prominently associated with the distinguished men of the 
time (Johann Reuchlin, Conrad Peutinger, Ulrich von Hulten, 
Conrad Mutianus), and took part in the political, religious and 
literary quarrels of the period, finally declaring in favour of 
Luther and the Reformation, although his subsequent corduct 
showed that he was actuated by selfish motives. The university 
was seriously weakened by the growing popularity of the new 
university of Wittenberg, and Hessus endeavoured (but without 
success) to gain a living by the practice of medicine. Through 
the influence of Camerarius and Melanchthon, he obtained a post 
at Nuremberg (1526), but, finding a regular life distasteful, be 
again went back to Erfurt (1533). But it was not the Erfurt he 
had known; his old friends were dead or had left the place; the 
university was deserted. A lengthy poem gained him the favour 



4H 



HESTIA— HESYCMUS 



of the landgrave of Hesse, by whom he was summoned in 1536 as 
professor of poetry and history to Marburg, where he died on the 
5th of October 1540. Hessus, who was considered the foremost 
Latin poet of his age, was a facile verse-maker, but not a true 
poet. He wrote what he thought was likely to pay or secure him 
the favour of some important person. He wrote local, historical 
and military poems, idylls, epigrams and occasional pieces, 
collected under the title of Syivac. His most popular works were 
translations of the Psalms into Latin distichs (which reached 
forty editions) and of the Iliad into hexameters. His most 
original poem was the Hcroides in imitation of Ovid, consist- 
ing of letters from holy women, from the Virgin Mary down to 
Kunigunde, wife of the emperor Henry H. 

His Epistolae were edited by his friend Camerarius, who also wrote 
his life (1553). There are later accounts of him by M. Hertz (i860), 
C. Schwerttell (1*74) and C. Krausc (1879); see also D. F. Strauss, 
ill rich ton HutUn (Eng. trans., 1874). His poems on Nuremberg 
and other towns have been edited with commentaries and 16th- 
century illustrations by J. Ncff and V. von Loga in M. Herrmann and 
S. Szamatolski's Lateinische Literaturdenkmdler des XV, u. XVI. 
Jahrhunderls (Berlin, 1 896). 

HESTIA, in Greek mythology, the " fire-goddess, w daughter 
of Cronus and Rhea, the goddess of hearth and home. She is 
not mentioned in Homer, although the hearth is recognized as 
a place of refuge for suppliants; this seems to show that her 
worship was not universally acknowledged at the time of the 
Homeric poems. In post-Homeric religion she is one of the 
twelve Olympian deities, but, as the abiding goddess of the 
household, she never leaves Olympus. When Apollo and 
Poseidon became suitors for her hand, she swore to remain a 
maiden for ever; whereupon Zeus bestowed upon her the 
honour of presiding over all sacrifices. To her the opening 
sacrifice was offered; to her at the sacrificial meal the first and 
last libations were poured. The fire of Hcstia was always kept 
burning, and, if by any accident it became extinct, only sacred 
fire produced by friction, or by burning glasses drawing fire from 
the sun, might be used to rekindle it. Hcstia is the goddess of 
the family union, the personification of the idea of home; and as 
the city union is only the family union on a large scale, she was 
regarded as the goddess of the state. In this character her special 
sanctuary was in the prytaneum, where the common hearth-fire 
round which the magistrates meet is ever burning, and where the 
sacred rites that sanctify the concord of city life are performed. 
From this fire, as the representative of the life of the city, intend- 
ing colonists took the fire which was to be kindled on the hearth 
of the new colony. Hestia was closely connected with Zeus, the 
god of the family both in its external relation of hospitality and 
Hs internal unity round its own hearth; in the Odyssey a form 
of oath is by Zeus, the table and the hearth. Again, Hcstia is 
often associated with Hermes, the two representing home and 
domestic life on the one hand, and business and outdoor life on 
the other; or, according to others, the association is local — that 
of the god of boundaries with the goddess of the house. In 
later philosophy Hestia became the hearth of the universe — the 
personification of the earth as the centre of the universe, identified 
with Cybcle and Demetcr. As Hcstia had her home in the 
prytaneum, special temples dedicated to her are of rare occurrence. 
She is seldom represented in works of art, and plays no important 
part in legend. It is not certain that any really Creek statues of 
Hestia are in existence, although the Giustiniani Vesta in the 
Torlonia Museum is usually accepted as such. In this she is 
represented standing upright, simply robed, a hood over her 
head, the left hand raised and pointing upwards. The Roman 
deity corresponding to the Greek Hestia is Vesta (q.v.J. 

See A. Preuner, Hcstia-Vcsta (1864), the standard treatise on the. 
subject, and his article in Roochcr's Lexikon der Mytkologie: J. G. 
Frazer, " The Prytaneum," &c, in Journal of Philology, xiv. (1885); 
G. Hagcmann, DeCraecorum prytaneis (1881), with bibliography 
and notes; Homeric Hymns, xxix, ed. T. W. Allen and E. E. Sikes 
(1904); Farnell, Cults, the Creek States, v. (1909). 

HESTCHASTS (favxooroi or favxdfomt, from Ijavxot, 
quiet, also called 6/*0aX6^vxoi, Umbilicanimi, and sometimes 
referred to as Euchites, Massalians or Palamitcs), a quiet istic 
sect which arose, during the. later period of the Byzantine 



empire, among the monks of the Greek church, especially at 
Mount Athos, then at the height of its fame and influence under 
the reign of Andronicus the younger and the abbacy of Symeon. 
Owing to various adventitious circumstances the sect came into 
great prominence politically and ecclesiastically for & few yens 
about the middle of the 14th century. Their, opinion and practice 
will be best represented in the words of one of their early teachers 
(quoted by Gibbon, Decline and Fall, c. 63): " When thou art 
alone in thy cell shut thy door, and seat thyself in a corner; 
raise thy mind above all things vain and transitory; recline thy 
beard and chin on thy breast; turn thine eyes and thy thought 
towards the middle of thy belly, the region of the navel (o/*4aX&); 
and search the place of the heart, the seat of the soul. At first 
all will be dark and comfortless; but if thou persevere day and 
night, thou wilt feel an ineffable joy; and no sooner has the soul 
discovered the place of the heart than it is involved in a mystic 
and ethereal light." About the year 1337 this hesychasm, which 
is obviously related to certain well-known forms of Oriental 
mysticism, attracted the attention of the learned and versatile 
Barlaam, a Calabrian monk, who at that time held the office of 
abbot in the Basilian monastery of St Saviour's in Constantinople, 
and who had visited the fraternities of Mount Athos on a tour of 
inspection. Amid, much that he disapproved, wha£ he specially 
took exception to as heretical and blasphemous was the doctrine 
entertained as to the nature of this divine light, the fruition of 
which was the supposed reward of hesychastic contemplation. 
It was maintained to be the pure and perfect essence of God 
Himself, that eternal light which had been manifested to the 
disciples on Mount Tabor at the transfiguration. This Barlaam 
held to be polytheistic, inasmuch as it postulated two eternal 
substances, a visible and an invisible God. On the hesychasik 
side the controversy was taken up by Gregory Palamas, after- 
wards archbishop of Thessalonica, who laboured to establish 
a distinction between eternal ovala and eternal bipryueu la 
1341 the dispute came before a synod held at Constantinople 
and presided over by the emperor Andronicus; the assembly, 
influenced by the veneration in which the writings of thepscudo- 
Dionysius were held in the Eastern Church, overawed Barlaam, 
who recanted and returned to Calabria, afterwards becoming 
bishop of Hierace in the Latin communion. One of his friends, 
Gregory Acindynus, continued the controversy, and three other 
synods on the subject were held, at the second of which the 
Barlaamites gained a brief victory. But in 13 51 under the 
presidency of the emperor John Cantacuzenus, the uncreated 
light of Mount Tabor was established as an article of faith for 
the Greeks, who ever since have been ready to recognize it as an 
additional ground of separation from the Roman Church. The 
contemporary historians Cantacuzenus and Nicephorus Grcgoras 
deal very copiously with this subject, taking the Hesychast and 
Barlaamitc sides respectively. It may be mentioned that in the 
time of Justinian the word hesychast was applied to monks in 
general simply as descriptive of the quiet and contemplative 
character of their pursuits. 

See article " Hesychasten " in Herzog-Hauck, Realencyklopdiii 
(3rd ed., 1900), where further references arc given. 

HESYCHIUS, grammarian of Alexandria, probably flourished 
in the 5th century a.d. He was probably a pagan; and the 
explanations of words from Gregory of Nazianzus and other 
Christian writers (glossae sacrac) are interpolations of a later 
time. He has left a Greek dictionary, containing a copious 
list of peculiar words, forms and phrases, with an explanation 
of their meaning, and often with a reference to the author 
who used them or to the district of Greece where they were 
current. Hence the book is of great value to the student 
of the Greek dialects; while in the restoration of the tat 
of the classical authors generally, and particularly of such 
writers as Aeschylus and Theocritus, who used many unusual 
words, its value can hardly be exaggerated. The explanations 
of many epithets and phrases reveal many important facts 
about the religion and social life of the ancients. In a prefatory 
letter Hesychius mentions that his lexicon is based on that of 
Diogenianus (itself extracted from an earlier work by Pamphilus), 



HESYCHIUS OF MILETUS—HEUGLIN 



4»5 



but that he hat also used similar works by Aristarehus, Apion, 
Heliodorus and others. 

The text is very corrupt, and the order of the words has often been 
disturbed. There is no doubt that many interpolations, besides the 
Christian glosses, have been made. The work has come down to 
as from a single MS., now in the library at Venice, from which the 
editio princeps was published. The best edition is by M. Schmidt 
(1858-1868); in a smaller edition (1867) he attempts to distinguish 
the additions made by Hesychius to the work of Dtogenianua. 

HESYCHIUS OP MILETUS, Greek chronicler and biographer, 
surnamed Ittustrius, son of an advocate, flourished at Con- 
stantinople in the 5th century a.d. during the reign of Justinian. 
According to Photius (cod. 60) he was the author of three 
important works. (1) A Compendium of Universal History 
in six books, from Belus, the reputed founder of the Assyrian 
empire, to Anastasius I. (d. 518). A considerable fragment 
has been preserved from the sixth book, entitled HUrpta 
KanvroiTUwviroXcwf, a history of Byzantium from its earliest 
beginnings till the time of Constantine the Great, (a) A 
Biographical Dictionary ('OtfojioroXoyot or Ulrat) of Learned 
Men, arranged according to classes (poets, philosophers), the chief 
sources of which were the Mourui) icropl* of Aelius Dionyslus 
and the works of Herennius Philo. Much of it has been in- 
corporated in the lexicon of Suidas, as we learn from that 
author. It is disputed, however, whether the words in Suidas 
(" of which this book is an epitome ") mean that Suidas himself 
epitomized the work of Hesychius, or whether they are part 
of the title of an already epitomized Hesychius used by Suidas. 
The second view is more generally' held. The epitome referred 
to, in which alphabetical order was substituted for arrangement 
in dasses and some articles on Christian writers added as a 
concession to the times, is assigned from internal indications 
to the years 820-837. Both it and the original work are lost, 
with the exception of the excerpts in Photius and Suidas. A 
smaller compilation, chiefly from Diogenes Laertius and Suidas, 
with a similar title, is the work of an unknown author of the 
nth or nth century. (3) A History of the Reign of Justin 
I* (518-527) and the early years of Justinian, completely lost. 
Photius praises the style of Hesychius, and credits him with 
being a veracious historian. 

. Editions: J. C. Orelli (1820) and J. Flach (1882); fragments in 
C. W. Mullcr, Frog. hist. Grate, iv. 143 and in T. Preger's Scriptores 
originis Constant inopolitanae, i. (1901); Pseudo-Hesyckius by J. 
Flach (1880); sec generally C. Krumbacher, Geukichte ier bytanti- 
nuchen Literatur (1897). 

HETAERISM (Gr. ereupa a mistress), the term employed 
by anthropologists to express the primitive condition of man 
in his sexual relations. The earliest social organization of 
the human race was characterized by the absence of the institu- 
tion of marriage in any form. Women were the common 
p roperty o f their tribe, and the children never knew their fathers. 

HETEROKARYOTA, a zoological name proposed by S. J. 
Hickson for the Infusoria (q.v.) on the ground of the differentia- 
tion of their nuclear apparatus into meganudeus and micro- 
nucleus (or nuclei). 

See Lankester's Treatise of Zoology, vol. I. fasc. 1 (1003). 

HETERONOMY (from Gr. erepot and nfyiot, the rule of 
another), the state of being under the rule of another person. 
In ethics the term is specially used as the antithesis of 
" autonomy," which, especially in Kantian terminology, treats 
of the true self as will, determining itself by its own law, the 
moral law. " Hetcronomy " fa therefore applied by Kant to 
all other ethical systems, inasmuch as they place the individual 
in subjection to external laws of conduct. 

HETM AN (a Polish word, probably derived from the Gcr. 
Hauptmann, head-man or captain; the Russian form is ataman), 
a military title formerly in use in Poland; the Hetman Wiclki, 
or Great Hetman, was the chief of the armed forces of the 
nation, and commanded in the field, except when the king 
was present in person. The office was abolished in 1 792. From 
Poland the word was introduced into Russia, in the form ataman, 
and was adopted by the Cossacks, as a title for their head, 
who was practically an independent prince, when under the 
suzerainty of Poland. After the acceptance of Russian rule 



by the Cossacks in 1654, the post was shorn of its power. The 
title of " ataman "or" hetman of all the Cossacks " is held 
by the Cesarevitch. "Ataman 1 ' or "hetman" is also the 
name of the elected elder of the stanitsa, the unit of Cossack 
ad minist ration. (See Cossacks.) 

HETTNER, HERMANN THEODOR (1821-1882), German 
literary historian and writer on the history of art, was born at 
Leisersdorf, near Goldberg, in Silesia, on the 12th of March 
1821. At the universities of Berlin, HaUe and Heidelberg he 
devoted himself chiefly to the study of philosophy, but in 1843 
turned his attention to aesthetics, art and literature. With a 
view to furthering these studies, he spent three years in Italy, 
and, on his return, published a Vorschule tur bUdenden Kunst 
der Alton (1848) and an essay on Die neapolilanischen Malcr- 
schulen. He became Privaidotent for aesthetics and the history 
of art at Heidelberg and, after the publication of his suggestive 
volume on Die romantische Sekule in ikrem Zusammenhang 
mit Goethe und Schiller (1850), accepted a call as professor to 
Jena where he lectured on the history of both art and literature. 
In 1855 he was appointed director of the royal collections of 
antiquities and the museum of plaster casts at Dresden, to which 
posts were subsequently added that of director of the historical 
museum and a professorship at the royal PolyUchnikum. He 
died in Dresden on the 29th of May 1882. Hettner's chief work 
is his Literoturgeschichte des 18 ten Jahrhunderts, which appeared 
in three parts, devoted respectively to English, French and 
German literature, between 1856 and 1870 (5th ed. of I. and II., 
revised by A. Brandl and H. Morf, 1804; 4th of III., revised by 
O. Harnack, 1804). Although to some extent influenced by the 
political and literary theories of the Hegelian school, which, 
since Hettner's day have fallen into discredit, and at times 
losing sight of the main issues of literary development over 
questions of social evolution, this work belongs' to the best 
histories that the 19th century produced. Hettner's judgment 
is sound and his point of view always original and stimulating. 
His other works include Griechische Reiseskizsen (1853), Das 
moderne Drama (1852) — a book that arose from a correspondence 
with Gottfried Keller— Italienische Siudien (1879), and several 
works descriptive of the Dresden art collections. His Kleine 
Schriften were collected and published in 1884. 

See A. Stern, Hermann Hettner, ein Lebensbild (1883); H. Spitzer, 
H. Hettners kunstpkilosopkische Anfdnge und LUeralur&stkelih (1903). 

HETTSTEDT, a town of Germany, in Prussian Saxony, on the 
Wipper, and at the junction of the railways Berlin -Blanken- 
heim and Hcttstedt-Halle, 23 m. N.W. of the last town. Pop. 
(1905), 9230. It has a Roman Catholic and four Evangelical 
churches, and has manufactures of machinery, pianofortes and 
artificial manure. In the neighbourhood are mines of argenti- 
ferous copper, and the surrounding district and villages are 
occupied with smelting and similar works. Silver and sulphuric 
acid are the other chief products; nickel and gold arc also found 
in small quantities. In the Kaiser Friedrich mine close by, the 
first steam-engine in Germany was erected on the 23rd of August 
1785. Hettstcdt is mentioned as early as 1046; in 1220 it 
possessed a castle; and in 1380 it received civic privileges. 
When the countship of Mansfeld was sequestrated, Hettstedt 
came into the possession of Saxony, passing to Prussia in 181 5. 

HEUGUN, THEODOR VON (1824-1876), German traveller 
in north-east Africa, was born on the 20th of March 1824 at 
Hirschlanden near Leonbcrg in Wurttcmberg. His father was 
a Protestant pastor, and be was trained to be a mining engineer. 
He was ambitious, however, to become a scientific investigator 
of unknown regions, and with that object studied the natural 
sciences, especially zoology. In 1850 he went to' Egypt where 
he learnt Arabic, afterwards visiting Arabia Petraea. In 1852 
he accompanied Dr Reitz, Austrian consul at Khartum, on a 
journey to Abyssinia, and in the next year was appointed 
Dr Reitz's successor in the consulate. While he held this 
post he travelled in Abyssinia and Kordofan, making a 
valuable collection of natural history specimens. In 1857 
he journeyed through the coast lands of the African side of the 
Red Sea, and along the Somali coast. In i860 he was chosen 



4i8 



HEXAPLA— HEXAPODA 



(CHARACTERS 



of varying merit and the metre suits the German language 
distinctly better than the English. The customary form of 
hexameter in English verse is exemplified by Coleridge's descrip- 
tive line.' — 
" In the hex ] ameter | rises the | fountain's | silvery | column." 
Several modern poets, and in particular Robert Browning, 
and Lord Bowen (1835-1804) have used with effect a truncated 
hexameter consisting of the usual verse deprived of its last 
syllable. Thus Browning. — 
" Well, it is I gone at | last, the | palace of | music 1 1 reared." 
It is not sufficiently observed that even the classic Greek 
poets introduced considerable variations into their treatment 
of the hexameter. These have been treated with erudition in 
G. Hermann's De adate scriptoris Argonaulicorum. The differ- 
ences in the hexameters of the Latin poets were not so remarkable, 
but even these varied, in various epochs, their treatment of 
the separate feet, and the position of the caesura. The satirists 
in particular allowed themselves an extraordinary licence: 
these hexameters, from Persius, are as far removed from the 
rhythm of Homer, or even of Virgil, as possible, if they are to 
remain hexameters: — 
" Mane piger stcrtis. ' Surge ! * inquit Avaritia, ' heia 

Surge ! ' negas; instat ' Surra ! ' inquit * Non queo.* ' Surge 1 ' 
* Et quid agam ? ' ' Rogitas 1 en sapcrdam advene Ponto. " 

It is also to be noted that various prosodical liberties, due origin- 
ally to the extreme antiquity of the hexameter, and long reformed 
and repressed by the culture of poets, were apt to be revived 
in later ages, by writers who slavishly copied the most antique 
examples of the art of verse. 

See Wilhelm Christ, Metrik der Criechen und Romer, 2te Aufl. 
(i«79). 

HEXAPLA (Gr. for " sixfold "), the term for an edition of 
the Bible in six versions, and especially the edition of the Old 
Testament compiled by Origen, which placed side by side 
(1) Hebrew, (2) Hebrew in Greek character, (3) Aquila, (4) 
Symmachus, (5) Scptuagint, (6) Theodotion. See Bible: 
Old Testament, Texts and Versions. 

HEXAPODA (Gr. f|, six, and irofe, foot), a term used in 
systematic zoology for that class of the Arthropoda, popularly 
known as insects. Linnaeus in his Sy sterna naturae (1735) 
grouped under the class Insccta all segmented animals with 
firm exoskelcton and jointed limbs— that is to say, the insects, 
centipedes, millipedes, crustaceans, spiders, scorpions and their 
allies. This assemblage is now generally regarded as a great 
division (phylum or sub-phylum) of the animal kingdom and 
known by K. T. E. von Siebold's (1848) name of Arthropoda. 
For the class of the true insects included in this phylum, Lin- 
naeus's old term Insects, first used in a restricted sense by M. J. 
Brisson (1756), is still adopted by many zoologists, while others 
prefer the name Hcxapoda, first used systematically in its 
modern sense by P. A. Latreille in 1825 {Families naturdles 
du regne animal), since it has the advantage of expressing, in 
a single word, an important characteristic of the group. The 
terms " Hcxapoda " and " hexapod " had already been used 
by F. Willughby, J. Ray and others in the late 17th century 
to include the active larvae of beetles, as well as bugs, lice, 
fleas and other insects with undeveloped wings. 

Characters. 
A true insect, or member of the class Hexapoda, may be 
known by the grouping of its body-segments in three distinct 
regions— a head, a thorax and an abdomen — each of which 
consists of a definite number of segments. In the terminology 
proposed by E. R. Lankester the arrangement is " nomomer- 
istic " and " nomotagmic." The head of an insect carries usually 
four pairs of conspicuous appendages — feelers, mandibles 
and two pairs of maxillae, so that the presence of four primitive 
somites is immediately evident. The compound eyes of insects 
resemble so closely the similar organs in Crustaceans that 
there can hardly be reasonable doubt of their homology, and 
the primitively appendicular nature of the eyes in the latter 
class suggests that in the Hexapoda also they represent the 



appendages of an anterior (protoeerebral) segment. Behind 
the antennal (or deutocerebral) segment an "intercalary" 
or tritocerebral segment has been demonstrated by W. M. 
Wheeler (1893) and others in various insect embryos, while 
in the lowest insect order— the Aptera— a pair of minute jaws— 
the maxillulae — in close association with the tongue are present, 
as has been shown by H. J. Hansen (1893) and J. W. Folsom 
(1000). Distinct vestiges of the maxillulae exist also in the 
earwigs and booklice, according to G. Enderlein and C. B&rner 
(1904), and they are very evident in larval may-flies. The 
number of limb-bearing somites in the insectan head is thus 
seen to be seven. All of these are to be regarded as primitively 
post-oral, but in the course of development the mouth moves 
back to the mandibular segment, so that the first three somites- 
ocular, antennal and intercalary — lie in front of it. In Lan- 
kester's terminology, therefore, the head of an insect is " triprot- 
thomerous." The maxillae of the hinder pair become more 
or less fused together to form a " lower lip " or labium, and the 
segment of these appendages is, in some insects, only imperfectly 
united with the head-capsule. 

The thorax is composed of three segments; each bears a pair 
of jointed legs, and in the vast majority of insects the two hind- 
most bear each a pair of wings. From these three pairs of 
thoracic legs comes the name — Hexapoda— which distinguishes 
the class. And the wings, though not always present, are highly 
characteristic of the Hexapoda, since no other group of the 
Arthropoda has acquired the power of flight. In the more 
generalized insects the abdomen evidently consists of ten seg- 
ments, the hindmost of which often carries a pair of tail-feelers, 
(cerci or cercopods) and a terminal anal segment. In some cases, 
however, it can be shown that the cerci really belong to an 
eleventh abdominal segment which usually becomes fused with the 
tenth. With very few exceptions the abdomen is without loco- 
motor limbs. Paired processes on the eighth and ninth abdominal 
segments may be specialized as external organs of reproduction, 
but these are probably not appendages. The female genital 
opening usually lies in front of the eighth abdominal segment, the 
male duct opens on the ninth. 

In all main points of their internal structure the Hexapoda 
agree with other Arthropoda. Specially characteristic of the 
class, however, is the presence of a complex system of air-tubes 
(tracheae) for respiration, usually opening to the exterior by a 
series of paired spiracles on certain of the body segments. The 
possession of a variable number of excretory tubes (Malpighian 
tubes), which are developed as outgrowths of the hind-gut and 
pour their excretion into the in testine,is also a distinctive character 
of the Hexapoda. 

The wings of insects are, in all cases, developed after hatching, 
the younger stages being wingless, and often unlike the parent in 
other respects. In such cases the development of wings and the 
attainment of the adult form depend upon a more or less profound 
transformation or metamorphosis. 

With this brief summary of the essential characters of the 
Hexapoda, we may pass to a more detailed account of their 
structure. 

EXOSKELETON 

The outer cellular layer (ectoderm or " hypodermis ") of insects 
as of other Arthropods, secretes a chitinous cuticle which has to be 
periodically shed and renewed during the growth of the animal. 
The regions of this cuticle have a markedly segmental arrangement, 
and the definite hardened pieces (scleritcs) of the exoskeletoo are 
in close contact with one another along linear sutures, or are united 
by regions of the cuticle which are less chitinous and more membran- 
ous, so as to permit freedom of movement. 

Head. — The head-capsule of an insect (figs. I, a) is composed of a 
number of sclerites firmly sutured together, so that the primitive 
segmentation is masked. Above is the crown {vertex at epicranial*), 
on which or on the " front " may be seated three simple eyes (ocelli). 
Below this comes the front, and then the face or clypeus, to which a 
very distinct upper lip (labrum) is usually jointed. Behind the labrum 
arises a process — the epipharynx — which in some blood-sucking 
insects becomes a formidable piercing-organ. On either side a 
variable amount of convex area is occupied by the compound eye; 
in many insects of acute sense and accurate flight these eyes are very 
large and sub-globular, almost meeting on the middle line of the 



CHARACTERS) 



HEXAPODA 



+19 



Bead. • Below each eye is a check area (jena), often divided into an 
Interior and a posterior part, while a distinct chin-sclerite (|Wa) is 
often developed behind the mouth. 

Fetters. — Most conspicuous among the appendages of the head are 
the feelers or antennae, which correspond to the anterior feelers 



jointed limb or palp (fig I. C, pa). Such maxillae are found in most 
biting insects. In insects whose mouths are adapted for sucking and 
piercing, remarkable modifications may occur. In many blood- 
sucking flies, for example, the galea is absent, while the lacinia 
becomes a strong knife-like fiercer and the palp is well developed. 




Pica UkU and Denny. TktCodtneek, Lovefl Rem & Go> 
' Fig. 1. — Head and Jaws of Cockroach {filalta), Magn 
C. back; v, vertex; /, frons; cl, clypeus; Ibr, labrum; < 
mandible; ca. si, pa, ga. la, cardo, stipes, palp, galea, lacii 
submentum, mentum, palp, galea of 2nd maxilla. 

(antennules) of Crustacea. In their simpler condition th 
long and many-jointed, the segments bearing numerous ol 
and tactile nerve-endings. Elaboration in the form of the 
often a secondary sexual character in male insects, may resu 
t distal broadening of the segments, so that the appendage b 
serrate, or from the development of processes bearing 1 
organs, so that the structure is pinnate or feather-like. On th 
hand, the number of segments may be reduced, certain 
often becoming highly modified in form. 

Jaws. — The mandibles of the Hexapoda are usually stror 
with one or more teeth at the apex (fig. 1, A, B, mn), artic 
at their bases with the head -capsule by sub-globular cc 
and provided with abductor and adductor muscles by means o 
they can be separated or drawn together so as to bite solid f 
seize objects which have to be carried about. They never bt 

mented limbs 
and only exc 
ally (as in the c 
t is the skeleton 
posed of more th 
sclcritc. The ma 
often furnish a 
example of "sec 
sexual charac 
being more si 
developed in th 
than in the fen 
the same speci< 
most insects th 
by suction the 
bles are modific 
bugs (Heteroptei 
' many flies, fore) 

they are changt 

needle-like picrci 

a, II). while in 

and caddis-fliei 

arc reduced tc 

vestiges or alt 

After Martatt Entow. BtJL 14, n. ». (U.S. Dept Afrit). "JJJ*!^^. 

Fig. 2.— Head of Cicad, front view. la, tj one d f a pair of 

Irons; k clypeus (the pointed labrum ; aws _ t he tnaxii 

beneath it); II, mandible; III. nrst are present i 

maxilla; (o, base; 6, sheath; c, piercer). j owest ct6£T ^ 

III', inner view of sheath; IV, second between the ma 

inaxiHae forming rostrum (0. mentum; c t an< j t i, e f^ „, 

ligula). They usually co 

an inner and ai 
lobe arising from a basal piece, which bears also in some g 
email palp (see After a). 

In their typical state of development, the first maxillae 
striking contrast to the mandibles, being composed of a t wo-seg 
basal piece {cardo and stipes, fig. 1, C, ca, si) bearing a distim 
and outer lobe Vatinia and foira, 



bra. fig. i.C la. go) and extci 



4«0 



HEULANDITE— HEVELIUS 



leader of an expedition to search, for Eduard Vogel, his com- 
panions including Werner Munzinger, Gottlob Kinzelbach, 
and Dr Hermann Steudner. In June 1861 the party landed at 
Massawa, having instructions to go direct to Khartum and thence 
to Wadai, where Vogel was thought to be detained. Heuglin, 
accompanied by Dr Steudner, turned aside and made a wide 
detour through Abyssinia and the Galla country, and in con- 
sequence the leadership of the expedition was taken from him. 
He and Steudner reached Khartum in 1862 and there joined the 
£arty organized by Miss Tinn& With her or on their own 
account, they travelled up the White Nile to Gondokoro and 
explored a great part of the Bahr-el-Ghazal, where Steudner 
died of fever on the xoth of April 1863. Heuglin returned to 
Europe at the end of 1864. In 1870 and 1871 he made a valuable 
series of explorations in Spitsbergen and Novaya Zemlya; but 
1875 found him again in north-east Africa, in the country of 
the Beni Araer and northern Abyssinia. He was preparing 
for an exploration of the island of Sokotra, when he died, at 



he 



ng 
>)• 
+3HsO. Small amounts of sodium and potassium are usually 
present replacing part of the calcium. Crystals are monoclinic, 
and have a characteristic coffin-shaped habit. They have a 
perfect cleavage parallel to the plane of symmetry (Af in the 
figure), on which the lustre is markedly pearly; on other faces 
the lustre is of the vitreous type. The mineral is 
usually colourless or white, sometimes brick-red, 
and varies from transparent to translucent. The 
hardness is 3J-4, and the specific gravity 2-2. 

Heulandite closely resembles stilbite (q.v.) in 
appearance, and differs from it chemically only 
in containing rather less water of crystallization. 
The two minerals may, however, be readily dis- 
tinguished by the fact that in heulandite the 
acute positive bisectrix of the optic axes emerges 
perpendicular to the cleavage. Heulandite was 
first separated from stilbite by A. Breithaupt in 1818, and 
named by him euzeolite (meaning beautiful zeolite) ; independ- 
ently, in 1822, H. J. Brooke arrived at the same result, giving 
the name heulandite, after the mineral collector, Henry Heuland. 
Heulandite occurs with stilbite and other zeolites in the 
amygdaloidal cavities of basaltic volcanic rocks, and occasion- 
ally in gneiss and metalliferous veins. The best specimens are 
from the basalts of Bcrufjord, near Djupivogr, in Iceland and 
the Faroe Islands, and the Dcccan traps of the Sahyadri 
mountains near Bombay. Crystals of a brick-red colour are 
from Campsie Fells in Stirlingshire and the Fassathal in Tirol. 
A variety known as beaumontite occurs as small yellow crystals 
on syenitic schist near Baltimore in Maryland. 

Isomorphous with heulandite is the strontium and 
barium zeolite brewsterite, named after Sir David Brewster. 
The greyish monoclinic crystals have the composition 
H«(Sr, Ba, Ca)Al»(SiO»)t+3HtO, and are found in the basalt 
of the Giant's Causeway in Co. Antrim, and with harmotome 
In the lead mines at Strontian in Argyllshire. (L. J. S.) 

t HEUSCH, WILLEM, or Guilltaii de, a Dutch landscape 
painter in the 17th century at Utrecht. The dates of this artist's 
birlh and death are unknown. Nothing certain is recorded 
of him except that he presided over the gild of Utrecht, whilst 
Cornolis Poelemburg, Jan Both and Jan Weenix formed the 




council of that body, in 1649* According to the majority of 
historians, Heusch was born in 1638, and was taught by Jan 
Both.* But each of these statements seems open to doubt; 
and although it is obvious that the style of Heusch is identical 
with that of Both, it may be that the two masters during their 
travels in Italy fell under the influence of Claude Lorraine, 
whose " Arcadian " art they imitated. Heusch certainly painted 
the same effects of evening in wide expanses of country varied 
by rock formations and lofty thin-leaved arborescence as Both. 
There is little to distinguish one master from the other, except 
that of the two Both is perhaps the more delicate colourisL 
The gild of Utrecht in the middle of the 17th century was com- 
posed of artists who clung faithfully to each other. Poelemburg, 
who painted figures for Jan Both, did the same duty for Heusch. 
Sometimes Heusch sketched landscapes for the battlcpieces of 
Molenaer. The most important examples of Heusch are in the 
galleries of the Hague and Rotterdam, in the Belvedere at 
Vienna, the Stadel at Frankfort and the Louvre. His pictures 
are signed with the full name, beginning with a monogram 
combining a G (for Guilliam), D and H. Heusch's etchings, of 
which thirteen are known, are also in the character of those of 
Both. 

After Guilliam there also flourished at Utrecht his nephew, 
Jacob de Heusch, who signs like his uncle, substituting an 
initial J for the initial G. He was born at Utrecht in 1657, 
learnt drawing from his uncle, and travelled early to Rome, 
where he acquired friends and patrons for whom he executed 
pictures after his return. He settled for a time at Berlin, but 
finally retired to Utrecht, where he died in 1701. Jacob was an 
" Arcadian," like his relative, and an imitator of Both, and he 
chiefly painted Italian harbour views. But his pictures are now 
scarce. Two of his. canvases, the " Ponte Rotto " at Rome, in the 
Brunswick Gallery, and a lake harbour with shipping in the 
Lichtenstein collection at Vienna, are dated 1606. A harbour 
with a tower and distant mountains, in the Belvedere at Vienna, 
was executed in 1609. Ol her examples may be found in English 
private galleries, in the Hermitage of St Petersburg and .the 
museums of Rouen and Montpellier. 

HBVBLIUS (Hevzl or H6welcke], JOHANN (1611-1687), 
German astronomer, was born at Danzig on the 28th of January 
161 1. He studied jurisprudence at Leiden in 1630; travelled 
in England and France; and in 1634 settled in his native town 
as a brewer and town councillor. JFYom 1639 his chief interest 
became centred in astronomy, though he took, throughout his 
life, a leading part in municipal affairs. In 1641 he built an 
observatory in his house, provided with a splendid instrumental 
outfit, including ultimately a tubelcss telescope of 150 ft. focal 
length, constructed by himself. It was visited, on the 29th 
of January 1660, by John II. and Maria Gonzaga, king and 
queen of Poland. Hevelius made observations of sunspots, 1642- 
1645, devoted four years to charting the lunar surface, discovered 
the moon's libration in longitude, and published his results in 
Selenographia (1647), a work which entitles him to be called 
the founder of lunar topography. He discovered four comets 
in the several years 1652, 1661, 1672 and 1677, and suggested 
the revolution of such bodies in parabolic tracks round the sun. 
On the 26th of September 1679, his observatory, instruments 
and books were maliciously destroyed by -fire, the catastrophe 
being described in the preface to his Annus dimactericus (1685). 
He promptly repaired the damage, so far as to enable him to 
observe the great comet of December 1680; but his health 
suffered from the shock, and he died on the 28th of January 1687. 
Among his works were: Prodromus comeiicus (1665); Comdo- 
graphia (1668); Machina coelestis (first part, 1673), containing 
a description of his instruments; the second part (1679) is 
extremely rare, nearly the whole issue having perished in the 
conflagration of 1679. The observations made by Hevelius 
on the variable star named by him " Mira " are included in 
Annus dimactericus. His catalogue of 1564 stars appeared 
posthumously in Prodromus aslronomiae (1600). Its value 
was much impaired by his preference of the antique " pinnules " 
to telescopic sights on quadrants. This led to an acrimonious 



HEWETT, SIR P.— HEXAMETER 



cofttroversy with Robert Hooke. In an Atlas of 50 sheets, 
corresponding to his catalogue, and entitled Firmamentum 
SobUscianum (1600), he delineated seven new constellations, 
still in use. Hevelius had his book printed in his own house, 
at lavish expense, and himself not only designed but engraved 
many of the plates. 

ten 

ten 

joe 
alf, 
lit. 
of 

180 

) 

HEWE1T, SIR PRE8C0TT GARDNER, Bart (18x2-1891), 
British surgeon, was born on the 3rd of July 181 2, being the son 
of a Yorkshire country gentleman. He lived for some years 
in early life in Paris, and started on a career as an artist, but 
abandoned it for surgery. He entered St George's Hospital, 
London (where his half-brother, Dr Cornwallis Hewett, was 
physician from 1825 to 1833) becoming demonstrator of anatomy 
and curator of the museum. He was the pupil and intimate 
friend of Sir B. C. Brodie, and helped him in much of his work. 
Eventually he rose to be anatomical lecturer, assistant-surgeon 
and surgeon to the hospital. In 1876 he was president of the 
College of Surgeons; in 1877 he was made serjeant-surgeon 
extraordinary to Queen Victoria, in 1884 serjeant-surgeon, and 
in 1883 he was created a baronet. He was a very good lecturer, 
but shrank from authorship; his lectures on Surgical A flections 
of the Head were, however, embodied in his treatise on the subject 
in Holmes's System of Surgery. As a surgeon he was always 
extremely conservative, but hesitated at no operation, however 
severe, when convinced of its expediency. He was a perfect 
operator, and one of the most trustworthy of counsellors. He 
died on the 19th of June 1891. 

HEWITT* ABRAH STEVENS (1822-1903), American manu- 
facturer and political leader, was born in Havcrstraw, New York, 
on the 3 xst of July 1822. His father, John, a Staffordshire man, 
was one of a party of four mechanics who were sent by Boulton 
and Watt to Philadelphia about 1700 to set up a steam engine 
for the city water-works and who in 1793-1794 built at Belleville, 
N.J., the first steam engine constructed wholly in America; 
he made a fortune in the manufacture of furniture, but lost it 
by the burning of his factories. The boy's mother was of Huguenot 
descent. He graduated with high rank from Columbia College 
in 1842, having supported himself through his course. He 
taught mathematics at Columbia, and in 1845 was admitted 
to the bar, but, owing to defective eyesight, never practised. 
With Edward Cooper (son of Peter Cooper, whom Hewitt 
greatly assisted in organizing Cooper Union, and whose daughter 
he married) he went into the manufacture of iron girders and 
beams under the firm name of Cooper, Hewitt & Co. His study 
of the making of gun-barrel iron in England enabled him to be 
of great assistance to the United States government during the 
Civil War, when he refused any profit on such orders. The men 
in his works never struck — indeed in 1873-1878 his plant was 
run at an annual loss of $100,000. In politics he was a Democrat. 
In 1871 he was prominent in the re-organization of Tammany 
after the fall of the " Tweed Ring "; from 1875 until the end 
of 18S6 (except in 1879-1881) he wasa representative in Congress ; 
in 1876 he left Tammany for the County Democracy; in the 
Hayes-Tilden campaign of that year he was chairman of the Demo- 
cratic National Committee, and in Congress he was one of the 
House members of the joint committee which drew up the famous 
Electoral Count Act providing for the Electoral Commission. 
In 1886 he was elected mayor of New York City, his nomination 
having been forced upon the Democratic Party by the strength 
of the other nominees, Henry George and Theodore Roosevelt; 
his administration (1 887-1 888) was thoroughly efficient and 
creditable, but he broke with Tammany, was not renominated, 
can independently for re-election, and was defeated. In 1896 



417 

and 1000 he voted the Republican ticket, but did not ally himself 
with the organization. He died in New York City on the 18th of 
January 1903. In Congress he was a consistent defender of 
sound money and civil service reform; in municipal politics 
he was in favour of business administrations and opposed to 
partisan nominations. He was a leader of those who contended 
for reform in municipal government, was conspicuous for his 
public spirit, and exerted a great influence for good not only in 
New York City but in the state and nation. His most famous 
speech was that made at the opening of the Brooklyn Bridge in 
1883. He was a terse, able and lucid speaker, master of wit and 
sarcasm, and a fearless critic. He gave liberally to Cooper 
Union t of which he was trustee and secretary, and which owes 
much of its success to him; was a trustee of Columbia University 
from 1001 until his death, chairman of the board of trustees of 
Barnard College, and was one of the original trustees, first 
chairman of the board of trustees, and a member of the executive 
committee of the Carnegie Institution. 

HEWLETT, MAURICE HENRY (1861- ), English novelist, 
was born on the 22nd of January 1861, the eldest son of Henry 
Gay Hewlett, of Shaw Hall, Addington, Kent. He was educated 
at the London International College, Spring Grove, Isleworth, 
and was called to the bar in 1891. From 1896 to 1000 he was 
keeper of the land revenue records and enrolments. He pub- 
lished in 1895 two books on Italy, Earthwork out of Tuscany, 
and tin verse) The Masque of Dead Florentines. Songs and 
Meditations followed in 1897, and in 1898 he won an immediate 
reputation by his Forest Lovers, a romance of medieval England, 
full of rapid movement and passion. In the same year he printed 
the pastoral and pagan drama of Pan and the Young Shepherd, 
shortened for purposes of representation and produced at the 
Court Theatre in March 1905, when it was followed by the 
Youngest of t/ie Angels, dramatized from a chapter in his Fool 
Errant. In Little Novels of Italy (1899), * collection of brilliant 
short stories, he showed again his power of literary expression 
together with a close knowledge of medieval Italy. The new and 
vivid portraits of Richard Cceur de Lion in his Richard Yea-and- 
Nay (xooo), and of Mary, queen of Scots, in The Queen's Quair 
(1904) showed the combination of fiction with real history 
at its best. The New Canterbury Talcs (1901) was another 
volume of stories of English life, but he returned to Italian 
subjects with The Road in Tuscany (1904); in Fond Adventures, 
Tales of the Youth of lite World (1905), two are Italian tales, and 
The Fool Errant (1905) purports to be the memoirs of Francis 
Antony Strctley, citizen of Lucca. Later works were the novel 
The Stooping Lady (1907), and a volume of poems, Artentision 
(1909). 

HEXAMETER, the name of the earliest and most important 
form of classical verse in dactylic rhythm. The word is due 
to each line containing six feet or measures Out pa), the last of 
which must be a spondee and the penultimate a dactyl, though 
occasionally, for some special effect, a spondee may be allowed 
in the fifth foot, when the line is said to be spondaic. The four 
other feet may be either spondees or dactyls. All the great 
heroic and epic verse of the Greek and Roman poets is in this 
metre, of which the finest examples are to be found in Homer 
and in Virgil. Varied cadences and varied caesura are essential 
to this form of verse, otherwise the monotony is wearying to the 
car. The most usual places for the caesura are at the middle 
of the third, or the middle of the fourth foot: the former is 
known as the penthcmimeral and the latter as hepthemimeral 
caesura. There are several more or less successful examples 
of English poems in this metre, for example Longfellow's £mm- 
gdine, Kingsley's Andromeda and Go ugh 's Bothie of Tober-na- 
Vuoilick, but it does not really suit the genius of the English 
language. In English the lack of true spondees is severely 
felt, even though the English metre depends, not, as in Greek 
and Latin, on the distinction between long and short syllables, 
but on that between accented and unaccented syllables. The 
accent must always (or it sounds very ugly) fall on the first 
syllable, whatever may have been the case in Greek and Latin — 
Voss, Klopstock and Goethe have written hexameter poems 



422 



HEXAPODA 



(INTERNAL ORGANS 

trades have firm chttfooos edges, and can 
d by special muscles. When the spiracles 
ontracts, air is expired. The subs eq u en t 
ises fresh air to enter the tracheal system, 
en closed and the body again contracted, 
st blanches of the air-tubes, where a direct 
takes place. The physiology of respiration 
by F. Plateau (1884). In aquatic insects 
ning or entangling air are found; these 
id in the special articles on the various 
era.Hemftbra.&c). Many insects have 
hkh take in atmospheric air at intervals, 
Ived air by means of tracheal gills. These 
ed below in the section, on metamorphosis. 
t riking feature in the food-cjanal of the 
thronods. is the mat extent of the " fore- 



spirucMV or sufiwuiu, wiucu usually occur laicmuy vn iihwi w uw • •uaonuiwi ticnuic. 



From MU11 and Denny, Tkt OclfMcfc! Uvd 
RtcvtaCo. 
Fig. 12.— Food Canal of Cockroach. 

*, Salivary glands and reservoir. 

c, Crop (the gizzard below it). 

coe, Caecal tubes (below them the 
stomach). 

A, Kidney tubes. 

i. Intestine. 

r, Rectum. 
» through the proventriculus into the 
:nt substances are absorbed, 
rogenous waste-matter is removed from 
ian tubes which open into the food-canal, 
ut joins the stomach. These tubes vary 
rer a hundred in different orders of insects. 

and also the cavities of the tubes contain 
I from the blood in the surrounding body- 
tains an irregular mass of whitish tissue. 

of fat-cells which undergo degradation 
1 filled with urates. When the worn-out 
t urates are carried dissolved in the blood 
)r excretion. The fat-body is therefore the 
lie processes in the hexapod body. 
All the Hexapoda are of separate sexes, 
le female are paired, each ovary consisting 
ubes (one in the bristle-tail CamPodea and 
1 termite) in which the eggs are developed. 
luct (fig. 13, od) leads, and in some oi the 
[bristle-tails, earwigs, may-flies) the two 
direct to the exterior. Usually they opea 
formed by an ectodermal inpushing and 
agina usually opens in front of the eighth 
Dcnind it U situated a spermatheca (fig. 14* iP) 



BMBRYOLOCY) 



HEXAPODA 



+23 



and the ovipositor previously mentioned, with its. three pairs of 
processes (Fig. 14. G, g). 
The paired testes of the male consist of a variable number of seminal 



Fsn MUI sad Door, Tk* Cmkntth, Lovtfl R«rt ft Co. 
Fig. 13.— Ovaries of Cockroach, with Oviducts Od and Colleterial 
Glands CG. , 

tubes, those of each testis opening into a to* deferens. In some 
bristle-tails and may-flies, the two vasa deferentia open separately, 
but usually they lead into a sperm-reservoir, whence issues a median 



Cr~ 





1 MUI sod Denny, Tht CedttmA, Lovd Ictvt ft Co. 
Fig. 14. — Hinder Abdominal Segment and Ovipositor of Female 



Fig. 14.— Hinder Abe 
Cockroach. Magnified. 



T Ac. Tergites. 

S*. nhSternite. 

S», Sderite between 7th and 8th 

S». ath Sderite. (sterna. 



Od, Vagina. 
sp, Spermatheca. 
G, Anterior, and g, pos- 
terior gonapophyses 



i nounsl 
i elongate 
lers again 
eautitully 
opted for 
le attacks 
>ns. For 
1 it is laid 
on, which 
; or they 
ng water- 
common, 
flesh-flies 
nt within 
an active 

cases are known among the 



ejaculatory duct. The male opening is on the ninth abdominal 
segment, to which belong the processes that form the claspers or 
genital armature. Accessory glands are commonly present in con- 
nexion both with the male and the female reproductive organs. 
The poison-glands of the. sting in wasps and bees are well-known 
examples of these. 

Embryology 

The Eff.— Amo 
the egg is large, 00 
ment of the growii 
oval shape; some 
are flask-shaped, ai 
sculptured (figs. 2< 
the protection of th 
of enemies, and f 
example, the egg it 
by an elongate stall 
in some cases form 
may be covered wi 
insects a gelatinou 
In various groups 
(Sarcophaga), for < 
the body of the m 
state; such insects 

Parthenogenesis. — A number of 
Hexapoda of the development of young from the eggs of virgin 
females. In insects so widely separated as bristle-tails and moths 
this occurs occasionally. In certain gall-flies {Cyniputae) no males 
are known to exist at all, and the species seems to be preserved 
entirely by successive parthenogenetic generations. In other gall- 
flies and in aphids we find that a sexual generation alternates with 
one or with many virgin generations. The offspring of the virgin 
females are in most of these instances females; but among the bees 
and wasps parthenogenesis occurs normally and always results in 
the development of males, the " queen insect laying either a 
fertilized or unfertilized egg at will. 

Maturation, Fertilisation and Segmentation. — Polar bodies were 
first observed in the eggs of Hexapoda by F. Blochmann in 1887. 
The two nuclei are successively divided from the egg nucleus in the 
usual way, but they frequently become absorbed in the peripheral 

ftrotoplasm instead of being extruded from the egg-cell altogether, 
t appears that in parthenogenetic eggs two polar nuclei are formed. 
According to A. Petrunkevich (1901-1903), the second polar nucleus 
uniting with one daughter-nucleus of the first polar body gives rise 
to the germ-cells of the parthenogcnetically-produced male. There 
is no reunion of the second polar nucleus with the female pronucleus, 
but, according to the recent work of L. Doncastcr (1 906-1 907) on 
the eggs of sawflies, the number of chromosomes is not reduced in 
parthenogenetic egg-nuclei, while, in eggs capable of fertilization, 
the usual reduction-divisions occur. Fertilization takes place as 
the egg is laid, the spermatozoa being ejected from the spermatheca 
of the female and making their way to the protoplasm of the egg 
through openings (micropyles) in its firm envelope. The segmenta- 
tion 01 the fertilized nucleus results in the formation of a number 
of nuclei which arrange themselves around the periphery of the egg 
and, the protoplasm surrounding them becoming constricted, a 
blastoderm or layer of cells, enclosing the central yolk, is formed. 
Within the yolk the nuclei of some " yolk cells " can be distinguished. 
Germinal layers and Food-Canal. — The embryo begins to develop 
as an elongate, thickened* ventral region of the blastoderm which is 
known as the ventral 
plate or germ band. 
Along this band a 
median furrow ap- 
pears, and a mass of 
cells sinks within, the 
one-layered germ 
band thus becoming 
transformed into a 
band of two cell-layers 
(fig. 15). In some 
cases the inner layer 
is formed not by in- 
v as i nation but by 
proliferation or by dc- 
lamiaation. The 
outer of these 
layers (fig. 15, E) b 
the ectoderm. With 




Fig. 15. — Diagram showing Formation of 
Germinal Layers. " "" ' 



E, ectoderm ; M , inner 



some authors, fig. is* M) much difference of opinion has pre- 
vailed. It has usually been regarded as representing both endoderm 
and mesoderm, and the groove which usually leads to its forma- 
tion has been compared to the abnormally elongated blastopore 
of a typical gastrula. No doubt can be entertained that the greater 
part of the inner layer corresponds to the mesoderm of more ordinary 
embryos, for the coelomic pouches, the germ-cells, the musculature 
and the vascular system all arise from it. Further, there is general 
agreement that the chitin-lined fore-gut and hind-gut, which form 



4*4 



HEXAPODA 



The recent researches of R. Heymons (189O on the Orthoptcra, and 
of A- Lecaillon (1898) on various leaf beetles, tend to show that the 
whole of the " mid-gut " arises from the proliferation of cells at the 
extremity of the stomadaeum and of the proctodaeum. On this view 
the entire food-canal in most Hexapoda must be regarded as of 
ectodermal origin, the " endoblast represents mesoderm only, 
and the median furrow whence it arises can be no longer compared 
with the blastopore. According to Heymons, the yolk-cells must be 
regarded as the true endoderm in the hcxapod embryo, for he states 
(1897) that in the bristle- tail Lepisma and in dragon-flies they give 
rise to the mid-gut. These views are not, however, supported 
by other recent observers. J. Camera's researches (1897) on the 
embryology of the mason bee (Ckaiicodoma) agree entirely with £he 
interpretations of Kowalcvsky and Hcidcr,' and so on the whole do 
those of F. Schwangart, who has studied (1904) the embryonic 
development of Lcpidoptera. He finds^that the endoderm arises 
from an anterior and a posterior rudiment derived from the " endo- 
blast," that many of the cells of these rudiments wander into the 
yolk, and that the mesenteric epithelium becomes reinforced by 
celb that migrate from the yolk. K. Escherich (1901), after a new 
research on the embryology of the muscid Diptera, claims that the 
fore and hind cndodcrmal rudiments arise from the blastoderm by 
invagination, and are from their origin distinct from the mesoderm. 
On the whole it seems likely that the endoderm is represented in 
part by the yolk, and in part by those anterior and posterior rudiments 
which usually form the mesenteron, but that in some Hexapoda 
the whole digestive tract may be ectodermal. It must be admitted 
that some of the later work on insect embryology has justified the 
growing scepticism in the universal applicability of the " germ-layer 
theory. ^ Hcidcr has suggested, however, that the apparent origin 
of the mid-gut from the stomodaeum and proctodaeum may be 
explainedby the presence of a " latent endoderm-group " in those 
invaginations. 

Embryonic Membranes. — A remarkable feature in the embryonic 
development of most Hexapoda is the formation of a protective 



IEMBRYOL0GY 

of the germ band a double fold in the undifferentiated blastoderm, 
which grows over the surface of the embryo, so that its inner and 
outer layers become continuous, forming respectively the amnio* 
and the serosa (fig. 16, A, S). The embryo of a moth, a dragon-fly 
or a bug is invaginated into the yolk at the head end. the portion of 
the blastoderm necessarily pushed in with it forming the amnion. 
The embryo thus becomes transferred to the dorsal face of the egg, 
but at a later stage it undergoes reversion to its original ventral 
position. In some parasitic Hymenoptera there is only a single 
embryonic membrane formed by delamination from the blastoderm, 
while in a few insects, including the wingless spring-tails, the em- 
bryonic membranes are vestigial or entirely wanting. In the bristle- 
tails Lepisma and Mackilis, an interesting transitional condition 
of the embryonic membranes has lately been shown by Heymons. 
The embryo is invaginated into the yolk, but the surface edges of 
the blastoderm do not close over, so that a groove or pore puts 
the insunken space that represents the amniotic cavity into com- 
munication with the outside. Heymons believes that the " dorsal 
organ " in the embryos of the lower Arthropoda corresponds with 
the region invaginated to form the serosa of the hcxapod embryo. 
Wheeler, however, compares with the " dorsal organ " the peculiar 
extra embryonic memorane or indusium which he has observed 
between serosa and amnion in the embryo of the grasshopper 
XiPkidium. 

Metameric Segmentation.— -The segments are perceptible at a very 
early stage of the development as a number of transverse bands 
arranged in a linear sequence. The first segmentation of the ventral 
plate is not, however, very definite, and the segmentation does not 
make its appearance simultaneously throughout the whole length of 
the plate; the anterior parts are segmented before the posterior. In 
Orthoptera and Thysanura, as well as some others of the lower 
insects, twenty-one of these divisions — not, however, all similar — 
may be readily distinguished, six of which subsequently enter into 
the formation of the head, three going to the thorax and twelve to 
the abdomen. In Hemiptera only eleven and in Collembola only 
six abdominal segments have been detected. The first and last 
of these twenty-one divisions are so different from the others that 
they can scarcely be considered true segments. 

Head Segments. — In the adult insect the head is insignificant in 
size compared with the thorax or abdomen, but in the embryo it 
forms a much larger portion of the body than it does in the adult. 
Its composition has been the subject of prolonged difference of 
opinion. Formerly it was said that the head consisted of four 
divisions, viz. three segments and the proccphalic or prae-oral lobes. 
It is now ascertained that the proccphalic lobes consist of three 
divisions, so that the head must certainly be formed from at least 
six segments. The first of these, according to the nomenclature 
of Heymons (see fig. 17), is the mouth or oral piece; the second, 
the antennal segment; the third, the intercalary or prae-mandibular 
segment; while the fourth, fifth, and sixth are respectively the 
segments of the mandibles and of the first and second maxillae. 
These six divisions of the head are diverse in kind, and subsequently 
undergo so much change that the part each of them takes in 
the formation of the head-capsule is not finally determined. The 

" ^ ion of the 

_ segment 

apparently entirely disappears! with' the exception of a pair of 
appendages it bears; these become the antennae; it is possible 



me lormauon 01 rne neaa-capsuie is not nnauy aciermineo 
labrum and clypcus arc developed as a single prolongation 
oral piece, not as a pair of appendages. The antennal s< 
apparently entirely disappears, with the exception of a | 
appendages it bears; these become the antennae; it is p 
that the original segment, or somepart of it, may even become a 
portion of the actual antennae. The intercalary segment has no 
appendages, nor rudiments thereof, except, according to H. Uzd 
(1897), in the thysanuran Campodea, and probably entirely dis- 
appears, though J. H. Comstock and C. Kochi believe that the 
labrum belongs to it. The appendages of the posterior three or 
trophal segments become the parts of the mouth. The ap- 
pendages of the two maxillary segments arise as treble instead 
of single projections, thus differing from other appendages. 
From these facts it appears that the anterior three divisions of 
the head differ strongly from the posterior three, which greatly 
resemble thoracic segments; hence it has been thought possible 
that the anterior divisions may represent a primitive head, to 
which three segments and their leg-like appendages were sub- 
sequently added to form the head as it now exists. This is, how- 
ever, very doubtful, and an entirely different inference is possible. 
Besides the five limb-bearing somites just enumerated, two others 
must now be recognized in the head. One of these is the ocular 
segment, in front of the antennal, and behind the primitive pre- 
oral segment. The other is the segment of the maxillulae (see 
above, under Jaws), behind the mandibular somite; the presence 
of this in the embryo of the collembolan Anurida has been lately 
shown (1900) by f. W. Folsom (fig. 18. v. 5), who terms the 
maxillulae " supcrfinguae " on account of their close association 
with the hypopharynx or lingua. In reference to the structure 
. of the head-capsule in the imago, it appears that the crypeus and 

Fie. 16. — Cross section of Embryo of German Cockroach (Pkyllo-- labrum represent, as already said, an unpaired median outgrowth 
dromia). S, serosa; A, amnion; E, ectoderm; N, rudiment of nerve- of the oral piece. According to W. A. Riley (1904) the cpicranium 
cord; M, mesodermal pouches. or " vertex," the compound eyes and the front divisions of the 

genae are formed by the cephalic lobes of the embryo (belonging 
membrane analogous to the amnion of higher Vertebrates and I to the ocular segment), while the mandibular and maxillary segments 
known by the same term. Usually there arises around the edge | form the hinder parts of the genae and the hypopharynx. 



Ffon NaMbtmn In MM md Denny, The Ctkneek, LovcO Reevr ft Co. 



Tn, 



EMBRYOLOGY, 

Great difference of opinion exists as to the hypopharynx, which 
has even been' thought to represent a distinct segment, or the pair 
of appendages of a distinct segment. Hevmona considers that it 
represents the sternites of the three trophai segments, and that the 
gula is merely a secondary development. Folsom looks on the 

hypopharynx as a secondary 
<*** development. Riley holds 

that the hypopharynx be- 
longs to the mandibular 
and maxillary segments, 
while the cervical sclerites 
or gula represent the ster- 
j num of the labial segment. 

The ganglia of the nervous 
system offer some important 
evidence as to the mor- 
M phology of the head, and 

are alluded to below. 

Thoracic Segments. — 
These are always three in 
number. ' iirs 

of legs api rly 

as rudimen the 

thoracic sej the 

wings, no esc 

appendages the 

close of tht ife, 

nor even, in till 

much later cic 

segments, a rly 

stage of the ventral plate, 
display in a well-marked 
manner the essential ele- 
ments of the insect seg- 
ment. These elements are 
a central piece or stcmitc, 
and a lateral field on each 
side bearing the leg-rudi- 
ment. The external part of 
the lateral held subsequently 
grows up, and by coalescence 
with its fellow forms the 
tergite or dorsal part of the 
segment. 

Abdominal Segments xxnd 
Appendages.—VJe have al- 
ready seen that in numerous 
lower insects the abdomen 
is formed from twelve divi- 
sions placed in linear fashion. 
Eleven of these may perhaps 
be considered as true seg- 
ments, but the twelfth or 
terminal one is different, and 
is called by Hcymons a 
„. «... , • tetson; in It is placed the 

Fig. 17.— Morphology of an Insect: ana | orifice, and the mass 
the embryo of CrvUotalpa, somewhat subsequently becomes the 
diagrammatic. The longitudinal scg- upper and lower laminae 
mented band along the middle line re- male*. i n Hcmiptcra this 
presents the early segmentation of the telson is absent, and the 
nervous system and the subsequent ana j orifice is placed quite 
median field of each stcrnitc; the lateral at the termination of the 
transverse unshaded bands are the eleventh segment. More- 
lateral fields of each segment ; t the OVCTf j n th f s or< j cr t h e ao _ 
shaded areas indicate the more inter- domen s hows at first a 
nally placed mesoderm layer. The : scg- division into only nine seg- 
ments are numbered 1-21; 1-6 will form men tsand a terminal mass, 
the head, 7-9 the thorax, 10-21 theabdo- which |a St subsequently be- 
men. if.anus; Abx x Abx lu appendage comes divided into two. 
of 1st and of nth abdominal segments; The appendages of the 
Ans, anal piece -telson or 1 2th abdo- a bdomen are called cerci. 
minal segment; Ant, antenna; D*> 8t ylets and gonapophyses. 
deuterencephalon; AW, mandible; Thcy differ much according 
first maxilla; Afar,, second t0 tnc kind f j nsect , and 



HEXAPODA 



425 



Alter Hcynoas, 



Mxi, 



maxilla or labium; O. mouth; Oocl, in the adult according 
rudimentary bbrum and clypeus; ^ Difference of opinion 
Pre. protencephalon; 5/,, St t * stig- as to the ^^^ f the 
mata 1 and 10; Terg, tergite; Thx u abdominal appendages pre- 
appendage of first thoracic segment; ^j^ The cerci, when 
7Vr. telencephalon; Ul. a thickening present, appear in the 
at hinder margin of the mouth, v * -- • « 



accor din g t 



mature insect to be attached 
to the tenth segment, but 
yrdtng to Hcymons they are really appendages of the eleventh seg- 
ment, their connexion with the tenth being secondary and the result 
of considerable changes that take place in the terminal segments. 
It has been disputed whether any true cerci exist in the higher insects, 
but they are probably represented in the Diptera and in the scorpion- 
flies (Mecaptera). In those insects in which a median terminal 
appendage exists between the two cerci this is considered to be a 




prolongation of the eleventh tergite. The stylets, when present, 
are placed on the ninth segment, and in some Thysanura exist also 
on the eighth segment ; their development takes place later in life 
than that of the cerci. The gonapophyses are the projections near 
the extremity of the body that surround the sexual orifices, and 
vary extremely according to the kind of insect. Thcy have chiefly 
been studied in the female, and form the sting and ovipositor, 
organs peculiar to this sex. They are developed on the ventral 
surface of the body and are six in number, one pair arising from the 
eighth ventral plate and two pairs from the ninth. This has been 
found to be the case in insects so widely different as Orthoptera and 
Aculeate Hymenoptera. The genital armature of the male u formed 
to a considerable extent by modifications of the segments them- 
selves. The development of the armature has been little studied, 
and the question whether there may be present gonapophyses homo- 
logous with those of the female is open. 

In the adult state no insect possesses more than six legs; and 
they are always attached to the thorax; in many Thysanura there 
are, however, processes on the abdomen that, as to their position, 
are similar to legs. In the embryos of many insects there are pro- 
jections from the segments of the abdomen similar, to a considerable 
extent, to the rudimentary thoracic legs. 
The question whether these projections 
can be considered an indication of former 
polypody in insects has been raised. 
They do not long persist in the embryo, 
but disappear, and the area each one 
occupied becomes part of the stcrnitc 
In some embryos there is but a single 
pair of these rudiments (or vestiges) 
situate on the first abdominal segment, 
and in some cases they become invagina- 1 
tions of a glandular nature. Whether 
ccrd, stylets and gonapophyses are 
developed from these rudiments has been 
much debated. It appears that it is ' 
possible to accept cerci and stylets as 
modifications of the temporary pseudo- 
pods, but it is more difficult to believe 
that this is the case with the gona- 
pophyses, for they apparently commence / 
their development considerably later jf* 
than cerci and stylets and only after the * 
apparently complete disappearance of the 
embryonic pscudopods. The fact that Sc 
there arc two pairs of gonapophyses on tf t 
the ninth abdominal segment would be h, 
fatal to the view that they arc in any way ba 
homologous with legs, were it not that he 
there is some evidence that the division nc 
into two pairs is secondary and incom- a, 
plete. But another and apparently in- m 
supcrable objection may be raised — that i, 
the appendages of the ninth segment are 2 * 
the stylets, and that the gonapophyses ■»' 
cannot therefore be appendicular. The / 
pscudopods that exist on the abdomen of e 
numerous caterpillars may possibly arise ' t Maxillary, 
from the embryonic pseuaopods, but this y Labial, 
also is far from beingestablishcd. g| Prothoracic 

Nervous System.— -The nervous system is « Meso thoracic 
ectodermal in origin, and is developed and IO * Mctathoracic 
segmented to a large extent in connexion 

with the outer part of the body, so that it affords important evidence 
as to the segmentation thereof. The continuous layer of cells from 
which the nervous system is developed undergoes a segmentation 
analogous with that we have described as occurring in the ventral 
plate; there is thus formed a pair of contiguous ganglia for each 
segment of the body, but there is no ganglion for the telson. The 
ganglia become greatly changed in position during the later life, 
and it is usually said that there arc only ten pairs of abdominal 
ganglia even in the embryo. In Orthoptera, Heymons has demon- 
strated the existence of eleven pairs, the terminal pair becoming, 
however, soon united with the tenth. The nervous system of the 
embryonic head exhibits three ganglionic masses, anterior to the 
thoracic ganglionic masses; these three masses subsequently amal- 
gamate and form the sub-oesophageal ganglion, which supplies the 
trophai segments. In front of the three masses that will form 
the sub-oesophageal ganglion the mass of cells that is to form the 
nervous system is very large, and projects on each side; this anterior 
or " brain " mass consists of three lobes (the prot-, dcut-, and trit- 
encephaton of Viallanes and others), each of which might be thought 
to represent a segmental ganglion. But the protocerebrum con- 
tains the ganglia of the ocular segment in addition to those of 
the procepnalic lobes. These three divisions subsequently form 
the 6upra-oesophageal ganglion or brain proper. There are other 
ganglia in addition to those of the ventral chain, and Janet supposes 
that the ganglia of the sympathetic system indicate the existence 
I of three anterior head-segments; the remains of the segments 
themselves are, in accordance with this view, to be sought in the 



Ocular segment, 

Antennal. 

Trite-cerebral. 

Mandibular. 

Maxillular. 



4^6 



HEXAPODA 



stomodaeum. Folsom has detected in the embryo of Anurida a 
pair of ganglia (fig. 18, 5) belonging to the maxillular (or superiingual) 
segment, thus establishing seven sets of cephalic ganglia, and sup- 
porting his view as to the composition of the head. 

Air-tubes.— The air-tubes, like the food-canal, are formed by in- 
vaginations of the ectoderm, which arise close to the developing 
appendages, the rudimentary spiracles appearing soon after the 
budding limbs. The pits leading from these lengthen into tubes, 
and undergo repeated branching as development proceeds. 

Dorsal Closure. — The germ band evidently marks the ventral 
aspect of the developing insect, whose body must be completed 
by the extension of the embryo so as to enclose the yolk dorsally. 
The method of this dorsal closure varies in different insects. In the 
Colorado beetle (Doryphora), whose development has been studied 
by W. M. Wheeler, the amnion is ruptured and turned back from 
covering the germ band, enclosing the yolk dorsally and becoming 
finally absorbed, as the ectoderm of the germ band itsell spreads 
to form the dorsal wall. In some midges and in caddis-flics the 
serosa becomes ruptured and absorbed, while the germ band, ttill 
clothed with the amnion, grows around the yolk. In moths and 
certain saw-flies there is no rupture of the membranes; the Russian 
zoologists Tichomirov and Kovalevsky have described the growth 
of both amnion and embryonic ectoderm around the yolk, the 
embryo being thus completely enclosed until hatching time by both 
amnion and serosa. V. Graber has described a similar method of 
dorsal closure in the saw-fly Hylotoma. 

Mesoderm, Codom ana Blood-System. — From the mesoderm 
most of the organs of the body — muscular, circulatory, reproductive — 

take their origin. The 
■ mass of cells undergoes 

> segmentation corre- 
sponding with the outer 
c segmentation of the 
] embryo, and a pair of 

' cavities — the coelomic 
pouches (fig. 16, M) — 
■sp are formed in each seg- 
. f ment. Each coelomic 

B>uch — as traced by 
eymons in his study 
mte on the development of 
the cockroach (Pkylh- 
dromia) — divides into 
' m three parts, of which 
the most dorsal con- 
tains the primitive 



Serm-celts, the median 
isappears, and the 
ventral loses its boun- 



After Bqrcnoat. ZtiL Wits. Ztobg. vol 53. 

Fig. 19. — Cross sections through Ab- 
domen of German Cockroach Embryo. A , . . 
(later than fig. 16) magnified. B (still ***** •» { becomes 
more advance*, dorsal closure complete) . aied f «P*5 h l , h , c fc™*- 
magnified. "». * at body %• IO > 
ec Ectoderm This latter, as well as the 
en\ Endoderm*. , ¥ M J, an ? *** wa " 8 . of 
sp, Splanchnic layer of mesoderm. g»e Wood spaces, .arises 
y Yolk. by the modification of 
h Heart mesodermal cells, and 
p\ Pericardial septum. Jhe body «*vity is 
c, Coelom. formed by the enlarge- 
g, Germ-cells surrounded by rudiment-cclla ™ c1 * a SLS oa, f scenC | e 



/. 



of ovarian tubes. 
M uscle-rudiment. 
Nerve-chain. 
Fat body. 

I npushing ot ectoderm to form air-tubes. 
Secondary body-cavity. 



of the blood channels 
and by the splitting of 
the fat body. It is 
therefore a haemocoel, 
the coelom of the de- 
veloped insect being 
represented only by 
the cavities of the genital glands and their ducts. 

Reproductive Organs.— In the cockroach embryo, before the see- 
mentation of the germ-band has begun, the primitive germ-ccUs 
can be recognized at the hinder end of the mesoderm, from whose 
ordinary cells they can be distinguished by their larger size. At a 
later stage further germ-cells arise from the epithelium of the coelomic 
pouches from the second to the seventh abdominal segments, and 
become surrounded by other mesoderm cells which form the ovarian 
or testicular tubes and ducts (fig. 19, g). In the male of PkyUo- 
dromia the rudiment of a vestigial ovary becomes separated from the 
developing testis, indicating perhaps an originally hermaphrodite 
condition. An exceedingly early differentiation of the primitive 
germ-cells occurs in certain Diptera. E. Metchnikoff observed 
(1866) in the development of the parthenogenetic eggs produced by 
the precocious larva of the gall-midge Cecidomyia that a large 
" polar-cell " appeared at one extremity during the primitive ceU- 
segmentation. This by successive divisions forms a group of four to 
eight cells, which subsequently pass through the blastoderm, and 
dividing into two groups become symmetrically arranged and 
surrounded by the rudiments of the ovarian tubes. E. G. Balbiani 
and R. Ritter (1800) have since observed a similar early origin for 
thegerm-cefls in the midge Chironomus and in the Aphidae. 
The paired oviducts and vasa deferentia are, as we have seen, 



(GROWTH AND CHANGS 

mesodermal in origin. The median vagina, sperrnathecm and 
ejaculatory duct are, on the other hand, formed by ectodermal 
inpushings. The classical researches of J. A. Palmen (1884) on these 
ducts have shown that in may-flies and in female earwigs the paired 
mesodermal ducts open directly to the exterior, while in male earwigs 
there is a single mesodermal duct, due either to the coal e scence of the 
two or to the suppression of one. In the absence of the external 
ectodermal ducts usual in winged insects, these two groups resemble 
therefore the primitive Aptcra. The presence of 'rudiments of the 
genital ducts of both sexes in the embryo of either sex is interesting 
and suggestive. The eiaculatory duct which opens on the ninth 
abdominal sternum in the adult male arises in the tenth abdominal 
embryonic segment and subsequently moves forward. 

Gkowth and Metamokphosxs 

After hatching or birth an insect undergoes a process of growth 
and change until the adult condition is reached. The varied 




AhaUubtt.E*LBmn.4,n.t. (U.S. Dept Agr.). 

Fio. 20.— a. Bed-bug (Cimex Uctuhrius, Linn.); newly hatched 
young from beneath; 6, from above; d, egg, magnified; c, foot 
with claws; e, serrate spine, more highly magnified. 

details of this post-embryonic development furnish some of the 
most interesting facts and problems to the students of the 
Hexapoda. Wingless insects, such as spring-tails and lice, make 
their appearance in the form of miniature adults. Some winged 
insects — cockroaches, bugs (fig. 20) and earwigs, for example — 
when young closely resemble their parents, except for the absence 
of wings. On the other hand, we find in the vast majority of the 
Hexapoda a very marked difference between the perfect insect 
(imago) and the young animal when newly hatched and for some 
time after hatching. From the moth's egg comes a crawling 
caterpillar (fig. at, c), from the fly's a legless maggot (fig. 25, a). 




Fmn Mafly. E*LBA U (VS. D4*. Agr). 

Fig. 21.— ej. Owl moth (Heliothis antigen); a,b. egg, highly 
magnified; c, larva or caterpillar; d, pupa in earthen cell. 

Such a young insect is a /arte— a. term used by zoologists for 
young animals generally that are decidedly unlike their parents, 
It is obvious that the hatching of the young as a larva necessitates 



* 



GROWTH AND CHANGE) 



HEXAPODA 



427 



a more or less profound transformation or metamorphosis before 
the perfect state is attained. Usually this transformation comes 
with apparent suddenness, at the penultimate stage of the 
insect's life-history, when the passive pupa (fig. 21, d) is revealed, 
exhibiting the wings and other imaginal structures, which have 
been developed unseen beneath the cuticle of the larva, Hexapoda 
with this resting pupal stage in their life-history are said to 
undergo "a complete transformation," to be metabolic, or 
holometabolic, whereas those insects in which the young form 
resembles the parent arc said to be a metabolic. Such insects as 
dragon-flies and may-flies, whose young, though unlike the parent, 
develop into the adult form without a resting pupal stage are 
said to undergo an "incomplete transformation" or to be 
hemimetabolic The absence of the pupal stage depends upon 
the fact that in the ametabolic and hemimetabolic Hexapoda the 
wing-rudiments appear as lateral outgrowths (fig. 22) of the two 
hinder thoracic segments and are visible externally throughout 
the life-history, becoming larger after each moult or casting of the 
cuticle. Hence, as has been pointed out by D. Sharp (1808), the 
marked divergence among the Hexapoda, as regards life-history, 
is between insects whose wings develop outside the cuticle 
(Exopterygota) and those whose wings develop inside the cuticle 
(Endopterygota), becoming visible only when the casting of the 
last larval cuticle reveals the pupa. Metamorphosis among the 
Hexapoda depends upon the universal acquisition of wings 




After Howard. ImsetS Lift, vol. vfi. 

Fic. 22. — Nymph of Locust (Schistocera americana), showing wing- 
rudimortU. 

during post-embryonic development — no insect being hatched 
with the smallest external rudiments of those organs — and on the 
necessity for successive castings or " moults " (ecdyses) of the 
cuticle. 

Ecdysis. — The embryonic ectoderm of an insect consists of a 
layer of cells forming a continuous structure, the orifices in it — 
mouth, spiracles, anus and terminal portions of the genital 
ducts— being invaginations of the outer wall. This cellular layer 
is called the hypodermis; it is protected externally by a cuticle, 
a layer of matter it itself excretes, or in the excretion of which it 
plays, at any rate, an important part. The cuticle is a dead 
substance, and is composed in large part of chitin. The cuticle 
contrasts strongly in its nature With the hypodermis it protects. 
It is different in its details in different insects and in different stages 
of the life of the same insect. The " sclerites " that make up the 
skeleton of the insect (which skeleton, it should be remembered, 
is entirely external) are composed of this chitinous excretion. The 
growth of an insect is usually rapid, and as the cuticle does not 
share therein, it is from time to time cast off by moulting or 
ecdysis. Before a moult actually occurs the cuticle becomes 
separated from its connexion with the underlying hypodermis. 
Concomitant with this separation there is commencement of the 
formation of a new cuticle within the old one, so that when the 
latter is cast off the insect appears with a partly completed new 
cuticle. The new inslar— or temporary form— is often very 
different from the old one, and this is the essential fact of meta- 
morphosis. Metamorphosis is, from this point of view, the sum 
of the changes that take place under the cuticle of an insect 
between the ecdyses, which changes only become externally 
displayed when the cuticle is cast off. The hypodermis is the 
immediate agent in effecting the external changes. 




The study of the physiology of ecdysis in its simpler forms has on- 
fortunately been somewhat neglected, investigators having directed 
their attention chiefly to the cases that are most striking, such as 
the transformation of a maggot into a fly, or of a caterpillar into a 
butterfly. The changes have been found to be made up of two sets 
of processes histolysis, by which the whole or part of a structure 
disappears: and histogenesis, or the formation of the new structure. 
By histolysis certain parts of the hypodermis are destroyed, while 
other portions of it develop into the new structures. The hypo- 
dermis is composed of parts of two different kinds, viz. (1) the larger 
part of the hypodermis that exists in 
the maggot or caterpillar and is dis- 
solved at the metamorphosis; (2) parts 
that remain comparatively quiescent 
previously, and that grow and develop 
when the other parts degenerate. These 
centres of renovation are called imaginal 
disks or folds. The adult caterpillar 
may be described as a creature the 
hypodermis of which is studded with ..Adapted, from K o mrhrft and 
buds that expand and form the butter- Henfcr.sndLowiKfc 
fly, while the parts around them de- . Fic. 23.— Diagram show- 
generate. In some insects (e.g. the ln S position of imaginal buds 
maggots of the blowfly, CaUipkora «n larva of fly. I., II., 111., 
vomttorio) the imaginal disks arc to all the three thoracic segments 

it""" "~ 

ho 
b> 



sp 

CO 

th 

Much consideration has been given to the nature of meta- 
morphosis in insects, to its value to the creatures and to the 
mode of it* origin. Insect metamorphosis may be briefly 
described as phenomena of development characterized by abrupt 
changes of appearance and of structure, occurring during the 
period subsequent to embryonic development and antecedent to 
the reproductive state. It is, in short, a peculiar mode of growth 
and adolescence. The differences in appearance between the 
caterpillar and the butterfly, striking as they are to the eye, do 
not sufficiently represent the phenomena of metamorphosis to the 
intelligence. The changes that take place involve a revolution in 
the being, and may be summarized under three headings: (1) 
The food-relations of the individual are profoundly changed, an 
entirely different set of mouth-organs appears and the kind and 



428 



HEXAPODA 



{GROWTH AND CHANGE 



quantity of the food taken is often radically different, (a) A 
wingless, sedentary creature is turned into a winged one with 
superlative powers of aerial movement. (3) An individual in 
which the reproductive organs and powers are functionally 
absent becomes one in which these Structures and powers are the 
only reason for existence, for the great majority of insects die 
after a brief period of reproduction. These changes are in the 
higher insects so extreme that it is difficult to imagine how they 
could be increased. In the case of the common drone-fly, 
Eristalis tenax, the individual, from a sedentary maggot living in 
filth, without any relations of sex, and with only unimportant 
organs for the ingestion of its foul nutriment, changes to a 
creature of extreme alertness, with magnificent powers of flight, 
living on the products of the flowers it frequents, and endowed 
with highly complex sexual structures. 

r Forms of Larva. — The unlikcness of the young insect to its 
parent is one of. the factors that necessitates metamorphosis. 
It is instructive, further, to trace among 
metabolic insects an increase in the degree 
of this dissimilarity. An adult Hexapod 
is provided with a firm, well-chitinized 
cuticle and six conspicuous jointed legs. 
Many larval Hexapoda might be defined 
in similar general terms, unlike as they are 
to their parents in most points of detail. 
Examples of such are to be seen in the 
grubs ».of£ may-flies, dragon-flies, lace- 
wing-flies and ground-beetles (fig. 24). 
This type of active, armoured larva — 
often bearing conspicuous feelers on the 
head and long jointed cercopods on the 
tenth abdominal segment — was styled cam- 
podeiform by F. Brauer (1869), on account 
of its likeness in shape to the bristle-tail 
Campodea. As an extreme contrast to this 
UodJn* {^rrjritttm campodeiform type, we take the maggot 
* Fig. 24. — Cam- of the house-fly (fig. 25) — a vermiform 
podeiform Larva of larva, with soft, white, feebly-chitmiied 
a Ground -Beetle cuticle and without either head-capsule 
(Aepus mannus). Qf legs Bctwecn aese two extremes, 
numerous intermediate forms can be traced: 
the grub (wireworm) of a dick-beetle, with narrow elongate 
well-armoured body, but with the legs very short; the grub 
of a chafer, with the legs fairly developed, but with the cuticle 
of all the trunk-segments soft and feebly chitinized; the well- 
known caterpillar of a moth (fig. 21, e) or saw-fly, with its 
long cylindrical body, bearing the six shortened thoracic legs 
and a variable number of pairs of " pro-legs " on the abdomen 
(this being the erucifonn type of larva); the soft, white, wood- 




After Ecmtid, Bd. Bull 4. nu s. (I/J>. Dipt Ajprj. K 

Fic. 25.— Vermiform Larva (maggot) of House-fly (Musca do- 
mestiea). Magnified; b, spiracle on prothorax; c, protruded head 
region; d, tail-end with functional spiracles; e,f, head region with 
mouth hooks protruded ; g, hooks retracted ; h, eggs . All magnified. 

boring grub of a longhorn-beetle or of the saw-fly Sirex, with 
its stumpy vestiges of thoracic legs; the large-headed but 
entirely legless, fleshy grub of a weevil; and the legless larva, 
with greatly reduced head, of a bee. The various larvae of 
the above series, however, have all a distinct head-capsule, 
which is altogether wanting in the degraded fly maggot. These 
duTerences in larval form depend in part or the surroundings 



among which the larva finds itself after hatching; the active, 
armoured grub has to seek food for itself and to fight its own 
battles, while the soft, defenceless maggot is provided with 
abundant nourishment. But in general we find that elaboration 
of imaginal structure is associated with degradation in the nature 
of the larva, erucifonn and vermiform larvae being characteristic 
of the highest orders of the Hexapoda, so that unlikmess 
between parent and offspring has increased with the evolution 
of the class. 

Hyperntetamorpkosis. — Among a few of the beetles or Coleo- 
ptera (?.«.), and also in the neuropterous genus Mantis pa, are 
found life-histories in which the earliest instar is campodeiform 
and the succeeding larval stages erucifonn. These later stages, 
comprising the greater part of the larval history, are adapted 
for an inquiline or a parasitic life, where shelter is assured 
and food abundant, while the short-lived, active condition 
enables the newly-hatched insect to make its way to the spot 
favourable for its future development, clinging, for example, 
in the case of an oil-beetle's larva, to the hairs of a bee as she 
flies towards her nest. The presence, of the two successive 
larval forms in the life-history constitutes what is called hyper- 
metamorphosis. Most significant is the precedence of the 
erucifonn by the campodeiform type. In conjunction with 
the association mentioned above of the most highly developed 
imaginal with the most degraded larval structure, it indicates 
clearly that the active, armoured grub preceded the sluggish 
soft-skinned caterpillar or maggot in the evolution of the Hexa- 
poda. 

Nymph. — The term nymph is applied by many writers on the 
Hexapoda to all young forms of insects that are not sufficiently 
unlike their parents to be called larvae. Other writers apply 
the term to a " free " pupa (see infra). It is in wellnigfa universal 
use for those instars of ametabolous and hemimetabolous 
insects in which the external wing-rudiments have become 
conspicuous (fig. 27). The mature dragon-fly nymph, for 
example, makes its way out of the water in which the early 
stages have been passed and, clinging to some water-plant, 
undergoes the final ecdysis that the imago may emerge into 
the air. Like most ametabolic and hemimetabolic Hexapoda, 
such nymphs continue to move and feed throughout their 
lives. But examples are not wanting of a more or less complete 
resting habit during the latest nymphal instar. In some deads 
the mature nymph ceases to feed and remains quiescent within 
a pillar-shaped earthen chamber. The nymph of a thrips-insect 
(Thysanoptcra) is sluggish, its legs and wings being sheathed 
by a delicate membrane, while the nymph of the male scale- 
insect rests enclosed beneath a waxy covering. ^ 

Sub-imago. — Among the Hexapoda generally there is no 
subsequent ecdysis nor any further growth after the assumption 
of the winged state. The may-flies, however, offer a remarkable 
exception to this rule. After a prolonged aquatic larval and 
nymphal life-history, the winged insect appears as a sub-imago, 
whence, after the casting of a delicate cuticle, the true imago 
emerges. 

Pupa. — In the metabolic Hexapoda the resting pupal instar 
shows externally the wings and other characteristic imaginal 
organs which have been gradually elaborated beneath the 
larval cuticle. It is usual to distinguish between the free 
pupae (fig. 26, b) — of Coleoptera and Hymenoptera, for example 
— in which the wings, legs and other appendages are not fixed 
to the trunk, and the obtect pupae (fig. 21, d) — such as may 
be noticed in the majority of the Lepidoptera— whose append* 
ages are closely and immovably pressed to the body by a general 
hardening and fusion of the cuticle. In the degree of mobility 
there is great diversity among pupae. A gnat pupa swims 
through the water by powerful strokes of its abdomen, while 
the caddis-fly pupa, in preparation for its final ecdysis, bites 
its way out of its subaqueous protective case and rises through 
the water, so that the fly may emerge into the air. Some 
pupae are thus more active than some nymphs; the essential 
character of a pupa is not therefore its passivity, but that it 
is the instar in which the wings first become evident externally. 



GROWTH AND CHANGE) 

The division < 
Endopteryga u 
> If we admit th 
diverged from tl 
Urva has alway 
notwithstanding 
cannot but rco 
transformation 
considered that 
of the pupa. 1 
part of the tra 
which, as L. C. 
fly enclosed in a 
imperfect mctai 
of the larva is c 
as the correspo 
will recognize if 
male Coccidae. 
be changed fror 
actively functtc 
false pupa and 
devoted to the i 
have become ex 
can be taken, 1 
insects with rna 
to the true pupa 



HEXAPODA 



4*9 



Fig. 26.— a, 
f», pupa ; c, larv 

ciRphemeridaei 
Alewrodidae an* 
than we yet pa 
order completcl 
heJotnetabolous 
rectly state tht 
transference of 1 
It cannot but t 
some peculiarity 
wings to be din 
that fleas posset 
This is a most n 
tion exists as to 

Life- Relation 
to the fasdna 
nymph and pt 
details, the rea 
orders and gn 
phosis is that 
habitat and n 
subterranean, < 
It may bite an 
It may eat roc 
flower*. The * 
endless beauli 
paired spiracle 
as a rule, in tei 
beetles, for ex; 
the spiracles a 
pair at the bit 
ment — such as 
scopk " tail " 
film and drat 
similar restric 



From Mull and 
(titer VayMfee). Tim 



%x 



(fig. 25, d) is seen in many larvae of flies (Dipteca ) that live and 
feed buried in carrion or excrement. Other aquatic larvae 
have the tracheal system entirely closed, and are able to breathe 
dissolved air by means of tubular or leaf-like gills. Such are 
the grubs of stone-flies, may-flies (fig. 27) and some dragon-flies 
and midges. An interesting feature is the difference often to 
be observed between an aquatic larva 
and pupa of the same insect in the 
matter of breathing. The gnat larva, for 
example, breathes at the tail-end, hanging 
head^lownwards from the surface-film. 
But the pupa hangs from the surface by 
means of paired respiratory trumpets on 
the pro thorax, the dorsal thoracic sur- 
face, where the cuticle splits to allow the 
emergence of the fly, being thus directed 
towards the upper air. 

A marked disproportion between the 
life-term of larva and imago is common; 
the former often lives for months or 
years, while the latter only survives for 
weeks or days or hours. Generally the 
larval is the feeding, the imaginal the 
breeding, stage of the life-cycle. The 
extreme of this " division of labour " is 
seen in those insects whose jaws arc 
vestigial in the winged state, when, the 
need for feeding all behind them, they 
have but to pair, to lay eggs and to die. 
The acquisition of wings is the sign of 
developed reproductive power. ^^ 

Paedogenesis. — Nevertheless, the func* ££ u^Tr«v« * Co. 
tion of reproduction is occasionally exer- Fig. 37. — Nymph of 
ciscd by larvae. In 1865 N. Wagner May-fly {Ckloeon dip- 
made his classical observations on ^ the l^^&Ki 
production of larvae from unfertilized gill-plates (6, 6). Mag- 
eggs developed in the precociously- nified— . (The feelers 
formed ovaries of a larval gall-midge and legs are cut shore) 
(Cecidomyid), and subsequent observers , 
have confirmed his results by studies on insects of the same 
family and of the related Chironomidae. The larvae produced 
by this remarkable method (paedogenesis) of virgin-reproduction 
arc hatched within the parent larva, and in some cases escape 
by the rupture of its body. 

Polyembryony. — Occasionally the power of reproduction is 
thrown still farther back in the life-history, and it is found 
that from a single egg a large number of embryos may be formed. 
P. Marchal has (1004) described this power in two small parasitic 
Hymenoptera— a Chalcid (Encyrius) which lays eggs in the 
developing eggs of the small moth Hypononuuta, and a Procto- 
trypid (Polygnotus) which infests a gall-midge (Cecidomyid) 
larva. In the egg of these insects a small number of nuclei 
are formed by the division of the nucleus, and each of these 
nuclei originates by division the cell-layers of a separate embryo. 
Thus a mass or chain of embryos is produced, lying in a common 
cyst, and developing as their larval host develops. In this 
way over a hundred embryos may result from a single egg. 
Marchal points out the analogy of this phenomenon to the 
artificial polyembryony that has been induced in Echinoderm 
and other eggs by separating the blastomeres, and suggests 
that the abundant food-supply afforded by the host-larva is 
favourable for this multiplication of embryos, which may be, 
in the first instance, incited by the abnormal osmotic pressure 
on the egg. 

Duration of Life.— The flour-moth (Epkestia kuknUUa) 
sometimes passes through five or six generations in a single' 
year. Although one of the characteristics of insects is the 
brevity of their adult lives, a considerable number of exceptions 
to the general rule have been discovered. These exceptions 
may be briefly summarized as follows: (x) Certain larvae, 
provided with food that may be adequate in quantity but 
deficient in nutriment, may live and go on feeding for many 



430 



HEXAPODA 



[CLASSIFICATION 



years; (2) certain stages of the life that are naturally M resting 
stages " may be in exceptional cases prolonged, and that to a 
very great extent; in this case no food is taken, and the activity 
of the individual is almost nil, (3) the life of certain insects 
in the adult state may be much prolonged if celibacy be main- 
tained; a female of Cybister roesdii (a large water-beetle) 
has lived five and a half years in the adult state in captivity. 
In addition to these abnormal cases, the life of certain insects 
is naturally more prolonged than usual. The females of some 
social insects have been known to live for many years. In 
Tibicen septemdecim the life of the larva extends over from 
thirteen to seventeen years. * The eggs of locusts may remain 
for years in the ground before hatching; and there may thus 
arise the peculiar phenomenon of some species of insect appear- 
ing in vast numbers in a locality where it has not been seen for 
several years. 

Classification 

Number of Species.— It is now considered that 2,000,000 
is a moderate estimate of the species of insects actually existing. 
Some authorities consider this total to be too small, and extend 
the number to 10,000,000. Upwards of 300,000 species have been 
collected and described, and at present the number of named 
forms increases at the rate of about 8000 species per annum. 
The greater part by far of the insects existing in the world is 
still quite unknown to science. Many of the species are in pro- 
cess' of extinction, owing to the extensive changes that are 
taking place in the natural conditions of the world by the 
extension of human population and of cultivation, and by the 
destruction of forests; hence it is probable that a considerable 
proportion of the species at present existing will disappear from 
the face of the earth before we have discovered or preserved 
any specimens of them. Nevertheless, the constant increase of 
our knowledge of insect forms renders classification increasingly 
difficult, for gaps in the series become filled, and while the number 
of genera and families increases, the distinctions between these 
groups become dependent on characters that must seem trivial 
to the naturalist who is not a specialist. 

Orders of Hexapoda. — In the present article it is only possible 
to treat of the division of the Hexapoda into orders and sub-orders 
and of the relations of these orders to each other. For further 
classificatory details, reference must be made to "the special 
articles on the various orders. As regards the vast majority 
of insects, the orders proposed by Linnaeus are acknowledged 
by modern zoologists. His classification was founded mainly 
on the nature of the wings, and five of his orders — the Hymeno- 
ptera (bees, ants, wasps, &c), Coleoptera (beetles), Diptera 
(two-winged flies), Lepidoptera (moths and butterflies), and 
Hemiptera (bugs, deads, &c.) — are recognized to-day with nearly 
the same limits as he laid down. His order of wingless insects 
(Aptera) included Crustacea, spiders, centipedes and other 
creatures that now form classes of the Arthropoda distinct from 
the Hexapoda; it also included Hexapoda of parasitic and 
evidently degraded structure, that are now regarded as allied 
more or less closely to various winged insects. Consequently 
the modern order Aptera comprises only a very small proportion 
of Linnaeus's " Aptera "—the spring-tails and bristle-tails, wing- 
less Hexapoda that stand evidently at a lower grade of develop- 
ment than the bulk of the class. The earwigs, cockroaches 
and locusts, which Linnaeus included among the Coleoptera, 
were early grouped into a distinct order, the Orthoptera. 
The great advance in modern zoology as regards the classifi- 
cation of the Hexapoda lies in the treatment of a hetero- 
geneous assembly which formed Linnaeus's order Neuroptera. 
The characters of the wings are doubtless important as indications 
of relationship, but the nature of the jaws and the course of 
the life-history must be considered of greater value. Linnaeus's 
Neuroptera exhibit great diversity in these respects, and the 
insects included in it are now therefore distributed into a number 
of distinct orders. The many different arrangements that 
have been proposed can hardly be referred to in this article. 
Of special importance In the history of systematic entomology 
was the scheme of F. Brauer (1885), who separated the spring- 



tails and brtstle-tafls as a sub-class Apterygogenca from all 
the other Hexapoda, these forming the sub-class Pterygogene* 
distributed into sixteen orders. Brauer in his arrangement 
of these orders laid special stress on the nature of the meta- 
morphosis, and was the first to draw attention to the number 
of Malpighian tubes as of importance in classification. Sub- 
sequent writers have, for the most part, increased the number 
of recognized orders; and during the last few years several 
schemes of classification have been published, in the most 
revolutionary of which— that of A. Handlirsch (1003-1004) 
— the Hexapoda are divided into four classes and thirty-four 
orders 1 Such excessive multiplication of the larger taxonomic 
divisions shows an imperfect sense of proportion, for if the 
term " class " be allowed its usual zoological value, no student 
can fail to recognize that the Hexapoda form a single well- 
defined class, from which few entomologists would wish to 
exclude even the Apterygogenea. In several recent attempts 
to group the orders into sub-classes, stress has been laid upon 
a few characters in the imago. C Bdrner (1004), for example, 
considers the presence or absence of cerci of great importance, 
while F. Klapalek (1004) lays stress on a supposed distinction 
between appendicular and non-appendicular genital processes. 
A natural system must take into account the nature of the 
larva and of the metamorphosis in conjunction with the 
general characters of the imago. Hence the grouping of the 
orders of winged Hexapoda into the divisions Exopterygota 
and Endopterygota, as suggested by D. Sharp, is unlikely to 
be superseded by the result of any researches into minute 
imaginal structure. Sharp's proposed association of the parasitic 
wingless insects in a group Anapterygota cannot, however, be 
defended as natural; and recent researches into the structure 
of these forms enables us to associate them confidently with 
related winged orders. The classification here adopted is based 
on Sharp's scheme, with the addition of suggestions from some 
of the most recent authors— especially Bdrner and Enderlein. 
Class: HEXAPODA. 
Sub-class: Apterygota. 

Primitively (?) wingless Hexapods with cumaccan mandibles, 
distinct maxillulae, and locomotor abdominal appendages. Without 
ectodermal genital ducts. Young closely resemble adults. 

The sub-class contains a single 

Order: Aptera t 
which is divided into two sub-orders: — 

t. Thysartura (Bristle-tails) : with ten abdominal segments; number 
of abdominal appendages variable. Cerci prominent. Developed 
tracheal system. 

a. CoUembcla (Spring-tails): with six abdominal segments; ap- 
pendages of the first forming an adherent ventral tube, those of 
the third a minute " catch," those of the fourth (fused basally) a 
" spring." Tracheal system reduced or absent. 

Sub-class: Exopterygota. 



Maxillula 

The wing-ruaunents develop vxsiDiy outside the cuticle. Young I 

or unlike parents. 

Order: Dermapiera. u 

Biting mandibles; minute but distinct 'raajdUulae; second maxil- 
lae incompletely fused. When wings are present, the fore-wings 
are small firm elytra, beneath which the delicate hind-wings are 
complexly folded. Many forms wingless. Genital ducts entirely 
mesodermal. Cerci always present; usually modified into un- 
jointed forceps. Numerous (30 or more) Malpighian tubes. Young 
resembling parents. 

Includes two families— the Forfiadidae or earwigs (2*.) and the 
Hemimeridae, 

Order: Orthoptera," 

Biting mandibles; vestigial maxillulae; second maxillae incom- 
pletely fused. Wings usually well developed, net-veined ; the fore- 
wings of firmer texture than the hind-wings, whose anal area folds 
fan wise beneath them. Jointed cerci always present; ovipositor 
well developed. Malpighian tubes numerous (100-150). Young 
resemble parents. 

' Includes stick and leaf insects, cockroaches, mantids, grasshoppers, 
locusts and crickets (see Orthoptera). 

Order: PUcoptera. 

Biting mandibles; second maxillae incompletely fused. Fore- 
wings similar in texture to hind-wings, whose anal area folds fanwise. 
Jointed, often elongate, cerci Numerous (50-60) Malpighian tubes. 



GEOLOGICAL HISTORY] 

Young resembling parents, but aquatic in habit, breathing dissolved 
air by thoracic tracheal gills 

Includes the sincle family of the PtrKdat (Stone-flies), formerly 
grouped with the Neuroptera. 

Order: IsopUro. 

Biting mandibles; second maxillae incompletely fused. Fore- 
wings similar in shape and texture to hind-wings, which do not fold. 
In most species the majority of individuals are wingless. Short, 
jointed cerd. Six or eight Malpighian tubes. Young resembling 
adults; te rre s t ri al throughout life. 

Includes two families, formerly reckoned among the Neuroptera 
—the Embiidat and the Termitidae or " White Ants " (see Termite). 
Order: Corrodcnlia. 

Biting mandibles; second maxillae incompletely fused; maxil- 
luiae often distinct. Cerci absent. Four Malpighian tubes. 

Includes two sub-orders, formerly regarded as Neuroptera.— 

1. Gspe»t*aJAa:Corrodentiawitn delicate cuticle. Wings usually 
developed; the fore-wings much larger than the hind-wings. One 
family, the Psocidae (Book-lice). These minute insects arc found 
amongst old books and furniture. 

2. Mallopkaga: Parasitic wingless Corrodentia (Bird-lice). 

Order: Ephemeroptera. 
Jaws vestigial Fore wings much larger than hind-wings. Elon- 

Bte, jointed cerci. Genitalducts paired and entirely mesodermal, 
alptghian tubes numerous (40). Aquatic larvae with distinct 
maxillulae, breathing dissolved air by abdominal tracheal gills. 
Penultimate instar a flying sub-imago. [Includes the single family 
of the Ephtmtridae or may-flies. See also Neuroptera, in which 
this order was formerly comprised.] 

Order: OoVmmJo. 

Biting mandibles. Wings of both pairs closely alike; firm and 
glassy in texture. Prominent, unjointed cerci, male with genital 
armature on second abdominal segment. Malpighian tubes numer- 
ous (50-60). Aquatic larvae with caudal leal-gills or with rectal 
tracheal system. 

Includes the three families of dragon-flies. Formerly comprised 
among the Neuroptera. 

Order: Thysawpttrc 

Piercing mandibles, retracted within the head-capsule. First 
maxillae also modified as piercers; maxillae of both pairs with 
distinct palps. Both pairs of wings similar, narrow and fringed. 
Four Malpighian tubes. Cerci absent. Ovipositor usually present. 
Young resembling parents, but penultimate instar passive and 
enclosed in a filmy pellicle. 

Includes three families of Thrips (see Tbtsamoptbka). 
Order: HempUra. 

Mandibles and first maxillae modified as piercers; second maxillae 
fused to form a jointed, grooved rostrum. Wings usually present. 
Four Malpighian tubes. Cerci absent. Ovipositor developed. 

Includes two sub-orders: — 

1. HeUropten: Rostrum not in contact with haunches of fore-legs. 
Fore-wings partly coriaceous. Young resembling adults. 

Includes the bugs, terrestrial and aquatic. 

2. Homoplera: Rostrum in contact with haunches of fore-legs. 
Fore-wings uniform in texture. Young often larvae. Penultimate 
instar passive in some cases. 

Includes the deads, aphides and scale-insects (see Hsmiptsra). 
Order: Anoplwra. 

Piercing jaws modified and reduced, a tubular, protrusible sucking- 
trunk being developed; mouth with hooks. Wingless, parasitic 
forms. Cerci absent. Four Malpighian tubes. Young resembling 
adults. 

Includes the family of the Lice (Pediculidoi), often reckoned as 
Hemiptera (g.t.). See also Lous*. 

Sub-class: ENDornaYGOTA. 

Hexapoda mostly with wings; the wingless forms clearly degraded 
or modified. Maxillulae vestigial or absent. No locomotor abdominal 
appendages (except in certain larvae). Young animals always unlike 
parents, the wini-rudiments developing beneath the larval cuticle 
and only appearing in a penultimate pupal instar, which takes no 
food and is usually passive. 

Order: NcmpUra. 

Biting mandibles; second maxillae completely fused. Prothorax 
large and free. Membranous, net-veined wings, those of the two 
pairs closely alike. Six or eight Malpighian tubes. Cerci absent. 
Larva campodeiform, usually feeding by suction (exceptionally 
hypermetamorphic with subsequent cruciform instar*). Pupa free. 

Includes the alder-flies, ant-lions and lacewing-flies, See Neuro- 
rrsRA. 

Order: CoUopUra. 

Biting mandibles; second maxillae very intimately fused. Pro- 
thorax large and free. Fore- wings modified into firm elytra, 
beneath which the membranous hind-wings (when present) can be 
folded. Cerd absent. Four or six Malpighian tubes. Larva cam- 
podeifona or erucifonn. Pupa free. 



HEXAPODA 



43i 



Includes the beetles and the parasitic Stylopida*, often regarded 
as a distinct order (Strepriptero). (See Colboptbea.) 
Order: MecapUra. 

Biting mandibles: first maxillae elongate; second maxmae com- 
pletely fused. Prothorax small Two pairs of similar, membranous 
wings, with predominantly longitudinal neuration. Six Malpighian 
tubes. Larva erucifonn. Pupa free. Cerd present. 

Includes the single family of Panorpidae (scorpion-flies), often com- 
prised among the Neuroptera. 

Order: Triekoptero. 

Mandibles present in pupa, vestigial in imago; maxillae suctorial 
without specialization; first maxillae with lacinia, galea and palp. 
Prothorax small Two pairs of membranous, hair-covered wings, 
with predominantly longitudinal neuration. Larvae aquatic and 
eruciform. Pupa free. Six Malpighian tubes. Cerci absent. 

Includes the caddis-flies. See Neuroptera, among which these 
insects were formerly comprised. 

Order: LepidopUra. 

Mandibles absent in imago, very exceptionally present in pupa; 
first maxillae nearly always without laciniae and often without palps, 
or only with vestigial palps, their galeae elongated and grooved 
inwardly so as to form a sucking trunk. Prothorax small. Wings 
with predominantly longitudinal neuration, covered with flattened 
scales. Fore-wings larger than hind-wings. Cerd absent. Four 
(rarely 6 or 6) Malpighian tubes. Larvae erucifonn, with rarely 
more than five pairs of abdominal prolegs. Pupa free in the lowest 
families, in most cases incompletely or completely obtect. 

Includes the moths and butterflies. See Lepidoptrra. 
Order: DiUera. 

st maxillae 
wi a suctorial 

pi nesothorax. 

F. Iked knobs 

(" our Malpi- 

gr vermiform 

wi free, and 

en 'puparium). 

f be divided 
in 

r puparium 
sp f imago. 

Puparium 

Comprises the hover-flies, flesh-flies, bot-flies, Ac. 
Order: Siphonaptera. 

Mandibles fused into a piercer ; first maxillae developed as piercers ; 
palps of both pairs of maxillae present; hypopharynx wanting. 
Prothorax large. Wings absent or vestigial. Larva cruciform. 



Includes the fleas. 

Order: HynuMoptera. 

Biting mandibles; second maxillae incompletely or completely 
fused; often forming a suctorial proboscis. Prothorax small, and 
united to mesothorax. First abdominal segment united to meta- 
thorax Wings membranous, fore-wings larger than hind-wings. 
Ovipositor always well developed, and often modified into a sting. 
Numerous (20-150) Malpighian tubes (in rare cases, 6-12 only). 
Larva cruciform, with seven or dght pairs of abdominal prolegs, 
or entirely legless. Pupa free. 

Includes two sub- or der s :— 

1. SympkyUx: Abdomen not basally constricted. Larvae cater- 
pillars with thoracic legs and abdominal prolegs. 

Comprises the saw-flies, 

2. Apocrita: Abdomen markedly constricted at second segment. 
Larvae legless grubs. 

Comprises gall-flies, ichneumon-flies, ants, wasps, bees. Sea 
Hymenoptera. 

Geological History 

The classification just given has been drawn up with reference 
to existing insects, but the great majority of the extinct forms 
that have been discovered can be referred with some confidence 
to the same orders, and in many cases to recent families. The 
Hexapoda, being aerial, terrestrial and fresh-water animals, 
are but occasionally preserved in stratified rocks, and our know- 
ledge of extinct members of the dass is therefore fragmentary, 
while the description, as insects, of various obscure fossils, 
whicluare perhaps not even Arthropods, has not tended to the 
advancement of this branch of zoology. Nevertheless, much 
progress has been made. Several Silurian fossils have been 
identified as insects, induding a Thysanuran from North America, 
but upon these considerable doubt has been cast. 



♦3* 



HEXAPODA 



{GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION 



The Devonian rocks of Canada (New Brunswick) have yielded 
several fossils which are undoubtedly wings of Hexapods. 
These have been described by S. H. Scudder, and incl u de gigantic 
forms related to the Ephemeroptera. 

In the Carboniferous strata (Coal measures) remains of 
Hexapods become numerous and quite indisputable. Many 
European forms of this age have been described by C. Brongniart, 
and American by S. H. Scudder. The latter has established, 
for all the Palaeozoic insects, an order Palaeodictyoptera, 
there being a closer similarity between the fore-wings and the 
hind- wings than is to be seen in most living orders of Hexapoda, 
while affinities are shown to several of these orders— notably 
the Orthoptera, Ephemeroptera, Odonata and Hemiptera. It 
is probable that many of these Carboniferous insects might 
be referred to the Isoptera, while others would fall into the 
existing orders to which they are allied, with some modification 
of our present diagnoses. Of special interest are cockroach- 
like forms, with two pairs of similar membranous wings and 
a long ovipositor, and gigantic insects allied to the Odonata, 
that measured 2 ft. across the outspread wings. A remark- 
able fossil from the Scottish Coal-measures (Litkotnantis) had 
apparently small wing-like structures on the prothorax, and 
in allied genera small veined outgrowths— like tracheal gills — 
occurred on the abdominal segments. To the Permian period 
belongs a remarkable genus Eugercon, that combines hemiptcroid 
jaws with orthopteroid wing-neuration. With the dawn of the 
Mesozoic epoch we reach Hexapods that can be unhesitatingly 
referred to existing orders. From the Trias of Colorado, Scudder 
has described cockroaches intermediate between their Carboni- 
ferous precursors and their present-day descendants, while 
the existence of endopterygotous Hexapods is shown by the 
remains of Coleeptera of several families. In the Jurassic rocks 
are found Ephemeroptera and Odonata, as well as Hemiptera, 
referable to existing families, some representatives of which 
had already appeared in the oldest of the Jurassic ages— the 
Lias. To the Lias also can be traced back the Neuroptcra, 
the Trichoptera, the orthorrhaphous Diptcra and, according 
to the determination of certain obscure fossils, also the Hyraeno- 
ptera (ants). The Lithographic stone of Kimmeridgian age, 
at Solenhofen in Bavaria, is especially rich in insect remains, 
cydorrhaphous Diptcra appearing here for the first time. In 
Tertiary times the higher Diptcra, besides Lepidoptera and 
Hymenoptcra, referable to existing families, become fairly 
abundant. Numerous fossil insects preserved in the amber 
of the Baltic OUgocene have been described by G. L. Mayr 
and others, while Scudder has studied the rich Oligocene faunas 
of Colorado (Florissant) and Wyoming (Green River). The 
Oeningen beds of Baden, of Miocene age, have also yielded 
an extensive insect fauna, described fifty years ago by 0. Heer. 
Further details of the geological history of the Hexapoda will 
be found in the special articles on the various orders. Frag- 
mentary as the records are, they show that the Exopterygota 
preceded the Endopjterygota in the evolution of the class, 
and that among the Endopterygota those orders in which 
the greatest difference exists between imago and larva — the 
Lepidoptera, Diptcra and Hyroenoptera— were the latest 
to take their rise. 

Geographical Distribution 

The class Hexapoda has a world-wide range, and so have most 
of its component orders. The Aptera have perhaps the most 
extensive distribution of all animals, being found in Franz Josef 
Land and South Victoria Land, on the snows of Alpine glaciers, 
and in the depths of the most extensive caves. Most of the 
families and a large proportion of the genera of insects are 
exceedingly widespread, but a study of the genera and species in 
any of the more important families shows that faunas can be 
distinguished whose headquarters agree fairly with the*regions 
that have been proposed to express the distribution of thehighcr 
vertebrates. Many insects, however, can readily extend their 
range, and a careful study of their distribution leads us to dis- 
criminate between faunas rather than definitely to map regions. 



A large and dominant Holoarctic fauna, with numerous sub- 
divisions, ranges over the great northern continents, and is 
characterized by the abundance of certain families like the 
Carabidac and StaphyHnidae among the Coleoptera and the 
Tcnthredinidac among the Hyroenoptera. The southern territory 
held by this fauna is invaded by genera and species distinctly 
tropical. Oriental types range far northwards into China and 
Japan. Ethiopian forms invade the Mediterranean area. 
Neotropical and distinctively Sonoran insects mingle with 
members of the Holoarctic fauna across a wide " transition zone " 
in North America. " Wallace's line " dividing the Indo-Malayan 
and Austro-Malayan subrrcgions is frequently transgressed in the 
range of Malayan insects. The Australian fauna is rich in 
characteristic and peculiar genera, and New Zealand, while 
possessing some remarkable insects of its own, lacks entirely 
several families with an almost world-wide range— for example, the 
Notodonlidae, Lasiocampidac, and other families of Lepidoptera. 
Interesting relationships between the Ethiopian and Oriental, the 
Neotropical and West African, the Patagonian and New Zealand 
faunas suggest great changes in the distribution of land and 
water, and throw doubt on the doctrine of the permanence of 
continental areas and oceanic basins. Holoarctic types reappear 
on the Andes and in South Africa, and even in New Zealand. 
The study of the Hexapoda of oceanic islands is full of interest. 
After the determination of a number of cosmopolitan insects 
that may well have been artificially introduced, there remains a 
large proportion of endemic species— sometimes referable to 
distinct genera — which suggest a high antiquity for the truly 
i nsular faunas. 

Relationships and Phytogeny 

The Hexapoda form a very clearly defined class of the Arthro- 
poda, and many recent writers have suggested that they must 
have arisen independently of other Arthropods from annelid 
worms, and that the Arthropoda must, therefore, be regarded 
as an " unnatural," polyphylctic assemblage. The cogent argu- 
ments against this view are set forth in the article on Arthropoda, 
A near relationship between the Apterygota and the Crustacea 
has been ably advocated by H. J. Hansen (1893). It is admitted 
on all hands that the Hexapoda are akin to the Chilopoda. 
Verhoefi* has lately (1904) put forward the view that there are 
really six segments in the hexapodan thorax and twenty in the 
abdomen— the cerci belonging to the seventeenth abdominal 
segment thus showing a dose agreement with the centipede 
Scolopetidra. On the other hand, G. H. Carpenter (1899, 1902- 
1904) has lately endeavoured to show an exact numerical 
correspondence in segmentation between the Hexapoda, the 
Crustacea, the Arachnida, and the most primitivtof the Diplopoda. 
On either view it may be believed that the Hexapoda arose with 
the allied classes from a primitive arthropod stock, while the 
relationships of the class are with the Crustacea, the Chilopoda 
and the Diplopoda, rather than with, the Arachnida. 

Nature of Primitive Hexapoda. — Two divergent views have 
been held as to the nature of the original hexapod stock. Some 
of those zoologists who look to Peripatus, or a similar worm-like 
form, as representing the direct ancestors of the Hexapoda have 
laid stress on a larva like the caterpillar of a moth or saw-fly as 
representing a primitive stage. On the other hand, the view of 
F. Muller and F. Braucr, that the Thysanura represent more 
nearly than any other existing insects the ancestors of the class, 
has been accepted by the great majority of students. And there 
can be little doubt that this belief is justified. The caterpillar, 
or the maggot, is a specialized larval form characteristic of the 
most highly developed orders, while the campodeiform larva is 
the starting-point for the more primitive insects. The occurrence 
in the hypermetamorphic Coleoptera (see supra) of a campodei- 
form preceding an cruciform stage in the life-history is most 
suggestive. Taken in connexion with the likeness of the young 
among the more generalized orders to the adults, it indicates 
clearly a thysanuroid starting-point for the evolution of the 
hexapod orders. And we roust infer further that the specializa- 
tion of the higher orders has been accompanied b£ an increase a 



ULATtONSHtm 



HEXAPODA 



433 



the extent of the metamorphosis— a veiy exceptional condition 
among animals generally, as has been ably pointed out by 
L. C. Mull (1805). 

Origin of Wings. — The post-embryonic growth of Hexapods 
with or without metamorphosis is accompanied in most cases by 
the acquisition of wings. These organs, thus acquired during the 
lifetime of the individual, must have been in some way acquired 
during the evolution of the class. Many students of the group, 
following Brauer, have regarded the Apterygota as representing 
the original wingless progenitors of the Pt cry got a, and the many 
primitive characters shown by the former group lend support to 
this view. On the other hand, it has been argued that the 
presence of wings in a vast majority of the Hexapoda suggests 
their presence in the ancestors of the whole class. It is most 
unlikely that wings have been acquired independently by various 
orders of Hexapoda, and if we regard the Thysanura as the 
slightly modified representatives of a primitively wingless stock, 
we must postulate the acquisition of wings by some early offshoot 
of that stock, an offshoot whence the whole group of the Pterygota 
took its rise. How wings were acquired by these primitive 
Pterygota must remain for the present a subject for speculation. 
Insect wings are specialized outgrowths of certain thoracic 
segments, and are quite unrepresented in any other class of 
Arthropods. They arc not, therefore, like the wings of birds, 
modified from some pre-existing structures (the fore-limbs) 
common to their phylum; they are new and peculiar structures. 
Comparison of the tracheated wings with the paired tracheated 
outgrowths on the abdominal segments of the aquatic campodei- • 
form larva of may-flies (see fig. 27) led C. Gcgenbaur to the 
brilliant suggestion that wings might be regarded as specialized 
and transformed gills. But a survey of the Hexapoda as a 
whole, and especially a comparative study of the tracheal system, 
can hardly leave room for doubt that this system is primitively 
adapted for atmospheric breathing, and that the presence of 
tracheal gills in larvae must be regarded as a special adaptation 
for temporary aquatic life. The origin of insect wings remains, 
therefore, a mystery, deepened by the difficulty of imagining any 
probable use for thoracic outgrowths, comparable to the wing- 
rudiments of the Exopterygota, jn the early stages of their 
evolution. 

Origin of Metamorphosis. — In connexion with the question 
whether metamorphosis has been gradually acquired, we have to 
consider two aspects, viz. the bionomic nature of metamorphosis, 
and to what extent it existed in primitive insects. BionomicaHy, 
metamorphosis may be defined as the sum of adaptations that 
have gradually fitted the larva (caterpillar or maggot) for one 
kind of life, the fly for another. So that we may conclude that 
the factors of evolution would favour its development. With 
regard to its occurrence in primitive insects, our knowledge of the 
geological record is most imperfect, but so far as it goes it supports 
the conclusion that hoioraetaboltsm (i.e. extreme metamorphosis) 
is a comparatively recent phenomenon of insect hfe. None of 
the groups of existing Endopterygota have been traced with 
certainty farther back than the Mcsozoic epoch, and all the 
numerous Palaeozoic insect-fossils seem to belong to forms that 
possessed only imperfect metamorphosis. The only doubt arises 
from the existence of insect remains, referred to the order 
Coleoptera, in the Silesian Culm of Steinkunzendorf near 
Reichenbacb. The oldest larva known, Mormotucoides arti- 
culates, is from the New Red Sandstone of Connecticut; it 
belongs to the SiaHdae, one of the lowest forms of Holometabola. 
It is now, in fact, generally admitted that metamorphosis has 
been acquired comparatively recently, and Scudder in his 
review of the earliest fossil insects states that " their meta- 
morphoses were simple and incomplete, the young leaving the 
egg with the form of the parent, but without wings, the assump- 
tion of which required no quiescent stage before maturity/ 1 

It has been previously remarked that the phenomena of 
holometaholism are connected with the development of wings 
inside the body (except in the case of the fleas, where there 
are no wings in the perfect insect). Of existing* insects 00% 
belong to the Endopterygota, At the same time we have no 



evidence that any Endopterygota existed amongst Palaeozoic 
insects, so that the phenomena of endopterygotism are compara- 
tively recent, and we are led to infer that the Endopterygota owe 
their origin to the older Exopterygota. In Endopterygota the 
wings commence their development as invaginations of the 
hypodermis, while in Exopterygota the wings begin— and always 
remain— as external folds or evaginations. The two modes 
of growth are directly opposed, and at first sight it appears that 
this fact negatives the view that Endopterygota have been 
derived from Exopterygota. 

Only three hypotheses as to the origin of Endopterygota 
can be suggested as possible, viz..-— (1) That some of the Palaeo- 
zoic insects, though we infer them to have been exopterygotous, 
were really endopterygotous, and were the actual ancestors 
of the existing Endopterygota; (2) that Endopterygota are 
not descended from Exopterygota, but were derived directly 
from ancestors that were never winged; (3) that the predominant 
division—*'.*. Endopterygota— of insects of the present epoch 
are descended from the predominant— if not the sole— group 
that existed in the Palaeozoic epoch, viz. the Exopterygota. 
The first hypothesis is not negatived by direct evidence, for 
we do not actually know the ontogeny of any of the Palaeozoic 
insects; it is, however, rendered highly improbable by the 
modern views as to the nature and origin of wings in insects, 
and by the fact that the Endopterygota include none of the 
lower existing forms of insects. The second hypothesis— to 
the effect that Endopterygota are the descendants of apterous 
insects that had never possessed wings {i.e. the Apterygogenea 
of Brauer and others, though we prefer the shorter term Aptery- 
gota)— is rendered improbable from the fact that existing 
Apterygota are related to Exopterygota, not to Endopterygota, 
and by the knowledge that has been gained as to the morphology 
and development of wings, which suggest that — if we may so 
phrase it— were an apterygotous insect gradually to develop 
wings, it would be on the exopterygotous system. From all 
points of view it appears, therefore, probable that Endopterygota 
are descended from Exopterygota, and we are brought to the 
question as to the way in which this has occurred. 

It is almost impossible to believe that any species of insect 
that has for a long period developed the wings outside the body 
could change this mode of growth suddenly for an internal 
mode of development of the organs in question, for, as we have 
already explained, the two modes of growth are directly opposed. 
The explanation has to be sought in another direction. Now 
there are many forms of Exopterygota in which the creatures 
are almost or quite destitute of wings. This phenomenon 
occurs among species found at high elevations, among others 
found in arid or desert regions, and in some cases in the female 
sex only, the male being winged and the female wingless. This 
last state is very frequent in Blattidae, which were amongst 
the most abundant of Palaeozoic insects. The wingless forms 
in question arc always allied to winged forms, and there is every 
reason to believe that they have been really derived from 
winged forms. There are also insects (fleas, &c) in which 
metamorphosis of a " complete " character exists, though the 
insects never develop wings. These cases render it highly 
probable that insects may in some circumstances become wing- 
less, though their ancestors were winged. Such insects have been 
styled anapterygotous. In these facts we have one possible 
clue to the change from exopterygotism to endopterygotism, 
namely, by an intermediate period of anapterygotism. 

Although we cannot yet define the conditions under which 
exopterygotous wings are suppressed or unusually developed, 
yet we know that such fluctuations occur. There are, in fact, 
existing forms of Exopterygota that are usually wingless, and 
that nevertheless appear in certain seasons or localities with 
wings. We are therefore entitled to assume that the suppressed 
wings of Exopterygota tend to reappear; and, speaking of the 
past, we may say that if after a period of suppression the wings 
began to reappear as hypodcnnal buds while a more rigid pressure 
was exerted by the cuticle, the growth of the buds would neces- 
sarily be inwards, and w* should have incipient endopterygotism. 



434 



HEXAPODA 



The change that is required to transform Exopterygota into 
Endopterygota is merely that a cell of hypodermis should 
proliferate inwards instead of outwards, or that a minute hypo- 
dermal evaginated bud should be forced to the interior of the 
body by the pressure of a contracted cuticle. 

If it should be objected that the wings so developed would 
be rudimentary, and that there would be nothing to encourage 
their development into perfect functional organs, we may 
remind the reader that we have already pointed out that im- 
perfect wings of Exopterygota do, even at the present time under 
certain conditions, become perfect organs; and we may also 
add that there are, even among existing Endopterygota, species 
in which the wings are usually vestiges arid yet sometimes 
become perfectly developed. In fact, almost every condition 
that is required for the change from exopterygotism to endo- 
pterygotism exists among the insects that surround us. 
< But it may perhaps be considered improbable that organs 
like the wings, having once been lost, should have been re- 
acquired on the large scale suggested by the theory just put 
forward. If so, there is an alternative method by which the 
endopterygotous may have arisen from the exopterygotous 
condition. The sub-imago of the Ephcmcroptera suggests that 
a moult, after the wings had become functional, was at one time 
general among the Hexapoda, and that the resting nymph of 
the Thysanoptera or the pupa of the Endopterygota represents 
a formerly active stage in the life-history. Further, although 
the wing-rudiments appear externally in an early instar of an 
exopterygotous insect, the earliest instars are wingless and 
wing-rudiments have been previously developing beneath 
the cuticle, growing however outwards, not inwards as in the 
larva of an endopterygote. The change from an exopterygote 
to an endopterygote development could, therefore, be brought 
about by the gradual postponement to a later and later instar 
of the appearance of the wing-rudiments outside the body, 
and their correlated growth inwards as imaginal disks. For 
in the post-embryonic development of the ancestors of the 
Endopterygota we may imagine two or three instars with 
wing-rudiments to have existed, the last represented by the 
sub-imago of the may-flies. As the life-conditions and feeding- 
habits of the larva and imago become constantly more divergent, 
the appearance of the wing-rudiments would be postponed to 
the pre-imaginal instar, and that instar would become pre- 
dominantly passive. 

Relationships of the Orders. — Reasons have been given for 
regarding the Thysanura as representing, more nearly than 
any other living group, the primitive slock of the Hexapoda. 
It is believed that insects of this group are represented among 
Silurian fossils. We may conclude, therefore, that t hey were pre- 
ceded, in Cambrian times or earlier, by Arthropods possessing well 
developed appendages on all the trunk-segments. Of such Arthro- 
pods the living Symphyla — of which the delicate little Scutigerclla 
is a fairly well-known example — give us some representation. 

No indications beyond those furnished by comparative 
anatomy help us to unravel the phylogeny of the Collembola. 
In most respects, the shortened abdomen, for example, they 
are more specialized than the Thysanura, and most of the 
features in which they appear to be simple, such as the absence 
of a tracheal system and of compound eyes, can be explained 
as the result of degradation. In their insunken mouth and their 
jaws retracted within the head-capsule, the Collembola resemble 
the entotrophous division of the Thysanura (sec Aptera), from 
which they are probably descended. 

From the thysanuroid stock of the Apterygota, the Exoptery- 
gota took their rise. We have undoubted fossil evidence that 
winged insects lived in the Devonian and became numerous 
in the Carboniferous period. These ancient Exopterygota 
were synthetic in type, and included insects that may, with 
probability, be regarded as ancestral to most of the existing 
orders. It is hard to arrange the Exopterygota in a linear 
series, for some of the orders that are remarkably primitive 
in some respects are rather higlily specialized in others. As 
regards wing-structure, the Isoptera with the two pairs closely 



[RELATIONSHIPS 

similar are the most primitive of all winged insects; while 
in the paired mesodermal genital ducts, the elongate eerci and 
the conspicuous maxillulae of their larvae the Ephcmcroptera 
retain notable ancestral characters. But the vestigial jaws, 
numerous Malpighian tubes, and specialized wings of may-flies 
forbid us to consider the order as on the whole primitive. So 
the Dermaptera, which retain distinct maxillulae and have no 
ectodermal genital ducts, have either specialized or aborted 
wings and a large number of Malpighian tubes. The Corrodentia 
retain vestigial maxillulae and two pairs of Malpighian tubes, 
but the wings are somewhat specialized in the Copeognatha and 
absent in the degraded and parasitic Mallophaga. The Pleco- 
ptcra and Orthoptera agree in their numerous Malpighian tubes 
and in the development of a folding anal area in the hind-wing. 
As shown by the number and variety of species, the Orthoptera 
are the most dominant order of this group. Eminently terres- 
trial in habit, the differentiation of their fore-wings and hind- 
wings can be traced from Carboniferous, isopteroid ancestors 
through intermediate Mcsozoic forms. The Plccoptera resemble 
the Ephemeroptera and Odonata in the aquatic habits of their 
larvae, and by the occasional presence of tufted thoracic gills 
in the imago exhibit an aquatic character unknown in any other 
winged insects. The Odonata are in many imaginal and larval 
characters highly specialized; yet they probably arose with the 
Ephcmcroptera as a divergent offshoot of the same primitive 
isopteroid stock which developed more directly into the living 
Isoptera, Plccoptera, Dermaptera and Orthoptera. 

All these orders agree in the possession of biting mandibles, 
while their second maxillae have the inner and outer lobes 
usually distinct. The Hemiptera, with their piercing mandibles 
and first maxillae and with their second maxillae fused to form 
a jointed beak, stand far apart from them. This order can be 
traced with certainty back to the early Jurassic epoch, while 
the Permian fossil Eu%erton, and the living order-especially 
modified in many respects— of the Thysanoptera indicate steps 
by which the aberrant suctorial and piercing mouth of the Hemi- 
ptera may have been developed from the biting mouth of primitive 
Isopteroids, by the elongation of some parts and the suppression 
of others. TheAnoplura may probably be regarded as a degraded 
offshoot of the Hemiptera. 

The importance of great cardinal features of the life-history 
as indicative of relationship leads us to consider the Endoptery- 
gota as a natural assemblage of orders. The occurrence of 
weevils — among the most specialized of the Coleoptera — in 
Triassic rocks shows us that this great order of metabolous 
insects had become differentiated into its leading families at 
the dawn of the Mesozoic era, and that we must go far back 
into the Palaeozoic for the origin of the Endopterygota. la 
this view we are confirmed by the impossibility of deriving the 
Endopterygota from any living order of Exopterygota. We 
conclude, therefore, that the primitive stock of the former sub- 
class became early differentiated from that of the latter. So 
widely have most of the higher orders of the Hexapoda now 
diverged from each other, that it is exceedingly difficult in most 
cases to trace their relationships with any confidence. The 
Neuroptera, with their similar fore- and hind-wings and their 
campodeiform larvae, seem to stand nearest to the presumed 
isopteroid ancestry, but the imago and larva are often specialized. 
The campodeiform larvae of many Coleoptera are indeed far 
more primitive than the neuropteran larvae, and suggest to us 
that the Coleoptera— modified as their wing-structure has 
become — arose very early from the primitive metabolous 
stock. The antiquity of the Coleoptera is further shown by 
the great diversity of larval form and habit that has arisen in 
the. order, and the proof afforded by the hypermetamorphic 
beetles tjiat the campodeiform preceded the cruciform larva 
has already been emphasized. 

In all the remaining orders of the Endopterygota the larva 
is cruciform or vermiform. The Mecaptera, with their pre- 
dominantly longitudinal wing-nervuration, serve as a link 
between the Neuroptera and the Trichoptera, their retention 
of small ccrci being an archaic character which stamps them as 



*t RELATIONSHIPS] 

* synthetic in type, but does not necessarily remove 'them from 
orders which agree with them in most points of structure but 

* which have lost the cerd. The standing of the Trichoptera in 
/> a position almost ancestral to the Lepidoptera is one of the 
'-i assured results of recent morphological study, the mobile mandi- 
■> bulate pupa and the imperfectly suctorial maxillae of the 
*) Trichoptera reappearing in the lowest families of the Lepi- 
«, doptera. This latter order, which is not certainly known to 
t. have existed before Tertiary times, has become the most highly 
> specialized of all insects in the structure of the pupa. Diptera 
<% of the sub-order Orthorrhapha occur in the Lias and Cyclor- 
'; xhapha in the Kimmeridgian. The order must therefore be 

* ancient, and as no evidence is forthcoming as to the mode of 
^ reduction of the hind-wings, nor as to the stages by which the 
~-. suctorial mouth-organs became specialized, it is difficult to trace 
*s ihe exact relationship of the group, but the presence of cerd 

- and a degree of correspondence in the nervuralion of the fore- 
s' wings suggest the Mecaptera as possible allies. There seems 
r no doubt that the suctorial mouth-organs of the Diptera have 

* arisen quite independently from those of the Lepidoptera, 

- for in the former order the sucker is formed from the second 
-* maxillae, in the latter from the first. The erudform larva of 
a the Orthorrhapha leads on to the headless vermiform maggot 

of the Cydorrhapha, and in the latter sub-order we find meta- 
» morphosis carried to its extreme point, the musdd Hies bang 

e the most highly spedalized of all the Hexapoda as regards 

structure, while thdr maggots are the most degraded of all 
e insect larvae. The Siphonaptera appear by the form of the 

» larva and the nature of the metamorphosis to be akin to the 

e Orthorrhapha— in which division they have indeed been induded 

a by many students. They differ from the Diptera, however, 

i in the general presence of palps to both pairs of maxillae, and 

i jn the absence of a hypopharynx, so it is possible that their 

I relationship to the Diptera is less dose than has been supposed, 

c The affinities of the Hymenoptcra afford another problem of 

much difficulty. They differ from other Endopterygota in the 
multiplication of thdr Malpighian tubes, and from all other 
i Hexapoda in the union of the first abdominal segment with 

the thorax. Spedalized as they are in form, development 
and habit, they retain mandibles for biting, and in thdr lower 
sub-order— the Symphyta — the maxillae are hardly more 
modified than those of the Orthoptera. From the evidence of 
fossils it seems that the higher sub-order — Apocrita — can be 
traced back to the Lias, so that we believe the Hymenoptera 
to be more ancient than the Diptera, and far more andent 
than the Lepidoptera. They afford an example — paralleled 
in other classes of the animal kingdom — of an order which, 
though spedalized in some respects, retains many primitive 
characters, and has won its way to dominance rather by per- 
fection of behaviour, and specially by the development of family 
life and helpful socialism, than by excessive elaboration of 
structure. We would trace the Kymenoplera back therefore 
to the primitive endoplcrygote stock. The spedalization of 
form in the constricted abdomen and in the suctorial " tongue " 
that characterizes the higher families of the order is correlated 
with the habit of careful egg-laying and provision of food for 
the young. In some way it is assured among the highest of the 
Hexapoda — the Lepidoptera, Diptera and Hymenoptera — that 
the larva finds itself amid a rich food-supply. And thus per- 
fection of structure and instinct in the imago has been accom- 
. panied by degradation in the larva, and by an increase in the 
extent of transformation and in the degree of reconstruction 
before and during the pupal stage. The fascinating difficulties 
presented to the student by the metamorphosis of the Hexapoda 
are to some extent explained, as he ponders over the evolution 
of the class. 

BiBLiocTRArnv.— References to the older classical writings on the 
Hexapoda are given in the article on Entomology. At present about 
a thousand works and papers are published annually, and in this 
place it is possible to enumerate only a few of the roost important 
among (mostly) recent memoirs that bear upon the Hexapoda 
generally. Further references will be found appended to the special 
Articles on the orders (After a, Colsoptera, Ac). 



HEXAPODA 



435 



dastifleation.— F. Brauer (S. 6. Akad. Wiss., Wien, xd., 1885) ; A. 
S. Packard (Amer. Nat. xx.; 1886); C. Borner, A. Handlirsch, F. 
Klapalek (Zod. Anz. xxvii., 1904); G. Enderlein (Zod. Ant. 
xxvi., 1903). 

Palaeontology.— S. H. Scudder, in Zittd's PakutnMogy (French 



43^ 



HEXASTYLE— HEYDEN 



trans., roL H., Paris, 1887, md Eng. trans., vol. i., London, 1900); 
C. Brongniart, InsectesfossUesdes temps primaires (St-£tienne, 1894) , 
A. Handlirsch, Diefossiien Inukten una die Phytogenve der rezenlcn 
Format (Leipzig. 1906). 

Phylogeny.- : Brauer, Lubbock, Sharp, Borner, &c (opp. cit.); 
P. Mayer (Jena, Zeits. Natuno. x., 1876); B. Grassi {Attt R. Accad. 
dei Lincei, Roma (4I, tv., 1888, and Archtv Hal. bid. xi., 1889), 
F. MOller, Facts and Arguments for Darwin (trans. W. S. Dallas, 
London, 1869); N. Zograf (Congr. Zool. Int., 1892); E. R. Lankcster 
{Quart. Journ. Micr. Set. xlvii., 1904): G. H. Carpenter (Proc. R. 
Irish Acad, wriv., 1903; Quart. Journ. Micr. Sci. xhx., 1905) 

(D.S.*iG.H.C.) 

HEXASTYLE (Gr. ?£, six, and orVhat, column), an archi- 
tectural term given to a temple in the portico of which there 
are six columns in front. 

HEXATEUCH, the name given to the first six books of the 
Old Testament (the Pentateuch and Joshua), to mark the fact 
that these form one literary whole, describing the early traditional 
history of the Israelites from the creation of the world to the 
conquest of Palestine and the origin of their national institu- 
tions. These books are the result of an intricate literary process, 
on which see Bible (Old Testament: Canon), and the articles 
on the separate books (Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, 
Deuteronomy and Joshua). 

HEXHAM, a market town in the Hexham parliamentary 
division of Northumberland, England, 21 m. W. from Newcastle 
by the Carlisle branch of the North-Eastern railway, served also 
from Scotland by a branch of the North British railway. Pop. 
of urban district (1001) 7107. It is pleasantly situated beneath 
the hills on the S. bank of the Tyne, and its market square and 
narrow streets bear many marks of antiquity. It is famous for 
its great abbey church of St Andrew. This building, as renovated 
in the 12th century, was to consist of nave and transepts, choir 
and aisles, and massive central tower. The Scots are believed to 
have destroyed the nave in 1206, but it may be doubted if it was 
ever completed. In 1536 the last prior was hanged for being 
concerned in the insurrection called the Pilgrimage of Grace. 
The church as it stands is a fine monument of Early English 
work, with Transitional details. Within, although it suffered 
much loss during a restoration c. 1858, there arc several objects of 
interest. Among these are a Roman slab, carved with figures of 
a horseman trampling upon an enemy, several fine tombs and 
stones of the 13th and 14th centuries, the frith or fridstool of 
stone, believed to be the original bishop's throne, and the fine 
Perpendicular roodscreen of oak, retaining its loft. The crypt, 
discovered in 1726, is part of the Saxon church, and a note- 
worthy example of architecture of the period. Its material is 
Roman, some of the stones having Roman inscriptions. These 
were brought from the Roman settlement at Corbridge, 4 m. E. of 
Hexham on the N. bank of the Tyne; for Hexham itself was not 
a Roman station. In 1832 a vessel containing about 8000 Saxon 
coins was discovered in the churchyard. Fragments of the 
monastic buildings remain, and west of the churchyard is the 
monks' park, known as the Seal, and now a promenade, command- 
ing beautiful views. In the town are two strong castellated 
towers of the 14th century, known as the Moot Hall and the 
Manor Office. Their names explain their use, but they were 
doubtless also intended as defensive works. In the interesting 
and beautiful neighbourhood of Hexham there should be noticed 
Aydon castle near Corbridge, a fortified house of the late 13th 
century; and Dilston or Dyvilston, a typical border fortress 
dating from Norman times, of which only a tower and small 
chapel remain. It is replete with memories of the last earl of 
Derwentwater, who was beheaded in 1716 for his part in the 
Stuart rising of the previous year, and was buried in the chapel. 
There is an Elizabethan grammar school. Hexham and Newcastle 
form a Roman Catholic bishopric, with the cathedral at New- 
castle. There are manufactures of leather gloves and other goods, 
and in the neighbourhood barytes and coal mines and extensive 
market gardens. 

The church and monastery at Hexham (Hextoldesham) were 
founded about 673 by Wilfrid, archbishop of York, who is said to 
have received a grant of the whole of Hexhamshire from j£thel- 
}uyth, queen of Northumbria, and a grant of sanctuary in his 



church from the king. The church in 678 became the bead of the 
new see of Bemicia, which was united to that of Liediifame 
about 821, when the bishop of Lindisfame appears to have taken 
possession of the lordship which he and his successors held until 
it was restored to the archbishop of York by Henry II. The 
archbishops appear to have had almost royal power throughout 
the liberty, including the rights of trying ail pleas of the crown 
in their court, of taking inquisitions and of taxation. In 1545 the 
archbishop exchanged Hexhamshire with the king for other 
property, and in 1572 all the separate privileges which had 
belonged to him were taken away, and the liberty was annexed 
to the county of Northumberland. Hexham was a borough by 
prescription, and governed by a bailiff at least as early as 1276, 
and the same form of government continued until 1853. In 1343 
the men of Hexham were accused of pretending to be Scots and 
imprisoning many people of Northumberland and Cumberland, 
killing some and extorting ransoms for others. The Lancastrians 
were defeated in 1464 near Hexham, and legend says that it was 
in the woods round the town that Queen Margaret and her son 
hid until their escape to Flanders. In 1522 the bishop of Carlisle 
complained to Cardinal Wolsey, then archbishop of York, that 
the English thieves committed more thefts than " all the Scots of 
Scotland," the men of Hexham being worst of all, and appearing 
100 strong at the markets held in Hexham, so that the men whom 
they had robbed dared not complain or " say one word to them." 
This state of affairs appears to have continued until the accession 
of James I., and in 1595 the bailiff and constables of Hexham 
were removed as being " infected with combination and toleration 
of thieves." Hexham was at one time- the market town of a large 
agricultural district. In 1 227 a market on Monday and a fair on 
the vigil and day of St Luke the Evangelist were granted to the 
archbishop, and in 1320 Archbishop Melton obtained the right of 
holding 4 wo new fairs on the feasts of St James the Apostle 
lasting five days and of SS. Simon and Jude lasting six days. The 
market day was altered to Tuesday in 166*, and Sir William 
Fenwick, then lord of the manor, received a grant of a cattle 
market on the Tuesday after the feast of St Cuthbert in March 
and every Tuesday fortnight until the feast of St Martin. The 
market rights were purchased from Wentworth B. Beaumont, 
lord of the manor, in 1886. During the 17th and x8th centuries 
Hexham was noted for the leather trade, especially for the 
manufacture of gloves, but in the 19th century the trade began 
to decline. Coal mines which had belonged to the archbishop, 
were sold to Sir John Fenwick, Kt., in 1628. Hexham has never 
been represented in parliament, but gives its name to one of the 
four parliamentary divisions 'of the county. 

See Edward Bateson and A. B. Hinds, A History of Northumberland 
vol. ui. (1893-1896); A. B. Wright, An Essay towards the History of 
Hexham (1823); James Hewitt, A Handbook to Hexham ana its 
Antiquities (1879). 

HEYDEN, JAN VAN DER (1637-1713), Dutch painter^ was 
born at Gorcum in 1637, and died at Amsterdam on the 12th of 
September 1 7 1 2. He was an architectural landscape painter, a con- 
temporary of Hobbema and Jacob Ruysdael, with the advantage, 
which they lacked, of a certain professional versatility; for, 
whilst they painted admirable pictures and starved, he varied the 
practice of art with the study of mechanics, improved the fire 
engine, and died superintendent of the lighting and director of the 
firemen's company at Amsterdam. Till 1672 he painted in partner- 
ship with Adrian van der Vclde. After Adrian's death, and 
probably because of the loss which that event entailed upon him, 
he accepted the offices to which allusion has just been made. At 
no period of artistic activity had the system of division of labour 
been more fully or more constantly applied to art than it was in 
Holland towards the close of the 1 7th century. Van der Heydcn, 
who was perfect as an architectural draughtsman in so far as he 
painted the outside of buildings and thoroughly mastered linear 
perspective, seldom turned his hand to the delineation of any- 
thing but brick houses and churches in streets and squares, or 
rows along canals, or " moated granges," common in his. native 
country. He was a travelled man, had seen The Hague, Ghent 
and Brussels, and had ascended the Rhine past Xanten to 



HEYLYN— HEYN 



437 



Cologne, where be copied over and oter again the tower and 
crane of the great cathedral. But he cared nothing for hill or 
vale, or stream or wood. He could reproduce the rows of bricks 
In a square of Dutch houses sparkling in the sua, or stunted trees 
and lines of dwellings varied by steeples, all in light or thrown 
into passing shadow by moving cloud. He had the art of 
painting microscopically without loss of breadth or keeping. 
But he could draw neither man nor beast, nor ships nor carts; 
and this was his disadvantage. His good genius under these 
circumstances was Adrian van der Velde, who enlivened his 
compositions with spirited figures; and the joint labour of both 
is a delicate, minute, transparent work, radiant with glow and 

atmosphere. 

HBTLTN (or Heyltn), PETER (1600-166 a), English historian 
and controversialist, was born at Burford in Oxfordshire. 
Having made great progress in his studies, he entered Hart 
Hall, Oxford, in 1613, afterwards Joining Magdalen College; 
and in 1618 he began to lecture on cosmography, being made 
fellow of Magdalen in the same year. His lectures, under the 
title of Mtxp&monot, were published in 1621, and many editions 
of this useful book, each somewhat enlarged, subsequently 
appeared. Having been ordained in 1624 Heylyn attracted 
the notice of William Laud, then bishop of Bath and Wells; 
and in 1628 he married Laetitia, daughter of Thomas Higbgate, 
or Heygate, of Hayes, Middlesex; but he appears to have 
kept his marriage secret and did not resign his fellowship. 
After serving as chaplain to Danby in the Channel Islands, 
he became chaplain to Charles I. in 1630, and was appointed by 
the king to the rectory of Hemingford, Huntingdonshire. 
John Williams, bishop of Lincoln, however, refused to institute 
Heylyn to this living, owing to his friendship with Laud; and 
In return Charles appointed him a prebendary of Westminster, 
where he made himself very objectionable to Williams, who 
held the deanery in commendam. In 1633 he became rector 
of Alresford, soon afterwards vicar of South Warnborough, and 
he became treasurer of Westminster Abbey in 1637; but before 
this dale he was widely known as one of the most prominent 
and able controversialists among the high-church party. Enter- 
ing with great ardour into the religious controversies of the 
time he disputed with John Prideaux, regius professor of divinity 
at Oxford, replied to the arguments of Williams in bis pamphlets, 
" A Coal from the Altar " and " Antidotum Lincolnense," and 
was hostile to the Puritan element both within and without 
the Church of England. He assisted William Noy to prepare 
the case against Prynne for the publication of bis Hislriomastix, 
and made himself useful to the Royalist party in other ways. 
However, when the Long Parliament met he was allowed to 
retire to Alresford, where he remained until he was disturbed 
by Sir William Waller's army in 1642, when he joined the 
king at Oxford. At Oxford Heylyn edited Mercurius Aulieus, 
a vivacious but virulent news-sheet, which greatly annoyed 
the Parliamentarians; and consequently his house at Alresford 
was plundered and his library dispersed. Subsequently he led 
for some years a wandering life of poverty, afterwards settling 
at Winchester and then at Minster Lovcl in Oxfordshire; and 
he refers to his hardships in his pamphlet " Extraneus Vapulans," 
the cleverest of his controversial writings, which was written 
fn answer to Hamon l'Estrange. In 1653 he settled at Lacy's 
Court, Abingdon, where he resided undisturbed by the govern- 
ment of the Commonwealth, and where he wrote several books 
and pamphlets, both against those of his own communion, 
like Thomas Fuller, whose opinions were less unyielding than 
his own, and against the Presbyterians and others, like Richard 
Baxter. 

His works, all of which are marred by political or theological 
rancour, number over fifty. Among the most important 
arc: a legendary and learned History of St. George of Cappadocia, 
written in 163 1; Cyprianus Anglic us, or the history of the Life 
and Death of William Laud, a defence of Laud and a valuable 
authority for his life; Ecclesia restaurata, or the History of the 
Reformation of the Church of England (1661 ; cd. J. C. Robertson, 
.Cambridge, 1849); Ecclesia vindicate, or the Church of England 



Justified-, Airius redhbut, or History of the Presbyterians', 
and Help to English History, an edition of which, with additions 
by P. Wright, was published in 1773. In 1636 he wrote 4 
History of the Sabbath, by order of Charles I. to answer the 
Puritans; and in consequence of a journey through France in 
1625 he wrote A Survey of France, a work, frequently reprinted, 
which was termed by Southey " one of the liveliest books of 
travel in its lighter parts, and one of the wisest and most replete 
with information that was ever written by a young man." Some 
verses of merit also came from his active pen, and his poetical 
memorial of William of Waynflete was published by the Caxton 
Society in 1851. 

Heylyn was a diligent writer and investigator, a good ecclesi- 
astical lawyer, and had always learning at his command. His 
principles, to which he was honestly attached, were defended 
with ability; but his efforts to uphold the church passed un- 
recognised at the Restoration, probably owing to his physical 
infirmities. His sight had been very bad for several years; 
yet he rejoiced that his M bad old eyes " had seen the king's 
return, and upon this event he preached before a large audience 
in Westminster Abbey on the 29th of May 1661. He died on 
the 8th of May 1662 and was buried in Westminster Abbey, 
where he had been sub-dean for some years. 

Lives of Heylyn were written by his son-in-law Dr John Barnard 
or Bernard, ana by George Vernon (1682). Bernard's work was 
reprinted with Robertson's edition of Heylyn's History of the 
Reformation in 1849. 

HBYN, PIETER ' PIETERZOON * [commonly """abbreviated' 
to Ptet] (1578-1629)1 Dutch admiral, was born at Delfshaven 
in 1578, the son of Pieter Hein, who was engaged in the herring 
fishery. The son went early to sea. In his youth he was taken 
prisoner by the Spaniards, and was forced to row in the galleys 
during four years. Having recovered his freedom by an ex- 
change of prisoners, he worked for several years as a merchant 
skipper with success. The then dangerous state of the seas 
at all times, and the continuous war with Spain, gave him 
ample opportunity to gain a reputation as a resolute fighting 
man. Wills which he made before 1623 show that he had 
been able to acquire considerable property. When the Dutch 
West India Company was formed he was Director on the Rotter- 
dam Board, and in 1624 he served as second in command of 
the fleet which took San Salvador in Bahia de Todos os Santos 
in Brazil. Tin 1628 he continued to serve the Company, both 
on the coast of Brazil, and in the West Indies. In the month 
of September of that year he made himself famous, gained 
immense advantage for the Company, and inflicted ruinous 
loss on the Spaniards, by the capture of the fleet which was 
bringing the bullion from the American mines home to Spain. 
The Spanish ships were outnumbered chiefly because the 
convoy had become scattered by bad management and bad 
seamanship. The more valuable part of it, Consisting of the 
four galleons, and eleven trading ships in which the king's 
share of the treasure was being carried, became separated 
from the rest, and on being chased by the superior force of 
Heyn endeavoured to take refuge at Matanzas in the island 
of Cuba, hoping to be able to land the bullion in the bush 
before the Dutchman could come up with them. But Juan de 
Benavidcs, the Spanish commander, failed to act with decision, 
was overtaken, and his ships captured in the harbour before 
the silver could be discharged. The total loss was estimated 
by the Spaniards at four millions of ducats. Piet Heyn now 
returned home, and bought himself a house at Delft with the 
intention of retiring from the sea. In the following year, however, 
he was chosen at a crisis to take command of the naval force of 
the Republic, with the rank of Lieutenant-Admiral of Holland, 
in order to clear the North Sea and Channel of the Dunkirkers, 
who acted for the king of Spain in his possessions in the Nether- 
lands. In June of 1629 he brought the Dunkirkers to action, 
and they were severely beaten, but Piet Heyn did not live 
to enjoy his victory. He was struck early in the battle by a 
cannon shot on the shoulder and fell dead on the spot. His 
memory has been preserved by bis capture of the Treasure 



438 



HEYNE— HEYWOOD, J. 



Galleons, which had never been taken to far, but he b also 
the traditional representative of the Dutch " sea dogs " of the 
17th century. 

See de Jonge, Geschiedenis van het Nedarlandscke Zeeweten; I. 
Duro, Armada cspanola, iv.; der Aa, Biograph. Woordenboek der 
Nederlanden. (D. H.) 

HEYNE, CHRISTIAN OOTTLOB (1720-1812), German classical 
scholar and archaeologist, was born on the 25th of September 
17 29, at Chemnitz in Saxony. His father was a poor weaver, 
and the expenses of his early education were .paid by one of bis 
godfathers. In 1748 he entered the university of Leipzig, 
where he was frequently in want of the necessaries of life. His 
distress had almost amounted to despair, when he procured 
the situation of tutor in the family of a French merchant in 
Leipzig, which enabled him to continue his studies. After he 
had completed his university course, he was for many years 
in very straitened circumstances. An elegy written by him 
in Latin on the death of a friend attracted the attention of 
Count von Brilhl, the prime minister, who expressed a desire 
to see the author. Accordingly, in April 1752, Heyne journeyed 
to Dresden, believing that his fortune was made. He was.wcll 
received, promised a secretaryship and a good salary, but nothing 
came of it. Another period of want followed, and it was only 
by persistent solicitation that Heync was able to obtain the 
post of under-clerk in the count's library, with a salary of some- 
what less than twenty pounds sterling. He increased his scanty 
pittance by translation; in addition to some French novels, 
he rendered into German the Ckaereas and Callirrkoe of Chariton, 
the Greek romance writer. He published his first edition of 
Tibullus in 1755, and in 1756 his Epiclelus. In the latter year 
the Seven Years' War broke out, and Heyne was once more 
in a state of destitution. In 1757 he was offered a tutorship 
in the household of Frau von Schonberg, where he met his future 
wife. In January 1759 he accompanied his pupil to the univer- 
sity of Wittenberg, from which he was driven in 1760 by the 
Prussian cannon. The bombardment of Dresden (to which 
city he had meanwhile returned) on the 18th of July 1760, 
destroyed all his possessions, including an almost finished 
edition of Lucian, based on a valuable codex of the Dresden 
Library. In the summer of 1761, although still without any 
fixed income, he married, and for some time he found it necessary 
to devote himself to the duties of land-steward to the Baron 
von Loben in Lusatia. At the end of 1762, however, he was 
enabled to return to Dresden, where he was commissioned 
by P. D. Lippert to prepare the Latin text cf the third volume 
of his Dactyliothcca (an account of a collection of gems). On 
the death of Johann Matthias Gesner at Gottingen in 1761, 
the vacant chair was refused first by Ernest i and then by Ruhn- 
ken, who persuaded Mttnchhausen, the Hanoverian minister 
and principal curator of the university, to bestow it on Heyne 
(1763). His emoluments were gradually augmented, and his 
growing celebrity brought him most advantageous offers from 
other German governments, which he persistently refused. 
After a long and useful career, he died on the 14th of July 
181 2. Unlike Gottfried Hermann, Heyne regarded the study 
of grammar and language only as the means to an end, not as 
the chief object of philology. But, although not a critical 
scholar, he was the first to attempt a scientific treatment of 
Greek mythology, and he gave an undoubted impulse to philo- 
logical studies. 

Of Hcyne's numerous 
Editions, with copious coi 
lien. 1817). Virgil (ed. G 
by G. H. Scha/er, 18 17 

Homer. Iliad (1802); 0} \ 

more than a hundred ac t 

valuable are those relatii 

Juities of Etruscan art ? 

1 778-1 779) i» a valuabl 5 

istory of ancient art. 1 1 

Anteifen are said to hav 

See biography by A. H. 1 s 

interesting essay by Carl r 

Professoren (1872); C. 1 , 

xiu; J. E. Sandys, Hist. Class. Sckd. in. 36-44. 



HEYSE. PAUL JOHAMI LUDWIO (1830- ) v German 
novelist, dramatist and poet, was born at Berlin on the 15th 
of March 1830, the son of the distinguished philologist Karl 
Wilhelm Ludwig Heyse (1797-1855). After attending the 
Friedrich Wilhelm Gymnasium in Berlin, he went, in 1849, to 
Bonn University as a student of the Romance languages, and in 
1852 took his doctor's degree. He had already given proof 
of great literary ability in the production in 1850 of Der Jungr 
brunnen, M&rckcn tints jahrtnden SckUlcrs and of the tragedy 
Francesca von Rimini, when after a year's stay an Italy, he was 
summoned, early in 1854, by King Maximilian II. to Munich, 
where he subsequently lived. Here be turned his attention to 
novel-writing. He published at Munich in 1855 f°ur short stories 
in one volume, one of which, at least, L'Arrabbiala, was a master- 
piece of its kind. These were the precursors of a series of similar 
volumes, necessarily unequal at times, but on the whole con- 
stituting such a mass of highly complex miniature fiction as 
seldom before had proceeded from the pen of a single writer. 
Heyse works in the spirit of a sculptor; he seizes upon some 
picturesque incident or situation, and chisels and polishes until 
all the effect which it is capable of producing has been extracted 
from it. The success of the story usually depends upon the 
theme, for the artist's skill is generally much the same, and the 
situation usually leaves a deeper impression than the characters. 
Heyse is also the author of several novels on a larger scale, 
all of which have gained success and provoked abundant dis- 
cussion. The more important are Kinder der Well (1873), 
Im Paradicse (1875) — the one dealing with the religious and 
social problems of its time, the other with artist-life in Munich — 
Der Roman der Sliflsdame (1888), and Merlin (1892), a novel 
directed against the modern realistic movement of which Heyse 
had been the leading opponent in Germany. He has also been 
a prolific dramatist, but his plays are deficient in theatrical 
qualities and arc rarely seen on the stage. Among the best 
of them are Die Sabinerinnen (1859); Hans Langt (1866), 
Kolberg (1868), Die WeisheU Salomos (1886), and Maria ton 
Magdala (1903). There are masterly translations by him of 
Leopard i, Giusti, and other Italian poets (Ilalieniscke Dicklcr 
seit der MiUe des l8Un Jahrhundert) (4 vols., 1889-1890). 

Heyse's Cesammeile Werke appeared In 29 vols. (1897-1899); 



there is also a popular edition of hw Romane (8 vols.. 1902-1904) 

(1901); also _. 
Heyses Novellen und Romane (1888); E. Pctzct. Paul Heyse als 



and Novellen (to vols., 1904-1906). See his autobiography, 
Jugenderinnerungen und Bekenntmsse (1901); also O. Kraus. Paui 



'aul 



Dromaliker (1904). and the essays by T. Zicgler (in Studtm und 
Studitnkdpfe, 1877), and G. Brandes (in Moderne Geuter, 1887).- 

HEYSHAM , a seaport in the Lancaster parliamentary division 
of Lancashire, England, on the south shore of Morecambe Bay, 
served by the Midland railway. Pop. (1901) 3381. Under 
powers obtained from parliament in 1896, the Midland Railway 
Company constructed, and opened in 1904, a harbour, enclosed 
by breakwaters, for the development of traffic with Belfast 
and other Irish ports, a daily passenger-service of the first 
class being established to Belfast. The harbour has a depth at 
low tide of 17 ft., and extensive accommodation for live-stock 
and goods of all kinds is provided. Heysham is in some favour 
as a watering-place. The church of St Peter is mainly Norman, 
and has fragments of even earlier date. Ruins of a very ancient 
oratory stand near it. This was dedicated to St Patrick, and 
is- traditionally said to have been erected as a place of prayer 
for those at sea. 

HEYWOOD, JOHN (b. 1497), English dramatist and epigram- 
matist, is generally said to have been a native of North Mimms, 
near St Albans, Hertfordshire, though Bale says he was born in 
London. A letter from a John Heywood, who may fairly be 
identified with him, is dated from Malines in 1575, when he 
called himself an old man of seventy-eight, which would fix his 
birth in 1497. He was a chorister of the Chapel Royal, and it 
said to have been educated at Broad gates Hall (Pembroke 
College), Oxford. From 1521 onwards his name appears in the 
king's accounts as the recipient of an annuity of ten marks as 
player of the virginals, and in 1538 he received forty shillings for 



HEYWOOD, T. 



* playing an interlude with his children " before the Princess 
Mary. He is. said to have owed his introduction to her to Sir 
Thomas More, at whose seat at Gobions near St Albans he wrote 
his Epigrams, according to Henry Peacham. More took a keen 
interest in the drama, and is represented by tradition as stepping 
on to the stage and taking an impromptu part in the dialogue. 
William Rastell, the printer of four of Heywood's plays, was the 
son of More's brother-in-law, John Rastell, who organized 
dramatic representations, and possibly wrote plays himself. 
Mr A. W. Pollard sees in Heywood's firm adherence to Catholicism 
and his free satire of legal and social abuses a reflection of the 
ideas of More and his friends, which counts for much in his 
dramatic development. His skill in music and his inexhaustible 
wit made him a favourite both with Henry VIII. and Mary. 
Under Edward VI. he was accused of denying the king's 
supremacy over the church, and had to make a public recantation 
in 1554; but with the accession of Mary his prospects brightened. 
He made a Latin speech to her in St Paul's Churchyard at her 
coronation, and wrote a poem to celebrate her marriage. Shortly 
before her death she granted him the lease of a manor and lands 
in Yorkshire. When Elizabeth succeeded to the throne he fled 
to Malines, and is said to have returned in 1577. In 1587 he is 
spoken of as " dead and gone " in Thomas Newton's epilogue 
to his works. ^ 

John Heywood is important in the history of English drama 
as the first writer to turn the abstract characters of the morality 
plays into real persons. His interludes link the morality plays 
to the modem drama, and were very popular in their day. They 
represent ludicrous incidents of a homely kind in a style of the 
broadest farce, and approximate to the French dramatic render- 
ings of the subjects of the fabliaux. The fun in them still 
survives in spite of the long arguments between the characters 
and what one of their editors calls his "humour of filth." Hey- 
wood's name was actually attached to four interludes. The 
Playe called the f owe PP; a newt and a very ntery interlude of a 
palmer, a pardoner, a pot year y t a pedler (not dated) is a contest 
in lying, easily won by Palmer, who said he had never known 
a woman out of patience. The Play of the Wether, a new and a 
very mery interlude of all matter of Wethers (printed 1533) describes 
the chaotic results of Jupiter's attempts to suit the weather to 
the desires of a number of different people. The Play of Love 
(printed 1533) is an extreme instance of the author's love of 
wire-drawn argument. It is a double dispute between " Loving 
not Loved " and " Loved not Loving " as to which is the more 
wretched, and between " Both Loved and Loving " and " Neither 
Loving nor Loved " to decide which is the happier. The only 
action in this piece is indicated by the stage direction marking 
the entrance of " Neither loved nor loving," who is to run about 
the audience with a huge copper tank on his head full of lighted 
squibs, and is to cry " Water, water 1 Fire, fire I " The Dialogue 
of Wit and Polly is more of an academic dispute than a play. 
But two pieces universally assigned to Heywood, although they 
were printed by Rastell without any author's name, combine 
action with dialogue, and are much more dramatic. In The 
Mery Play between the Pardoner and the Frere, tlie Curate and 
Neybour Pratte (printed 1533, but probably written much 
earlier) the Pardoner and the Friar both try to preach at the 
same time, and, coming at last to blows, are separated by the 
other two personages of the piece. The Mery Play betuene 
Jokan Johan the Husbande, Tyb the Wyfe, and Syr Jhan the 
Preest (printed 1533) is the best constructed of all his pieces. 
Tyb and Syr Jhan eat the " Pye " which is the central " property " 
of the piece, while Johan Johan is made to chafe wax at the fire 
to stop a hole in a pail. This incident occurs in a French Farce 
nouvelle Iris bonne et fort joyeuse de Panel qui va au vin. Hey- 
wood has sometimes been credited with the authorship of the 
dialogue of Gentylnes and Nobylyte printed by Rastell without 
date, and Mr Pollard adduces some ground for attributing to 
bim the anonymous New Enterlude called Thersytes (played 1 538). 
Heywood's other works are a collection of proverbs and epigrams, 
the earliest extant edition of which is dated 1562; some ballads, 
one of them being the " Willow Garland," known to Desdcmona; 



439 

and a long verse allegory of over 7000 lines entitled The Spider 
and the Flie (1556). A contemporary writer in Holinshed's 
Chronicle said that neither its author nor any one else could 
" reach unto the meaning thereof." But the flies are generally 
taken to represent the Roman Catholics and the spiders the 
Protestants, while Queen Mary is represented by the housemaid 
who with her broom (the sword) executes the commands of 
her master (Christ) and her mistress (the church). Dr A. W. 
Ward speaks of its "general lucidity and relative variety 
of treatment." Heywood says that he laid it aside for twenty 
years before he finished it, and, whatever may be the final 
interpretation put upon it, it contains a very energetic statement 
of the social evils of the time, and especially of the deficiencies 
of English law. 



a 

if 

T 
S< 
H 
A 
ai 
T 
fo 

His son, Jasper Heywood (153 5-1 59*0, who translated into 
English three plays of Seneca, the Troas (1559), the Thyestes 
(1560) and Hercules Furens (1561), was a fellow of Merton 
College, Oxford, but was compelled to resign from that society 
in 1558. In the same year he was elected a fellow of All Souls 
College, but, refusing to conform to the changes in religion at 
the beginning of the reign of Elizabeth, he gave up his fellowship 
and went to Rome, where he was received into the Society of 
Jesus. For seventeen years he was professor of moral theology 
and controversy in the Jesuit College at Dillingen, Bavaria. 
In 1 581 he was sent to England as superior of the Jesuit mission, 
but his leniency in that position led to his recall. He was on 
his way back to the Continent when a violent storm drove him 
back to the English coast. He was arrested on the charge of 
being a priest, but, although extraordinary efforts were made 
to induce him to abjure his opinions, he remained firm. He 
was condemned to perpetual exile on pain of death, and died 
at Naples on the 9th of January 1598. His translations of 
Seneca were supplemented by other plays contributed by 
Alexander Neville, Thomas Nuce, John Studley and Thomas 
Newton. Newton collected these translations in one volume, 
Seneca, his tenne tragedies translated into Englysh (1581). The 
importance of this work in the development of English drama 
can hardly be over-estimated. 

See Dr J. W. Cunliffe, On Ike Influence of Seneca upon Elizabethan 
Tragedy (1893). 

HEYWOOD, THOMAS (d. c 1650), English dramatist and 
miscellaneous author, was a native of Lincolnshire, born about 
1575, and said to have been educated at Cambridge and to have 
become a fellow of Peterhouse. Heywood is mentioned by 
Philip Hcnslowe as having written a book or play for the Lord 
Admiral's company of actors in October 1596; and ip 1598 he 
was regularly engaged as a player in the company, in which he 
presumably had a share, as no wages are mentioned. He was 
also a member of other companies, of Lord Southampton's, 
of the earl of Derby's and of the earl of Worcester's players, 
afterwards known as the Queen's Servants. In his preface to 
the English Traveller (1633) he describes himself as having had 
" an entire hand or at least a main finger in two hundred and 
twenty plays." Of this number, probably considerably in- 
creased before the close of his dramatic career, only twenty-three 
survive. He wrote for the stage, not for the press, and protested 
against the printing of his works, which he said he had no time 
to revise. He was, said Ticck, the " model of a light and rapid 
talent," and his plays, as might be expected from his rate of 
production, bear little trace of artistic elaboration. Charles 



440 



HEYWOOD— HEZEKIAH 



Lamb called him a " prose Shakespeare w ; Professor Ward, one 
of Heywood's most sympathetic editors, points out that this 
epigrammatic statement can only be accepted with reservations. 
Heywood had a keen eye for dramatic situations and great 
constructive skill, but his powers of characterization were not 
on a par with his stagecraft. He delighted in what he called 
'• merry accidents," that is, in coarse, broad farce; his fancy 
and invention were inexhaustible. It was in the domestic drama 
of sentiment that he won his most distinctive success. For this 
he was especially fitted by his genuine tenderness and his freedom 
from affectation, by the sweetness and gentleness for which 
Lamb praised him. His masterpiece, A Woman kiide with 
kindnesse (acted 1603; printed 1607), is a type of the comidie 
larmoyanle, and The English Traveller (1633) is a domestic 
tragedy scarcely inferior to it in pathos and in the elevation of 
hs moral tone. His first play was probably The Foure Prentises 
of London: With the Conquest of Jerusalem (printed 1615, but 
acted some fifteen years earlier). This may have been intended 
as a burlesque of the old romances, but it is more likely that it 
was meant seriously to attract the apprentice public to whom 
it was dedicated, and its popularity was no doubt aimed at in 
Beaumont and Fletcher's travesty of the City taste in drama 
in their Knight of the Burning Pestle. The two parts of King 
Edward the Fourth (printed 1600), and of // you know not me, 
you know no bodie; Or, The Troubles of Queene Elizabeth (1605 
and 1606) are chronicle histories. His other comedies include: 
The Royall King, and the Loyall subject (acted c. 1600; printed 
1637); the two parts of The Fair Maid of the West; Or, A Girle 
worth Cold (two parts, printed 1631); The Fayre Maid of the 
Exchange (printed anonymously 1607); The Late Lancashire 
Witches (1634), written with Richard Brome, and prompted by 
an actual trial in the preceding year; A Pleasant Comedy, called 
A Mayden-HeadweU lost (1634;; A Challenge for Beautie (1636) ; 
The Wise-Woman of Hogsdon (printed 1638), the witchcraft 
in this case being matter for comedy, not seriously treated as 
in the Lancashire play; and Fortune by Land and Sea (printed 
1655), with William Rowley. The five plays called respectively 
The Golden, The Silver, The Brazen and The Iron Age (the last 
in two parts), dated 1611, 1613, 1613, 1632, are series of classical 
stories strung together with no particular connexion except that 
"old Homer" introduces the performers of each act' in turn. 
Loves Maistresse; Or, The Queens Masque (printed 1636) is on 
the story of Cupid and Psyche as told by Apuleius; and the 
tragedy of the Rape of Lucrece (1608) is varied by a " merry 
lord," Valerius, who lightens the gloom of the situation by 
singing comic songs. A series of pageants, most of them devised 
for the City of London, or its guilds, by Heywood, were printed 
in 1637. In vol. iv. of his Collection of Old English Plays (1885), 
Mr A. H. Bullen printed for the first time a comedy by Heywood, 
The Captives, or The Lost Recovered (licensed 1624), and in vol. ii. 
of the same series, Dicke of Devonshire, which he tentatively 
assigns to the same hand. 

Besides his dramatic works, twelve of which were reprinted 
by the " Shakespeare Society," and were published by Mr John 
Pearson in a complete edition of six vols, with notes and illustra- 
tions in 1874, he was the author of Troia Britannica, or Great 
Britain's Troy (1609), a poem in seventeen cantos "intermixed 
with many pleasant poetical tales " and " concluding with an 
universal chronicle from the creation until the present time"; 
An Apology for Actors, containing three brief treatises (161 2) 
edited for the Shakespeare Society in 1841; Twautiov or nine 
books of various history concerning women (1624); .England's 
Elizabeth, her Life and Troubles during her minority from the 
Cradle to the Crown (1631); The Hierarchy of the Blessed Angels 
(1635), a didactic poem in nine books; Pleasant Dialogue, 
and Dramas selected out of Lucian, &c. (1637; ed. W. Bang, 
Louvain, 1903); and The Life of Merlin surnamed Ambrosius 
(1641) 




HEYWOOD, a municipal borough in the Heywood parlia- 
mentary division of Lancashire, England, 9 m. N. of Manchester 
on the Lancashire and Yorkshire railway. Pop. (1901) 25,458. 
It is of modern growth and possesses several handsome churches, 
chapels and public buildings. The Queen's Park, purchased and 
laid out at a cost of £11,000 with money which devolved to 
Queen Victoria in right of her duchy and county palatine of 
Lancaster, was opened in 1879. Heywood Hall in the neighbour- 
hood of the town was the residence of Peter Heywood, who 
contributed to the discovery of the Gunpowder Plot. Heywood 
owes its rise to the enterprise of the Peels, its first manufactures 
having been introduced by the father of the first Sir Robert 
Peel. It is an important seat of the cotton manufacture, and 
there are power-loom factories, iron foundries, chemical works, 
boiler-works and railway wagon works. Coal is worked exten- 
sively in the neighbourhood. Heywood was incorporated In 
1 88 1, and the corporation consists of a mayor, 6 aldermen and 
18 councillors. Area, 3660 acres. 

HEZEKIAH (Heb. for " [my] strength is [of] Yah "), in the 
Bible son of Ahaz, one of the greatest of the kings of Judah. 
He flourished at the end of the 8th and beginning of the 7th 
century B.C., when Palestine passed through one of the most 
eventful periods of its history. There is much that is uncertain 
in his reign, and with the exception of the great crisis of 701 B.C. 
its chronology has not been unanimously fixed. Whether be 
came to the throne before or after the fall of Samaria (722- 
721 B.C.) is disputed, 1 nor is it clear what share Judah took in 
the Assyrian conflicts down to 701.' Shortly before this date 
the whole of western Asia was in a ferment; Sargon had died 
and Sennacherib had come to the throne (in 705); vassal kings 
plotted to recover their independence and Assyrian puppets 
were removed by their opponents. Judah was in touch with a 
general rising in S.W. Palestine, in which Ekron, Lachish, Ascalon 
(Ashkelon) and other towns of the Philistines were supported 
by the kings of Musri and Meluhba." Sennacherib completely 
routed them at Eltekeh (a Danite city), and thence turned against 
Hezekiah, who had been in league with Ekron and had imprisoned 
its king Padi, an Assyrian vassal. In this invasion of Judah the 
Assyrian claims entire success; 46 towns of Judah were captured, 
200,150 men and many herds of cattle were carried off among 
the spoil, and Jerusalem itself was closely invested. Hezekiah 
was imprisoned " like a bird in a cage "*— to quote Sennacherib, 
and the Urbi (Arabian?) troops in Jerusalem laid down their 
arms. Thirty talents of gold, eight hundred of silver, precious 
stones, couches and seats of ivory — "all kinds of valuable 
treasure ",— the ladies of the court, male and female attendants 
(perhaps " singers ") were carried away to Nineveh. Here the 
Assyrian record ends somewhat abruptly, for, in the meanwhile, 
Babylonia had again revolted (700 B.C.) and Sennacherib's 
presence was urgently needed nearer home. 

At what precise period the Babylonian Merodach (i.e. Marduk)- 
Baladan sent his embassy to Hezekiah is disputed. Although 
ostensibly to congratulate the king upon his recovery from a 
sickness, it was really sent in the hope of enlisting his support, 
and the excessive courtesy and complaisance with which it was 
received suggest that it found a ready ally in Judah (2 Kings xx. 
12 sqq.; Isa. xxxix.). Merodach-Baladan was overthrown 
by Sargon in 710 B.C., but succeeded in making a fresh revolt 
some years later (704-703 B.C.), and opinion is much divided 
whether his embassy was to secure the friendship of the 

»See W. R. Smith, Prophets of Israel? 415 sqq.; Q. C. White- 
house, Isaiah, pp. 20 sqq., 372; J. Skinner, Kings, p. 43 seq.; T. K. 
Cheyne, Ency. Bib. col. 2058, n. 1, and references. 

'The chief dates are: 720, defeat of a coalition (Hamath, Gaza 
and Musri) at Karfcar in north Syria and Raphia (S. Palestine); 
7 15, a rising of Musri and Arabian tribes; 7 13-7 u. revolt and capture 
of Ashdod (cp. Is. xx). That Judah was invaded on this fatter 
occasion is not improbable. 

* Mclubba is held by many critics to be N.W. Arabia; the identi- 
fication of Musri is uncertain, see below. 

4 The phrase was a favourite one of Rib-Addi, king of Gebal 
Byblus), in the 15th century 3.C.; TtU-tl-Amama Letters (ed. 
-Cnudtzon). Nos. 74. 79, Ac. Jeremiah (v. 27) uses the simile in a 
different way. For a discussion of Sennacherib's record, see WBke, 
Jesaja u. Assur (Leipzig, 1905), pp. 97 sqq. 



HIATUS— HIBERNATION 



4+1 



youthful Hexekiah at his succession of is to be associated with 
the later widespread attempt to remove the Assyrian yoke. 1 

The brief account of the Assyrian invasion, Hetekiah's sub- 
mission, and the payment of tribute in a Kings xviii. 14-16, 
supplements the Assyrian record by the statement that Sen- 
nacherib besieged Lachish, a fact which is confirmed by a bas- 
relief (now in the British Museum) depicting the king in the act 
of besieging that town. 9 This thoroughly historical fragment 
is followed by two narratives which tell how the king sent an 
official from Lachish to demand the submission of Hezekiah 
and conclude with the unexpected deliverance of Jerusalem. 
Both these stories appear to belong to a biography of Isaiah, 
and, like the similar biographies of Elijah and Elisha, are open 
to the suspicion that historical facts have been subordinated to 
idealise the work of the prophet. See Kings, Books or. 

The narratives are (a) 2 Kings xviii. 13, 17-xix. 8; cf. Isa. xxxvi. 
l-xxxvii. 8, and (6) xix. 96-35; cp. Isa. xxxvii. 9-36 (a Chron. xxxii. 
9 sqq. is based on both), and Jerusalem's deliverance is attributed 
to a certain rumour (xix. 7), to the advance of Tirhakah, king of 
Ethiopia (9. 9), and to a remarkable pestilence (». 35) which finds 
an echo in a famous story related, not without some confusion of 
essential facts, by Herodotus (ii 141 ; cf. Josephus Attitq. x. i. 5).* 
It is difficult to decide whether xix. oa belongs to the first or second of 
these narratives; and whether the " rumour " refers to the approach 
of Tirhakah, or rather to the serious troubles which had arisen in 
Babylonia. It is equally difficult to determine whether Tirhakah 
actually appeared on the scene in 701, and the precise application 
of the term Musri (Mizraim) is much debated. Unless the two narra- 
tives are duplicates of the same event, it may be urged that 
Sennacherib's attack upon Arabia (apparently about 689) involved 
an invasion of Judah, by which time Egypt was in a position to be 
of material assistance (cL Isa. xxx. 1-5, xxxi. 1-3?). This theory of 
a second campaign (first suggested By Sir Henry Rawlinson) has 
been contested, although it is pointed out that Sennacherib at all 
events did not invade Egypt, and that a Kings xix. 24 (Isa. xxxvii. 
95) can only refer to his successor. The allusion to the murder of 
Sennacherib (xix. 36 sq.) 4 points to the year 681, but it is uncertain 
to which of the above narratives it belongs. On the whole, the 
question must be left open, and with it both the problem of the 
extension of the name Musri and Mizraim outside Egypt in the 
Assyrian and Hebrew records of this period and the true historical 
background of a number of the Isaiank prophecies. It 'u quite possible 
that later events which belong to the time of the Egyptian supremacy 
and the wars of Esarhaddon have been confused with the history 
of Sennacherib's invasion. 

It is not certain whether Hezekiah's conflict with the Philis- 
tines as far as Gaza or his preparations to secure for Jerusalem 
a good water supply (xviii. 8, xx. 20; a Chron. xxxii. 30; Ecclus. 
xlviii. 17 sq.)* should precede or follow the events which have 
been discussed. On the other hand, the reforms which the 
compiler of the book has attributed to the early part of the 
reign were doubtless much later (2 Kings xviii. 1-8). Not the 
fall of Samaria, but the crisis of 701, is the earliest date that 
could safely be chosen, and the extent of these reforms must 
not be overestimated. They are related in terms that imply 
an acquaintance with the great " Dcuteronomic " movement 
(see Deuteronomy), and are magnified further with character- 
istic detail by the chronicler (2 Chron. xxix.-xxxi.). The most 
remarkable was the destruction of a brazen serpent, the cult 
of which was traditionally traced back to the time of Moses 
(Num. xxi. 9)." This persistence of serpent-cult, and the 

1 For the early date (between 720 and 710). Winckler. Alttest Unt 



139 sqq, » Burn'ey, Kings, 350 sq^ ; Driver; rCOchler, &c ; for the 
ir, Wjutehousc, Isaiah, 29 sq , in agreement with Schrader, Well- 



later, 



hauscn, W. R. Smith. CheynerM 'Curdy. Paton. &c 

* Isa. x. 28-32 may perhaps refer to this invasion. Allusions to 
the Assyrian oppression are found in Isa. x. 5-15, xiv. 24*27. xvii. 
I2;i4; and to internal Judaean intrigues perhaps in Isa. xxiL 15-18, 
xxix. 15. For a picture of the ruins in Jerusalem, see Isa. xxii. 9-11. 
But see further Isaiah (Book). 

•See, on the story, Griffith, in D. Hogarth's Authority and 
Archaeology, p. 167, n. 1. 

4 The house of Ntsroch should probably be that of the god Nusku ; 
see also Driver in Hogarth, 06. cU. p. 109; Winckler, op. cit. p 84. 

* It is commonly believed that Hezekiah constructed the conduit 
of Siloam, famous for its Hebrew inscription (see Inscriptions, 
Jerusalem). But Isa. viii. 6, would seem to show that the pool 
was, already in existence, and. for palaeographical details, see Pal. 



ExUor. Fund, Onart. Stat. (1900), pp. 289, 305 sqq. 

*The name Nehnshtan (2 Kings xviii. 4, cp. n&k&sk, 
h obscure; see the commentaries. 



idolatry (necromancy, tree-worship) which the contemporary 
prophets denounce, do not support the view that the 
apparently radical reforms of Hezekiah were extensive or 
permanent, and Jer. xxvi. 17-19 (which suggests that Micah 
had a greater influence than Isaiah) throws another light upon 
the conditions during his reign. Hezekiah was succeeded by 
Us son Mamassbh (?.».). 

See further W. 1 b- 

licion. According of 

literature (sec Pro ig 

(Isa. xxxviii. 9-20, ce 

Chcync, In trod, to I cr 

in which the Judac y. 

perhaps, in the be jc 

reward for his picl d. 

alttcsl. Wisscnscha] t- 

such., 26 sqq.; Scl >n 

a Kings. Le); Dri •*. 

Jcretmas, Alte Test 1*. 

(Leipzig, 1903, co »'» 

" Feldzugc gecen a. 

1 13-158). K. Fullc C 

Alt, Israel it. Agy to 

Isaiah. 

HIATUS (Lat. for gaping, or gap), a break In continuity, 
whether in speech, thought or events, a lacuna. In anatomy 
the terra is used for an opening or foramen, as the hiatus FallopH, 
a foramen of the temporal bone. In logic a hiatus occurs when 
a step or link in reasoning is wanting; and in grammar it is the 
pause made for the sake of euphony in pronouncing two successive 
vowels, which arc not separated by a consonant. 

HIAWATHA (" he makes rivers "), a legendary chief (c 1450) 
of the Onondaga tribe of North American Indians. The forma- 
tion of the League of Six Nations, known as the Iroquois, is 
attributed to «him by Indian tradition. In his miraculous 
character Hiawatha is the incarnation of human progress and 
civilization. He teaches agriculture, navigation, medicine and 
the arts, conquering by his magic all the powers of nature which 
war against man. 

See J. N. B. Hewitt, in Amer. Anthrop. for April 1893. 

H1BBIN0, a village of St Louis county, Minnesota, U.S.A., 
75 m. N.W. of Duluth. Pop. (1000) 2481; (1005 state census) 
6566, of whom 3537 were foreign-born (1169 Finns, 516 Swedes, 
408 Canadians, 323 Austrians and 314 Norwegians); (1910) 8832. 
Hibbing is served by the Great Northern and the Duluth, 
Missabe & Northern railways. It lies in the midst of the great 
Mesabi iron-ore deposits of the state; in 1007 forty iron mines 
were in operation within 10 m. of the village. Lumbering and 
farming are also important industries. The village owns and 
operates the water-works and electric-lighting plant. Hibbing 
was settled in T892 and was incorporated in 1893. 

H1BERNACULUM (Lat. for winter quarters), in botany a 
term for a winter bud; in botanic gardens, the winter quarters 
for plants, in zoology, the winter bud of a polyzoan. 

HIBERNATION (winter sleep), the dormant condition in 
which certain animals pass the winter in cold latitudes. Aestiva- 
tion (summer sleep) is the similar condition in which other 
species pass periods of heat or drought in warm latitudes. The 
origins of these kindred phenomena are probably to be sought 
in the regularly recurrent failure of food supply or of other 
factors essential to existence due to the seasonal onset of cold 
in the one case and of excessively dry hot weather in the other. 
They are means whereby certain non-migratory species are 
enabled to live through unfavourable climatic conditions which 
would end fatally in starvation or desiccation were the animals 
to maintain their normal state of activity. 

I. The Physiology of Hibernation. Hibernation and AesHm- 
Hon. — The physiology of hibernation, as exemplified in mam- 
malia, has been worked out in detail by several observers in 
the case of some European species, notably bats, hedgehogs, 
dormice and marmots. Of the physiology of aestivation nothing 
definite appears to have been ascertained. It seems probable, 
however, from observations upon the dormant animals that the 
physiological accompaniments of winter and summer sleep are 
to all intents and purposes the same. The state of hibernation. 



442 



HIBERNATION 



for example, in the European hedgehog (Erinaceus europaeus) 
is not distinguished by external signs from the state of aestiva- 
tion of the allied Mascarene genus, the tenrec (Cenietes ecaudatus) 
The lethargy in both cases appears to be directly due to 
fall in the temperature of the organisms; and the fall in 
temperature proceeds part passu with the slowing down and 
weakening of the respiration and with retardation in the cir- 
culation of the blood. Similarity, moreover, between hiberna- 
tion and aestivation is shown not only in their physiological 
accompaniments but also in the species of animals which become 
scaspnally dormant. Birds neither hibernate nor aestivate. 
The tenrec (Centetes) of Madagascar, which aestivates, closely 
resembles the hedgehog (Erinaceus) in habits and belongs to 
the same order of mammalia. In the case of reptiles and 
batrachians, snakes, lizards, tortoises, frogs and toads sleep 
the winter through in cold countries; and some species of 
these groups habitually bury themselves in the sand or mud 
in tropical latitudes where drought is of periodical occurrence. 
Terrestrial molluscs lie dormant in the winter in cold and 
temperate latitudes and their tropical allies aestivate in districts 
where conditions enforce the habit. Some fresh-water molluscs 
bury themselves in the mud at the bottom of ponds when the 
surface is covered with ice; others take refuge in the same way 
when pools and tanks become exhausted during the dry season 
in the tropics. In temperate and north temperate countries 
insects and arachnida cither die or retire to winter quarters 
during the cold weather, and in the tropics they similarly dis- 
appear during times of drought. 

Predisposing Causes of Hibernation.— -The likeness between 
hibernation and aestivation and the coincidence of the one 
with cold and of the other with heat arrest the conclusion that 
the temperature of the surrounding medium, whether atmo- 
spheric or aquatic, is the prime, much less the sole, cause of either 
The effect of extreme cold is to rouse the hibernating animal 
from its slumber; and its continuance thereafter brings about 
a state of torpor which proves fatal. This at least appears to 
be the case with mammals, where actual freezing of the tissues 
is followed by death because the gases are expelled from the 
fluids as bubbles and the salts separate in the form of crystals. 
Some cold-blooded animals, however, may be cooled to o° C. 
Fish have been resuscitated after solidification in blocks of ice, 
and frogs have been known to recover when Ice has been formed 
in the blood and in the lymph of the peritoneal cavity (Landois). 

For the reasons given, all hibernating mammals take pre* 
cautions against exposure to extreme cold. They either bury 
themselves in the soil or under* the snow or seek the shelter of 
hollow trees or of caves, not infrequently congregating in the 
same spot so that the temperature is kept up by corporeal 
contact. Again the hibernating instinct may be suspended 
unless the conditions are favourable for safely entering upon 
winter sleep. It is alleged that bears in Scandinavia do not 
hibernate unless food has been sufficiently plentiful during 
the summer and autumn to fatten them for their winter fast, 
and hedgehogs and dormice in captivity have been known to 
remain active in the cold until warm sleeping-quarters were 
insured by placing hay and cotton- wool in their cages. Finally 
the wood-chucks (Arctomys monax) in the Adirondacks retire 
to winter quarters at about the time of the autumnal equinox, 
when the weather is warm and pleasant, and emerge at the 
vernal equinox before the snows of winter have vanished from 
the ground. These and other facts justify Marshall Hall's 
conclusion that cold is merely a predisposing cause of hibernation 
in the sense that it is a predisposing cause of ordinary sleep. 
It has also been shown that the state of hibernation cannot be 
forced upon snails in summer by submitting them to artificial cold 
even almost to freezing point; but that at the proper season^ 
they prepare for winter quarters at temperatures varying from 37° 
to 77 Fahr. Again insects sometimes retire to winter quarters in 
the autumn when the temperature of the atmosphere is higher than 
that of preceding days during which they retain their activity. 

Thus the oncoming and ceasing both of winter and summer 
sleep depend to a considerable extent upon conditions of existence 



other than those of temperature. Darwin saw scarcely a sign 
of a living thing on his arrival at Bahia Blanca, Argentina, 
on the 7th of Sept., although by digging several insects, large 
spiders and lizards were found in a half-torpid state. During 
the days of his visit when nature was dormant the mean tempera- 
ture was 51°, the thermometer seldom rising above 55° at 
mid-day But during the succeeding days when the mean 
temperature was 58° and that of the middle of the day between 
6o° and 70° both insect and reptilian life was in a state of activity. 
Nevertheless at Montevideo, lying only four degrees further 
north, between the 26th of July and the 19th of August when the 
mean temperature was 58-4° and the mean highest temperature 
of mid-day 65-5° almost every beetle, several genera of spiders, 
land molluscs, toads and lizards were all lying dormant beneath 
stones. Thus the animal-life at Montevideo remained dormant 
at a temperature which roused that at Bahia Blanca from its 
torpidity. Darwin unfortunately does not record whether the 
species observed were identical in the two localities. 

The temperature of animals in a profound slate of hibernation 
is approximately the same as that of the sunounding medium 
or at most a degree or two higher. If, however, the temperature 
of the chosen hibernaculum (winter quarters) falls as low as 
freezing point, life is endangered at least in the case of mammals. 

In most cold-blooded animals, like reptiles, the temperature 
is normally only a little above that of the atmosphere, the two 
rising and falling together. But, setting aside the young, 
especially of those species in which the offspring are born or 
hatched at a comparatively early stage of development, the 
majority of warm-blooded animals are able to maintain a high 
and approximately level temperature irrespective of decline 
in the temperature of the surrounding medium. This faculty 
of temperature adjustment, however, appears to be absent or 
weakened in most if not in all hibernating mammals both in 
their normal nocturnal or diurnal sleep and in their winter sleep. 
In the case of European bats it has been shown that the ordinary 
day sleep in summer differs only in the matter of duration from 
the prolonged slumber of the same animals in winter. The 
temperature falls with that of the atmosphere, respiration 
practically ceases and immersion in water for as many as eleven 
minutes has been known to prove innocuous. At moderate 
temperatures ranging from 45° to 50° F , dormice (Muscardinus 
avellanarius) and hedgehogs {Erinaceus europaeus) alternately 
wake to feed and sink into slumber. Dormice awake once in 
every twenty-four hours; the sleep of the hedgehogs may last 
for two or three days. The temperature of the hedgehog, when 
awake and active, rises to about 87 F., that of the dormouse 
to 92° or 04° F.; but during sleep the temperature of both species 
falls to about that of the atmosphere. In other words, all the 
phenomena characteristic of hibernation are exhibited in these 
animals during the periods of sleep interrupting their periods 
of wakeful activity. Sleep of this nature, for which the term 
" diurnation " has been proposed, because it has only been 
observed in nocturnal animals, lies phenomenally midway 
between the normal sleep of non-hibernating mammals and the 
dormant condition in winter of hibernating species. The 
stimulus of hunger appears to be the prime cause of its periodic 
cessation. Since then the faculty of temperature adjustment 
is in abeyance during the ordinary diurnal summer sleep in 
hibernating mammals, which in this physiological particular 
resemble reptiles, it seems probable that hibernation can only 
be practised by those species in which the power to maintain, 
when sleeping, a permanent average high temperature has been 
lost or perhaps never acquired. That there is no broad line 
of demarcation between the ordinary sleep of these hibernating 
mammals in which the temperature is known to drop considerably 
and that of non-hibernating species is indicated by the fact that 
the temperature of human beings and possibly of all son- 
hibernating species falls to a certain, though to a limited, extent 
in ordinary sleep. 

The relation between the internal body-temperature and the 
respiratory movements has been worked out in hibernating 
dormice, hedgehogs, marmots and bats. When the temperature 



HIBERNATION 



+43 



it below i a* C , the torpid animal exhibits long periods of apnoea 
of several minutes' duration and interrupted by a few respirations. 
With the temperature rising above 13 C, the periods of apnoea 
in the still inactive animal become shorter, the respiration 
suddenly commencing and ceasing (Biot's type), or gradually 
waxing and waning (Cheyne-Stokes' type). When the tempera- 
ture is at about 16 C, the periods of apnoea in the gradually 
awaking animal are very short and infrequent. When the 
temperature is about 20° and rising apace, respiration becomes 
continuous and rapid and the animal is awake. These stages 
have been especially recorded in the case of dormice In the 
last stage the respiration of hedgehogs and marmots is somewhat 
different, there being a series of rapid respirations, often followed 
by a single deep sighing respiration. 

Respiration appears to be totally suspended in animals in a 
complete state of hibernation, if left undisturbed It may 
however, be readily re-excited by the slightest stimulus, and 
to this fact may perhaps be attributed the belief that breathing 
does not actually cease. If a hibernating hedgehog be lightly 
touched it draws a deep breath, and breathing is maintained for a 
longer or shorter time before again ceasing, but if at the same 
time the temperature of the atmosphere be raised, respiration 
becomes continuous and lethargy is succeeded by activity 
(Marshall Hall). The opinion that respiration is totally suspended 
is supported by a number of facts. Hibernating marmots and 
bats, for example, have been known to live four hours in carbon 
dioxide, a gas which proves almost instantly fatal to mammals 
in a state of normal activity (Spallanzani) A hedgehog which 
may be drowned in about three minutes when awake and active, 
has been removed from water uninjured when in deep winter 
sleep after twenty-two and a half minutes' submergence. A 
hibernating noctule bat, when similarly treated, survived 
sixteen minutes' immersion. Further proof of the suspension 
of respiration has been furnished by experiments upon a bat 
which wnile in a deep and undisturbed state of lethargy was 
kept in a pneumatometer for ten hours without appreciably 
affecting the percentage of oxygen in the air The same animal, 
when active, removed over 5 cub. in. of oxygen in the space of 
one hour from the instrument. 

As in the case of respiration, alimentation and excretion are 
suspended dunng hibernation. 

The circulation of the blood, on the other hand, continues without 
interruption, though its rapidity is greatly retarded This fact 
may be observed by microscopic examination of the wings of bats 
in a state of winter sleep. Moreover, in the case of a hedgehog 
lethargic from hibernation, it was experimentally shown that 
when the spinal cord was severed behind the occipital foramen, 
the brain removed and the entire spinal cord gently destroyed, 
the heart continued to beat strongly and regularly for several 
hours, the contraction of the auricles and ventricles being quite 
perceptible, though feeble, even after the lapse of ten hours. 
After eleven hours the organ was motionless, but resumed its 
activity when stimulated by a knife-point. Even after twelve 
hours both auricles responded to the same stimulus, though the 
ventricles remained motionless. Shortly afterwards the auricles 
gave no response. On the other hand, when the spinal cord of a 
hedgehog in a normal state of activity was severed at the occiput, 
the left ventricle ceased to beat almost at once, and the left 
auricle in less than fifteen minutes; the right auricle was the 
next to cease, whereas the right ventricle continued its contraction 
for about two hours. Experiments upon marmots have yielded 
very similar results. The heart of a marmot decapitated in a 
state of lethargy continued to beat for over three hours The 
pulsations,- at first strong and frequent and varying from 16 
to 18 per minute, became gradually weaker and less frequent, 
until at the end of the third hour only 3 were recorded in the 
same length of time. Excised pieces of voluntary muscular 
tissue contracted vigorously three hours after death under 
electric stimulus. Only at the end of four hours did they cease 
to respond. The heart of an active marmot killed in the same 
way contracted about 28 times a minute at first, the 
number of pulsations falling to about 1 a at the end of fifteen 



HIBERNATION 



recently shown in the case of the greater and lesser horseshoe bats 
(Rhinolophus ferrum-tquinwn and R. kipposiderus), that during 
the early period of their occupation of the winter retreat, hiberna- 
tion, in the strict sense of the word, does not take place, and that 
even later in the season the sleep is constantly interrupted, 
especially when the temperature of the air rises above 46° F„ 
and that during their wakeful intervals they crawl about and feed 
apparently upon the insects which live throughout the year in the 
caves. This is also true of the long-eared bat (Piecotus aurttus), 
and probably of ot her species of this group. At M ussoorie in the 
Himalayas, and in other parts of northern India, insectivorous 
bats, such as Rkinolophus lucius and Rk. a finis, pass the winter 
in a semi-torpid state, and are rarely seen abroad during the cold 
season. The fruit^eating bats, on the contrary (Pkropidae), 
which are more southern in their distribution and are restricted 
in the Himalayas to the warmer valleys and lower slopes of the 
mountains, are as active in the winter as at other times of the 
year (Blanford). 

Although almost as exclusively insectivorous as bats, moles 
and shrews do not, so far as is known, hibernate. This distinction 
between two groups so nearly alike m diet, no doubt depends 
upon the difference in their habitats and in those of the creatures 
they live upon. By tunnelling deeper in winter than in summer, 
moles are still able to find worms and various insects buried 
in the earth beyond the reach of frost; and shrews hunt out 
spiders, centipedes and insects which in their larval, pupal or 
sexual stages have taken shelter and lie dormant in holes and 
crannies of the soil, beneath the leaves of ground plants or 
under stones and logs of wood. In view of the perennially 
active life of the two insectivora just mentioned, it is a singular 
fact that the common hedgehog (Erinaceus europaeus)—tht 
only member of this order besides genera referable to the moles 
(Taipidae) and shrews (Soricidae) that inhabits temperate and 
north-temperate latitudes in Europe and Asia— passes the 
winter in a state of torpor unsurpassed in profundity by that 
of any species of mammal so far as is known. Possibly the 
explanation of this seeming anomaly may be found in the 
Monomial differences between the three animals. The sub- 
terranean feeding habits of the mole render hibernation un- 
necessary on his part Therefore the shrew and the hedgehog, 
both surface feeders for the most part, need only be considered 
in this connexion. As compared with shrews, amongst the 
smallest of palaearctic mammals, the hedgehog is of considerable 
size. Moreover, in point of vivacious energy it would be difficult 
to find two mammals of the same order more utterly unlike. 
Hence in winter when insects are scarce and demand active 
and diligent search, it is quite intelligible that the shrews, 
in virtue of their smallness and rapidity of movement, are able 
to procure sufficient food for their needs; whereas the hedgehogs, 
requiring a far larger quantity and handicapped by lack of 
activity, would probably starve under the same conditions. 
Like the common hedgehog of Europe, the long-eared hedge- 
hog (Erinaceus megabits) hibernates in Afghanistan from 
November till February. The tenrec (Caitdcs tcaudotus), a 
large insectivore from Madagascar, aestivates during the hottest 
weeks of the year; and specimens exhibited in the Zoo- 
logical Gardens in London preserved the habit although 
kept at a uniform temperature and regularly supplied with 
food. 

Amongst the Rodentia, no members of the Lagomorpha 
* (hares, rabbits and picas) are known to hibernate, although 
some of the species, like the mountain hare (Lepus limidus), 
extend far to the north in the palaearctic region, and the picas 
(Ochotona) live at high altitudes in the Himalayas and Central 
Asia, where the cold of winter is excessive, and where the snow 
lies deep for many months. It is probable that the picas live 
In fissures and burrows beneath the snow, and feed on stores 
of food accumulated during the summer and autumn. The 
Hystrico-morpha also are non-hibernators. It is true that the 
common porcupine (Hystrix cristata) of south Europe and 
north Africa is alleged to hibernate; the statement cannot, 
sr, be accepted without confirmation, because the cold is 



seldom excessive in the countries it frequents, and specimens 
exhibited in the Zoological Gardens in London remain active 
throughout the year, although kept in enclosures without 
artificial heat of any kind. Even the most northerly repre- 
sentative of this group, the Canadian porcupine (Erttitan 
dorsatus), which inhabits forest-covered tracts in the United 
States and Canada, may be trapped and shot in the winter. 
Some members of this group, lie capybaras (Hydrockama 
capybara) and coypus (Myocastors coypus) which live in tropical 
America, are unaffected by the winter cold of temperate countries, 
and live in the open all the year round in parks and zoological 
gardens in England. Several of the genera of Myomorpha 
contain species inhabiting the northern hemisphere, which 
habitually hibernate. The three European genera of dormict 
(Myoxidcc),immc\y Muscardinus, Eliomys and Giis, sleep soundly 
practically throughout the winter; and examples of the South 
African genus Graphiurus practise the same habit when imported 
to Europe. If a warm spell in the winter rouses dormice from 
their slumbers, they feed upon nuts or other food accumulated 
during the autumn, but do not as a rule leave the nests constructed 
for shelter during the winter. According to the weather, the 
sleep lasts from about five to seven months. In the family 
Muridae, the true mice and rats (Murinae) and the voles 
and lemmings (Arvkolinac) seem to remain active through the 
winter, although some species, like the lemmings, range far to 
the north in Europe and Asia; but the white-footed mice 
(Hesperomys) of North America, belonging to the Gratis*, 
spend the winter sleeping in underground burrows, where food 
is laid up for consumption in the early spring. The Canadian 
jumping mouse (Zapus kudsonianus), one of the Jaculidee, 
also hibernates, although the sleep is frequently interrupted 
by milder days. Some of the most northerly species of jerboas 
(Jaculidae), namely Alactaga decumana of the Kirghiz Steppes 
and A. indica of Afghanistan, sleep from September or October 
till April; and the Egyptian species (Jaculus jaculus) and the 
Cape jumping hare (Pcdctes cafcr), one of the Hystricomorpha, 
remain in their burrows during the wet season in a state analogous 
to winter sleep. The sub-order Stiuromorpha also contain! 
many hibernating species. None of the true squirrels, however, 
appear to sleep throughout the winter. Even the red squirrel 
(Sciurus hudsonianus) of North America retains its activity 
in spite of the sub-arctic conditions that prevail. The same is 
true of its European ally Sc vulgaris. The North American 
grey squirrel (Sc. cincrcus), although more southerly in its 
distribution than the red squirrel of that country, hiber- 
nates partially. Specimens running wild in the Zoological 
Gardens in London disappear for a day or two when the cold 
is exceptionally keen, but for the most part they may be seea 
abroad throughout the season. On the other hand, ground 
squirrels like the chipmunks (Tawiuu)and the susliks or gophers 
(Spermoplnlus) of North America and Central Asia, at all eventi 
in the more northern districts of their range, sleep from the 
late autumn till the spring in their subterranean burrows, where 
they accumulate food for use in early spring and for spells of 
warmer weather in the winter which may rouse them from their 
slumbers. The North American flying squirrel (Sauroptena 
volucella) and its ally PUromys inornatus arc believed to hibernate 
in hollow trees. All the true marmots (Arciomys), a genus of 
which the species live at tolerably high altitudes in Central 
Europe, Asia and North America, appear to spend the winter 
in uninterrupted slumber buried deep in their burrows. They 
apparently lay up no store of food, but accumulate a quantity of 
fat as the summer and autumn advance, and frequently, as in 
the case of the woodchuck (A. menax) <A the Adirondack, 
retire to winter quarters in the autumn long before the onset 
of the winter cold. The prairie marmots or prairie dogs (Cyuomp 
ludovtctanus) of North America, which live in the plains, do 
not hibernate to the same extent as the true marmots, although 
they appear to remain in their burrows during the coldest 
portions of the winter. Beavers (Castor), although formerly at 
all events extending in North America from the tropic of Cancer 
up to the Arctic circle, do not hibernate. When the ground 



HIBERNATION 



++5 



il deep in snow and the river frozen over, they are still able 
to feed on aquatic plants beneath the ice. 

. Amongst the terrestrial carnivore hibernation appears to be 
practised, with one possible exception, only by species belonging 
to the group Arctoidea. In north temperate latitudes both in 
Europe and Asia, as well as in the Himalayas, brown bears 
(Ursus arclos) hibernate, so also does the North American 
grizzly bear {U. korribilis), at least in the more northern districts 
of its range. The smaller black bear of the Himalayas {U. 
tibctanus) appears to lapse into a state of semi-torpor during the 
rioter, only emerging from, his retreat to hunt for food when 
occasional breaks in the weather occur. In the case of the 
American black bear (IT. americanus) the female seeks winter 
quarters comparatively early in the season in preparation for the 
birth of her progeny soon after the turn of the year; but the 
males remain active so long as plenty of food is to be found. In 
the case of all bears, except the Polar bear (U. maritimus), the 
site chosen as the hibernaculum is either a cave or hole or some 
sheltered spot beneath a ledge of rock, or the roots of large trees, 
more or less overgrown with brushwood which holds the snow 
until it freezes into a solid roof over the hollow where the sleeping 
animal lies. In the hibernating brown and black bears the 
intestine is blocked by a plug commonly called " tappen " and 
composed principally of pine leaves, which is usually not evacuated 
until the spring. There is much diversity of opinion on the 
subject of the hibernation of Polar bears. Their absence during 
the winter from particular spots in the Arctic regions where ice- 
bound ships have spent the winter, and the occasional discovery 
of specimens buried beneath the snow, have led to the belief that 
these animals habitually retire to winter quarters through the 
cold sunless months of the year. This may possibly be the true 
explanation at least for certain districts. But it has been alleged 
that bears, both adult and half-grown, may be seen throughout 
the winter; and it is known that pregnant females bury them- 
selves in the autumn under the snow, where they remain without 
feeding with their newly-born young until the spring of the 
following year. Hence the absence of bears in the winter from 
the neighbourhood of icebound ships may be explained on the 
supposition that the adult females alone hibernate for breeding 
purposes, while the full-grown males and half-grown specimens of 
both sexes migrate in the winter to the edges of the ice-floes and 
to coast lines, where the water is open. Be/ore retiring to winter 
quarters the pregnant female* store up sufficient quantity of fat in 
their tissues not only to sustain themselves but also to supply milk 
for their cubs. In the Adirondack region and probably in other 
districts of the same or more northern latitudes in North America, 
raccoons {Procyon lotor) retire in the winter to some sheltered 
place, such as a hollow tree-trunk, and pass the severest part of 
the season in sleep, emerging in February or March when the 
snow has begun to disappear. In the same country, the skunks 
(Mepkitis mcphilica), a member of the weasel family, also seek 
shelter during the coldest portion of the winter. Merriam 
believes that the hibernation of this animal is determined by cold, 
and not by failure of food-supply, for he observes that skunks 
may frequently be seen in numbers on snow lying 5 ft. deep at a 
time of the year when they feed almost entirely upon mice and 
shrews which do not hibernate even when the thermometer 
registers over twelve degrees of frost. In British North America 
the badger {Taxidea americana) is said to hibernate from October 
till April; but the duration of the period probably depends, as in 
the case of its European ally {Mela nuUs), upon the length and 
severity of the inclement season. In the last-named species the 
winter repose is not as a rule sufficiently profound to prevent a 
break in the weather rousing the animal from sleep to sally forth 
In search of food. This interrupted hibernation takes place at 
least in England and even in Scandinavia; but in countries 
where frost is continuous throughout the winter it is probable 
that the badger's sleep is unbroken. 

The one exception to the general rule that hibernation in the 
carnivore is restricted to the Arctoidea, is supplied by the 
raccoon dog {Nyclcrtutcs procyonoides) of Japan and north-eastern 
4sia, which is said by Radde to hibernate in burrows in Amur- 



land if food has been sufficiently plentiful in late summer and 
autumn to enable the animal to lay on enough fat to resist the 
cold and sustain a long period of fast. If, however, food has been 
scarce, this dog is compelled to remain active all through the 
winter. The Arctic fox {Vulpcs lagopus), although considerably 
more northern in range than the raccoon dog, does not hibernate. 
It was long a mystery how these animals obtained food in winter, 
but it has been ascertained that in some districts they migrate 
southwards in large numbers in the late autumn, whereas in 
other districts apparently they lay up stores of dead lemmings 
or hares, for food during the winter months. In Australia the 
porcupine ant-eater {Echidna aculeata) hibernates; and the 
habit is retained by specimens imported to Europe if exposed to 
the cold in outdoor cages. 

Instances of quasi-hibernation have been recorded in the case 
of man. For example, in the government of Pskov in Russia, 
where food is scarce throughout the year and in danger of ex- 
haustion during the winter, the peasants are said to resort to a 
practice closely akin to hibernation, spending at least one-half of 
the cold weather in sleep. From time immemorial it has been the 
custom when the first snows fall for families to shut themselves 
up in their huts, huddle round the stove and lapse into slumber, 
each member taking his turn to keep the fire alight. Once a day 
only do the inmates rouse themselves from sleep to eat a little 
dry bread. 

Reptiles in which the body-temperature falls with that of the 
surrounding medium pass the winter in temperate countries in 
a state of lethargy; and specimens exported from the tropics into 
northern latitudes become dormant when exposed to cold in virtue 
of their inability to maintain their temperature at a higher level 
than that of the atmosphere. The common land tortoise ( Tcsludo 
gracca) of South Europe buries itself in the soil during the winter 
in its natural habitat, and even when imported to England is able,' 
in some cases at least, to withstand the more rigorous winter by 
practising the same habit, as Gilbert White originally recorded. 
In Pennsylvania the box-tortoise {Cistudo Carolina) passes the 
winter in a burrow; and Tcstudo cUgans, which inhabits dry hilly 
districts in north India, takes shelter beneath tufts of grass or 
bushes as the cold weather approaches and remains in a semi- 
lethargic state until the return of the warmth. The European 
pond tortoise {Emys orbicularis) also hibernates buried in the soil; 
and the North American salt-water terrapin {Malacoclcmmys 
amcentrica), abundant in the salt-marshes round Charleston, 
S. Carolina, retires into the muddy banks to spend the cold 
months of the year. In certain parts of the tropics tortoises 
protect themselves from the excessive heat by burrowing into 
the soil which afterwards becomes indurated. When drought 
sets in with the dry season and the tanks become exhausted and 
food unobtainable, crocodiles and alligators sometimes wander 
across country in search of water, but more commonly bury 
themselves in the mud and remain in a state of quiescence until 
the return of the rains; and according to Humboldt, large 
snakes, anacondas or boa constrictors are often found by the 
Indians in South America buried in the same lethargic state. 
Snakes and lizards in all countries where there is any considerable 
seasonal variation in temperature become dormant or semi- 
dormant during the colder months. 

Batrachians, like reptiles, hibernate in Europe and other 
countries situated in temperate latitudes. Frogs bury them- 
selves in the mud at the bottom of tanks and ponds, often 
congregating in numbers in the same spot. Toads retire to 
burrows or other secluded places on the land, and newts either 
bury themselves in the mud of ponds, like frogs, or lie up 
beneath stones and pieces of wood on the land. According to 
Mr G. A. Boulenger, however, European frogs and toads do not 
pass the winter in profound torpor, but merely in a state of 
sluggish quiescence. In tropical countries, where wet and dry 
seasons alternate, frogs which, like the rest of the batrachians, 
are for the most part intolerant of great heat, especially when 
accompanied by dryness of atmosphere, bury themselves deep 
in the soil during the time of drought and emerge from their 
retreats in numbers with the breaking of the rains. 



44& 



HIBERNATION 



This habit of passing the- dry season in the hardened mud 
forming the bottom of exhausted pools and rivers is practised 
by several species of tropical freshwater fishes, belonging princi- 
pally to the family Siluridae. The members of this group are 
able to exist and thrive in moist mud, and can even support 
life for a comparatively long time out of water altogether. The 
instinct is exhibited by species occurring both in the eastern and 
western hemispheres, as is shown by its record in the case of 
species of Cailicthys and Loricaria in Guiana and by Clarias 
Ultra in Senegambia. It is also met with, according to Tennent, 
in a species of climbing perch (Anabas oligolepis) found in Ceylon 
and belonging to the family Anabantidae, all the species of 
which are able to live for a certain length of time out of water, 
and may sometimes be found crawling across land in search of 
fresh pools. The habit is also common to some species of mud 
fishes of the order Dipneusti, in which the air bladder' plays 
the part of lungs. Protopterus, from tropical Africa, for instance, 
burrows into the mud and remains for nearly half the year 
coiled up at the bottom in a slightly enlarged chamber. The 
walls of this are lined with a layer of slime secreted from the 
fish's skin, and the orifice is closed with a lid the centre of which 
is perforated and forms an inturned tube by means of which 
air is conducted to the fish's mouth. The aestivating burrow 
of the Brazilian mudfish (Lepidosiren) is similar, except that 
the lid is perforated with several apertures. The Australian 
mudfish (Ceralodus) is not known to hibernate or acstivate. 

In countries where winter frosts arrest the growth of vegeta- 
tion terrestrial mollusca seek hibernacula beneath stones or 
fallen tree trunks, in rock crannies, holes in walls, in heaps of 
dead leaves, in moss or under the soil, and remain quiescent 
until the coming of spring. Amongst pulmonate gastropods, 
most species of snails (Helix, Clausilia) dose the mouth of the 
shell at this period with a membranous or calcified plate, the 
epiphragm. Slugs (Limax, Arion), on the contrary, lie buried 
in the earth encysted in a coating of slime. Similarly in the 
tropics members of this group, such as Achatina in tropical 
Africa and Orthalicus in Brazil, aestivate during the dry season, 
the epiphragm preserving them against desiccation; and 
examples of two species of Achatina from east and west Africa 
exhibited in the Zoological Gardens in London remained con- 
cealed in their shells during the winter, although kept in an 
artificially warmed house, and resumed their activity in the 
summer. 

Freshwater Pulmonata do not appear to hibernate, such 
forms as Limnaea and Planorbis having been frequently seen 
crawling about beneath the ice of frozen ponds. During periods 
of drought in England, however, they commonly bury them- 
selves in the mud, a habit which is also practised during the 
dry season in the tropics by species of Prosobranchiate Gastropods 
belonging to the genera Ampullario, Melania and others, which 
lie dormant until the first rains rouse them from their lethargy. 
Freshwater Pelecypoda (Anodonta, Unto) spend the European 
winter buried deep in the muddy bottom of ponds and streams. 

In cold and temperate latitudes a great majority of insects 
pass the winter in a dormant state, either in the larval, pupal 
or imaginal (reproductive) stages. In some the state of hiberna- 
tion is complete in the sense that although the insects may be 
roused from their lethargy to the extent of movement by spells 
of warm weather, they do not leave their hibernacula to feed; 
in others it is incomplete in the sense that the insects emerge 
to feed, as in the case of the caterpillar of Euprepia fuliginosa, 
or to take the wing as in the case Of the midge Trichocera hiemalis. 
Others again, like Podura nivalis and Boreus hiemalis, never 
appear to hibernate, at least in England. The insects which 
hibernate as larvae belong to those species which pass more 
than one season in that stage, such as the goat-moth (Cossus 
lignipcrda), cockchafers (Melolontha), stagbeetles (Lucanus) 
and dragon-flies (Libcllula), &c; and to some species which, 
although they only live a few months \a this immature state, 
are hatched in the autumn or summer and only reach the final 
stage of growth in the following spring, like the butterflies of 
the genus Argynnis (papkia, aglaia, &c.) in England. As an 



instance of species which survive the winter in die pupa! or 
chrysalis stage may be dted the swallow-tailed butterfly of 
Europe (Papilio machaon); while to the category of species 
which hibernate as perfect insects belong many of the Coleoptera 
(Rhyncophora, Coccinetlidae), &c, as well as some Hemiptera, 
Hymenoptera, Diptera and Lepidoptera (Vanessa to, urtkoe, 
&c). In the case of the sodal Hymenoptera it is only the 
fertilized queen wasp out of the nest that survives the frost 
of winter, all the workers dying with the onset of cold in the 
autumn; the common hive bees (Apis meUifica), although they 
retire to the hive, do not hibernate, the numbers and activity 
of the individuals within the hive being sufficient to keep up the 
temperature above soporific point. Ants also remain actively 
at work underground unless the temperature falls several 
degrees below zero. 

Spiders, like nearly all insects, hibernate in cold temperate 
latitudes. Burrowing spedes like trap-door spiders of the 
family Ctenaidae and some species of Lycosidae seal the doors 
of their burrows with silk or dose up the orifice with a sheet 
of that material. Other non-burrowing spedes, like some species 
of Clubionidae and Drassidae, lie up in silken cases attached 
to the underside of stones or of pieces of loose bark, or buried 
under dead leaves or concealed in the cracks of walls. Other 
spedes, on the contrary, pass the winter in an immature state 
protected from the cold by the silken cocoon spun by the mother 
for her eggs before she dies in the late autumn, as in the " garden 
spider" (Aranea diadema). Commonly, however, when the 
cocoons are later in the making, or the cold weather sets in early, 
•he eggs of this and of allied spedes do not hatch until the spring; 
but in either case the young emerge in the warm weather, become 
adult during the summer and die in the autumn after pairing 
and oviposition. Some members of this family, nevertheless, 
like Zilla x-notala t which live in the corners of windows, or in 
outhouses where the habitat affords a certain degree of pro- 
tection from the cold, may survive the winter in the adult stage 
and be roused from lethargy by breaks in the weather and 
tempted by the warmth to spin new webs. Typical members 
of the Opiliones or harvest spiders, belonging to the family 
Phalangiidae, do not hibernate in temperate and more northern 
latitudes in Europe and America, but perish in the autumn, 
leaving their eggs buried in the soil to hatch in the succeeding 
spring. During the early summer, therefore, only immature 
individuals are found. Other spedes of this order, belonging 
to the family Trogulidae, spend the winter in a dormant state 
under stones or buried in the soil. False scorpions (Pseudo- 
scorpiones) also hibernate in temperate latitudes, passing the 
cold months, like many spiders, enclosed in silken cases attached 
to the underside of stones or loosened pieces of bark. Centi- 
pedes and millipedes bury themselves in the earth, or lie up in 
some seduded shelter such as stones or fallen tree trunks afford 
during the winter; and in the tropics millipedes lie dormant 
during seasons of drought. 

What is true of the dormant condition of arthropod life in 
the winter of the northern hemisphere is also true in a general 
way of that of the southern hemisphere at the same season 
of the year. This is proved — to mention no other cases— by the 
observations of Darwin on the hibernation of insects and spiders 
at Montevideo and Bahia Blanca in South America, and by 
Distant 's account of the paudtyof insect life in the winter 
in South Africa; by his discovery under stones of hibernating 
semi-torpid Coleoptera and Hemiptera at the end of August in 
the Transvaal, and of the gradual increase in the numbers of 
individuals and spedes of insects in that country as the spring 
advanced and the dry season came to an end. 

Bibliography.— T. Bell, A History of British Reptiles (and 
Amphibians) (1849); W. T. Blanford, Fauna of British India: 
Mammalia (1889-1891); G. A. Boulenger, Monograph of the 
Tailless Batrachtans of Europe, edited by the Kay Society; 
" Teleostei " in Cambridge Natural History, vii. 
T. W. Bridge, " Dipneustei " in 



d History, yii. 54.1-7*7 (to**): 

. „ . Cambridge Natural Htsterv, vn. 

505-520 (1904); A. H. Cooke, " Mollusc* in Cambridge Natural 

History, iii. 25-27 (1895); T. A. Coward. P£.S. pp. 840- 

855 (1906), and pp. 312-324 (1907); C. Darwin, A Naturahere 



E 



HIBERNIA— HICKORY 



4+7 



Memoires sur la respiration (1803); J. Emerson Tcnnent, Sketches 
of the Natural History of Ceylon, pp. 351-358 (1861); Volkov, " Lc 
Somraeil hivemal chea lcs payaans rusaes," Bull. Menu Soc. Anthropol. 
(Paris, 1900), i. 67; abstract in Brit. Med. Journ. (looo), i. 
1554. (R- L ?•) 

HIBERNIA, in ancient geography, one of the names by which 
Ireland was known to Greek and Roman writers. Other names 
were Ierne, Iuverna, Iberio. All these are adaptations of a stem 
from which also Erin is descended. The island was well known 
to the Romans through the reports of traders, so far at least as 
its coasts. But it never became part of the Roman empire. 
Agricola (about a.d. 80) planned its conquest, which he judged 
an easy task, but the Roman government vetoed the enterprise. 
During the Roman occupation of Britain, Irish pirates seem to 
have been an intermittent nuisance, and Irish emigrants may 
have settled occasionally in Wales; the best attested emigration 
is that of the Scots into Caledonia. It was only in post-Roman 
days that Roman civilization, brought perhaps by Christian 
missionaries like Patrick, entered the island. 

HICKERINGILL (or Hick horn gill), EDMUND (1631-1708), 
English divine, lived an eventful life in the days of the Common- 
wealth and the Restoration. After graduating at Caius College, 
Cambridge, where he was junior fellow in 1651-1652, he joined 
Lilburne's regiment as chaplain, and afterwards served in the 
ranks in Scotland and in the Swedish service, ultimately becoming 
a captain in Fleetwood's regiment. He then lived for a time in 
Jamaica, of which he published an account in 1661. In the same 
year he was ordained by Robert Sanderson, bishop of Lincoln, 
having already passed through such shades of belief as are 
connoted by the terms Baptist, Quaker and Deist. From 1662 
until his death in 1708 he was vicar of All Saints', Colchester. 
He was a vigorous pamphleteer, and came into collision with 
Henry Compton, bishop of London, to whom he had to pay heavy 
damages for slander in 1682. He made a public recantation in 
1684, was excluded from his living in 1685-1688, and ended his 
career by being convicted for forgery in 1707. 

HICKES, GEORGE (1642-1 7 15), Englbh divine and scholar, 
was born at Newsham near Thirsk, Yorkshire, on the 20th of 
June 1642. In 1659 he entered St John's College, Oxford, 
whence after the Restoration he removed to Magdalen Col- 
lege and then to Magdalen Hall. In 1664 he was elected 
fellow of Lincoln College, and in the following year proceeded 
M.A. In 1673 he graduated in divinity, and in 1675 he was 
appointed rector of St Ebbe's, Oxford. In 1676, as private 
chaplain, he accompanied the duke of Lauderdale, the royal 
commissioner, to Scotland, and shortly afterwards received the 
degree of D.D. from St Andrews. In 1680 he became vicar of 
All Hallows, Barking, London; and after having been made 
chaplain to the king in 1681, he was in 1683 promoted to the 
deanery of Worcester. He opposed both James II. 's declaration 
of indulgence and Monmouth's rising, and he tried in vain to save 
from death his nonconformist brother John Hickes (1633-1685), 
one of the Sedgemoor refugees harboured by Alice Lisle. At the 
revolution of 1688, having declined to take the oath of allegiance, 
Hickes was first suspended and afterwards deprived of his 



deanery. When he heard of the appointment of a successor 
he affixed to the cathedral doors a " protestation and claim of 
right." After remaining some time in concealment in London, 
he was sent by Sancroft and the other nonjurors to James II. in 
France on matters connected with the continuance of their 
episcopal succession; upon his return in 1604 he was himself 
consecrated suffragan bishop of Thetford. His later years were 
largely occupied in controversies and in writing, while in 17 13 he 
persuaded two Scottish bishops, James Gadderar and Archibald 
Campbell, to assist him in consecrating Jeremy Collier, Samuel 
Hawes and Nathaniel Spinckes as bishops among the nonjurors. 
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sopher and divine, was born at Bethel, Connecticut, on the 
29th of December 1 798. He took his degree at Union College in 
1820V Until 1836 he was occupied in active pastoral work, and 
was then appointed professor of theology at the Western Reserve 
College, Ohio, and later (1844-1852) at the Auburn (N.Y.) Theo- 
logical Seminary. From this post he was elected vice-president of 
Union College and professor of mental and moral science. In 
1866 he succeeded Dr E. Nott as president, but in July 1868 
retired to Amherst, Massachusetts, where he devoted himself to 
writing and study. A collected edition of his principal works was 
published at Boston in 1875. He died at Amherst on the 7th 
of May 1888. He wrote Rational Psychology (1848), System of 
Moral Science (1853), Empirical Psychology (1854), Rational 
Cosmology (1858), Creator and Creation, or the Knowledge in the 
Reason of Cod and His Work (1872), Humanity Immortal (1872), 
Logic of Reason (1874). 

HICKORY, a shortened form of the American Indian name 
pohkkery. Hickory trees are natives of North America, and 
belong to the genus Carya. They are closely allied to the walnuts 
(Juglans), the chief or at least one very obvious difference being 
that, whilst in Carya the husk which covers the shell of the nut 
separates into four valves, in Juglans it consists of but one piece, 
which bursts irregularly. The timber is both strong and heavy, 
and remarkable for its extreme elasticity, but it decays rapidly 
when exposed to heat and moisture, and is peculiarly subject to 
the attacks of worms. It is very extensively employed in 
manufacturing musket stocks, axle-trees, screws, rake teeth, the 
bows of yokes, the wooden rings used on the rigging of vessels, 
chair-backs, axe-handles, whip-handles and other purposes 
requiring great strength and elasticity. Its principal use in 
America is for hoop-making; and it is the only American wood 
found perfectly fit for that purpose. 

The wood of the hickory is of great value as fuel, on account of 
the brilliancy with which it burns and the ardent heat which it 



4+8 



HICKS, E.— HICKS, W. 



gives out, the* charcoal being heavy, compact and long-lived. 
The species which furnish the best wood are Carya alba (shell- 
bark hickory), C. tomentosa (mockernut), C. olioaeformis (pecan 
or pacane nut), and C. porcina (pig-nut), that of the last named, 
on account of its extreme tenacity, being preferred for axle-trees 



Fig. i — SheH-bark Hickory (.Carya alba) in flower. 

and axle-handles. The wood of C. alba splits very easily and is 
very elastic, so that it is much used for making whip-handles and 
baskets. The wood of this species is also used in the neighbour- 
hood of New York and Philadelphia for making the back bows 
of Windsor chairs. The timber of C. amara and C. aquatica is 
considered of inferior quality. 

I Most of the hickories form fine-looking noble trees of from 60 to 
00 ft. in height, with straight, symmetrical trunks, well-balanced 
ample heads, and bold, handsome, pinnated fob'age. When 
confined in the forest they shoot up 50 to 60 ft. without branches, 
but when standing alone they expand into a fine head, and 
produce a lofty round-headed pyramid of fob'age. They have all 
the qualities necessary to constitute fine graceful park trees. 
The most ornamental of the species are C. olivaeformis, C. alba 
and C. porcina, the last two also producing delicious nuts, and 
being worthy of cultivation for their fruit alone. 

The husk of the hickory nut, as already stated, breaks up into 
four equal valves or separates into four equal portions in the 
upper part, while the nut itself is tolerably even on the surface, 
but has four or more blunt angles in its transverse outline. The 



Fio. a.— I, Fruit of Carya alba: 2, Hickory Nut; 3, Cross Section 
of Nut; 4* Vertical Section of the Seed. 

hickory nuts of the American markets are the produce of C. alba, 
called the shell-bark hickory because of the roughness of its bark, 
which becomes loosened from the trunk in long scales bending 
outwards at the extremities and adhering only by the middle. 
The nuts are much esteemed in all parts of the States, and are 
exported in considerable quantities to Europe. The pecan-nuts, 



which come from the Western States, are from r in. to 1} in. long, 
smooth, cylindrical, pointed at the ends and thin-shelled, with 
the kernels full, not like those of most of the hickories divided by 
partitions, and of delicate and agreeable flavour. The thick- 
shelled fruits of the pig-nut are generally left on the ground for 
swine, squirrels, &c, to devour. In C. amara the kernel is 10 
bitter that even squirrels refuse to eat it. 

HICKS, ELIAS (1748-1830), American Quaker, was bora m 
Hempstead township, Long Island, on the 19th of March 1748. 
His parents were Friends, but he took little interest in religion 
until he was about twenty; soon after that time he gave op 
the carpenter's trade, to which he had been apprenticed when 
seventeen, and became a farmer. By 1775 be had " opemnp 
leading to the ministry " and was " deeply engaged for the 
right administration of discipline and order in the church," 
and in 1779 he first set out on his itinerant preaching toon 
between Vermont and Maryland. He attacked slavery, even 
when preaching in Maryland; wrote Observations on the Slavery 
of the Africans and their Descendants (181 1); and was influential 
in procuring the passage (in 1817) of the act declaring free tiler 
1827 all negroes born in New York and not freed by the Act of 
1799. He died at Jericho, Long Island, on the 27th of February 
1830. His preaching was practical rather than doctrinal and he 
was heartily opposed to any set creed ; hence his successful opposi- 
tion at the Baltimore yearly meeting of 181 7 to the proposed creed 
which would make the Society in America approach the position 
of the English Friends by definite doctrinal statements. Hii 
Doctrinal Epistle (1824) stated his position, and a break ensued 
in 1827-1828, Hicks's followers, who call themselves the " liberal 
Branch," being called " Hicksites " by the M Orthodox M party, 
which they for a time outnumbered. The village of HicksvOie, 
in Nassau County, New York, 15 m. E. of Jamaica, lies in the 
centre of the Quaker district of Long Island and was named 
in honour of Elias Hicks. 

See A Series of Extemporaneous Discourses . . . by Elias Etch 
(Philadelphia, 1825) ; The Journal of the Life and Labors of Elias 
Hicks (Philadelphia, 1828), and his Letters (Philadelphia, 1834). 

HICKS, HENRY (1837-1899), British physician and geologist, 
was born on the 26th of May 1837 at St David's, in Pembroke- 
shire, where his father, Thomas Hicks, was a surgeon. He 
studied medicine at Guy's Hospital, London, qualifying at 
M.R.C.S. in 1862. Returning to his native place be commenced 
a practice which he continued until 187 1, when he removed to 
Hendon. He then devoted special attention to mental diseases, 
took the degree of M.D. at St Andrews in 1878, and continued 
his medical work until the close of his life. In Wales he had 
been attracted to geology by J. W. Salter (then palaeontologist 
to the Geological Survey), and his leisure time was given to the 
study of the older rocks and fossils of South Wales. In conjunc- 
tion with Salter, he established in 1865 the Menevian group 
(Middle Cambrian) characterized by the trilobite Paradoxides. 
Subsequently Hicks contributed a series of important papas 
on the Cambrian and Lower Silurian rocks, and figured and 
described many new species of fossils. Later he worked at the 
Pre-Cambrian rocks of St David's, describing the Dimetias 
(granitoid rock) and the Pebidian (volcanic series), and his 
views, though contested, have been generally accepted. At 
Hendon Dr Hicks gave much attention to the local geology 
and also to the Pleistocene deposits of the Denbighshire cavei 
For a few years before his death he had laboured at the 
Devonian rocks. With his keen eye for fossils he detected 
organic remains in the Morte slates, previously regarded as 
unfossiliferous, and these he regarded as including represents* 
rives of Lower Devonian and Silurian. His papers were mostly 
published in the Ceol. Mag. and Quart* Journ. CeoL See, Be 
was elected F.R.S. in 1885, and president of the Geological 
Society of London 1 806-1 898. He died at Hendon on the 18th 
of November 1809. 

HICKS, WILLIAM (1830-1883), British soldier, entered the 
Bombay army in 1849, and served through the Indian mutiny, 
being mentioned in despatches for good conduct at the action 
of Sitka Ghaut in 1859. In 1861 be became captain, and ia the 



HIDALG<*-H1DDENITE 



44y 



Abyssinian Expedition of 1867-68 w*s a brigade major, being 
again mentioned in despatches and given a brevet majority. 
He retired with the honorary rank of colonel in 1880. After 
the close of the Egyptian war of 1882, he enteced the khedive's 
service and was made a pasha. Early in 18^3 he went to Khar* 
torn as chief of the staff of the army there, then commanded 
by Suliman Niazi Pasha. Camp was formed at Omdurman 
and a new force of some 8000 fighting men collected— mostly 
recruited from -the f dlahin of Arabics disbanded troops, sent 
in chains from Egypt. After a month's vigorous drilling Hicks 
led 5000 of his men against an equal force of dervishes in Sennar, 
whom he defeated, and cleared the country between the towns 
of Sennar and Khartum of rebels. Refieved of the fear of an 
inunediate attack by the mahdists the Egyptian officials at 
Khartum intrigued against Hicks, who in July tendered his 
resignation. This resulted in the dismissal of Suliman Niazi 
and the appointment of Hicks as commander-in-chief of an 
expeditionary force to Kordofan with orders to crush the mahdi, 
who in January 1883 bad captured El Obeid, the capital 6f that 
province. Hicks, aware of the worthlessness of his force for the 
purpose contemplated, stated his opinion that H would be best 
to " wait for Kordofan to settle itself " (telegram of the. 5th of 
August). The Egyptian ministry, however, did not then 
believe in the power of the mahdi, and the expedition started 
from Khartum on the oth of September. It was made up of 
7000 infantry, 1000 cavalry and 2000 camp followers and 
included thirteen Europeans. On the 20th the force left the 
Nik at Duem and struck inland across the almost waterless 
wastes of Kordofan for Obeid. On the 5th of November the 
army, misled by treacherous guides and thirst -stricken, was 
ambuscaded in dense forest at Kashgil, 30* m. south of Obeid, 
With the exception of some 300 men the whole force was killed. 
According to the story of Hicks's cook, one of the survivors! 
the general was the last officer to fall, pierced by the spear of 
the khalifa Mahommed Sherif. After emptying- his revolver 
the pasha kept his assailants at bay for some time with his sword, 
1 body of Baggara who fled before him being known afterwards 
as " Baggar Hicks " (the cows driven by Hicks), a play on the 
words baggara and baggar, the former being the herdsmen and 
the iatter the cows. Hicks's head was cut off and taken to 
the mahdi. 

See Mahdiism and the Egyptian Sudan, book iv., by Sir 
F. R. Wingate (London, 189 1), and With Hicks Pasha in the 
Soudun, by J. Colborne (London, 1884). Afeo EcYrt: Military 
Operations. 

HIDALGO, an inland state of Mexico, bounded N. by San 
Luis Potosi and Vera Cruz,E.by Vera Cms and Puebla,S.by Tlax- 
cala and Mexico (state), and W. by Qucrfitaro. Pop. (1895) 
551,817, (1000) ,605,051. Area, 8917 sq. m. The northern 
and eastern ports are elevated and mountainous, culminating 
in the Cerro de Nsvajas (10,528 ft.). A considerable area of 
this region on the eastern side of the state is arid and semi- 
barren, being part of the elevated tableland of Apam where 
the maguey (American aloe) has been grown for centuries. The 
southern and western parts of the state consist of rolling plains, 
in the midst of wMcb is the large lake of Metztitlan. Hidalgo 
produces cereals in the more elevated districts, sugar, maguey, 
toffee, beans, cotton and tobacco. Maguey is cultivated for 
the production of fariyue, the national drink. The chief industry; 
however, is mining, the mineral districts of Pacnuca, El Chico, 
Real del Monte, San Jose" del Ore, and Zimapan being among 
the richest in Mexico. The mineral product* include silver; 
gold, mercury, copper, iron, lead, sine, antimony, manganese 
and plumbago. Coal, marble and opals are also found. Rail- 
way facilities are afforded by a branch of the Vera Cruz and 
Mexico line, which runs from Ometusco to Pachuca, the capital 
of the state, and by the Mexican Central. Among the principal 
towns are Tulancingo (pop. 9057), a rich mining centre 24 m. 
E. of Pachuca, IxmiQuilpan (about 9000) with silver mines 
80 m. N. by W. of the Federal Capital, and Act6pan (1666), 
the chief town of the district N.N.W. of Pachuca, inhabited 
principally by Indians of the Qtbomics aation. _ 
9 



HIBAIOO <a Spanish word, contracted from kije a* at go 
or hijo de aige, son of something, or somewhat), originally 
a Spanish title of the lower nobility; the hidalgo being the 
lowest grade of nobility which was entitled to use the prefix 
"don." The term is now used generally to denote one of 
gentle birth. He Portuguese i /Wfl/go has a similar history and 
meaning. 

HIDALGO T COSTILLA. MIGUSL (1753-1811), Mexican 
patriot, was born on the 8th of May 1753, on a farm at Corralejos, 
near Guanajuato. His mother's maiden name was Gallaga, 
but contrary to the usual custom of the Spaniards he used only 
the surname of his father, Cristobal Hidalgo y Costilla. He 
was educated at Valladolid in Mexico, and was ordamed priest 
in 1779* Until 1809 he was known only as a man of pious life 
who exerted himself to introduce various forms of industry; 
including the cultivation of silk, among his parishioners at 
Dolores. But Napoleon's invasion of Spain in 1808 caused a 
widespread commotion. The colonists were indisposed to 
accept a French ruler and showed great zeal in proclaiming 
Ferdinand VII. as kingi, 'The societies they formed for 
their professedly loyal purpose were regarded, however, 
by the Spanish authorities with suspicion as being designed 
to prepare the independence of Mexico. Hidalgo and several 
of his friends, among whom was Miguel Dominguez, mayor of 
Querftaro, engaged in consultation and preparations which the 
authorities considered treasonable. Dominguez was arrested, 
but Hidalgo was warned in time. He collected some hundred 
of his parishioners, and on the 16th of September 1810 they seized 
the prison at Dolores. This action began what was in fact a 
revolt against the Spanish and Creole elements of the population. 
With what is known as the " grilo " or cry of Dolores as their 
rallying shout, a multitude gathered round Hidalgo, who took for 
his banner a wonder-working picture of the Virgin belonging to a 
popular shrine. At first be met with some success. A regiment 
of dragoons of the militia joined him, and some small posts were 
stormed. The whole tumultuous host moved on the city of 
Mexico. But here the Spaniards and Creoles were concentrated* 
Hidalgo lost heart and retreated. Many of his followers deserted,' 
and on the march to Querltaro he was attacked at Aculco 
by General Felix Calleja on the 7th of November 1810, and routed. 
He endeavoured to. continue the struggle, and did succeed in 
collecting a mob estimated at. 100,000 about Guadalajara. 
With this ill-armed and undisciplined crowd be took up a 
position on the bridge of Calderon on the river Santiago. On 
th^ 17th of January 1811 he was completely beaten by Calleja 
and a small force of soldiers. * Hidalgo was deposed by the other 
leaders, and soon afterwards all of them were betrayed to the 
Spaniards. They were tried at Chihuahua, and condemned. 
Hidalgo was first degraded from the priesthood and then 
shot as a rebel, on the 31st of July or the xst of August 
1811. 

See H. H. Bancroft, The Pacific Slates, vol. vii., which contains a 
copious bibliography. 

HIDDENITE, a green transparent variety of spodumene, (9.9.) 
used as agem-stone. It was discovered by William E. Hidden (b- 
1853) about 1879 at Stonypoint, Alexander county, North Care- 
Una, and was at first taken for diopside. In 1881 J. Lawrence 
Smith proved it to be spodumene, and named it. Hiddcnite 
occurs in small slender monoclinic crystals of prismatic habits 
often pitted on the surface. A well-marked prismatic cleavage 
renders the mineral rather difficult to cut. Its colour passes. 
( roni an emerald green to a greenish-yellow, and is often unevenly 
distributed through the stone. The mineral is dichroic in a 
marked degree, and shows much " fire " when properly cut. 
The composition of the mineral is represented by the formats: 
LiAKSiOs)*, the green colour being probably due to the presence 
of a small proportion of chromium. The presence of lithia 
in this green mineral suggested the inappropriate name of 
lithia emerald, by which it is sometimes known. * Hiddenite 
was originally found as loose crystals in the soH7 but was after** 
wards worked in a vcigstone, where it occurred in association 
with beryl, quartz, garnet, mica, rutile, &c. 

2a 



45© 



HIDE 



HIDE 1 (Lat. hida, A.-S. kigtd, Ud or MvtV, members of a 
household), a measure of land. The word was in general use 
in England in Anglo-Saxon and early English times, although 
its meaning seems to have varied somewhat from time to time. 
Among its Latin equivalents are terra unius familiae, terra 
unius cassali and mansio; the first of these forms is used by 
Bede, who, like all early writers, gives to it no definite area. 
In its earliest form the hide was the typical holding of the typical 
family. Gradually, this typical holding came to be regarded 
as containing 120 " acres " (not 120 acres of 4840 sq. yds. each, 
but 120 times the amount of land which a plough team of 
eight oxen could plough in a single day) . This definition appears 
to have been very general in England before the Norman 
Conquest, and in Domesday Book 30, 40, 50 and 80 acres are 
repeatedly mentioned as fractions of a hide. Some historians, 
however, have thought that the hide only contained 30 acres 
pr thereabouts. 

" The question about the hide," says Professor Maitland in Domes- 
day Book and Beyond, " is 'pre- judicial ' to all the great Questions of 
early. English history." The main argument employed by J. M. 
Kemble fjne Saxons in England) in favour of the " small hide is 
that the number of hides stated to have existed in the various parts 
of England gives an acreage far in excess of the total acreage of these 
parts, making due allowance for pasture and for woodland, an 
allowance necessary because the hide was only that part of the land 
which came under the plough, and each hide must have carried 
with it a certain amount of pasture. Two illustrations in support 
of Kemble's theory must suffice. Bede says the Isle of Wight 
contained 1200 hides. Now 1200 hides of 120 acres each gives a 
total acreage of 144,000 acres, while the total acreage of the island 
to-day is only 93,000 acres. Again a document called The Tribal 
Hidoge puts the number of hides in the whole of England at nearly 
a quarter of a million. This gives in acres a figure about equal to 
the total acreage of England at the present time, but it leaves no 
room for pasture and for the great proportion of land which was 
Stilt woodland. On these grounds Kemble regarded the hide as 
containing 30 or 33, certainly not more than 40 acres, and thought 
that each acre contained about 4000 sq. yds., i.t. that it was roughly 
equal to the modem acre. Another argument brought forward is that 
30 or 40 acres was enough land for the support of the average family, 
in other words that it was the terra unius familiae of Bede. Another 
Domesday student, R. W. Eyton, puts down the hide at 48 acres. 

But formidable arguments have been advanced against the 
" small " hide. There is no doubt that at the time of Domesday 
the hide was equated with 130 and not with 30 acres. Then, taking 
the word famuia in its proper sense, a household with many de- 
pendent members, and making an allowance for primitive methods 
of agriculture, it is questionable whether 30 or 40 acres were sufficient 
for its support; and again if the equation I hide** 120 acres is re- 
jected there is no serious evidence in favour ol tie 
explanation is that, although in early Anglo de 
consisted of 30 acres or thereabouts, it had ne 
of Domesday to contain 120 acres. But nc ge 
can be found; there is no break in the co d- 
charter ** * »■--••-• • manses, >le 
questio the view 1 ed 
120 acr us but th le. 
Bede, * d speakm of 
lands 1 1, uses fi| nd 
general t> acres dc tes 
4840 y< lastly at sy 
the hid rement, i ir- 
poses < hand, I ck 
(Sludil r) says th at 
the hid the lOth century, ne suggest* 



that pc 
40 acre 
Dr Sti 
haveai 
of ooe 
30 acre 
fields, 
all cast 
peculia 



Mercia may have been fixed at 
garded as containing 120 acres. 
;ests that the confusion may 
sed " to express the whole share 
illage." Thua it might refer to 
» 120 acres, his share in the four 
1 explanation is not adequate for 
out the size of the hide are not 
f Huntingdon says, HidoAngiice 
suffieietu per annum, while the 



'The homonym "hide," meaning to conceal, is in O. Eng. 
Wan ; the word appears in various forms in Old Teutonic languages. 
Tne root is probably seen in Gr. KtMuv to hide, or may be the 
same as in " hide, skin, O. Eng. hyd, which is also seen in 
Ger. HauX Dutch huid; the root appears in Lat. cutis. Gr. irfrrot* 
The Indo-European root **-, weakened form of tkw, seen in " sky," 
and meaning " to cover," may be the ultimate source of both 
WOrds. The slang Use of " to hide," to flog or whip, means " to 
take the skin off, to flay." 



too acres, tfiewffh this iMyfc 
hcrcfore, Selden is wisest trbea 
piantity." Certainly he rms 
r hide when he says (Tides tf 
irly is and was (as 1 think) as 
wf with one plough, together 
ipetent for the maintenance of 
i family." The view that the 
:t to district is borne out by 
t researches. In his EngUtk 
tentions that there was a bide 
> acres in Dorset. In addiUba 
en English hides and Web* 

contained 8 virgatcs. Some- 
s were not merely fiscal uats; 

init of assessment, has bees 

established by Mr J. H. Round in his Feudal England^ and a 
regarded as throwing a most valuable light upon the many 
problems which present themselves to the student of Domesday. 
The process which converted the hide from a unit of measure- 
ment to a unit for assessment purposes is probably as foOow 
Being in general use to denote a large piece of land, and such 
pieces of land being roughly equal all over England, the hide 
was a useful unit on which to levy taxation, a use which dates 
doubtless from the time of the Danegeld. For some time the 
two meanings were used side by side, bu.t before the Norman 
Conquest the hide, a unit for taxation, had quite supplanted 
the hide, a measure of land, and this was the state of affain 
when in 1086 William I. ordered his great inquest to be made. 
The formula used in Domesday varies from county to county, 
bat a single illustration may be given. Huniednn Burgdefemdebet 
to ad gddum regis pro quarta parte do HyrsHngestan kundrd 
pro L. hidit. This docs not mean that the town of Huntingdon 
contained a certain fixed number of square yards multiplied 
by 50, but that for purposes of taxation Huntingdon was 
regarded as worth 50 times a certain fiscal unit. 
( This view of the nature of the hide was hinted at by R. W. Eytoo 
in A Key to Domesday and was accepted by Maitland. Its proof 
rests primarily upon the prevalence of the five-hide unit. By 
collating various documents which formed part of the Domeadar 



of 5 hides or 10 hides or only a slight discrepancy therefrom. A 
similar result is shown for the hundreds where multiples of 5 are 
almost universal, and the total hidage for the county of Worcester 
is very near the round figure of 1200. This arrangement is obviously 
artificial; if must have been imposed upon the counties or the 
hundreds by the central authority and then divided among the 
villa. Another proof is found in what is called " beneficial nidation." 
It is shown that in certain cases the number of hides in a hundred 
has been reduced since the time of Edward the Confessor, and that 
this reduction had been transferred pro rata to the villi in the 
hundred. Thus Mr Round concludes that the hide was fixed 
" independently of area or value." Some slight criticism has bees 
directed against the idea of " artificial nidation," but the most that 
can be said against it b that its proof rests upon isolated cases, a 
reproach which further research will doubtless remove. However, 
Professor Vinogradoff accepts the hide primarily as a fiscal una 
" which corresponds only in a very rough way to the agrarian 
reality," and Maitland says the fiscal hide is " at its best a lame 
compromise between a unit of area and a unit of value." 

What is the origin of the five-hide unit? Various con jectur e * 
have been hazarded, and the unit is undoubtedly older thin 
the Danegeld. Rejecting the idea that it is of Roman or of 
British origin, and pointing to the serious difference in the rate} 
at which the various counties were assessed, Mr Round thinks 
that it dates from the time when the various Anglo-Saxon 
kingdoms were independent. Possibly it was the unit of assess- 
ment for military service, possibly it was the recognised endow- 
ment of a Saxon thegn. In Anglo-Saxon times a man's stand- 
ing in society was dependent to a great extent upon the number 
of hides which he possessed; this statement is fully proved 
from the laws. Moreover, in the laws of the Wessex king, Ine, 
the value of a man's oath is expressed in hides, the oath for a 
king's thegn being probably worth 60 hides and that of a ctori 
S hides. 

The usual division of the hide was into virgates, a vtrgate 
being, after the Conquest at least, the normal holding of the 



HIEL— HIEKAPOLIS 



45* 



vOlefe tritb two* dea. Mr Round holds that £h Domesday 
at ill events the hide always consisted of four virgates; Mr F. 
Seebohm in The English Village Community, although thinking 
that the normal hide " consisted as a. rule of four virgates of 
p acres each," says that the Hundred Rolb lor Huntingdon* 
ipfae ghoir that " the hide did not always contain the same 
number of virgates." The virgatc, it may be noted, consisted 
of a strip of land hi each acre of the hide, and there is undoubtedly 
a strong case in favour of the equation x hide** 4 virgates. 

Mr Seebohm, propounding his theory that English institutions 
are rooted in those of Rome, argues for some resemblance between 
the methods of taxation of land in Rome and in England; he 
sees some connexion between the Roman centuria and' the 
hide, and between the 'Roman system of taxation called jugalio 
and the English hidage. Professor Vinegradoff (Villuwagc m 
England) sumsnarizes the views of those who hold a contrary 
opinion thus: "The curious fact that the normal holding, 
the hide, was equal all over England can be explained only by 
its origin; it came full-formed from Germany and remained 
unchanged in spite of all diversities of geographical and 
economical conditions." 

la the Banish parts of England, or rather in the district of the 
"Five Boroughs, the carucatc takes the place of the hide as the 
unit of value, and six supplants five, six carucates bcing^ the unit of 
assessment. In Leicestershire and in part of Lancashire the hide 
is quite different from what it is elsewhere in England. According 
to Mr Round the Leicestershire hide consisted of 16 carucates: 
Mr W. H. Stevenson (English Historical Renew, vol. v.) argues that 
h contained onty 12 and that it was a hundred and not a hide. 
Mr Secbohm thinks there was a solanda or double hide of 740 acres 
in Essex and other soot hern counties, but Mr Round does not 
uunk that this word refers toa»mea*ure or unit of assessment at all. 
For Kent, however, the word sullune or solin, is used in Domesday 
Book and in the charters instead of hide and carucatc as elsewhere, 
and Vinogradoff thinks that this contained from 180 to 200 acres. 

Under the Norman and early Plantagenet kings a levy of two 
or more shitfmgs on each hide of land was a usual and recognized 
method of raising money, royal and some other estates, however, 
as h seen from Domesday, not being hidated and not paying 
the tax. This geld, or tax, received several names, one of the 
most general being hidage (Lat. htdagium). "Hidage/* says 
Vrnogradoff, "fs historically connected with the old English 
Dancgdd system," arid as Danegeld and then hidage it was 
levied long' after Hs original purpose was forgotten, and was 
during the nth centary " the most sweeping and the heaviest 
of all the taxes;** Henry of Huntingdon says fts usual rate was 
75. on each hide of land, and this was evidently the rate at the 
time of the famous dispute between Henry II. and Becket at 
Woodstock in 1163, but ft was not always kept at this figure, 
as in 1084 William I. had levied a tax of 6s. on each hide, an 
unusual extortion. The feudal afds were levied on the hide. 
Thus in 1 100 Henry I. raised one at the rate of 3s. per hide 
for the marriage of his daughter Matilda with the emperor 
Henry V., and fh 1 194, when money was collected for the ransom 
of Richard I., some of the taxation for this purpose seems to 
have been assessed according to the hidage given in Domesday 
Book. 

By this time the word hidage as the designation of the tax 
was disappearing, its place being taken by the word cantcage. 
The carucatc (Lat. cornea, a plough) was a measure of land 
which prevailed in the north of England, the district inhabited 
by people of Danish descent. Some authorities regard it as 
equivalent to the hide, others deny this identity. In 1108, 
however* when Richard I. imposed a tax of 5s. oh each cantata 
Urrae she hyda, the two words were obviously interchangeable, 
and about the same time the size of the carucate was fixed at 
100 acres. The word cam cage remained in use for some time 
longer, and then other names were given to the various taxes 
on land. 

One or two other questions with regard to the hide still remain 
unsolved. What is the connexion, if any, between the hundred and 
a hundred hides? Again, was the site of the hide fixed at I JO acres 
to make the work of reckoning the amount of Danegeld, or hidage, 
a simple process? 120 acres to the hide, 240 pence to the pound, 
makes en tenia t ions easy. Lastly, is the English hide derived from 
the German kufe or hmbaf (A. W. H.«) 



HIEU BHMAHTrBL (1S34-1S00), Bdgba-Dutch poet and 
prose writer, was bom at Dendermonde, in Flanders, in May 
1834. He acted in varidus functions, from teacher and govern* 
ment official to journalist and bookseller, busily writing all 
the time both for the theatre and the magazines of North and 
South Netherlands. His last posts were those of librarian at 
the Industrial Museum and professor of declamation at the 
Conservatoire in Brussels. Among his better-known poetic 
works may be died Looverkens ("Leaflets," 1857); Ninon 
Liedekens (" New Poesies," 1861); CedichUn (" Poems," 1863)1 
Psaimtn, Zaugtn, em Oratorios (" Psalms, Songs, ami Oratorios/* 
1869) ; De Wind (1869); an inspiriting cantata, which had a large 
measure of success and was crowned; De Lirfdt in U Leven 
( M Love in Life," 1870); Bile and /» (two musical dramas; 
1874); Lied&en voor Groott en Kteint Kinder** {" Songs tor 
Big and Small Folk," 1*70)1 Jakoba van Beieren ('< Jacquetein 
of Bavaria," a poetic drama, 1880); Mathilda van Dcnemarken 
(a lyrical drama, 1890). His collected poetical works were pub* 
lished in three volumes at Ronsselaere in 1885. Hid took an 
active and prominent part in the so-called " Flemish movement " 
in Belgium, and his name is constantly associated with those 
of Jan van Beers, the Willems and Peter BenoiL The last 
wrote some of his compositions to Hi el's verses, notably to Us 
oratorios Lucifer (performed in London at the Royal Albert 
Hall and elsewhere) and De Scheldt (<< The Scheldt "); whilst 
the Dutch composer, Richard Hoi (of Utrecht), composed the 
musk to HieTs "Ode to Liberty," and van Gheluwe to the 
poet's " Songs for Big and Small Folk " (second edition, much 
enlarged, 1870), which has greatly contributed to their popularity 
in schools and among Belgian choral societies. Hid also tran*: 
lated several foreign lyrics. His rendering of Tennyson's 
Dora appeared at Antwerp In 1871. For the national festival 
of 1880 at Brussels, to commemorate the fiftieth anniversary 
of Belgian independence, Hiel composed two cantatas, Bdgen- 
Uind (" The Land of the Belgians ") and Eer Bdgeniatti (" Honour 
to Belgium "), whkh, set to music, were much appreciated. 
He died at Schaerbeek, near Brussels, on the 17th of August 
1809. Hid's efforts to counteract Walloon influences and bring 
about a rapprochement between the Net her landers in the north 
and the Teutonic ladal sympathisers across the Rhine made 
Mm very popular with both, and a volume of his best poems 
was in 1874 the first in a coMcctfcmof Dutch authors published 
at Leipsig. * 

HIEHPSAL, the name of the two kings* of Nawddia. Fog 
Hiempsal I. see under Jvgurtha. Riempsal II. was the son of 
Cauda, the half .brother of Jugurtha. In 88 B.C., after the 
triumph of Sulla, when the younger Marios fled from Rome to 
Africa, Hiempsal received him with apparent friendliness, hftf 
real intention being to detain turn as a prisoner. Marias dis- 
covered this intention in time and made good his escape with 
the assistance of the king's daughter. In- 81 Hiempsal was 
driven from his throne by the Numidians themselves, or by 
Hiarbus* ruler of part of the kingdom, supported by Cn. Domirius 
Ahcnobarbus, the leader of the Marian party in Africa*' Soon 
afterwards Pompey was sent to Africa by Sulla to reinstate 
Hiempsal, whose territory was subsequently increased by the 
addition of some land on the coast in accordance with a treaty 
concluded with L. AureKus Cotta. When the tribune P. ScnrlEus 
Rullus introduced Ms agrarian law (63), these Isnds, which had 
been orfginaUy assigned to the Roman people by Sdpio Af ricaausy 
were expressly exempted from sale, which roused Che indignation 
of Cicero (Delege agraria, i. 4, ii. aa). From Suetonius (Caesar^ 
71) it is evident that Hiempsal was alive in 6a. According to 
Satlost (Jugurtha, 17), he was the author of an historical work in 
the Punic language. 

Plutarch, Marine, 40, Pempey, n; Appfen, BeU. cfe, i. 6a. 80| 
Dio Cassius ali. 41* 

HIERAPOUS. x. (Arabic Manbij or Mumbiy) an ancient 
Syrian town occupying one of the finest sites in Northern Syria, 
in a fertile district about 16 m. S.W. of the confluence of'tbe 
Snjur and Euphrates. There is abundant water supply from 
large springs. In 1879, after the RiutsVTudLisb war, w^otoay ©I 



♦5* 



HIERARCHY I 



Circassiansfrom Vidm (Widow) was plant** to tJbft tubs, amdthe 
result has been the constant discovery of antiquities, which ind 
their way into the bazaars of Aleppo and Aintab. The place first 
Appeals in Greek as Bombyca, bat Pliny (v. 23) tells us its Syrian 
name was Mabog. It was doubtless an ancient Commagenian 
sanctuary; but history knows it first under the Sekurids, who 
made it the chief station on their main road between Antaoch and 
Sekucia-on-Tlgris; and as a centre of the worship of the Syrian 
Nature Goddess, Atargatisfa.?.), it became known to the Greeks as 
the city of the sanctuary 'IepoiroXts, and finally as the Holy City 
IapdwoXis. Lucian» a native of Commagene (or some anonymoos 
writer) has immortalised this worship in the tract DtDea Syria, 
wherein are described the orgiastic luxury of the shrine and the 
tank of sacred fish, of which Aelian also relates marvels. Accord* 
inf to the De Deo Syria, the worship was of a phallic character, 
votaries offering little male figures of wood and bronze. There 
were also huge phalli set up like obelisks before the temple, 
which were climbed once a year with certain ceremonies, and 
decorated. For the rest, the temple was of Ionic character with 
golden plated doors and roof and much gilt decoration. . Inside 
was a holy chamber into which priests only were allowed to enter. 
Here were statues of a goddess and a god in gold, but the first 
seems to have been the more richly decorated with gems and 
other ornaments. Between them stood a gilt xoanon, which 
seems to have been carried outside in sacred processions. Other 
rich furniture is described, and a mode of divination by move- 
ments of a xoanen of Apollo. A great bronze altar stood in front, 
set about with statues, and in the forecourt lived numerous 
sacred animals and birds (but not swine) used for sacrifice. Some 
three hundred priests served the shrine and there were numerous 
minor ministrants. The lake was the centre of sacred festivities 
and it was customary for votaries to swim out and decorate an 
altar standing in the middle of the water. Self-mutilation and 
other orgies went on in the temple precinct, and there was an 
elaborate ritual on entering the city and first visiting the shrine 
under the conduct of local guides, which reminds one of the 
Meccan Pilgrimage. 

The temple was sacked by Crassus on his way tb meet the 
Parthians (53 b. c); but in the 3rd century of the empire the 
dty was the capital of the Euphratensian province and one of 
the great cities of Syria. Proeopius called it the greatest in that 
part of the world, . It was, however, ruinous when Julian collected 
his troops there ere marching to Jtiis defeat and death in Meso- 
potamia, and Chosroes I. held it to ransom after Justinian had 
failed to put it in a state of defence. Harun restored it at the end 
of the 8th century and it became a bone of contention between 
Byzantines, Arabs and Turks. The crusaders captured it from 
the Seljuks in the rath century, but Saladin retook it (1175), 
and later it became the headquarters of Hulagu and his Mongols, 
who completed its ruin. The remains are extensive, but almost 
wholly of late date, as is to be expected in the case of a city 
which survived into Moslem times. The walls are Arab, and no 
ruins of the great temple survive. The' most noteworthy relic of 
antiquity is the sacred lake, on two sides of which can still be 
seen stepped quays and water-stairs. The first modern account 
of the site is in a short narrative appended by H. Maundrell to his 
Journey from Aleppo to Jerusalem, He was at Mumbij in 1600. 

The coinage of the city begins in the 4th century B.C. with an 
Aramaic series, showing the goddess, either as a bust with mural 
crown or as riding on a lion. She continues to supply the chief 
type even during imperial times, being generally shown seated 
with the tympanum in her hand. Other coins substitute the 
legend OeasSvpfot'IepoveXtrwr, within a wreath. It is interesting 
to note that from Bambyce (near which much silk was produced) 
were derived the bombycina testis of the Romans and, through the 
crusaders, the bombasine of modern commerce. 

See F. R. Chesney. Euphrates Expedition (1850) ; W. F. Alnsworth, 
Personal Narratm* of the Euphrates Expedition (1888); E. Sachau. 
Reise in Syrieu, &c (1883); D. G. Hogarth in Journal of Hellenic 
Studies (1909). 

2, A Phrygian dty, altitude 1 200 ft. on the right bank of the 
Cbferuk Su (LycusVjtbout 8 m. above its junction with the 



Menderes <Maeantkr), situated 0* a broad terracavaooft.ahewi 
thevalleyand6m.N.ofLaodkea. On the terrace rise c akare o m 
springs, that have deposited vast incrustations of snowy white' 
nest. To these springs, which are warm and slightly sulphureous, 
and to the *• Plutonium "—a hole reaching deep into the earth! 
from which issued a mephitic vapour— the place'owed its celebrity 
and sanctity. Here, at an early date, a religious establishsxat 
(Jtieron) existed in connexion with the old Phrygian Kydrara, a 
settlement of the tribe Hyckeliiae; and the town which grew 
round it became one of the greatest centres of Phrygian native 
life but Of non-political importance. The chief religious festival 
was the Letoia* named after the goddess Leto, a local variety d 
the Mother Goddess (Cybcle), who was honoured with orgiastic 
rites in winch elements of the original Anatolian matriarcheic 
and Nature-cult survived: there was also a worship of apaflo 
Lairbenos. Hierapolis was the seat of an early church (Col iv. 
13), with which tradition closely connects the apostle Pnflip. 
Epictetus, the philosopher, and Papias, a disciple of St John sad 
author of a lost work on. the Sayings of Jesus, were born then. 
Hierapolis is now easily reached from Gon jdi, a station en the 
Dineir railway about 7 m. distant, A village of Yureks ha 
gradually grown below the site. The native name for the place is 
apparently Pombuk Kale (though doubt has been thrown on the 
statement), and this has always been explained by the cotton- 
like appearance of the white incrustations. It should be noted, 
however, that this name, if genuine, is curiously like that given by 
the Syrians to the Commagenian Hierapolis (above), Bombjct, 
the origin of which it has been suggested was a native name of the 
goddess Pambe or Mambe (whence Mabog). Considering that 
cotton is a comparatively modern phenomenon in Anatoha, it ■ 
worth suggesting that Pambuh in this case may be a survival of a 
primitive name, derived from the same goddess, Pambe. The 
goddesses of the two Hierapoleis were in any case closely atia. 
If an old native name has reappeared here after the decline of 
Greek influence, and been given a meaning in modern Turkish, 
it affords another instance of a very common feature of west 
Asian nomenclature. Combined with the petrified terraces, the 
ruins of Hierapolis present the most attractive of the easily 
accessible spectacles in Asia Minor, They are remarkable for the 
long avenue of tombs, mostly inscribed sarcophagi on plinths, by 
which the city is approached from the W., and for * VCf y perfect 
theatre partly excavated in the hill at the N. side of the site. 
Stage buildings as well as auditorium are well preserved. Ontht 
S., just above the white terraces and largely blocked with petrified 
deposit, stand large baths, into which the natural warm spriag 
was once conducted. Behind these is a fine triumphal arch, 
whence runs a colonnade. Ruins of several churches survive, and 
also of a large basilica. There is a sulphureous pool which may 
represent the " Plutonium," but k has no such deadly power at 
was ascribed to that pond. Ramsay thinks that the u Plu- 
tonium " was obliterated by Christians in the 4th century. Over 
300 inscriptions have been collected, mostly sepulchral, whence 
Ramsay has deduced interesting facts about the very early 
Christian community which existed here. The site has been often 
visited and described, and was systematically examined in 1887 
by parties under W. M. Ramsay and K. Humann respectively. 
See K. Humaon, Allcrtuwur 9. Hierapolis (1888); Sir W. M 
Ramsay, Cities and Bishoprics of Phrytia, vol. i. (1895). 

*^' (C.W.W.; D.G.H.) 

HIERARCHY (Gr. Upfa, holy, and &>*€», to rule), the office 
of a steward or guardian of holy things, not a " ruler of priests " 
or " priestly ruler " (see Boeckh, Carp, inscr. Gr. No. 1570), 
a term commonly used in ecclesiastical language to denote 
the aggregate of tnose persons who exercise authority fWithia 
the Christian Church, the patriarchate, episcopate or entire three* 
fold order of the clergy. The word lepapxi*, which does not 
occur in any classical Greek writer, owes its present extensive 
currency to the celebrated writings of Dionysius Areopagitkus 
Of these the most important are the two which treat of the 
celestial and of the ecclesiastical hierarchy respectively. De- 
fining hierarchy as the " function which comprises all sacred 
things," or,, more fully, as " a sacred order and science and 



HIERATKMHIBRQCfcESPf? ALEXANDRIA 



m 



activity, assimilated as far aa possible to the s*dMtoe,~ and 
elevated to the imitation of God proportionately to the Divine 
flluminations conceded to it," the author proceeds to enumerate 
the nine orders of the heavenly host, which are subdivided 
again into hierarchies or triads, in . descending , order, thusi 
Seraphim, Cherubim, Thrones; Dominations, Virtues, Powers; 
Principalities, Archangels, Angels. These alt exist lor the 
common object of raising men through ascending stages of 
purification and illumination to perfection* The ecclesiastical 
or earthly hierarchy is the counterpart of the other. In it the 
first or highest triad is formed by baptism, communion and 
chrism. The second triad. consists of the three orders of the 
ministry, bishop or hkrareh, priest and minister or deacon 
(tfpdpXP»fep^ttaroap76s); this, is the earliest known m- 
ataace in which the title hierarch is applied to a .bishop. The 
third or lowest triad is made up of monks, " initiated " and 
catechumens. To Dionysius may be traced, through Thomas 
Aquinas and other Catholic writers of the intervening period, 
the definition of the term. usually given by Roman Catholic 
w rite r s " coitus sen ordo praesldum et sacrorum mmistrorum 
ad regendam eccleaiam gignendamque in hominibus sanctitatem 
dirinkus institdtus "'"-although it immediately rests upon 
the authority of the sixth canon of the twenty-third session 
of the council of Trent, in whioh anathema is pronounced upon 
afi who deny the existence within the Catholic Church of a 
hierarchy instituted by divine appointment, and consisting of 
bishops, priests and ministers* (See Oider, Holy) .- 

HIERATIC, priestly or sacred (Gr. Ufrcru&t, 2ep6r, sacred), 
a term particularly applied to a style of ancient Egyptian writing, 
which is a simplified cursive form of hieroglyphic The name 
was first given by Cnampoihoa (see Egypt, § Language). 

HIERAX* or Hiebacas, a learned ascetic who flourished 
about the end of the 3rd century at Leontopolb in Egypt, 
where he lived to the age of ninety, supporting himself by 
calligraphy and devoting his leisure to scientific and literary 
pursuits, especially to. the study of the Bible. He was the author 
of Biblical commentaries both In Greek and Coptic, and is 
said to have composed many hymns. He became leader of 
the so-called sect of the Hieracites, ata ascetic society from 
which married persons were excluded, and of which one of 
the leading tenets waa that only the celibate could enter the 
kingdom of heaven. He asserted that the suppression of the sexual 
impulse was emphatically the new revelation brought by the 
Logos, and appealed to 1 Cor. viL, Heb. jsi. 14, and Matt* 
xix.* is, xxv. ai. Hierax may be called the connecting link 
between Qrigea and the Coptic monks. A man of deep learning 
and prodigious memory, he, seems to have developed Origen's 
Christology in the direction of Athanaeius. He held that 
the Son waa a torch lighted at the torch of the Father, thai 
Father and Son are a bipartite light. He repudiated the ideas 
af a bodily resurrection and a material paradise, and on, the 
ground of a Tim* ii. 5 questioned; the salvation of even baptised 
infants, " for without knowledge no conflict, without conflict 
no reward." In his insistence en virginity as toe specifically 
Christian virtue heeet up the great theme of the church of the 
4th and stb centuries. 

H1SBO (strictly Hibjlqn), the name of two rulers of 
Syracuse. 

Hixao L was the brother of Gdo, and tyrant of Syracuse 
from 478 to 467/6 ax. During bis reign he greatly increased the 
power of Syracuse. He removed the in ha b itants of Naxos 
and Catana to Leontini, peopled Catana (which he renamed 
Aetna) with Dorians, concluded an alliance with Acragas 
(Agrigentum), and espoused the cause of the Locrians against 
Anaxilaus, tyrant of Rhegium. Hit most important achieve- 
ment waa the defeat of the Etruscans at Cumae (474)1 by which 
he saved the Greeks of Campania. A bronee helmet (now in 
the British Museum), with an inscription commemorating 

1 Perrone, Dt locis theotogicis, pt. I., tec. i. cap. 2. 
■ ST quia dixerit in etcteWa catbotka ncm esse merarchiam divina 
exdsnatioae institutam, quae canstat ex tptscepia, presbyttris, et 



th© v evfent,^was" dedicated at Olympiad Though despotic in 
his rule Hiero was a liberal patron of literature^ He died at 
Catana in 467. 

See Diod. Sic. xi. 38-67; Xeaophon, Hitrtt. 6. 2; E. Uwbert, 
Syrakus tur Zeti des GOon und Hieron (1875)1 for his coins see 
Numismatics (section Sicily). 

Hieko II., tyrant of Syracuse from 270 to 216 B.C., was the 
illegitimate son of a Syracusan noble, Hierodes, who claimed 
descent from Gek>~ On the departure of Pyrfhus from Sicfly (275) 
the Syracusan army and citizens appointed him commander 
of the troops. He materially strengthened his position by 
marrying the daughter of Leptines, the leading citizen. In the 
meantime, the Mamertines, a body of Campanian mercenaries 
who had been employed by A#*tfeodes, had seined the strong- 
hold of Mesaana, whence they harassed the Syracusans. They 
were finally defeated in a pitched battle near Myiae by Hiero> 
who waa only prevented from capturing Messana by Carthaginian 
interference. His grateful countrymen then chose him king 
(270). In 264 he again returned to the attack, and the Mamer* 
tinea called in the aid of Rome, Hiero at once joined the 
Punic leader Hanno, who had recently landed in Sicily; but 
betag defeated by the consul Appius Claudius, be withdrew 
to Syracuse.. Pressed by the Roman forces, in 163 he was 
compelled to conclude a treaty with Rome, by which he was 
to rule over the south-east of Sicily and the eastern coast as 
far as Tauromenium (Polybius L 8-16; Zonaras viii. 9). prom 
this time till his death in 216 he remained loyal to the Romans, 
and frequently assisted them with men and provisions during 
the Punic wars (Livy xxi 40-51, xxii. 07, xxifi. 21). He kept 
up a powerful fleet for defensive purposes, and employed his 
famous kinsman Archimedes in the construction of those engines 
that, at a later date, played so important a part during the 
siege of Syracuse by the Romans. 

A picture of the prosperity of Syracuse during his rule is given In 
the sixteenth idyll of Theocritus, his favourite poet. See Diod. Sic. 
xxii. 24-ravi. 24; Polybius i. 8-vii. 7; Justin xxiii 4. 

HIEROCLES, proconsul of Bithynia and Alexandria, lived 
during the reign of Diocletian (a.d. 284-305). He is said to 
have been the instigator of the fierce persecution of the Christians, 
under Galcrius in 303. He was the author of a work (not' 
extant) entitled Xbyoi #iXaX#?ets irpor rout Xpt*nafto6r in two 
books, in which he endeavoured to persuade the Christiana 
that their sacred books were full of contradictions, and that 
in moral influence and miraculous power Christ was inferior Co 
Apollonius of Tyana. Our knowledge of this treatise is derived 
from Lactantius {Ins tit. di*. v. 2) and Eusebius, who wrote a 
refutation entitled 'AmAArruedr irpdt r* 'Iepo«X4ovf. 

HIEROCLES OF ALEXANDRIA, Neoplatonist writer, 
flourished e. a.d. 430. He studied under the celebrated Neo- 
platonist Plutarch at Athens, and taught for some years in his 
native city. He seems to have been banished from Alexandria 
and to have taken up his abode in Constantinople, where he 
gave such offence by his religious opinions that he was thrown 
Into prison and cruelly flogged. The only complete work of his 
which has been preserved is the commentary on the Carmina 
Aurea of Pythagoras. It enjoyed a great reputation in middle 
age and Renaissance times, and there are numerous translations 
in various European languages. Several other writings, especi- 
ally one on providence and fate, a consolatory treatise dedicated 
to his patron Olympiodorus of Thebes, author of laropuaol 
X&yot, are quoted or referred to by Phot ii is and Stobaeus. 
The collection of some 260 witticisms (dama) called $tX67<Xus 
(ed. A. Eberhard, Berlin, 1869), attributed to Hierodes and 
Philagrius, has no connexion with Hierodes of Alexandria, but 
is probably a compilation of later date, founded on two older 
collections. It is now agreed that the fragments of the Elements 
of Ethics ('RdiKii ffTOix&jxrts) preserved in Stobaeus are from 
a work by a Stoic named Hierodes, contemporary of Epictetus, 
who has been identified with the " Hierodes Stoicus vir sanctus 
et gravis " in Aulus Gellius (ix. 5. 8). This theory is confirmed 
by the discovery of a papyrus fed. H, von Arnim in Berliner 
Klassikertexte, iv. 1906; see also C. Pracbter, Hieroklesdew 
Striker, 1001). 



45* 



HIEROGLYPHICS— HIGG1NS 



. Them is an edition ol die commentary by F. W. MulUch in 
Fragment* pk i U t o p hfum Graecamm (i860), l. 408, including full 
information concerning Hierocles, the poem and the commentary; 
aee also E, Zeller, Philosophut der Gnecke* (2nd ed.). HI 2. PP- 
68 1 -W: W. Christ, Gesc&chu der gtiuhisckeu Literati* (1898), 
pp. 854, 849. 

Another Hi erodes, who flourished during the reign of Justinian, 
.vat the author of a list of provinces and towns in the Eastern 
Empire, called Zurkfrtfto ("fellow-traveller "; ed. A. Burckhardt, 
1895); it wan one of the chief Authorities used by Constantioe 
Porpbyrogenitus ia his work on the " themes " of the Roman 
Empire <9ee C. Krumbacher, Cesckichte der byumtinischen Literatur, 
1897, p. 417). In Fabricius's BMiotheco Graeca (ed. Maries), i. 
791, sixteen persons named Hie/odes, chiefly literary, are men- 
tioned. 

HIEROGLYPHICS (Gr. tsosc, sacred. and yh»M t carving), the 
term used by Greek and Latin writers to describe the sacred 
characters of the ancient Egyptian language in its classical 
phase. It is now also used for various systems ol writing in 
which figures of objects take the place of conventional signs. 
Such characters whkh symbolise the idea of a thing without 
etpres&ing the name of it are generally styled " ideographs " 
(Gr. Itea, idea, and ypa<fi«*> to write), «.g. the Chinese characters. 
' See Ecy pt, Lenguage ; Cuneiform ; Inscriptions and Wrjttno. 

HIBR0NYMITE3, a common name for three or four con- 
gregations of hermits living according to the rule of St Augustine 
with supplementary regulations taken from St Jerome's writings. 
Their habit was white, with a black cloak. (1) The Spanish 
Hieronymites, established near Toledo in 1374. The order 
soon became popular in Spain and Portugal, and in 141 5 it 
numbered 25 houses. It possessed some of the most famous 
monasteries in the Peninsula, including the royal monastery 
of Belem near Lisbon, and the magnificent monastety built 
by Philip II. at the Escurial. Though the manner of life was 
very austere the Hieronymites devoted themselves to studies 
and to the active work of the ministry, and they possessed 
great influence both at the Spanish and the Portuguese courts. 
They went to Spanish and Portuguese America and. played a 
considerable part in Christianizing and civilizing the Indians. 
There were Hieronymitc nuns founded in 1375, who became 
very numerous. The order decayed during the 18th century 
and was completely suppressed in 1835. (a) Hieronymites 
of the Observance, or of Lombardy: a reform of (1) effected 
by the third general in 1424; it embraced seven houses in 
£pain and seventeen in Italy, mostly in Lombardy. It is now 
extinct. (3) Poor Hermits of St Jerome, established near Pisa 
in 1377: it came to embrace nearly fifty houses whereof only 
one in Rome and one in Viterbo survive. (4) Hermits of St 
Jerome of the congregation of Fiesole, established in 1406: 
they had forty houses but in 1668 they were united to (3). 

See Helyot. HistMre des ordres rdigitux (1714). '»• cc 57-6o» 
iv. cc. 1-3; Max Heimbuchcr, Orden and Kongregattonen (1896), j. 
1 70; and art. " Hieronymiten " in Herzog-Hauck, Reaiencyklopddie 
fed. 3), and in Welle and Wetter, Kuekentextton (ed. 3). (E. C. B.) 

H1BRONYMVS OF CARDIA. Greek general and historian, 
contemporary of Alexander the Great. After the death of the 
king he followed the fortunes of his friend and fellow-countryman 
Euroenes. He was wounded and taken prisoner by Antigonus, 
who pardoned him and appointed him superintendent of the 
asphalt beds in the Dead Sea. He was treated with equal 
friendliness by Antigonus's son Demetrius, who made him pole- 
march of Thespiae, and by Antigonus Gonatas, at whose court 
he died at the age of 104. He wrote a history of the Diadochi 
and their descendants, embracing the period from the death of 
Alexander to the war with Pyrrhus (523-372-8.0.), which is one 
of the chief authorities used by Diodorus Siculus (xviii.-xx.) 
and also by Plutarch in his life of Pyrrhus. He made use of 
official papers and was careful in his investigation of facts. 
The simplicity of his style rendered his work unpopular, but it 
fc probable that it was on a high level as compared with that 
of his contemporaries. In the last part of his work he made a 
praiseworthy attempt to acquaint the Greeks with the character 
and early history of the Romans. He is reproached by Pausanias 
(1. 0. 8) with unfairness towards all rulers with the exception 
of Antigonus Gonatas. 



See Luciaa. Mecnbii, »t Plutarch, Dmttttnt, 59; Died. Sfc> 
uii. 42. 44/ JO. xix. 100; Dion. Halic. Antia. item. I 6; F. 
Bruckner, "Dc vita ct scriptis Hieronyroi Cardii in Zaixhrjftfa 



50, xix. 100; Dion. Halic. Antia. 
^uli^i. -^ vita ct scriptis Hieronyroi Cardii u» mwmtoi^ 
die Alterthumswissenschafl (1842): F. Reuss, Hierouvmo* ten Jurats 
(Berlin, 1876); C. Wachsmuth, Ehdeitunt in das Stvdtum der alien 
State*** (1895); fragments inCW. Mullcr, Frag, hist, fast, 
ii. 450-461. 

HIERRO, or Fekbo, an island in the Atlantic Ocean, foradag 
part of the Spanish archipelago of the Canary Islands (#.».). 
Pop. (1900) 6508; area 207 sq. m. Hierro, the most westerly 
and the smallest island of the group, is somewhat crescent- 
shaped. Its length is about iS m., its greatest breadth aboat 
15 m., and its circumference 50 m. It lies 02 m. W.S.W. of 
Teneriffe. Its coast fa bound by high, steep rocks, whkh only 
admit of one harbour, but the interior is tolerably level Its 
hill-tops in winter are sometimes wrapped in snow. Better 
and more abundant grass grows here than on any of the other 
islands. Hierro is exposed to westerly gales which frequently 
inflict great damage. Fresh water is scarce, but there is a 
sulphurous spring, with a temperature of iot* Fahr. The one* 
celebrated and almost sacred Til tree, which was reputed to be 
always niiiiHng water in great abundance from its leaves, as 
longer exists. Only a small part of the cultivable land is nmkr 
tillage, the inhabitants being principally employed in pestvafc. 
Valverde (pop. about 3000) is the principal town. Geograpbeis 
were formerly in the habit of measuring all longitudes from 
Ferro, the most westerly land known to them. The toagitftde 
assigned at first has, however, turned oat to-be err eo eo u, 
and the so-called "Longitude of Ferro"' dots not cofadde 
with the actual longitude of the island. 

HIGDON (or Hicden), RANULF (c raoo-c 1365), Engfisk 
chronicler, was a Benedictine monk of the monastery of St 
Werburg in Chester, in which he lived, it is said, for sixty-four 
years, and died '* in a good old age, 1 ' probably in 1565. Higdes 
was the author of a long chronicle, one of several such works 
based on a plan taken from Scripture, and written for tat 
amusement and instruction of his society. It closes the loag 
series of general chronicles, which were soon superseded by tht 
invention of printing. It is commonly styled the PeJycJtremuen, 
from the longer tide Ranulpki Castrensis, capsomhu Higdtn, 
Poiyckroniam (six* Uistaria Petycratica) ab initio ntundi usem 
ad mortem regis Bdwordi III. in sepiem libros disposition. The 
work is divided into seven books, in humble imitation of the 
seven days of Genesis, and, with exception of the hut book, is 
a summary of general history, a compilation made with coa- 
siderable style and taste. It seems to have enjoyed no hide 
popularity in the (5th century, It was tht standard work es 
general history, and more than a hundred MSS. of it are kaova 
to exist. The Christ Church MS. says that Higdon wrote it 
down to the year 1342; the fine VIS. at Christ's College, Can- 
bridge, states that he wrote to the year 1544* after which date, 
with the omission of two years, John of Malvern, a monk of 
Worcester, carried the history on to 1357, at whkh date it 
ends. According, however, to its latest editor, Hagdon's pan 
of the work goes no further than 1526 or 1527 at latest, after 
which time it was carried on by two continuators to the end. 
Thomas Gale, in his Hist. Brit. 6rc, script ores, xv. (Oxon., 1691), 
published that portion of it, In the original Latin, whkh cones 
down to 1066. Three early translations of the Polychrome* 
exist. The first was made by John of Trcvisa, chaplain to Lord 
Berkeley, in 1587, and was printed by Caxton in 1482-, the second 
by an anonymous writer, was written between 1452 and 143°; 
the third, based on Trevisa's version, with the addition of at 
eighth book, was prepared by Caxton. These versions ate 
specially valuable as illustrating the change of the Enghsb 
language during the period they cover. 

The Patyckronicon, with the continuations and the EniUiji 
versions, was edited for the' Rolls Series (No. 41) by Churchill 
Babington (vols. i. and ii.) and Joseph Rawson Lumby (1865-1886). 
ThU edition was adversely criticized by Mandeil Creifbton in tht 
Eng. Hut. Rev. for October 1888. 

HJG61NS, MATTHEW JAMBS (1810-186$), British writer 
over the nom-de-plume " Jacob Omnium," which was the tide 
ol bis first magazine article, was born in County Meath, Ireland, 



HIGGINSGN— HIGHLANDS 



455 



on the 4th of December 1810. His letter* in The Times were 
instrumental in exposing many abuses. He was a frequent con* 
tribator to the CornMW, and was a friend of Thackeray, who 
dedicated to him The Adventures of Philip, and eae of his ballads, 
" Jacob Omnium's Hoss," deals with an incident in Higgihs's 
areer. He died on the 14th of August 1868. Some of Ins 
articles were published in 1875 as Essays 0* Social Subjects. 
. HIMINSON, THOMAS WENTWORTH (1823- ), American 
author and soldier, was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on 
the 22nd of December 1823. He was a descendant of Francis 
Higginson (1588-1630), who emigrated from Leicestershire to 
the colony of Massachusetts Bay and was a minister of the church 
of Salem, Mass., in 1620-1630; and a grandson of Stephen 
Higginson (1743-1828), a Boston merchant, who was a member 
of the Continental Congress in 1783,100k an active part in sup- 
pressing Shay's Rebellion, was the author of the " Laco " letters 
(1789), and rendered valuable services to the United States 
government as navy agent from the irth of May to the 22nd of 
June 1 708. Graduating from Harvard fn 1841, he was a school* 
master for two years, studied theology at the Harvard Divinity 
School, and was pastor in 1847-18.50 of the First Religious Society 
(Unitarian) of Newburyport, Massachusetts, and of the Free 
Church at Worcester in 185 2-18 58. He was a Free Soil candi- 
date for Congress (1850), but was defeated; was indicted with 
Wendell Phillips and Theodore Parker for participation in the 
attempt to release the fugitive slave, Anthony Burns, in Boston 
(1855); was engaged in the effort to make Kansas a free state 
alter the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska BUI of 1854; and during 
the Civil War was captain in the 51st Massachusetts Volunteers, 
and from November 1862 to October 1864, when he was retired 
because of a wound received in the preceding August, was 
colonel of the First South Carolina Volunteers, the first regiment 
recruited from former slaves for the Federal service. He «e* 
scribed his experiences inArmyLife in a Black Regiment (1870). 
lb politics Higginson was successively a Republican, an Inde- 
pendent and a Democrat. Has writings show a deep love of 
nature, art and humanity, and are marked by vigour of thought, 
sincerity of feeling, and grace and finish of style. In his Common 
Sense About Women (1881) and hh Women and Men (1888) he 
advocated equality of opportunity and equality of rights tor the 
two sexes. 

Among his numerous books are Outdoor Papers (1863) J MaJbone: 
m Otdport Romance (1869); Lift of Mortar* Fuller Ossoli (in 
" American Men of Letters " series, 1884); A Larger History of the 
United States of America to the Close of President Jackson s Ad- 
ministration (1885); The Monarch of Dreams (1886); Travellers and 
Outlaw (1880J; The ^Afternoon Landscape ^tf^9), poems and 

trs 

f« 
ier 

of 
t>3. 



fis 

HIOHAM FERRERS, a market town and municipal borough 
in the Eastern parliamentary division of Northamptonshire, 
England, 63 m. N.N.W. from London, on branches of the London 
& North-Western and Midland railways. Pop. (iooi), 2540. It is 
pleasantly situated on high ground above the south bank of the 
river Nene. The church of St Mary is among the most beautiful 
of the many fine churches in Northamptonshire. To the Early 
English chancel a very wide north aisle, resembling a second 
nave, was added in the Decorated period, and the general appear- 
ance of the chancel, with its north aisle and Lady-chapel, is 
Decorated. The tower with its fine spire and west front was 
partially but carefully rebuilt in the 17th century. Close to the 
church, but detached from it, stands a beautiful Perpendicular 
building, the school-house, founded by Archbishop Chichek in 
14". The Bede House, a somewhat similar structure by the 
same founder, completes a striking group of buildings. In the 
town are remains of Chichelc's college. 1 < Higham Ferrers shares 



in the widespread local industry of shoemaking. The town is 
governed by * mayor* 4 aldermen and 12 councillors, Area, 
1045 acres. 

Higham (Hecham, Heccam, Hegham Ferers) was evidently a 
large village before the Domesday Survey. It was then held by 
William Feverd of the king, but on the forfeiture of the lordship 
by his son it was granted in 1100 to William Ferrers, earl of 
Derby. On the outlawry of Robert his grandson it passed to 
Edmund, earl of Lancaster, and, reverting to the crown in 1342, 
was granted to Aymer de Valence, earl of Pembroke, but escheated 
to the crown in 13 27, and was granted to Henry, earl of Lancaster. 
The castle, which may have been bulk before Henry III. visited 
Higham in raso, is mentioned in 1322, but had been destroyed by 
1540. It appears by the confirmation of Henry III. in 1 351 thai 
the borough originated in the previous year when William de 
Ferrers* earl of Derby, manumitted by charter ninety-two 
persons, granting they should have a free borough. A mayor was 
elected from the beginning of the reign of Richard II., while ft 
town hall is mentioned in 1305. The revenues of Chicbele's 
college were given to the corporation by the charter of 1566, 
whereby the borough returned one representative te* parliament, 
a privilege enjoyed until 1832. James I. in 1 604 gave the mayor 
the commission of the peace with other privileges which were 
confirmed by Charles II. in 1664. Tbe old charters were sur- 
rendered in 1684 and a new grant obtained; a further charter 
was granted in 1887. . 1 

HIGHGATE, a northern district of London, England, partly 
in the metropolitan' borough of St Pancms, but efctending 
into Middlesex. It is a high-lying district, the greatest 
elevation being 426 ft. The Great North Road pastes ihrouftb 
Highgate, which is supposed to have received its nsune*rrojn the 
toll-gate erected by the bishop of London when the road was 
formed through Ins demesne in the 14th century.' • It is possible, 
however, that " gate " is used here, in its old signification, end 
that the name means simply highroad. The road rose so steeply 
here that in 1812 an effort was made to lessen the slope, lor 
coaches by means of an archway, and a new way wasicompkieat 
in 1000. In the timeof stagecoaches a custom was introduced of 
making ignorant persons believe that they required to be awora 
and admitted to the freedom of 'the Highgate before being 
allowed to pass the gate, tbe fine of admission being a bottle of 
wine. Not a few famous names occur among the former residents 
of Highgate. Bacon died here in 1626; Coleridge and Andrew 
fcfarvell, the poets, were residents. Cromwell House* now a 
convalescent home, was presented by Oliver Cromwell to his 
eldest daughter Bridget on her marriage with Henry Ireloft 
(January 15, 1646/7). «Lauderdale House, now attached to 
the public grounds of Wateriow Park, belonged to the Duke of 
Lauderdale, one of the " Cabal " of Charles II. Among various 
institutions may be mentioned Whittingion's almshouses, near 
Whittington Stone, at the foot of Highgate Hill, on. which the 
future mayor of London is reputed to have been resting when he 
heard the peal of Bow bells and " turned again." Highgate 
grammar school was founded ( 1 562-1 565) by Sir Roger Cboimley, 
chief-justice. St Joseph's Retreat is the mother-house of the 
Passionist Fathers in England. There is an extensive and 
beautiful cemetery on the slope below the church of St Michael* 

HIGHLANDS, THE, that part of Scotland north-west of a hne 
drawn from Dumbarton to Stonehaven, including the Inner and 
Outer Hebrides and the county of Bute, but excluding the 
Orkneys and Shetland's, Caithness, the flat coastal land of the 
shires of Nairn, Elgin and Banff, and all East Aberdeenshire (see 
Scotland). This area is to be distinguished from the Lowlands 
by language and race, the preservation of the Gaelic speech being 
characteristic. Even in a historical sense the Highlanders were 
a separate people from the Lowlanders, with whom, during 
many centuries, they shared nothing in common. The town of 
Inverness is usually regarded as the capital Of the Highlands. 
The Highlands consist of an old dissected plateau, or Mock* 
of ancient crystalline rocks with incised valleys and lochs 
carved by the action of mountain streams and by ice, the 
resulting topography being a wide area of irregularly difttabut** 1 



*58 



HIGINBOTHAM— HILARIU8, ST (POITIERS) 



to highway may be caused by encroachment, by interfering with 
the soil oC the highway, by. attracting crowds, by creating 
danger or inconvenience on or near the highway, by placing 
-obstacle* on the highway, by unreasonable user, by offences 
against decency and good order, &c. 
■ The use of locomotives, motor cars and other vehicles on high* 
mays is regulated by acts of 1 861-1003. 

Formerly under the Turnpike Acts many of the more important 
highways were placed under the management of boards of 
commissioners or trustees. The trustees were required and 
empowered to maintain, repair and improve the roads committed 
to their charge, and the expenses of the trust were met by tolls 
levied oil persons using the road. The various grounds of exemp- 
tion from toll on turnpike roads were all of a public character, 
#.g« horses and carriages attending the sovereign or royal family, 
or used by soldiers or volunteers in uniform, were free from tolL 
In general horses and carriages used in agricultural work were 
free from toll By the Highways and Locomotives Act of 1878 
dUturnpiked roads became " main roads." Ordinary highways 
might be declared to be " main roads," and " main roads " be 
deduced to the status of ordinary highways. 

In Scotland the highway system is regulated by the Roads and 
Bodges Act 187S and amending acts. The management and 
maintenance of the highways and bridges is vested in county 
toad trustees, viz. the commissioners of supply, certain elected 
trustees representing ratepayers in parishes and others. One of 
Che consequences of the act was the abolition of tolls, statute*, 
labour, causeway mail and other exactions for the maintenance 
of bridges and highways, and all turnpike roads became high- 
ways, and all highways became open to the public free of tolls 
and other exactions. The county is divided into districts under 
district committees, and county and district officers are appointed, 
lie expenses of highway management in each district (or parish), 
together with, a proportion of the general e xpe n ses of the act, are 
levied by the trustees by an assess m ent on the lands and heritages 
within the district (or parish)* 

• Jftghway, in the law of the states of the American Union, 
generally means a lawful public road, over which all citizens are 
allowed to pass and repass on foot, on horseback, in carriages and 
waggons. Sometimes it is held to be restricted to county roads 
as opposed to town-ways. In statutes dealing with offences con- 
nected with the highway, such as gaming, negligence of carriers, 
&c.< " highway " includes navigable rivers. But in a statute 
punishing with death robbery on the highway, railways were held 
not to be included in the term. In one case it has Been held 
that any way is a highway which has been used as such for 
£f ty years. 

See Glen, Law Relating to Highways', Pratt, Law of Highways, 
Main Roads and Bridges. 

HIGINBOTHAM, GEORGE (1827-1803), chief-justice of 
Victoria* Australia, sixth son of T. Higinbotham of Dublin, was 
born on the xoth of April 1877, and educated at the Royal School, 
Dungannon, and at Trinity College, Dublin. After entering as a 
law student at Lincoln's Inn, and being engaged as reporter on 
the Morning Chronicle in 1840, he emigrated to Victoria, where 
he contributed to the Melbourne Herald and practised at the bar 
(having been " called " in 1853) with much success. In 1850 he 
became editor of the Melbourne Argus, but resigned in 2859 and 
returned to the bar. He was elected to the legislative assembly 
in 1B61 for Brighton as an independent Liberal, was rejected at 
the general election of the same year, but was returned nine 
months later. In 1863 he became attorney-general. Under his 
influence measures were passed through the legislative assembly 
of a somewhat extreme character, completely ignoring the 
tights of the legislative council, and the government was 
carried on without any Appropriation Act for more than a year. 
lax Higinbotham, by his eloquence and earnestness, obtained 
great influence amongst the members of the legislative assembly, 
but his colleagues were not prepared to follow him as far as he 
desired to go. He contended that in a constitutional colony like 
Victoria the secretary of state for the colonies had no right to 
letter the discretion of the queen's representatives Mr Higin* 



botham did not return to power with his chief, Sir James 
M'Cuuoch, after the defeat of the short-lived Skden administra- 
tion; and being defeated for Brighton at the next general election 
by a comparatively unknown man, be devoted himself to hit 
practice at the bar. Amongst his other labours as attorney- 
general be bad codified all the statutes which were in force 
throughout the colony. In 1874 be was returned to the legis- 
lative assembly for Brunswick, but after a few months he 
resigned his seat. In x£8o he was appointed a puisne judge of the 
supreme court, and in 1886, on the retirement of Sir William 
StaweU, he was promoted to the office of chief justice. Mr 
Higinbotham was appointed president of the International 
Exhibition held at Melbourne in 1888-1889, but did not take any 
active part in its management. One of his latest public acts was 
to subscribe a sum of £10, 10s. a week towards the funds of the 
strikers in the great Australian labour dispute of 1890, an act 
which did not meet with general approval. He died in 1803. 

HILARIOM, ST (c 200-371), abbot, the first to introduce the 
monastic system into Palestine. The chief source of information 
is a life written by St Jerome; it was based upon a letter, no 
longer extant, written by St Epiphanius, who had known 
Hilarion. The accounts in Sozomen are mainly based oa 
Jerome's Vila; but Otto Zfcker has shown that Sozomen aim 
had at his disposal authentic local traditions (see " Hilarion voa 
Gaza " in the Neue Jakrbticker filr deulseke Tkeohgic, 1894), the 
most important study on Hilarion, which is written against the 
hypercritical school of Weingarten and shows that Hilarion must 
be accepted as an historical personage and the Vila as a sub- 
stantially correct account of his career. He was born of heathen 
parents at Tabatha near Oasa about aoo; be was sent to 
Alexandria for his education and there became a convert to 
Christianity; about 306 he visited St Anthony and became his 
disciple, embracing the eremitical life. He returned to ha 
native place and for many years lived as a hermit in the desert by 
the marshes on the Egyptian border. Many disciples put them- 
selves under his guidance; but his influence must have been 
limited to south Palestine, for there is no mention of him ia 
Palladius or Cassian. In 356 he left Palestine and went again to 
Egypt; but the accounts given in the Vita of his travels during 
the last fifteen years of his life must be taken with extreme 
caution. It is there said that he* went from Egypt to Sicily, 
and thence to Epldaurus, and finally to Cyprus where he met 
Epiphanius and died in 371. 

An abridged story of his life will be found in Alban Butler's Lha 
of the Saints, on the 3 let of October, and a critical sketch with faD 
references in Herzog-Hauck, RcalcncyklopadU (ed. 3). (E. C B.) 

HILARIUS (Hilary 1 ), ST (c. 300-367), bishop of PicUvium 
(Poitiers), an eminent u doctor " of the Western Church, some- 
times referred to as the " malleus Arianorum " and the " Athan- 
asius of the West," was born at Poitiers about the enJ 01 the 
3rd century a.o. His parents were pagans of distinction. Be 
received a good education, including what had even then become 
somewhat rare in the West* some knowledge of Greek. He 
studied, later on, the Old and New Testament writings, with 
the result that he abandoned his neo-platonism for Christianity, 
and with his wife and his daughter received the sacrament of 
baptism. So great was the respect in which he was held by the 
citizens of Poitiers that about 353, although still a married man, 
he was unanimously elected bishop. At that time Arianism 
was threatening to overrun the Western Church; to repel the 
irruption was the great task which Hilary undertook. Ooc 
of his first steps was to secure the excommunication, by those 
of the Gallfcan hierarchy who still remained orthodox, of Satur- 
ninus, the Arian bishop of Aries and of Ursachis and Valeni, two 
of his prominent supporters. About the same time he wrote to 
the emperor Constantius a remonstrance against the persecutions 
by which the Arians had sought to crush their opponents 
(Ad Constantium Angnslum liber primus, of which the most 
probable date is 355). His efforts were not at first success- 
ful, for at the synod of Biterrae (Beziecs), summoned in 356 by 

'The name is derived from Or. <X«*6t, gay, cheerful, whence 
hilarious, hilarity. 



HILARIl/S— HILARIUS, ST (ARLES) 



Constantius with the professed purpose of stilling the long- 
(landing disputes, Hilary was by an imperial rescript banished 
irith Rhodanus of Toulouse to Phrygia, in which exile he spent 
nearly four years. Thence, however* he continued to govern 
his diocese; while be found leisure for the preparation of two 
ef ibe most important of his contributions to dogmatic and 
polemical theology, the Do synodis or De jide Qrienialium, 
an epistle addressed in 358 to the Setoi-Arianv bishops in Caul, 
Germany and Britain, expounding the true views (sometimes 
veiled in ambiguous words (of the Oriental bishops on the 
Nicene . controversy, and the Do Umilatc libri at., 1 com- 
posed in 359 and 360, in which, for the first time* a successful 
attempt was made to express in Latin the theological subtleties 
elaborated in the original Creek. The former of these works 
was not entirely approved by some members of his own party, 
who thought he had shewn too great forbearance towards the 
Arians; to their criticisms he replied in the Apologetic* ad 
uprtkensores libri de synodis responsa. In 359 Hilary attended 
the convocation of bishops at Seleucia in Isauria, where, with 
the Egyptian Albanasians, he joined the Homoiousian majority 
against the Arianixing party headed by Acacius of Cacsarta; 
thence he went to Constantinople, and, in a petition (Ad Con- 
stantium August urn liber secundus) personally presented to the 
emperor in 360, repudiated the calumniesof his enemies and sought 
to vindicate his trinitarian principles. His urgent and repeated 
request for a public discussion with his opponents, especially 
with Ursacius and Vatens, proved at last so Inconvenient that 
he was sent back to his diocese, which he appears to have reached 
about 361, within a very snort time of the accession of Julian. 
He was occupied for two or throe years m combating Arianism 
within his diocese; but in 304, extending bis efforts once more 
beyond Caul, he impeached Auxemius, bishop of Milan, and a 
man high in the imperial favour, as heterodox. Summoned to 
appear before the emperor (Valentinian) at Milan and there 
maintain his charges, Hilary had the mortification of hearing 
the supposed heretic give satisfactory answers to ail the questions 
proposed; nor did his (doubtless sincere) denunciation of the 
metropolitan as a hypocrite save himself from an ignominious 
expulsion from Milan. In 305 he published the Contra Arianos 
pel Auxentium iiediohnetuern liber, in connexion with the 
controversy; and also (but perhaps at a somewhat earlier date) 
the Contra Constant ium Augustvm liber, in which he pronounced 
that lately deceased emperor to have been Antichrist, a rebel 
against God, " a tyrant whose sole object had been to make 
a gift to the devil of that world for which Christ had suffered." 
Hilary is sometimes regarded as the first Latin Christian hymn- 
writer, but none of the compositions assigned to him is indis- 
putable. The later years of his life were spent in comparative 
quiet, devoted in part to the preparation of his expositions of 
the Psalms (Trattatus super Psalmo*) t for which he was largely 
indebted to Origen; of his Commeniarius in Evongeliun Mat- 
Ikoei, a work on allegorical lines of no exegetical value; and of 
his no longer extant translation of Origen 's commentary on Job. 
While he thus closely followed the two great Alexandrians, 
Origen and Athanasius, in exegesis and Christology respectively, 
bis work shows many traces of vigorous independent thought. 
He died in 367; no 1 more exact date is trustworthy. He holds 
the highest rank among the Latin writers of his century. Desig- 
nated already by Augustine as " the illustrious doctor of the 
churches," he by his works exerted an increasing influence In 
later centuries; and by Phis IX. he was formally recognized 
as "universae ecdesiae doctor" at the synod of. Bordeaux 
In 185 1. Hilary's day in the Roman calendar is the 13th of 
January.* 

1 Hilary's own title was De fide contra \ 
less with the doctrine of the Trinity than wii 

That it is not an easy work to read b du f 
the subject, partly to the fact that it was \a 

■ " Hilary " was the name of one of the 1 
legal year. These terms were abolished 

IS73. s- 26. and " sittings " substituted. 1 r 

anting of the Supreme Court of Judical t > 

She itth of Jamsary a«d terminates 'to 1 



459 

• 1526k 1538); P. Constant 
fro/. Lot. be. , x.). The Tractatus 
>mc, 188?), and the Tructqtifs 
Vienna Corpus strip, eed. Lit. 
1 in Ween* and rott* Nicene 

us) Fortunatus c. 550 is almost 
e notices in Jerome (be vtr. 
li* 39-45) and in Hilary's own 
Posters (1864); O. Harden* 
gf Dogma, esp. vol iv.; F. 



HILARIUS, 01 Hbakus (Huaby), bishop of Rome from 
461 to 468, is known to nave been a deacon and to have acted 
as legate of Leo the Great at the H robber " synod of Epbesus 
in 440. There he so vigorously defended the conduct of Flavian 
in deposing Eutyches that he was thrown into prison, whence 
he had great difficulty in making bis escape to Rome. He was 
chosen to succeed Leo on the 19th of November 461. In 46$ 
he held at Rome a council which put a stop to some abuses, 
particularly to that of bishops appointing their own successors. 
His pontificate was also marked by a successful encroachment 
of the papal authority on the metropolitan rights of the Trench 
and Spanish hierarchy, and by a resistance to the toleration 
cdfct of Anthemius, which ultimately caused it to be recalled. 
Hilarius-died on the 17th of November 467, and was succeeded 
by Simplidus. 

HILARIUS <fl. 1125), a Latin poet who is supposed to have 
been an Englishman. He was one of the pupils of Abcmrd at bis 
oratory of Paraclete, and addressed to him a cop/ of verses 
with Its refrain in thd vulgar tongue, *' Tort avers 90s N 'meslre* 
Abelard having threatened to discontinue Ins teaching because 
of certain reports made by his servant about the conduct of the 
scholars* Later Hilarius made his way to Angers. His poems 
are contained in MS.supp.lat. 1008 of theBrbUothequeNatmnale, 
Paris, purchased in 1837 at the sale of M. de Rosny. Quotations 
from this MS. had appeared before, but in 1838 it was edited by 
Champollion Figeac as Hilarii -oersns et Mi. His works consist 
chiefly of light verses of the goliardic type. There are verses 
addressed to an English nun named Eva, lines to Rosa, "Ave 
splendor pueUarnm, getierosa domino," and another poem 
describes the beauties of the priory of Chaloutre la Petite, in the 
diocese of Sens, of which the writer was then as inmate. One 
copy of satirical verses seems to aim at the pope himself. He 
also wrote three miracle plays in rhymed Latin with an ad- 
mixture of French. Two of them , SuseUatlo Latari and ti istoria 
de Daniel repraesentanda t are of purely liturgical type. At the 
end of Lazarus is a stage direction to the effect that if the per- 
formance has been given at matins, Lazarus should proceed with 
tbe Te Dcum, if at vespers, with the Magnificat. The third, 
Ludus super iconia Sancti Nicholai, is founded on a sufficiently 
foolish legend. Petit de Jullevilk sees in the play a satiric 
in 
th 

at 
is 

a 

CI 
Sc 

pi, 

oh 

(Jl . . . - . 

HILARIUS (Hxlaky), ST (c. 403-449). bishop of Aries, was 
born about 403. In early youth he entered the abbey of Le'rins, 
then presided over by his kinsman Honotatus (St Honor*), and 
succeeded Honoratus in the bishopric of Aries in 439. Following 
the example of St Augustine, he is said to have organised his 
cathedral clergy into a " congregation/' devoting a great part of 
their time to social exercises of ascetic religion. He held the 
rank of metropolitan of Vienne and Narbonne, and attempted 
to realize the sort of primacy over the church of .south CauJ 



Easter. In the Ions of Court, Hilary is ooe of the four wrane 
terms; it begins on the 1 ith of January and ends on the 1st of 
February. It is also the name of one of the terms at the universities 
of Oxford (more usually " Lent term '*) and DuWuw f 



4$P 



HILDA, ST— HlLDfiBRAND, ITAY &F 



which seemed implied in the vicariate, granted to his predecessor 
Patroclus (417). HUarius deposed the bishop of Besangoo 
(Chelidonus), for ignoring this primacy, and for claiming a 
metropolitan dignity for Besancon. An appeal was made to 
Rome, and Leo I. used it to extinguish the Gallican vicariate 
(a.d. 444). Hilarius was deprived of his rights as metropolitan 
to consecrate bishops, call synods, or exercise ecclesiastical over- 
flight in the province, and the pope secured the edict of Valen- 
tinian III., so important in the history of. the Gallican church, 
" ut episcopis Gallicanis omnibusque pro lege esset quidquid 
apostolicae sedis auctoritas sanxiiset." The papal claims were 
made imperial law, and violation of them subject to legal 
penalties (Nevtllae Valent. iii. tit. 16). Hilarius died in 440, and 
his name was afterwards introduced into the Roman martyro- 
logy for commemoration on the 5th of May. He enjoyed during 
his lifetime a high reputation for learning and eloquence as well 
as for piety; his extant works (Vita S. H oner at i Arelatensis 
episccpi and Mctrum in Genesin) compare favourably with any 
similar literary productions of that period. 

A poem* Qe procidentia, usually included among the writings of 
Prosper, is sometimes attributed to Hilary of Aries. 

HILDA, ST, strictly Hud (614-680), was the daughter of 
Hemic, a nephew of Edwin, king of Northumbria. She was 
converted to Christianity before 653 by the preaching of Paulinus. 
According to Bede she took the veil in 614, when Oswio was king 
of Northumbria and Aidan bishop of Lindisfame, and spent a 
year in East Anglia, where her sister Hereswith had married 
iEthelhere, who was to succeed his brother Anna, the reigning 
king. In 648 or 649 Hilda was recalled to Northumbria by 
Aidan, and lived for a year in a small monastic community north 
of the Wear. She then succeeded Heiu, the foundress, as abbess 
pi Hartlepool, where she remained several years. From Hartle- 
pool Hilda moved to Whitby, where in 657 she founded the 
famous double monastery which in the time of the first abbess 
included among its members five future bishops, Bosa, j£tta, 
Oftfor, John and Wilfrid II. as well as the poet Casdmon. Hilda 
exercised great influence in Northumbria, and ecclesiastics from 
all over Christian England and from Strathclyde an4 Dalriada 
visited her monastery. In 655 after the battle of Winward 
Oswio entrusted his daughter .Allied to Hilda, with whom she 
went to Whitby. At the synod of Whitby in 664 Hilda sided 
with Colman and Cedd against Wilfrid. In spite of the defeat of 
the Celtic party she remained hostile to Wilfrid until 679 at any 
rate. Hilda died in 680 after a painful illness lasting for seven 
years. 

See Bedc, Hist. eccl. (cd. C. Plummer, Oxford, 1869), iii. 24, 25, 
iv. 23; Eddius, Vita Wilfridi (Rainc, Historians of Church of York, 
Rolls Series, vol. i., 1879), c liv. 

HILDBtJROHAUSEH, a town of Germany, in the duchy of 
Saxe-Meiningcn, situated m a wide and fruitful valley on the 
river Wcrra, 19 m. S.E. of Meiningcn, on the railway Eiscnach- 
Lichtenfels. Pop. (1005) 7456. The principal buildings are a 
ducal palace, erected 1685-1695, now used as barracks, with a 
park in which there is a monument to Queen Louisa of Prussia, 
the old town hall, two Evangelical and a Roman Catholic church 
and a theatre. A technical college occupies the premises in 
which Meyer's Bibliographisches Institut carried on business 
from 1828, when it removed hither from Gotha, until 1874, when 
it was transferred to Leipzig. A monument has been erected to 
those citizens who died in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870-71. 
The manufactures include linen fabrics, doth, toys, buttons, 
optical instruments, agricultural machines, knives, .mineral 
waters, condensed soups and condensed milk. Hildburghausen 
(in records HUpcrshusia and Villa HUptrti) belonged in the 13th 
century to the counts of Hennebcrg, from whom it passed to the 
landgraves of Thuringia and then to the dukes of Saxony. In 
4683 it became the capital of a principality which in 1826 was 
united to Saxe-Meiningen. 

See R. A. Human, Ckronik der Stadt Hildburghausen (Hildburg- 
hausen, 1888). 

HILDEBERT, Hydalbert, Gildebert or Aldebert (c. 
1055-1133), French writer and ecclesiastic, was born of poor 
parents at Lavardin, near Vendome, and was intended for- the 



diurch. He was probably a pupil of Berengarius of Tours, and 
became master (sekoiasfkus) of the school at Le Mans; in 1091 
he was made archdeacon and in 1096 bishop of Le Mans. He 
had to face the hostility of a section of his clergy and abo of the 
English king, William II., who captured Le Mans and carried the 
bishop with him to England for about a year. Hildebert then 
travelled to Rome and sought permission to resign his bishopric, 
which Pope Paschal II. refused. In 1 1 1 6 his diocese was throws 
into great confusion owing to the preaching of Henry of 
Lausanne, who was denouncing the higher clergy, especially the 
bishop. Hildebert compelled him to leave the neighbourhood of 
Le Mans, but the effects of his preaching remained. In 112s 
Hildebert was translated very unwillingly to the archbishopric of 
Tours, and there he came into conflict with the French king 
Louis VI. about the rights of ecclesiastical patronage and with 
the bishop of Dol about the authority of his see in Brittany. He 
presided over the synod of Nantes, and died at Tours probably on 
the 18th of December 1153. Hildebert, who built part of the 
cathedral at Le Mans, has received from some writers the title of 
saint, but there appears to be no authority for this. He was not 
a man of very strict life; his contemporaries, however, bad a 
very high opinion of him and he was called egregius versifUatar. 
The extant writings of Hildebert consist of letters, poems, 
a few sermons, two lives and one or two treatises. An edition 
of his works prepared by the Maurist, Antoine Beaugendre, 
and entitled VtnerabUis Hildcbcrfi, prima Cenomarmensis 
episcopi, deinde Turonensis arckupiscopi, opera tarn edUa quern 
inedita, was published in Paris in 1708 and was reprinted with 
additions by J. J. Bourasse in. 1854. These editions, however, 
are very faulty. They credit Hildebert with numerous writings 
which are the work of others, while some genuine writings are 
omitted. The revelation of this fact has affected Hildeberts 
position in the history of medieval thought. His standing as 
a philosopher rested upon his supposed authorship of the im- 
portant Tradolus theohgicus; but this is now regarded as the 
work of Hugh of St Victor, and consequently Hildebert can 
hardly be counted among the philosophers. His genuine 
writings include many letters. These Epistalat enjoyed great 
popularity in the 12th and 13th centuries, and were frequently 
used as classics in the schools of France and Italy. Those which 
concern the struggle between the emperor Henry V. and Pope 
Paschal II. have been edited by E. Sdckur and printed in the 
Monumenta Germaniae hislerica. LibeUi de lite ii. (1893). His 
poems, which deal with various subjects, are disfigured by many 
defects of style and metre, bat they too were very popular. 
Hildebert attained celebrity also as a preacher both in French 
and Latin, but only a few of hts sermons are in existence, most 
of the 144 attributed to him by his editors being the work of 
Peter Lombard and others. The Vltae written by Hildebert 
are the lives of Hugo, abbot of Cluny, and of St Radegunda. 
Undoubtedly genuine is also his Liber de qucrimonia el conflict* 
carnis el spiritus stu animae. Hildebert was an excellent Latin 
scholar, being' acquainted with Cicero, Ovid and other authors, 
and his spirit is rather that of a pagan than of a Christian writer. 

See B. Haureau, L ' bert de Lavardin 

(Paris, 1882), and N<* tuscrils latins de 

la Bibliothcqu* nation fce P. de Deser* 

viilcrs, Un Eveque au 1 ps (Paris. 1 8 76); 

E. A. Freeman, The R 1882) ; tome xl 

of the Histoire littirai jer in Band via. 

of Herzog-Hauck's R most important 

work, however, to fc 6's Hildebert de 

Lasardin w hique du I >a via, see lettns 
(Paris, 1898J. 

HILDEBRAND, LAY OF (Das Hildebrondslied), a unique 
example of Old German alliterative poetry, written about the 
year 800 on the first and last pages of a theological manuscript, 
by two monks of the monastery of Fulda. The fragment, OJ 
rather fragments, only extend to sixty-eight lines, and the 
conclusion of the poem is wanting. The theory propounded by 
Karl Lachmann, that the poem had been written in its present 
form from memory, has been discredited, by later philological 
investigation; it, is clearly a iranscript of an older original, 



HILDEBHANDT^i^HILBEJGARD, ST 



461 



which the cbpyista-4-or moreprowably the Writer to whom we 
«we the older version-- imperfectly understood. The language 
of the poem snows a curious mixture of Low and High German 
forms; as the High German dement* point to the dialect of 
FukU, the inference ft that the copyists were reproducing an 
originally Low German say in the form in which it was sung in 
Franconia. 

The fragment is mainly taken up- with a dialogue between 
Hildebrand and his son Hadubrand. When Hildebrand followed , 
his master, Theodoric the Great, who was fleeing eastwards 
before Odoacer, he left his young wife and an infant child behind 
him. At his return to his old home, after thirty years' absence 
among the Huns, he is met by a young warrior and challenged 
to single combat. Before the fight begins, Hildebrand asks 
fbrthe name of iris opponent, and discovering bis own son In him, 
tries to avert the fight, but in vain; Hadubrand only regards 
the old man's words as the excuse of cowardice. " In sharp 
showers the ashen spears fall on the shields, and then the warriors 
stfee their swords and hew vigorously at the white shields until 
these are beaten to pieces. . . . " With these words the frag- 
ment breaks off abruptly, giving no due as to the issue of the 
combat. There is little doubt, however, that, as in the Old 
Norse Asmmndar saga, where the tale is alluded to, the fight 
most have been fatal to Hadubrand. But in the later traditions, 
both of the Old Norse Tkidreks saga (13th Century), and the 
so-called Jiingcrc Hildebranasiicd~-a. German popular lay, 
preserved in several versions from the 15th to the 17th century— 
Hadubrand is simply represented as defeated, and obliged to 
recognise his father. The Old High German Htiiebrandslied 
is dramatically conceived, and written in a terse, vigorous 
style; it is the only remnant that has come down from early 
Germanic times of an undoubtedly extensive ballad literature, 
dealing with the national sagas. 

re- 
ihe 
W. 
bis 
hrs 
ed 

& 

he 
ive 
*e 
7>- 



HILDBBRANDT, BDUARD (1818-1868), German painter, 
was born in 1818, and served as apprentice to his father, a 
house-painter at Danzig. He was not twenty when he came 
to Bertiff, where he was taken in hand by Wilhclrn Krause, a 
painter of sea pieces. Several early pieces exhibited after Ins 
death — a breakwater, dated 1838, ships- in a breeze off Swine- 
mUnde (2840), and other canvases of 'this and the following, 
year— show Hifidebrandt to have been a careful' student of nature, 
with inborn talents kept down by the conventionalisms of the 
formal school to which Krause belonged. Accident made him 
acquainted with, masterpieces ot French art displayed at the 
Berlin Academy, and these awakened his curiosity mud envy. 
He went to Paris, where, about. 1842, he entered the atelier of 
Tsabey and became the companion- of Lepoittevin. In a short 
time be sent home pictures which might have been taken for 
copies from these artists., Gradually he mastered the mysteries 
of touch and the secrets of effect in which the French at this 
period excelled. He also acquired the necessary skill in painting 
figures, and returned to Germany, skilled in the rendering of 
many kinds of landscape forms. His pictures of French street 
Hre, done abouti 1843; while impressed with the stamp of the 



Paris school, reveal a spirit eager for novelty, quick at grasping 
equally quick at rendering, momentary changes of tone and 
atmosphere. After 1843 Hildebrandt, under the influence of 
Humboldt, extended his travels, and in 1864- 1865 he went round 
the world. Whilst his experience became enlarged his powers 
of concentration broke down. He lost the taste for detail in 
seeking for scenic breadth, and a fatal faculty of tend diminished 
the value of his works for all those who look for composition 
and harmony of hue as necessary concomitants of tone and 
touch. In oil he gradually produced less, in water colours 
more, than at first, and his fame must rest on the sketches 
which he made in the latter form, many of them represented by 
chromo-lithography. Fantasies in red, yellow and opal, sunset, 
sunrise and moonshine, distances of hundreds of miles like those 
of the Andes and the Himalaya, narrow streets in the bazaars 
of Cairo or Suez, panoramas as seen from mastheads, wide 
cities like Bombay or Pckin, narrow strips of desert with measure* 
less expanses of sky— all aKke display his quality of bravura. 
Hildebrandt died at Berlin on the 25th of October 1868. 

HILDBBRANDT, THBODOR (1 804-1 $74), German painter, 
was born at Stettin. He was a disciple of the painter Schadow, 
and, on SchadowV appointment to the presidency of a new 
academy in the Rhenish provinces in 18*8, followed that master 
to Dussoldorf. Hildebrandt began by painting pictures illustra- 
tive of Goethe and Shakespeare; but in this form he followed 
the traditions of the stage rather than the taws of nature. He 
produced rapidly " Faust and Mephistophelej " (1824), " Faust 
and Margaret " (1825), and " Lear and Cordelia " (1828). He 
visited the Netherlands with, Schadow in 1829, and wandered 
alone in 1830 to Italy, but travel did not alter his style, though 
it led him to cultivate alternately eclecticism and realism 
At Dusseldorf, about 1830, he produced " Romeo and Juliet," 
"Tancred and < Glorinda," and other works which deserved 
to be classed with earlier paintings; but during the same period 
ne exhibited <r8ao) the " Robber" and (1832) the a Captain 
and bis Infant Son," examples of an affected but kindly realism 
which captivated the public, and marked to a certain extent 
an epoch in Prussian art. The picture which made Hildebrandt'! 
fame is the " Murder of the' Children of King Edward " (183d), 
of which the original, afterwards frequently copied, still belongs 
to the Spiegel collection at Halberstadt. Comparatively late 
in lire' Hildebxandt tried fats powers as an historical painter in 
pictures representing Wolsey and Henry VIIL, but he lapsed 
again into the romantic in 4< Othello and Desdemona." After 
1847 Hildebrandt gave himself up to portrait-painting, and in 
that branch succeeded in obtaining a large practice. He died 
at Dttsseldorf in 1874. 

HILDEGARD, ST (1008-1170), German abbess and mystic, 
was born of noble parents at Bockclheim, in the countship of 
Spoaheim, in 1098, and from her eighth year was educated at 
the Benedictine cloister of Dhribodenberg by Jutta, sister of 
the count of Spoaheim, whom she succeeded as abbess in 1136. 
From earliest childhood she was accustomed to see visions, 
which increased in frequency and vividness as she approached 
the age of womanhood;- these, however, she for many years 
kept almost secret, nor was it until she had reached her forty- 
third year (1141) that she felt constrained to divulge them. 
Committed to writing by her intimate friendthemonk Godef ridut, 
they now form the first and most important of her printed 
works, entitled Sckrias (probably an abbreviation lor " sciens 
vias" or tnosce vias Domini 1 ') s, vistontm d mdatiomm 
Ubri iii. y and completed in 1x51. In 1147 St Bernard of 
Clairvaux, while at Brazen preaching the new crusade, heard 
of Hildegard's revelations, and became so convinced of their 
reality that he not only wrote to her a letter cordially acknow- 
ledging her as a prophetessof God, but also successfully advocated 
-her recognition as such by his friend and former pupil Pope 
Eagenius III. in the synod of Trivet (1x48)- In the name 
year Hildegard migrated along with eighteen of tier nuns to 
a- new convent on .the Rupertsberg near Bingen, over which 
-she p res ided during the remainder of her life. By means of 
voluminous correspondence, as well as by extensive; journeys. 



*6s 



HILDEN— HILDESHEIM 



in ih« course of which she tos unwearied in the emote of 

JUer gilt of prophecy, she wielded for many yean an increasing 
influence -upon her contemporaries— an influence doubtless 
due to the fact that she was imbued with the most widely 
diffused feelings and beliefs, fears and hopes, of her tinse. 
Amongst her correspondents were Popes Anastasius IV. and 
Adrian IV„ the emperors Conrad III. and Frederick I., and 
also the theologian Guibert of Gembloux, who submitted 
numerous questions in dogmatic theology for her determination. 
She died in 1179, but has never been canonized; her name, 
however, was received into the Roman martyrology in the 
j 5th century, September 17th being the day fixed for her 
commemoration. 

Her biography, which was written by two contemporaries, Godc- 
fridus and Theodoricus, was first printed at Cologne in 1566. 
Hildegard's writings, besides the Schias already mentioned and 
first printed in Paris in 1513. include the Liber divinomm oporum, 
Exptonati* reruhe S. Benedict*, Physic* and the Letters, &c., are 
contained in Migne, Pair. Lot. t. exevii., and in Cardinal Pitra's 
Analecla sacra spicUeifO Solesmensi parata; Nova S. Hildtgardis 
opera (Paris. 1882). 

For a modern study of the saint's writings, see Sainte ffitiegarde 
by Pal Franche. " Les Sainis " series (Pari* 1905); and U. Chevalier, 
fUpertoirt des sources kistoriques, bio^bM, 2153* 

HILDEN, a town in the Prussian Rhine province on the 
liter, 9 m. S.E. of Dusseldorf by rail Pop. (1005) 13,046. 
It possesses an Evangelical and a Roman Catholic church and a 
monument to the emperor William I. Its manufactures include 
silks, velvets, carpets, calico-printing, machinery and brick- 
making. 

HihDESHEW, a town and episcopal see of Germany, in 
the Prussian province of Hanover, beautifully situated at 
the north foot of the Harz Mountains, on the right bank of 
the Innerste, 18 m. S.E. of Hanover by railway, and 00 the 
main line from Berlin, via Magdeburg to Cologne. Pop. (1885) 
.20,386, (1005) 47,060. The town consists of an old and a new 
part, and is surrounded by ramparts which have been converted 
into promenades. Its streets are for the most part narrow 
and irregular, and contain- many old bouses with overhanging 
Upper storeys and richly and curiously adorned wooden facades. 
Its religious edifices are five Roman Catholic and fdur Evangelical 
churches and a synagogue. The most interesting is the Roman 
Catholic cathedral, which dates from the middle of the nth 
century and occupies the site of a building founded by the 
emperor Louis the Pious early in the 9th century* It is famous 
for its antiquities and works of art! These include the bronze 
doors executed by Bishop Bernward, with reliefs from the 
history of Adam and of Jesus Christ; a brazen font of the 
13th century; two large candelabra of the nth century; the 
sarcophagus of St Godehard; and the tomb of St Epiphanius. 
In the cathedral also there is a bronze column 15 ft. high, 
adorned with reliefs from the life of Christ and dating from 102a, 
arid another column, at one time thought to be an Irminsaule 
erected in honour of the Saxon idol Irmin, but 'now regarded 
as belonging to a Roman aqueduct. On the wall of the Roman- 
esque crypt, which was restored in 1896, is a rose-bush, 
alleged to be a thousand years old; this sends its branches to 
a height of 14 ft. and a breadth of 30 ft., and they are trained 
to interlace one of the windows. Before the cathedral is the 
pretty cloister garth, with the chapel of St Anne, erected in 
1321 and restored in 1888. The Romanesque church of St 
Godehard was built in the 12th century and restored in the 
19th. The church of St Michael, founded by Bishop Bernward 
carry in the nth century and restored after injury by fire in 
ix86y contains a unique painted ceiling of the ssth century, 
the* sarcophagus and monument of Bishop Bernward, end a 
bronze font; it is now a Protestant parish church, but the 
crypt is used by the Roman Catholics. The church of the 
afagdalene possesses two candelabra, a gold cross, and various 
other works in metal by Bishop Bernward; and the Lutheran 
church of St Andrew has a choir dating from 13B9 and a tower 
385 ft. high. In the suburb of Moritzberg there is an abbey 
church founded in 1040, the only pure columnar basilica in 
north Germany. 



The chief secular buildings are the town-hall (Ralhass), 
which dates from the 15th century and was restored m 1883* 
180a, adorned with frescoes illustrating the history of the city; 
the Tempelherrenhaus, in Late Gothic erroneously said to have 
been built by the Knights Templars; the Knocheuhauetmmtbsxa, 
formerly the gild-house of the butchers, which was restored 
after being damaged by fire in 1884, and is probably the finest 
specimen of a wooden building in Germany; the Michsdts 
monastery, used Ms a lunatic asylum; and the old f^Hnttt 
monastery. The Romer museum of antiquities and aatmsi 
history is housed in the former church of St Martin; the buildings 
of Trinity hospital, partly dating from the 14th century, are 
now a factory; and the Wedekindhaus (1598) b now a savings- 
bank. The educational establishments include a Remit 
Catholic and a Lutheran gymnasium, a Roman Catholic school 
and college and two technical institutions, the Georgstift for 
daughters of stoteseivanu and a conservatoire of music. HiUes- 
hcim is the seat of considerable industry. Its chief production 
are sugar, tobacco and cigars, stoves, machines, vehicles, 
agricultural implements and bricks. Other trades are hrevisf 
and tanning. It is connected with Hanover by an electric tra* 
line, 19 m. in length. 

Hildesheim owes its rise and prosperity to the fact that is 
812 it was made the seat of the bishopric which Charienugoe 
had founded at Else a few years before. Its importance was 
greatly increased by St Bernward, who was bishop from 993 
to 1022 and walled the town. By his example and patronage 
the art of working in metals was greatly stimulated. In the 
13th century Hildesheim became a free city of the Eamuc; 
in 1249 it received municipal rights and about the same tine 
it joined the Hanseatic league. Several of its bishops belonged 
to one or other of the great families of Germany; and gradaall/ 
they became practically independent. The citizens were fre- 
quently quarrelling with the bishops, who also carried on wan 
with neighbouring princes, especially with the bouse of Brtns- 
wick-LUneburg, under whose protection Hildesheim placed 
itself several times. The most celebrated of these struggles 
is the one known as the HUdcskeimer Sti/ls/ckde, which broke out 
early m the 16th century when John, duke of Saxe-Lauenbuig, 
was bishop. At first the bishop and his allies were successful, 
but in 1 52 1 the king of Denmark and the duke of Brunssick 
overran his lands and in 1523 he made peace, surrendering 
nearly all his possessions. Much, however, was restored whet 
Ferdinand, prince of Bavaria, was bishop (1612-1650), as this 
warlike prelate took advantage of the disturbances caused by 
the Thirty Years' War to seize the lost lands, and at the begin- 
ning of the 19th century the extent of the prince bishopric was 
682 sq. m. In 1801 the bishopric was secularized and in i8oj 
was granted to Prussia; in 1807 it was incorporated with the 
kingdom of Westphalia and in 1813 was transferred to Hanover. 
In 1866, along with Hanover, it was annexed by Prussia. Is 
1803 a new bishopric of Hildesheim, a spiritual organization only, 
was established, and this has jurisdiction over all the Romu 
Catholic churches in the centre of north Germany. 

In October 1868 a unique collection of ancient Augustas 
silver plate was discovered on the Galgenberg near Hildesbeisi 
by some soldiers who were throwing up earthworks. This 
Hildeskeimar Silberfttnd excited great interest among ckssicsi 
archaeologists. Some authorities think that it b the actasl 
plate which belonged to Dmsus himself. The most noteworthy 
pieces are a crater richly ornamented with arabesques and 
figures of children, a platter with a representation of Minerva, 
another with one of the boy Hercules and another with one of 



HILPRETH—HILIvA. P. 



4*3 



m 
ten 
to- 



ri* 
nd. 
«r, 
E. 
urn 

ist 



and author, was born at Deerfield, Massachusetts, on the 28th 
of June 1807, the son of Hosea Hildreth (1782-1835), a teacher 
of mathematics and later a Congregational minister. Richard 
graduated at Harvard in 1826, and, after studying law at 
Newburyport, was admitted to the bar at Boston in 183a 
He had already taken to journalism, and in 1832 he became 
joint founder and editor of a daily newspaper, the Boston 
Alias. Having in 1834 gone to the South for the benefit of his 
health, he was led by what he witnessed of the evils of slavery 
(chiefly in Florida) to write the anti-slavery novel The Slave: 
or Memoir of Archy Moore (1836; enlarged edition, 1852, The 
While Slave). In 1837 he wrote for the Adas a series of articles 
vigorously opposing the annexation of Texas. In the same year 
he published Banks, Banking, and Paper Currencies, Avtork which 
helped to promote the growth of the free banking system in 
America. In 1838 he resumed his editorial duties on the Alias, 
but in 1840 removed, on account of his health, to British Guiana, 
where he lived for three years and was editor of two weekly news- 
papers in succession at Georgetown. He published in this year 
(1840) a volume in opposition to slavery, Despotism in America 
(2nd ed., 1854). In 1849 he published the first three volumes of 
kis History of the United States, two more volumes of which were 
published in 1851 and the sixth and last in 1852. The first 
three volumes of this history, his most important work, deal 
with the period 1402-1789, and the second three with the period 
1780-1821. The history is notable for its painstaking accuracy 
and candour, but the later volumes have a strong Federalist 
bias. Hildrelh's Japan as It Was and Is (1855) was at the time 
a valuable digest of the information contained in other works 
on that country (new ed., 1006). He also wrote a campaign 
biography of William Henry Harrison (1839); Theory 0/ Morals 
(1844); and Theory of Politics (1853), as well as Lives of Atrocious 
Judges (1856), compiled from Lord Campbell's two works. In 
1861 he was appointed United States consul at Trieste, but 
ill-heal th compelled him to resign and remove to Florence, 
where he died on the nth of July 1865. 

HILGENFELD, ADOLF BERNHARD CHRISTOPH (18*3- 
1907), German Protestant divine, was bom at Stappenbeck 
near Salzwcdel in Prussian Saxony on the and of June 1823. 
He studied at Berlin and Halle, and in 1890 became professor 
ordinarius of theology at Jena. He belonged to the Tubingen 
school. " Fond of emphasizing Ms independence of Baur, he 
still, in all important points, followed in the footsteps of his 
master; his method, which he is wont to contrast as LUerarkritik 
with Baur's TendenxkrUik, is nevertheless essentially the same 
as Baur's" (Otto Pfleiderer). On the whole, however, he 
modified the positions of the founder of the Tubingen school, 
going beyond him only in his investigations into- the Fourth 
Gospel. In 1858 he became editor of the Zcttschri/I fUr tnsstn- 
Kkaftliche Theologie. He died on the 12th of January 1007. 

His works include: Die elententarischen Recognitions und 
Homilien (1848}; Die Evangelicn und die Brief e des Johannes nach 
ikrem Lehrbegriff (1849); Das Markusevangelium (1850): Die 
Esnugdten nach ihrer Entstehnng und geschichtlichen Bede\ ' 



(1875); Acta Apostolorwn gracce et taline secundum anliquissimos 
testes (1809); the first complete edition of the Shepherd of Hermas 
(1887); IgmM et Petyeorpiepuloiae (190a). 

HILU AARON (1685-1750), English author, was bom in 
London on the 10th of February 1685. He was the son of 
George Hill of Malroesbnry Abbey, Wiltshire, who contrived 
to sell an estate entailed on his tots. la nil fourteenta year be 



left Westminster School to go to Constahimbpfc, where William, 
Lord Paget de Beaudesert (1637*1713), a relative of his mother, 
was ambassador. Paget sent him, under care of a tutor, to travel 
in Palestine and Egypt, and he returned to England in 1703. 
He was estranged from his patron by the " envious fears and 
malice of a certain female," and again went abroad as companion 
to Sir William Went worth. On his return home in 1709 he pub- 
lished A Full and Just Account of the Present State of the Ottoman 
Empire, a production of which he was afterwards much ashamed, 
and he addressed his poem of CamiBus to Charles Mordaunt, 
earl of Peterborough. In the same year he is said to have been 
manager of Drury Lane theatre and in 17 10 of the Haymarket. 
His first play, Elfridz or The Fair Inconstant (afterwards 
revised as Athetwotd), was produced at Drury Lane Ua 1709. 
His connexion with the theatre was of short duration, and the 
rest of his life was spent in ingenious commercial enterprises, 
none of which were successful, and in literary pursuits. He 
formed s company to extract oil from beechmast, another for 
the colonization of the district to be known later as Georgia, 
a third to supply wood for naval construction from Scotland, 
and a fourth for the manufacture of potash. In 1730 be wrote 
The Progress of Wit, being a caveat for the use of an Eminent 
Writer. The " eminent writer " was Pope, who had introduced 
him into The Duneiad as one of the competitors for the prize 
offered by the goddess of Dullness, though the satire was qualified 
by an oblique compliment. A note in the edition of 1729 on 
the obnoxious passage, in which, however, the Original initial 
was replaced by asterisks, gave Hill great offence. He wrote 
to Pope complaining of his treatment, and received a reply 
in which Pope denied responsibility for the notes. Hill appears 
to have been a persistent correspondent, and Inflicted on Pope 
a aeries of letters, which are printed in Elwin & Counhope's 
edition (x. r-78). Hill died on the 8th of February 1750* 
and was buried in Westminster Abbey. The best of his plays 
were Zara (acted 1735) and Metope (1749), both adaptations 
from Voltaire. He also published two scries of periodical 
essays, The Prompter (1735) and, with William Bond, The 
Ptaindealer (1724). He was generous to fellow-men of letters, 
and bis letters to Richard Savage, whom he helped considerably, 
show his character in a very amiable light. 

The Works of the late Aaron Mil, consisting of tetters . * ., original 

poems With an essay on the Art of Acting appeared in I753# 

and his Dramatic Works m 1760. His Poetical Worhs are included 
in Anderson's and other editions of the British "poets. A full account 
of his life is provided by an anonymous writer in Theophilus Cibber*s 
Lifts of the Poets, vol. v. 

HILL, AMBROSE POWELL (1825-1865), American Con- 
federate soldier, was born in Culpeper county, Virginia, on the 
oth of November 1825, and graduated from West Point in 1847, 
being appointed to the xst U.S. artillery. He served in the 
Mexican and Seminole Wars, was promoted first lieutenant in 
September 1851, and in 1855-1860 was employed on the United 
States' coast survey. In March 1861, just before the outbreak 
of the Civil War, he resigned his commission, and when his state 
seceded he was made colonel of a Virginian infantry regiment, 
winning promotion to the rank of brigadier-general on the field 
of Bull Run. In the Peninsular campaign of 1862 he gained 
further promotion, and as a major-general Hill was one of the 
most prominent and successful divisional commanders of Lee's 
army in the Seven Days', Second Bull Run, Antietam and 
Fredericksburg campaigns. His division formed part of " Stone- 
wall "Jackson's corps, and he was severely wounded in the flank 
attack of ChanceDorsville in May 1863. After Jackson's death 
Hill was made a lieutenant-general and placed in command of the 
3rd corps of Lee's army, which he led in the Gettysburg campaign 
of 1863, the autumn campaign of the same year, and the Wilder- 
ness and Petersburg operations of 1864-65. He was killed m 
front of the Petersburg lines* on the 2nd of April 1865; His 1 
reputation as a troop leader In battle was one of the'Mghest 
amongst the generals of both sides, and both Lee and Jacksoni 
when on their death-beds their thoughts wandered in defTHum 
to the battlefield, caHed for " A. P. Hill " to deliver the decisive 
blow. 



464 



/TOLI*. EL H^HILL, J. 



HILL DANTBL HARVIY {*aix-i88o), American Confederate 
soldier, was bora in York district, South Carolina, on the 12th of 
July 1821, and graduated at the United States Military Academy 
in 184s, being appointed to the 1st United States artillery. ' He 
distinguished himself in the Mexican War, being breveted 
captain and major for bravery at Contreras and Churubusco and 
at Chapultepec respectively. In February 1849 he resigned his 
commission and became a professor of mathematics at Washing- 
ton College (now Washington and Lee University), Lexington, 
Virginia. In 1854 he joined the faculty of Davidson College, 
North Carolina, and was in 1859 made superintendent of the 
North Carolina Military Institute of Charlotte. At the outbreak 
of the Civil War, D. H. Hilt was made colonel of a Confederate 
infantry regiment, at the head of which ho won the action of Big 
Bethel, near Fortress Monroe, Va., on the 10th of June 1861. 
Shortly after this he was made a brigadier-general. He took part 
in the York town and Williamsburg operations in the spring of 
1862, and as a major-general led a division with great distinction 
in the battle of Fair Oaks and the Seven Days* He took part in 
the Second Bull Run campaign, in August-September 1862, and in 
the Antietam campaign the stubborn resistance of D. H. Hill's 
division in the passes of South Mountain enabled Lee to con- 
centrate for battle. The division bore a conspicuous part in 
the battles of the Antietam and Fredericksburg. On the reorgan- 
ization of the army of Northern Virginia after Jackson's death, 
D. H. Hill was not appointed to a corps command, but some* 
what later in 1863 ho was sent to the west as a lieutenant-general 
and commanded one of Bragg's corps in the brilliant victory of 
Chickamauga. D. H. Hill surrendered with Gen. J. £. Johnston 
on the 26th of April 1865. In 1866-1869 he edited a magazine. 
The Land we Lave,- at Charlotte, N.C., which dealt with 
social and historical subjects and had a great influence in the 
South. In .1877 he became president of the university of 
Arkansas, a post which he held until 1884, and in 1885 presi- 
dent of the Military and Agricultural College of Milledgeville, 
Georgia. General Hill died a* Charlotte, N.C, on the 24th of 

September 1889. 

HILL, DAVID BENNETT (1843-1910), American politician, 
was born at Havana, New York, on the 29th of August 1843. In 
1862 he removed to Elmira, New York, where in 1864 he was 
admitted to the bar. He at once became active in the affairs of 
the Democratic party, attracting the attention of "Samuel J. 
Tflden, one of whose shrewdest and ablest lieutenants he became. 
In 1871 and 1872 he was a member of the New York State 
Assembly, and in 1877 *nd again in 1881 presided over the 
Democratic State Convention. In 1882 he was elected mayors f 
Elmira, and in the same year was chosen lieutenant-governor of 
the state, having been defeated for nomination as governor by 
Grover Cleveland. In January 1 885, however, Cleveland having 
resigned to become president, Hill became governor, and in 
November was ejected for a three-year term, and subsequently 
re-elected. In 1891-1897 he was a member of the United States 
Senate. During these years, and in 1 892, when he tried to get the 
presidential nomination, he was prominent in working against 
Cleveland. In 1896 he opposed the free silver plank in the 
platform adopted by the Democratic National Convention 
which nominated W. J. Bryan; in the National Convention of 
1900, however, the free-silver issue having been subordinated to 
anti-imperjalism, he seconded Bryan's nomination. After 1897 
be devoted himself to his law practice, and in 1905 retired from 
politics. He died in Albany on the 30th of October 19x0. 

HILL, GEORGE BIRKBECK NORMAN (1835-1903), English 
author, son of Arthur Hill, head master of Bruce Castle school, 
was born at Tottenham) Middlesex, on the 7th of June 1835. 
Arthur Hill, with his brothers Rowland Hill, the postal reformer, 
and Matthew Davenport Hill, afterwards recorder of Birmingham, 
had worked out a system of education which was to exclude com- 
pulsion of any kind. The school at Bruce Castle, of which Arthur 
Hill was head master, was founded to carry into execution their 
theories, known as the Hazel wood system. George Birkbeck 
Hill was educated in his father's school and at Pembroke College, 
Oxford. In 1858 he began to teach at Bruce Castle school, and 



from 1868 to 1877 was head master. In 1869 he became a 
regular contributor to the Saturday Renew, with which he re- 
mained in connexion until 1884. On his retirement from teaching 
he devoted himself to the study of English 18th-century literature, 
and established his reputation as the most learned commentator 
on the works of Samuel Johnson. He settled at Oxford in 18S7, 
but from 1891 onwards his winters were usually spent abroad 
He died at Hampstead, London, on the 27th of February 1903. 
His works include: Dr Johnson, his Friends and his Critics 
(1878); an edition of Boswell's Correspondence (1879); * 
laborious edition of BoswcB*s Lift of Johnson, including BosweWt 
Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides, and Johnson's Diary of a 
Journey into North Wales (Clarendon Press, 6 vols., 1887) ; Wit and 
Wisdom of Samuel Johnson (1888); Select Essays of Dr Johnson 
(1889); Footsteps of Dr Johnson in Scotland (1890); Letters sf 
Johnson (1892); Johnsonian Miscellanies' (a vols., 1897); an 
edition (tycoj of Edward Gibbon's Autobiography; Johnson's 
Lives of the Poets (3 vols., 1905), and other works on the 18th- 
century topics. Dr Birkbeck Hill's elaborate edition of BosweS's 
Life is a monumental work, invaluable to the student. 

See a memoir by his nephew, Harold Spencer Scott, in the edition 
of the Lives of the English Poets (1905), and the Letters edited by his 
daughter, Lucy Crump, in 1903. 

HILL, JAMES J. (1838- ), American railway capitalist, 
was born near Guetph, Ontario, Canada, on the 1 6th of September 
1838, and was educated at Rockwood (Orit.) Academy, a Quaker 
institution. In r8s6 he settled in St Paul, Minnesota. Abandon- 
ing, because of his father's death, his plans to study medicine, 
he became a clerk in the office of a firm of river steamboat 
agents and shippers, and later the agent for a line of river 
packets; he established about 1870 transportation lines on 
the Mississippi and on the Red River (of the North). He effected 
a traffic arrangement between the St Paul Pacific Railroad 
and his steamboat lines; and when the railway failed in 1873 
for $27,000,000, Hifl interested Sir Donald A. Smith (Lord 
Strathcona), George Stephen (Lord Mount Stephen), and 
other Canadian capitalists, in the road and in the wheat country 
of the Red River Valley;- he got control of the bonds (1878), 
foreclosed the mortgage, reorganized the road as the St Paul, 
Minneapolis & Manitoba, and began to extend the line, 
then only 380 m. long, toward the Pacific; and in 1883 he 
became its president. He was president of the Great Northern 
Railway (comprehending all his secondary lines) from 1803 
to April 1907, when he became chairman of its board of directors. 
In the extension (1883-1893) of this railway westward to Paget 
Sound (whence it has direct steamship connexions with China 
and Japan), the line was built by the company itself, none of 
the work being handled by contractors. Subsequently las 
financial interests in American railways caused constant sensa- 
tions in the stock-markets. The Hill interests obtained control 
not only of the Great -Northern system, but of the Northern 
Pacific and the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy, and proposed 
the construction of another northern line to the Pacific coast 
Hill was the president of the Northern Securities Company, whin 
in 1004 was declared by the United States Supreme Court to be 
in conflict with the Sherman Anti-Trust Law. (See Vol. 27, p. 733.) 
Among Hill's gifts to public institutions was one of $500/300 to 
the St Paul Theological Seminary (Roman Catholic). 

HILL, JOHN (c. 1716-1775), called from his Swedish honours.' 
"Sir" John Hill, English author, son of the Rev. Theo- 
philus Hill, is said to have been born in Peterborough in 1716, 
He was apprenticed to an apothecary and on the completion 
of fas apprenticeship he set up in a small shop in St Martin's 
Lane, Westminster. He also travelled over the country in 
search of rare herbs, with a view to publishing a hortus siccus, 
but the plan failed. His first publication was a translation 
of Theopbrastus's History of Stones (1746). From this time 
forward he was an indefatigable writer. He edited the British 
Magptim (1746-1730). and for two years ( 1 75 t-*7$$) Jie wrote 
a daily letter, " The Inspector," for the London Advertiser end 
. Literary Gauette. He also produced novels, plays and scientific 
works, and was a Urge contributor to tbesupplesnent of Ephratm 



HILL, M. D.— HILL, SIR R. 



+*5 



Chambers* Cyclopaedia. Hb personal and scurrilous writings 
Involved him in many quarrels. Henry Fielding attacked 
Aim in the Coveut Garden Journal, Christopher Smart wrote 
a mock-epic, TkcHiiliod, against him, and David Garrick replied 
to his strictures against him by two epigrams, one of which 
tuns:— 

" For physics and farces, his equal there scarce is; 
His farces are physic, his physic a farce is." 
He had other, literary passages-*t-anns with John Rich, who 
accused him of plagiarising his Orpheus, also with Samuel 
Foote and Henry Woodward. From 1759 to 177$ he was 
engaged on a huge botanical work — The Vegetable System 
(ao vols, fol.) — adorned by 1600 copperplate engravings* Hill's 
botanical labours were underaken at the request of his patron, 
Lord Bute, and he was rewarded by the order of Vasa from 
the king of Sweden in 1774. He had a medical degree from 
Edinburgh, and he now practised as a quack doctor, making 
considerable sums by the preparation of vegetable medicines. He 
died in London on the jist of November 1775. 

Of the seventy-six separate works with which he is credited in the 
Dictionary of National Biography, the most valuable are these that 
deal with botany. He is said to have been the author of the second 
part of The Oeconomy of Human Life (1751), the first part of which is 
by Lord Chesterfield, and Hannah Glasse s famous manual of cookery 
was generally ascribed to him (see BoawettV «d. Hill, Hi, 385). Dr 
Johnson said of him that he was " an ingenious man, but had no 
veracity." 

See a Short Account of the Life, Writings and Character of (he late 
Sir John Hill' (1779). which is chiefly occupied with a descriptive 
catalogue of his works; also Temple Bar (1872, xxxv. 161-266). 

HILL, MATTHEW DAVENPORT (1702-1872), English lawyer 
and penologist, was born on the 6th of August 179a, at Birming- 
ham, where his father, T. W. Hill, for long conducted a private 
school He was a brother of Sir Rowland HilL He early acted 
as assistant in his father's school, but in 1819 was called to 
the bar at Lincoln's Inn. He went the midland circuit. In 
1832 he was elected one of the liberal members for Kingston- 
upon-Huu, but he lost his, seat at the next election m 1834. 
On the incorporation of Birmingham in 1839 he was chosen 
recorder; and in 1851 he was appointed cornmissioswr in 
bankruptcy for the Bristol district. Having had has interest 
excited in questions relating to the treatment of criminal offenders, 
he ventilated in his charges to the grand juries, as wd as in 
special pamphlets, opinions which were the jneans of introducing 
many important reforms in the methods of dealing with crime. 
One of his principal coadjutors in these reforms was his brother 
Frederick Hill (1 803-1 806), whose Amount, Causes and Remedies 
$f Crime, the result of his experience as inspector of prisons 
for Scotland, marked an era in the methods of prison discipline. 
Hill was one of the chief promoters of the Society for the Diffusion 
of Useful Knowledge, and the originator of the Penny Magazine. 
He died at Stapleton, near Bristol, on the 7th of June 187s. 

His principal works are Practical Suggestions to the Pounders of 
Reformatory Schools (1855); Suggestions for the Repression of Crime 
(1857), consisting of charges addressed to the grand juries of 
Birmingham; Meltray (1855): Papers on the Penal Servitude Acts 
(1864); Journal of a Third Visit to the Convict Cools, Refuges and 
Reformatories of Dublin (1865) ; A ddresses delivered at the Birmingham 
and Midland Institute (1867). See Memoir of Matthew Davenport 
Hill, by hiadaughtexs Rosamond and Florence Davenport Hill. (1878). 

' HILL, OCTAVIA (1838- > and MIRANDA (1836-1910), 
English philanthropic workers, were born in London, being 
daughters of Mr. James Hill and granddaughters of Dr South' 
wood Smith, the pioneer of sanitary reform. Miss Octavia Hill's 
attention was early drawn to the evils of London housing, 
and the habits of indolence and lethargy induced in many 
of the lower classes by their degrading surroundings. She 
conceived the idea of trying to free a few poor people from 
such influences, and Mr. Ruskin, who sympathized with her 
plans, supplied' the money for starting the work. For £750 
Miss JflH purchased the 56 years' lease of three bouses in one 
of the poorest courts of Marylebone. Another £78 was spent in 
building a large room at the back of her own house where she 
could meet the tenants. The houses were put in repair, and 
let out in seta of two rooms. At the end of eighteen months 



it was possible to pay 5% interest, to repay £48 of the 
capital, as well as meet all expenses for taxes, ground rent 
and insurance. What specially distinguished this scheme was 
that Miss Hill herself collected the rents, thus coming into 
contact with the tenants and helping to enforce regular and 
self-respecting habits. The success of her first attempt encour- 
aged her to continue. Six more houses were bought and treated 
in a similar maimer. A yearly sum was set aside for the repairs 
of each house, and whatever remained over was spent on such 
additional appliances as the tenants themselves desired. This 
encouraged them to keep their tenements in good repair. By 
the help of friends Miss Hill was now enabled to enlarge the 
scope of her work. In 1869 eleven more houses were bought. 
The plan was to set a visitor over a small court or block of 
buildings to do whatever work in the way of rent-collecting, 
visiting for the School Board, &c, was required. As years 
went on Miss Octavia Hill's work was largely Increased. Numbers 
of her friends bought and placed under her care small groups 
of houses, over which she fulfilled the duties of a conscientious 
landlord. Several large owners of tenement houses, notably 
the Ecclesiastical Commissioners, entrusted to her the manage- 
ment of such property, and consulted her about plans of re- 
building; and a number of fetlow-workers were trained by 
her in the management of houses for the poor. The* results 
in Soutbwark (where Red Cross Hall was established) and 
elsewhere were very beneficial. Both Miss Miranda and Miss 
Octavia Hill took an interest in the movement for bringing 
beauty into the homes of the poor, and the former was practically 
the founder of the Kyrle Society, the first suggestion of which 
was contained in a paper read to a small circle of friends. Both 
sisters worked for the preservation of open spaces, and helped 
to promote the work of the Charity Organisation Society, and 
for several years Miss Miranda HOI (who died on the 31st of May 
1910) did admirable work in Marylebone as a member of the 
Board of Guardians. 

HILL, ROWLAND (1744-1833), English preacher, sixth son 
of Sir Rowland Hfll, Bait. (d. 1783), was born at Hawkstone, 
Shropshire, on the 93rd of August 174a. He was educated at 
Shrewsbury, Eton and St John's College, Cambridge. Stimu- 
lated by George Whitefield's example, he scandalized the uni- 
versity authorities and his own friends by preaching and visiting 
the sick before he had taken orders. In 1773 he was appointed 
to the parish of Kingston, Somersetshire, where he toon attracted 
great crowds to his open-air services. Having inherited consider- 
able property, he built' for Us own use Surrey Chapel, in the 
Blackfriars Road, London (i7»3>. Hill conducted his services 
in accordance with the forms of the Church of England, in 
whose communion he always remained. Both at Surrey Chapel 
and in his provincial" gospel tours" he had great success. 
His oratory was specially adapted for rude and uncultivated 
audiences. He possessed a voice of great power, and according 
to Southey "Ms manner " was " that of a performer as great 
in his own Hne as Keaa or Kenble." His earnest and pure 
purposes more than made up for his occasional lapses from good 
taste and the eccentricity of his wit. He helped to found the 
Religious Tract Society, the British and Foreign Bible Society, 
and the London- Missionary Society, and was a stout advocate 
of vaccination. His best-known work is the Village Dialogues, 
which first appeared in i8re> and reached a 34th edition in 
1839. He died on the nth of April 1833. 

See Ufe by E. Sidney (1833); Memoirs, by Wuliam Jones (1834)*; 
and Memorials* by Jan. Sherman (1857). 

HILL, IIR ROWLAND (r79S-i*79)» EngHsh administrator, 
author of the penny postal system, a younger brother of Matthew 
Davenport Hill, and third son of T. W. Hill, who named him after 
Rowland Hill the preacher, was born on the 3rd of December 
T79C at Kidderminster. As a young child he had, on account 
of an affection of the spine, to maintain a recumbent position, 
and his principal method of relieving the frksomeness of hb 
situation was to repeat figures aloud consecutively until he had 
reached very high totals. A similar bent of mind was manifested 
when he entered school in sAoa, his aptitude for mathema ti cs 



466 



HILL, VISCOUNT 



being quite exceptional. But be was Indebted for the direction of 
bis abilities in no small degree to the guidance of his father, 
a man of advanced political and social views, which were qualified 
and balanced by the strong practical tendency of his mind. At 
the age of twelve Rowland began to assist in teaching mathe- 
matics in his father's school at Hilltop, Birmingham, and latterly 
he had the chief management of the school On his suggestion 
the establishment was removed in 1810 to Hazelwood, a more 
commodious building in the Hagley Road, in order to have the 
advantages of a large body of boys, for the purpose of properly 
carrying out an improved system of education. That system, 
which was devised principally by Rowland, was expounded in 
a pamphlet entitled Plans for the Government and Education 
of Boys in Large Numbers, the first edition of which appeared 
in 1822, and a second with additions in 1807. The principal 
feature of the system was " to leave as much as possible all 
power in the hands of the boys themselves *'; and it was so 
successful that, in a circular issued six years after the experiment 
had been in operation, it was announced that " the head master 
had never once exercised his right of veto on their proceedings." 
It may be said that Rowland Hill, as an educationist, is entitled 
to a place side by side with Arnold of Rugby* and was equally 
successful with him in making moral influence of the highest 
kind the predominant power in school discipline. After his 
marriage in 1827 Hill temoved to a new school at Bruce Castle, 
Tottenham, which he conducted until failing health compelled 
him to retire in 1833. About this time he became secretary 
of Gibbon Wakefield's scheme for colonizing South Australia, 
the objects of which he explained in 1832 in a pamphlet on 
Home Colonies, afterwards partly reprinted during the Irish 
famine under the title Home Colonies for Ireland. It was in 183 5 
that his zeal as an administrative reformer was first directed 
to the postal system. The discovery which resulted from these 
investigations is when stated so easy of comprehension that 
there is great danger of losing sight of its originality and thorough- 
ness. A fact which enhances its merit was that be was not & 
post-office official, and possessed no practical experience of the 
details of the old system. After a laborious collection •{statistics 
he succeeded in demonstrating that the principal expense of 
letter carriage was in receiving and distributing, and that the 
cost of conveyance differed so little with the distance that a 
uniform rate of postage was in reality the fairest to all parties 
that could be adopted. Trusting also that the deficiency in 
the postal rate would be made up by the immense increase of 
correspondence, and by the saving which would be obtained 
from prepayment, from improved methods of keeping accounts, 
and from lessening the expense of distribution, he in his famous 
pamphlet published in 1857 recommended that within the 
United Kingdom the rate for letters not exceeding half an ounce 
in weight should be only one penny The employment of postage 
stamps is mentioned only as a suggestion, and in the following 
words: " Perhaps the difficulties might be obviated by using a 
hit of paper just large enough to bear the stamp, and covered 
at the back with a glutinous wash which by applying a little 
moisture might be attached to the back of the tetter. Proposals 
so striking and novel in regard to a subject in which every one 
had a personal interest commanded immediate and general 
attention. So great became the pressure of public opinion 
against the opposition offered to the measure by official pre- 
possessions and prejudices that in 1838 the House of Commons 
appointed a committee to examine the subject. The committee 
having reported favourably, a bill to carry out Hill's recom- 
mendations was brought in by the governments The act received 
the royal assent in 1839, and after an intermediate rate of four- 
pence had been in operation from the 5th of December of that 
year, the penny rate commenced on the 10th of January 1840. 
Hill received an appointment in the Treasury in order to super- 
intend the introduction of his reforms, but he was compelled 
to retire when the Liberal government resigned office in 184s* 
In consideration of the loss he thus sustained ^and to mark the 
public appreciation of his services, he was in 1846 presented 
with the aum of £13*360. On. the Liberals returning to office 



in the same year he was" appointed secretary to the postmaster, 
general and in 1854 he was made chief secretary. His shinty 
as a practical administrator enabled him to supplement ha 
original discovery by measures realizing its benefits in a degree 
commensurate with continually improving facilities of com- 
munication, and in a manner best combining cheapness with 
efficiency. In i860 his services were rewarded with the honour 
of knighthood; and when failing health compelled him to resign 
his office in 1864, he received from parliament a grant of £20,000 
and was also allowed to retain his full salary of £2000 a year 
as retiring pension. In 1864 the university of Oxford conferred 
on him the degree of D.C.L., and on the 6th of June 1870 he was 
presented with the freedom of the dty of London. The pre- 
sentation, on account of his infirm health, took place at hs 
residence at Hampstead, and he died on the 97th of Angut 
following. He was buried in Westminster Abbey. 

He wrote, in conjunction with his brother, Arthur Hill, a History 
of Penny Postage, published in 1880. with an introductory memoir by 
his nephew, G. Burkbeck Hill. See also Sir Rowland Bill, the Story 
of a Great Reform, told by bis daughter (1907). To commemorate 
his memory the Rowland Hill Memorial and Benevolent Fund wtt 
founded shortly after his death for the purpose of relieving distressed 
persons connected with the post office who were outside the scope 
of the Superannuation Act. See also Post and Postal Sesvice. 

HILL, ROWLAND HILL> ist Viscount (1772-1842), British 
general, was the second son of (Sir) John H91, of Hawkstone, 
Shropshire, and nephew of the Rev. Rowland Hill (1744-1833), 
was born at Prees Hall near Hawkstone on the nth of August 
1772. He was gazetted to the 38th regiment in 1700, obtaining 
permission at the same time to study in a military academy it 
Scrassburg, where he continued after removing into the 53rd 
regiment with the rank of lieutenant in 1791. In the beginning 
of 1793 he raised a company, and was promoted to the rank of 
captain. The same year he acted as assistant secretary to the 
British minister at Genoa, and served with distinction as a staff 
officer in the siege of Toulon. HiU took part in many minor 
expeditions in the following years. In 1800, when only twenty- 
eight, ha was made a brevet colonel, and in 1801 he served with 
distinction in Sir Ralph Abercromby's expedition to Egypt, sad 
was Wounded at the battle of Alexandria. He continued to 
command his regiment, the ooth, until 1803, when he became a 
brigadier-general During his regimental command he introduced 
a regimental school and a sergeants' mess. He held various 
commands as brigadier, and after 1805 as major-general, ia 
Ireland. In 1805 he commanded a brigade in the abortive 
Hanover expedition. In 1808 he was appointed to a brigade in 
the forte sent to Portugal, and from Vimeira to Vittorit, to 
advance or retreat, he proved himself Wellington's ablest and 
most indefatigable coadjutor. He led a brigade at Vimeira, 
at Corunna and at Oporto, and a division at Talavera (see 
Peninsula*. War). His capacity for independent command 
was fully demonstrated in the campaigns of 18 10, 18 it and 
1812. In 181 1 he annihilated a French detachment under 
Girard at Arroyo-dos-Molinos, and early in 181*, having now 
attained a rank of lieutenant-general (January 181 2) and become 
a K.B. (March), he carried by assault the important works of 
Almarax on the Tagus. Hill led the right wing of Wellington's 
army in the Salamanca campaign in 1812 and at the battle of 
Vittoria in 18x3. Later in this year he conducted thx investaseot 
of Pampeluna and fought with the greatest distinction at the 
Nivelle and the Ni ve. In the invasion of France in 18 14 his corn 
was victoriously engaged both at Orthez and at Toulouse. HiU 
was one of the general officers rewarded for their services by 
peerages, his title being at first Baron Hill of Ahnaraz and 
Hawkstone, and he received a pension, the thanks of parliament 
and the freedom of the city of London. For about two years 
previous to his elevation to the peerage, he had been hi P. for 
Shrewsbury. In 1815 the news of Napoleon's return from Elba 
was followed by the assembly of an Anglo-Allied army (see 
Waterloo Campaign) m the Netherlands, and HiU was appointed 
to one pf the two corps commands in this army. At Waterloo he 
led the famous charge of Sir Frederick Adams's brigade against 
the Imperial Guardj jmd for some time it was thought that he 



HILL-MILLEL 



467 



* bed faflen in the melee; Heesaped.lHmew, without a wound, 

* and continued with the army hi France until its withdrawal in 
t 1818. Hill lived ~ip retirement for some years at bis estate of 
1 Hardwicke Grange. He carried the royal standaid at the corona- 
( tion of George IV* and became general in 1835, When Wellington 
1 became premier in 1828, he received the appointment of genera! 

commandingrin-chief, and on resigning this office in 1842 he waft 
created a viscount He died on the 10th of December of the 
same year. Lord Hill was, next to Wellington, the most popular 
and able soldier of his time in the British service, a*d wa* so 
math beloved by the troops, especially those under hi* immediate 
command, that he gained from them the-tkle of M the soldier's 
friend." He was a G.C.B. and- G.CE, and held the gaud 
crosses of various foreign orders, amongst them the Russian St 
George and the Austrian Maria Theresa. 

The Lift qf Lard Hill, G.C.B., by Rev, Edwin Sidney, appeared in 
1845- 

HILL (O. Eng. Ay//; cf. Low Ger hull, Mid. Butch hul, allied 
to Lat. eclsus, high, collis, hill, &c), a natural elevation of the 
earth's surface. The term is now usually confined to elevations 
lower than a mountain,- but formerly was used for all such 
elevations, high or low. 

HILLAH, a town of Asiatic Turkey, in the pashallk of Bagdad, 
60 ra. S. of the city of Bagdad, in 32 28' 35* N., 44 4^ 4oT E., 
formerly the capital of a sanjak and the residence of a mutasserif, 
who in 1803 was transferred to Diwanieh. It is situated on both 
banks of the Euphrates, the two parts of the town being con- 
nected by a floating bridge, 450 ft. in length, in the midst of a 
Very fertile district; The estimated population, which includes a 
large number of Jews, varies from 6000 to 1 2,000. The town has 
suffered much from the periodical breaking of the Hindieh dam 
and the consequent deflection of the waters of the Euphrates to 
the westward, as a result of which at times the Euphrates at this 
point has been entirely dry. This deflection of water has also 
seriously interfered , with the palm groves, the cultivation of 
which constitutes a large part of the industry of the surrounding 
country along the river. The, bazaars of Hillah are relatively 
large and well supplied. , Many of the houses in the town are 
built of brick, not a few hearing an inscription of Nebuchadrezzar, 
obtained from the ruins of Babylon, which fie less than an hour 
away to the north. , 

BjbmograpHy.— C. J. Rich, Babylon and Persepotis (1830); J. R. 
Peters, Nippur (1857); H. Rassara, Arthur and Ike Land efNtntrod 
(1897); H. V. Geere. By Nile and Euphrates (1904). 0- fc Pb.) 

HILLARD, GE0R8E STILLMAN <i8o&-i*7o>, American 
lawyer and author, was born at Machias, Maine, on the sind of 
September 1808. After graduating at Harvard College in 1828, 
be taught in the Round Hill School at Northampton, Massa- 
chusetts. He graduated at the Harvard Law School in 1832, and 
in 1833 he was admitted to the bai* in Boston, where he entered 
into partnership wi th Charles Sumner. He was a member of the 
state Hbuse of Representatives In 1836, of the stale Senate fn 
1850, and of the state constitutional convection of 1853, and 
in 1866-70 was United States district attorney for Massa- 
chusetts. He devoted a large portion of his time to literature. 
He became a member of the editorial staff Of the Christian 
Register, a Unitarian weekly, in 1833; in 1834 he became editor 
of The American Jurist (1820-1843), a legal journal to which 
Sumner, Simon Greenleaf and Theron Metcalf contributed; and 
from 1856 to- 1 86 1 he was an associate editor of the Boston 
Courier. His publications include an edition of Edmund 
Spenser's works (in 5 vols., 1830)? Selections frvm the Writing* of 
Walter Sotage Landpr (1S56) ; Sii Months in Italy (2 vols., t&53>; 
Lift and Campaigns of George B. McCMlon (1864); a part of the 
Life, Letters, and Journals of George Ticknor (r*f6); besides a 
series of school readers and many articles in periodicals and 
encyclopaedias. He died in Boston on the 21st of January 
1870. 

H1LLEBRAND, KARL (1820-1884), German author, was 
born at Giessen on the 17th of September 1820, his father 
Joseph Hfllebrand (1788-1871) being a literary historian and 
writer on philosophic subjects. Karl Hillebrand became involved, 
as a student in Heidelberg, m the Baden revolutionary move- 



aient, and was imprisoned in Rattatt* He sneeaecbd Is < 
and lived for a time in Strasabuig, Paris— where for several 
months he was Heine's secretary— and Bordeaux. He continued 
his studies, and after obtaining the doctor's degree, at the 
Sorbonne, he was appointed teacher of German in the £coU 
milHw e at St Cyr, and shortly afterwards, professor of foreign 
fiteratures at Douai On the outbreak of the Franco-German 
War he, resigned his professorship and acted for a time as 
correspondent to The Times in Italy. He then settled in 
Florence, where he died on the 19th of .October 1884. Hille- 
brand wrote with facility and elegance in French* English and 
Italian, besides his own- language. His essays, collected undet 
the tffle«Zrtfe«, VOlksr und Umsshen (Berlin, 1874-1885), show 
dear discernment, a finely balanced cosmopolitan judgment 
and grace of styie. He undertook to wirte the GesckichU Frank* 
rekhs von der TkronbettoigsUg Ludwig PlaUpps bis sum Fall 
Napoieons III.-, hut only two volumes were completed (to 1848) 
(2nd td., 1881-1882). In French he published Des conditions 
de la bonne comtiie (1863), La Prusse contemparaiue (1867), 
faudesitalienues (1868), and a translation of a Mailer's Griecki* 
sche. Utaraturgesckkkte (3rd ed., 1883). In English he published 
his Royal Institution Lectures on German Thought during tut 
Last 2W Hundred Years (1880). He also edited a collection 
of essays dealing with Italy, under the title Italia (4 vols., 
Leipafa 1874*1877). 
See H. Homberger, Karl SiiUbrand (Berlin, 1884), 
HILLEL, Jewish rabbi, of Babylonian origin, lived at Jenn 
salem in the time of King Herod. Though hard pressed by 
poverty, he applied himself to study in* the schools- of Shemaiah 
and Abtalion (Sameas and Poflion in Josephus). On account 
of his comprehensive learning 1 and his rare qualities be was 
numbered among the recognised leaders of the Pharisaic scribes. 
Tradition assigns him the highest dignity of the Sanhedrin, 
under the title of nasi (" prince **), about a hundred years before 
the destruction of Jerusalem, i.e. about 30 bxx The date at 
least can be recognised as historic; the fact that Hillel took 
a leading position in the council can also be established. The 
epithet ha-token (" the elder "), which usually accompanies 
his name, proves him to have been a member of the Sanhedrin,* 
and according to a trustworthy authority Hillel filled bis leading 
position for forty years, dying, therefore, about ajd. 10. His 
descendants remained, with few exceptions, at the bead of 
Judaism in Palestine until the beginning of the 5th century, 
two of them, his grandson Gamaliel I. and the letter's son 
Simon, during the time when the Temple was still standing. 
The fact that Josephus (Vita 38) ascribes to Simon descent from' 
a very distinguished stock (ytrovtoip66p*\atiirpo\)) 1 shows in 
what degree of estimation HillePa descendants stood. When 
the dignity of nasi became afterwards hereditary among them, 
Hifld'3 ancestry, perhaps on the ground of old family traditions, 
was traced back to David. Hillel is especially noted for the 
fact that he gave a definite form to the Jewish traditional 
learning, as it had been developed and made into the ruling and 
conserving factor of Judaism in the latter days of the second 
Temple, and particularly in the centuries following thedest ruction 
of the Temple. He laid down seven rules for the interpretation 
of the Scriptures, and these became the foundation of rabbinical 
hermeneutics; and the ordering of the traditional doctrines' 
into a whole, effected in the Mishna by his successor Judah I. 
two hundred years after Hillel's death, was probably likewise 
due to his Instigation. The tendency of his theory and practice 
m matters pertaining to the Law is evidenced by the fact that 
in general he advanced milder and more lenient views in op- 
position to his colleague Shammai, a contrast which after the 
death of the two masters, but not until after the destruction of 
the Temple, was maintained in the strife kept up between the 
two schools named the House of Hillel and the House of Shammai. 
The weB-known institution of the Prosbol (xpoofoMi), introduced 
by Hillel, was intended to avert the evil consequences of the 
scriptural law of release in the seventh year (Deut. xv. 1). He 
was led to this, as is expressly set forth (M. Gittin, lv. 3), by a 
regard for the welfare of the community. Hillel fiVed in the 



463 



HILLED F;— HILLER, J. A. 



memory of tx»tepky chiefly as the great leader who enjoined 
ud practised the virtues of charity, humility and true piety. 
His proverbial sayings, in particular, a great number of which 
were written down partly in Aramaic, partly in Hebrew, strongly 
affected the spirit both of his contemporaries and of the succeed- 
ing generations. In his Maxims (Aboth, i. 12) he recommends 
the love of peace and the love of mankind beyond all else, and 
his own love of peace sprang from the t en d er ness and deep 
humility which were essential features in his cha r acter, as has 
been illustrated by many anecdotes. Hillcl's patience has 
become proverbial. One of his sayings commends humility 
in the following paradox: ** My abasement is my exaltation." 
His charity towards men is given its finest expression in the 
answer which he made to a proselyte who asked to be taught 
the commandments of the Torah in the shortest possible form: 
" What is unpleasant to thyself that do not to thy neighbour; 
this is the whole Law, all else is but its exposition." This allusion 
to the scriptural injunction to love one's neighbour (Lev. six. 
18) as the fundamental law of religious morals, became in a 
certain sense a commonplace of Pharisaic scholasticism. For the 
Pharisee who accepts the answer of Jesus regarding that funda- 
mental doctrine which ranks the love of one's neighbour as 
the highest duty after the love of God (Mark xii. 33), does so 
because as a disciple of Hillel the idea is iamiliar to him. St 
Paul also (Gal. v. 14) doubtless learned this in the school of 
GamalieL Hillel emphasized the connexion between duty 
towards one's neighbour and duty towards oneself in the epi- 
grammatic saying: " If I am not for myself, who is for me? 
And if I am for myself alone, what then am I ? And if not now, 
then when?" (Abolk, i. 14). The duty of working both with 
and for men he teaches in the sentence: " Separate not thyself 
from the congregation" (ib. ii. 4). The duty of considering 
oneself part of comman humanity, of not differing from others 
by any peculiarity of behaviour, he sums up in the words: 
" Appear neither naked nor clothed, neither sitting nor standing, 
neither laughing nor weeping " ( Tostj. Bet. c< ii.). The command 
to love one's neighbour inspired also Hillel's injunction (Aboih, 
ii. 4): " Judge not thy neighbour until thou art in his place " 
(ci. Matt. vii. 1). The disinterested pursuit of learning, study 
for study's sake, is commended in many of Hillel's sayings 
as being what is best in life: " He who wishes (0 make a name 
for himself loses his name; he who does not increase [his know- 
ledge] decreases it; he who does not learn is worthy of death; 
he who works for the sake of a crown is lost " (Aboth, i. 13). 
" He who occupies himself, much with learning makes his life " 
(ib. ii. 7). " He who has acquired the- words of doctrine has 
acquired the life of, the world to come " {ib.). " Say not: When 
I am free from other occupations I shall study; far may be thou 
shall never at all be free " (ib. 4). One of his strings of proverbs 
runs as follows: "The uncultivated man is not innocent; the 
ignorant man is not devout; the bashful man learns not; the 
wrathful man teaches not; he who is much absorbed in trade 
cannot become wise; where no jnen are, there strive thyself 
to be a man " (ib. 5). The almost mystical profundity of Hillel's 
eonciousness of God is shown in the words spoken by him on 
the occasion of a feast in the Temple — words alluding to the 
throng of people gathered there which he puts into the mouth 
of God Himself: " If I am here every one is here; if I 
am not here no one is here " (Sukbah 530X In like manner 
Hillel makes God say to Israel, referring to Exodus xx. ,34: 
" Whither I please, thither will I go; if thou come into my 
house I come into thy house; if thou come not into my house, I 
come not into thine " (ib.). 

It is noteworthy that no miraculous legends are connected 
with Hillel's life. A scholastic tradition, however, tells of 
a voice from heaven which made itself heard when the wise men 
had assembled in Jericho, saying: "Among those here present 
is one. who would have deserved the Holy Spirit to rest upon 
him, if his time had been worthy of it." And all eyes turned 
towards Hillel (Tos. SofaM, xiii. 3). ' When he died lamentation 
was made, for him as follows: " Woe for the humble, woe for 
the pious, woe for the disciple of Ezra! " (#.) 



. Hillel IL^one of the patriarchs balostfogtDilHafaattlyof KBdU 
lived in Tiberias about the middle of the 4th century, and introduced 
the arrangement of the calendar through which the Jews of the 
Diaspora became independent of Palestine in the uniform fixation 



pendent 
of the new moons and feasts. 

The Rabbi Hillel, who in the 4th century made the remarkable 
declaration that Israel neednot expect a Messiah, because the promise 
of a Messiah had already been fulfilled f n the days of King Hezekiah 
(BabH, Sankedrin, 09a), is probably HflW, the son of Samuel ben 
Nabmau, a well-known expounder of the scriptures. . (W. Ba.) 

HILLER, FERDIMAMD (1811-1885), German composer, was 
born at Frankfort-on-Main, on the 24th of October i8il His 
first master was Aloys. Schmitt, and when he was ten yean of 
age his compositions and talent led his father, a well-to-do man, 
to send him to Hummel in Weimar. There he devoted htmseM 
to composition,, among his work being the entr'actes to Mark 
Stuart, through which he made Goethe's acquaintance. Under 
Hummel, Hiller made great strides as a pianist, so much so that 
early in 1827 he went on a tour to Vienna, where he met Beethoven 
and produced his first quartet. After a brief visit home Hilkr 
went to Paris in 1829, where he lived till 1836. His father's 
death necessitated his return to Frankfort for a time, but on the 
8th of January 1839 he produced at Milan his opera La RomUde t 
and began to write his oratorio Die Zcrsldrung Jerusalem* , one of 
his best works. Then he went to Leipzig, to his friend Mendels- 
sohn, where in 1843-1844 he conducted a number of the Gewand- 
haus concerts and produced his oratorio. After a further visit 
to Italy to study sacred music, Hiller produced two operas, Ei* 
Traum and Conradin t at Dresden in 1845 and 1847 respectively; 
he went as conductor to Dtlsseldorf in 1847 and Cologne in 1850, 
and conducted at the Opera Italien in Paris in 1851 and 1852. 
At Cologne he became a power as conductor of the Gurzenich' 
concerts and head of the Conservatorium. In 1884 he retired, 
and died on the 12 th of May in the following year. Hiller 
frequently- visited England. He composed a work for the 
opening of the Royal Albert Hall, his Nolo and Damayanti was 
performed at Birmingham, and he gave a series ol pianoforte 
recitals of his own compositions at the Hanover Square Rooms 
in 187 1. He had a perfect mastery over technique and form in 
musical composition, but his works are generally dry. He was a 
sound pianist and teacher, and occasionally a brilliant writer on 
musical matters. His compositions, numbering about two 
hundred, include six operas, two oratorios, six or seven cantatas, 
much chamber music and a once-popular pianoforte concerto. 

HILLER, JOHANN ADAM (17*^1804), German musical 
composer, was born at Wendisch-Ossig near Gorlitx in Silesia 00 
the 25th of December 1738. By the death of his father in 1734 
he was left dependent to a large extent on the charity of friends, 
Entering in x 747 the Kreuaschule in Dresden, the school attended 
many years afterwards by Richard Wagner, he subsequently 
went to the university of Leipzig, where he studied jurisprudence, 
supporting himself by giving music lessons, and also by per- 
forming at concerts both on the flute and as a vocalist. Gradually 
he adopted music as his sole profession, and devoted himself more 
especially to the permanent establishment of a concert institute 
at Leipzig. It was be who in 1781 originated the celebrated 
Gewandhaus concerts which still nourish- at Leipzig. In 1789 
he became " cantor " of the Thomas school there, a poauoa 
previously held by John Sebastian Bach. He died in Leipzig on 
the 16th of June 1804, Two of his pupils placed a monument to 
his memory in front of the Thomas school Hiller's compositions 
comprise almost every land of church music, from the cantata to 
the simple chorale. But much more important are his operettas, 
14 in number, which for a long time retained their place on the 
boards, and had considerable influence oh the development of 
light dramatic music in Germany. The Jolly Cobbler, Late in tk 
Country and the Village Barber were amongst the most popular 
of his works. Hiller also excelled in sentimental songs and ballads. 
With peat simplicity of structure his music combines a consider* 
able amount of genuine melodic invention. Although an admirer 
and imitator of the Italian school, Hiller fully appreciated the 
greatness of Handel, and did much for the appreciation of hit 
music in Germany. It was under his direction that the Uessiak 



HJMM&D, L.—HILTON 



+** 



fas for the first time gwea at Berlin, more than forty yeaxs after 
the composition of that great work. HiQer was also a writer on 
music, and (or some years (1766-1770) edited • musical weekly 
periodical named Wdctuntlidu Nackricktmund Anmerhun&en die 
Mmsik betrtfend* 

HILUARD. LAWRENCE (d. 1640), English miniature painjter. 
The date of his birth is not known, bujt he died in 1 640. He was. 
the son of Nicholas Hilliard, and evidently derived his Christian 
name from that of his grandmother. He adopted his father's 
profession and worked out the unexpired time of his licence after 
Nicholas Hilliard died. It was from Lawrence Hilliard that 
Charles I. received the portrait of Queen Elizabeth now at 
Montagu House, since van der Don's catalogue describes it as 
" done by old Hilliard, and bought by the king of young Hilliard." 
In 1624 be was paid £42 imm the treasury for five pictures, but 
the warrant does not specify whom they represented. His 
portraits are of great rarity, two of the most beautiful being those 
in the collections of Earl Beauchamp and Mr J. Pierpont Morgan. 
They are as a rule signed L.H., but are also to be distinguished by 
the beauty of the calligraphy in which the inscriptions round the 
portraits are written. The writing is as a rule very florid, full of 
exquisite curves and flourishes, and more elaborate than the more 
formal handwriting of Nicholas Hilliard. The colour scheme 
adopted by the son is richer and more varied than that used by 
the father, and Lawrence Hilliard's miniatures are not so hard as 
are those of Nicholas, and are marked by more shade and a, 
greater effect of atmosphere, (G< C. W.) 

HILLIARD, NICHOLAS (c. 1537-1619), the first true English 
miniature painter, is said to have been the son of Richard Hilliard 
of Exeter, high sheriff of the city and county in 1 560, by Lawrence, 
daughter of John Wall, goldsmith, of London, and was born 
probably about 1537. He was appointed goldsmith, carver and 
portrait painter to Queen Elizabeth, and engraved the Great Seal 
of England is 1 586. He was in high favour with James I. as weU 
as with Elizabeth, and from the king received a special patent of 
appointment, dated the 5th of May 161 7, and granting him a sole 
licence for the royal work for twelve years. He is believed to 
have been the author of an important treatise on miniature 
painting, now preserved in the Bodleian Library, but it seems 
more probable that the author -of that treatise was John de 
CriU, Serjeant Painter te James I. It is probable, however, 
that the treatise was taken down from the instructions of Hilliard, 
for the benefit of one of bis pupils, perhaps Isaac Oliver. 

The esteem of his countrymen for Hilliard is testified to by 
Dr Donne, who in a poem called " The Storm " (1597) praises the 
work of this artist. He painted a portrait of himself at the age of 
thirteen, and is said to have executed one of Mary queen of 
Scots when he was eighteen years old* He died on the 7th of 
January 1619, and was buried in St Martin's-in-tbe-Fields, 
Westminster, leaving by his will twenty shillings to the poor of 
the parish, £30 between his two sisters, some goods to his maid- 
servant, and all the rest of his effects to his son, Lawrence 
Hilliard, bis sole executor. 

It seems to be pretty certain that he visited France, and that he 
is the artist alluded to in the papers of the due d'Alencon under 
the name of " Nicholas Belliart, peintre anglois " who was 
painter to this prince in 1577, receiving a stipend of, 200 livres. 
The miniature of Mademoiselle de Sourdis, "in the collection of 
Mr J. Pierpont Morgan, is certainly the work of Hilliard, and is 
dated 1577, in which year she was a maid of honour at the 
French Court; and other portraits which are his work are 
believed to represent Gabrielle d'Estrees, niece of Madame de 
Sourdis, la Princesse de Cond6 and Madame de Montgomery. 

For further Information respecting Hflllard'i sojourn in France, 
•ee the privately printed- catalogue of the collection of mtaiaturea. 
belonging to Mr J. Pierpont Morgan, compiled by Dr G. C. 
Williamson. (G. C. W.) 

HILLSDALE, a city and the county-seat of Hillsdale county, 
Michigan, IL5.A., about 87 m. W. by S. of Detroit. Pop. 
(1000) 41 51, of whom 300 were foreign-born; (1004) 4809; 
(1910) 5001. Hillsdale is served by the Lake Shore & Michigan 
Southern railway. It has a public library, and is the seat of 



QObdaJn Collage (coeducational Free Baptist), which was 
opened as Michigan Central College, at Spring Arbor, Michigan* 
in 1*44, was removed to Hillsdale and received its peeaent 
name in 1853 end was re-opened here in 1855. The college 
in 1907-1908 had 22 instructors and 345 students. The city 
is a centre for, a rich fanning region; among its. manufactures 
are gasoline and gas engines, screen doors, wagons, barrels, 
shoes, fur-coats and flour. Hillsdale was first settled in 1837, 
was incorporated as a village in 1847, and was chartered en 
a<ity in 1869. 

HILL TIPPERA, or Tmpuia, a native state of India, adjoining 
the British district -of Tippera, in Eastern Bengal and Assam. 
Area; 4086 sq. m.; pop (1901) 173*325; estimated revenue, 
£55,000. Six parallel ranges of hill cross it from north to south, 
at an average distance of 12 m- apart. The hills ate covered 
for the most part with bamboo jungle, while the low ground 
abounds with trees of various kinds, canebrakes and swamps. 
The principal crop and food staple is rice. The other articles 
of produce are cotton, chillies and vegetables. The chief exports 
are cotton, Umber, oilseeds, bamboo canes, thatching-grass 
and firewood, on all of which tolls are levied. The chief rivers 
are the Gumti, Haora, Khoyai, Dulai, Manu and Fenny (Pheni). 
During the heavy rains the people in the plains use boats at 
almost the sole means of conveyance. 

The history of the state includes two distinct periods— the 
traditional period described in the Romaic, or " Chronicles 
. of the Kings of Tippera," and the period since a.d. 1407* 
The Rojmata. is a history in Bengali verse, compiled by the 
Brahmans of the court of Tripura. In the early history of the 
state, the rajas were in a state of chronic feud with all the 
neighbouring .countries. The worship of Siva was here, as 
elsewhere in India, associated with the practice of human 
sacrifice, and in no part of India were more victims offered. 
It was not until the beginning of the 17th century that the 
Moguls obtained any footing in this country. When the East 
India Company obtained the 4riMfH<c* financial administration, 
of Bengal in 1765, so much el Tippera as had been placed on 
the Mahommedan rent-roll came under British rule. Since 
1808,. each, successive rider has received investiture from the 
British government. In October 1905 the state was attached 
to the new province of Eastern Bengal and Assam. It has a 
chronological era of its own, adopted by Raja Birraj, from 
whom the present raja is 93rd in descent. The year 187s 
corresponded with x 285 of the Tippera era. 

Besides being the ruler of Hill Tippera, the raja holda aa 
estate in the British district of Tippera, called ckaJUa RoshnabadV 
which is far the most valuable of his possessions. The capital 
is Agartala (pop. 95*3). where there is an Arts College* The 
raja's palace and other public buildings were seriously damaged 
by the earthquake of the 12th of June 1897* The late raja, 
who died from the result of a motor-car accident in 1909, 
succeeded his father in {896, but he bad taken a large share 
in the administration of the state for some years previously* 
The principle of succession, which had often caused serious 
disputes,- was defined in 2904, to the effect that the chief may 
nominate any male descendant through males from himself 
or from any male ancestor, but failing such nomination, then 
the rule of primogeniture applies. 

HILTON, JOHN (1804-1878), British surgeon, was born at 
Castle Hedingham, in Essex, in 1804. He entered Guy's Hos- 
pital in 1824. He was appointed demonstrator of anatomy 
;in 1828, assistant-surgeon in 1845* surgeon 1849- *n *8e* 
he was president of the Royal College of Surgeons, of which 
he became member in 1827 and fellow in 1843, and he 
also delivered the Hunterian oration in 1867. As Arris and 
Gale professor (1850-1869) he delivered a course of lectures 
on " Rest and Pain," winch have become classics. He was 
also surgeon-extraordinary to Queen * Victoria, Hilton was 
the greatest anatomist of his time, and was nick named " Ana- 
tomical John." It was he who, with Joseph Towne the artist, 
enriched Guy's Hospital with its unique collection of models. 
In his grasp of the structure and functions of the brain and 



470 



HILTON— HIMALAYA 



Spmal cord he was far m 'advance of his contemporaries. As 
an operator be was more cautious than brilliant. This was 
doubtless due partly to his living in the pre-anaesthetic* period, 
and partly to bis own consummate anatomical knowledge, 
as is indicated by the method for opening deep abscesses which 
is known by his name. But he could be bold when necessary; 
be was the first to reduce a case of obturator hernia by abdominal 
section, and one of the first to practise lumbar colostomy. He 
died at Clapham oh the 14th of September 187S. 

HILTON, WILLIAM (1786-1839), English painter, was born 
in Lincoln on the 3rd of June 1786, son of a portrait-painter 
In 1800 he was placed with the engraver J. R. Smith, and 
about the same time began studying in the Royal Academy 
school. He first exhibited in this institution in 1803, sending 
a " Group of Banditti "; and he soon established a reputation 
for choice of subject, and qualities of design and colour superior 
to the great mass of his contemporaries. He made a tour in 
Italy with Thomas Phillips, the portrait-painter. In 1813, 
having exhibited "Miranda and Ferdinand with the Logs of 
Wood," be was elected an associate of the Academy, and in 
1820 a full academician, his diploma-picture representing 
"Ganymede." In 1S23 he produced "Christ crowned with 
Thorns," a large and important work, subsequently bought 
out of the Chantrey Fundi this may be regarded as his master- 
piece. In 1827 he succeeded Henry Thomson as keeper of the 
Academy. He died in London on the 30th of December 1839 
Some of bis best pictures remained on his hands at his decease- 
such as the " Angel releasing Peter from Prison " (life-size), 
painted in 1831, ** Una with the Lion entering Corceca's Cave " 
(1832), the "Murder of the Innocents," his last exhibited 
work (1838), "Comus," and " Amphitrite." The National 
Gallery now owns " Edith finding the Body of Harold " (1834), 
"Cupid Disarmed," " Rebecca and Abraham's Servant " 
(1829), " Nature blowing Bubbles for her Children " (1821), 
and " Sir Calcpine rescuing Serena " (from the Faerie Qtuen) 
(183 1 ). In the National Portrait Gallery is his likeness of John 
Keats, with whom he was acquainted. In a great school or 
period Hilton could not count as more' than a respectable 
subordinate; but in the British school of the earlier part of 
the 19th century he had sufficient elevation of aim and width 
of attainment to stand conspicuous. 

HILVBRSUM , a town in the province of North Holland, 
i& m. by rail S.E. of Amsterdam. It is connected with Amster- 
dam by a steam tramway, passing by way of the small fortified 
towns of Naarden and Muiden on the Zuider Zee. Pop. (toco) 
20,238. It is situated in the middle of the Gooi, a stretch of 
hilly country extending from the Zuider Zee to about 5 m. 
south of Hilversum, and composed of pine woods and sandy 
heaths. A convalescent home, the Trompenberg, was established 
here in 1874, and there are a town hall, middle-class and technical 
schools, and various places of worship, including a synagogue. 
Hilversum manufactures large quantities of floor-cloths and 
horse-blankets. 

HIMALAYA, the name given to the mountains which form 
the northern boundary of India. The word is Sanskrit and 
literally signifies "snow-abode," from kirn, snow, and 4/ayc, 
abode, and might be translated M snowy-range," although that 
expression is perhaps more nearly the equivalent of Himadtol, 
another Sanskrit word derived from him, snow, and Ackal, 
mountain, which is practically synonymous with Himalaya 
and is often used by natives of northern In^ia. The name 
was converted by the Greeks into Emodos and/aw*. 

Modern geographers restrict the term Himalaya to that portion 
of the mountain region between India and Tibet enclosed within 
the arms of the Indus and the Brahmaputra. From the bend 
of the Indus southwards towards the plains of the Punjab 
to the* bend of the Brahmaputra southwards towards the plains 
of Assam, through a length of 1500 m., is Himachal or Himalaya. 
Beyond the Indus, to the north-west, the region of mountain 
ranges which stretches to a junction with the Hindu Kush south 
of the Pamirs, is usually known as Trans-Himalaya. Thus the 
Himalaya represents the southern face of the great central 



upheaval— the plateau of Tibet— the northern face of -which is 
buttressed by the Kuen Lun. 

Throughout this vast space of elevated plateau and mountain 
face geologists now trace a system of main chains, 
or axes, extending from the Hindu Kush to Assam, Jj?" 
arranged in approximately parallel lines, and rriwdm 
traversed at Intervals by main lines of drainage 
obliquely. Godwin-Austen indicates six of these geological axes 
as follows: 

1. The main Central Asian axis, the Kuca Lun forming the aonktra 
edge or ridge of the Tibetan plateau* 

2. The Trans-Himalayan chain of Muztagh Cor Karakoram). 
which is lost in the Tibetan uplands, passing to the north of the 
sources of the Indus. 

t. The Ladakh chain, partly north and partly south of the Into- 
foi t across it about 100 m above Leh- This chats 

coi le Tsanpo (or Upper Brahmaputra), and becomes 

pa ^n system. 

r main chain of the Himalaya, ije. (he " snowy 
rai xt which is indicated by Manga Parbat (over* 

lot , and passes in a south-east direction to the 

soi Deosai plains. Thence, bending slightly south, 

it < of snowy peaks which are seen from Simla to the 

fat . ngotri and Nanda Devi. This is the best knows 

range of the Himalaya. - 

$. The outer Himalaya or Pir Panjal-Dhaoladhar ridge 

6. The Sub-Himalaya, which is " easily defined by the fringing 
line of hills, more or less broad, and in places very distinctly marked 
off from the main chain by open valleys (dhuns) or narrow valleys, 
parallel to the main axis of the chain." These include the Siwaliks. 

Interspersed between these main geological axes are many 
other minor ridges, on some of which are peaksof great elevation. 
In fact, the geological axis seldom coincides with the line of 
highest elevation, nor must it be confused with the main fines 
of water-divide of the Himalaya. 

On the north and north-west of Kashmir the great water- 
divide which separates the Indus drainage area from that of 
the Yarkand and other rivers of Chinese Turkestan TtognM 
has been explored by Sir F. Younghusband, and sub- mmrtttn 
sequently by H. H. P. Deasy. The general result ■'■awsasj 
of their investigations has been to prove that the • #l "* fc 
Muztagh range, as it trends south-eastwards and finally forms a 
continuous mountain barrier together with the Karakoram, 
is the true water-divide west of the Tibetan plateau. Shutting 
off the sources of the Indus affluents from those of the Central 
Asian system of hydrography; this great water-parting is dis- 
tinguished by a group of peaks of which the altitude is hardly 
less than that of the Eastern Himalaya. Mount Godwin-Austen 
(28,250 ft. high), only 750 ft. lower than Everest, affords as 
excellent example in Asiatic geography of a dominating, peak- 
crOwned water-parting or divide. From Kailas on the far west 
to the extreme north-eastern sources of the Brahmaputra, the 
great northern water-parting of the Indo-Tibetan highlands has 
only been occasionally touched. Littledale, du Rbins and 
Bonvalot may have stood on it as they looked southwards towards 
Lhasa, but for some 500 or 600 m. east of Kailas it appears to be 
lost in the mazes of the minor ranges and ridges of the Tibetan 
plateau. Nor can it be said to be as yet well defined to the east 
of Lhasa. 

The Tibetan plateau, or Chang, breaks up about the meridian 
of 02° E., and to the east of this meridian the. affluents of the 
Tsanpo (the same river astheDihongand subsequently 
as the Brahmaputra) drain no longer from the elevated 
plateau, but from the rugged slopes of a wild region 
of mountains which assumes a systematic conformation where 
its successive ridges are arranged in concentric curves around 
the great bend of the Brahmaputra, wherein are bidden the 
sources of all the great rivers of Burma and China. Neither 
immediately beyond this great bend, nor within it in the Hima- 
layan regions lying north of Assam and east of Bhutan, have 
scientific investigations yet been systematically carried oat; 
but it is known that the largest of the Himalayan affluents of 
the Brahmaputra west of the bead derive their sources from ike 
Tibetan plateau, and break down through the containing bands 
of hills, carrying deposits of gold from their sources to the 1 ' ' 
as do all the rivers of Tibet. 



HIMALAYA 471 



^ Although the northern malts of the Tsanpo basin are not 

sufficiently well known to locate the Indo-Tibetan watershed 

* ■■ evcn a PP r0x " natc *y» ^w exists some scattered 
S 2S«r* evidence of the nature of that strip of Northern Hima- 

* it* matnt bya on the Tibeto-Nepalese border which Iks between 
% «*«!»•/ the line of greatest elevation and the trough of the 
. JS7 Tsanpo. Recent investigations show that all the 

* fm ^ chief rivers of Nepal flowing southwards to the Tarai 
^ take their rise north of the line of highest crests, the " main 

range " of the Himalaya; and that some of them drain long 
'< lateral high-Jevel valleys enclosed between minor ridges whose 

strike is parallel to the axis of the Himalaya and, occasionally, 
almost at right angles to the course of the main drainage channels 
\ breaking down to the plains. This formation brings the 

^ southern edge of the Tsanpo basin to the immediate neighbour- 

hood of the banks of that river, which runs at its foot like a 
[' drain flanking a wall. It also affords material evidence of that 
: wrinkling or folding action which accompanied the process of 

upheaval, when the Central Asian highlands were raised, which 
is more or leas marked throughout the whole of the north-west 
5 * Indian borderland. North of Bhutan, between the Himalayan 
.crest and Lhasa, this formation is approximately maintained; 
farther east, although the same natural forces first resulted in 
the same effect of successive folds of the earth's crust, forming 
i extensive curves of ridge and furrow, the abundant rainfall 

* and the totally distinct climatic conditions which govern the 
^j processes of denudation subsequently led to the erosion of 

* deeper valleys enclosed between forest-covered ranges which 
rise steeply from the river banks. 

u Although suggestions have been made of the existence of 

higher peaks north of the Himalaya than that which dominates 

the Everest group, no evidence has been adduced to 

2 mSta?' * u PP° rt such a contention. On the other hand the 

V JSSk *" <*»ervBtioi»of Major Ryder and other surveyors who 

"* explored from Lhasa to the sources of the Brahmaputra 

" and Indus, at the conclusion of the Tibetan mission in 1904, 

conclusively prove that Mount Everest, which appears from the 

~ Tibetan plateau as a single dominating peak, has no rival amongst 

'f Himalayan altitudes, whilst the very remarkable investigations 

c made by permission of the Nepal durbar from peaks near Kath- 

•* nandu in 1003, by Captain Wood, R.E., not only place the 

;_ Everest group apart from other peaks with which they have been 

' confused by scientists, isolating them in the topographical system 

; of Nepal, but dearly show that there is no one dominating and 

" continuous range indicating a main Himalayan chain which 

Includes both Everest and Kinchinjunga. The main features of 

Nepalese topography are now fairly well defined. So much 

: controversy has been aroused on the subject of Himalayan 

5 altitudes that the present position of scientific analysis in relation 

to them may be shortly stated. The heights of peaks determined 

* by exact processes of trigonometrical observation are bound to 
be more or less in error for three reasons: (1) the extraordinary 

\ geoidal deformation of the level surface at the observing stations 
in submontane regions; (2) ignorance of the laws of refraction 
when rays traverse rarefied air in snow-covered regions; (3) 
ignorance of the variations in the actual height of peaks due to 
the increase, or decrease, of snow The value of the heights 
i attached to the three highest mountains in the world are, for 
1 these reasons, adjudged by Colonel S. G. Burrard, the Supt. 

Trigonometrical Surveys in India, to be in probable error to the 
following extent: 





Present Survey 
Value of Height 


Most probable 
Value. 


Mount Everest . . 
Ki (Godwin Austen) . . 
Kinchinjunga . . • 


39.002 
28,250 
98.146 


20,141 
28,191 
38,225 



These determinations have the effect of placing Kinchinjunga 
second and Ksthird on the list. (T. H. H.*) 

tTrflfefV.— The Himalaya have been formed by violent cnimplme 

-" ^ L •--*■**> it tableland 

1 ab sign of 



Of the earth's crust along the southern margin of the great tableland 
Of Central Asia. Outside the arc of the mountain chain 1 



47* 



HIMALAYA 



without fowls. Throughout the whole length of the chain, wherever 
the junction of the Siwaliks with the pre-Tertiary rocks has been seen, 
it is a great reversed fault. West of the Bias river a similar reversed 
fault forms the boundary between the lower Tertiaries and the 
pre-Tertiary rocks of the Himalaya, while between the Sutlei and 
the Jumna rivers, where the lower Tertiaries help to form the lower 
Himalaya, the fault lies between them and the Siwaliks. The hade 
of the fault is constantly inwards, towards the centre of the chain, 
and the older rocks which form the Himalaya proper, have been 

died forward over the later beds of the sub-Himalaya. But the 
t is more than an ordinary reversed fault: it was, nearly every- 
where, the northern boundary of deposition of the Siwalik beds, and 
only in a few instances do any of the Siwalik deposits extend even to 
a short distance beyond it. The fault in fact was being formed 
during the deposition of the Siwalik beds, and as the beds were laid 
down, the Himalaya were pushed forward over them, the Siwaliks 
themselves being folded and upturned during the process. Accord- 
ingly, in some places the Siwaliks now form a continuous and con- 
formable series from base to summit, in other places the middle beds 
are absent and the upper beds of the series rest upon the upturned and 
denuded edges of the lower beds. The Siwaliks are fluviatile and 
torrential deposits similar to those which are now being formed 
at the foot of the mountains, in the Indo-Gangetic plain; and 
their relations to the older rocks of the Himalaya proper were 
very similar to those which now exist between the deposits of 
the plain and the Siwaliks themselves. But the great fault just 
described is not the only one of this character. There is a series of 
such faults, approximately parallel to one another, and although 
they have not been traced throughout the whole chain, yet wherever 
they occur they seem to have formed the northern boundary of 
deposition of the deposits immediately to the south of them. It 
appears, therefore, that the Himalaya grew southwards in a series 
of stages. A reversed fault was formed at the foot of the chain, and 



an I system of folds as we see on the 

wc t transverse gaps where the riven 

crc e a course parallel to that origuv 

all xurs where the Indus suddsssy 

bn adakh range in the North-west 

Hi Kiy course after passing from tat 

no e range. The reason assigned far 

thi the drainage right across the 

gei : is antecedent — i.e. that the lines 

of ds or anticiinals were raised . and 

thi taiaed the course originally held, 

by gradual process of upheaval 

! aya the sides are generally steep. 

so irhilst the streams are still cutting 

do . ,.i reached the stage of equilibrium. 

Here and there a valley has become filled with alluvial detritus ova* 
to some local impediment in the drainage, and when this occurs there 
is usually to be found a fertile and productive field for agriculture. 
The straits of the Jhelum, below Baramulla, probably account for 
the lovely vale of Kashmir, which is in form (if not in principles of 
construction) a repetition on grand scale of the Maidan of the Afridi 
Tirah, where the drainage from the slopes of a great amphitheatre of 
hills is collected and then arrested by the gorge which marks the 
outlet to the Bara. 

Other rivers besides the Indus and the Brahmaputra begin by 
draining a considerable area north of the snowy range— the Sutlcj, 
the Kosi, the Gandak and the Subansiri, for example. nm nt 
AH these rivers break through the main snowy range ere j^"." 
they twist their way through the southern hills to the JLtmSm 
plains of India. Here the " antecedent " theory will not *tnkaL 
suffice, for there is no sufficient catchment area north of WF ^ 
the snows to support it. Their formation is explained by a process 
of " cutting back," by which the heads of these streams are gradually 




Section across the sub-Himalayan zone. 



upon this fault the mountains were pushed forward over the beds 
deposited at their base, crumpling and folding them in the process, 
and forming a sub-Himalayan ridge in front of the main chain. 
After a time a new fault originated at the foot of the sub-Himalayan 
aone thus raised, which now became part of the Himalaya themselves; 
and a new sub-Himalayan chain was formed in front of the previous 
one. The earthquakes of the present day show that the process is 
still in operation, and in time the deposits of the present < Indo- 
Gangetic plain will be involved in the folds. 
' The regular form of the Himalaya, constituting an arc of a true 
circle, appears to indicate that the whole chain has been pushed 
forward as one mass upon a gigantic thrust-plane; but, if so, the 
dip of the plane must be low, for a line drawn along the southern 
foot of the Himalaya would coincide with the outcrop of. a plane 
inclined to the surface at an angle of about 14°. The thrust-plane, 
then, does not coincide with any of the boundary faults already 
mentioned, which are usually inclined at angles of 50° or 6o°. The 
latter are due to the fact that, although, perhaps, the whole mass 
above the thrust-plane may move, yet the pressure which pushes it 
forwards necessarily proceeds from behind. The back, accordingly, 
moves faster than the front, and the whole is packed together; as 
when an tee-floe drives against the shore, the ice breaks and the 
outer fragments ride over those within. The great thrust-plane 
which n thus imagined to exist at the base of the Himalaya, corre- 
sponds with the " major thrusts " of the N.W. Highlands of Scotland, 
and the reversed faults which appear at the surface with the " minor 
thrusts." (P. La.) 

Such is the general outline of Himalayan evolution as now under- 
stood, and the process of it has led to certain marked features of 
scenery and topography. Within the area of the trans- 
Indus mountains we nave beds of hard limestone or sand- 
stone alternating with soft shales, which leads to the 
scooping out by erosion of long narrow valleys where the 



Tspe- 



shales occur, and the passage 61 the streams through deep 
rifts or gorges across the hard limestone anticlinals, which 
I in irregular series of parallel ridges with the eroded valleys 
between. The great mass of the Himalaya exhibits the same structure, 
due to the same conditions acting for longer periods and on a much 
larger scale; but the structure is varied in the eastern portions of the 
mountains by the effect of different climatic conditions, and especially 
by the greater rainfall. Instead of wide, barren, wind-swept valleys, 
here are found fertile alluvial plains— such as Manipur — but for the 
most part the erosive action of the river has been able to keep pace 
with tip rise of the river bed, and we have deep, steep-sided valleys 



rainfall on the 



eating their way northwards owing to the greater rainfi 

southern than on the northern slopes. The result of this w 

well exhibited in the relative steepness of slope on the Indian and 
Tibetan sides of the passes to the Indus plateau. On the southern or 
Indian side the routes to Tibet and Ladakh follow the levels of 
Himalayan valleys with no remarkably steep gradients till they near 
the approach to the water-divide. The slope then steepens with the 
ascending curve to the summit of the pass, from which point it fab 
with a comparatively gentle gradient to the general level of the 
plateau. The Zoji La, the Kashmir water-divide between the 
Jhelum and the Indus, is a prominent case in point, and all the passes 
from the Kumaon and Garhwal hills into Tibet exhibit this formatioa 
in a marked degree. Taking the average elevation of the central 
axial line of snowy peaks as 19,000 ft., the average height of the 
passes is not more than 10,000 owing to this process of cutting dowe 
by erosion and gradual encroachment into the northern basin. 

Meteorology. — Independently of the enormous variety of topo- 
graphical conformation contained in the Himalayan system, the vast 
altitude of the mountains alone is sufficient to cause modifications of 
climate in ascending over their slopes such as are not surpassed by 
those observed in moving from the equator to the poles. One half of 
the total mass of the atmosphere and three-fourths of the water 
suspended in it in the form or vapour lie below the average altitude 
of the Himalaya ; and of the residue, one-half of the air and virtually 
almost all the vapour come within the influence of the big heat peaks. 
The regular variations in pressure of the air indicated by the baro- 
meter and the annual and diurnal oscillations arc as well marked in 
the Himalaya as elsewhere, but the amount of vapour held in suv 
pension diminishes so rapidly with the altitude that not more than 
one-sixth (sometimes only one-tenth) of that observed at the foot of 
the mountains is found at the greatest heights: This is d e p en d en t 
on the temperature of the air which rapidly decreases with altitude. 
On the mountains every altitude has its corresponding temperature, 
an elevation of 1000 ft. producing a fall of 3I . or about r* to each 
300 ft. The mean winter temperature at 7000 ft. (which is about the 
average height of Himalayan " hill stations ") Is 44* F. and the 
summer mean about 65° F. At 9000 ft. the mean temperature of 
the coldest month is 32* F. At 12,000 ft. the thermometer never falU 



below freezing-point from the end of May to the middle of October, 
and at 15,000 ft. it 'is seldom above that point even in the height of 
summer. It should be noted that the thermometries conditions of 
Tibet vary considerably from those of the Himalaya. At \2&x> ft. 
in Tibet the mean of the hottest month is about 60° F. and of the 
coldest about 10° F. whilst, at 15,000 ft. the frost is only 1 



HIMALAYA 473 



from tu end of October to the cud of April, 
vegetation and topographical conformation lai 
question of local temperature. For instance it 1 
the difference of temperature between forested 
Indian plain* U twice as much in April and May 
January; and the difference between the temf 
wooded hill top and the open valley below may 1 
within twenty-four hours. The general relation! 
altitude as determined by Himalayan observat* 
0) The decrease of temperature with altitude 
summer. (2) The annual range diminishes * 
(3) The diurnal sange diminishes with the eleva 
are. however, apt to become anomalous when J 
tones with a dense covering of forest and a grea 
and open and uncloudy regions both above and b 



The chief rainfall occurs in the summer month) 
October («.#. the period of the monsoon rains of Ii 
of the year being comparatively dry 
over the great plain of northern Ina: 
tahes in quantity, and begins later, as we pass 
At the same time the rain is heavier as 
Himalaya and the g reat est falls are measured 1 
but the quantity again diminishes as we pass 
chain, ana on arriving at the border of Tibet 
line of snowy peaks, the rain falls in such snu 
be hardly susceptible of measurement. Diurna 
which are established from the plains to the 
the day, and from the hills to the plains during 
portent agents in distributing the rainfall. Tl 
vapour from the ascending currents and their , 
•s they are precipitated on successive ranges 
(he cloud effects produced during the monsooi 
windward face of each range being clothed daj 
-white crest of cloud whilst the northern slo 
entirely free. This shows how large a proportk 
arrested and how it is that only by drifting t 
fDfjges can any moisture find its way to the Tibe 
Tne yearly rainfall, which amounts to betwec 
the delta of the Ganges, is reduced to about 40 
issues from the mountains, and diminishes to yo 
nest of the Indus into the plains. At Darjeefmj 
os the outer ranges of the eastern Himalaya it 
tao in. At Naini Tal north of the United Provinc 
at Simla about 80 in., diminishing still further as 
north-western hill*. All these stations are about tl 
In the eastern Himalaya the ordinary winti 
6000 f L and it never lies for many days even at 70 
on the west, it usually reaches down 1 
and occasionally to 2500 ft. Snow ! 
fall at Peshawar. At Leh, ill western Tibet, hi 
are usually registered and the fall on the passes 1 
19,000 ft. is not generally more than 3 ft., but 
passes farther east the falls are much heavier. 
these passes may be quite blocked and they are 1 
the middle of June. The snow-line, or the le 
recedes in the course of the year, ranges from 15, 
the southern exposures of the Himalaya that cai 
along all that part of the system that lies betwt 
Indus. It is not till December that the snow be 
the winter, although after September light falls 
the mountain sides down to 11.000 ft., but th< 
Ob the snowy range the snow-line is not lower thi 
the summit of the table-land it reaches to ao,< 
passes, into Tibet vegetation reaches to about 
August they may be crossed in ordinary year 
wiukout finding any snow upon them ; and it is a 
snow in the summer in Tibet at 15*500 ft. abov 
plains of India. ^ 

GUeUrs.—Thz level to which the Himalaya! 
greatly dependent on local conditions, princrpa 
elevation of the snow basins which feed them, 
position of the mountain on which they are formi 
guter slopes of the Himalaya descend much lowe 
the case in Tibet, or in the most elevated valh 
range. The glaciers of Sikkbn and the east 
believed not to reach a lower level than 13,50 
Kumaon many of them descend to between 11 
la the higher valleys and Tibet 15.000 and 16,00 
level at which they end, but there are exception 
lower. In Europe the glaciers descend betweei 
below the snow-line, and in the Himalaya and T1 
holds good. The summer temperatures of tin 
glaciers end on the Himalaya also correspond fail 
corresponding positions in European glaciers, v 
below 6o° F.. August 58° and September 55°. 
. Measurements of the movement of Himalayan 
according closely with those obtained under anal 
the Alps, vis. rates from 9} to \a\ in. in twenl 
motion of one glacier from the middle of May to tl 



474 



HIMALAYA 



and dimbing Aroidet* are very numerous, the tact named profusely 
adorning the forest* with their splendid dark-green foliage. Various 
oaks d e sc e nd within a few hundred feet of the sea-level, * — ;- 



Dapkne, Myrsint, Sympiafs and Rubus. Rhododendrons begin at 
about 6000 ft. and become abundant at 8000 ft., from 10,000 to 14*000 
ft. forming in many places the mass of the shrubby vegetation which 
extends soma 3000 ft. above the forest. Epiphytal orchids are 
extremely numerous between 6000 and 8000 ft. Of (he Conifers*, 
Podocatpu* and Pinus hngtfoHa alone descend to the tropical cone; 
Abies Brunoniana and SmUhiana and the larch (a genus not seen in 
the western mountains) are found at 6000, and the yew and Picta 
Webbiana at 10,000 ft. Pinus exccUa, which occurs in Bhutan, is 
absent in the wetter climate of Sikldm. 

On the drier and higher mountains of the interior of the chain, the 
forests become more open, and are spread less uniformly over the 
bill-sides, a luxuriant herbaceous vegetation appears, and the number 
of shrubby Lttuminouu, such as Dtsmodium and IndigaferOy in- 
creases, aa well as Ranunadaceae, Rosaltoc, UmbdUftnu, Lmbiatat, 
Cramineae, Cyfcraaat and other European genera. 

Passing to the westward, and viewing the flora of Kumaon, which 
province holds a central position on the chain, on the 60th meridian, 
we find that the gradual decrease of moisture and increase of high 
summer-beat are accompanied by a marked change of the vegetation. 
The tropical forest is characterized by the trees of the hotter and 
drier parts of southern India, combined with a few of European type. 
Ferns are more rare, and the tree-ferns have disappeared. The 
species of palm are also reduced to iwo or three, and bamboos, though 
abundant, are confined to a few species. 

The outer ranges of mountains are mainly covered with forests of 
Patus lonzifolia* rhododendron, oak and Pisris. At Naini Tal cypress 
b abundant. The shrubby vegetation comprises Rim, Rubus, 
Indigo/era* Dtsmodium, Btrbsris, BoeMmeria, Viburnum, CUmaHs, 
with an Amndinaria. Of herbaceous plants species of Ranunculus, 
PotentiUa, Geranium, Thalictrum, Primula, Gtniiana and many other 
European forms are common. In the leas exposed localities, on 
northern slopes and sheltered valleys, the European forms become 
more numerous, and we find species of alder, birch, ash, dm, maple, 
holly, hornbeam, Pyrus, &c. At greater elevations in the ulterior, 
besides the above are met Carylus, the common walnut, found wild 
throughout the range, horse chestnut, yew, also Pieea Wtboiana, 
Pinus txedsa. AHes Smitkiama* Ccdrus Dtodara (which tree does not 

Sow spontaneously east of Kumaon), and several junipers. The 
nser forests arc commonly found on the northern faceeoi the higher 
ranges, or in the deeper valleys, between Sooo and 10,500 ft. The 
woods on the outer ranges from 3000 up to 7000 ft. are more open, 
and consist mainly of evergreen trees. 

The herbaceous vegetation does not differ greatly, genetically, 
from that of the east, and many species of Pnmulaceat, Ranunctd- 
Cnttiferot t Labiates and Scropbulariacfae 



WWIB, wrM^i'iHt kwwim situ >iw» ywy i w>m> w^wi w«m i ui 

abound, also beautiful forms of Campe n uioc e a t , Gtniiana, kttconopsis, 
Saxifraga and many others. 

Cultivation hardly extends above 7000 ft., except in the valleys 
behind the great snowy peaks, where a few fields of buckwheat and 
Tibetan barley are sown up to 11,000 or 12,000 ft. At the lower 
elevations rice, maize and millets are common, wheat and barley at a 
somewhat higher level, and buckwheat and amaranth usually on the 
poorer lands, or those recently reclaimed from forest. Besides these, 
most of the ordinary vegetables of the plains are reared, and potatoes 
have been introduced in the neighbourhood of all the British stations. 

As we pass to the west the species of rhododendron, oak and 
Magnolia are much reduced in number as compared to the eastern 
region, and both the Malayan and Japanese forms are much less 
common. The herbaceous tropical and semi-tropical vegetation 
likewise by degrees disappears, the Scitamimae, epiphytal and 
terrestrial Orcntdcae, Aracau, Cyrlandracsat and Begonia* only occur 
in small numbers in Kumaon, and scarcely extend west of the Sutlcj. 
In like manner several of the western forms suited to drier climates 
find their eastern limit in Kumaon. In Kashmir the plane and 
Lembardy poplar flourish, though hardly seen farther east, the cherry 
b cultivated in orchards, and the vegetation presents an eminently 
European cast. The alpine flora is slower in changing its character 
as we pass from east to west, but in Kashmir the vegetation of the 
higher mountains hardly differs from that of the mountains of 
Afghanistan, Persia and Siberia, even in species. 

The total number of flowering plants inhabiting the range amounts 
probably to 5000 or 6000 species, among which may be reckoned 
several hundred common English plants chiefly from the temperate 
and alpine regions; and the characteristic of the flora as a whole is 
that it contains a general and tolerably complete illustration of 
almost all the chief natural families of all parts of the world, and 
has comparatively few distinctive features of its own. 

The Umber frees of the Himalaya are very numerous, but few of 
them are known to be of much value. The " Sal " is one of.the most 
valuable of the trees; with the " Toon " and " Sissoo." it grows in 
the outer ranges most accessible from the plains. The " Deodar" 
is also much used, but the other pines produce timber that is not 
Bamboos grew everywhere along the outer ranges, and 



rattan* to the eastward* end are largely exported fbrossuthepbdag 
of India. 

Though one species of coffee i* indigenous in the hotter Himakyaa 
forests, the climate does not appear suitable for the growth of the 
plant which supplies the coffee of commerce. The cultivation of tea, 
however, is earned on successfully on a large scale, both in die east 
and west of the mountains. In the western Himalaya the cultivated 
variety of the tea plant of China succeeds well; on the east the 
indigenous tea of Assam, which, is not specifically different, and is 
perhaps the original parent of the Chinese variety, is now almost 
everywhere p re f er r e d . The produce of the Chinese variety in the hot 
and wet climate of the eastern Himalaya, Assam and eastern Bengal 
is neither so ahondant nor so highly flavoured aa that of the In- 
digenous plant. 

The cultivation of the cinchona, several species of whkh have been 
introduced from South America and naturalised in the Sikkhn 
Himalaya, promises to yield at a comparatively small coat an ample 
supply of the febrifuge extracted from its bark. At present the 
manufacture is almost wholly in the hands of the Government, and 
the drug prepared is all disposed of in India. 

Zoobry.—Thc general distribution of animal life is determined by 



much the 



conditions that have controlled the vegetation, 



The connexion with Europe en the north-west, with China on the 
north-east, with Africa om the south-west, and with the Mahyaa 
region on die south-east is manifest; and the greater or less preval- 
ence of the European and Eastern forma varies acc or ding to more 
western or eastern position on the chain. So far as is known theat 
remarks will apply to the extinct as well as to the e xi sting fauna. 
The Palaeozoic forms found in the Himalaya are very dose to theat 
of Europe, and in some cases identical. The Triassic fossils are stia 
more closely allied, more than a third of the specie* being identical. 
Among the Jurassic Mollusca, also, are many species that are couuaea 
in Europe. The Siwalik fossils contain 84 species of mammals of 
j genera, the whole bearing a marked resemblance to the Miocene 
una of Europe, bet containing a larger number of genera sttl 
existing, especially of ruminants, and now held to be of Pliocene age. 
The fauna of the Tibetan Himalaya is essentially European or 
rather that of the northern half of the old continent, which region has 
by zoologists been termed Palaearetic. Among the characteristic 
animals may be named the yak, from which is reared a crass breed 
with the ordinary horned cattle of India, many wild sh e e p, and two 
antelopes, as well aa the musk-deer; several hares and some burrow- 
ing animals, including; pileas (Lagomys) and two or three spedes of 
marmot; certain arctic forms of carnivore— fox, wolf, lynx, ounce, 
marten and ermine; also wild asses. Among- bird* are found 



fi 



bustard and species of sand-grouse and partridge; water-fowl is 
great variety, which breed on the lake* in summer and migrate to 
the plain* of India in winter; the raven, hawks, eagles and owls 
a magpie, and two kinds of chough; and many smaller birds of tot 
passerine order, amongst whkh are several finches. Reptiles, as 
might be anticipated, are far from numerous, but a few lizard* tie 
found, belonging for the roost part to types, such a* Pkrynocepkctui 
characteristic of the Central- Asiatic area. The fishes from the head 
waters of the Indus also belong, for the most part, to Central- Asiatio 
types, with a small admixture of purely Himalayan forms. Amongst 
the former are several peculiar small-scaled carps, belonging to tat 
genus Schuatkorax and its allies. 

The ranges of the Himalaya, from the border of Tibet to the 
plains, form a zoological region which is one of the richest of the 
world, particularly in respect to birds, to which the forest-dad 
mountains offer almost every range of temperature. 

Only two or three forms of monkey enter the mountains, tat 
langur, a specie* of SemnopWueus. ranging up to 12.000 ft. No 
lemurs occur, although a species b found in Assam, and another ia 
southern India. Bats are numerous,' but the species are for the most 
part not peculiar to the area ; several European forms are found 
at the higher elevations. Moles, which are unknown in the Indisa 
peninsula, abound in the forest regions of the eastern Himalayas at 



than Himalayan. Bears are common, and so are a marten, several 
weasels and otters, and cats of various kinds and sue*, from the little 
spotted Fdis ixngaUnsis, smaller than a domestic cat. to animal* Hke 
tbeclouded leopard rivalling a leopard in size. Leopards are conunoa, 
and the tiger wanders to a considerable elevation, out can hardly b* 
considered a permanent inhabitant, except in the lower vatky*. 



carnivore some very peculiar forms are found, the most reraarkablt 
of which is Ac/snu, sometimes called the cat-bear, a type akin to the 
American racoon. Two other genera, Hdktis, an aberrant badger, 
and linsang. an aberrant d vet, are representatives of Malayan type*. 
Amongst the rodents squirrels abound, and the so-called frying 
squirrels are represented by several spedes. Rats and mice swarm, 
both kinds and individuals being numerous, but few present much 
peculiarity, a bamboo rat {Rkuomys) from the base of the easteri 
Himalaya being perhaps most worthy of notice. Two or tares 
species of vole (imcoia) haw been d et ected, and porcupines are 



HIMERA * 7 s 



}; 



common. The < 
Jumna, and the 
of these animals 
beyond their pr 
they have proba 
fire-arms. Wild 

Eculiar species 
habits the for 

Sikim. Deer of 

high on the hilli 
^ musk deer keeps 

*' aad the Malay c 

found at the baa 
>: * having some affi 

the " serow M (JV 
: * tragus), the last- 

C: the pangolin (JM 

*• Himalaya. A dc 

river and its affli 
3 Almost all th 

marvellous varie 

rivalled in Ccntr 
'- birds of prey are 

*• ranges. Owls a 

conspicuous, ore 

though musical c 

- jars are found, a 
: > and beautiful ki 
*■. hornbills inhabit 
n restricted to pai 

- a single small I 
*- and the variety 
•• cuckoo, of whic 
■■ spring as in E 
-- mense. Amongs 

* almost rival in I 
Creepers, nuthati 

=•- swallows, thrush* 

buls and orioles, 

tits, crows, jays 

crossbills and ma 

inches, may als< 

Several wood-pig 

birds include the | 

ing on the plains 

which the chiko 
' pheasants and p 

Waders and wate 

• nearly all migrat 
'•* only important e 

red-billed curlew. 

> Of the reptiles I 

of the snakes of 1 

~ the python and « 

as high up as 8c 

numerous, and as 

plains to the upp 

The fishes foui 

general connexioi 

arctic, the Africai 

AtotUhopUrygii, <\ 

hardly enter the : 

<■ one is the peculia 

fishes are found it 

Cyprinidae* or ca: 

ana the genera ai 

torrent Inc. being 

■■' to maintain their 

A few Siluridae h 

t the larger part ol 

Indian fish which 

their ova, and the 

» on the table-land 

' characteristics of 

■ Salmonidae are ei 

proper, of Tibet a 

The Himalayan 

most part belong] 

and European res 

large and gorgeou 

Danaidae, and the 

second to South / 

variety in insect li 

are common. Th 

autumn: flights o 

they are carried In 

eternal snows. Aj 

gnats abound, pai 

all elevations. _, . _ _ . 

Mountain Sctiury.— Much has been written about the impressive-' I Hannibal, after capturing Sethrus^ Invested and took Hitneta 



:43* 



HIMERIUa^-JUNCKS, SIR F. 



and faied the city to fhe ground, founding a hew town close to the 
hot springs (Thermae Himeraeae), 8 m. to the west. The' only 
reHc of the ancient town now visible above ground ia a small 
portion (four cdtumns, lower diameter 7 ft.) of a Doric temple, the 
date of which (whether before or after 480 B.C.) is uncertain. 

HIMERIUS [f. AX). 315-386), Greek sophist and rhetorician, 
was born at Prusa in Bithynia. He completed bis education at 
Athens, whence he was summoned to Antioch in 362 by the 
emperor Julian to act as his private secretary. After the death 
of Julian in. the following year Himcrius returned to- Athens, 1 
where he established a school of rhetoric, which he compared 
with that of Isocrates and the Delphic oracle, owing to the 
number of those who flocked from all parts of the world to hear; 
him. Amongst his pupils were Gregory of Nazianzus and Basil 
the Great, bishop of Cafsarca. In recognition of his merits, 
civic rights and the membership of the Areopagus were conferred 
upon him. The death of his son Rufinus (his lament for whom, 
called jjey^Sla, is extant) and that of a favourite daughter 
greatly affected his health; in his later years he became blind 
and he died of epilepsy. Although a heathen, who had been' 
initiated into the mysteries of Mithra by Julian, he shows no* 
prejudice against the Christians. Himcrius is a typical repre- 
sentative of the later rhetorical schools. Photius (cod. 165, 243 
Bekker) had read 71 speeches by him, of 36 of which he has given 
an epitome; 24 have come down to us complete and fragments ' 
of 10 or 12 others. They consist of epideictic or " display " 
i speeches after the style of Aristides, the majority of them 
1 having been delivered on special occasions, such as the arrival of 
a new governor, visits to different cities ( Thessalonica, Constanti- 
nople), or the death of friends or well-known personages. The 
, Pokmarchicus, like the Mcncxcnus of Plato and the Epiiaphios 
, Logos of Hypereides, is a panegyric of those who had given then- 
lives for their country; it is so called "because it was originally, 
the duty of the polemarch to arrange the funeral games in 
honour of those who bad fallen in battle. Other declamations, 
only known from the excerpts in Photius, were imaginary orations ' 
put into the mouth of famous persons— Demosthenes advocating 
the recall of Aeschincs from banishment, Hypereides supporting 
the policy of Demosthenes, Tbemisiocles inveighing against the 
king of Persia, an orator unnamed attacking Epicurus for 
atheism before Julian at Constantinople. Hhnerius is more of a 
poet than a rhetorician, and bis declamations are valuable' as 
giving prose versions or even the actual words of lost poems by 
Greek lyric writers. The prose poem on the marriage of Sevems 
and his greeting to Basil at the beginning of spring are quite In the 
spirit of the old lyric Himerius possesses vigour of language, and 
descriptive powers, though his productions are spoilt by too 
frequent use of imagery, allegorical and metaphorical obscurities, 
mannerism and ostentatious learning. But they are valuable 
for the history and social conditions of the time, ' although 
lacking the sincerity characteristic of Libanius. 

See Eanapius, Vita* sophistarumi Suidas, sx.; editions by G. 
Wernsdorf (1700), with valuable introduction and commentaries, 

Jnd by F. Dubner (1849) in the Didot series; C Teuber, Ouaestionts 
limerianae (Breslau, 1882); on the style, E. Norden, Die antike 
Knnslproia (1898). 

. HIMLY (LOUIS), AUGUSTS (1823-1906), French historian 
and geographer, was born at Strassburg on the 28th of March 
1823. After studying in his native town and taking the university 
course in Berlin (1842-1843) he went to Paris, and passed first 
in the examination for fellowship (ogrtgation) of the lycies 
(1845), first in the examinations on leaving the £cole des Chartes, 
and first In the examination for fellowship of the faculties (1849). 
In 1849 he took the degree of doctor of letters with two theses, 
one of which, Wala et Louis U Dibonnaire (published in Paris 
in 1849), Placed him in the front rank of French scholars in the 
province of Carolingian history. Soon, , however, he turned 
his attention to the study of geography. In 1858 he obtained 
an appointment as teacher of geography at the Sorbonne, and 
.henceforth devoted himself to that subject. It was not till 
1876 that he published, in two volumes, his remarkable Hisloirc 
•de Information territorial* des Hats de I' Europe centrole, in which 
he showed wfth a firm, but sometimes slightly heavy touch, 



tne reciprocal influence exerted hy geography and history. 
While the work gives evidence throughout of wide and well- 
directed research, he preferred to write it in the form of a 
student's manual; but it was • manual so original that h gained 
him admission to the Institute in i88r. In that year he was 
appointed dean of the faculty of letters, and for ten yean he 
directed the intellectual life of that great educational centre 
during its development into a great scientific body. He died 
at Sevres on the 6th of October 1006. 

HIMMEU FREDERICK HENRY (1765-1814), German com- 
poser, was horn on the 40th of November 1765 at Treuea- 
brietzen in Brandenburg, Prussia, and originally studied theology 
at Halle. During a temporary stay at Potsdam he had aa 
opportunity of showing his self-acquired skill as a pianist before 
King Frederick William II., who thereupon made him a yearly 
allowance to enable him to complete his musical studies. This 
he did under Naumann, a German composer of the Italian school, 
and the style of that school Himmel himself adopted in his serious 
operas. The first of these, a pastoral opera, II Prima Navigptore, 
was produced at Venice in 1704 with great success. In 1792 
he went to Berlin, where hisr oratorio Isaaco was produced, in 
consequence of which he was made court Kapellmeister to the 
king of Prussia, and in that capacity wrote a great deal of official 
music, including cantatas, and a coronation Te Deum. Hh 
Italian'operas, successively composed for Stockholm, St Peters- 
burg and Berlin, were all received with great favour in their 
day. Of much greater importance than these is an operetta 
to German words by Kotzcbue, called Pasuhon, an admirable 
specimen of the primitive form of the musical drama known 
in Germany as the Singspitl. Himmel's gift of writing genuine 
simple melody is also observable in his songs, amongst which 
one called " To Alexis " is the best. He died in Berlin on the 
8th of June 18x4. 

' HINCKLEY, -a market town in the Bosworth* parliamentary 
division of Leicestershire, England, 14! m. S.W. from Leicester 
on the Nuneaton-Leicester branch of the London & North- 
western railway, and near the Ashby-dc-la-Zouch canaL Bop. 
of urban district (1901), 11,304. The town is weH situated on 
a considerable eminence. Among the principal "buildings are 
the church of St Mary, a Decorated and Perpendicular structure, 
with lofty tower and spire; the Roman Catholic academy 
named St Peter's Priory, and a grammar school The ditch 
of a castle erected by Hugh de Grentismenil in the time of William 
Rufus is still to be traced. Hinckley is the centre of a. stocking- 
weaving district, and its speciality is circular hose. It also 
possesses a boot-making industry, brick and tile works, and 
lime works. There are mineral springs in the neighbourhood. 

HINCKS, EDWARD (1 702-1866), British assyrjologist, wis 
born at Cork, Ireland, and educated at Trinity College, Dublin. 
He took orders in the Protestant Church of Ireland, and we 
rector of KiUyleagh, Down, from 1825 till his death on the 3rd 
of December 1866. Hincks devoted his spare time to the study 
of hieroglyphics, and to the deciphering of the cuneiform script 
(see Cuneiform), in which he was a pioneer, working out con- 
temporaneously with Sir H. Rawfinson, and independently 
of him, the ancient Persian vowel system. He published a 
number of original and scholarly papers on assyriologial 
questions of the highest value, chiefly in (he Transactions of 
the Royal Irish Academy. 

HINCKS, SIR FRANCIS (1807-1885), Canadian statesman, 
was born at Cork, Ireland* the son of an Irish Presbyterian 
minister. In 1832 he engaged in business in Toronto, became 
a friend of Robert Baldwin, and in 1835 was chosen to examine 
the accounts of the Weliand Canal, the management of whits 
was being attacked by W. L. Mackenzie. This turned his atten- 
tion to political life • and in 1838 he founded the Exommcr, a 
weekly paper in the Liberal interest. In .1841 he was elected 
M.P. for tfce county of Oxford, and in the following year was 
appointed inspector-general, the title then borne by the finance 
minister, but in 1843 resigned with Baldwin and the other 
ministers on the-questioti of responsible government. In 1848 
he again became inspector-general in the Balclwin-Lafootaioe 



HINCMAR 



■47-7 



ministry, end on their retirement in i8$i Became premier of 
Canada, his chief colleague being A. N. Morin (1803-1865). 
While premier he was prominent in the negotiations which Jed 
to the construction of the Grand Trunk railway, and in co- 
operation with Lord Elgin negotiated with the United States 
the reciprocity treaty of 1854. in* the same year the bitter 
'hostility of the " Clear Grits " under George Brown compelled 
his resignation, and he was prominent in the formation ot the 
Liberal-Conservative Party. In 1855 he was chosen governor 
of Barbados and the Windward Islands, and subsequently t 
governor of British Guiana. In 1869 he was created &GM.G. : 
and returned to Canada, becoming till 1873 finance minister 
in the cabinet of Sir John Mtcdonald. In February of that 
year he resigned, but continued to take an active part in public 
life. In 1879 the failure of the Consolidated Bank of Canada, 
ol which he was president, led to his being tried for issuing false 
statements. Though found guilty on a technicality (see Journal 
of the Canadian Bankers' Association, April 1006) judgment 
was suspended, his personal credit remained unimpaired, and 
he continued to take part in the discussion of public questions 
till his death on the x8th of August 1885. 

His writings include : The Political History of Canada between 1840 • 
and 18 & (1*77); The Political Destiny of Canada (1878), and his 
Reminiscences (1984). 

HIVCaUR (t. 805-881), archbishop of Reims, one of the 
most remarkable figures m the ecclesiastical history of France, 
belonged to a noble family of the north or north-east of Gaul. 
Destined, doubtless, to the monastic life, he was brought up at 
St Denis under the direction, of the abbot Hilduin (d. 844), who 
brought him in 82a to the court of the emperor Louis the Pious. 
When Hilduin was disgraced in 830 for. having joined the party of 
Lothair, Hincmar accompanied him into exile at Corvty in 
Saioay, but returned with him to Si Denis when the abbot was 
reconciled with the emperor, and remained faithful to the emperor 
during his struggle with his sons. After the death of Louis the 
Pious (840) Hincmar supported Charles the Bold, and received 
from him the abbacies of Notre-Dame at Compiegne and St 
Germer de Fly. In 845 he obtained through the king's support 
the archbishopric of Reims, and this choice was confirmed at 
the synod of Beauvais (April 845). Archbishop Ebbo, whom be 
nepUced, had been deposed in 83 S at the synod of Thionville 
(Diedcnbofen) for having broken his oath of fidelity to the emperor 
Louis, whom he had deserted to join the party of Lothair. After 
the death of Louis, Ebbo succeeded in regaining possession of his 
see for some years (840-844), but in 844 Pope Sergius IL con- 
finned his deposition. It was in these circumstances that 
Hincmar succeeded, and in 847 Pope Leo IV. sent him the 
pallium. 

One of the first cares of the new prelate was the restitution tp 
his metropolitan see of the domains that bad been alienated under 
Ebbo and given as benefices, to laymen. From the beginning of 
his episcopate Hincmar was in constant conflict with the clerks 
.who had been ordained by Ebbo during his reappearance. These 
clerks, whose ordination was regarded as invalid by Hincmar and 
his adherents, were condemned in. 853- at the council of Soissons, 
and the decisions of that council were confirmed in $55 by Pope 
Benedict III. This conflict, however, bred an antagonism of 
which Hincmar was later to feel the effects. During the next 
thirty years the archbishop of Reims played a very prominent 
part in church and state. His authoritative and energetic will 
inspired, and in great measure directed, the policy of the west 
Frankisb kingdom until his death. He took an active part in 
all the great political and religious affairs of his time, and was 
especially energetic in defending and extending the rights of the 
church and of the metropolitans in general, and of the metro- 
politan of the church of Reims in particular. In the resulting 
conflicts, in which his personal interest, was in question, he 
displayed great activity and a wide knowledge of canon law, but 
did not scruple to resort to disingenuous interpretation of texts. 
His first encounter was with the heresiarch Gottschalk, whose 
predestinarian doctrines claimed to be modelled on those pf St 
Augustine,^ Hin c m i r placed himself jrt the head, of the parity 



that regarded Gottschalk'? doctrines as heretical, and succeeded 
in procuring the arrest and imprisonment of his adversary (840). 
For a part at least of his doctrines Gottschalk found ardent 
defenders, such as Lupus of Ferrieres, the deacon Floras and 
Amolo of Lyons. Through the energy and activity of Hincmar 
the theories, of Gottschalk wore condemned at Quiexzy (853) and 
Valence (855), and the decisions of these two synods were con- 
finned at the synods of Langres and Sayorm**res, near Toul 
(859). To refute the predmtinaxian heresy Hincmar composed 
his De fratdestinoUom {Dei el liber arbitrio, and against 
certain propositions advanced by Gottschalk on the Trinity he 
wrote a treatise called De una et non Itina deitate, Gottschalk* 
died in prison-in 86& The question of the divorce of Lothair II., 
king of Lorraine, who had. repudiated his wife Theutberga to 
marry his concubine Waldrada, engaged Hinanar's literary 
activities in another direction. At the request of a number of 
great personages in Lorraine he composed in 860 his Die ditoHia 
Letharii, el Teutbergae, in which he vigorously attacked, both 
from the moral and the legal standpoints, the condemnation 
pitoapunced against the queen by the synod of Aix-la-ChapeJJe 
(February 860). Hincmar energetically supported the policy 0/ 
Charles the Bald in Lorraine, less perhaps from devotion to the 
king's interests than from a desire to see the whole of the ecclesi- 
astical province of Reims united under the authority of a single 
sovereign, and in 869 it was he who consecrated Charles at Met* 
as king of Lorraine. 

In the middle of the 9th century there appeared in Caul the 
collection of false decretals commonly known as the Pseudo- 
Isidorian Decretals. The exact date and the circumstances of the 
composition of the collection are still an open question, but it is 
certain that Hincmar was one of the first to know of their existence, 
and apparently he was not aware that the documents were forged. 
The importance assigned by these decretals to the bishops and the 
provincial councils, as well as to the direct intervention of the 
Holy See, tended to curtail the rights of the metropolitans, ot 
which Hincmar was so jealous. Rothad, bishop of Soissons, one of 
the most active members of the party in favour of the pseudo- 
Isidorian theories, immediately came into collision with his 
archbishop. Deposed in 863 at the council of Soissons, presided 
over by Hincmar, Rothad appealed to Rome, Pope Nicholas I. 
supported him zealously, and in 865, in spite of the protests of the 
archbishop of Reims, Arsenius, bishop of Orta and legate of the 
Holy See, was instructed to restore Rothad to his episcopal sea. 
Hinrraar experienced another check when he endeavoured to 
prevent Wulfad, one of the clerks deposed by Ebbo, from obtain- 
ing the archbishopric of Bourges with the support of Charles the 
Bald. After a synod held at Soissons, Nicholas I. pronounced 
himself in favour of the deposed clerks, and Hincmar was con- 
strained to make submission (866). He was more successful in 
his contest with his nephew Hincmar, bishop of Laon, who was 
at first supported both by the king and by his uncle, the arch- 
bishop of Reims, but soon quarrelled with both. Hincmar of 
Laon refused to recognize the authority of his metropolitan, and 
entered into an open struggle with* his uncle, who exposed his 
errors in a treatise called Opusculum LV. capiiulorum, and pro- 
cured his condemnation and deposition at the synod of Douzy 
t--~--- - - t mto g^^ pxobabiy to 

} : by order of Count Boso. 

] position, but it was coa- 

f it was not>until 878, at the 

c ite prelate was reconciled 

1 rose between Hincmar 09 

t on the other in 876, when 

] est, entrusted Ansegisus, 

a cy of the Gauls and of 

( _ tolic. In Hincmar's eyes 

this was an encroachment on the jurisdiction of the archbishops, 
and it was against this primacy that he directed his treatise 
Dejure melropoHtanorum. At the same time he wrote a life of St 
ftemigius, in which he endeavoured by audacious falsifications to 
prove the supremacy of the church of Reims over the other 
churches. jCharles the Bald, however, upheld the rights of 



47 8 



HIND^HINKLEY 



Ansegisus at the synod of Ponthion. Although Hincmar bad 
been very hostile to Charles's expedition into Italy, he figured 
among his testamentary executors and helped to secure &he sub- 
mission of the nobles to Louis the Stammerer, whom be crowned 
at Compiegne (8th of December S77). 

During the reign of Louis, Hincmar played an obscure part. 
He supported the accession of Louis I1L and' Carlontan, but had 
a dispute with Louis, who wished to instal a candidate is the 
episcopal see of Beauvais without the archbishop's assent. To 
Carloman, on his accession in 882, Hincmar addressed bis De 
online polatii, partly based on a treatise' (now lost) by Adalard, 
abbot of Corbie (c. 8 14), in which he set forth his system of govern- 
ment and his opinion of the duties of a sovereign, a subject be 
bad already" touched in his Dv regis persona ct regie mitiisterio, 
dedicated to Charles the Bald at an unknown date, and in bis 
Instruct* ad Ludovicum regent, addressed to Lows the Stammerer 
on his accession in 877. In tbe autumn of 882 an irruption -of 
the Normans forced the old archbishop to take refuge at Epernay, 
where he died on the 21st of December 882. Hincmar was a 
prolific writer. Besides tbe works already mentioned, be was the 
author of several theological tracts; of the Do villa NovUiato, 
concerning the claiming of a domain of his church; and he con- 
tinued from 861 the Annates Bertinioni, of which the first part 
was written by Prudentius, bishop of Troyes, the best source for 
the history of Charles the Bald. He also wrote a great number , 
of letters, some of which are extant, and others embodied in tbe 
chronicles of Flodoard. 

3 

so 
d. 

II 

Hi 



'< HIND, the female of tbe red-deer, usually taken as being 
three years old and over, the male being known as a " hart. 
It is sometimes also applied to the female of other species of 
deer. The word appears in several Teutonic languages, d . 
Dutch and Ger. Hindc, and has been connected with the Goth. 
kinYan (kintkan), to seise, which may be connected ultimately 
with " hand w and " hunt." u Hart," from the O.E. hcoH, may 
be in origin connected with the root of Gr. jtf/>at, horn. 
44 Hind" (O.E. nine, probably from the O.E. kinan, members 
of a family or household), meaning a servant, especially a 
labourer on a farm, is another word. In Scotland tbe " hind " 
is a farm servant, with a cottage on the farm, and duties and 
responsibilities that make him superior to tbe rest of the 
labourers. Similarly "hind" is used in certain parts of 
northern England as equivalent to " bailiff-" 

HINDfcRSIN, GUSTAV EDUARD VON (1804-1872), Prussian 
general, was born at Wernigerode near Halberstadt on the 
x8th of Jury 1804. He was the son of a priest and received a 
good education. His earlier life was spent in great poverty, 
and the struggle for existence developed in him an iron strength 
of character. Entering the Prussian artillery in 1820 he became 
an officer in 1825. From 1830 to 1837 he attended the Allgemeine 
Kriegsakademie at Berlin, and in 1841, while still a subaltern, 
he was posted to tbe great General Staff, in which he afterwards 
directed tbe topographical section. In 1849 he served with tbe 
tank of major on the staff of General Peucker, who commanded 
a federal corps in the suppression of the Baden insurrection. He 
fell into the hands of the insurgents at the action of Ladenbufg, 
but was released just before the fall of Rastadt. In the Danish 
war of 1864 Hindersin, now. lieutenant-general, directed the 
artillery operations against the lines of Duppel, and for his 
services was ennobled by the king of Prussia. Soon afterwards 
be became inspector-general of artillery. His experience at 
Dtippel had convinced him that the days of the smooth-bore 
gun were past, and he now devoted himself with unremitting 
seal to the rearmament and reorganisation of the Prussian 
artillery. The available funds were small,, and grudgingly 



voted by-the parliament. There was a strong I eeling moreover 
that tbe smooth-bore was still tactically superior to its rival 
(see Artilxxry, §19). There was- no practical training for 
war in either the field or tbe fortress artillery units. The latter 
bad made scarcely any progress since the days of Frederick 
tbe Great, and before von Hindersin'* appointment had practised 
with the same guns in the same bastion year after year. All 
this was altered, the whole "soot-artillery " was reorganised, 
manoeuvres were instituted, and the smooth-bores were, except 
for ditch defence, eliminated from the armament of tbe Prussian 
fortresses. But far more important was his work in connexion 
with the field and horse batteries. In 1864 only one battery 
in four bad rifled guns, but by the unrelenting energy of von 
Hindersin the outbreak of war with Austria one and a half 
years later found the Prussians with ten in every sixteen batteries 
armed with the new weapon. But tbe* battles of 1866 showed, 
besides the superiority of the rifled gun, a very marked absence 
of tacticalemdcncy in the Prussian artillery, which was almost 
always outmatched by that of the enemy. Von Hindersin 
had pleaded, in season, and out of season, for the establishment 
of a school of gunnery; and in spite of want of funds, such 
a school had already been established. After x866, however, 
more support was obtained, and tbe improvement in tbe Prussian 
field artillery between 1866 and 1870 was* extraordinary, even 
thodgh there had not been time for the work of the school to 
leaven the whole arm. Indeed, tbe German artillery played 
by far the most important part in the victories of the Franco- 
German war. Von Hiiio^iBinacc»rire^nied tbe king^s headquarters 
as chief of artillery, as he had done in 1866, and was present 
at Gravelotte, Sedan and the siege of Paris. But his work, 
which was now accomplished, had worn out his physical powers, 
and he died on the 23rd of January 1872 at Berlin. 

See Bartholomews, Der General ier Infankrie vm Hindenim 
(Berlin, 1899). and Prince Kraft an l i oh cnio b e-lpgelnngen. Letters 
on Artillery (translated by Major Walford, RA)7No7xl 

HINDI, EASTERN, one of the " intermediate " Indo-Aryan 
languages (see Hindostato). It is spoken in Oudh, Baghelkhand 
and Chhattisgarh by over 22,000,000 people. It is derived 
from the Apabbramsa form Of ArdhamlgadhI Prakrit (see 
Prakrit), and possesses a large and important literature. Its 
most famous writer was Tulsl Das, the poet and reformer, 
who died early in the 17th century, and since his time it has 
been the North-Ind ian language employed for epic poetry. 

HINDI, WESTERN, the Indo-Aryan language of the middle 
and upper Gangetic Doab, and of tbe country to the north 
and south. It is the vernacular of over 40,000,000 people. Its 
standard dialect is Braj BaashS, spoken near Muttrk, which 
has a considerable literature mainly devoted to the religion 
founded on devotion ' to Krishna. Another dialect spoken 
near Delhi and in the upper Gangetic Doab is the original from 
which Hindostani, the great lingua franca of India, has developed 
(see Hindostani). Western Hindi, like Punjabi; its neighbour 
to the west, is descended from tbe Ar*bhramsa form of $auras€nl 
Prakrit (see Prakrit), and represents the language of the 
Madhy&desa or Midland* as distinct from the intermediate 
an d oute r Indo-Aryan languages. 

HINDKI, the name given to the Hindus who inhabit Afghani- 
stan. They are of the Khatri class* and are found all over 
the country even amongst the wildest tribes. BelleW in his 
Races of Afghanistan estimates their number at about 300,000. 
The name Hindki is also loosely used on the upper Indus, 
in Dir, Bajour, &c., to denote tbe speakers of Punjabi or any 
of its dialects. It is sometimes applied in a historical sense 
to the Buddhist inhabitants of the Peshawar Valley north of 
the Kabul river, who were driven thence about tbe 5th or 
6th century and settled in the 1 Neighbourhood of Kandahar. 

HINDtBY, an urban district in the 1 Incc parliamentary 
division of Lancashire, England, 2 m. E.S.E. of Wigan, on the 
Lancashire & Yorkshire and Great Central railways. Pop. (1001) 
23,504. Cotton spinning and tbe manufacture of cotton goods 
are the .principal industries, and there are- extensive coal-mines 
in the neighbourhood. . 4 lt is recorded that in the time of the 



HtNJDOSTANI 



479 



-* 















Puritan revolution Hindky church was entered b* tilt Cevalieri, 
who played at cards in the pew*, pulled down the pulpit and 
tore the Bible in pieces. : 

HINDOSTANI (properly %inddsidni, of or belonging to 
Hindostan 1 ), the name given by Europeans to an Indo-Aryan 
dialect (whoso home is in the upper Gangetic Doab and near 
the city of Delhi), which, owing to political causes, has become 
the great lingua franca of modem India. The name is not. 
employed by natives of India, except as an imitation of the 
English nomenclature. Hindostani is by origin a dialect of 
Western Hindi, and it is first of all necessary to explain what 
we mean by the term " Hindi " as applied to language./ Modem 
Indo-Aryan languages fall into three groups,— an outer band, 
the language of the Midland and an intermediate band. The 
Midland consists of the Gangetic Doab and of the country to 
its immediate north and south, extending, roughly speaking, 
from the Eastern Punjab on the west, to Cawnpore on its test. 
The language of this tract is called "Western Hindi"; to its 
west we have Panjabi (of the Central Punjab)* and to the east, 
reaching as far as Benares, Eastern Hindi, both Intermediate 
languages. These three will all be dealt with in the present 
article. Panjabi and Western Hindi are derived tarn Saurasenl, 
and Eastern Hindi from Ardham gadbe Prakrit, through the 
corresponding Apabhramsas (see P*ajcut). Eastern Hindi 
differs in many respects from the two others, but it is customary 
to consider it together with the language of the Midland, and 
this will be followed on the present occasion. In ions the speakers 
of these three languages numbered: Panjabi, 17^070^962 ; Western 
Hindi, 40,714.93$; Eastern Hindi, 22,1 36458. 

Linguistic Boundaries.— Tiking the tract covered by these 
three forms of speech, it has to its west, in the western Punjab, 
Lahndi (see Smom), a language of the Outer band. The 
parent of Lahnda once no doubt covered the whole of the 
Punjab, but, in the process of expansion of the tribes of the 
Midland described in . the ankle Indo-Am*n Lsxocaoes, 
it was gradually driven back, leaving traces of its former exist- 
ence which grow stronger as we proceed westwards, until at 
about the 74th degree of cast longitude there is a nmeoV transi- 
tion dialect. To the west of that degree Lahnda may he said 
to be established, the deserts of the west-central Punjab forming 
a barrier and protecting it, just as, farther south, a continuation 
of the same desert has protected Sindhi from Rajasthani. It 
it the old traces of Lahndi which mainly, differentiate Panjabi 
from Hindostani To the south of Panjabi and Western Hindi 
lies Rajasthani This language. arose in much the same way 
as Panjabi. The expanding Midland language was stopped by 
the desert from reaching Sindhi, but to the south-west it found an 
unobstructed way into Gujarat, where, under the form of Gujarati, 
, » " Hindostan is a Persian wont and in modem Persian is 
pronounced " Hindustan." It means the country of the Hindus In 
medieval Persian the word was '* Hindostan*" with and, but in the 
modern language the distinctions between I and I and between 6 
and u have been lost. Indian languages have b o nu we d Persian 
words in their medieval form. Jbu» ia India we have sMr, a tiger, 
as compared with modern Persian $klr; id, but modern Pen. gU: 
bCsMn, but modern Per*, b&st&n. The word " Hindu " is in medieval 
Persian " Hindd " representing the ancient Avesta hendavo (Sanskrit, 
satadaaso), a dweller on the Stnamn or 1 ndus. Owing to the influence 
of scholars in modern Persian the ford " Hindi " Is now established 
in English and, through English, in the Indian literary languages; 
but " Hinda " is also often heard in India. M Hindostan ' with 
is much more common both in English and in Indian languages, 
although " Hindustan " is also employed. Up to the days of Persian 
supremacy inaugurated in Calcutta by Gilchrist and his friends, -every 
traveller tn India spoke of " ladostaa " or some such word, thus 
bearing testimony to the current pronunciation* Gilchrist intro- 
duced "Hindoostan," which became "Hindustan" in modern 
spelling. The word is not an Indian one, and both pronunciations, 
with 6 and with, tf, are current in India at the present day, but that 
with 9 is unquestionably the one demanded by the history of the 
word and of the form which other Persian words take on Indian 
soiL On the other hand " Hindu " is too firmly established in Eng- 
lish for us to suggest the spelling " Hindo." The word " Hindi.' 
has another derivation, being formed from the Persian Hind, India 
(Avesta hindu, Sanskrit undMu. the Indus). " Hindi " means "of 
or belonging to India," while " Hindu " now means " a person of the 
Hindu, religion." (Cf. Sir C. J. Lyall, A Sktkh of Qu Hindustani 
Language p*J). ( 



it broke the continuity of' the Outer band. Eastern Hindi, 
as an Intermediate form of speech, fa of much older lineage. 
It has been an Intermediate language since, at least, the institu- 
tion of Jamtsm (say, 500 *£.), and is much less subject to the 
influence of the Midland than is Panjabi. To its east it has 
Bihari, and, stretching far to the south, it has Marathi as its 
neighbour in that direction, both of these being Outer languages. 

Dialed*.— The only important dialect of Eastern Hindi 
is AwadhI, spoken in Oudfa, and possessing a large literature of 
great excellence. Chhattisgarh! and Baghett, the other dialects, 
have scanty literatures of small value. Western Hindi has four 
main dialects, Bundeft of Bnndelkhand, Braj Bhasha (properly 
" Braj Bhlsa ") of the country round Mathura (Muttra), Kanaujf 
of the central Doab and the country to its north, and vernacular 
Hindostani of Delhi and the Upper Doab. West of the Upper 
Doab, across the Jumna, another dialect, Bangarft, is also found. 
It possesses no literature, Kanaujf is very closely allied to 
Braj Bhasha, and these two share with Awadhi the honour 
of being the great literary speeches of northern India. Nearly 
all the classical literature of India is religious in character, 
and we may say that, as a broad rule, Awadhi literature is devoted 
to the Ramaite religion and the epic .poetry connected with it, 
while that of Braj Bhasha is concerned with the religion of 
Krishna. Vernacular Hindostani has no literature of iu own, 
but as the lingua franca now to be described it has a large 
one. Panjabi has one dialect, Dogrt, spoken in the Himalayas. 

Hindostani at a Lingua franca.— It has often been said that 
Hindostani is a mongrel "pigeon" form of speech made up 
of contributions from the various languages which met in Demi 
baaaar, but this theory has now been proved to be unfounded, 
owing to the discovery of the met that it is an actual living 
dialect of Western Hindi, existing for centuries fn its present 
habitat, and the direct descendant of Saurasenl Prakrit. It 
is not a typical dialect of that language, for, situated where it 
is, it represents Western Hindi merging into Panjabi (Braj 
Bhasha being admittedly the standard of the language), but to 
say that it fa a mongrel tongue thrown together in the market 
is to reverse the order of events. It was the natural language 
of the people in the neighbourhood of Delhi, who formed the 
bulk of these who resorted to the baaaar, and hence it became 
the baaaar language. From here it became the lingua franca 
of the Mogul camp and was carried everywhere in India by the 
lieutenants of the empire. IX has several recognized varieties, 
amongst which we may mention Dakhinl, Urdu, RCfcbta and 
Hindi. Dakhini or " southern/' Is the form current in the south 
of India, and was the first to be employed for literature. It 
contains many archaic expressions now extinct in the standard 
dialect* Urdu, or UrdQ zabSn, " the language of the camp," 
is the name usually employed for Hindostani by natives, and 
is now the standard form of speech used by Mussulmans. AQ 
the early Hindostani literature was in poetry, and this literary 
form of speech was named *' RCkhta,** or" scattered," from the 
way in which words borrowed from Persian were " scattered " 
through it. The name is now reserved for the dialect used in 
poetry, Urdu being the dialect of prose and of conversation. 
The introduction of these borrowed words, which has been 
carried to even a greater extent in Urdu, was facilitated by the 
facts that the letter was by origin a " camp " language, and that 
Persian was the official language of the Mogul court In this 
"way Persian (and, with Persian, Arabic) words came into current 
use, and, though the language remained Indo-Aryan in its 
grammar and essential characteristics, it soon became un- 
intelligible to any one who had not at least a moderate acquaint' 
ance with the vocabulary of Iran. This extreme Persianization 
of Urdu was due rather to Hindu than to Persian influence. 
Although Urdu literature was Mussulman in its origin, the 
Persian element was first introduced in excess by the pliant 
Hindu officials employed in the Mogul administration, and 
acquainted with Persian, rather than by Persians and Per- 
sianized Moguls, who for many centuries used only their own 
languages for literary purposes.* Prose Urdu literature took its' 
• Sir C. j. Lyall, op. ctt. p. o. 



4.8a 



HIND06TANI 



originiin the English occupation of India and the need lor tfltU 
books for the college of Fort Wffliam. It has had a prosperous 
career since the commencement of the 19th century, but some 
writers, especially those of Lucknow, have so overloaded it with 
Persian and Arabic that httfc of the original Indo- Aryan char- 
acter remains, except, perhaps, an occasional pronoun or auxiliary 
verb. The Hindi form of Hindustani was invented simultane* 
ously with Urdu prose by the teachers at Fort William. It 
was intended to be a Hindostani f or the use of Hindus, and was 
derived from Urdu by ejecting all words of Persian or Arabic 
hirth, and substituting for them words either borrowed from 
Sanskrit (ksisamas) or derived from the old primary Prakrit 
(tadbkavas) (see Indo-Aslyan Languages). Owing to the popu- 
larity of the first book written in it, and to its supplying the 
need for a lingua franco which could be used by the most patriotic 
Hindus without offending their religious prejudices, it became 
widely adopted, and is now the recognized vehicle for writing 
prose by those inhabitants of northern India who do not employ 
Urdu. This Hindi, which is an altogether artificial product of the 
English, is hardly ever usedfor poetry. For this the indigenous 
dialects (usually Awadhi or Braj Bhasha) are nearly always 
employed by Hindus. Urdu, on the other hand, having had a 
natural growth, has a vigorous poetical literature. Modern 
Hindi prose is often disfigured by that too free borrowing of 
Sanskrit words instead of using home-born tadbkovas, which 
has been the ruin of Bengali, and it is rapidly becoming a Hindu 
counterpart of the Persianised Urdu, neither of which is in- 
telligible except to persons of high education* 

Not only has Urdu adopted a Persian vocabulary, but even 
a few peculiarities of Persian construction, such as reversing 
the positions of the. governing and the governed word (e.g. 
Up mtra for j*£rd bdp), or of the Adjective and the substantive 
it qualifies, or such as the use of Persian phrases with the pre- 
position ba instead of the native postposition of the ablative 
case (e.g. bo-kkushi for bhushi-$e y or ba-k*km sark&r-k& instead 
of sorkar-fU bukm-si) are to be met with in many writings; 
and these, perhaps, combined with the too free indulgence on 
the part of some authors in the use of high-flown and pedantic 
Persian and Arabic words in place of common and yet chaste 
Indian words, and the general use of the Persian instead of the 
Nftgarl character, have induced some to regard Hindostani or 
Urdu as a language distinct from Hindi. But such a view 
betrays a radical misunderstanding of the whole question. We 
must define Urdu as the Persianiaed Hindostani of educated 
Mussulmans, while Hindi is the Sanskritized Hindostani of 
educated Hindus. As. for the written character, Urdu, from 
the number of Persian words which it contains, can only be 
written conveniently in the Persian character, while Hindi, 
for a parallel reason, can only be written in the Nagari or one 
of its related alphabets (see Sanskrit). On the other hand, 
" Hindostani " implies the great lingua franca of India, capable 
of being written in either character, and, wkpout purism, 
avoiding the excessive use of either Persian or Sanskrit words 
when employed for literature. It is easy to write this Hindostani, 
for it has an opulent vocabulary of tadbhova words understood 
everywhere by both Mussulmans and Hindus. While " Hindo- 
stani," " Urdu " and " Hindi " are thus names of dialects, it 
should be remembered that the terms " Western Hindi " and 
" Eastern Hindi " connote, not dialects, t>ut languages. 

The epoch of Akbar, which first saw a regular revenue system 
established, with toleration and the free use of their religion to 
the Hindus, was, there can be little doubt, the period of the 
formation of the language. But its final consolidation did not 
take place till the reign of Shah Jah&n. After the date of this 
monarch the changes are comparatively immaterial until we 
come to the time when European sources began to mingle 
with those of the East. Of the contributions from these sources 
there is little to say. Like the greater part of those from Arabic 
and Persian, they are chiefly nouns, and may be regarded rather 
as excrescences which have sprung up casually and have attached 
themselves to the original trunk than as ingredients duly in- 
corporated in the body. In the case of the Persian and Arabic 



element. Indeed, wo do find not a ft w Instances in which nouns 
have been furnished with a Hindi termination, e.g. kJpridnA, 
badalnd, guzarnd, dajknt, bakkjhnd, kanOnopan, &c; but the 
European element cannot be said to have at all woven itself 
into the grammar of the language. It consists, as has been 
observed, solely of nouns, principally substantive nouns, which 
on their admission into the language are spelt phonetically, 
or according to the corrupt pronunciation they receive in the 
mouths of the natives, and are declined like the indigenous 
nouns by means of the usual postpositions or case-affixes. A 
few examples will suffice. The Portuguese, the first in order of 
seniority, contributes a few words, as kamarll or komrtt (camera), 
a room; tnirtdt (marteJh), a hammer; nildm (leVoo), an auction, 
&«.&c, Of French and Dutch influence scarcely a trace exists. 
English has contributed a number of words, some of which have 
even found a. place in the literature of the language; ej. 
kamishanar (commissioner); jaj (judge); f&ktcr (doctor); 
<2dJfc/eri, "the science of medicine" or "the profession of 
physicians "; inspector (inspector); ishnf (assistant); sosayefi 
(society); apU (appeal); apU karno\ "to appeal"; ottrf or 
iigri (decree); oVrVi (degree); inc (inch); Jut (foot); and 
many more, ate now words commonly used. Some borrowed 
words are distorted into the shape of genuine Hindostani words 
familiar to the speakers; e.g. the English railway term " signal " 
has become sikondar, the native name for Alexander the Great, 
and " signal-man " is sikandcr-man, or " the pride of Alexander." 
How far the free use of Anglicisms will be adopted as the language 
progresses is a question upon which it would be hazardous to 
pronounce an opinion, but of late years it has greatly increased 
in the language of theeducated, especially in the case of technical 
terms. A native veterinary surgeon once said to the present 
writer, " kulil+kd saliva bahut antiseptic hoi " for " a dog's 
saliva is very antiseptic/' and this is not an extravagant 
example.* 

The vocabulary of Panjabiand Eastern Hindi Is very similar 
to that of Western Hindi Panjabi has no literature to speak 
of and is free from the burden of words borrowed from Persian 
or Sanskrit, only the commonest and simplest of such being found 
in it. Its vocabulary is thus almost entirely tadbkova, and, 
while capable of expressing all ideas, it has a charming rustic 
flavour, like the Lowland Scotch of Burnt, indicative of the 
national character of the sturdy peasantry that employs it. 
Eastern. Hindi is very like Panjabi' in this respect, but for a 
different reason. In ft were written the works of Tulsf Das, 
one of the greatest writers that India has produced, and his 
influence on the language has been as great as that of Shake- 
speare on English. The peasantry are continually quoting 
him without knowing it, and his style, simple and yet vigorous, 
thoroughly Indian and yet free from purism, ha£ set a model 
which is everywhere followed except in. the large towns where 
Urdu pr Sanskritized Hindi prevails. Eastern Hindi is written 
in the Nagari alphabet, or in the current character related to 
it called " Kaitbi " (see Boxasi). The indigenous alphabet of 
the Punjab is called Lanfa or " clipped." It is related to Nlgarl, 
but is hardly legible to any one except the original writer, and 
sometimes not even to him. To remedy this defect an improved 
form of the alphabet was devised in the 16th century by Angad, 
the fifth Sikh Guru, for the purpose of recording the Sikh scrip- 
tures. It was named Gurmukhi, " proceeding from the mouth of 
the Guru," and is now generally used for writing the language. 

Grammar.— In the following account we use these contractions: 
Skr. -Sanskrit; Pr.-Praknu Ap.- Apabhramsa; W.H. - 
Western Hindi; EH. -Eastern Hindi; H.« Hindostani; Br.- 
Braf Bhasha ; P. - Panjabi 

(A) Phonetics.— The phonetic system of aH three languages is 
nearly the same as that of the Apabhramsas from which they are 
derived. With a few exceptions, to be noted below, the letters of the 
alphabet* of the three languages are the same as in Sanskrit. 
Panjabi, and the western dtatoctb of Western Hindi, have preserved 
thp old Vedic cerebral /. There is a tendency for concurrent vowels 
to run into each other, and for the semi-vowels y and • to become 
vowels. Thus, Skr. carmak&as, Ap. camma&ru, a leather-worker, 



1 This and the preceding paragraph are partly taken from Ma 
Platts's article in vol.xi. of the 9U1 edition of this encyclopaedia 



HINDOSTAN1 



481 



H. eamdrtSkr. rajdni, Ap. nMani, H. ram, night; Skr. 

ikmotakas, Ap. dkamUu, B. rfWd, white. Sometimes the semi- 
vowel is retained, as in Skr. kdtaras. Ap. kd(j)aru, H. kdyar, a 
coward. Almost (he only compound consonants which survived 
in the Pr. stage were double letters, and in W.H. and E.H. these 
are usually simplified, the .preceding vowel being lengthened and 
sometimes nasalised, m compensation. P., on the other hand, pre- 
fers to retain the double consonant. Thus, Skr. karma, Ap. kammu, 
W.H. and E.H. kdm, but P. kamm, a work; Skr. satyas, Ap. saccu, 
W.H. and E.H. sic, but P. sacc, true (H., being the W.H. dialect 
which lies nearest to P., often follows that language, and in this 
iastance has sou, usually written sac); Skr. kastas, Ap. hatthu, 
W.H. and E.H. hoik, but P. kattk, a hand. The nasalisation of vowels 
is very frequent in all three languages, and is here represented by the 
sigh ~ avtt the vowel. Sometimes it is compensatory, as in s&c, 
but it often represents an original m, as in kav&l from Skr. kamaias, 
a lotus. Final short vowels quicsce in prose pronunciation, and are 
usually not written, in transliteration; thus the final a, t 01 u has 
been lost in all the examples given above, and other latsama examples 
are Skr. mati- which becomes mat, mind, and Skr. vastu-, which be- 
comes bait, a thing. In all poetry, however (except in the Urdu 
poetry formed on Persian models, and under the rules of Persian 
prosody), they reappear and are necessary for the scansion. 

In ladbhava words an original Jong vowel in any syllable earlier 
than the penultimate is shortened. In P. and H. when the long vowel 
is I or 6 it is shortened to « or u respectively, but in other W.H. 
"alects and in EJJ. it is shortened to a or o; thus, 6*fl, daughter, 
me form H^ bitiyd, E.H. befiyd; ghdri, mare, long form H. ghuriyd, 
_.H. gkcriyd. The short vowels « and o are very rare in P. and H., 
but are not uncommon (though ignored by most grammars) in E.H. 
and the other W.H. dialects. A medial 4 is pronounced as a strongly 
burred cerebral r, and is then written a* shown, with a supposited 
dot. All these changes and various contractions of Prakrit syllables- 
nave caused considerable variations in the forma of words, but 
generally not so as to obscure the origin. 

(B) Declension. — The nominative form of a tadbhava word is de- 
rived from the nominative form in Sanskrit and Prakrit, but latsama 
words are usually borrowed in the form of the Skr. crude base; thus, 
Skr. haitin-, nom. hasO, Ap. nom. haUhl, H. ad/At, an elephant; 
Skr. base mati-, nom. matis, H. (latsama) mati, or, with elision of the 
final short vowel, mat. Some tatsamas are, however, borrowed in the 
nominative form, as in Skr. dhanin-, nom. dhart, H. dhanl, a rich 
man. As another example of a tadbkava word, we may take the 
Skr. nom. ghdfas, Ap. ghddv, H. gMr, a horse. Here again the final 
short vowel has been elided, but in old poetry we should find gkdru, 
and corresponding forms ia u are occasionally met with at the 
present day. 

In the article Prakrit attention is drawn to the frequent use of 
pleonastic suffixes, especially -ka- (fem.-(«)*d). 
With such a suffix we have the Skr. gkifaJtas, 
Ap. ghdoa-Uy Western Hindi gkorau, or in P. 
and H. (which is the W.H. dialect nearest in 
locality to P.) ghdrd, a horse; Skr. fAdMd, 
Ap. gkddira, W.H. and P. gktdi, a mare. 
Such modern forms made with one pleon- 
astic suffix are called " strong forms," while 
those made without it are called " weak 
forms." All strong forms end in au (or d) 
in the masculine, and in I in the feminine, 
whereas, in Skr., and hence in tatsamas, both d 
and i are generally typical of fei is, 

though sometimes employed fo :u- t v 

line. It is shown in the article 1 tat 

these pleonastic suffixes can h or 

even trebled, and in this way w ew 

series of ladbhava forms. Let he 

imaginary Skr. m gh6fa-ka-kas « i>le 

suffix. From this we have the 1 -*, 

and modern ghorawd (with eu In- 

setted), a horse. Similarly for Ine 

we have Skr. *gM4ti-Ma-kd, / ~4, 

modern ghoriyd (with euphonic , a 

mare. Such forms, made with es, 

are called " long forms," and in 

famifiar conversation, the fern. serving as diminutives. 

There is a further stage, built upon three suffixes, and called the 
** redundant form," which is mainly used by the vulgar. As a rule 
masculine long forms end in -axed, -iyi or -ltd, and feminines in -iyd, 
aithobgh the matter is complicated by the occasional usebf pleonastic 
suffixes other than the -ka- which we have taken for our example, 
and is the most common. Strong forms are rarely met with in E.H., 
but on the other hand long forms are more common in that language. 

There are a few feminine terminations of weak nouns which may 
be noted. These arc -inf, -in, -an, -ri (Skr. -itrl, Pr. -ipl); ana 
•drfi, -dni, -dm (Skr. -d*i, Pr. -dnl). These are found not only in 
words derived from Prakrit, but are added to Persian and even 
Arabic words: thus, katkini, katknl, kdthin (Skr. kastinl, Pr. kattkirf), 
a she-elephant; sunSrin, sundran, a female goldsmith (sdndr); 
shtrM, a tigress (Persian tkir, a tiger) j Naslban, a proper name 
(Arabic naflb) ' "' ' " " * - ■ ■ 



1 

gkdda-a" (nom. ghddti-u), and adding -hi we get gkdda-a-hi, which 
becomes contracted ghddahi and finally to ghirl. The nominative 
plural is the same as the oblique singular, except in E.H. where it 
follows the oblique plural. The oblique plural of all closely follows 
in principle the weak forms. Feminine strong forms in Ap. ended 
in -i-d, contracted to i in the modern languages. Except in E.H. 
the -hi of the original oblique form singular disappears, so that we 
have E.H. ghiriMi or gkdrl. others only ghdri. The nominative 
plural of feminine strong forms exhibits some irregularities. In 
E.H., as usual, it follows the plural oblique forms. In W.H. (except 
Hindostani) it simply nasalizes the oblique form singular (i.e. adds 
-hi instead of -hi), as in gkdrl. P. and H. adopt the oblique Ions 
form for the plural and nasalize it, thus, P. ghdrld, H* gtoriytL 
The oblique plurals call for no further remarks. We thus get the 
following summary, illustrating the way in which these nominative 
and oblique forms are made. 



W 



Panjabi. 



ghar 

ghar 
ghar 
gharJL 

ghdrd 
ghcxi 
ghdri 
gkdrid 

bdt 
bdi 
bdtS 
bdta 

fWfi 
ghdri 
ghdrlH 
ghdria 



Hindostani. 



fhar 

ghar . 

ghar 

ghard 

gkSrd 

|W 
ghdri 
ghdrd 

bdt 
bdt 
bdit 
bdtS 

ghdri 
gkdrl 

'{£?* 
gkdrtyo 



Braj Bhasha. 



gkar 

ghat 
ghar 
gharaQ, gkarani 

ghdrau 
ghdri, gkdrai 
ghdri 
gh6raU, ghdrani 

bdt 
bdt 
bdtal 
bdtaa, bdtani 

ghdri 
ghdri 
ghdri, 
gkdrtyoU, 
ghdriyani 



Eastern Hindi. 



ghar 

gkar, gkaraki 

gkaran 

gkaran 

Zhdrd, 

ghdxd, ghdri 
ghdran 
ghdran 

bdt 
bdt 



bdtan 

ghdri 

ghdri, gkdrtki 

ghdtfn 

ghdrin 



We have seen that the oblique form is the resultant of a general 
melting down of all the oblique cases of Sanskrit and Prakrit, and 
that in consequence it can be used for any oblique case. It it 
obvious that if it were so employed it would often give rise to great 
confusion. Hence, when it is necessary to show clearly what 
particular case is intended, it is Usual to add defining particles 
corresponding to the English prepositions " of," " to,' ' from," 
" by, Ac., which, as in all Indo-Aryan languages they follow the 
main word, are here called " postpositions." The following are 
the postpositions commonly employed to form cases in our three 
languages: — 



1 In some dialects of W.H. weak forms have masculines ending 
in u and corresponding feminines in i. but these arc nowadays rarely 

, „__,, r - r - met in the literary forms of speech. In old poetry they are common* 

panddtdni, the wife of a pan4U\ caudkrftin, liiej la Bra* Bhasha they have survived in the present participle. . 



+8* 



HINDOSTANI 





Agent. 


Genitive. 


Dative. 


Ablative. 


U 


Panjabi . . 
Hindostani 
Braj Bhasha 
Eastern Hindi 


nai 
ni 
ni 

None 


dd 
kd 
kau 
kir.k 


nU 
kd 
ka* 
kd 


a 

si 

a.saU 
si 


ti 

m 
m 
m 



The agent case is the case which a noun takes when it is the 
of a transitive verb in a tense formed from the past pa 
This participle is passive in origin, and must be construed pi 
la the Prakrit stage the subject was in such cases put i 
instrumental case (see Prakrit), as in the phrase akam lint 
I by-him (was) struck, i.e. he struck me. In Eastern Hind 
still the case, the old instrumental being represented by the 
form without any suffix. The other two languages define 
that the subject is in the instrumental (or agent) case by 
dition of the postposition ni. Sec., an old form 
employed elsewhere to define the dative. It 
is really the oblique form (by origin a loca- 
tive) of nd or nd, which is employed in 
Gujarati (g.v.) for the genitive. As this suffix 
is never employed to indicate a material 
instrument but here only to indicate the 
agent or subject of a verb, it is called the 
postposition of the " agent " case. 

The genitive postpositions have an interest- 
ing origin. In Buddhist Sanskrit the words 
krtas, done, and k^lws, to be done, were 
added to a noun to form a kind of genitive. 
A synonym of ktfvas was kdryas. These 
three words were all adjectives, and agreed 
with the thing possessed in gender, number, 
and case; thus, mdia-kr,ti karanqX in the 
basket of the garbnd, literally, in the garland- 
made basket. In the various dialects of 
Apabhramsa Prakrit arte* became (strong 
form) kida-u or kio-u, ktfyas became kicca-u, 
and kdryas became kira-u or kajja-u, the 
initial k of which is liable to elision after a 
vowel. With the exception of Gujarati (and 
perhaps Marathi, q.v.) every Indo-Aryan lan- 
guage has genitive postpositions derived from 
one or other of these forms. Thus from (ki)da-u 
we have Panjabi dd;Jrota kia-u we have H. kd, Br. kau, E 

Tk-t f i. i *r_; 1: m.m. t it^i\ .. I .1 1 



The pronouns closely follow the Prakrit originals. Thas vol ba 
evident from the preceding table of the first two personal prono uns 
compared with Apabhraihia. 

It will be observed that in most of the nominatives of the first 
person, and in the E.H. nominative of the second person, the old 
nominative has disappeared, and its place has been supplied by an 
oblique form, exactly as we have observed in the nominative pineal 
of nouns substantive. The P. oil, tusl, Ac, are survivals from the 
old Lahndl (see Linguistic Boundaries, above). The genitives of 
these two pronouns are rarely used, possessive pronouns (in H. mira\ 
my; kamdrd, our; tird, thy; tumkdrm\ your) being employed 
instead. They can all (except P. asd4d, our; tusddd f your, which 
are Lahndi) be referred to corresponding Ap. forms. 

There is no pronoun of the third person, the demonstrative 
pronouns being used instead. The following table shows the 
principal remaining pronominal forma, with their derivation from 
Ap..— 





Apabhramsa. 


Panjabi. 


Hindostani. 


Braj 
Bhasha. 


Eastern 
Hindi. 


THAT, HB, 


Nom. 


? 


uh 


vok 


wd 







Obi. 


? 


uk 


us 


wd 


d 


THOSE, THEY 


Nom. 


6i 


6k 


wi 


wot 


unk 




Obi. 


t 


unkS 


unk 


unt 


unk 


THIS, HE, 


Nom. 


ihu 


ih 


yeh' 


yak 


i 




Obi. 


Ikasu, ikako 


ik 


* 


y* 


i 


these; THEY 


, Nom. 


H 


ih 


ya% 


ink 




Obi. 


ikdna 


ink* 




ini 


ink 


THAT, 


Nora. 


s6 


sd 


$5 


sd 


si 




Obi. 


tasu, take 


tik 


Hs 


td 


li 


THOSS, 


Nom. 


si 


a 


sd 


sd 


si 




Obi. 


tdna 


tinhi 


link 


tins 


Unk 


WHO, 


Nom. 


jo 


* .' 


jo 


jo 


ji 




Obi. 


/ 


jik 


i* 


J* 


ji 


WHO (pi.), 


Nom. 


/ 


J* . 


i' 


J* 


J* 




Obi. 


J* 


jinki 


jink 
kaun 


jm$ 


'jenk 


WHO? 


Nom. 


kd 


kaun 


kd 


kd 




Obi. 


k 


kik 


his 


kd 


ki 


WHO? (pi.). 


Nom. 


k 


kaun 


kaun 


kd 


ki 




Obi. 


k 


kinki 


kink 


kini 


ktnk 


WHAT?(Neut.),Nom. 


ki 


kid 


kdki 


kakd 


kd 




Obi. 


k 


kdk.kds 


kdki 


kdki 



H. and 
■'— -Ai 
nd 
he 
ak 
an 

do 

«*. 

tr, 
he 
he 
lis 
tit 
he 
dd 
or 
he 





Apabhramsa. 


Panjabi. 


Hindostani. 


Braj 
Bhasha. 


Eastern 
Hindi. 


1, Nom. 
Obi. 

we, Nom. 
Obi. 

THOU, Nom. 
Obi. 

YOU, Nom. 
Obi. 


kaQ 

mat, mahu, 

majjku 
amkl 
amaki 

tuhtt 
tat, tuha, 
tujjhu 
tumM 
tumhahd 


mat 
mai 

oA 
aid 

lu 
tai 

tusl 
tusa 


mot 
mujk 

kam 
hamb* 

ta 

lujh 

turn 
tumho 


kaa 

moki 

kam 
hamaU, 
kamani 
/ii 
loki 

turn 
tumhaH 


mal 
md 

kam 
kam 

tat 

turn 
turn 



The origin of the first pronoun given above (that, he; those, 
they) cannot be referred to Sanskrit. It b derived from an Indo- 
Aryan base which was not admitted to the classical literary language, 
but of which we find sporadic traces in Apabhramsa. The existence 
j .t_?_ •____ ._ /.._.i. l.j *._ i_._ .._ jeeyj-rence j n | ne Iranian 

lai ava-. The base of the 

so f the first syllable in the 

Sk wins, and also occurs in 

th >m i-sas. 

n which, except perhaps 

kd is unnecessary to dweQ. 

TI )?" is the usual fornutla 

foi 1 the origin of the Anglo- 

In ronoun is dp (Ap. appu, 

Sk e Latin suus (Skr. stas), 

alt e, but to all persons, not 

on miri) bdp-ko dekhtd-ki. 

ition was already com- 
nu he modem languages the 

on ' present, the imperative, 

an \ now generally employed 

as ing table we have the con* 

jut „. , .._ % _«, participles, present active, 

and past and future passive, compared with Apabhramsa. the verb 
selected being the intransitive root tall or col, go. In Ap. the word 
may be spelt with one or with two to, which accounts lor the varia- 
tions of spelling in the modern languages. 

The imperative closely resembles the old present, except that it 
drops all terrain"* --- *- -• J * • • f, go thou. 

deling the 
1 Thus, a 

* y said to 

t gone, but 

t fc to the 

f le to pro- 

I the same 

t « the old 

f J. eaiikaM, 

S gated like 

t n of the 

l 9 find ia 

1 is in Braj 

1 re rorroed 

1 ' by me," 

nartkipk* 






HINDOSTANI LITERATURE 



483 





Apabhrarhsa. 


Panjabi. 


Hindostani. 


Bral 
Bhasha. 


Eastern 
Hindi 


Old Present— 
Singular 1. . . . 
** 2. . . . 

3 • • • 

Plural 1. . . . 

„ 2. . . . 

3- • • . 

Present Participle 
Past Part. Passive 
Future Part. Passive . 


cattai 
callasi, 

caiiahi 
cattai 
cattaha 
caltaku 
cattanti, 

callaht 
callanta-u 
cnllia-u 
callania-* 
caUiavW'U 


colli 
CitUS 

colli 
calliyl 
catld 
cailan 

calldd 
callid 
caUnd 


calS 

call 

call 
caU 
cold 
cali 

calm, 
cola 
calnd 


calaU 
calai 

calai 
calai 
colon 
calat 

calatu 
calyau 
calnaU 
catiwaa 


calaU 
colas 

calai 
calat 
calau 
calat 

calai 
cold 

calab 



Thus, calab-H, it-is-to-be-gone by-me, I shall go. We thus get the 
following forms. It will be observed that, as in many other I ado- 
Aryan languages, the first person plural has no suffix: — 
Sing. Plur. 

I. calabA calab 

3. calabl calabd 

3. calihai calihaf 

In old E.H. the future participle passive, calab, takes no suffix for 
Any person, and is used for all persons. 

The last remark leads us to a class of tenses in P. and W.H., in 
which a participle, by itself, can be employed for any person of a 
finite tense. A few examples of the use of the present and past 
participles will show the construction. They are all taken from 
Hindostani. Woh caltd, he goes; woh colli, she goes; mat cold, 
1 went; woh call, she went; u* call, they went. The present 
participle in this construction, though it may be used to signify 
the present, is more commonly employed to signify a past con- 
ditional " (if) he had gone." It will have been observed that in the 
above examples, in all of which the verb is intransitive, the past 
as well as the present participle agrees with the subject in gender 
and number; but, if the verb be transitive, the passive meaning 
of the past participle comes into force. The subject must be put 
into the case of the agent, and the participle inflects to agree with 
the object. I f the object be not expressed, or, as sometimes happens, 
be expressed in the dative case, the participle ss construed im- 
personally, and takes the masculine (for want of a neuter) form. 
Thus, mat-nc kakd, by-me it-was-said, •'.*. I said; us-ni ciffki /teal, 
by-him a-lctter (fern.) was-written, he wrote a letter; rdjd-nl 
ihlrnl-kd mdrd, the king killed the tigress* lit., by-thc-king, with- 
reference-to-t he-tigress, it (impersonal) -was-kiUcd. In the article 
Prakrit it is shown that the same construction obtained in that 
language. 

In E.H.. the construction is the same, but is obscured by the 
fact that (as in the future) pronominal suffixes are added to the 
participle to indicate the person of the subject or of the agent, as 
in calat-ett, (if) I had gone; caUeU, I went; mdr-cS (transitive), I 
struck, lit.. strtick-by*mc; mdr~es, struck-by him, he struck. If 
the participle has Co be feminine, it (although a weak form) takes 
the feminine termination i, as in mdri-i, I struck her; calaH-U, 
fif)I (fern.) had gone; cali-U,\ (fern.) went. 

Further tenses are formed by adding the verb substantive to 
these participles, as in H. mat caltd-hH,l am going: mat caltd-thd, 
1 was going; mat cald-hu, 1 have gone; mat cald'thd, I had gone. 
These and other auxiliary verbs need not detain us long. They 
differ in the various languages. For " I am " we have P. hi, H. 
ha, Br. haa, E.H. bSfyeU or aheS. For " I was " we have P. si or id, 
H. thd. Br. hau or hutau, E.H. rahetL The H. Afl is thus con- 
jugated:— 



St 

s.hai 
3. hoi 
The derivation of hi, h&, tofl 
usually derived from the 5kr. a 
difficulties. An old form of the 
this points to the Pr. haval, he 
he becomes. On the other ha 
initial a of aktQ. This last wo 
and it may be a secondary form 
a feminine of sd, as usually sU 
dslt, Pr. dsl, was. As in. the Pn 
genders, both numbers and all 1 
tlo» from this, on the analogy ol 
SthUas, Pr. thio, stood, and is < 
woh Ihd, he was; woh thl, she w 
of haO, while hutau is probably I 
Skr. bhU. become, Pr. kunlaO. 
Ap. vaUaB. RaheU is the past te 
The future participle passive 
infinitive or verbal noun; thus, 
going, to go. There is a whole 



Plur. 
hat 
hd 
hat 



making potential passives. and tramhfues 
from intransitive*, and causals (and even 
double causals) from transitive*. Thus 
dlkhnd, to be seen; potential passive, 
dihkdnd, to be visible; transitive, dlkhnd, 
to see; causal, dikhland, to show. 

D. Literature— The literatures of Western 
and Eastern Hindi form the subject 01 a 
separate article (see Hindostani Litera- 
ture). Panjabi has no formal literature. 
Even the Cronlh, the sacred book of the 
Sikhs, is mainly in archaic Western Hindi, 
only a small portion being in Panjabi. 
On the other hand, the language is 
peculiarly rich in folksongs and ballads, 
some of considerable length and great 
poetic beauty. The most famous is the 
ballad olHir and R&njhd by W&ris Shah, 
which is considered to be a model of pure Panjabi. Colonel Sir 
Richard Temple has published an important collection of these 
songs under the title of The legends of the Punjab (3 vols., Bombay 
and London, 1884- 1 000), in which both texts and translations of 
nearly all the favourite ones arc to be found. 

Authorities, — (a) General: The two standard authorities are 
the comparative grammars of J. Beanies (1872-1879) and A. F. R. 
Hoernle (i860), Mentioned in the article Indo-Aryan Languages. 
To these may be added G. A. Grierson, " On the Radical and 
Participial Tenses of the Modern Indo-Aryan Languages " in the 
Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, vol. lxiv. (189O, part i. 
pp. 352 et seq.; and "On Certain Suffixes in the Modern Indo- 
Aryan Vernaculars " in the Zeitschrifl fur vergleUhende Sjtrochfot 



schung ovf dem Gebiete det mdogewmanischen Sprachcn 



1903. 



pp. 473 c* 8Ct l- 

(b) For the separate languages, see C. J. Lyalt. A Sketch of the 
Hindustani Language (Edinburgh, 1880); S. H. Kellogg. A Grammar 
of the Hinds Language (for both Western and Eastern Hindi). (2nd cd., 
London, 1803); J. T. Platts, A Grammar of the Hindustani or Urdu" 
Language (London, 1874); and A Dictionary of Urdu, Classical 
Hindi and English (London, 1884) ; E. P. Newton, Panj&bt Grammar: 
with Exercises and Vocabulary (Ludhiana, 1898); and Bhai Maya 
Singh, The Panjabi Dictionary (Lahore. 1895). The Linguistic 
Survey of India, vol. vi., describes Eastern Hindi, and vol ix>, 
Hindostani and Panjabi, in each instance in great detail* 

• (G. A. Gr.) 

HINDUSTANI LITERATURE. The writings dealt with in 
this article are those composed in the vernacular of that pari 0/ 
India which is properly called HindasLan,— thai is, the valleys oi 
the Jumna and Ganges rivers as far east as the rivqr Kos, and 
the tract to the south including Rajpulana, Central India 
(Bundelkhand and Baghelkhand), the Naxmada (Nerbudda) 
valley as far west as Khandwa, and the northern half oi the 
Central Provinces. It does not include the Punjab proper 
(though the town population there speak Hindustani), nor does 
it extend to Lower Bengal. 

In this region several different dialects prevail. . The people of 
the towns everywhere use chiefly the form of the language called 
Urdi or Rikhla, 1 stocked with Persian words and phrases, and 
ordinarily written in a modification oi the Persian character. 
The country loljk (who form the immense majority) apeak 
different varieties of Hindi, of which the word-stock derives 
from the Prakrits and literary Sanskrit, and which are written 
in the Devanagari or KaithI character. Of these the most imr 



^HINDOST&MI LITERATURE 



.■ the indigenous speech is mere strictly adhered to than in Urdu, 
which under the influence of Persian constructions has admitted 
many inversions. 

i As in many other countries, nearly all the earjy vernacular 
literature of Hindustan is in verse, and works in prose axe a 
modern growth. 1 Both Hindi and Urdu" are, in their application 
to literary purposes, at first intruders upon the ground already 
occupied by the learned languages Sanskrit and Persian, the 
former representing Hindu and the latter Musalman culture. 
But there is this difference between, them, that, whereas Hindi 
has been raised to the dignity of a literary speech chiefly by 
impulses of revolt against the monopoly of' the Brahmans, 
Urdu' has been cultivated with goodwill by authors who have 
themselves highly valued and dexterously used the polished 
Persian. Both Sanskrit and Persian continue to be employed 
occasionally for composition by Indian writers, though much 
fallen from their former estate; but for popular purposes it 
may be said that their vernacular rivals are now almost in solo 
possession of the field. 
. The subject may be conveniently divided as follows:— 

I. Early Hindi, of the period during which the language was being 
fashioned as a literary medium out of the ancient Prakrits, represented 
by the old heroic poems of Raj pQ tana and the literature of the carry 
JBiagats or Vaishnava reformers, and extending from about a.ix noo 

Ai'ddle Hindi, representing the best age of Hindi poetry, and 
from about 1550 to the end of the 18th century; 
rise and development of literary UrdQ, beginning about the 



to 1550 
a. Mi 



reaching from about 1550 to the end of the 18th century; 
3. The rise and development of literary UrdQ, beginning 
end of the 161)1 centuryi and reaching its height during the 18th; 

tThe oiodcrn period, marked by the growth of a prose literature 
th dialects, and dating from the beginning of the 19th century. 

x. Early Hindi. — Our knowledge of the ancient metrical 
chronicles of RajpulanS. is still very imperfect, and is chiefly 
derived from the monumental work of Colonel James Tod, called 
The Annals and Antiquities of Rdj&sth&n (published in 1820- 
183a), which is founded on them. It is in the nature of com- 
positions of this character to be subjected to perpetual revision 
and recasting; they are the production of the family bards of a he 
dynasties whose fortunes they record, and from generation to 
generation they are added to, and their language constantly 
modified to make it intelligible to the people of the time. Round 
an original nucleus of historical fact a rich growth of legend 
accumulates; 'later redactors endeavour to systematize and to 
assign' dates, but (he result is not often such as to inspire con- 
fidence; and the mass has more the character of ballad literature 
than of serious history. The materials used by Tod are nearly 
•11 still unprinted; his manuscripts are now deposited in the 
library of the Royal Asiatic Society in London; and one of the 
tasks which,' on linguistic and historical grounds, should first be | 
undertaken by the investigator of early Hindi literature is the 
examination and sifting, and the publication in their original 
form, of these important texts. 

Omitting a few fragments of more ancient bards given by 
compilers of accounts of Hindi literature, the earliest author of 
whom any portion has as yet been published in the original text 
is Chand Bardal, the court bard of PrithwI-Raj, the last Hindu 
•overefgn of Delhi. His poem, entitled Pritki-Rdj Rdsau (dr 
Jc<fys*), is a vast chronicle in 69 books or cantos, comprising a 
general history of the period when he wrote. Of this a small 
portion has been printed, partly under the editorship of the late 
Mr John Beames and partly under that of Dr Rudolf Hoernlc, by 
the Asiatic Society of Bengal; but the excessively difficult 
nature of the task prevented both scholars from making much 
progress. Chand, who came of a family of bards, was a native 
of Lahore, which had for nearly 170 ycars(since 10*3) been under 
Muslim rule when he flourished, and the language of the poem 
exhibits a considerable leaven of Persian words. In its present 
form the work is a redaction made by Arriar Singh of M6w5r, 
about the beginning of tlic 17th century, and therefore more 

1 The only known exceptions are a work in Hindi called the 
CkaurOsi V&rla (mentioned below) and a few commentaries. on poems; 
the latter can scarcely be called literature. 

1 A fresh critical edition of the text by Pandit Mohan Lai Vishnu 
Lai Pandsa at Benares* under the auspices of the NOgarl Prochatirt 
Sabhd, had reached canto xxiv. in 1907. ■ - • 



than 400 years alter Cliand's death, with his patron PrithwI-Raj, 
in 1 1 93. There is, therefore, consideja.bjc reason* Lo doubt 
whether we have in it much of Chand 's composition in its original 
shape; and the nature of the incidents described enhances thfs 
doubt. The detailed dates contained in the Chronicle have been 
shown by Kabiraj Syamal Das' to be in every case about 
ninety years astray. , It tells of repeated conflicts between the 
hero PrithwI-Raj and Sultan Shihabuddin, of Ghor (Muhammad 
Ghori), in which the latter always, except in the last great battle, 
comes off the worst, is taken prisoner and is released on pay- 
ment of a ransom; these seem to be entirely unhistortcal, our 
contemporary Persian authorities knowing of only one encounter 
(that of Tiraurf (Tirawari) near Thenesar, fought in 1191) in 
which the Sultan was defeated, and even then he escaped un- 
captured to Lahore. The Mongols (Book XV.) are brought on 
the stage more than thirty years before they actually set foot in 
India, and are related to have been vanquished by the redoubt- 
able PrithwI-Raj. It is evident that such a record cannot 
possibly be, in its entirety, a contemporary chronicle; but 
nevertheless it appears to contain a considerable clement which, 
from its language, may belong to Chand's own age, and represents 
the earliest surviving document in Hindi. " Though wc may not 
possess the actual text of Chand, we have certainly in his writings 
some of the oldest known specimens of Gaudian literature, 
abounding in pure Apabhramsa Saurastol Prakrit loans" 
(Grierson). 

It is very difficult now to form a just estimate of the poem as 
literature. The language, essentially transitional in character, con- 
sists largely of words which have long since died out of the vernacular 
speech. Even the most learned Hindus of the present day are 
unable to interpret it with confidence; and the meaning of the verses 
must be sought by investigating the processes by which Sanskrit 
and Prakrit forms have been transfigured in their progress into Hindi 
Chand appears, on the whole, to_ exhibit the merits and defects of 
chronic" 



ballad chroniclers in general. There is much that is lively and 
spirited in his descriptions of fight or council ; and the characters of 
the R&jpot warriors who surround his hero are often sketched in their! 
utterances with skill and animation. The sound, however, frequently 
predominates over the sense; the narratrve is carried on with the 
wearisome iteration and tedious unfolding of familiar themes and 
images which characterise all such poetry in India; and his value, 
for us at least, is linguistic rather than literary. 

Chand may be taken as the representative of a long line of 
successors, continued even to the. present day in the Rajput 
states. Many of their compositions are still widely popular 
as ballad literature, but are known only in oral versions sung 
in Hindustan by professional singers. One of the most famous 
of these is the Alh&-kkav4i reputed to be the work of a con- 
temporary of Chand called Jagnlk or Jagnftyak, of Mahobf 
in Bundelkhand, who sang the praises of R&ja-Parmil, a ruler 
whose wars with PrithwI-Raj are recorded in the Mahdbf-Khaod 
of Chand's work. Alha and Cdal, the heroes of the poem, are 
famous warriors in popular legend, and the stories connected 
with them exist in an eastern recension, current in Bihar, as 
well as in the Bundelkhandl or western form which is best 
known. Two versions of the latter have been printed, having 
been taken down as recited by illiterate professional rhapsodists. 
Another celebrated bard was S&rangdhar of Rantambhor, who 
flourished in 1363, and sang the praises of Hammlr Deo (Hamir 
Deo), the Chauhan chief of RantambhCr who fell in a heroic 
struggle against Sultan \AUVuddIn Khiljl in 1300. He wrote 
the Hammlr K&vya and Hammir Rdsau, of which an account 
is given by Tod; 4 he was also a poet in Sanskrit, in which 
language he compiled, in 1363, the anthology called Simgadkara- 
PaddktUL Another work which may be mentioned (though 
much more' modem) is the long chronicle entitled Ckhattro- 
Prokts, or the history of Raja Chhatarsal, the Bundflfi rtjft of 
Panna, who was killed, fighting on behalf of Prince Dari-ShukAfa, 
in the battle of Dholpur won by AnrangzSb in 1658. The 
author, L&l Kabi, has given in this work a history of the valiant 
Bundek nation which was rendered into English by Captain 
W. R. Pogson in 1828, and printed at Calcutta. 

Before passing on to the more important branch of early 



•See J.AS.B. (i886},pp, 6 sac-. 
Annate and Antiquities, U. 45* n. 



.' and 472 n. 



HiNDCSTANl LFTBRATURE 



485 



'fthdYnHerature, the works of the Btogols, mention may be made ' 
liereof a remarkable composition, a poem entitled the Padmdwoi, 
the materials of which are derived from the heroic legend* 
of RajpClina, but which is not the work: of a bard nor even of 
« Hindu. The author, Malik Muhammad of JaTs, in Oudh, 
was a venerated Muslim devotee, to whom the Hindu raji of 
Amethl was greatly attached. MaHk Mohammad wrote the 
Padmiwet in 1540, the year in which Sher Shah Sflr ousted 
Homlyftn from the throne of Delhi. The poem is composed 
in the purest vernacular Awadht, with no admixture of traditional , 
Hindu learning, and is generally to be found written m the 
Persian character, though the metres and language are thoroughly ' 
Indian. It professes to tell the tale of PadmiwatI or PadminI, 
a princess celebrated for her beauty who was the wife of the 
Chauhin rtjl of ChltOr in Mewtr. The historical PadminTs, 
husband was named Bhlm Singh, but Malik Muhammad calls 
him Ratan Sen; and the story turns upon the attempts of 
•'AU'uddtn Khiljf, the sovereign of Delhi, to gain possession 
of her person. The tale of the siege of ChltoY in 1303 by 'Ali- 
Uddta, the heroic stand made by its defenders, who perished 
to the last man in fight with the Sultan's army, and the self- 
immolation of PadminI and the other women, the wives and 
daughters of the warriors, by the fiery death called jffkar, will be 
found related in Tod's Rdj&sth&n, i. *6* sqq. Malik Muhammad 
takes great liberties with the history, and explains at the end 
of the poem that all fa an allegory, and that the personages 
represent the human soul, Divine wisdom, Satan, delusion 
and other mystical characters. 

Both on account of its: interest as a true vernacular work, and as 
the composition of a Musala&n who has taken the incidents of his 
morality from the legends of his country and not from an exotic 
source, the poem is memorable. It has often been lithographed, and 
is very popular; a translation has even been made into Sanskrit. 
A critical edition has been prepared by Dr G. A. Cncraon and Paotft 
Sodhakar Dwivedi. 

The other class of composition which is characteristic of the 
period of early Hindi, the literature of the BhagaU t or Vaishnava 
saints, who propagated the doctrine of bhakti, or (akh in Vishnu, 
as the popular religion of HindosUsi, has exercised a much 
store powerful influence both upon the national speech and 
upon the themes chesea: for poetic treatment. It k also, eva 
body of literature, of high intrinsic interest for its form and 
content. Nearly the whole of subsequent poetical composition • 
in Hindi is impressed with one or other type of Vaishnava 
doctrine, which, like Buddhism, many centuries before, was 
essentially a reaction against Brahmanical influence and the 
chain* of caste, a claim- for the rights of humanity In face of 
Uw monopoly which, the "twice-born" asserted of leaning, 
of worship, of righteousness. A laige proportion of the writers 
were non-Bjahmana» and many of them of the lowest castes. 
A* Stwa was the popular deity of theBraamaas, so was Vishnu 
of the peoples and while the literature of the Seivas and Salttaa * 
is almost entirely in Sanskrit, and exercised little c* no influence. 
.Pjb the popular mind in northern India, that of the Vaiahnavaa 
is largely in Hindi, and in itself constitutes the great bulk of 
what baa bean written in that language. 

The Vaishnava doctrine is commonly carried back to Raminuja, 
• Brahman who was bom about the end of the nth century, 
at Pertfmbur in the neighbourhood of the modern Madras, 
and spent his life iaaDutham India, His works, which are in 
Sanskrit and consist of commentaries on the Vedtota Sutras, 
are devoted to establishing " the personal existence of a Supreme 
Deity, possessing; every gracious attribute, full of kwe and pity 
for this sinful beings who adore him, and granting the released 
aotd a home of eternal buss near him— * home where each 
soul never loses Its identity, and whose state is one of perfect 
peace."* In the Deity's innatU love and pity be has on several 
occasions beoome incarnate for the salvation of mankind, and 
jol these incarnations two, Bamachandra, the prince of Ayodhyi, 
and Krishna, the chief of the Yadava clan and son of Vaeudeva, 

* Worshippers of theenerglo power Ae* of Siva, represented 
by ms consort Pirvati or Bhawani. 

* Quoted ffom G. A. Gricraoo, chapter oa " Literature," in the 
India Camttm (ed. 1907). 



ore pre-eminently those In which It Is most fitting that he 
should be worshipped. Both of these incarnations had for 
many centuries » attracted popular veneration, and their 
bistorfea had been celebrated by poets in epics and by weavers 
of religious myths in Puranas or " old stories"; but it was 
apparently R&manuja's teaching which secured for them, and 
especially for Rimachandra, their exclusive place as the objects 
of *tot*#— ardent faith and personal devotion addressed to the 
Supreme. The adherents of Ramanvja were, however, all 
Brahmans, and observed very strict rules in respect of food, 
bathing and dress; the new doctrine had not yet penetrated 
to the people. 

Whether Ramanoja himself gave the preference to Rama 
against Krishna as the form of Vishnu most worthy Of worship 
is uncertain. He dealt mainly with philosophic conceptions 
of the Divine Nature, and probably busied himself little with 
mythological legend. His mantra, or formula of initiation', 
if Wilson 4 was correctly informed, implies devotion to Rama 1 ; 
but Vlsudeva (Krishna) is also mentioned as a principal object 
of adoration, and Raminuja himself dwelt for several yean 
in Mysore, at a temple erected by the rij& at Yidavagiri in 
boribur of Krishna in his form Ranchhor.* It is stated that 
in his worship of Krishna he joined with that god as bis SakH, 
or Energy, his wife RukminI; while the later varieties of 
Krishna-worship prefer to honour his mistress Radha. The 
great difference, in temper and influence upon life, between 
these two forms of Vaishnava faith appears to be a development 
subsequent to Ram&nuja; but by the time of Jaideo (about 
1250) it is clear that the theme of Krishna and Radha, and the 
use of passionate language drawn from the relations of the sexes 
to express the longings of the soul for God, had become fuBy 
established; and from that time onwards the two types of 
Vaishnava religious emotion diverged more and more from 
one another. 

The cult of ROma is founded on family«Iife, and the relation 
of the worshipper to the Deity is that of a child to a father. 
The morality it inculcates springs from the sacred sources of 
human piety which in all religions have wrought most in favour 
of^pureneas of life, of fraternal helpfulness and of humble 
devotion to a loving and tender Parent, who desires the good 
of mankind, His children, and hates violence and wrong. That 
of Krishna, On the other hand, had for its basis the legendary 
career of a less estimable human hero, whose exploits are marked 
by a kind of elvish and fantastic wantonness; it has more and 
more spent its energy in developing that side of devotkm which 
is ' perilously near to sensual thought, and has allowed the 
imagination and ingenuity of poets to dwell on things unmeet 
for verse or even for speech. It is churned for those who first 
opened this way to faith that their hearts were pure and their 
thoughts innocent, and that the language of erotic passion 
which they use as the vehicle of their religious emotion is merely 
mystical and allegorical. This is probable; but that these 
beginnings were followed by corruption in the multitude, and that 
the fervent impulses of adoration made way in later times for 
those of lust and lasdviousness, seems beyond dispute. 

The worship of Krishna, especially in his infant and youthful 
form (which appeals chiefly to women), is widely popular in the 
neighbourhood of Mathura, the capital of that land of Braj 
where as a boy he lived. Its literature is mainly composed 
in the dialect of this region, called Brajbhasht. That of Rama, 

«Tl»wor9hipofKri^nai«asoWasMegasthenea(aboiit300B.C.). 
who calls him Herakles, and was then, as now, located at Math w* on 
the Jumna river. That of Rima is probably still mere ancient; the 
name occurs in stories of the Buddna. 

4 Religious Sects of the Hindus, p. 40. 

* This name of Krishna, which means " He who auks the battle*" 
is connected with the story of the transfer of the Yadava dan from 
Mathura to the new capital on the coast of the peninsula of 
Katfuawaf, the city of Dw&raka. This migration was the result of 
an invasion of Braj by Jarasandha, king of Magadha, before whom 
Krishna resolved to retreat. As his path southwards took him 
through Rajpfltflna and Gujarat, it is in these regions that his form 
Ranchhor 1* most generally venerated as a symbol of 
the centre of divine life from Gangetic to 1 



I of the shifting of 



**t 



hindostAnI literature 



though general throughout HSadost&n, has since the time of 
TulsJ Das adopted lor poetic use the language of Oudh, called 
Awadbl or Baisw&rl, a form of Eastern Hindi easily understood 
throughout the whole of the Gangetic valley. Thus these two 
dialects came to be, what they are to this day, the standard 
vehicles of poetic expression. 

Subsequently to Ram&nuja his doctrine appears to have 
been set forth, about 1250, in the vernacular of the people by 
Jaideo, a Brahman born at Kinduvilva, the modern Kenduli, 
in the BlrbhQxn district of Bengal, author of the Sanskrit Gild 
Gdrittda, and by Namdeo or Nama, a tailor 1 of Maharashtra, 
of both of whom verses in the popular speech are preserved in 
the Adi Gfantk of the Sikhs. But it was not until the beginning 
of the 15th century that the Brahman R&manand, a prominent 
Gds&A of the sect of Ramanuja, having had a dispute with the 
members of his order in regard to the stringent rules observed 
by them, left the community, migrated to northern India 
(where he is said to have made his headquarters Galti in Raj- 
pQtana), and addressed himself to those outside the Brahman 
caste, thus initiating the teaching of Vaishnavism as the popular 
faith of Hindustan. Among his twelve disciples or apostles 
were a Rajput, a Jat, a leather-worker, a barber and a Musal- 
m&n weaver; the last-mentioned was the celebrated KabU 
(see separate article). One short. Hindi poem by R&manand 
is contained in the Adi Granth, and Dr Grierson has collected 
hymns (bhajans) attributed to him and still current in Mitbilfi 
or TirhCkt. Both Ramanand and Kablr were adherents of 
the form of Vaishnavism where devotion is specially addressed to 
Rama, who is regarded not only as an incarnation, but as himself 
identical with tho Deity. A contemporary of Raman and, 
Bidyipati Jhakur, is celebrated as the author of numerous 
lyrics in the Maitbill dialect of Bihar, expressive of the other 
aide of Vaishnavism, the passionate adoration of the Deity 
in the person of Krishna, the aspirations of the worshipper 
being mystically conveyed in the character of Rftdha, the 
cowherdess of Braj and the beloved of the son of Vasudeva. 
These stanzas of Bidyipati (who was a Brahman and author 
of several works in Sanskrit) afterwards inspired the Vaishnava 
literatureof Bengal, whose mostcelebrated exponent wasChaitanya 
(b. 1484). Another famous adherent of the same cult was 
Mlrt Bal, " the one great poetess of northern India " (Grierson). 
This lady, daughter of Raja Ratiya Rana, Rather, of M£rt& 
in Rajputtna, must have been born about the beginning of the 
15th century; she was married in 1415 to Raja Kumbhkaran 
of Mewar, who was killed by his son Uday Ran* in' 1469. She 
was devoted to Krishna in the form of Ra#chh6r, and her songs 



va 

of 
gh 

& 
' a 
fly 
Die 
he 
of 
lis 
>m 
of 

by 



Ceeded h"r- 

2. Middle Hindi,— The second period, that of middle Hindi, 
begins with the reign of the Emperor Akbar (1556-1605); and 
it is not improbable that the broad and liberal views of this 
great monarch, his active sympathy with his Hindu subjects, 
the interest which he took in their religion and literature, and 
the peace which his organization of the empire secured for Hindo- 

1 In the GranA N&mdeo is called a calico-printer, Ckhipi. The 
Marathi tradition is that he was a tailor, SUmM; it is probable that 
the latter word, being unknown in northern India, has Dean wrongly 
rendered by the fanner. 



stan, had an important effect on the great derelopment of Hindi 
poetry which now set in.' Akbar's court was itself a centre of 
poetical composition. The court musician Tan Sen (who was 
also a poet) is still renowned, and many verses composed by 
him in the Emperor's name live to this day in the memory of 
the people. Akbar's favourite minister arid companion, Raja 
Blrbal (who fell in battle on the north-western frontier in 1583), 
was a musician and a poet as well as a politician, and held the 
title, conferred by the Emperor, of Kabi-R&y, or poet laureate; 
his verses and witty sayings are still extremely popular in 
northern India, though no complete work by him it known 
to exist. Other nobles of the court were also poets, among 
them the Khdn^kh&n&n 'Abdur-Rafelm, son of Bairam khan, 
whose Hindi dth&s and kabittas are still held in high estimation, 
and FaieJ, brother of the celebrated Abul-Faxl, the Emperor's 
annalist. 

By this time the worship of Krishna as the lover of R&dbi 
(RBdhA-boUabh) had been systematized, and a local habitation 
found for it at Gokul, opposite Mathura on the Jumna, some 
jo m. upstream from Agra, Akbar's capital, by VaLabhacharya, 
a Tailinga Brahman from Madras. Born in 1478, in 1407 he 
chose the land of Braj as his headquarters, thence making 
missionary tours throughout India. He wrote chiefly, if net 
entirely, in Sanskrit; but among his immediate followers, and 
those of his son Bitihalnath (who succeeded this father on the 
latter's death in 1530), were some of the most eminent poets 
in Hindi. Four disciples of Vallabh&charya and four of Bittbal- 
nath, who flourished between 1550 and 1570, are known as the 
Ash} Ckh&p, or " Eight Seals," and are the acknowledged masters 
of the literature of Braj-bhasha, in which dialect tney all wrote. 
Their names are Krishna-Das Pay-ah&rl, SOr Das (the Bhtt), 
Parmanand Das, Kumbhan Das,Chaturbhuj Dfis,Chhit SwSmI, 
NandDasandGobindDas. Of these much the most celebrated, 
and the only one whose verses are still popular, is Sur Die. The 
son of Baba Rim Das, who was a singer at Akbar's court, Sur 
Das was descended, according to bis own statement, from the 
bard of Prithwl-Rfij, Chand BardM. A tradition gives the date 
of his birth as 1483, and that of hfs death as 1573; but both 
seem to be placed too early, and in Abul-FasTs Atn-i AkbtH 
he is mentioned as living when that work was completed (1 506/7). 
He was blind, and entirely devoted to the worship of Krishna, 
to whose address he composed a great number of hymns (bhafans), 
which have been collected in a compilation entitled the 5s> 
SSgar, said to contain 60,000 verses; this work is very highly 
esteemed as the high-water mark of Braj devotional poetry, 
and has been repeatedly printed in India. Other compositions 
by him were a translation in verse of the Bk&govat* JtvAts, 
and a poem dealing with the famous story of Nala and Dams- 
yanti; of the latter no copies are now known to exist. 

'The great glory of this age is Tulsl Das ($.».). He and Sor 
Das between them are held to have exhausted the possibilities of 
the poetic art. It is somewhat remarkable that the time of their 
appearance coincided with the Elizabethan age of English 
literature. 

To these great masters succeeded a period of artifice and 
reflection, when many works were composed dealing with the 
rules of poetry and the analysis and the appropriate language of 
sentiment. Of their writers the most famous is Kesab cis, a 
Brahman of Bundetkhand* who flourished during the latter part of 
Akbar's reign and the beginning of that of Jahlnglr. His works 
are the Rasih-priy*, on composition (1501), the Kavi-priyd, on 
the laws of poetry (root), a highly esteemed poem dedicated to 
Parbm Rai Piturf, a celebrated courtesan of Orchha in Bundel- 
khan& the Katnackondrtkd, dealing with the history of Rama, 
(1610), and the VigyOn-gfU (1610). The fruit of this elaboration 
of the poetic art reached its highest perfection in BmXxl Ltt, 
whose Sot-sat, or u seven centuries " (1662), is the most remark- 
able example in Hindi of the rhetorical style in poetry (see 
separate artide). 

* It will he remembered that Akbar's reign was remarkable for the 
translation into Persian of a large number of Sanskrit works of 
religion and philosophy, roost of the versions being made by, or in 
the names of, members of his court. ■'.■■• 



HIND6STANI LITERATURE 



+*7 



** 

** 
*> 
** 

^ 






7;; 



Side by side with this cultivation of the literary use of the 
themes of Rgma and Krishna, there grew up a class oT composi- 
tions dealing, in a devotional spirit, with the lives and doings of 
the holy men from whose utterances and example the' develop- 
ment of the popular religion proceeded. The most famous of 
these is the Bhakta-mOti, or " Roll of the Bkaptis," by Niriyan 
Das, otherwise called Nabha Das, or Nabhajl. This author, who 
belonged to the despised caste of Doms and was a native of the 
Decern, had in his youth seen Tulsl Das at Matburft, and himself 
flourished in the first half of the 17th century. His work con- 
sists of 108 stanzas in chkapp&l metre, each setting forth the 
characteristics of some holy personage, and expressed in a style 
which is extremely brief and obscure. Its exact date is unknown , 
but it falls between 1585 and 1623. The book was furnished 
with a lk& (supplement or gloss) in the kabilta metre, by Priya 
Dis in 1713, gathering up, in an allusive and disjointed fashion, 
all the legendary stories related of each saint. This again was 
expanded about a century later by a modern author named 
tachhman into a detailed work of biography, called the Bhakla- 
sMku. From these nearly all our knowledge (such as it is) of 
the lives of the Vaishnava authors, both of the Rama and the 
Krishna cults, is derived, and much of it is of a very legendary 
and untrustworthy character. Another work, somewhat earlier 
is date than the Bkakta-mHi, named the ChaurdH Vdrta, is 
devoted exclusively to stories of the followers of Vallabhichftrya. 
It is reputed to have been written by Gokulnath, son of Biffhal- 
nath, son of Vallabhachirya, and is dated in 1551. 

The matter of these tales is lastly characterised by Professor Wilson 1 
(who gives some translated specimens) as"" marvellous and insipid 
anecdotes " ; but the bsok is remarkable for being in very artless 
prose, and, though written more than 300 years ago, shows that the 
current language of Braj was then almost precisely identical with 
that now spoken in that region. A specimen of the text will be found 
at 0. 296 of Mr F. S. Growse's Matkum* a District Memoir (3rd cd.. 

my 

It would be tedious to enumerate the many authors who 
succeeded the great period of Hind poetical composition which 
extended through the reigns of Akbar, Jahanglr and Shahjah&n. 
None of them attained to the fame of Sur Das, Tub Das or 
Bihari Lai Their themes exhibit no novelty, and they repeat 
with a wearisome monotony the sentiments of their predecessors. 
The list of Hindi authors drawn up by Dr G. A. Grierson, and 
printed in the Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal in 1S80, 
may be consulted for the names and works of these cpigoni. The 
courts of Cbhatarsil, rija of Panna in Bundelkhand, who was 
killed in battle with Aurangzeo in 1658, and of several rajas of 
Bandhd (now caHed Rlwin or Rewah) in Baghilkhand, were 
famous for their patronage of poets; and the Mogul court itself 
kept up the office of Kabi-R6y or poet laureate even during the 
fanatical reign of Aurangzeo. . 

Such, In the briefest outline, is the character of Hind literature 
during the period when it grew and flourished through its own 
original forces. Founded by a popular and religious impulse in 
many respects comparable to that which, nearly 1600 years 
before, had produced the doctrine and literature, in the vernacular 
tongue, of Jainisra and Buddhism, and cultivated largely (though 
by no means exclusively) by authors not belonging to the Brah- 
manical order, it was the legitimate descendant in spirit, as 
Hindi is the legitimate' descendant in speech, of the Prakrit litera- 
ture which preceded it. Entirely in verse, it adopted and elabor- 
ated the PrAkrit metrical forms, and carried them to a pitch of 
perfection too often overlooked by those who concern themselves 
rather with the substance than the form of the works they read. 
It covers a wide range of style, and expresses, in the works of its 
greatest masters, a rich variety of human feeling. Little studied 
by Europeans in the past, it deserves much more attention than 
it has received. The few who have explored It speak of It as an 
" enchanted garden " (Grierson), abounding in beauties of thought 
and phrase. Above ail it is to be remembered that it is genuinely 
popular, and has reached strata of society scarcely touched by 
literature in Europe. The ballads of Rajput prowess, the 
aphorisms oi Kahlr, TuisI Das '5 Rdmdyan, and the bkajans of 
iJteilitmtSta*. p» 13*. 



Sot Dis are to this day carried about ereiywhere by waedering 
minstrels, and have found their way, throughout the great plains 
of northern India and the uplands of the Vindhyft plateau, to the 
hearts of the people. There is no surer key to unlock the con- 
fidence of the villager than an apt quotation from one of these 
inspired singers. 

3. Literary Unfa.— The engines of Urdu as a literary language 
are somewhat obscure. The popular account refers its rise to 
the time of Timor's invasion (1308). Some authors even claim 
for it a higher antiquity, asserting that a dhodn, or collection of 
poems, was composed in Rikkla by Mas*ud, son of Sad, in the 
last half of the nth or beginning of the 12th century, and that 
Sa'di of Shirts and his friend Amir Khusrau* of Delhi likewise 
made verses in that dialect before the end of the 13th century. 
Tins, however, is very improbable* It has already been seen that 
during the early centuries of Muslim rule in India adherents of 
that kith used the language and metrical forms of the country 
for their compositions. Persian words early made their way into 
the popular speech; they are common in Chand, and in Kablr's 
verses (which are nevertheless unquestionable Hindi) they are in 
many places used as freely as in the modern dialect. Much of the 
confusion which besets the subject is due to the want of a de$x 
understanding of what Urdfl, as opposed to Hindi, really is* 

Urdu, as a literary language, differs from Hindi rather in its 
form than in its substance. The grammar, and to a large extent 
the vocabulary, of both are the same. The really vital point of 
difference, that in which Hindi and Urdu are incommensurable, 
is the prosody. Hardly one of the metres taken over by Urdu 
poets from Persian agrees with those used in Hindi. In the latter 
language it is the rule to give the short a inherent in every con* 
sonant or nexus of consonants its full value in scansion (though 
in prose it is no longer heard)! except occasionally at the metrical 
pause; in Urdu this is never done, the words being scanned 
generally as pronounced in prose, with a few exceptions which 
need not be mentioned here. The great majority of Hindi 
metres are scanned by the number of mOlrds orsyllabk instants-- , 
the value in time of a short syllable— of which the lines consist; 
in Urdu, as in Persian, the metre follows a special order of long 
and short syllables. 

The question, then, is not When did Persian first become 
intermixed with Hindi in the literary speech? — for this process 
began with the first entry of Muslim conquerors into India, 
and continued for centuries before a line of Urdu vense was 
composed; nor When was the Persian character first employed 
to write Hindi?— for the written form is but a subordinate 
matter; as already mentioned, the MSS. of Malik Muhammad's 
purely Hindi poem, the Podm&woi, are ordinarily found to be 
written in the Persian character; and copies lithographed in 
DeVanagarl of the popular compositions of the Urdu poet 
Na#r are commonly procurable in the bazirs. We must ask 
When was the first verse composed in Hindi, whether with 
or without foreign admixture, according to the forms of Persian 
prosody, and not in those of the indigenous metrical system? 
Then, and not till then, did Urdu poetry come into being. This 
appears to have happened, as already mentioned, about the end 
of the 16th century. Meantime the vernacular speech had been 
gradually permeated with Persian words and phrases. The 
impulse which Akbar's interest in his Hindu subjects bad given 
to the translation of Sanskrit works into Persian had brought 
the indigenous and the foreign literatures into contact. The 
current language of the neighbourhood of the capital, the 
Hindi spoken about Delhi and thence northwards to the Himi- 
laya, was naturally the form of the vernacular which was most' 
subject to foreign influences; and with the extension of Mogul 

»AmIr Khusrau k credited with the authorship of many still 
popular rhymes, riddles or punning verses (called pahms awd 
mukurls): but these, though often containing Persian words, are i* 
Hindi and scanned according to the prosody or that language: they 
arc. therefore, like Malik Muhammad's Padmdwat, not Urdfi or 
Rekbta verse (see Professor Azfid's Abi-flaydl, pp. 72-76). A late 
Dakkhani poet who used the takkallus of Sa'di is said by A*M (p. 797 
to have been confused by MirzA Rafi'us-Sauda in his Task** with 
Sa'di of Shirax. 



4.88- 



HINDOSTTANI LITERATURE- 



territory by the conquests In the sooth of Akbar and his suc- 
cessors, this idiom was carried abroad by their armies, and was 
adopted by the Musalmln kingdoms of the Deccan as their 
court language some time before their overthrow by the cam- 
paigns of AurangzCb. 

It is not a little remarkable that, as happened with the Vaish- 
nava reformation initiated by Rim&nuja and Rfimanand, and 
with the Vallabhlcharya cult of Krishna established at Mathura, 
the first impulse to literary composition in Urdu should have 
been given, not at the headquarters of the empire in the north, 
but at the Muhammadan courts of Gdlkonda and Bijapur in 
the south, the former situated amid an indigenous population 
speaking Telugu, and the latter among one whose speech was 
Kanarcse, both Dra vidian languages having nothing in common 
with the Aryan tongues of the north. This fact of itself defines 
the nature of the literature thus inaugurated. It had nothing 
to do with the idiom or ideas of the people among whom it was 
born, but was from the beginning an imitation of Persian models. 
It adopted the standards of form and content current among 
the poets of £r£n. The qaslda or laudatory ode, the ghaial 
or love-sonnet, usually of mystical import, the morsjya or dirge, 
the masnavl or narrative poem with coupled rhymes, the fiijd 
or satire, the rubd'l or epigram — these were the types which 
UrdQ took over ready-made. And with the forms were ap- 
propriated also all the conventions of poetic diction. The 
Persians, having for centuries treated the same themes with 
a fecundity which most Europeans find extremely wearisome, 
bad elaborated a system of rhetoric and a stock of poetic images 
which, in the exhaustion of original matter, made the success 
of the poet depend chiefly upon dexterity of artifice and clever- 
ness of conceit. Pleasing hyperbole, ingenious comparison, 
antithesis, alliteration, carefully arranged gradation of noun 
and epithet, are the means employed to obtain variety; and 
few of the most eloquent passages of later Persian verse admit 
of translation into any other language without losing that which 
in the original makes their whole charm. What is true of Persian 
is likewise true of Urdu poetry. Until quite modern times, 
there is scarcely anything in it which can be called original. 1 
Differences of school, which are made much of by native critics, 
are to us hardly perceptible; they consist in the use of one 
or other range of metaphor or comparison, classed, according 
as they repeat the well-worn poetical stock-in-trade of the 
Persians, or seek a slightly fresher and more Indian field of 
sentiment, as the old or the new style of composition* 

in- 
tei he 
van he 
60 nd 
sei of 
G< itb 
Sa of 
ve ng 

th tin 

fai vis 

en m. 

Tr by 

Ni . , _ ed 

the Suka-saptati; this collection has been frequently rehandled in 
UrdQ, both in verse and prose, and is the original of the T 6 t&- 
Kah&ni, one of the first works in* Urdfl prose, composed in 1801 by 
Muhammad tyaidar-bakhsh tfaidari of the Fort William College. 
The Phut-ban is a love tale named from its heroine, said to be trans- 
lated from a Persian work entitled the Bas&On. Another famous 
work which probably belongs to the same place and time is the Story 
of K&mrUp and Kan by Tafesinuddm, a ntasnavl which has been 
published (1836) by M. Garcin de Tassy; what makes this poem 
remarkable is that, though the work of a Musalra&n, its personages 
are Hindu. Kfimrflp, the hero, is son of the king of Oudh, and the 
heroine. Kali, daughter of the king of Ceylon ; the incidents some- 
what resemble those of the tale of as-Sindibfid in the Thousand and 
One Nights-, the hero and heroine dream one of the other, and the 
former sets forth to find his beloved; his wanderings take him to 



1 An exception may be made to this general statement in favour 
of the genre pictures of city and country life contained in the mapuwls 
of Saudi and Naair. These arc often satires (in the vein of Horace 
rather than Juvenal), and are full of interest as pictures of society. 
In Sauda, however, the conventional language used in description is 
often Persian rather than Indian. 



HINDOSTANl LITERATURE 489 



49° 



HINDOSTANI LITERATURE 



of 

RprCMVM 

nulus to the 
its of older 
• Persian a* 
i legislature, 
as of tcchoi- 
toa limited 
tin subjects 



nlarged the 
i to the use 
at wholesale 
facy of the 
at modelled 
para press, 
a the reach 



•actised the 
leir mother- 
k 

i in a ten te- 
wing on the 
India from 
oe i860 their 
g. The use 
Me birth to 
both 



arouffh 



» activity of 
ade of new 
as, in Urdt 
be majority 
the Punjab, 
ad Calcutta. 
> apeak only 
■ somewhat 



name who flourished half a century later. 



i« indeed, of 
t excellence, 
th mention- 
it probable 
culture. 
11 aeemed to 
y practised. 
I the Delhi 
f LucJcnow, 
lew ape was 
natertal and 
or taste for 
India, as in 
utronage of 
'had passed 
his form of 
the patron- 
tst of these, 
itatkra as a 

lonopolizins 
reform and 
(1817-1898) 
IcallyatyWd 
ken in the 
outh was a 
nd of whose 
ice of forty 
a, and from 
t of his co- 
l interesting 
if quatrains 
S. E. Ward 
ddressed to 
; avoidance 
>peal to the 
that he has 
tool, which 

I is his lone 
t and ebb of 
Be instimo- 
Musalmans 
L direct but 
te glories of 
g sources of 
picture the 
te. fallen in 
of a people 

___. # _ . ^ ^enunciation, 

1 or with more earnestness of moral purpose. In w preface he 



HINDU CHRONOLOGY 



+9* 



explains how the poem came to be written— after a youth spent in 
peadleasnes* and unsettlement,. at the instigation of Sir Sayyid 
Abroad Khan, and in the cause of that great reformer. The poem 
Is still redted and imitated by Muslims in the Punjab and United 
Provinces, though the picture which it presents of Indian Musal- 
mftas is no longer wholly applicable to the community. Hall 
has recently completed a life of Sir Sayyid Ahmad Khin in two 
volumes* entitled J&oy&t-i JtaOd (" eternal life "). a work of great 
merit. 
Another writer whose work, though chiefly in prose, deals with 




Lahore, r83j), is by far the best book dealing with the subject. 
His prose style is much admired. As Half was the pupil of GhAlib, 
so was JLatd that of Zauq, of whose poem* he has published a re- 
vised and annotated edition. His other works in prose are Qisas-4 
Hind, episodes of Indian history arranged for schools; Navang-i 
KhayOl, an allegory dealing with human life; and Darb&r-i Akbari, 
an account of the reign of Akbar. 
Sir Sayyid Ahmad Khan's life and work are dealt 

Ihi 



Among his literary achievements may be mention 
$ou6dtd (" Vestiges of Princes "), an excellent ac 
and its monuments, which has passed through i 
since it was first lithographed in 1847. His essays 
papers, published in the ARgarh Institute Gaeetle (si 
and afterwards (from 1870 onwards) in a periodical er 
Akkl&q (or " Muhammadan Social Reformer "), har 
blems of religious, social and educational advan 
Indian Musalmftns — the cause with which his life" 
Mis great Commentary on the Our' 6m, in seven vo 
finished only a few days before his death in 1898. i 
end of Surah xx.. a little more than half the book. 



prose found its most powerful wielder for the diffusion of modern 
ideas, and th - t: - 1 - ■ > — '— ■— ' »* : ng 



of the best lii 
Another e: 
Nazir Abmac 
scribing dom 
have had a 1 
have been sp 
These are e 
faubafun-Na 
r the Seven 
Age "). and j 
many sides; 
tiaoslator irn 
reckoned a a 
ideas; and m 
of the Quran 
displaying a 1 



associated with Sir Sayyid Ahmad Khin. 

The novel is one of the most noteworthy feature* of recent 
literary composition in UrdO. India has from time immemorial been 
rich in stories and romance* of adventure; but the description of 
actual Kfe and character in action, as the modern novel is under- 
stood in Europe, is quite a new development. The most admired 
production of this kind in Urdu is a work entitled Fisanane AsOd, 
by Pandit Ratan-n&th Sarsh&r of Lucknow. The story, which h very 
long, is remarkable for the faithful and vivid pictures of Lucknow 
society which it presents, and its exact and lifelike delineation of 
character; it appeared originally as a feuiltekm of the Awadh 
Akhbdr, of which paper the author was at the time editor. Another 
good writer in the same branch of literature is Maubvi 'Abdul- 
tf allot Sharar, also a native of the neighbourhood of Lucknow, but 
settled at Hyderabad. He was editor of a monthly periodical 
called the Dv-nutis (" melter of hearts "), which contained essays 
and papers in European style, and in it his novels, which are all of 
an historical character, in the style of Sir Walter Scott, originally 
appeared. The best are 'A&s and VirginA, a tale of the Crusades, 
and Mansur and Mdkind, a story of which the scene is laid in India 
at the time of the invasions of Sultan MahroQd of Ghazni. 

Although Urchl chiefly represents Mnsalmftn culture, its use is 
by no means confined to adherents of that faith. It has just been 
mentioned that the most popular UrdO novelist is a Hindu (a 
Brihman from Kashmir); and the statistics of the vernacular 
press show that this form of the language is widely used by Hindfls 
as well as Musalmftns. Thus, of eighty periodicals in UrdQ pub- 
lished in the United Provinces, twenty-nine are conducted by 
Hindus; similarly, in the Punjab, of forty-eight UrdQ journals, 
twenty are edited by Hindus. 

" High Hindi " has scarcely adapted itself to modern requirements 
with the thoroughness displayed by UrdO. It is taught in the schools 
where the population is mainly- Hindu, and books of science have been 
written in it with a terminology bun u we d from Sanskrit, in place 
of the Persian terms used in the other dialect. But Sanskrit is far 
removed from the daily life of the people, and the majority of works 
in this style are read only by Pandits, the great bulk of them dealing 



with religion, philosophy and the ancient l i ter a ture. There are 
thirty-seven Hindi and four Hindi-Urdu journals pi the United 
Provinces; but many of them are exclusively religious in their 
Character, and several, though written in IXfvan&gari, employ a 
mixed language which admits Persian words freely. The old 
dialects of literature, Awadhi and Braj-bhaahft, are now only used 
for poetry; High Hindi has been a complete failure for this 
purpose. 

The most noticeable authors in Hindi since the middle of the 19th 
century have been Btbfl Harishchandra and Rajg Siva Prasftd, both 
of Benares. The former, during his short life (1850-1885), was an 
enthusiastic cultivator of the old poetic art, using the dialects just 
mentioned. He published in the Sundari Ttiak an anthology of the 
best Hindi poetry, and in the Kabi-backan~Sudk& (" ambrosia of the 
words of poets **) and the magazine called Harishchandrika a quantity 
of old texts, with much added matter. He also wrote a volume of 
biographies of famous men, European and Indian, and many critical 
studies, historical and literary. In history especially he cleared up 
many problems, and traced the lines for further investigation. In 
his Kashmir Kusum. or history of Kashmir, a list is given of about 
a hundred works by him. He was also the real founder of the modern 
Hindi drama: he wrote plays himself, and inspired other*. Raja 
Siva Prasad (1823-1895) served for many years in the educational 
department, and published a number of works intended for use in 
schools, which have greatly contributed to the formation of a sound 
vernacular form of Hindi, not excessively Sanskritiaed, and not 
rejecting current Persian forms. The society at Benares called the 
Nagarl PrachSrinl Sabhd (" Society for promoting the use of the 
N3gari character ") has, since the death of Harishchandra, been 
active in procuring the publication of works in Hindi, and has 
issued many useful books, beside* conducting a systematic search 
foroldMSS. 

Bibliography. — The best account in English of Hindi literature 
is Dr C. A. Grierson's Modern Vernacular Literature 0/ HindislAn, 
issued by the Asiatic Society of Bengal in 1880; the dates in this 
work, which is founded on indigenous compilations, have, however, 
in many cases to be received with caution. Before it appeared* 
Garcia de Tassy's Histoire do la literature Hindouu et HindoustanU % 
and his annual summaries of the progress made from 1850 to 1877, 
were our chief authority, and may still be consulted with advantage. 
For the religious literature of the Vaishnava sects. Professor H. H. 
Wilson's Essay on the Religious Sods of the Hindus (voL L of hhr 
collected works) has not yet been superseded. 

For UrdQ poets. Professor Azfid's Ab-i tfaytu (in UrdQ) is the most 
trustworthy record. For the new school of Urdfl literature reference 

E' be made to a series ot lectures (in English) by Shaikh 'Abdul- 
ir of Lahore, printed in 1 898. The catalogues by Professor Blum- 
It of Hinddst&nf and Hindi books in the libraries of the British 
Museum and the India Office will give a good idea of the volume et 
the recent productions of the press in those languages. (C. J. L.) 

HINDU CHRONOLOGY. The subject of Hindu chronology 
divides naturally into three parts: the calendar, the eras, and 
other reckoning*. 

I. The Calendar 

The Hindus have had from very ancient times the system 
of lunisolar cycles, made by the combination of solar years, 
regulated by the course of the sun, and^ lunar years, regulated 
by the course of the moon, but treated in such a manner as to 
keep the beginning of the lunar year near the beginning of the 
solar year. The exact manner in which they arranged the details 
of their earliest calendar is still a subject of research. We deal 
here with their calendar as it now stands, in a form which was 
developed from about a.d. 400 under the influence of the Greek 
astronomy which had been introduced into India at no very 
long time previously. 

The Hindu calendar, then, is determined by years of two 
kinds, solar and lunar. For civil purposes, solar years are used 
in Bengal, including Orissa, and in the Tamil and Malayalam 
districts of Madras, and lunar years throughout the rest of India. 
But the lunar year regulates everywhere the general religious 
rites and festivals, and the details of private and domestic life, 
such as the selection of auspicious occasions for marriages and 
for starting on journeys, the choice of lucky moments for shaving, 
and so on. Consequently, the details of the lunar year are 
shown even in the almanacs which follow the solar year. On 
the other hand, certain details of the solar year, such as the 
course of the sun through the signs and other divisions of the 
zodiac, are shown in the almanacs which follow the lunar year. 
We will treat the solar year first, because it governs the luni- 
solar system, and the explanation of it will greatly simplify 
the process of explaining the lunar calendar. 



+92 



HINDO CHRONOLOGY 



The civil solar year is determined by the astronomical sSlar 
year. The latter professes to begin at the vernal equinox, 
rasas**- but the actual position is as follows. In our Western 
avafcaf astronomy the signs of the zodiac have, in consequence 
•oisr of ^e precession of the equinoxes, drawn away to 
r0mr ' a large extent from the constellations from which 
they derived their names; with the result that the sun now 
comes to the vernal equinox, at the first point of the sign Aries, 
not in the constellation Aries, but at a point in Pisces, about 
28 degrees before the beginning of Aries. The Hindus, however, 
have disregarded precession in connexion with their calendar 
from the time (aj>. 409, 52a, or 527, according to different schools) 
when, by their system, the signs coincided with the constella- 
tions; and their sign Aries, called Mesha by them, is still their 
constellation Aries, beginning, according to them, at or near 
the star £ Pisdum. Their astronomical solar year is, in fact, 
not the tropical year, in the course of which the sun really 
passes from one vernal equinox to the next, but a sidereal year, 
the period during which the earth makes one revolution in its 
orbit round the sun with reference to the first point of Mesha; 
its beginning is the moment of the Mesha-samkrftnti, the entrance 
of the sun into the sidereal sign Mesha, instead of the tropical 
sign Aries; and it begins, not with the true equinox, but with 
an artificial or nominal equinox. 

The length of this sidereal solar year was determined in the 
following manner. The astronomer selected what the Greeks 
termed an exdigmos, the Romans an annus magnus or mundanus, 
a period in the course of which a given order of things is completed 
by the sun, moon, and planets returning to a state of conjunction 
from which they have started. The usual Hindu exdigmos 
has been the Great Age of 4.320,000 sidereal solar years, the 
aggregate of the Krita or golden age, the TrSta or silver age, 
the Dvftpara or brazen age, and the Kali or iron age, in which 
we now are; but it has sometimes been the Kalpa or aeon, 
consisting according to one view of 1000, according to another 
view of 1008, Great Ages. He then laid down the number of 
revolutions, in the period of his cxdigmos, of the nakshatras, 
certain stars and groups of stars which will be noticed more 
definitely in our account of the lunar year; that is, the number 
of rotations of the earth on its axis, or, in other words, the number 
of sidereal days. A deduction of the number of the years from 
the number of the sidereal days gave, as remainder, the number 
Of civil days in the exdigmos. And, this rcrnainder being 
divided by the number of the years, the quotient save the 
length of the sidereal solar year; refinements, suggested by 
experience, inference, or extraneous information, were made 
by increasing or decreasing the number of sidereal days assigned 
to the exdigmos. The Hindus now recognize three standard 
sidereal solar years determined in that manner. (1) A year of 
365 days 6 hrs. 12 min. 30 sec according to the Aryabhatiya, 
otherwise called the First AryaSiddh&nto, which was written 
by the astronomer Aryabhata (b. a.d. 476): this year is 
used in the Tamil and Malayftjam districts, and, we may add, 
in Ceylon. (2) A year of 365 days 6 hrs. 12 min. 30*915 sec. 
according to the Rajamrigd ka, a treatise based on the Br&hma~ 
Siddh&nla of Brahmagupta (b. a.d. 598) and attributed to 
king Bhoja, of which the epoch, the point of time used in it 
for calculations, falls in a.d. 1042: this year is used in parts 
of Gujarat (Bombay) and in Rajputftnft and other western parts 
of Northern India. (3) A year of 36s days 6 hrs. 12 min. 
36-56 sec. according to the present SHrya-Siddhdnta, a work 
of unknown authorship which dates from probably about 
a.d. 1000: this year is used in almost all the other parts of 
India. It may be remarked that, according to modern science, 
the true mean sidereal solar year measures 365 days 6 hrs. 9 min. 
96 sec., and the mean tropical year nftasures 365 days 5 hrs. 
48 min. 46054440 sec. 

The result of the use of this sidereal solar year is that the 
beginning of the Hindu astronomical solar year, and with it 
the civil solar year and the lunar year and the nominal incidence 
of the seasons, has always been, and still is, travelling slowly 
forward in our calendar year by an amount which varies accord- 



ing -to the particular authority .» For instance, Arybbbats's 
year exceeds the Julian year by 12 min. 30 sec. This amounts 
to exactly one day in 115} years, and five days in 576 years. 
Thus, if we take the longer period and confine ourselves to a 
time when the Julian calendar (old style) was in use, according 
to Aryabhata the Mesha-samkrftnti began to occur in A.D. 603 
on 20th March, and in aj>. 1179 on 25th March. The inter- 
mediate advances arrange themselves into four steps of one 
day each in xx6 years, followed by one step of one day in na 
years; thus, the Mesha-samkrftnti began to occur on 21st 
March in a.d. 719, on 22nd March in a.d. 835, on 23rd March 
in a.d. 951, and on 24th March in a.d. 1067 (whence 112 year* 
take us to 25th March in aj>. 1179). It is now occurring some* 
times on nth April, sometimes on the xath; having first come 
to the 1 2th in a.d. 1871. 

The civil solar year exists in more varieties than one. The 
principal variety, conveniently called the Meshftdi year, £*.' 
" the year beginning st the Me&ha-sarhkrftnti/' is 
the only one that we need notice at this point. The *** fl 
beginning of it is determined directly by the astrono- j, 
mical solar year; and for religious purposes it begins, 
with that year, at the moment of the Mesha-samkrftntL Its 
first civil day, however, may be either the day on which the 
samkrinti occurs, or the next day, or even the day after that: 
this is determined partly by the time of day or night at which 
the samkrdnti occurs, which, moreover, of course varies ixt 
accordance with the locality as well as the particular authority 
that is followed; partly by differing details of practice .in 
different parts of the country. In these circumstances an 
exact equivalent of the Meshftdi civil solar year cannot be 
stated; but it may be taken as now beginning on or closely 
about the 12th of April. , 




the Sanskrit forms of these names are Chaitra, Vaiftkha, jyaishtha, 
Aflhftdha, Srftvaaa, BiiAdrapada, Asvma or Aivayuja, KArtttka, 
Mftrgaiira or Mftrgashvha (also known as Agrahayana), Pauaha, 
Magna, and Ph&lguna: in tome localities these names are used 
in corrupted forms, and in others vernacular names are substituted 
for some of them; and, while in some parts the name Chakra is 
attached to the month Mesha, ia other parts it is attached to the 
month Mina, and so on throughout the series in each case. The 
astronomical solar month runs from the moment of one satkkrdmti 
of the sun to the moment of the next samkr&nh; and, as the signs 
of the Hindu zodiac are all of equal length, 30 degrees* as with us, 
while the speed of the sun (the motion of the earth in its orbit 
round the sun) varies according to the time of the year, the length 
of the month b variable: the shortest month » Dfcanus; the 



* *~ J ' ' T precession, and the consequent travelling 

through the natural seasons, is, of course, a 
Hindu calendar, the principles of which are 
cordingly, an attempt was made by a small 
> rectify this state of things by introducing a 
; taking as the first lunar month the synodic 
e sun enters the tropical Aries, instead of the 
the publication was started, in or about 1886, 
tag or " Processional Almanac.'' 
u sidereal solar year is in excess of the true 
..«-».. ««_«.. , v. »f (if we use AryabhataV value) 3 min. 20*4 
sec. If we take this, for convenience, at 3 min. 20 sec, the excess 
amounts to exactly one day in 432 years. And so even the sidereal 
Mesha-smmkranti is vow found to occur three or four days later 
than the day on which it should occur. Accordingly, another re- 
former had begun, in or about 1865, to publish the fiavin athavft 
Patwardhani raftch&ng, the " New or Patwardhanf Almanac," in 
which he determined the details of the year according to the proper 
Mesha-samkrftnti. 



HINDI/ » CHRONOLOGY. 



40k 



year. 



longest Is Mithttaa.. The cM eofer month begins with rat 

car* day, which, is oetermined, in different localities, in t dm 
manner with the first aril day of the Mcshldi year, as i td 
above. The civil month is of variable .length; partly tat 

reason, partly because of the variation in the length of the asj ni- 
cal month. No exact equivalents o£ the civil months, t! re, 

can be stated; but, speaking approximately, we may a at, 
while the month Mesha now begins on or closely about 121 ril, 

the beginning of a subsequent month may come as late aa ith 

davof the English month in which it falls. 

The solar year is also divided into six seasons, the Sanskrit names 
ofc which are Vasanta, spring; Grishma. the hot weather; Varshft. 
_- the rainy season; Sarad, autumn; Hemanta, the cold 

JZL-^i, weather; and Satire, the dewy season. Vasanta begins 
at the Mina-samlcranti; the other seasons begin at each 
successive second saihkrAnH from that. Originally, this scheme was 
laid out with reference to the true course of the sun, and the starting- 
point of it was the real winter solstice, with Sttra, as the first season, 
beginning then: now. owing partly to the disregard of precession, 
partly to our introduction of New Style, each season cornea 
about three weeks too late; Vasanta begins on or about lath 
March, instead of 19th or 20th February, and so on with the rest. 
It may be added that in early times the year was also divided into 
three or four, and even into five or seven, seasons; and there 
appears to have been also a practice of reckoning the seasons ac- 
cording to the lunar months, which, however, would only give a 
very varying arrangement, in addition to neglecting the point that 
the seasons are naturally determined by the course of the sun, not 
of the moon. But there is now recognised only the division into 
six seasons, determined as stated above. 

The solar year is also divided into two parts called Uttariyana, 
the period during which the sun is moving to the north, and Dak- 
ahia&yana, the period during which it is moving to the south. 
The Uttaravana begins at the nominal winter solstice, 
as marked by the Makara-samkranri ; and the day on 
which this solstice occurs, usually lath January at 
present, is stiU a special occasion of festivity and re- 
joicing; the Dakshinayana begins at the nominal summer 
solstice, as marked by the Karka-aamkranti. It may be 
added here that, while the Hindus disregard precession in the actual 
computation of their years and the regulation of their calendar, 
they pay attention to it in certain other respects* and notably as 
regards the solstices: the precesskmal solstices are looked upon as 
auspicious occasions, as well as the non-processional solstices, and 
are customarily shown in the almanacs; and some of the almanacs 
•how also the other processional sathkraniis of the sun. 

The civil days of the solar month begin at Sunrise. They are 
numbered 1, 2, 3, Ac., in unbroken succession to the end of the 
Ihmctri month. And, the length of the month being variable 
jj~~^^ for the reasons stated above, the number of the civil 
^' days may range from twenty-nine to thirty-two. 

The civil days are named after the weekdays, of which the usual 
appellations (there are various synonyms in each- case, and some 
y*. *» *£ tne name * are U9ec < in corrupted forms) are in Sanskrit 
J** •*•*** Adityaytra or Ravivira, the day of the sun, sometimes 
"* r * called Adivara, the beginning-day (Sunday) ; Somavara, 

the day of the moon (Monday); Maagalavfira, the day of Mara 
(Tuesday); Budhavira, the day of Mercury (Wednesday); Brihas- 
pativara or Guruvara, the day of Jupiter (Thursday); Sukxav&ra, 
the day of Venus (Friday); and Sanivara, the aay of Saturn 
(Saturday). It may be mentioned, as a matter of .archaeological , 
interest, that,' while some of the astronomical books perhaps postulate > 
an earlier knowledge of the " lords of the days," and other writings 
indicate a still earlier use of the period of seven days, the first 
proved instance of the use of the name of a weekday it of the year 
A.D. 484, and is furnished by an. inscription in the Saugor district. 
Central India. 

The divisions of the civil day, as far as we need note them, are 
60 vipatas-i fmla~34 seconds; 60 polos ^ighafiH -24 minute*; 
^ tuM _. 60 f*o#**f«24 hours-* 1 day. There is also the muhOrta 
p VT-^ mB ~2 gha(HMs»48 minutes: this is the nearest approach 
•***• to the " hour." The comparative value of these measures 
•**■ of time may perhaps be best illustrated thus : 2 k muk&rlas 

-2 hours; 2} gho(ik&s-i hour; 2\ polos— 1 minute; 2\ itpolosm 
1 second. 

As their civil day begins at sunrise, the Hindus naturally count 
all their times, in ghoHk&s and pahs, from that moment. But 
_„ the moment is a varying one, though not in India to 

zrT anything like the extent to which it is so in European 

C " BM * latitudes; and tinder the British Government the Hindus 

have recognized the advantage, and in fact the necessity, especially 
in connexion with their lunar calendar, of having a convenient 
means of referring their own times to the tfme which prevails offici- 
ally. Consequently, some of the almanacs have adopted the 
European practice of showing the time of sunrise, in hours and 
minutes, from midnight; and some of them add the time of sunset 
from noon. 

The lunar year consists primarily of twelve lunations or 
lunar months, of which the present Sanskrit names, .generally 



^ HINDU CHRONOLOGY 



>. iftfs the Mtebs> 
t dvfl day of the 
and 1817 the fin* 
li March and iftta 
rtercelated saoath, 
rat civil day of the 
er various shifting* 
rcalation of A&vint 
833, when the fin* 
to 13th March, by 
when the Meiha. 
■t civil day of the 

it* (pa*s*e), celled 
iuddU, todi, swH, 
"tnigfat, n,^ 
, endtng g^ 



right fortnight pre* 
t month, the dark 
great* for instance, 
of time throughout 
Northern India at 
India as the dark 
it affect the period 
i Kftrttikndi yean 
laitraand Klrttika 
he dark fortnight* 

tits, and by the 
the years, Like 
t with its fin* 



rpoees 1 
3 day. 



teen Htkis or lunar 
creases her distance 
; and the Vhmhmmm 

5m, after ^* 
ace. In accordance 
ith the weekday oa 
irding certain rites. 
;o be used end cited 
tent at a particular 
mediately after the 
vely; the last <tls» 
on. The Mis em 
for each fortnight: 
d 15, the new-soooa 

purpimdnta month 
ir figures or by the 
[ydT 1 * second/' Ac., 
n of either fortnight 
new-moon and full* 
d p&ntimA; or here, 
used. And special 
the tilhis, according 
or events or merit* 
Is 3 is Akahaye or 
permanence to acts 
.neea-chaturthj, the 
I Ganeea, Ganapati. 
ivine krtshoa 13 is 
some reason which 
i beginning of the 

the year tf styled 
»seiy tqour " New 

e those of the solar 
t the names of the 
manner; t*«a* 
lis. The 2? 
Krofthe mr " 
aulta are as foUowi. 
periodically, a tffe 
Hindu calculations, 
Leec.: it may. there- 
lay, the duratioa of 
ighly, more or less, 
end at any moment 
1 the dvfl day after 
sunrise and gives its 
, however, begin on 

by " lunar day:**. It 
a; and. a* the Atttt 
iroating to 24 hours, 
nust not be confused 
tiich i* the interval, 
u, between two sac- 



HINDU CHRONOLOGY 



495 



one chril day and end on the next but one, and to cover two sun- 
row; aod it is then treated as a repeated til**, in the tense that 

its cumber '' J * " : ! ' "- u ' MJ "to 

and ends, ( he 

tilhi which he 

day covere ise 

that Htki u of 

which the is, 

is again nu :er 

that, when ter 

band, a HA y, 

so as not t ny 

practical pi be 

avoided if p- 

pressed or he 

sense that ** 

testes and m, 

as before, t) he 

seventh till he 

eighth Htki no 

civil day be xi 

of nnmberii t>n 

ofaidHtl 5: 

that the da at 

the first da ir, 

is numbered a instead of i. 

There are. on an average, thirteen suppressed Hikis and seven 
repeated tilkis in twelve lunar months; and so the lunar year 
averages 354 days, rising to about 384 when a month is intercalated. 
It occasionally happens that there are two suppressions of tilkis in 



tils 



one and the same fortnight ; and the almanacs show such a case in 
the bright fortnight of Jyaishtha, a.d. 1678: but this occurs only 
after very long intervals. 

The Mki is divided into two ka the 

time in which the moon increases h< six 

degrees. But this is a d< 
JJ* chronological interest. S 

**■■* to which a prominent pbo 
to y6ga, or time in which the joint am 

of the motions of the sun and the m ees 

20 minute*; and the nokskaira, the f *d 

to the ecliptic by means of the stars _ tve 

been mentioned above under the I una/ month. 

In the Indian calendar everything depends upon exact times, 
which differ, of course, on every different meridian; and, (to cite 
what is perhaps the most frequent and generally important occur- 
rence) suppression and repetition may affect one Hthi and civil day 
in one locality, and another tilhi and civil day in another locality 
riot very far distant. Consequently, neither for the lunar nor for 
the solar calendar is there any almanac which is applicable to even 
the whole area in which any particular length of the astronomical 
solar year prevails; much less, for the whole of India. Different 
almanacs are prepared and published for places of leading im- 
portance; details for minor places, when wanted, have to be worked 
out by the local astrologer, the modern representative of an ancient 
official known as S&mvatsara, the " clerk of the year." 

n. Eras 

* As far as the available evidence goes (and we have no reason 
to expect to discover anything opposed to it), any use of eras, 
In the sense of continuous reckonings which originated in historical 
occurrences or astronomical epochs and were employed for 
official and other public chronological purposes, did not prevail 
in India before the xst century B.C. Prior to that time, there 
existed, indeed, in connexion with the sacrificial calendar, a 
five-years luniaolar cycle, and possibly some extended cycles of 
the same nature 4 , and there was in Buddhist circles a record of 
Che years elapsed since the death of Buddha, which we shall 
mention again further on. But, as is gathered from books and is 
well illustrated by the edicts of Aioka (reigned 964-927 B.C.) and 
the inscriptions of other rulers, the years of the reign of each 
successive king were found sufficient for the public dating of pro- 
clamations and the record of events. There is no known case in 
Which any Indian king, of really ancient times, deliberately 
applied himself to the foundation of an era: and we have no 
reason for thinking that such a thing was ever done, or that any 
Hindu reckoning at all owes its existence to a recognition of 
historical requirements. The eras which came into existence 
1 We illustrate the ordinary occurrences. But there are others. 
Thus, a repeated Htki may occasionally be followed by a suppressed 
one: la thiacase the numbering of the civil days would be 6, 7, 7, 9. 
Ac., instead of 6, 7. 7i *» 9, &c Or it may occasionally be preceded 
by a suppressed one: in this case the numbering would be 5, 7. 7. 
*8, Ac, instead of 5, 6, 7. 7 A *c 



from the tst century b.c. onwards mostly had their origin In the 
fortuitous extension of regnal reckonings. The usual course has 
been that, under the influence of filial piety, pride in ancestry, 
loyalty to a paramount sovereign, or some other such motive, 
the successor of some king continued the regnal reckoning of his 
predecessor, who was not necessarily the first king in the dynasty, 
and perhaps did not even reign for any long time, instead of 
starting a new reckoning, beginning again with the year z, 
according to the years of his own reign. Having thus run for two 
reigns, the reckoning was sufficiently well established to con- 
tinue in the same form, and to eventually develop into a generally 
accepted local era, which might or might not be taken over by 
subsequent dynasties ruling afterwards over the same territory. 
In these circumstances, we find the establisher of any particular 
era in that king who first continued his predecessor's regnal 
reckoning, instead of replacing it by his own; but we regard as 
the founder of the era that king whose regnal reckoning was so 
continued. We may add here that it was only in advanced 
stages that any of the Hindu eras assumed specific names: 
during the earlier period of each of them, the years were simply 
cited by the term sarfnotsara or varsha, " the year (bearing such- 
and-such a number)," or by the abbreviations ssihoat and sam, 
without any appellative designation. 

The Hindus have had two religious reckonings, which it will 
be convenient to notice first. Certain statements in the 
Ceylonese chronicles, the LHpavoiksa and Maktooiiisa, _ _^ 
endorsed by an entry in a record of AS6ka f show that in abU( M j 
the 3rd century B.C. there existed among the Buddhists Jsta r— 
a record of the time elapsed since the death of Buddha 
in 483 B.C., from which it was known that Asoka was 
anointed to the sovereignty ar8 years 1 after the 
death. The reckoning, however, was confined to esoteric Buddhist 
circles, and did not commend itself for any public use; and the 
only known inscriptional use of it, which' also furnishes the 
latest known date recorded in it, is found in the Last Edict of 
Asoka, which presents his dying speech delivered in 226 B.C., 256 
years after the death of Buddha. In Ceylon, where, also the 
original reckoning was not maintained, there was devised in the 
12th century A.d. a reckoning styled Buddhavarsba, " the years 
of Buddha," which still exists, and which purports to run from 
the death of Buddha, but has set up an erroneous date for that 
event in $44 BX. This later reckoning spread from Ceylon to 
Burma and Siam, where, also, it is still used. It did not obtain 
any general recognition in India, because, when it was devised, 
Buddhism had practically died out there, except at BSdh-Gayi. 
But, as there seems to have been constant intercourse between 
Bodh-Gaya and Ceylon as well as other foreign Buddhist countries, 
we should not be surprised to find an occasional instance of its 
use at Bodh-Gaya: and it is believed that one such instance, 
belonging to a.d. 1270, has been obtained. 

The Jains have had, and still maintain, a reckoning from the 
death of the founder of their faith, Vlra, Mah&vfra, Vardba- 
mina, which event is placed by them in 528 B.C. This reckon- 
ing figures largely in the Jain books, which put forward dates in it 
for very early times. But the earliest known synchronous date 
in it— by which we mean a date given by a writer who recorded 
the year in which he himself was writing— is one of the year 080, 
or, according to a different view mentioned in the passage itself, 
Of the year 093. This reckoning, again, did not commend itself 
for any official or other public use. And the only known inscrfp- 
tional instances of the use of it are modern ones, of the ioih 
century. While it is certain that the Jain reckoning, as it exists, 
has its initial point in 528 B.C. it has not yet been determined 
whether that is actually the year in which Vlra died. AH that can 
be said on this point is that the date b not inconsistent with 
certain statements in Buddhist books, which mention, by a 
Prakrit name of which the Sanskrit form is Nirgrantha-Jnita- 
putra, a contemporary of Buddha, in whom there is recognised 
the original of the Jain Vlra, Mahlvlra, or Vardham&na, and who, 
the same books say, died while Buddha was still alive. But there 
are some indications that Nirgrantha-Jnataputra may have died 
only a short time before Buddha himself; and the event may 



496 



HINDU CHRONOLOGY 



lalmlr in Rijput&nft, pnmt a reckoning 
J point in a,d. 634' or in the preceding 
bean an appellation, Bhatjka* 
I on the name of the Bhafp T~\ 
f Jesalmer belong. Nohiaton- jf* * 1 
able to that time, which can Bna " 
, It is possible that the apparent initial 
at the end of the Saka year 546 or there- 
le astronomical work composed then or 
in the Jesalmer territory. But it seems 
wrely fictitious date, set up by aa attempt 
of the ruling family. 

:t of Madras, and in the territories of the 
the Malayajam language prevails, namely, 
ingalore, the Malabar district, and the 
tates, there is used a reckoning which is 
foUam or Kolamba reckoning, sometime* 
The years of it are solar: in the southern 
which it is current, they begin with the 
rthern parts, they begin with the next 
ial point of the reckoning is in a.d. *j$; 
ceo in A.D. 1900. The popular view about 
consists of cycles of 1000 years; that we 
Je; and that the reckoning originated ia 
ikal Parasur&ma, who exterminated the 
e, and reclaimed the Konkan countries. 
Ghauts, from the ocean. But the earliest 
ear 140, falls in a.d. 973; and the reckon- 
tion of the thousand, instead of beginning 
una probable, therefore, that the reckoning 
d. 825. The years are cited sometimes as 
iich-and-such a number)," sometimes a 
ter Kollam appeared}" and this suggests 
possibly owe its origin to some event, 
netted with one or other of the towns ana 
t the Malabar coast; perhaps Northern 
listrict, perhaps Southern Kollam, better 
vancore. But the introduction of Para- 
which would carry back (let us say) the 
legendary times, may indicate, rather, a 
b Or, again, since each century of the 
in the same year a.d. with a century of 
[see below under, IIL Other Reckonings), 
Jus reckoning may be a southern offshoot 
ig, or at least may have had the same 

coning, known as the News/ era. and com* 
:h superseded the Gupta and Hanha eras 
tributes the foundation of it to a king 
iva that; in the time and with the per- 
devamalla, a merchant named SikhwQ 
Jth acquired from sand which turned into 
lusting in the country, and introduced the 
po of the occurrence. It is possible that 
inded by some ruler of Nepal : but nothing 
t the particular names mentioned in con- 
appears to have been discarded for state 
ivour of the Saka era, in a.d. 1768, when 
ten of Nepal; but manuscripts show that 
snained in use up to at any rate A.D. 187$. 
te use in Ka^hiawar and Gujarat, in the 
of a reckoning, commencing in a.d. 11 if, 
irhha-sarhvat. No historical occurrence n 
have been based; and the origin of it is 



bove have for the most part served their 
, Bat there are three great WfH 
a. very respectable antiquity, gnm 
m and survived to the present Aran at 
iyuga, Vikrama, and Saka eras. J**"** 
reat the Kaliyugafirst, though, . "** 
greatest apparent antiquity, it is the 
apect of actual date of origin, 
the principal astronomical reckoning oi 
luently, if not generally, shown in the 
Lrdly be looked upon as being yj^/rj*. 
dvil purposes; and, as regards ^ssecsu 
times aa far as we can judge it ot*m 
use, which furnishes a good &a 
as follows: from Southern India we 
of a.d. 634, one of aj>. 770, three oi the 
1, from the 1 ath century onwards, but 
he 14th, a eertmkt number of instances, 
In itself, but extremely so in comparison 



HINDU CBRONQLOGYt 



497 



with the number of cases of the use; Of the Vikraraa and Salt* 
eras and other reckonings: from Northern India the earnest 
known instance of is a.d. i 169 or i i 70, and the later ones number 
only four. Its years are by nature sidereal solar years, com- 
mencing with the Mesha-samkrftnti, the entrance of the sun 
into the Hindu constellation and sign Mesha, i.e. Aries (for 
this and other technical details, see above, under the Calendar); * 
but they were probably cited as lunar years in the inscriptional 
records which present the reckoning; and the almanacs appear 
to treat them either as Meshftdi civil solar years with solar months, 
or as Chaitradi lunar years with lunar months am&nta (ending 
with the new-moon) or purvimdrrta (ending with the full-moon) 
as the case may be, according to the locality. Its initial point lies 
in 3101 B.C.; and the year 5002 began in aj>. 1900.* 

This reckoning is not an historical era. actually running from 
3102 B.C. It was devised for astronomical purposes at some time 
about A.n. 400, when the Hindu astronomers, having taken over 
the principles of the Greek astronomy, recognized that they required 
for purposes of computation a specific reckoning with a definite 
initial occasion. They found that occasion in a conjunction of the 
sun, the moon, and the five planets which were then known, at the 
first point of their sign Mesha. There was not really such a con- 
junction; nor, apparently, is it even the case that the sun was 
actually at the first point of Mesha at the moment arrived at. But 
there was an approach to such a conjunction, which was turned 
into an actual conjunction by taking the mean instead of the true 
positions of the sun, the moon, and the planets. And, partly from 
the reckoning which has come down to us, partly from the astro- 
nomical books, we know that the moment assigned to the assumed 
conjunction was according to one school the midnight between 
Thursday the 17th, and Friday the 18th, February, 3103 B.C., arid 
according to another school the sunrise on the Friday. 

The reckoning thus devised was subsequently identified with 
the Kaliyuga as the iron age, the last and shortest, with a duration 
of 432,000 yean, of the four ages in each cycle of ages in the Hindu 
system of coamtcal periods. Also, traditional history was fitted 
to it by one school, represented notably by the Pur&oas, which, 
referring the great war between the P&odavas and the Kurus, which 
is the topic of the Mahabharata, to the close of the preceding age, 
the Dvapara; placed on the last day of that age the culminating 
event which ushered in the Kali age; namely, the death of Krishna 
(the return to heaven of Vishnu on the termination of his incarna- 
tion as Krishna), which was followed by the abdication of the 
Ptpdava king Yudhishthira, who, having installed his grand-nephew 
Pankshit as- his successor, then set out on his own journey to heaven. 
Another school, however,, placed the Panda vaa and the Kurus 
653 years later, in 2449 B.C. A third school places in 3102 B.C. the 
""'idnishtf' -^ -• <---■ 



anointment of Yudhishthira to the sovcreig 



and treats that 



nt of Yudhishthira to the sovereignty, and t 
event as inaugurating the Kali age; from this point of view, the 
first 3044 years of the Kaliyuga— -the period from its commencement 
in 310a B.C. to the commencement of the first historical era, the 
so-called Vikrama era, in 58 B.C— ■ are also known as " the era of 
Yudhishthira." 

The Vikrama era, which is the earliest of all the Hindu eras 
In respect of order of foundation, is the dominant era and the 
rsvVZft- gr&t historical reckoning of Northern India— that 
nm* Brm is, of the territory on the north of the rivers Narbadft 
•/» and MahanadI— to which part of the country its use 

** G has always been practically confined. Like, indeed, 

the Kaliyuga and Saka eras, it is freely cited in almanacs in any 
part of India; and it is sometimes used in the south by immigrants 
from the north: but it is, by nature, so essentially foreign to 
the south that the earliest known inscriptional instance of the 
use of it in Southern India only dates from a.d. iai8, and the 
very few later instances that have been obtained, prior to the 
15th century a.d., come, along with the instance of a.d. 1218, 
from the close neighbourhood of the dividing-line between the 

1 It is always to be borne in mind that, as already explained, 
while the Hindu Mesha answers to our Aries, it does not coincide 
with either the sign or the constellation Aries. 

1 We select a.d. 1900 as a gauge-year, in preference to the year 
in which we are writing, because its figures are more convenient 
for comparative purposes. In accordance with the general tendency 
of the Hindus to cite expired years, the almanacs would mostly 
show 5001 (instead of 5002) as the number for the Kaliyuga year 
answering to a.d. 1900-1901. And, for the same reason, this 
reckoning has. often been called the Kaliyuga era of 3101 b.c» There 
is, perhaps, no particular objection to that, provided that we then 
deal with the Vikrama and Saka eras on the same lines, and bear in 
mind that in each case the initial point of the reckoning really lies 
in the preceding year. Bat we prefer to treat these reckonings with 
exact correctness. 



north and; jtha south. The Vikrama era has never been used for 
astronomical. purposes. Its years are lunar, with lunar months, 
but seem liable to be sometimes regarded as solar, with solar 
months, when they are cited in almanacs of Southern India 
which present the solar calendar. Originally they were Kauti- 
k&di, with ptorvim&nla months (ending with the full-moon). 
They now exist in the following three varieties: in Kathiawar 
and Gujarat, they are chiefly Kaxtiikadi, with amdnla months 
(ending with the new-moon); and, they are shown in this form 
in almanacs for the other parts of the Bombay Presidency: 
but there is also found in JUthiiwir and that neighbourhood 
an Ashadhadi variety, commencing with Ashadha sukla 1, 
similarly with amdnta months; in the rest of Northern India, 
they are Chaitradi, with puryimdnL* months. The era has its 
initial point in 58 B.C., and its first civil day, K&rttika iukla 1, 
is 19th September in that year if we determine it with reference 
to the Hindu Tuli-saihkr&nti, or i&th October if we determine 
it with reference to the tropical equinox. The years of the 
three varieties, Chaitradi, Ashadhadi, and KarttikJLdi, all 
commence in the same year aj>.; and the year 1958 began in 

AJ 

nd connects the foundation of this era with a king 
^ikramaditya of Ujjain in Milwft, Central India: one 
tt he began to reign in 58 B.C.; another is that he 
'ear, and that the reckoning commemorates his death. 
Lirh, however, based largely on the inscriptional re- 
own that there was no such king, and that the real 
• different. The era owes its existence to the Kushan 
ka, a foreign invader, who established himself in- 
ia and commenced to reign there in B.C. 58.* He was 
)f it, in the sense that the opening years of it were 
lis reign. It was established and sot going as an era 
or, who continued the reckoning so started, instead of 
jy introducing another according to his Own regnal 
Jt was perpetuated as an era, and transmitted as such 



VI 



fa< 
kii 
N< 
th. 
th 

& 

ye- 



to posterity by the Malavas, the people from whom the modern 
territory Malwa derived its name, who were an important section 
Of the subjects of Kanishka and his successors. In consonance 
with that, records ranging in date from A.D. 473 to 879 style It 
" the reckoning of the Mfiiavas, the years of the M&lava lords* the 
Milava time or era." Prior to that, it had no specific name; the 
years of it were simply cited, in ordinary Hindu fashion, by the 
term saArvalsara, " the year (of such-and-such a number)," or by 
its abbreviations satlwat and saih: and the same was frequently 
done in later times also, and is habitually done in the present day: 
and so, in modern times, this era has often been loosely styled 
" the Samvat era." The idea of a king Vikrama in connexion with 
it appears to date from only the oth or 10th century a.d. 

The Saka era, though it actually had its origin in the south- 
west corner of Northern India, is the dominant era and the 
great historical reckoning of Southern India; that 
is, of the territory below the rivers Narbada and ' !* *"?** 
MahanadI. It is also the subsidiary astronomical a.d.78. 
reckoning, largely used, from the 6th century aj>. 
onwards, in the Kora»as t the works dealing with practical 
details of the calendar, for laying down epochs or points of time 
furnishing convenient bases for computation. As a result 
of that, it came to be used in past times for general purposes 
also, to a limited extent, in parts of Northern India where it 
was not indigenous. And it is now used more or less freely, 
and is cited in almanacs everywhere. Its years are usually 
lunar, Chaitradi, and its months are pHrpimdnta (ending with 
the full-moon) in Northern India, and amdnta (ending with 
the new-moon) in Southern India; but in times gone by it was 
sometimes treated for purposes of calculation as having astro- 
nomical solar years, and it is now treated as having Mesh df 
civil solar years and solar months in those parts of India where 
that form of the solar calendar prevails. It has its initial point 
in aj>. 78; and its first civil day, Chaitra sukla 1, is 3rd March 

e different views 
he Vikrama era. 

in a.d. 78, and 
year; one writer 
s would place it 

writer was held 
me others have 
ily accumulating 



49* 



HINDU CHRONOLOGY? 



in that year, as determined -with reference either to the Hindu 
M 'na-sathkrinti or to the entrance of the sun into the tropical 
Pisces. The year 1823 began in a.d. 1000. 

Regarding the origin of the Saaa era, there was current in 
the 10th and nth centuries a.d. a belief which, ignoring the 
difference of a hundred and thirty-five years between the two 
reckonings, connected the legendary king Vikrftmaditya of 
Ujjain, mentioned above under the Vikrama era, with the 
foundation of this era also. The story runs, from this point of 
view, that the Sakas were a barbarous people who established 
themselves in the western and north-western dominions of that 
king, but were met in battle and destroyed by him, and that 
the era was established in celebration of that event. The modern 
belief, however, ascribes the foundation of this era to a king 
Salivfthana of Pratishthana, which is the modern Paithan, on 
the Godavarl, in the Nizam's dominions. But in this case, 
again, research has shown that the facts are very different. 
Like the Vikrama era, the Saka era owes its existence to foreign 
invaders. It was founded by the Chhaharata or Kahaharftta 
king Nahapftna, who appears to have been a Pahlava or Palhava, 
i.e. of Parthian extraction, and who reigned from ajd. 78 to 
about I25- 1 He established himself first in Kftthiftwftr, but 
subsequently brought under his sway northern Gujarat (Bom- 
bay) and Ujjain, and, below the Narbada, southern Gujarat, 
Sftsik and probably Kh&ndesh. His capital seems to have been 
Chad, ia the Panch Mahals. And he had two viceroys: one, 
named Bhumaka, of the same family with himself, in Kftthiftwftr; 
and another, Chashtana, son of Ghsamotika, at Ujjain. Soon 
after a.d. 125, Nahapftna was overthrown, and his family was 
wiped out, by the Sfttavfthana-Sfttakarni king Gautamlputra- 
Sri-S&takarni, who thereby recovered the territories on the 
south of the Narbada, and perhaps secured for a time Kftthiftw&r 
arid some other parts on the north of that river. Very soon, 
however, Chashtana, or else his son Jayadaman, established 
his sway over all the territory which had belonged to Nahapftna 
on the north of the Narbada; founded a line of Hinduized 
foreign kings, who ruled there for more than three centuries; 
and, continuing Nahapana's regnal reckoning, established 
the era to which the name Saka eventually became attached. 
Inscriptions and coins show that, up to at least the second 
decade of its fourth century, this reckoning had no specific appella- 
tion; its years were simply cited, in the usual fashion, as varsha, 
" the year (of such-and-such a number)." The reckoning was 
then taken up by the astronomers. And we find it first called 
Sakakala, " the time or era of the Sakas," in an epochal date, 
the end of the year 427, falling in a.d. 505, which was used by 
the astronomer Varahamihira (d. a.d. 587) in his Pafichasfddhan- 
tikl. That this name came to be attached to it appears to be 
due to the points that, along with some of the Pahlavas or Pal- 
havas and the Yavanas or descendants of the Asiatic Greeks, 
some of the Sakas, the Scythians, had made their way into 
Kathiawfir and neighbouring parts by about a.d. 100, and that 
the Sakas incidentally came to acquire prominence in the memory 
of the Hindus regarding these occurrences, in such a manner 
that their name was selected when the occasion arose to devise 
an appellation for an era the exact origin of which had been 
forgotten. The name of the imaginary king SlUvahana first 
figures in connexion with the era in a record of a.d. 1273, an4 
seems plainly to have been introduced in imitation of the coupling 
of the name Vikrama, Vikram&ditya. with the era of B.C. 58. 

That the Saka era, though it had its origin in the south-west 
corner of Northern India, h essentially an era of Southern India, 
h proved by its inscriptional and numismatic history. During the 
period before the time when it was taken up by the astronomers. 
it is found only in the inscriptions of Nahapftna, and in the similar 
records and on the coins of the descendants of Chashtana. After 
that same time, it figures first in a record of the Chalukya king 
Kartivarman I„ at Bftdftmi in the Btj&pfir district, Bombay, which 
as dated on the fuU-mooo day of the month Kftrttika, falling in 
A.d. 578, "when there had elapsed five centuries of the years ofthe' 

• M/\!n»iAAfi» **f S-Iia Q.<*iV«t iV***s* •.rw »Ka ■AifAMki/vnli# ** Am/1 f»AM« +Kte 



1 Sec the preceding note. 



the term Saka or Saka. In Nc^them India the case is very d 
We have a record dated in the month Kftrttika, the Saka year 631 
(expired), falling in a.d. 709: it comes from Multfti in the BetOl 
district, Central Provinces, that is, from the south of the Narbada; 
but it belongs to Gujarat (Bombay), and perhaps to the north, 
though more probably to the south, of that province. But, setting 
that aside, the earliest inscriptional instance of the use of this era 
in Northern India, outside Kfttniftwftr and Gujarat, is found in a 
record of a.d. 86a at Deogarh near LalitpQr, the headquarters 
town of the LalitpQr district, united Provinces of Agra and Oude: 
here, however, the record is primarily dated, with the full details of 
the month, &c* in " Samvat 919," that is, in the Vikrama year 910; 
it is only as a subsidiary detail that the Saka year 784 ia given in a 
separate passage at the end of the record, a sort of ^postscript- 
From this date onwards the era is found in other records of Northern 
India, hut to any appreciable extent only from A.D. 1 137, and to 
only a very small extent in comparison with the Vikrama and other 
northern eras; and the cases m which it was used exclusively there, 
without being coupled with one or other of the northern reckonings, 
are still more conspicuously few. In short, the general position is 
that the Saka era has been essentially foreign tr» Northern India 
until recent times; it was used there quite exceptionally and 
sporadically, and in very few cases indeed at any appreciable distance 
from the dividing-line between the north and the south. That it 
found its way into Northern India, outside K&thiawar and northern 
Gujarat at all, is unquestionably due to its use by the astronomers. 
It also travelled, across the sea, by the 7th century a.d. to Cambodia, 
and somewhat later to Java; to which parts it was doubtless taken 
in almanacs, or in invoices, statements of account. &c., by the persons 
engaged in the trade between Broach and the far east via Tagara 
CT£r) and the east coast. It also found its way in subsequent tunes 
to Assam and Ceylon, and more recently still to Nepal. 

m. Other Reckonings 

We come now to certain reckonings consisting of cycles, 
and will take first the cycles of Guru or Brihaspati, Jupiter. 
This planet, a very conspicuous object in eastern 
skies, requires a period of 4332*6 days,- 50*4 days Jjc^sf 
less than twelve Julian years, to make a circuit of the j^Mm. 
heavens, and has provided the Hindus with two reckon- 
ings, each in more than one variety; a cyde of twelve years, 
and a cyde of sixty years. The years of Jupiter, in all their 
varieties, are usually styled samvatsara; and it is convenient 
to use this term here, in order to preserve dearly the distinction 
between them and the solar and lunar years.. The samvaisaras 
have no divisions of their own; the months, days, &c, tited 
with them are those of the ordinary solar or lunar calendar, 
as the case may be. 

The older reckoning of Jupiter appears to be that of the it- 
years cyde, which is found in two varieties; in both of them the 
samvaisaras bear, according to certain rules which need - 4 _« 
not be explained here, the same names with the 2Jv 
lunar months, Chaitra, Vailftkha, &c. In one variety, 
each samvaUara runs from one of the planet's heliacal 
risings— that is, from the day on which it becomes visible as a 
morning star on the eastern horizon — to the next such rising: 
and the length of such a samvaisara, according to the Hindu data, 
is from 392 to 405 days, with an average of 309 days. Inscrip- 
tional instances of the use of this cyde are found in six of the 
Gupta records of Northern India, ranging from aj>. 47 s to 518. 

In the other variety of the ia-years cyde, which is mentioned 
in astronomical works from the time of Aryabhata onwards 
(b. aj>. 476), the samvaisaras are regulated by Jupiter's course 
with reference to his mean motion and mean longitude: a 
sathvalsara of this variety commences when Jupiter thus enters a 
sign ol the. zodiac, and lasts for the time occupied by him in 
traversing that sign from the same point of view; and the period 
taken by him to do that — that is, the duration of such a iast- 
vat$arah-vk shghtly in excess, according to the Hindu data, of 
361-02 days, which amount is very dose to the actual fact, 
361-05 days, Inscriptional instances of the use of this cycle are 
perhaps found in two record* of Southern India of the Kadamba 
series, belonging to about ajx. 575. . 

The 11-years mean-sign cycle seems to be still used in some 
parts. And the heliacal risings of Jupiter, as also, indeed, those 
of the other planets, are shown in almanacs for astrological 
parposea. In either variety, however, the ir-years cycle is now 
chiefly of antiquarian interest. 



HINDU CHRONOLOGY 



499 



The cycle of Jupiter now in general me -it a cycle of sixty years, 

the saikvalsaras of which bear certain special names, 

*»•"- Prabhava, Vibhava, SukJa, Praaoda, &c, again 

j Sy in accordance with certain rules which we need not 

explain here. This cycle exists in three varieties. 

According to the original constitution of this cycle, the saih- 
uUara* are determined as in the second or mean-sign variety of 
the ia-years cycle: each saikvatsara commences when Jupiter 
voters a sign of the xodiac with reference to his mean motion and 
longitude; and it lasts for slightly more than 361*03 days. 
This variety is traced back in inscriptions! records to ajx 60a, 
and is still used in Northern India. 

( Now, the saikvatsaras are calculated by means of the astro- 
nomical solar year commencing with the Meaha-samkrinti, the 
entrance of the sun into the sign Meaha (Aries). The process 
gives the number of the saikvatsara last expired before any 
particular Mesha-samkranti, with a remainder denoting the 
portion of the current saikvatsara elapsed up to the same time; 
and the remainder, reduced to months, &c, gives the moment of 
the commencement of the current saikvatsara, by reckoning back 

• from tbeMesha-Barhkranti. As the result, apparently, of unwill- 
ingness to take the trouble to work out the full details, at some 
time about a.d. 800 a practice arose, in some quarters, according 
to which that saikvatsara of the 60-years cycle which was current 
at any particular Mesha-samkranti was taken as coinciding with 
the astronomical solar year beginning at that sathkr&nli, and 
with the Chaitradi lunar year belonging to that same solar year. 
And this practice set up a lunisolar variety of the cycle, in con- 
nexion with which we have to notice the following point While 
the duration of a mean-sign saikvatsara Is dosdy about 361-02 
days, the length of the Hindu astronomical solar year is closely 
about 365.158 days. It consequently happens, after every 85 or 
86 years, that a mean-sign saikvatsara begins and ends between 
two successive Mesha-samkrantis. In the mean-sign cycle, such 

• saikvatsara retains its existence unaffected; and the names 
Prabhava, Vibhava, &c, run on without any interruption. Ac- 
cording to the lunisolar system, however, the position is different; 
the saikvatsara beginning and ending between the two Mesha- 
aamkrlntis is expunged or suppressed, in the sense that its 
name is omitted and is replaced by the next name on the list. The 
second variety of the 60-years cycle, thus started, ran on alongside 
of the mean-sign variety, and, being eventually transferred, with 
that variety, to Northern India, is now known as the northern 
lunisolar variety. It preserves a connexion between the saik- 
vatsaras and the movements of Jupiter: but the connexion is an 
Imperfect one; and both in this variety, and still more markedly 
in the remaining one still to be described, the saikvatsaras prac- 
tically became mere appellations for the solar and lunar years. 

' Meanwhile, just after a.d. 900, another development occurred, 
and there was started a third variety, which is now known as the 
southern lunisolar variety. The precise year in which this hap- 
pened depends on the particular authority that we follow. If we 
take the elements adopted in the SQrya-Siddhflnta as the proper 
data for that time and for the locality— Western India below the 
Narbadl— to which the early history of the cycle belongs,' the 
position was as follows. At the Mesha-samkranti in a,d. 908 
there was current, by the mean-sign system, the saikvatsara 
No. a, Vibhava: but No. 4, Pramada, was current by the same 
system at the Mesha-samkranti in a.d. 009; and No, 3, Sukla, 
began and ended between the two Mesha-samkrintis. Accord- 
ingly, No. a, Vibhava, was the lunisolar saikvatsara for the 
Meahadi solar year and the Chaitradi lunar year commencing in 
A.D. 008;. and by the strict lunisolar system, which was adhered 
to by some people and is now known as the northern lunisolar 
system, it was followed in a.d. 009 by No. 4, Pramftda, the name 
of the intermediate saikvatsara. No. 3, Sukla, being passed over. 
On the other hand, whether through oversight, or whatever the 
reason may have been, by other people the name of No. 3, Sukla, 
was not passed over, but that saikvatsara was taken as the luni- 
solar saikvatsara for the Meshadi solar year and the Chaitradi 
lunar year beginning in aj>, 909, and No. 4, PramOda, followed it 
ia a.d. 910. On subsequent similar occasions, also, the** was, in 



5<*> 



MINER* CHRONOLOGY 



tM ■untunes' to* which they btiongv Fortunately, nowvcr, as 
regards Kashmir, we have the necessary, guide in the (acts that 
Kalhana recorded his own date in the Saka era as well as in this 
reckoning, and gave full historical details which enable us to deter- 
mine unmistakably the equivalent of the first date In this reckoning 
dted by him, and to arrange with ccrtamty thechronology presented , 
by him from that time. 

The belief underlying this reckoning according to the course of 
the Seven Rishis is traced back in India, as an astrological detail, 
to at least the 6th century a.d. But the reckoning was first adopted 
for chronological purposes in Kashmir and at some time about 
A.D. Boo; the first recorded date in it is one of "the year 89," 
fnmanin^ 3689, - a.d. 813-614, given by Kalhasn. It wa» intro- 
duced into India between a.d. 915 and 1025. 

The Grahaparivritti is a reckoning which is used in the 
southernmost parts of Madras, particularly in the Madura 
district It consists of cycles of 90 Meshfidi solar 
Ij^jjjjjj years, and is said, in conformity with its name, which 
tyrh" mm ' means " the revolution of planets," to be made up 
by the sum of the days in x revolution of the sun, 
22 of Mercury, 5 of Venus, 15 of Man, 11 of Jupiter, and 29 of 
Saturn. The first cycle is held to have commenced in 24 B.C., 
the second in a.d. 67, and so on; and, in accordance with 
that view, the year 34, which began in A.D. 1900, was the 34th 
year of the 22nd cycle. 

No inscriptional use of this cycle has come to notice. There 
seems no substantial reason for believing that the reckoning was 
really started in 24 B.C. The alleged constitution of the cycle, which 
appears to be correct within about twelve days, and might possibly 
be made apparently exact, suggests an astrological origin. And, 
if a guess may be hazarded, we would conjecture that the reckoning 
is an offshoot of the southern lunisolar variety of the co-years cycle 
of Jupiter, and had its real origin in some year in which a Prabhava 
samvatsara of that variety commenced, and to which the first year 
of a Grahaparivritti cycle can be referred: that was the case in 
A.D. 967 and at each subsequent 180th year. 

In part of the Ganj&m district, Madras, there is a reckoning, 
known as the Qnko or Anka, i.e. literally " the number or 
t*»aa*» numbers," consisting of lunar years, each commencing 
^fe" with Bhadrapada lukla w,. which run theoretically 
in cycles of 59 years, But the reckoning has the 
peculiarity that, whether the explanation is to be found in a 
superstition about certain numbers or in some other reason, 
the year 6, and any year the number of which ends with 6 or o 
(except the year io), is omitted from the numbering; so that, 
ior instance, the year 7 follows next after the year $. The 
origin of the reckoning is not known. But the use of it seems 
to be traceable in records of the Ganga kings who. reigned in 
that part of the country and in Oriasa in the 12th and following 
centuries. And the initial day, Bhadrapada sukla 12, which 
figures again in the Vilay&ti and Amli reckoning of Orissa (see 
farther on), is perhaps to be accounted for on the view that this 
day was the day of the anointment, in the 7th century, of the 
first Gftnga king, Rajasimha-Indravarman I. 

In the Chittagong district, Bengal, there is a, solar reckoning, 
known by the name Maghl, of which the year 1262 either began 
or ended in A.D. 1900; so that it has an initial point 
^Jjj^jj*** in aj>. 639 or 638. It appears that Chittagong was 
conquered by the king of Arakah in the 9th century, 
and remained usually in the possession of the Maghs— 
the Arakanese or a class of them— till a.d. 2666, when it was 
finally annexed to the Mogul empire. In these circumstances 
it is plain that the Magh reckoning took its name from the 
Maghs; its year, which is Mesh&di, from Bengal; and its 
numbering from the Sakkaraj, the ordinary era of . Arakin and 
Burma, which has its initial point in a.d. 638. 
* The Hijra (Hegira) era, the reckoning from the flight of 
Mahomet, which dates from the 16th of July, ajx, 662, is, of 
course, used by the Mahommedans in India, and is 
customarily shown, with the details of its calendar, 
in "the Hindu almanacs. An account of it does not 
fall within the scope of this article. But we have 
to mention it because wc come now to certain Hindu* 
tted reckonings which are hybrid offshoots of it. We need 
only say; however, in explanation of some of the following 
figures, that the years of the Hijra era are purely lunar, consisting 
of twelve lunar month* and no more; with the result that the 



initial day of the year £» always travelling backwards through 
the Julian year, and makes a complete circuit in thirty-four 
years. The reckonings derived from it, which we have to describe, 
have apparent initial points in a.d. 591, 593, 594, and 600. 
They had their real origin, however, in the 14th, 16th, and 17th 
centuries. 

The emperor Akbar succeeded to the throne in February, 
a.d. 1556, in the Hijra year 063, which ran from 16th November 
r$55 to 3rd November 1556. Amongst the reforms aimed at 
by him and his officials, one wis to abolish, or at least m i n im is e, 
by introducing uniformity of numbering, the confusion dee 
to the existence of various reckonings, both Mahommedan and 
Hindu. ' And one step taken in that direction was to assign to 
the Hindu year the same number with the Hijra vear. It * 
believed that this was first done by the Persian clerks of the 
revenue and financial offices At an early rime in Akbar 's reiga, 
and that ft received authoritative sanction in the Hijra year 
971 (21st August 1563 to 8th August 1564). At any rate, the 
innovation was certainly first made in Upper India; and the 
numbering started there was Introduced into Bengal said those 
parts as Akbar extended his dominions, but without interfering 
with local customs as to the commencement of the Hindu year. 
The result is that we now have the following reckonings, tie 
years of which are used as revenue years>— 

In tfce United Provinces and the Punjab, there is an AsVinldi 
lunar reckoning, known as the Fasli. according to which the year 
1508 began in a.d. 1900; so that the reckoning has an __ __ 
apparent initial jpoint in a.d. 393. The name of this ***. ""* 
reckoning is den red from /o*J, "a harvest," of which 232? 
there are two: the /wW-raM. or "spring harvest/* }12*^ 
commencing in February .and thtfafL4-kkarlf,ar "autumn 
harvest " commencing in October. The years of this r e c taw uaf 
begin with the ptirvumtoUa Asvina krishea 1, which now falls in 
September. A peculiar feature of it is that, though the months ate 
lunar, they are not divided into fortnights, and the numbering of 
the days runs on, as in the Mahommedan month, from the first to 
the end of the month without being affected by any exjunction and 
repetition of tithis; and, for this and other reasons, it seems that 
in this case a new form of Hindu year was devised, of such a kind 
as to enable the agriculturists to realize their produce and pay 
their assessments comfortably within the year. The Hijra era 
has, of course, now drawn somewhat widely away from this and 
the other reckonings derived from it; the Hijra year coss> 
mencing in A.D. 1900 was 1918,. ten years in advance of she Fas! 
year. 

In Orissa and some other parts of Bengal, there Is a reckoning, 
or two almost identical reckonings, the facts of which are not quite 
dear. According to one account, the term AmK-saa, _~ j__ 
" the official year/' is only another name of the ViUyati- **!:*'** 
san, M the year received from the vildyal or province J If'V 
of Hindustan." But we are also told that the Vilayati- JJJir 
san is a Kanyidi solar year, whereas the AmU-aan, yf~" 
though it too has solar months, changes ha number on 
the lunar day Bhadrapada sukla 12 (mentioned above in J^ut*^ 
with the Onko cycle of Orissa), which comes sometimes in KanyL 
but sometimes in the preceding month, Simha. Elsewhere, again, 
ft » the VUftyati-san which is shown as changing its number oa 
Bhftdrapada sulda ». in either case, the year 1308 of this reckos* 
ing, also, began in a.d. 1900; and so, like the Fasli of Upper India, 
this reckoning, too, has an apparent initial point in a.d. 593. The 
day Bhadrapada sulda 12 now usually falls in September, but may 
come during the last three days of August. The first day of the 
solar month Hattys} now falls on 15th or 16th September. 

In Bengal there is in more general use a MeshAdi solar r 
known as the Bcngali-san or " Bengal year," according y- _ . 
to which the year 1307 began hi a.d. 1900; so that this 2L2T 
reckoning has an apparent initial point in a.d. 594. The * , *'*** v 
initial day of the year is the neat day of the solar month MenVa, 
now falling on 12th or 13th April 

The system of Fasli reckonings was introduced into Southern 
India under the emperor Shah Tahiti , at some time in the Hijra 
year 1046, which ran from 26th May, a.d. 1636, to 15th. r . _- 
May, A.D. 16^7. But the numbering which was current ITtl^ 
in Northern India wai not taken oyer. A new start was *^2# 
made; and, as the vear of the Hyra had gone back, *?.»■■ 
during the intervening seventy-three Julian years, by 
two years and a quarter (less by only five days) from the date Of ft* 
conmienccment in the year 971, the Fasli reckoning of Soother* 
India began with a. nominal year 1046 (instead of 97*4*73 ■ 10 44X 
commencing in A.p. 1636. ' The Fasli reckoning oTSoutncrn IncSi 
exists in two Varieties: The years of the Bombay FaiB arc poputafty 
known as MrigesaJ y«ar», -because they coramswot whoa the* sea 
enters the mtttaelro UnmMmn Which occurs*** **6th os jth Jam* 



HltfOUlSM 



5©i 



w& reckoning' seethe to have taken u wi ' this ' irtlatl day "from the 
14a**tha Sor-san (see below). The Fasli year* erf Mtdw originally 
began at the Karka-sainkranti, the nominal summer solstice: 
under the British government, the commencement of them was first 
Med to 1 2th July, on which day the sathkrtnti was then usually 
occurring^ but it was afterwards changed to 1st July as » more 
convenient date. The years of the Bombay an* Madnu Fasli 
have no division of their own into months, fortnights, &c; the year 
is always used along with one or other of the realHindu reckonings, 
and the details arc cited according to that reckoning. 

Another offshoot of the Hiira era, but one of earlier date and not 
belonging to the data of Fasli reckonings, is fouod, in toe Marimba 
__ m country, in the SOr-san or Shahflr-san, "the year of 
IJa^r* months, ** also known as ArabT-san. "the Arab year." 
" J^ This reckoning, which is met with chiefly in old sanads or 
Afai ^ charters, appears to have branched off in or closely about 



those of the Bombay Fasli, with the entrance of the* sun into the 
nmkskatr* M rigasiras, which now occurs on 6th or 7th June} but the 
pootfasand days are those of the Hij ra year. The SOr-saaycar 1901 
began in A.D. iqoo; and so the reckoning has an apparent initial 
point in a.d. 600. A peculiarity attending this reckoning is that, 
whatever may be the vernacular of a clerk, he uses the Arabic 
numeral words in reading out the year; and the 



Bvca alongside of the figures in the Hindu almanacs. 

Authorities. — The Hindu astronomy had already begun to 
attract attention before the close of the 1 8th century. The inves- 
tigation, however, of the calendar and the eras, along with the 
verification of dates, was started by Warren, whose Kola SankalUa 
waa published in 1825. The inquiry was carried 00 by Prinaftp in 
his Useful TabUx (1834-1836) by Cowasjee Patdl in his Cktoudop 
0866)f and by Cunningham in his Book of Indian Eras (188JJ. 
But Warren's processes, though mostly giving accurate results, were 
lengthy and troublesome; and calculations made on the lines laid 
dowa by his successors gave results which might or aright not be 
correct, and could poly be c^ted as approximate results. The exact 

Simulation of Hindu dates by easy processes was started byShankar 
ilkrishna Dikshlt, in an article published in the Indian Antiquary. 
vol. 16 (iSSf). This was succeeded by methods and tables devised 
by Jacob*, which were published in nc next volume of the same 
journal. There then followed several contributions in the same 
line by other scholars, some for exact, others for closely approximate, 
results, and some valuable articles by Kielhorn on some of the 
prhadpal Hindu eras and other reckoning*} which were published in 
the. same joaroal, vols. 17 ,(1888) to m (1807)1 And the tceat- 
roent'of the nutter culminated for the time being in the publication, 
in 1896, of Sew'cll and Dikshlt 's Indian Calendar, which contains an 
appendix by Schram on eclipses of the sun in India, and was supple- 
mented in 1898 by Scwelrs Edipsts of the Moon in India. The 
present article is based oa the above/mentioned and various de- 



tached writings, supplemented by original research. For the exact 
calculation of Hindu dates and the determination of the European 
equivalents of them, use may be made either of Sewell and Dilcsmt's 



Works mentioned above, or of the improved tables by Jacob* 
which were published in the EpigrapkU Indue, vols. 1 and a 
(1*00-1894). ^ (J. F.F.) 

" HINDUISM, a term generally employed to c o mprehend the 
nodal institutions, past and present, of the Hindus who form the 
great majority ot the people of India; as well as the flrukitudinbu* 
Crop of their religious beliefs which has grown up, in the course 
of many centuries, on the foundation of the Brahmanical 
scriptures. The actual proportion of the total population of 
India (a** millions) included under the Dame of "Hindus" 
has been computed in the census report for £001 at something 
like yo% (206 miUtohs); the- remaining 30% being made up 
partly of the followers of foreign creeds, such as Mahoflnoedans, 
Parsees, Christians and Jews, partly of the votaries of indigenous 
forms of belief* which have at various times separated from the 
main stock, and developed into independent systems, such as 
Buddhism, Jainism and Sikhism; and partly of isolated -hill 
fend jungle tribes -such as the Santats, Bhil* (Bhflla) and Kpb, 
whose crude -animistic tendencies have hitherto kept them, 
either wholly or for the most part, outside- the pale of the 
Brahmanical cetamunity. The name "Hindu" itself is of 
foreign origin, being derived rrom the Persians, by Whom the 
river Sindhu was called Hmdhiva name subsequently applied 
to the inhabitants of that frontier district, and gradually 'ex- 
tended over the upper and middle reaches of the Gangetic valley, 
whence this whole tract of country between the Himalaya and 
the Vindhya mountains* west of Bengal, came to be called by 
the foreign conquerors " Hindustan," or the abode. >of the 



Hindus} whilst the ttatfve writers called ft " <r Aryavafta, w or 
the abode of the Aryas. 

But whilst, fn its more comprehensive acceptation, the term 
Hinduism would thus range over the entire historical devdbp* 
ment of Brahmanical India, it is abo not infrequently used in 
a narrower sense, as denoting mpre especially the modern phase 
of Indian social and religious institutions— from the earlier 
centuries of the Christian era down to our own days — as distin- 
guished from the period dominated by the authoritative doctrine 
of pantheistic belief, formulated by the speculative theologians 
during the centuries Immediately succeeding the Vedic period 
(see Brahmanism). In this its more restricted sense the term 
may thus practically be taken to apply to the later bewildering 
variety of popular sectarian forms of belief, with its social 
concomitant, the fully developed caste-system. But, though 
one may at times find ft convenient to Speak of " Brahmanisni 
and Hinduism," it must be clearly Understood that the distinc- 
tion implied in the combination of these terms is an extremely 
vague one, especially from the chronological point of view. 
The following considerations will probably make this dear. 

The characteristic tenet of orthodox Brahmanism consists 
in the conception of an absolute, all-embracing spirit, the3rahraa 
(neutr.), being the one and only reality, itself un- coamtxh'm 
conditioned, and the original cause and ultimate with 
goal of all individual souls (Jin, i.e. living things). BnS* 
Coupler! with this abstract conception are two other *»««** , » 
doctrines, viz. first, the transmigration of souls (sothsOro), 
regarded by Indian thinkers as the necessary complement of 
a belief in the essential sameness of all the various spiritual 
units, however contaminated, to a greater or less degree, they 
may be by their material' embodiment; and in their ultimate, 
re-union with the Paramdtmah, or Supreme Self; and second,' 
the assumption of a triple manifestation of the ceaseless working 
of that Absolute Spirit as a creative, conservative and destruc- 
tive principle, represented respectively by the divine per- 
sonalities of Brahma (masc), Vishnu and Siva, forming the 
TrimOrti or Triad. As regards this latter, purely exoteric 1 , 
doctrine, there can be little doubt of its owing its origin to 
considerations of theological expediency, as being calculated 
to supply a sufficiently wide formula oil belief for general ac- 
ceptance; and the very fact of this divine triad including the 
two principal deities of the later sectarian worship, Vishnu and 
Siva, goes far to show that these two gods at all events must have 
been already in those early days favourite objects of popular 
adoration to an extent sufficient to 'preclude their being ignored 
by a diplomatic priesthood bent upon the formulation of a 
common creed. Thus, so far from sectarianism being a mere 
modem development of Brahmanism, it actually goes back 
to beyond the formulation of the Brahmanical creed. Nay, 
when, <m analysing the functions and attributes of those two 
divine figures, each of them is found to be but & compound of 
several previously recognized deities, sectarian worship may 
well be traced right up to the Vedic age; That the theory of 
the triple manifestation of the deity was indeed only a com- 
promise between Brahmanical aspirations and popular worship, 
probably largely influenced by the traditional sanctity of the 
number. three, is sufficiently dear from the fact that, whilst 
Brahma, the creator, and at the same time the very embodi- 
ment of Brahmanical dass pride, has practically remained a 
mere figurehead in the actual worship of the people, Siva, on 
the other hand, so far from being merely the destroyer', is also 
the unmistakable representative of generative and reproductive 
power in nature* In factj Brahma-, having performed hit legiti- 
mate part in the mundane evolution by his original creation 
of the universe, has retired into the background, being, as it 
were, looked upon as functus officio, like a venerable figure of 
a former generation, whence in epic poetry he Is commonly 
styled pitdmaha, " the gnndsire." But despite the artificial 
character of. the Trim&rii, it has retained to this day at least its 
theoretical validity in orthodox Hinduism, whilst it has also 
undoubtedly eifmised considerable influence in shaping sectarian 
belief, in promoting feelings of toksatiom .towards the chnaut 



502 



HINDUISM 



of rival deities; and in a tendency towards identifying divine 
figures newly sprung into popular favour with one or other of 
the principal deities, and thus helping to bring into vogue that 
potion of avatars, or periodical descents or incarnations of the 
deity, which has become so prominent a feature of the later 
sectarian belief. 

Under more favourable political conditions, 1 the sacerdotal 
class might perhaps, in course of time, have succeeded in imposing 
something like an effective common creed on the heterogeneous 
medley of races and tribes scattered over the peninsula, just 
as they certainly did succeed in establishing the social prerogative 
of their own order over the length and breadth of India. They 
were, however, fated to fall far short of such a consummation; 
and at all times orthodox Brahmanjsm has had to wink at, 
or ignore, all manner of gross superstitions and repulsive 
practices, along with the popular worship of countless hosts of 
godlings, demons, spirits and ghosts, and mystic objects and 
symbols of every description. Indeed, according to a recent 
account by a close observer of the religious practices prevalent 
in southern India, fully four-fifths of the people of the Dravidian 
race r whilst nominally acknowledging the spiritual guidance 
of tjbe Brahmans, are to this day practically given over to the 
worship of their nondescript local village deities (jrdma-dtvatd), 
usually attended by animal sacrifices frequently involving the 
slaughter, under revolting circumstances, of thousands of 
victims. Curiously enough these local deities are nearly all of 
the female, not the male sex. In the estimation of these people 
41 Siva and Vishnu may be more dignified beings, but the village 
deity is regarded as a more present help in trouble, and more 
intimately concerned with the happiness and prosperity of the 
villagers. The origin of this form of Hinduism is lost in antiquity, 
but it is probable that it represents a pre-Aryan religion, more 
or less modified in various parts of south India by Brahrnanical 
influence. At the same time, many of the deities themselves 
are of quite recent origin, and it is easy to observe a deity in 
making even at the present day." * It is a significant fact that, 
whilst in the worship of Siva and Vishnu, at which no animal 
sacrifices are offered, the officiating priests are almost invariably 
Brahmans, this is practically never the case at the popular 
performance of those " gloomy and weird rites for the propitia- 
tion of angry deities, or the driving away of evil spirits, when 
the pujaris (or ministrants) are drawn from all other castes, 
even from the Pariahs, the out-caste section of Indian society." 
> As from the point of view of religious belief, so also from 
that of social organization no clear line of demarcation can be 
Cmtttt drawn between Brahmanism and Hinduism. Though 
it was not till later times that the network of class 
divisions and subdivisions attained anything like the degree of 
intricacy which it shows in these latter days, still in its origin the 
caste-system is undoubtedly coincident with the rise of Brah- 
manism, and may even be said to be of the very essence of it. 1 
The cardinal principle which underlies the system of caste is the 
preservation of purity of descent, and purity of religious belief 
And, ceremonial usage. Now, that same principle had been 
operative from the very dawn of the history of Aryanized India. 
The social organism of the Aryan tribe did not probably differ 
essentially from that of most communities at that primitive 
stage of civilization; whilst the body of the people— the Vii 
(or aggregate of VaiSyas)— would be mainly occupied with 
agricultural and pastoral pursuits, two professional classes— 
those of the warrior and the priest— had already made good their 
claim to social distinction. As yet, however, the tribal com- 
munity would still feel one in race and traditional usage. But 

1 " It is, perhaps,' by surveying India that we at this day can 
best represent to ourselves and appreciate the va6t external reform 
worked upon the heathen world by Christianity, as it was organized 
and executed throughout Europe by the combined authority of the 
Holy Roman Empire and the Church Apostolic" Sir Alfred C. 
Lyall, Asiatic StudUs, I 2. 

* Henry Whitehead, D.D., bishop of Madras, Tks Village Deities 
pf Southern India (Madras. 1007). 

• " The effect of caste is to give all Hindu society a religious 
Urn*." Sir A>C Lyall. tonweiptr*s\, 



when the fairooloured Aryan immigrants first came in esutst* 
with, and drove back or subdued the dark-skinned race that 
occupied the northern plains — doubtless the ancestors of the 
modern Dravidian people — the preservation of their racial 
type and traditionary order of things would naturally become 
to them a matter of serious concern. In the extreme north- 
western districts— the Punjab and Rajputana, judging from 
the fairly uniform physical features of the present population 
of these parts— they seem to have been signally successful in 
their endeavour to preserve their racial purity, probably by 
being able to dear a sufficiently extensive area of the origiati 
occupants for themselves with their wives and children to 
settle upon. The case was, however, very different in the 
adjoining valley of the Jumna and Ganges, the sacred Madhy*. 
desa or Middle-land of classical India. Here the Aryan immi- 
grants were not allowed to establish themselves without under* 
going a considerable admixture of foreign blood. It most 
remain uncertain whether it was that the thickly-populated 
character of the land scarcely admitted of complete occupa- 
tion, but only of a conquest by an army of fighting men, starting 
from the Aryanized region— who might, however, subsequently 
draw women of their own kin after them— or whether, as has 
been suggested, a second Aryan invasion of India took place 
at that time through the mountainous tracts of the upper Iudus 
and northern Kashmir, where the nature of the road would 
render it impracticable for the invading bands to be accompanied 
by women and children. Be this as it may, the physical appear- 
ance of the population of this central region of northern India- 
Hindustan and Behar— clearly points to an intermixture of 
the tall, fair-coloured, fine-nosed Aryan with the short-sized, 
dark-skinned, broad-nosed Dravidian; the latter type becoming 
more pronounced towards the lower strata of the social order.* 
Now, it was precisely in this part of India that mainly arose 
the body of literature which records the gradual rise of the 
Brahrnanical hierarchy and the early development of the caste- 
system. 

The problem that now lay before the successful invaders 
was how to deal with the indigenous people, probably vastly 
outnumbering them, without losing their own racial identity. 
They dealt with them in the way the white race usually deals 
with the coloured race— they kept them socially apart. The 
land .being appropriated by the conquerors, husbandry, as the 
most respectable industrial occupation, became the legitimate 
calling of the Aryan settler, the Vaiiya ; whilst handicrafts, 
gradually multiplying with advancing civilization and menial 
service, were assigned to the subject race. The generic same 
applied to the latter was Sildra, originally probably the name 
of one of the subjected tribes. So far the social development 
proceeded on lines hardly differing from those with which one 
is familiar in the history of other nations. The Indo-Aryans, 
however, went a step farther. What they did was not only to 
keep the native race apart from social intercourse with them- 
selves, but to shut them out from all participation in their own 
higher aims, and especially in their own religious convictions 
and ceremonial practices. So fax from attempting to raise 
their standard of spiritual life, or even leaving it to ordinary 
intercourse to gradually bring about a certain community of 
intellectual culture and religious sentiment, they deliberately 
set up artificial barriers in order to prevent their owiuraditiouj 
modes of worship from being contaminated with the obnoxious 
practices of the servile race. The serf, the Sadra, was not to 
worship the gods of the Aryan freemen. The result was the 
system of four castes (twpo, i.e. " colour "; or jdti, " gens "V 
Though the Brahman, who by this time had firmly secured his 
supremacy over the kshdriya, or noble, in matters spiritual 
as well as in legislative and administrative functions, would 
naturally be the prime mover in this regulation of the social 

< Thus, in [Berar, " there is a strong non-Aryan leaven in the 
dregs of the agricultural class, derived from the primitive races 
which have gradually melted down into settled life, and thus become 
fused with the genera! community, while these same races are seal 
distinct tribes in «.W wild tracts of hill and jungle.** Sir Alfred C 
LyaU.^.^.i.6, 



HINDUISM 



5«3 



order, there seems Bo reason to believe that the other two tipper 
classes were not equally interested in seeing their hereditary 
privileges thus perpetuated by divine sanction. Nothing, 
indeed, is more remarkable in the whole development of the 
caste-system than the jealous pride which every caste, from the 
highest to the lowest, takes in its own peculiar occupation and 
sphere of life. The distinctive badge of a member of the three 
upper castes was the sacred triple cord or thread (sMra) — made 
of cotton, hemp or wool, according to the respective caste — 
with which he was invested at the upanayanc ceremony, or 
initiation into the use of the sacred s&rilri, or prayer to the sun 
(also called gdyolri), constituting his second birth. Whilst the 
Arya was thus a dvi-ja, or twice-born, the Sudra remained 
unregenerate during his lifetime, his consolation being the hope 
that, on the faithful performance of his duties in this life, he 
might hereafter be born again into a higher grade of life. In 
later times, the strict adherence to caste duties would naturally 
receive considerable support from the belief in the transmigration 
of souls, already prevalent before Buddha's time, and from the 
vay general acceptance of the doctrine of barms (" deed "), 
or retribution, according to which a man's present station and 
manner of life are the result of the sum-total of his actions and 
thoughts in his former existence; as his actions here will again, 
by the same automatic process of retribution, determine his 
status and condition in his nekt existence. Though this 
doctrine Is especially insisted upon in Buddhism, and its 
designation as a specific term (Pali, Kommm) may be due to 
that creed, the notion itself was doubtless already prevalent in 
pre-Buddhist times. It would even seem to be necessarily and 
naturally implied in Brahmamcal belief in metempsychosis; 
Whilst in the doctrine of Buddha, who admits no soul, the 
theory of the net result or fruit of a man's actions serving here- 
after to form or condition the existence of some new individual 
who will have no conscious identity with himself, seems of a 
peculiarly artificial and mystic character. But, be this as it 
may, * the doctrine of karma is certainly one of the firmest 
beliefs of all classes of Hindus, and the fear that a man shall 
reap as he has sown is an appreciable element in the average 
morality ... the idea of forgiveness is absolutely wanting; 
evil done may indeed be outweighed by meritorious deeds so 
far as to ensure a better existence in the future, but it is not 
effaced, and must be atoned for " {Census Report, i. 364). 

In spite, however, of the artificial restrictions placed on the 
intermarrying of the castes, the mingling of the two races seems 
to have proceeded at a tolerably rapid rate. Indeed, the paucity 
of women of the Aryan stock would probably render these 
mixed unions almost a necessity from the very outset; and the 
vaunted purity of blood which the caste rules were calculated 
to perpetuate can scarcely have remained of more than a 
relative degree even in the case of the Brahman caste. Certain 
it is that mixed castes are found referred to at a com- 
paratively early period; and at the time of Buddha— some 
five or six centuries before the Christian era— the social 
organization would seem to have presented an appearance 
not so very unlike that of modern times. It must be con- 
fessed, however, that our information regarding the develop- 
ment of the caste-system is far from complete, especially in 
its earlier stages. Thus, we are almost entirely left to conjecture 
on the important point as to the original social organization 
of the subject race. Though doubtless divided into different 
tribes scattered over an extensive tract of land, the subjected 
aborigines were slumped together under the designation of 
Sudras, whose duty it was to serve the upper classes in all the 
various departments of manual labour, save those of a downright 
sordid and degrading character which it was left to vratyas or 
outcasts to perform. How, then, was the distribution of crafts 
and habitual occupations of all kinds brought about? Was 
the process one of spontaneous growth adapting an already 
existing social organization to a new order of things; or was 
it originated and perpetuated by regulation from above? Or 
was it rather that the status and duties of existing offices and 
trades came to be determined and mads hereditary by some 



such artificial system as that by which the Theodosian Cod* 
succeeded for a time in organizing the Roman society in the 
5th century of oar era? <T It is well known" (says Professor 
Dill) " that the tendency of the later Empire was to stereotype 
society, by compelling men to follow the occupation of their 
fathers, and preventing a free circulation among different 
callings and grades of life. The man who brought the grain 
from Africa to the public stores at Ostia, the baker who made 
it into loaves for distribution, the butchers who brought pigs 
from Sammum, Lucania or Bruttiutn, the purveyors of wine 
and oil, the men who fed the furnaces of the public baths, were 
bound to their callings from one generation to another. It was 
the principle of rural serfdom appHed to social functions. Every 
avenue of escape was closed. A man was bound to his calling 
not only by his father's but also by his mother's condition. 
Men were not permitted to marry out of their gild. If the 
daughter of one of the baker caste married a man not belonging 
to it, her husband was bound to her father's calling. Not even 
a dispensation obtained by some means from the imperial 
chancery, not even the power of the Church could avail to break 
the chain of servitude." It can hardly be gainsaid that these 
artificial arrangements bear a very striking analogy to those 
of the Indian caste-system; and if these class restrictions were" 
comparatively short-lived on Italian ground, it was not perhaps 
so much that so strange a plant found there an ethnic soil less 
congenial to its permanent growth, but because it Was not 
allowed sufficient time* to become firmly rooted; for already 
great political events were impending which within a few decades 
were to ray the mighty empire in ruins. In India, on the other 
hand, the institution of caste — even if artificially contrived 
and imposed by the Indo- Aryan priest and ruler— had at least 
ample time allowed it to become firmly established in the social 
habits, and even in the affections, of the people. At the same 
time, one could more easily understand how such a system 
could have found general acceptance all over the Dravidiaft 
region of southern India, with its merest sprinkling of Aryan 
blood, if ft were possible to assume that class arrangements 
of a similar kind must have already been prevalent amongst 
the aboriginal tribes prior to the advent of the Aryan. Whether 
a more intimate acquaintance with the manners and customs 
of those rude tribes that have hitherto kept themselves com- 
paratively free from Hindu influences may yet throw some 
light on this question, remains to be seen. But, by this as it 
may, the institution of caste, when once established, certainly 
appears to have gone on steadily developing; and not even the 
long period of Buddhist ascendancy, with its uncompromising 
resistance to the Brahman's claim to being the sole arbiter 
in matters of faith, seems to have had any very appreciable 
rctardant effect upon the progress of the movement. It was not 
only by the formation of ever new endogamous castes and 
sub-castes that the system gained in extent and intricacy, but 
even more so by the constant subdivision of the castes into 
numerous exogamous groups or septs, themselves often involving 
gradations of social status important enough to seriously affect 
the possibility of intermarriage, already hampered by various 
other restrictions. Thus a man wishing to marry his son or 
daughter had to look for a suitable match outside his sept, but 
within his caste. But whilst for his son he might choose a wife 
from a lower sept than his own, for his daughter, on the other 
hand, the law of hypergamy compelled him, if at all possible, 
to find a husband in a higher sept. This would naturally lead 
to an excess of women over men in the higher septs, and would 
render it difficult for a man to get his daughter respectably 
married without paying a high price for a suitable bridegroom 
and incurring other heavy marriage expenses. It can hardly 
be doubted that this custom has been largely responsible lot 
the crime of female Infanticide, formerly so prevalent in India: 
as it also probably is to some extent for infant marriages, still 
too common in some parts of India, especially Bengal; and 
even for the all but universal repugnance to the re-marriage 
of widows, even when these had been married in early childhood 
and had never joined their husbands. Yet violations of these 1 



So* 



HINDUISM: 



rnks arc jealoutfy etched by the other members of the sept, 
and are liable—in accordance with the general custom in which 
communal matters are regulated in India— to be brought before 
a special council (panck&yat), originally consisting of five (pancka) , 
but now no longer limited to that number, since it is chiefly 
the greater or less strictness in the observance of caste rules and 
the orthodox ceremonial generally that determine the status 
of the sept in the social scale of the caste. Whilst community 
of occupation was an important factor in the original formation 
of non-tribal castes, the practical exigencies of life have led to 
considerable laxity in this respect— not least so in the case of 
Brahmans who have often had to take to callings which would 
seem altogether incompatible with the proper spiritual functions 
of their caste. Thus, " the prejudice against eating cooked food 
that has been touched by a man of an inferior caste is so strong 
that, although the Shastras do not prohibit the eating of food 
cooked by a Kshatriya or Vateya, yet the Brahmans, in most 
parts of the country, would not eat such food. For these reasons, 
every Hindu household— whether Brahman, Kshatriya or Sudra 
—that can afford to keep a paid cook generally entertains the 
services of a Brahman for the performance of its cuisine — the 
result being that in the larger towns the very name of Brahman 
has suffered a strange degradation of late, so as to mean only a 
cook " (Jogendra Nath Bhattacharya, Hindu Castes and Sects). 
In this caste, however, as in all others, there are certain kinds 
of occupation to which a member could not turn for a livelihood 
without incurring serious defilement. In fact, adherence to 
the traditional ceremonial and respectability of occupation 
go very much hand-in-hand. Thus, amongst agricultural castes, 
those engaged in vegetable-growing or market-gardening are 
inferior to the genuine peasant or yeoman, such as the Jat and 
Rajput; whilst of these the Jat who practises widow-marriage 
ranks below the Rajput who prides himself on his tradition, 
of ceremonial orthodoxy — though racially there seems little, 
if any, difference between the two; and the Rajput, again, is 
looked down upon by the Babhan of Bchar because he does not, 
like himself, scruple to handle the plough, instead of invariably 
employing low-caste men for this manual labour. So also 
when members of the Baidya, or physician, caste of Bengal, 
ranging next to that of the Brahman, farm land on tenure, 
" they will on no account hold the plough, or engage in any 
form of manual labour, and thus necessarily carry on their 
cultivation by means of hired servants " (H. H. Risley, Census 
Report). 

The scale of social precedence as recognized by native public 
opinion is concisely reviewed (ib.) as revealing Jtsclf 



"in the facts 
tnat particular castes are supposed to be modern representatives 
of one or other of the original castes of the theoretical Hindu system; 
that Brahmans will take water from certain castes; that Brahmans 
of high standing will serve particular castes; that certain castes, 
though not served by the best Brahmans, have nevertheless got' 
Brahmans of their own whose rank varies according to circumstances; 
that certain castes ace not served by Brahmans ait all but have 
priests of their own; that the status of certain castes has been 
raised by their taking to infant-marriage or abandoning the re- 
marriage of widows; that the status of others has been modified 
by their pursuing some occupations in a special or peculiar way; 
that some can claim the services of the village barber, the village 
palanquin-bearer. , the village midwife, &c, while others cannot; 
that some castes may not enter the courtyards of certain temples; 
that some castes are subject to special taboos, such as thai they 
must not use the village well, or may draw water only whh their 
own vessels, that they must live outside the village or in a separate 
quarter, that they must leave the road on the approach of a high- 
caste man and must call out to give warning of their approach." . . 
** The first point to observe is the predominance throughout India 
of the influence of the traditional system of four original castes. 
In every scheme of grouping the Brahman beads the list. Then 
come the castes whom popular opinion accepts as the modern 
representatives of the Kshatriyas; and these arc followed by the 
mercantile groups supposed to be akin to the Vaisyas. When we 
leave the higher circles of the twice-born, the difficulty of finding a 
uniform basis of classification becomes apparent. The ancient 
designation Sudra finds no great favour in modern times, and we 
can point to no group that is generally recognized as representing 
it. The term is used in Bombay, Madras and Bengal to denote 
a considerable number of castes of moderate respectability, the higher 
Of whom are considered ' dean * Sudra*. while the precise status 
pf the lower is a question which lends itself to endless controversy." 



north-was t e rs India, on the other hand, 



_ e twice-born rank is occupied by a number 

of castes from whose hands Brahmans and members of tl 



. . In northern and a 

the grade next below th< .____ 

stes from whose hands Brahmans and members of the higher 
castes will take water and certain kinds of sweetmeats. Below 
these again is rather an indeterminate group from whom water is 
taken by some of the higher castes, not oy others. Further down, 
where the test of water no longer applies, the status of the caste 
depends on the nature of its occupation and its habits in respect of 
diet. There are castes whose touch defiles the twice-born, but who 
do not commit the crowning enormity of eating beef .... In 
western and southern India the idea that the social state of a 
caste depends on whether Brahmans will take water and sweetmeats 
from its members is unknown, for the higher castes will as a rule 
take water only from persons of their own caste and sab-carte. 
In MadrasespectaUy the idea of ceremonial pollution by thepwanmity 
of an unclean caste has been developed with much ela b osa tt oa. 
Thus the table of social precedence attached to the Cochin report 
shows that while a Nayar can pollute a man of a higher caste only 
by touching him, people of the Kammalan group, including masons, 
blacksmiths, carpenters and workers in leather, pollute at a distance 
of 24 ft., toddy-d/awers at 36 ft-, Fulayan or Cheruman cultivators 
at 48 ft., while in the case of the Paraiyan (Pariahs) who cat beef 
the range of pollution is no less than 64 it." 

In this bewildering maxe of social grades end class drslinrjiom, 
the Brahman, as will have been seen, continue* to hold the 
dominant position, being respected and evert worshipped by all 
the others. " The more orthodox Sudras cany their veneration 
for the priestly class to such a degree that they will not cross 
the shadow of a Brahman, and it is not unusual for them to be 
under a vow not to eat .any food in the mowing, before drinking 
Biprackardnamrita, ».«. water in which the toe of a Brahman 
has been dipped. On the other hand, the pride of the Brahmans 
is such that they do not bow to even the images of the gods 
worshipped in a Sudra's house by Bftehman priests" (Jog. 
Nath Bh.). There are, however, not a few classes of Brahmans 
who, for various reasons, have become degraded from their high 
station, and formed separate castes with whom respectable 
Brahmans refuse to intermarry and consort. Chief amongst 
these are the Brahmans who minister, for " unclean " Sudras 
and lower castes, including the makers and dealers in spirituous 
liquors; as well an those who officiate at the great public shrines 
or places of pilgrimage where they might be liable to accept 
forbidden gifts, and, as a matter of fact, often amass considerable 
wealth; and those who officiate as paid priests at cremations and 
funeral rites, when the wearing apparel and bedding of the de- 
ceased arc not unfrequently churned by them as their perquisites. 

As regards the other two " twice-born " castes, several 
'modem groups do indeed claim to be their direct descendants, 
and in vindication of their title make it a point to perform the 
upanayana ceremony and to wear the sacred thread. But 
though the Brahmans, too, will often acquiesce in the reasonable- 
ness of such claims, it is probably only as a matter of policy 
that they do so, whilst in reality they regard the other two 
higher castes as having long since disappeared and been merged 
by miscegenation in the Sudra mass. Hence, in the later classical 
Sanskrit literature, the term dvija,<x twice-born, is used simply 
as a synonym for a Brahman. As regards the numerous groups 
included under the term of Sudras, the distinction between 
" clean " and " unclean " Sudras is of especial importance for 
the upper classes, inasmuch as only the former — of whom nine 
distinct castes are usually recognized — are as a ride considered 
fit for employment in household service. 

The picture thus presented by Hindu society — as made up of s 
confused congeries of social groups of the most varied standing, 
each held together and kept separate from others 
by a traditional body of ceremonial rules and by the 
notion of social gradations being due to a divinely 
instituted order of things — finds something like a counterpart 
in the religious life of the people. As in the social sphere, so also 
in the sphere of religious belief, we find the whole scale of types 
represented from the lowest to the highest; and here as there, 
we meet with the same failure of welding the confused mass 
into a well-ordered whole. In their theory of a triple manifesta- 
tion of an impersonal deity, the Brahmanical theologians, as 
we have seen, had indeed elaborated a doctrine which might 
have seemed to form a reasonable, authoritative creed for 



Tlkss* 



HINDUISM 



•505 



a community already strongly imbued whh pantheistic notions; 
yet, at best, that creed could only appeal to the sympathies of 
a comparatively limited portion of the people* Indeed, the 
sacerdotal class themselves had made its universal acceptance 
an impossibility, seeing that their laws, by which the relations 
of the classes were to be regulated, aimed at permanently ex- 
cluding the entire body of aboriginal tribes from the religious 
life of their Aryan masters. They were to be left for all time 
coming to their own traditional idolatrous notions and practices. 
However, the two races could not, in the nature of things, be 
permanently kept separate from each other. Indeed, even 
prior to the definite establishment of the caste-system, the 
mingfing of the lower race with the upper classes, especially 
with the aristocratic landowners and still more so with the 
yeomanry, had probably been going on to such an extent as to 
have resulted in two fairly well-denned intermediate types of 
colour between the priestly order and the servile race and to have 
facilitated the ultimate division into four " colours " (vorna). 
In course of time the process of intermingling, as we have seen, 
assumed such proportions that the priestly class, in their pride 
of blood, felt naturally tempted to recognize, as of old, only 
two ".colours," the Aryan Brahman and the non-Aryan Sudra. 
Under these conditions the religious practices of the lower race 
could hardly have failed in the long run to tell seriously upon the 
spiritual life of the lay body of the Brahmankal community. 
To what extent this may have been the case, our limited know- 
ledge of the early phases of the sectarian worship of the people 
does not enable us to determine. But, on the other hand, the 
same process of racial intermixture also tended to gradually 
draw the lower race more or less under the influence of the Brah- 
raanical forms of worship, and thus contributed towards the 
shaping of the religious system- of- modern Hinduism. The 
grossly idolatrous 'practices, however, still so largely prevalent 
in the frravidian South, show how superficial, after all, that 
Influence has been m those parts of India where the admixture 
of Aryan blood has been so slight as fo have practically had no 
effect on the racial characteristics of the people. These present- 
day practices, and the attitude' of the Brahman towards them, 
help at all events to explain the aversion with which the strange 
rites of the subjected tribes were looked upon by the worshippers 
of the Vedic pantheon. At the same time, in judging the ap- 
parently inhuman way in which the Sudras were treated in the 
caste rules, one has always to bear in mind the fact that the 
belief in metempsychosis was already universal at the time, and 
seemed to afford the only rational explanation of the apparent 
injustice involved in the unequal distribution of the good things 
in this world; and that, if the Sudra was strictly excluded from 
the religious rites and beliefs of the superior classes, this exclusion 
in no way involved the question of his ultimate emancipation 
and his union with the Infinite Spirit, which were as certain in 
his case as in that of any other sentient being. What it did make 
impossible for him was to attain that union immediately on the 
cessation of his present hfe, as he would first have to pass through 
higher and purer stages of mundane existence before reaching 
that goal; but in this respect he only shared the lot of all but 
a very few of the saintliest in the higher spheres of life, Since 
the ordinary twice-born would be liable to sink, after his present 
fife, to grades yet lower than that of the Sudra. 

To what extent the changes, which the religious belief of the 
Aryan classes underwent in post- Vedtc times, may have been 
due to aboriginal influences is a question not easily answered, 
though the later creeds offer only too many features in which 
one might feel inclined to suspect influences of that kind. The 
literary documents, both in Sanskrit and Pali, dating from about 
the time of Buddha onwardV-particnlarly the two epic poems, 
the Mohabk&aM and Romoyono—stiR show us in the main the 
personnel of the old pantheon; but the character of the gods has 
Changed; they have become anthropomorphized and almost 
purely mythological figures. A number of the chief gods, 
sometimes four, but generally eight of them, how appear as 
lokdpalas or worM-guardians, having definite quarters or 
intermediate quarters of the compass assigned to them as their 



special domains. One of them, Kubera, the god of wealth, is 
a new figure; whiht another, Varuna, the most spiritual and 
ethical of Vedic deities— the king of the gods and the universe; 
the nightly, star-spangled firmament— has become the Indian 
Neptune, the god of waters. Indra* their chief, is virtually a 
kind of superior raja, residing in siarga, and aa such is on visiting 
terms with earthly kings, driving about in mid-air with his 
charioteer Matali. As might happen to any earth-lord, Indra 
is actually defeated in battle by the son of the demon-king 
of Lanka (Ceylon), and kept there a prisoner till ransomed 
by Brahma and the gods conferring immortality on his con- 
queror. A quaint figure in the pantheon of the heroic age is 
Hanuman, the deified chief of monkeys— probably meant to 
represent the aboriginal tribes of southern India— ^hose wonder- 
ful exploits as Rama's ally on the expedition to Lanka Indian 
audiences will never weary of hearing recounted. The Gand- 
harvas figure already in the Veda, either as a single divinity, 
or as a class of genii, conceived of as the body-guard of Soma 
and as connected with the moon. In the later Vedic times 
they are represented aa being fond of and dangerous to, women; 
the Apsaras, apparently originally water-nymphs, being closer/ 
associated with them. lit the heroic age the Gandharvas have 
become the heavenly minstrels plying their art at Indra's court, 
with the Apsaras as their wives or mistresses. These fair 
damsels play, however, yet another part, and one far from 
complimentary to the dignity of the gods. In the epics consider- 
able merit is attached to a life of seclusion and ascetic practices 
by means of which man is considered capable of acquiring 
supernatural powers equal or even superior to those of the gods— 
a notion perhaps not unnaturally springing from the pantheistic 
conception. Now, in cases of danger being threatened to their 
own ascendancy by such practices, the gods as a rule proceed 
to employ the usually successful expedient of despatching 
some lovely nymph to lure the saintly men back to worldly 
pleasures. Seeing that the epic poems, as repeated by pro- 
fessional reciters, either in their original Sanskrit text, or in their 
vernacular versions, as well as dramatic compositions based 
on them, form to this day the chief source of intellectual enjoy- 
ment for most Hindus, the legendary matter contained m these 
heroic poems, however marvellous and incredible it may appear, 
stiU enters largely into the religious convictions of the people. 
" These popular recitals from the Ramayan are done into 
Gujarati in easy, flowing narrative verse ... by Premanand, 
the sweetest of our bards. They are read out by an intelligent 
Brahman to a mixed audience of aU classes and both sexes, 
it has a perceptible influence on the Hindu character. I believe 
the remarkable freedom from infidelity which is to be seen in 
most Hindu families, in spite of their strange gregarious habits, 
can be traced to that influence; and little wonder" (B. M. 
Malabari, Gwjarat and the Gujaraiis). Hence also the universal 
reverence paid to serpents (naga) since those early days; though 
whether it simply arose from the superstitious dread inspired 
by the insidious reptile so fatal to man in India, or whether the 
verbal coincidence with the name of the once-powerful nonv 
Aryan tribe of Nagas had something to do with it must remain 
doubtful. Indian, myth represents them as a race of demons 
sprung from Kadru, the wife of the sage Kasyapa, with a jewel 
in their heads which gives them their sparkling look; and 
inhabiting one of the seven beautiful worlds below the earth 
(and above the hells), where they are rulectaver by three chiefs 
or kings, Sesha, Vaauki and Takshaka; their fair daughters 
often entering into .matrimonial alliances with men, like the 
mermaids of western legend. 

In addition to such essentially mythological conceptions, we 
meet in the religious life of this period with an element of more 
serious aspect in the two gods, on one or other of whom the 
religious fervour of the large majority of Hindus has ever since 
concentpated Itself, via. Vishnu and Siva. Both these divine 
figures have grown out of Vedic conceptions — the genial Vishnu 
mainly out of a not very prominent solar deity of the same name; 
whilst the stern Siva, i.e. the kind or gracious one — do«bt> 
less a euphemistic name— has his prototype is the old fierce 



506 



HINDUISM 



storm-god Rudia, the " Roarer," with certain additional features 
derived from other deities, especially Pushan, the guardian of 
flocks and bestower of prosperity, worked up therewith. The 
exact process of the evolution of the two deities and their advance 
in popular favour are still somewhat obscure. In the epic poems 
which may be assumed to have taken their final shape in the 
early centuries before and after the Christian era, their popular 
character, so strikingly illustrated by their inclusion in the 
Brahmanical triad, appears in full force; whilst their cult 
Is likewise attested by the coins and inscriptions of the early 
centuries of our era. The co-ordination of the two gods in the 
Trimurti does not by any means exclude a certain rivalry between 
them; but, on the contrary, a supreme position as the true 
embodiment p( the Divine Spirit is claimed for each of them 
by their respective votaries, without, however, an honourable, 
if subordinate, place being refused to the rival deity, wherever 
the latter, as is not infrequently the case, is not actually repre- 
sented as merely another form of the favoured god. Whilst 
At times a truly monotheistic fervour manifests itself in the 
adoration of these two gods, the polytheistic instincts of the 
people did not fail to extend the pantheon by groups of new 
deities in connexion with them. Two 'of such new gods actually 
pass as the sons of Siva and his consort Parvati, via. Skanda— 
also called Kumara (the youth), Karttikeya, or Subrahmanya 
(in the south) — the six-headed war-lord of the gods; and 
Ganese, the lord (or leader) of Siva's troupes of attendants, beiug 
at the same time the elephant-headed, paunch-bellied god of 
wisdom; whilst a third, Kama (Kamadeva) or Randarpa, the 
god of love, gets his popular epithet of Ananga, •'! the bodiless," 
from his having once, in frolicsome play» tried the power of his 
arrows upon Siva, whilst engaged in austere practices, when 
A single glance from the third (forehead) eye of the angry god 
reduced the mischievous urchin to ashes. For his chief attendant, 
the great god (Mahadeva, MahesVara) has already with him 
the " holy " Nandi— presumably, though his shape is not 
specified, identical in form as in name with Siva's sacred butt 
of later times, the appropriate symbol of the god's reproductive 
power. But, in this repect, we also meet in the epics with the 
first dear evidence of what in after time became the promi- 
nent feature of the worship of Siva and his consort all over 
India, viz. the feature represented by the #*fo, or phallic 
symbol. 

As regards Vishnu, the epic poems, including the supplement 
to the Mahabharata, the Harivamsa, supply practically the 
entire framework of legendary matter on which the later Vaish- 
nava creeds are based. The theory of Avataras which makes 
the deity— also variously called Narayana, Purushottama, 
or Vasudeva— periodically assume some material form in order 
to rescue the world from some great calamity, is fully developed; 
the ten universally recognized " descents " being enumerated 
in the larger poem. Though Siva, too, assumes various forms, 
the incarnation theory is peculiarly characteristic of Vaishnav- 
ism; and the fact that the principal hero of the Ramayana 
(Rama), and one of the prominent warriors of the Mahabharata 
(Krishna) become in this way identified with the supreme god, 
And remain to this day the chief objects of the adoration of 
Vaishnava sectaries, naturally imparts to these creeds a human 
interest and sympathetic aspect which is wholly wanting in 
the worship of Siva. It is, however, unfortunately but too true 
that in some of these creeds the devotional ardour has developed 
features of a highly objectionable character. 

Even granting the reasonableness of the triple manifestation of 
the Divine Spirit, how is one to reconcile all these idolatrous 



MSI , . 

A Second "f The Indian theosophist would doubtless have little 

answering that question. For him there is only the 

One Absolute Being, the one reality that is all in all ; whilst all the 



difficulty in answering that question. For him there is only the 
One Absolute Being, the one reality that is all in all ; whilst all the 
phenomenal existences and occurrences that crowd upon our senses 



are nothing more than an illusion of the individual soul estranged 
for a time from its divine source — an illusion only to be dispelled 
in the end by the soul's fuller knowledge of its own true nature 
And its being one with the eternal fountain of blissful being. But 



to the man of ordinary understanding, unused to the rarefied atmo- 
sphere of abstract thought, this conception of a transcendental, 
impersonal Spirit and the unreality of the phenomenal world caa 
have no meaning : what he requires is a deity that stands in intimate 
relation to things material and to all that affects man's life. Hesse 
the exoteric theory of manifestations of the Supreme Spirit, sad 
that not only the manifestations implied in the triad of gods repre- 
senting the cardinal processes of mundane existence— creation, 
preservation, and destruction or regeneration — but even such as 
would tend to supply a rational ex pl a n a ti on for superstitious 
imaginings of every kind. For " the Indian philosophy does not 
ignore or hold aloof from the religion of the masses: it underlies, 
supports and interprets their polytheism. This may be accounted 
the keystone of the fabric of Brahmanism, which accepts and eves 
encourages the rudest forms of idolatry, explaining everything by 
giving it a higher meaning It treats all the worships as outward, 
visible signs of some spiritual truth, and is ready to show how each 
particular image or rite is the symbol of some aspect of universal 
divinity. The Hindus, like the pagans of antiquity, adore natural 
objects and force s — a mountain, a river or an animal. The Brahmaa 
holds all nature to be the vesture or cloak of indwelling, diviat 
energy, which inspires everything that produces awe or passes 
man s understanding " (Sir Alfred C. Lyall, Brahminism). 

During the early centuries of our era, whilst Buddhism, where 
countenanced by the political rulers, was still holding its own by 
the side of Brahmanism, sectarian belief in the Hindu SNtw t 
gods seems to have made steady progress. The caste- ^,i>, 
system, always calculated to favour unity of religious' 
practice within its social groups, must naturally have contributed 
to the advance of sectarianism. Even greater was the support 
it received later on from the Puranas, a class of poetical works 
of a partly legendary, partly discursive and controversial charac- 
ter, mainly composed in the interest of special deities, of which 
eighteen principal (maka-purana) and as many seconda r y ones 
(upa-pwanq) are recognized, the oldest of which may go back 
to about the 4th century of our era. It was probably also 
during this period that the female element was first definitely 
admittea to a prominent place amongst the divine objects of 
sectarian worship, in the shape of the wives of the principal gods 
.viewed as their sakli, or female energy,, theoretically identi- 
fied with the Maya, or cosmic Illusion, of the idealistic Vedanta, 
and the Prekriti, or plastic matter, of the materialistic Sankhya 
philosophy, as the primary source of mundane things. The 
connubial relations of the deities may thus be considered " to 
typify the mystical union of the two eternal principles, spirit 
and matter, for the production and reproduction of the universe." 
But whilst this privilege of divine worship was claimed for 
the consorts of aU the gods, it is principally to Siva's consort, 
in one or other of her numerous forms, that adoration on an 
extensive scale came to be offered by a special sect of votaries, 
the Soktas. 

In the midst of these conflicting tendencies, an attempt was 
made, about the latter part of the 8th century, by the dis- 
tinguished Malabar theologian and philosopher San- mm . 
kara Acharya to restore the Brahmanical creed to m 
something like its pristine purity, and thus once more 
to bring about a uniform system of orthodox Hindu belief. 
Though himself, like most Brahmans, apparently by predilection 
a follower of Siva, his aim was the revival of the doctrine of the 
Brahms as the one self-existent Being and the sole cause of 
the universe; coupled with the recognition of the practical 
worship of the orthodox pantheon, especially the gods of the 
Trimurti, as manifestations of the supreme deity. The practical 
result of bis labours was the foundation of a new sect, the 
Smartas, i.e. adherents of the smrlii or tradition, which has a 
numerous following amongst southern Brahmans, and, whilst 
professing Sankara's doctrines, is usually classed as one of the 
Saiva sects, its members adopting the horizontal sectarial 
mark peculiar to Saivas, consisting in their case of a triple line, 
the tripundra, prepared from the ashes of burnt cow-dung and 
painted on the forehead. Sankara also founded four Maths, 
or convents, for Brahmans; the chief one being that of Sringeri 
in Mysore, the spiritual head (Guru) of which wields consider- 
able power, even that of excommunication, over the Saivas of 
southern India. In northern India, the professed followers of 
Sankara are mainly limited to certain classes of mendicants 



HINDUISM 



£07 



and ascetics, although the tenets of this great Vedantt teacher 
may be said virtually to constitute the creed of intelligent 
Brahman* generally. 

Whilst Sankara's chief title to cal 

works, as the upholder of the stri< he 

doubtless played an important p of 

the Hindu system of belief at a t ily 

losing ground in India. Not that i sts 

ever having been actually persecui ess 

of Sankara himself ever having d lief 

in some personal god, as the prinei >le, 

all-pervading deity, would doubt the 

minds and hearts of the people tl em 

promulgated by the Sakya saint. ] iip 

appear as a rule to have been d< >ut 

they seem rather to have been ta wn 

religious uses; at any rate there —~ ^ »....«., .~.. ....... .....du 

shrines, especially in Bengal, dedicated to Dharmaraj, " the prince 
of righteousness, as the Buddha is commonly styled. That the 
tenets and practices of so characteristic a faith as Buddhism, so 
lpng prevalent in India, cannot but have left their marks on Hindu 
life and beKcf may readily be assumed, though it is not so easy 
to by one's finger on the precise features that might seem to betray 
such an influence. If the general tenderness towards animals* 
based on the principle of ahimsa, or inflicting no injury on sentient 
beings, be due to Buddhist teaching, that influence must have 
made itself felt at a comparatively early period, seeing that senti- 
ments of a similar nature are repeatedly urged in the Code of Menu. 
Thus, in v. 46-48. " He who does not willingly cause the pain of 
confinement ana death to living; beings, but desires the good of all, 
obtains endless bliss. He who injures no creature obtains without 
effort what he thinks of, what he strives for, and what he fixes his 
mind on. Flesh-meat cannot be procured without injury to animals, 
and the slaughter of animals is not conducive to heavenly bliss: 
from flesh-meat, therefore, let man abstain." Moreover, in view 
of the fact that Jainism, which originated about the same time as 
Buddhism, inculcates tnc same principle, even to an extravagant 
degree, it seems by no means improbable that the spirit of kindliness 
towards living beings generally was already widely diffused among 
the people whan these new doctrines were promulgated. To the 
same tendency doubtless is due the gradual decline and ultimate 
discontinuance of animal sacrifices by all sects except the extreme 
branch of SaUtt-worshippers. In this respect, the veneration shown 
to serpents and monkeys has, however, to be viewed in a some- 
what different light, as having a mythical background ; whilst quite 
a special significance attaches to the sacred character assigned to 
the cow by all classes of Hindus, even those who are not prepared 
to admit the claim of the Brahman to the exalted position of the 
earthly god usually conceded to him. In the Veda no tendency 
shows itself as yet towards rendering divine honour to the cow; 
and though the importance assigned her in an agricultural com- 
munity is easily understood, still the exact process of her deification 
and her identification with the mother earth in the time of Manu 
and the epics requires further elucidation. An idealized type of 
the useful quadruped— likewise often identified with the earth — 
presents itself in the mythical Cow of Plenty, or "wish-cow" 
(Kamadhenu, or Kamadugha, i£. wish-milker), already appearing 
in rhc Atharvaveda, and in epic times assigned to Indrs, or identified 
with Surabhi, u the fragrant," the sacred cow of the sage Vasishtha. 
Possibly the growth of the legend of Krishna— his being reared at 
Qo-kula (cow-station); his tender relations to the gopts, or cow- 
herdesses, of Vrindavana; his epithets Gopala, "the cowherd," 
and Gotrinda, "cow-finder,** actually explained aa "recoverer of 
the earth " in the great epic, and the jf4**«, or " cow-world." 
as s ig n ed to him as his heavenly abode— may have some connexion 
with the sacred character ascribed to the cow from early times. 

Since the time of Sankara, or for more than a thousand years, 
the gods Vishnu and Siva, or Hari and Hara as they are also 
Wanhi commonly called— with their wives, especially that 
*• of the latter god— have shared between them the 
practical worship of the vast majority of Hindus. But, though 
the people have thus been divided between two different religious 
camps, sectarian animosity has upon the whole kept within 
reasonable limits. In fact, the respectable Hindu, whilst owning 
special allegiance to one of the two gods as his Uhi& devoid 
(favourite deity), will not withhold bis tribute of adoration from 
the other gods of the pantheon. The high-caste Brahman will 
probably keep at his home a saJagrtm stone, the favourite 
symbol of Vishnu, aa well as the characteristic emblems of Siva 
and hit consort, to both of which he win* do reverence in the morn- 
ing; and when he visits some holy place of pilgrimage, he will 
not fail to pay his homage at both the Seiva and the Vaishnava 
shrines there. Indeed, "sectarian bigotry and exclusiveness 
are to be found chiefly among the professional leaders of the 



modern brotherhoods and their low-caste followers, who aw 
taught to believe that theirs are the only true gods, and that the 
rest do not deserve any reverence whatever" (Jog. Nath). 
The same spirit of toleration shows itself in the celebration of 
the numerous religious festivals. Whilst some of these— *.g.' 
the Sonkranti (called Pongal, i.t. " boiled rice," to the south), 
which marks the entrance of the sun into the sign of Capricorn 
and the beginning of its northward course (tdtardyana) on the 
tst day of the month Magna (c. Jan. is); the Go*tta-caturlH, 
or 4th day of the light fortnight of Bhadra (August-September), 
considered the birthday of Ganesa, the god of wisdom; and the 
Holt, the Indian Saturnalia in the month of Phllguna (February 
to March) — have nothing of a sectarian tendency about them ; 
others again, which are of a distinctly sectarian character- 
such as the Kriskna-jonm&shfonHy the birthday of Krishna on' 
the 8th day of the dark half of Bhadra, or (in the south) of 
Srfvana (July-August), the Dwgafrj* and the Dtpvuii, 
or lamp feast, celebrating Krishna's victory over the demon 
Narakasura, on the last two days of Asvina (September-October) 
— are likewise observed and heartily joined in by the whole, 
community irrespective of sect. Widely different, however, as is 
the character of the two leading gods are also the modes of 
worship practised by their votaries. 

Siva has at all times been the favourite god of the Brahmans, 1 
and his worship is accordingly more widely extended than 
that of his rival, especially in southern India. Indeed there is 
hardly a village in India which cannot boast of a shrine dedicated 
to Siva, and containing the emblem of his reproductive power; 
for almost the only form in which the " Great God " is adored 
is the Linga, consisting usually of an upright cylindrical Mock 
of marble or other stone, mostly resting on a circular perforated' 
slab. The mystic nature of these emblems seems, however, 
to be but little understood by the common people; and, as 
H. H. Wilson remarks, " notwithstanding the acknowledged 
purport of this worship, it is but justice to state that it is un- 
attended In Upper India by any indecent or indelicate cere- 
monies, and it requires a rather lively imagination to trace any 
resemblance in its symbols to the objects they are supposed 
to represent." In spite, however, of its wide diffusion, and 
the vast number of shrines dedicated to it, the worship of Siva 
has never assumed a really popular character, especially in 
northern India, being attended with scarcely any solemnity 
or display of emotional spirit. The temple, which usually stand* 
in the middle of a court, is as a rule a building of very moderate 
dimensions, consisting either of a single square chamber, sur- 
mounted by a pyramidal structure, or of a chamber for the 
linga and a small vestibule. The worshipper, having first circum- 
ambulated the shrine as often as he pleases, keeping it at his 
right-hand side, steps up to the threshold of the sanctum, and 
presents his offering of flowers or fruit, which the officiating 
priest receives; he then prostrates himself, or merely lifts 
bis hands— joined so as to leave a hollow space between the 
palms— to his forehead, muttering a short prayer, and takes 
his departure. Amongst the many thousands of Lingas, twelve 
are usually regarded as of especial sanctity, one of which, that 
of Somnalh in Gujarat, where Siva is worshipped as " the lord 
of Soma," was, however, shattered by Mahmud of Ghaxnij 
whilst another, representing Siva as Visveswa, or " Lord of the 
Universe," is the chief object of adoration at Benares, the great 
centre of Siva-worship. The Saivas of southern India, on the 
other hand, single out as peculiarly sacred five of their temples 
which are supposed to enshrine as many characteristic aspects 
(linga) of the god in the form of the five elements, the most 
holy of these being the shrine of Chidambaram (i.e. " thought* 
ether ") in S. Arcot, supposed to contain the ether-linga. Accord* 
ing to Pandit S. M. Natesa (Hindu Feasts, Fasts and Ceremonies), 
" the several forms of the god Siva in these sacred shrines are 
considered to be the bodies or casements of the soul whose 

Siva Is said to have first appeared in the beginning of the present 
age as Sveta. the White, for the purpose of benefiting the Brahman*, 
and he is invariably painted white; whilst Vishnu, when pictured. 
Is always of a dark-blue colour. 



5©» 



HINDUISM 



natural bates are the five, dements— earth, water, fin, air 
and ether. The apprehension of God in the last of these five 
as ether is, according to the Saiva school of philosophy, the 
highest form of worship, for it is not the worship of God in a 
tangible form, but the worship of what, to ordinary minds, is 
vacuum, which nevertheless leads to the attainment of a know- 
ledge of the all-pervading without physical accessories in the 
shape of any linga, which is, after all, an emblem. That this is 
the case At Chidambaram is known to every Hindu, for if he 
ever asks the priests to show him the God in the temple he is 
pointed to an empty space in the holy of holies, which has been 
termed the Akasa, or ether-linga." But, however congenial 
this refined symbolism may be to the worshipper of a speculative 
turn of mind, it is difficult to see how it could ever satisfy the 
religious wants of the common man little given to abstract 
conceptions of this kind. 

From early times, detachment from the world and the practice 
of Austerities have been regarded in India as peculiarly con- 
ducive to a spirit of godliness, and ultimately to a 
state of ecstatic communion with the deity. On these 
grounds it was actually laid down as a rule for a man 
solicitous for his spiritual welfare to pass the last 
two of the four stages (dSrama) of his life in such conditions of 
renunciation and self-restraint. Though there is hardly a sect 
which has not contributed its share to the dement of rdigious 
mendicancy and asceticism so prevalent in India, it is in con- 
nexion with the Siva-cult that these tendencies have been most 
extensivdy cultivated. Indeed, the personality of the stern 
God himself exhibits this feature in a very marked degree, 
whence the term mahiyogi or " great ascetic " is often applied 
to him. 

Of Saiva mendicant and ascetic orders, the members of which arc 
considered more or less followers of Sankara Acharya, the following 
may be mentioned : (i ) Dandis, or staff-bearers, who carry a wand 
with a piece of red cloth, containing the sacred cord, attached to it, 
and also wear one or more pieces ofcloth of the same colour. They 
worship Siva in his form of Bhairava, the " terrible." A sub-section 

of this order are the Dandi Dasnamis, or Dandi of '~ so 

called from their assuming one of the names of nit 

disciples, and six of their pupils, (a) Yogis Cor pc s}, 

ie. adherents of the Yoga philosophy and thesyi tic 

practices enjoined by it with the view of mental abst he 

supposed attainment of superhuman powers — pi A, 

when not merely pretended, but rigidly carried ot oo 

apt to produce vacuity of mind and wild fits o£ f c rse 

degenerate days their supernatural powers consist in- 

juring, sooth-saying, and feats of jugglery, by whi >m 

fail in imposing upon a credulous public (3) Sam xs 

who " renounce " earthly concerns, an order not ler 

to the Brahmanical caste or to the Saiva persuasion. • ..«,_ w . J»e 
latter are in the habit of smearing their bodies with ashes, and 
wearing a tiger-skin and a necklace or rosary of rudraksha berries 
(Elaeocarpus Ganitrus, lit. " Rudra's eye "), sacred to Siva, and 
allowing their hair to grow till it becomes matted and filthy. (4) 
Parama-hamsas, i.e. " supreme geese (or swans)," a term applied to 
the world-soul with which they claim to be identical. This is the 



capable of satiety of want." Some of them go about naked, but 
the majority are clad like the Dandi*. (5) Aghora Panikis, a vile 
and disreputable class of mendicants, now rarely met with. Thar 
filthy habits and disgusting practices of gross promiscuous feeding, 
even to the extent of eating offal and dead men's flesh, look almost 
like a direct repudiation of the strict Brahmanical code of ceremonial 
purity and cleanliness, and of the rules regulating the matter and 
manner of eating and drinking; and they certainly make them 
objects of loathing and terror wherever they are seen. 

On the general effect of the manner of life led by Sadhut or " holy 
men." a recent observer (J. C. Oman, Mystics, Ascttics and Sainis 
cf India, p. 274) remarks: " Sadhuisnr, whether perpetuating the 
peculiar idea of the efficiency of austerities for the acquisition of 
far-reaching powers over natural phenomena, or bearing its testi- 
mony to the belief in the indispensablencss of detachment from the 
world as a preparation for the ineffable joy of ecstatic communion 
with the Divine Being, has undoubtedly tended to keep before 
men> eyes, as the highest ideal, a life of purity, self-restraint, and 
contempt of the world and human affairs. It has also necessarily 
maintained amongst the laity a sense of the righteous claims- of 
the poor upon the charity of the more affluent members of the 
community. Aforeover. sadhutsm, by the multiplicity of the inde- 
pendent sects which have arisen in India, has engendered and 



favoured a spirit of tolerance which cannot escape the notice of the 
most superficial observer. * 

An independent Saiva sect, or, indeed, the only strictly 
Saiva sect, are the Vira Saivas, more commonly called Lings' 
l yals (popularly Lingaits) or Lingavais, from their 
practice of wearing on their person a phallic emblem fS^ 
of Siva, made of copper or silver, and usually enclosed 
in a case Suspended from the neck by a string. Apparently from 
the movable nature of their badge, their Gurus are called Janga- 
mas (" movable ")• This sect counts numerous adherents is 
southern India; the Census Report qf xoox recording nearly 
a million and a half, rnduding some 79 or 80 different, mostlx 
endogamous, castes. The reputed founder, or rather reformer, 
of the sect was Basava (or Basaba), a Brahman of the Belgaum 
district who seems to have lived in the nth or 12th century. 
According to the Basava-purana he early in life renounced his 
caste and went to reside* at Kalyana, then the capital of the 
Chalukya kingdom, and later on at Sangamesvara near Rat- 
nagiri, where he was initiated into the Vira Saiva faith which he 
subsequently made k his life's work to propagate. His doctrine, 
which may be said to constitute a kind of reaction against the 
severe sacerdotalism of Sankara, has spread over all classes of 
the southern community, most of the priests of Saiva temples 
there being adherents of it; whilst in northern India its votaries 
are only occasionally met with, and then mostly as mendicants, 
leading about a neatly caparisoned bull as representing Siva's 
sacred bull Nandi. Though the Lingayats still show a certain 
animosity towards the Brahmans, and in the Census lists are 
accordingly dasses as an independent group beside the Hindus, 
still they can hardly be excluded from the Hindu community, 
and are sure sooner or later to find their way back to the 
Brahmanical fold. 

Vishnu, whilst less popular with Brahmans than his rival, 
has from early times proved to the lay mind a more attractive 
object of adoration on account of the genial and, x**sam 
so to speak, romantic character of his mythical per- 
sonality. It is not, however, so much the original figure of the 
god himself that enlists the sympathies of his adherents as 
the additional elements it has received through the theory of 
periodical " descents " (awidra) or incarnations applied to this 
ddty. Whilst the Saiva philosophers do not approve of the 
notion of incarnations, as being derogatory to the dignity oil 
the ddty, the Brahmans have nevertheless thought fit to adopt 
it as apparently a convenient expedient for bringing certain 
tendencies of popular worship within the pale of their system, 
and probably also for, counteracting the Buddhist doctrines; 
and for this purpose Vishnu would obviously offer himself as 
the most attractive figure in the Brahmanical trinity. Whether 
the incarnation theory started from the original solar nature 
of the god suggestive of regular visits to the world of men, or 
in what other way it may have originated, must remain doubtful. 
Certain, however, it is that at least one of his, Avatars is clearly 
based on the Vedic conception of the sun-god, via, thai of the 
dwarf who claims as much ground as he can cover by three steps, 
and then gains the whole universe by his three mighty strides. 
Of the ten or more Avatars, assumed by different authorities, 
only two have entered to any considerable extent into the 
rdigious worship of the people, viz. those of Xmm (or Rama- 
chandra) and Krishna, the favourite heroes of epic romance. 
That these two figures would appeal far more strongly to the 
hearts and feelings of the people, especially the warlike Ksha- 
triyas, 1 than the austere Siva is only what might have been 
expected; and, indeed, since the time of the epics their cult 
seems never to have lacked numerous adherents. But, on the 
other hand, the essentially human nature of these two gods 

1 As in the case of Siva's traditional white complexion, it may 
not be without significance, from a racial point of view, that Vishnu, 
Kama and Krishna have various darker shades of colour attributed 
to them. viz. blue, hyacinthine, and dark azure or dark brown rs> 
spectively. The names of the two heroes meaning simply "I hjack 
or " dark," the blue tint may originally have belonged to Vishnu, 
who is also called pitcvasas, dressed 10 yellow garment, f>. the 
colours of sky and sun combined. 



HINDU18M 



5©9 



npuld naturally fad to modify the character *f the eektkaa 
oetween . worshipper and ■ worshipped, and to impart to the 
nedes end forms of adoration features of a more popular and 
more human kind And accordingly it is exactly in connexion 
with these two incarnations of Vishnu, especially that of Krishna, 
that a new spirit was infused into the religious life df the people 
by the sentiment of fervent devotion to the deity, as it found 
expression in certain portions of the epic poems, especially the 
BiagooodgiUi, and in the Bhaiawatapurami (as against the more 
orthodox Vaishnava works of this class such as the Vishnu* 
purana), and was formulated into a regular doctrine of faith 
in the SandUyo-siitrOt and ultimately translated into practice 
by the Vaishnava reformers. 

. The first successful Vaishnava reaction against Sankara's: 
reconstructed creed was led by Ramanuja, a southern Brahman 
of the 1 2th century. His followers, the Ramanujas, 
or Sri-Vaishnavas as they are" usually called, worship 
Vishnu (Narayana) with his consort Sri or Lakshmt 
(the goddess of beauty and fortune), or their incarnations Rama 
with Sita and Krishna with Rukmini. Ramanuja's doctrine, 
which is especially directed against the Linga- worship, is essenti- 
ally based on the tenets of an old Vaishnava sect, the Bhagavatas 
or Pancharatras, who worshipped the Supreme Being under 
the name of Vasudeva (subsequently identified with Krishna, 
as the son of Vasudeva, who indeed is credited by some scholars 
with the foundation of that monotheistic creed). Thesectarial 
mark of the Ramanujas resembles a capital V (or, -in the case of 
another division, a Y), painted with a white day called gopi* 
chandana, between the hair and the root of the nose, with a red 
or yellow vertical stroke (representing the female element) 
between the two white lines. They also usually wear, like all 
Vaishnavas, a necklace of lulaiV, or basil wood, and a rosary of 
seeds of the same shrub or of the Joins. Their most important 
shrines are those of Srirangam near Tridnnopoly, Mailkote 
in Mysore, Dvaraka (the dty of Krishna) on the Kathiawar 
coast, and Jagannath in Orissa; all of them decorated with 
Vishnu's emblems, the tulasi plant and salagram stone. The 
Ramanuja Brahmans are most punctilious in the preparation 
of their food and in regard to the privacy of their meals, before 
taking which they have to bathe and put on woollen or silk 
garments. Whilst Sankara's mendicant followers were pro* 
hibited to touch fire and had to subsist entirely on, the charity 
of Brahman householders, Ramanuja, on the contrary, not only 
allowed bis followers to use fire, but strictly forbade their eating 
any food cooked, or even seen, by a stranger. On the speculative 
side, Ramanuja also met Sankara's strictly monistic theory 
by another recognizing Vishnu as identical with Brahma as the 
Supreme Spirit animating the material world as well, as the 
individual souls which have become estranged from God through 
unbelief, and can only attain again conscious union with him 
through' devotion or love (bhakii). His tenets are expounded 
in various works, especially in his commentaries on the Vedanta- 
sutra* and the Bhagavadgita. The followers of Ramanuja 
have spfit into two sects, a northern one, recognizing the Vedas 
as their chief authority, and a southern one, basing their tenets 
on the Nalayir, a Tamil work of the Upanishad order. In point 
of doctrine, they differ in their view of the relation between 
God Vishnu and the human soul; whilst the former sect define 
it by the ape theory, which makes the soul ding to God as the 
young ape does to its mother, the latter explain it by the cat 
theory, by which Vishnu himself seizes and rescues the souls 
as the mother cat does her young ones. 

MatUfa Acharya, another distinguished Vedanta teacher 
and founder of a Vaishnava sect, born in Kanara in a J), uoo, 
Mm .. was less intolerant of the Linga cult than Ramanuja, 

********* fag seems rather to have aimed at a reconciliation of 
the Saiva and Vaishnava forms of worship. The Madkvas 
or iiadhvackaris favour Krishna and his consort as their spedal 
objects of adoration, whilst images of Siva, Barvaii, and their 
son Ganesa are, however, likewise admitted and worshipped in 
some of their temples, the most important of which is at Udfpi 
In South Kanara, with eight monasteries connected with it. 



This shrine contain* an image of Krishna which is said to have 
been rescued from the wreck of a ship which brought it f mm 
Dvaraka, where it was supposed to have been set up of oM by 
no other than Krishna's friend Arjunv one of the five Pandtva 
princes. Followers of the Madhva creed are but rarely met with 
in Upper India. . Their tectarial mark is like the U of the Sri* 
Vaishnava* except that their central tine is black instead of 
red or yellow. Madhva*— who after his initiation assumed 
the name Anandatirtha— conqxaed numerous Sanskrit works, 
including commentaries on the Brahma swtras (i.e. the Vedanta 
aphorisms), the Gita, the Rigveda and many TJpanishads. 
His philosophical theory was a dualistic one, postulating dis- 
tinctness of nature for the divine and the human soul, and 
hescs independent existence, instead of absorption, after the 
completion of mundane existence. 

The Ramanandb or Ramavats (popularly Ramats) are a 
numerous northern sect of similar tenets to those of 4he Rama- 
nujas. Indeed its founder, Ramananda, who probably Rgautg, 
nourished in the latter part of the 14th century, 
according to the traditional account, was originally a Sri- 
Vaishnava monk, and, having come under the suspicion of laxity 
in observing the strict rules of food during las peregrinations; 
and been ordered by his superior (Mahant) to take his meals 
apart from his brethren, left the monastery in a huff and set 
up a schismatic math of his own at Benares. The sectarian 
mark of his sea differs but slightly from that of the parent stock. 
The distinctive features of their creed consist in thrir making 
Rama and Sita, dthcr singly or conjointly, the chief objects of 
their adoration, instead of Vishnu and Lakshmi, and their attach- 
ing little or no importance to the observance of privacy in the 
cooking and eating of thdr food. Their mendicant members, 
usually known as Vairagis, are, like the general body of the sect, 
drawn from all castes without distinction. Thus, the founder's 
twelve chief disciples indude, besides Brahmans, a we»ver r 
a currier, a Rajput, a Jatand a barber— for, they argue, seeing 
that Bhagavan, the Holy One (Vishnu), became incarnate even 
in animal form, a Bhakta (believer) may be born even in the 
lowest of castes. Ramananda's teaching was thus of a distinctly 
levelling and popular character; and, in accordance therewith, 
the Bhakta^nala and other authoritative writings of the sect 
are composed, not in Sanskrit, but in the popular dialects. A 
follower of thrs creed was the distinguished poet Tulsidas, the 
composer of the beautiful Hindi version of the Ramayana and 
other works which "exercise more influence upon the great 
body of Hindu population than the whole voluminous series 
of Sanskrit composition M (H. H. Wilson). 

The traditional list of Ramananda's immediate ctfsdples 
indudes the name of Kabir, the weaver, a remarkable man 
who would accordingly have lived in the latter part KMbiCm 
of the 15th century, and who is claimed by both Hindus 
and Moslems as having been born within thdr fold. The story 
goes thaty having been deeply impressed by Ramananda's 1 
teaching, be sought to attach himself to him; add, one day 
at Benares, in stepping down the ghat at daybreak to bathe 
in the Ganges, and putting himself in the way of the teacher, 
the latter, having inadvertently struck him with his foot, uttered 
his customary exclamation u Ram Ram," which, being also 
the initiatory formula of the sect, was claimed by Kabir as such, 
making him Ramananda's disciple. Be this as it may, Kabir's 
oWn reformatory activity lay in the direction of a compromise 
between the Hindu and the Mahommedan creeds, the religious 
practices of both of which he criticized with equal severity. 
His followers, the Kabir PantWs (" those following Kabir's 
path "), though neither worshipping the gods of the pantheon, 
nor observing the rites and ceremonial of the Hindus, are never- 
theless in dose touch with the Vaishnava sects, espedaHy the 
Ramavats, and generally worship Rama as the supreme deity, 
when they do not rather address their homage, in hymns and 
otherwise, to the founder of their creed himself. Whilst very 
numerous, particularly amongst, the low-caste population, in 
western, central and northern India, resident adherents of 
Kabir's doctrine are rare in Bengal and the south; although 



5*o 



HINDUISM 



M there b hardly a town In India where strolling beggar* may 
not be found ringing tongs of Kabir fat the original or as trans- 
lated' into the local dialects." The mendicants of this creed, 
however, never actually solicit alms; and, indeed, "the quaker- 
like spirit of the sect, their abhorrence of ail violence, their 
regard for truth and the inobtrasiveness of their opinions render 
them very inoffensive members of the state " (H. H. Wilson). 
The doctrines of Kabir are taught, mostly in the form of dia- 
logues, in numerous Hindi works, composed by his disciples 
and adherents, who, however, usually profess to give the teacher's 
own words. 

The peculiar conciliatory tendencies of Kabir were carried 
on with even greater seal from the latter part of the 15th century 
by one pf his followers, Nanak Shah, the promulgator of the 
creed of the Nanak Shahis or Sikhs— i.e. (Sanskr.) siskya, dis- 
ciples, whose gum, or teacher, be called himself— a peaceful 
sect at first until, in consequence of Mahommedan persecution, 
a martial spirit was infused into it by the tenth, and last, guru, 
Govind Shah, changing it into a political organization. Whilst 
originally more akin in its principles to the Moslem faith, the sect 
seems latterly to have shown tendencies towards drifting back 
to 

( ies 

Ka ich 

do he 

mo du 

atx ar, 

on< ce. 

wh he 

foil ge. 

exc ny 

del ily 

kin 

Although the Vaisboava sects hitherto noticed, in their 
adoration of Vishnu and bis incarnations, Krishna and Rama- 
chandra, usually associate with these gods their 
wives, as their saktis, or female energies, the sexual 
element is, as a rule, only just allowed sufficient scope 
to enhance the emotional character of the rites of 
In some of the later Vaishnava creeds, on the other 
hand, this element is far from being kept within the bounds of 
moderation and decency. The favourite object of adoration 
with adherents of, these sects is Krishna with his mate — but 
not the devoted friend and counsellor of the ¥ andavas and 
deified hero of epic song, nor the ruler of Dvaraka and wedded 
lord of Rukmini, but the juvenile Krishna, Govinda or Bala 
Gopala, " the cowherd lad," the foster son of the cowherd Nanda 
of Gokula, taken up with his amorous sports with the C*pis t 
or wivesof the cowherds of Vrindavana (Brindaban,near Mathura 
on the Yamuna), especially his favourite mistress Radha or 
Radhika. This episode in the legendary .life of Krishna has 
every appearance of being a later accretion* After barely a few 
allusions to it in the epics, it bursts forth full-blown In the 
Harivansa, the Visbnu-purana, the Narada-JPancharatra and 
the Bhagavata-purana, the tenth canto of which, dealing with 
the life of Krishna, has become, through vernacular versions, 
especially the Hindi Pr ems a gar, or " ocean of love," a favourite 
romance all over India, and has doubtless helped largely to 
popularize the cult of Krishna. Strange to say, however, no 
mention is as yet made by any of these works of Krishna's 
favourite Radha; it is only in another Purana — though scarcely 
deserving that designation—that she makes her appearance, 
viz. in the Brahma- vaivarta, in which Krishna's amours in 
Nanda's cow-station are dwelt upon in fulsome and wearisome 
detail; whilst the poet Jayadeva, in the 12th century, made 
her love for the gay and inconstant boy the theme of his beautiful, 
if highly voluptuous, lyrical drama, GUagoiinda. r 

The earliest of the sects which associate Radha with Krishna in 
their worship is that of the Nimavats, founded by Nimbaditya or 
Nimbarka {te. " the sun of the Nimba tree "), a teacher 01 un- 
certain date, aid to have been a Telugu Brahman who subsequently 
established himself at Mathura (Muttra) on the Yamuna, where 
the headquarters of his sect have remained ever since. The Mahant 
of their monastery at Ohruva Kshetra near Mathura, who claims 
direct descent from Nimbarka. is said to place the foundation of 
that establishment as far back as the 5th century— doubtless an 



worship. 



d. and seem by 
E Nimbarka, thb 
early pa* of the 
authorities to be 
ya. who is known 
It is worthy of 
Ramanuja'a and 
p r es e nt a t ion of 
rted in a mystical 
striving, through 
iment, alter many 
awtbority of thev 



1 devotional char- 

-are stilt extant. 

northern India, 

rpendjcular white 



tioed, because of 
ided early in the 

and Chaitaaya. 

these creeds the 
eer scope than ia 
luxiliary to these 
raycrs and hymns 
mis service. The 
from the title of 
r. " the cow-lords 
js in western and 

Brahman, after 
at Gokula near 

Krishna Gopala, 
tical persecutions 

to Nathdvara is 
• the lord of Sri .• 
ship for adherents 
ed feom Mathura 
es in Rajputana. 
Benares, where he 
et, the adualistic 
ul and voluptuous 
cal with God. the 
ted against God. 
iral appetites and 
II best be shown. 
ire many wealthy 
fly to Gooal Lai 
Ige is sedulously 
1 a day — from its 

repose at night, 
red perpendicular 
ose. sad having a 
rincipal doctrinal 
ed upon by Val- 
al other Sanskrit 
sect, children are 
age of four, and 
e. of 108 beads of 

I they are taught 
i svranam mama, 

II feature of this 
Bailed Maharajas, 
>line and austere 

and auow there- 
with Choice kinds 
sentatives of the 
eive in their own 
9 the deity, even, 
der. In the final 
Maharajas, before 
69, these impro- 
Ugh so unsparing 
not to believe ia 
sharajas. still he 
n, that can make 
r spiritual guides, 

, with the avowed 
ras started, in the 
l Brahman of the 
name of Svami 
wars at Ahmada- 
he had a meeting 
village of Wartal 
iple to La ksh mi- 
nus the two chief 
Maharaja. Their 
as the Supreme 
ihna and Radha. 
_, Chaitaaya, the 



HINDUISM 



S« 



OJ 



particular ttkti, as an indispensable complement enabling 
him to properly perform his cosmic functions, adherents of this 
persuasion might be expected to be recruited from all s*tM*. 
sects. To a certain extent this is indeed the case; but 
though Vaishnavism, and especially the Krishna creed, with its 
luxuriant growth of erotic legends, might have seemed peculiarly 
favourable to a development in this direction, it is practically 
only in connexion with the Saiva system that an independent cult 
of the female principle has been developed; whilst in other 
sects— and, indeed, in the ordinary Saiva cult as well—such 
worship, even where it is at all prominent, is combined with, and 
subordinated to, that of the male principle. What has made this 
cult attach itself more especially to the Saiva creed is doubtless 
the character ef Siva as the type of reproductive power, in 
addition to his function as destroyer which, as we shall see, 
is likewise reflected in some of the forms of his Sakti. The theory 
of the god and his Sakti as cosmic principles is perhaps already 
foreshadowed in the Vedic couple of Heaven and Earth, whilst 
in the speculative treatises of the later Vedic period, as well 
as in the post- Vedic Brahmanical writings, the assumption of 
the self-existent being dividing himself into a mate and a female 
half usually forms the starting-point of cosmic evolution. 1 In 
the later Saiva mythology this theory finds its artistic repre-r 
sentation in Siva's androgynous form of Ardba-narisa, or " half- 
woman-lord," typifying the union of the male and female energies; 
the male half in this form of the deity occupying the right-hand, 
and the female the left-hand side. In accordance with this 
type of productive energy, the Sakta* divide Uiemselves into 
two distinct groups, according to whether they attach the greater 
importance to the male or to the female principle; viz. the 
Dakshfrackaris, or " right-hand-observers " (also called Dak- 
skina-morgis, or followers " of the right-hand path "), and the 
Vamacharis, or "left-hand-observers" (or Vama-nwiis, 
followers ".of the left path "). Though some of the Puranasj 
the chief repositories of sectarian doctrines, enter largely into 
Sakta topics, it is only in the numerous Tantras that these 
are fully and systematically developed. In these works, almost 
invariably composed in the form of a colloquy, Siva, as a rule, 
in answer to questions asked by his consort Parvati, unfolds 
the mysteries of this occult creed. 



The principal seat of Sakta worship is the north-eastern part of 

—Bengal, Assam and Behar. The great majority of its 

adherents profess to follow the right-hand practice; and apart 



India- 



frora the implied purport and the emblems of the cult, their mode 
of adoration does not seem to oner any very objectionable features. 
And even amongst the adherents of the left-hand mode of worship, 
many of these are said to follow it as a matter of famHy tradition 
rather than of religious conviction, and to practise it in a sober and 
temperate manner; whilst only an extreme section — the so-called 
Kaulas or Kulinas, who appeal to a spurious Upanishad, the Kaulo- 
panishad,as the divine authority of their tenets — persist in carrying 
on the mystic and licentious ntes taught in many of the Tantras. 
But strict secrecy being enjoined in the performance of these rites, 
it is not easy to check any statements made on this point. The 
Sakta cult is, however, known to be especially prevalent — though 
apparently not in a very extreme form— amongst members of the 
very respectable Kayastha or writer caste of Bengal, and as these 
are largely employed as clerks and accountants in Upper India, 
there is reason to fear that their vicious practices arc gradually 
being disseminated through them. 

The divine object of the adoration of the Saktas, then, is 
Siva's wife— the Devi (goddess), Mahadati (great goddess) j 
or Jagan-mata (mother of the world) — in one or other of hex 
numerous forms, benign or terrible. The forms in which she 
is worshipped in Bengal are of the latter category, viz. Durga, 
" the unapproachable," and Kali, " the black one," or, as some 
take it, the wife of Kala, " time," or death the great dissolve^ 
viz. Siva. In honour of the former, the Durga-puja is celebrated 

1 This notion not improbably took its origin in the mystic cos* 
mogonic hymn, Rtgv. x. 129, where it is said that—" that one 
(existent, neutr.) breathed breathless by (or with) its soadha (? in- 
herent power, or nature), beyond that there was nothing whatever 
. . . that one live (germ) which was enclosed in the void was 
generated by the power of heat (or fervour) ; desire then first came 
soon st, wsuch was the first seed of the mind . . . lertiliring forces 
there were, madka be low, pfayoti (? willj above." 



512 



HINDUISM 



during ten days at the time of the autumnal equinox, in com- 
memoration of her victory over the buffalo-headed demon 
Mahishasura; when the image of the ten-armed goddess, holding 
a weapon in each hand, is worshipped for nine days, and cast 
into the water on the tenth day, called the Dasahara, whence 
the festival itself is commonly called Dasara in western India. 
Kali, on the other band, the most terrible of the goddess's forms, 
has a special service performed to her, at the Kali-puja, during 
the darkest night of the succeeding month; when she is repre- 
sented as a naked black woman, four-armed, wearing a garland 
of heads of giants slain by her, and a string of skulls round her 
neck, dancing on the breast of her husband (Mahakala), with 
gaping mouth and protruding tongue; and when she has to be 
propitiated by the slaughter of goats, sheep and buffaloes. On 
other occasions also Vamacharis commonly offer animal sacri- 
fices, usually one or more kids; the head of the victim, which 
has to be severed by a single stroke, being always placed in front 
of the image of the goddess as a blood-offering (bolt), with an 
earthen lamp fed with ghee burning above it, whilst the flesh 
b cooked and served to the guests attending the ceremony, 
except that of buffaloes, which is given to the low-caste musicians 
who perform during the service. Even some adherents of this 
class have, however, discontinued animal sacrifices, and use 
certain kinds of fruit, such as coco-nuts or pumpkins, instead. 
The use of wine, which at one time was very common on these 
occasions, seems also to have become much more restricted; 
and only members of the extreme section would still seem to 
adhere to the practice of the so-called five m's prescribed by 
tome of the Tantras, vis. momsa (flesh), maisya (fish), madya 
(wine), maitknna (sexual union), and mudra (mystical finger 
signs)— probably the most degrading cult ever practised under 
the pretext of religious worship. 

In connexion with the principal object of this cul£, Tantric theory 
has devised an elaborate system of female figures representing either 
special forms and personifications or attendants of the Great 
Goddess." They are generally arranged in groups, the most im- 

Krtant of which are the Aiahavidyas (great sciences), the 8 (or 9) 
atoms (mothers) or Mahamataras (great mothers), consisting of 
the wives of the principal gods; the 6 Najikas or mistresses: and 
different classes 01 sorceresses and ogresses, called Yoginis, Dakinis 
and Saktnis. A special feature of the Sakti cult is the use of obscure 
Vcdic mantras, often changed so as to be quite .meaningless and on 
that very account deemed the more efficacious for the acquisition 
of superhuman powers; as well as of mystic letters and syllables 
called bija (germ), of magic circles (chakra) and diagrams {yatUra) i 
and of amulets of various materials inscribed with formulae of 
fancied mysterious import. 

This survey Of the Indian sects will have shown how little 
the character of their divine objects of worship is calculated to 

exert that elevating and spiritualizing influence. 
SnrZT y *° cn * racter i sl » c °f true religious devotion, In all 
jfegg, but a few of the minor groups religious fervour is 

only too apt to degenerate into that Very state of 
sexual excitation which devotional exercises should surely tend 
to repress. If the worship of Siva, despite the purport of 
his chief symbol, seems on the whole less liable to produce 
these undesirable effects than that of the rival deity, it is doubt- 
less due partly to the real nature of that emblem being little 
realized by the common people, and partly to the somewhat 
repellent character of the- " great god," more favourable to 
evoking feelings of awe and terror than a spirit of fervid devotion. 
All the more are, however, the gross stimulants, connected with 
the adoration of his consort, calculated to work up the carnal 
instincts of the devotees to an extreme degree of sensual frenzy. 
In the Vaishnava camp, on the other hand, the cult of Krishna, 
and more especially that of the youthful Krishna, can scarcely 
fail to exert an influence which, if of a subtler and more in- 
sinuating, is not oa that account of a less demoralising kind. 
Indeed, it would be hard to find anything less consonant with 
godliness and divine perfection than the pranks of this juvenile 
god; and if poets and thinkers' try to explain them away by 
dint of allegorical interpretation, the plain man will not for 
all their refinements take these amusing adventures any the less 
au pied de la Utlrc. No fault, in this respect, can assuredly be 



found with the legendary Rama, a very paragon of knighth/ 
honour and virtue, even as bis consort Sita is the very model 
of a noble and faithful wife; and yet this cult has perhaps 
retained even more of the character of mere hero-worship thai 
that of Krishna, Since by the universally accepted doctrine of 
karman (deed) or karmavipaka (" the maturing of deeds ") 
man himself— either in bis present, or some future, existence— 
enjoys the fruit of, or has to atone for, his former good and bad 
actions, there could hardly be room in Hindu pantheism for a 
belief in the remission of sin by divine grace or vicarious sub- 
stitution. And accordingly the " descents " or incarnations of 
the deity have for their object, not so much the spiritual regenera- 
tion of man as the deliverance of the world from some material 
calamity threatening to overwhelm it. The generally recognized 
principal Avatars do not, however, by any means constitute 
the only occasions of a direct intercession of the deity in worldly 
affairs, but — in the same way as to this day the eclipses of the 
sun and moon are ascribed by the ordinary Hindu to these 
luminaries being temporarily swallowed by the dragon R*km 
(or Crohn, " the seixer ")— so any uncommon occurrence would 
be apt to be set down as a special manifestation of divine power; 
and any man credited with exceptional merit or achievement, 
or even remarkable for. some strange incident connected with 
his life or death, might ultimately come to be looked upon as a 
veritable incarnation of the deity, capable of influencing the 
destinies of man, and might hecome an object of local adoration 
or superstitious awe and propitiatory rites to multitudes of people. 
That the transmigration theory, which makes the spirit of the 
departed hover about for a time in quest of a new corporeal 
abode, would naturally lend itself to superstitious notions of this 
kind can scarcely be doubted. Of peculiar importance in this 
respect is the worship of the FUrU. (" fathers ") or deceased 
ancestors, as entering largely into the everyday life and family 
relations of the Hindus. At stated intervals to offer reverential 
homage and oblations of food to the forefathers up to the third 
degree is one of the most sacred duties the devout Hindu has to 
discharge. The periodical performance of the commemorative 
rite of obsequies called Sraddka — i.e. an oblation " made in faith " 
(sraddhoi Lat. credo) — is the duty and privilege of the eldest sg* 
of the deceased, or, failing him, of the nearest relative who thereby 
establishes his right as next of kin in respect of inheritance; 
and those other relatives who have the right to take part in the 
ceremony are called sapinda, ix. sharing in the pinias (or balls of 
cooked rice, constituting along with libations of water the usual 
offering to the Manes)— such relationship being held a bar to 
intermarriage. The first Sraddka takes place as soon as possible 
after the untyeshti (" final offering ") or funeral ceremony proper, 
usually spread over ten days; being afterwards repeated once a 
month for a year, and subsequently at every anniversary and 
otherwise voluntarily on special occasions. Moreover, a simple 
libation of water should be offered to the Fathers twice daily at 
the morning and evening devotion called sandkya (" twilight ")♦ 
It is doubtless a sense of filial obligation coupled with sentiments 
of piety and reverence that gave rise to this practice of offering 
gifts of food and drink to the deceased ancestors. Hence also 
frequent allusion b made by poets to the anxious care caused to 
the Fathers by the possibility of the living head of the family 
being afflicted with failure of offspring; this dire prospect com- 
pelling them to use but sparingly their little store of provisions, 
in case the supply should shortly cease altogether. At the same 
time one also meets with frank avowals of a superstitious fear 
lest any irregularity in the performance of the obsequial rites 
should cause the Fathers to haunt their old home and trouble the 
peace of their unduttful descendant, or even prematurely draw 
him after them to the Pitri-toka or world of the Fathers, supposed 
to be located in the southern region. Terminating as it usually 
does with the feeding and feeing of a greater or less number of 
Brahmans and the feasting of members of the performers' own 
caste, the Sraddha, especially its first performance, is often a 
matter of very considerable expense; and more than ordinary 
benefit to the deceased is supposed to accrue from It when ft takes 
place at a spot of recognized sanctity, such as one of the great 



HINDU KUSH 



5»3 



places of pilgrimage lik* Prayaga (Allahabad, where the three 
sacred rivers, Gang*, Yamuna and Sarasvati, meet), Mathura, 
and especially Gaya and Kasi (Benares). But indeed the tirtha- 
yd/to, or pilgrimage to holy bathing-places, is in itself considered 
an act of piety conferring religious merit in proportion to. the 
time and trouble expended upon it. The number of such places 
is legion and is constantly increasing. The banks of the great 
rivers such as the Ganga (Ganges), the Yamuna (Jumna), the 
Narbada, the Krishna (Kistna), are studded with them, and the 
water of these rivers is supposed to be imbued with the essence 
of sanctity capable of cleansing the pious bather of all sin and 
moral taint. To follow the entire course of one of the sacred 
rivers from the mouth to the source on one side and back again on 
the other in the sun-wise (pradakshina) direction — that is, 
always keeping the stream on one's right-hand side — is held to be 
a highly meritorious undertaking which it requires years to carry 
through. No wonder that water from these rivers, especially the 
Ganges, is sent and taken in bottles to all parts of India to be used 
on occasion as healing medicine or for sacramental purposes. In 
Vcdic times, at the Rajasuya, or inauguration of a king, some 
water from the holy river Sarasvati was mixed with the sprinkling 
water used for consecrating the king. Hence also sick persons are 
frequently conveyed long distances to a sacred river to heal them 
of their maladies; and for a dying man to breathe his last at the 
side of the Ganges is devoutly believed to be the surest way of 
securing for him salvation and eternal bliss. 

Such probably was the be 

years ago, and such it rem 

such as these, who could ven 

is likely to be ? Is the reg 

by the modern theistic mov 

Arya-samaj, as so close and 

and thought as Sir A. Lyall 

he remarks, " is essentially 

never consent to be shut ur. 

it has grasped and holds fit 

manifestations of some pow 

ency of contemporary religi 

be followed from a distanc 

old foundations, towards se 

their Vedic theology with 

of conduct and a system o 

discern a movement in vai 

impersonal theism, and tows 

caf schools upon some def 

morals, which may satisfy 1 

permanently embody that tenaency 10 suosiicuce spiritual aevouon 

for external forms and caste rules which is the characteristic of 

the sects that have from time to time dissented from orthodox 

Brahminism." 
Authorities. — Census of India (1901), vol. i. part I.; India, by 

H. H. Risley and E. A. Gait; vol. i. Ethnographical Appendices, 

by H. H. Risley; The Indian Empire, vol. L (new ed., Oxford, 1907); 

I. Muir, Original Sanskrit Texts (and ed., 5 vols., London, 1873); 

Monier Williams, Religious Thought and Life in India (London, 

v «- , . . j. m fa infans (London, 1878, 3rd ed. 1870); 

7); Sir Alfred C. Lyall, Asiatic Studies 
" Hinduism " in Religious Systems of the 
" Brahminism " in Great Religions of the 
London, 1002); W. J. Wilkins, Modern 
\ ; J. C. Oman, Indian Life, Religious and 
The Mystics, Ascetics and Saints of India 
rahmans, Theisls and Muslims 0] India 
Bose, The Hindus as they are (2nd ed., 
on, Hinduism and Christianity (Edinburgh 
05); J. Murray Mitchell, Hinduism Past 
don, 1897); Jogendra Nath Bhattacharya, 
Calcutta, 1896); A. Barth, The Religions 
; E. W. Hopkins, The Religions of India 

HINDU KUSH, a range of mountains in Central Asia. Through- 
out 500 m. of its length, from its roots in the Pamir regions till it 
fades into the Koh-i-Baba to the west of Kabul, this great range 
forms the water-divide between the Kabul and the Oxus basins, 
and, for the first 200 m. reckoning westwards, the southern 
boundary of Afghanistan. It may be said to spring from the 
head of the Taghdumbash Pamir, where it unites With the great 
meridional system of Sarikol stretching northwards, and the yet 
more impressive mountain barrier of Muztagh, the northern base 
of which separates China from the semi-independent territory of 
XIJJL 10 



Kanjut. The Wakhjir pass, crossing the head of the Taghdumbash 
Pamir into the sources of the river Hunxa, almost marks the in- 
junction of the three great chains of mountains. As the Hindu 
Kush strikes westwards, after first rounding the head of an Oxus 
tributary (the Ab-i-Panja, which Curzon considers to be the true 
source of the Oxus), it closely overlooks the trough of that 
glacier-fed stream under its northern spurs, its crest at the nearest 
point being separated from the river by a distance which cannot* 
much exceed 10 m. As the river is here the northern boundary 
of Afghanistan, and the crest of the Hindu Kush the southern 
boundary, this distance represents the width of the Afghan 
kingdom at that point. 

Pkysiograpky'—Far the first 100 m. of its length the Hindu Kush 
is a comparatively flat-backed range of conaderable width, per- 
mitting the formation of small lakes on the ctest, and possessing no 
considerable peaks. It is crossed by many passes, varying in height 
from 12,500 ft. to 17.500 ft., the lowest and the easiest being the 
well-known group about Baroghil, which has from time immemorial 
offered a line of approach from High Asia to Chitral and Jalalabad. 
As the Hindu Kush gradually recedes from the Ab-i-Panja and turns 
south-westwards it gains in altitude, and we find prominent peaks 
on the crest which measure more than 24,000 ft. above sea-level. 
Even here, however, the main central water-divide, or axis of the 
chain, Is apparently not the line of highest peaks, which must be 
looked for to the south, where the great square-headed giant called 
Ttrach Mir dominates Chitral from a southern spur. For some 40 
or 50 m. of this south-westerly bend, bearing away from the Oxus, 
where the Hindu Kush overlooks the mountain wilderness of Badak- 
shan to the west, the crest is intersected by many passes, of which 
the most important is the Dorah group (including the Minjan and 
the Mandal), which rise to about 15,000 ft., and which are, under 
favourable conditions, practicable links between the Oxus and 
Chitral basins. 

From the Dorah to the Khawak pass (or group of passes, for It 



the Khawak, no less than such fragmentary evidence of its rock 
composition as at present exists to the north, points to Qg^^ 
its construction under the same conditions of upheaval ^^^ 
and subsequent denudation as are common to the western ^^ 
Himalaya and the whole of the trans-Indus borderland. 
Its upheaval above the great sea which submerged all the 
north-west of the Indian peninsula long after the Himalaya had 
massed itself as a formidable mountain chain, belongs to a com- 
paratively recent geologic period, and the same thrust upwards of 
vast masses of cretaceous limestone has disturbed the overlying 
recent beds of shale and clays with very similar results to those 
which have left so marked an impress on the Baluch frontier. Suc- 
cessive flexures or ridges are ranged in more or less parallel lines, 
and from between the bands of hard, unyielding rock of older 
formation the soft beds of recent shale have been washed out, to be 
carried through the enclosing ridges by rifts which break across 
their axes. The Hindu Kush is, in fact, but the face of a great 
upheaved mass of plateau-land lying beyond it northwards, just 
as the Himalaya forms the southern face of the great central table- 
land of Tibet, and its general physiography, exhibiting long, narrow, 
lateral valleys and transverse hnes of " antecedent drainage, b 

2a 



5H 



HINDUR— HINGHAM 



belong rather to the Murtagh system than to the Hindu Kush. 
Other passes across this important water-divide are the Shandur 
( i a, 2 50 ft.), between Gilgit and Mastuj; the Lowarai (10,450 ft.), 
between the Panjkora ana Chitral valleys; and farther south certain 
lower crossings which once formed part of the great highway between 
Kabul and India. 

Deep down in the trough of the Chitral river, about midway 
between its source and its junction with the Kabul at Jalalabad, is 
CbttraL *!** v 'lkge and fort of Chitral ($.*.). Facing Chitral, on the 

sh 



he 

ire 

Historical Notices. — Hindu Kush is the Caucasus of Alexander's 
historians. It is also included in the Paropamisus, though the 
latter term embraces more, Caucasus being apparently used only 
when the alpine barrier is in question. Whether the name was 
given in mere vanity to the barrier which Alexander passed (as 
Arrian and others repeatedly allege), or was founded also on 
tome verbal confusion, cannot be stated.. It was no doubt 
regarded (and perhaps not altogether untruly) as a part of a 
great alpine zone believed to traverse Asia from west to east, 
whetheT called Taurus, Caucasus or Imaus. Arrian himself 
applies Caucasus distinctly to the Himalaya also. The applica- 
tion of the name Tanais to the Syr seems to indicate a real con- 
fusion with Colchian Caucasus. Alexander, after building an 
Alexandria at its foot (probably at Hupian near Charikar), 



crossed into Bactrfa, first teaching Drapsaca, or Adrapsa. This 
has been interpreted as Anderab, in which case he probably 
crossed the Khawak Pass, but the identity is uncertain. The 
ancient Zend name is, according to Rawlinson, Paresina, the 
essential part of Paropamisus; this accounts for the great 
Asiastic Parnassus of Aristotle, and the Fkhio-sin-a of Hsflaa 
Tsang. 

The name Hindu Rush is used by Ibn Batuta, who crossed (c. 
1332) from Anderab, and he gives the explanation of the name 
which, however doubtful, is still popular, as (Pcrs.) Hindu- Killer, 
" because of the number of Indian slaves who perished in passing" 
itsanows. Baber always calls the range Hindu Kush, and the way 
in which he speaks of it shows clearly that it was a range that was 
meant, not a solitary pass or peak (according to modern local use, 
as alleged by Elphinsione and Burnes). Probably, however, the 
title was confined to the section from Khawak to Koh-i-Baba. 
The name has by some later Oriental writers been modified into 
Hindu /Co/r (mountain), but this is factitious, and throws no more 
light on the origin of the title. The name seems to have become 
known to European geographers by the Oriental translations of 
the two Petis de la Croix, and was taken up by Delisle and 
D'Anville. Rennell and Elphinstone familiarized it. Burnes 
first crossed the range (1833). A British force was stationed at 
Bamian beyond it in 1840, with an outpost at Saighan. 

The Hindu Kush, formidable as it seems,, and often as it has 
been the limit between petty states, has hardly ever been the 
boundary of a considerable power. Greeks, White Huns, 
Samanidae of Bokhara, Ghaznevides, Mongols, Timur and 
Timuridae, down to Saddozais and Barakzais, have ruled both 
sides of this great alpine chain. 

no 
of 

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Tl 
Al 
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(L 

HINDUR, or Nalagarh, one of the Simla hill states, under 
the government of the Punjab, India. Pop. (1901) 5 J, 551; 
area, 256 sq. m.; estimated revenue, £8600. The country was 
overrun by the Gurkhas for some years before 1815, when they 
were driven out by the British, and the raja was confirmed in 
possession of the territory. The principal products are grain 
and opium. 

HINGANQHAT, a town of British India in Wardba district, 
Central Provinces, 21 m. S.W. of Wardha town. Pop (1001) 
12,662. It is a main seat of the cotton trade, the cotton here 
produced in the rich Wardha valley having given its name to 
one of the best indigenous staples of India. The principal 
native traders are Marwaris, many of whom have large trans* 
actions and export on their own account; but the greater 
number act as middle-men. There are two cotton-mills and 
several ginning and pressing factories. 

HINGB (in Mid. Eng. kenge or hceng, from hengtn, to 
hang), a movable joint, particularly that by which a door or 
window " hangs " from its side-post, or by which a lid or cover 
is attached to that which it closes; also any device which allows 
two parts to be joined together and move upon each other 
(see Joinery). Figuratively the word is used of that on which 
something depends, a cardinal or turning point, a crisis. 

HINGHAM, a township of Plymouth county, Massachusetts, 
U.S.A., on Massachusetts Bay. Pop (1890) 4564; (1900) 
5059 (969 being foreign-born); (1005, state census) 4819; (1910) 
4965. Area, about 30 sq. m. The township is traversed by 
the New York, New Haven & Hartford railway, and contains 
the villages of Hingham, West Hingham, Hingham Center, and 
South Hingham. Derby Academy, a co-educational school 



HINRICHS— HIOGO 



5»5 



founded and endowed with about £12,000 in 1784 by Sarah 
Derby (1714-1790), was opened in 1791. Hingham has a public 
library (1868), with 12,000 volumes in 1008. The Old Meeting 
House, erected in 1681, is one of the oldest church buildings in 
the country used continuously. Manufactures were relatively 
much more important in the 17th and 18th centuries than since. 
There were settlers here as early as 1633, some of tbem — notably 
Edmund Hobart, ancestor of Bishop John Henry Hobart,— 
being natives of Hingham, Norfolk, England, whence the name; 
and in 163s common land called Barecove became the township 
of Hingham. 

See History of Ike Town of Hingham (4 vols., Hingham, 1893). 

HINRICHS, HERMANN FRIEDRICH WILHELM (1794-1861), 
German philosopher, studied theology at Strasbourg, and philo- 
sophy at Heidelberg under Hegel (q.v.), who wrote a preface to 
his Religion im innern Vcrh&ltniss tur Wissenschafi (Heidelberg, 
1722). He became a Privatdoxent in 18 19, and held professor- 
ships at Breslau (1822) and Halle (1824). 

Works.— (i) Philosophical: Grundlinien der Philosophic der 
Logik (Halle, 1826); Genesis des Wissens (Heidelberg, 1835). (2) 
On aesthetics: Vorlesungen Hber Goethes Faust (Halle, 1825); 
SchiUers Dicklungeu nach threat historischen Zusmmmenhang (Leipzig, 
1837-1839). By these works he became a recognized exponent of 
orthodox HeaeUanism. (3) Historical: Geschichte der Richts- und 
Slaatsprintipten seit der Reformation bis auf die Gegenwart (Leipzig, 
1848-1852); Die Kdnige (2nd ed., Leipzig, 1853). 

HTNSCHIUS, PAUL (1835-1808), German jurist, was the son 
of Franz Sales August Hinschius (1807-1877), and was born in 
Berlin on the 25th of December 1835. His father was not only 
a scientific jurist, but also a lawyer in large practice in Berlin. 
After working under bis father, Hinschius in 1852 began to study 
jurisprudence at Heidelberg and Berlin, the teacher who had 
most influence upon him being Aemilius Ludwig Richter (1808- 
1864), to whom he afterwards ascribed the great revival of the 
study of ecclesiastical law in Germany. In 1855 Hinschius took 
the degree of doctor ulriusque juris, and in 1859 was admitted to 
the juridical faculty of Berlin. In 1863 he went as professor 
extraordinarius to Halle, returning in the same capacity to 
Berlin in 1865; and in 1868 became professor ordinarius at the 
university of Kiel, which he represented in the Prussian Upper 
House (1870-187 1). He also assisted his father in editing the 
Preussische Anwallsteilung from 1862 to 1866 and the Zeitschrift 
fUr Gesetzgebung und RuhtspfUge in Preussen from 1867 to 1871. 
In 1872 he was appointed professor ordinarius of ecclesiastical 
law at Berlin. In the same year he took part in the conferences 
of the ministry of ecclesiastical affairs, which issued in the famous 
** Falk laws." In connexion with the developments of the 
Kullurkampf which resulted from the " Falk laws," he wrote 
several treatises: e.g. on "The Attitude of the German State 
Governments towards the Decrees of the Vatican Council " 
(187 1), on " The Prussian Church Laws of 1873 " (1873). " The 
Prussian Church Laws of the years 1874 and 1875 " (1875), and 
"The Prussian Church Law of 14th July 1880" (1881). He 
sat in the Reichstag as a National Liberal from 1872 to 1878, 
and again in 188 1 and 1882, and from 1889 onwards be repre- 
sented the university of Berlin in the Prussian Upper House. 
He died on the 13th of December 1808. 

The two great works by which Hinschius established his fame 
are the Der relates Pseudo-I sidorianae et capitula AngUramni 
(2 parts, Leipzig, 1863) and Das Kirchenreckt der Katholiken 
und Protestanten in Deutschland, vols, i.-vi. (Berlin, 1860-1877) 
The first of these, for which during 1800 and 1861 he had gathered 
materials in Italy, Spain, France, England, Scotland, Ireland, 
Holland and Belgium, was the first critical edition of the False 
Decretals. His most monumental work, however, is the Kirchen- 
reckt, which remains incomplete. The six volumes actually 
published (System des hatholiscken Kirchenrechls) cover only 
book i. of the work as planned; they are devoted to an exhaustive 
historical and analytical study of the Roman Catholic hierarchy 
and its government of the church. The work is planned with 
special reference to Germany; but in fact .its scheme embraces 
the whole of the Roman Catholic organization in its principles 
and practice. Unfortunately even this part of the work remains 



incomplete; two chapters of book L and the whole of book fl., 
which was to have dealt with "the rights and duties of the 
members of the hierarchy," remain unwritten; the most notable 
om<ssion is that of the ecclesiastical law in relation to the regular 
orders. Incomplete as it is, however, the Kirchenreckt remains 
a work of the highest scientific authority. Epoch-making in 
its application of the modern historical method to the study of 
ecclesiastical law in its theory and practice, it has become the 
model for the younger school of canonists. 

See the articles s.v. by E. Scckel in Herzoc-Hauck. Realencyhlo*' 
pddie (3rd ed., 1900). and by Ulrich Stettz in tbeAUgtmeim demtscht 
Biographic vol 50 (Leipzig, 1905). 

HINTERLAND (German for " the land behind "), the region 
lying behind a coast or river line, or a country dependent for 
trade or commerce on any other region. In the purely physical 
sense " interior " on " back country " is more commonly used, 
but the word has gained a distinct political significance. It 
first came into prominence during 1883-1885, when Germany 
insisted that she had a right to exercise jurisdiction in the 
territory behind those parts of the African coast that she bad 
occupied. The "doctrine of the hinterland" was that the 
possessor of the littoral was entitled to as much of the back 
country as geographically, economically or politically was 
dependent upon the coast lands, a doctrine which, in the space 
of ten years, led to the partition of Africa between various 
European powers. 

HINTON, JAMES (1822-187 5), English surgeon and author, 
son of John Howard Hinton (1791-1873), Baptist minister and 
author of the History and Topography of the United States and 
other works, was bom at Reading in 1822. He was educated 
at his grandfather's school near Oxford, and at the Noncon- 
formist school at Harpenden, and in 1838, on his father's removal 
to London, was apprenticed to a woollen-draper in Whitechapel. 
After retaining this situation about a year he became clerk in 
an insurance office. His evenings were spent in intense study, 
and this, joined to the ardour, amounting to. morbidness, 0/ his 
interest in moral problems, so affected his health that in his 
nineteenth year he resolved to seek refuge from his own thoughts 
by running away to sea. His intention having, however, been 
discovered, he was sent, on the advice of the physician who 
was consulted regarding his health, to St Bartholomew's 
Hospital to study for the medical profession. After receiving his 
diploma in 1847, he was for some time assistant surgeon at 
Newport, Essex, but the same year he went out to Sierra Leone 
to take medical charge of the free labourers on their voyage 
thence to Jamaica, where he stayed some time. He returned 
to England in 1850, and entered into partnership with a surgeon: 
in London, where he soon had his interest awakened specially 
in aural surgery, and gave also much of hisattention to physiology. 
He made his first appearance as an author in 1856 by contribut- 
ing papers on physiological and ethical subjects to the Christian. 
Spectator; and in 1859 he published Man and his Dwelling- 
place. A series of papers entitled " Physiological Riddles," 
in the CornkiU Magazine, afterwards published as Life in Nature 
(1862), as well as another series entitled Thoughts on Health 
(1871), proved bis aptitude for popular scientific exposition. 
After being appointed aural surgeon to Guy's Hospital in 1863, 
he speedily acquired a reputation as the most skilful aural 
surgeon of his day, which was fully borne out by his works, 
An Atlas of Diseases of the membrana tympani (1874), and 
Questions of Aural Surgery (1874)- But his health broke down, 
and in 1874 be gave up practice; and he died at the Azores of 
acute inflammation of the brain on the 16th of December 1875. 
In addition to the works already mentioned, be was the author 
of The Mystery of Pain (1866) and The Place of the Physiciam 
(1874). On account of their fresh and vigorous discussion of 
many of the important moral and social problems of the time, 
his writings had a wide circulation on both sides of the Atlantic. 

His Life and Letters, edited by EHice Hopkins, with an introduction 
by Sir W. W Gull, appeared in 1878. 

HIOGO (Hyoco), a town of Japan fn the province of Settsu, 
Nippon, on the western shore of the bay of Osaka, adjoining 
the foreign settlement of Kobe, 21 m. W of Osaka by rail The 



516 



HIP— HIPPED ROOF 



growth of its prosperity has been very remarkable. Its popula- 
tion, including that of Kobe, was 135,639 in 1891, and 385,00a 
in 1003. From 1884 to the close of the century its trade increased 
nearly eightfold, and the increase was not confined to a few 
staples of commerce, but was spread over almost the whole trade, 
in which silk and cotton fabrics, floor-mats , straw-plaits, matches, 
and cotton yarns are specially important. Kobe owes much 
of its prosperity to the fact of serving largely as the shipping 
port of Osaka, the chief manufacturing town in Japan. The 
foreign community, exclusive of Chinese, exceeds 1000 persons. 
Kobe is considered the brightest and healthiest of all the places 
assigned as foreign settlements in Japan, its pure, dry air and 
granite subsoil constituting special advantages. It is in rail- 
way communication with all parts of the country, and wharves 
admit of steamers of large size loading and discharging cargo 
without the aid of lighters. The area originally appropriated 
for a foreign settlement soon proved too restricted, and foreigners 
received permission to lease lands and' houses direct from 
Japanese owners beyond the treaty limits, a privilege which, 
together with that of building villas on the hills behind the town, 
ultimately involved some diplomatic complications. Kobe has 
a shipbuilding yard, and docks in its immediate neighbourhood. 

Hiogo has several temples of interest, one of which has near 
it a huge bronze statue of Buddha, while by the Minatogawa, 
which flows into the sea between Hiogo and Kobe, a temple 
commemorates the spot where Kusunoki Masashige, the mirror 
of Japanese loyalty, met his death in battle in 1336. The temple 
of Ikuta was erected on the site of the ancient fane built by Jingo 
on her return from Korea in the 3rd century. 

Hiogo's original name was Bako. Its position near the ent ranee 
of the Inland Sea gave it some maritime importance from a 
very early period, but it did not become really prominent until 
the 12th century, when Kiyomori, chief of the Taira clan, 
transferred the capital from Kioto to Fukuhara, in Hiogo's 
immediate neighbourhood, and undertook various public works 
for improving the place. The change of capital was very brief, 
but Hiogo benefited permanently from the distinction. 

HIP. ( 1 ) (From O. Eng. hype, a word common in various forms 
to many Teutonic languages; cf. Dutch hcup, and Ger. Hiljic), 
the projecting part of the body formed by the top of the thigh- 
bone and the side of the pelvis, in quadrupeds generally known 
as the haunch (see Joints). (?)(0. Eng. hlopt, from same root 
as M.H. Ger. kiefe, a thorn-bush), the fruit of the dog-rose 
(Rasa canina); " hips " are usually joined with " haws," the 
fruit of the hawthorn. 

HIP-KNOB, in architecture, the finial on the hip of a roof, 
between the barge-boards of a gable. 

HIPPARCHUS (fl. 146-226 B.C.), Greek astronomer, was born 
at Nkaea In Bithynia early in the 2nd century B.C. He observed 
in the island of Rhodes probably from 161, certainly from 146 
until about 126 B.C., and made the capital discovery of the 
precession of the equinoxes in 130 (see Astronomy: History). 
The outburst of a new star in 134 B.C. is stated by Pliny (Hist, 
not. ii. 26) to have prompted the preparation of his catalogue 
of 1080 stars, substantially embodied in Ptolemy's Almagest. 
Hipparchus founded trigonometry, and compiled the first table 
of chords. Scientific geography originated with his invention 
of the method of fixing terrestrial positions by circles of latitude 
and longitude. There can be little doubt that the fundamental 
part of his astronomical knowledge was derived from Chaldaea. 
None of his many works has survived except a Commentary 
on the Pkaenomena of Aratus and Eudoxus, published by P. 
Victorius at Florence in 1567, and included by D. Petavius 
in his Urattotogium (Paris, 1630). A new edition was published 
by Carolus Manitius (Leipzig, 1894). 

•See J. B. J. Delambre, Histoire de r astronomic ancienne, i. 173; 
P. Tannery, Recherches sur I' histoire de I'astr. ancienne, p. 130; 
A. Berry, Hist, of Astronomy, pp. 40-61 ; M. Marie, Hist, des sciences, 



i. 307; G. Cornewall Lewis, Astronomy of the Ancients, p. 207; R 
Grant, HisL of Phys. Astronomy, pp. 318, 437; F. Boll, Sphaera, 
p. 61 (Leipzig, 1903)1 R. Wolf, Geschichte der Astronomic, p. 45; 
1. F. Montucia, HisL des mathimatiques, t. L p. 257; J. A. Schmidt, 
Variorum pkUosophicorum decaf, cap. i. (Jcnae, 169;). (A. M. C.) 



HIPPASTJS OP MFTAPOirTBB, Pythagorean philosopher, 
was one of the earliest of the disciples of Pythagoras. He is 
mentioned both by Diogenes Laertiua and by Iamblichus, bat 
nothing is known of his life. Diogenes says that ht left no 
writings, but other authorities make him the author of a ftvorutot 
Xbyot directed against the Pythagoreans. According to Aristotle 
(Metaphysica, i. 3), he was an adherent of the Heradkeaa fire- 
doctrine, whereas the Pythagoreans maintained the theory 
that number is the principle of everything. He seems to nave 
regarded the soul as composed of igneous matter, and so approxi- 
mates the orthodox Pythagorean doctrine of the central fire, 
or Hestia*to the more detailed theories of Heraditus. In spite 
of this divergence, Hippasus is always regarded as a Pythagorean. 

See Diogenes viii. 84; Brandts, History of Creek and Roman 
Philosophy; also Pythagoras. 

HIPPEASTRTJM, in botany, a genus of the natural order 
Amaryllidaceae, containing about 50 species of bulbous plants, 
natives of tropical and sub-tropical South America. In cultiva- 
tion they are generally known as AmaryQis. The handsome 
funnel-shaped flowers are borne in a cluster of two to many, at 
the end of a short hollow scape. The species and the numerous 
hybrids which have been obtained artificially, show a great 
variety in si2c and colour of the flower, including the richest 
deep crimson and blood-red, white, or with striped, mottled or 
blended colours. They are of easy culture, and free-blooming 
habiL Like other bulbs they are increased by offsets, which 
should be carefully removed when the plants are at rest, and 
should be allowed to attain a fair size before removal. These 
young bulbs should be potted singly in February or March, in 
mellow loamy soil with a moderate quantity of sand, about 
two-thirds of the bulb being kept above the level of the soil, 
which should be made quite solid. They should be removed to 
a temperature of 6o° by night and 70 by day, very carefully 
watered until the roots have begun to grow freely, after which 
the soil should be kept moderately moist. As they advance 
the temperature should be raised to 70° at night, and to 80° or 
higher with sun heat by day. They do not need shading, but 
should have plenty of air, and be syringed daily in the afternoon. 
When growing they require a good supply of water. After the 
decay of the flowers they should be returned to a brisk moist 
temperature of from 70° to 8o° by day during summer to perfect 
their leaves, and then be ripened oft in autumn. Through the 
winter they should have less water, but must not be kept entirely 
dry. The minimum temperature should now be about 55°, to 
be increased io° or 15 in spring. As the bulbs get large they 
will occasionally need shifting into larger pots. Propagation 
is also readily effected by seeds for raising new varieties. Seeds 
are sown when ripe in well drained pans of sandy loam at a 
temperature of about 65 . The seedlings when large enough 
to handle are placed either singly in very small pots or several 
in a pot or shallow pan, and put in a bottom heat, in a moist 
atmosphere with a temperature from 6o° to 70 . H. Ackcrmanni, 
with large, handsome, crimson flowers — itself a hybrid — is the 
parent of many of the large-flowered forms; H. equcsire (Barbados 
lily), with yellowish-green flowers tipped with scarlet, has also 
given rise to several handsome forms; H. aulicum (flowers 
crimson and green), H. pardinum (flowers creamy-white spotted 
with crimson), and H. vittalum (flowers white with red stripes, 
a beautiful species and the parent of many varieties), are stove 
or warm greenhouse plants. These kinds, however, are now 
only regarded as botanical curiosities, and are rarely grown in 
private or commercial establishments. They have been ousted 
by the more gorgeous looking hybrids, which have been evolved 
during the past 100 years. H. Johnsoni is named after a. 
Lancashire watchmaker who raised it in 1799 by crossing H. 
Reginae with H. tiltatunu Since that time other species have 
been used for hybridizing, notably H. reticulatum, H. aulicum, 
H. solandriflorum, and sometimes H. equtstre and H. psiltacinum. 
The finest forms since 1880 have been evolved from H. Leopold* 
and H. pardinum. (J. Ws.) 

HIPPED ROOF, the name given in architecture to a roof 
which slopes down on ail four sides instead of terminating 00 



HIPPEL— HIPPOCRATES 



517 



two sides Against a rtrtical gable. Sometimes ft compromise 
» made between the two, hall the rodf being hipped and half 
reeling on the vertical wall; this gives much more .room inside 
the roof, and externally a most picturesque effect, which is one 
of the great attractions of domestic architecture in the south 
of England, and is rarely found in other countries. 

HIPPEI* THEODOR GOTTLIEB VON (1741-1796)1 German 
satirical and humorous writer, was bora on the 31st of January 
174 1, at Gerdauen in East Prussia, where his father was rector 
of a school. He enjoyed an excellent education at home, and In 
his sixteenth year he entered Konigsberg university as a student 
of theology. Interrupting his studies, he went, on the invitation 
of a friend, to St Petersburg, where he was introduced at the 
brilliant court of the empress Catherine U. Returning to 
Konigsberg he became a tutor in a private family; but, falling 
in love with a young lady of high position, his ambition was 
aroused, and giving up his tutorship he devoted himself with 
enthusiasm to legal studies. He was successful in his profession, 
and in 1780 was appointed chief .burgomaster in Konigsberg, 
and in 1786 privy councillor of war and president of the town. 
As he rose in the world, however, his inclination for matrimony 
vanished, and the lady who had stimulated his ambition was 
forgotten. He died at Konigsberg on the 23rd of April 1796, 
leaving a considerable fortune. Hippei had extraordinary 
talents, rich in wit and fancy; but his was a character full of 
contrasts and contradictions. Cautiousness and ardent passion, 
dry pedantry and piety, morality and sensuality; simplicity 
and ostentation composed his nature; and, hence, his literary 
productions never attained artistic finish. In his LebensUtufe 
uach oufsteigcnder Linie (1778-1781) he intended to describe the 
lives of his father and grandfather, but he eventually confined 
himself to his own. It is an autobiography, in which persons 
well known to him are introduced, together with a mass of 
heterogeneous reflections on life and philosophy. Kreu*- und 
QuenUge des Hitters AbisZ(i 793-1 794) is a satire levelled against 
the follies of the age— ancestral pride and the thirst for orders, 
decoration and the like. Among others of his better known 
works are Vber die Eke (1774) and Cber die biirgerliche Ver- 
kesserung der Weiber (1792). Hippei has been called the fore- 
runner of Jean Paul Richter, and has some resemblance to this 
author, in his constant digressions and in the interweaving of 
scientific matter in his narrative. Like Richter he was strongly 
influenced by Laurence Sterne. 

In 1827-1838 a collected edition of Hippel's works in 14 vols., 
was issued at Berlin. Ober die EM has been edited by E. Brenning 
(Leipzig, 1872), and the LebensUvfenach aufsteigender Linie has in 
a modernised edition by A. von Ottingen (1878),. gone through 
several editions. See J. Cxeray, Sterne, Bippd und Jean Paul 
(Berlin. 1904). 

HIPPIAS OF ELIS, Greek sophist, -was born about the middle 
of the 5th century B.C. and was thus a younger contemporary 
of Protagoras and Socrates. He was a man of great versatility 
and won the respect of his fellow-citixens to such an extent that 
ne was sent to various towns on important embassies. At 
Athens he made the acquaintance of Socrates and other leading 
thinkers. With an assurance characteristic of the later sophists, 
he claimed to be regarded as an authority on all subjects, and 
lectured, at all events with financial success, on poetry, grammar, 
history, politics, archaeology, mathematics and astronomy. 
He boasted that be was more popular than Protagoras, and was 
prepared at any moment to deliver an extempore address on 
any subject to the assembly at Olympia. Of his ability there 
is no question, but it is equally certain that he was superficial. 
His aim was not to give knowledge, but to provide his pupils 
with the weapons of argument, to make them fertile in discussion 
on all subjects alike. It is said that he boasted of wearing 
nothing which he had not made with his own hands. Plato's 
two dialogues, the Hippies major and minor, contain an expose 
of his methods, exaggerated no doubt for purposes of argument 
but written with full knowledge of the man and the class which 
he represented. Ast denies their authenticity, but they must 
have been written by a contemporary writer (as they are 
mentioned in the literature of the 4th century), and undoubtedly 



represent the attitude of serious thinkers to the growing influence 
of the professional Sophists. There is, however, no question 
that Hippias did a real service to Greek literature by insisting 
On the meaning of words, the value of rhythm and literary style. 
He is credited with an excellent work on Homer, collections of 
Greek and foreign literature, and archaeological treatises, but 
nothing remains except the barest notes. He forms the con* 
netting link between the first great sophists, Protagoras and 
Prodiais, and the innumerable eristics who brought their name 
into disrepute. 

For the general atmospheee in which Hippias moved tee 
Sophists; also histories of Philosophy (e.g. windelband, Eng. 
trans, by Tufts, pt. 1, c a, IS 7 and 8). 

HIPPO, a Greek philosopher and natural scientist, classed 
with the Ionian or physical school. He was probably a con- 
temporary of Archelaus and lived chiefly in Athens. Aristotle 
declared that he was unworthy of the name of philosopher, and, 
while comparing him with Thales in his main doctrine, adds that 
his intellect was too shallow for serious consideration. He held 
that the principle of all things is moisture (t6 bypdv); that fire 
develops from water, and from fire the material universe. 
Further he denied all existence save that of material things as 
known through the senses, and was, therefore, classed among the 
"Atheists." The gods are merely great men canonized by 
popular tradition. It is said that he composed his own epitaph, 
wherein he claims for himself a place in this company. 

HIPPOCRA3, an old medicinal drink or cordial, made of wine 
mixed with spices— such as cinnamon, ginger and sugar 1 — and 
strained through woollen cloths. The early spelling usual in English 
was ipocras, or ypocras. The word is an adaptation of the Med. 
Lat. Vinum Hdppocratiam, or wine of Hippocrates, so called, not 
because it was supposed to be a receipt of the physician, but from 
an apothecary's name for a strainer or sieve, "Hippocrates' 
slccvc"(see W. W. Skeat, Chancer, note to the Merchant's Tale). 

HIPPOCRATES. Greek philosopher and writer, termed the 
"■ Father of Medicine," was born, according to Soranus, in Cos, 
in the first year of the 80th Olympiad, i.e. in 46b b.c. He was a 
member of the family of the Asclepiadae, and was believed to 
be either the nineteenth or seventeenth in direct descent from 
Aesculapius. It is also claimed for him that he was descended from 
Hercules through his mother, Phaenarete. He studied medicine 
under Heraclides, his father, and Herodicus of Selymbria; in 
philosophy Gorgias of Leontini and Democritus of Abdera were 
his masters. His earlier studies were prosecuted in the famous 
Asclepion of Cos, and probably also at Cnidos. He travelled 
extensively, and taught and practised his profession at Athens, 
probably also in Thrace, Thessaly, Delos and his native island. 
He died at Larissa in Thessaly, his age being variously stated as 
85, 90, 104 and 109. The incidents of his life are shrouded by 
uncertain traditions, which naturally sprang up in the absence of 
any authentic record; the earliest biography was by one of the 
Sorani, probably Soranus the younger of Ephesus, in the 2nd 
century; Suidas, the lexicographer, wrote of him in the nth, and 
Tzetzes in the 12th century. In all these biographies there is 
internal evidence of confusion; many of the incidents related 
are elsewhere told of other persons, and certain of them are 
quite irreconcilable with his character, so far as it can be judged 
of from his writings and from the opinions expressed of him by his 
contemporaries; we may safely reject, for instance, the legends 
that he set fire to the library of the Temple of Health at Cnidos, in 
order to destroy the evidence of plagiarism, and that he refused 
to visit Persia at the request of Artaxerxes Longimanus, during 
a pestilential epidemic, on the ground that he would in so doing be 
assisting an enemy. He is referred to by Plato (Protag. p. 283; 
Phaedr. p. 211) as an eminent medical authority, and his opinion 
is also quoted by Aristotle. 'The veneration in which he was held 
by the Athenians serves to dissipate the calumnies which have 
been thrown on his character by Andreas, and the whole tone of 
his writings bespeaks a man of the highest integrity and purest 
morality. 

Born of a family of priest-physicians, and inheriting all its 
traditions and . prejudices, Hippocrates was the first to cast 



5 x8 



HIPPOCRATES 



superstition aside, and to base the practice of medicine on the prin- 
ciples of inductive philosophy. It is impossible to trace directly 
the influence exercised upon him by the great men of his time, 
but one cannot fail to connect his emancipation of medicine from 
superstition with the widespread power exercised over Creek life 
and thought by the living work of Socrates, Plato, Aeschylus, 
Sophocles, Euripides, Herodotus and Thucydides. It was a 
period of great intellectual development, and it only needed a 
powerful mind such as his to bring to bear upon medicine the 
same influences which were at work in other sciences. It must be 
remembered that his training was not altogether bad, although 
superstition entered so largely into it. He had a great master in 
Democritus, the originator of the doctrine of atoms, and there is 
every reason to believe that the various " asclepia " were very 
carefully conducted hospitals for the sick, possessing a curious 
system of case-books, in the form of votive tablets, left by the 
patients, on which were recorded the symptoms, treatment and 
result of each case. He had these records at his command; and 
he had the opportunity of observing the system of training and 
the treatment of injuries in the gymnasia. One of his great 
merits is that he was the first to dissociate medicine from priest- 
craft, and to direct exclusive attention to the natural history of 
disease. How strongly his mind revolted against the use of 
charms, amulets, incantations and such devices appears from his 
writings; and he has expressly recorded, as underlying all his 
practice, the conviction that, however diseases maybe regarded 
from the religious point of view, they must all be scientifically 
treated as subject to natural laws (De aire, 29). Nor was he 
anxious to maintain the connexion between philosophy and 
medicine which had for long existed in a confused and confusing 
fashion. 1 His knowledge of anatomy, physiology and pathology 
was necessarily defective, the respect in which the dead body was 
held by the Greeks precluding him from practising dissection; 
thus we find him writing of the tissues without distinguishing 
between the various textures of the body, confusing 'arteries, 
veins and nerves, and speaking vaguely of the muscles as 
" flesh." But when we come to study his observations on the 
natural history of disease as presented in the living subject, we 
recognize at once the presence of a great clinical physician. 
Hippocrates based his principles and practice on the theory of 
the existence of a spiritual restoring essence or principle, d»ums, 
the vis medkairix naturae, in the management of which the art 
of the physician consisted. This art could, he held, be only 
obtained by the application of experience, not only to disease at 
large, but to disease in the individual. He strongly deprecated 
blind empiricism; the aphorism " ^ vtlpa <r4>aXepfi, 1) KpLois 
XaX«n7 '• (whether it be his or not), tersely illustrates his position. 
Holding firmly to the principle, vovauv Qbous irfrpol, he did not 
allow himself to remain inactive in the presence of disease; he 
was not a merely " expectant " physician; as Sydenham puts it, 
his practice was " the support of enfeebled and the coercion of 
outrageous nature." He largely employed powerful medicines 
and blood-letting both ordinary and by cupping. He advises, 
however, great caution in their application. He placed great 
dependence on diet and regimen, and here, quaint as many of his 
directions may now sound, not only in themselves, but in the 
reasons given, there is much which is still adhered to at the 
present day. His treatise Uepl akpuv, vHfow, noirbrwv (Airs, 
Waters, and Places) contains the first enunciation of the principles 
of public health. Although the treatises TUpl tcpurlfuap cannot 
be accepted as authentic, we find in the Upar/wxmxbv evidence of 
the acuteness of observation in the manner in which the occur- 
rence of critical days in disease is enunciated. His method of 
reporting cases is most interesting and instructive; in them we 
can read how thoroughly he had separated himself from the 
priest-physician. Laennec, to whom we are indebted for the 
practice of auscultation, freely admits that the idea was suggested 
to him by study of Hippocrates, who, treating of the presence of 
morbid fluids in the thorax, gives very particular directions, by 

1 " Hippocrates Cous, primus quidem ex omnibus memoria 
digmis, ab studio aapicntiac disciplinam hanc scparavit, vir et arte 
ct facundia inftignis " (Celsus, De medtcina). 



means of succession, for arriving at an opinion regarding their 
nature. Laennec says, " Hippocrate avail tent* l'auscukatioo 
immediate." Although the treatise Ibpl tobr is doubtfully 
from the pen of Hippocrates, it contains strong evidence of 
having been the work of his grandson, representing the views of 
the Father of Medicine. Although not accurate in the conclusions 
reached at the time, the value of the method of rfi«giwA jg 
shown by the retention in modern medicine of the name and the 
practice of " Hippocratic succession." The power of graphic 
description of phenomena in the Hippocratic writings is illus- 
trated by the retention of the term " fades Hippocratica," 
applied to the appearance of a moribund person, pictured in the 
Prognostics. In surgery bis writings are important and interest* 
ing, but they do not bear the same character of caution as the 
treatises on medicine; for instance, in the essay On Injuries of 
the Head, he advocates the operation " of trephining " more 
strongly and in wider classes of .cases than would be warranted 
by the experience of later times. 

The Hippocratic Collection consists of eighty-seven treatises, of 
which a part only can be accepted as genuine. The collection has 
been submitted to the closest criticism in ancient and modern times 
by a large number of commentators (for full list of the early com- 
mentators, see Adams's Genuine Works of Hippocrates, Sydenham 
Society, i. 27. 28). The treatises have been classified according 
to ( 1) the direct evidence of ancient writers, (2) peculiarities of style 
ana method, and (3) the presence of anachronisms and of opinions 
opposed to the general Hippocratic teaching — greatest weight 
being attached to the opinions of Erorian and Galen. The general 
estimate of commentators is thus stated by Adams: " The peculiar 
style and method of Hippocrates are held to be conciseness of 
expression, great condensation of matter, and disposition to regard 
all professional subjects in a practical point 01 view, to eschew 
subtle hypotheses and modes of treatment based on vague ab- 
stractions." The treatises have been grouped in the four following 
sections: (1) genuine; (2) those consisting of notes taken by 
students and collected after the death of Hippocrates; (3) essays 
by disciples; (4) those utterly spurious. Littre" accepts the following 
thirteen as absolutely genuine: (l) On Ancient Medicine (IW 
*PX«Art firo><**f); (2) The Prognostics (Uooynmrutop); (3) The 
Aphorisms ('A$o»t*»oO; (4) The Epidemics, i. and iii. ('Krttmnm 
a r KalY); (5) On Regimen %n Acute Diseases (D«pi iudrnt 4&«~); 

(6) On Atrs, Waters, and Pieces [Utpl dlpwr, M&rwr, «*i r*r*»); 

(7) On the Articulations (IIcpl Ap6W) ; (8) On Fractures (n«*t *,*€») ; 
(9) The Instruments of Reduction (MoxXufe); (to) The Physician's 
Establishment, or Surgery (Ear* bjrptio*); (11) On Injuries of the 
Head (lltpl tQ* to ««*aX£ rpumaruif); (12) The Oath ('Op««h); 
(13) The Law (N6pot ). Of these Adams accepts as certainly genuine 
the 2nd. 6th, «h. 3rd (7 books). 4th, 7th, 8th, Qth and t2th. and as 

.. ! — . ^ — ;i y acknowledged as genuine, although the evidence 

in 1 not so strong," the 1st, 10th and 13th. and. in 
ad "** -------- 



* Ulcers (Il«pt IX«A»); (15) On Ftsiulae (U*M 
On Hemorrhoids (n*i qfropfrrfsW) ; (17) On the 
Utfll kpflt mhoov). According to the sceptical 
bjective criticism of Ermerins, the whole collection 
I as spurious except Epidemics, books i. and iu. 
tolations). On Airs, Waters, and Places, On Injt 



signe fragment urn libri Hippocratei "). the former 
reatise On Regimen in Acute Diseases, and the 
pocratic " fragments of the Coan Prognostics. 
Oath may be accepted as genuine; its comparative 
denied. The Aphorisms are certainly later and 
>ther non-Hippocratic writings Ermerins thinks he 
c hands of no fewer than nineteen different authors, 
nymous, and some of them very late. 
»ek edition of the Hippocratic writings is that which 
r Aldus and Asulanus at Venice in 1526 (folio); 
illowed by that of Frobenius. which is much more 
nplete (fol.. Basel, 1538). Of the numerous sub- 
probably the best was that of roestus (Frankfort, 
va, 1657), until the publication of the great works 
s completes aVHippocrate, traduction nouveUe am 
egard, cottationnee sur Us manuscrits et toutes Us 
pee oVune introduction, de commentaires midicaux, 
t notes phUotogiques (10 vols., Paris, 1839-1861), 
nerina, Hippocratis et oJiorum medicorum veterum 
, Utrecht, 1859-1864). See also Adams (as cited 
mold's Hippocrates (2 vols., Athens, 1864-1867). 
ion of the CEuvres choisies (2nd ed.. Paris, 1853) 
, the Lam. the Prosthetics, book i.. the Prognostics, 
and Places, Epidemics, books i. and iii.. Regimen, 
Of the separate works attributed to Hippocrates 
I translations are almost innumerable; of the 
xample. seventy editions are known, while of the 
are said to exist as many as three hundred. For 
e Arabic, Syriac and Hebrew translations of works 



HIPPOCRENE— HIPPOLYTUS 



professedly by Hippocrates (Ibulrrat of Bukrat), the number of 
which greatly exceeds that of the extant Greek originals, reference 
may be made to FlQgd's contribution to the article Hippokrates " 
in the Encyklofmdie of Erach and Gruber. They have been partially 
catalogued by Fabricius in his Bibliotheca Craeca. (J. B. T.) 

HTPPOCRENB (the " fountain of the horse," 4 Tmrou *pfcn»), 
the spring on Mt Helicon, in Boeolia, which, like the other 
spring there, Aganippe, was sacred to the Muses and Apollo, 
and hence taken as the source of poetic inspiration. The spring, 
surrounded by an ancient wall, is now known as Kryopcgadi or 
the cold spring. According to the legend, at was produced by 
the stamping of the hoof of Bellerophon's horse Pegasus. The 
same story accounts for the Hippocrene in Troezen and the 
spring Peirene at Corinth. 

HIPPODAMUS, of Miletus, a Greek architect or the 5th 
century B.C. It was he who introduced order and regularity 
into the planning of cities, in place of the previous intricacy 
end confusion. For Pericles he planned the arrangement of 
the harbour-town Peiraeus at Athens. When the Athenians 
founded Thurii in Italy he accompanied the colony as architect, 
and afterwards, in 408 B.C., he superintended the building of 
the new city of Rhodes. His schemes consisted of series of broad, 
straight streets, cutting one another at right angles. 

HIPPODROME (Gr. iirrdSponoi, from fcnroi, horse, and 
ftpoAJos. racecourse), the course provided by the Greeks for 
horse and chariot racing; it corresponded to the Roman circus, 
except that in the latter only four chariots ran at a time, whereas 
ten or more contended in the Greek games, so that the width 
was far greater, being about 400 ft., the courcc being 600 to 
700 ft. long. The Greek hippodrome was usually set out on the 
slope of a hill, and the ground taken from one side served to 
form the embankment on the other side. One end of the 
hippodrome was semicircular, and the other end square with 
an extensive portico, in front of which, at a lower level, were 
the stalls for the horses and chariots. The modern hippodrome 
is more for equestrian and other displays than for horse racing. 
The Hippodrome in Paris somewhat resembles the Roman 
amphitheatre, being open in the centre to the sky, with seats 
round on rising levels. 

HIPPOLYTUS* in Greek legend, son of Theseus and Hippolyte, 
queen of the Amazons (or of her sister Antiope), a famous hunter 
and charioteer and favourite of Artemis. His stepmother 
Phaedra became enamoured of him, but, finding her advances 
rejected, she hanged herself, leaving a letter in which she accused 
Hippolytus of an attempt upon her virtue. Theseus thereupon 
drove his son from his presence with curses and called upon his 
father Poseidon to destroy him. While Hippolytus was driving 
along the shore at Troezen (the scene of the Hippolytus of 
Euripides), a sea-monster (a bull or phoca) sent by Poseidon 
emerged from the waves; the horses were scared, Hippolytus 
was thrown out of the chariot, and was dragged along, entangled 
in the reins, until he died. According toa tradition of Epidaurus, 
Asclepius restored him to life at the request of Artemis, who 
removed him to Italy (see Virbius). At Troezen, where he had 
a special sanctuary and priest, and was worshipped with divine 
honoura, the story of his death was denied. He was said to 
have been rescued by the gods at the critical moment, and to 
have been placed amongst the stars as the Charioteer (Auriga). 
It was also the custom of the Troeaenian maidens to cut off a 
lock of their hair and to dedicate it to Hippolytus before marriage 
(see F rarer on Pausanias ii. 32. 1). Well-known classical 
parallels to the main theme are Bellcrophon and Antea (or 
Stheneboea) and Peleus and Astydamia. The story was the 
subject of two plays by Euripides (the later of which is extant), 
of a tragedy by Seneca and of Racine's Phtdrc. A trace of it 
has survived in the legendary death of the apocryphal martyr 
Hippolytus, a Roman officer who waa torn to pieces by wild 
horses as a convert to Christianity (see J. J. Dollinger, Hip- 
polytus and Callistus, Eng. tr. by A. Plummer, 1876, pp. 28-39, 
Si-60). 

According to the older explanations, Hippolytus represented 
the sun, which sets in the sea (cf. the scene of his death and the 
story of Phaethon), and Phaedra the moon, which travels behind 



519 



the sun, but is unable to overtake ft. If is more probable, 
however, that he was a local hero famous for his chastity, perhaps 
originally a priest of Artemis, worshipped as a god at Troezen, 
where he was closely connected and sometimes confounded with 
Asclepius. It is noteworthy that, in a speech put into the mouth 
of Theseus by Euripides, the father, who of course believes his 
wife's story and regards Hippolytus as a hypocrite, throws his 
son's pretended misogyny and asceticism (Orphism) in his 
teeth. This seems to point to a struggle between a new ritual 
and that of Poseidon, the chief deity of Troezen, in which the 
representative of the intruding religion meets his death through 
the agency of the offended god, as Orpheus (q.v.) was torn to 
pieces by the votaries of the jealous Dionysus. According, to 
S. Reinach {Archio ftir Religionswissenschaft,x., 1907, p. 47), 
the Troezenian Hippolytus was a horse, the hypostasis of an 
equestrian divinity periodically torn to pieces by the faithful, 
who called themselves, and believed themselves to be, horses. 

D 

of 
fa 

tic 
£l 
D; 
18 
(tl 

which enveloped the person and writings of Hippolytus, 1 one of 
the most prolific ecclesiastical writers of early tiroes, had some 
light thrown upon it for the first time about the middle of the 
19th century by the discovery of the so-called Pkilosophumena 
(see below). Assuming this writing to be the work of Hippolytus, 
the information given in it as to the author and his times can be 
combined with other traditional dates to form a tolerably clear 
picture. Hippolytus must have been born in the second half of 
the 2nd century, probably in Rome. Photius describes him in 
his Biblictheca (cod. i»i) as a disciple of Irenaeus, and from the 
context of this passage it is supposed that we may conclude that 
Hippolytus himself so styled himself. But this is not certain, and 
even if it were, it does not necessarily imply that Hippolytus 
enjoyed the personal teaching of the celebrated Gallic bishop; 
it may perhaps merely refer to that relation of his theological 
system to that of Irenaeus which can easily be traced In his 
writings; As a presbyter of the church at Rome under Bishop 
Zephyrinus (100-217), Hippolytus was distinguished for his 
learning and eloquence. It was at this time that Origen, then a 
young man, heard him preach (Hieron. Vir. ill. 61; cp. Euseb. 
H.B. vi. 14, 10). It was probably not long before questions of 
theology and church discipline brought him into direct conflict with 
Zephyrinus, or at any rate with his successor Calixtus I. (?.*.). 
He accused the bishop of favouring the Christological heresies 
of the Monarchians, and, further, of subverting the discipline of 
the Church by his lax action in receiving back into the Church 
those guilty of gross offences. The result was a schism, and for 
perhaps over ten years Hippolytus stood as bishop at the bead of 
a separate church. Then came the persecution under Maximinus 
the Thracian. Hippolytus and Pontius, who was then bishop, 
were transported in 235 to Sardinia, where it would seem that 
both of them died. From the so-called chronograph of the year 
354 (Catalogus Libcriamus) we learn that on the 13th of August, 
probably in 236, the bodies of the exiles were interred in Rome 
and that of Hippolytus in the cemetery on the Via Tiburtina. 
So we must suppose that before his death the schismatic waa 
received again into the bosom of the Church, and this is confirmed 
by the fact that his memory was henceforth celebrated in the 
Church as that of a holy martyr. Pope Damasus I. dedicated to 
him one of his famous epigrams, and Prudentius( Peristcphanon, 11) 
drew a highly coloured picture of his gruesome death, the details 
of which are certainly purely legendary: the myth of Hippolytus 
the son of Theseus was transferred to the Christian martyr. Of 
the historical Hippolytus little remained in the memory of after 

■ According to the legend St Hippolytus was a Roman soldier 
who was converted by St Lawrence. 



520 



HIPPOLYTUS, CANONS OF: 



ages. . Neither Eusebius (H.E. vi. so, a) nor Jerome ( Vir. ill. 61) 
knew that the author so much read in the East and the Roman 
saint were one and the same person. The notice in the Chronica* 
Paschale preserves one slight reminiscence of the historical facts, 
namely, that Hippolytus's episcopal see was situated at Port us 
near Rome. In 1 551 a marble statue of a seated man was found 
in the cemetery of the Via Tiburtina: on the sides of the 
seat were carved a paschal cycle, and on the back the titles of 
numerous writings. It was the statue of Hippolytus, a work 
at any rate of the 3rd century; at the time of Pius IX. it 
was placed in the Lateran Museum, a record in stone of a lost 
tradition. 

! Hippolytus's voluminous writings, which for variety of 
subject can be compared with those of Origen, embrace the 
spheres of exegesis, homilctics, apologetics and polemic, cbrono- 
graphy and ecclesiastical law. His works have unfortunately 
come down to us in such a fragmentary condition that it is 
difficult to obtain from them any very exact notion of his intel- 
lectual and literary importance. Of his exegetical works the best , 
preserved are the Commentary on the Prophet Daniel and the 
Commentary on the Song of Songs. In spite of many instances of 
a want of taste in his typology, they are distinguished by a certain 
sobriety and sense of proportion in his exegesis. We arc unable 
to form an opinion of Hippolytus as a preacher, for the Homilies 
on the Feast of Epiphany which go under his name are wrongly 
attributed to him. He wrote polemical words directed against 
the pagans, the Jews and heretics. The most important of these 
polemical treatises is the Refutation of all Heresies, which has 
come to be known by the inappropriate title of the Philoso- 
phumena. Of its ten books, the second and third are lost; 
Book i. was for a long time printed (with the title Philoso- 
phumena) among the works of Origen; Books iv.-x. were found in 
1842 by the Greek Minoides Mynas, without the name of the 
author, in a MS. at Mount Athos. It is nowadays universally 
admitted that Hippolytus was the author, and that Books i. ind 
iv.-x belong to the same work. The importance of the work has, 
however, been much overrated; a close examination of the 
sources for the exposition of the Gnostic system which is con- 
tained in it has proved that the information it gives is not 
always trustworthy. Of the dogmatic works, that on Christ and 
Antichrist survives in a complete state. Among other things it 
includes a vivid account of the events preceding the end of the 
world, and it was probably written at the time of the persecu- 
tion under Septimius Severus, i*. about 202. The influence of 
Hippolytus was felt chiefly through his works on chronographic 
and ecclesiastical law. His chronicle of the world, a compilation 
embracing the whole period from the creation of the world up to 
the year 234, formed a basis for many chronographical works 
both in the East and West. In the great compilations of eccle- 
siastical law which arose in the East since the 4th century (see 
below: also Apostolic Constitutions) much of the material was 
taken from the writings of Hippolytus; how much of this is 
genuinely his, how much of it worked over, and how much of it 
wrongly attributed to him, can no longer be determined beyond 
dispute even by the most learned investigation. 

Bibliography.— The edition of J. A. Fabricius, Hippdyti opera 

Saece et latine (2 vols., Hamburg, 1716-1718, reprinted in Gallandi, 
ibtiotheca veterum patrum (vol. ii., 1766), and Migne, Curs us 
patrol, ser. Craeca, vol. x.) is out of date. The preparation of a 
complete critical edition has been undertaken by the Prussian 
Academy of Sciences. The task is one of extraordinary difficulty, 
for the textual problems of the various writings are complex 
and confused: the Greek original is extant in a few cases only 
(the Commentary on Daniel, the Refutation, on Antichrist, parts of 
the Chronicle, and some fragments) ; for the rest we are dependent 
on fragments of translations, chiefly Slavonic, all of which are not 
even published. Of the Academy's edition one volume was published 
at Berlin in 1897, containing the Commentaries on Daniel and on 
the Song of Songs, the treatise on Antichrist, and the Lesser Exege- 
tical and Homiletie Works, edited by Nathanael Bonwetach and Hans 



Achelis. The Commentary on the Song of Songs has also been 
lubtished by Bonwetsch (Leipzig, 1002) in a German translation 
ased on a Russian translation by N. Man- of the Grusian (Georgian) 



text, and he added to it (Leipzig. 1904) a translation of various small 
exegetical pieces, which are preserved in a Georgian version only 
(The Blessing of Jacob, The Blessing of Moses, The Narrative of 



Datid and Goliath). A gnat part of the original of the Chronidm 

has been published by Adolf Bauer (Leipzig. 1905) from the Codex 
MatrUensu Graecus, 221.. For the Refutation we are still dependent 
on the editions of Miller (Oxford, 1851), Duncker and Schneidrwin 
(Gdttingen, i8<q), and Cruice (Paris, i860). An English translation 
is to be found in the Ante-Nicene Christian Library (Ediabvigh, 
1868-1869). 

See Bu risen, Hippolytus and his Age (1852, 2nd ed., 1854; Gee 
ed.. 1853): DoUinger, Hippolytus und KoMstus (Regensb? 1855: 
Eng. transl, Edinb., 1876); Gerhard Ficker, Studien our Hippohh 
frage (Leipzig, 1893); Hans Achelis, Hippdytstudien (Leipzig. 1897): 
Karl Johannes Neumann, Hippolytus von Rom in setner Stellung an 
Stoat und WeU, part i. (Leipzig, 1902) ; Adhemar d'Alee, La TMclogm 
de Saint Hippofyte (Paris, 1906). (G. K.) , 

HIPPOLYTUS, THB CANONS OF. This book stands at the 
head of a series of Church Orders, which contain instructions in 
regard to the choice and ordination of Christian ministers, regula- 
tions as to widows and virgins, conditions of reception of converts 
from heathenism, preparation for and administration of baptism, 
rules for the celebration of the eucharist, for fasting, daily prayers, 
charity suppers, memorial meals, first-fruits, &c We shall give 
(1) a description of the book as we have it at present; (2) a brief 
statement of its relation to allied documents; (3) some remarks 
on the evidence for its date and authorship. 

x. We possess the Canons of Hippolytus only in an Arabic 
version, itself made from a Coptic version of the original Greek. 
Attention was called to the book by Wansleben and Ludolf 
towards the end of the 17th century, but it was only in 1870 that 
it was edited by Hanebcrg, who added a Latin translation, and 
so made it generally accessible.. In 1891 H. Achelis reproduced 
this translation in a revised form, embodying it in a synopsis 
of allied documents. He suspected much interpolation and 
derangement of order, and consequently rearranged its con- 
tents with a free hand. In 1900 a German translation was made 
by H. Ricdel, based on fresh MSS. These showed that the book, 
as hitherto edited, had been thrown into disorder by the displace- 
ment of two pages near the end; they also removed other 
difficulties upon which the theory of interpolation had been 
based. Further discoveries, to be spoken of presently, have 
added to our materials for the study of the book. 

s, the chief of the bishops 
ht canons, to which short 
certainly not original, bat 
e. Canon 1 is prefatory; 
the Trinity, and especially 
■peaks of the expulsion of 
i give regulations for the 
byters and deacons. The 
don : " One of the bishops 
m and say a prayer which 
ith " the offering," taking 
: where the sursum tarda 
ned with the same prayer 
i word bishop " ; but he is 
trs to be inconsistent with 
bed, and the prayer of his 
with various classes in the 
tent for the faith (6) is to 
on : " his confession is his 
(7) are riven the Gospel, 
..ds. A claim to ordination 



bu , -#--* - 

on the ground of gifts of healing (8) is to be admitted, if the facta 
arc clear and the healing b from God. Widows are not ordained 
(9): "ordination is for men only." Canons 10-15 describe con- 
ditions for the admission of converts. Certain occupations are 
incompatible with Christian life: only under compoluoo rray a 
Christian be a soldier. Canons 16-18 deal chiefly with regulation* 
concerning women. Canon 19 is a long one dealing with catechumens, 
preparation for baptism, administration of that sacrament, and of 
the eucharist for the newly baptized. The candidate w twice 
anointed : first, with the oil of exorcism, after he has said, with his 
face westward. " I renounce thee. O devil, and all thy following "; 
and, again, immediately after the baptism. As he stands in the 
water, he declares his faith in response to an interrogatory creed; 
and after each of the three clauses he is immersed. After the 
second anointing the bishop gives thanks " for that Thou hast made 
them worthy that they should be born again, and hast poured out 
Thy Holy Ghost upon them, so that they may belong, each one of 
them, to the body of the Church ": he signs them with the cross 
on their foreheads, and kisses them: The eucharist tbenproceeda: 
" the bishop gives them of the body of Christ and says. This is the 
body of Christ, and they answer Ajsea " ; and siosUaiii; for the asx* 



HIPPOLYTUS, CANONS OF 



Mlllt and honey are then given to them as being " born a second 
time as little children." A warning is added against sating anything 
before communicating. Canons 30-22 deal with fast-days, daily 
services in church, and the fast of the passover-week. Canon s$ 
seems as if it closed the series, speaking, as it does, of " oar brethren 
the bishops " who in their cities have made regulations " according 
to the commands of our fathers the apostles ' "' ' r 

successors alter them ; because it saith that th r 

than the sea, and hath no end." We pass on, ho i 

about the sick (24) who are to be visited by t ; 

it is a great thing for the sick that th* high-prii 1 

(for the shadow of Peter healed the sick). Car 1 

with prayers and church-services. The " seven , 

with reasons for their observance (25): attendance at sermons is 
urged (26), " for the Lord is in the place where his lordship is pro- 
claimed " (comp. Didachk 4, part of the Two Ways). When there 
are no prayers in church, reading at home is enjoined (27) : " let 
the sun each morning sec the book upon thy knees " (comp. Ath. 
Ad virg., I 12, " Let the sun when he ariscth sec the book in thy 
hands ). Prayer must be preceded by the washing of the hands. 
"No believer must take food before communicating, especially 
on fast-days " : only believers may communicate (28). The sacred 
elements must be guarded, " lest anything fall into the cup, and it 
be a sin unto death for the presbyters." No crumb must be dropped, 
" lest an evil spirit get possession of it." Canons 30-35 contain 
various rules, and specially deal wkh suppers for the poor (i.e. 
otapae) and memorial feasts. Then we have a prayer for the offering 
of first-fruits (36) ; a direction that ministers i ' " ' ~ 1 

at " the mysteries " (37) ; and a commanc 
njght of the resurrection (38). The last cane 
a general exhortation to right living, which 
the whole book. In Rieders translation wc 
time as a connected whole. It falls into tw 
first, the true life of ordinary Christians, wa 
empty profession, and laving down roanv 
and then it addresses itself to the " ascete 
to the rank of the angels," and who lives 
poverty. He is encouraged by an exposition 
lines, of the temptations of our Lord, and is s] 
spiritual pride and contempt of other men. 
an appeal for love and mutual service, base< 
Matthew xxv. 

2. It is impossible to estimate the position of the Canons of 
Hippolytus without some reference to allied documents (see 
Apostolical Constitutions), (a) The most important of 
these is what is now commonly called the Egyptian Chunk 
Order. This fa preserved to us in Coptic and Aethiopic versions, 
of which Achelis, in his synopsis, gives German translations. The 
subject-matter and arrangement of these canons correspond 
generally to those of Hippolytus; but many of the details are 
modified to bring them into accord with a later practice. A 
new light was thrown on the criticism of this work by Hauler's 
discovery (1900) of a Latin version (of which, unfortunately, 
about half is missing) in the Verona palimpsest, from which 
he has also given us large Latin fragments of the Didascalia 
(which underlies books i.-vi. of the Apostolic Constitutions, and 
which hitherto we have only known from the Syriac) The Latin 
of the Egyptian Church Order is somewhat more primitive than 
the Coptic, and approaches more nearly, at some points, to the 
Canons 0/ Hippolytus. It has a preface which refers to a treatise 
Concerning Spiritual Gifts, as having immediately preceded it, 
but neither this nor the Coptic- Aethiopic form has either the 
introduction or concluding exhortation which is found in the 
Canons of Hippolytus (b) The Testament of the Lord is a docu- 
ment in Syriac, of which the opening part had been published 
by Lagarde, and of which Rahmani (1809) has given us the whole. 
It professes to contain instructions given by our Lord to the 
apostles after the resurrection. After an introduction containing 
apocalyptical matter, it passes on to give elaborate directions 
for the ordering of the Church, embodying, in a much-expanded 
form, the Egyptian Church Order, and showing a knowledge of 
the preface to that document which appears in the Latin version. 
It cannot be placed with probability earlier than the latter part 
of the 4th century, (c) The Apostolic Constitutions is a composite 
document, which probably belongs to the end of the 4th century. 
Its first six books are an expanded edition of a Didascalia which 
we have already mentioned: its seventh book similarly expands 
and modifies the Didache; its eighth book begins by treating 
of " spiritual gifts," and then in c. 3 passes on to expand in like 
manner the Egyptian Church Order. The band which has 



521 

wrought tip afl these documents has been shown to be that of 
the interpolator of the Ignatian Epistles in the longer Greek 
recension, (a*) The Canons of Basil is the title of an Arabic 
work, of which a German translation has been given us by 
Riedd, who thinks that they have come through Coptic from 
an original Greek book. They embody; in a modified form, 
considerable portions of the Canons of Hippolytus. 

3. We now approach the difficult questions of date and author- 
ship. Much of the material has been quite recently brought to 
light, and criticism has not had time to investigate and pronounce 
upon it. Some provisional remarks, therefore, are all that can 
prudently be made. It seems plain that we have two lines of 
tradition: (1) The Canons of Hippolytus, followed by the 
Canons of Basil; (2) the Egyptian Church Order, itself repre- 
sented (a) by the Latin version, the Testament of the Lord, and 
the Apostolic Constitutions, which are linked together by the 
same preface (or portions of it); (*) by the Coptic and Aethiopic 
versions. Now, the preface of the Latin version points to a time 
when the canons were embodied in a corpus of similar materials, 
or, at the least, were preceded by a work on "Spiritual Gifts." 
The Canons of Hippolytus have a wholly different preface, and 
also a long exhortation at the close. The question which criticism 
must endeavour to answer is, whether the Canons of Hippolytus 
are the original from which the Egyptian Church Order is derived, 
or whether an earlier body of canons lies behind them both. 
At present it is probably wise to assume that the latter is the 
true explanation. For the Canons of Hippolytus appear to 
contain contradictory regulations (e.g. cc 2 and 4 of the 
presbyters), and also suggest that they have received a consider- 
able supplement (after c 23). There is, however, no doubt that 
they present us with a more primitive stage of Church life than 
we find in the Egyptian Church Order. The mention of sub- 
deacons (which, after RiedeTs fresh manuscript evidence, cannot 
now be dismissed as due to interpolation) makes it difficult 
to assign a date much earlier than the middle of the 3rd 
century. 

The Puritan severity of the canons well accords with 
the temper of the writer to whom the Arabic title attributes 
them; and it is to be noted that the exhortation at the 
close contains a quotation from 2 Peter actually attributed 
to the apostle, and Hippolytus is perhaps the earliest 
author who can with certainty be said to have used this epistle. 
But the general style of Hippolytus, which is simple, straight- 
forward and stropg, is in marked contrast with that of the 
closing passage of the canons; moreover, his mind, as presented 
to us in his extant writings, appears to be a much larger one than 
that of the writer of these canons; it is as difficult to think of 
Hippolytus as it would be to think of Origen in such a connexion. 
How, then, are we to account for the attribution? There is 
evidence to show that Hippolytus was highly reverenced through- 
out the East : his writings, which were in Greek, were known, 
but his history was entirely unknown. He was supposed to 
be " a pupil (ypwpiuos) of apostles " (Palladius, 4th century), 
and the Arabic title calls him " chief of the bishops of Rome," 
ie archbishop of Rome. It is hard to trust this attribution 
more than the attribution of a Coptic discourse on the Dormitio 
Mariae to u Evodius, archbishop of the great city Rome, who 
was the second after Peter the apostle " (Texts and Studies, iv. 
2-44)— Evodius being by tradition first bishop of Antioch. 
A whole group of books on Church Order bears the name of 
Clement of Rome; and the attribution of our canons to Hip- 
polytus may be only an example of the same tendency. The 
fact that Hippolytus wrote a treatise Concerning Spiritual Gifts, 
and that some such treatise is not only referred to in the Latin 
preface to the Egyptian Church Order, but is actually found 
at the beginning of book viii. of the Apostolic Constitutions, 
introduces an interesting complication; but we cannot here 
pursue the matter further. Dom Morin's ingenious attribution 
of the canons to Dionysius of Alexandria (on the ground of 
Eusebius, HE. vi. 46., 5) cannot be accepted in view of the broader 
church policy which that writer represents. If the Hippolytean 
authorship be given up, it is probable that Egypt will make 



52a 



HIPPONAX— HIPPOPOTAMUS 



the strongest claim to be the locality in which the canons were 
compiled in their present form. 

The authorities of chief practical importance are H. Achelis, 
Texte u. UnUrs. vi. 4 (1891); Rahmani, Testamentum Domini 
(1809); Hauler, Didascaliae Apostolornm (1900); Riedel, Kirchen- 
rtcktsquttten des Patriarchal* Alexandria* (1900). (J. A. R.) 

HIPPONAX, of Ephesus, Greek iambic poet. Expelled from 
Ephesus in 540 B.C. by the tyrant Athenagoras, he took refuge 
in Clazomenae, where be spent the rest of his life in poverty. 
His deformed figure and malicious disposition exposed him to 
the caricature of the Chian sculptors Bupalus and Athena, upon 
whom he revenged himself by issuing against them a series of 
satires. They are said to have banged themselves like Lycambes 
and his daughters when assailed by Archilochus, the model and 
predecessor of Hipponax. His coarseness of thought and feeling, 
his rude vocabulary, his want of grace and taste, and his numerous 
allusions to matters of merely local interest prevented his becom- 
ing a favourite in Attica. He was considered the inventor 
of parody and of a peculiar metre, the scazon or choiiambus, 
which substitutes a spondee for the final iambus of an iambic 
senarius, and is an appropriate form for the burlesque character 
of his poems. 

Fragments in Bergk, PoHae lyrki Graeci; see also B. J. Peltier, 
De parodied Crauorum poesi (1655), containing an account of 
Hipponax and the fragments. 

HIPPOPOTAMUS ("river-horse," Cr. fmror, horse and 
irora/jfe, river), the name of the largest representative of the 
non-ruminating artiodactyle ungulate mammals, and its living 
and extinct relatives. The common hippopotamus (Hippo- 
potamus amphibius), which formerly inhabited all the great rivers 
of Africa but whose range has now been much restricted, is most 
likely the behemoth of Scripture, and may very probably in 
Biblical times have been found in the Jordan valley, since at a 
still earlier (Pleistocene) epoch it ranged over a large part of 
Europe. It typifies not only a genus, but likewise a family, 
Hippopotamidoe, distinguished from its relatives the pigs and 



The Hippopotamus (Hippopotamus amphibius). 

peccaries, or Suidae, by the following assemblage of characters: 
Muzzle very broad and rounded. Feet short and broad, with 
four subequal toes, bearing short rounded hoofs, and all reaching 
the ground in walking. Incisors not rooted but continuously 
growing; those of the upper jaw curved and directed down- 
wards; those of the lower straight and procumbent. Canines 
very large, curved, continuously growing; upper ones directed 
downwards. Premolars |; molars f . Stomach complex. No 
caecum. 

In form the hippopotamus is a huge, unwieldy creature, 
measuring in the largest specimens fully 14 ft. from the ex- 
tremity of the upper lip to the tip of the tail, while it ordinarily 
attains a length of 1 2 ft., with a height of 5 ft. at the shoulders, 
and a girth round the thickest part of the body almost equal to 
its length. The small cars are exceedingly flexible, and kept in 
constant motion when the animal is seeking 10 catch a distant 



sound; the eyes are placed high up 00 the head, but Utile bckm 
the level of the ears; while the gape is wide, and the upper tip 
thick and bulging so as to cover over even its large tusks when the 
mouth is closed. The molars, which show trefoil-shaped grinding- 
surfaces are well adapted for masticating vegetable substances, 
while the formidable array of long spear-like incisors and curved 
chisel-edged canines or tusks root up rank grass like an agri- 
cultural implement. The legs are short, so that the body is but 
little elevated above the ground; and the feet, which are small 
in proportion to the size of the animal, terminate in four short 
toes each bearing a small hoof. With the exception of a few tufts 
of hair on the lips, on the sides of the head and neck, and at the 
extremity of the short robust tail, the skin of the hippopotamus, 
some portions of which are 2 in. in thickness, is destitute of 
covering. Hippopotamuses are gregarious animals, living in herds 
of from 20 to 40 individuals on the banks and in the beds of 
rivers, in the neighbourhood of which they most readily find 
appropriate food. This consists chiefly of grass and of aquatic 
plants, of which these animals consume enormous quantities, the 
stomach being capable of containing from 5 to 6 bushels. They 
feed principally by night, remaining in the water during the day, 
although in districts where they are little disturbed they are less 
exclusively aquatic. In such remote quarters, they put their 
heads boldly out of the water to blow, but when rendered sus- 
picious they become exceedingly cautious in this respect, only 
exposing their nostrils above the water, and even this they 
prefer doing amid the shelter of water plants. In spite of their 
enormous size and uncouth form, they are expert swimmers and 
divers, and can remain easily under the water from five to eight 
minutes. They walk on the bottoms of rivers, beneath at least 
1 ft. of water. At nightfaU they come on land to feed; and when, 
as often happens on the banks of the Nile, they reach cultivated 
ground, they do immense damage to growing crops, destroying 
by their ponderous tread even more than they devour. To scare 
away these unwelcome visitors the natives in such districts are 
in the habit of kindling fires at night. Although hippopotamuses 
do not willingly go far from the water on which their existence 
depends, they occasionally travel long distances by night in 
search of food, and in spite of their clumsy appearance are able 
to climb steep banks and precipitous ravines with ease. Of a 
wounded hippopotamus which Sir S. Baker saw leaving the 
water and galloping inland, he writes: " I never could have 
imagined that so unwieldy an animal could have exhibited such 
speed. No man could have had a chance of escape. 1 ' The 
hippopotamus does not confine itself to rivers and lakes, but has 
been known to prefer the waters of the ocean as its home during 
the day. Of a mild and inoffensive disposition, it seeks to avoid 
collision with man; when wounded, however, or in defence of 
its young, it exhibits great ferocity, and native canoes are 
capsized and occasionally demolished by its infuriated attacks; 
the bellowing grunt then becoming loud enough to be heard a 
mile away. As among elephants, so also among hippopotamuses 
there arc "-rogues " — old bulls which have become soured in 
solitude, and are at all times dangerous. Assuming the offensive 
on every occasion, they attack all and sundry without shadow 
of provocation; and the natives avoid their haunts, which are 
usually well known. 

The only other living species is the pygmy hippopotamus, 
H. (Choeropsis) liberiensis, of West Africa, an animal not larger 
than a clumsily made pig of full dimensions, and characterized 
by having generally one (in place of two) pair of incisors. It is 
much less aquatic than its giant relative, having, in fact, the 
habits of a pig. 

A small extinct species (H. lemerlei) inhabited Madagascar at 
a comparatively recent date; while other dwarf kinds were 
natives of Crete (H. minutus) and Malta and Sicily (H. penllandi) 
during the Pleistocene. A large form of the ordinary species 
(H. amphibius major) was distributed over Europe as far north 
as Yorkshire at the same epoch; while an allied species (H, 
palacindkus) inhabited Pleistocene India. Contemporary with 
the latter was, however, a species (//. namadicus) with three 
pairs of incisors; and " hexaprotodont " hippopotamuses are 



HIPPURIC ACID— HIROSHIGE 



523 



ibo characteristic of the Pliocene of India and Burma (H. 
sivalensis and H. iravodiau), and of Algeria, Egypt and southern 
Europe (H. kipponcnsU). 
For the ancestral genera of the hippopotamus fine, see Artto- 

BACTYLA, <R. L.*) 

HIPPURIC ACID (Gr. fare*, hone, otipdP, mine), ben- 
aoyl glycocoll or benzoyl amidoacetic add, C»H,NOj or 
CftHiCO'NH'CHrCOtH, an organic acid found fn the urine of 
horses and other berbivorae. It is excreted When many aromatic 
compounds, such as benzoic acid and toluene, are taken in* 
ternally . J. v. Liebig in 1 829 showed that it differed from benzoic 
acid, and in 1830 determined its constitution, while in 1853 
V. Dessaignes (Ann. 87, p. 335) synthesized it by acting with 
benzoyl chloride on zinc glycocollide. It is also formed by 
heating benzoic anhydride with glycocoD (Th. Curtius, Ber., 1884, 
17, p, 1662), and by heating benzamide with monochloracetic 
add. It crystallizes in rhombic prisms which are readily soluble 
in hot water, melt at 187° C. and decompose at about 240* C. It 
is readily hydrolysed by hot caustic alkalis to benzoic acid and 
glycocoll. Nitrous add converts it into benzoyl glycollic add, 
C«HiCO-0-CHr COtH. Its ethyl ester reacts with hydrazine to 
form hippuryl hydrazine, C,H»CONHCH,CONHNH,, which 
was used by Curt i us for the preparation of azoimide (?.*.)• 

HIPURNIAS, a tribe of South American Indians, 2000 or 3000 
in number, living on the river Purus, western Brazil. Their 
houses are long, low and narrow: the side walls and roof are one, 
poles being fixed in the ground and then bent together so as to 
meet and form a pointed arch for the cross-sections. They use 
small bark canoes. Their chief weapons are poisoned arrows. 
They have a native god called Cuintiniri. 

HIRA, the capital of an Arabian kingdom, founded in the 2nd 
century a.o., on the western edge of Irak, was situated at 32° 
N., 44° 20' E., about 4 m. S.E. of modern Nejef, by the Sa'ade 
canal, on the shore of the Bahr Nejef or Assyrium Stagnum. 
Its kings governed the western shore of the lower Euphrates and 
of the Persian Gulf, their kingdom extending inland to the con- 
fines of the Nejd. This Lakhmid kingdom was more or less 
dependent, during the four centuries of its existence, on the 
Sassanian empire, to which it formed a sort of buffer state 
towards Arabia. After the battle of Kadesiya and the founding 
of Kufa by the Arabs, Hira lost its importance and fell into 
decay. The ruin mounds covering the ancient site, while ex- 
tensive, are insignificant in appearance and give no indications 
of the existence of important buildings. 

HIRADO, an island belonging to Japan, 19} m. long and 6 m. 
wide, lying off the west coast of the province of Hizen, Kiushiu, 
in 33 15* N. and 129 25' E. It is celebrated as the site of the 
original Dutch factory— often erroneously written Firando— • 
and as the place where one of the finest blue-and-white porcelains 
of Japan {Hiradoyaki) was produced in tjie 17th and i8ih 
centuries. The kilns arc still active. 

HIRE-PURCHASE AGREEMENT, in the law of contract, a 
form of bailment of goods, on credit, which has extended very 
considerably of late years. Originally applied to the sale of 
the more expensive kinds of goods, such as pianos and articles 
of furniture, the hire-purchase agreement has now been extended 
to almost every description. The agreement is usually in writing, 
with a stipulation that the payments to purchase shall be by 
weekly, monthly or other instalments. The agreement is virtually 
one to purchase, but in order that the vendor may be able to 
recover the goods at any time on non-payment of an instalment, 
it is treated as an agreement to let and hire, with a provision 
that when the last instalment has been paid the goods shall 
become the property of the hirer. A clause provides that in 
case of default of any instalment, or breach of any part of the 
agreement, all previous payments shall be forfeited to the lender, 
who can forcibly recover the goods. Such agreements, therefore, 
do not pass the property in the goods, which remains in the 
lender until all the instalments have been paid. But the terms 
of the agreement may sometimes purposely obscure the nature 
of the transaction between the pasties, where, for example, the 
hire-purchase is merely to create a security for money. In such 



a case a fudge will look to the true nature of the transaction. 
H it is net a real letting and hiring, the agreement will require 
registration under the Bills of Sale Acts. If the agreement 
contains words to the effect that a person has " bought or agreed 
to buy " goods, the transaction comes under the Factors Act 
1889, and the person in possession of the goods may dispose 
of them and give a good title. The doctrine of reputed ownership, 
by which a bankrupt is deemed the reputed owner of goods in 
his apparent possession, has been somewhat modified by trade 
customs, in accordance with which property is frequently let 
out on the hit e-purcbasc system (see Bankruptcy). 

HIRING (from O. Eng. Jrfrian, a word common to many Teutonic 
languages cf. Ger. heuern, Dutch kuren, &c), in law, a contract 
by which one man grants the use of a thing to another in return 
for a certain price. It corresponds to the loeatio-conductio of 
Roman law. That contract was dther a letting of a thing 
{hcatio-conductio ret) or of labour {locatio operarum). The 
distinguishing feature of the contract was the price. Thus the 
contracts of mutuum, commodatum, depositttm and mandatitm, 
which are all gratuitous contracts, become, if a price is fixed, 
cases of locatio «mdutl\o. In modern English law the term can 
scarcely be said to be used in a strictly technical sense. The 
contracts which the Roman law grouped together under the 
head of locatio-conductio— such as those of landlord and tenant, 
master and servant, &c. — are not in English law 'treated as cases 
of hiring but as independent varieties of contract. Nrilher 
in law books nor in ordinary discourse could a tenant farmer 
be said to hire his land. Hiring would generally be applied to 
contracts in which the services of a man or the use of a thing 
are engaged for a short time. 

Hiring Fairs, or Statute Fairs, still held in Wales and some 
parts of England, were formerly an annual fixture in every 
important country town. These fairs served to bring together 
masters and servants. The men and maids seeking work stood 
in rows, the males together and the females together, while masters 
and mistresses walked down the lines and selected those who 
suited them. Originally these hiring-fairs were always held on 
Martinmas Day (nth of November). Now tbey are held on 
different dates in different towns, usually in October or November. 
In Cumberland the men seeking work stood with straws in thdr 
mouths. In Lincolnshire the bargain between employer and 
employed was dosed by the giving of the " fasten-penny," the 
earnest money, usually a shilling, which " fastened " the contract 
for a twelvemonth. Some few days after the Statute Fair it 
was customary to hold a second called a Mop Fair or Runaway 
Mop. " Mop " (from Lat. map pa, napkin, or small cloth) 
meant in Old English a tuft or tassel, and the fair was so called, 
it is suggested, in allusion to tufts or badges worn by those 
seeking employment. Thus the carter wore whipcord on his 
hat, the cowherd a tuft of cow's hair, and so on. Another 
possible explanation would be to take the word " mop " in its 
old provincial slang sense of " a fool," mop fair bdng the fools' 
fair, a sort of last chance offered to those who were too dull or 
slovenly-looking to be hired at the statute fair. Perhaps " run- 
away " suggests the idea of those absent through drunkenness, 
or those who simply feared to face the ordeal of the larger hiring 
and so ran away. 

HIR06AKI, a town of Japan in the province of Michmoku 
or Rikuchiu, north Nippon, 22 m. S.W. of Aomori by rail. Pop. 
about 37,000. The fine isolated cone of Iwakisan, a mountain 
of pilgrimage, rises to the west. Hirosaki is a very old place, 
formerly residence of a great daimio (or daimyo) and capital of 
a vast prindpality, and still the seat of a high court with juris- 
diction over the surrounding districts of Aomori and Akita. 
Like most places in north Nippon, it is built with continu- 
ous verandas extending from house to house, and affording a 
promenade completely sheltered from the snows of winter. 
Apples of fine flavour grow in the district, which also enjoys 
some reputation for its peculiar green lacquer-ware. 

HIROSHIGE (1797-1858), Japanese artist, was one of the 
principal members of that branch of the Ukiyo~ye or Popular 
School of Painting in Japan, a school which chiefly made 



524 



HIROSHIMA— iHiRSCH, M, DB 



colour-prints. Hit family name was Andft TokitarO; that under 
which he is known having been, in accordance with Japanese 
practice, adopted by him in recognition of the fact that be was 
a pupil of Toyohiro. The earliest reference to him is in the 
account given by an inhabitant of the Lu-chu islands of a 
visit to Japan; where a sketch of a procession drawn with great 
skill by Hiroshige at the age of ten years only is mentioned as 
one of the remarkable sights seen. At the age of fifteen he 
applied unsuccessfully to be admitted to the studio of the elder 
Toyokuni; but was eventually received by Toyohiro. On the 
death of the latter in 1828, he began to practise on his own 
account, but finding small encouragement at Yedo (Tdkyo) he 
removed to Kioto, where he published a set of landscapes. He 
soon returned to Yedo, where his work soon became popular, 
and was imitated by other artists. He died in that city on the 
6th day of the 9th month of the year, Ansei 5th, at the age of 
sixty-two, and was buried at Asakusa. One of his pupils, 
Hironobu, received from him the name of Hiroshige II. and 
another, Ando Tokubei, that of Hiroshige III. All three were 
closely associated with the work signed with the name of the 
master. Hiroshige II. some time after the year 1863 fell into 
disgrace and was compelled to leave Yedo for Nagasaki, where 
he died; Hiroshige III. then called himself Hiroshige II. He 
died in 1896. The earlier prints by these artists, whose work 
can hardly be' separated, are of extraordinary merit. They 
applied the process of colour block printing to the purposes 
of depicting landscape, with a breadth, skil) and suitability of 
convention that has been equalled only by Hokusai in Japan, 
and by no European. Most of their subjects were derived from 
the neighbourhood of Yedo, or were scenes on the old high road 
—the Tokaidd— that ran from that city to Kiato. The two 
elder of the name were competent painters, and pictures and 
drawings by them are occasionally to be met with. 

See E. F. Strange, "Japanese Colour-prints" (Victoria and 
Albert Museum Handbook, 1904). (E. F. S.) 

HIROSHIMA, a city and seaport of Japan, capital of the 
government of its name in central Nippon. Pop. (1903) 1 13,545* 
It is very beautifully situated on a small plain surrounded by 
hills, the bay being studded with islands. In its general aspect it 
resembles Osaka, from which it is too m. W. by rail, and next to 
that place and Hiogo it is the most important commercial centre 
on the Inland Sea. The government has an area of about 3000 
sq. m., with a population of about 1,500,000. Hiroshima is 
famous all over Japan owing to its association with the neighbour- 
ing islet of Iuku-Shima, " Island of Light," which is dedicated 
to the goddess Bentin and regarded as one of the three wonders 
of Japan. The chief temple dates from the year 587, and the 
island, which is inhabited largely by priests and their attendants, 
is annually visited by thousands of pilgrims. But the hallowed 
soil is never tilled, so that all provisions have to be brought from 
the surrounding districts. 

HIRPINI (from an Oscan or Sabine stem kirpo-, "wolf "), an 
inland Saronite tribe in the south of Italy, whose territory was 
bounded by that of the Lucani on the S., the Campani on the 
S.W., the Appuli (Apuli) and Frentani on the E. and N.E. On 
the N. we find them, politically speaking, identified with the 
Pentri and Caracini, and with them constituting the Samnite 
alliance in the wars of the 4th century B.C. (see Samnitcs). 
The Roman policy of separation cut them off from these allies by 
the foundation of Beneventum in 268 B.C., and henceforward they 
are a separate unit; they joined Hannibal in 2x6 B.C., and re- 
tained their independence until, after joining in the Social war, 
which in their part of Italy can hardly be said to have ceased till 
the final defeat of the Samnites by Sulla in 83 B.C., they received 
the Roman franchise. Of their Oscan speech, besides the 
evidence of their place-names, only a few fragments survive 
(R. S. Conway, The Italic Dialects, pp. 170 ff.; and for kirpo- , 
ib. p. 200). In the ethnology of Italy the Hirpini appear from 
one point of view as the purest type of Safine stock, namely, that 
in which the proportion of ethnica formed with the suffix -no- 
is highest, thirty-three out of thirty-six tribal or municipal 
epithets being formed thereby (e.g. Caudini, Compsanf) and only 



one with the suffix -tf- {AbtUmaks), where ft Is dearly second- 
ary. On the significance of this see Sabwi. (R. S. C.) 

HIRSATJ (formerly Hirschau), a village of Germany, in the 
kingdom of Wttrttembcrg, on the Nagold and the Pforzheim- 
Horb railway, 2 m. N. of Calw. Pop. 800. Hirsau has some 
small manufactures, but it owes its origin and historical interest 
to its former Benedictine monastery, M onasterium Hirsaugicnse, 
at one period one of the most famous in Europe. Its picturesque 
ruins, of which only the chapel with the library hall are still in 
good preservation, testify to the pristine grandeur of the establish- 
ment. It was founded about 830 by Count Erlafried of Calw, at 
the instigation of his son, Bishop Notting of VerceUi, who en- 
riched it with, among other treasures, the body of St Aurelius. 
Its first occupants (838) were a colony of fifteen monks from 
Fulda, disciples of Hrabanus Maurus and Walafrid Strabo, 
headed by the abbot Liudebert. During about a century and a 
half, under the fostering care of the counts of Calw, it enjoyed 
great prosperity, and became an important seat of learning; but 
towards the end of the 10th century the ravages of the pestilence 
combined with the rapacity of its patrons, and the selfishness 
and immorality of its inmates, to bring it to the lowest ebb. 
After it had been desolate and in ruins for upwards of sixty years 
it was rebuilt in 1059, and under Abbot William— Wilhelm von 
Hirsau— abbot from 1069 to 1091, it more than regained Its 
former splendour. By his ConsUtutiones Hirsaugunses, a new 
religious order, the Ordo Hirsaugiensis, was formed, the rule of 
which was afterwards adopted by many monastic establishments 
throughout Germany, such as those of Blaubeuren, Erfurt and 
Schaffhausen. The friend and correspondent of Pope Gregory 
VII., and of Anselm of Canterbury, Abbot William took active 
part in the politico-ecclesiastical controversies of his time; 
while a treatise from his pen, De musica el tonis, as well as the 
Philosopkicarum el asUronomicarum institutionum libri n't., bears 
witness to his interest in science and philosophy. About the end 
of the 1 2th century the material and moral welfare of Hirsau 
was again very perceptibly on the decline; and it never after- 
wards again rose into importance. In consequence of the 
Reformation it was secularised in 1558; in 1692 it was laid in 
ruins by the French. The Ckronicon HirsaugUnse, or, as in the 
later edition it is called, Annates Hirsaugienses of Abbot Trithe- 
mius (Basel, 1559; St Gall, 1690), is, although containing much 
that is merely legendary, an important source of information, 
not only on the affairs of this monastery, but also on the early 
history of Germany. The Codex Hirsaugiensis was edited by 
A. F. Gfrttrer and printed at Stuttgart in 1843. 

See Steely Das Kloster Hirschau (1844) ; Helmsddrfer, Forsckungm 
tur Ceschichte des Abts Wilhelm von Hirschau (Gottingen, 1874); 
Wcizsacker, FUhrer durch die Ceschichte des Klosters Hirschau 
(Stuttgart, 1898); SQssmann, Forsthungen tur Ceschichte da 
Klosters Hirschau (Halle, 1903): Giseke, Die Hirschauer vtdhrend 
des Jnvestiturstreits (Got ha, 1883); C. H. Klaiber, Das Kloster 
Hirschau (Ttibingen, 1886); and Baer, Die Hirsauers Bauschuls 
(Freiburg, 1897). 

HIRSCH, MAURICE DE, Baron Hi*sch aut Gereuth, in the 
baronage of Bavaria (1831-1896), capitalist and philanthropist 
(German by birth, Austro-Hungarian by domicile), was born at 
Munich, 9th December 1831. His grandfather, the first Jewish 
landowner in Bavaria, was ennobled with the pr&dikat "auf 
Gereuth "in x8i8; his father, who was banker to the Bavarian 
king, was created a baron in 1 869. The family for generations has 
occupied a prominent position in the German Jewish community. 
At the age of thirteen young Hirscb was sent to Brussels to school, 
but when seventeen years old he went into business. In 1855 
he became associated with the banking house of Bischoffsheim 
& Goldschmidt, of Brussels, London and Paris. He amassed a 
large fortune, which he increased by purchasing and working 
railway concessions in Austria, Turkey and the Balkans, and by 
speculations in sugar and copper. While living in great splendour 
in Paris and London and on his estates in Hungary, he devoted 
much of his time to schemes for the relief of his Hebrew co- 
religionists in lands where they were persecuted and oppressed. 1 
He took a deep interest in the educational work of the Alliance 
Israelite Univeiselk, and on two occasions presented the society 



HIRSCH, S..IL— HISHAM IBM AL-KALBI 



525 



with gifts of a million francs. For some years he regularly paid 
the deficits in the accounts of the Alliance, amounting to several 
thousand pounds a year. In 1889 he capitalized his donations 
and presented the society with securities producing an annual 
income of £16,000. On the occasion of the fortieth anniversary 
of the emperor Francis Joseph's accession to the Austiian throne 
" he gave £500,000 for the establishment of primary and technical 
schools in Galicia and the Bukowina. The greatest charitable 
enterprise on which he embarked was in connexion with the 
persecution .of the Jews in Russia (see Anti-Semitism). He 
gave £10,000 to the funds raised for the repatriation of the 
refugees in 1862, but, feeling that this was a very lame conclusion 
to the efforts made in western Europe for the relief of the Russian 
Jews, he offered the Russian Government £2,000,000 for the en* 
dowment of a system of secular education to be established in the 
Jewish pale of settlement; The Russian Government was willing 
to accept the money, but declined to allow any foreigner to be 
concerned in its control or administration. Thereupon Baron 
de Hirsch resolved to devote the money to an emigration and 
colonization scheme whieh should afford the persecuted Jews 
opportunities of establishing themselves in agricultural colonies 
outside Russia. He founded the Jewish Colonization Association 
as an English society, with a capital of £2,000,000, and in 1892 
he presented to it a further sum of £7,000,000. On the death of 
his wife in 1809 the capital was increased to £1 1,000,000, of which 
£1,250,000 went to the Treasury, after some litigation, in death 
duties. This enormous fund, which is probably the greatest 
charitable trust in the world, is now managed by delegates of 
certain Jewish societies, chiefly the Anglo-Jewish Association of 
London and the Alliance Israelite Universelk of Paris, among 
whom the shares in the association have been divided. The 
association, which is prohibited from working for profit, possesses 
large colonies in South America, Canada and Asia Minor. In 
addition to its vast agricultural work it has a gigantic and complex 
machinery for dealing with the whole problem of Jewish persecu- 
tion, including emigration and distributing agencies, technical 
schools* co-operative factories, savings and loan banks and model 
dwellings in the congested Russian Jewries. It also subventions 
and assists a large number of societies all over the world whose 
work is connected with the relief and rehabilitation of Jewish 
refugees. Besides this great organization, Baron de Hirsch 
founded in 1891 a benevolent trust in the United States for the 
benefit of Jewish immigrants, which he endowed with £493,000. 
His minor charities were on a princely scale, and during his 
residence in London he distributed over £100,000 among the 
local hospitals. It was in this manner that he disposed of the 
whole gross proceeds derived from bis successes on the English 
turf, of which be was a lavish patron. He raced, as be said 
himself, " for the London hospitals," and in 1892, when his filly, 
La Flecbe, won the Oaks, St Leger and One Thousand Guineas, 
his donations from this source amounted to about £40,000. 
Baron de Hirsch married on 28th June 1855 Clara, daughter of 
Senator Bischonsbeim of Brussels (b. 1853), by whom he had a 
son and daughter, both of whom predeceased him. He died at 
Ogyalla, near Komorn, in Hungary, atst April 1896. The 
baroness, who seconded her husband's charitable work with 
great munificence— their total benefactions have been estimated 
at £18,000,000,— died at Paris on the 1st of April 1899. 

For details of Baron de Hirsch's chief charities tee the annual 
reports of the Alliance Israelite Universale and of the " Adminis- 
tration Centrale " of the Jewish Colonization Association. (L. W.) 

HIRSCH, SAMSON RAPHAEL (1808-1888)', Jewish theologian, 
was born in Hamburg in 1808 and died at Frankfort -on-the-Main 
in 1888. He opposed the reform tendency of Gdger (?.».), and 
presented Jewish orthodoxy in a new and attractive light. His 
philosophical conception of tradition, associated as it was with 
conservatism in ritual practice, created what is often known as 
the Frankfort " Neo-Orthodozy." Hirsch exercised a profound 
influence on the Synagogue and undoubtedly stemmed the tide 
of liberalism. His famous Nineteen Letters (1836), with which 
the Neo-Ortbodoxy began, were translated Into English by 
Drachma nn (New York, 1899). Other works by Hirsch were 



Uortk, and commentaries on the Pentateuch and Psalms. These 
are marked by much originality, but their exegesis is fanciful. 
Three volumes of his essays have been published (1902-1908); 
these were collected as GesomneUe Schriflen from his periodical 
Jesckurun. 

For Hirsch's religious philosophy see S. A. Hirsch, A Book of 
Essays (London, 1905). tf. A.) , 

HIRSCHBBRG, a town of Germany, in the Prussian province 
bf Silesia, beautifully situated at the confluence of the Bober and 
Zacken, 1x20 ft. above the sea-level, 48 m. S.E. of Corlitz, on the 
railway to Glatz, with branches to Grttnthal and Schmiedeberg. 
Fop. (1005) 19,317. It is surrounded by pleasant promenades 
occupying the site of its former fortifications. It possesses an 
Evangelical church, the church of the Holy Cross, one of the six 
Gnaden Kitchen for the Silesian Protestants stipulated for in the' 
agreement at Altranstadt between Charles XII. of Sweden and the 
emperor Joseph I. in 1707, four Roman Catholic churches, one of 
which dates from the 14th century, a synagogue, several schools, 
an orphanage and an asylum. The town is the principal emporium 
of commerce in the Silesian mountains, and its industries include 
the carding and spinning of wool, and the manufacture of linen and 
cotton fabrics, yarn, artificial flowers, paper, cement, porcelain, 
sealing-wax, blacking, chemicals and cider. There is also a 
lively trade in corn, wine and agricultural produce. The town' 
is celebrated for its romantic surroundings, including the 
Cavalierberg, from which there is a splendid view, the Hausberg,' 
the Helicon, crowned by a small Doric temple, the Kreuzberg, 
with walks commanding beautiful views, and the Saltier* 
ravine, over which there is a railway viaduct. Hirschberg was' 
in existence in the nth century, and obtained town rights in' 
x 108 from Duke Boleslaus of Poland. It withstood a siege by the 
Hussites in 1427, and an attack of the imperial troops in 1640. 1 
The foundation of its prosperity was laid in the x6th century by' 
the introduction of the manufacture of linen and veils. 

Hirschberg is also the name of a town of Thuringia on the 1 ; 
Saale with manufactures of leather and knives. Pop. 3000. 

HIRSON, a town of northern France in the department of 1 
Aisne, 35 m. by rail N.E. of Laoo, on the Oise. Pop. (1906)' 
8335. It occupies an important strategic position close to the 
point of intersection of several railway lines, and not far from' 
the Belgian frontier. For its defence there are a permanent fort 
and two batteries* near the railway junction. The town carries 
on the manufacture of glass bottles, tiles, iron and tin goods, 
wool-spinning and brewing. 

HIRTIUS, AULDS (c. 90-43 B.C.), Roman historian and states- 
man. He was with Julius Caesar as legate in Gaul, but after the 
civil war broke out in 49 he seems to have remained in Rome to 
protect Caesar's interests. He was also a personal friend of 
Cicero. He was nominated with C. Vibius Pansa by Caesar for 
the consulship of 43; and after the dictator's assassination in 
March 44, he and his colleague supported the senatorial party 
against M. Antonius, with whom Hirtius had at first sided. The 
consuls set out for Mutina, where Antonius was besieging Dedmus 
Brutus. On the tsth of April, Pansa was attacked by Antonius 
at Forum Gallonim, about 8 m. from Mutina, and lost his life 
in the engagement. Hirtius, however, compelled Antonius to 
retire on Mutina, where another battle took place on the 25th 
(or 27th) of April, in which Hirtius was slain. Of the continua- 
tions of Caesar's Commentaries— the eighth book of the Gallic war, 
the history of the Alexandrian, African and Spanish wars—the 
first is generally allowed to be by Hirtius; the Alexandrian war 
is perhaps by him (or Oppius) ; the last two are supposed to have 
been written at his request, by persons who had taken part in the 
events described, with a view to subsequent revision and incorpora- 
tion in his prorx>sed work cm rnilitaxy commanders. The language 
of Hirtius is good, but his style is monotonous and lacks vigour. 

Hirtius and the other conriauatort of Caesar are discussed in M. 
Schanz, CesekichU der rOmischcn Literatur, I; also R. Schneider, 
Bdlum Africanum (1905). For the history of the period see under 
Aktonius: Cicero's Letters (ed. Tyrrell and Purser); G. Boissier, 
Cicero and his Friends (Eng. trans., 1897). 

HISHAM IBN AL-KALBI [Abu-1 MundMr HfehSm ibn 
M aho m med ibn us-Sa'ib ul-Kalb] d. c. 8x9), Arabic historian, 



526 



HISPELLUM— HISSAR 



was born in Kufa, but spent much of his life in Bagdad. Like his 
father, on whose authority he relied largely, he collected informa- 
tion about the genealogies and history of the ancient Arabs. 
According to the Fihrist (see NaoIm) he wrote 140 works. As 
independent works they have almost entirely ceased to exist, but 
his account of the genealogies of the Arabs is continually quoted 
in the Kildb ul-Agh&ni. 

Large extracts from another of his works, the KiUSb uI-Asn&m, 
are contained in the KhizAnat ul-Adab (iii. 242-246) and in the 
geography of Yftqut (q.v.). These latter have been translated with 
comments by J. Wellhausen in his Rest* des arabischen Hetdentums 
(2nd ed., Berlin, 1897). (G. W. T.) 

HISPBLLUM (mod. Spello, q.v.), an ancient town of fimbria* 
Italy, 5 m. N. of Fulginiae, on the road between it and Perusia, 
1030 ft. above sea-kveL It does not appear to be mentioned 
before the time of Augustus, who founded a colony there {Colonia 
lulia His pelt um) and extended its territory to the springs of the 
Clitumnus, which had originally belonged to the territory of 
Mevania. It received the name of Flavia Constans by a rescript 
of the emperor Constantino, a copy of which on a marble tablet 
is still preserved at Spello. The gate by which the town is 
entered is ancient and has three portrait statues above it; two 
other gates and a part of the city wall, built of rectangular blocks 
of local limestone, may still be seen, as also the ruins of what 
is possibly a triumphal arch (attributed to Augustus) and an 
amphitheatre, and perhaps of a theatre, close to the modern 
high-road, outside the town. (T. As.) 

HISSAR, a district in Central Asia, lying between 66° 30' and 70 
E. and 39° 15' and 37° N. and dependent on the amir of Bokhara. 
It forms that part of the basin of the Amu-darya or Oxus which 
lies on the north side of the river, opposite the Afghan province 
of Balkh. The western prolongation of the Tian-shan, which 
divides the basin of the Zarafshan from that of the upper Amu, 
after rising to a height of 12,300 ft., bifurcates in 67 45' £. The 
main chain, the southern arm of this bifurcation, designated the 
Hissar range, but sometimes called also Koh-Mau, forms the N. 
and N.W. boundaries of Hissar. On the W. it is wholly bounded 
by the desert; the Amu limits it on the S. and S.E.; and Kara- 
teghin and Darvaz complete the boundary on the E. Until 
1875 it was one of the least known tracts of Central Asia. Hissar 
is traversed from north to south by four tributaries of the Amu, 
viz. the Surkhab or Vakhsb, Kafirnihan, Surkhan and Shirabad- 
darya, which descend from the snowy mountains to the north 
and form a series of fertile valleys, disposed in a fan-shape, 
within which lie the principal towns. In the N.W. boundary 
range between Rhuzar and Derbent is situated the defile 
formerly called the Iron Gate (Caspian Gates, Bftb-al-Hadld, Dar 
Ahanln and in Chinese T'ie-men-kuan) but now styled Buzghol- 
khana or the Goat-house. It was also called Kohluga, said to be 
a Mongol word meaning barrier. This pass is described as a deep 
but narrow chasm in a transverse range, whose rocks overhang 
and threaten to choke the tortuous and gloomy corridor (in 
places but five paces wide) which affords the only exit from the 
valley. In ancient times it was a vantage point of much im- 
portance and commanded one of the chief routes between 
Turkestan and India. Hsttan Tsang, the Chinese traveller, who 
passed through it in the 7th century, states that there were 
then two folding doors or gates, cased with iron and hung 
with bells, placed across the pass. Clavijo, the Spanish ambas- 
sador to the court of Timur, heard of this when he passed 
through the defile nearly 800 years later, but the gates had then 
disappeared. 

The Surkhan valley is highly cultivated, especially in its 
upper portion. It supplies Bokhara with corn and sheep, but 
its chief products are rice and flax. The town of Hissar (pop. 
15,000) commands the entrance into the fertile valleys of the 
Surkhan and Kafirnihan, just as Kabadian at the southern end 
of the latter defends them from the south. Hissar was long 
famous for its damascened swords and its silk goods. Kulab 
produces wheat in abundance, and gold is brought thither from 
the surrounding districts. Kabadian is a large, silk-producing 
town, and is surrounded with rice-fields. 

The population consists principally of Uzbegs and Tajiks, 



the. former predominating and gradually pushing the Tajfta 
into the hills. On the banks of the Amu there are Turkomans 
who work the ferries, drive sheep and accompany caravans. 
Lyuli (gipsies), Jews, Hindus and Afghans are other dements 
of the population. The climate of the valleys of Hissar and 
Kulab is pleasant, as they are protected by mountains to the 
north and open towards the south. They produce all the cereals 
and garden plants indigenous to Central Asia. Cotton is grown 
in the district of Shirabad; and cotton, wheat, flax, sheep and 
rock-salt are all exported. 

History. — This country was ancientry part of the Persuo 
empire of the Acbaemenidac, and probably afterwards of the 
Graeco-Bactrian kingdom, and then subject to the invading 
Asiatic tribes who broke up that kingdom, e.g. the Yue-cW. 
It was afterwards conquered by the Ephthalites or While 
Huns, who were subdued by the Turks in the early part of the 
7th century. It then became subject successively to the Mahonv 
medan invaders from Persia, and after to the Mongol dynasty 
of Jenghiz Khan, and to Timur and his successors. It subse- 
quently became a cluster of Uxbeg states and was annexed 
by the amir of Bokhara («.t.) in 1869-1870, soon after the Russian 
occupation of Samarkand. (J. T. Be., C. El) 

HISSAR, a town and district of British India, in the Delhi 
division of the Punjab. The town is situated on the Rajputana 
railway and the Western Jumna canal, 102 ra. W.N.W. of Delhi. 
Pop. (1001) 17,647. It was founded in 1356 by the emperor 
Feroz Shah, who constructed the canal to supply it with water; 
but this fell into decay during the 18th century, owing to the 
constant inroads of marauders. Hissar was almost completely 
depopulated during the famine of 1783, but was afterwards 
occupied by the famous Irish adventurer George Thomas, 
who built a fort and collected inhabitants. It is now chiefly 
known for its cattle and horse fairs, and has a cotton factory. 

The District comprises an area of 5217 sq. m It forms 
the western border district of the great Bikanir desert, and 
consists for the most part of sandy plains dotted with shrub 
and brushwood, and broken by undulations towards the 
south, which rise into hills of rock like islands out of a 
sea of sand. . The Ghaggar is its only river, whose supply is 
uncertain, depending much on the fall of rain in the lower 
Himalayas; its overflow in times of heavy rain is caught by 
jhils. which, dry up in the hot season. The Western Jumna 
canal crosses the district from east to west, irrigating many 
villages. The soil is in places hard and clayey, and difficult 
to till; but when sufficiently irrigated it is highly productive. 
Old mosques and other buildings exist in parts of the district. 
Hissar produces a breed of large milk-white oxen, which are 
in great request for the carriages of natives. The district has 
always been subject to famine. The first calamity of this kind 
of which there is authentic record was in 1783; and Hissar has 
suffered severely in more recent famines. Its population in 
1 001 was 781,717, showing practically no increase in the decade, 
whereas in the previous decade there had been an increase of 
15%. The climate is very dry, hot westerly winds blowing 
from the middle of March till July. Cotton weaving, ginning 
and pressing are carried on. The district is served by the 
Rajputana-Malwa, the Southern Punjab and the Jodhpur- 
Bikanir railways. The chief trading centres are Bhiwani, Hansi, 
Hissar and Sirsa. 

Before the Mahommedan conquest, the semi-desert tract 
of which Hissar district now forms part was the retreat of 
Cnauhan Rajputs. Towards the end of the x8th century the 
Bhattis of Bhattiana gained ascendancy after bloody struggles. 
To complete the ruin brought on by these conflicts, nature lent 
her aid in the great famine of 1783. Hissar passed nominally 
to the British in 1803, but they could not enforce order till 1810. 
Early in the mutiny of 1857 Hissar was wholly lost for a time 
to British rule, and all Europeans were either murdered or 
compelled to fly. The Bhattis rose under their hereditary 
chiefs, and the majority of the Mahommedan population followed 
their example. Before Delhi had been recovered, the rebels 
were utterly routed. 



HISTIAEUS— HBTORY 



5^7 



HOTIAKTO (d. 404 ix»), tyrant of Miletus under the Persian 
king Darius Hystaspis. According to Herodotus he rendered 
great service to Darius while he was campaigning in Scythia by 
persuading his fellow-despots not to destroy the bridge, over 
the Danube by which the Persians must return. Choosing his 
own reward for this service, he became possessor of territory near 
Myrcinus (afterwards Amphipolis), rich in timber and minerals. 
The success of his enterprise led to his being invited to Susa, 
where in the midst of every kind of honour he was virtually 
a prisoner of Darius, who had reason to dread his growing 
power in Ionia. During this period the Creek cities were left 
under native despots supported by Persia, Aristagoras, son-in- 
law of Histiaeus, being ruler of Miletus in his stead. This prince, 
having failed against Naxos in a joint expedition with the satrap 
Artaphernes, began to stir up the Ionians to revolt, and this 
result was brought to pass, according to Herodotus, by a secret 
message from Histiaeus. The revolt assumed a formidable 
character and Histiaeus persuaded Darius that he alone could 
quell it. He was allowed to leave Susa, but on his arrival at 
the coast found himself suspected by the satrap, and was ulti- 
mately driven to establish himself (Herodotus says as a pirate; 
more probably in charge of the Bosporus route) at Byzantium. 
After the total failure of the revolt at the battle of Lade, be made 
various attempts to re-establish himself, but was captured by 
the Persian Harpagus and crucified by Artaphernes at Sardis. 
His head was embalmed and sent to Darius, who gave it honour- 
able burial. The theory of Herodotus that the Ionian revolt 
was caused by the single message of Histiaeus is incredible; 
there is evidence to show that the Ionians had been meditating 
since about 512 a patriotic revolt against the Persian domination 
and the "tyrants" on whom it rested (see Grote, Hist, of 
Greece, ed. 1007, especially p. 12a note; art. Ionia, and 
authorities; also S. HeinJcin in Klio, 1000, pp. 341-351). 

HISTOLOGY (Gr. lar&t t web, tissue, properly the web-beam 
of the loom, from itrrfoxu, to make to stand), the science which 
deals with the structure of the tissues of plants and animals 
(see Cytology). 

HISTORY. The word " history " is used in two senses. It 
may mean either the record of events, or events themselves. 
Originally (see below) limited to inquiry and statement, it was 
only in comparatively modern times that the meaning of the word 
was extended to include the phenomena which form or might 
form their subject. It was perhaps by a somewhat careless 
transference of ideas that this extension was brought about. 
Now indeed it is the commoner meaning. We speak of the 
" history of England " without reference to any literary narrative. 
We term kings and statesmen the " makers of history," and some- 
times say that the historian only records the history which 
they make. History in this connexion is obviously not the 
record, but the thing to be recorded. It is unfortunate that such 
a double meaning of the word should have grown up, for it 
is productive of not a little confusion of thought. 

History in the wider sense is all that has happened, not merely 
all the phenomena of human life, but those of the natural 
world as well. It includes everything that undergoes change; 
and as modern science has shown that there is nothing absolutely 
static, therefore the whole universe, and every part of it, has 
its history. The discovery of ether brought with it a recon- 
struction of our ideas of the physical universe, transferring the 
emphasis from the mathematical expression of static relationships 
to a dynamic conception of a universe in constant transformation; 
matter in equipoise became energy in gradual readjustment. 
Solids are solids no longer. The universe is in motion in every 
particle of every part; rock and metal merely a transition stage 
between crystallization and dissolution. This idea of universal 
activity has in a sense made physics itself a branch of history. 
It is the same with the other sciences — especially the biological 
division, where the doctrine of evolution has induced an attitude 
of mind which is distinctly historical 

But the tendency to look at things historically is not merely 
the attitude of men of science. Our outlook upon life differs in 
just this particular from that of preceding ages. We recognize the 



unstable nature of our whole sodal fabric, and are therefore more 
and more capable of transforming it Our institutions are no 
longer held to be inevitable and. immutable creations. We do 
not attempt to fit them to absolute formulae, but continually 
adapt them to a changing environment. Even modern aichi- 
tecture, notably in America, reflects the consciousness of Change. 
The permanent character of ancient or medieval buildings was 
fitted only to a society dominated by static ideals. Now the 
architect builds, not for all time, but for a set of conditions which 
wiU inevitably cease in the not distant future. Thus our whole 
society not only bears the marks of its evolution, but shows its 
growing consciousness of the fact in the most evident of its 
arts. In literature, philosophy 4 and political science, there is the 
same historical trend. Criticism no longer judges by absolute 
standards; it applies the standards of the author's own environ- 
ment. We no longer condemn Shakespea r e for having violated 
the ancient dramatic laws, nor Voltaire ior having objected to 
the violations. Each age has its own expression, and in judging 
each we enter the field of history. In ethics, again, the revolt 
against absolute standards limits is to the relative, and morals 
are investigated on the basis of history, as largely conditioned 
by economic environment and the growth of intellectual freedom. 
Revelation no longer appeals to scientific minds as a source of 
knowledge. Experience on the other hand is history. As for 
political science, we do not regard the national state as that 
ultimate and final product which men once saw in the Roman 
Empire. It has hardly come into being before forces are evident 
which aim at its destruction. Internationalism has gained 
ground in Europe in recent years; and Socialism itself, which is 
based upon a distinct interpretation of history, is regarded by its 
followers as merely a stage in human progress, like those which 
have gone before it It is evident that Freeman's definition of 
history as " past politics " is miserably inadequate. Political 
events are mere externals. History enters into every phase of 
activity, and the economic forces which urge society along are 
as much its subject as the political result. 

In short the historical spirit of the age has invaded every field. 
The world-pkture presented in this encyclopaedia is that of a 
dynamic universe, of phenomena in process of ceaseless change. 
Owing to this insistent change all things which happen, or seem 
to happen, are history in the broader sense of the word. The 
encyclopaedia itself is a history of them in the stricter sense,—- 
the description and record of this universal process. This 
narrower meaning is the subject of the rest of this article. 

The word " history " comes from the Gr. ioropla, which was • 
used by the Ionians in the 6th century B.C. for the search for 
knowledge in the widest sense. It meant inquiry, investigation, 
not narrative. It was not until two centuries later that the 
historikos, the reciter of stories, superseded the histondn (bnopbuir), 
the seeker after knowledge. Thus history began as a branch of 
scientific research, — much the same as what the Athenians later 
termed philosophy. Herodotus himself was as much a scientific 
explorer as a reciter of narrative, and his life-long investigation 
was historit in his Ionian speech. Yet it was Herodotus himself 
who first hinted at the new use of the word, applied merely to the 
details accumulated during a long search for knowledge. It 
is not until Aristotle, however, that we have it definitely applied 
to the literary product instead of the inquiry which precedes k. 
From Aristotle to modern times, history (Lat. hisl&na) has been 
a form of literature. It is only in the scientific environment of 
to-day that we recognize once more, with those earliest of the 
forerunners of Herodotus, that history involves two distinct 
operations, one of which, investigation, is in the field of science, 
while the other, the literary presentation, is in the field of art. 

The history of history itself is therefore two-fold. History as 
art .flourishes with the arts. It calls upon the imagination and 
the literary gifts of expression. Its history does not run parallel 
with the scientific side, but rather varies in inverse ratio with 
scientific activity. Those periods which have been dominated 
by the great masters of style have been less interested in the 
criticism of the historian's methods of investigation than in the 
beauty of his rhetoric The scientific historian, deeply interested 



528 



HISTORY 



In the search for truth, is generally bat a poor artist, and his 
uncoloured picture of the past will never rank in literature beside 
the splendid distortions which glow in the pages of a Michdet or 
Macaulay. History the art, in so far as it is conditioned upon 
genius, has no single traceable line of development. Here the 
product of the age of Pericles remains unsurpassed still; the 
works of Herodotus and Thucydides standing along with those 
of Pheidias as models for all time. On the other hand, history 
the science has developed so that it has not only gained recogni- 
tion among historians as a distinct subject, but it has raised with 
it a group of auxiliary sciences which serve either as tools for 
investigation or as a basis for testing the results. The advance 
in this branch of history in the roth century was one of its greatest 
achievements. The vast gulf which lies between the history of 
Egypt by Herodotus and that by Flinders Petrie is the measure 
of its achievement. By the mechanism now at his disposal the 
scientific explorer can read more history from the dust-heaps of 
Abydos than the greatest traveller of antiquity could gather 
from the priests of Sab. In tracing the history of history we 
must therefore keep in mind the double aspect. 

History itself, this double subject, the science and the art 
combined, begins with the dawn of memory and the invention 
of speech. It is wrong to term those ages pre-kistorie whose 
history has not come down to us, including in one category the 
pre-literary age and the literary whose traces have been lost. 
Even the pre-literary had its history, first in myth and then in 
saga. The saga, or epos, was a great advance upon the myth, for 
in it the deeds of men replace or tend to replace the deeds of the 
gods. But we are still largely in the realm of imagination. 
Poetry, as Thucydides complained, is a most imperfect medium 
for fact. The bard will exaggerate or distort his story. True 
history, as a record of what really has happened, first reached 
maturity in prose. Therefore, although much of the past has 
been handed down to us in epic, in ballad and in the legends of 
folk-lore, we must turn from them to what became history in 
the narrower sense. 

• The earliest prose origins of history are the inscriptions. 
Their inadequacy is evident from two standpoints. Their 
permanence depends not upon their importance, but upon the 
durability of the substance on which they are inscribed. A note 
for a wedding ring baked into the clay of Babylon has been 
preserved, while the history of the greatest events has perished. 
In the second place they are sealed to all but those who know how 
to read them, and so they lie forgotten for centuries while oral 
tradition flourishes, — being within the reach of every man. It 
is only recently that archaeology, turning from the field of art, 
has undertaken to interpret for us this first written history. 
The process by which the modern fits together all the obtainable 
remains of an antiquity, and reconstructs even that past which 
left no written record, lies outside the field of this article. But 
such enlargement of the field of history is a modern scientific 
product, and is to be distinguished from the imperfect beginnings 
of history-writing which the archaeologist is able to decipher. 

Next to the inscriptions,— sometimes identical with them, — 
are the early chronicles. These are of various kinds. Family 
chronicles preserved the memory of heroic ancestors whose deeds 
in the earliest age would have passed into the keeping of the 
bards. Such family archives were perhaps the main source for 
Roman historians. But they are not confined to Rome or Greece. 
Genealogies also pass from the bald verse, which was the vehicle 
for oral transmission, to such elaborate tables as those in which 
Manetho has preserved the dynasties of Egyptian Pharaohs. 

In this field the priest succeeds the poet. The temple itself 
became the chief repository of records. There were simple 
religious annals, votive tablets recording miracles accomplished 
at a shrine, lists of priests and priestesses, accounts of benefactions, 
of prodigies and portents. In some cases, as in Rome, the 
pontiffs kept a kind of register, not merely of religious history, 
but of important political events as well. Down to the time of 
the Gracchi (131 B.c.) the Pontifex Maximus inscribed the year's 
events upon annual tablets of wood which were preserved in the 
Regia, the official residence of the pontiff in the Forum. These 



po nti fi c al ** annals " thus came to be a tort of civic history. 
Chronicles of tbe Greek dties were commonly ascribed to mythical 
authors, as for instance that of Miletus, the oldest, to Cadmus the 
inventor of letters. But they were continued and edited by met 
in whom the critical spirit was awakening, as when the chroniclers 
of Ionian towns began the criticism of Homer. 

The first historians wete the logograpbi of these Ionian cities; 
men who carried their inquiry (kisivril) beyond both written 
record and oral tradition to a study of the world around then. 
Their "saying " {legos) was gathered mostly from contempo- 
raries; and upon the basis of a widened experience they became 
critics of their traditions. The opening lines of H ec a t a et i s of 
Miletus begin the history of the true historic spirit in words 
which read like a sentence from Voltaire. "Hecataeos of 
Miletus thus speaks: I write as I deem true, for the traditions of 
the Greeks seem to me manifold and laughable." Those words 
mark an epoch in the history of thought. They are the introduc- 
tion to historical criticism and scientific investigation. Whatever 
the actual achievement' of Hecataens may have been, from his 
time onward the scientific movement was set going. Herodotus 
of Heraclea struggled to rationalize mythology, and. estab- 
lished chronology on a solid basis. And finally Herodotus, a pro- 
fessional story-teller, rose to the height of genuine scientific 
investigation. Herodotus' inquiry way not simply that of an idle 
tourist. He was a critical observer, who tested his evidence. It 
is easy for the student now to show the inadequacy of his sources, 
and his failure here or there to discriminate between fact and 
fable. But given the imperfect medium for investigation and 
the absence of an archaeoloffical basis for criticism, the work of 
Herodotus remains a scientific achievement, as remarkable for its 
approximation to truth as for the vastness of its scope. Yet it 
was Herodotus' chief glory to have joined to this scientific spirit 
an artistic sense which enabled him to cast the material into 
the truest literary form. He gathered all his knowledge of the 
ancient world, not simply for itself, but to mass it around the 
story of the war between the east and west, the Greeks and 
the Persians. He Is first and foremost a story-teller; his theme 
is like that of the bards, a heroic event. His story is a rast prose 
epos, in which science h to this extent subordinated to art. M Tins 
is the showing forth of the Inquiry of Herodotus of Halicaraassus, 
to the end that neither the deeds of men may be forgotten by lapse 
of time, nor the works, great and marvellous, which have been 
produced, some by Hellenes, some by Barbarians, may lose their 
renown, and especially that the causes may be remembered for 
which these waged war with one another" (i.e. the Persian war). 

In Thucydides a higher art than that of Herodotus was com- 
bined with a higher science. He scorned the story-teller " who 
seeks to please the ear rather than to speak the truth," and yet 
his rhetoric is the culmination of Greek historical prose. He 
withdrew from vulgar applause, conscious that his narrative 
would be considered u disappointing to the ear," yet he recast the 
materials out of which he constructed it in order to Kft that 
narrative into the realm of pure literature. Speeches, letters and 
documents are reworded to be in tone with the rest of the story. 
It was his art, in fact, which really created the Peloponnesian 
war out of its separate parts. And yet this art was merely the 
language of a scientist. The "laborious task " of which he speaks' 
is that of consulting all possible evidence, and weighing conflicting* 
accounts. It is this which makes his rhetoric worth while, "an 
everlasting possession, not a prize competition which is heard 
and forgotten." 

From the sublimity of Thucydides, and Xcnophon's Straight- 
forward story, history passed with Thcopompus and Ephorus 
into the field of rhetoric. A revival of the scientific instinct of 
investigation is discernable in Timaeus the Sicilian, at the end of 
the 4th century, but his attack upon his predecessors was the 
text of a more crushing attack upon himself by Polybius, who 
declares him lacking m critical insight and biased by passion. 
Polybius* comments upon Timaeus reach the dignity of a treatise 
upon history. He protests against its use for controversial 
pamphlets which distort the truth. " Directly a man assumes 
the moral attitude of an historian be ought to forget all 



HISTORY 



529 



oniHefitloDS, such is love of one's Mends, hatred of one's 
enemies .... He must sometimes praise enemies land blame friends. 
For as a living creature is rendered useless if deprived of its eyes, 
•0 if you take truth from History, what is left but an Unprofit- 
able tale " (bk. xii. 24). These are the words of a Ranks, Un- 
fortunately Polybhis, like most modern scientific historians, 'was 
no artist. His style is the very opposite of that of Isocrates and 
the rhetoricians. It is often only dear in the light of inscriptions, 
so closely does it keep to the sources. The style found no imitator, 
history passed from Greece to Rome in the guise of rhetoric. In 
Dionysius of HaHcarnassus the rhetoric was combined with an 
extensive study of the sources; but the influence of the Greek 
rhetoricians upon Roman prose was deplorable from the stand* 
point of science. Cicero, although he said that the duty of the 
historian is to conceal nothing true, to say nothing false, would 
in practice have written the kind of history that Polybius 
denounced. He finds fault with those who are nan exomatores 
rerum sod ionium narratores. History for him is the mine from 
which to draw argument in oratory and example m education. 
It is not the subject of a scientific curiosity. 
f. It should be noted before we pass to Rome that with the 
expansion of Hellenism the subject of historians expanded as 
well. Universal history was begun by EphoruB, the rhetorician, 
' and formed the theme of Polybtus and Deodorus. Exiled Greeks 
were the first to write histories of Rome worthy of the name. 
The Alexandrian Eratosthenes placed chronology upon the 
scientific basts of astronomy, and ApoUodorus drew up the most 
important chronica of antiquity. 

History-writing in Rome,— except for the Greek writers 
resident there,— was until the first half of the ret century B.C. In 
the form of annals. Then came rhetorical ornamentation,— and 
the Ciceronian era. The first Roman historian who rose to the 
conception of a science and art combined was Sallust, the student 
of Thucydides. The Augustan age produced In Ltvy a great 
popular historian and natural artist and a trained rhetorician 
(in the speeches),— but as uncritical and inaccurate as he was 
brilliant. From Livy to Tacitus the gulf is greater than from 
Herodotus to Thucydides. Tacitus is at least a consummate 
artist. His style ranges from the brilliancy of his youth to the 
sternness and sombre gravity of age, passing almost to poetic 
expression in its epigrammatic terseness. Yet in spite of his 
searching study of authorities, his keen judgment of men, and 
his perception of underlying principles of moral law, his view was 
warped by the heat of faction, which glows beneath his external 
objectivity. After him Roman history-writing speedily degenerw 
ated Suetonius ' Lives of the Caesars is but a superior kind of 
journalism. But his gossip of the court became the model for 
historians, whose works, now lost, furnish the mam source for 
the Historic Augusta. The importance to us of this uncritical 
collection of biographies is sufficient comment on the decline of 
history-writing in the latter empire. Finally, from the 4th 
century the epitomes of Eutropius and Festus served to satisfy 
the lessening curiosity in the past and became the handbooks 
for the middle ages. The single figure of Ammianus Marcellinus 
stands out of this age like a belated disciple of Tacitus. But 
the world was changing from antique to Christian ideals just as 
he was writing, and with him we leave this outline of ancient 
history. 

The 4th and 5th centuries saw a great revolution in the history 
of history. The story of the pagan past slipped out of mind, and 
in its place was set, by the genius of Eusebius, the story of the 
world force which had superseded it, Christianity, and of Chat 
small fraction of antiquity from which it sprang,— the Jews. 
Christianity from the first had forced thinking men to recon- 
struct their philosophy of history, but it was only after the 
Church's triumph that its point of view became dominant in 
historiography. Three centuries more passed before the pagan 
models were quite lost to sight. But from the 7th century to 
the x 7th— from Isidore of Seville and the English Bede for a 
thousand years,— mankind was to look back along the line of 
Jewish priests and kings to the Creation. Egypt was of interest 
only as it came into Israelite history, Babylon and Nineveh were 



to illustrate the Judgments of Yahweh, Tyre and Sidon to reflect 
the glory of Solomon. The process by which the " gentiles * 
have been robbed of their legitimate history was the inevitable 
result of a religion whose sacred books make them lay figures for 
the history Of the Jews. Rejected by the Yahweh who became 
the Christian God, they have remained to the present day, in 
Sunday schools and in common opinion, not nations of living 
men, with the culture of arts and sciences, but outcasts who do 
not enter into the divine scheme of the world's history. When a 
line was drawn between pagan and Christian back to the creation 
of the world, it left outside the pale of inquiry nearly all antiquity. 
But it must be remembered that that antiquity was one in which 
the German nations had no personal Interest. Scipio and the 
Gracchi wereessentially unreal to them. The one living organiza- 
tion with which they came into touch was the Church. So 
Cicero and Pompey paled before Joshua and PauL Diocletian, 
the organising genius, became a bloodthirsty monster, and 
Constantine, the murderer, a saint. 

Christian history begins with the triumph of the Church! 
With Eusebius of Caesarea the apologetic pamphlets of the age 
of persecutions gave way to a calm review of three centuries of 
Christian progress. Eusebius' biography of Constantine shows 
What distortion of fact the father of Church history permitted 
himself, but the Ecclesiastical History was fortunately written 
for those who wanted to know what really happened, and 
remains to-day an invaluable repository of Christian antiquities.' 
With the continuations of Socrates, Sozomen and Tbeodorct, and 
the Latin manual which Cassiodorus had woven from them (the 
Historia tripartita), it formed the body of Church history during 
all the middle ages. An even greater influence, however, was 
exercised by Eusebius' Chronica, Through Jerome's translation! 
and additions, this scheme of this world's chronology became the 
basis for all medieval world chronicles. It settled until our own' 
day the succession of years from the Creation to the birth of 
Christ,— fitting the Old Testament story into that of ancient' 
history. Henceforth the Jewish past,— that one path back to 
the beginning of the world,— was marked out by the absolute laws 
of mathematics and revelation. Jerome had marked it out; 
Sulpicius Severus, the biographer of St Martin, in his Historic 
sacra, adorned it with the attractions of romance. Sulpicius 
was admirably fitted to interpret the miraculous Bible story to 
the middle ageSr But there were few who could write like him,' 
and Jerome's Chronicle itself, or rather portions of it, became; 
in the age which followed, a sort of universal preface for the 
monastic chronicler. For a time there were even attempts to 
continue "imperial chronicles," but they were insignificant 
compared with the influence of Eusebius and Jerome. 

From the first, Christianity had a philosophy of history. Its 
earnest apologists sought to show how the world had followed a 
divine plan in its long preparation for the life of Christ. From 
this central fact of all history, mankind should continue through 
war and suffering until the divine plan was completed at the 
judgment day. The fate of nations is in God's hands; history 
is the revelation of His wisdom and power. Whether He inter- 
venes directly by miracle, or merely sets His laws in operation, 
He is master of men's fate. This idea, which has underlain alt 
Christian philosophy of history, from the first apologists who 
prophesied the fall of the Empire and the coming of the millen- 
nium, down to our own day, received its classic statement in St 
Augustine's City of God. The terrestrial city, whose eternity had 
been the theme of pagan history, had just fallen before Alaric's 
Goths. Augustine's explanation of its fall passes in review not 
only the calamities of Roman history— combined with a pathetic 
perception of its greatness,— but carries the survey back to the 
origin of evil at the creation. Then over against this civitas 
terrena he sets the divine city which is to be realised fn Christen- 
dom. The Roman Empire,— the last general form of the earthly 
city,— gives way slowly to the heavenly. This is the main 
thread of Augustine's philosophy of history. The mathematical 
demonstration of its truth was left by Augustine for his disciple, 
Paulus Orosius. 
I Orosius' Seven Boohs of Histories against the Pagans, written 



530 



HISTORY 



as a supplement to tire City of God, is the first attempt at a 
Christian " World History." This manual for the middle ages 
arranged the rise and fall of empires with convincing exactness. 
The history of antiquity, according to it, begins with Ninus. 
His realm was overthrown by the Medes in the same year in 
which the history of Rome began. From the first year of Ninus' 
reign until the rebuilding of Babylon by Semiramis there were 
sixty -four years; the same between the first of Procas and the 
building of Rome. Eleven hundred and sixty-four years after 
each city was built, it was taken,— Babylon by Cyrus, Rome by 
Alaric, and Cyrus' conquest took place just when Rome began the 
Republic. But before Rome becomes a world empire, Macedoa 
and Carthage intervene, guardians of Rome's youth (tutor 
curaiorquc). This scheme of the four world-monarchies, which 
was to prevail through all the middle ages, was developed through 
seven books filled with the story of war and suffering. As it was 
Orosius' aim to show that the world had improved since the 
coming of Christ, he used Tragus Pompeius' war history, written 
to exalt Roman triumphs, to show the reverse of victory,— 
disaster and ruin. Livy, Caesar, Tacitus and Suetonius were 
plundered for the story of horrors; until finally even the Goths 
in Spain shine by contrast with the pagan heroes; and through 
the confusion of the German invasions one may look forward to 
Christendom, — and its peace. 

t The commonest form of medieval historical writing was the 
chronicle, which reaches all the way from monastic annals, mere 
notes on Easter tables, to the dignity of national monuments. 
Utterly lacking in perspective, and dominated by the idea of the 
miraculous, they are for the most part a record of the trivial or 
the marvellous. Individual historians sometimes recount the 
story of their own times with sober judgment, but seldom know 
how to test their sources when dealing with the past. Contra- 
dictions are often copied down without the writer noticing them; 
and since the middle ages forged and falsified so many docu- 
ments, — monasteries, towns and corporations gaining privileges 
or titles of possession by the bold use of them, — the narrative 
of medieval writers cannot be relied upon unless we can verify it 
by collateral evidence. Some historians, like Otto of Freising, 
Guibcrt of Nogent or Bernard Gui, would have been scientific if 
they had had our appliances for comparison. But even men like 
Roger Bacon, who deplored the inaccuracy of texts, had worked 
out no general method to apply in their restoration. Toward the 
close of the middle ages the vernacular literatures were adorned 
with Villani's and Froissart's chronicles. But the merit of both 
lies in their journalistic qualities of contemporary narrative. 
Neither was a history in the truest sense. 
; The Renaissance marked the first great gain in the historic 
sense, in the efforts of the humanists to realize the spirit of 
the antique world. They did not altogether succeed; antiquity 
to them meant largely Plato and Cicero. Their interests were 
literary, and the un-Ciceronian centuries were generally ignored. 
Those in which the foundations of modern Europe were laid, 
which produced parliaments, cathedrals, cities, Dante and 
Chaucer, were grouped alike on one dismal level and christened 
the middle ages. The perspective of the humanists was only 
one degree better than that of the middle ages. History became 
the servant to literature, an adjunct to the classics. Thus it 
passed into the schools, where text-books still in use devote 200 
pages to the Peloponnesian war and two to the Athens of Pericles, 
r But if the literary side of humanism has been a barrier to 
the progress of scientific history, the discovery and elucidation 
of texts first made that progress possible. Historical criticism 
soon awoke. Laurentius Valla's brilliant attack on the " Dona- 
tion of Constantine " (1440), and Ulrich von Hutten's rehabilita- 
tion of Henry IV, from monkish tales mark the rise of the 
new science. One sees at a glance what an engine of contro- 
versy it was to be; yet for a while it remained but a phase of 
humanism. It was north of the Alps that it parted company with 
the grammarians. Classical antiquity was an Italian past, the 
German scholars turned back to the sources of their national 
history. Aeneas Sylvius Piccolomini (Pius II.) had discovered 
Otto of Freising and Jordanes* Maximilian I. encouraged the 



search for manuscripts, and Vienna became a great 1 
centre. Conrad Celtes left his Cermama iUustrata unfinished, 
but he had found the works of Hroswitha. Conrad Peutinger 
gathered, all sorts of Chronicles in his room in Vienna, ami 
published several, — among them Gregory of Tours. Tan 
national movement of the 15th century was not paralleled hi 
France or England, where the classical humanities reigned. 
The Reformation meanwhile gave another turn to the work ef 
German scholars. 

The Reformation, with its heated controversies, seems t 
strange starting-point for science, yet it, even more than the 
Renaissance, brought out scientific methods of historical in* 
vestigation. It not only sobered the humanist tendency to 
sacrifice truth for aesthetic effect, it called for the documents 
of the Church and subjected them to the most hostile criticism. 
Luther himself challenged them. Then in the Jfof&forf 
Centuries (1550-1574) Protestantism tried to make good hi 
attack on the medieval Church by a great collection of sources 
accompanied with much destructive criticism. This gigantic 
work is the first monument of modern historical research. The 
reply of Cardinal Baronius (Annates ecclesiastici, 1588-1697) 
was a still greater collection, drawn from archives which till 
then had not been used for scientific history. Baronha' 
criticism and texts are faulty, though far surpassing anything 
before his day, and his collection is the basis for most subsequent 
ones, — in spite of J. J. Scaliger's refutation, which was to con- 
tain an equal number of volumes of the errors in Baronius. 

The movement back to the sources in Germany until the 
Thirty Years' War was a notable one. Collections were made 
by Simon Schard (153 5-1573). Johannes Pistorius (1576-1606), 
Marquard Freher (1565-1614), Melchior Goldast (1 576-1635) 
and others. After the war Leibnitz began a new epoch, both 
by his philosophy with its law of continuity in phenomena, and 
by his systematic attempt to collect sources through an associa- 
tion (1670). His plan to have documents printed as they were, 
instead of " correcting " them, was a notable advance. But 
from Leibnitz until the toth century German national historio- 
graphy made little progress,— -although church historians like 
Mosheim and Neander stand out among the greatest historisM 
of all time. 

France had not paralleled the activity of Maximihairt 
Renaissance historians. The lather of modern French history, 
or at least of historical research, was Andr6 Duchesne (1584- 
1640), whose splendid collections of sources are still in use. 
Jean Bodin wrote the first treatise en scientific history (Matiudm 
ad facilem hisloriarum cogntiionem, 2566), but he did not apply 
his own principles of criticism; and it was left for the Benedictine 
monks of the Congregation of St Maur to establish definitely 
the new science. The placed this school in the history of history 
is absolutely without a parallel. Few of those in the audiences 
of Mohere, returning home under the grey walls of St Germain- 
des^Pres, knew that within that monastery the men whose 
midnight they disturbed were laying the basis for all scientific 
history; and few of the later historians of that age have been 
any wiser. But when Luc d'Achery turned from exegetics to 
patristics and the lives of the saints, as a sort of Christian 
humanist, he led the way to that vast work of collection and 
comparison of texts which developed through Mabillon, Mont- 
faucon, Ruinart, MarUne, Bouquet and their associates, into 
the indispensable implements of modem historians. Here, at 
in the Reformation, controversy called out the richest product 
Jean Mabillon's treatise, Da re diplomatic* (16S1), was due to 
the criticisms of that group of Belgian Jesuits whose Acta 
Sanctorum quotquot toio arba coluntur (1043, &c, see Boilanoists) 
was destined to grow into the greatest repository of legend and 
biography the world has seen. In reply to D. Fapebrochs 
criticisms of the chronicle of St Denis, MabHlon prepared this 
manual for the testing of medieval documents. Its canons an 
the basis, indeed, almost the whole, of the science of diplomatic 
(?.«.), the touchstone of truth for medieval research. Hence- 
forth even the mediocre scholar bad a body of technical rules 
by which to sort out the vast mass of apocrypha in medieval 



HISTORY 



531 



documentary sources. ~ Scientific history depends upon imple- 
ments. Without manuals, dictionaries, and easy access to 
texts, we should go as far astray as any medieval chronicler. 
The France of the Maurists supplied the most essential of these 
instruments. The great ''glossary'* of Ducange is still in 
enlarged editions the indispensable encyclopaedia of the middle 
ages. Chronology and palaeography were placed on a new 
footing by Dom Bernard de Monttaucon's Palaeog/raphia graeca 
(1708), the monumental Art de verifier tes dates (3rd ed t 1818- 
1831, in 38 vols.), and iheNouveau Traiti de diplomatique (1750- 
1765) of Dom Tassin and Dom Toustain. The collections of 
texts which the Maurists published are too many and too vast 
to be enumerated here (see C. Langkris, Manuel de bMiogrophie 
histotique, pp. 203 ff.). Dom Bouquet's Historiens de la Gaule 
et de la France— the national repertory for French historians—* 
is bat one of a dozen tasks of similar magnitude. Daring the 
;8th century this deep under-work of scientific history continued 
to advance, though for the most part unseen by the brilliant 
writers whose untrustworthy generalities passed for history 
in the salons of the old regime. Interrupted by the Revolution, 
it revived in the 19th century, and the roll of honour of the 
French ficole des Chartes has almost rivalled that of St Germain- 
des-Pres. 

The father ot critical history in Italy was L. A. Muratori 
(1673-1750), the Italian counterpart of Leibniu. His vast 
collection of sources {Rerum Italjearmm scriptores), prepared 
amid every discouragement, remains to-day the national monu- 
ment of Italian history; and it is but one of his collections. 
His output is perhaps the greatest of any isolated worker in the 
whole history of historiography. The same haste, but much less 
care, marked the work of J. D. Mansi (d. 1760), the compiler 
of the fullest collection of the Councils. Spain, stifled by the 
Inquisition, produced no national collection of sources during 
the 17th and 18th centuries, although Nicolas Antonio (d. 1684) 
produced a national literary history of the first rank. 

England in the 16th century kept pace with Continental 
historiography. Henry VIII. *s chaplain, John Leland, is the 
father of English antiquaries. Three of the most precious 
collections of medieval manuscripts still in existence were then 
begun by Thomas Bodley (the Bodleian at Oxford), Archbishop 
Matthew Parker (Corpus Christi at Cambridge), and Robert 
Cotton (the Cottonian collection of the British Museum). In 
Elizabeth's reign a serious effort was made to arrange the national 
records, but until the end of the 18th century they were scattered 
in not less than fifteen repositories. In the 17th and x8th 
centuries English scholarship was enriched by such monuments 
of research as William Dugdak's Monastic**, Thomas Madox's 
History of the Exchequer, Wilkins's Concilia, and Thomas Ryraer's 
Foedera. But these works, important as they were, gave but 
fittle idea of the wealth of historical sources which the xotb 
century was to reveal in England. 

1 In the 10th century the science of history underwent a sort 
of industrial revolution. The machinery of research, invented 
by the genius of men like Mabillon, was perfected and set going in 
all the archives of Europe. Isolated workers or groups of workers 
grew into national or international associations, producing from 
archives vast collections of material to be worked up into the 
artistic form of history. The result of this movement has been 
to revolutionise the whole subject. These men of the factory- 
devoting their lives to the cataloguing of archives and libraries, 
to the publication of material, and then to the gigantic task of 
indexing what they have produced — have made it possible for 
the student in an American or Australian college to master in a 
few hours In his library sources of history which baffled the long 
years of research of a Martene or Rymer. The texts themselves 
have mostly become as correct as they can ever be, and manuals 
and bibliographies guide one to and through them, so that no one 
need go astray who takes the trouble to make use of the mechan- 
ism which is at his hand. For example, since the papal archives 
were opened, so many regesta have appeared that soon it will be 
possible to follow the letter- writing of the medieval popes day by 
day for century after century. 



The apparatus for this research is too wast to be described here 
Archives have been reformed, their contents catalogued or 
calendared; government commissions have rescued numberless 
documents from oblivion or destruction, and learned societies 
have supplemented and criticized this work and co-ordinated the 
results. Every state in Europe now has published the main 
sources for its history. The " Rolls " series, the Monumenta 
Germaniae historica, and the Documents: intdits are but the more 
notable of such national products. A series of periodicals 
keeps watch over this enormous output. The files and indices 
of the English Historical Renew, Historische Zeitschrift, Rewue 
kistorique, or American Historical Review will alone reveal the 
strength and character of historica) research in the later 10th 
century." 

Every science which deals with human phenomena is in a 
way an implement in this great factory system, in whic^ the past 
Is welded together again. Psychology has been drawn upon to 
interpret the movements of revolutions or religions, anthropology 
and ethnology furnish a due to problems to which the key of 
documents has been lost* Genealogy, heraldry and chronology 
ran parallel with the wider subject. But the real auxiliary 
sciences to history are those which deal with those traces of the 
past that still exist, the science of language (philology), of 
writing (palaeography), of documents (diplomatic), of seals 
(sphragistics), of coins (numismatics), of weights and measure*, 
and archaeology in the widest sense of the word. These sciences 
underlie the whole development of scientific history. Diction- 
aries and manuals are the instruments of this industrial revolu- 
tion. Without them the literary remains of the race would still 
be as useless as Egyptian inscriptions to the fellaheen. Arena©*. 
ology itself remained but a minor branch of art until the 
machinery was perfected which enabled it to classify and in- 
terpret the remains of the " pre-historic " age. 
. This is the most remarkable chapter in the whole history of 
history—the recovery of that past which had already been lost 
when our literary history began. The perspective stretches out 
as far the other side of Homer as we are this. The old " provi- 
dential " scheme of history disintegrates before a new interest in 
the " gentile '* nations to whose high culture Hebrew sources bore 
unwilling testimony. Biblical criticism is a part of the historic 
process. The Jewish texts, once the infallible basis of history, 
are now tested by the libraries of Babylon, from which they were 
partly drawn, and Hebrew history sinks into its proper place in 
the wide horizon of antiquity. The finding of the Rosetta stone 
left us no longer dependent upon Greek, Latin or Hebrew sources, 
and now fifty centuries of Egyptian history He before us. The 
scientific historian of antiquity works on the hills of Crete, rather 
than in the quiet of a library with the classics spread out before 
him. There he can reconstruct the splendour of that Minoan 
age to which Homeric poems look back, as the Germanic epics 
looked back to Rome or Verona. His discoveries, co-ordinated 
and arranged in vast corpora inscriptionum, stand now along, 
side Herodotus or Livy, furnishing a basis for their criticism, 
Medieval archaeology has, since Quicherat, revealed how me* 
were living while the monks wrote chronicles, and now cathedrals 
and castles are studied as genuine historic documents. 

The immense increase fn available sources, archaeological and 
literary, has remade historical criticism. Ranke's application 
of the principles of " higher criticism " to works written since 
the invention of printing {Kritik neuerer GeschUhtssckreiber) was 
an epoch-making challenge of narrative sources. Now they are 
everywhere checked by contemporary evidence, and a clearer 
sense of what constitutes a primary source has discredited much 
of what had been currently accepted as true. This b true not 
only of andent history, where last year's book may be a thousand 
years out of date, but of the whole field. Hardly an "old master" 
remains an authoritative book of reference. Gibbon, Grete, 
Giesebrecht, Guizot stand to-day by reason of other virtues than 
their truth. Old landmarks drop out of sight— e.g. the fall of 
the Western Empire in 476, the coming of the Greeks to Italy in 
1450, dates which once enclosed the middle ages. The per- 
spective changes— the Renaissance grows less and the middle 



532 



HISTORY 



ages more; the Protestant Revolution become* * complex of 
.economics and politics and religion, the French Revolution a 
vast social reform in which the Terror was an incident, Ac*, &c 
The result has been a complete transformation of history since 
the middle of the 19th century. 

In the 17th century the Augustinian scheme of world history 
received its last classic statement in Bossuer/s HisUrirc univcrstlU. 
Voltaire's reply to it in the x8th (Essai snr Us mews) attacked 
its limitations on the basis of deism, and its miraculous procedure 
on that of science. But while there are foreshadowing* of the 
evolutionary theory in this work, neither the pkUosOpke historians 
nor Hume nor Gibbon arrived at a constructive principle in 
history which could take the place of the Providence they 
rejected. Religion, though false, might be a real historic force. 
History became the tragic spectacle of a game of dupes— the 
real movers being priests, kings or warriors. The pawns slowly 
acquired reason, and then would be able to regulate the moves 
themselves. But all this failed to give a satisfactory explanation 
of the laws which determine the direction of this evolution, 
Giovanni Battista Vico (1 668-1 744) was the first to ask why there 
is no science of human history. But his lonely life and un* 
recognized labours leave him apart from the main movement, 
until his works were discovered again in the'xoth century. It 
was A. L. H. Heeren who; at the opening of the 19th century, 
first laid that emphasis upon the economic factors in history 
which is to-day slowly replacing the Augustinian explanation of 
its evolution. Heeren'* own influence, however, was slight. The 
first half of the century (apart from the scientific activity of 
Peru, Guizot, &c) was largely dominated by the romanticists, 
with their exaggeration of the individual. Carlyle's " great man 
theory of history " is logically connected with the age of Scott. 
It was a philosophy of history which lent itself to magnificent 
dramatic creations; but it explained nothing. It substituted 
the work of the genius for the miraculous intervention of 
Providence, but, apart from certain abstract formulae such as 
Truth and Right, knew nothing of why or how. It is but 
dealing in words to say that the meaning of it all is God's revela- 
tion of Himself. Granting that, what is the process? Why does 
it so slowly reveal the Right of the middle ages (as in slavery for 
instance) to be the Wrong to-day? Carlyle stands to Bossuet 
as the sage to the myth. Hegel got no closer to realities. His 
idealistic scheme of history, which makes religion the keynote of 
progress, and describes the function of each— Judaism to typify 
duty, Confucianism order, Mahommedanism justice, Buddhism 
patience, and Christianity love— does not account for the facts 
of the history enacted by the devotees. It characterizes, not the 
real process of evolution, but an ideal which history has not 
realized. Besides, it does not face the question how far religion 
itself is a product or a cause, or both combined. 
' In the middle of the century two men sought to incorporate in 
their philosophy the physical basis which Hegel had ignored in 
his spiritism— recognizing that life is conditioned by an environ- 
ment and not an abstraction for metaphysics. H. T. Buckle, in 
his History of Civilisation in England (1857), was the first to work 
out the influences of the material world upon history, developing 
through a wealth of illustration the importance of food, soil and 
the general aspect of nature upon the formation of society. 
Buckle did not, as is generally believed, make these three factors 
dominate all history. He distinctly stated that " the advance of 
European civilization Is characterized by a diminishing influence 
of physical laws and an increasing influence of mental laws," 
and " the measure of civilization is the triumph of mind over 
external agents." Yet his challenge, not only to the theologian, 
but also to those " historians whose indolence of thought " or 
M natural incapacity " prevented them from attempting more than 
the annalistic record of events, called out a storm of protest from 
almost every side. Now that the controversy has cleared away, 
we see that in spite of Buckle's too confident formulation of his 
laws, his pioneer work in a great field marks him out as the 
Augustine of the scientific age. Among historians, however, 
Buckle's theory received but little favour for another generation. 
Meanwhile the economists had themselves taken up the problem, 



and it was from them that the historians of to-dayh«ve learned 

it, T>n y**x% hgfrwg Burkte puhlkluni hfr ht-nry, g«rf M»r» *«H 

already formulated the " economic theory of history." Accept* 
ing with reservation Feuerbach's attack on the Hegelian M absoaste 
idea," based on materialistic grounds (Dor Mouth ist, mas tr tor), 
Marx was led to the conclusion that the causes of that process of 
growth which constitutes the history of society are to be found ia 
the economic conditions of existence. From this be went on to 
socialism, which bases its militant philosophy upon this farter* 
pretation of history. But the truth or falseness of socialism does 
not affect the theory of history. In 1845 Marx wrote of the 
Young-Hegelians that to separate history from natural science 
and industry was like separating the soul from the body, and 
" finding the birthplace of history, not in the gross material 
production on earth, but in the misty cloud formation of heaven " 
{Die heiUgt Familia, p. 158). In his Misert de la pkHosefhm 

(1847) belays down the principle that social relationships largely 
depend upon modes of production, and therefore the prindpks, 
ideas and categories which are thus evolved are no mote eternal 
than the relations they express, but are historical and transitory 
products. In the famous Manifesto of the Co mmuni st Party 

(1848) the theory was applied to show how the industrial revoh> 
tion had replaced feudal with modern conditions. But it had 
little vogue,' except among Socialists, until the third volume of 
Das Kapital was published in 1804, when its importance was 
borne in upon continental scholars. Since then the controversy 
has been almost as heated as in the days of the Reformation, 
It is an exaggeration of the theory which makes it an explanation 
of all human life, but the whole science of dynamic sociology 
rests upon the postulate of Marx. 

The content of history always reflects the interests of the age 
in which it is written. It was so in Herodotus and in medieval 
chronicles. Modem historians began with politics. But as the 
complex nature of society became more evident in the age of 
democracy, the economic or sociological history gained ground. 
Histories of commerce and cities now rank beside those on war 
and kings, although there are readers still who prefer to follow 
the pennants of robber barons rather than to watch the slow 
evolution of modern conditions. The drum-and-trumpet history 
has its place like that of art, jurisprudence, science or philosophy. 
Only now we know that no one of these is more than a single 
glimpse at a vast complex of phenomena, most of which lie for 
ever beyond our ken. 

This expansion of interest has • intensified specialisation, 
Historians no longer attempt to write world histories; they 
form associations of specialists for the purpose. Each historian 
chooses his own epoch or century and his own subject, and 
spends his life mastering such traces of it as he can find. His 
work there enables him to judge of the methods of bis fellows, 
but his own remains restricted by the very wealth of material 
which has been accumulated on the single subject before him. 
Thus the great enterprises of to-day are co-operative— the 
Cambridge Modern History, Lavisse and Rambaud's Histein 
genirale, or Lavisse'* Histoire is France, like Hunt and Poole's 
Political History of England* and Onckcn's Attgcmeint Cesckichts 
in Einzeldarstellungen. But even these vast sets cover but the 
merest fraction of their subjects. The Cambridge history passe* 
for the most part along the political crust of society, and seldom 
glances at the social forces within. This limitation of the pro- 
fessed historian is made up for by the growingly historical 
treatment of all the sciences and arts— a tendency noted before, 
to which this edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica is itself 
a notable witness. Indeed, for a definition of that limitless 
subject which includes all the phenomena that stand the warp 
and stress of change, one might adapt a famous epitaph—* 
historian requiris, tircumspke. 

Bibliography.— See Cb. V. Langlols, Manud is biblio grophii 
historians (2 vols.. 1904). This forms the logical bibliography of 
this article. It U a general survey of the whole apparatus of histori- 
cal research, and is the indisDcnsablc guide to the subject. Simitar 
bibliographies covering sections of history are noted with the 
articles where they properly belong. «.#. in English medieval history 
the manual of Chas. Cross, Sources and Literature of Engiuh History 



HIT^HITCHCOCK, R. D. 



533 



it 



a?- 



b German history the QueUenkunde of Dahknann-Waitx (7th ed.); 
for France the Bibliographic de Vhistoire de France of G. Monod 
(antiquated, 1888), or the Sources de I'histoire de France so ably 
begun by A. Molioier's volumes on the medieval period. Perhaps 
the sanest survey of the present scientific movement in history is 
the clear summary of Ch. V. Langlois and Ch. Seignobos. Intro- 
duction to the Study of History (trans, with preface by F. York 
Powell, London, 1808). Much more ambitious is E. Bernheim's 
Lehrbuch der htstoriscnen Method* und der Gesckichts philosophic mil 
Nackweis der uncmtiisten Quetten und HilfsmiUei turn Studium der 
CeschichU (3rd and 4th ed.. Leipzig, 1903). 0- T. S.*) 

HIT, a (own of Asiatic Turkey, in the vilayet of Bagdad, on 
the west bank of the Euphrates, 70 m, W.N.W. of Bagdad, in 
33° 38' 8* N., 42* 52' 1 5* E. It is picturesquely situated on a line 
of hills, partly natural, but in large part certainly artificial, the 
accumulation of centuries of former habitation, from 30 to xoo ft. 
in height, bordering the river. The houses are built of field stones 
and mud. A striking feature of the town is a lofty and well- 
proportioned minaret, which leans quite perceptibly. Behind 
and around Hit is an extensive but utterly barren plain, through 
which flow several streams of bitter water, coming from mineral 
springs. Directly behind the town are two bitumen springs, one 
cold and one hot, within 30 ft. of one another. The gypsum 
cliffs on the edge of the plain, and the rocks which crop out here 
and there in the plain, arc full of seams of bitumen, and the 
whole place is redolent of sulphuretted hydrogen. Across the 
river there are naphtha springs. Indeed, the entire region is one 
possessing great potential wealth in mineral oils and the like. 
Hit, with its fringe of palms, is like an oasis in the desert 
occasioned by the outcrop of these deposits. From time 
immemorial it has been the chief source of supply of bitumen for 
Babylonia, the prosperity of the town depending always upon its 
bitumen fountains, which are still the property of the govern- 
ment, but are rented out to any one who wishes to use them. 
There is also a shipyard at Hit, where the characteristic Baby- 
lonian boats are still made, smeared within and without with 
bit umen. Hit is the head of navigation on the Euphrates. It is 
also the point from which the camel-post starts across the desert 
to Damascus. About 8 m. inland from Hit, on a bitter stream, 
lies the small town of Kubcitha. Hit is mentioned, under the 
name of 1st, in the Karnak inscription as paying tribute to 
Telhmosis (Thothmcs) II L In the Bible (Ezra viii. 1 5) it is called 
Ahava; the original Babylonian name seems to have been Ihi, 
which becomes in the Talmud Ihidakira, in Ptolemy Iducapa, and 
in Zosimus and Ammianus Aaxipo. and Diacira. 

Sec Geo. Rawlinson's Herodotus, i. 179, and note by H. C. Rawlin- 
son; J. P. Peters, Nippur (1897); H. V. Gcerc, By Nile and 
Euphrates (1904). (J. P- Pe.) 

HITA, GINES PEREZ DB (1544?- 1605?), Spanish novelist 
and poet, was born at M ula (Murcia) about the middle of the 16th 
century. He served in the campaign of 1569-1571 against the 
Moriscoa, and in 1572 wrote a rhymed history of the city of Lorca 
which remained unpublished till 1889. Heowes his wide celebrity 
to the Uistoria de lot bondos de Zegrtes y.Abencctrajcs (1595- 
Z004), better knows as the Cucrras child de Granada, which 
purports to*be a chronicle based on an Arabic original ascribed 
to a certain Aben-Hamin. Aben-Hamin is a fictitious personage, 
and the Guerras de Granada is in reality a historical novel, perhaps 
the earliest example of its kind, and certainly the first historical 
novel that attained popularity. In thefirst part the events which 
led to the downfall of Granada axe related with uncommon 
brilliancy, and Hita's sympathetic transcription of life at the 
Emir's court has clearly suggested the conventional presentation 
of the picturesque, chivalrous Moor in the pages of Mile de 
Scadery, Mme de Lafayette, Chateaubriand and Washington 
I rving. The second part is concerned with the author's personal 
experiences, and the treatment is effective; yet, though 
Calderon's play, A mar dtsfuts da la muerte, is derived from it, the 
second part has never enjoyed the vogue or influence of the first. 
The exact date of Hita's death is unknown. His blank verse 
tendering of the Crtnica Troyana, written in 1596, exists in 
manuscript. 

HITCHCOCK, EDWARD (1 793-1864), American geologist, 
was. born of poor parents at Deer fie Id, Massachusetts, on the 
94th 0/ May J 793- He owed his education, chiefly to his own 



exertions, and was preparing himself to enter Harvard College 
when he was compelled to interrupt his studies from a weakness 
in his eyesight. In 1815 be became principal of the academy of 
his native town; but he resigned this office in 1818 in order 
to study for the ministry. Having been ordained in 1821 
pastor of the Congregational church of Conway, Mass., he em- 
ployed his leisure in making a scientific survey of the western 
counties of the state. From 1825 to 1845 he was professor of 
chemistry and natural history, from 1845 to 1864 was professor of 
natural theology and geology at Amherst College, and from 1845 
to 1854 was president; the college owed its early success largely 
to his energetic efforts, especially during the period of his presid- 
ency. In 1830 he was appointed state geologist of Massachusetts, 
and in 1836 was made geologist of the first district of the state of 
New York. In 1840 he received the degree of LLJD. from 
Harvard, and in 1846 that of D.D. from Middlebury College, 
Vermont Besides his constant labours in geology, zoology and 
botany, Hitchcock took an active interest in agriculture, and in 
1850 he was sent by the Massachusetts legislature to examine 
into the methods of the agricultural schools of Europe. In 
geology he made a detailed examination and exposition of the 
fossil footprints from the Triassic sandstones of the Connecticut 
valley. His collection is preserved in the Hitchcock Ichnological 
Museum of Amherst College, and a description of it was published 
in 1858 in his report to the Massachusetts legislature on the 
ichnology of New. England. The footprints were regarded as 
those of reptiles, amphibia and birds (?). In 1857 nc undertook, 
with the aid of his two sons, the geological survey of Vermont, 
which was completed in 1861. As a writer, on geological science, 
Hitchcock was largely concerned in determining the connexioa 
between it and religion, and employing its results to explain 
and support what he regarded as the truths of revelation. He 
died at Amherst, on the 27th of February 1864. 

.His son, Charles Henry Hitchcock (1836- ), did good, 
service in geology, in Vermont, New Hampshire (1868-1878), and 
ot* " " ' 



of 
cu 

° f o 
18 

in 

t 

Ce 

cet 
Jo 

be 
Bi 
Ui 

a pupil of Boulanger and Lefebvre in Paris. He attracted notice 
in the Salon of 1885 with his " Tulip Growing," a Dutch garden 
which he painted in Holland. He had for years a studio at 
Egmond, in the Netherlands. He became a Chevalier of the 
Legion of Honour, France; a member of the Vienna Academy 
of Arts, the Munich Secession Society, and other art bodies; and 
is represented in the Dresden gallery; the imperial collection, 
Vienna; the Chicago Art Institute, and the Detroit Museum of 
Fine Arts. 

HITCHCOCK, ROSWELL DW1GHT (1817-1887)1, American 
divine, was born at East Machias, Maine, on the 15th of August 
181 7, graduated at Amherst College in 1836, and later studied at 
Andover Theological Seminary, Mass. After a visit to Germany 
he was a tutor at Amherst in 1839-1842, and was minister of the 
First (Congregational) Church, Exeter, New Hampshire, in 1845* 
1852. He became professor of natural and revealed religion in 
Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine, in 1852, and in 1855 
professor of church history in the Union Theological Seminary 
in New York, of which he was president in 1880-1887. He died 
at Somerset, Mass., on the x6th of June 1887. 

Among his works are: Life of Edward Robinson (1863) ; Socialism 
(1879); Carmine Sanctorum (with Z. Eddy and L. W. Mudge, 1885); 
and Eternal Atonement <i888). 



53+ 



HITCHIN— HITTITES 



HITCHIN, a market town m the Hitchin parliamentary 
division of Hertfordshire, England, on the small river Hiz, 32 m. 
N. from London by the Great' Northern railway. Pop. of urban 
district (1001) 10,072. It is the junction of the main line with 
the Cambridge branch, and with a branch of the Midland railway 
to Bedford. The church of St Mary is Perpendicular, with a fine 
porch, a painting of the Adoration of the Magi, attributed to 
Rubens, a small crypt said to have been used by Cromwell as a 
prison for the Royalists, and many interesting monuments. 
Hitchin Priory is a mansion on the site of a Carmelite foundation 
of the early 14th century. A Gilbertine nunnery, founded later 
in the same century, stood adjacent to the church, and portions 
of the buildings appear in an existing block of almshouses. The 
grammar school (1632) was reconstituted in 1889 for boys and 
girls. Straw-plaiting, mailing, brewing, and the cultivation and 
distillation of lavender and peppermint are carried on. 

HITTITES, an ancient people, alluded to frequently in the 
earlier records of Israel, and also, under slightly variant names, 
in Egyptian records of the XVIIlth, XlXth and XXth Dynasties, 
and in Assyrian from about 1 100 to 700 B.C. They appear also in 
the Vannic cuneiform texts, and are believed to be the authors of 
a class of monuments bearing inscriptions in a peculiar picto- 
graphic character, and widely distributed over Asia Minor and 
N. Syria, around which much controversy has raged during the 
past thirty years. 

1. The Bible.— In the Old Testament the name of the race is 
written Heth (with initial aspirate), members of it being Hitti, 
Hittim, which the Septuagint renders x*»"» x^raiot, x*rrd» <w 
X*rrc(p, keeping, it will be noted, € in the stem throughout. The 
race appears in two connexions, (a) In pre-Israelite Palestine, 
it is resident about Hebron (Gen. xxiii. 3), and in the central 
uplands (Num. xiii. 20). To Joshua (i. 4) is promised " from the 
wilderness and this Lebanon even unto the great river, the river 
Euphrates, all the land of the Hittites." The term " wilderness " 
here is of geographical ambiguity; but the promise is usually 
taken to mean that Palestine itself was part of the Hittite land 
before the coming of Israel; and an apostrophe of Ezekiel 
(xvi. 3) to Jerusalem, "thy mother (was) an Hittite," is quoted 
in confirmation. Under the monarchy we hear frequently of 
Hittites within the borders of Israel, but either as a small subject 
people, coupled with other petty tribes, or as individuals in the 
Jewish service (e.g. Uriah, in the time of David). . It appears, 
therefore, that there survived in Palestine to late times a de- 
tached Hittite population, with which Hebrews sometimes 
intermarried (Judges iii. 5-6 ; Gen. xxvi. 34) and lived in relations 
now amicable, now tyrannical {e.g. Hittites were made tributary 
bondsmen by Solomon, x Kings ix. 20, 21; 2 Cbron. vfii. 7, 8). 
(b) An independent and powerful Hittite people was domiciled 
N. of Palestine proper, organized rather as a confederacy of tribes 
than a single monarchy (1 Kings x. 28; 2 Kings vii. 6). Presum- 
ably it was a daughter of these Hittites that Solomon took to wife. 
If the emendation of 2 Sam. xxiv. 64, " Tahtim-hodshi," based on 
the Septuagint version yip x«r«*J* *a&¥ he accepted, we hear of 
them at Kadesh on Orontes; and some minor Hittite cities are 
mentioned, e.g. Luz; but no one capital city of the race is clearly 
indicated. Carchemish, on the Euphrates, though mentioned 
three times (2 Chron. xxxv. 20; Isa. x. 9; Jer. xlvi. 2), is not 
connected explicitly with Hittites, a fact which is not surprising, 
since that city was no longer under a Hatti dynasty at the epoch 
of the Old Testament references. So far as the Old Testament 
goes, therefore, we gather that the Hittites were a considerable 
people, widely spread in Syria, in part subdued and to some 
extent assimilated by Israel, but in part out of reach. The latter 
portion was not much known to the Hebrews, but was vaguely 
feared as a power in the early days of the monarchy, though not 
in the later pre-Captivity period. The identification of the 
northern and southern Hittites, however, presents certain 
difficulties not yet fully explained; and it seems that we must 
assume Heth to have been the name both of a country in the 
north and of a tribal population not confined to that country. 

2, Egyptian Records. — The decipherment of the inscriptions 
of the XVIIlth Theban Dynasty led, before the middle of the 



19th century, to the discovery of the important part played ta 
the Syrian campaigns of Tethmosis (Thothraes) III. by the H~t a 
(vulgarly transliterated Kketo, though the vocalization is ta- 
certain). The coincidence of this name, beginning with aa 
aspirate, led H. K. Brugsch to identify the Khcta with Heth. 
That identification stands, and no earlier Egyptian mention of 
the race has been found. Tethmosis HI. found the Kheta 
(" Great " and M Little ") in 74. Syria, not apparently at Kadesb, 
but at Carchemish, though they had not been in possession of the 
latter place long (not in the epoch of Tethmosis I.'s Syrian 
campaign). They were a power strong enough to give the 
Pharaoh cause to vaunt his success (see also Egypt: Ancieot 
History, \ " The New Empire "). Though he says he levied 
tribute upon them, his successors in the dynasty nearly all 
record fresh wars with the Kheta who appear as the northern- 
most of Pharaoh's enemies, and Amenopbis or Amenhotep III. 
saw fit to take to wife Gilukhipa, a Syrian princess, who may or 
may not have been a Hittite. This queen is by some supposed to 
have introduced into Egypt certain exotic ideas which blossomed 
In the reign of Amenophis IV. The first Pharaoh of the succeeding 
dynasty, Rameses I., came to terms with a Kheta king called 
Saplel or Saparura; but Seti I. again attacked the Kheta (1366 
B.C.), who had apparently pushed southwards. Forced back by 
Seti, the Kheta returned and were found holding Kadesh by 
Rameses II., who, in his fifth year, there fought against them and 
a large body of allies, drawn probably in part from beyond 
Taurus, the battle which occasioned the monumental poem of 
Pentaur. After long struggles, a treaty was concluded in 
Rameses's twenty-first year, between Pharaoh and M Kheta- 
sar " (i.e. Kheta-king), of which we possess an Egyptian copy. 
The discovery of a cuneiform tablet containing a copy of this 
same treaty, in the Babylonian language, was reported from 
Boghaz Keui in Cappadocia by H. Winckler in 1007. It argues 
the Kheta a people of considerable civilization. The Kheta king 
subsequently visited Pharaoh and gave him his daughter to wife. 
Rameses' successor, Mineplah, remained on terms with the 
Kheta folk; but in the reign of Rameses III. (Dyn. XX.) the 
latter seem to have joined in the great raid of northern tribes oa 
Egypt which was checked by the battle of Pelusium. From this 
point (c. 1 150 B.C.)— the point at which (roughly) the monarchic 
history of Israel in Palestine opens— Egyptian records cease to 
mention Kheta; and as we know from other sources that the 
latter continued powerful in Carchemish for some centuries to 
come, we must presume that the rise of the Israelite state inter- 
posed an effective political barrier. 

3, Assyrian Records.— >lh an inscription of Tiglath Pfleser L 
(about 1 100 B.C.), first deciphered in 1857, a people called Khatti 
h mentioned as powerful in Girgamish on Euphrates (U. 
Carchemish); and m other records of the same monarch, sub* 
sequently read, much mention is made of this and of other N. 
Syrian names. These Khatti appear again in the inscriptions of 
Assur-naxir-pal (early oth century B.C.), In whose time Car- 
chemish was very wealthy, and the Khatti power extended far 
over N. Syria and even into Mesopotamia. Shalmaneser 11. 
(d. 825 b.c.) raided the Khatti and their allies year after year, 
and at last Sargon III., in 717 b-c, relates that he captured 
Carchemish and its king, Piairis, and put an end to its independ- 
ence. We hear no more of it thenceforward. These Kkatti, 
there is no reasonable doubt, are identical with Kbeis. (For the 
chronology see further under Babylonia and Assyria!) 

4. OtMer Cuneiform Records. — The name of the race appears ia 
certain of the Tel-el-Amama letters, tablets written in Baby- 
lonian script to Amenophis (Amenhotep) IV. and found in X891 
on the site of bis capital. Some of his governors in Syriaa 
districts (e.g. one Aairu of Phoenicia) report movements of the 
Hittites, who were then pursuing an aggressive polky (about 
1400 B.C.). There are also other letters from rulers of princi- 
palities In N. Syria (Mitaimi) and E. Asia Minor (Arzawa), who 
write in non-Semitic tongues and are supposed to have beta 
Hittites. 

Certain Khotior Kkati are mentioned in the Vannic inscriptions 
(deciphered partially by A. H. Sayce and others) aa attacked by 



HITTITES 



535 



kings of Bianas (Van) r aad-appanmtly domiciled on the middle 
Euphrates N. of Taurus in the oth century B.C. TWa name 
again may safely be identified with Kkatii-Kheta. 

The Khalti also appear on a " prophecy-tablet/' referring 
ostensibly to the time of Sargon of Agade (middle of 4th 
millennium B.C.); but the document is probably of very 
much later date* Lastly, a fragmentary chronicle of the 1st 
Babylonian Dynasty mentions an invasion of Akkad by them 
about 1800 B.C. 

From all these various sources we should gather that the 
Hittites were among the more important racial elements in N. 
Syria and S.E. Asia Minor for at least a thousand years. The 
limits at each end, however, are very ill defined, the superior 
falling not later than 2000 B.C. and the inferior not earlier than 
600 B.C. This people was militant, aggressive and unsettled In 
the earlier part of that time; commercial, wealthy and enervated 
in the latter. A memorial of its trading long remained in Asia 
in the shape of the weight-measure called in cuneiform records 
the month " of Carchemish." These Hittites had close relations 
with other Asia Minor peoples, and at times headed a confederacy. 
During the later part of their history they were in continual 
contact with Assyria, and, as a Syrian power, and perhaps also 
as a Cappadocian one, they finally succumbed to Assyrian 
pressure. 

The " H Utile " Monuments.— It remains to consider in the light 
of the foregoing evidence a class of monuments to which attention 
began to be called about 1870. In that year two Americans, 
Consul J. A. Johnson and the Rev. S. Jessup, rediscovered, at 
Hamah (Hamath) on Orontes, five basaltic blocks bearing 
pictographic inscriptions in relief, one of which had been reported 
by J. L. Burckhardt in 1812. In spite of their efforts and 
subsequent attempts made by Tyrwhitt Drake and Richard 
Burton, when consul at Damascus, proper copies could not be 
obtained; and it was not till the end of 1872 that, thanks to 
W. Wright, of Beirut, casts were taken and the stones themselves 
sent to Constantinople by Subhi Pasha of Damascus. As usually 
happens when a new class of antiquities is announced, it was soon 
found that the " Hamathite " inscriptions did not stand alone. 
A monument in the same script had been seen in Aleppo by 
Tyrwhitt Drake and George Smith in 1872. It still exists, built 
into a mosque on the Western wall of the city. Certain clay 
coalings, eight of which bore pictographic signs, found by A. H. 
Layard in the palace of Assur-bani-pal at Kuyunjik (Nineveh), 
as long ago as 185 1 and noticed then as in a " doubtful character," 
were compared by Hayes Ward and found to be of the Hamathite 
class. A new copy of the long known rock-sculpture at Ivriz'in 
S.W. Cappadocia was published by E. J. Davis in 1876, and 
clearly showed Hamathite characters accompanying the figures. 
Davis also reported, but did not see; a similar inscription at Bulgar 
Maden, not far away. Sculptures seen by W. Skene and George 
Smith at Jerablus, on the middle Euphrates, led to excavations 
being undertaken there, in 1878, by the British Museum, and to 
the discovery of certain Hamathite inscriptions accompanying 
sculptures, a few of which were brought to London. The conduct 
of these excavations, owing to the death of George Smith, 
devolved on Consul Henderson of Aleppo, and was not satis- 
factorily carried out. Meanwhile Wright, Ward and Sayce had 
all suggested " Hittite " as a substitute for " Hamathite," 
because no other N". Syrian people loomed so large in ancient 
records as did the Hittites, and the suggestion began to find 
acceptance. Jerablus was confidently identified with Car- 
chemish (but without positive proof to this day), and the occur- 
rence of Hamathite monuments there was held to confirm the 
Hit the theory. 

" In 1876 Sayce pointed out the resemblance between certain 
Hittite signs and characters in the lately deciphered Cypriote 
syllabary, and suggested that the comparison might lead to a 
beginning of decipherment; but the hope has proved vain. To 

1 First described by the Turk. Hani Knalifa. in the 17th century; 
first seen by the Swedish traveller Otter in 1736, and first published 
in 1840 in Hitter's Erdkundc. Hi., after a drawing by Major Fischer, 
made in 1837. 



this scholar, however* is owed the next great step ahead. In 
1870 it first occurred to him to compare the rock-monuments 
at Boghaz Keui (see Pteria) and Euyuk in N. Cappadocia, 
discovered by Tcxier and Hamilton in 1835 and subsequently 
explored by G. Perrot and £. Guilkurae. These, he now 
saw, bore Hittite pictographs. Other rock-sculptures at Giaur 
Kalessi, in Galatia, and in the Karabel pass near Smyrna, he 
suspected of belonging to the same class 9 ; and visiting the 
last-named locality in the autumn, he found Hittite pictographs 
accompanying one of the two figures.' He announced his dis- 
coveries in 1880, and proclaimed the fact that a great Hittite 
empire, extending from. Kadesh to Smyrna, had risen from the 
dead. A month later he had the good fortune to recover copies 
of a silver boss, or hilt-top, offered to various museums about 
1 860, but rejected by them as a meaningless forgery and for a 
long time lost again to sight. Round the rim was a cuneiform 
legend, and in the field a Hittite figure with six Hittite symbols 
engraved twice over on either hand of it. Reading the cuneiform 
as Tarqu-dimme sar mat Ertne {i.e. " T. king of the country £."), 
Sayce distributed phonetic values, corresponding to the syllables 
of the two proper names, among four of the Hittite characters, 
reserving two as "ideograms" of "king" and "country," 
and launched into the field of decipherment. But he subse- 
quently recognized that this was a false start, and began afresh 
from another basis. Since then a number of other monuments 
have been found, some on new sites, others on sites already 
known to be Hittite, the distribution of which can be seen 
by reference to the accompanying map. It will be observed 
that, so far as at present known, they cluster most closely in 
C " ' ' 



CNorth Cappadocia.— Bog hot Keui (see Ptkhia) ; largecity with 
remains of palace, citadel, walls, &c. Long rock-cut inscription of 
ten lines in relief, two short relief inscriptions cut on blocks, and 
also cuneiform tablets in Babylonian and also in a native language, 
first found in situ in 1893, and showing the she to be the capital of 
Arzawa, whence came two of the Tell el-Amarna letters. Near the 
she are the rock reliefs of Yasili Kaya in two hypaethral galleries, 
showing, in the one, two processions composed of over sixty figures 
meeting at the head of the gallery; in the other, isolated groups of 
figures, fifteen in number (see for detailed description Murray's 
Guide to Asia Minor , 1895, pp. 23 ff.). Pictographs accompany 
many of the figures. The whole makes the most extensive group 
of Kittite remains yet known. Boghaz Keui was never thoroughly 
explored until 1907, the survey of Perrot and Guillaume having been 
superficial only and the excavations of E. Chantre (1894) very slight. 
In 1906 a German expedition under Professor H. Wincklcf under- 
took the work, and great numbers of cuneiform tablets were found. 
These refer to the reigns of at least four kings from Subbiluliuma 
(-Saplcl. see above) to Hattusil II. or Khattusil (-Khctasar. see 
above). The latter was an ally of Katashmanturgu of Babylon, 



* The "Niobe " statue near Manisa was not definitely known for 
*• Hittite " till 1882. when G. Dennis detected pictographs near it. 

* The " pseudo-Sesostrcs " of .Herodotus, already demonstrated 
non-Egyptian by Rosellini. The second figure was unknown, till 
found by Dr Beddoe in 1856. 



536 



HITTlTSS 



HITTCTES 



537 



and large mounds, explored in 1902 bv Oppeoheun. Bamahi five 
blocks inscribed in relief (see above). 

F. Outlying Sitbs.— *Enerum\ source of an incised inscription, 
perhaps not originally found there. Kedabeg: metal boss or hut-top 
with pictographs. found in a tomb and stated by F. Hommel to be 
Hittite, but doubtful. Toprak Kaleh; bronze fragments with two 
pictographs; doubtful if Hittite. Nineveh', seafings. see above. 
Babylon; a bowl and a stela of storm-god, both with incised in- 
scriptions; doubtless spoil of war or tribute brought from Syria. 
The bowl is inscribed round the outside, the stela on the back. 

(For a detailed description of the subjects of the reliefs, &c., with 
the necessary illustrations, see the works indicated in the biblio- 
graphy.) 

Structures.— The structural remains found as yet on Hittite 
sites are few, scanty and far between. They consist of; (a) 
Ground plans of a palatial building and three temples and 
fortifications with sculptured gate at Boghaz KeuL The palace 
was built round a central court, flanked by passages and entered 
by a doorway of three baUants hung on two columns. The 
whole plan bears more than a superficial resemblance to those 
of Cretan palaces in the later Minoan period. Only the rough 
core of the walls is standing to a height of about 3 ft. The 
fortifications of the citadel have an elaborate double gate 
with flanking towers, (b) Fortifications, palace, &c, at Sinjerli. 
The gates here are more elaborate than at Boghaz Kern, but 
planned with the same idea—that of entrapping in an enclosed 
space, barred by a second door, an enemy who may have forced 
the first door, while flanking towers would add to his discom- 
fiture. The palace plan is again rectangular, with a central 
pillared hall, and very similar in plan to that of Boghaz Keui. 
The massive walls are also of similar construction. Dados of 
relief-sculpture run round the inner walls; this feature seems 
to have been common to Hittite buildings of a sumptuous 
kind, and accounts for most of the sculptured blocks that have 
been found, e*g. at Jerablus, Sakhchegeuzu, Euyuk, Arslan Tepe, 
&c. Columns, probably of wood, rested on bases carved as 
winged lions, (c) Gate with sculptured approach at Euyuk. 
The ground plan of the gate is practically the same in idea as 
that at Sinjerli. Structures were found at Jerablus, but never 
properly uncovered or planned, (d) Sculptured porticoes of 
temples or palaces uncovered at Sakchegeuzu and Tell Halaf 
(sec above). On other sites, e.g. Arslan Tepe (Ordasu), Arbistan, 
Maxash (above the modern town and near the springs), Beikeui, 
mounds, doubtless covering structures, may be seen, and 
sculptured slabs have been recovered. The mounds, probably 
Hittite, in N. Syria alone are to be counted by hundreds. No 
tombs certainly Hittite have been found, 1 though it is possible 
that some of the reliefs (e.g. at Fraktin) are of funerary character. 

Sculptures end other Objects of Art.— The sculptures hitherto 
found consist of reliefs on rocks and on stelae, either honorific 
or funerary; reliefs on blocks forming parts of wall-dados; and 
a few figures more or less in the round, though most of these 
(e.g. the sphinxes of Euyuk and the hons of Arslan Tash and 
Maxash) are not completely disengaged from the block. The 
most considerable sculptured rock-panels are at Boghaz Keui 
(see Ptema); the others (Ivriz, Fraktin, Rarabel, Giaur Kalessi, 
Dogbanradere), it should be observed, all lie N. of Taurus— a 
fact of some bearing on the problem of the origin and local 
domicile of the art, since rock-reliefs, at any rate, cannot be 
otherwise than in situ. Sculptured stelae, honorific or funerary, 
all with pyramidal or slightly rounded upper ends, and showing 
a single regal or divine figure or two figures, have come to light 
at Bor, Marash, Sinjerli, Jerablus, Babylon, &c. These, like 
most of the rock-panels, are all marked as Hittite by accompany- 
ing pictographic Inscriptions. The walUbtacks are seldom in- 
scribed, the exceptions (e.g. the Arslan Tepe Kon-hunt and certain 
blocks from Marash and Jerablus) being not more certainly 
wall-dados than sklae. The only fairly complete anthropoid 
statue known is the much-defaced " Niobe " at Suratlu Tasb, 
engaged in the rock behind. The aniconfc Ibwer part of an 
inscribed statue wholly in the round was found at Palanga, and 
parts of others at Kirchoglu and Marash. Despite considerable 

1 Five intramural graves were explored at Sinjerli, but whether 
of the Hittite or of the Assyrian occupation is doubtful 



differences in execution and details, all these sculptures show 
one general type of art, a type which recalls now Babylonian, 
now Assyrian, now Egyptian, now archaic Ionian, style, but is 
always individual and easily distinguishable from the actual 
products of those peoples. The figures, whether of men or beasts, 
axe of a squat, heavy order, with internal features (e.g. bones, 
muscles, &c.) shown as if external, as in some Mesopotamian 
sculptures. The human type is always very brachycephalic, 
with brow receding sharply and long nose making almost one 
line with the sloping forehead. In the sculptures of the Com- 
magene and the Tyana districts, the nose has a long curving tip, 
of very Jewish appearance, but not unlike the outline given to 
Kheta warriors in Egyptian scenes, The lips are full and the 
chin short and shaven. The whole, physiognomy is fleshy and, 
markedly distinct from that of other Syrians. At Boghaz 
Keui, Euyuk and Jerablus, the facial type is very markedly 
non-Semitic. But not much stress can be laid on these differences 
owing to (1) great variety of execution in different sculptures, 
which argues artists of very unequal capacity; (a) doubt whether 
individual portraits are intended in some cases and not in others. 
The hair of males is sometimes, but not always, worn in pigtail. 
The fashions of head-covering and clothes are very various, 
but several of them — e.g. the horned cap of the Ivriz god; the 
conical hat at Boghaz Keui, Fraktin, &c; the "jockey-cap" 
on the Tarkudimme boss; the broad-bordered over-robe, and the 
upturned shoes — are not iound on other Asiatic monuments, 
except where Hittites are portrayed. Animals in profile are 
represented more naturaJistically than human beings, e.g. at 
Yasili Kaya, and especially in some pictographic symbols in 
relief (e.g. at Hamah). This, however, is a feature common to 
Mesopotamian and Egyptian, and perhaps to all primitive art. 

The subjects depicted are processions of figures, human and 
divine (Yasili Kaya, Euyuk, Giaur Kalessi); scenes of sacrifice 
or adoration, or other cult-practice (Yasili Kaya, Euyuk, Fraktin, 
Ivriz, and perhaps the figures seated beside tables at Marash 
Sakchegeuzu, Sinjerli, &c); of the chase (Arslan Tepe, Sak- 
chegeuzu); but not, as known at present, of battle. Both at 
Euyuk and Yasili Kaya reliefs in one and the same series are 
widely separated in artistic conception and execution, some 
showing the utmost naivetS, others expressing both outline and 
motion with fair success. The fact warns us against drawing 
hasty inductions as to relative dates from style and execution. 

Besides sculptures, well assured, Hittite art-products include 
a few small objects in metal (e.g. heavy, inscribed gold ring 
bought by Sir W. M. Ramsay at Konia; base silver seal, sup- 
ported on three lions' claws, bought by D. G. Hogarth at Qor; 
inscribed silver boss of "Tarkudimme/' mentioned above, 
&£, &c); many intaglios in various stones (chiefly in steatite), 
mostly either spheroidal or gable-shaped, but a few scarabaeoid, 
conical or cylindrical, bearing sometimes pictographic symbols, 
sometimes divine, human or animal figures. The best collection 
is at Oxford. The majority are of very rude workmanship, 
bodies and limbs being represented by mere skeleton lines or 
unfilled outlines; a few vessels (e.g. inscribed basalt bowl found 
at Babylon) and fragments of ware painted with dark ornament 
on light body-day, or in polychrome on a cream-white slip, or 
black burnished, found on N. Cappadockin sites, Ire The 
bronzes hitherto claimed as Hittite have been bought on the 
Syrian coast or come from not certainly HHtite sites in Cappa- 
docia (see E. Chantre, Mission en Cap'padocie). A great many 
small objects were found in the excavations at Sinjerli, including 
carved ivories, seals, toilet-instruments, implements, frc, but 
these have not been published. Nor, except provisionally, has 
the pottery, found at Sakchegeuzu. 

Inscriptions. — These, now almost sixty in number (excluding 
seals), are all in a pictographic character which employed 
symbols somewhat elaborately depicted in relief, but reduced to 
conventional and " shorthand " representations in the indsed 
texts. So far, the majority of our Hittite inscriptions, like those 
first found at Hamah, are In rdief (cameo); but the incised 
characters, first observed in the Tyana district, have since been 
shown, by discoveries at Marash, Babylon, &c, to have had a 



53« 



HITTITES 



wider range. It lias usually been assumed that the incised 
inscriptions, being the more conventionalized, are all of later 
date than thqse in relief; but comparison of Egyptian inscriptions, 
wherein both incised and cameo characters coexisted back to 
very early times, suggests that this assumption is not necessarily 
correct. The Hittite symbols at present known show about 
two hundred varieties; but new inscriptions continually add 
to the list, and great uncertainty remains as to the distinction 
of many symbols (i.e. whether mere variants or not), and as 
to many others which are defaced or broken in our texts. The 
objects represented by these symbols have been certainly 
identified in only a few instances. A certain number are beads 
(human and animal) detached from bodies, in a manner not 
known In the Egyptian hieroglyphic system, with which some 
of the other symbols show obvious analogies. Articles of dress, 
weapons, tools, &c, also appear. The longer inscriptions are 
disposed in horizontal rones, or panels, divided by lines, and, it 
seems, they were to be read boustrophedon, not only as regards 
the lines (which begin right to left) but also the words, which are 
written in columnar fashion, syllable below syllable, and read 
downwards and upwards alternately. The direction of reading is 
towards any faces which may be shown among the pictographs. 
The words are perhaps distinguished in some texts by punctua- 
tion marks. 

Long and patient efforts have been made to decipher this 
script, ever since it was first restored to our knowledge; and 
among the would-be decipherers honourable mention must be 
made, for persistence and courage, of Professor A. H. Sayce and 
of Professor P. Jensen. Other interpretations have been put 
forward by F. E. Peiser (based on conjectures as to the names 
on the Nineveh sealings), C. R. Conder (based largely on Cypriote 
comparisons and phonetic values transferred from these) and 
C. J. Ball (based on Hittite names recorded on Egyptian and 
Assyrian monuments, and applied to word-groups on the 
Hittite monuments). These, however, as having arbitrary 
and inadequate foundations, and for other reasons, have not been 
accepted. F. Hommel, J. HaWvy and J. Menant have done 
useful work in distinguishing word-groups, and have essayed 
partial interpretations. No other decipherers call for mention. 
A. H. Sayce and P. Jensen alone have enlisted any large body 
of adherents; and the former, who has worked upon his 
system for thirty years and published in the Proceedings of the 
Society for Biblical Archaeology for 1007 a summary of his 
method and results, has proceeded on the more scientific plan. 
His system, however, like all others, is built in the main upon 
hypotheses incapable at present of quite satisfactory verification, 
such, for example, as the conjectural reading " Gargamish " 
for a group of symbols which recurs in inscriptions from Jerablus 
and elsewhere. In this case, to add to the other obvious elements 
of uncertainty, it must be borne in mind that the location of 
Carcbemish at Jerablus is not proved, though it is very probable. 
Other conjectural identifications of groups of symbols with the 
place-names Hamath, Marash, Tyana are bases of Sayce's 
system. Jensen's system may be said to have been effectually 
demolished by L. Messerschmidt in his Bemerkungen (1898); 
but Sayce's system, which has been approved by Hommel and 
others, is probably in its main lines correct. Its frequent 
explanation, however, of incompatible symbols by the doctrines 
of phonetic variation and interchange, or by alternative values 
of the same symbol used as ideograph, determinative or phonetic 
complement, and the occasional use of circular argument in 
the process of "verification," do not inspire confidence in 
other than its broader results. Sayce's phonetic values and 
interpretations of determinatives are his best assured achieve- 
ments. But the words thus arrived at represent a language 
on which other known tongues throw little or no light, and 
their meaning is usually to be guessed only. In some significant 
cases, however, the Boghaz Keui tablets appear to give striking 
confirmation of Sayce's conjectures. 

Writing in 1903 L. Messerschmidt, editor of the best collection 
of Hittite texts up to date, made a tabula rasa of all systems of 
decipherment, asserting that only one sign out of two hundred— 



the bisected oval, determinative of divinity— had been inter- 
preted with any certainty; and in view of this opinion, coupled 
with the steady refusal of historians to apply the results of any 
Hittite decipherment, and the obvious lack of satisfactory 
verification, without which the pfling of hypothesis on hypothesis 
may only lead further from probability, there is no choice bat 
to suspend judgment for some time longer as to the inscriptions 
and all deductions drawn from them. 

Are the Monuments HUtite t ?>— It is time to. ask this question, 
although a perfectly satisfactory answer can only be expected 
when the inscriptions themselves have been deciphered. Almost 
all " Hittitologues " assume a connexion between the monu- 
ments and the Kheta-Khatti-Hittites, but in various degrees; 
e.g. while Sayce has said roundly that common sense demands 
the acceptance of all as the work of 'the Hittites, who were tie 
dominant caste throughout a loosely-knit empire extending at 
one time from the Orontes to the Aegean, Messerschmidt has 
stated with equal dogmatism that the Hittites proper were only 
one people out of many * in N. Syria and Asia Minor who shared 
a common civilization, and that therefore they Were authors of a 
part of the monuments only— presumably the N. Syrian, Com- 
magenian and Cataonian groups.. O. Puchstein* has denied to 
the Hittites some of the N. Syrian monuments, holding these of 
too late a date (judged by their Assyrian analogies) for the 
flourishing period of the Kheta-Khatti, as known from Egyptian 
and Assyrian records. He would ascribe them to the Kummukh 
(Commagenians), who seem to have succeeded theXhatti as the 
strongest opponents of Assyria in these parts. He was possibly 
right as regards the Sinjerli and Sakchegeuzu sculptures, which 
are of provincial appearance. The following considerations, how- 
ever, may be stated in favour of the ascription of the monuments 
to the Hittites:— 

(1) The monuments In question are found frequently where- 
ever, from other records, we know the Hittites to have bees 
domiciled at some period, i.e. throughout N. Syria and in 
Cataonia. (2) It was under the Khatti that Carchemish was a 
flourishing commercial city; and if Jerablus be really Car- 
chemish. it is significant that apparently the most numerous 
and most artistic of the monuments occur there. (3) Among an 
the early peoples of N. Syria and Asia Minor known to us from 
Egyptian and Assyrian records, the Kheta-Khatti alone appear 
frequently as leading to war peoples from far beyond Taurus, 
(4) The Kheta certainly had a system of writing and a glyptic art 
in the time of Rameses II., or else the Egyptian account of their 
copy of the treaty would be baseless. (5) The physiognomy 
given to Kheta warriors by Egyptian artists is fairly representa- 
tive of the prevailing type shown in the Hittite sculptures. 

Furthermore, the Boghaz Keui tablets, though only partially 
deciphered as yet, go far to settle the question. They show that 
whether Boghaz Keui was actually the capital of the Hatti or 
not, it was a great city of the Hatti, and that the latter were 
an important dement in Cappadocia from very early times. 
Before the middle of the 16th century B.C. the Cappadodan 
Hatti were already in relations, generally more or less hostile, 
with a rival power in Syria, that of Mitanni; and Subbtluliuma 
(•Sapid or Saparura), king of these Hatti, a contemporary of 
Amenophis IV. and Rameses I., seems to have obtained lasting 
dominion in Syria by subduing Doshratta of Mitanni. Car- 
chemish thenceforward became a Hatti dty and the southern 
capital of Cappadodan power. Since all the Syrian monuments 
of the Hittite class, so far known, seem comparatively late 
(most show such strong Assyrian influence that they must fall 
after 1100 B.C. and probably even considerably later), whole the 
North Cappadodan monuments (as Sayce, Ramsay, Perrot and 
others saw long ago) are the earlier in style, we are. bound to 
ascribe the origin of the dvilization which they represent, to the 
Cappadodan Hatti. 

1 The Assyrian records, as well as the Egyptian, distinguish many 
peoples in both areas from the Kheta-Khatti; and the most we can 
infer from these records is that there was an occasional league formed 
under the Hittites, not any imperial subjection or even a continuous 
federation. 

• Pseudo-Hethituch* fCunst (Berlin, 1890). 



HITTITES 



539 



Whether the Mitanni had shared in that civilization while 
independent, and whether they were racially kin to the Haiti, 
cannot be determined at present. Winckler has adduced 
evidence from names of local gods to show that there was an 
Indo-European racial element in Mitanni; but none for a 
similar element in the Hatti, whose chief god was Teshub. The 
majority ot scholars has always regarded the Hittites proper as, 
at any rate, non-Semitic, and some leading authorities have 
called them proto-Armenian, and believed that they have 
modern descendants in the Caucasus. This racial question can 
hardly be determined till those Hatti records, whether in cunei- 
form or pictograpbic script, which are couched in a native 
tongue, not in Babylonian, are read. In the meantime we have 
proper names to argue from; and these give us at least the 
significant indication that the Hittite nominative ended in s and 
the accusative in tn. In any case the connexion of the Hatti with 
the peculiar class of monuments which we have been describing, 
can hardly be further questioned; and it has become more than 
probable that the Hatti of Cappadoda were responsible in the 
beginning for the art and script of those monuments and for the 
civilization of which they are memorials. Other peoples of 
north Syria and Asia Minor {e.g. the Kummukh or Comma- 
genians and the Muski or Phrygians) came no doubt under the 
influence of this civilization and imitated its monuments, while 
subject to or federated with the Hatti. Through Phrygia and 
Lydia (q.v.) influences. of this same Cappadocian civilization 
passed towards the west; and indeed, before the Greek coloniza- 
tion of Asia Minor, a loosely knit Hatti empire may have 
stretched even to the Aegean. The Nymphi (Kara Bel) and 
Niobe sculptures near Smyrna are probably memorials of that 
extension. Certainly some inland Anatolian power seems to have 
kept Aegean settlers and culture away from the Ionian coast 
during the Bronze Age, and that power was in all likelihood the 
Hatti kingdom of Cappadocia. Owing perhaps to Assyrian 
aggression, this power seems to have begun to suffer decay about 
iooo B.C. and thereafter to have shrunk inwards, leaving the 
coasts open. The powers of Phrygia and Lydia rose successively 
out of its ruins, and continued to offer westward passage to 
influences of Mesopotamian culture till well into historic times. 
The Greeks came too late to Asia to have had any contact with 
Hatti power obscured from their view by the intermediate and 
secondary state of Phrygia. Their earliest writers regarded the 
latter as the seat of the oldest and most godlike of mankind. 
Only one Greek author, Hcrodqtus, alludes to the prehistoric 
Cappadocian power and only at the latest moment of its long 
decline. At the same time, some of the Greek legends seem to 
show that peoples, with whom the Greeks came into early con- 
tact, had vivid memories of the Hatti. Such are the Amazon 
stories, whose local range was very extensive, and the myths of 
Memnon and Pelops. The real reference of these stories, how- 
ever, was forgotten, and it has been reserved to our own generation 
to rediscover the records of a power and a civilization which once 
dominated Asia Minor and north Syria and occupied all the 
continental roads of communication between the East and the 
West of the ancient world. The credit of having been the first 
to divine this importance of the Hittites should always be 
ascribed to Sayce. 

I The history of the Hatti and their civilization, then, would 
appear to have been, very briefly, this. They belonged to an 
ethnic scattered widely over Eastern Asia Minor and Syria at 
an early period (Khatti invaded Akkad about 1800 B.C. in the 
reign of Samsuditana) ; but they first formed a strong state 
in Cappadocia late in the 16th century B.C. Subbiluliuma 
became their first great king, though he had at least one dynastic 
predecessor of the name of HattusU. The Hatti now pushed 
southwards in force, overcame the kingdom of Mitanni and 
proceeded partly to occupy and partly to make tributary both 
north Syria and western Mesopotamia where some of their 
congeners were already settled. They came early into collision 
with Egypt, and at the height of their power under Haltusil II. 
fought the battle of Kadesh with Rameses II., on at least equal 
terms. Both now and previously the diplomatic correspondence 



5+o 



HITTORFF— HKAMTI LONG 



PkHol. Wochensehtift (1891), pp. 803, 951 ; and F. von Luschan, 
and others, " Ausorabungen in Sendschirli " in Mitteil. Orient- 
SamnUungen (Berlin Museum, 1893 ff.); and on excavations at 
Boghai-Keui, H. Winckler in OrtenL Literaturteitung (Berlin, 1907); 
Mttteil. Oricnt-GeseUschoft (Dec. 1907). See also s.v. Pteria. 

(D.G.H.) 

HITTORFF, JACQUES IGNACB (1792-1867), French architect, 
was bora at Cologne on the 20th of August 1792. After serving 
an apprenticeship to a mason in his native town, he went in 
1 810 to Paris, and studied for some years at the Academy 
of Fine Arts, where he was a favourite pupil of Beianger, 
the government architect, who in 1814 appointed him his 
principal inspector. Succeeding B61anger as government archi- 
tect in 1818, he designed many important public and private 
buildings in Paris and also in the south of France. From 1819 
to 1830 in collaboration with le Cointe he directed the royal 
ffites and ceremonials. After making architectural tours in 
Germany, England, Italy and Sicily, he published the result 
of his observations in the latter country in the work Architecture 
antique de la Sicite (3 vols., 1826-1830; new edition, 1866-1867), 
and also in Architecture modern* de la Sicite (1826-1835). One 
of his important discoveries was that colour had been made 
use of in ancient Greek architecture, a subject which he especially 
discussed in Architecture polychrome chez les Crecs (1830) and in 
Restitution du temple d Empidocle & Silinunte (185 1); and in 
accordance with the doctrines enunciated in these works Jie 
was in the habit of making colour an important feature in most 
of his architectural designs. His principal building is the church 
of St Vincent de Paul in the basilica style, which was constructed 
between 1830 and 1844. He also designed the two fountains 
in the Place de la Concorde, the Circus of the Empress, the 
Rotunda of the panoramas, many cafes and restaurants of the 
Champs Elysecs, the houses forming the circle round the Arc 
de Triomphc de l'fitoile, besides many embellishments of the 
Bois de Boulogne and other places. In 1833 he was elected a 
member of the Academy of Fine Arts. He died in Paris on the 
25th of March 1867. 

HITZACKBR, a town of Germany, in the Prussian province 
of Hanover at the influx of the Jcetze into the Elbe; 33 m. N.E. 
of LUneburg by the railway to Wittenberge. Pop. (190s) 1106. 
It has an Evangelical church and an old castle and numerous 
medieval remains. There are chalybeate springs and a hydro- 
pathic establishment in the town. The famous library now in 
Wolfenbattel was originally founded here by Augustus, duke 
of Brunswick (d. 1666) and was removed to its present habitation 
in 1643. 

HITZIG, FERDINAND (1807-1875). German biblical critic, 
was born at Hauingen, Baden, where his father was a pastor, 
on the 23rd of June 1807. He studied theology at Heidelberg 
under H. E. G. Paulus, at Halle under Wilhelm Gesenius and 
at Gottingen under Ewald. Returning to Heidelberg he became 
Pritatdotent in theology in 1829, and in 183 1 published his 
Begrifl der Kritik am Alien Testamente praktisch erdrterl, a 
study of Old Testament criticism in which he explained the 
critical principles of the grammatico-historical school, and his 
Des Propheien Jonas Orakel Uber Moab, an exposition of the 
15th and 16th chapters of the book of Isaiah attributed by him 
to the prophet Jonah mentioned in 2 Kings xiv. 25* In 1833 
he "was called to the university of Zurich as professor ordinarius 
of theology. His next work was a commentary on Isaiah with 
a translation (Vbersetzung u. Auslegungdes Propheien Jesajas), 
which he dedicated to Heinrich Ewald, and which Hermann 
Hupfeld (1796-1866), well known as a commentator on the 
Psalms (1855-1861), pronounced to be his best exegetical work. 
At Zflrich he laboured for a period of twenty-eight years, during 
which, besides commentaries on The Psalms (1835-1836; 2nd 
ed., 1863-1865), The Minor Prophets (1838; 3rd ed., 1863), 
Jeremiah (1841; 2nd ed., 1866), Ezekid (184?)* Danid (1850), 
Ecclesiasles (1847), Canticles (1855), and Proverbs (1858), he 
published a monograph, Ober Johannes Markus u. seine Schriften 
(1843), in which be maintained the chronological priority of the 
second gospel, and sought to prove that the Apocalypse was 
written by the same author. He also published various treatises 



of archaeological interest, of which the most important tie 
Die Erfindung des Alphabets (1840), Urgesckickto u. Mytkoltgu 
der Philist&er (1845), and Die CrabschHJt des Eschmunaar(t%s$). 
After the death of Friedrich Umbreit (1795-1860), one of the 
founders of the well-known Studkn rnnd Kritihen, he was called 
in 1861 to succeed him as professor of theology at Heidelberg. 
Here he wrote his CeschicltU des V dikes Israel (1869-1870), in 
two parts, extending respectively to the end of the Person 
domination and to the fall of Masada, a.d. 72. as well as a work 
on the Pauline epistles, Zur Kritik Pauliniscker Briefe (1870), 
on the Moabite Stone, Die Insehnjl des Mescko (1870), and on 
Assyrian, Sprache u. Sproctten Assyriens (1871), besides revising 
the commentary on Job by Ludwig Hirzel (1801-1841), which 
was first published in 1839. He was also a contributor to the 
Monatsschrift des wissensthaftKehen Vereins in Zurich, the 
Zeitschrift der deutschen morgenUtndiscken Gesollsckoft, the 
Theotogische Studkn u. KrUiken, Eduard Zeller's Tkcdogistki 
Jahrbticher, and Adolf Hilgenfeld's Zeitschrift /Or trissensckaft- 
liche Theoiogiz. Hitzig died at Heidelberg on the sand of 
January 1875. As a Hebrew philologist he holds high rank; 
and as a constructive critic he is remarkable for acuteness and 
sagacity. As a historian, however, some of his speculations 
have been considered fanciful. " He places the cradle of the 
Israelites in the south of Arabia, and, like many other critics, 
makes the historical times begin only with Moses " (F. Lknten- 
berger, History of German Theology, p. 569). 

His lectures on biblical theology (VorUtungtn Uber hibtisch* 
Tkedogie u. messianischo Wei&iagungen) were published in i860 

le£ 

Adolf 

Katnphausen's article in Heraog-Hatick's Realeneyklop&ii*. 

HIUNG-NU, Hiong-nu, Heung-ntj, a people who about 
the end of the 3rd century b-.c. formed, according to Chinese 
records, a powerful empire from the Great Wall of China to the 
Caspian. Their ethnical affinities have been much discussed; 
but it is most probable that they were of the Turki stock, as were 
the Huns, their later western representatives. They are the 
first Turkish people mentioned by the Chinese. A theory which 
seems plausible is that which assumes them to have been s 
heterogenous collection of Mongol, Tungus, Turki and perhaps 
even Finnish hordes under a Mdngol Military caste, thoogh the 
Mongolo-Tungus clement probably predominated. Towards the 
close of the 1st century of the Christian era the Hiung-nu empire 
broke up. Their subsequent history is obscure. Some of tbem 
seem to have gone westward and settled on the Ural river. 
These, de Guiques suggests, were the ancestors of the Huns, and 
many ethnologists hold that the Hiung-nu were the ancestors of 
the modern Turks. 

See Journal A ntkropological Institute for 1874 ; Sir H. H. Howorth, 
History of the Mongols (1876-1880); 6th Congress of Orientalists, 
Leiden, 1883 (Actes, part iv. pp. 177-195); de Guiques, Htsttnrt 
gtniraU des Huns, des Tuns, des MongoUs, a des autres TarUns 
occidontaux (1756-1758). 

HIVTTBS, an ancient tribe of Palestine driven out by the 
invading Israelites. In Josh. ix. 7, «j. 19 they are connected 
with Gibeon. The meaning of the name is uncertain; Weti- 
hausen derives it from *V3 " Eve," or " serpent," in which 
case the Hivites were originally the snake clan; others explain 
it from the Arabic hayy, 4< family,", as meaning " dwellers in 
(Bedouin) encampments.!' (See Palestine; Jews.) 

HJ&RRING, an ancient town of Denmark, capital of the ami 
(county) of its name, in the northern insular part of the peninsula 
of Jutland. Pop. (1001) 7901. It lies 7 m. inland from the shore 
of Jammer Bay, a stretch of coast notoriously dangerous to 
shipping. On the coast is Lonstrup, a favoured seaside resort 
In this neighbourhood as well as to the south-east of Hjfirring, 
slight elevations are seen, deserving the name of hills in this 
low-lying district* Hjfirring is on the northern railway of 
Jutland, which here turns eastward to the Cattegat part of 
Frederikshavn (23 m.), a harbour of refuge. 

HKAMTI LONG (called Kantigyi by the Burmese, and Bar 
Hkampti by the peoples on the Assam side), a collection of seven 



HLQTHHERE— HOACTZIN 



Shan states subordinate to Burma, but at present beyond the 
administrative border. Estimated area, ooo sq. m.; estimated 
pop. 11,000. It lies between 27 and 28 N. and 07 and 98° E., 
and is bordered by the Mishmi country on the N., by the Patkai 
range on the W., by the Hukawng valley on the S. and E,, and 
indeed all round by various Chingpaw or Kachin communities. 
The country is little known. It was visited by T. T. Cooper, the 
Chinese traveller and political agent at Bhamo, where he was 
murdered; by General Woodthorpe and Colonel Macgregor in 
1884, by Mr Errol Grey in the following year, and by Prince 
Henry of Orleans in 1895. All of these, however, limited their 
explorations to the valley of the Mali-hka, the western branch of 
the Irrawaddy river. Hkamti has shrunk very much from its old 
sue. It was no doubt the northernmost province of the Shan 
kingdom, founded at Mogaung by Sam Long-hpa, the brother of 
the ruler of Kambawsa, when that empire had reached its greatest 
extension. The irruption of Kachins or Chingpaw from the 
north has now completely hemmed the state in. Prince Henry 
of Orleans described it as " a splendid territory, fertile in soil and 
abundant in water, where tropical and temperate culture flourish 
aide by side, and the inhabitants are protected on three fronts by 
mountains." According to him the Kiutze, the people of the 
hills between the Irrawaddy and the Salween, call it the kingdom 
of Moam. 

HLOTHHKRE, king of Kent, succeeded his brother Ecgberht 
in 673, and appears for a time to have reigned Jointly with his 
nephew Eadric, son of Ecgberht, as a code of laws still extant was 
issued under both names. Neither is mentioned in the account of 
the invasion of /Ethel red in 676. In 685 Eadric, who seems to 
have quarrelled with Hlothherc, went into exile and led the 
South Saxons against him. Hlothherc was defeated and died of 
his wounds. 

See Bedc. Bist. eccl. (Plammer), fv. 5, 17, 26, v. 24; Saxon 
Chronicle (Earte and Plummer), s.a. 685; Schmid, Gesetze, pp. 10 
sqq. ; T horp e, Ancient Lows, i. 26 sqq. 

HOACTZIN, or Hoatzin, a bird of tropical South America, 
thought by Buff on to be that indicated by Hernandez or Fer- 
nandez under these names, the Opistkocotnm hoazin or O. cristatus 
of modern ornithologists— a very curious and remarkable form, 
which has long exercised the ingenuity of classifiers. Placed by 
Buffon among his " Hoccos " (Curassows), and then by P. L. S. 
Mfitler and J. F. Gmelin in the Linnacan genus Pkasianus, some of 
its many peculiarities were recognized by J. K. W. Illiger in i8ii 
as sufficient to establish it as a distinct genus, Opisthocomus; but 
various positions were assigned to it by subsequent systematic 
authors. L'HerroinJer was the first to give any account of its 
anatomy (Comptes rendu*, 1837, v. 433), and from his time our 
knowledge of it has been successively increased by Johannes 
M tiller (Ber. Akod. Wissensch. Berlin, 1841, p. 177), Deville (Rev. 
et mag. de wodogie, 1852, p. 217), Gervais (Castelnau, Expid. 
Amerique du Sud, woologie, anatomie, p. 66), Huxley (Proc. Z00L 
Society, 1868, p. 304), Perrin (Trans. Zool. Society t ix. p. 
353), and A. H. Garrod (Proc. Zool. Society, 1879, p. 109). After 
a minute description of the skeleton of Opisthocomus, with the 
especial object of determining its affinities, Huxley declared that 
it " resembles the ordinary gallinaceous birds and pigeons more 
than it does any others, and that when it diverges from them it is 
either sui generis or approaches the Musophagidae." He ac- 
cordingly regarded it as the type and sole member of a group, 
named by him Heteromorphae, which sprang from the great 
Carinate stem later than the Tinamomorphae, Turnicomorphae, 
or Charadriomorpkae, but before the Peristeromorphae, Pteroclo- 
norpkae or Alectoromorphae. This conclusion is substantially 
the same as that at which A. H. Garrod subsequently arrived 
after closely examining and dissecting specimens preserved in 
spirit; but the latter has gone further and endeavoured to trace 
more particularly the descent of this peculiar form and some 
others, remarking that the ancestor of Opisthocomus must have 
left the parent stem very shortly before the true Gallinae first 
appeared, and at about the same time as the independent pedi- 
gree of the CucuUdae and Musophagidae commenced— these two 
groups being, be believed, very closely related, and Opisthocomus 
serving to fill the gap between them. 



5+i 



The first thing that strikes the observer of its skeleton is the 
extraordinary structure of the sternal apparatus, which is wholly 
unlike that of any other bird known. The keel is only developed 
on the posterior part of the sternum— the fore part being, as it 
were, cut away, while the short furcula at its symphysis meets 
the manubrium, with which it is firmly consolidated by means of 
a prolonged and straight hypodeidium, and anteriorly ossifies 
with the coracoids. This unique arrangement seems to be 
correlated with the enormously capacious crop, which rests upon 
the furcula and fore part of the sternum, and is also received in 
a cavity formed on the surface of each of the great pectoral 
muscles. Furthermore this crop is extremely muscular, so as 
more to resemble a gizzard, and consists of two portions divided 
by a partial constriction, after a fashion of which no other 
example is known among birds. The true gizzard is greatly 
reduced. 

The hoactzin appears to be about the size of a small pheasant, 1 
but is really a much smaller bird. The beak is strong, curiously 
denticulated along the margin of the maxilla near the base, and 
is beset by diverging bristles. The eyes, placed in the middle 
of a patch of bare skin, are furnished with bristly lashes, re- 
sembling those of horn-bills and some few other birds. The 
head bears a long pendant crest of loose yellowish feathers. 
The body is olive-coloured, varied with white above, and beneath 



Hoactzin. 1 

is of a dull bay. The wings are short and rounded. The tail 
is long and tipped with yellow. The legs are rather short, the 
feet stout, the tarsi reticulated, and the toes scutellated; the 
claws long and slightly curved. According to all who have 
observed the habits of this bird, it lives in bands on the lower 
trees and bushes bordering the streams and lagoons, feeding on 
leaves and various wild fruits, especially, says H. W. Bates 
(Naturalist on the River Anuuons, L 120), those of a species 
of Psidium, and it is also credited with eating those of an arum 
(Caladiun arborcscens), which grows plentifully in its haunts. 
" Its voice is a harsh, grating hiss," continues the same traveller, 
and "it makes the noise when alarmed, all the individuals 
sibilating as they fly heavily away from tree to tree, when dis- 
turbed by passing canoes." It exhales a very strong odour— 
wherefore it is known in British Guiana as the " stink-bird "— 
compared by Bates to " musk combined with wet hides," and 
by Deville to that of a cow-house. The species is said to be 
polygamous; the nest is built on trees, of sticks placed above 
one another, and softer materials atop. Therein the hen lays 
her eggs to the number of three or four, of a dull-yellowish white, 
somewhat profusely marked with reddish blotches and spots, 
so as to resemble those of some of the Rallidae (Proc, Zool. 
Society, 1867, pi. xv. fig. 7. p. 164). The young are covered 
only with very scanty hair, like down, and have well-developed 
claws on the first and second fingers of the wing, which they use 



5+3 



HGADLY— HOAR 



in clambering about the twigs in a quadrupedal manner; if 
placed in the water they swim and dive well, although the adults 
seem to be not at all aquatic. (A. N.) 

HOADLY, BENJAMIN (1676-1761), English divine, was born 
at Wester ham, Kent, on the 14th of November 1676. In 1601 
he entered Catharine Hall, Cambridge, where he graduated M.A. 
and was for two years tutor, after which he held from 1701 to 
17 1 1 the lectureship of St Mildred in the Poultry, and along with 
it from 1704 the rectory of St Petex-le-Poer, London. His first 
important appearance as a controversialist was against Edmund 
Calamy" the younger "in reference to conformity (1703-1707), 
and after this he came into conflict with Francis Atterbury, 
first on the interpretation of certain texts and then on the whole 
Anglican doctrine of non-resistance. His principal treatises 
on this subject were the Measures of Submission to the Civil 
Magistrate and The Origin and Institution of Civil Government 
discussed-, and his part in the discussion was so much appreciated 
by the Commons that in 1709 they presented an address to the 
queen praying her to " bestow some dignity in the church on 
Mr Hoadly for his eminent services both to church and state." 
The queen returned a favourable answer, but the dignity was 
not conferred. In 17 10 he was presented by a private patron 
to the rectory of Streatham in Surrey. In 1 7 1 5 he was appointed 
chaplain to the king, and the same year he obtained the bishopric 
of Bangor. He held the see for six years, but never visited the 
diocese. In 1716, in reply to George Hickes (q.v.), he published a 
Preservative against the Principles and Practices of Nonjurors 
in Church and Stole, and in the following year preached before 
the king his famous sermon on the Kingdom of Christ, which 
was immediately published by royal command. These works 
were attacks on the divine authority of kings and of the clergy, 
but as the sermon dealt more specifically and distinctly with the 
power of the church, its publication caused an ecclesiastical 
ferment which in certain aspects has no parallel in religious 
history. It was at once resolved to proceed against him in 
convocation, but this was prevented by the king proroguing 
the assembly, a step which had consequences of vital bearing 
on the history of the Church of England, since from that period 
the great Anglican council ceased to transact business of a more 
than formal nature. The restrained sentiments of the council 
in regard to Hoadly found expression in a war of pamphlets 
known as the Bangorian Controversy, which, partly from a 
want of clearness in the statements of Hoadly, partly from the 
disingenuousness of his opponents and the confusion resulting 
from exasperated feelings, developed into an intricate and 
bewildering maze of side discussions in which the main issues 
of the dispute were concealed almost beyond the possibility 
of discovery. But however vague and uncertain might be the 
meaning of Hoadly in regard to several of the important bearings 
of the questions around which he aroused discussion, be was 
explicit in denying the power of the Church over the conscience, 
and its right to determine the condition of men in relation to 
the favour of God. The most able of his opponents was William 
Law; others were Andrew Snape, provost of Eton, and Thomas 
Sherlock, dean of Chichester. So exercised was the mind of 
the religious world over the dispute that in July 17x7 as many 
as seventy-four pamphlets made their appearance; and at one 
period the crisis became so serious that the business of London 
was for some days virtually at a standstill. Hoadly, being not 
unskilled in the art of flattery, was translated in 1721 to the 
seetrf Hereford, in 1723 to Salisbury and in 1734 to Win- 
chester. He died at his palace at Chelsea on the 17th of April 
1 76 1. His controversial writings are vigorous if prolix and his 
theological essays have little merit. He must have been a 
much hated man, for his latitudinarianism offended the high 
church party and his rationalism the other sections. He was 
an intimate friend of Dr Samuel Clarke, of whom he wrote 
a life. 

Hoadly's brother, John Hoadly (1678-1746), was archbishop 
of Dublin from 1730 to 1742 and archbishop of Armagh from 
the latter date until his death on the 19th of July 1 746. In early 
life the archbishop was very intimate with Gilbert Burnet, then 



bishop of Salisbury, and Is later life he was a pr omincut figure 
in Irish politics. 

The works of Benjamin Hoadly were collected awd published by 
his son Joh n in 3 vols. ( 1 773). To the first volume was prefixed the 
article " Hoadly from the supplement to the Biographia BrikxnmiA. 
See also L. Stephen, English Thought in the 18th Century. 

HOAR, SAMUEL (1778-1856), American lawyer, was born in 
Lincoln, Massachusetts, on the 18th of May 1778. He was the 
son of Samuel Hoar, an officer in the American army during the 
War of Independence, for many years a member of the Massa- 
chusetts General Court, and a member in 1820-1821 of the state 
Constitutional Convention. The son graduated at Harvard in 
1802, was admitted to the Massachusetts bar in 1805 and began 
practice at Concord. His success in his profession was immediate, 
and for a half-century he was one of the leading lawyers of 
Massachusetts. He was in early life a Federalist and was later 
an ardent Whig in politics. He was a member of the state 
senate in 1825, 1832 and 1833, and of the national house of 
representatives in 1835-1837, during which time be made a 
notable speech in favour of the constitutional right of congress 
to abolish slavery in the District of Columbia. In November 
1844, having retired from active legal practice some years before* 
he went to Charleston, S.C., at the request of Governor George 
Nixon Briggs (1 706-1861), to test in the courts of South Carolina 
the constitutionality of the state law which provided that " it 
shall not be lawful for any free negro, or person of color, to 
come into this state on board any vessel, as a cook, steward 
or mariner, or in any other employment," and that such free 
negroes should be seized and locked up until the vessels on which 
they had come were ready for sea, when they should be returned 
to such vessels. His visit aroused great excitment, he was 
threatened with personal injury, the state legislature passed 
resolutions calling for his expulsion, and he was compelled to 
leave early in December. In 1848 he was prominent in the Free 
Soil movement in Massachusetts, and subsequently assisted 
in the organization of the Republican Party. In 1850 be served 
in the Massachusetts bouse of representatives. He married 
a daughter of Roger Sherman of Connecticut. He died at 
Concord, Massachusetts, on the and of November 1856. 

See a memoir by his son G. F. Hoar in Memorial Biographies of 
the New England Historic Genealogical Society, vol. iii. (Boston, 
1883) ; the estimate by R. W. Emerson in Lectures and Biographical 
Sketches (Boston, 1003); and "Samuel Hoar's Expulsion from 
Charleston," Old South Leaflets, vol. vL No. 140. 

His son, Ebenezek Rockwooo Hoar (1816-1895), was bora 
at Concord, Massachusetts, on the 21st of February 1816^ He 
graduated at Harvard in 1835 and at the Harvard Law School 
in 1839, and was admitted to the Massachusetts bar in 1840. 
From 1849 to l8 55 he was a judge of the Massachusetts court 
of common pleas, from 1859 to 1869 a judge of the state supreme 
court, and in 1860-1870 attorney-general of the United States 
in the cabinet of President Grant, and in that position fought 
unmerited " machine " appointments to offices in the civil 
service until at the pressure of the " machine " Grant asked for 
his resignation from the cabinet. The Senate had already 
shown its disapproval of Hoar's policy of civil service reform 
by its failure in 1870 to confirm the President's nomination of 
Hoar as associate-justice of the supreme court. In 1*871 he was 
a member of the Joint High Commission which drew up the 
Treaty of Washington. In 1872 he was a presidential elector 
on the Republican ticket, and in 1873-1875 was a representative 
in Congress. He was a member of the Board of Overseers of 
Harvard University from 1868 to 2880 and from 1881 to 1887, 
and was president of the Board in 1878-1880 and in 1881-1887. 
He was also prominent in the affairs of the Unitarian church. 
He was a man of high character and brilliant wit. He died at 
Concord on the 31st of January 189s* 

Another son, Georgi Frisbie Hoar (1826-1004), was bora 
in Concord, Massachusetts, on the 29th of August 1826. He 
graduated at Harvard in 1846 and at the Harvard Law School in 
1849. He settled In the practice of law in Worcester, Massa- 
chusetts, where in 1852 he became a partner of Emory Washburn 
(1800-1877). In 185a he was elected as a Free-Soikr to tht 



HOARE— HOBART PASHA 



5+3 



Massachusetts House of Representatives, and during his single 
term of service became the leader of his party in that body. He 
was active in the organisation of the Republican party in If asaa- 
cfausetts, and in 1857 was elected to the State senate, bat declined 
a re-election. During 1856-1857 he was active in behalf of the 
Free-State cause in Kansas. He was a member of the National 
House of Representatives from 1869 until 1877, and in this body 
took high rank as a ready debater and a conscientious committee 
worker. He was prominent as a defender and supporter of the 
Freedman's Bureau, took a leading part in the later reconstruction 
legislation and in the investigation of the Crtdit Mobilier scandal, 
and in 1876 was one of the House managers of the impeachment 
of General W. W. Belknap, Grant's secretary of war. In 1877 
he was a member of the Electoral Commission which settled the 
disputed Hayes-TUden election. From 1877 until his death he 
was a member of the United States senate. In the senate almost 
from the start he took rank as one of the most influential leaders 
of the Republican party; be was a member from 188a until 
his death of the important Judiciary Committee, of which he was 
chairman in 1801-1803 and in 1895-1004. His most important 
piece of legislation was the Presidential Succession Act of x886. 
He was a delegate to every Republican National Convention from 
1876 to 1004, and presided over that at Chicago in 1880. He 
was a conservative by birth and training, and although he did not 
leave his party he disagreed with its policy in regard to the 
Philippines, and spoke ami voted against the ratification of the 
Spanish Treaty. He was regent of the Smithsonian Institution in 
1880-1881, and long served as an overseer of Harvard University 
(1896-1004) and as president of its alumni association. He was 
also president of the American Historical Association (1894- 
1895) and of the American Antiquarian Society (1884-1887). 
lake his brother, he was a leading Unitarian, and was president 
of its National Conference from 1894 to 1903. He died at 
Worcester, Massachusetts, on the 30th of September 1904. A 
memorial statue has been erected there. 

See his Recollections ef Seventy Years (New York, 1903). 

HOARE, SIR RICHARD COLT, Bart. (1758-1838), English 
antiquary, was the eldest son of Richard Hoare, who was created 
a baronet in 1786, and was born on the oth of December 1758. 
He was descended from Sir Richard Hoare (1648-1718), lord 
mayor of London, the founder of the family banking business. 
An ample allowance from his grandfather, Henry Hoare, 
enabled him to pursue the archaeological studies for which he 
had already shown an inclination. In 1783 ha married Hester, 
daughter of William Henry, Lord Lyttehon, and after her death 
in 1785 he paid a prolonged visit to France, Italy and Switzer- 
land. He succeeded to the baronetcy in 1787, and in 1788 made 
a second continental tour, the record of his travels appearing in 
1819 under the title A Classical Tour through Italy and Sicily. 
A journey through Wales was followed by a translation of the 
ttt'nerarium Cambria* and of the Descriptio Cambria* of Giraldus 
Cambrensis, Hoare adding notes and a life of Giraldus to the 
translation. This was first published in 1804, and has been 
revised by T. Wright (London, 1863). Sir Richard died at 
Stourhead, Wiltshire, on the 19th of May 1838, being succeeded 
in the baronetcy by his half-brother, Henry Hugh Hoare. 
Hoare's most important work was his Ancient History of North 
and South Wiltshire (181 2-1819); he also did some work, on the 
large History of Modem Wiltshire (1822-1844). 

For notices of him and a list of his works, many of which were 
printed privately, see the Gentleman's Majazine for Jury 1838, and 
the Diet. Nat. Biog. vol. xxvii. (1891). See also E. Hoare, History 
of the Hoare Family (1883). 

HOBART, GARRET AUGUSTUS (1844-1809), Vice-President 
of the United States 1897-1899, was born at Long Branch, N.J., 
on the 3rd of June 1844. He graduated at Rutgers College in 
1863, was admitted to the bar in 1869, practised law at Paterson, 
N.J., and rose to prominence in the State. He was long con- 
spicuous in the State Republican organization, was chairman of 
the New Jersey State Republican Committee from 1880 to 
1890, became a member in 1884 of the Republican National 
Committee, and was the delegate-at -large from New Jersey to 
five successive Republican national nominating conventions. 



He served in the New Jersey Assembly in 1873-1874, and in the 
New Jersey Senate in 1877-188*, and was speaker of the Assembly 
in 1874 and president of the Senate in 1881 and 1882, He was 
also prominent and successful in business and accumulated a 
large fortune. He accepted the nomination as Vice-President 
in 1896, on the ticket with President McKinley, and was elected; 
but while stiH in office he died at Paterson, N.J., on the azst of 
November 1899. 

See the Life (New York, 1910) by David Magic 

HOBART, JOHN HENRY (1775-1830), American Protestant 
Episcopal bishop, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on the 
14th of September 1775, being fifth in direct descent from 
Edmund Hobart, a founder of Hingham, Massachusetts. He 
was educated at the Philadelphia Latin School, the College of 
Philadelphia (now the University of Pennsylvania), and Prince- 
ton, where he graduated in 1793. After studying theology under 
Bishop William White at Philadelphia, he was ordained deacon m 
1 798, and priest two years later. He was elected assistant bishop 
of New York, with the right of succession, in 181 r, and was acting 
diocesan from that date because of the ill-health of Bishop Ben- 
jamin Moore, whom he formally succeeded on the latter's death 
in February 1816. He was one of the founders of the General 
Theological Seminary, became its professor of pastoral theology 
In 1821, and as bishop was its governor. In his zeal for the his- 
toric episcopacy he published in 1807 An Apology for Apostolic 
Order and its Advocates, a series of letters to Rev. John M. Mason, 
who, in The Christian's Magazine, of which he was editor, had 
attacked the Episcopacy in general and in particular Hobart 's 
Collection of Essays on the Subject of Episcopacy ( 1 806). Hobart's 
zeal for the General Seminary and the General Convention led 
him to oppose the plan of Philander Chase, bishop of Ohio, for 
an Episcopal seminary in that diocese; but the Ohio seminary 
was made directly responsible to the House of Bishops, and 
Hobart approved the plan. His strong opposition to " dissenting 
churches" was nowhere so clearly shown as in a pamphlet 
published in 1816 to dissuade all Episcopalians from joining the 
American Bible Society, which he thought the Protestant 
Episcopal Church had not the numerical or the financial strength 
to control In 1818, to counterbalance the influence of the 
Bible Society and especially of Scott's Commentaries, he began 
to edit with selected notes the Family Bible Of the Society for 
Promoting Christian Knowledge. He delivered episcopal charges 
to the clergy of Connecticut and New York entitled The Church- 
man (1819) and The High Churchman Vindicated (1826), in 
which he accepted the name " high churchman," and stated and 
explained his principles " in distinction from the corruptions of 
the Church of Rome and from the Errors of Certain Protestant 
Sects." He exerted himself greatly in building up his diocese, 
attempting to make an annual visit to every parish. His failing 
health led him to visit Europe in 1823-1825. Upon his return he 
preached a characteristic sermon entitled The United Slates of 
America compared with some European Countries, particularly 
England (published 1826), in which, although there was some 
praise for the English church, he so boldly criticized the establish- 
ment, state patronage, cabinet appointment of bishops, lax 
discipline, and the low requirements of theological education, as 
to rouse much hostility in England, where he had been highly 
praised for two volumes of Sermons on the Principal Events and 
Truths of Redemption (1 824). He died at Auburn, New York, on 
the 1 2th of September 1830. He was able, impetuous, frank, 
perfectly fearless in controversy, a speaker and preacher of much 
eloquence, a supporter of missions to the Oneida Indians in his 
diocese, and the compiler of the following devotional works: 
A Companion for the Altar (1804), Festivals and Fasts (1804), 
A Companion to the Booh of Common Prayer (1805), and A 
Clergyman's Companion (1805). 

See Memorial of Bishop Hobart, containing a Memoir (New York, 
1831); John McVickar, The Early Life and Professional Years of 
Bishop Hobart (New York, 1834), and The Closing Years of Bishop 
Hobart (New York, 1836). 

HOBART PASHA, Augustus Chailes HobaktHahpdbm 
(1822-1886), English naval captain and Turkish admiral, was 



544 



HOBART— HOBBEMA 



born in Leicestershire on the xst of April 1822, being the third 
son of the 6th Earl of Buckinghamshire. In 1835 he entered 
the Royal Navy and served as a midshipman on the coast of 
Brazil in the suppression of the slave trade, displaying much 
gallantry in the operations. In 1855 be took part, as captain 
of the " Driver/' in the Baltic Expedition, and was actively 
engaged at Bomarsund and Abo. In 1863 he retired from the 
navy with the rank of post-captain; but his love of adventure 
led him, during the American Civil War, to take the command 
of a blockade-runner. He had the good fortune to run the 
blockade eighteen times, conveying war material to Charleston 
and returning with a cargo of cotton. In 1867 Hobart entered 
the Turkish service, and was immediately nominated to the 
command of that fleet, with the rank of " Bahrie Limassi " 
(rear-admiral). In this capacity he performed splendid service 
in helping to suppress the insurrection in Crete, and was rewarded 
by the Sultan with the title of Pasha (1869). In 1874 Hobart, 
whose name had, on representations made by Greece, been 
removed from the British Navy List, was reinstated; his 
restoration did not, however, last long, for on the outbreak of 
the Russo-Turkish war he again entered Turkish service. In 
command of the Turkish squadron he completely dominated 
the Black Sea, blockading the ports of South Russia and the 
mouths of the Danube, and paralysing the action of the Russian 
fleet. On the conclusion of peace Hobart still remained in the 
Turkish service, and in 1881 was appointed Mu&bir, or marshal, 
being the first Christian to hold that high office. His achieve- 
ments as a blockade-runner, his blockade of Crete, and his 
handling of the Turkish fleet against the torpedo-lined coasts 
of Russia, showed him to be a daring, resourceful, and skilful 
commander, worthy to be ranked among the illustrious names of 
British naval heroes. He died at Milan on the 19th of June 
1886. 

See his Sketches of My Life (1886), which must, however, be used 
with caution, since it contains many proved inaccuracies. 

HOBART, the capital of Tasmania, in the county of Bucking- 
ham, on the southern coast of the island. It occupies a site of 
great beauty, standing on a series of low hills at the foot of 
Mount Wellington, a lofty peak (4166 ft.) which is snow-clad 
for many months in the year. The town fronts Sullivan's Cove, 
a picturesque bay opening into the estuary of the river Derwent, 
and is nearly square in form, laid out with wide streets intersecting 
at right angles, the chief of which are served by electric tramways. 
It is the seat of the Anglican bishop of Tasmania, and of the 
Roman Catholic archbishop of Hobart. The Anglican cathedral 
of St David dates from 1873, though its foundations were laid 
as early as 2817. St Mary's Roman Catholic cathedral is a 
beautiful building; but perhaps the most notable ecclesiastical 
building in Hobart is the great Baptist tabernacle in Upper 
Elizabeth Street. The most prominent public buildings are the 
Houses of Parliament, to which an excellent library is attached; 
the town hall, a beautiful building of brown and white Tasmanian 
freestone in Italian style; the museum and national art gallery, 
and the general post office (1904) with its lofty dock-tower. 
Government House, the residence of the governor of Tasmania, 
a handsome castellated building, stands in its domain on the 
banks of the Derwent, to the north of the town. The botanical 
gardens adjoin. Of the parks and public gardens, the most 
extensive is the Queen's Domain, covering an area of about 
700 acres, while the most central is Franklin Square, adorned 
with a statue of Sir John Franklin, the famous Arctic explorer, 
who was governor of Tasmania from 1837 to 1843. The uni- 
versity of Tasmania, established in 1800, and opened in 1893, 
has its headquarters at Hobart. The town is celebrated for its 
invigorating climate, and its annual regatta on the Derwent 
attracts numerous visitors. The harbour is easy of access, 
well sheltered and deep, with wharf accommodation for vessels 
of the largest tonnage. It is a regular port of call for several 
intercolonial lines from Sydney and Melbourne, and for lines 
from London to New Zealand. The exports, of an average 
value of £850,000 annually, consist mainly of fruit, hops, grain, 
timber and wool. The industries comprise brewing, saw-milling, 



iron-founding, flour-miUing, tanning, and the manufacture ot 
pottery and woollen goods. Hobart is the centre of a Urge 
fruit-growing district, the produce of which, for the most part, 
is exported to London and Sydney. The city watt founded in 
1804 and takes its name from Lord Hobart (see Bdcuncham- 
8H1EE, Eauls of), then secretary of state for the colonies. 
It was created a municipality in 1853, and a city in 1857; and 
in 1 88 1 its name was changed from Hobart Town to the present 
form. The chief suburbs are Newton, Sandy Bay, Wellington, 
R isdon , Glenorchy , Belleri ve and Beltana. The population of ibe 
city proper in 1001 was 24,652, or including suburbs, 34,182. 

HOBBEMA, MBYNDERT (c. 1638-1709), the greatest land- 
scape painter of the Dutch school after Ruysdael, lived at 
Amsterdam in the second half of the 17 th century. The facta 
of his life are somewhat obscure. Nothing is more disappointing 
than to find that in Hobbema's case chronology and signed 
pictures substantially contradict each other. According to the 
latter his practice lasted from 1650 to 1689; according to the 
former his birth occurred in 1638, his death as late as 1709. 
If the masterpiece formerly in the Bred el collection, called 
" A Wooded Stream, " honestly bears the date of 1650, or " The 
Cottages under Trees " of the Ford collection the date of 165?, 
the painter of these canvases cannot be Hobbema, whose birth 
took place in 1638, unless indeed we admit that Hobbema 
painted some of his finest works at the age of twelve or fourteen. 
For a considerable period it was profitable to pass Hobbcmas 
as Ruysdaels, and the name of the lesser master was probably 
erased from several of his productions. When Hobbema's 
talent was recognized, the contrary process was followed, and 
in this way the name, and perhaps fictitious dates, reappeared 
by fraud. An experienced eye will note the differences which 
occur in Hobbema's signatures in such well-known examples as 
adorn the galleries of London and Rotterdam, or the Grosvenor 
and van dcr Hoop collections. Meanwhile, we must be content 
to know that, if the question of dales could be brought into 
accordance with records and chronology, the facts of Hobbema's 
fife would be as follows. 

Meyndert Hobbema was married at the age of thirty to 
Eeltije Vinck of Gorcum, in the Oudckerk or old church at 
Amsterdam, on the 2nd of November 1068. Witnesses to the 
marriage were the bride's brother Cornelius Vinck and Jacob 
Ruysdael. We might suppose from this that Hobbema and 
Ruysdael, the two great masters of landscape, were united at 
this time by tics of friendship, and accept the belief that the 
former was the pupil of the latter. Yet even this is denied to us, 
since records tell us that there were two Jacob Ruysdaels, 
cousins and contemporaries, at Amsterdam in the middle of 
the 17th century— one a framemaker, the son of Solomon, the 
other a painter, the son of Isaac RnysdaeL Of Hobbema's 
marriage there came between 1668 and 1673 four children. la 
1704 Eeltije died, and was buried in the pauper section of the 
Leiden cemetery at Amsterdam. Hobbema himself survived 
till December 1709, receiving burial on the 14th of that month 
in the pauper section of the Westerkerk cemetery at Amsterdam. 
Husband and wife had lived during their lifetime in the Rosen* 
gracht, at no great distance from Rembrandt, who also dwelt 
there in his later and impoverished days. Rembrandt, Hals, 
Jacob Ruysdael, and Hobbema were in one respect alike. They 
all died in misery, insufficiently rewarded perhaps for their 
toil, imprudent perhaps in the use of the means derived from 
their labours. Posterity has recognized that Hobbema and 
Ruysdael together represent the final development of landscape 
art in Holland. Their style is so related 1 hat we cannot suppose 
the first to have been unconnected with the second. Still their 
works differ in certain ways, and their character is generally 
so marked that we shall find little difficulty in distinguishing 
them, nor indeed shall we hesitate in separating those of Hobbema 
from the feebler productions of his imitators and predecessors- 
Isaac Ruysdael, Rontbouts, de Vries, Dekker, Looten, Vcrboom, 
du Bois, van Kessel, van der Hagen, even Philip de Koningk. 
In the exercise of his craft Hobbema was patient beyond all 
conception. It is doubtful whether any one ever so completely 



HOBBES 



545 



mastered as he did the stHl life of woods and hedges, or mills 
and pools. Nor can we believe that he obtained this mastery 
othenrise than by constantly dwelling in the same neighbourhood, 
say in Guelders or on the Dutch Westphalian border, where day 
after day he might study the branching and foliage of trees and 
underwood embowering cottages and mills, under every variety 
of light, in every shade of transparency, in all changes produced 
by the seasons. Though his landscapes are severely and mode- 
rately toned, generally in aa olive key, and often attuned 
to a puritanical grey or russet, they surprise us, not only by 
the variety of their leafage, but by the finish of their detail as 
well as the boldness of their touch. With astonishing subtlety 
light is shown penetrating cloud, and illuminating, sometimes 
transiently, sometimes steadily, different portions of the ground, 
shining through leaves upon other leaves, and multiplying in 
an endless way the transparency of the picture. If the chance 
be given him he mirrors all these things in the still pool near a 
cottage, the reaches of a sluggish river, or the swirl of the stream 
that feeds a busy mill The same spot will furnish him with 
several pictures. One mill gives him repeated opportunities 
of charming our eye; and this wonderful artist, who is only 
second to Ruysdael because he had not Ruysdael's versatility 
and did not extend his study equally to downs and rocky 
eminences, or torrents and estuaries— this is the man who lived 
penuriousiy, died poor, and left no trace m the artistic annals 
of his country 1 It has been said that Hobbema did not paint 
his own figures, but transferred that duty to Adrian van de 
Velde, Lingclbach, Barendt Gael, and Abraham Storck. As to 
this much is conjecture. 

The best of Hobbcma's dated pictures are those of the years 1663 
to 1667. Of the former, several in the galleries of Brussels and St 
Petersburg, and one in the Holford collection, are celebrated. 
Of 1665 fine specimens arc at Grosvenor House and the Wallace 
collection. Of seven pieces in the National Gallery, including the 
•" Avenue at Middelharnis," which some assign to 1680, and the 
•' Ruins of Breberode Castle," two are dated 1667. A sample of the 
last of these years is also in the Fitzwilliam Museum at Cambridge. 
Amongst the masterpieces in private hands in England may be 



aoticcB two landscapes in Buckingham Palace, two at Bridgewater 
belonging to Mr Walter of Bearwood. De 

_._ _ "Wooded Landscape" in the Berlin gaflei.. 

Forest " belonging to the duchess of Sagan in Paris, and a Glade 



House, and one 
continent are a 



n the Louvre. There are other fine Hobbemas in the Antwerp 
Museum, the Arenberg gallery at Brussels, and the Belvedere at 
Vienna. 0* A. C.) 

HOBBES, THOMAS (1588-1679), English philosopher, second 
son of Thomas Hobbcs, was born at Westport (now part of 
Malmesbury, Wiltshire) on the 5U1 of April 1588. His father, 
vicar of Charlton and Westport, an illiterate and choleric man, 
quarrelled, it is said, with a brother clergyman at the church door, 
and was forced to decamp, leaving his three children to the care 
of an elder brother Francis, a flourishing glover at Malmesbury. 
Thomas Hobbes was put to school at Westport church at the age 
of four, passed to the Malmesbury school at eight, and was 
taught again in Westport later at a private school kept by a 
young man named Robert Latimer, fresh from Oxford and " a 
good Grecian." He had begun Latin and Greek early, and under 
Latimer made such progress as to be able to translate the Medea 
of Euripides into Latin iambic verse before he was fourteen. 
About the age of fifteen he was sent to Oxford and entered at 
Magdalen HalL During his residence, the first principal of 
Magdalen Hall, John Hussce, was succeeded by John Wilkinson, 
who ruled in the interest of the Calvinistic party in the university. 
Thus early was he brought into contact with the aggressive 
Puritan spirit. Apart from this, Hobbcs owed little to. his uni- ' 
versity training, which was based on the scholastic logic then 
prevalent. We have from himself a lively record of his student 
life {VU. carm. ex p. p. lxxxv.), which, though penned in extreme 
old age, may be taken as trustworthy. He tells how, when he had 
slowly taken in the doctrine of logical figures and moods, he put 
H aside and would prove things only in his own way; how he 
then heard about bodies as consisting of matter and form, as 
throwing off species of themselves for perception, and as moved 
by sympathies and antipathies, with much else of a like sort, all 
beyond his comprehension; and how he therefore turned to his 
Xffl. 10* 



old books again, fed bis mind on maps and charts of earth and 
sky, traced the sun in his path,- followed Drake and Cavendish 
girdling the main, and gazed with delight upon pictured haunts of 
men and wonders of unknown lands. Very characteristic is the 
interest in men and things, and the disposition to cut through 
questions in the schools after a trenchant fashion of his own. 
He was little attracted by the scholastic learning, though it 
would be wrong to take his words as evidence of a precocious 
insight into its weakness. The truth probably is that he took no 
interest in studies which there was no risk in neglecting, and 
thought as little of rejecting as of accepting the traditional 
doctrines. He adds that he took his degree at the proper time; 
but in fact, upon any computation and from whatever cause, he 
remained at Magdalen Hall five, instead of the required four, 
years, not being admitted as bachelor till the 5th of February 
1608. 

In the same year Hobbes was recommended by Wilkinson as 
tutor to the son of William Cavendish, baron of Hardwick (after- 
wards 2nd earl of Devonshire), and thus began a lifelong con- 
nexion with a great and powerful family. Twice it was loosened 
— once, for a short time, after twenty years, and again, for a 
longer period, during the Civil War— but it never was broken. 
Hobbes spoke of the first years of his tutorship as the happiest of 
his life. Young Cavendish was hardly younger than Hobbes, and 
had been married, a few months before, at the instance of the 
king, to Christiana, the only daughter of Edward, Lord Bruce of 
Kinloss, though by reason of the bride's age, which was only 
twelve years, the pair had no establishment for some time. 
Hobbes was his companion rather than tutor (before becoming 
secretary); and, growing greatly attached to each other, they 
were sent abaoad together on the grand tour in 1610. During 
this journey, the duration of which cannot be precisely stated, 
Hobbes acquired some knowledge of French and Italian, and 
also made the important discovery that the scholastic philosophy 
which he had- learned in Oxford was almost universally neglected 
in favour of the scientific and critical methods of Galileo, Kepler 
and Montaigne. Unable at first to cope with their unfamiliar 
ideas, he determined to become a scholar, and until 1628 was 
engaged in a careful study of Greek and Latin authors, the out- 
come of which was his great translation of Thucydides. But 
when he had finished his work he kept it lying by him Trmati*. 
for years, being no longer so sure of finding appreciative tkwof 
readers; and when he did send it forth, in 1628, he was ^*y 
fain to be content with u the few and better sort." 1 ^^ 
That he was finally determined to publication by the political 
troubles of the year 1628 may be regarded as certain, not only 
from his own express declaration at a later time ( VU. carm. ex p.), 
but also from unmistakable hints in the account of the life and 
work* of his aathor prefixed to the translation on its appearance. 
This was the year of the Petition of Right, extorted from the king 
in the third parliament he had tried within three years of his 
accession; and, in view of Hobbes's later activity, it is significant 
that he came forward just then, at the mature age of forty, with 
his version of the story of 
production of his pen. fr* 

1 The translation, under th 
War, written try Tkncydides 
and diligence immediately ou 
tary to the late Earl of Devon 
the death of the earl, to wl 
dedication. It reappeared i 
altered, as if then newly wri 
performed his work " with 
his version is remarkable as 
means accurate. It fills voli 
(1 1 vols., including index vo 
Bonn, 1839-184$). The v< 
cited as B.W. Molesworth 
sophica <S vols., 1 830-1 845) 1 
and odd Latin hexameters 
(L.W. v. 323-340), giving j 
Chatsworth to view the se 
were written before 1628 (in 
1636. It was a New Year' 
£5 in return. A later cditk 
by another band. 



54° 



HOBBES 



before 1628, except tint through his connexion with young 
Cavendish be had relations with literary men of note like Ben 
Jonson, and also with Bacon and Lord Herbert of Cherbury. If 
he never had any sympathy with Herbert's intuitionalist principles 
in philosophy, be was no less eager, as he afterwards showed, than 
Herbert to rationalize in matters of religious doctrine, so that he 
may be called the second of the English deists, as Herbert has 
been called the first. With Bacon he was so intimate (Aubrey's 
Lives, pp. 222, 602) that some writers have described him as a 
disciple. The facts that he used to walk with Bacon at Gorham- 
bury, and would jot down with exceptional intelligence the eager 
thinker's sudden " notions," and that he was employed to make 
the Latin version of some of the Essays, prove nothing when 
weighed against his own disregard of all Bacon's principles, and 
the other evidence that the impulse to independent thinking 
came to him not from Bacon, and not till some time after Bacon's 
death in 1626. 1 

So far as we have any positive evidence, it was not before the 
year 1629 that Hobbes entered on philosophical inquiry. Mean- 
while a great change had been wrought in his circum- 
stances. His friend and master, after about two years' 
tenure of the earldom of Devonshire, died of the plague 
in June 1628, and the affairs of the family were so 
disordered financially that the widowed countess was left with the 
task of righting them in the boyhood of the third earl. Hobbes 
went on for a time living in the household; but his services were 
no longer in demand, and, remaining inconsolable under his 
personal bereavement, he sought distraction, in 1629, in another 
engagement which took him abroad as tutor to the son of Sir 
Gervase Clifton, of an old Nottinghamshire family. This, his 
second, sojourn abroad appears to have been spent chiefly in 
Paris, and the one important fact recorded of it is that he then 
first began to look into Euclid. The engagement came to an end 
in 163 1, when he was recalled to train the young earl of Devon- 
shire, now thirteen years old, son of his previous pupil* In the 
course of the next seven years in Derbyshire and abroad, Hobbes 
took his pupil over rhetoric, 1 logic, astronomy, and the principles 
of law, with other subjects. His mind was now full of the thought 
of motion in nature, and on the continent be sought out the 
philosophical speculators or scientific workers. In Florence in 
1636 be saw Galileo, for whom he ever retained the warmest 
admiration, and spent eight months in daily converse with the 
members of a scientific circle in Paris, held together by Marin 
Mersenne (?.».)• From that time (the winter of 1636-1637) he 
too. as be tells us, was numbered among philosophers. 

His introduction to Euclid took place accidentally in 1629 
(Aubrey's Lives, p. 604). Euclid's manner of proof became the 
model for his own way of thinking upon all subjects. It is less 
easy to determine when he awoke to an interest in the physical 
doctrine of motion. The story told by himself ( Vit. p. xx) is that, 
hearing the question asked " What is sense ? " he tell to thinking 
often on the subject, till it suddenly occurred to him that if bodies 
and their internal parts were at rest, or were always in the same 
state of motion, there could be no distinction of anything, and 
.consequently no sense: the cause of all things must therefore be 
sought in^ diversity of movements. Starting from this principle 
he was driven to geometry for insight into the ground and modes 
of motion. The biographies we possess do not tell as* where or 
when this great change of interest occurred. Nothing is said, 
however, which contradicts a statement that on his third journey 
in Europe he began to study the doctrine of motion more seriously, 
being interested in it before; and as he claims more than once 



a mechanical hypothesis as far back as 1630. the intpiratioa msy 
be assigned to the time of the second journey. But it was not tin 
the third journey that the new interest became an overpowering 

Ession, and the " philosopher " was on his way home before he 
d advanced so far as to conceive the scheme of a system of thought 
to the elaboration of which his life should henceforth be devoted. 

Hobbes was able to carry out his plan in some twenty years or 
more from the time of its conception, but the execution was so 
broken in upon by political events, and so complicated with other 
labours, that its stagescan hardly be followed without some previous 
understanding of the relations of the parts of the scheme, as then 
is reason to believe they were sketched out from the beginning. 
His scheme was* first to work out, in a separate treatise De cor port, 
a systematic doctrine of Body, showing how physical phenomena 
were universally explicable in terms of motion, as motion or mecha- 
nical action was then (through Galileo and others) understood— the 
theory of motion being applied in the light of mathematical science, 
after quantity, the subject-matter of mathematics, had been duly 
considered in its place among the fundamental conceptions of 
philosophy, and a clear indication had been given, at first starting, 
of the logical ground and method of all philosophical inquiry. He 
would then single out Man from the realm of nature, and, in a 
treatise De homine, show what specific bodily motions were in- 
volved in the production of the peculiar phenomena of sensation 
and knowledge, as also of the affections and passions thence resulting, 
whereby man came into relation with man. Finally he would con- 
sider, in a crowning treatise De cite, how men, being naturally 
rivals or foes, were moved to enter into the better relation of Society, 
and demonstrate how this grand product of human wit must be 
regulated if men were not to fall back into brutish ness and misery. 
Thus he proposed to unite in one coherent whole the separate 
phenomena of Body, Man and the State, 

Hobbes came home, in 1637, to a country seething with dis- 
content. The reign of " Thorough ° was collapsing, and the 
forces pent up since 1629 were soon to rend the fabric of the 
state. By these events Hobbes was distracted from the orderly 
execution of his philosophic plan. The Short Parliament, as 
he tells us at a later time (E.W. iv. 414), was not dissolved 
before he had ready " a little treatise in English," in which he 
sought to prove that the points of the royal prerogative which 
the members were determined to dispute before granting supplies 
" were inseparably annexed to the sovereignty which they did 
not then deny to be in the king." Now it can be proved that 
at this time he had written not only his Human Nature but also 
his De corpore politico, the two treatises (though published 
separately ten years later) having been composed as parts of 
one work;* and there cannot be the least question that together 
they make " the little treatise " just mentioned. We are there- 
fore to understand, first, that he wrote the earliest draft of his 
political theory some years before the outbreak of the Civil 
War, and, secondly, that this earliest draft was not written till, in 
accordance with his philosophical conception, he had established 
the grounds of polity in human nature. The first point is to 
be noted, because it has often been supposed that Hobbes's 
political doctrine took its peculiar complexion from his revulsion 
against the state of anarchy before his eyes, as he wrote during 
the progress of the Civil War. The second point must be main- 
tained against his own implied, if not express, statement some 
years later, when publishing his De cive (L.W. ii. 151), that 
he wrote this third part of his system before he had been able 
to set down any finished representation of the fundamental 
doctrines which it presupposed. In the beginning of 1640, 
therefore, he had written out his doctrine of Man at least, with 
almost as much elaboration as it ever received from him. 

In November 1640 the Long Parliament succeeded to the 
Short, and sent Laud and Strafford to the Tower, and Hobbes, 
who had become, or thought he had become, a marked to Partg# 
man by the circulation of his treatise (of which, 
" though not printed, many gentlemen had copies "), hastened 
to Paris, " the first of all that fled." He was now for the fourth 
and last time abroad, and did not return for eleven years. 
Apparently he remained the greater part of the time in or about 

■ Among the Hardwick papers there is preserved a MS. copy of 
the work, under the title Elements of Law Naturall and Politique, 
with the dedication to the earl of Newcastle, written in Hobbes's 
own hand, and dated May 9, 164O. This dedication was prefixed 
to the first thirteen chapters of the work when printed by themselves, 
under the title Human Nature in 1650, 



HOBBES 



5+7 



Park. He was welcomed back into the scientific coterie about 
Mersenne, and forthwith had the task assigned him of criticizing 
the Meditations of Descartes, which had been sent from Holland, 
before publication, to Mersenne with the author's request for 
criticism from the most different points of view. Hobbes was 
soon ready with the remarks that were 'printed as " Third " 
among the six (later seven) sets of " Objections " appended, 
with " Replies " from Descartes, to the Meditations, when 
published shortly afterwards in 1641 (reprinted in L.W. v. 
240-274). About the same time also Mersenne sent to Descartes, 
as if they came from a friend in England, another set of objections 
which Hobbes had to offer on various points in the scientific 
treatises, especially the Dioptrics, appended by Descartes to 
his Discourse on Method in 1637; to which Descartes replied 
without suspecting the common authorship of the two sets. 
The result was to keep the two thinkers apart rather than bring 
them together. Hobbes was more eager to bring forward his 
own philosophical and physical ideas than careful to enter into 
the full meaning of another's thought; and Descartes was too 
jealous, and too confident in his conclusions to bear with this 
kind of criticism. He was very curt in his replies to Hobbes's 
philosophical objections, and broke off all correspondence on 
the physical questions, writing privately to Mersenne that he 
had grave doubts of the Englishman's good faith in drawing 
him into controversy (L.W. v. 277-307). 

Meanwhile Hobbes had his thoughts too full of the political 
theory whi'h the events of the last years had ripened within 
him to settle, even in Paris, to the orderly composition of his 
works. Though connected in his own mind with his view of 
human nature and of nature generally, the political theory, 
as he always declared, could stand by itself. Also, while he 
may have hoped at this time to be able to add much (though he 
never did) to the sketch of his doctrine of Man contained 
in the unpublished " little treatise," he might extend, but could 
hardly otherwise modify, the sketch he had there given of his 
carefully articulated theory of Body Politic. Possibly, indeed, 
before that sketch was written early in 1640, be may, under 
pressure of the political excitement, have advanced no small 
way in the actual composition of the treatise De Owe, the third 
section of his projected system. In any case, it was upon this 
section, before the others, that be set to work in Paris; and 
before the end of 1641 the book, as we know from the date 
of the dedication (November 1), was finished. Though it was 
forthwith printed in the course of the year 1642, he was content 
to circulate a limited number of copies privately *; and when 
be found his work received with applause (it was praised even 
by Descartes), he seems to have taken this recognition of his 
philosophical achievement as an additional reason for deferring 
publication till the earlier works of the system were completed. 
Accordingly, for the next three or four years, he remained 
steadily at work, and nothing appeared from him in pubb'c 
except a short treatise on optics (Tractatus opticus, L.W. v. 
217-248) included in the collection of scientific tracts pub- 
lished by Mersenne under the title Cogitata physico-mathematica 
in 1644, and a highly compressed statement of his psychological 
application of the doctrine of motion (LW. v. 300-318), 
incorporated with Mersenne's Ballistica, published in the same 
year. Thus or otherwise he had become sufficiently known by 
1645 to be chosen as a referee, with Descartes, Roberval and 
others, in the famous controversy between John Pell (q.v.) and 
the Dane Longomontanus (q.v.) over that problem of the squaring 
of the circle which was seen later on to have such a fatal charm 
for himself. But though about this time he had got ready all 
or most of the materials for his fundamental work on Body, 
not even now was he able to make way with its composition, 

1 The book, of which the copies are rare (one in Dr Williams's 
library in London and one in the Bodleian), was printed in quarto 
sue (Paris, 1642), with a pictorial title-page (not afterwards repro- 
duced) of scenes and figures illustrating its three divisions. " Liber- 
tas," l ' Imperium," ** KeliRio." The title Elemenlorum philosophiae 
sectio ttrtia, De ewe, expresses its relation to the unwritten 
sections which also ooiOes out in one or two back-references in 
the text. 



and when he returned to it after a number of years, he returned 
a different man. 

The Civil War had broken out in 1642, and the royalist 
cause began to decline from the time of the defeat at Marston 
Moor, in the middle of 1644. Then commenced an exodus of 
the king's friends. Newcastle himself, who was a cousin of 
Hobbes's late patron and to whom he dedicated the " little 
treatise" of 1640, found his way to Paris, and was followed 
by a stream of fugitives, many of whom were known to Hobbes. 
The sight of these exiles made the political interest once more 
predominant in Hobbes, and before long the revived feeling 
issued in the formation of a new and important design. It first 
showed itself in the publication of the De ewe, of which the 
fame, but only the fame, had extended beyond the inner circle 
of friends and critics who had copies of the original impression. 
Hobbes now entrusted it, early in 1646, to his admirer, the 
Frenchman Samuel de Sorbiere, by whom it was seen through 
the Elzevir press at Amsterdam in 1647 — having previously 
inserted a number of notes in reply to objections, and also a 
striking preface, in the course of which he explained its relation 
to the other parts of the system not yet forthcoming, and the 
(political) occasion of its having been composed and being 
now published before them. 2 So hopeless, meanwhile, was he 
growing of being able to return home that, later on in the year, 
he was on the point of leaving Paris to take up his abode in the 
south with a French friend,' when he was engaged " by the 
month " as mathematical instructor to the young prince of Wales, 
who had come over from Jersey about the month of July. This 
engagement lasted nominally from 1646 to 1648 when 
Charles went to Holland. Thus thrown more than 
ever into the company of the exiled royalists, it was then, 
if not earlier, that he conceived his new design of bringing 
all his powers of thought and expression to bear upon the 
production of an English book that should set forth his whole 
theory of civil government in relation to the political crisis 
resulting from the war. The De civc, presently to be published, 
was written in Latin for the learned, and gave the political 
theory without its foundation in human nature. The unpublished 
treatise of 2640 contained all or nearly all that he had to tell 
concerning human nature, but was written before the terrible 
events of the last years had disclosed how men might still be 
urged by their anti-social passions back into the abyss of anarchy. 
There was need of an exposition at once comprehensive, incisive 
and popular. The State, it now seemed to Hobbes, might be 
regarded as a great artificial man or monster (Leviathan), com- 
posed of men, with a life that might be traced from its generation, 
through human reason under pressure of human needs to its 
dissolution through civil strife proceeding from human passions. 
This, we may suppose, was the presiding conception from the 
first, but the design may have been variously modified in the 
three or four years of its execution. Before the end, in 1650-1651, 
it is plain that he wrote in direct reference to the greatly changed 
aspect of affairs in England. The king being dead, and the 
royalist cause appearing to be hopelessly lost, he did not scruple, 
in closing the work with a general " Review and Conclusion," 
to raise the question of the subject's right to change allegiance 
when a former sovereign's power to protect was irrecoverably 
gone. Also he took advantage of the rule of the Commonwealth 
to indulge much more freely than he might have otherwise 
dared in rationalistic criticism of religious doctrines; while, 
amid the turmoil of sects, be could the more forcibly urge that 
the preservation of social order, when again firmly restored, 
must depend on the assumption by the civil power of the right 

*L.W. ti. 133-134. In this first public edition (i2mo). the title 
was changed to Elementa pkilosophtca de cive, the references in the 
text to the previous sections being omitted. The date of the dedi- 
cation to the young earl of Devonshire was altered from 1641 to 
1646. 

» Described as " nobilis Languedocianus ** in Vit.; doubtless the 
same with the " Dominus Verdusius, nobilis Aquitanus," to whom 
was dedicated the Exam, et emend, math. hod. (L.W. iv.) in 1660. 
Du Verdus was one of Hobbes's profoundest admirers and most 
frequent correspondents in later years; there are many of his letters 
among Hobbes s papers at Hardwick 



54» 



HOBBES 



to wield all sanctions, supernatural as well as natural, against 
the pretensions of any clergy, Catholic, Anglican or Presbyterian, 
to the exercise of an imperium in imperio. 

We know the Leviathan only as it finally emerged from Hobbes's 
pen. During the years of its composition he remained in or near 
Paris, at first in attendance on his royal pupil, with whom he 
became a great favourite. In 1647 Hobbies was overtaken by 
a serious illness which disabled him for six months. Mersenne 
begged him not to die outside the Roman Catholic Church, but 
Hobbes said that he had already considered the matter sufficiently 
and afterwards took the sacrament according to the rites of the 
Church of England. On recovering from this illness, which nearly 
proved fatal, he resumed his literary task, and carried it steadily 
forward to completion by the year 1650, having also within the 
same time translated into English, with characteristic force of 
expression, his Latin treatise. Otherwise the only thing known 
(from one or two letters) of his life in those years is that from 
the year 1648 he had begun to think of returning home; he was 
then sixty, and might well be weary of exile. When 1650 
came, as if to prepare the way for the reception of his magnum 
4/wj, he allowed the publication of his earliest treatise, divided 
into two separate small volumes (Human Nature, or Ike Funda- 
mental Elements of Policy, E.W. iv. 1-76, and De Corpore 
Politico, or the Elements of Lata, Moral and Politic , pp. 7 7-2 28) .* 
In 1651 s he published his translation of the De Cxve under the 
title of Philosophical Rudiments concerning Government and 
Society (E.W. ii.). Meanwhile the printing of the greater 
work was proceeding, and finally it appeared about the middle 
of the same year, 1651, under the title of Leviathan, or the Matter, 
Form and Power of a Commonwealth, Ecclesiastical and Civil 
(E.W, Hi.), with a quaint frontispiece in which, from behind 
hills overlooking a fair landscape of town and country, there 
towered the body (above the waist) of a crowned giant, made 
up of tiny figures of human beings and bearing sword and crozier 
in the two hands. It appeared, and soon its author was more 
lauded and decried than any other thinker of his time; but the 
first effect of its publication was to sever his connexion with 
the exiled royalist party, and to throw him for protection on 
the revolutionary Government. No sooner did copies of the 
book reach Paris than he found himself shunned by his former 
associates, and though he was himself so little conscious of 
disloyalty that he was forward to present a manuscript copy 
"engrossed in vellum in a marvellous fair hand"* to the, young 
king of the Scots (who, after the defeat at Worcester, escaped 
to Paris about the end of October), he was denied the royal 
presence when he sought it shortly afterwards. Straightway, 
then, he saw himself exposed to a double peril. The exiles had 
among them desperadoes who could sky; and, besides exciting 
the enmity of the Anglican clergy about the king, who bitterly 
resented the secularist spirit of his book, be had compromised 
himself with the French authorities by his elaborate attack on 
the papal system. In the circumstances, no resource was left 
him but secret flight. Travelling with what speed he could in 
the depths of a severe winter and under the effects of a recent 
(second) illness, he managed to reach London, where, sending 
in his submission to the council of state, he was allowed to subside 
into private life. 

Though Hobbes came back, after his eleven years' absence, 
without having as yet publicly proved his title to rank with the 
natural philosophers of the age, he was sufficiently conscious of 
what he had been able to achieve in Leviathan', and it was 

1 The Human Nature corresponds with cc. i.-xiii. of the first part 
of the original treatise. The remaining six chapters of the part 
stand now as Part 1. of the De corpore politico. Part II. of the 
D.C.P. corresponds with the original second part of the whole work. 

■ At the beginning of this year he wrote and published in Paris a 
letter on the nature and conditions of poetry, chiefly epic; in answer 
to an appeal to his judgment made in the preface to Sir W. 
Davenant's heroic poem, Gondtbert (E.W. iv. 441-458). The letter 
is dated Jan. 10, 1650 (1650/1). 

* This presentation copy, so described by Clarendon (Survey of the 
Leviathan, 1676, p. 8), is doubtless the beautifully written and finely 
bound MS. now to be found in the British Museum (Egerton MSS. 
1910). 



in no humble mood that he now, at the age* of sixty-four, turned 
to complete the fundamental treatise of his philosophical 
system. Neither those whom his masterpiece soon 
roused to enthusiasm, nor those whom it moved to 
indignation, were likely to be indifferent to anything 
he should now write, whether it lay near to or far from 
the region of practice. Taking up his abode in Fetter Lane, 
London, on his return, and continuing to reside there for the sake 
of intellectual society, even after renewing his old ties with the 
earl of Devonshire, who lived in the country till the Restoration, 4 
he worked so steadily as to be printing the De corpore in the year 
1654. Circumstances (of which more presently) .however, kept 
the book back till the following year, and meanwhile the readers 
of Leviathan had a different excitement. In 1654 a small 
treatise, "Of Liberty and Necessity" (E.W. iv. 229-278), 
issued from the press, claiming to be an answer to 
a discourse on the same subject by Bishop Bramhall Jj^J^, 
of Londonderry (afterwards archbishop of Armagh, BrmrnhMtt. 
d. 1663), addressed by Hobbes to the marquis of 
Newcastle. 1 It had grown out of an oral discussion between 
Hobbes and Bramhall in the marquis's presence at Paris in 
1646. Bramhall, a strong Arminian, had afterwards written down 
his views and sent them to Newcastle to be answered in this 
form by Hobbes. Hobbes duly replied, but not for publication, 
because he thought the subject a delicate one. But it happened 
that Hobbes had allowed a French acquaintance to nave a 
private translation of his reply made by a young Englishman, 
who secretly took a copy of the original for himself; and now it 
was this unnamed purloiner who, in 2654, when Hobbes had 
become famous and feared, gave it to the world of his own motion, 
with an extravagantly laudatory epistle to the reader in its 
front. Upon Hobbes himself the publication came as a surprise, 
but, after his plain speaking in Leviathan, there was nothing 
in the piece that he need scruple to have made known, and he 
seems to have condoned the act. On the other hand, Bramhall, 
supposing Hobbes privy to the publication, resented the manner 
of it, especially as no mention was made of his rejoinder. Ac- 
cordingly, in 1655, ne printed everything that had passed between 
them (under the title of A Defence of the True Liberty of Human 
Actions from Antecedent or Extrinsic Necessity), with loud 
complaint against the treatment he had received, and the promise 
added that, in default of others, he himself would stand forward 
to expose the deadly principles of Leviathan. About this time 
Hobbes had begun to be hard pressed by other foes, and, being 
never more sure of himself than upon the question of the will, 
be appears to have welcomed the opportunity thus given him 
of showing his strength. By 1656 he was ready with his Questions 
concerning Liberty, Necessity and Chance (E.W. v.), in which 
he replied with astonishing force to the bishop's rejoinder point 
by point, besides explaining the occasion and circumstances 
of the whole debate, and reproducing (as Bramhall had done) 
all the pieces from the beginning. As perhaps the first clear 
exposition and defence of the psychological doctrine of determin- 
ism, Hobbes's own two pieces must ever retain a classical 
importance in the history of the free-will controversy; while 
Bramhall's are still worth study as specimens of scholastic 
fence. The bishop, it should be added, returned to the charge 
in 1658. with ponderous Caseations of Mr Hobbes's Animad- 
versions, and also made good his previous threat in a bulky 

4 During all the time he was abroad he had continued to receive 
from his patron a yearly pension of £80. and they remained in steady 
correspondence. The earl, having sided with the kins in 1642, was 
declared unfit to sit in the House of Peers, and though, by submission 
to Parliament, he recovered his estates when they were sequestered 
later on, he did not sit again till 1660. . Among Hobbes's friends at 
this time are specially mentioned John Sclden and William Harvey, 
who* left him a legacy of £10. According to Aubrey, Sdden left him 
an equal bequest, but this seems to be a mistake. Harvey (not 
Bacon) is the only Englishman he mentions in the dedicatory 
epistle prefixed to the De corpore, among the founders, before 
himself, of the new natural philosophy. 

*The treatise bore the date, " Rouen, Aug. 20, 1632," but it 
should have been 1646, as afterwards explained by Hobbes himself 
(£.W.v.*5). -r—~ 



HOBBES 549 



. translation of the D$ cor pore (E.W.. i.) to appear in 16*6, take 

* care to remove some of the worst mistakes exposed by Wafiis, and, 

while leaving out all the references to Vindex, now profess to make. 



55° 



HOBBES 



a makeshift for the proper transition required in the system from 
questions of Body Natural to questions of Body Politic. Hobbes 
had in fact spent himself in his earlier constructive efforts, and at the 

, •.___• 1_ ? J* ._ ls. J . ^_- 1 xm _•*. _^ f 

th 
ud 
us 
ed 

es. 

!St 



X L.W. iv. 1-333. The propositions on the circle, forty-eix in 
number (shattered by Wall is in 1662), were omitted by Hobbes when 
he republished the Dialorues in 1 668, in the collected edition of his 
Latin works from which Molesworth reprints. In the part omitted, 
at p. 154 of the original edition, Hobbes refers to his first introduction 
to Euclid, in a way that confirms the story in Aubrey quoted in an 
earlier paragraph. 

* Remaining at Oxford, Wallis, in fact, took no active part in the 
constitution of the new society, but he had been, from 1645. one of the 
originators of an earlier association in London, thus continued or 
revived. This earlier society had been continued also at Oxford after 
the year 1649, when Wallis and others of its members received 
appointments there, 

* The ProbUmata physica was at the same time put into English 
(with some changes and omission of part of the mathematical appen- 
dix), and presented to the king, to whom the work was dedicated in a 
remarkable letter apologizing for Leviathan, In its English form, 
as Seven Philosophical Problems and Two Propositions of Geometry 
(E.W. vii. 1-68), the work was first published in 1682, after Hobbes s 



But all the more eagerly did he take advantage of WamYe loose 
calumny to strike where he felt himself safe. His answer to 
the personal charges took the form of a letter about himself ia the 
third person addressed to Wallis in 1662, under the title of Considera- 
tionx upon the Reputation, Loyalty, Manners and Religion of Thomas 
Hobbes (B.W. iv. 409-440). In this piece, which is of great bio- 
graphical value, he tola nis own and wallis's " little stones during 
the time of the late rebellion " with such effect that Wallis, like a 
wise man, attempted no further reply. Thus ended the second bout. 
After a time Hobbes took heart again and began a third period 
of controversial activity, which did not end, on his side, till hia 
ninetieth year. Little need be added to the simple catalogue of the 
untiring old man's labours in this last stage of his life. The first 
piece, published in 1666, De principiii et ratiocinatione g e ome - 
trarum (L.W. iv. 385-484), was designed, as the sub-title declared, 
to lower the pride of geometrical professors by showing that there 
was no less uncertainty and error in their works than in those of 
plr-*--. i~-~. ---< «»-«-• «-. -«-—.-- -~ the Pki b. 

so t he brought 

hi rm. Quadra* 

tui oon as they 

w< in answer to 

th iscany, who 

W aid, refuted 

hi rked up hia 

pr i-y>),, as a 

in a criticism 

(C treatise Do 

m > the Royal 

Sc rhen Wallis, 

sti them scpar- 

at sver to them 

(£ he believed, 

es to complete 

th ricty on all 

th Lux Uathe- 

m \ae Hobbesii 

(Z i Repcrtor) 

ad p." Willis 

re L Hobbes's 

en ghty-six, he 

pi etrica, ante 

de \r 150-214). 

co nciple not a 

fe toked in the 

sti iron physio- 

lot lialogucs on 

Ef iilar fashion 

c _ blc to fire a 

parting shot at Wallis; ana one more demonstration of the equality 
of a straight line to the arc of a circle, thrown in at the end. appro- 
priately closed the strangest warfare in which perverse thinker ever 
engaged. 4 

We must now turn back to trace the fortunes of Hobbes and 
his other doings in the last twenty years of his life. All these 
controversial writings on mathematics and physics 
represent but one half of his activity after the age of 
seventy; though, as regards the other half, it is not 
possible, for a reason that will be seen, to say as definitely 
in what order the works belonging to the period were produced. 
From the time of the Restoration he acquired a new prominence 
in the public eye. No year had passed since the appearance of 
Leviathan without some indignant protest against the influence 
which its trenchant doctrine was calculated to produce upon 
minds longing above everything for civil repose; but after the 
Restoration " Hobbism " became a fashionable creed, which 
it was the duty of every lover of true morality and religion to 
denounce. Two or three days after Charles's arrival in London, 
Hobbes drew in the street the notice of his former pupil, and 
was at once received into favour. The young king, if he 
had ever himself resented the apparent disloyalty of the 
" Conclusion " of Leviathan, had not retained the feeling long, 
and could appreciate the principles of the great book when the 
application of them happened, as now, to be turned in his own 
favour. He had, besides, a relish for Hobbes's wit (as he used 
to say, " Here comes the bear to be baited "), and did not like 
the old man the less because his presence at court scandalized 
the bishops or the prim virtue of Chancellor Hyde. He even 
went the length of bestowing on Hobbes (but not always paying) 
a pension of £100, and had his portrait hung up in the royal 
I Wallis's pieces were excluded from the collected edition of nil 
works (1693-1697), and have become extremely rare. 



HOBBES 



55* 



doset. These marks of favour, naturally, did not lessen Hobbes's 
self-esteem, and perhaps they explain, in his later writings, a 
certain slavishness toward the regal authority, which is wholly 
absent from his rational demonstration of absolutism in the 
earlier works. At all events Hobbcs was satisfied with the rule 
of a king who had appreciated the author of Leviathan, and 
protected him when, after a time, protection in a very real sense 
became necessary. His eagerness to defend himself against 
Wallis's imputation of disloyalty, and his apologetic dedication 
of the Problemata physua to the king, are evidence of the 
hostility with which he was being pressed as early as 1661; 
but it was not till 1666 that he felt himself seriously in danger. 
In that year the Great Fire of London, following on the Great 
Plague,' roused the superstitious fears of the people, and the 
House of Commons embodied the general feeling in a bill against 
•theism and profaneness. On the 1 7 th of October it was ordered 
that the committee to which the bill was referred " should be 
empowered to receive information touching such books as tend 
to atheism, blasphemy and profaneness, or against the essence 
and attributes of God, and in particular the book published 
in the name of one White, 1 and the book of Mr Hobbcs called 
the Leviathan, and to report the matter with their opinion to 
the House." Hobbes, then verging upon eighty, was terrified 
at the prospect of being treated as a heretic, and proceeded to 
burn such of his papers as he thought might compromise him. 
At the same time he set himself, with a very characteristic 
determination, to inquire into the actual state of the law of 
heresy. The results of his investigation were first announced 
in three short Dialogues added (in place of the old " Review and 
Conclusion," for which the day had passed) as an Appendix to 
his Latin translation of Leviathan {L.W* iii.), included with the 
general collection of his works published at Amsterdam in 1668. 
In this appendix, as also in the posthumous tract, published in 
1680, An Historical Narration concerning Heresy and the Punish- 
ment thereof (EJV. iv. 385-408), he aimed at showing that, 
since the High. Court of Commission had been put down, there 
remained no court of heresy at all to which he was amenable, 
and that even when it stood nothing was to be declared heresy 
but what was at variance with the Nicene Creed, as he main- 
tained the doctrine of Leviathan was not. 

The only consequence that came of the parliamentary scare 
was that Hobbes could never afterwards get permission to print 
anything on subjects relating to human conduct. The collected 
edition of his Latin works (in two quarto volumes) appeared at 
Amsterdam in 1668, because he could not obtain the censor's 
licence for its publication at London, Oxford or Cambridge. 
Other writings which he had finished, or on which he must have 
been engaged about this time, were not made public till after 
his death — the king apparently having made it the price of his 
protection that no fresh provocation should be offered to the 
popular sentiment. The most important of the works composed 
towards 1670, and thus kept back, is the extremely spirited 
dialogue to which he gave the title Behemoth: the History of the 
Causes of the Civil Wars of England and of the Counsels and 
Artifices by which they were carried on from the year 1640 to the 
year 1660} To the same period probably belongs the unfinished 
Dialogue between a Philosopher and a Student of the Common Laws 
of England (E.W. vi. 1-160), a trenchant criticism of the con- 
stitutional theory of English government as upheld by Coke. 
Aubrey takes credit for having tried to induce Hobbes to write 
upon the subject in 2664 by presenting him with a copy of Bacon's 
Elements of the Laws of England, and though the attempt was 
then unsuccessful, Hobbes later on took to studying the statute- 
book, with Coke upon Littleton. One other posthumous pro- 
duction also (besides the tract on Heresy before mentioned) may 
be referred to this, if not, as Aubrey suggests, an earlier time — 
the two thousand and odd elagiac verses in which he gave his 

*Thc Dt medio animarum statu of Thomas White, a heterodox 
Catholic priest, who contested the natural immortality of the soul. 
White (who died 1676) and Hobbes were friends. 

'E.W. vi. 161-418. Though Behemoth was kept back at the 
king's express desire, it saw the light, without Hobbes's leave, in 
I679, before his death. 



view of ecclesiastical encroachment on the civil power; the 
quaint verses, disposed in his now favourite dialogue-form, were 
first published, nine years after his death, under the title Historic 
ecclesiastica (L.W, v. 341-408), with a preface by Thomas 
Rymer. 

For some time Hobbes was not even allowed to utter a word 
of protest, whatever might be the occasion that his enemies took 
to triumph over him. In 1669 an unworthy follower 1 — Daniel 
Scargil by name, a fellow of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge-* 
had to recant publicly and confess that his evil life had been the 
result of Hobbist doctrines. In 1674 John Fell, the dean of 
Christ Church, who bore the charges of the Latin translation of 
Anthony Wood's History and Antiquities of the University of 
Oxford (1670), struck out all the complimentary epithets in the 
account of his life, and substituted very different ones; but this 
time the king did suffer him to defend himself by publishing a 
dignified letter (Vit. Aucl. pp. xlvii.-l.), to which Fell replied by 
adding to the translation when it appeared a note full of the 
grossest insults. And, amid all his troubles, Hobbes was not 
without his consolations. No Englishman of that day stood in 
the same repute abroad, and foreigners, noble or learned, who 
came to England, never forgot to pay their respects to the old 
man, whose vigour and freshness of intellect no progress of the 
years seemed able to quench. Among these was the grand-duke 
of Tuscany (Ferdinand II.), who took away some works and a 
portrait to adorn the Medicean library. 

His pastimes in the latest years were as singular as his labours. 
The autobiography in Latin verse, with its playful humour, 
occasional pathos and sublime self-complacency, was thrown 
off at the age of eighty-four. At eighty-five, in the year 1673, he 
sent forth a translation of four books of the Odyssey (ix.-xii.) 
in rugged but. not seldom happily turned English rhymes; and, 
when he found this Voyage of Ulysses eagerly received, be had 
ready by 1675 a complete translation of both Iliad and Odyssey 
(E.W. x.), prefaced by a lively dissertation " Concerning the 
Virtues of an Heroic Poem," showing his unabated interest in 
questions of literary style. After 167$, he passed his time at his 
patron's seats in Derbyshire, occupied to the last with intellectual 
work in the early morning and in the afternoon hours, which it had 
long been his habit to devote to thinking and to writing. Even as 
late as August 1679 he was promising his publisher " somewhat 
to print in English." The end came very soon afterwards. A 
suppression of urine in October, in spite of which he insisted upon 
being conveyed with the family from Chatsworth to Hardwick 
Hall towards the end of November, was followed by a paralytic 
stroke, under which he sank on the 4th of December, in his 
ninety-second year. He lies buried in the neighbouring church 
of Ault HucknalL 

He was tall and erect in figure, and lived on the whole a 
temperate life, though he used to say that he had been drunk 
about a hundred times. His favourite exercise was 
tennis, which he played regularly even after the age of JJSaSw* 
seventy. Socially he was genial and courteous, though &<*». 
in argument he occasionally lost his temper. As a friend 
he was generous and loyaL Intellectually bold in the extreme, he 
was curiously timid in ordinary life, and is said to have had a 
horror of ghosts. He read little, and often boasted that he 
would have known as little as other men if he had read as much. 
He appears to have had an illegitimate daughter for whom he 
made generous provision. In the National Portrait Gallery 
there is a portrait of him by J. M. Wright, and two others are in 
the possession of the Royal Society. 

As already suggested, it cannot be allowed that Hobbes falls 
into any regular succession from Bacon; neither can it be said 
that he handed on the torch to Locke. He was the ^^ 
one English thinker of the first rank in the long period JJJJJ.i" 
of two generations separating Locke from Bacon, but, utoujbt. 
save in the chronological sense, there is no true relatiori r 
of succession among the three. It would be difficult even to 
prove any ground of affinity among them beyond a desposition to 
take sense as a prime factor in the account of subjective ex* 
pcrience: their common interest in physical science was shared 



552 



HOBBY— HOBOKEN 



equally by rationalist thinkers of the Cartesian school, and was 
indeed begotten of the time. Backwards, Hobbes's relations are 
rather with Galileo and the other inquirers who, from the 
beginning of the 17th century, occupied themselves with the 
physical world in the manner that has come later to be dis- 
tinguished by the name of science in opposition to philosophy. 
But even more than in external nature, Hobbes was interested in 
the phenomena of social life, presenting themselves so impres- 
sively in an age of political revolution. So it came to pass that, 
while he was unable, by reason of imperfect training and too 
tardy development, with all his pains, to make any contribution 
to physical science or to mathematics as instrumental in physical 
research, he attempted a task which no other adherent of the 
new "mechanical philosophy" conceived—nothing less than 
such a universal construction of human knowledge as would 
bring Society and Man (at once the matter and maker of Society) 
within the same principles of scientific explanation as were 
found applicable to the world of Nature. The construction was, 
of course, utterly premature, even supposing it were inherently 
possible; but it is Hobbes's distinction, in his century, to have 
conceived it, and he is thereby lifted from among the scientific 
workers with whom he associated to the rank of those philo- 
sophical thinkers who have sought to order the whole domain of 
human knowledge. The effects of his philosophical endeavour 
may be traced on a variety of lines. Upon every subject that 
came within the sweep of his system, except mathematics and 
physics, his thoughts have been productive of thought. When 
the first storm of opposition from smaller men had begun to die 
down, thinkers of real weight, beginning with Cumberland and 
Cudworth, were moved by their aversion to his analysis of the 
moral nature of man to probe anew the -question of the natural 
springs and the rational grounds of human action; and thus it 
may be said that Hobbes gave the first impulse to the whole of 
that movement of ethical speculation that, in modern times, has 
been carried on with such remarkable continuity in England. 
In politics the revulsion from his particuar conclusions did not 
prevent the more dear-sighted of his opponents from recognizing 
the force of his supreme demonstration of the practical irresponsi- 
bility of the sovereign power, wherever seated, in the state; and, 
when in a later age the foundations of a positive theory of legisla- 
tion were laid in England, the school of Bent ham — James Mill, 
Grote, Molesworth— brought again into general notice the 
writings of the great publicist of the 17th century, who, however 
he might, by the force of temperament, himself prefer the rule of 
one, based his whole political system upon a rational regard to 
the common weal. Finally, the psychology of Hobbes, though 
too undeveloped to guide the thoughts or even perhaps arrest 
the attention of Locke, when essaying the scientific analysis of 
knowledge, came in course of time (chiefly through James Mill) 
to be connected with the theory of associationism developed 
from within the school of Locke, in different ways, by Hartley 
and Hume; nor is it surprising that the later assodationists, 
finding their principle more distinctly formulated in the earlier 
thinker, should sometimes have been betrayed into affiliating 
themselves to Hobbes rather than to Locke. For his ethical 
theories see Ethics. 

Sufficient information is given in the Vitae Hobbianae audarium 
(L.W. i. p. Ixv. ff.) concerning the frequent early editions of Hobbes's 
separate works, and also concerning the works of those who wrote 
against him, to the end of the 17th century. In the 18th century, 
after Clarke's Boyle Lectures of 1704-1705. the opposition was less 
express. In 1750 The Moral and Political Works were collected, with 
lire, &c, by ur Campbell, in a folio edition, including in order, 
Human Nature, De cor port politico, Leviathan, Answer to BramkaU's 
Catching of Hie Leviathan, Narration concerning Heresy, Of Liberty 
and Necessity, Behemoth, Dialogue of the Common Laws, the Introduc- 
tion to the Thucydides, Letter to Datenant and two others, the Preface 
to the Homer, De mirabilibus Pecci (with English translation), Con- 
sidcrations on the Reputation, &c, of T. H. In 181 a the Human 
Nature and the Liberty and Necessity (with supplementary extracts 
from the Questions of 1656) were reprinted in a small edition of 250 
copies, with a meritorious memoir (based on Campbell) and dedica- 
tion to Home Tooke, by Philip Mallet. Molesworth's edition (1830- 
I845), dedicated to Grote, has been referred to in a former note. Of 
translations may be mentioned Les Elimens philosophiques du 
titoyen (1649) and Le Corps politique (1652), both by S. dc Sorbierc. 



at is of any 
i Robertson s 
nd Sir Lesbe 
:ters " scries, 
See afeo F. 

lUMtCH (19OA 

it Bacon amf 
; G. Brandt, 
G. Lyon, La 
mists (1907); 
do), pp. 1-72; 
am, English 
H. Campion, 
C.R.;X.) 



conjoined with Le Traits de la nature humaine, by d^HoIbach, is 
1787, under the general title Les CEuvres philosophiques et potitupus da 
Thomas Hobbes; a translation of the first section,- Computauo stve 
kwica," of the De corpora, included by Destutt de Tracy with fait 
Elimens d'tdiotogie (1804), a translation of Levtathan into Dutch in 
1678, and another(anonymous)into German— Dm EngUinders Thomas 
Hobbes Leviathan odet der ktrchltche und bUrgerliche Stoat (Halle, 1794, 
2 vols.); a translation of the De ewe by J. H. v. Ktrchmann — t. 
Hobbes: Abhandlung Hber den Bxtreer, £fc. (Leipzig, 1873). Im- 
portant later editions are those of Ferdinand Tonnies, Behunotk 
(1889), on which see Croom Robertson's Philosophical Remains (1894), 
p. 451 , Elements of Lata (1889). 

Biographical and Critical Works. — There are three accounts of 
Hobbes's life, first published together in 168 1, two years after ha 
death, by R. B. (Richard Blackbournc, a friend of Hobbes's admirer. 
John Aubrey), and reprinted, with complimentary verses by Cowley 
and others, at the beginning of Sir W. Molesworth's collection of the 

H( lias dictation; 

J a to Latin from 

U $a (pp. txxxlr 

xc rst published 

by mrie, printed 

an y's papers ia 

th one interest- 

jn| 
tm 
H 
St 
bo 
T< 
fol 
du 
Tl 
Pi 

Ot 

HOBBY, a small horse, probably from early quotations, of 
Irish .breed, trained to an easy gait so that riding was not fatigu- 
ing. The common use of the word is for a favourite pursuit or 
occupation, with the idea either of excessive devotion or of 
absence of ulterior motive or of profit, &c, outside the occupation 
itself. This use is probably not derived from the easy ambling 
gait of the Irish " hobby," but from the " hobby-horse," the 
mock horse of the old morris-dances, made of a painted wooden 
horse's head and tail, with a framework casing for an actor's 
body, his legs being covered by a cloth made to represent the 
" housings " of the medieval tilling-horsc. A hobby or hobby- 
horse is thus a toy, a diversion. The 0. Fr. hobin, or hebi, Mod. 
aubin, and Ital. ubina arc probably adaptations of the English, 
according to the New English Dictionary. The 0. Fr. kobcr, to 
move, which is often taken to be the origin of all these words, is 
the source of a use of " hobby " for a small kind of falcon, falco 
subbuteo, used in hawking. 

HOBHOUSE, ARTHUR HOBHOUSE, ist Baron (1819-1004), 
English judge, fourth son of Henry Hobhouse, permanent 
undcr-secretaryof state in the Home Office,was born atHadspen, 
Somerset, on the zoth of November 1819. Educated at Eton 
and Balliol, he was called to the bar at Lincoln's Inn in 1845, 
and rapidly acquired a large practice as a conveyancer and, 
equity draftsman; he became Q.C.- in 1862, and practised in the 
Rolls Court, retiring in 1866. He was an active member of the 
charity commission and urged the appropriation of pious bequests 
to educational and other purposes. In 1872 he began a five 
years' term of service as legal member of the council of Ibe 
governor-general of India, his services being acknowledged by 
a K.C.SJ.; and in 1881 he was appointed a member of the 
judicial committee of the privy council, on which he served for 
twenty years. He was made a peer in 1885, and consistently 
supported the Liberal party in the House of Lords. He died on 
the 6th of December 1004, leaving no heir to the barony. 

His papers read before the Social Science Association on the subject 
of property were collected id 1880 under the title of The Dead Hand, 

HOBOKEN, a small town of Belgium on the right bank of the 
Scheldt about 4 m. above Antwerp. It is only important on 
account of the ship-building yard which the Cockcrill firm of 
Seraing has established at Hobokcn. Many wealthy Antwerp 



HOBOKEN— HOCHE, LAZARE 



353 



Merchants have villas here, and it is the headquarters of several 
t>4 the leadingrowing dubs on the Scheldt. Pop. (1904) 12,816. 

HOBOKEN, a city of Hudson county, New Jersey, U.S.A., on 
the Hudson river, adjoining Jersey City on the S. and W. and 
opposite New York city, with which it is connected by ferries 
and by two subway lines through tunnels under the river. Pop. 
(1890) 43,648; (1000) 59*364. of whom 21,380 were foreign-born, 
10,843 being natives of Germany; (1010 census) 70424. 
Of the total population in 1000, 48,340 had either one or both 
parent* foreign-born, German being the principal racial element. 
The dty is served by the West Shore, and the Delaware, Lacka- 
wanna & Western railways, being the eastern terminus of the 
latter, and is connected by electric railway with the neighbouring 
cities of north-eastern New Jersey. In Hoboken are the piers of 
the North German Lloyd, the Hamburg American, the Nether- 
lands American, the Scandinavian and the Phoenix steamship 
lines. Hoboken occupies a little more than 1 sq. m. and lies 
near the foot of the New Jersey Palisades, which rise both on the 
W. and N. to a height of nearly 200 ft. Much of its surface has 
had to be tilled in to raise it above high tide, but Castle Point, in 
the N.E., rises from the generally low level about 100 ft On this 
Point are the residence and private estate of the founder of the 
dty, John Stevens (1749-1838), Hudson Park, and facing it the 
Stevens Institute of Technology, an excellent school of mechanical 
engineering endowed by Edwin A. Stevens (1 705-1868), son of 
John Stevens, opened in 1871, and having in 1900-19x0 34 
instructors and 300 students. The institute owes much to its 
first president, Henry Morton { 1836-1902), a distinguished 
scientist, whose aim was " to offer a tourse of instruction in 
which theory and practice were carefully balanced and thoroughly 
combined/' and who gave to the institute sums aggregating 
$175,006 (see Morton M&ntorial, History of Stevens Institute, ed. 
by Furman, 1905). In connexion with the institute there is a 
preparatory department, the Stevens School (1870). The dty 
maintains a teachers' training school. Among the dty*s pro- 
minent buildings are the Delaware, Lackawanna Jfc Western 
station, the Hoboken Academy (i860), founded by German 
Americans, and the public library. The dty has an extensive 
coal trade and numerous manufactures, among which are lead 
pencils, leather goods, s3k goods, wall-paper and caskets. The 
value of the manufactured product increased from $7,1 51,391 in 
1890 to $11,092,879 in 1900, or 69-1%. The factory product 
in 1905 was valued at $14,077,305, an increase of 34*3% over 
that for 1900. The site of Hoboken (originally "Hobocan- 
fcadringh," the place of the tobacco pipe) was occupied about 
1640 as a Dutch farm, but in 1643 the stock and all the buildings 
except a brew-house were destroyed by the Indians. In 171 1 
title to the place was acquired by Samuel Bayard, a New York 
merchant, who built on Castle Point his summer residence. 
During the War of Independence his descendant, William 
Bayard, was a loyalist, and his home was burned and his estate 
confiscated. In 1784 the property was purchased by John Stevens, 
the inventor, who in 1804 laid it out as a town. For the next 
thirty-five years its " Erysian Fidds " were a famous pleasure 
resort of New York City. Hoboken was incorporated as a town in 
1849 and as a dty in 1855. On the 30th of June 1900 the wharves 
of the North German Lloyd Steamship Company and three 
of its ocean liners were almost completely destroyed by a fire, 
which caused a loss of more than 200 lives and over $5,000,000. 

HOBSOirS CHOICE, i,e. «< this or nothing," an expression that 
«rose from the fact that the Cambridge-London carrier, Thomas 
Hobson (1544-1630), refused, when letting his horses on hire, to 
allow any animal to leave the stable out of its turn. Among 
Other bequests made by Hobson, and commemorated by Milton, 
was a conduit for the Cambridge market-place, for which he 
provided the perpetual maintenance. See Spectator, No. 509 
(14th of October 1712). 

HOBY, SIR THOMAS (1 530-1 566), English diplomatist and 
translator, son of William Hoby of Leominster, was born in 1 530. 
He entered St John's College, Cambridge, in 1545, but in 1547 
he went to Strassburg, where he was the guest of Martin Bucer, 
whose Gratulation . . . unto the Church of En%Umde for the 



restitution of Christes Religion he translated into English. He 
then proceeded to Italy, visiting Padua and Venice, Florence arid 
Siena, and in May 1550 he had settled at Rome, when he was 
summoned by his half-brother, Sir Philip Hoby (1 505-1558), 
then ambassador at the emperor's court, to Augsburg. The 
brothers returned to England at the end of the year, and Thomas 
attached himself to the service of the marquis of Northampton, 
whom he accompanied to France on an embassy to arrange a 
marriage between Edward VI. and the princess EHzabeth, 
Shortly after he returned to England he started once more for 
Paris, and in 1552 he was engaged on his translation of The 
Courtyer of Count Baldessar Castilio. His work was probably 
completed in 1554, and the freedom of the allusions to the 
Roman church probably accounts for the fact that it was withheld 
from publication until 1561. The Cortegiano of Baldassare 
Castiglione, which Dr Johnson called " the best book that ever 
was written upon good breeding," is a book as entirely typical of 
the Italian Renaissance as MachiaveOi's Prince in another 
direction. It exercised an immense influence on the standards 
of chivalry throughout Europe, and was long the recognized 
authority for the education of a nobleman. The accession of 
Mary made it desirable for the Hobys to remain abroad, and they 
were in Italy until the end of 1555. Thomas Hoby married in 
1558 Elizabeth, the learned daughter of Sir Anthony Cook, who 
wrote a Latin epitaph on her husband. He was knighted in 1 566 
by Elizabeth, and was sent to France as English ambassador. 
He died on the 13th of July in the same year in Paris, and was 
buried in Bisham Church. 

His son, Six Edward Hoby (x 560-1617), enjoyed Elizabeth's 
favour, and he was employed on various confidential missions. 
HeVas constable of Queenborough Castle, Kent, where he died 
on the 1st of March 16x7. He took part in the religious contro- 
versies of the time, publishing many pamphlets against Thco- 
philus Higgons and John Fludd or Floyd. He translated, from 
the French of Mathieu Coignet, Politique Discourses on Trueth and 

Ly**t (158°)- 

The authority for Thomas Hoby'* biography is a MS " Booke of 
the Travaile and lief of mc Thomas Hoby, with diverse things worth 
the noting/' This was edited for the Royal Historical Society by 
Edgar Powell in 1902. Hoby's translation of The Courtyer was edited 
(1900) by Professor Walter Raleigh for the " Tudor Translations M 



HOCHE, LAZARB (1 768-1 797), French general, was born 
of poor parents near Versailles on the 24th of June X768. At 
sixteen years of age he enlisted as a private soldier in the Gardes 
franchises. He spent his entire leisure in earning extra pay by 
rivil work, his object being to provide himself with books, and 
this love of study, which was combined with a strong sense of 
duty and personal courage, soon led to his promotion. When 
the Gardes francflises were broken up in x 789 he was a corporal, 
and thereafter he served in various line regiments up to the time 
of his receiving a commission in X702. In the defence of Thiou- 
ville in that year Hoche earned further promotion, and he served 
with credit in the operations of 1792-1793 on the northern 
frontier of France. At the battle of Neerwinden he was aide-de- 
camp to General le Veneur, and when Dumouxiez deserted 
to the Austrian*,. Hoche, along with le Veneur and others, fell 
under suspidon of treason; but after being kept under arrest 
and unemployed for some months be took part in the defence 
of Dunkirk, and in the same year (1793) he waa promoted 
successively chef de brigade, general of brigade, and general of 
division. In October 1793 he was provisionally appointed to 
command the Army of the Moselle, and within a few weeks he 
was in the field at the head of his army in Lorraine. His first 
battle was that of Kaiscrslautera (28th~3oth of November) 
against Prussians. The French were defeated, but even in the 
midst of the Terror the Committee of Public Safety continued 
Hoche in his command. Pertinadty and fiery energy in theit 
eyes outweighed everything else, and Hoche soon showed that 
he possessed these qualities. On the 2 2nd of December he stormed 
the lines of FrOschweiler, and the representatives of the Con- 
vention with his army at once added the Army of the Rhine 
to his sphere of command. On the *6tb of December the French 



55+ 



HOCHHEIM— HOCKEY 



carried by assault the famous lines of Weissenborg, and Heche 
pursued his success, sweeping the enemy before him to the middle 
Rhine in four days. He then put his troops into winter quarters. 
Before the following campaign opened, he married Anne Adelaide 
Dechaux at Thionville (March nth, 1704). But ten days later 
he was suddenly arrested, charges of treason having been pre* 
ferrcd by Pichegru, the displaced commander of the Army 
of the Rhine, and by his friends. Hochc escaped execution, 
however, though imprisoned in Paris until the fall of Robespierre. 
Shortly after his release he was appointed to command against 
the Vendeans (21st of August 1794)* He completed the work 
of his predecessors in a few months by the peace of Jaunaye 
(15th of February 1795), but soon afterwards the war was 
renewed by the Royalists. Hoche showed himself equal to the 
crisis and inflicted a crushing blow on the Royalist cause by 
defeating and capturing de SombreuiTs expedition at Quiberon 
and Penthievre (i6th-2ist of July 1795). Thereafter, by means 
of mobile columns (which he kept under good discipline) he 
succeeded before the summer of 1796 in pacifying the whole of 
the west, which had for more than three years been the scene 
of a pitiless civil war. After this he was appointed to organize 
and command the troops destined for the invasion of Ireland, 
and he started on this enterprise in December 1796. A tempest, 
however, separated Hoche from the expedition, and after various 
adventures the whole fleet returned to Brest without having 
effected its purpose. Hoche was at once transferred to the 
Rhine frontier, where he defeated the Austrians at Neuwied 
(April), though operations were soon afterwards brought to an 
end by the Preliminaries of Leobcn. Later in 1797 he was 
minister of war for a short period, but in this position he was 
surrounded by obscure political intrigues, and, finding himself 
the dupe of Barras and technically guilty of violating the 
constitution, he quickly laid down his office, returning to his 
command on the Rhine frontier. But his health grew rapidly 
worse, and he died at Wetzlar on the 19th of September 1797 
of consumption. The belief was widely spread that he had been 
poisoned, bat the suspicion seems to have been without founda- 
tion. He was buried by the side of his friend Marceau in a fort 
on the Rhine, amidst the mourning not only of his army but of 

et 
du 
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la 
he 

ral 
le 
ire 
m- 
vie 

7); 

et 

J>; 
w 
he 
A. 

HOCHHEIM, a town of Germany, in the Prussian province 
of Hesse-Nassau, situated on an elevation not far from the 
right bank of the Main, 3 m. above its influx into the Rhine and 
* m. E. of Mainz by the railway from Cassel to Frankfort -on- 
Main. Pop. (1905) 3779. It has an Evangelical and a Roman 
Catholic church, and carries on an extensive trade in wine, the 
English word " Hock," the generic term for Rhine wine, being 
derived from its name. Hochheim is mentioned in the chronicles 
as early as the 7th century. It is also memorable as the scene 
of a victory gained here, on the 7th of November 1813 by the 
Austrians over the French. 

See Schiller, Geschichte der SUxdi Hochheim am Main (Hochheim, 
1888). 

HOCHST* a town of Germany, in the Prussian province of 
Hesse-Nassau on the Main, 6 m. by rail W. of Frankfort-on-Main. 
Pop. (1905) Mi*". It is a busy industrial town with large 
dye-works and manufactures of machinery, snuff, tobacco, 
waxcloth, gelatine, furniture and biscuits. Brewing is carried 



on and there is a considerable river trade. The Roman Catholic 

church of St Justinus is a fine basilica originally built in the 
9th century; it has been restored several times, and a Gothic 
choir was added in the 15th century. The town has also aa 
Evangelical church and a synagogue, and a statue of Bismarck 
by Alois Mayer. Hochst belonged formerly to the electors of 
Mainz who had a palace here; this was destroyed in 1634 with 
the exception of one fine tower which still remains. In 1632 
Christian, duke of Brunswick, was defeated here by Count 
Tilly, and in 1795 the Austrians gained a victory here over 
the French. 

Hochst is also the name of a small town in Hesse. This has 
some manufactures, and was formerly the seat of a Benedictine 
monastery. 

H&CHST&DT, a town of Bavaria, Germany, in the district of 
Swabia, on the left bank of the Danube, 34 m. N.E. of Ulm by 
rail. Pop. (190s) 2305. It has three Roman Catholic churches, 
a castle flanked by walls and towers and same small industries, 
including malting and brewing. Hochstldt, which came into 
the possession of Bavaria in 1266, has been a place of battles. 
Here Frederick of Hohenstaufen, vicegerent of the Empire for 
Henry IV., was defeated by Henry's rival, Hermann of Luxem- 
burg, in xo8i; in 1703 the Imperialists were routed here by 
Marshal Yillars in command of the French; in August 1704 
Marlborough and Prince Eugene defeated the French and 
Bavarians commanded by Max Emanuel, the elector of Bavaria 
and Marshal Tallard, this battle being usually known as that of 
Blenheim; and in June 1800 an engagement took place here 
between the Austrians and the French. 

There is another small town in Bavaria named Hochstadu 
Pop. 2000. This is on the river Aisch, not far from Bamberg, to 
which bishopric it belonged from 1x57 to 1802, when it was ceded 
to Bavaria. 

HOCHSTEITER, FERDINAND CHRISTIAN VON, Baron 
(1820-1884), Austrian geologist, was bom at Esslingen, WOrtem- 
berg, on the 30th of April 1829. He was the son of Christian 
Ferdinand Hochstetter (1787-1860), a clergyman and professor 
at BrOnn, who was also a botanist and mineralogist. Having 
received his early education at the evangelical seminary at 
Maulbronn, he proceeded to the university of Tubingen; there 
under F. A. Quenstedt the interest he already felt in geology 
became permanently fixed, and there he obtained his doctor's 
degree and a travelling scholarship. In 1852 he joined the staff 
of the Imperial Geological Survey of Austria and was engaged 
un^l 1856 in parts of Bohemia, especially in the Bdhmerwald, and 
in the Fichtel and Karlsbad mountains. His excellent reports 
established his reputation. Thus he came to be chosen as geolo- 
gist to the Novara expedition (1857-1859), and made numerous 
valuable observations in the voyage round the world. In 1859 
he was engaged by the government of New Zealand to make a 
rapid geological survey of the islands. On his Teturn he was 
appointed in i860 professor of mineralogy and geology at the 
Imperial Polytechnic Institute in Vienna, and in 1876 he was 
made superintendent of the Imperial Natural History Museum. 
In these later years he explored portions of Turkey and eastern 
Russia, and he published papers on a variety of geological, 
palaeontological and mineralogies! subjects. He died at Vienna 
on the 18th of July 1884. 

Publications.— JCarfefarf, seine gtotnostischen Verhaltnisse nmd 
seine Quelkn (18*8); Neu-Secland (1863); Geological and Topo- 
graphical Atlas of New Zealand (1864); LeUfaden der Mineralogie 
una Geologic (with A. Bisching) (1876, ed. 8, 1890). 

HOCKEY (possibly derived from the " hooked " stick with 
which it is played; cf. O. Fr. koquet, shepherd's crook), a game 
played with a ball or some similar object by two opposing sides, 
using hooked or bent sticks, with which each side attempts to 
drive it into the other's goal. In one or more of its variations 
Hockey was known to most northern peoples in both Europe and 
Asia, and the Romans possessed a game of similar nature. It 
was played indiscriminately on the frozen ground or the ice in 
winter. In Scotland it was called " shinty," and in Ireland 
" hurley," and was usually played on the hard, sandy sea-shore 



HOCKEY 



555 



with numerous players on each side. The rules were simple 
and the play very rough. 

Modern Hockey, properly so called, is played during the cold 
season on the hard turf, and owes its recent vogue to the forma- 
tion of " The Men's Hockey Association " in England in 1875. 
The rules drawn up by the Wimbledon Club in 1883 still obtain 
in all essentials. Since 1895 " international " matches at hockey 
have been played annually between England, Scotland, Ireland 
and Wales; and in 1007 a match was played between England 
and France, won by England by 14 goals to nil. In 1800 Divi- 
sional Association matches (North, South, West, Midlands) and 
inter-university matches (Oxford and Cambridge) were in- 
augurated, and have since been played annually. County 
matches are also now regularly played in England, twenty-six 
counties competing in 1907. Of other hockey dubs playing 
regular matches in 1907, there were eighty-one in the London 
district, and fifty-nine in the provinces. 

The game U played by teams of eleven players on a ground 100 
yds. long and 50 to 60 yds. wide. The goals are in the centre of each 

end-line, and consist of 
/? If- A two uprights 7 ft. high 

' — - J ■ y.^ . 1 xi 1 surmounted by a hori- 

zoatal bar. enclosing a 
•pace 12 ft. wide. In 
front of each goal is 
a space enclosed by a 
curved line, its greatest 
diameter from the goal- 
line being 15 ft., called 
the slrikint-circle. The 
positions of the players 
on each side may be 
— •«• unpany- 

on each 
itre-line, 

ordinary 
ainted 
:k has a 
ed head, 
of cork 
me. It 
mu-v ..~» ~~~ed 2 in. 
in diameter nor 28 oz. 
in weight. At the start 
of the game, which 
consists of two thirty 
or thirty-five minute 
periods, the two centre- 
A forwards H bully off " 
* the ball in the middle 
of the field. In " bully- 
ing off " each centre 
must strike the ground 
on his own side of the 

„„ ball three times with 

CF, Centre Forward, his stick and strike his 
LI, Inside Left. opponent's stick three 

LW, Left Wing. times alternately; after 

which either may strike 
the ball. Each side 
then endeavours, by means of striking, passing and dribbling, 
to drive the ball into its opponents' goal. A player is "off 
side " if he is nearer the enemy's goal than one of his own side 
who strikes the ball, and he may not strike the ball himself 
until it has been touched by one of the opposing side. The ball 
may be caught (but not held) or stopped by any part of the body, 
but may not be picked up, carried, kicked, thrown or knocked 
except with the stick. An opponent's stick may be hooked, but not 
an opponent's person, which may not be obstructed in any way. 
No left-handed play is allowed. Penalties for infringing rules are of 
two classes; " free hits " and " penalty bullies," to be taken where 
the foul occurred. For flagrant fouls penalty goals may also be 
awarded. A " corner " occurs when the ball goes behind the goal- 
line, but not into goal. If it is hit by the attacking side, or unin- 
tentionally by the defenders, it must be brought out 25 yds., in a 
direction at right angles to the goal-line from the point where it 
crossed the line, and there " bullied." But if the ball is driven from 
within the 25-yd. line unintentionally behind the goal-line by the 
defenders, a member of the attacking side is given a free hit from a 
point within 3 yds. of a comer flag, the members of the defending side 
remaining behind their goal-line. If the ball is hit intentionally behind 
the goal-une by the attacking side, the free hit is taken from the point 
where the ball went over. No goal can be scored from a free hit directly. 




Diagram of Hockey Field. 

G. Goal. RW, Right Wing. 

RB, Right Back. RI, Inside Right. 
LB, Left Back. 
RH, Right Half. 
CH, Centre Half. 
LH, Left Half. 



Ice Hockey (or Bandy, to give it Its original name) is far more 
popular than ordinary Hockey in countries where there is much 
ice; in fact in America " Hockey " means Ice Hockey, while 
the land game is called Field Hockey. Ice Hockey in its simplest 
form of driving a ball across a given limit with a stick or dub 
has been played for centuries in northern Europe, attaining 
its greatest popularity in the Low Countries, and there are many 
16th- and 17th-century paintings extant which represent games 
of Bandy, the players using an implement formed much like 
a golf dub. 

t 
1 



1 
t 
1 
1 

1 

1 
1 
t 
made! 

In America the development of the modem game is due to the 
Victoria Hockey Clnb and McGill University (Montreal). About 
1881 the secretary of the former dub made the first efforts towards 
drawing up a recognized code Ol laws, and for some time afterwards 
playing rules were agreed upon from time to time whenever an 
important match was played, the chief teams being, besides those 
already mentioned, the Ottawa, Quebec, Crystal and Montreal 
Hockey Clubs, the first general tournament taking place in 1884. 
Three years later the "Amateur Hockey Association of Canada 
was formed, and a definite code of rules drawn up. Soon afterwards, 
in consequence of exhibitions given by the best Canadian teams In 




Hockey Stick. 



lu Polo, a winter sport similar to Ice Hockey, is almost exdusivdy 
played in the New England states. A rubber-covered ball is used and 
the stick is heavier than that used in Ice Hockey. The radical differ- 
ence between the two games is that, in Ice Polo, there is no strict 
off-side rule, so that passes and shots at goal may come from any and 
often the most unexpected direction. Five men constitute a team: 
a goal-tend, a half-back, a centre and two rushers. The rushers must 
be rapid skaters, adepts in dribbling and passing and good goal shots. 
The centre supports the rushers, passing the ball to them or trying 
for goat himself. The half-back is the first defence and the goal-tend 
the last. The rink is 150 ft. long. 

Ring Hockey may be played on the floor of any gymnasium or 
large room by teams of six, comprising a goal-keeper, a quarter, three 



556 



HOCK-TIDE— HODGE 



s 

ing 
: is 
>ut 
irer 
[he 
he 
lis 
ree 

the 
m- 



summer halves. The derivation of the word is disputed: any 
analogy with Ger. hock, " high/' being generally denied. No 
trace of the word is found in Old English, and " hock-day," its 
earliest use in composition, appears first in the 12 th century. 
The characteristic pastime of hock-tide was called binding. On 
Monday the women, on Tuesday the men, stopped all passers 
of the opposite sex and bound them with ropes till they bought 
their release with a small payment, or a rope was stretched across 
the highroads, and the passers were obliged to pay tolL The 
money thus collected seems to have gone towards parish expenses. 
Many entries are found in parish registers under " Hocktyde 
money." The hocktide celebration became obsolete in the 
beginning of the 18th century. At Coventry there was a play 
called "The Old Coventry Play of Hock Tuesday." This, 
suppressed at the Reformation owing to the incidental disorder, 
and revived as part of the festivities on Queen Elizabeth's visit 
to Kenil worth in July 1575, depicted the struggle between Saxons 
and Danes, and has given colour to the suggestion that hock-tide 
was originally a commemoration of the massacre of the Danes 
on St Brice's Day, the 13th of November a.d. 1002, or of the 
rejoicings at the death of Hardicanute on the 8th of June 1042 
and the expulsion of the Danes. . Put the dates of these anni- 
versaries do not bear this out. 

HOCUS, a shortened form of " hocus pocus," used in the 17th 
century in the sense of " to play a trick on any one," to " hoax," 
which is generally taken to be a derivative, " Hocus pocus " 
appears to have been a mock Latin expression first used as the 
name of a juggler or conjurer. Thus in Ady's CandU in the Dark 
(1655), quoted in the New English Dictionary, " I will speak of 
one man . . . that went about in King James his time . • . 
who called himself, The Kings Majesties most excellent Hocus 
Pocus, and so was called, because that at the playing of every 
Trick, he used to say, Hocus pocus, ionius talontus, vade ecleriter 
jubeo, a dark composure of words, to blinde the eyes of the 
beholders, to make his Trick pass the more currently without 
discovery." Tillotson's guess (Sermons, xxvi.) that the phrase 
was a corruption of hoc est corpus and alluded to the words of 
the Eucharist^ "in ridiculous imitation of the priests of the 
Church of Rome in their trick of Transubstantiation." has 
frequently been accepted as a serious derivation, but has no 
foundation. A connexion with a supposed demon of Scandin- 
avian mythology, called " OchusBochus," is equally unwarranted. 
" Hocus " is used as a verb, meaning to drug, stupefy with opium, 
&c. r for a criminal purpose. This use dates from the beginning 
of the 19th century. 

HODDEN (a word of unknown origin), a coarse kind of doth 
made of undyed wool, formerly much worn by the peasantry 
of Scotland. It was usually made on small hand-looms by the 
peasants themselves. Grey hodden was made by mixing black 
and white fleeces together in the proportion of one to twelve 
when weaving. 

HODDESDON, an urban district in the Hertford parliamentary 
division of Hertfordshire, England, near the river Lea, 17 m. N. 
from London by the Great Eastern railway (Broxbourne and 
Hoddesdon station on the Cambridge line). Pop. (iooi), 471 1. 
This is the northernmost of a series of populous townships 



extending from the suburbs of London along the Lea valley aft- 
far as its junction with the Stort, which is dose to Hoddesdon. 
They are in the main residential . Hoddesdon was a famous 
coaching station on the Old North Road; and the Bull posting- 
house is mentioned in Matthew Prior's " Down HalL" The Lea 
has been a favourite resort of anglers (mainly for coarse fish 
in this part) from the time of Ixaak Walton, in whose book 
Hoddesdon is specifically named. The church of St Augustine, 
Broxbourne, is & fine example of Perpendicular work, and 
contains interesting monuments, including an altar tomb with 
enamelled brasses of 1473. Hoddesdon probably coven the 
site of a Romano-British village. 

HODEDA (Hodcida, Hadeda), a town in Arabia situated on the 
Red Sea coast 14° 48' N. and 42 57' & It lies on a beach 
of muddy sand exposed to the southerly and westerly winds. 
Steamers anchor more than a mile from shore, and merchandize 
has to be transhipped by means of sambuks ox native boats. 
But Hodeda has become the chief centre of the maritime trade 
of Turkish Yemen, and has superseded Mokha as the great port 
of export of South Arabian coffee. The town is composed of 
stone-built houses of several storeys, and is surrounded, except 
on the sea face, by a fortified enceinte. The population is esti- 
mated at 33,ooo, and contains, besides the Arab inhabitants and 
the Turkish officials and garrison, a considerable foreign dement, 
Greeks, Indians and African traders from the opposite coast. 
There are consulates of Great Britain, United States, France, 
Germany, Italy and Greece, The steam tonnage entering and 
clearing the port in 1904 amounted to 78,700 tons, the highest 
hitherto recorded. Regular services are maintained with Aden, 
and with Suez, Massowa and the other Red Sea ports. Large 
dhows bring dates from the Persian Gulf, and occasional steamers 
from Bombay call on their way to Jidda with cargoes of grain. 
The imports for 1904 amounted in value to £467,000, the chief 
items being piece goods, food grains and sugar; the exports 
amounted to £451,000, including coffee valued at £a 29,00a 

HODENING, an ancient Christmas custom still surviving in 
Wales, Kent, Lancashire and elsewhere. A horse's skull or 
a wooden imitation on a pole is carried round by a party of 
youths, one of whom conceals himself under a white doth to 
simulate the horse's body, holding a lighted candle in the skulL 
Tbey make a house-to-house visitation, begging gratuities. 
The " Penitential " of Archbishop Theodore (d. 690) speaks of 
" any who, on the kalands of January, dothe themselves with 
the skins of cattle and carry heads of animals." This, coupled 
with the fact that among the primitive Scandinavians the horse 
was often the sacrifice made at the winter solstice to Odin for 
success in battle, has been thought to justify the theory that 
hodening is a corruption of Odining. 

HODGE, CHARLES (1 797-1878), American theologian, was 
born in Philaddphia, Pennsylvania, on the 28th of December 
1797. He graduated atthe Collegeof New Jersey (now Princeton) 
in 1815, and in 1819 at the Princeton Theological seminary, 
where he became an instructor in 1820, and the first professor 
of Oriental and Biblical literature in 1822. Meanwhile, in 1821, 
he had been ordained as a Presbyterian minister. From 1826 
to 1828 he studied under de Sacy in Paris, under Gesenius and 
Tholuck in Halle, and under Hengstenberg, Neander and 
Humboldt in Berlin. In 1840 he was transferred to the chair of 
exegetical and didactic theology, to which subjects that of 
polemic theology was added in 1854, and this office he held until 
his death. In 1825 he established the quarterly Biblical Reper- 
tory, the title of which was changed to Biblical Repertory and 
Theological Review In 1830 and to Biblical Repertory and Princeton 
Review in 1837. With it, in 1840, was merged the Literary 
and Theological Review of New York, and in 1872 the American 
Presbyterian Review of New York, the title becoming Presbyterian 
Quarterly and Princeton Review in 1872 and Princeton Review 
in 1877. He secured for it the position of theological organ of the 
Old School division of the Presbyterian church, and continued 
its principal editor and contributor until 1868, when the Rev. 
Lyman H. Atwater became his colleague. His more important 
essays were republished under the titles Essays and Reviews 



HODGKIN— H<5dMEZO-VASARHELY 



(1857), Princeton Theological Essays, and Discussions in Church 
Polity (1878). He was moderator of the General Assembly 
(O.S.) in 1846, a member of the committee to revise the Book of 
Discipline of the Presbyterian church in 1858, and president of 
the Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions in 1868-1870. The 
24th of April 187a, the fiftieth anniversary of his election to his 
professorship, was observed in Princeton as his jubilee by between 
400 and 500 representatives of his 2700 pupils, and $50,000 was 
raised for the endowment of his chair. He died at Princeton 
on the 19th of June 1878. Hodge was one of the greatest of 
Amcria 

Bcsidi a 

Commen 36, 

rcwrittc yry 

of (he Pi 0); 

The Wi 5)j 

I Corint (3 

vols.. 22 ex- 

position! 4), 

in whict 1 a 

volume< his 

son, was 

His son, Archibald Alexander Hodge (1823-1886), also 
famous as a Presbyterian theologian, was bom at Princeton on 
the iSth of July 1823. He graduated at the College of New Jersey 
in 1 841, and at the Princeton Theological seminary in 1846, 
and was ordained in 1847. From 1847 to 1850 he was a mission- 
ary at Allahabad, India, and was then pastor of churches 
successively at Lower West Nottingham, Maryland (1851-1855); 
at Fredcricksburg^Virginia (1855-1861), and at Wilkes-Barre, 
Pennsylvania (1861-2864). From 1864 to 1877 he was professor 
of didactic and polemical theology in the Allegheny Theological 
seminary at Allegheny, Pennsylvania, where he was also from 
1866 to 1877 pastor of the North Church (Presbyterian). In 
1878 he succeeded his father as professor of didactic theology 
at the Princeton seminary. He died on the nth of November 
1886. Besides writing the biography of his father, he was the 
author of Outlines of Theology (i860, new ed. 1875; enlarged, 
1870); The Atonement (1867); Exposition of the Confession of 
Faith (i860); and Popular Lectures on Theological Themes (1887). 

See C. A. Salmond's Charles and A. A. Hodge (New York, 1888). 

HODGKIN, THOMAS (1831- ), British historian, son of 
John Hodgkin (1800-1875), barrister, was born in London on 
the 29th of July 1831. Having been educated as a member of 
the Society of Friends and taken the degree of B.A. at London 
University, he became a partner in the banking house of Hodgkin, 
Barnett & Co., Newcastle-on-Tyne, a firm afterwards amalga- 
mated with Lloyds' Bank. While continuing in business as 
a banker, Hodgkin devoted a good deal of time to historical 
study, and soon became a leading authority on the history of 
the early middle ages, his books being indispensable to all 
students of this period. .His chief works are, Italy and her 
invaders (8 vols., Oxford, 1880-1899); The Dynasty of Theodosius 
(Oxford, 1889); Theodoric the Goth (London, 1891); and an 
introduction to the Letters of Cassiodorus (London, 1886). 
He also wrote a Life of Charles the Great (London, 1897); Life 
of George Fox (Boston, 1806); and the opening volume of 
Longman's Political History of England (London, 1006). 

HODGKINSON, BATOR (1780-1861), English engineer, the 
son of a farmer, was born at Anderton near Northwich, Cheshire, 
on rhe 26th of February 1789. After attending school at North- 
wich, he began to help his widowed mother on the farm, but to 
escape from that uncongenial occupation he persuaded her in 
181 1 to remove to Manchester and start a pawnbroking business. 
There he made the acquaintance of John Dalton, and began those 
inquiries into the strength of materials which formed the work 
of his life. He was associated with Sir William Fairbairn in an 
important series of experiments on cast iron, and his help was 
sought by Robert Stephenson in regard to the forms and dimen- 
sions of the tubes for the Britannia bridge. A paper which he 
communicated to the Royal Society on" Experimental Researches 
on the Strength of Pillars of Cast Iron and other Materials," in 
1840 gained him a Royal medal in 1841, and he was also elected 
a fellow. In 1847 he was appointed professor of the mechanical 



557 

principles of engineering in University College, London, and at 
the same time he was employed as a member of the Royal Com- 
missioo appointed to inquire into the application of iron to 
railway structures. In 1848 he was chosen president of the 
Manchester Philosophical Society, of which he had been a 
member since 1826, and to which, both previously and sub- 
sequently, he contributed many of the more important results of 
bis discoveries. For several years he took an active part in the 
discussions of the Institution of Civil Engineers, of which he was 
elected an honorary member m 185X. He died at Eaglesfield 
House, near Manchester, on the x8th of June 1861. 

HODGSON, BRIAN HOUGHTON (1800-1804), English ad- 
ministrator, ethnologist and naturalist, was born at Lower 
Beech, Prestbury, Cheshire, on the xst of February 1800. His 
father, Brian Hodgson, came of a family of country gentlemen, 
and his mother was a daughter of William Houghton of Man- 
chester. In 1816 he obtained an East Indian writership. After 
passing through the usual course at Haileybury, he went out to 
India in 1818, and after a brief service at Kumaon as assistant- 
commissioner was in 1820 appointed assistant to the Resident at 
Katmandu, the capital of Nepal. In 2823 he obtained an under- 
secretaryship in the foreign department at Calcutta, but his 
health failed, and in 1824 he returned to Nepal, to which the 
whole of his life, whether in or out of India, may be said to have 
been thenceforth given. He devoted himself particularly to the 
collection of Sanskrit MSS. relating to Buddhism, and hardly less 
so to the natural history and antiquities of the country, and by 
1839 had contributed eighty-nine papers to the Transactions 
of the Asiatic Society of Bengal His investigations of the 
ethnology of the aboriginal tribes were especially important. In 
1833 be became Resident in Nepal, and passed many stormy 
years in conflict with the cruel and faithless court to which he was 
accredited. He succeeded, nevertheless, in concluding a satis- 
factory treaty in 1839; but in 1842 his policy, which involved an 
imperious attitude towards the native government, was upset by 
the interference of Lord Ellenborough, but just arrived in India 
and not unnaturally anxious to avoid trouble in Nepal during the 
conflict in Afghanistan. Hodgson took upon himself to disobey 
his instructions, a breach of discipline justified to his own mind 
by his superior knowledge of the situation, but which the governor- 
general could hardly be expected to overlook. He was, neverthe- 
less, continued in office for a time, but was recalled in 1843, *°A 
resigned the service. In 1845 he returned to India and settled at 
Darjeeling, where he devoted himself entirely to his favourite 
pursuits, becoming the greatest authority on the Buddhist 
religion and on the flora of the Himalayas. It was he who early 
suggested the recruiting of Gurkhas for the Indian army, and who 
influenced Sir Jung Bahadur to lend his assistance to the British 
during the mutiny in 1857. In 1858 he returned to England, and 
lived successively in Cheshire and Gloucestershire, occupied with 
his studies to the last. He died at his seat at Alderley Grange in 
the Cots wold Hills on the 23rd of May 1804. No man has done 
so much to throw light on Buddhism as it exists in Nepal, and 
his collections of Sanskrit manuscripts, presented to the East 
India Office, and of natural history, presented to the British 
Museum, are unique as gatherings from a single country. He 
wrote altogether 184 philological and ethnological and 127 
scientific papers, as well as some valuable pamphlets on native 
education, in which he took great interest. His principal work, 
Illustrations of the Literature and Religion of Buddhists (1841), 
was republished with the most important of his other writings 
in 1872-1880. 

His life was written by Sir W. W. Hunter in 1896. 

H6DM EZtt-VAsARHELY, a town of Hungary, in the county 
of Csongr&d, 135 m. S.E. of Budapest by rah. Pop. (1900) 
60,824, of which about two-thirds are Protestants. The town, 
situated on Lake H6d, not far from the right bank of the Tisza, 
has a modern aspect. The soil of the surrounding country, of 
which 383 sq. m. belong to the municipality, is exceedingly 
fertile, the chief products being wheat, mangcorn, barley, oats, 
millet, make and various descriptions of fruit, especially melons. 
Extensive vineyards, yielding large quantities of both white and 



558 



HODOGRAPH— HODSON 



red grapes, skirt the town, and the horned cattle and horses of 
H6dmez6VV&sarhely have a good reputation; sheep and pigs are 
also extensively reared. The commune is protected from inunda- 
tions of the Tissa by an enormous dike, but the town, neverthe- 
less, sometimes suffers considerable damage during the spring 
floods. 

HODOGRAPH (Gr. bibs, a way, and 7pd$«i>, to write), a curve 
of which the radius vector is proportional to the velocity of a 
moving particle. It appears to have been used by James 
Bradley, but for its practical development we are mainly indebted 
to Sir William Rowan Hamilton, who published an account of it 
in the Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, 1846. If a point 
be in motion in any orbit and with any velocity, and if, at each 
instant, a line be drawn from a fixed point parallel and equal to 
the velocity of the moving point at that instant, the extremities 
of these lines will lie on a curve called the hodograph. Let PPiPt 
be the path of the moving point, and let OT, OTi, OTj, be drawn 
from the fixed point O parallel 
and equal to the velocities at 
P, Pi, P» respectively, then the 
locus of T is the hodograph of the 
orbits described by P (see figure). 
From this definition we have 
the following important funda- 
mental property which belongs 
to all hodographs, viz. that at 
any point the tangent to the 

0^ -^# hodograph is parallel to the 

direction, and the velocity in 
the hodograph equal to the 
magnitude of the resultant 
acceleration at the correspond- 
l T * ing point of the orbit. This 

will be evident if we consider 
that, since radii vectores of the 
hodograph represent velocities in the orbit, the elementary 
arc between two consecutive radii vectores of the hodo- 
graph represents the velocity which must be compounded 
with the velocity of the moving point at the beginning of any 
short interval of time to get the velocity at the end of that 
interval, that is to say, represents the change of velocity for 
that interval. Hence the elementary arc divided by the element of 
time is the rate of change of velocity of the moving-point, or in 
other words, the velocity in the hodograph is the acceleration in 
the orbit. 

Analytically thus (Thomson and Tait, Nat. Phil.):— Let x, y, s 
be the coordinates of P in the orbit, {, n, f those of the correspond- 
ing point T in the hodograph, then 




therefore 



„ dx dy „ dt 
«-3I' i-af- *-3r 



&x m tPy m <P* 
& Ifa 7? 



CO. 



Also, if * be the arc of the hod< 



r of the ho dograph. 



Equation (1) shows that the tangent to the hodograph is parallel 
to the line of resultant acceleration, and (2) that the velocity ia 
the hodograph is equal to the acceleration. 

Every orbit must clearly have a hodograph, and, conversely, every 
hodograph a corresponding orbit; and, theoretically speaking, it u 
possible to deduce the one from the other, having given the other 
circumstances of the motion. 

For applications of the hodograph to the solution of kinematical 
problems see Mechanics. 

H0D60N. WILLIAM STEPHEN RAIKES (1821-1858), known 
as " Hodson of Hodson's Horse," British leader of light cavalry 
during the Indian Mutiny, third son of the Rev. George Hodson, 
afterwards, archdeacon of Stafford and canon of Lichfield, 
was born on the 19th of March 1821 at Maisemore Court, near 
Gloucester* He was educated at Rugby and Cambridge, and 



accepted a cadetship in the Indian army at the advanced age 
for those days of twenty-three. Joining the and Bengal 
Grenadiers he went through the first Sikh War, and was present 
at the battles of Moodkee, Ferozeshah and Sobraon. In one 
of his letters home at this period he calls the campaign a " tissue 
of mismanagement, blunders, errors, ignorance and arrogance "» 
and outspoken criticism such as this brought him many bitter 
enemies throughout his career, who made the most of undeniable 
faults of character. In 1847, through the influence of Sir Henry 
Lawrence, be was appointed adjutant of the corps of Guides, 
and in 1852 was promoted to the command of the Guides with 
the civil charge of Yusafzai. But his brusque and haughty 
demeanour to his equals made him many enemies. In 1855 two 
separate charges were brought against him. The first was that 
he had arbitrarily imprisoned a Pathan chief named Khadar 
Khan, on suspicion of being concerned in the murder of Colonel 
Mackeson. The man was acquitted, and Lord Dalhousie removed 
Hodson from his civil functions and remanded him to his regiment 
on account of his lack of judgment. The second charge was 
more serious, amounting to an accusation of malversation in 
the funds of his regiment. He was tried by a court of inquiry, 
who found that his conduct to natives had been " unjustifiable 
and oppressive," that he had used abusive language to his 
native officers and personal violence to his men, and that his 
system of accounts was "calculated to screen peculation and 
fraud." Subsequently another inquiry was carried out by 
Major Reynell Taylor, which dealt simply with Hodson's accounts 
and found them to be "an honest and correct record . . . 
irregularly kept." At this time the Guides were split up into 
numerous detachments, and there was a system of advances 
which made the accounts very complicated. The verdicts of 
the two inquiries may be set against each other, and this particular 
charge declared " not proven." It is possible that Hodson was 
careless and extravagant in money matters rather than actually 
dishonest; but there were several similar charges against him. 
During a tour through Kashmir with Sir Henry Lawrence he 
kept the purse and Sir Henry could never obtain an account 
from him, subsequently Sir George Lawrence accused him of 
embezzling the funds of the Lawrence Asylum at Kasauli; 
while Sir Neville Chamberlain in a published letter says of the 
third brother, Lord Lawrence, " I am bound to say that Lord 
Lawrence had no opinion of Hodson's integrity in money matters. 
He has often discussed Hodson's character in talking to me, 
and it was to him a regret that a man possessing so many fine 
gifts should have been wanting in a moral quality which made 
him untrustworthy." Finally, on. one occasion Hodson spent 
£500 of the pay due to Lieutenant Godby, and under threat of 
exposure was obliged to borrow the money from a native banker 
through one of his officers named Bisharat Ali. 

It was just at the lime when Hodson's career seemed ruined 
that the Indian Mutiny broke out, and he obtained the oppor- 
tunity of rehabilitating himself. At the very outset of the 
campaign he made his name by riding with despatches from 
General Anson at Karnal to Meerut and back again, a distance 
of 1 52 m. in all, in seventy-two hours, through a country swarming 
with the rebel cavalry. This feat so pleased the commander- 
in-chief that he empowered him to raise a regiment of 2000 
irregular horse, which became known to fame as Hodson's 
Horse, and placed him at the head of the Intelligence Depart- 
ment. In his double role of cavalry leader and intelligence 
officer, Hodson played a large part in the reduction of Delhi 
and consequently in saving India for the British empire. He 
was the finest swordsman in the army, and possessed that 
daring recklessness which is the most useful quality of leader- 
ship against Asiatics. In explanation of the fact that he 
never received the Victoria Cross ft was said of him that it was 
because he earned It every day of his life. But he also had 
the defects of his qualities, and could display on occasion a 
certain cruelty and callousness of disposition. Reference has 
already been made to Bisharat Ali, who had lent Hodson money. 
During the siege of Delhi another native, said to be an enemy 
of Bisharat Ali's, informed Hodson that he had turned rebel 



HODY— HOB 



559 



^ and had just retched Khurkbouda, a village near Delhi. Hodson 

>. thereupon took out a body of his sowars, attacked the village, 

i and shot Bisharat Ali and several of his relatives. General 

Crawford Chamberlain states that this was Hodson's way of 
t' wiping out the debt. Again, after the fall of Delhi, Hodson 

f. obtained from General Wilson permission to ride out with fifty 

t, horsemen to Humayun's tomb, 6 m. out of Delhi, and bring 

> in Bahadur Shah, the last of the Moguls. This he did with 

safety in the face of a large and threatening crowd, and thus 
s" dealt the routineers a heavy, blow. On the following day with 

^ 100 horsemen he went out to the same tomb and obtained the 

: unconditional surrender of the three princes, who had been 

- ; left behind on the previous occasion. A crowd of 6000 persons 

gathered, and Hodson with marvellous coolness ordered them 
to disarm, which they proceeded to do. He sent the princes on 
with an escort of ten men, while with the remaining ninety 
.v he collected the arms of the crowd. On galloping after the 

I. princes he found the crowd once more pressing on the escort 

and threatening an attack; and fearing that he would be unable 
to bring his prisoners into Delhi he shot them with his own 
hand. This is the most bitterly criticized action in bis career, 
but no one but the man on the spot can judge how it is necessary 
to handle a crowd; and in addition one of the princes, Abu 
Bukt, heir-apparent to the throne, had made himself notorious 
for cutting off the arms and legs of English children and pouring 
the blood into their mothers' mouths. Considering the circum- 
stances of the moment, Hodson's act at the worst was one of 
irregular justice. A more unpleasant side to the question is 
that he gave the king a safe conduct, which was afterwards seen 
by Sir Donald Stewart, before he left the palace, and presumably 
^ for a bribe; and he took an armlet and rings from the bodios 

? of the princes. He was freely accused of looting at the time, 

and though this charge, like that of peculation, is matter for 
,"_ controversy, it is very strongly supported. General Pelham 

Burn said that he saw loot in Hodson's boxes when he accom- 
J panied him from Fatchgarh to take part in the siege of Lucknow, 

and Sir Henry Daly said that he found " loads of loot " in 
L Hodson's boxes after his death, and also a file of documents 

, relating to the Guides case, which bad been stolen from him 

'. and of which Hodson denied all knowledge. On the other hand 

. the Rev. G. Hodson states in his book that he obtained the 

inventory of his brother's possessions made by the Committee 
of Adjustment and it contained no articles of loot, and Sir 
Charles Gough, president of the committee, confirmed this 
evidence. This statement is totally incompatible with Sir 
Henry Daly's and is only one of many contradictions in the 
case. Sir Henry Norman stated that to his personal knowledge 
Hodson* remitted several thousand pounds to Calcutta which 
could only have been obtained by looting. On the other hand, 
again, Hodson died a poor man, his effects were sold for £170, 
his widow was dependent on charity for her passage hornet, 
was given apartments by the queen at Hampton Court, and 
left only £400 at her death. 

Hodson was killed on the nth of March 1858 in the attack 00 
the Begum Kotee at Lucknow. He had just arrived on the spot 
and met a man going to fetch powder to blow in a door; instead 
Hodson, with his usual recklessness, rushed into the doorway 
and was shot. On the whole, it can hardly be doubted that he 
was somewhat unscrupulous in his private character, but he was 
a splendid soldier, and rendered inestimable service* to the 
empire* 

The controversy relating to Hodson's moral character is very 
complicated and unpleasant. Upon Hodson's side see Rev. G. 
Hodson. Hodson of Hodson's Horse (1883). and L. J. Trotter, A 
Leader of Light Horse (1901); against him. R. Bosworth Smith, Life 
of Lord Lawrence, appendix to the 6th edition of 1 885: T. R. E. 
Holmes. History of the Indian Mutiny, appendix N to the 5th edition 
of 1898, and Four Famous Soldiers by the same author, 1889; and 
General Sir Crawford Chamberlain. Remarks on Captain Trotter's 
Btotraphy of Major W. S. R. Hodson (1901). 

HODY, HUMPHREY (1650-1707), English divine, was born 
at Odcombe in Somersetshire in 1659. In 1676 be entered 
Wadham College, Oxford, of which he became fellow in 1685. 



In 1684 he published Contra historian Aristeae de LXX. inter- 
prtlibus disscriatio, in which he showed that the so-called letter 
of Aristeas, containing an account of the production of the 
Septuagint, was the late forgery of a Hellenist Jew originally 
circulated to lend authority to that version. The dissertation 
was generally regarded as conclusive, although Isaac Vossius 
published an angry and scurrilous reply to ft in the appendix 
to his edition of Pomponius Mela* In 1689 Hody wrote the 
Prolegomena to the Greek chronicle of John Malalas, pub* 
lished at Oxford in 169 1. The following year he became chaplain 
to Edward Stillingflcet, bishop of Worcester, and for his support 
of the ruling party in a controversy with Henry Dod well regarding 
the non-juring bishops he was appointed chaplain to Archbishop 
Tillotson, an office which he continued to hold under Tenison. 
In 1698 he was appointed regius professor of Greek at Oxford, 
and in 1704 was made archdeacon of Oxford. In 1701 he 
published A History of English Councils end Convocations, and 
in 1703 in four volumes De BiTdiorum testis originations, in 
which he included a revision of his work on the Septuagint, and 
published a reply to Vossius. He died on the 20th of January 
1707. 

A work, De Graech Ittustribus. which he left in manuscript, was 
published in 174a by Samuel Jebb, who prefixed to it a Latin life of 
the author. 

HOB, RICHARD MARCH (18x2-1886), American inventor, 
was born in New York City on the 12th of September 1812. He 
was the son of Robert Hoe (1784-1833), an English-born American 
mechanic, who with his brothers-in-law, Peter and Matthew 
Smith, established in New York City a manufactory of printing 
presses, and used steam to run his machinery. Richard entered 
his father's manufactory at the age of fifteen and became head of 
the firm (Robert Hoe & Company) on his father's death. Hehad 
considerable inventive genius and set himself to secure greater 
speed for printing presses. He discarded the old flat-bed model 
and placed the type on a revolving cylinder, a model later 
developed into the well-known Hoe rotary or '* lightning " 
press, patented in 1846, and further improved under the name 
of the Hoe web perfecting press (see Printing). He died in 
Florence, Italy, on the 7th of June 1886. 

See A Short History of the Printing Press (New York, 1002) by his 
nephew Robert Hoe (1839-1909), who was responsible for further 
improvements in printing, and was an indefatigable worker in sup- 
port of the New York Metropolitan Museum. 

HOB (through Fr. hone from O.H.G. houmd, mod. Ger. Ham; 
the root is seen in " hew," to cut, cleave; the word must be 
distinguished from " hoe," promontory, tongue of land, seen In 
place names, e.g. Morthoe, Luton Hoo, the Hoe at Plymouth, 6c. ; 
this is the same as' Northern English " heugh " and is connected 
with " hang "), an agricultural and gardening implement used 
for extirpating weeds, for stirring the surface-soil in order tp 
break the capillary channels and so prevent the evaporation of 
moisture, for singling out turnips and other root-crops and 
similar purposes. Among common forms of hoe are the ordinary 




Fig. 1. — Three Forms of Manual Hoc, 

garden-hoe (numbered / in fig. x), which consists of a fiat blade 
set transversely in a long wooden handle; the Dutch or thrust- 
hoe (<?), which has the blade set into the handle after the fashion 
of a spade; and the swan-neck hoe (3), the best manual hoe 
for agricultural purposes, which has a long curved neck to attach 
the blade to the handle; the soil falls back over this, blocking is 
thus avoided and a longer stroke obtained. Several types of 
horse-drawn hoe capable of working one or more rows at a time 
are used among root and grain crops. The illustrations show 
two forms of the implement, the blades of which differ in shape 
from those of the garden-hoe. Fig. 2 is in ordinary use for hoeing 
between two lines of beans or turnips or other " roots." Fig. 3 



560 



HOEFNAGEL— HOFER 



Is adapted for the narrow rows of grain crops and is also con- 
vertible into a root-hoe. In the lever-hoe, which is largely used 
in grain crops, the blades may be raised and lowered by means 



Fig. 2.— Martin's One-Row Florae Hoe. 
of a lever. The horse-drawn hoe is steered by means of handles 
in the rear, but its successful working depends on accurate 
drilling of the seed, because unless the rows are parallel the roots 
of the plants are liable to be cut and the foliage injured. Thus 
Jetbro Tull (17th century), with whose name the beginning of 



Fig. 3. — Martin's General Purpose Steerage Horse Hoc. 

the practice of horsc-hocing is principally connected, used the 
drill which he invented as an essential adjunct in the so-called 
"Horse-hoeing Husbandry" (sec Agriculture). 

HOEFNAGEL, JORIS (1 545-1601), Dutch painter and engraver, 
the son of a diamond merchant, was born at Antwerp. He 
travelled abroad, making drawings from archaeological subjects, 
and was a pupil of Jan Bol at Mechlin. He was afterwards 
patronized by the elector of Bavaria at Munich, where he stayed 
eight years, and by the Emperor Rudolph at Prague. He died 
at Vienna in 1601. He is famous for his miniature work, especi- 
ally on a missal in the imperial library at Vienna; he painted 
animals and plants to illustrate works on natural history; 
and his engravings (especially for Braun's Civitates orbis 
tcrrarum, 1572, and Ortelius's Theatrum orbis krrarum, 1570) 
give him an interesting place among early topographical 
draughtsmen. 

HOP, a town of Germany, in the Bavarian province of Upper 
Franconia, beautifully situated on the Saale, on the north- 
eastern spurs of the Fichtelgebirge, 103 m. S.W. of Leipzig 
on the main line of railway to Rcgcnsburg and Munich. Pop. 
(1885) 22,257; (1005) 36,348. It has one Roman Catholic 
and three Protestant churches (among the latter that of St 
Michael, which was restored in 1884), a town hall of 1563, a 
gymnasium with an extensive library, a commercial school 
and a hospital founded in 1 262. It is the seat of various flourish- 
ing industries, notably woollen, cotton and jute spinning, jute 
weaving, and the manufacture of cotton and half-woollen 
fabrics. It has also dye-works, flour-mills, saw-mills, breweries, 
iron-works, and manufactures of machinery, iron and tin wares, 
chemicals and sugar. In the neighbourhood there are large 



marble quarries and ' extensive iron mines. Hof, originally 
called Regnitzhof, was built about 1080. It was held for some 
time by the dukes of Meran, and was sold in 1373 to the bur- 
graves of Nuremberg. The cloth manufacture introduced into 
it in the 15th century, and the manufacture of veils begun 
in the 16th century, greatly promoted its prosperity, but it 
suffered severely in the Albertine and Hussite wars as well 
as in the Thirty Years' War. In 1792 it came into the possession 
of Prussia; in 1806 it fell to France; and in 1810 it was incor- 
porated with Bavaria. In 1823 the greater part of the town 
was destroyed by fire. 

See Ernst, CeschichU uni Btschreibung its Besirks vni itr StoH 
Hof (1866); Tillmann, Die Sladi Hof und ihrc Um&bunz (Hot, 
1 899) , and C. Meyer, Quelkn nur GtsthichU ier Stadt Hof (1894-1 896). 

HOFER, ANDREAS (1767-1810), Tirolese patriot, was born 
on the 22nd of November 1767 at St Leonhard, in the Passeier 
valley. There his father kept an inn known as " am Sand," 
which Hofer inherited, and on that account he was popularly 
known as the " Sandwirth/' In addition to this he carried on 
a trade in wine and horses with the north of Italy, acquiring 
a high reputation for intelligence and honesty. In the wars 
against the French from 1796 1 9 1805 he took part, first as a 
sharp-shooter and afterwards as a captain of militia. By the 
treaty of Pressburg (1805) Tirol was transferred from Austria 
to Bavaria, and Hofer, who was almost fanatically devoted to 
the Austrian house, became conspicuous as a leader of the 
agitation against Bavarian rule. In 1808 ho formed one of a 
deputation who went to Vienna, at the invitation of the arch- 
duke John, to concert a rising; and when in April 1809 the 
Tirolese rose in arms, Hofer was chosen commander of the 
contingent from his native valley, and inflicted an overwhelming 
defeat on the Bavarians at Sterling (April 11). This victory, 
which resulted in the temporary reoccupation of Innsbruck 
by the Austrians, made Hofer the most conspicuous of the 
insurgent leaders. The rapid advance of Napoleon, indeed, 
and the defeat of the main Austrian army under the archduke 
Charles, once more exposed Tirol to the French and Bavarians, 
who rcoccupied Innsbruck. The withdrawal of the bulk of 
the troops, however, gave the Tirolese their chance again; 
after two battles fought on the Isclberg (May 25 and 29) the 
Bavarians were again forced to evacuate the country, and Hofer 
entered Innsbruck in triumph. An autograph letter of the 
emperor Francis (May 29) assured him that no peace would be 
concluded by which Tirol would again be separated from the 
Austrian monarchy, and Hofer, believing his work accomplished, 
returned to his home. Then came the news of the armistice 
of Znaim (July 1a), by which Tirol and Vorarlbcrg were sur- 
rendered by Austria unconditionally and given up to the ven- 
geance of the French. The country was now again invaded by 
40,000 French and Bavarian troops, and Innsbruck fell; but 
the Tirolese once more organised resistance to the French 
"atheists and freemasons," and, after a temporary hesitation, 
Hofer — on whose head a price had been placed — threw himself 
into the movement. On the 13th of August, in another battle 
on the Iselberg, the French under Marshal Lefebvre were routed 
by the Tirolese peasants, and Hofer once more entered Innsbruck, 
which be had some difficulty in saving from sack. Hofer was 
now elected Oberkommaudant of Tirol, took up bis quarters in 
the Hofburg at Innsbruck, and for two months ruled the country 
in the emperor's name. He preserved the habits of a simple 
peasant, and his administration was characterized in part by 
the peasant's shrewd common sense, but yet more by a pious 
solicitude for the minutest details of faith and morals. On the 
29th of September Hofer received from the emperor a chain and 
medal of honour, which encouraged him in the belief that Austria 
did not intend again to desert him; the news of the conclusion 
of the treaty of Schonbrunn (October 14), by which Tirol was 
again ceded to Bavaria, came upon him as an overwhelming 
surprise. The French in overpowering force at once pushed 
into the country, and, an amnesty having been stipulated in 
the treaty, Hofer and his companions, after some hesitation, 
gave in their submission. On the 12th of November, however, 



HOFFDING— HOFFMANN, E. T. W. 



5*1 



urged on by the hotter beads among the peasant leaden and 
deceived by false reports of Austrian victories, Hofer again 
issued a proclamation calling the mountaineers to arms The 
summons met with little response, the enemy advanced in 
irresistible force, and Hofer, a price once more set on his head, 
had to take refuge in the mountains His hiding-place was 
betrayed by one of his neighbours, named Josef Raffl. and on 
the 27 th of January 1810 he was captured by Italian troops 
and sent in chains to Mantua. There he was tried by court- 
martial, and on the aoth of February was shot, twenty-four 
hours after his condemnation. This crime, which was believed 
to be due to Napoleon's direct orders, caused an immense 
sensation throughout Germany and did much to inflame popular 
sentiment against the French. At the court of Austria, too. 
which was accused of having cynically sacrificed the hero, it 
produced a painful impression, and Metternicb, when he visited 
Paris on the occasion of the marriage of the archduchess Marie 
Louse to Napoleon, was charged to remonstrate with the 
emperor. Napoleon expressed his regret, stating that the 
execution had been carried out against bis wishes, having been 
hurried on by the real of his generals. In 1823 Holer's remains 
were removed from Mantua to Innsbruck, where they were 
interred in the Franciscan church, and in 1834 a marble statue 
was erected over his tomb. In 1893 a bronze statue of him 
was also set up on the Isetberg. At Meran his patriotic deeds 
of heroism are the subject of a festival play celebrated annually 
in the open air. In 1818 the patent of nobility bestowed upon 
him by the Austrian emperor in 1809 was conferred upon his 
family. 

See Leben und Thaten des ehemaligen Tyroler Insurgenten-Ckefs 
Andr. Hofer (Berlin, 1810); Andr. Hofer und die Tyroler Insur- 
rection tm Jahre 1809 (Munich, 1811); Hormayr, Cescktckte Andr 
Hofer' % Sandunrths auf Passeyr (Leipzig, 1845); B. Weber, Das Thai 
Passeyr und seine Bewohner mil besonderer Ruckstchl auf Andreas 
Hofer und das Jakr 1809 (Innsbruck, 1831); Rapp, Tirol tm Jahr 
1809 (Innsbruck, 1852); Weidingcr, Andreas Hofer und seme 
Kompfgenasen ford ed., Leipzig. 1861). Hcigel. Andreas Hofer 
(Munich, 1874) ; Stampfer, Sandvnrt Andreas Hofer (Freiburg, 1874) . 
Schrnolze, A ndreas Hofer und seine Kampfgerussen { Innsbruck. 1900). 
His history has supplied the materials lor tragedies to B. Auerbach 
and I m merman n, and for numerous ballads, of which some remain 
very popular in Germany (see Franke, Andreas Hofer tm Ltede, 
Innsbruck, 1884) 

H&FFDING, HARALD (1843- ), Danish philosopher, 
was born and educated in Copenhagen. He became a school- 
master, and ultimately in 1883 professor in the university of 
Copenhagen. He was much influenced by Soren Kierkegaard 
in the early development Of bis thought, but later became a 
poativist, retaining, however, and combining with it the spirit 
and method of practical psychology and the critical school. 
His best-known work is perhaps his Den nyere Filosofis Historic 
(1804), translated into English from the German edition (1895) 
by B. E> Meyer as History of Modern Philosophy (2 vols., 1900), 
a work intended by him to supplement and correct that of 
Hans Brochner, to whom it is dedicated. His Psychology \ the 
Problems of Philosophy (1905) and Philosophy of Religion (1006) 
also have appeared in English. 

Among Hoftding's other writings, practically all of which have 
* ' ' " : Den engelske FUosofi t vor Ttd 



been translated into German, are: Den engelsk* 



(1874); Etik (1876. ed. 1870): Psyckologt t Omrids paa Crundlag 
' Er faring (ed. 1892); Psykologtske Under sogelser (1889), Charles 



Da 



rwin (f889); KoutinuUeUn 1 Kants JUosofiske Udvtklmgsgant 
(1893); Del psykologtske Crundlag for logtske Domme (1899); 
Rousseau und seine Philosophic (1901): Mindre Arbejder (1899). 

HOFFMANN. AUGUST HEINRICH (1798-1874). known as 
Hoffmann von Fallersleben, German poet, philologist and 
historian of literature, was born at Fallersleben in the duchy 
of Luneburg, Hanover, on the 2nd of April 1708, the son of the 
mayor of the town. He was educated at the classical schools 
of Helmstedt and Brunswick, and afterwards at the universities 
of Gdttingen and Bonn. His original intention was to study 
theology, but he soon devoted himself entirely to liteiature 
In 1823 he was appointed custodian of the university library 
at Breslau, a post which he held till 1838 He was also made 
extraordinary professor of the German language and literature 
at that university in 1830, and ordinary professor in 1835, 



but he was deprived of his chair in 1842 in consequence of his 
Unpolitisch*. LtaUr (1840-1841), which gave much offence to 
the authorities in Prussia. He then travelled in Germany, 
Switzerland and Italy, and lived for two or three years in 
Mecklenburg, of which he became a naturalized citizen. After 
the revolution of 1848 he was enabled to return to Prussia, where 
he was restored to his rights, and received the Wartegeld— the 
salary attached to a promised office not yet vacant. He married 
in 1849. and during the next ten years lived first in Bingerbruck. 
afterwards in Neuwied, and then in Weimar, where together 
with Oskar Schade (1826-1006) he edited the Weimansdit 
Jahrbuch (1854-1857). In i860 he was appointed librarian to 
the Duke of Ratibor at the monasterial castle of Corvey near 
Hoxter on the Weser, where he died oa the 19th of January 
1874. Fallersleben was one of the best popular poets of modern 
Germany In politics he ardently sympathized with the pro- 
gressive tendencies of his. time, and he was among the earliest 
and most effective of the. political poets who prepared the way 
for the outbreak of 1848. As a poet, however, he acquired 
distinction chiefly by the ease, simplicity and grace with which 
he gave expression to the passions and aspirations of daily life. 
Although he had* not been scientifically trained in music, he 
composed melodies for many of his songs, and a considerable 
number of them are sung by all classes in every part of Germany. 
Among the best known is the patriotic Deutschland, Deutschlated 
ubcr AUts, composed in 1841 on the island of Heligoland, where 
a monument was erected in 189 1 to his memory (subsequently 
destroyed). 

B 
L 

(i 



HOFFMANN. ERNST THEODOR WILHELM (1776-1822), 
German romance-writer, was born at Kdnigsberg on the 24th 
of January 1 776. For the name Wilhelm he himself substituted 
Amadeus in homage to Mozart. His parents lived unhappily 
together, and when the child was only three they separated* 
His bringing up was left to an uncle who had neither understand- 
ing nor sympathy for his dreamy and wayward temperament. 
Hoffmann showed more talent for music and drawing than for 
books. In 1792, when little over sixteen years old, he entered 
the university of Konigsberg, with a view to preparing himself 
for a legal career. The chief features of interest in his student 
years were an intimate friendship for Theodor Gottlieb von 
Hippel (1775*1843). a nephew of the novelist Hippel, and an 
unhappy passion for a lady to whom he gave music lessons; 
the latter found its outlet, not merely in music, but also in two 
novels, neither of which he was able to have published In the 
summer of 1795 he began his practical career as a jurist in 
Konigsberg. but his mother's death and the complications in 
which his love-affair threatened to involve him made him decide 
to leave his native town and continue his legal apprenticeship 



S 6a 



HOFFMANN, F. B.— HOFFMANN, F. 



in Glogau. In the autumn of 1798 be was transferred to Berlin, 
where the beginnings of the new Romantic movement were in 
the air. Music, however, had still the first place in his heart, 
and the Berlin opera house was the chief centre of his interests. 

In 1800 further promotion brought him to Posen, where he 
gave himself up entirely to the pleasures of the hour. Unfortun- 
ately, however, his brilliant powers of caricature brought him 
into ill odour, and instead of receiving the hoped-for preferment 
in Posen itself, he found himself virtually banished to the little 
town of Plozk on the Vistula. Before leaving Posen he married, 
and his domestic happiness alleviated to some extent the 
monotony of the two years' exile. His leisure was spent in 
literary studies and musical composition. In 1804 he was 
transferred to Warsaw, where, through J E. Hitxig (1780-1849)* 
be was introduced to Zacharias Werner, and began to take 
an interest in the later Romantic literature; now, for the first 
time, he discovered how writers like Novalis, Tieck, and especially 
Wackenroder, had spoken out of bis own heart. But in spite 
of this literary stimulus, his leisure in Warsaw was mainly 
occupied by composition; he wrote music to Brentano's Lustigt 
Musikanten and Werner's Kreut an der Ostsee, and also an opera 
Liebe und Eifersucht, based oa Cakkron*s drama La Bandc 
yla Flor. 

The arrival of the French in Warsaw and the consequent 
political changes put an end to Hoffmann's congenial life there, 
and a time of tribulation followed. A position which he obtained 
in 1808 as musical director of a new theatre in Bamberg availed 
him little, as within a very short time the theatre was bankrupt 
and Hoffmann again reduced to destitution. But these mis- 
fortunes induced him to turn to literature in order to eke out 
the miserable livelihood he earned by composing and giving 
music lessons. The editor of the AUgemeine musikalische 
Zeitung expressed his willingness to accept contributions from 
Hoffmann, and. here appeared for the first time some of the 
musical sketches which ultimately passed over into the Phantasie- 
stucke in Callots Mania. This work appeared in four volumes in 
1814 and laid the foundation of his fame as a writer. Meanwhile. 
Hoffmann had again been for some time attached, in the capacity 
of musical director, to a theatrical company, whose headquarters 
were at Dresden. In 1814 he gladly embraced the opportunity 
that was offered him of resuming his legal profession in Berlin, 
and two years later he was appointed councillor of the Court 
of Appeal (Kammergericht). Hoffmann had the reputation of 
being an excellent jurist and a conscientious official, he had 
leisure for literary pursuits and was on the best of terms with 
the circle of Romantic poets and novelists who gathered round 
Fouque 1 , Chamisso and his old friend Hitzig. Unfortunately, 
however, the habits of intemperance which, in earlier years, 
had thrown a shadow over his life, grew upon him, and his 
health was speedily undermined by the nights he spent in the 
wine-house, in company unworthy of him. He was struck down 
by locomotor ataxy, and died on the 24th of July 1822. 

The Phantasieslucke, which had been published with a 
commendatory preface by Jean Paul, were followed in 1816 
by the gruesome novel — to some extent inspired by Lewis's 
Monk — Die Elixitrc das Teufcls, and the even more gruesome 
and grotesque stories which make up the Nathtslutke (1817, 
2 vols.). The full range of Hoffmann's powers is first clearly 
displayed in the collection of stories (4 vols., 1817-1821) Dte 
Serapionsbruder, this being the name of a small club of Hoffmann's 
more intimate literary friends. Die Serapionsbruder includes not 
merely stories in which Hoffmann's love for the mysterious 
and the supernatural is to be seen, but novels in which he draws 
on his own early reminiscences (Rat Krespei, Fermate), 6nc!y 
outlined pictures of old German life (Der Artushof, Meister 
Martin der Kufncr und seine GescUcn),zr\6 vivid and picturesque 
incidents from Italian and French history (Doge und Dogaressa, 
the story of Marino Faliero, and Das Fraulein von Scuderi). 
The last-mentioned story is usually regarded as Hoffmann's 
masterpiece. Two longer works also belong to Hoffmann's 
later years and display to advantage his powers as a humorist , 
these are Khun Zaches, genonnt Zinnober (1819), and bebens- 



1 he nrst collected edition of HoHmann s works appeared in 
volumes (AusgewahU* Scknflen. 1827-1828); to these his »k 
added five volumes in 1839 (including the 3rd edition of J. 
Hitzig 's A us Hoffmanns Leoen und Nacklass, 1823). Other editi 



ansichten da Katers Murr, nebst fragmmUariscker Biographic in 
Kapellmeisters Johannes Kreisler (182 1-1822). 

Hoffmann is one of the master novelists of the Romantic 
movement in Germany. He combined with a humour that 
reminds us of Jean Paul the warm sympathy for the artist's 
standpoint towards life, which was enunciated by early Romantic 
leaders like Tieck and Wackenroder; but he was superior to 
all in the almost clairvoyant powers of his imagination. His 
works abound in grotesque and gruesome scenes— in this respect 
they mark a descent from the high ideals of the Romantic school; 
but the gruesome was only one outlet for Hoffmann's genius, 
and even here the secret of his power lay not in his choice of 
subjects, but in the wonderfully vivid and realistic presentation 
of them. Every line he wrote leaves the impression behind it 
that it expresses something felt or experienced; every scene, 
vision or character he described seems to have been real and 
living to him. It is this realism, in the best sense of the word, 
that made him the great artist he was, and gave him so extra- 
ordinary a power over his contemporaries. 

The first collected edition of Hoffmann's works appeared in tea 

• . . ........ ~ . . . f m .j < j ow 

.-.„.---. editions 
of his works appeared in 1844-1845. 1871-1873. 1879-1883. and. 
most complete of all, Samtltehe Werke, edited by E. Grisebach. in 15 

vc'- '■'-—* * ri - ,! - : — iof selections, as well as cheap 

re| l All Hoffmann's important 

w< r Murr— have been translated 

ini 1). The Golden Pot by Carlyle 

(ir rapion Brethren by A. Ewmg 

(1 n was even more popular than 

in nns Erxaklungtn in Frankrekh 

(n tpllles appeared in 12 vols, in 

Pa m Hoffmann is by G. Ellinger. 

E. Klinke, Hoffmanns Leben una 

W Us (1903) ; and the exhaustive 

bil xur GesckickU der deutuhen 

Di (1905). (J-G.R.) 

OIT (1 760-1828), French 
dramatist and critic, was born at Nancy on the nth of July 
1760 He studied law at the university of Strassburg, but a 
slight hesitation in his speech precluded success at the bar. and 
he entered a regiment on service in Corsica. He served, however, 
for a very short lime, and, returning to Nancy, he wrote some 
poems which brought him into notice at the little court of 
Luneville over which the marquise de BoufBers then presided. 
In 1784 he went to Paris, and two years later produced the opera 
Phedre. His opera Adrien { 1 792) was objected to by the govern- 
ment on political grounds, and Hoffmann, who refused to 
make the changes proposed to him, ran considerable risk under 
the revolutionary government. His later operas, which were 
numerous, were produced at the Opera Comique In 1807 he 
was invited by fttienne to contribute to the Journal de V Empire 
(afterwards the Journal des debate). Hoffmann's wide reading 
qualified him to write on all sorts of subjects, and he turned, 
apparently with no difficulty, from reviewing books on medicine 
to violent at tacks on the Jesuits. His severe criticism of Chateau- 
briand's Martyrs led the author to make some changes in a later 
edition. He had the reputation of being an absolutely con- 
scientious and incorruptible critic and thus exercised wide 
influence Hoffmann died in Paris on the 25th of April 1828. 
Among his numerous plays should be mentioned an excellent 
one-act comedy, Lc Roman d'une heure (1803), and an amusing 
one-act opera Lcs Renda-vous bourgeois. 
t See Saintc-Bruvc. ° M. de Feletr et la critique litteraire sous 
I'Empire " in Causenes du lundt, vol. t. 

HOFFMANN. FRIEDRICH (1660-1742), German physidan, 
a member of a family that had been connected with -medicine 
for 200 years before him, was born at Halle on the 19th of 
February 1660. At the gymnasium of his native town he 
acquired that taste for and skill in mathematics to which he 
attributed much of his after success. At the age of eighteen 
he went to study medicine at Jena, whence in 1680 he passed 
to Erfurt, in order to attend Kasper Cramer's lectures on 
chemistry. Next year, returning to Jena, he received his 
doctor's diploma, and, after publishing a thesis, was permitted to 



HOFFMANN, J. J.— HOFMANN, A. W. VON 



5 6 3 



teach. Constant study then began to tell on his health, and in 
j 68 a, leaving his already numerous pupils, he proceeded to 
Minden in Westphalia to recruit himself, at the request of a 
relative who held a high position in that town. After practising 
at Minden for two years, Hoffmann made a journey to Holland 
and England, where he formed the acquaintance of many 
illustrious chemists and physicians. Towards the end of 1684 
he returned to Minden, and during the next three years he 
received many flattering appointments. In 1688 he removed 
to the more promising sphere of Halberstadt, with the title 
of physician to the principality of Halberstadt; and on the 
founding of Halle university in 1693, his reputation, which had 
been steadily increasing, procured for him the primarius chair 
of medicine, while at the same time he was charged with the 
responsible duty of framing the statutes for the new medical 
faculty. He filled also the chair of natural philosophy. With 
the exception of four years (1708-1712), which he passed at 
Berlin in the capacity of royal physician, Hoffmann spent the 
rest of his life at Halle in instruction, practice and study, inter- 
rupted now and again by visits to different courts of Germany, 
where his services procured him honours and rewards. His 
fame became European. He was enrolled a member of many 
learned societies in different foreign countries, while in his own 
be became privy councillor. He died at Halle on the 12 th of 
November 1742. 

Of his numerous writings a catalogue is to be found in Haller's 
Bibliotheca medicinae practical. The chief is Afedicina' ratio- 
naiis systematica, undertaken at the age of sixty, and published in 
1730. It was translated into French in 1739, under the title of 
Uidecine raisonnie a" Hoffmann, A complete edition of Hoffmann's 
works, with a life of the author, was published at Geneva in 1740, 
to which supplements were added in 1753 and 1760. Editions ap- 
peared also at Venice in 1745 and at Naples in 1753 and 1793. (Sec 
abo Medicine.) 

HOFFMANN, JOHANN JOSEPH (1805-1878), German 
scholar, was born at WUrzburg on the 16th of February 1805. 
After studying at Wurzburg he went on the stage in 1825; but 
owing to an accidental meeting with the German traveller, 
Dr Philipp Franz von Siebold (1 706-1866), in July 1830, his 
interest was diverted to Oriental philology. From Siebold 
be acquired the rudiments of Japanese, and in order to take 
advantage of the instructions of Ko-ching-chang, a Chinese 
teacher whom Siebold had brought home with him, he made 
himself acquainted with Malay, the only language except 
Chinese which the Chinaman could understand. In a few years 
he was able to supply the translations for Siebold 's Nippon; 
and the high character of his work soon attracted the attention 
of older scholars. Stanislas Julicn invited him to Paris; and 
he would probably have accepted the invitation, as a disagree- 
ment had broken out between him and Siebold, had not M. 
Baud, the Dutch colonial minister, appointed him Japanese 
translator with a salary of 1800 florins (£150). The Dutch 
authorities were slow in giving him further recognition; and 
be was too modest a man successfully to urge his claims. It 
was not till after he had received the offer of the professorship 
of Chinese in King's College, London, that the authorities made 
him professor at Leiden and the king allowed him a yearly 
pension. In 1875 he was decorated with the order of the 
Netherlands Lion, and in 1877 he was elected corresponding 
, member of the Berlin Academy. He died at the Hague on the 
\ 33rd of January 1878. 

Hoffmann's chief work was his unfinished Japanese Dictionary. 
I begun in 1839 and afterwards continued by L. Serrurier. Unable at 
first to procure the necessary type, he set himself to the cutting of 
punches, and even when the proper founts were obtained he had to 
act as his own compositor as far as Chinese and Japanese were con- 
cerned. His Japanese grammar (Japanische Sprechlehre) was 
published in Dutch and English in 1867, and in English and German 
in 1876. Of his miscellaneous productions it is enough to mention 
"japans Bczagc mit dcr koraischen Halbinscl und mit Schina " in 
Nippon, vii.; Yo-San-fi*Rok, L'Art (Ttlever Us vers 4 soieau J a port, 
far Oockaki Mourikoum (Paris. 1 848) ; " Die Hetlkunde in Japan" 
» Uittkeil. d. deuisck CeseUsth. fur Natur- und Vilkerk. OsUAsiens 
(1873-1874); and Japanische Studien (1878). 

1 HOFMANN, AUGUST WILHEUf VON (181&-1802). German 
chemist, was born at Giesscn on the 8th. of April 1848. Not 



intending originally to devote himself to physical science, he 
first took up the study of law and philology at Goltingen, and 
the general Culture he thus gained stood him in good stead 
when he turned to chemistry, the study of which he began under 
Liebig. When, in 1845, a school of practical chemistry was 
started in London, under the style of the Royal College of 
Chemistry, Hofmann, largely through the influence of the Prince 
Consort, was appointed its first director. It was with some 
natural hesitation that he, then a Privatdosnt! at Bonn, accepted 
the position, which may well have seemed rather a precarious 
one; but the difficulty was removed by his appointment as 
extraordinary professor at Bonn, with leave of absence for two 
years, so that he could resume his career in Germany if his 
English one proved unsatisfactory. Fortunately the college 
was more or less successful, owing largely to his enthusiasm 
and energy, and many of the men who were trained there sub- 
sequently made their mark in chemical history. But in 1864 
he returned to Bonn, and in the succeeding year he was selected 
to succeed E. Mitscherlich as professor of chemistry and director 
of the laboratory in Berlin University. In leaving England, 
of which he used to speak as his adopted country, Hofmann 
was probably influenced by a combination of causes. The public 
support extended to the college of chemistry had been dwindling 
for some years, and before he left it had ceased to have an 
independent existence and had been absorbed into the School 
of Mines. This event he must have looked upon as a curtailment 
of its possibilities of usefulness. But, in addition, there is only 
too much reason to suppose that he was disappointed at the 
general apathy with which his science was regarded in England. 
No man ever realized more fully than he how entirely dependent 
on the advance of scientific knowledge is the continuation of a 
country's material prosperity, and no single chemist ever 
exercised a greater or more direct influence upon industrial 
development. In England, however, people cared for none 
of these things, and were blind to the commercial potentialities 
of scientific research. The college to which Hofmann devoted 
nearly twenty of the best years of his life was starved; the coal- 
tar industry, which was really brought into existence by his 
work and that of his pupils under his direction at that college, 
and which with a little intelligent forethought might have been 
retained in England, was allowed to slip into the hands of 
Germany, where it is now worth millions of pounds annually; 
and Hofmann himself was compelled to return to his native 
land to find due appreciation as one of the foremost chemists 
of his time. The rest of his life was spent in Berlin, and there 
he died on the 5th of May 1892. That city possesses a permanent 
memorial to his name in Hofmann House, the home of the 
German Chemical Society (of which he was the founder), which 
was formally opened in 1000, appropriately enough with an 
account of that great triumph of German chemical enterprise, 
the industrial manufacture. of synthetical indigo. 

Hofmann 's work covered a wide range of organic chemistry, 
though with inorganic bodies he did but little. His first research, 
carried out in Liebig's laboratory at Giesscn, was on coal-tar, 
and his investigation of the organic bases in coal-gas naphtha 
established the nature of aniline. This substance he used to 
refer to as his first love, and it was a love to which he remained 
faithful throughout his life. His perception of the analogy between 
it and ammonia led to his famous work on the amines and 
ammonium bases and the allied organic phosphorus compounds, 
while his researches on rosaniline, which he first prepared in 1858, 
formed the first of a series of investigations on colouring matters 
which only ended with quinoline red in 1887. But in addition 
to these and numberless other investigations for which he was 
responsible the influence he exercised through his pupils must 
also be taken into account. As a teacher, besides the power of 
accurately gauging the character and capabilities of those who 
studied under him, he had the faculty of infecting them with 
his own enthusiasm, and thus of stimulating them to put forward 
their best efforts. In the lecture-room he laid great stress on 
the importance of experimental demonstrations, paying particular 
attention to their selection and arrangement, though, since he 



5&4 



HOFMANN, J. C. K. VON— HOFMEISTER 



himself was a somewhat clumsy manipulator, their actual 
exhibition was generally entrusted to his assistants. He was 
the possessor of a clear and graceful, if somewhat florid, style, 
which showed to special advantage in his numerous obituary 
notices or encomiums (collected and published in three volumes 
Zur Er inner ung an vorangegangene Freunde, 1888). He also 
excelled as a speaker, particularly at gatherings of an international 
character, for in addition to his native German he could speak 
English, French and Italian with fluency. 

See Memorial Lectures delivered be/ore the Chemical Society, 1893- 
190O (London, 1901). 

HOFMANN, JOHANN CHRISTIAN KONRAD VON (1810- 
1877), Lutheran theologian and historian, was born on the 21st 
of December 1810 at Nuremberg, and studied theology and 
history at the university of Erlangen. In 1820 he went to 
Berlin, where Schleiermacher, Hengstenbcrg, Neander, Ranke 
and Raumer were among his teachers. In 1833 he received an 
appointment to teach Hebrew and history in the gymnasium of 
Erlangen. In 1835 he became Repctcnt, in 1838 Privatdozent 
and in 1841 professor extraordinarius in the theological faculty 
at Erlangen. In 1842 he became professor ordinarius at Rostock, 
but in 1845 returned once more to Erlangen as the successor of 
Gottlieb Christ oph Adolf von Harless (1806-1879), founder of 
the Zeitschrift filr Protestantismus und Kir c he, of which Hofmann 
became one of the editors in 1846, J. F. Hofling (1802-1853) and 
Gottfried Thomasius (1802-1875) being his collaborators. He 
was a conservative in theology, but an enthusiastic adherent of 
the progressive party in politics, and sat as member for Erlangen 
and Furth in the Bavarian second chamber from 1863 to 1868. 
He died on the 20th of December 1877 

He wrote Die siebzig Jahre des Jcremias u die siebzig Jahrwochen 
des Daniel (iSib)\Ceschichte des Aufruhrs in den Cevcnnen 
(1837); Lehrbuth der Weltgeschichle fur Cymnasien (1830). which 
became a text-book in the Protestant gymnasia of Bavaria; 
Weissagung u. Erfullungitn alien u. neuen Testamente (1841-1844; 
2nd ed., 1857-1860); DerSchriflbewas (1852-1856; 2nd ed., 1857- 
1860); Die heilige Sckrifl des neuen Testaments zusammenhangend 
untersucht (1862-1875); Sehutzschrijten (1856-1859), in which he 
defends himself against the charge of denying the Atonement, 
and Theologischc Elhik (1878) His most important works are 
the Ave last named. In theology, as in ecclesiastical polity, 
Hofmann was a Lutheran of an extreme type, although the 
strongly marked individuality of some of his opinions laid him 
open to repeated accusations of heterodoxy. He was the head 
of what has been called the Erlangen School, and " in his day 
he was unquestionably the chief glory of the University of 
Erlangen M (Lichtenberaer). 

Sec the articles in Herzog-Hauck's Realeneyklobadie and the 
AUtemeine deulscke Btographte; and cf. F. Lichtenbergcr, History 
of German Theology in the Nineteenth Century (1889) pp. 446-458. 

HOFMANN, MELCHIOR (c. 1498-1543-4), anabaptist, was 
born at Hall, in Swabia, before 1500 (£ur Linden suggests 1408). 
His biographers usually give his surname as above; in his printed 
works it is Hoffman, in his manuscripts Hoffmann. He was 
without scholarly training, and first appears as a furrier at 
Livland. Attracted by Luther's doctrine, he came forward 
as a lay preacher, combining business travels with a religious 
mission. Accompanied by Melchior Rinck, also a skinner or 
furrier, and a religious enthusiast, he made his way to Sweden. 
Joined by Bernard Knipperdolhng, the party reached Stockholm 
in the autumn of 1524.' Their fervid attacks on image worship 
led to their expulsion. By way of Livonia, Hofmann arrived 
at Dorpat in November 1524, but was driven thence In the 
following January. Making his way to Riga, and thence to 
Wittenberg, he found favour with Luther; his letter of the 
22nd of June 1525 appears in a tract by Luther of that year. 
He was again at Dorpat in May 1526; later at Magdeburg. 
Returning to Wittenberg, he was coldly received; he wrote 
there his exposition of Daniel xii. (1527), Repairing to Holstein, 
he got into the good graces of Frederick I. of Denmark, and 
was appointed by royal ordinance to preach the Gospel at Rid. 
He was extravagant in denunciation, and developed a Zwinglian 
view of the Eucharist. Luther was alarmed. At a colloquy of 



preachers in Flensbarg (3th April 15*0) Hofmann, Joha 
Campanus and others were put on their defence. Hofmana 
maintained (against the " magic " of the Lutherans) that the 
function of the Eucharist, like that of preaching, b an appeal 
for spiritual union with Christ. Refusing to retract, he was 
banished. At Strassburg to which he now turned, be was wefl 
received (1520) till his anabaptist development became apparent. 
He was in relations with Schwenkfeld and with Caristadt, bet 
assumed a prophetic rote of his own. Journeying to East 
Friesland, (1530) he founded a community at Emden (1532), 
securing a large following of artisans. Despite the warning of 
John Trypmaker, who prophesied for him "six months'* in 
prison, he returned in the spring of 1533 to Strassburg, where 
we hear of his wife and child. He gathered from the Apocalypse 
a vision of "resurrections" of apostolic Christianity, first 
under John Hua, and now tinder himself. The year 1533 was 
to inaugurate the new era; Strassburg was to be the seat of 
the New Jerusalem. In May 1533 he and others were arrested. 
Under examination, he denied that he had made common cause 
with the anabaptists and claimed to be no prophet, a mere witness 
of the Most High, but refused the articles of faith proposed to 
him by the provincial synod. Hofmann and Claua Frey, an 
anabaptist, were detained in prison, a measure due to the tenor 
excited by the Minister episode of 1533-1534- The synod, hi 
1539, made further effort to reclaim him. The last notice of his 
imprisonment is on the xoth of November 1543; he probably 
died soon after. 

Two of his publications, with similar titles, in 1 530, are note* 
worthy as having influenced Menno Simons and David Joris 
(Weissagung vst heiliger gdtiieker gesckrijft, and Propkeeey odtr 
Weissagung vst warcr hciliger gdtlicher sehrifft). Bock treats 
him as an antitrinitarian, on grounds which Wallace rightly 
deems inconclusive. With better reason Trechsel includes aim 
among pioneers of some of the positions of Scrvctus. His 
Christology was Valentinian. While all are elected to salvation, 
only the regenerate may receive baptism, and those who sin 
after regeneration sin against the Holy Ghost, and cannot 
be saved. His followers were known at Hofmannites or 
Melchiorites. 

See G. Herrmann, Estai sur la vie elks icrits 4* hi. Hofmann 
(1852); F. O. sur Linden, M. Hofmann, an Prophet der Wtoderiaujtr 
(1885); H. Holtzmann. in Allgemetnt deuUehe Biographit (1880); 
Hegler in Hauck's Realeruyklopadie (1900); Bock, Hut. Autilrtn. 
(1776). ii.; Wallace, Antttrtn. Biography (1850) Hi., app. m ; 
Trechsel. Prot. Antitrin. tor F. Soein (1839) i.; Barclay, Inner 
Life of Rel. Societies (1876). An alleged portrait, from an cngr»v> 
ing of 1608, is reproduced in the appendix to A. Rosa. Pauuhen 
(1655). (A. Go.*) 

HOFMEISTER, W1LHELM FRIEDRICH BENEDICT (1824- 
1877), German botanist, was born at Leipzig on the 18th of 
May 1824. He came of a family engaged in trade, and after 
being educated at the Realsebule of Leipzig be entered business 
as a music-dealer. Much of his botanical work was done while 
he was so employed, till in 1863 ne *** nominated, without 
intermediate academic steps, to the chair in Heidelberg; thence 
he was transferred in 1872 to Tubingen, in succession to H. voo 
MohL His first work was on the distribution of the ConHerae 
in the Himalaya, but his attention was very soon devoted to 
studying the sexuality and origin of the embryo of Phanerogams. 
His contributions on this subject extended from 1847 till i860, 
and they finally settled the question of the origin of the embryo 
from an ovum, as against the prevalent pollen-tube theory of 
M. J. Schleiden, for he showed that the pollen-tube does not 
itself produce the embryo, but only stimulates the ovum alresdy 
present in the ovule. He soon turned his attention to the 
embryology of Bryophytes and Pteridophytes, and gave con- 
tinuous accounts of the germination of the spores and fertilization 
in PHularia, Salvinia, Sclaginclla. Some of the main facts of the 
life of ferns and mosses were already known; these, together with 
his own wider observations, were worked into that great general 
pronouncement published in 1851 under the title, Vergleickende 
Untersuchunrtn der Keimung, EntfoHung und Prnxhlbildvni 
hoMrer Kryptogatnen und der Sonunbildung der Couifertn. 



HOFMEYR 



56s 



This work wifl always stand in the first rank of botanical books. 
It antedated the Origin of Species by eight years, but contained 
facts and comparisons which could only become inteHtgible on 
some theory of descent. The plan of life-story common to them 
all, involving two alternating generations, was demonstrated 
for Liverworts, Mosses, Ferns, Equiseta, Rhizocarps, Lycopodi- 
aceac, and even Gymnospenns, with a completeness and certainty 
which must still surprise those who know the botanical literature 
of the author's time. The conclusions of Hofmcister remain in 
their broad outlines unshaken, but rather strengthened by later- 
acquired details. In the light of the theory of descent the 
common plan of life-history in plants apparently so diverse as 
those named acquires a special significance; but it is one of the 
remarkable features of this great work that the writer himself 
does not theorize — with an unerring insight he points out his 
comparisons and states his homologies, but docs not indulge in 
explanatory surmises. It is the typical work of an heroic age 
of plant-morphology. From 1857 till 1862 Hofmeister wrote 
occasionally on physiological subjects, such as the ascent of sap, 
and curvatures of growing parts, but it was in morphology that 
he found his natural sphere. In 1861, in conjunction with 
other botanists, a plan was drawn up of a handbook of physio- 
logical botany, of which Hofmeister was to be editor. Though 
the original scheme was never completed, the editor himself 
contributed two notable parts, Die Lekre von der Pflanutuetie 
(1867) and AUgemeine MorpttologU der Cewdckse (1868). The 
former gives an excellent summary of the structure and relations 
of the vegetable cell as then known, but it did not greatly modify 
current views. The latter was notable for its refutation of the 
spiral theory of leaf arrangement in plants, founded by C. F. 
Schttnper and A. Braun. Hofmeister transferred the discussion 
from the mere study of mature form to the observation of the 
development of the parts, and substituted for the "spiral 
tendency " a mechanical theory based upon the observed fact 
that new branchings appear over the widest gaps which exist 
between next older branchings of like nature. With this im- 
portant work Hofmeistcr's period of active production closed; 
he fell into ill-health, and retired from his academic duties some 
time before his death at Lindenau, near Leipzig, on the nth of 
January 1877. (F. O. B.) 

HOFMEYR, JAN HBNDRIR (1845-1000), South African 
politician, was born at Cape Town on the 4th of July 1845. 
He was educated at the South African College, and at an early 
age turned his attention to politics, first as a journalist. He 
was editor of the Zuid Afrikoan till its incorporation with Ons 
Land, and of the Zuid Afrikoanscke Tidjschrifk By birth, 
education and sympathies a typical Dutch Afrikander, he set 
himself to organize the political power of his fellow-countrymen. 
This he did very effectively, and when in 1879 be entered the 
Cape parliament as member for Stetlenbosch, he became the 
real leader of the Dutch party. Yet he only held office for six 
months — as minister without portfolio in the Scanlen ministry 
from May to November 1881. He held no subsequent official 
post in the colony, though he shared with Sir Thomas Upington 
and Sir Charles Mills the honour of representing the Cape at 
the intercolonial conference of 1887. Here be supported the 
proposal* for entrusting the defence of Simon's Town to Cape 
Colony, leaving only the armament to be provided by the 
imperial government, opposed trans-oceanic penny postage, 
and moved a resolution in favour of an imperial customs union. 
At the colonial conference of 1804 at Ottawa he was again one 
of the Cape representatives. In 1888 and in 2889 he was a 
member of the South African customs conference. 

His chief importance as a pubhc man was, however, derived 
from his power over the Dutch in Cape Colony, and his control 
of the Afrikander Bond. In 1878 he had himself founded the 
" Fanners' Association," and as the Cape farmers were almost 
entirely Dutch the Association became a centre of Dutch in- 
fluence. When the Bond was formed in 1882, with purely 
political aims, Hofmeyr made haste to obtain control of it, 
and m 1883 amalgamated the Farmers' Association with it. 
Under his direction the constitution of the Bond was mo d if ie d 



by the elimination of the provisions inconsistent with loyalty 
to the British crown. But it remained an organization for 
obtaining the political supremacy of the Cape Dutch. (See 
Care Colony: History.) His control over the Bond enabled 
him for many years, while free from the responsibilities of office, 
to make and unmake ministers at his will, and earned for him 
the name of "Cabinet-maker of South Africa." Although 
officially the term "Afrikander" was explained by Hofmeyr 
to include white men of whatever race, yet in practice the 
influence of the Bond was always exerted in favour of the Dutch, 
and its power was drawn from the Dutch districts of Cape Colony. 
The sympathies of the Bond were thus always strongly with 
the Transvaal, as the chief centre of Dutch influence in South 
Africa; and Hofmeyr's position might in many respects be 
compared with that of Parnell at the head of the Irish Nationalist 
party in Great Britain. In the Bechuanaland difficulty of 1884 
Hofmeyr threw all the influence of the Bond into the scale in 
favour of the Transvaal. But in the course of the next few years 
he began to drift away from President Kruger. He resented 
the reckless disregard of Cape interests involved in Kruger's 
fiscal policy; he feared that the Transvaal, after its sudden 
leap into prosperity upon the gold discoveries of 1886, might 
overshadow all other Dutch influences in South Africa; above 
all he was convinced, as he showed by his action at the London 
conference, that the protection of the British navy was indis- 
pensable to South Africa, and he set his face against Kruger's 
intrigues with Germany, and his avowed intention of acquiring 
an outlet to the sea in order to get into touch with foreign 
powers. 

In 1800 Hofmeyr joined forces with Cecil Rhodes, who became 
premier of Cape Colony with the support of the Bond. Hofmeyr's 
influence was a powerful factor in the conclusion of the Swaziland 
convention of 1890, as well as in stopping the " trek H to Banyai- 
land (Rhodesia) in 1891 — a notable reversal of the polky he 
had pursued seven years before. But the reactionary elements 
in the Bond grew alarmed at Rhodes's imperialism, and in 1805 
Hofmeyr resigned his seat in parliament and the presidency 
of the Bond. Then came the Jameson Raid, and in its wake 
there rolled over South Africa a wave of Dot en and anti- British 
feeling such as had not been known since the days of Majuba. 
(The proclamation issued by Sir Hercules Robinson disavowing 
Jameson was suggested by Hofmeyr, who helped to draw up 
its terms.) Once more Hofmeyr became president of the Bond. 
By an alteration of the provincial constitution, all power in the 
Cape branch of the Bond was vested in the hands of a vigilance 
committee of three, of whom Hofmeyr and his brother were 
two. As the recognized leader of the Cape Dutch, he protested 
against such abuses as the dynamite monopoly in the Transvaal, 
and urged Kruger even at the eleventh hour to grant reasonable 
concessions rather than plunge into a war that might involve 
Cape Afrikanderdom and the Transvaal in a common ruin. In 
July 1800 be journeyed to Pretoria, aad vainly supported tbo 
proposal of a satisfactory franchise law* combined with a limited 
representation of the Uitlanders in the Volksraad, and in 
September urged the Transvaal to accede to the proposed 
joint inquiry. During the negotiations of 1899, and after the 
outbreak of war, the official organ of the Bond, Ons Land, was 
conspicuous for its anti-British attitude, and its violence forced 
Lord Roberts to suppress it in the Cape Colony district under 
martial law. Hofmeyr never associated himself publicly with 
the opinions expressed by Ons Land, but neither did he repudiate 
them. The tide of race sympathy among his Dutch supporters 
made his position one of great difficulty, and shortly after the 
outbreak of war he withdrew to Europe, and refused to act as 
a member of the " Conciliation Committee " which came to 
England in 1901 in the interests of the Boer republics. 

Towards the close of the war Hofmeyr returned to South Africa 
and organized the Bond forces for the general election held in 
Cape Colony at the beginning of 1904, which resulted in the 
defeat of the Bond party. Hofmeyr retained his ascendancy 
over the Cape Dutch, but now began to find himself somewhat 
out of sympathy with the larger outlook oa South African 



566 



HOFSTEDE DE GROOT— HOGARTH, WILLIAM 



affairs taken by the younger leaders of the Boers in the Transvaal. 
During 1006 he gave offence to the extreme section oC the Bond 
by some criticisms of the tool and his use of English in public 
speeches. At the general election in 1908 the Bond, still 
largely under his direction, gained a victory at the polls, but 
Hofmeyr himself was not a candidate. In the renewed move- 
ment for the closer union of the South African colonics he 
advocated federation as opposed to unification. When, however, 
the unification proposals were ratified by the Cape parliament, 
Hofmeyr procured his nomination as one of the Cape delegates 
to England in the summer of 1909 to submit the draft act of 
union to the imperial government. He attended the conferences 
with the officials of the Colonial Office for the preparation of 
the draft act, and after the bill had become law went to Germany 
for a " cure." He returned to London in October 1900, where 
he died on the 16th of that month. His body was taken to 
Cape Town for burial. 

HOFSTEDE DB GROOT, PETRUS (1 802-1886), Dutch 
theologian, was bora at Leer in East Friesland, Prussia, on the 
8th of October 1802, and was educated at the Gymnasium and 
university of Gr&ningcn. For three years (1826*1839) he was 
pastor of the Reformed Church at Ulrum, and then entered upon 
his lifelong duties as professor of theology at Groningen. With 
bis colleagues L.G. Parcau, J. F. van Vordt, and W. Muurling 
he edited from 1837 to 1872 the Waarheid in Licfde. In this 
review and in his numerous books he vigorously upheld the 
orthodox faith against the Dutch " modern theology " move- 
ment. Many of his works were written in Latin, including 
Disputatio, qua ep. ad Hcbraeos cum Paul in. c pistol is com parol ur 
(1826), I nstitut fortes historiae ecclesiae (1835), Inslitutio theologlae 
natnralis (1842), Encyclopaedia theologi christian! (1844). Others, 
in Dutch, were: The Divine Education of Humanity up to the 
Coming of Jesus Christ (3 vols., 1846), The Nature of the Gospel 
Ministry (1858), The "Modern Theology" of the Netherlands 
(1869), The Old Catholic Movement (1877). He became professor 
emeritus in 1872, and died at Groningcn on the 5th of December 
1886. 

HOGARTH, WILLIAM (1697-1764)* the great English 
painter and pictorial satirist, was born at Bartholomew Close 
in London on the roth of November 1697, and baptized on the 
28th in the church of St Bartholomew the Great. He had two 
younger sisters, Mary, bom in 1699, and Ann, born in 1701. 
His father, Richard Hogarth, who died in 1718, was a school- 
master and literary hack, who had come to the metropolis to 
seek that fortune which had been denied to him in his native 
Westmorland. The son seems to have been early distinguished 
by a talent for drawing and an active perceptive faculty rather 
than by any dose attention to the learning which he was soon 
shrewd enough to see had not made his parent prosper. " Shows 
of all sorts gave mc uncommon pleasure when an infant," he 
says, " and mimicry, common to all children, was remarkable in 
me. . . . My exercises when at school were more remarkable for 
the ornaments which adorned them than for the exercise itself." 
This being the case, it is no wonder that, by his own desire, 
he was apprenticed to a silver-plate engraver, Mr Ellis Gamble, 
at the sign of the " Golden Angel " in Cranbourne Street or 
Alley, Leicester Fields. For this master he engraved a shop- 
card which is still extant. When his apprenticeship began is 
not recorded; but it must have been concluded before the 
beginning of 1720, for in April of that year he appears to have 
set up as engraver on his own account. His desires, however, 
were not limited to silver-plate engraving. " Engraving on 
Copper was, at twenty years of age, my utmost ambition." 
For this he lacked the needful skill as a draughtsman; and his 
account of the means which he took to supply this want, without 
too much interfering with his pleasure, is thoroughly character- 
istic, though it can scarcely be recommended as an example. 
" Laying it down," he says," first as an axiom, that he who 
could by any means acquire and retain in his memory, perfect 
ideas of the subjects he meant to draw, would have as clear a 
knowledge of the figure as a man who can write freely hath 
of the twenty-four letters of the alphabet and their infinite 



combinations (each of these being composed of lines), and would 
consequently be an accurate designer, ... I therefore en- 
deavoured to habituate myself to the exercise of a sort of technical 
memory, and by repeating in my own mind, the parts of which 
objects were composed, 1 could by degrees combine and put 
them down with my pencil." This account, it is possible, has 
something of the complacency of the old age in which it was 
written; but there is little doubt that his marvellous power 
of seizing expression owed less to patient academical study 
than to his unexampled eye-memory and tenacity of minor 
detail. But be was not entirely without technical training, 
since, by his own showing, he occasionally " took the life " to 
correct his memories, and is known to have studied at Sir James 
ThornhiU's then recently opened art school. 

" His first employment " (i.e. after he set up for himself) 
" seems," says John Nichols, m his Anecdotes, "to have bees 
the engraving of arms and shop bills." After this be was 
employed in designing "plates for booksellers." Of these early 
and mostly insignificant works we may pass over " The Lottery, 
an Emblematic Print on the South Sea Scheme," and some book 
illustrations, to pause at " Masquerades and Operas" (1724), 
the first plate he published on his own account. This is a 
clever little satire on contemporary follies, such as the masque- 
rades of the Swiss adventurer Heidegger, the popular Italian 
opera-singers, Rich's pantomimes at Lincoln's Inn Fields, and 
last, but by no means least, the exaggerated popularity of Lord 
Burlington's proteg6, the architect painter William Kent, who 
is here represented on the summit of Burlington Gate, with 
Raphael and Michelangelo for supporters. This worthy, 
Hogarth had doubtless not learned to despise less in the school 
of his rival Sir James ThornhiU. Indeed almost the next of 
Hogarth's important prints was aimed at Kent alone, being 
that memorable burlesque of the unfortunate alt arpiece designed 
by the latter for St Clement Danes, which, in deference to the 
ridicule of the parishioners, Bishop Gibson took down in 1725. 
Hogarth's squib, which appeared subsequently, exhibits it as 
a very masterpiece of confusion and bad drawing. In 1726 he 
prepared twelve large engravings for Butler's Mudibras. These 
he himself valued highly, and they are the best of his book 
illustrations. But he was far too individual to be the patient 
interpreter of other men's thoughts, and it is not in this direction 
that his successes are to besought. 

To 1727-17*8 belongs one of those rare occurrences which 
have survived as contributions to his biography. He was 
engaged by Joshua Morris, a tapestry worker, to prepare a 
design for the " Element of Earth." Morris, however, having 
heard that he was "an engraver, and no painter," declined 
the work when completed, and Hogarth accordingly sued him 
for the money in the Westminster Court, where, on the 28th of 
May 1728, the case was decided in his (Hogarth's) favour. It 
may have been the aspersion thus early cast on his skill as a 
painter (coupled perhaps with the unsatisfactory state of print- 
selling, owing to the uncontrolled circulation of piratical copies) 
that induced him about this time to turn his attention 10 the 
production of "small conversation pieces" (i.e. groups in oil 
of full-length portraits from z 2 to 15 in. high), many of which 
are still preserved in different collections. "This," he says, 

having noveky, succeeded for a few years." Among his 
other efforts in oil between 1728 and 1732 were " The Wanstead 
Conversation," " The House of Commons examining Bambridge," 
an infamous warden of the Fleet, and several pictures of the 
chief actors in Gay's popular Beggar's Opera. 

On the 23rd of March 1729 he was married at old Paddingtoa 
church to Jane Thomhill, the only daughter of Kent's rival 
above mentioned. The match was a clandestine one, although 
Lady Thomhill appears to have favoured it. We next hear of 
him in " lodgings at South Lambeth,' 1 Where he rendered some 
assistance to the then well-known Jonathan Tyers, who opened 
Vauxhall in 1732 with an entertainment styled a ridotlo al 
fresco. For these gardens Hogarth painted a poor picture of 
Henry VIII. and Anne Boleyn, and he also permitted Hayman 
to make copies of the later series of the " Four Times of the Day." 



HOGARTH, WILLIAM 



567 



1 In return, the grateful Tyers presented him with a gold pats 

ticket " In perpetuam BenefUU Memorial*" It was long thought 

1 that Hogarth designed this himself, Mr Warwick Wroth (Numis- 

\ malic Chronicle, vol. xviii.) doubts this, although he thinks it 

probable that Hogarth designed some of the silver Vauxhall 

\ passes which are figured in Wilkinson's Londina illustrate. The 

oary engravings between 1726 and 1733 which need be referred 

1 to are the " Large Masquerade Ticket " (1737), another satire 

1 on masquerades, and the print of " Burlington Gate " (1731)* 

s evoked by Pope's Epistle to Lord Burlington, and defending 

1 Lord Cbandos, who is therein satirized. This print gave great 

off ence, and was, it is said, suppressed. 
\ By 1731 Hogarth must have completed the earliest of the 

series of moral works which fust gave him his position as a great 
1 and original genius. This was "A Harlot's Progress," the 
paintings for which, if we may trust the dale in the last of the 
pictures, were finished in that year. Almost immediately after- 
wards he must have begun to engrave them— a task he had at 
1 fiat intended to leave to others. From an advertisement in 
the Country Journal! or, the Craftsman, 39th of January 173a, 
the pictures were then being engraved, and from later announce* 
menu it seems clear that they were delivered to the subscribers 
1 early in the following April, on the 21st of which month an 
1 unauthorized prose description of them was published. We have 
no record of the particular train of thought which prompted 
these story-pictures; but it may perhaps be fairly assumed 
that the necessity for creating some link of interest between 
the personages of the little " conversation pieces" above referred 
r to, led to the further idea of connecting several groups or scenes 
so as to form a sequent narrative. " I wished," says Hogarth, 
1 " to compose pictures on canvas, similar to representations on 
f the stage. " " I have endeavoured," he says again, "to treat 
, my subject as a dramatic writer; my picture is my stage, and 
men and women my players, who by means of certain actions 
and gestures are to exhibit a dumb ska*." There was never a 
more eloquent dumb show than this of the " Harlot's Progress." 
In six scenes the miserable career of a woman of the town is 
, traced out remorselessly from its first facile beginning to its 
, shameful and degraded end. Nothing of the detail Is softened 
or abated; the whole is acted out coram populo, with the hard, 
uncompassionate morality of the age the painter lived in, while 
the introduction here and there of one or two well-known 
characters such as Colonel Charteris and Justice Gonson give a 
vivid reality to the satire. It had an immediate success. To 
say nothing of the facMhat the talent of the paintings completely 
reconciled Sir James Thornhill to the son-hvlaw he bad hitherto 
refused to acknowledge, more than twelve hundred names of 
subscribers to the engravings were entered in the artist's book. 
On the appearance of plate iiL the lords of the treasury trooped 
to the print shop for Sir John Gonson 's portrait which it contained. 
The story was made into a pantomime by Theophilus Cibber, 
and by some one else into a ballad opera; and it gave rise to 
numerous pamphlets and poems. It was painted on fan-mounts 
and transferred to cups and saucers. Lastly, it was freely 
pirated. There could be no surer testimony to its popularity. 

From the MSS. of George Vertue in the British Museum 
(Add. MSS. 23060-08) it seems that during the progress of the 
plates, Hogarth was domiciled with his father-in-law, Sir James 
Thornhill, in the Middle Piazza, Covent Garden (the " second 
house eastward from James Street "), and it must have been 
thence that set out the historical expedition from London to 
Sheerness of which the original record still exists at the British 
Museum. This is an oblong MS. volume entitled An Account 
of what seem'd most Remarkable in the Five Days' Peregrination 
of the Five Follovring Persons, vizi., Messieurs Tothall, Scott, 
Hogarth, Thornhill and Forrest. Begun on Saturday May 27th 
1732 and Finish' d On the 31st of the Same Month. A in lu el 
fac similiter. Inscription on Dultoich College Porch. The journal, 
which is written by Ebenezer, the father of Garrick's friend 
Theodosius Forrest, gives a good idea of what a " frisk " — as 
Johnson called it — was in those days, while the illustrations 
were by Hogarth and Samuel Scott the landscape painter. 



John Thornhill, Sir James's son, made the map. This version 
(in prose) was subsequently rurf into rhyme by one of Hogarth's 
friends, the Rev. Wm> Gostling of Canterbury, and after the 
artist's death both versions were published. In the absence 
of other biographical detail, they are of considerable interest 
to the student of Hogarth. In 1733 Hogarth moved into the 
M Golden Head " in Leicester Fields, which, with occasional 
absences at Cm'swick, he continued to occupy until his death. 
By December of this year he was already engaged upon the 
engravings of a second Progress, that of a Rake. It was not as 
successful oa its predecessor. It was In eight plates in lieu of 
six. The story is unequal; but there is nothing finer than the 
figure of the desperate hero in the Covent Qarden gaming-house, 
or the admirable scenes in the Fleet prison and Bedlam, where 
at last his headlong career comes to its tragic termination. The 
plates abound with allusive suggestion and covert humour; 
but it is impossible to attempt any detailed description of them 
here* 

"A Rake's Progress" was dated June 25, 1735. and the 
engravings bear the words " according to Act of Parliament." 
This was an act (8 Geo. II. cap. 13) which Hogarth had been 
instrumental in obtaining from the legislature, being stirred 
thereto py the shameless piracies of rival prinlsellers. Although 
loosely drawn, it served its purpose; and the painter comme- 
morated bis success by a long inscription on the plate entitled 
" Crowns, Mitres, &c," afterwards used asasubscription ticket to 
the Election scries. These subscription tickets to his engravings, 
let us add, are among the brightest and most vivacious of the 
artist's productions. That to the " Harlot's Progress " was 
entitled "Boys peeping at Nature," while the Rake's Progress 
was heralded by the delightful etching known as "A Pleased. 
Audience at, a Play, or The Laughing Audience." 

We must pass more briefly over the prints which followed the 
two Progresses, noting first " A Modern Midnight Conversation," 
an admirable drinking scene which comes between them in 1733, 
and the bright little plate of " Southwark Fair," which, although 
dated 1733, was published with " A Rake's Progress " in 1735. 
Between these and " Marriage d la mode," upon the pictures of 
which the painter must have been not long after at work, come the 
small prints of the " Consultation of Physicians " and " Sleeping 
Congregation" (1736), the "Scholars at a Lecture" (1737); the. 
" Four Times of the Day " (1738), a series of pictures of 18th 
century life, the earlier designs for which have been already referred 
to; the" Strolling Actresses dressing in a Bam" (1738), which 
Walpole held to be, " for wit and imagination, without any 
other end, the best of all the painter's works "; and finally the 
admirable plates of the Distrest Poet painfully composing a 
poem on Riches " in a garret, and the Enraged Musician 
fulminating from his parlour window upon a discordant orchestra 
of knife*grindcrs, milk-girls, ballad-singers and the rest upon the 
pavement outside. These are dated respectively 1736 and 1741. 
To this period also (i.e. the period preceding the production 
of the plates of " Marriage d la mode ") belong two of those 
history pictures to which, in emulation of the Haymans and 
Thornhills, the artist was continually attracted. " The Pool of 
Bethesda " and the M Good Samaritan," " with figures seven feet 
high," were painted circa 1736, and presented by the artist to 
St Bartholomew's Hospital, where they remain. They were net 
masterpieces; and it is pleasanter to think of his connexion 
with Captain Coram 's recently established Foundling Hospital 
(1739). which he aided with his money, his graver and his brush, 
and for which he painted that admirable portrait of the good 
old philanthropist which js still, and deservedly, one of its chief 
ornaments. 

In " A Harlot's Progress " Hogarth had not strayed much 
beyond the lower walks of sodety, and although, in "A Rake's 
Progress." his hero was taken from the middle classes, he can 
scarcely be said to have quitted those fields of observation which 
are common to every spectator. It is therefore more remarkable, 
looking to his education and antecedents, that his masterpiece, 
" Marriage a la morff," should successfully depict, as the advertise- 
ment has it, " a variety of modem occurrences in high life." 



568 



HOGARTH, WILLIAM 



Yet, as an accurate delineation of upper class iBth century 
society, his " Marriage a la mode'* has never, we believe, been 
seriously assailed. The countess's bedroom, the earl's apartment 
with its lavish coronets and old masters, the grand saloon with 
its marble pillars and grotesque ornaments, are fully as true to 
nature as the frowsy chamber in the " Turk's Head Bagnio," 
the quack-doctor's museum in St Martin's Lane, or the mean 
opulence of the merchant's house in the city. And what story 
could be more vividly, more perspicuously, more powerfully told 
than this godless alliance of sacs et porchemins — this miserable 
tragedy of an ill-assorted marriage? There Is no defect of in- 
vention, no superfluity of detail, no purposeless stroke. It has 
the merit of a work by a great master of fiction, with the addi- 
tional advantages which result from the pictorial fashion of the 
narrative; and it is matter for congratulation that it is still to 
be seen by all the world in the National Gallery in London, 
where it can tell its own tale better than pages of commentary. 
The engravings of " Marriage a la mode " were dated April 1745. 
Although by this time the painter found a ready market for his 
engravings, be does not appear to have been equally successful 
in selling his pictures. The people bought his prints; but the 
richer and not numerous connoisseurs who purchased pictures 
were wholly in the hands of the importers and manufacturers 
of "old roasters." In February 174 s the original oil paintings 
of the two Progresses, the " Four Times of the Day ** and the 
" Strolling Actresses " were still unsold. On the last day of 
that month Hogarth disposed of them by an ill-devised kind of 
auction, the details of which may be read in Nichols's Anecdotes, 
for the paltry Sum of £4*7, 7*- No better fate attended " Marriage 
a la mode," which six years later became the property of Mr Lane 
of Hillirtgdon for 120 guineas, being then in Carlo Maratti frames 
which had cost the artist four guineas a piece. Something of this 
was no doubt due to Hogarth's impracticable arrangements, 
but the fact shows conclusively how completely blind bis con- 
temporaries were to his merits as a painter, and how hopelessly 
in bondage to the all-powerful picture-dealers. Of these latter 
the painter himself gave a graphic picture in a letter addressed 
by him under the pseudonym of " Britophil " to the St James's 
Evening Post, in June 1737. 

But if Hogarth was not successful with his dramas on canvas, 
he occasionally shared with his contemporaries in the popularity 
of portrait painting. For a picture, executed in 1746, of Garrick 
as Richard III. be was paid £200, " which was more," says he, 
" than any English artist ever received for a single portrait." 
In the same year a sketch of Simon Frascr, Lord Lovat, after- 
wards beheaded on Tower Hill, had an exceptional success. 

We must content ourselves with a brief enumeration of the 
most important of his remaining works. These are " The Stage 
Coach or Country Inn Yard" (1747); the series of twelve plates 
entitled " Industry and Idleness " (1747), depicting the career 
of two London apprentices; the " Gate of Calais " (1749)* 
which had its origin in a rather unfortunate visit paid to France 
by the painter after the peace of Aix-la*ChapcUe; the " March 
to Finchley " (1750); " Beer Street," " Gin Lane" and the " Four 
Stages of Cruelty" (1751); the admirable re pr e s e ntations of 
election humours in the days of Sir Robert Walpole, entitled 
" Four Prints of an Election " (1755-1758); and the plate of 
" Credulity, Superstition and Fanaticism, a Medley " (1762), 
adapted from an earlier unpublished design called " Enthusiasm 
Delineated." Besides these must be chronicled three more 
essays in the " great Style of history painting," viz. " Paul 
before Felix," "Moses brought to Pharaoh's Daughter " and the 
AUarpiece for St Mary Reddiffe at Bristol The first two were 
engraved in 1751-1752, the last in 1704. A subscription ticket to 
the earlier pictures, entitled " Paul before Felix Burlesqued," had 
a popularity far greater than that of the prints themselves. 

In 1745 Hogarth painted that admirable portrait of himself 
with bis dog Trump, which is now in the National Gallery. In 
a corner of this he had drawn on a palette a serpentine curve 
with the words " The Line of Beauty." Much inquiry ensued 
as to the meaning of this hieroglyphic; and in an unpropiiious 
hour the painter resolved to explain himself in writing. The 



result was the well-known Analysis of Beauty (1755), a treaties 
to fix " the fluctuating idea* of Taste," otherwise a desultory 
essay having for pretext the precept attributed to Mkhekogcfe 
that a figure should be always "Pyramidall, Serpent like and 
multiplied by one two and three." The fate of the book was 
what might have been expected. By the painter's adherents 
it was praised as a final deliverance upon aesthetics; by his 
enemies and professional rivals, its obscurities, and the minor 
errors which, notwithstanding the benevolent* efforts of literary 
friends, the work had not escaped, were made the subject of 
endless ridicule and caricature. It added little to its author's 
fame, and it is perhaps to be regretted that he ever undertook 
it. Moreover, there were further humiliations in store for him. 
In 1759 the success of a little picture called "The Lady's Last 
Stake," painted for Lord Charlemont, procured him a commission 
from Sir Richard Grosvenor to. paint another picture " upon 
the same terms." Unhappily on this occasion he deserted ha 
own field of genre and social satire, to select the story from 
Boccaccio (or rather Dryden) of Sigismunda weeping over the 
heart of her murdered lover Guiscardo, being the subject of a 
picture in Sir Luke Schaub's collectio n by Furini which bad 
recently been sold for £400. The picture, over which he spent 
much time and patience, was not regarded as a success; aad 
Sir Richard rather meanly shuffled out of his bargain upon the 
plea that " the constantly having it before one's eyes, would be 
too often occasioning melancholy ideas to arise in one's mind.** 
Sigismunda, therefore, much to the artist's mortification, and 
the delight of the malicious, remained upon his bands. As, by 
her husband's desire, his widow valued it at £500, it found no 
purchaser until after her death, when the Boydclls bought it 
for 56 guineas. It was exhibited, with others of Hogarth's 
pictures, at the Spring Gardens exhibition of 1761, for the 
catalogue of which Hogarth engraved a Head-piece and a Tail- 
piece which are still the delight of collectors; and finally, by 
the bequest of Mr J. H. Anderdon, it passed in 1879 to the 
National Gallery, where, in spite of theatrical treatment and 
a repulsive theme, it still commands admiration for its colour, 
drawing and expression. 

In 1701 Hogarth was sixty-five years of age, and he had but 
three years more to live. These three years were embittered 
by an unhappy quarrel with his quondam friends, John Wilkes 
and Churchill the poet, over which most of his biographers are 
contented to pass rapidly. Having succeeded John ThorahiB 
in 1757 as Serjeant painter (to which post he was reappointed 
at the accession of George III.), an evil genius prompted him 
in 1762 to do some " timed " thing in the ministerial interest, and 
he accordingly published the indifferent satire of " The Tiroes, 
plate i." This at once brought him into collision with Wilkes 
and Churchill, and the immediate result was a violent attack 
upon him, both as a man and an artist, in the opposition North 
Briton, No. 17. The aleged decay of his powers, the miscarriage 
of Sigismunda, the cobbled composition of the Analysis, were 
all discussed with scurrilous malignity by those who had known 
his domestic life and learned his weaknesses. The old artist 
was deeply wounded, and his health was failing. Early in the 
next year, however, he replied by that portrait of Wilkes which 
will for ever carry his squinting features to posterity. Churchill 
retaliated in July by a savage Epistle to William Hogarth, to which 
the artist rejoined by a print of Churchill as a bear, in torn bands 
and mules, not the most successful of his works. " The pleasure, 
and pecuniary advantage," writes Hogarth manfully, " which 
I derived from these two engravings " (of Wilkes and Churchill), 
" together with occasional l y riding on horseback, restored me 
to as much health as can be expected at ray time of life." He 
produced but one more print, that of " Finis, or The Bathos," 
March 1764, a strange jumble of "fag ends," intended as a 
tail-piece to his collected prints; and on the a6th October of 
the same year be died of an aneurism at his house in Leicester 
Square. His wife, to whom he left his plates as a chief source 
of income, survived him until 1780. He was buried in Chiswick 
churchyard, where a tomb was erected to him by bis friends 
in 1771, with an epitaph by Garrick. Not fax off, on the road 



HOGG, JAMES . 



S*9 



to 

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ow 
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' Eurick Shepherd," was baptised at Ettrick in Se lkirk s hir e 



on the 9th of December 1770. His ancestor* hadfceea shepherds 
for centuries. He received hardly any school training, and 
seems to have had difficulty in getting books to read. After 
spending his early years herding sheep for different masters, he 
was engaged as shepherd by Mr Laidktw, tenant of Blackhouse, 
in the parish of Yarrow, from 1700 till 1799. He was treated 
with great kindness, and had access to a large collection of 
books. When this was arhauntrri he subscribed to a circulating 
horary in Peebles. While attending to his flock, he spent a 
great deal of time in reading. He profited by the company of 
his master's sons, of whom William Laidlaw is known as the 
friend of Scott and the author of Lucy's Ftitim'. Hogg's first 
printed piece was "The Mistakes of a Night" in the Scots 
Magazine for October 1704, and in 1 801 he published his Scottish 
Pastorals. In x8oa Hogg became acquainted with Sir Walter 
Scott, who was then collecting materials for his Border Minstrelsy. 
On Scott's recommendation Constable published Hogg's mis- 
cellaneous poems (The Mountain Bard) in 1807. By this work, 
and by The Shepherd's Guide, being a Practical Treatise on the 
Diseases of Sheep, Hogg realized about £300. With this money 
he unfortunately embarked in farming in Dumfriesshire, and 
in three years was utterly ruined, having to abandon all his 
effects to his creditors. He returned to Ettrick, only to find 
that he could not even obtain employment as a shepherd; so 
he set off in February 18x0 to push his fortune in Edinburgh 
as a literary adventurer. In the same year he published a collec- 
tion of Songs, The Forest Minstrel, to which he was the largest 
contributor. This book, being dedicated to the countess of 
Dalkeith (afterwards duchess of Buccleuch), and recommended 
to her notice by Scott, was rewarded with a present of 100 
guineas. He then began a weekly periodical, The Spy, which 
he continued from September 1810 till August 181 1. The 
appearance of The Queen's Wake in 1813 established Hogg's 
reputation as a poet; Byron recommended it to John Murray, 
who brought out an English edition. The scene of the poem 
is laid in 1561; the queen is Mary Stuart; and the " wake " 
provides a simple framework for seventeen poems sung by rival 
bards. It was followed by the Pilgrims of the Sun (1815), and 
Mador of the Moor (1816). The duchess of Buccleuch, on her 
death-bed (1814), had asked her husband to do something for 
the Ettrick bard; and the duke gave him a lease for life of the 
farm of Altrive in Yarrow, consisting of about 70 acres of moor- 
land, on which the poet built a house and spent the last years 
of lib life. In order to obtain money to stock his farm Hogg 
asked various poets to contribute to a volume of verse which 
should be a kind of poetic " benefit " for himself. Failing in 
his applications he wrote a volume of parodies, published in 
1816, as The Poetic Mirror, or the Living Bards of Great Britain. 
He took possession of his farm in 1817; but his literary exertions 
were never relaxed. Before 1820 he had written the prose tales 
qf The Brownie of Bodsbcck (1818) and two volumes of Winter 
Evening Tales (1820), besides collecting, editing and writing 
part of two volumes of The Jacobite Relics of Scotland (1810- 
1821), and contributing largely to Blackwood's Magazine. " The 
Chaldee MS.,'\which appeared in Blackwood's Magazine (October 
18x7), and gave such offence that.it was immediately withdrawn, 
was largely Hogg's work. . 

In 1820 he married Margaret Phillips, a lady of a good Annan- 
dale family, and found himself possessed of about. £1000, a 
good house and a well-stocked farm. Hogg's connexion with 
Blackwood's Magazine kept him continually before the public; 
his contributions, which include the best of his. prose works* 
were collected in the Shepherd's Calendar (1829). The wit and 
mischief of some of his literary friends made free with his name 
as the " Shepherd " of the Nodes Ambrosianae, and represented 
him in ludicrous and grotesque aspects; but the effect of the 
whole was favourable to his popularity. " Whatever may be 
the merits of the picture of the Shepherd [in the Nodes Am- 

I brosiatuu]— mid no one will deny its power and genius," writes 
Professor Veitch— " it is true, all the same, that this Shepherd 
was not the Shepherd of Ettrick or the man James Hogg. He 
was neither a Socrates nor a Falstaff, neither to be credited 



HOGG, T. J.— HOHENFRIEDBERG 



570 

with the wisdom and lofty idealizings of the one, nor with the 
characteristic humour and coarseness of the other." The Three 
Perils of Woman (1820), and The Three Perils of Mom (1822), 
were followed in 1825 by an epic poem, Queen Hynde, which 
was unfavourably received. He visited London in 1832, and was 
much lionized. On his return a public dinner was given to him 
in Peebles, — Professor Wilson in the chair, — and be acknow- 
ledged that he had at last " found fame." His health, however, 
was seriously impaired. With his pen in his hand to the last, 
Hogg in 1834 published a volume of Lay Sermons, and The 
Domestic Manners and Private Life of Sir Walter Scott, a book 
which Lpckhart regarded as an infringement on his rights. 
In 1835 appeared three volumes of Tales of the Wars of Montrose. 
Hogg died on the 21st of November 1835, and was buried in 
the churchyard of his native parish Ettrick. His fame had 
seemed to fill the whole district, and was brightest at its close; 
his presence was associated with all the border sports and 
festivities; and as a man James Hogg was ever frank, joyous 
and charitable. It is mainly as a great peasant poet that he 
lives in literature. Some of his lyrics and minor poems — his 
"Skylark," "When the Kye comes Hame," his verses on the 
" Comet " and " Evening Star," and his " Address to Lady 
Ann Scott "—are exquisite. The Queen* s Wake unites his 
characteristic excellences— his command of the old romantic 
ballad style, his graceful fairy mythology and his aerial flights 
of imagination. In the fairy story of Kilmeny in this work 
Hogg seems completely transformed; he is absorbed in the 
ideal and supernatural, and writes under direct and immediate 
inspiration. 

r, M 

bo 
cr, 
:h, 



HOGG. THOMAS JEFFERSON (1702-1862), English man of 
letters, was born at Norton, Durham, on the 24th of May 1792. 
He was educated at Durham grammar school and at University 
College, Oxford. Here he became the intimate friend of the 
poet Shelley, with whom in 181 1 he was expelled from the 
university for refusing to disclaim connexion with the author- 
ship of the pamphlet The Necessity for Atheism. He was then 
sent to study law at York, where he remained for six months. 
Hogg's behaviour to Harriet Shelley interrupted his relations 
with her husband for some time, but in 1813 the friendship 
was renewed in London. In 181 7 Hogg was called to the bar, 
and became later a revising barrister. In 1844 he inherited 
£2000 under Shelley's will, and in 1855, in accordance with 
the wishes of the poet's family, began to write Shelley's 
biography. The first two volumes of it were published in 1858, 
but they proved to be far more an autobiography than a 
biography, and Shelley's representatives refused Hogg further 
access to the materials necessary for its completion. Hogg died 
on the 27th of August 1862. 

HOGMANAY, the name in Scotland and some parts of the 
north of England for New Year's Eve, as also for the cake then 
given to the children. On the morning of the 31st of December 
the children in small bands go from door to door singing: 

" Hogmanay 
Trollolay 
Gie't o' your white bread and naae o' your grey "; 



and begging for small gifts or alms. These usually take the 
form of an oaten cake. The derivation of the term has been. 
much disputed. Cotgrave (1611) says: M It is the voice of 
the country folks begging small presents or New Year's gifts 
* . . an ancient term of rejoicing derived from the Druids, 
who were wont the first of each January to go into ihe woods, 
where, having sacrificed and banquetled together, they gathered 
mistletoe, esteeming it excellent to make beasts fruitful and 
most soverayne against all poyson." And he connects the word, 
through such Norman French forms as hotuwetri, with the old 
French atuUanneuf, which he explains as au gui-l'an-newf, " to 
the mistletoe! the New Year!"— this being (on his interpreta- 
tion) the Druidical salutation to the coming year as the revellers 
issued from the woods armed with boughs of mistletoe. But 
though this explanation may be accepted as containing the 
truth in referring the word to a French original, Cot grave's 
detailed etymology is now repudiated by scientific philologists, 
and the identical French aguUanneuf remains, like it, in 
obscurity. 

HOGSHEAD, a cask for holding liquor or other commodities, 
such as tobacco, sugar, molasses, &c; also a liquid measure 
of capacity, varying with the contents. As a measure for beer, 
cider, &c, it equals 54 gallons. A statute of Richard III. (1483) 
fixed the hogshead of wine at 63 wine-gallons, i.e. 5*! imperial 
gallons. The etymology of the word has been much discussed. 
According to Skeat, the origin is to be found in the name for a 
cask or liquid measure appearing in various forms in several 
Teutonic languages, in Dutch oxhoofl (modern okshoofd), Dan. 
oxehoved, O. Swed. oxhnfvod, &c. The word should therefore 
be * oxhead," and * hogshead " is a meTe corruption. It has 
been suggested that the name arose from the branding of such 
a measure with the head of an ox (see Notes and Queries, series 
iv. 2, 46, note by H. Tiedeman). The New English Dictionary 
does not attempt any explanation of the term, and takes 
" hogshead " as the original term, from which the forms in other 
languages have been corrupted. The earlier Dutch forms 
hukeshovel and hockskoot are nearer to the English form, and, 
further, the Dutch for M ox " is os. 

HOHENASPERQ, an ancient fortress of Germany, in the 
kingdom of Wurttemberg, 10 m. N. of Stuttgart, is skoated 
on a conical hill, lioo ft. high, overlooking the town of Asperg. 
It was formerly strongly fortified and was long the state prison 
of the kingdom of Wtlrttemberg. Among the many who have 
been interned here may be mentioned the notorious Jew financier, 
Joseph SOss-Oppenheimer (1692-1738) and the poet C. F. D. 
Schubart (1730-1791). It is now a reformatory. Hohenaspcrg 
originally belonged to the counts of Calw; it next passed to 
the counts palatine of Tubingen and from them was acquired 
in 1308 by Wurttemberg. In 1535 the fortifications were 
extended and strengthened, and in 1635 the town was taken 
by the Imperialists, who occupied it until 1649. 

See Schon, Die Stoats&fangenen von Hohenaspcrg (Stuttgart, ! 899) ; 
and Kfforf, Geschichte der WUrUembergischtn Peste Hokenaspcrr 
(Stuttgart, 1858). 

HOHEMFRIEDBERG, or Hohenjmedebero, a village of 
Silesia, about 6 m. from the small town of Striegau. It gives 
its name to a battle (also called the battle of Striegau) in the 
War of the Austrian Succession, fought on the 3rd of June 1745 
between the Prussians under Frederick the Great and the 
Austrian and Saxons commanded by Prince Charles of Lorraine. 
In May the king, whose army had occupied extended winter 
quarters in Silesia, had drawn it together into a position about 
Neisse whence he could manoeuvre against the Austrians, 
whether they invaded Silesia by Troppau or Gtatz, or joined 
their allies (who, under the duke of Weissenfels, were on the 
upper Elbe), and made their advance on Schweidnitz, Breslau 
or Liegnitz. On the Austrians concentrating towards the Elbe, 
Frederick gradually drew his army north-westward along the 
edge of the mountain country until on the 1st of June it was 
near Schweidnitz. At that date the Austro-Saxons were ad- 
vancing (very slowly owing to the poorness of the roads and 
the dilatoriness of the Saxon artillery train) from Waldenburg 



HOHENFRIEDBERG 



57i 



and Landshut through the mountain*, beading for Striegau. 
After a few minor skirmishes at the end of May, Frederick had 
made up his mind to offer no opposition to the passage of the 
Allies, but to fall upon them as they emerged, and the Prussian 
army was therefore kept concentrated out of sight, while only 
selected officers and patrols watched the debouches of the 
mountains. On the other hand the Allies had no intention of 
delivering battle, but meant only, on emerging from the 
mountains, to take up a suitable camping position and thence 
to interpose between Breslau and the king, believing- that " the 
king was at his wits' end, and, once the army really began its 
retreat on Breslau, there would be frightful consternation in 
its ranks." But in fact, as even the coolest observers noticed, 
the Prussian army was in excellent spirits and eager for the 
" decisive affair " promised by the king. On the 3rd of June, 
watched by the invisible patrols, the Austrian* and Saxons 
emerged from the hills at Hohenfriedberg with bands playing 
and colours flying. Their advanced guard of infantry and 
cavalry spread out into the plain, making for a line of hills 
spreading north-west from Striegau, where the army was to 



encamp. But the mam body moved slowly, and at last Prince 
Charles and Weissenfels decided to put off the occupation of 
the line of hills till the morrow. The army bivouacked therefore 
in two separate wings, the Saxons (with a few Austrian regiments) 
between Guntbersdorf and Pilgramshain, the Austrians near 
Hausdorf. They were about 70,000 strong, Frederick 65,000. 

The king had made his arrangements in good time, aided by 
the enemy's slowness, and in the evening he issued simple orders 
to move. About 9 p.m. the Prussians marched off from Alt- 
Jauernigk towards Striegau, the guns on the road, the infantry 
and cavalry, in long open columns of companies and squadrons, 
over the fields on either side — a night march well remembered 
by contrast with others as having been executed in perfect 
order. Meanwhile General Dumoulin, who commanded an 
advanced detachment between Striegau and Stanowitz, broke 
camp silently and moved into position below the hill north-west 
of Striegau, which was found to be occupied by Saxon light 
infantry outposts. The king's orders were for Dumoulin and 
the right wing of the main army to deploy and advance towards 
Haslicht against the Saxons, and for the left wing infantry to 
prolong the tine from the marsh to Gdnthersdorf, covered by 
the left-wing cavalry on the plain near Thomaswaldau. On 
the side of the Austrians, the outlying hussars are said to have 
noticed and reported the king's movement, for the night was 
dear and starlit, but their report, if mad*, was ignored. 

At 4 a.m. Dumoulin advanced on Pilgramshain, neglecting 
the fire of the Saxon outpost on the Spitzberg, whereupon 



this promptly retired in order to avoid being surrounded. 

Dumoulin then posted artillery on the slope of the hill and 

deployed his six grenadier battalions facing the village. The 

leading cavalry of the main army came up and deployed on 

Dumoulin's left front in open rolling ground. Meantime the 

duke of Weissenfels had improvised a line of defence, posting 

his infantry in the marshy ground and about Pilgramshain, 

and his cavalry, partly in front of Pilgramshain and partly on 

the intervening space, opposite that of the Prussians. But 

before the marshy ground was effectively occupied by the duke's 

infantry, his cavalry had been first shaken by the fire of 

Dumoulin's guns on the Spitzberg and a heavy battery that 

was brought up on to the GrSbener Fuchsberg, and then charged 

by the Prussian right-wing cavalry, and in the melee the Allies 

were gradually driven in confusion off the battlefield. The 

cavalry battle was ended by 6.30 A.K., by which time Dumoulin's 

grenadiers, stiffened by the line regiment Anhalt (the "Old 

Dessauer's " own), were vigorously attacking the garden hedges 

and walls of Pilgramshain, and the Saxon and Austrian infantry 

in the marsh was being attacked by Prince Dietrich of Dessau 

""' * ight wing of the king's infantry. The line infantry 

lays, however, did not work easily in bad ground, 

Saxons were steady and well drilled. After an 

ht, well supported by the guns and continually 

as the rest of the army closed up, the prince 

the enemy from the marsh, while Dumoulin 

light troops out of Pilgramshain. By 7 km, the 

raiing the left wing of the allied army, were in 

t. 

lis allies were being defeated, Prince Charles of 
had done nothing, believing that the cannonade 
ly an outpost affair for the possession of the 
His generals indeed had drawn out their 
commands in order of battle, the infantry south 
tersdorf, the cavalry near Thomaswaldau, but 
no authority to advance without orders, and 
dive, while, x m. away, the Prussian columns 
ting over the Striegau Water. This phase of 
; advance was the most delicate of all, and the 
that he heard from Prince Dietrich that the 
s captured he stopped the northward flow of his 
and swung them westward, the left wing cavalry 
< cover their deployment. But when one-third 
ivalry only had crossed at Tekhau the bridge 
broke, for a time the advanced squadrons were in great 
danger. But they charged boldly, and a disjointed cavalry 
battle began, during which (Ziethen's hussars having dis- 
covered a ford) the rest of the left-wing cavalry was able to 
cross. At last 25 intact squadrons under Lieut.- General von 
Nassau charged and drove the Austrians in disorder towards 
Hohenfriedberg. This action was the more creditable to the 
victors in that 45 squadrons in 3 separate fractions defeated a 
mass of 60 squadrons that stood already deployed to meet them. 
Meanwhile the Prussiin infantry columns of the centre and 
left had crossed Striegau Water and deployed to their left, and 
by 8.30 they were advancing on Gdnthersdorf and the Austrian 
infantry south of that place. Frederick's purpose was to roll 
up the enemy from their inner flank, and while Prince Dietrich, 
with most of the troops that had forced the Saxons out of the 
marsh, pursued Weissenfels, two regiments of his and one of 
Dumoulin's were brought over to the left wing and sent against 
the north side of Gdnthersdorf. In the course of the general 
forward movement, which was made in what was for those 
days a very irregular line, a wide gap opened up between the 
centre and left, behind which 10 squadrons of the Bayreuth 
dragoon regiment, with Lieut .-General von Gessler, took up 
their position. Thus the line advanced. The grenadiers on the 
extreme left cleared Thomaswaldau, and their fire galled the 
Austrian squadrons engaged in the cavalry battle to the south. 
Then GOnthersdorf. attacked on three sides, was also evacuated 
by the enemy. But although Frederick rode back from the 
front saying " the battle is won," the Prussian infantry, in spite 



57? 



HOHENHEIM— HOHENLOHE 



of its superior fire discipline, failed for some time to master the 
defence, and suffered heavily from the eight dose-range volleys 
they received, one or two regiments losing 40 and 50 % of their 
strength. The Austrians, however, suffered still more; feeling 
themselves isolated in the midst of the victorious enemy, they 
began to waver, and at the psychological moment Gessler and 
the Bayreuth dragoons charged into their ranks and " broke 
the equilibrium." These 1 500 sabres scattered twenty battalions 
of the enemy and brought in 3500 prisoners and 66 Austrian 
colours, and in this astounding charge they themselves lost no 
more than 94 men. By nine o'clock the battle was over, and 
the wrecks of the Austro-Saxon army were retreating to the 
mountains. The Prussians, who had been marching all night, 
were too far spent to pursue. 

The loss of the allies was in all 15,224, 7985 killed and wounded* 
and 7239 prisoners, as well as 72 guns and 83 standards and colours. 
The Prussians lost 4666 killed and wounded, 71 missing. 

HOHENHEIM, a village of Germany, in the kingdom of 
Wflrttemberg, 7 m. $. of Stuttgart by rail Pop. 300. It came 
in 1768 from the counts of Hohenheim to the dukes of Wflrttem- 
berg, and in 1785 Duke Karl Eugen built a country house here. 
This house with grounds is now the seat of the most important 
agricultural college in Germany; it was founded in 1817, was 
raised to the position of a high school in 1865, and now ranks 
as a technical high school with university status. 

See Frohlich, Das Schloss und die Akademie Hohenheim (Stuttgart, 
1870). 

H0HENLIMBUR6, a town of Germany, on the Lenne, in 
the Prussian prov. of Westphalia, 30 m. by rail S.E. of Dortmund. 
Pop. (1005) 12,700. It has two Evangelical churches, a Roman 
Catholic church and a synagogue. The town is the seat of various 
iron and metal industries, while dyeing, cloth-making and .linen- 
weaving are also carried on here. It is the chief town of the. 
county of Limburg, and formerly belonged to the counts of 
Limburg, a family which became extinct in 1508. Later it 
passed to the counts of Benthcim-Tecklenburg. The castle of 
Hohenlimburg, which overlooks the town, is now the residence 
of Prince Adolf of Bentheim-Tecklenburg. 

HOHENLOHE, a German princely family which took its name 
from the district of Hohenlohe in Franconia. At first a count- 
ship, its two branches were raised to the rank of principalities 
of the Empire in 1744 and 1764 respectively; in 1806 they 
lost their independence and their lands now form part of the 
kingdoms of Bavaria and of Wflrttemberg. At the time of 
the mediatizatioo the area of Hohenlohe was 680 sq. m. and its 
estimated population was 108,000. The family is first mentioned 
in the 12th century as possessing the castle of Hohcnloch, or 
Hohenlohe, near Uffenheim, and its influence was soon perceptible 
in several of the Franconian valleys, including those of the 
Kocher, the Jagst and the Tauber. Henry I. (d. 1183) was the 
first to take the title of count of Hohenldbe, and in 1230 his 
grandsons, Gottfried and Conrad, supporters of the emperor 
Frederick II., founded the lines of Hohenlohe— Hohenlohe and 
Hohenlohe-Brauneck, names taken from their respective castles. 
The latter became extinct in 1300, its lands passing later to 
Brandenburg, while the former was divided into several branches, 
only two of which, however, Hohenlohe-Weikersheim and 
Hohenlohe-Uffenheim-Speckfeld, need be mentioned here. 
Hohenlohe-Weikersheim, descended from Count Kraft I. 
(d. 1313), also underwent several divisions, that which took 
place after the deaths of Counts Albert and George in 1551 
being specially important. At this time the lines of Hohenlohe- 
Neuenstein and Hohenlohe-Waldenburg were founded by the 
sons of Count George. Meanwhile, in 1412, the family of 
Hohenlohe-Uffenheim-Speckfeld had become extinct, and its 
lands had passed through the marriages of its heiresses into 
other families. 

The existing branches of the Hohenlohe family are descended 
from the lines of Hohcnlohe-Neuenstein and Hohenlohe-Walden- 
burg, established in 1 ssi. The former of these became Pro- 
testant, while the latter remained Catholic. Of the family 
of Hohcnlohe-Neuenstein, which underwent several partitions 
and inherited Gldchen in 163 1, the senior line became extinct 



in 180$, while in 1761 the juntos line divided itself into time 
branches, those of Langenburg, Ingelfingen and Kirchbcrg. 
Kirchberg died out in 1861, but members of the families of 
Hohenlohe-Langenburg and Hohenldbe-Ingelnngen are stffl 
alive, the latter being represented by the branches of Hohenlohe- 
Ingelfingen and Hohenlohe-Obringen. The Roman Catholic 
family of Hohenlohe- Waldenburg was soon divided into three 
branches, but two of these had died out by 1720. The surviving 
branch, that of Schillingsfiirst, was divided into the lines of 
Hohenlohe^SchillingsfUrst and Hohenlohe-Bartenstem; other 
divisions followed, and the four existing lines of this branch of 
the family are those of Waldenburg, Schillings™ rst, Jagstbcrg 
and Bertenstein* The family of Hohcnlohe-Schillingsfurst pos- 
sesses the duchies of Ratibor and of Corbie inherited in 1824. 
The principal members of the family are dealt with below. 

I. Frixoricb Ludwio, prince of Hohenlohe-Ingelfingeft 
(1746-1818), Prussian general, was the eldest son of Prince 
Johann Friedrich (d. 1706) of Hebehiohe-Ingelfingen, and began 
his military career asa boy, serving against the Prussians in the 
last years of the Seven Yeas' War. Entering the Prussian army 
after the peace (1768), he was on account of his rank at once 
made major, and in 1775 he became lieutenant-colonel; in 177* 
he took part in the War of the Bavarian Succession and about 
the same time was made a colonel. Shortly before the death 
of Frederick the Great he was promoted to the rank of major- 
general and appointed chief of a regiment. For some years the 
prince did garrison duty at Breslau, until in 1 791 he was made 
governor of Berlin. In 1704 be commanded a corps in £he 
Prussian* army on the Rhine and distinguished himself greatly 
in many engagements, particularly in the battle of Kaisers- 
lautern on the 20th of September. He was at this time the 
most popular soldier in the Prussian army. BlGcber wrote of 
him that " he was a leader of whom the Prussian army might 
well be proud." He succeeded his father in the principality, 
and acquired additional lands by his marriage with a daughter 
of Count von Hoym. In 1806 Hohenlohe now a general of 
infantry, was appointed to command the left-wing army of the 
Prussian forces opposing Napoleon, having under him Prince 
Louis Ferdinand of Prussia; but, feeling that his career had 
been that of a prince and not that of a scientific soldier, he 
allowed his quartermaster-general Massenbach to influence 
him unduly. Disputes soon broke out between Hohenlohe and 
the commander-in-chief, the duke of Brunswick, the armies 
marched hither and thither without effective results, and finally 
Hohenlohe's army was almost destroyed by Napoleon at Jena 
(see Napohqnic Campaigns). The prince displayed his usual 
personal bravery in the battle, and managed to rally a portion 
of his corps near Erfurt, whence he retired into Prussia. But 
the pursuers followed him- up closely, and, still acting under 
Massenbach 's advice, he surrendered the remnant of his army 
at Prenzlao on the 28th of October, a fortnight after Jena and 
three weeks after the beginning of hostilities. Hohenlohe's 
former popularity and influence in the army had now the worst 
possible effect, for the commandants of garrisons everywhere 
lost heart and followed has example. After two years spent as 
a prisoner of war in France Hohenlohe retired to his estates, 
living in self-imposed obscurity until his death on the 15th of 
February 1818. He had, in August 1806, just before the out- 
break of the French War, resigned the principality to his eldest 
son, not being willing to become a " mediatised " ruler under 
Wiirttemberg suzerainty. 

II. Ludwig Aloysjus, prince of Hohenlohe-Waldenburg- 
Bartenstein (1765-1829), marshal and peer of France, was bora 
on the 1 8th of August 1765. In 1784 he entered the service of 
the Palatinate, which he. quitted in 1792 in order to take the 
command of a regiment raised by his father for the service 
of the emigrant princes of France. He greatly distinguished 
himself under Conde in the campaigns of 1792-1793, especially 
at the storming of the lines of Weissenburg. Subsequently he 
entered the service of Holland, and, when almost surrounded 
by the army of General Pichegru, conducted a masterly retreat 
from the island of Bommel. From 1704 to 1799 he served as 



HOHENLOHE 



573 



colonel in tbe Austrian campaigns; in 1709 be was named 
major-general by the archduke Charles; and after obtaining the 
rank of lieutenant-general he was appointed by the emperor 
governor of the two Galicias. Napoleon offered u> restore to 
him his principality on condition thai he adhered to tbe con* 
federation of the Rhine, but as he refused, it was united to 
Wurttemberg. After Napoleon's fall in 1814 he entered the 
French service, and in 181 5 he held the command of a regiment 
raised by himself, with which be took part in the Spanish 
Campaign of 1823. In 1827 be was created marshal and peer 
of France. He died at Luneville on tbe 30th of May 1820. 

IIL Alexander Leopold Feani Emmerich, prince of 
Hohenlohe - Waldenbarg - SchilUngsfUrst ( 1 704-1849)* priest 
and reputed miracle-worker, was bom at KupferzeU, near 
Waldenburg, on the 17th of August 1704- By his mother, the 
daughter of an Hungarian nobleman, he was from infancy 
destined for the church; and she entrusted his early education 
to the ex-Jesuit Riel. In 1804 he entered the " Theresianum " 
at Vienna, in 1808 the academy at Bern, in x8io the archi- 
episcopal seminary at Vienna, and afterwards he studied at 
Tyrniu and EUwangen. He was ordained priest in 181 5, and 
m the following year he went to Rome, where he entered the 
society of the " Fathers of the Sacred Heart-" Subsequently, 
at Munich and Bamberg, he was blamed for Jesuit and ob- 
scurantist tendencies, but obtained considerable reputation 
as a preacher. His first co-called miraculous cure was effected, 
in conjunction with a peasant, Martin Michel, on a princess of 
Schwarzenberg who had been for some years paralytic Im- 
mediately he acquired such fame as a performer of miraculous 
cures that multitudes from various countries flocked to partake 
of the beneficial influence of bis supposed supernatural gifts. 
Ultimately, on account of the interference of the authorities 
with his operations, he went in 182 1 to Vienna and then to 
Hungary, where he became canon at Grosswavdein and in 1844 
titular bishop of Sardica. He died at Voslau near Vienna on 
tbe 17th of November 1849. He was the author of a number 
of ascetic and controversial writings, which were collected and 
published in one edition by S. Brunner in 1851. 

IV. Kraft, prince of Hohenlohe- 1 ngelfingen (1827-1892), 
soldier and military writer, son of Prince Adolf of Hohenlohe- 
Ingelfingen (1 797-1873), was born at Koschentin in Upper 
Silesia. He was a nephew of the Prince Hohenlohe noticed 
above, who commanded the Prussians at Jena. Educated with 
great rigour, owing to the impoverishment of tbe family estates 
during the Napoleonic wars, he was sent into the Prussian 
army, and commissioned to the artillery at the least expensive 
arm of the service. He joined the Prussian Guard artillery in 
184s, and it was soon discovered that he had unusual aptitudes 
as an artilhry officer. For a time his brother officers resented 
the presence of a prince, until it was found that he made no 
attempt to use his social position to secure advancement After 
serving as a military attache* in Vienna and on the Tramylvanian 
frontier during the Crimean War, he was made a captain on the 
general staff, and in 1856 personal aide-de-camp to the king, 
remaining, however, in close touch with the artillery. In 1864. 
having become in the meanwhile successively major and lieut - 
colonel, he resigned the staff appointments to become commander 
of the new Guard Field Artillery regiment and in the following 
year he became colonel. In 1866 he saw his first real active 
service. In the bold advance of the Guard corps on the Austrian 
right wing at Kdniggratz (see Seven Weeks' War), he led the 
Guard reserve artillery with the greatest dash and success, and 
after the short war ended he turned his energies, now fortified 
by experience, to the better tactical training of tbe Prussian 
artillery. In 1868 he was made a major-general and assigned 
to command the Guard artillery brigade. In this capacity he 
gained great distinction during the Franco-German war and 
especially at Gravelotte and Sedan; he was in control of the 
artillery attack on the fortifications of Paris. In 1873 he was 
placed in command of an infantry division, and three years 
later was promoted lieutenant-general. He retired in 1879, 
was made general of infantry in 1883 and general of artillery 



in 1889. His military writings were numerous, and amongst 
them several have become classics. These are Btiefe uber 
Ariilterie (Ectg. trans. Letters em Artillery, 1887); Briefe Uber 
Stralegie (1877; Eog* trans. Letters en Strategy, 1898), and 
Gespraeke Uber Reiterei (1887; Eng. trans. Conversations en 
Cavalry). The Briefe 4iber 1 njanlerie and Bne/e uber Kavallerte 
(translated into English, Letters en Infantry, Letters en Cavalry, 
18S9) are of less importance, though interesting as a reflection 
of prevailing German ideas. His memoirs (Ausmeinem Leben) 
were prepared in retirement near Dresden, and the first volume 
(1807) created such a sensation that eight years were allowed 
to elapse before tbe publication was continued. Prince Kraft 
died near Dresden on the 16th of January 1892. (C. F. A.) 

V. Chlodwic Karl Victor, prince of Hohenlobe-Schillings- 
ftirst (1819-1901), statesman, was born on tbe 31st of March 
1819 at SchiUhtgsfttrst in Bavaria. His father, Prince Fran* 
Joseph (1787-1841), was • Catholic, his mother, Princess 
Konstanze of Hohenlohe-Langenburg, a Protestant. In accord- 
ance with tbe compromise customary at tbe time, Prince Chlodwig 
and his brothers were brought up in the religion of their father, 
wmle his sisters followed that of their mother. In spite of the 
difference of creed the family was very united, and it was to 
the spirit that rendered this possible that the prince owed his 
libera] and tolerant point of view, which was to exercise an 
Important influence on his politcal activity. As the younger 
son of a cadet line of his house it was necessary for Prince 
Chlodwig to follow a profession. For a while he thought of 
obtaining a commission in the British army through the in- 
fluence of his aunt, Princess Feodora of Hohenlohe-Langenburg 
(nie princess of Leiningen), Queen Victoria's half-sister. He 
decided, however, to enter tbe Prussian diplomatic service. 
His application to be excused the preliminary steps, which 
involved several years' work in subordinate positions in the 
Prussian civil service, was refused by Frederick William IV., 
and the prince, with great good sense, decided to sacrifice Ins 
pride of rank and to accept the king's conditions. As anscultator 
in the courts at Coblena he acquired a taste for jurisprudence, 
became a Rxfereninr in September 1843, and after some months 
of travel m France, Switzerland and Italy went to Potsdam 
as a civil servant (May 13, 1844). These early years were 
invaluable, not only as giving him experience of practical affairs 
but as affording him an insight into the strength and weakness 
of the Prussian system. The immediate result was to confirm 
his Liberalism. The Prussian principle of "propagating en- 
lightenment with a stick " did not appeal to him, he " recognized 
the confusion and want of dear ideas in the highest circles," 
the tendency to make agreement with the views of the govern- 
ment the test of loyalty to the state; and he noted in Ins 
journal (June 25, 1844) four years before the revolution of '48, 
" a slight cause and we shall have a rising/' " The free press," 
be notes on another occasion, "is a necessity, progress the 
condition of the existence of a state." If be was an ardent 
advocate of German unity, and saw in Prussia the instrument 
for its attainment, he was throughout opposed to the " Prussifica- 
lion " of Germany, and ultimately it was he who made the 
unification of Germany possible by insisting at once on the 
principle of union with the North German states and at tbe 
same time on the preservation of the individuality of the states 
of the South. 

On the 1 2th of November 1834 the landgrave Viktor Amadeus 
of Hessc-Rotenburg died, leaving to his nephews, the princes 
Viktor and Chlodwig Hohenlohe, his allodial estates: the duchy 
of Ratibor m SBesia, the principality of Corvey in Westphalia, 
and the lordship of Treffurt in the Prussian governmental 
district of Erfurt. On the death of Prince Franz Joseph on the 
14th of January 1841 it was decided that the principality of 
Schillingsfurst should pass to the third brother, Phillpp Ernst, 
as the two elder sons, Viktor and Chlodwig, were provided for 
already under their uncle's will, the one with the duchy of 
Ratibor, the other with Corvey and Treffurt. The youngest 
son, Gustav (b. February 28, 1823), the future cardinal, was 
destined for the Church. On the death of Prince Philipp Ernst 



57+ 



HOHENLOHE 



(May 3, 1845) a new arrangement was made: Prince Chlodwig 
became prince of Scbillingsfurst, while Corvey was assigned to 
the duke of Ratibor, Treffurt was subsequently sold by Prince 
Chlodwig, who purchased with the price large estates in Posen. 
This involved a complete change in Prince Cbtodwig's career. 
His new position as a " reiguing " prince and hereditary member 
of the Bavarian Upper House was incompatible with that of a 
Prussian official. On the 18th of April 1846 he took his seat 
as a member of the Bavarian Reicksratk, and on the 26th of 
June received his formal discbarge from the Prussian service. 

Save for the interlude of 1848 the political life of Prince 
Hohenlohe was for the next eighteen years not eventful. During 
the revolutionary years his sympathies were with the Liberal 
idea of a united Germany, and he compromised his chances of 
favour from the king of Bavaria by accepting the task (November 
1, 1848) of announcing to the courts of Rome, Florence and 
Athens the accession to office of the Archduke John of Austria 
as regent of Germany. But he was too shrewd an observer to 
hope much from a national parliament which " wasted time in 
idle babble," or from a democratic victory which had stunned 
but not destroyed the German military powers. On the 16th of 
February 1847 he had married the Princess Marie of Sayn- 
Wittgenstein-Berlcburg, the heiress to vast estates in Russia. 1 
This led to a prolonged visit to Werki in Lithuania (1851*1853) 
in connexion with the management of the property, a visit 
repeated in i860. In general this period of Hohenlohe 's life 
was occupied in the management of his estates, in the sessions 
of the Bavarian Reicksratk and in travels. In 1856 he visited 
Rome, during which he noted the baneful influence of the 
Jesuits. In 1859 he was studying the political situation at 
Berlin, and in the same year he paid a visit to England. The 
marriage of his brother Konstantin in 1850 to another princess 
of Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg led also to frequent visits to 
Vienna. Thus Prince Hohenlohe was brought into close touch 
with all the most Double people in Europe. At the same time, 
during this period (1850-1866) be was endeavouring to get 
into relations with the Bavarian government, with a view to 
taking a more active part in affairs. Towards the German 
question his attitude at this time was tentative. He had little 
hope of a practical realization of a united Germany, and 
inclined towards the tripartite divisions under Austria, Prussia 
and Bavaria— the so-called " Trias." He attended the Furslen- 
tag at Frankfort in 1863, and in the Schleswig-Holstein question 
was a supporter of the prince of Augustcnburg. It was at this 
time that, at the request of Queen Victoria, he began to send her 
regular reports on the political condition of Germany. 

Prince Hohenlohe'* importance in history, however, begins 
with the year 1866. In his opinion the war was a blessing. It 
had demonstrated the insignificance of the small and middle 
states, " a misfortune for the dynasties "—with whose feelings 
a mediatized prince could scarcely be expected to be over- 
sympathetic— but the best possible good fortune for the German 
nation. In the Bavarian Reicksratk Hohenlohe now began to 
make his voice heard in favour of a closer union with Prussia, 
dearly, if such a union were desirable, he was the man in every 
way best fitted to prepare the way for it. One of the main 
obstacles in the way was the temperament of Louis II. of Bavaria, 
whose ideas of kingship were very 'remote from those of the 
Hohenzollerns, whose pride revolted from any concession to 
Prussian superiority, and who— even during the crisis of 1866 — 
was more absorbed in operas than in affairs of state. Fortunately 
Richard Wagner was a politician as well as a composer, and 
equally fortunately Hohenlohe was a man of culture capable of 
appreciating " the master's "genius. It was Wagner, apparently, 
who persuaded the king to place Hohenlohe at the head of his 
government (DenkwurdigkeiUn, i. 178, 211), and on the 
31st of December i860 the prince was duly appointed minister 

1 Through her mother, tih Princess Stephanie Radztwill (d. 1832). 
Before Prince Wittgenstein's death (1887) anew law had forbidden 
foreigners to hold land in Russia. Prince Hohenlohe appear*, 
however, to have sold one of hi* wife's estates and to have secured 
certain privileges from the Russian court (or the rc*t. 



of the royal house and of foreign affairs and president of tin 
council of ministers. 

As head' of the Bavarian government Hobenlohe's principal 
task was to discover tome basis for an effective union of the 
South German states with the North German Confederation, 
and during the three critical years of his tenure of office he was, 
next to Bismarck, the most important statesman in Germany. 
He carried out the reorganization of the Bavarian army oa 
the Prussian model, brought about the military union of the 
southern states, and took a leading share in the creation of 
the customs parliament {Zollpcrlamait), of which on the 28th 
of April 1868 be was elected a vice-president. During the 
agitation that arose in connexion with the summoning of the 
Vatican council Hohenlohe took up an attitude of strong opposi- 
tion to the ultramontane position. In common with his brothers, 
the duke of Ratibor and the cardinal* he believed that the 
policy of Pius IX.— inspired by* the Jesuits (that "devil's 
society," as he oncecaOed it)— of setting the Church in opposition 
to the modern State would prove ruinous to both, and that the 
definition of the dogma of papal infallibility, by raising the 
pronouncements of the Syllabus of 1864 into articles of faith, 
would commit the Church to this policy irrevocably. Thai 
view he embodied into a circular note to the Catholic | 
(April 0, i86q), drawn up by Dollinger, inviting (hem to t 
the right of sending ambassadors to the council and to < 
to prevent the definition of the dogma. The greater powers, 
however, were tor one reason or another unwilling to intervene, 
and the only practical outcome of Hohenlohe's action was that 
in Bavaria the powerful ultramontane party combined against 
him with the Bavarian " patriots " who accused ram of bartering 
away Bavarian independence to Prussia. The combination 
was too strong for him; a bill which he brought in for curbing 
the influence of the Church over education was defeated, the 
elections of 1869 went against him, and in spite of the continued 
support of the king he was forced to resign (March 7, 1870). 

Though out of office, his personal influence continued very 
great both at Munich and Berlin and bad not a little to do with 
favourable terms of the treaty of the North German Confedera- 
tion with Bavaria, which embodied his views, and with its 
acceptance by the Bavarian parliament.* Ejected a member 
of the German Reichstag, he was on the 23rd of March 187 1 
chosen one of its vice-presidents, and was instrumental in found- 
ing the new groups which took the name of the Liberal Imperial 
party (Liberal* Racks per let), the objects of which were to support 
the new empire, to secure its internal development on Liberal 
lines, and to oppose clerical aggression as r e p r ese n ted by the 
Catholic Centre. Like the duke of Ratibor, Hohenlohe was 
from the first a strenuous supporter of Bismarck's anti-papal 
policy, the main lines of which (prohibition of the Society of 
Jesus, etc.) he himself suggested. Though sympathising with 
the motives of the Old Catholics, however, be realized that they 
were doomed to sink into a powerless sect, and did not join 
them, believing that the only hope for a reform of the Church 
lay in those who desired it remaining in her communion.' In 
1872 Bismarck proposed to appoint Cardinal Hohenlohe 
Prussian envoy al the Vatican, but his views were too much 
in harmony with those of his family, and the pope refused to 
receive him in this capacity. 4 

In 1873 Bismarck chose Prince Hohenlohe to succeed Count 
Harry Arnim as ambassador in Paris, where he remained for 
seven years. In 1878 he attended the congress of Berlin as 
third German representative, and in 1880, on the death of 
Bernhardt Ernst von Btilow (October ao), secretary of state for 
foreign affairs, he was called to Berlin as temporary bead of 
the Foreign Office and representative of Bismarck during his 

* Speech of December 30, 1870, in the Reicksratk. Drnkwirdif- 
keiten, it. 36 

• " If I wished to leave the Church because of all the scandalous 
occurrences in the Catholic Church, 1 should have had to secede 
while studying Churrh history," ot. cil. ik 92. 

• Dr Johann Friedrich (?.».). afterwards one of the Old Catholic 
lender*, wa* hi« vcretarv at the time of the Vatican council, and 
supplied historical and theological material to the opposition bis h op*. 



HOHENSTAUFEN— HOHENZOLLERN 



575 



absence through illness. In 1885 he was chosen to succeed 
Manteuffel as governor of Alsace-Lorraine. In thia capacity 
he had to carry out the coercive measures introduced by the 
chancellor in 1887-1888, though be largely disapproved of them; 1 
his conciliatory disposition, however, did much to reconcile 
the Abace-Lorrainers to German rule. He remained at Slrass- 
burg till October 1804, when, at the urgent request of the emperor, 
he consented, in spite of his advanced years, to accept the 
chancellorship In succession to Caprivi. The events of his 
chancellorship belong to the general history of Germany <?.?.); 
as regards the inner history of this time the editor of his memoirs 
has very properly suppressed the greater part of the detailed 
comments which the prince left behind him. In general, during 
his term of office, the personality of the chancellor was less 
conspicuous in public affairs than In the case of either of hb 
predecessors. His appearances in the Prussian and German 
parliaments were rare, and great independence was left to the 
secretaries of state. What influence the tact and exper i enc e 
of Hohenlohe exercised behind the scenes on the masterful 
will and impulsive character of the emperor cannot as yet be 
generally known. 

Prince Hohenlohe resigned the chancellorship on the 17th of 
October 1000, and died at Ragaz on the 6th of July 1001. 
On the i6th of February 1897 he had celebrated his golden 
wedding; on the a 1st of December of the same year the princess 
died. There were six children of the marriages Elizabeth 
(b. 1847); Stephanie (b. 1851); Philipp Ernst, reigning prince 
of Hohenlohe-Schilungsfurst (b. 1853), who married Princess 
Charietet Ypsilanti; Albert (1857-1866); Moriu and Alexander, 
twins (b. 1863). 

All other authorities for the life of Prince Hohenlohe have been 
superseded by the DenkwArditkeiten (2 vols., Stuttgart and Leipzig, 
1906). With the exception noted above these are singularly full 
andoutspoken, the latter quality causing no little scandal in Germany 
and bringing down on Prince Alexander, who wes responsible for 
their publication, the disfavour of the emperor. They form not only 
the record of a singularly full and varied life* but are invaluable to 
the historian for the wealth of material they contain and for apprecia- 
tions of men and events by an observer who had the best opportunities 
for forming a judgment. The prince himself they reveal not only as 
a capable man of affairs, though falling short of greatness, but as a 
personality of singular charm, tenacious of hb principles, tolerant, 
broad-minded, and possessed ot a large measure of the saving grace 
of humour. 

See generally A. F. Fbchcr, Gesckichte des Houses Hohenlohe (1866- 
1871): K. Welter, Hohenlohixhes Vrhmdenbmch, 1153-1350 (Stutt- 
gart, 1899-1901), and GesckUht* des Haust$ Hokeniohe (Stuttgart. 
1904). (W.A.P.;C.F.A.) 

HOHENSTAUFEN, the name of a village and ruined castle 
near Lorsch in Swabia, now in the kingdom of Wurttemberg, 
which gave its name to a celebrated Swabian family, members 
of which were emperors or German kings from 1138 to iao8, 
and again from 1214 to 1254. The earliest known anoestor 
was Frederick, count of BUren (d. 1094), whose son Frederick 
built a castle at Staufen, or Hohenstaufen, and called himself 
by this name. He was a firm supporter of the emperor Henry 
IV., who rewarded hb fidelity by granting him the dukedom 
of Swabia in 1079, and giving him his daughter Agnes in 
marriage. In 1081 he remained in Germany as Henry's repre- 
sentative, but only secured possession of Swabia after a struggle 
lasting twenty years. In 1105 Frederick was succeeded by hb 
son Frederick IT., called the One-eyed, who, together with hb 
brother Conrad, afterwards the German king Conrad III., 
held south-west Germany for their uncle the emperor Henry V. 
Frederick inherited the estates of Henry V. in 1125, but failed 
to secure the throne, and took up an attitude of hostility towards 
the new emperor, Lothair the Saxon, who claimed some of the 
estates of the late emperor as crown property. A war broke 
out and ended in the complete submission of Frederick at 
Bamberg. He retained, however, hb dukedom and estates. 
In 1138 Conrad of Hobenstaufen was elected German king, 

1 He protested against the passport system as likely to lead to a 
war with France, for which he preferred not to be responsible (Letter 
to Wilmowski. Denkw. ii. 433), but on the chancellor taking full 
responsibility consented to retain office. 



and was succeeded in 115a, not by hb son but by hb nephew 
Frederick Barbarossa, son of hb brother Frederick (d. 1147). 
Conrad's son Frederick inherited the duchy of Franconia which 
hb father had received in ins, and this was retained by the 
Hobenstaufen until the death of Duke Conrad II. in 1196. In 
u$a Frederick received the duchy of Swabia from hb cousin 
the German king Frederick I., and on hb death in 1 167 it passed 
successively to Frederick's three sons Frederick, Conrad and 
Philip. The second Hobenstaufen emperor was Frederick 
Barbarossa's son, Henry VI., after whose death a struggle for 
the throne took place between Henry's brother Philip, duke 
of Swabia, and Otto of Brunswick, afterwards the emperor 
Otto IV. Regained for the Hohenstaufen by Henry's son, 
Frederick II., in 1214, the German kingdom passed to hb son, 
Conrad IV., and when Conrad's son Conradin was beheaded in 
Italy in 1268, the male line of the Hohenstaufen became extinct. 
Daughters of Phih'p of Swabia married Ferdinand III., king of 
Castile and Leon, and Henry II., duke of Brabant , and a daughter 
of Conrad, brother of the emperor Frederick I., married into the 
family of Guelph. The castle of Hohenstaufen was destroyed 
in the.ioth centory during the Peasants' War, and only a few 
fragments now remain. 

See F. von Raumer, Ceschichte der Hohenstaufen und ihrer Zeti 
(Leipzig, 1878); B. F. W. Zimmermann, Ceschichte der Hohenstaufen 
(Stuttgart, 1st ed., 1838; and ed., 1865); F. W. Schirrmacher, Die 
UUien Hohenstaujem (Gottingen, 1871). 

BOHENSTEm (Hohenstein-Ernstthal), a town of Germany, 
in the kingdom of Saxony, on the slopes of the Ersgebirge, and 
on the railway Rekhenbach-Chemnitz, ta m. N.E. of Zwickau. 
Pop. (1905) 13,903* Hohenstein possesses two fine Evangelical 
churches, a town hall, restored in 1876, and several monu- 
ments to famous men. The principal industries are the 
spinning and weaving of cotton, the manufacture of machines, 
stockings, gloves and woollen and silk fabrics, cotton 
printing and dyeing. Many of the inhabitants are also 
employed in the neighbouring copper and arsenic mines. 
Not far from Hohenstein there b a mineral spring, con- 
nected with which there are various kinds of baths. Hohen- 
stein b the birthplace of the physicist G. H. von Schubert 
and of C. G. Schroter (1609-1782), one of the inventors of the 
pianoforte. Hohenstein consists of two towns, Hohenstein 
and Ernstthal, which were united in 1898. 

Another place of the same name b a town in East Prussia. 
Pop. (1000) 2467. This Hohenstein, which was founded by the 
Teutonic Order in 13 $9 , has a Roman Catholic and an Evangelical 
church, a synagogue and several educational establishments. 

HOHENZOLLERM, the name of a castle which stood on the 
hill of Zollern about i| m. south of Hechingen, and gave its 
name to the family to which the present German emperor 
belongs. A vague tradition connects the house with the Cotonna 
family of Rome, or the. Colalto family of Lombardy; but one 
more definite unites the Hobenzollerns with the Burkhardingers, 
who were counts in Raetia during the early part of the 10th 
century, and two of whom became dukes of Swabia. Tassilo, 
a member of this family, b said to have built a castle at Zollern 
early in the 9th century; but the first historical mention of 
the name b in the Chronica* of a certain Berthold (d. 1088), 
who refers to Burkhard and Wezil, or Werner, of Zollern, or 
Zolorin. These men appear to have been counts of Zollern, and 
to have met their death in 1061. The family of Wezil died out 
in 1 104, and the existing branches of the HohenzoUerns are 
descended from Burkhard and hb son Frederick, whose eldest 
son, Frederick II., was in great favour with the German kings, 
Lothair the Saxon and Conrad IIL Frederick II. died about 
1 »45» and hb son and successor, Frederick III., was a constant 
supporter of the Hohenstaufen. This count married Sophia, 
daughter and heiress of Conrad, burgrave of Nuremberg, and 
about 119a he succeeded hb father-in-law as burgrave, obtaining 
also some lands in Austria and Franconia. He died about 1200, 
and hb sons, Conrad and Frederick, ruled their lands in common 
until 1227, when an important division took place. Conrad 
became burgrave of Nuremberg, and, receiving the lands which 



3?6 



HOHENZOLLERN 



bad come into the family through his mother, founded the 
Franconian branch of the family, which became the more im- 
portant of the two; while Frederick, receiving the county of 
Zollern and the older possessions of the family, was the ancestor 
of the Swabian branch. 

Early in the x 2th century Burkhard, a younger son of Frederick 
I., secured the county of Hohenberg, and this district remained 
in the possession of the HohenaoUems until the death of Count 
Sigismund in i486. Its rulers, however, with the exception of 
Count Albert II. (d. 1 208), played an unimportant port in German 
history. Albert, who was a Minnesinger, was loyal to the 
declining fortunes of the Hohenstaufen, and afterwards supported 
his brother-in-law, Rudolph of Habsburg, in his efforts to obtain 
the German throne. He shared in the campaigns of Rudolph 
and fell in battle in 1208, during the struggle between Adolph 
of Nassau and Albert of Habsburg (afterwards King Albert IX 
When this family became extinct in i486 Hohenberg passed to 
the Habsburgs. 

The Franconian branch of the Hobenxouerns was represented 
in 1227 by Conrad, burgrave of Nuremberg, whom the emperor 
Frederick II. appointed guardian of his son Henry, and admi- 
nistrator of Austria. After a short apostasy, during which 
he supported Henry Raspe, landgrave of Thuringia, Conrad 
returned to the side of the Hohenstaufen and aided Conrad IV. 
He died in 1261, when his son and successor, the burgrave 
Frederick III., had already obtained Bayreuth through his 
marriage with Elizabeth, daughter of Otto of Meran (d. 1134). 
Frederick took a leading part in German affairs, and it is interest* 
ing to note that he had a considerable share in securing Use 
election of bis uncle, Rudolph of Habsburg, as German king 
in 1273. He died in 1207 and was succeeded by his son, Frederick 
IV. This burgrave fought for King Albert L in Thuringia, 
and Supported Henry VII. in his efforts to secure Bohemia for 
his son John; but in 13 14, forsaking bis father's policy, be 
favoured Louis, afterwards the emperor Louis IV., in his 
struggle with Frederick, duke of Austria, and by his conduct 
at the battle of Muhldorf in 1322 and elsewhere earned the 
designation of " saviour of the empire." Frederick, however, 
did not neglect his hereditary lands. He did something for the 
maintenance of peace and the security of traders, gave corporate 
privileges to villages, and took the Jews under his protection. 
His services to Louis were rewarded in various ways, and, using 
part of bis wealth to increase the area of his possessions, he bought 
the town and district of Ansbach in 1331. Dying in 1332, 
Frederick was succeeded by his son, John II., who, after one of 
his brothers had died and two others had entered the church, 
ruled his lands in common with his brother Albert. About 
1338 John bought Culmbach and Plassenburg, and on the strength 
of a privilege granted to him in 1347 he seized many robber- 
fortresses and held the surrounding lands as imperial fiefs. In 
general he continued his father's policy, and when he died in 
13 S7 was succeeded by his son, Frederick V,, who, after the death 
of his uncle Albert in 1361, became sole ruler of Nuremberg, 
Ansbach and Bayreuth. Frederick lived in close friendship 
with the emperor Charles IV., who formally invested him with 
Ansbach and Bayreuth and made him a prince of the empire 
in 1.363. In spite of the troubled times in which he lived, 
Frederick was a successful ruler, and introduced a regular system 
of public finance into his lands. In 1397 he divided his territories 
between his sons John and Frederick, and died in the following 
year. His eider son, John HI., who had married Margaret, a 
daughter of the emperor Charles IV., was frequently in the 
company of his brothers-in-law, the German kings Wenceslaus 
and Sigismund. He died without sons in 1420. 

Since 1397 the office of burgrave of Nuremberg had been held 
by John's brother, Frederick, who in 1415 received Brandenburg 
from King Sigismund, and became margrave of Brandenburg 
as Frederick I. (q.v.). On his brother's death in 1420 he reunited 
the lands of his branch of the family, but in 1427 he sold his 
rights as burgrave to the town of Nuremberg. The subsequent 
history of this branch of the Hohenzollcrns is identified with 
that of Brandenburg from 141s to 1701, and with that of Prussia 



since the latter date, as in this year the elector Frederick HI. 
became king of Prussia. la 1871 William, the seventh king, 
took the title of German emperor. While the electorate of 
Brandenburg passed according to the rule of primogeniture, 
the Franconian possessions of the HohensoUerns, Ansbach and 
Bayreuth, were given as appanages to younger sons, an arrange- 
ment which was confirmed by the disposilio Achillea of 14 71* 
These principalities were ruled by the sons and descendants of 
the ejector Albert Achilles from 1486 to 1003; and, after 
reverting: to the elector of Brandenburg, by the descendants 
of the elector John George from 1603 to 1791. In 1791 Prince 
Charles Alexander (d, 1806), who had inherited both districts, 
sold his lands to Prussia. 

The influence of the Swabian branch of the HohenaoUerns 
was weakened by several partitions of its lands; but .early in 
the 16th century it rose to some eminence through Count Eitel 
Frederick II. (d. 151a), a friend and adviser of the emperor 
Maximilian L Eitel received from this emperor the district of 
Haigerloch, and in 1534 his grandson Charles (d. 1576) was 
granted the counties of Sigmaringen and Vonringen by the 
emperor Charles V. In 1576 the sons of Charles divided their 
lands, and founded three branches of the family, one of which 
is still flourishing. Eitel Frederick IV. took HohenaoUem with 
the title of Hohetuouem-Hechiogen; Charles II. Sigmaringea 
and Vdhringen and the title of Hohenxollern-Sigmaringen; 
and Christopher took Haigerloch. Christopher's family died 
out in 1634, but the remaining lines are of some importance. 
Count John George of Hohenrollern-Hcchingen was made a 
prince in 1623, and John of Hohenconern-Sigmaringen soon 
received the same honour. In 169s these two branches of the 
family entered conjointly into an agreement with Brandenburg, 
which provided that, in case of the extinction of either of the 
Swabian branches, the remaining branch should inherit its 
lands; and if both branches became extinct the principalities 
should revert to Brandenburg. During the 17th and 18th 
centuries and during the period of the Napoleonic wars the 
history of these lands was very similar to that of the other 
small estates of Germany. In consequence of the political 
troubles of 1848 Princes Frederick William of HohenxoUern- 
Hechingen and Charles Anton pf HohenzoUern*Sigmaringea 
resigned their principalities, and accordingly these fell to the 
king of Prussia, who took possession on the 12th of March 1850. 
By a royal decree of the 20th of May following the title of " high- 
ness," with the prerogatives of younger sons of the royal house, 
was conferred on the two princes. The proposal to raise Prince 
Leopold of Hoh«zollern-Sigmaringen( 1835-1905) to the Spanish 
throne in 1870 was the immediate cause of the war between 
France and Germany. In 1908 the head of this branch of the 
HobenaoBerns, the only one existing besides the imperial house 5 , 
was Leopold's son William (b. 1864), who, owing to the extinction 
of the family of Hohenzollern-Hcchtngen in 1869, was called 
simply prince of HohrnzoRcm. In 1866 Prince Charles of 
Hohenzollefh-Sigmaringen was chosen prince of Rumania, 
becoming king in 1881. 

The modern Prussian province of Hohen2olJcrn is a long, 
narrow strip of territory bounded on the S.W. by Baden and 
in other directions by Wurttcmberg. It was divided into two 
principalities, Hohenrallern-Sigmaringen and Hohenzollcm. 
Hechingen, until 1850, when these were united. They now 
form the government of Sigmaringen (qt.). 

The castle of Hohenzollern was destroyed in r4 23, but it has 
been restored several times. Some remains of the old buiMing 
may still be seen adjoining the present castle, which was buih 
by King Frederick William IV. 

See Monxmenta ZoUerano, edited by R. von StiUfried and T. 
Marker (Berlin, 1852-1890); Quelle* und Untenwktmt** ar 
Gesehuhle des Houses Hohenzollern, edited by E. Berner (Bcrtia. 
1901 fol.); R. von StiUfried. Altertumer und KunsldenkmaU des 
eriauchlen Houses von HoUeniotlern (Berlin. 1852-1867) and 
Stammtafdn des Cesamthauses Hokenzollem (Berlin, 1869); L. 
Schmid, Die oltesU Geschhhle des eriauchlen Gesamihauses des 
kdntttuhen und fUtsttkhen Hohenzollern (Tubingen. 1&84-18S8); 
E. Schwartz. StammUxfel des preussiscken Kdnigskauset (Breslaa 



HOKKAIDO— HOLBEIN 



577 



1898); Hohenaotternseke Porschumgen, Jahrbnck fir die Gesehickte der 
HahensoUern, edited by C. Meyer (Berlin, 1 891-1902); HohentoUem 
JaMrbuch, Forschungcn und Aobildungen tur Gesehickte der Hohen- 
tollern in Brandenburg-Prtussen, edited by Seidel (Leipzig, 1897- 
1903), and T. Cariyle, History of Frederick the Great (London, 1872- 
1873). (A. W. H.») 

HOKKAIDO, the Japanese name for the northern division 
of the empire (Hoku = north, *ai= sea, and do** road), including 
Yezo, the Ruriles and their adjacent islets. 

HOKUSAI (1 760-1849), the greatest of all the Japanese painters 
of the Popular School (Ukiyo-ye), was born at Ycdo (Tokyo) 
in the 9th month of the 10th year of the period Horeki, i.e. 
October- November 1760. He came of an artisan family, his 
father having been a mirror-maker, Nakajiraa Issai. After 
some practice as a wood-engraver he, at the age of eighteen, 
entered the studio of Katsugawa Shunshd, a painter and 
designer of colour-prints of considerable importance. His dis- 
regard for the artistic principles of his master caused his expul- 
sion in 17S5; and thereafter — although from time to time 
Hokusai studied various styles, including especially that of 
Shiba Gokan, from whom he gained some fragmentary knowledge 
of European methods — he kept his personal independence. 
For a time he lived in extreme, poverty, and, although he must 
have gained sums for his work which might have secured him 
comfort, he remained poor, and to the end of his life proudly 
described himself as a peasant. He illustrated large numbers 
of books, of which the world-famous Mangwa, a pictorial ency- 
clopaedia of Japanese life, appeared in fifteen volumes from 
181 2 to 1875. Of his colour-prints the "Thirty-six Views of 
Mount Fuji " (the whole set consisting of forty-six prints) were 
made between 1823 and 1829; "Views of Famous Bridges" 
(11), "Waterfalls" (8), and "Views of the Lu-chu Islands" 
(3), are the best known of those issued fn series; but Hokusai 
also designed some superb broadsheets published separately, 
and his surimono (small prints made for special occasions and 
ceremonies) are unequalled for delicacy and beauty. The 
" Hundred Views of Mount Fuji " (1834-1835), 3 vols., in 
monochrome, are of extraordinary originality and variety. 
As a painter and draughtsman Hokusai is not held by Japanese 
critics to be of the first rank, but this verdict has never been 
accepted by Europeans, who place him among the greatest 
artists of the world. He possessed great powers of observation 
and characterization, a singular technical skill, an unfailing 
gift of good humour, and untiring industry. He was an eager 
student to the end of his long life, and on his death-bed said, 
" If Heaven had lent me but five years more, I should have 
become a great painter." He died on the 10th of May 1849. 

See E. de Goncourt, Hokousal (1896); M. Rcvon, £tude sur 



Hokusai (1896); E. F. Fcnollosa, Catalogue of the Exhibition of 
«... ."T:. . .-... ">*«io. (1906). 

(E.F.S) 



Paintings by Hokusai at Tdkyd (1901); E. F. Strange, Hokusai (n 



HOLBACH. PAUL HHNRICH DIETRICH, Baron d' (1723- 
1789), French philosopher and man of letters, of German origin, 
was bom at Heidelsheim fn the palatinate in 1 7 23. Of his family 
little is known; according to J. J. Rousseau his father was a 
rich parvenu, who brought his son at an early age to Paris, 
where the latter spent most of his life. Much of Holbacb/s fame 
is due to his intimate connexion with the brilliant coterie of 
bold thinkers and polished wits whose creed, the new philosophy, 
Is concentrated in the famous Encyclopedic. Possessed of easy 
means and being of hospitable disposition, he kept open house 
for Helvetius, D'Alcmbert, Diderot, Condillac, Turgot, Buffon, 
Grimm, Hume, Garrick, Wilkes, Sterne, and for a time J. J. 
Rousseau, guests who, while enjoying the intellectual pleasure 
of their host's conversation, were not insensible to his excellent 
ruisine and costly wines. For the Encyclopedic he compiled 
and translated a large number of articles on chemistry and 
mineralogy, chiefly from German sources. He attracted more 
attention, however, in the department of philosophy. In 1767 
Ckristionistnc dtvoiU appeared, in which he attacked Christianity 
and religion as the source of all human evils. This was followed 
up by other works, and in 1770 by a still more open attack in 
his most famous book, Le Systemc de la nature, in which it 
xni. 11 



is probable he was assisted by Diderot. Denying the existence 
of a deity, and refusing to admit as evidence all a priori arguments, 
Holbach taw in the universe nothing save matter in spontaneous 
movement. What men call their souls become extinct when 
the body dies. Happiness is the end of mankind. " It would 
be useless and almost unjust to insist upon a man's being virtuous 
if he cannot be so without being unhappy. So long as vice 
renders him happy, he should love vice." The restraints of 
religion were to be replaced by an education developing an 
enlightened self-interest. The study of science was to bring 
human desires into line with their natural surroundings. Not 
less direct and trenchant are his attacks on political government, 
which, interpreted by the light of after events, sound like the 
first distant mutterings of revolution. Holbach exposed the 
logical consequences of the theories of the Encyclopaedist*. 
Voltaire hastily seised his pen to refute the philosophy of the 
Systemc in the article " Dieu " in his Diciionnairt philosophique, 
while Frederick the Great also drew up an answer to it. Though 
vigorous in thought and in some passages dear and eloquent, 
the style of the System* is diffuse and declamatory, and asserts 
rather than proves its statements. Its principles are summed 
up in a more popular form in Bon Sens, on idies naiunUes 
opposHs anx idies snrnatnrdles (Amsterdam, 1772). In the 
Systeme social (1773), the Politique nalnreUe (1773-1774) and 
the Morale unmrsetie (1776) Holbach attempts to rear a system 
of morality in place of the one he had so fiercely attacked, but 
these later writings had not a tithe of the popularity and influence 
of his earlier work. He published his books either anonymously 
or under borrowed names, and was forced to have them printed 
oat of France. The uprightness and sincerity of his character 
won the friendship of many to whom his philosophy was repug- 
nant. J. J. Rousseau is supposed to have drawn his portrait 
in the virtuous atheist Wolmar of the Nouoelk Htidu. He 
died on the 21st of January 1789. 

Bt 
di 
Pt 
en 

ae< 

d* 
Di 
(1878;. 

HOLBBACH, a market town in the Holland or Spalding 
parliamentary division of Lincolnshire, England, on the 
Midland and Great Northern Joint railway, 23$ m. N.E. of 
Peterborough. Pop. of urban district (1001), 4755. All Saints' 
Church, with a lofty spire, is a fine specimen of late Decorated 
work. The grammar school, founded in 1669, occupies a building 
erected in 1877. Other public buildings are' the assembly 
rooms and a market house. Roman and Saxon remains have 
been found, and the market dates from the 13th century. 

HOLBEIN, HANS, the elder (c. 1460-1524), belonged to a 
celebrated family of painters in practice at Augsburg and Basel 
from the close of the 15th to the middle of the xoth century. 
Though closely connected with Venice by her commercial 
relations, and geographically nearer to Italy than to Flanders, 
Augsburg at the time of Maximilian cultivated art after the 
fashion of the Flemings, and felt the influence of the schools 
of Bruges and Brussels, which had branches at Cologne and in 
many cities about the headwaters of the Rhine. It was not 
till after the opening of the 16th century, and between that 
and the era of the Reformation, that Italian example mitigated 
to some extent the asperity of South German painting. Flemish 
and German art was first tempered with Italian elements at 
Augsburg by Hans Holbein the elder. Hans first appears at 
Augsburg as partner to his brother Sigismund, who survived 
him and died in 1540 at Berne. Sigismund is described as a 
painter, but his works have not come down to us. Hans had 
the lead of the partnership at Augsburg, and signed all the 
pictures which it produced. In common with Herlen, Schongauer, 
and other masters of South Germany, he first cultivated a style 

2a 



57» 



HOLBEIN 



akin to that of Memlinc and other followers of the schools of 
Brussels and Bruges, but he probably modified the systems 
of those schools by studying the works of the masters of Cologne. 
As these early impressions waned, they were replaced by other* 
less favourable to the expansion of the master's fame; and as 
his custom increased between 1499 and 1506, we find him relying 
less upon the teaching of the schools than upon a mere observa- 
tion and reproduction of the quaintnesses of local passion plays. 
Most of his early works indeed are taken from the Passion, and 
in these he obviously marshalled his figures with the shallow 
stage effect of the plays, copying their artificial system of group- 
ing, careless to some extent of proportion in the human shape, 
heedless of any but the coarser forms of expression, and technically 
satisfied with the simplest methods of execution/ If in any 
branch of bis art he can be said to have had a conscience at this 
period, we should say that he showed it in bis portrait drawings. 
It is seldom that we find a painted likeness worthy of the name. 
The drawings of which numbers are still preserved in the galleries 
of Basel, Berlin and Copenhagen show extraordinary quickness 
and delicacy of hand, and a wonderful facility for seizing 
character; and this happily is one of the features which Holbein 
bequeathed to his more famous son, Hans the younger. It is 
between 151a and 252a that Holbein tempered the German 
quality of his style with some North Italian elements. A purer 
taste and more pleasing realism mark his work, which in drapery, 
dress and tone is as much more agreeable to the eye as in 
respect of modelling and finish it is smoother and more carefully 
rounded. Costume, architecture, ornament and colour are 
applied with some knowledge of the higher canons of art. Here, 
too, advantage accrued to Hans the younger, whose independent 
career about this time began. 

t The date of the elder Holbein's birth is unknown." But his 
name appears in the books of the tax-gatherers of Augsburg 
in 1494, superseding that of Michael Holbein, who is supposed 
to have been his father. Previous to that date, and as early as 
1493, he was a painter of name, and he executed in that year, 
it is said, for the abbey at Weingarten, the wings of an altar- 
piece representing Joachim's Offering, the Nativity of the Virgin, 
Mary's Presentation in the Temple, and the Presentation of 
Christ, which now hang in separate panels in the cathedral of 
Augsburg. In these pieces and others of the same period, 
for instance in two Madonnas In the Moritz chapel and castle 
of Nuremberg, we mark the clear impress of the schools of Van 
der Weyden and Memlinc; whilst in later works, such as the 
Basilica of St Paul (1504) in the gallery of Augsburg, the wane of 
Flemish influence is apparent. But. this altarpiece, with its 
quaint illustrations of St Paul's life and martyrdom, is not alone 
of interest because its execution is characteristic of old Holbein. 
It is equally so because it contains portraits of the master himself, 
accompanied by his two sons, the painters Ambrose (c. 2494- 
c. 1 519) and Hans the younger. Later pictures, such as the 
Passion series in the FUrstenberg gallery at Donaueschingen, or 
the Martyrdom of St Sebastian in the Munich Pinakothck, 
contain similar portraits, the original drawings of which are found 
in old Holbein's sketch-book at Berlin, or in stray leaves like 
those possessed by the duke of Aumale in Paris. Not one of 
these fails to give us an insight into the character, or a reflex 
of the features, of the members of this celebrated family. Old 
Holbein seems to ape Leonardo, allowing his hair and beard 
to grow wildly, except on the upper lip. Hans the younger 
is a plain-looking boy. But his father points to him with his 
finger, and hints that though but a child he is clearly a prodigy. 
After 2516 Hans Holbein the elder appears as a defaulter 
in the registers of the tax-gatherers at Augsburg; but he 
willingly accepts commissions abroad. At Issenhcim in Alsace, 
vhere Griinewald was employed in 25x6, old Holbein also finds 
patrons, and contracts to complete an altarpiece. But mis- 
fortune or a bailiff pursues him, and he leaves Issenhcim, abandon- 
ing his work and tools. According to Sandrart, he wanders to 
Basel and takes the freedom of its gild. His brother Sigismund 
and others are found suing him for debt before the courts of 
Augsburg. Where he lived when he executed the altarpiece, 



ofwhich two wings with the date of 2522 are fn the gallery of 
Carlsruhe, is uncertain; where he died two years later is unknown. 
He slinks from ken at the close of a long life, and disappears 
at last heeded by none but his own son, who claims -his brushes 
and paints from the monks of Issenheim without much chance 
of obtaining them. His name is struck off the books of the 
Augsburg gild in 2524. 

The elder Holbein was a prolific artist, who left many pictures 
behind him. Earlier than the Basilica of St Paul, already mentioned, 
is the Basilica of St Mary Maggiore, and a Passion in eleven pieces, 
in the Augsburg gallery, both executed in 1499. Another Passion, 
with the root oQesse and a tree of the Dominicans, is that preserved 
in the Staedel, SaaJhof, and church of St Leonard at; Frankfort. It 
was executed in 1501. The Passion of Donaueschingen was finished 

flfr !__.•.._•. .....i . •__„___. , «... a.r_ j 



HOLBEIN, HANS, the younger (2497-1543)1 German painter, 
favourite son of Hans Holbein the elder, was probably born at 
Augsburg about the year 2497. Though Sandrart and Van 
Mander declare that they do not know who gave him the first 
lessons, he doubtless received an artist's education from his 
father. About 2515 he left Augsburg with Ambrose, his elder 
brother, to seek employment as an illustrator of books at Basel. 
His first patron is said to have been Erasmus, for whom, shortly 
after his arrival, he illustrated "with pen-and-ink sketches an 
edition of the Encomium Moriae, now in the museum of BascL 
But his chief occupation was that of drawing tillepagc-blocks 
and initials for new editions of the Bible and classics issued 
from the presses of Froben and other publishers. His leisure 
hours, it is supposed, were devoted to the production of rough 
painter's work, a schoolmaster's sign in the Basel collection, 
a table with pictures of St Nobody in the library of the university 
at Zurich. In contrast with these coarse productions, the portraits 
of Jacob Meyer and his wife in the Basel museum, one of which 
purports to have been finished in 2516, are miracles of workman- 
ship. It has always seemed difficult indeed to ascribe such 
excellent creations to Holbein's nineteenth year; and it is 
hardly credible that he should have been asked to do things 
of this kind so early, especially when it is remembered that 
neither he nor his brother Ambrose were then allowed to matricu- 
late in the guild of Basel. Not till 1517 did Ambrose, whose 
life otherwise remains obscure, join that corporation; Hans, 
not overburdened with practice, wandered into Switzerland, 
where (2517) he was employed to paint in the house of Jacob 
Hertenstcin at Lucerne. In 2529 Holbein reappeared at Basel, 
where he matriculated and, there is every reason to think, 
married. Whether, previous to this time, he took advantage of 
his vicinity to the Italian border to cross the Alps is uncertain. 
Van Mander says that he never was in Italy; yet the large 
wall-paintings which he executed after 2519 at Basel, and the 
series of his sketches and pictures which is still extant, might 
lead to the belief that Van Mander was misinformed. The 
spirit of Holbein's compositions for the Basel town hall, the 
scenery and architecture of his numerous drawings, and the cast 
of form in some of his imaginative portraits, make it more 
likely that he should have felt the direct influence of North 
Italian painting than that he should have taken Italian elements 
from imported works or prints. The Swiss at this period 
wandered in thousands to swell the ranks of the French or 
imperial armies fighting on Italian soil, and the road they took 
may have been followed by Hans on a more peaceful mission. 
He shows himself at all events familiar with Italian example* 



HOLBEIN 



579 



at various periods of his career; and if we accept as early works the 
" Flagellation/ 1 and the " Last Supper " at Basel, coarse as they 
are, they show some acquaintance with Lombard methods of 
painting, whilst in other pieces; such as the series of the Passion in 
oil in the same collection, the modes of Hans Holbein the elder are 
agreeably commingled with a more modern, it may be said Italian, 
polish. Again, looking at the " Virgin " and " Man of Sorrows " 
in the Basel museum, we shall be struck by a searching metallic 
style akin to that of the Ferrarese; and the " Lais " or the " Venus 
and Amor " of the same collection reminds us of the Leonard* 
esques of the school of Milan. When Holbein settled down to an 
extensive practice at Basel in 1519, he decorated the walls of 
the house " Zum Tanz " with simulated architectural features 
of a florid character after the fashion of the Veronese; and his 
wall paintings in the town-hall, if we can truly judge of them 
by copies, reveal an artist not unfamiliar with North Italian 
composition, distribution, action, gesture and expression. In 
bis drawings too, particularly in a set representing the Passion 
at Basel, the arrangement, and also the perspective, form and 
decorative ornament, are in the spirit of the school of Mantcgna. 
Contemporary with these, however, and almost inexplicably 
in contrast with them as regards handling, are portrait-drawings 
such as the likenesses of Jacob Meyer, and his wife, which are 
finished with German delicacy, and with a power and subtlety 
of hand seldom rivalled in any school. Curiously enough, the 
same contrast may be observed between painted compositions 
and painted portraits. The " Bonifacius Amerbach " of 1510 at 
Basel is acknowledged to be one of the most complete examples 
of smooth and transparent handling that Holbein ever executed. 
His versatility at this period is shown by a dead Christ (1521), 
a corpse in profile on a dissecting table, and a set of figures in 
couples; the " Madonna and St Pan talus," and " Kaiser Henry 
with the Empress Kunigunde" (1522), originally composed for 
the organ loft of the Basel cathedral, now in the Basel museum. 
Equally remarkable, but more attractive, though injured, is 
the " Virgin and Child between St Ursus and St Nicholas " (not 
St Martin) giving alms to a beggar, in the gallery of Solothurn. 
This remarkable picture is dated 1522, and seems to have been 
ordered for an altar in the minster of St Ursus of Solothurn by 
Nicholas Conrad, a captain and statesman of the 16th century, 
whose family allowed the precious heirloom to fall into decay 
in a chapel of the neighbouring village of Grenchen. Numerous 
drawings in the spirit of this picture, and probably of the same 
period in his career, might have led Holbein's contemporaries 
to believe that he would make his mark in the annals of Basel 
as a model for painters of altarpieces as well as a model for 
pictorial composition and portrait. The promise which he gave 
at this time was immense. He was gaming a freedom in draughts- 
manship that gave him facility to deal with any subject. Though 
a realist, he was sensible of the dignity and severity of religious 
painting. His colour had almost all the richness and sweetness 
of the Venetians. But he had fallen on evil times, as the next 
few years undoubtedly showed. Amongst the portraits which 
he executed in these years are those of Froben, the publisher, 
known only by copies at Basel and Hampton Court, and Erasmus, 
who sat in 1523, as he likewise did in 1530, in various positions, 
showing his face threequarters as at Longford, Basel, Turin, 
Parma, the Hague and Vienna, and in profile as in the Louvre 
or at Hampton Court. Besides these, Holbein made designs 
for glass windows, and for woodcuts, including subjects of every 
tort, from the Virgin and Child with saints of the old time to 
the Dance of Detth, from gospel incidents extracted from 
Luther's Bible to satirical pieces illustrating the sale of indulgences 
and other abuses denounced by .Reformers. Holbein, in this 
way, was carried irresistibly with the stream of the Reformation, 
in which, it must now be admitted, the old traditions of religious 
painting were wrecked, leaving nothing behind but unpictorial 
elements which Cranach and his school vainly used for pictorial 
purposes. 

Once only, after 1526, and after he had produced the " Lais " 
and." Venus and Amor," did Holbein with impartial spirit give 
his services and pencil to the Roman Catholic cause. The burgo- 



master Meyer* whose patronage he had already enjoyed, now 
asked him to represent himself and his wives and children in 
prayer before the Virgin; and Holbein produced the celebrated 
altarpiece now in the palace of Prince William of Hesse at 
Darmstadt, the shape and composition of which are known to 
all the world by its copy in the Dresden museum. The drawings 
for this masterpiece are amongst the most precious relics in the 
museum* of Basei The time now came when art began to suffer 
from unavoidable depression in all countries north of the Alps. 
Holbein, at Basel, was reduced to accept the smallest commissions 
— even for scutcheons. Then he saw that his chances were 
dwindling to nothing, and taking a bold resolution, armed with 
letters of introduction from Erasmus to More, he crossed the 
Channel to England, where in the one-sided branch of portrait 
painting he found an endless circle of clients. Eighty-seven 
drawings by Holbein in Windsor Castle, containing an equal 
number of portraits, of persons chiefly of high quality, testify 
to his industry in the years which divide 1528 from 1543. They 
are all originals of pictures that are still extant, or sketches 
for pictures that were lost or never carried out. Sir Thomas 
More, with whom he seems to have had a very friendly connexion, 
sat to him for likenesses of various kinds. The drawing of his 
head is at Windsor. A pen-and-ink sketch, in which we see 
More surrounded by all the members of his family, is now in 
the gallery of Basel, and numerous copies of a picture from it 
prove how popular the lost original must once have been. At 
the same period were executed the portraits of Warham (Lambeth 
and Louvre), Wyatt (Louvre), Sir Henry Guildford and his 
wife (Windsor), all finished in 1527, the astronomer Nicholas 
Krateer (Louvre), Thomas Godsalve (Dresden), and Sir Bryan 
Tuke (Munich) in 1528. In this year, 1528, Holbein returned 
to Basel, taking to Erasmus the sketch of More's family. With 
money which he brought from London he purchased a bouse 
at Basel wherein to lodge his wife and children, whose portraits 
he now painted with all the care of a husband and father (1528). 
He then witnessed the flight of Erasmus and the fury of the 
iconoclasts, who destroyed in one day almost all the religious 
pictures at Basel The municipality, unwilling that he should 
suffer again from the depression caused by evil times, asked him 
to finish the frescoes of the town-hall, and the sketches from these 
lost pictures are still before us to show that he had not lost the 
spirit of his earlier days, and was still capable as a composer. His 
" Rehoboam receiving the Israelite Envoys," and " Saul at the 
Head of his Array meeting Samuel," testify to Holbein's power 
and his will, also proved at a later period by the " Triumphs of 
Riches and Poverty," executed for the Steelyard in London 
(but now lost), to prefer the fame of a painter of history to that 
of a painter of portraits. But the reforming times still remained 
unfavourable to art. With the exception of a portrait of 
Melanchthon (Hanover) which he now completed, Holbein 
found little to do at Basel The year 1530, therefore, saw him 
again on the move, and he landed in England for the second 
time with the prospect of bettering his fortunes. Here indeed 
political changes bad robbed him of his earlier patrons. The 
circle of More and Warham was gone. But that of the merchants 
of the Steelyard took its place, for whom Holbein executed the 
long and important series of portraits that He scattered throughout 
the galleries and collections of England and the Continent, and 
bear date after 1532. Then came again the chance of practice 
in more fashionable circles. In 1533 the '•Ambassadors" 
(National Gallery), and the " Triumphs of Wealth and Poverty " 
were executed, then the portraits of Leland and Wyatt (Longford), 
and (1 534) the portrait of Thomas Cromwell. ThroughCromwell 
Holbein probably became attached to the court, in the pay of 
which he appears permanently after 1537. From that time 
onwards he was connected with all that was highest in the 
society of London. Henry VIII. invited him to make a family 
picture of himself, his father and family, which obtained a 
post of honour at Whitehall. The beautiful cartoon of a part 
of this fine piece at Hardwicke Hall enables us to gauge its 
beauty before the fire which destroyed it in the 17th century. 
Then Holbein painted Jane Seymour in state (Vienna), employing 



S8o 



HOLBERG 



some English hand perhaps to make the reptfcas at the Hague, 
Sion House and Wo burn; he finished the Southwell of the 
Uffixi (copy at the Louvre), the jeweller Morett at Dresden, 
and last, not least, Christine of Denmark, who gave sittings at 
Brussels in 1538. During the journey which this work involved 
Holbein took the opportunity of revisiting Basel, where he made 
his appearance in silk and satin, and pro forma only accepted 
the office of town painter. He had been living long and con- 
tinuously away from home, not indeed observing due fidelity 
to his wife, who still resided at Basel, but fairly performing the 
duties of, keeping her in comfort. His return to London in 
autumn enabled him to do homage to the king in the way 
familiar to artists. He presented to Henry at Christmas a 
portrait of Prince Edward. Again abroad in the summer of 
1539, he painted with great fidelity the princess Anne of Cleves, 
at Duren near Cologne, whose form we still see depicted in the 
great picture of the Louvre. That be could render the features 
of his sitter without flattery is plain from this one example. 
Indeed, habitual flattery was contrary to his habits. His 
portraits up to this time all display that uncommon facility for 
seizing character which his father enjoyed before him, and 
which be had inherited in an expanded form. No amount of 
labour, no laboriousness of finish — and of both he was ever 
prodigal — betrayed him into loss of resemblance or expression. 
No painter was ever quicker at noting peculiarities of physiog- 
nomy, and it may be observed that in none of his faces, as 
Indeed in none of the faces one sees in nature, are the two sides 
alike. Yet he was not a child of the 16th century, as the 
Venetians were, in substituting touch for line. We must not 
look in his works for modulations of surface or subtle contrasts 
of colour in juxtaposition. His method was to the very last 
delicate, finished and smooth, as became a painter of the old 
school. 

Amongst the more important creations of Holbein's later time 
we should note his " Duke of Norfolk " at Windsor, the hands 
of which are so perfectly preserved as to compensate for the 
shrivel that now disfigures the head. Two other portraits of 
1 541 (Berlin and Vienna), the Falconer at the Hague, and John 
Chambers at Vienna (1542), are noble specimens of portrait 
art; most interesting and of the same year are the likenesses 
of Holbein himself, of which several examples are extant— one 
particularly good at F&hna, the seat of the Stackelberg family 
near Riga, and another at the Uffizi in Florence. Here Holbein 
appears to us as a man of regular features, with hair just turning 
grey, but healthy in colour and shape, and. evidently well to 
do in the world. Yet a few months only separated him then 
from his death-bed. He was busy painting a picture of Henry 
the VIII. confirming the Privileges of the Barber Surgeons 
(Lincoln's Inn Fields), when he sickened of the plague and died 
after making a will about November 1543. His loss must have 
been seriously felt in England. Had he lived his last years in 
Germany, he would not have changed the current which decided 
the fate of painting in that country; he would but have shared 
the fate of Dttrer and others who merely prolonged the agony 
of art amidst the troubles of. the Reformation. 0- A. C.) 

The early authorities are Karel Van Mander's Het Sckilder Both 
(1604), and J. von Sandrart, Accademia Todesca (1675). Sec also 
R. N. Vornum, Life and Work of Holbein (1867); H. Knackfuss, 
Holbein (1899); G. S. Davies, Holbein (1903); A. F. G. A. Wolt- 
mann, Holbein und seine Zeit (1876). 

HOLBERG, LUDVIG HOLBERG, Bason (1684-17 54), the 
great Scandinavian writer, was born at Bergen, in Norway, on 
the 3rd of December 1684. Both Holberg's parents died in 
his childhood, his father first, leaving a considerable property; 
and in his eleventh year he lost his mother also. Before the 
latter event, however, the family had been seriously im- 
poverished by a great fire, which destroyed several valuable 
buildings, but notwithstanding this, the mother left to each of 
her six children some little fortune. In 1695 the boy Holbcrg 
was taken into the house of his uncle, Pcdcr Lera, who sent him 
to the Latin school, and prepared him for the profession of a 
soldier; but soon after this he was adopted by his cousin Otto 
Muntbc, and went to him up in the mountains. His great 



desire for instruction, however, at last induced his family to 
send him back to Bergen, to his uncle, and there he- remained, 
eagerly studying, until the destruction of that city by fire in 
1702, when he was sent to the university of Copenhagen. Bat 
he soon exhausted his resources, and, having nothing to live 
upon, was glad to hurry back to Norway, where he accepted 
the position of tutor in the bouse of a rural dean at Voas. He 
soon returned to Copenhagen, where in 1704 he took his degree, 
and worked hard at French, English and Italian. Bui he had 
to gain his living, and accordingly he accepted the post of tutor 
once more, this time in the house of Dr Smith, vice-bishop of 
Bergen. The good doctor had travelled much, and the reading 
of his itineraries and note-books awakened such a longing for 
travel in the young Holberg that at last, at the dose of 1704, 
having scraped together 60 dollars, be went on board a ship 
bound for Holland. He proceeded as far as Aix-la-Chapclle, 
where he fell sick of a fever, and suffered so much from weakness 
and poverty, that he made his way on foot to Amsterdam, and 
came back to Norway. Ashamed to be seen so soon in Bergen, 
be stopped at Christianssand, where he lived through the winter, 
supporting himself by giving lessons in French. In the spring 
of 1706 he travelled, in company with a student named Brix» 
through London to Oxford, where he studied for two years, 
gaining bis livelihood by giving lessons on the violin and the flute. 
He mentions, with gratitude, the valuable libraries of Oxford, 
and it is pleasant to record that it was while he was there that 
it first occurred to him, as he says, " how splendid and glorious a 
thing it would be to take * place among the authors." Through 
London and Elsinore he reached Copenhagen a third time, and 
began to lecture at the university; his lectures were attended, 
but he got no money. He was asked in 1709 to conduct a rich 
young gentleman to Dresden, and on his return journey he 
lectured at Leipzig, Halle and Hamburg. Once more in Copen- 
hagen, be undertook to teach the children of Admiral Gedde. 
Weary with this work, he took a post at Borch College in 17x0, 
where he wrote, and printed in 1711, his first work, An Introduc- 
tion to the History of the Nations of Europe, and was permitted 
to present to King Frederick IV. two manuscript essays on 
Christian IV. and Frederick III. The king soon after presented 
him with the title of Professor, and with the RosenkranU grant 
of 100 dollars for four years, the holder of which was expected 
to travel. Holberg accordingly started in x 7 1 4, and visited, chiefly 
on foot, a great portion of Europe. From Amsterdam he walked 
through Rotterdam to Antwerp, took a boat to Brussels, and on 
foot again reached Paris. Walking and skating, he proceeded 
in the depth of winter to Marseilles, and on by sea to Genoa. 
On the last-mentioned voyage he caught a fever, and nearly 
died in that city. On his recovery he pushed on to Civita Vecchia 
and Rome. When the spring had come, being still very poor 
and in feeble health, he started homewards on foot by Florence, 
across the Apennines, through Bologna, Parma, Piaeenza, Turin, 
over the Alps, through Savoy and Dauphin^ to Lyons,- and 
finally to Paris, where he arrived in excellent health. After 
spending a month in Paris, he walked on to Amsterdam, took 
sail to Hamburg, and so went back to Denmark m 1716. He 
spent the next two years in extreme poverty, and published his 
Introduction to Natural and Popular Law. But at last, in 171&, 
his talents were recognized by his appointment as professor 
of metaphysics at the university of Copenhagen; and in 1720 
he was promoted to the lucrative chair of public eloquence, 
which gave him a scat in the consistory. His pecuniary troubles 
were now at an end. Hitherto he had written only on law, 
history and philology, although in a Latin controversy with 
the jurist Andreas Hojer of Flensborg his satirical genius had 
flashed out. But now, and until 1728, he created an entirely 
new class of humorous literature under the pseudonym of Hans 
Mikkelsen. The serio-comic epic of Peder Poors* the earliest 
of the great classics of the Danish language, appeared in 17:0. 
This poem was a brilliant satire on contemporary manners, and 
enjoyed an extraordinary success. But the author had offended 
in it several powerful persons who threatened his life, and if 
Count Danneskjold had not personally interested the king in 



HOLBORN 



581 



him, Holberg's career might have had an untimely dose. During 
the next two years he published five shorter satires, all of which 
were well received by the public. The great event of 1721 was 
the erection of the first Danish theatre in Grdnnegade, Copen- 
hagen; Holberg took the direction of this house, in which was 
played, in September 1722, a Danish translation of L'Avarc. 
Until this time no plays had been acted in Denmark except in 
French and German, but Holberg now determined to use his 
talent in the construction of Danish comedy. The first of his 
original pieces performed was Den politiske Kandestdber (The 
Pewtcrer .turned Politician), he wrote other comedies with 
miraculous rapidity, and before 1722 was closed, there had been 
performed in succession, and with immense success, Den Vaegd- 
sindede (The Waverer), Jean dc France, Jeppe poo Bjergel, and 
Cert the Westphatian. Of these five plays, four at least are 
masterpieces; and they were almost immediately followed by 
others. Holberg took no rest, and before the end of 1723 
the comedies of Barsdstuen (The Lying-in Room), The Eleventh 
of July, Jakob ton Thyboe, Den Bundesldse (The Fidget), Erasmus 
Montanus, Dan Ranudo, Ulysses of Ithaca, Without Head or Tail, 
Witchcraft and Melamfe had alt been written, and some of them 
acted. In 1 724 the most famous comedy that Holberg produced 
was Henri k and Pernille. But in spile of this unprecedented 
blaze of dramatic genius the theatre fell into pecuniary difficulties, 
and had to be closed, Holberg composing for the last night's 
performance, in February 1727, a Funeral of Danish Comedy. 
All this excessive labour for the stage had undermined the great 
poet's health, and in 1725 he had determined to take the baths 
at Aix-Ia-Chapdle; but instead of going thither he wandered 
through Belgium to Paris, and spent the winter there. In the 
spring he returned to Copenhagen with recovered health and 
spirits, and worked quietly at his protean literary labours until 
the great fire of 1728. In the period of national poverty and 
depression that followed this event, a puritanical spirit came 
into vogue which was little in sympathy with Holberg's dramatic 
or satiric genius. He therefore closed his career as a dramatic 
poet by publishing in 1731 his acted comedies, with the addition 
of five which he had no opportunity of putting on the stage. 
With characteristic versatility, he adopted the serious tone of 
the new age, and busied himself for the next twenty years with 
historical, philosophical and statistical writings. During this 
period he published his poetical satire called Metamorphosis 
(1726), his Epistolae ad virum pcrillustrem (1727), his Description 
of Denmark and Norway (1720), History of Denmark, Universal 
Church History, Biographies of Famous Men, Moral Reflections, 
Description of Bergen (1737), A History of the Jews, and other 
learned and laborious compilations. The only poem he published 
at this time was the famous Nicolai Klimii iter subterraneum 
(1741), afterwards translated into Danish by Baggesen. When 
Christian VI. died in 1747, pietism lost its sway; the theatre 
was reopened and Holberg was appointed director, but he soon 
resigned this arduous post. The six comedies he wrote in his 
old age did not add to his reputation. His last published work 
was his Epistles, in 5 vols, the last of them posthumous (1754). 
In 1747 he was created by the new king Baron of Holberg. In 
August 1753 he t0 °k to his bed, and he died at Copenhagen 
on the 28th of January 1754, in the seventieth year of his age. 
He was buried at Soro, in Zealand. He had never married, and 
he bequeathed all his property, which was considerable, to Soro 
College. 

Holberg was not only the founder of Danish literature and the 
greatest of Danish authors, but he was, with the exception of 
Voltaire, the first writer in Europe during his own generation. 
Neither Pope nor Swift, who perhaps excelled him in particular 
branches of literary production, approached him in range of 
genius, or in encyclopaedic versatility. Holberg found Denmark 
provided with no books, and he wrote a library for her. When 
he arrived in the country, the Danish language was never heard 
in a gentleman's house. Polite Danes were wont to say that a 
man wrote Latin to his friends, talked French to the ladies, 
called his dogs in German, and only used Danish to swear at 
his servants. The single genius of Holberg revolutionized this 



system. He wrote poems of all kinds in a language hitherto 
employed only for ballads and hymns; he instituted a theatre, 
and composed a rich collection of comedies for it; he filled the 
shelves of the citizens with works in their own tongue on history, 
law, politics, science, philology and philosophy, all written In 
a true and manly style, and representing the extreme attain- 
ment of European culture at the moment. Perhaps no author 
who ever lived has had so vast an influence over his country^ 
still at work after soo years. 
1 works are legion. Complete editions of 
mis to.be quoted ; the best u that brought 
itenberg, in 1870. Of Peder Poors there 
editions, besides translations in Dutch. 
i Iter subterraneum has been three several 
ah, ten times into German, thrice into 
, thrice into English, twice into French. 
* into Hungarian. The life of Holberg 
n 1858 and by Georg Brandcs in 1884. 
us by foreigners may be mentioned an 
it Prutx (1857), and Hotbtrg consuUri 
by A. Legrelle (Paris, 1864). (E. G.) 
HOLBORN, a central metropolitan borough of London, 
England, bounded N.W. by St Pancras, N.E. by Finsbury, 
S.E. by the City of London, S. and W. by the City of Westminster 
and St Marylebone. Pop. (1001), 50,405. Area 405-1 acres. 
Its main thoroughfare is that running E. and W. under the 
names of Holbora Viaduct, High Holborn and New Oxford 
Street. 

The name of Holborn was formerly derived from Old Bourne, 
a tributary of the Fleet, the valley of which is clearly seen where 
Holborn Viaduct crosses Farringdon Street Of the existence 
of this tributary, however, there is no evidence, and the origin 
of the name is found in Hole-bourne, the stream in the hollow, 
in allusion to the Fleet itself. The fall and rise of the road across 
the valley before the construction of the viaduct (i860) was 
abrupt and inconvenient. In earlier times a bridge here crossed 
the Fleet, leading from Newgate, while a quarter of a mile west 
of the viaduct is the site of Holborn Ban, at the entrance to 
the City, where tolls were levied. The better residential district 
of Holborn, which extends northward to Euston Road in the 
borough of St Pancras, is mainly within the parish of St George, 
Bloomsbury. . The name of Bloomsbury is commonly derived 
from William Blemund, a lord of the manor in the 15th century. 
A dyke called Blemund's Ditch, of unknown, origin, bounded 
it on the south, where the land was marshy. During the 18th 
century Bloomsbury was a fashionable and wealthy residential 
quarter. The reputation of the district immediately to the 
south, embraced in the parish of St Giles in the Fields, was far 
different. From the 17th century until modem times this was 
notorious as a home of crime and poverty. Here occurred some 
of the earliest cases of the plague which spread over London 
in 1664-1665. The opening of the thoroughfares of New Oxford 
Street (1840) and Shaftesbury Avenue (1855) by no means 
wholly destroyed the character of the district. The circus 
of Seven Dials, east of Shaftesbury Avenue, affords a typical 
name in connexion with the lowest aspect of life in London. 
A similar notoriety attached to Saffron Hill on the eastern 
confines of the borough. By a singular contrast, the neighbour- 
ing thoroughfare of Hatton Garden, leading north from Holborn 
Circus, is a centre of the diamond trade. 

Of the ecclesiastical buildings of Holborn that of first 
interest is the chapel of St Etheldreda in Ely Place, opening 
from Holborn Circus. Ely Place takes its name from a palace 
of the bishops of Ely, who held land here as early as the 13th 
century. Here died John of Gaunt in 1300. The property was 
acquired by Sir Christopher Hatton, Lord Chancellor under 
Queen Elisabeth, after whom Hatton Garden is named; though 
the bishopric kept some hold upon it until the 18th century. 
The chapel, the only remnant of the palace, is a beautiful 
Decorated structure with a vaulted crypt, itself above ground- 
level. Both are used for worship by Roman Catholics, by whom 
the chapel was acquired in 1874 and opened five years later 
after careful restoration. The present parish church of St 
Giles in the Fields, between Shaftesbury Avenue and New 



58a 



HOLCROFT— HQLDEN, SIR I. 



Oxford Street, dates from 1754, bat here was situated a leper's 
hospital founded by Matilda, wife of Henry L, in 1101. Its 
chapel became the parish church on the suppression of the 
monasteries. The church of St Andrew, the parish of which 
extends into the City, stands near Holborn Viaduct. It is by 
Wren, but there are traces of the previous Gothic edifice in the 
tower. Sacheverell was among its rectors (1.713-1724), and 
Thomas Chatterton (1770) was interred in the adjacent burial 
ground, no longer extant, of Shoe Lane Workhouse; the register 
recording his Christian name as William. Close to this church 
is the City Temple (Congregational). 

Two of the four Inns of Court, Lincoln's Inn and Gray's 
Inn, lie within the borough. Of the first the Tudor gateway 
opens upon Chancery Lane. The chapel, hall and r es id e nt i al 
buildings surrounding the squares .within, are picturesque, but 
of later date. To the west lie the fine square, with public gardens, 
still called, from its original character, Lincoln's Inn Fields. 
Gray's Inn, between High Holborn and Theobald's Road, and 
west of Gray's Inn Road, is of similar arrangement. The fabric 
of the small chapel is apparently of the 14th century, and may 
have been attached to the manor house of Portpool, held At 
that period by the Lords Grey of Wilton. Of the former Inns 
of Chancery attached to these Inns of Court the most note- 
worthy buildings remaining are those of Staple Inn, of which 
the timbered and gabled Elizabethan front upon High Holborn 
is a unique survival of its character in a London thoroughfare; 
and of Barnard's Inn, occupied by the Mercer's School Both 
these were attached to Gray's Inn. Of FurnivaTs and Thavies 
Inns, attached to Lincoln's Inn, only the names remain. The 
site of the first is covered by the fine red brick buildings of the 
Prudential Assurance Company, Holborn Viaduct. Among 
other institutions in Holborn, the British Museum, north of 
New Oxford Street, is pre-eminent. The varied collections 
of Sir John Soane, accumulated at his house in Lincoln's Inn 
Fields, are open to view as the Soane Museum. There may also 
be mentioned the Royal College of Surgeons, Lincoln's Inn 
Fields, with museum; the Royal Colleges of Organists, and Of 
Veterinary Surgeons, the College of Preceptors, the Jews' 
College, and the Metropolitan School of Shorthand. Among 
hospitals are the Italian, the Homoeopathic, the National for 
the paralysed and epileptic, the Alexandra for children with 
hip disease, and the Hospital for sick children. The Foundling 
Hospital,- Guilford Street, was founded by Thomas Coram in 

1739- 

HOLCROFT, THOMAS (1745-1809), English dramatist and 
miscellaneous writer, was bora on the 10th of December 174$ 
(old style) in Orange Court, Leicester Fields, London* His 
father, besides haying a shoemaker's shop, kept riding horses for 
hire; but having fallen into difficulties was reduced ultimately 
to the necessity of hawking pedlary. The son accompanied 
his parents in their tramps, and succeeded in procuring the 
situation of stable boy at Newmarket, where he spent his evenings 
chiefly in miscellaneous reading and the study of music 
Gradually he obtained a knowledge of French, German and 
Italian. At the end of his term of engagement as stable boy he 
returned to assist his father, who had again resumed his trade 
of shoemaker in London; but after marrying in 1765, he became 
a teacher in a small school in Liverpool. He failed in an attempt 
to set up a private school, and became prompter in a Dublin 
theatre. He acted in various strolling companies until 1778, 
when he produced The Crisis; or, Love and Famine, at Drury 
Lane. Duplicity followed in 1781. Two years later he went 
to Paris as correspondent of the Homing Herald. Here he 
attended the performances of Beaumarchais's Manage de Figaro 
until he had memorized the whole. The translation of it, with 
the title The Follies of the Day, was produced at Drury Lane 
in 1784. The Road to Ruin, his most successful melodrama, 
was produced in 1792. A revival in 1873 ran for 118 nights. 
Holcroft died on the 23rd of March 1809. He was a member 
bf the Society for Constitutional • Information, and on that 
account was, in 1794, indicted of high treason, but was discharged 
without a trial Among his novels may be mentioned Alvyn 



(1780), an account, largely Autobiographical, of a strolling 
comedian, and Hugh Trevor ( 1 794- 1 797). He also was the author 
of Travels from Hamburg through Westphalia, Holland and the 
Netherlands to Paris, of some volumes of verse and of translations 
from the French and German. 

His Memoirs written by Himself and continued down to the Time ef 
his Death, from hu Dtary, Notes and other Papers, by William Haxfitt, 
appeared in 1816, and was reprinted, in a slightly abridged form, ia 
1852. 

HOLDEN, HUBERT ASHTON (1822-1*96), English classical 
scholar, came of an old Staffordshire family. He was educated 
at King Edward's school, Birmingham, and Trinity College, 
Cambridge (senior classic, 1845; fellow, 1847). He was vice- 
principal of Cheltenham College (1853-1858), and headmaster 
of Queen Elizabeth's school, Ipswich (1858-1883). He died 
in London on the 1st of December 1896. In addition to several 
school editions of portions of Cicero, Thucydides, Xenophon 
and Plutarch, he published aa expurgated text of Aristophanes 
with a useful onomasticoa (re-issued separately, 190a) and larger 
editions of Cicero's De qficiis (revised ed., 1808) and of the 
Octaoius of Mmucius Felix (1853). His chief works, however, 
were his Foliorum silvula (1852), a collection of English extracts 
for translation into Greek and Latin verse; Folia, silvulae 
(translations of the same) ; and Foliorum ctnturiat, a rnrnrwinion 
volume of extracts for Latin prose translation. In English 
schools these books have been widely used for the teaching of 
Latin and Greek composition. 

HOLDEN, SIR ISAAC, Bast. (1807-1897), English inventor 
and manufacturer, was the son of Isaac Holden, a native of 
Cumberland, and was born at Hurlct, a village between Paisley 
and Glasgow, on the 7th of May 1807. His early life was passed 
in very straitened circumstances, but his father spared no pains 
to give him as much elementary education as possible. At the 
age of ten he began to work as weaver's draw-boy, and after- 
wards was employed in a cotton mill. Meanwhile his education 
was continued at the night schools, and from time to time, 
as funds allowed, he was taken from work and sent to the 
grammar-school, to which he at last went regularly for a year 
or two until he was fifteen, when his father removed to Paisley 
and apprenticed him to an uncie, a shawl-weaver there. This 
proving too much for his strength, in 1823 he became assistant 
teacher in a school at Paisley, and In 1828 he was appointed 
mathematical teacher in the Queen's Square Academy, Leeds. 
At the end of six months he was transferred to Lingard's grammar 
school, near Huddersficld, and shortly afterwards became 
classical master at Castle Street Academy, Reading. It was here 
that in 1829 he invented a lucifer match by adopting sulphur 
as the medium between the explosive material and the wood, 
but he refused to patent the invention. In 1830 his health 
again failed, and he returned to Scotland, where a Glasgow 
friend set up a school for him. After six months, however, 
he was recommended for the post of bookkeeper to Messrs. 
Townend Brothers, worsted manufacturers, of Cullingworth, 
where his interest in machinery soon led to his transfer from 
the counting-house to the mill. There his experiments led hint 
to the invention of his square motion wool-comber and of a 
process for making genappe yarns, a patent for which was taken 
out by him in conjunction with S. C. Lister (Lord Masham) 
in 1847. The firm of Lister & Holden, which established a 
factory near Paris in 1848, carried on a successful business, and 
in 1859, when Lister retired, was succeeded by Isaac Holden 
and Sons, which became the largest wool-combing business in 
the world, employing upwards of 4000 workpeople. In 1865 
Holden's medical advisers insisted on complete change of 
occupation, and he entered parliament as Liberal member for 
Knaresborough. From 1868 to 1882 he was without a seat, 
but in the latter year he was elected for the northern division 
of the West Riding, and in 1885 for Keighlcy. He was created 
a baronet in 1893, and died suddenly at Oakworth House, 
near Keighley, on the 13th of August 1897. 

His son and heir, Sir Angus Holden, was in 1908 created a 
peer with the title of Baron Holden of Alston. 



HOLDERLIN— HOLGUIN 



583 



H&IDBRLIN. JOHANN CHRIftTIAlf PR1EDRICH (1770- 
1843), German poet, was born on the 20th of March 1770, at 
Lauffen on Che Neckar. His mother removing, after a second 
marriage, to Nttrtingen, he began his education at the classical 
school there. He was destined by his relations for the church, 
and with this view was later admitted to the seminaries at 
Denkendorf and Maulbronn. At the age of eighteen he entered 
as a student of theology the university of Tubingen, where he 
remained till 2793. He was already the writer of occasional 
verses, and had begun to sketch his novel Hyperion, when he 
was introduced in this year to Schiller, and obtained through 
him the post of tutor to the young son of Charlotte von Kalb. 
A year later be left this situation to attend Fichte's lectures, 
and to be near Schiller in Jena. The latter recognized in the 
young poet something of bis own genius, and encouraged him 
by publishing some of his early writings in his periodicals Die 
neue Thalia and Die Horen. In 1796 HbMderlin obtained the 
post of tutor in the family of the banker J. F. Gontard in Frank- 
tbrt-on-Main. For Gontard's beautiful and gifted wife, Susette, 
the " Diotima " of"his Hyperion, he conceived a violent passion; 
and she became at once his inspiration and his ruin. At the 
end of two years, during which time the first volume of Hyperion 
was published (1797), a crisis appears to have occurred in their 
relations, for the young poet suddenly left Frankfort. In spite 
of ill-health, he now completed Hyperion, the second volume of 
which appeared in 1799, and began a tragedy, Der Tod des 
EmpedokUs, a fragment of which is published among his works. 
His friends became alarmed at the alternate depression and 
nervous irritability from which he suffered, and he was induced 
to go to Switzerland, as tutor in a family at HauptwiU. There 
his health improved; and several of his poems, among which 
are Der blbuU Sanger, An die Hojjnmig and Dichtermut, were 
written at this time. In 1801 he returned home to arrange for 
the publication of a volume of his poems; but, on the failure 
of this enterprise, he was obliged to accept a tutorship at 
Bordeaux. " Diotima. died a year later, in June 2802, and the 
news is supposed to have reached Holdcrlin shortly afterwards, 
for in the following month he suddenly left Bordeaux, and 
travelled homewards on foot through France, - arriving at 
Kurtingen destitute and insane. Kind treatment gradually 
alleviated his condition, and in lucid intervals he occupied himself 
by writing verses and translating Greek plays. Two of these 
translations — the Antigone and Oedipus rex of Sophocles — 
appeared in 2804, and several of ins short poems were published 
by Franz K. L. von Seckendorff in his Musenalmanach, 2807 
and 1808. In 2804 Holdcrlin obtained the sinecure post of 
librarian to the landgrave Frederick V. of Hesae-Homburg, 
and went to live in Horaburg under the supervision of friends; 
but two years later becoming irremediably but harmlessly insane, 
he was taken in the summer of 2807 to Tubingen, where he 
remained till his death on the 7th of June 2843. 

Holderlin's writings are the production of a beautiful and 
sensitive mind; but they are intensely, almost morbidly, sub- 
jective, and they lack real human strength. Perhaps his strongest 
characteristic was his passion tor Greece, the result of which 
was that he almost entirely discarded rhyme in favour of the 
ancient verse measures. His poems are all short pieces; of 
his tragedy only a fragment was written. Hyperion, oder der 
BremU in Criechenland (2707-2709), is a romance in letters, in 
Which the stormy fervour of the " Sturm und Drang " is combined 
with a romantic enthusiasm for Greek antiquity. The interest 
centres not in the story, for the novel has little or none— 
Hyperion is a young Greek who takes part in the rising of his 
people against the Turks in 1770— but in its lyric subjectivity 
and the dithyrambic beauty of its language. 

H61derlin's lyrics, Lyrische Cedicfde, were edited by L. Uhland and 
G. Schwab in 1826. A complete edition of his works, Sdmtliche 
Werkc, with a biography by C. T. Schwab, appeared in 1846- also 
Diehtungen by K. KostUn CTQbingen, 1884), and (the best edition) 
CesomtneiU Diehtungen by B. Litzraann (2 vols., Stuttgart, 1897). 
For biography and criticism, see C. C. T. Litzmann. F H&ldeHws 
Uben&erYin, 1890). A. Wilbrandt. Holdcrlin (2nd ed., Berlin. 1891), 

and C. Muller, Fricdrich Holdex 

(Bremen. 2894). 



\erlin, scin Leben und sein Dichten 



HOLDBRKESSB, EARL OP, an English title borne by Sir 
John Ramsay and later by the family of Darcy. John Ramsay 
(c. 1580-1626), a member of the Scottish family of Ramsay of 
Dalhousie, was knighted for his share in rescuing James VL 
from the hands of John Ruthven, earl of Cowrie, in August 
2600. In 2606 the king created him Viscount Haddington and 
Lord Ramsay of Bams, and in 1621 made him an English peer 
as earl of Holdernesse; Ramsay died without surviving issue 
in February 2626, when his titles became extinct. In 2644 
Charles I. created his nephew, Prince Rupert, carl of Holdernesse, 
but when the prince died unmarried in November 268a the 
earldom again became extinct. Conyers Darcy (2599-2689), 
who was made earl of Holdernesse in 268a only a few days after 
the death of Rupert, was the son and heir of Conyers Darcy, 
Lord Darcy and Conyers {c 2572-2654), and succeeded his 
father in these baronies in March 2654. He was succeeded as 2nd 
earl by his only son Conyers (c. 1620-1692), who was member 
of parliament for Yorkshire during the reign of Charles II. In 
his turn he was succeeded by his grandson Robert (2682*2722). 
Robert's only son, Robert Darcy, 4th earl of Holdernesse (272*- 
2778), was a diplomatist and a politician. From 2744 to 2746 he 
was ambassador at Venice and from 2749 to 2752 he represented 
his country at the Hague. 1111751 he became one of the secretaries 
of state, and he remained in office until March 2762, when he 
was dismissed by George III. From 2772 to 2776 he acted at 
governor to two of the long's sons, a " solemn phantom " as 
Horace Walpole calls him. He left no sons, and all his titles 
became extinct except the barony of Conyers, which had been 
created by writ in 2509 in favour of his ancestor Sir William 
Conyers (d. 2525). This descended to his only daughter Amelia 
(2754-2784), the wife of Francis Osborne, afterwards 5th duke of 
Leeds, and when the 7th duke of Leeds died in 2859 it passed to 
his nephew, SackvHle George Lane-Fox (2827-1888), falling 
into abeyance on his death. Hornby castle in Yorkshire, now 
the principal seat of the dukes of Leeds, came to them through 
marriage of the 5th duke with the heiress of the families of 
Conyers and of Darcy. 

HOLDHEIII. SAMUEL (1806-1860), Jewish rabbi, a leader 
of reform in the German Synagogue, was born in Posen in 2806 
and died in Berlin in 2860. In 2836 he was appointed rabbi 
at Frankfort-on-the-Oder, in 2840. he was transferred to the 
rabbinate of Mecklenburg-Schwerin. He then became prominent 
as an advocate on the one hand of religious freedom (much 
trammelled at the time by Prussian state laws) and on the 
other of reform within the Jewish community. Various rabbinical 
conferences were held, at Brunswick (2844), Frankfort-on-the* 
Main (2845) and Breslau (1846). At all of these Holdheim was 
a strong supporter of the policy of modifying ritual (especially 
with regard to Sabbath observance, marriage laws and liturgical 
customs). In 2846 he was chosen Rabbi of the new Berlin 
congregation and there exercised considerable influence on the 
course of Jewish reform. 

See I. H. Ritter in the Jewish Quarterly Revirtt, }. 202. The 
same authority has written the life of Holdheim in vol. iii. of his 
Ceschichte der judischen Reformation (Berlin, 2865). Graetz in 
his History passes an unfavourable judgment on Holdheim, and 
there were admittedly grounds for opposition to . Holdheim '• 
attitude. A moderate criticism is contained in Dr D. Philipson's 
History ojthe Reform Movement in Judaism (London, 1906). 

HOLQUlN, a town of the high plateau country in the interior 
of Oriente province, Cuba, about 65 m. N.W. of Santiago de 
Cuba. Pop. (2907) 7592. The town is near the Maranon and 
Jigue* rivers, on a plain from which hills rise on all sides except 
the £., on which side it is open to the winds of the plateau. 
Holgufn was long the principal acclimatization station for 
Spanish troops. The oldest public buildings are two churches 
built in 2800 and 2809 respectively. Holgufn has trade in 
cabinet woods, tobacco, Indian corn and cattle products, which 
K exports through its port Gibara, about 25 m. N.N.E., with 
which it is connected by railway. Holgufn was settled about 
1720 and became a ciudod (city) in 2752. In the Ten Years' 
War of 1868*78 and in the revolution of 1895-98 Holgufn was 
an insurgent centre. 



58+ 



HOLIDAY— HOLL 



HOLIDAY, originally the "holy day/' a festival set apart 
for religious observances as a memorial of some sacred event 
or sacred person; hence a day on which the ordinary work or 
business ceases. For the religious sense see Feasts and 
Festivals, and Sunday. Apart from the use of the term for 
a single day of rest or enjoyment, it is commonly used in the 
plural for a recognized and regular period (as at schools, &c) of 
absence from work. It is unnecessary here to deal with what 
may be regarded as private holidays, which are matters of 
agreement between employer and employed or between the 
authorities of this or that institution and those who attend it. 
In recent years there has been a notable tendency in most 
occupations to shorten the hours of labour, and make holidays 
more regular. It will suffice to deal here with public holidays, 
the observance of which is prescribed by the state. In one 
respect these have been diminished, in so far as saints 1 days are 
no longer regarded as entailing non-attendance at the government 
offices in England, as was the case at the beginning of the 19th 
century. But while the influence of religion in determining 
such holidays has waned, the importance of making some com- 
pulsory provision for social recreation has made itself felt. In 
England four days, known as Bank Holidays (q.v.), are set apart 
by statute to be observed as general holidays, while the sovereign 
may by proclamation appoint any day to be similarly observed. 
Endeavours have been made from time to time to get additional 
days recognized as general holidays, such as Empire Day 
(May 24th), Arbor Day, &c In the British colonics there is 
no uniform practice. In Canada eight days are generally ob- 
served as public holidays: New Year's Day, Good Friday, 
Easter Monday, Christmas Day, the birthday of the sovereign, 
Victoria Day, Dominion Day and Labour Day. Some of the 
provinces have followed the American example by adding an 
Arbor Day. Alberta and Saskatchewan observe Ash Wednesday. 
In Quebec, where the majority of the population is Roman 
Catholic, the holy days are also holidays, namely, the Festival 
of the Epiphany, Ash Wednesday, Good Friday, Easter Monday, 
the Ascension, All Saint's Day, Conception Day, Christmas 
Day. In 1807 Labour Day was added. In New South Wales, 
the 1 st of January, Good Friday, Easter Eve, Easter Monday, 
the birthday of the sovereign, the 1st of August, the birthday 
of the prince of Wales, Christmas Day and the 26th of December, 
are observed as holidays. In Victoria there are thirteen public 
holidays during the year, and in Queensland fourteen. In New 
Zealand the public holidays are confined to four, Christmas 
Day, New Year's Day, Good Friday and Labour Day. In most 
of the other British colonies the. usual number of public holidays 
is from six to eight. 

In the United States there is no legal holiday in the sense of 
the English bank' holidays. A legal holiday is dependent upon 
state and territorial legislation. It is usual for the president 
to proclaim the last Thursday in November as a day of thanks- 
giving; this makes it only a legal holiday in the District of 
Columbia, and in the territories, but most states make it a 
general holiday. Independence Day (July 4th) and Labour Day 
(first Monday in September) are legal holidays in most states. 
There are other days which, in connexion with particular events 
or in remembrance of particular persons, have been made legal 
holidays by particular states. For example, Lincoln's birthday, 
Washington's birthday, Memorial Day (May 50th), Patriots' Day 
(April 29th, Maine and Mass.), R. E. Lee's birthday (Jan. 19th, 
Ala., Fla., Ga., Va.), Pioneers' Day (July 24th, Utah), Colorado 
Day (Aug. 1st), Battle of New Orleans (Jan. 8th, La.)i Benning- 
tonBattleDay(Aug.i6th,Vt.),Defenders'sDay(Sept.Z2th,Md.), 
Arbor Day (April 22nd, Nebraska; second Friday in May R.I., 
&c), Admission Day (September oth, Cal.; Oct. 31st, Nev.), Con- 
federate Memorial Day (April 26th, Ala., Fla., Ga., Miss., May 
joth, N. & S. Car., June 3rd, La., Miss., Texas), &c 

See M'Curdy, Bibliography of Articles relating to Holidays (Boston, 
1905). (T.A.1.) 

HOLINSHED (or Holiingshead), RAPHAEL (d. c. 1580), 
English chronicler, belonged probably to a Cheshire family, and 
according to Anthony Wood was educated at one of the English 



universities, afterwards becoming a "minister of God's Word." 
The authenticity of these facts is doubtful, although it is possible 
that Raphael was the Holinshed who matriculated from Christ's 
College, Cambridge, in 1544. About 1560 he came to London 
and was employed as a translator by Reginald or Reyner Wolfe, 
to whom he says he was "singularly beholden." Wolfe was 
already engaged in the preparation of a universal history, and 
Holinshed worked for some years on this undertaking; but 
after Wolfe's death in 1573 the scope of the work was abridged, 
and it appeared in 1578 as the Chronicles of England, Scotland, 
and Ireland, The work was in two volumes, which were illus- 
trated, and although Holinshed did a great deal of the work he 
received valuable assistance from William Harrison (1534-1593) 
and others, while the part dealing with the history of Scotland 
is mainly a translation of Hector Boece's Scaiorum Hstchae, 
Afterwards, as is shown by his will, Holinshed served as steward to 
Thomas Burdet of Bramcott, Warwickshire, and died about 1580. 



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HOLKAR, the family name of the Mahratta ruler of Indore 
(q.v.), which has been adopted as a dynastic title. The termina- 
tion ~kar implies that the founder of the family came from the 
village of Hoi near Poona. 

HOLL, FRANK (1845-1888), English painter, was born in 
London on the 4th of July 1845, *ad was educated chiefly at 
University College School. He was a grandson of William 
Holl, an engraver of note, and the son of Francis Holl, AJLA., 
another engraver, whose profession he originally intended to 
follow. Entering the Royal Academy schools as a probationer 
in painting in i860, he rapidly progressed, winning silver and 
gold medals, and making his d€bnt as an exhibitor in 1864 with 
" A Portrait," and " Turned out of Church," a subject picture. 
"A Fern Gatherer" (x86 5 ); "The Ordeal" (1866); "Con- 
valescent" (the somewhat grim pathos of which attracted 
much attention), and " Faces in the Fire " (1867), succeeded. 
Holl gained the travelling studentship in 1868; the successful 
work was characteristic of the young painter's mood, being 
" The Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken away." His insatiable 
zeal for work of all kinds began early to undermine the artist's 
health, but his position was assured by the studentship picture, 
which created a sort of furore, although, as with most of his 
works, the blackness of its coloration, probably due to his 
training as an engraver, was even more decidedly against it 
than the sadness of its theme; Otherwise, this p ri-t ing ex- 
hibited nearly all the best technical qualities to which he ever 
attained, except high finish and clearness, and a very sincere 
vein of pathos. Holl was much below Millais in portraiture, 
and far inferior in all the higher ways of design; in technical 
resources, relatively speaking, he was but scantily provided. 
The range of his studies and the manner of his p»h*»ng woe 
narrower than those of Josef Israels, with whom, except as a 
portrait-painter, he may better be compared than with Millais. 
In 1870 he painted " Better is a Dinner of Herbs where Love is, 
than a Stalled Ox and Hatred therewith "; " No Tidings from 
the Sea," a scene in a fisherman's cottage, in 187 1— a story told 
with breath-catching pathos and power; " I am the Resurrection 
and the Life " (1872); " Leaving Home " (1873), " Deserted " 
(1874), both of which had great success; "Her First-born," 
girls carrying a baby to the grave (1876); and " Going Home " 
(1877). In 1877 he painted the two pictures " Hush " and 



HOLUVND, C.— HOLLAND, isr BARON 



S85 



• Hushed." " Newgate, Committed for Trial," a very sad and 
telling piece, first attested the breaking down of the painter's 
health in 1878. In this year he was elected A.R.A., and exhibited 
" The Gifts of the Fairies," " The Daughter of the House," 
" Absconded," and a very fine portrait of Samuel Cousins, the 
mezzotint engraver. This last canvas is a masterpiece, and 
deserved the success which attended the print engraved from 
it. HoU was overwhelmed with commissions, which he would 
mot decline. The consequences of this strain upon a constitution 
which was never strong were more or less, though unequally, 
manifest in "Ordered to the Front," a soldier's departure 
(1880); "Homo Again," its sequel, in 1883 (after which he 
was made R.A.). In 1886 he produced a portrait of MiQais 
as his diploma work, but his health rapidly declined and he 
died at Hampstcad, on the 31st of Jury 1888, Holl's better 
portraits, being of men of rare importance; attest the command- 
ing position he occupied in the branch of art he so unflinchingly 
followed. They include likenesses of Lord Roberts, painted 
for queen Victoria (1882); the prince of Wales, Lord 
DufFerin, the duke of Cleveland (1885); Lord Overstone, 
Mr Bright, Mr Gladstone, Mr Chamberlain, Sir J. Tenniel, Earl 
Spencer, Viscount Cranbrook, and a score of other important 
subjects. (F. C. S.) 

HOLLAND, CHARLES (1733-1760), English actor, was born 
In Chiswick, the son of a baker. He made his first appearance 
on the stage in the title role of Oroonoho at Drury Lane in 1755, 
John Palmer, Richard Yates and Mrs Cibber being in the cast. 
He played under Garrick, and was the original FTorizel in the 
tatter's* adaptation of Shakespeare's Winter's Tale. Garrick 
thought highly of him, and wrote a eulogistic epitaph for his 
monument in Chiswick church. 

His nephew, Charles Holland (1768-1849) was also an actor, 
who played with Mrs Siddons and Kean. 

HOLLAND, SIR HBNRY, Bast. ( 1788- 187 j)/"" English 
physician and author, was born at Knutsford, Cheshire, on the 
97th of October 1788. His maternal grandmother was the 
sister of Josiah Wedgwood, whose grandson was Charles Darwin; 
and his paternal aunt was the mother of Mrs GaskelL After 
spending some years at a private school at Knutsford, he was 
sent to a school at Newcastle-on-Tyne, whence after four years 
he was transferred to Dr J. P. Estlin's school near Bristol. 
There he at once took the position of head boy, in succession to 
John Cam Hobbouse, afterwards Lord Broughton, an honour 
which required to be maintained by physical prowess. On 
leaving school he became articled clerk to a mercantile firm 
in Liverpool, but, as the privilege was reserved to him of passing 
two sessions at Glasgow university, be at the close of his second 
session sought relief from his articles, and in 1806 began the 
study of medicine in the university of Edinburgh, where he 
graduated in 181 x. After several years spent in foreign travel, 
fee began practice in 18 16 as a physician in London— according 
to his own statement, " with a fair augury of success speedily 
and completely fulfilled." This "success," he adds, "was 
materially aided by visits for four successive years to Spa, at 
the dose of that which is called the London season." It must 
also, however, be in a great degree attributed to his happy 
temperament and his gifts as a conversationalist— qualities 
the influence of which, in the majority of cases belonging to 
his class of practice, is often of more importance than direct 
medical treatment. In 1816 be was elected F.R£., and in 
iSa8 F.R.C.S. He became physician in ordinary to Prince 
Albert in 1840, and was appointed in 185a physician in ordinary 
to the queen. In April 1853 he was created a baronet. He was 
also a D.C.L. of Oxford and a member of the principal learned 
societies of Europe. He was twke married, his second wife 
being a daughter of Sydney Smith, a lady of considerable literary 
talent, who published a biography of her father. Sir Henry 
Holland at an early period of his practice resolved to devote 
to his professional duties no more of his time than was necessary 
to secure an income of £5000 a year, and also to spend two 
months of every year solely in foreign travel By the former 
resolution he secured leisure for a wide acquaintance with 



general literature, and for a more than superficial cultivation 
of several branches of science; and the latter enabled him, 
besides visiting, " and most of them repeatedly, every country 
of Europe," to make extensive tours in the other three con- 
tinents, journeying often to places little frequented by European 
travellers. As, moreover, he procured an introduction to nearly 
all the eminent personages in his line of travel, and knew many 
of them in his capacity of -physician, his acquaintance, with 
"men and dties" was of a spedes without a parallel. . The 
London Medical Record, in noticing his death, which took place 
on his eighty-fifth birthday, October 27, 1873, remarked that 
it "had occurred under circumstances highly characteristic 
of his rema rk able career." . On hjs return from a journey in 
Russia he was present, on Friday, October 24th, at the trial of 
Marshal Bazaine in Paris, dining with some of the judges in 
the evening. He reached London on the Saturday, took ill 
the following day, and died quietly on the Monday afternoon. 
Sir Henry Holland was the author of General View of the Agri- 



culture of Cheshire (1807); Travels in the Ionian Isles, Albania. 
Thessaly and Greece (1812-1813, and ed., 1810); Medical Notes and 
Rejections (1830); Chapters on Mental Physiology (1852); Essays on 
Scientific and other Subjects contributed to the Edinburgh and Quarterly 
Reviews (1862) ; and Recollections of Past Life (1872). 

HOLLAND, HBNRY FOX, isr Baion (1705-1774), English 
statesman, second son of Sir Stephen Fox, was born on the 
28th of September 1705. Inheriting a large share of the riches 
which his father had accumulated, he squandered it soon after 
attaining his majority, and went to the Continent to escape from 
his creditors. There he made the acquaintance of a country- 
woman of fortune, who became his patroness and was so lavish 
with her purse that, after several years' absence, be was in a 
position to return home and, in 1735, to enter parliament as 
member for Hindoo in Wiltshire. He became the favourite 
pupil and devoted supporter of Sir Robert Waipole, achieving 
unequalled and unenviable proficiency in the worst political 
arts of his master and model. As a speaker he was fluent 
and self-possessed, imperturbable under attack, audacious in 
exposition or retort, and able to hold his own against Pitt 
himself. Thus he made himself a power in the House of Commons 
and an in di spensa b le member of several administrations. H 
was surveyor-general of works from 1737 to 1742, wa* member 
for Windsor from 1741 to 1761; lord of the treasury in 1743, 
secretary at war and member of the privy council in 1746, and 
in 1755 became leader of the House of Commons, secretary 
of state and a member of the cabinet under the duke of New- 
castle. In 1757, in the rearrangements of the government. 
Fox was ultimately exduded from the cabinet, and given the 
post of paymaster of the forces. During the war, which Pitt 
conducted with extraordinary vigour, and in which the nation 
was intoxicated with glory, Fox devoted himself mainly to 
accumulating' a vast fortune. In 176s he again accepted the 
leadership of the House, with a seat in the cabinet, under the 
earl of Bute, and exercised his skill in cajolery and corruption 
to induce the House of Commons to approve of the treaty of 
Paris of 1763; as a recomp ens e, he was raised to the House of 
Lords with the title of Baron Holland of Foxley, Wiltshire, 
on the 16th of April 1763. In 1765 he was forced to resign the 
paymaster generalship, and four years later a petition of the 
livery of the dty of London against the ministers referred to 
him as " the public defaulter of unaccounted millions- "* The 
proceedings brought against him in the court of exchequer 
were stayed by a royal warrant; and in a statement published 
by him he proved that in the delays in making up the accounts 
of his office he had transgressed neither the law nor the custom 
of the time. From the interest on the outstanding ba l a nce s 
he had, none the less, amassed a princely fortune. He strove, 
but in vain, to obtain promotion to the dignity of an earl, a 
dignity upon which he had set his heart, and be died at Holland 
House, Kensington, on the 1st of July 1774, a sorely disappointed 
man, with a reputation for cunning and unscrupulousness 
which cannot easily be matched, and with an unpopularity 
which justifies the condusion that he was the most thoroughly 
hated statesman of his day. Lord Holland married in 1744 



586 HOLLAND, ist. EARL OF— HOLLAND, 3*0 BARON 



Lady Georgina Caroline Lennox, daughter of the duke of 
Richmond, who was created Baroness Holland, of Holland, 
Lincolnshire, in 1762. There were four sons of the marriage: 
Stephen, 2nd Lord Holland (d. 1774); Henry (d. an infant); 
Charles James (the celebrated statesman); and Henry .Edward 
(1755-18x1), soldier and diplomatist 

See Walpok's and other memoirs of the time, also the article Fox, 
Charles Jambs. - , _ - __ 

HOLLAND, HENRY RICH, 1st Earl of (1590-1640),^ 
son of Robert, ist earl of Warwick, and of Penelope, Sir Philip 
Sidney's " Stella," daughter of Walter Devereux, ist earl of 
Essex, was baptized on the 10th of August 1500, educated at 
Emmanuel College, Cambridge, knighted on the 3rd of June 
1610, and returned to parliament for Leicester in 1610 and 1614. 
In 1610 he was present at the siege of Juliers. Favours were 
showered upon him by James L He was made gentleman of 
the bedchamber to Charles, prince of Wales, and captain of the 
yeomen of the guard; and on the 8th of March 1623 he was 
raised to the peerage as Baron Kensington. ; In 1624 be was 
sent to Paris to negotiate the marriage treaty between Charles 
and Henrietta Maria. On the 15th of September he was created 
earl of Holland, and in 1625 was sent on two further missions, 
first to Paris to arrange a treaty between Louis XIU. and the 
Huguenots, and later to the Netherlands in company with 
Buckingham. In October 1627 he was given command of the 
troops sent to reinforce Buckingham at Rhe, but through 
delay in starting only met the defeated troops on their return. 
He succeeded Buckingham as chancellor of Cambridge Uni- 
versity; was master of the horse in 1628, and was appointed 
constable of Windsor and high steward to the queen in 1629. 
He interested himself, like, his elder brother, Lord Warwick, 
in the plantations; and was the first governor of the Providence 
company in 1630, and one of the proprietors of Newfoundland 
in 1637. In 1631 he was made chief-justke-in-eyre south of 
the Trent, and in this capacity was responsible for the unpopular 
revival of the obsolete forest laws. » He intrigued at court against 
Portland and against Strafford,, who expressed for him the 
greatest contempt. In 1636 he was disappointed at not obtaining 
the great office of lord high admiral, but was made instead 
groom of the stole. In 1639 he was appointed general of the 
horse, and drew ridicule upon himself by the fiasco at Kelso. 
In the second war against the Soots be was superseded in favour 
of Conway. He opposed the dissolution of the Short Parliament, 
joined the peers who supported the parliamentary cause, and 
gave evidence against Strafford* He was, however, won back 
to the king's side by the queen, and on the z6th of April 1641 
inade captain general north of the Trent, j Dissatisfied, however, 
with Charles's refusal to grant him the nomination of a new 
baron, he again abandoned him, refused the summons to York, 
and was deprived of his office as groom of the stole at the instance 
of the queen, who greatly resented his ingratitude. He was 
chosen by the parliamen^in March and July 1642 to communicate 
its votes to Charles, who received him, much to his indignation, 
with studietLcoldness. He was appointed one of the committee 
of safety in Jury; made zealous speeches on behalf of the 
parliamentary cause to the London citizens; and joined Essex's 
army at Twickenham, where, it is said, Jie persuaded him to 
avoid a battle. In 1643 he appeared as a peacemaker, and after 
failing to bring over Essex, he returned to the king. His recep- 
tion, however, was not a cordial one, and he was not reinstated 
in his office of groom of the stole. After, therefore, accompanying 
the king to Gloucester and taking part in the first battle of 
Newbury, he once more returned to the parliament, declaring 
that the court was too much bent on continuing hostilities, 
and the influence of the M papists " too strong for his patriotism. 
He was restored to his estates, but the Commons obliged the 
Lords to exclude him from the upper house, and his petition 
in 1645 for compensation for his losses and for a pension was 
refused. His hopes being In this quarter also disappointed, he 
once again renewed his allegiance to the king's cause; and 
after endeavouring to promote, the negotiations for peace in 
1645 **d 1647 be took up arms in the second Civil War, received 



a commission as general, and put himself at the head of 600 net 
at Kingston. He was defeated on the 7th of July 1647, captured 
at St Neots shortly afterwards, and imprisoned at Warwick 
Castle. He was tried before a " high court of justice " on the 
3rd of February 1649, and in spite of his plea that he had received 
quarter was sen t enced to death. He was executed together with 
Hamilton and Capel on the oth of March. Clarendon styles 
him "a very well-bred man and a fine gentleman in good times." 1 
He was evidently a man of shallow character, devoid of ability, 
raised far above lu> merits and hopelessly unfit for the great 
times in which he lived. Lord Holland married Elizabeth, 
daughter and heiress of Sir Walter Cope of Kensington, and, 
besides several daughters, had four jons, of whom the eldest, 
Robert, succeeded him as and earl of Holland, and inherited 
the earldom of Warwick in 1673. 

HOLLAND, HENRY RICHARD VASSALL FOX. 310 Bxaov 
(1773-1840), was the son of Stephen Fox, 2nd Baron Holland, 
his mother, Lady Mary Fitzpatrick; being the daughter of the 
earl of Upper Ossory. . He was born at Winterslow House in 
Wiltshire, on the 21st of November 1773, And his father died 
in the following year. He was educated at Eton and at Christ 
Church, Oxford, where he became the friend, of Canning, of 
Hookham Frere, and of other wits of the time. Lord Holland 
did not take the same political side as his friends in the conflicts 
of the revolutionary epoch. He was from his boyhood deeply 
attached to his uncle, C J. Fox, and remained steadily loyal 
to the Whig party. In 1791 he visited Paris and became ac- 
quainted with Lafayette and Talleyrand, and in 1793 he again 
went abroad to travel in France and Italy- At Florence he 
met with Lady Webster, wife of Sir Godfrey Webster, Bart,, 
who left her husband for him. She was by birth Elizabeth 
Vassall (17,70-1845), daughter of Richard Vassall, a planter 
in Jamaica. k A son was born of their irregular union, a Charles 
Richard Fox (x 706-1873), who after some service in the navy 
entered the Grenadiers, and was known in later life as a collector 
of Greek coins. His collection was bought for the royal museum 
of Berlin when he died in 1873. He married Lady Mary Fitx- 
darence, a daughter of William IV. by Mrs Jordan. Sir Godfrey 
Webster having obtained a divorce. Lord Holland was enabled 
to marry on the 6th of July 1797. He had taken his seat in 
the House of Lords on the 5th of October 1796. During several 
years he may be said almost to have constituted the Whig party 
in the Upper House. ; His protests against the measures of the 
Tory ministers were collected and published, as the Opinion* 
of Lord Holland (1841) , by £>r Moylan of Lincoln's Inn. In 1 800 
he was authorized to take the name of Vassal], and after 1807 
he signed himself Vassall Holland, though the name was no part 
of his title. In 1800 Lord and Lady Holland went abroad and 
remained in France and Spain till 1805, visiting Paris during 
the Peace of Amiens, and being well received by Napoleon. 
Lady Holland always professed a profound admiration of 
Napoleon, of which she made a theatrical display after his fall, 
and he left her a gold snuff-box by his will. In public life Lord 
Holland took a share proportionate to his birth and opportunities. 
He was appointed to negotiate with the American envoys, 
Monroe and W. Pinkney, was admitted to the privy council on the 
27th of August 1806, and on the 15th of October entered the 
cabinet " of all the talents " as lord privy seal, retiring with 
the rest of his colleagues in March 1807. He led the opposition 
to the Regency bill in z8n, and be attacked the "orders in 
council " and other strong measures of the government taken 
to counteract Napoleon's Berlin decrees. He was in fact in 
politics a consistent Whig, and in that character he denounced 
the treaty of 2813 with Sweden which bound England to consent 
to the forcible union of Norway, and he resisted the bill of 18 16 
for confining Napoleon in St Helena. His loyalty as a Whig 
secured recognition when bis party triumphed in the struggle 
for parliamentary reform, by his appointment as chancellor of 
the duchy of Lancaster in the cabinet of Lord Grey and Lord 
Melbourne, and he was still in office when he died on the a 2nd 
of October 1840. Lord Holland is notable, not for his somewhat 
x HuL of tiu Rsbdliom, xusoj. 



HOLLAND, J. G.— HOLLAND 



587 



31 

•is 



'4? 

Id 
UK 

ftt 



Insignificant political career, but as a patron of literature, as 
a writer oa his own' account, and because his house was the 
centre and the headquarters of the Whig political and literary 
world of the tine; and Lady Holland (who died on the 16th 
of November 1845) succeeded in taking the sort of place in 
London whkh had been filled in Paris during the 18th century 
by the society ladies who kept M salons." . .Lord Holland's 
Foreign Reminiscences (1850) contain ranch amusing gossip 
from the Revolutionary and Napoleonic era. - His Memoirs of 
the Whig Party (1852) is an important contemporary authority. 
His small work on Lope de Vega (1806) is still of some value. 
Holland had two legitimate sons, Stephen, who died in 1800, 
and Henry Edward, who became 4th Lord Holland.' When this 
peer died in December 1859 the title became extinct. 

See The Journal of Elimbeih, Lady Holland, edited by the earl of 
Ilchefter (1908); and Lloyd Sanders, The Holland House Circle 
(1908). 

HOLLAND, JOSIAH GILBERT (1810-X881 V American' author 
and editor, was born in Bekbertown, Massachusetts, on the 
74th of July 1819. He graduated in 1843 at the Berkshire. 
Medical College (no longer in existence) at Pittbfield, Mas!., 
and after practising medicine in 1844-1847, and making an 
unsuccessful attempt, with Charles Robinson (1818-1804), 
later first governor of the state of Kansas, to establish a hospital 
for women, he taught for a brief period in Richmond, Virginia, 
and in 1848 was superintendent of schools in Vicksburg, Missis- 
sippi. In 1849 be became assistant editor under Samuel Bowles, 
and three years later one of the owners, of the Springfield (Massa- 
chusetts) Republican, with which be retained his connexion 
until 1867. He then travelled for some time in Europe, and 
in 1870 removed to New York, where be helped to establish 
and became editor and one-third owner of Scribner'sMonVily (the 
title of which was changed in 188 1 to The Q ' "ch 
absorbed the periodicals Hours at Home, Putnt ne 

and the Riverside Magashu. He remained e lis 

magazine utotn his death. Dr Holland's books ed 

a wide popularity. ' The earlier ones were publi be 

pseudonym " Timothy Titcomb." His writings ur 

classes: history and biography, represented by of 

Western Massachusetts (1855), and a Life of Ab in 

(1865); fiction, of which Miss Gilbert's Career (i he 

Story of SeeenoeJts (1875) remain faithful pictu*~ ~ ,^-ge 
life in eastern United States; poetry, of which BiUer-Sweet 
(1858) and Kalhrina, Her Life and Mine (1867) were widely 
read; and a series of homely essays on the art of living,, of 
which the most characteristic were Letters to Young People, 
Single and Married (1858), Cold Foil, hammered from Popular 
Proverbs (1859), Letters to the Jonses (1863), and Every-Day 
Topics (a series, 1876 and 188a). While a resident of New 
York, where he died on the xath of October 1881, be identified 
himself with measures for good government and school reform, 
and in 187a became a member and fcr a short time in 1873 was 
president of the Board of Education. 

See Mrs H. M. Plunkett'a Josiah Gilbert Hottand (New York. 
1894). . 

HOLLAND, PHILEMON (X552-1637), English scholar," " the 
translator-general in his age," was born at Chelmsford in. Essex. 
He was the son of a clergyman, John Holland, who had been 
obliged to take refuge in Germany and Denmark with Miles 
Coverdale during the Marian persecution. Having become a 
fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, and taken the degree of 
M.A., he was incorporated at Oxford (July x xth, x 585). Having 
subsequently studied medicine, about 1595 be settled as a 
doctor in Coventry, but chiefly occupied himself with translations. 
In 1628 he was appointed headmaster of the free school, but, 
owing probably to advancing age, he held office for only eleven 
months. His latter days were oppressed by poverty, partly 
relieved by the generosity of the common council of Coventry, 
which in 1632 assigned him £3, 69. 8d. for three years, " if he 
should live so long." He died on the oth of February, 1636- 
1637. His fame is due solely to his translations, which included 
Livy, Pliny's Natural History, Plutarch's Morals, Suetonius, 



Ammianus Marcelfinus and Xenophon's Cyropaedia. He 
published also an English version, with additions, of Camden's 
Britannia. His Latin translation of Brice Bauderon's Pharma- 
coftaed and his Regimen sanUaHs Salemi were published after 
his death by his son, Henky Holland (1583-?! 650), who 
became a London bookseller, and is known to bibliographers 
for his Batlludogia; a Boohe of Kings, beeing the true and liudy 
Effigies of all our English Kings from the Conquest (1618), and 
his Hertoologia Anglica (1620). 

* HOLLAND, RICHARD, or RichamTdb Holande (fl. 1450), 
Scottish writer, author of the Buhe of the Howlat, was secretary 
or chaplain to the earl of Moray (1450) and rector of Halkirk, 
near Thurso." He was afterwards rector of Abbreochy, Loch 
Ness, and later held a chantry in the cathedral of Norway. 
He was an ardent partisan of the Douglases, and on their over- 
throw retired to Orkney and later to Shetland. ; He was employed 
by Edward IV. in his attempt to rouse the Western Isles through 
Douglas agency, and in 1482 was excluded from the general 
pardon granted by James HL to those who would renounce 
their fealty to the Douglases. , 

> The poem, entitled the Butte of the Howlat,'- written about 
1450, shows his devotion to the house of Douglas:— 
" u On ilk beugh till embrace 

Writtin in a bill was 

O Dowglass, O Dowslass 

Tender and trowel 

GL 400-403). 
and is dedicated to the wife of a Douglas— 

" Thus for ane Dow of Dunbar drew I this Dyte, . 
Dowit with ane Dowglass, and boith war thei dowis." 

but all theories of its being a political allegory in favour of that' 
house may be discarded. Sir Walter Scott's judgment that the 
Buhe is " a poetical apologue . . . without any view whatever 
to local or natural politics " is certainly the most reasonable. 
The poem, which extends to 1001 lines written in the irregular 
alliterative rhymed stanza, is a bird-allegory, of the type familiar 
in the Parlement of Faults. It has the incidental interest of 
showing (especially in stanzas 6i and 63) the antipathy of the 
" Inglis-spcaking Scot " to the " Scots-speaking Gael " of the 
west, as is also shown in Dunbar's Flyting with Kennedy. 

ed in the Asloan and Bannatyne 
] Jth century black-letter edition, 

< oduccd in the Adversaria of the 

] s been freoucntry reprinted, by 

1 (1702); by D. Lamg (Bannatyne 

( ib series, Paisley, 1882) ; by the 

] F the Bannatyne MS- and by A. 

j est edition is that by F. J. Amours 

i sh Text Society, 1897), pp. 47-81. 

(.-■ .. •) 

HOLLAND, officially the' kingdom "of the Netherlands 
(Koningrijh der Nederlanden), a maritime country in the north- 
west of Europe. The name Holland is that of the former count- 
ship, which forms part of the political, as well as the geographical 
centre of the kingdom (see the next article). 
;* Topography.— -Holland is bounded on the E. by Germany,' 
on the S. by Belgium, on the W. and N. by the North Sea, and 
at the N.E. corner by the Dollart. From Stevensweert south- 
ward to the extreme comer of Limburg the boundary line is 
formed by the river Maas or Meuse. 1 On the east a natural 
geographical boundary was formed by the long line of marshy 
fens extending along the borders of Overysel, Drente and 
Groningen. The kingdom extends from 53° 32' ti' (Groningen 
Cape on Rottum Island) to 50° 45' 49* N. (Mesch in the 
province of Limburg), and from 3 23' 27* (Sltds in the province 
of Zeeland) to ?° 12' 20* E. (Langakkerschans in the province 
of Groningen). 'The greatest length from north to south, viz. 
that from Rottum Island to Eisden near Maastricht is 164 m 
and the greatest breadth from south-west to north-east, or from 
Zwin near Sluis to Losser in Overysel, 144 m» The area is subject 

* At Maastricht, however, a portion lies on the left bank of the 
river, measured, according to the treaty with Belgium, 19th of April 
1839, art. 4, by an average radius of 1200 Dutch fathom* (7874 ft.) 
from the outer glacis of the fortress. 



$88 



HOLLAND 



[GEOGRAPHY 



to perpetual variation, owing, on the one hand, to the erosion 
of the coasts, and, on the other, to reclamation of land by means 
of endiking and drainage operations. In 1889 the total area 
was calculated at 12,558 sq. m. f and, including the Zuidcr Zee 
and the Wadden (2050 sq. m.) and the Dutch portion of the 
Dollart (23 sq. m.), 14, 613 sq. m. In no country in Europe has 
the character of the territory exercised so great an influence on 
the inhabitants as in the Netherlands; and, on the other hand, 
no people has so extensively modified the condition of its territory 
as the Dutch. The greatest importance attaches therefore to 
the physical conformation of the country. 

The coast-line extends in a double curve from south-west to north- 
east, and is formed by a row of sand dunes, 171 m. in length, fringed 
CamaL ty * broad sandy beach descending very gradually into 
the sea. In the north and south, however, this line is 
broken by the inlets of the sea which form the Frisian and the South 
Holland and Zeeland Islands respectively; but the dunes themselves 
are found continued along the seaward side of these islands, thus 
indicating the original continuity of the coast-line. The breadth of 
the dunes naturally varies greatly, the maximum width of about 
4375 yds. being found at Schoorl, north-west of Alkmaar. The 
average height of the individual dune-tops is not above 3$ ft., but 
attains a maximum of 197 ft. at the High Blinfcert, near Haarlem. 
The steepness of the dunes on the side towards the sea is caused by 
the continual erosion, probably traceable, in part at least, to the 
channel current (which at mean tide has a velocity of 14. or 15 in. 
per second), and to the strong west or north-west winds which carry 
off large quantities of material This alteration of coast-line appears 
at Loosduincn, where the moor or fenland formerly developed 
behind the dunes now crops out on the shore amid the sand, being 
pressed to the compactness of lignite by the weight of the sand 
drifted over it. Again, the remains of the Roman camp Brittenburg 
or Hub te Britten, which originally lay within the dunes and, after 
being covered by them, emerged again in 1520, were, in 1694, l6o ° 
paces out to sea, opposite Katwijk; while, besides Katwijk itself, 
several other villages of the west coast, as Domburg, Seheveningen, 
Egraond, have been removed further inland. The tendency of the 
dunes to drift off on the landward side is prevented by the planting 
of bent-grass (Arundo arenaria). whose long roots serve to bind the 
sand together. It must be further remarked that both the " dune- 
pans," or depressions, which are naturally marshy through their 
defective drainage, and the geesi grounds— that is, the grounds alone 
the foot of the downs — have been in various places either planted 
with wood or turned into arable and pasture land; while the 
numerous springs at the base of the dunes are of the utmost value to 
the great cities situated on the marshy soil inland, the example set 



nd 
te. 

downward slope from south-east to north-west, in which direction 
the rivers mainly flow. The elevation of the surface of the country 
ranges between the extreme height of 1037 ft. near Vaals in the 



r 

. r 



M 

Ni 

Merwede (constructed in the second naff 0/ the 19th century) extends 
between dykes through the marshes of the Biesbosch to the 
Hollandsch Diep. These great rivers render very important service 
as waterways. The mean velocity of their flow seldom exceeds 4*9 
ft., but rises to 6*4 ft. when the river is high. In the lower reaches of 
the streams the velocity and slope arc of course affected by the tides. 
In the Waal ordinary high water is perceptible as far up as Zalt 
Bommel in Gelderland, in the Lek the maximum limits or ordinary 
and spring tides are at Vianen and Kuilenburg respectively, in the 
Ysel above the Katerveer at the junction of the Willemsvaart and 
past Wyhe midway between ZwoJIe and De venter; and in the Maaa 
near Heusden ana at Well in Limbing. Into the Zuider Zee there 
also flow the Kuindcr, the Zwarte Water, with its tributary the Vecht. 
and the Eem. The total length of navigable channels is about 
1130 m., but sand banks and shallows not Infrequently impede the 
shipping traffic at low water .during the summer. The smaller 
streams are often of great importance. Except where they rise in 
the fens they call into life a strip of fertile grassland in the midst 
of the barren sand, and are responsible for the existence of many 
villages along their banks. Following the example of the great 
Kampen irrigation canal in Belgium, artificial irrigation b also 
practised by means of some of the smaller streams, especially in 
North Brabant, Drentc and Overysel, and in the absence of streams* 
canals and sluices are sometimes specially constructed to perform the 
same service. The low-lying spaces at the confluences of the rivers* 
being readily laid under water, have been not infrequently chosen as 
sites for fortresses. As a matter of course, the streams are also 
turned to account in connexion with the canal system — the Dommel, 
Berkel, Vecht, Rcggc, Holland Ysel, Gouwe, Rotte.Schie, Spaa me, 
Zaan, Amstel, Dieze, Amer r Mark, Zwarte Water, Kuinder and the 
numerous Aas in Drente and Groningen being the most important 
in this respect. 

It is unnecessary to mention the names of the numerous marshy 
lakes which exist, especially in Friesland and Groningen, and are 
connected with rivers or streamlets. Those of Friesland »«w. 
are of note for the abundance of their fish and their beauty 
of situation, on which last account the Uddelermeer in Gelderland is 
also celebrated. The Rockanie Lake near Bridle is remarkable for 
the strong salty solution which covers even the growing reeds with a 



1 The datum plane, or basis of the measurement of heights, is 
throughout Holland, and also in some of the border districts of 
Germany, the Amsterdasiuck PeU (A. P.), or Amsterdam water-level* 
and represents the average high water-level of the Y at Amsterdam 
at the time when it was still open to the Zuidcr Zee. Local and 
provincial " peils " are, however, also in use on some water-ways. 



Itf 



DIKES: DRAINAGE] HOLLAND 

hard crust. Many of the lake* are nothing more than deep pits or 
marshes from which the peat has been extracted. 

Dikes— The circumstance that so much of Holland Is below 
the sea-level necessarily exercises a very important influence 
on the drainage, the climate and the sanitary conditions of the 
counh-y, as well as on its defence by means of inundation. The 
endiking of low lands against the sea which had been quietly 
proceeding during the first eleven centuries of the Christian era, 
received a fresh impetus in the 12th and 13th centuries from the 
fact that the level of the sea then became higher in relation to 
that of the land. This fact is illustrated by the broadening of 
river mouths and estuaries at this time, and the beginning of 
the formation of the Zuider Zee. A new feature in diking was 
the construction of dams or sluices across the mouths of rivers, 
sometimes with important consequences for the villages situated 
on the spot. Thus the dam on the Amstcl (1257) was the origin 
of Amsterdam, and the dam on the Ye gave rise to Edam. Out 
Holland's chief protection against inundation is its long line of 
sand dunes, in which only two real breaches have been effected 
during the centuries of erosion. These are represented by the 
famous sea dikes called the Westkapclle dike and the Honds- 
bossche Zeewering, or sea-defence, which were begun respectively 
in the first and second halves of the 15th century. The first 
extends for a distance of over 4000 yds. between the villages 
of Westkapelle and Domburg in the island of Walchercn; the 
second is about 4900 yds. long, and extends from Kampcrduin 
to near Petten, whence it is continued for another ixoo yds. 
by the Pettemer dike. These two sea dikes were reconstructed 
by the state at great expense between the year i860 and 1884, 
having consisted before that time of little more than a protected 
sand dike. The earthen dikes are protected by stone-slopes and 
by piles, and at the more dangerous points also by ainkstukken 
(sinking pieces), artificial structures of brushwood laden with 
stones, and measuring some 400 yds. in circuit, by means of 
which the current is to some extent turned aside. The West* 
kapelle dike, 12,468 ft. long, has a seaward slope of 300 ft., and 
is protected by rows of piles and basalt blocks. On its ridge, 
39 ft. broad, there is not only a roadway but a service railway. 
The cost of its upkeep is more than £6000 a year, and of the 
Hondsbossche Zeewering £?ooo a year. When it is remembered 
that the woodwork is infested by the pile worm {Teredo navalis), 
the ravages of which were discovered in 1731, the labour and 
expense incurred in the construction and maintenance of the 
sea dikes now existing may be imagined. In other parts of the 
coast the dunes, though not pierced through, have become so 
wasted by erosion as to require artificial strengthening. This 
is afforded, either by means of a so-called sleeping dike (slaptr- 
dyk) behind the weak spot, as, for instance, between Kadzand 
and Breskens in Zecland- Flanders, and again between 's Graven- 
zande and Loosduinen; or by means of piers or breakwaters 
(koofden, heads) projecting at intervals into the sea and composed 
of piles, or brushwood and stones. The first of such breakwaters 
was that constructed in 1857 at the north end of the island of 
Goerec, and extends over 100 yds. into the sea at low water. 
Similar constructions are to* be found on the seaward side of 
the islands of Walcheren, Schouwen and Voorne, and between 
'S Gravenzande and Scheveningen, and Katwijk and Noordwijk. 
Owing to the obstruction which they offer to drifting sands, 
artificial dunes are in course of time formed about them, and 
in this way they become at once more effective and less costly 
to maintain. The firm and regular dunes which now run from 
Petten to Kallantsoog (formerly an island), and thence north- 
wards toHuisduinen, were thus formed about the Zypcr (1617) 
and Koegras (1610) dikes respectively. From Huisduinen to 
Nieuwediep the dunes are replaced by the famous Helder sea- 
wall. The shores of the Zuider Zee and the Wadden, and the 
Frisian and Zuider Zee islands, are also partially protected by 
dikes. In more than one quarter the dikes have been repeatedly 
extended so as to enclose land conquered from the sea, the work 
of reclamation being aided by a natural process. Layer upon 
layer of day is deposited by the sea in front of. the dikes, until 
a new fringe has been added to the coast-line on which sea- 



589 



grasses begin to grow. Upon these clay-lands (kwelders) horses, 
cattle and sheep are at last able to pasture at low tide, and in 
course of time they are in turn endiked. 

River dikes are as necessary as sea dikes, elevated banks 
being found only in a few places, as on the Lower Rhine. Owing 
to the unsuitability of the foundations, Dutch dikes arc usually 
marked by a great width, which at the crown varies between 
13 and 26 ft. The height of the dike ranges to 40 in. above 
high water-level. Between the dikes and the stream lie '* fore- 
lands " (interwaarden), which are usually submerged in winter, 
and frequently lie 1 or 2 yds, higher than the country 
within the dikes. These forelands also offer in course of time 
an opportunity for endiking and reclamation. In this way 
the towns of Rotterdam, Schiedam, Vlaardingeh and Maasluis 
have all gradually extended over the Maas dike in order to 
keep in touch with the river, and the small town of Delftshaven 
is built altogether on the outer side of the same dike. 

TmpoUfring.—Tht first step in the reclamation of land is to " im- 
polder it, or convert it into a " polder " (i.«. a section of artificially 
drained land), by surrounding it with dikes or quays for the twofold 
purpose of protecting it from all further inundation from outside and 
of controlling the amount of water inside, impoldcring for its own 
sake or on a large scale was impossible as long as the means of 
drainage were restricted. But in the beginning of the 15th century 
new possibilities were revealed by the adaptation of the windmill to 
the purpose of pumping water. It was gradually recognized that the 
masses, of water which collected wherever peat-digging had been 
carried on were an unnecessary menace to the neighbouring lands, 
and also that a more enduring source of profit lay in the bed of the 
fertile sea-clay under the peat. It became usual, therefore, to make 
the subsequent drainage of the land a condition of the extraction of 
peat from it, this condition being established by proclamation in 1595. 

Drainage— \t has been shown that the western provinces of 
Holland may he broadly defined as lying below sea-level. In fact 
the surface of the sea-clay in these provinces is from 11} to 16} ft. 
below the Amsterdam zero. The ground-water is, therefore, re- 
latively very high and the capacit£bf the soil for further absorption 
proportionately low. To increase the reservoir capacity of the polder, 
as well as to conduct the water to the windmills or engines, it is 
intersected by a network of ditches cut at right angles to each other, 
the amount of ditching required being usually one-twelfth of the area 
to.be drained. In modern times pumping engines have replaced 
windmills, and the typical old Dutch landscape with its countless 
hooded heads and swinging arms has been greatly transformed by 
the advent of the chimney stacks of the Dumping-stations. The 
power of the pumping-engines is taken on the basis of 12 h.p. per 
1000 hectares for every metre that the water has to be raised, or 
stated in another form, the engines must be capable of raising nearly 
9 lb of water through I yd. per acre per minute. The main ditches, 
or canals, afterwards also serve as a means of navigation. The level 
at which it is desired to keep the water in these ditches constitutes 
the unit of water measurement for the polder, and is called the- 
polder's wmer ptil (Z.P.) or summer water-level. In pasture- 
polders (kcepolders) Z.P. is 1 to i| ft. below the level of the polder, 
and m agricultural polders 2 J to 3 J ft. below. Owing to the shrinkage 
of the soil in reclaimed lands, however, that is, lands which have been' 
drained after fen or other reclamation, the sides of the polder are 
often higher than the middle, and it is necessary by means of small 
dams or sluices to make separate water-tight compartments 
(afpoidtringm), each having its own unit of measurement. Some 
polders also have a winter peil as a precaution against the increased 
tall of water in that season. The summer water-level of the pasture 
polders south of the former Y is about 4 to 8 ft. bdow the Amsterdam 
zero, but in the Noordcrkwartier to the north, it reaches 10J ft. below 
A. P. in the Beschotcl polder, and in reclaimed lands (droo%makenjen) 
may be still lower, thus in the Reeuwyk polder north of Gouda it is 
21 1 ft. below. 

The drainage of the cot 
means, according to the slo 
of Zecland and South Holl 
the sea at average low w 
But in North Holland an 
water has generally to be n 
lands where the water cai 
at once, windmills are fou 
The final removal of polcfc 
upon its discharge into the 
the sea itself or the large 1 
this happens with but a s 
as those of Zeeland, the Ho! 

As the system of impold 
were gradually cut oft by 
which they flowed, and by 
communicated. Their levi 
that of the pasture polder 



59© 



HOLLAND 



and endikcd or embanked lakes had come into existence, forming 
altogether a vast network of more or less stagnant waters. These waters 
are utilized as the temporary reservoirs of the superfluous polder 
water, each system of reservoirs being termed a boeaem (bosom or 
basin), and all lands watering into the same boezem being considered 
as belonging to it. The largest boezem is that of Friesland, which 
embraces nearly the whole province. It sometimes happens that 
a polder is not in direct contact with the boezem to which it belongs. 
but first drains into an adjacent polder, from which the water is 
afterwards removed. In the same way, some boezems discharge 
first into others, which then discharge into the sea or rivers. This 
is usually the case where there is a great difference in height between 
the surface of the boezem and the outer waters, and may be illus- 
trated by the Alblasscrwaard and the Rotte boezems in the pro- 
vinces of South and North Holland respectively. In time of drought 
the water in the canals and boezems is allowed to run back into the 
polders, and so serve a double purpose as water-reservoirs. Boezems. 
like polders, have a standard water-level which may not be ex- 
ceeded, and as in the polder this level may vary in the different 
parts of an extended boezem. The height of the boezem peil ranges 
beween 1} ft. above to il ft. below the Amsterdam zero, though 
the average is about 1 to it ft. below. Some boezems, again, which 
are less easily controlled, have a " danger water-level at which 
they refuse to receive any more water from the surrounding polders. 
The Schie or Delflands boezem of South Holland is of this kind, 
and such a boezem is termed besloten or " sequestered," in con- 
tradistinction to a " free " boezem. A third kind of boezem is the 
reserve or berg-boesem, which in summer may be made dry and used 
for agriculture, while in winter it serves' as a special reserve. The 
centuries of labour and self-sacrifice involved in the making of th|s 
complete and harmonious system of combined defence and reclama- 
tion are better imagined than described, and even at the present 

day the evidences of the struggle are far less apparent than real. 
£ . r» -^ ,,_..••_ _...___ 5 _ .rr-_ -_ LL _ L „j of 

ed 
ed 

he 



lie 
is 
he 
to 
of 
tea 

he 
of 

N. 

night extending in the north to nine hours, and tKcre is a corre- 
spondingly wide range of temperature; it also belongs to the 
region of variable winds. On an average of fifty years the mean 
annual temperature was 49*8' Fahr.; the maximum, 93*9* Fahr.; 
the minimum, —5*8° Fahr. The mean annual barometric height is 
2993 in.; the mean annual moisture, 81%; the mean annual 
rainfall, 27-99 m - The mean annual number of days with rain is 
204, with snow 19, and with thunder-storms 18. The increased 
rainfall from July to December (the summer and autumn rains), and 
the increased evaporation in spring and summer (5*2 in. more than 
the rainfall), are of importance as regards " poldcring " and draining 
operations. The prevalence of south-west winds during nine 
months of the year and of north-west during three (ApriMune) has 
a strong influence on the temperature and rainfall, tides, river 
mouths and outlets, and also, geologically, on dunes and sand drifts, 
and on fens and the accumulation of clay on the coast. The west 
winds of course increase the moisture, and moderate both the winter 
cold and the summer heat, while the cast winds blowing over, the 



1 Sec J. Lorie, Contributions a la gcologie des Pays-bas (1885-1895), 
Archive* du Mus. Tcyltr (Haarlem), scr. 2, vol. ii. pp. 109-240, 
vol. iii. pp. I -160. 375-461. vol. iv. pp. 1 65-309 and Butt. soc. 
beljx giol. vol. iii. (1889); idem, pp. 409-449: F. W. Harmcr. 
" On the Pliocene Deposits of Holland, &c. Quart. Journ. Ccol. 
$oc. t London, vol. hi. (1896) pp. 748-781, pis. xxxiv.. xxxv. 



(FAUNA AND FLORA 

continent have an opposite influence. It cannot be said that the 
climate is particularly good, owing to the changcableness of the 
weather, which may alter completely within a single day. The 
heavy atmosphere likewise, and the necessity of living within doors 
or in confined localities, cannot but exercise an influence on the 
character and temperament of the inhabitants*. Only of certain 
districts, however, can it be said that they are positively unhealthy; 
to this category belong some parts of the Holland provinces, Zeeland, 
and Friesland, where the inhabitants are exposed to the exhalations 
from the marshy ground, and the atmosphere is often burdened 
with sea-fogs. 

Fauna.— In the densely populated Netherlands, with no extensive 
forests, the fauna does not present any unusual varieties. The otter, 
martin and badger may be mentioned among the rarer wild animals, 
and the weasel, ermine and pole-cat among the more common. 
In the 1 8th century wolves still roamed the country in such large 
numbers that hunting parties were organized against them; now 
they are unknown. Roebuck and deer arc found in a wild state 
in Gelderland and Overyscl, foxes are plentiful in the dry wooded 
regions on the borders of the country, and hares and rabbits in the 
dunes and other sandy stretches. Among birds may be reckoned 
about two hundred and forty different kinds which arc regular 
inhabitants, although nearly two hundred of these are migratory. 
The woodcock, partridge, hawk, water-ousel, magpie, jay, raven, 
various kinds of owls, wood-pigeon, golden-crested wren, tufted lark 
and titmouse are among the birds which breed here. Birds of 
passage include the buzzard, kite, quail, wild fowl of various kinds, 
golden thrush, wagtail, linnet, finch and nightingale. Storks are 
plentiful in summer and might almost be considered the most 
characteristic feature of the prevailing landscape. 

Flora. — The flora may be most conveniently dealt with in the four 
physiographical divisions to which it belongs. These arc, namely, 
the heath-lands, pasture-lands, dunes and coasts. Heath {Erica 
tetrojix) and ling (Caltuna vulgaris) cover all the waste sandy regions 
in the eastern division of tbo country. The vegetation of the 
meadow-lands is monotonous. In the more damp and marshy 
places the bottom is covered with marsh trefoil, carex, smooth 
cquisctum, and rush. In the ditches and pools common yellow and 
white water-lilies are seen, as well as water-soldier (Slratiotes abides). 

?;reat and lesser reed-mace, sweet flag and bur-reed. The plant 
orms of the dunes are stunted and meagre as compared with the 
same forms elsewhere. The most common plant here is the stiff 
sand -reed (Arundo arenaria), called sand-oats in Drente and Overy- 
scl, where it is much used for making mats. Like the sand-reed, 
the dewberry bramble and the shrub of the buckthorn {HiPpopkat 
rhamnoides) perform a useful service in helping to bind the sand 
together. Furze and the common juniper are regular dune plants, 
and may also be found on the heaths of Drente, Overyscl and 
Gelderland. Thyme and the small white dune-rose (Rosa pimpineUi- 
folia) also grow in the dunes, and wall-pepper (Sedum acre), field 
fever-wort, reindeer moss, common asparagus, sheep's fescue grass, 
the pretty Solomon-seal (Pohgonatum officinale), and the broad- 
lea ved or marsh Orchis (Orcnts latifolia). The sea-plants which 
flourish on the sand and mud-banks along the coasts greatly assist 
the process of littoral deposits and are specially cultivated in places. 
Sea -aster flourishes in the Wadden of Friesland and Croningen. the 
Dollar! and the Zeeland estuaries, giving place nearer the shore 
to sandspurry (Spergularia), or sea-poa or floating meadow grass 
(Glyctria maritima), which grows up to the dikes, and affords pasture 
for cattle and sheep. Along the coast of Overyscl and in the Bies- 
bosch lake club-rush, or scirpus, is planted in considerable quantities 
for the hat-making industry, and common sea-wrack (Zoster a 
marina) is found in large patches in the northern half of the Zuider 
Zee, where it is gathered for trade purposes during the months of 
June, July and August. Except for the willow-plots found along 
the rivers on the clay lands, nearly all the wood is confined to the 
sand and gravel soils, where copses of birch and alder are common. 

Papulation.— Ths following table f hows the area and popula- 
tion in the eleven provinces of the Netherlands; — 



Province 


Area in 
sq. m. 


Population 
1890. 


Population 
1900. 


Density per 

sq. m. in 

1900. 


North Brabant 
Gelderland 
South Holland 
North Holland 
Zeeland .' . 
Utrecht , . 
Friesland. . 
Overyscl . 
Groningen . 
Drente . . 
Limburg . . 

Total . . 


1.980 
1.965 
1,166 
1.070 
690 

1,282 
1.291 

790 
1.030 

850 


509,628 

512,202 

949.641 

829.489 

199*234 

221,007 

335.558 . 

295.445 

272.786 

130.704 

255.721 


553.842 
566.549 

'•ittSJ 

216,295 
251.034 
340,262 
333.338 
399.602 
M8.544 
281,934 


280 
288 
081 
905 
3»3 
11° 

*3 

258 

379 
144 
332 


12,648 


4.51I.4I5 


5.104.I37 1 


404 



'* This total includes 158 persons assigned to no province 



communications] HOLLAND 591 



The extremes of density of population are found in the provinces 
of North Holland and South Holland on the one hand, and 
Drente on* the other. This divergence is partly explained by 
the difference of soil — which in Drente comprises the maximum 
of waste lands, and in South Holland the minimum — and partly 
also by the greater facilities which the seaward provinces enjoy 
of earning a subsistence, and the greater variety of their indus- 
tries. The largest towns are Amsterdam, Rotterdam, the Hague, 
Utrecht, Groningen, Haarlem, Arnhem, Leiden, Nijmwegen, 
Tilburg. Other considerable towns are Dordrecht, Maastricht, 
Leeuwarden, Zwolle, Delft, 's Hertogenbosch, Schiedam, 
Deventer, Breda, Apeldoorn, Helder, Enschede, Gouda, Zaandam, 
Kampen, Hilversum, Flushing, Amersfoort, Middelburg, Zutphen 
and Alkmaar. Many of the smaller towns, such as Assen, 
Enschede, Helmond, Hengelo, Tiel, Venlo, Vlaardingen, Zaandam, 
Yerseke, show a great development, and it is a noteworthy 
fact that the rural districts, taken as a whole, have borne an 
equal share in the general increase of population. This, taken 
in conjunction with the advance in trade and shipping, the 
diminution in emigration, and the prosperity of the savings 
banks, points to a favourable state in the condition of the people. 

Communications. — The roads are divided info national or royal 
roads, placed directly under the control of the roatarstaal and sup- 
B**4*. ported by the state; provincial roads, under the direct 
kom. control of the states of the provinces, and almost all 
supported by the provincial treasuries; communal and polder 
roads, maintained by the communal authorities and the polder 
boards; and finally, private roads. The system of national roads, 
mainly constructed between 182 1 and 1827, but still in process of 
extension, brings into connexion nearly all the towns. 

The canal system of Hollar ids 

into every part of the country »t 

Cmnmi*. a n^ritirae appcara als 

**■""*• exceeds 1500 m. ler 

streams have been largely u he 

necessity for a comprehensive ed 

in no small degree. During tl he 

extensive scheme of construct 1. 

was carried out, the following ito 

existence in that period: th« th, 

16 J ft.) from Amsterdam to en 

Apeldoorn and Hattem, the' ith 

the Ysel. the Zuid Willetnsv* .), 

from 's Hertogenbosch to Maa lip 

canal. After 1849 the canal r. he 

state, which alone or in conio ies 

constructed the Apeldoorn- Di gc 

canals of the " Peel " marsh 1 rn 

Brovinccs, namely, the Deurni to 

lelenaveen* the Almelo (18 \8) 

canals from Zwolle, Deventer he 

Stieltjes (1880-1884), and Ora at? 

in Drente, the North Williams ^..a. v . uo « .««*, »in^.>..».. »nd 
Groningen, the Ems (1866-1876) ship canal from Groningen Co 
DelfzyC and the New Mcrwede, and enlarged the canal from Har- 
lingen by way of Leeuwarden to the La a wars Zee. The large ship 
canals to Rotterdam and Amsterdam, called the New Waterway 
and the North Sea canal respectively, were constructed in 1866-1872 
and 1865-1876 at a cost of 2 J and 3 million pounds sterling, the 
former by widening the channel of the Scheur north of Rozenburg, 
and cutting across the Hook of Holland, the latter by utilizing the 
bed of the Y and cutf * * " * -«--•*-- .- -— 

an agreement was ar 
important drainage ca 
the Ems canal system 
(1884-1888) and other 

The canals differ 
Zeeland they connect 
river mouths; for ex 
and Flushing (1866-18 
Zicrikzec also to the Ei 
canal connects the E 
Holland the Voorne ca 
which does not allow 
whilst owing to the b 
the New Waterway % 
is the Zcderik canal, 

Holland, the Lek, at V- _, „ 

at Gorkum. Amsterdam ts connected with the Lek and the Zederik 
<anal via Utrecht by the Vecht and the Vaart Rhine (1881-1893; 
depth 10-2 ft.). Again, a totally different character belongs to the 
canals in North Brabant, and the east and north-east of Holland 
where, in the absence of great rivers, they fdrm the only waterways 
which render possible the drainage of the fens and the export of 



592 



HOLLAND 



carried across the river Ysel at Doesburg on a pontoon bridge. 
The state first began to encourage the construction of these local 
y. light railways by means of subsidies in 1893, *» ncc when 

™""~ some of the most prominent lines have come into exist- 
y ence, such as Purmcrcnd— Alkmaar (1898), Zutphcn— 

Emmerich (1902), along the Dedemsvaart in Overyscl (1902), from 
'« Hertogenbosch via Utrecht and Eindhoven to Turnhout in 
Belgium (1898), and especially those connecting the South Holland 
and Zeeland islands with the railway, namely, between Rotterdam 
and Numansdorp on the Hollandsch Diep (1898), and from Breda 
or Bcrgen-op-Zoom, via Steenbergen to St Philipsland, Zicrikzee 
and Brouwershavcn (1900). An electric tramway connects Haarlem 
and Zandvoort. The number of passengers carried by the steam* 
tramways is relatively higher than that of the railways. The value 
of the goods traffic is not so high, owing, principally, to the want of 
intercommunication between the various lines on account of differ- 
ences in the width of the gauge. 

Agriculture— Wast? lands are chiefly composed of the barren 
stretches of heaths found in Drente, Overyscl, Gelderland 
and North Brabant. They formerly served to support large 
flocks of sheep and some cattle, but are gradually transformed 
by the planting of woods, as well as by strenuous efforts at 
cultivation. Zeeland and Groningen are the two principal 
agricultural provinces, and after them follow Limburg, North 
Brabant, Gelderland and South Holland. The chief products 
of cultivation on the heavy clay soil are oats, barley and wheat, 
and on the sand-grounds rye, buckwheat and potatoes. Flax 
and beetroot are also cultivated on the clay lands. Tobacco, 
hemp, hops, colza and chicory form special cultures. With the 
possible exception of oats, the cereals do not suffice for home 
consumption, and maize is imported in large quantities for 
cattle-feeding, and barley for the distilleries and breweries. 
Horticulture and market-gardening arc of a high order, and 
flourish especially on the low fen soil and geest grounds along the 
foot of the dunes in the provinces of North and South Holland. 
The principal market products are cauliflower, cabbage, onions, 
asparagus, gherkins, cucumbers, beans, peas, &c. The principal 
flowers are hyacinths, tulips, crocuses, narcissus and other 
bulbous plants, the total export of which is estimated at over 
£200,000. Fruit is everywhere grown, and there is a special 
cultivation of grapes and figs in the Westland of South Holland. 
The woods, or rather the plantations, covering 6%, consist 
of (1) the so-called forest timber {opgoandhout; Ft. arbres 
de haute fuiaie), including the beech, oak, elm, poplar, birch, 
ash, willow and coniferous trees; and (2). the copse wood 
(akkermaal or ha k haul), embracing the elder, willow, beech, 
oak, &c. This forms no unimportant branch of the national 
wealth. 

With nearly 35% of the total surface of the country under 
permanent pasture, cattle-breeding forms one of the most char- 
, .^ acteristic industries of the country. The provinces of 

mtocL Friesland, North and South Holland, and Utrecht take 

tiocs. tne j eaj j as ypgarjg ^h q ua |jt y am j numbers. A smaller, 

hardier kind of cattle and large numbers of sheep are kept upon 
the heath-lands in the eastern provinces, which also favour the 
rearing of pigs and bee-culture. Horse-breeding is most important 
in Friesland. which produces the well-known black breed of horse 
commonly used in funeral processions. Goats are most numerous 

in Gelderland and % * L «* L — " ' " ' ' ire 

generally kept. Si ily 

improved under th I), 

which grants subsii he 

importation of fin< of 

factories for dairy \ 

Fisheries. — The I id 

to have been in ex he 



following century 
ho 



r>d 



covcry how to cui 

fisherman. It stea », 

however, but again I y. 

The fisheries are co is. 

namely, the " deep 

(binncntaatsch) fist he 

South Holland and be 

further divided intc y, 

mainly carried on fi ier 

and autumn, and at 

Scheveningen, Kat-.,, , ng 

fisheries is enhanced by the careful methods of smoking and salting, 
the export of salted fish being considerable. In the winter the 
largest boats are laid up and the remainder take to line-fishing. 



(AGRICULTURE: INDUSTRIES 

Zwartewaal are the centres of this branch 
alibut, rfod. ling and haddock. The trawl 
d sole, plaice, turbot, brill, skate, &c.. of 
lUght alive to the market. In the Zuider 
fish, anchovies and shrimps are caught. 
1 being the islands of Tcxel, Urk and 
t towns of Hclder, Bunschotcn, Huixen, 
Kampen, Hardcrwyk, Vollenhove! The 
tcs place in May, June and luly sometimes 
suits. Oysters and mussels are obtained 



nd anchovies at Bcrgen-op-Zoom; while 
sal ire caught in the Maas, the Lek and the 

N( tcr-beds and salmon fisheries are largely in 

th ich lets them to the highest bidder. Large 

qu (ht in the Frisian lakes. The fisheries not 

on ... „ _ i demand, but allow of large exports. 

Manufacturing Industries.— The mineral resources of Holland 
give no encouragement to industrial activity, with the exception 
of the coal-mining in Limburg, the smelting of iron ore in a 
few furnaces in Overysel and Gelderland, the use of stone and 
gravel in the making of dikes and roads, and of day in brick- 
works and potteries, the quarrying of stone at St Pietersberg, 
&c. Nevertheless the industry of the country has developed 
in a remarkable manner since the separation from Belgium. 
The greatest activity is shown in the cotton industry, which 
flourishes especially in the Twente district of Overysel, where 
jute is also worked into sacks. In the manufacture of woollen 
and linen goods Tilburg ranks first, followed by Leiden, Utrecht 
and Eindhoven; that of half- woollens is best developed at 
Roermond and Helmond. Other branches of industry include 
carpet-weaving at Deventer, the distillation of brandy, gin 
and liqueurs at Schiedam, Rotterdam and Amsterdam, and 
beer-brewing in most of the principal towns; shoe-making and 
leather-tanning in the Langstraat district of North Brabant; 
paper-making at Apeldoorn, on the Zaan, and in Limburg; 
the manufacture of earthenware and faience at Maastricht, 
the Hague and Delft, as well as at Utrecht, Purmerend and 
Makkum; clay pipes and stearine candles at Gouda; margarine 
at Osch; chocolate at Weesp and on the Zaan; mat-plaiting 
and broom-making at Genemuiden and Blokayl; diamond- 
cutting and the manufacture of quinine at Amsterdam; and 
the making of cigars and snuff at Eindhoven, Amsterdam, 
Utrecht, Kampen, &c. Shipbuilding is of no small importance 
in Holland, not only in the greater, but also in the smaller 
towns along the rivers and canals. The principal shipbuilding 
yards are at Amsterdam, Kinderdijk, Rotterdam and at Flushing, 
where there is a government dockyard for building warships. 

Trade and Shipping.— To obtain a correct idea of the trade of 
Holland, greater attention than would be requisite in the case of 
other countries must be paid to the inland traffic. It is impossible 
to state the value of this in definite figures, but an estimate may be 
formed of its extent from the number of ships which it employs in 
the rivers and canals, and from the quantity of produce brought to 
the public market. In connexion with this traffic there is a Large 
fleet fcf tug boats; but stoam- or petroleum-propelled barges ace 
becoming more common. Some of the lighters used in the Rhine 
transport trade have a capacity of 3000 tons. A great part of the 
commercial business at Rotterdam belongs to the commission and 
transit trade. The other principal ports are Flushing, Terneuaen 
(for Belgium), Harlingen, Delfzyl. Dordrecht, Zaandam, Schiedam, 
Groningen, den Helder. Middelburg, Vlaardingen. Among the 
national mail steamship services are the lines to the East and West 
Indies, Africa and the United States. An examination of its lists 
of exports and imports will show that Holland receives from its 
colonies its soiccrics, coffee, sugar, tobacco, indigo, cinnamon; 
from England and Belgium its manufactured goods and coals; 
petroleum, raw cotton and cereals from the United States; grain 
from the Baltic provinces. Archangel, and the ports of the Black 
Sea; timber from Norway and the basin of the Rhine, yarn from 
England, wine from France, hops from Bavaria and Alsace; iron* 
ore from Spain ; while in its turn it sends its colonial wares to 
Germany, its agricultural produce to the London market, its fish 
to Belgium and Germany, and its cheese to France, Belgium and 
Hamburg, as well as England. The bulk of trade is carried on with 
Germany and England: then follow Java, Belgium, Russia, the 
United States, &c. In the last half of the 19th century the total 
value of the foreign commerce was more than trebled. 

Constitution and Government. —The government of the Nether- 
lands is regulated by the constitution of 1815, revised in 1848 
and 1887, under which the sovereign's person is in violabis and 



CONSTITUTION AND GOVERNMENT] 



HOLLAND 



593 



die ministers are responsible. The age of majority of the 
sovereign is eighteen. The crown is hereditary in both the 
male and the female line according to primogeniture; but it 
is only in default of male heirs that females can come to the 
throne. The crown prince or heir apparent is the first subject 
of the sovereign, and bears the title of the prince of Orange. The 
sovereign alone has executive authority. To him belong the 
ultimate direction of foreign affairs, the power to declare war 
and peace, to make treaties and alliances, and to dissolve one 
Or both chambers of parliament, the supreme command of the 
army and navy, the supreme administration of the state finances 
and of the colonies and other possessions of the kingdom, and 
the prerogative of mercy. By the provisions of the same con- 
stitution he establishes the ministerial departments, and shares 
the legislative power with the first and second chambera of 
parliament, which constitute the states-general and ait at 
the Hague. The heads of the departments to whom the especial 
executive functions are entrusted are eight in number — ministers 
respectively of the interior, of " water-staat," trade and industry 
(that is, of public works, including railways, post-office, &c.), 
of justice, of finance, of war, of marine, of the colonies and 
of foreign affairs. There is a department of agriculture, but 
without a minister at its head. The heads of departments are 
appointed and dismissed at the pleasure of the sovereign, usually 
determined, however, as in all constitutional states, by the 
will of the nation as indicated by its representatives. 

The number of members in the first chamber is 50, South 
Holland sending 10, North Holland o, North Brabant and 
Gelderland each 6, Friesland 4, Overysel, Limburg and Groningen 
each 3, Zecland, Utrecht and Drente each 2. According to 
the fundamental Jaw (Grorutod) of 1887, they are chosen by 
the provincial states, not only from amongst those who bear 
the greatest burden of direct taxation in each province, but 
also from amongst great functionaries and persons of high rank. 
Those deputies who are not resident in the Hague are entitled 
to receive 16s. 8d. a day during the session. The duration of 
parliament is nine years, a third of the members retiring every 
three years. The retiring members are eligible. for re-election. 
The members of the second chamber are chosen in the electoral 
districts by all capable male citizens not under 33 years of age, 
who pay one or more direct taxes, ranging from a minimum of 
one guilder (is. 8d.) towards the income tax. The number of 
members is 100, Amsterdam returning 9, Rotterdam 5, the 
Hague 3, Groningen and Utrecht 2 members each. Members must 
be at least thirty years old, and receive an annual allowance 
of £r66, besides travelling expenses. They only, and the govern- 
ment, have the right of initiating business, and of proposing 
amendments. Their term is four years, but they are re-eligible. 
All communications from the sovereign to the states-general 
and from the states to the sovereign, as well as all measures 
relating to internal administration or to foreign possessions, 
are first submitted to the consideration of the council of state, 
which consists of 14 members appointed by the sovereign, who 
is the president. The state council also has the right of making 
suggestions to the sovereign in regard to subjects of legislation 
and administration. 

The provincial administration is entrusted to the provincial 
states, which are returned by direct election by the same electors 
a* vote for the second.chamber. The term is for six years, but one- 
half of the members retire every three years subject to re-election 
or renewal. The president of the assembly is the royal commissioner 
for the province. As the provincial states only meet a few times in 
the year, they name a committee of deputy-states which manages 
current^ general basinets, and at the same time exercises the right 
of control over the affairs of the communes. At the head of every 
commune stands a communal council, whose members must be not 
under 23 years of age. They are elected for six years (one-third of 
the council retiring every two years) by the same voters as for the 
provincial states. Communal franchise is further restricted, how- 
ever, to those electors who pay a certain sum to the communal rates. 
The number of councillors varies according to the population between 
7 and 45. One of the special duties of the council is the super- 
vision of education. The president of the communal council is the 
burgomaster, who is named by -the sovereign in every instance for 
six years, and receives a salary varying from £40 to over £600. 
Provision is made for paying the councillors a certain fee— called 



594. HOLLAND (religion; education 

and state which had been established by the synod of Dort (1618) 1 the optional subjects. While the boys are instructed in woodwork. 
~ " ~ * * ~" ••*••' needlework is taught to the girls, its introduction in 1889 having 
been the first recognition of practical instruction in any lorm. 
Continuation schools (lurhalingisckoUn) mast be organised wherever 
required, and are generally open for six months in winter. pupil* 
of twelve to fourteen or sixteen attending. Secondary schools were 
established by the law of 1863 and must be provided by every 
, * :-u-w: u~. ~ :- thc Burgher-Day- 

chools. The first 



1 gradually fell into 

1 r law is two years, 

I nd the instruction, 

1 al local industries; 

I erOng per annum. 

n of the school of 
< my of Plastic Arts 

i t either a three or 

toe. to £5 a year, 
ad and scientific 
end of the course, 
Ae natural science 
a supplementary 
or other branches, 
peaking under the 
ery town of jogooa 
ride a gymnasium. 
1 by the state to 
im is classical and 
b a bifurcation in 
\u The fees vary 
rf scholarships and 
e of the nigher- 
ivc specialized in- 
able trade schools 
corresponding in- 
d schools of oavi- 
w c science, and of 

commerce and industry, among which the municipal school at 
Enschede (1886) deserves special mention; and the school of social 
work, " Das Huis," at Amsterdam (1900). For the edacation of 
medical practitioners, civil and military, the more important in- 
stitutions are the National Obstetrical College at Amsterdam, the 
National Veterinary School at Utrecht, the National College for 
Military Physicians at Amsterdam and the establishment at Utrecht 
for the training of military apothecaries for the East and West 
Indies. The organization of agricultural education under the state 
is very complete, and includes a state professor of agriculture for 
every province (as well as professors of horticulture in several 
cases), " winter schools " of agriculture and horticulture, and a 
state agricultural college at wageningen (1876) with courses in 
home and colonial agriculture. The total fees at this college, in- 
cluding board and lodging, are about £50 a -year. According to the 
law of 1898, the state also maintains or subsidizes experimental or 
testing-stations. > Other schools of the same class are the Gerard 
Adriaan van Swieten schools of agriculture, gardening and forestry 
in Drente t the school of instruction In butter and cheese making 
(zuivdbcreidint) at Bolsward and the state veterinary college at 

There are three state universities in Holland, namefy. Leaden 
(»575). Groningen (1585) and Utrecht (1634)* The ancient athe- 
naeums of Franeker (1585) and Harderwyk (i6o£) were closed in 
181 1, but that of Amsterdam was converted into a municipal 
university in 1877. In each of these universities there are, five 
faculties, namely, law, theology, medicine, science and mathe- 
matics, and literature and philosophy, the courses for which are 
respectively four, five, eight, and six or seven years for the two 
last named. The fees amount to 200 florins f£i6, 15s. 46.) per 

ar j jj| e fa f our y tAnm t wo kinds of degrees are 

cc xe ordinary Icandidaats) and the " doctor's ** 

dV 1 the higher-burgher schools are only eligible 

fc i also a tree (Calvinistic) university at Antster* 

d > and enjoying, since 1905, the right of oon- 

fc has, however, no faculties of law or science. 

T c school at Delft (1864) for the study of en- 

~ ranches, architecture and naval construction, 

of four years, and confers the degree of " en* 

5 s the same as those of the universttiesj and aa at 

e are bursaries. A national institution at 
L of languages, geography and ethnology of the 

D-v — -.— -- ..— »„en place to communal institutions of the same 
nature at Delft and at Leiden, founded in 1864 and 1877. The 
centre of Dutch university life, which is non-residential, Is the 
students' corps, at the head of which is a " senate," elected annuaHy 
from among the students of four years' standing. Membership of 
the corps is gained after a somewhat trying novitiate, but is the only 
passport to the various social and sports societies. 



E 



elementary general history, English, French and German are among 



HOLLAND 59 $ 



J 



59* 



HOLLAND 



[HISTORY PROM 1579 



«***Cr 



United Netherlands was to be raised. Its immediate results 
were Car from promising. The falling away of the Walloon 
provinces and the Catholic nobles from the patriot cause 
threatened it with ruin. Nothing but the strong personal 
influence and indefatigable labours of the prince of Orange 
stood in the way of a moro general defection. Everywhere, 
save in staunch and steadfast Holland and Zetland, a feeling 
of wavering and hesitation was spreading through the land. 
In Holland and Zetland William was supreme, but elsewhere 
his aims and his principles were misrepresented and misunder- 
stood. He saw that unaided the patriotic party could not hope 
to resist the power of Philip II., and he had therefore' resolved 
to gain the support of France by the offer of the sovereignty 
of the Netherlands to the duke of Anjou. But Anjou 
was a Catholic, and this fact aroused among the Pro- 
testants a feeling that they were being betrayed. 
to tb* But the prince persisted in the policy he felt to be a 
JJjjJj^ necessity, and (23rd of Jan. 1581) a treaty was con- 
cluded with the duke, by which he, under certain 
conditions, agreed to accept the sovereignty of the Netherland 
provinces, except Holland and Zeeland. These two provinces 
TtuBMM wcrc unwilling to have any sovereign but William 
mgaiatt himself, and after considerable hesitation he agreed 
WiMmmof to become their Count (24th of July 1581). He felt 
<***** that he was justified in taking this step becatise of the 
Ban which Philip had published on the 15th of March 
1 58 1, in which Orange had been proclaimed a traitor and 
miscreant, and a reward offered to any one who would take his 
life. His practical answer to the king was the act 
JJjJJ^ of Abjuration, by which at his persuasion the repre- 
tfc* sentatives of 'the provinces of Brabant, Flanders, 

Holland, Zeeland, Gelderland and Utrecht, assembled 
at the Hague, declared that Philip had forfeited his sovereignty 
over them, and that they held themselves henceforth absolved 
from their allegiance to him. In a written defence, 
ApoHtT' tnc fo roous Apology, published later in the year, William 
replied at great length to the charges that had been 
brought against him, and carrying the war into the enemy's 
camp, endeavoured to prove that the course he had pursued 
was justified by the crimes and tyranny of the king. 

The duke of Anjou was solemnly inaugurated as duke of 
Brabant (February 1582), and shortly afterwards as duke of 
Gelderland, count of Flanders and lord of Friesland. 
titto William had taken up his residence aPXntwerp in 
Lift of order to give the French prince his strongest personal 
Onmf support, and while there a serious attempt was made 
JJjJjJJ- upon his life (March 18th) by a youth named Jean 
Jaureguy. He fired a pistol at the prince close to his 
head, and the ball passed under the right ear and out at the left 
jaw. It was a terrible wound, but fortunately n*t fatal Mean- 
while Anjou soon grew tired of his dependent position and of 
the limitations placed upon his sovereignty. He resolved by 
a secret and sudden attack (17th of January 1583) to make 
himself master of Antwerp and of the person of Orange. 
JJ^ The assault was made, but it proved an utter failure. 
P^y. The citizens resisted stoutly behind barricades, and 
the French were routed with heavy loss. The "French 
Fury " as it was called, rendered the position of Anjou in the 
Netherlands impossible, and made William himself unpopular 
in Brabant. He accordingly withdrew to Delft. In the midst 
of his faithful Hollanders he felt that he could still organize 
resistance, and stem the progress made by Spanish arms and 
Spanish influence under the able leadership of Alexander of 
Parma. Antwerp, with St Aldegonde as its burgomaster, was 
still in the hands of the patriots and barred the way to the sea, 
and covered Zeeland from invasion. Never for one moment did 
William lose heart or relax his efforts and vigilance; he felt that 
with the two maritime provinces secure the national cause need 
not be despaired of. But his own days had now drawn to their 
end. The failure of Jaureguy did not deter a young Catholic 
zealot, by name Balthazar Gerard, from attempting to assas- 
sinate the man whom he looked upon as the arch-enemy of 



God and the king. Under the pretext of seeking a passport, 
Gerard penetrated into the Prinsenhof at Delft, and Aua ^ 
firing point blank at William as he left the dining Bimmaom ' 
hall, mortally wounded him (10th of July 1584). o/wuamm 
Amidst general lamentations " the Father of his tte 5-Mt 
Country," as he was called, was buried with great state in the 
Nieuwe Kerk at Delft at the public charge. 

But though the great leader was dead, he had not striven or 
worked in vain. The situation was critical, but there was no 
panic Throughout the revolted provinces there was a general 
determination to continue the struggle to the bitter end. To 
make head, however, against the victorious advance of Parma, 
before whose arms all the chief towns of Brabant and Flanders, 
Bruges, Ghent, Brussels and lastly— after a valiant defence — 
Antwerp itself had fallen, ft was necessary to look for the pro- 
tection of a foreign ruler. The government, now that the com- 
manding personal influence of William was no more, was without 
any central authority which could claim obedience. The States- 
General were but the delegates of a number of sovereign pro- 
vinces, and amongst these Holland by its size and wealth (after 
the occupation by the Spaniards of Brabant and 
Flanders) was predominant. Maurice of Nassau, ** 
William's second son, had indeed on his father's death 
been appointed captain and admiral-general of the 
Union, president of the Council of State, and stadbolder of 
Holland and Zeeland»but he was as yet too young, only seventeen, 
to take a leading part in affairs. Count Hohenloo took the 
command of the troops with the title of lieutenant-gcneraL Two 
devoted adherents of William of Orange, Paul Buys, advocate 
of Holland, and Johan van Oldenbarnevcldt, pensionary 
of Rotterdam, were the statesmen who at this difficult JJ£jJ v *" 
juncture took the foremost part in directing the policy «/*/** 
of the confederacy. They turned first to France. toHtmwy 
The sovereignty of the provinces was offered to Henry ^ f J^ 4 
III., but the king, harassed by dv3 discords in his 
own country, declined the dangerous honour (1585). Repelled 
in this direction, the States-General next turned themselves to 
England. Elizabeth was alarmed by the successes of the Spanish 
arms, and especially by the fall of Antwerp; and, though refus- 
ing the sovereignty, she agreed to send a force of 5000 foot and 
1000 horse to the aid of the Provinces under the com- 
mand of the earl of Leicester, her expenses being 
guaranteed by the handing over to her the towns 
of Flushing, Brill and Rammekcns as pledges (10th 
of August 1585). Leicester, on landing in Holland, was in the 
presence of the States-General and of Maurice of Nassau invested 
with the title of governor-general and practically sovereign 
powers (February 1586). 

The new governor had great difficulties to contend with. He 
knew nothing of the language or the character of the people he 
was called upon to govern; his own abilities both as p»*r* 
general and statesman were mediocre; and he was mmtwMM- 
hampered constantly in his efforts by the niggardliness *"?***** 
and changing whims of his royal mistress. In trying LUMUf ' 
to consolidate the forces of the Provinces for united action and 
to centralize its government, he undoubtedly did his best, 
according to his lights, for the national cause- But he was too 
hasty and overbearing. His edict prohibiting all commercial 
intercourse with the enemy at once aroused against him the 
bitter hostility of the merchants of Holland and Zeeland, who 
thrived by such traffic His attempts to pack the council of 
State, on which already two Englishmen had seats, with personal 
adherents and to override the opposition of the provincial 
states of Holland to bis arbitrary acts, at last made bis position 
impossible. The traitorous surrender of DeVenter and Z u tp h e n 
by their English governors, Stanley .and York, both Catholics, 
rendered all Englishmen suspect. The States of Holland under 
the leadership of Johan van Oldenbarneveldt, took up an attitude 
of resolute hostility to him, and the States of Holland dominated 
the States-General. In the midst of these divided councils the 
important seaport of Sluis was taken by Parma. Utterly dis- 
credited. Leicester (6th of August 1587) abandoned the task. 



HISTORY FROM IJ79) 



HOLLAND 



597 



in which he had met with nothing but failure, and returned 
to England. 

Nothing could have been worse than the petition of the States 
at the beginning of 1588. Had Parma had a free hand, in all 
probability he would have crushed out the revolt 
«J»**""*J and reconquered the northern Netherlands. But the 
JJJJJJJfc attention of the Spanish king was at this time con- 
centrated upon the success of the Invincible Armada. 
The army of Parma was held in readiness for the invasion of 
England, and the United Provinces had a respite. They were 
fortunately able to avail themselves of it. The commanding 
abilities of Olden bame veldt, now advocate of Holland, gradually 
gathered into his hands the entire administration of the Republic. 
He became indispensable and, as bis influence grew, more and 
more did the policy of the provinces acquire unity and con- 
sistency of purpose. At the same time Maurice of 
Nassau, now grown to man's estate, began to display 
those military talents which were to gain for him the 
fame of being the first general of his time. But 
Maurice' was no politician. He had implicit trust in the 
advocate, his father's faithful friend and counsellor, and for 
many years to come the statesman and the soldier worked in 
harmony together for the best interests of .their country (sec 
Oldenbarnevelot, and Maurice, prince of Orange). At the 
side of Maurice, as a wise adviser, stood his cousin William Louis, 
stad holder of Friesland, a trained soldier and good commander 
in the field. 

After the destruction of the Armada, Parma had been occupied 
with campaigns on the southern frontier against the French, 
and the Netherlanders had been content to stand on 
mfuSh K uaT d against attack. The surprise of Breda by a 
stratagem (8th of March 1500) was the only military 
event of importance up to 1501. But the two sladholdcrs had 
not wasted the time* The Slates' forces had been reorganized 
and brought to a high state of military discipline and training. 
In 1 501 the States-General, after considerable hesitation, were 
persuaded by Maurice to sanction an offensive campaign. It 
was attended by marvellous success. Zutphen was captured 
on the roth of May, Deventer on the roth of June. Parma, 
who was besieging the fort of Knodsenburg, was forced to retire 
with loss. Hulst fell after a three days' investment, and finally 
Nymegen was taken on the 21st of October. The fame of 
Maurice, a consummate general at the early age of twenty-four, 
was on all men's lips. The following campaign was signalized 
-^.. by the capture of Steenwyk and Koevorden. On the 
{EJ££r 8th Of December 1502 Parma died, and the States 
were delivered from their most redoubtable adversary. 
In 1503 the leaguer of Geertruidenburg put the seal on Maurice's 
reputation as an invincible besieger. The town fell after an 
New investment of three months. Croningen was the 

provfnc* chief fruit of the campaign of 1 504. With its dependent 
otstm* district it was formed into a new province under the 
•• ******** name of Stadt en Landen. William Louis became 
the at ad holder (see Groningen). The soil of the northern 
Netherlands was at last practically free from the presence of 
Spanish garrisons. 

The growing importance of the new state was signalized by 
the conclusion, in 1506, of a triple alliance between England, 
France and the United Provinces. It was of short 
duration and purchased by hard conditions, but it 
Implied the recognition by Henry IV. and Elizabeth 
of the States -General, as a sovereign power, with 
whom treaties could be concluded. Such a recognition 
was justified by the brilliant successes of the campaign 
of 1 507. It began with the complete rout of a Spanish 
force of 4500 men at Turnhout in January, with scarcely any 
loss to the victors. Then in a succession of sieges Rheinberg, 
Meurs, Groenlo, Bredevoort, Enschede, Ootmarsum, Oldenzaal 
and Lingen fell into the hands of Maurice. 

The relations of the Netherlands to Spam were in 1508 com- 
pletely changed. Philip II. feeling death approaching, resolved 
to many his elder daughter, the Infanta Isabel Clara Eugenia, 



Trlph 



otFnoct, 



amdtbe 
UattexJ 



to her cousin, the Cardinal Archduke Albert of Austria, who 
had been governor-general of the Netherlands since 1596, 
and to erect the Provinces into an independent sove- Antrt g 
reignty under their joint rule. The instrument was /<j**i 
executed in May; Philip died in September; the So^trHgn* 
marriage took place in November. In case the mar- j£ l J* lw 
riage should have no issue, the sovereignty of the /mST 
Netherlands was to revert to the king of Spain. The 
archdukes (such was their official title) did not make their 
joyetue entrte into Brussels until the close of 1509. The step 
was taken too late to effect a reconciliation with the rebel 
provinces. Peace overtures were made, but the conditions 
were unacceptable. The States-General never seriously con- 
sidered the question of giving in their submission to the new 
sovereigns. The traders of Holland and Zeeland had thriven 
mightily by the war. Their ships had penetrated to the East 
and West Indies, and were to be found in every sea. The year 
1600 saw the foundation of the Chartered East India Company 
(see Dutch East India Company). The question of freedom 
of trade with the Indies had become no less vital to the Dutch 
people than freedom of religious worship. To both these con- 
cessions Spanish policy was irreconcilably opposed. 

Dunkirk, as a nest of freebooters who preyed upon Dutch 
commerce, was made the objective jf a daring offensive campaign 
in 1600 by the orders of the Stales-General under the 
influence of Oldcnbarneveldt in the teeth of the opposi- J?f,?*f 1 ' 
lion of the stadholders Maurice- and William Louis. £,£*' 
By a bold march across Flanders, Maurice reached 
Nieuport on the 1st of July, and proceeded to invest it. The 
archduke Albert, however, followed hard on his steps with an 
army of seasoned troops, and Maurice, with his communications 
cut, was forced to fight for his existence. A desperate combat 
took place on the dunes between forces of equal strength and 
valour. Only by calling up his last reserves did victory declare 
for Maurice. The archduke had to fly for his life. Five thousand 
Spaniards were killed; seven hundred taken, and one hundred 
and five standards. To have thus worsted the dreaded Spanish 
infantry in open fight was a great triumph for the States troops 
and their general, but it was barren of results. Maurice refused 
to run further risks and led back his army to Holland. For the 
following three years all the energies alike of the archdukes and 
the States-General were concentrated on the siege 
of Ostend (15th of July 1601 -20th of Sept. 1604), the SSJ/ia 
solitary possession of the Dutch in Flanders. The 
heroic obstinacy of the defence was equalled by the perseverance 
of the attack, and there was a vast expenditure, especially on 
the side of the Spaniards, of blood and treasure. At last when 
reduced to a heap of ruins, Ostend fell before the resolution of 
Ambrosio de Spinola, a Genoese banker, to whom the command 
of the besiegers had been entrusted (see Spinola). A month 
before the surrender, however, another and more commodious 
seaport, Sluis, had fallen into the possession of the States army 
under Maurice, and thus the loss of Ostend was discounted. 

Spinola proved himself to be a general of a high order, and the 
campaigns of 1606 and 1607 resolved themselves into a duel 
of skill between him and Maurice without much ad- 
vantage accruing to either side. But the archdukes* JJJJIjU 
treasury was now empty, and their credit exhausted; #**». 
both sides were weary of fighting, and serious negotia- 
tions for peace were set on foot. The disposition of the Spaniards 
to make concessions was further quickened by the destruction 
of their fleet at Gibraltar by the Dutch admiral Heemskerk, 
(April 1607). But there were many difficulties in the way. 
The peace party in the United Provinces headed by Oldcn- 
barneveldt was opposed by the stadholders Maurice and William 
Louis, the great majority of the military and naval officers, 
the Carvintst preachers and many leading merchants. The 
Spaniards on their side were obdurate on the subjects of freedom 
of trade in the Indies and of freedom of religious worship. At 
last, after the negotiations had been repeatedly on the point of 
breaking off, a compromise was effected by the mediation of 
the envoys of France and England. On the nth of April 1609 



S9« 



HOLLAND 



(HISTORY FROM is* 



Twttv* 
Tract. 



a truce for twelve years Was agreed upon. On all points the 
Dutch demands were granted The treaty was concluded with 
the Provinces, "in the quality of free States over 
whom the archdukes made no pretentions." The uti 
possidetis as regards territorial possession was recog- 
nized. Neither the granting of freedom of worship 
to Roman Catholics nor the word "Indies" was mentioned, 
but in a secret treaty King Philip undertook to place no hindrance 
in the way of Dutch trade, wherever carried on. 

One of the immediate results of this triumph of his policy was 
the increase of Oldenbarneveldt's influence and authority in the 
Tk9 £ government of the Republic. But though Maurice 
kttkmi and his other opponents had reluctantly yielded to 
trittim the advocate's skilful diplomacy and persuasive 
HotUa4. ar g amentS| a soreness remained between the statesman 
and the stadholder which was destined never to be healed. The 
country was no sooner relieved from the pressure of external 
war than it was torn by internal discords. After a brief inter- 
ference in the affairs of Germany, where the intricate question 
of the Cleves-Jiilich succession was already preparing the way 
for the Thirty Years' War, the United Provinces became immersed 
in a hot and absorbing theological struggle with which, were 
mixed up important political issues. The province 
ArmJatac Q | Holland was the arena in which it was fought out. 
cfoMfu. Two professors of theology at Leiden, Jacobus Arminius 
(see Arminius) and Franciscus Gomarus, became the 
leaders of two parties, who differed from one another upon 
certain tenets of the abstruse doctrine of predestination. 
Gomarus supported the orthodox Calvinist view; Arminius 
assailed it. The Arminians appealed to the States of Holland 
(1610) in a Remonstrance in which their theological position 
Rtmoa- was defined. They were henceforth known as " Re- 
cftMfsaotfmonstrants"; their opponents were Styled "Contra- 
Remonstrants." The advocate and the Slates of 
Holland took sides with the Remonstrants, Maurice 
and the majority of the States-General (four provinces 
out of seven) supported the Contra-Remonstrants. It became 
a question of the extent of the rights of sovereign princes under 
the Union. The States-General wished to summon a national 
synod, the States of Holland refused their assent, and made 
levies of local mitixiaiwaord-geldcrs) for the maintenance of order. 
The States-General (9th of July 1618) took up the challenge, 
and the prince of Orange, as captain-general, was placed at the 
head of a commission to go in the first place to Utrecht, which 
supported Oldenbarneveldt, and then to the various cities of 
Holland to insist on the disbanding of the ward- 
gdders. On the side of Maurice, whom the army 
obeyed, was the power of the sword. The opposition 
collapsed; the recalcitrant provincial states were purged, and 
the leaders of the party of state rights— the advocate himself, 
Hugo de Groot (see Grottos), pensionary of Rotterdam, and 
Hoogerbeets, pensionary of Leiden, were arrested and thrown 
into prison. The whole proceedings were illegal, and the illegality 
was consummated by the prisoners being brought before a 
special tribunal of 24 judges, nearly all of whom were 
personal enemies of the accused. The trial was 
merely a preliminary to condemnation. The advocate 
was sentenced to death, and executed (13th of May 
1619) in the Binnenhof at the Hague. The sentences of Grotius 
and Hoogerbeets were commuted to perpetual imprisonment. 

Meanwhile the National Synod had been summoned and had 
met at Dort on the ijth of November 1618. One hundred 
members, many of them foreign divines, composed 
ito^. this great assembly, who after 154 sittings gave their 
seal to the doctrines of the Netherlands Confession and 
the Heidelberg Catechism. The Arminians were condemned, 
their preachers deprived; and the Remonstrant patty placed 
under a ban (6th of May 1610). 

In 162 1 the Twelve Years' Truce came to an end, and war 
broke out once more with Spain. Maurice, after the death of 
Oldenbarneveldt, was supreme in the land, but he missed 
sorely the wise counsels of the old statesman whose tragic end 



lie 



he had been so largely instrumental in bringing about. 
and Spinola found themselves once more at the head 
of the armies in the field, but the health of the stad- £/£Tm 
bolder was undermined, and bis military genius was 
under a cloud. Deeply mortified by his failure to relieve Breda, 
which was blockaded by Spinola, Maurice fell seriously _ ,. 
ill, and died on the 23rd of April 1625. He was umftm 
succeeded in his dignities by his younger brother 
Frederick Henry (see Frederick Henry, prince of Orange), 
who was appointed stadholder of Holland, Zeeland, Utrecht, 
Overyssel and Gelderland, captain and adjutant-general of the 
Union and head of the Council of State. Frederick Henry was as 
a general scarcely inferior to Maurice, and a far more able states- 
man. The moderation of his views and his conciliatory temper 
did much to heal the wounds left by civil and religious strife, 
and during his time the power and influence of the stadholderaie 
attained their highest point. Such was his popularity rw 
and the confidence he inspired that in 163 1 his great puimttr 
offices of state were declared hereditary, in favour of 
bis five-year-old son, by the Acte de Sunhcnce. He 
did much to justify the trust placed in him, for the period of 
Frederick Henry is the most brilliant in the history of the Dutch 
Republic During his lime the East India Company, which had 
founded the town of Batavia in Java as their adminis- 7^ EMtt 
trative capital, under a succession of able governor- «w w*u 
generals almost monopoliaed the trade of the entire *•«•€••- 
Orient, made many conquests and established a net- *—**• 
work of factories and trade posts stretching from the Cape of 
Good Hope to Japan (see Dutch East India Company). The 
West India Company, erected in 1621, though framed on the 
same model, aimed rather at waging war on the enemies* com- 
merce than in developing their own. Their fleets for some years 
brought vast booty into the company's coffers. The Mexican 
treasure ships fell into the hands of Piet Heyn, the boldest of 
their admirals, in 1628; and they were able to send armies 
across the ocean, conquer a large part of Brazil, and set up a 
flourishing Dutch dominion in South America (see Dutch West 
India Company). The operations of these two great chartered 
companies occupy a place among memorable events of Frederick 
Henry's stadholderaie, they arc therefore mentioned here, but 
for further details the special articles must be consulted. 

When Frederick Henry stepped into his brother's place, be 
found the United Provinces in a position of great danger and of 
critical importance. The Protestants of Germany 
were on the point of being crushed by the forces of the JJJJjjJ^ 
Austrian Habsburgs and the Catholic League. It lay 
with the Netherlands to create a diversion in the favour 
of their co-religionists by keeping the forces of the Spanish 
Habsburgs fully occupied. But to do so with their flank exposed 
to imperialist attack from the east, was a task involving grave 
risks and possible disaster. In these circumstances, Frederick 
Henry saw the necessity of securing French aid. It was secured 
by the skilful diplomacy of Francis van Aarssens (q.v.) but 
on hard conditions. Richelieu required the assistance of the 
Dutch fleet to enable him to overcome the resistance of the 
Huguenot stronghold of La Rochelle. The far-sighted stadholder, 
despite popular opposition, by his powerful personal influence 
induced the States-General to grant the naval aid, and thus 
obtain the French alliance on which the safety of the republic 
depended. 

The first great military success of Frederick Henry was in 
1629. His capture of Hertogenbosch (Bois-le-duc), hitherto 
supposed to be impregnable, after a siege of five $***••* 
months was a triumph of engineering skill. Wesel "— 
also was taken by surprise this same year. In 1631 a 
large Spanish fleet carrying a picked force of 6000 ' 
soldiers, for the invasion of Zeeland, was completely 
destroyed by the Dutch in the SJaak and the troops made 
prisoners. The campaign of the following year was made 
memorable by the siege of Maestricht. This important frontier 
town lying on both sides of the river Meuse was taken by the 
prince of Orange in the teeth of two relieving armies, Spanish 



HISTORY FROM 1579) 



HOLLAND 



599 



Csptwn 
•tends. 



and Imperialist, whose united forces were far larger than his own. 
This brilliant feat of arms was the prelude to peace negotiations, 
0»«/» which led to a lengthy exchange of diplomatic notes. 
0tu» No agreement, however, was reached. The death of 
*" w" lhe Infanta Isabel in November 1633, and the reversion 
UmM ' of the Netherlands to the sovereignty of the king 
of Spain, rendered all efforts to end the war, for the time being, 
fruitless. 

At this juncture a strengthening of the French alliance seemed 
to the prince not merely expedient, but necessary. He had 
to contend against a strong peace party in Holland 
headed by the pensionary Pauw, but with the aid of 
the diplomatic skill of Aarssens all opposition was 
overcome. Pauw was replaced as pensionary by 
Jacob Cats, and the objections of Rkhelieu were met and 
satisfied. A defensive and offensive alliance with France was 
concluded early in 1635 against the king of Spain, and each 
party bound itself not to make a peace or truce without the 
assent of the other. A large French force was sent Into the 
Netherlands and placed under the command of the prince of 
Orange. The military results of the alliance were during the 
first two campaigns inconsiderable. The Cardinal Infant 
Ferdinand had been appointed governor of the Netherlands, 
and he proved himself an excellent general, and there were 
dissensions in the councils of the allies. In 1637 the stadholder 
was able to add to his fame as an invincible besieger of cities. 
His failure to relieve Breda had hastened the death of Maurice. 
It fell in 1615 into the hands of Spinola after a blockade 
of eleven months; it was now retaken by Frederick 
Henry after a Siege of eleven weeks, in the face of 
immense difficulties. The reluctance of the States of Holland, 
and of Amsterdam in particular, to grant adequate supplies 
caused the campaigns of 1638 and 1630 to be in the main defen- 
sive and dilatory. An attempted attack on Antwerp was foiled 
by the vigilance of the Cardinal Infant. A body of 6000 men 
under Count William of Nassau were surprised and utterly 
cut to pieces. The year 1639, which had begun with abortive 
negotiations, and in which the activity of the stadholder had 
been mach hampered by ill-health, was not to end, however, 
without a signal triumph of the Dutch arms, but it was to be 
on sea and not on land. A magnificent Spanish armada consisting 
of 77 vessels, manned by 24,000 soldiers and sailors under the 
command of Admiral Oquendo, were sent to the Channel in 
September with orders to drive the Dutch from the narrow 
seas and land a large body of troops at Dunkirk. Attacked by 
a small Dutch fleet under Admiral Marten Tromp, 
•#**• tne Spaniards sheltered themselves under the English 
09wb», Downs by the side of an English squadron. Tromp 
kept watch over them until he had received large 
reinforcements, and then (*tst of October) boldly attacked them 
as they lay in English waters. Oquendo himself with seven 
vessels escaped under cover of a fog; all the rest of the fleet 
was destroyed. This crushing victory assured to the Dutch 
the command of the sea during the rest of the war. The naval 
power of Spain never in fact recovered from the blow. 

The triumph of Tromp had, however, a bad effect on public 
feeling in England. The circumstances under which the battle 
of the Downs was won were galling to the pride of 
the English people, and intensified the growing 
unfriendliness between two nations, one of whom 
possessed and the other claimed supremacy upon 
the seas. The prosperity of the world-wide Dutch 
commerce was looked upon with eyes of jealousy across the 
Channel. Disputes had been constantly recurring between 
Dutch and English traders in the East Indies and elsewhere, 
and the seeds were already sown of that stern rivalry which was 
to issue in a series of fiercely contested wars. But in 
mtwwZm '630- 1640 civil discords in England stood in the way 
mad Mary, of a strong foreign policy, and the adroit Aarssens 
was able so " to sweeten the bitterness of the pill " 
is to bring King Charles not merely to " overlook the scandal 
of the Downs/* but to consent to the marriage of the princess 



mad Dutch 



royal with William, the only son of the stadholder. The wed- 
ding of the youthful couple (aged respectively 14 and 10 years) 
took place on the 12th of May 1641 (see William II., prince 
of Orange). This royal alliance gave added influence and 
position to the bouse of Orange-Nassau. 

About this time various causes brought about a change in 
the feelings which had hitherto prevented any possibility of 
peace between Spain and the United Netherlands, cmmngmd 
The revolt of Portugal (December 1640) weakened nimUmma 
the Spanish power, and involved the loss to Spain of J* **V 
the Portuguese colonies. But It was in the Portuguese fZOftLx* 
colonies that the conquests of the Dutch East and w*m 
West India Companies had been made, and the J 
question of the Indies as between Netherlander and ' 
Spaniard assumed henceforth quite a different complexion. 
Aarssens, the strongest advocate of the French alliance, passed 
away in 1641, and his death was quickly followed by those of 
Richelieu and Louis XIII. The victory of Conde* at Rocroy 
opened the eyes of Frederick Henry to the danger of a French 
conquest of the Belgian provinces; and, feeling his health 
growing enfeebled, the prince became anxious before his death 
to obtain peace and security for his country by means of an 
accommodation with Spain. In 1643 negotiations were opened 
which, after many delays and in the face of countless difficulties, 
were at length, four years later, to terminate successfully. 

The course of the pourparlers would doubtless have run 
more smoothly but for tne infirm health and finally the death 
of the prince of Orange himself. Frederick Henryj^^ 
expired oh the 14th of March 1647, and was buried Frrdrrk* 
by the side of his father and brother in Delft. In Hm m ry mm t 
his last campaigns he had completed with signal tm *L cmm m 
success the task which, as a military commander, he***"* 
had set himself,— of giving to the United Provinces a thoroughly 
defensible frontier of barrier, fortresses. In 1644 he captured 
Sas de' Ghent; in 1645 Hulst. That portion of Flanders which 
skirts the south bank of the Scheldt thus passed into the posses- 
sion of the States, and with it the complete control of all the 
waterways to the sea. 

The death of the great stadholder did not, however, long delay 
the carrying out of the policy on which, he had set bis heart, 
of concluding a separate peace with Spain behind the 
back of France, notwithstanding the compact of 1635 J** f 
with that power. A provisional draft of a treaty had Maatttr. 
already been drawn up before the demise of Frederick 
Henry, and afterwards, despite the strenuous opposition of the 
new. prince of Orange (who, under the Ade de Survivance, had 
inherited all his father's offices and dignities) and of two of the 
provinces, Zeeland and Utrecht, the negotiations were by the 
powerful support of the States of Holland and of the majority 
of the States-General, quickly brought to a successful issue. The 
treaty was signed at MUnster on the 30th of January 1648. It 
was a peace practically dictated by the Dutch, and involved 
a complete surrender of everything for which Spain had so 
long fought. The United Provinces were recognized cmmtphtm 
as free and independent, and Spain dropped all her trtmmpm 
claims; the uti possidetis basis was adopted in respect j££* 
to all conquests; the Scheldt was declared entirely 
closed — a clause which meant the ruin of Antwerp for the profit 
of Amsterdam; the right to trade in the East and West Indies 
was granted, and all the conquests made by the Dutch from 
the Portuguese were ceded to them; the two contracting parties 
agreed to respect and keep dear of each other's trading grounds, 
each was to pay in the ports of the other only such tolls as natives 
paid. Thus, triumphantly for the revolted provinces, the eighty 
years' war came to an end. At this moment the republic of the 
United Netherlands touched, perhaps, the topmost point of its 
prosperity and greatness. 

No sooner was peace concluded than bitter* disputes arose 
between the provincial States of Holland and the prince of 
Orange, supported by the other six provinces, upon the question 
of the disbanding of the military forces. William was a young 
man (he was twenty-one at the time of his father's death) of 



6oo 



the highest abilities and of soaring ambition. He was totally 
opposed to the peace with Spain, and wished to bring about 
a speedy resumption of the war. With this view he 
J7J^JJJ^. entered into secret negotiations for a French alliance 
mcatta which, as far as can be gathered from extant records, 
the had for its objects tfce conquest and partition by the 

JJjJJJ*^ allies of the Belgic provinces, and joint action in 
England on behalf of Charles II. As a preliminary 
step William aimed at a centralisation of the powers of govern- 
ment in the United Provinces in his own person. He saw clearly 
the inherent defects of the existing federation, and he wished 
to remedy a system which was so complicated as to be at times 
almost unworkable. The States-General were but the delegates, 
the stadholders the servants, of a number of sovereign provinces, 
each of which had different historical traditions and a different 
form of government, and one of which — Holland — in wealth and 
importance outweighed the other six taken together. Between 
the States of Holland and the States- General there was constant 
jealousy and friction. And yet strangely enough 
JJjJf lne States of Holland themselves were not really 
representative of the people of that province, but only 
of the limited, self-coopting burgher aristocracies of 
certain towns, each of which with itsrightsand liberties 
had a quasi-independence of its own. Foremost among 
these was the great commercial capital, Amsterdam, whose rich 
burgher patriciate did not scruple on occasion to defy the 
authority of the States-General, the stadholder and even of the 
States of HoUand themselves. 

The States of Holland bad, in the years that followed the 
truce of 1609, measured their strength with that of the States- 
General, but the issue had been decided conclusively 
2*2T"* * n * avour °f tne fed era l authority by the sword of 
JJJJl Maurice. The party and the principles of Olden- 

ba me veldt, however, though crushed, were not extin- 
guished, and though Frederick Henry by his personal influence 
and prudent statesmanship had been able to surmount the 
difficulties placed in his way, he had had to encounter at times 
strong opposition, and had been much hampered in the conduct 
both of his campaigns and of his policy. With the conclusion 
of the peace of Monster and the death of the veteran stadholder 
the struggle for predominance in the Union between the Orange- 
federalist and the Hollander States-rights parties was certain 
to be renewed. The moment seemed to be favourable for the 
assertion of provincial sovereignty because of the youth and 
inexperience of the new prince of Orange. But William 11/ 
though Utile more than a boy, was endowed with singular 
capacity and great strength of will, and he was intent upon 
ambitious projects, the scope of which has been already indicated. 
The collision came, which was perhaps inevitable. The Statcs- 
Tk0 qu09» General in the disbanding of the forces wished to 
ttoa 0/ retain the cadres of the regiments complete in case of a 
ditt*n4- renewal of the war. The States of HoUand objected, 
if* '*• and , although the army was a federal force, gave orders 
ntM * for the general disbanding of the troops in the pay of 
the province. The officers refused to obey any orders but those 
of the council of State of the Union. The provincial states, on 
their part, threatened them with loss of pay. At this juncture 
the States-General, as in' 1618, appointed a commission headed 
by the prince of Orange to visit the towns of Holland, and 
provide for the maintenance of order and the upholding of the 
Union. Both parties put themselves in the wrong, the province 
by refusing its quota to the federal war-sheet, the generality 
by dealing with individual towns instead of with the states of 
the province. The visitation was a failure. The town councils, 
though most of them willing to receive William in his capaqty 
as stadholder, declined to give a hearing to the commission. 
Tht Amsterdam refused absolutely to admit either stad- 

ivfcww holder or commission. In these circumstances William 
o(lo*v*B- resolved upon strong measures. Six leading mem- 
««/•. ^ n r lnc states of Holland were seized (30th of 

July 1650) and imprisoned in Loevcnstein Castle, and troops 
under the command of William Frederick, stadholder of Fries- 



HOLLAND ihistory from 1579 

land, were sent to surprise Amsterdam. But the town council 
had been warned, and the gates were shut and guarded. The 
coup d'itat nevertheless was completely successful. The anti- 
Orange party, remembering the fate of Oldenbarne veldt, were 
stricken with panic at the imprisonment of their leaders. The 
Stales of Holland and the town council of Amsterdam gave in 
their submission. The prisoners were released, and public thanks 
were rendered to the prince by the various provincial states for 
" his great trouble, care and prudence." William appeared to 
be master of the situation but his plans for future action were 
never to be carried into effect. Busily engaged in 
secret negotiations with France, he had retired to his 
hunting seat at Dieren, when he fell ill with smallpox 
on the 27th of October A few days later he expired ** 
at the Hague (6th of November), aged but twenty-four years. 
A week after his death, his widow, the princess Mary of England, 
gave birth to a son who, as William III., was to give added lustre 
to the house of Orange 

The anti-Orange particulates* party, which had just suffered 
decisive defeat, now lifted up its head again. At the instance ol 
Holland a Grand Assembly was summoned, consisting 
of delegates from all the provinces, to consider the V™ 
state of the Union, the army and religion. It met at *«*«I»fr. 
the Hague on the iSth of January 1651. The conclu- 
sions arrived at were that all sovereign powers resided in the 
provinces, and that to them severally, each within its own 
borders, belonged the control of the military forces and of 
religion. There was to be no captain-general of the Union. All 
the provinces, except Fricsland and Groningen, which remained 
true to William Frederick of Nassau-Diets, agreed to leave the 
office of stadholder vacant. The practical result was the estab- 
lishment of the hegemony of Holland in the Union, and the 
handing over of the control of its policy to the patrician oligarchies 
who formed the town councils of that province. 

Such a system would have been unworkable but for the fact 
that with the revival of the political principles of Oldenbarne- 
veldt, there was found a statesman of commanding r(HY ffr r 
ability to fill the office in which the famous advocate oiOr~4 
of Holland had for so many years been " minister of #*•**•- 
all affairs " in the forming state. The title of advocate ** y * 
had indeed been replaced by that of grand pensionary {Road 
Pcmionani), but the duties assigned to the office remained the 
same, the only change of importance being that the advocate 
was appointed for life, the grand pensionary for a term of five 
years. The grand pensionary was nominally the paid servant 
of the States of Holland, but his functions were such as to permit 
a man of talent and industry in the stadholdcrless republic to 
exercise control in all departments of policy and of government. 
All correspondence passed through his hands, he wrote all 
despatches, conducted the debates over which he presided, kept 
the minutes, drafted the resolutions, and was ex officio the 
leader and spokesman of the delegates who represented the 
Province of Holland in the Stales-General. Such was the 
position to which John de Wilt, a young man of 
twenty-eight years of age, belonging to one of the wtUm 
most influential patrician families of Dordrecht (his 
father, Jacob de Witt, was one of the prisoners of Loevcnstein) 
was appointed in 1653. From that dale until 167a it was his 
brain and his wil} that guided the affairs of the United Nether- 
lands. He was supreme in the States of Holland, and Holland 
was dominant in the States-General (see John de Witt). 

The death of William II. had left the Dutch republic at the 
very highest point of commercial prosperity, based upon an 
almost universal carrying trade, and the strictest ff 
system of monopoly Friction and disputes bad Mxtmsmm 
frequently arisen between the Dutch and the English fittfe* 
traders in different parts of the world, and especially y^fy* 
in the East Indies, culminating in the so-called 
" Massacre of Amboyna "; and the slrained relations between 
the two nations would, but for the civil discords in England, 
have probably led to active hostilities during the reign oi 
Charles I. With the accession of Cromwell to power the breach 



wltm 



Act of 



HISTORY FROM iJTti HOLLAND 

was widened. A strong party in the Provinces were unfriendly 
to the Commonwealth, and insults were offered in the Hague 
to the English envoys. The parliament replied by passing the 
memorable Navigation Act (Oct. 1651), which struck a deadly 
blow at the Dutch carrying trade. It was the beginning of that 
struggle for supremacy upon the seas which was to end, after 
SmysI three great wars, in the defeat of the weaker country. 
The first English war lasted from May 165a to April 
1654, and within fifteen months twelve sea-fights took 
place, which were desperately contested and with 
varying success. The leaders oa both sides— the Netherlanders 
Tromp (killed in action on the 10th of August 1653) and de 
Ruyter, the Englishmen Blake and Monk— covered themselves 
with equal glory. But the losses to Dutch trade were so serious 
that negotiations for peace were set on foot by the burgher party 
of Holland, and Cromwell being not unwilling, an agreement 
was reached in the Treaty of .Westminster, signed on 
H^JJL the 5th of April 1654. The Dutch conceded the 
miBMttr. striking of the flag and compensation for English 
claims against the Dutch in the East Indies and else- 
where. The act of Seclusion, which barred the young prince of 
Orange from holding the office of stadholder and of captain- 
general, had been one of the conditions on which Cromwell had 
insisted. The consent of the States-General was refused, but by 
a secret treaty Holland, under the influence of de 
Witt, accepted it in their own name as a sovereign 
province. The popular feeling throughout the United 
Provinces was strongly antagonistic to the act of Seclusion, 
by which at the dictation of a foreign power a ban of exclusion 
was pronounced against the house of Orange-Nassau, to which 
the republic owed its independence. 

In 1658, the States-General interfered to save the Danes from 
Charles Gustavus of Sweden. In 1659 a treaty of peace was 
War with conc,u< * e<1 between France, England and the United 
$ W9 4tm Provinces with a view to the settlement of the Dano- 
Swedish question, which ended in securing a northern 
peace in 1660, and in keeping the Baltic open for Dutch trade. 
The foreign affairs of the republic were throughout these years 
ably conducted by de Wilt, and the position of Dutch colonial 
expansion in the Eastern seas made secure and firm. An 
advantageous peace with Portugal was made in 1662. 

Meanwhile the Commonwealth in England had been followed 
in 1660 by the restoration of the monarchy. To conciliate the 
^^ new king the act of Seclusion was repealed, and the 

£ag ^ k education of the young prince of Orange was under- 
WMr , taken by the States of Holland under the super- 

intendence of de Witt. But Charles owed a grudge 
against Holland, and he was determined to gratify it. The 
Navigation Act was re-enacted, old grievances revived, and 
finally the Dutch colony of New Net her land was seized in lime 
of peace (1664) and its capital, New Amsterdam, renamed New 
York. War broke out in 1665, and was marked by a series of 
terrific battles. On the 13th of June 1665 the Dutch admiral 
Obdam was completely defeated by the English under the 
duke of York. The four days' fight (nth-i4th of June 1666) 
ended in a hard-won victory by de Ruyter over Monk, but later 
in this year (August 3rd) de Ruyter was beaten by Ayscue 
and forced to take refuge in the Dutch harbours. He had his 
revenge, for on the 22nd of June 1667 the Dutch fleet under 
de Ruyter and Cornelius de Witt made their way up the Medway 
as far as Chatham and burnt the English fleet as it lay at anchor. 
Negotiations between the two countries were already in progress 
ftja . and this event hastened a settlement. The peace of 
Bnia. Breda was signed (31st of July 1667) on terms on 
the whole favourable to the Dutch. New Ncthcrland 
was retained by England in exchange for Surinamc. In the 
following year by the efforts of Sir William Temple the much 
vaunted Triple Alliance was concluded between Great 
Britain, the United Provinces and Sweden to check 
the ambitious designs of Louis XIV. The instability 
of Charles II., who sold himself to Louis by the treaty 
of Dover (1670), speedily rendered.it of no effect, and left the 



Tb* 

Trip* 



Tb0 



601 



United Provinces to face unaided the vengeance of the French 
king. 

From 1668 to 1672 Louis made ready to destroy the Dutch, 
and so well had his diplomacy served him that they were left with- 
out a friend in Europe. In 1672 the storm broke: the 
English without a declaration of war tried, unsuccess- 
fully, to intercept the Dutch Mediterranean fleet; 
and the French at the same time set forthin apparently 
irresistible strength to overcome the despised traders of Holland. 
The States were ill-prepared on land though their fleet was 
strong and ready; party spirit had become intensely bitter as 
the prince of Orange (see William III.) grew to man's estate, 
and the ruling burgher party, knowing how great was the 
popularity of William, especially in the army, had purposely 
neglected their land forces. Town after town fell before the 
French armies, and to de Witt and his supporters there seemed 
to be nothing left but to make submission and accept the best 
terms that Louis XIV. would grant. The young prince alone 
rose to the height of the occasion, and set his face against such 
cowardly counsels, and he had the enthusiastic support waBMm 
of the great majority of the people. Amidst general §u. &•+> 
acclamation William was elected stadholder, first of bokUraa4 
Zee land, then of Holland, and was appointed captain- Jjjjjjjj* 
general of the Union (June 1672). Meanwhile the 
fleet under de Ruyter had encountered a combined English 
and French force in Solebay (7th of June), and after a 
desperate fight, in which the French had but slackly supported 
their allies, had more then held its own. William, 
in his turn, with an army wholly insufficient to meet j?^* 
the French in the open field, was able to persuade wm. 
his countrymen to open the dikes and by flooding 
the land to prevent its occupation by the enemy. The courage 
and resourcefulness of their youthful leader inspired Man* 
the people to make heroic sacrifices for their independ- •/'*• 
ence, but unfortunately such was the revulsion of JJ^jJjJ* 
feeling against the grand pensionary, that he himself 
and his brother Cornelius were torn in pieces by an infuriated 
mob at the Hague (20th of August). 

William, now supreme In the States, while on land struggling 
with chequered success against the superior forces of the 
French, strove by his diplomacy, and not in vain, to 
gain allies for the republic. The growing power of {JJJJ** 
France caused alarm to her neighbours, and Sweden, mUastm 
Denmark, Spain and the emperor lent a willing ear 
to the persuasions of the stadholder and were ready to aid his 
efforts to curb the ambition of Louis. On sea in 1673 de Ruyter, 
in a series of fiercely contested battles, successfully maintained 
his strenuous and dogged conflict against the united English 
and French fleets. In England the var was exceedingly un- 
popular, and public opinion forced Cha les IL to conclude peace. 
The treaty of Westminster, which pre vided that all conquests 
should be restored, was- signed on the 14th of February .1674. 
The French now found themselves threatened on many sides, 
and were reduced to the defensive. The prince, how- 
ever, suffered a defeat at Sencff, and was in 1674 
prevented from invading France. The war, neverthe- 
less, during the following years waj on the whole 
advantageous to the Dutch. In 1676 a Dutch squadron fought 
two hard but indecisive battles with a superior French force, 
off Stromboli (8th of January) and of Messina (22nd of April). 
In the last-named fight Admiral de R vter was badly Dtmtk f 
wounded and died (29th of April). ) 1677 negotia- a»Rmyttr. 
tions for peace went on, and were forvarded by the 
marriage, at the dose of the year, of William of Orange with 
his cousin the princess Mary, daughter of the duke of York, 
At last (August 1678) a peace was concluded at Nym- 
wegen by which the Dutch secured the integrity 
and independence of their country. All the conquests 
made by the French were given up. 

The aggressive policy of Louis XIV. in the years that followed 
Ihe peace of Nymwcgen enabled William to lay the foundations 
of the famous confederacy which changed the whole aspect 



Tbe war 
wHb 



Nym- 



602 



HOLLAND 



{HISTORY FROM 1579 



Augstmrr- 



of European poKtics. The league of Augsburg (1686), which 
followed the revocation of the edict of Nantes, placed Orange 

at the head of the resistance to French domination. 
* ** The league was formed by the emperor, Spain, Sweden, 

the United Provinces and by several German states. 
In England William and Mary were looked upon as the natural 
successors to the throne on the death of James II., and William 
kept up close relations with the malcontents in Church and 
State, who disliked the arbitrary and papistical policy of his 
father-in-law. But with the birth of a prince of Wales the 
situation was changed, and William determined to intervene 
actively in English affairs. His opportunity came when Louis 
XIV., having declared war against the Empire, had invaded the 
Palatinate. The opposition of Amsterdam to an English 

expedition, in the absence of danger from the side of 
*•*•*»" France,, was overcome. The Revolution of 1688 
{JuS** ensued, and England became, under William's strong 

rule, the chief member of the Great Coalition against 
French aggression. In the Grand Alliance of 1680-1690 he was 
accused of sacrificing Dutch to English interests, but there 
can be no doubt that William loved his native country better 
than his adopted one, and was a true patriot. If the United 
Provinces suffered in prosperity through their close relations 

with and subordination to Great Britain during a 
Th * long series of years, it was due not to the policy of 

William, but to the fact that the territory of the 

republic was small, open to attack by great military 
powers, and devoid of natural resources. The stadholder's 
authority and popularity continued unimpaired, despite of 
his frequent absences in England. He had to contend, tike his 
predecessors, with the perennial hostility of the burgher aristo- 
cracy of Amsterdam, and at times with other refractory town 
councils, but his power in the States during his life was almost 
autocratic. His task was rendered lighter by the influence and 

ability of Heinsius, the grand pensionary of Holland, 
} ^ Mm a wise and prudent statesman, whose tact and modera- 
tion in dealing with the details and difficulties of internal 

administration were conspicuous. The stadholdcr 
gave to Heinsius his fullest confidence, and the pensionary on 
his part loyally supported William's policy and placed his 
services ungrudgingly at his disposal (see Heinsivs). 

The conduct of the war by the alKes was far from successful. 
In 1600 (July 1st) Waldeck was defeated by Luxemburg at 

Fleurus; and (he Anglo-Dutch fleet was so severely- 
/>££ handled by Tourville (toth July) off Beachy Head 

that for two years the command of the sea remained 
in the possession of the French. A striking victory off Cape la 
Hogue (29th of May 1692) restored, however, supremacy to 
the allies. On land the combined armies fared ill. In 1691 
the French took Mons, and in 1602 Namur, in which year after 
a hard-fought battle William was defeated at Stecnkirk and in 
1693 at Neerwinden. But William's military genius never shone 
so brightly as in the hour of defeat; he never knew what it was 
to be beaten, and in 1605 his recapture of Namur was a real 
triumph of skill and resolution. At last, after long negotiations, 
exhaustion compelled the French king to sign the peace of 

Ryswick in 1697, in which William Was recognised 
RyswkL Dv France as king of England, the Dutch obtaining 

a favourable commercial treaty, and the right to 
garrison the Netherland barrier towns. This peace, however, did 
no more than afford a breathing space during which Louis XIV. 
prepared for a renewal of the struggle. The great question of 
the Spanish succession was looming in all men's eyes, and 

though partition treaties between the interested- 
wailm P owtTS wcrc concluded in 1608 and 1 700, it is practically 
u" certain that the French king held himself little bound 

by them. In 1701 he elbowed the Dutch troops 
out of the barrier towns; he defied England by recognizing 
James III. on the death of his father; and it was clear 
that another war was imminent when William III. died in 
170 j. 
In 1672 the stadholderahip in five provinces had been made 



hereditary in the family of the prince of Orange, but WRbam 
died childless, and the republican burgher party was strong 
enough to prevent the posts being filled up. William 
had wished that his cousin, Count John William 
Friso of Nassau, stadbolder of Friesland and Gron- 
ingen, should succeed him, but his extreme youth and mtmL 
the jealousy of Holland against a " Frisian " stood in the way 
of his election. The result was a want of unity in counsel and 
action among the provinces, Friesland and Groningen standing 
aloof from the other five, while Holland and Zeeland had to pay 
for their predominance in the Union by being left to bear the 
bulk of the charges. Fortunately there was no break of continuity 
in the policy of the States, the chief conduct of affairs remaining, 
until his death in 1720, in the capable and tried hands of the 
grand pensionary Heinsius, who had at his side a number of 
exceptionally experienced and wise counsellors— among these 
Simon van Slingeland, for forty-five years (1680-1725) secretary 
of the council of state, and afterwards grand pensionary of 
Holland (1 727-1736), and Francis Fagel, who succeeded his 
father in 1699 as recorder {Grijfier) of the States-General, and 
held that important office for fifty years. The tradition of 
William III. was thus preserved, but with the loss of the firm 
hand and strong personality of that great ruler the United 
Provinces were relegated to a subordinate place in the councils 
of the nations, and with the gradual decadence of its navy 
the Dutch republic ceased to rank as a power to be reckoned 
with- 
in the War of the Spanish Succession, which broke out in 1702, 
Dutch troops took part in the campaigns of Marlborough and 
Eugene, and had their share in winning the great Wm , 
victories of Blenheim (1704), Ramillies (1706), Ouden- ^^m 
arde (1708) and Malplaquet (1709). At the peace of 3»— «■* 
Utrecht, concluded in 17 13, the interests of the 2E"*" 
Netherlands were but half-heartedly supported by 
the English plenipotentiaries, and the French were able to obtain 
far more favourable terms than they had the power to exact. 
But they were compelled to abandon all daim to the Spanish 
Netherlands, which were formally handed over to the United 
Provinces, as trustees, to be by them, after the conclusion of a 
satisfactory barrier treaty, given up to the emperor, 
and be known henceforth as the Austrian Netherlands. JUS^ 
The peace of Utrecht taught the Dutch that the great 
powers around them, while ready to use their resources for 
war, would not scruple to abandon them when they wanted 
peace; they, therefore, determined henceforth to stand dear 
of all foreign complications. With 1713 the influence of the 
United Netherlands upon European politics comes almost to 
an end. 

The ruling party in the States took an active -part in securing 
George I. on the throne of England; and they succeeded in 
coming to an agreement both with France and with _ 
Austria over the difficulties connected with the barrier 
towns, and were thus able in tranquillity to concentrate 
their energies upon furthering the interests of their trade. Under 
the dose oligarchical rule of the patrician families, who filled 
all offices in the town councils, the States of Holland, in which 
the influence of Amsterdam was dominant, and which in their 
turn exercised predominance in the States-General, became more 
and more an assembly of " shopkeepers " whose policy was to 
maintain peace for the sake of the commerce on which they 
thrived. For thirty years after the peace of Utrecht the Provinces 
kept themselves free from entanglement in the quarrels of 
their neighbours. The foundation of the Ostend East 
India Company (see Ostend Company), however, £**£-_ 
by the emperor Joseph II. in 1723, at once aroused 
the strong opposition of the Amsterdam merchants 
who looked upon this invasion of their monopoly with alarm, 
and dedared that the Ostend Company had been set up in 
contravention to the terms of Article V. of the treaty of Munster. 
In maintaining this position the States had the support of 
England, but it was not until 1731 that they succeeded in 
obtaining, the suppression of the company by consenting to 



HISTORY FROM 1579! 



HOLLAND 



603 



guarantee the Pragmatic Sanction of Charles VL This 
step led in 1743 to their being involved in the War of the 
Wmftdf Austrian Succession, and thus being drawn into hostili- 
Amttrism ties with France, which invaded the barrier country. 
f*y In 1744 they formed with Great Britain, Austria and 
*^ Saxony, a Quadruple Alliance, and put a contingent 

of troops in the field. The Dutch took an active part in the 
campaign of 1745 and suffered heavily at Fontenoy, after which, 
battle Marshal Saxe overran the Austrian Netherlands. The 
_^^ French captured all the. barrier towns, and in 1747 
2£^JJ* entered Dutch Flanders and made an easy conquest. 
Mr. The United Provinces, as in 1672, seemed to lie at the 

mercy of their enemies, and as in that eventful year, 
popular feeling broke down the opposition of the burgher 
oligarchies, and turned to William IV., prince of Orange, as the 1 

saviour of the state. John William Friso had died 

young in 171 1, leaving a posthumous son, William 

Charles Henry Friso, who was duly elected stadhokkr 
by the two provinces, Friesland and Groningen, which were 
always faithful to his family, and in 1722 he became also, though 
with very limited powers, stad holder of Gelderland. The other 
provinces, however, under pressure from Holland, bound them- 
selves not to elect stadholders, and they refused to revive the 
office of captain-general of the Union. By the conquest of 
Dutch Flanders Zeeland was threatened, and the states of that 
province, in which there were always many Orange partisans, 
elected (April 1747) William stadbolder, captain-general and 
admiral of Zeeland. The example once given was infectious, 
and was followed in rapid succession by Holland, Utrecht and 
Overysel. Finally the States-General (May 4) appointed the 
prince, who was the first member of his family to be stad- 
holder of all the seven provinces, captain and admiral-general of 
the Union, and a little later these offices were declared hereditary 
in both the male and female lines. 

William IV., though not a man of great ability, was sincerely 
anxious to do his utmost for securing the maintenance of peace, 

and the development of the resources and commercial 
Ah!%? prosperity of the country, and his powerful dynastic 
C*«V«Jfc» connexions (he had married Anne, eldest daughter 

of George II.) gave him weight in the councils of 
Europe. The peace of Aix-Ia-Chapelle, in 1748, in which the 
influence of Great Britain was exerted on behalf of the States, 
though it nominally restored the old condition of things, left 
the Provinces crippled by debt, and fallen low from their old 
position among the nations. At first the stadhoider's efforts 
to promote the trade and welfare of the country were hampered 
by the distrust and opposition of Amsterdam, and other strong* 

holds of anti-Orange feeling, and just as his good 
*jJJ*^ intentions were becoming more generally recognized, 
/v. William unfortunately died, on the 22nd of October 

1751, aged forty years, leaving his three-year-old son, 
William V., heir to his dignities. The princess Anne of England 
became regent, but she had a difficult part to play, and on the 

outbreak of the Seven Years* War in which the 
*"£^J Provinces were determined to maintain neutrality, 
ibjirat. her English leanings brought much unpopularity upon 

her. She died in 1750, and for the next seven years 
the regency passed into the hands of the States, and the 
government was practically stadholderless. 

In 1766 William V. was declared to be of age; and bis accession 
to power was generally welcomed. He was, however, a weak 
waUam y man, without energy or resolution, and he allowed 
' himself to be entirely led by his old guardian the 
duke of Brunswick, and by his wife Frederica Wilhelmina 
of Prussia, a woman of marked ability, to whom he entirely 
deferred. In the American War of Independence William's 
sympathies were strongly on the English side, while those 
of the majority of the Dutch people were with the revolted 
colonies. It is, however, certain that nothing would have driven 
the Provinces to take part in the war but for the overbearing 
attitude of the British government with -regard to the right of 
neutral shipping upon the seas, and the heavy losses sustained 



trmMy. 



by Dutch commerce at the hands of British privateers. The 
famous agreement, known as the "Armed Neutrality," with 
which in 1780 the States of the continent at the ra» 
instigation of Catherine II. of Russia replied to the 
maritime claims put forward by Great Britain drew the 
Provinces once more into the arena of European politics. 
Every effort was made by the English to prevent the Dutch 
from joining the league, and in this they were assisted by the 
stadhoider, but at last the States-General, though only by the 
bare majority of four provinces against three, determined to 
throw in their lot with the opponents of England. 
Nothing could have been more unfortunate, for the EogUa4. 
country was not ready for war, and party spirit was too 
strong for united action to be taken or vigorous preparations 
to be made. When war broke out Dutch commerce was 
destroyed, and the Dutch colonies were at the mercy of the 
English fleet without the possibility of a blow being struck in 
their defence. An indecisive, but bravely fought action with 
Admiral Parker at the Dogger Bank showed, however, that the 
Dutch seamen had lost none of their old dogged courage, and did 
much to soothe the national sense of humiliation. In the negotia- 
tions of the Treaty of Paris (1783) the Dutch found 
themselves abandoned by their allies, and compelled pJJJ 
to accept the disadvantageous but. not ungenerous 
terms accorded to them by Great Britain. They had to sacrifice 
some of their East Indian possessions and to concede to the 
English freedom of trade in the Eastern seas.. 

One result of this humiliating and disastrous war was the 
strengthening of the hands of the anti-Orange burgher-regents, 
who had now arrogated to themselves the name of 
" patriots." It was they, and not the stadboider, who Tf£ trhi - 
had been mainly responsible for the Provinces joining ptny 
"the Armed Neutrality," but the consequences of the 
war, in which this act had involved them, was largely visited 
upon the prince of Orange. The " patriot " party did their 
utmost to curtail his prerogatives, and harass him with petty 
insults, and at last the Prussian king was obliged to /,i #r v#»- 
interfere to save his niece, who was even more un- mmmt 
popular than her weak husband, from being driven * ***y * 
from the country. In 1784 the emperor Joseph II. Prmaim ' 
took advantage of the dissensions in the Provinces to 
raise the question of the opening of the Scheldt. He himself 
was, however, no more prepared for attack than the Republic 
for defence, but the Dutch had already sunk so low, 
that they agreed to pay a heavy indemnity to induce {JjJJflJ' 
the Austrians to drop a demand they were unable to Emptor. 
enforce. To hold the mouth of tne Scheldt and 
prevent at all costs a revival of Antwerp as a commercial port 
had been for two centuries a cardinal point of Dutch policy. 
This difficulty removed, the agitation of the " patriots " against 
the stadholderate form of government increased in violence, and 
William speedily found his position untenable. An insult offered 
to the prince of Orange in 1787 led to an invasion 
of the country by a Prussian army. Amsterdam |p V ^ te I, 
capitulated, the country was occupied, and the patriot 
leaders declared incapable of holding any office. The Orange 
party was completely triumphant, and William V., under the 
protection of Prussia and England, with which states R^ton- 
the United Provinces were compelled to ally themselves, ma t» 
was restored to power. It was, however, impossible fJ2* r# ' 
to make the complicated and creaking machinery of wmMm Ym 
the constitution of the worn-out republic of the United Nether- 
lands work smoothly, and in all probability it would have been 
within a very short time replaced by an hereditary monarchy, 
had not the cataclysm of the French Revolution swept it away 
from Its path, never to be revived. 

When war broke out between the French revolutionary 
government and the coalition of kings, the Provinces ra« Amc* 
remained neutral as long as they could. It was not till tmva& tm§ 
Duraouriez had overrun all the Austrian Netherlands ***** 
Jn 1 79 2 .and had thrown open the passage of the Scheldt, ***" 
that they were drawn into the war. The patriot party sided with 



6o6 



HOLLAND, COUNTY OF 






G»uiii>d*n4idor t NeitrIoMdsoke Letterhmnd* (a Vols. 1881); C Butken 
Huet, tfcf Lo** von Rtmbtandt-strnditn over it Nordntd tr la n dtck t 
besckaving in de fje eeuv (a vols., 1 836); L. D. Petit, Repertorium 
dcr oerhandetinten en bijdragen betreffende dt gesckiedenis its Voter- 
Unit in Hjdsckriflen en menget wtrktn tot op 1900 versciiemn, spurt* 
(190$); other puts of this valuable nPwtorimn are in course of 
publication. (C. E.) 

HOLLAND, COUNTY AND PROVINCE OF.— The first mention 
of Holland in any document is found in an imperial gift brief 
dated May and, 1064. In this the phrase "onmis comiiahu 
in Hoilondl " occurs, but without any further description of the 
locality indicated. A comparison with other documentary 
evidence, however, leads to the iden t ifi c a t ion of Holland with 
the fonstum Merweda, or the bush-grown fenknd lying between 
the Waal, the old Meuse and the Merwe. It is the district 
surrounding the town of Dordrecht. A portion of the original 
Holland was submerged by a great inundation in 1421, and its 
modern appellation of Biesboach (reed-forest) is descriptive of 
what must have been the condition of the entire district in early 
times. The word Holland is indeed by many authorities thought 
to be a corruption of Holt-land (it was sometimes so spelt by 
13th-century writers) and to signify wood-land. The earliest 
spelling is, however, Holland, and it is more probable that it 
means lowlying-land (hol-hollqw), a derivation which is 
equally applicable to the district in Lincomshire which bears 
the same name. 

The title count of Holland appears to have been first borne 
by the Frisian count Dirk HX, who founded Dord recht (about 
1015) and made it his residence (see below). It was 
The ant not( however, till late in the xrth century that his 
successors adopted the style " H e llsn d en s is ernes** as 
their territorial designation (it is found for the first 
time on a seal of Dirk V. 1083), and that the name Holland 
became gradually extended northwards to connote all the 
land subject to the rule of the counts between Texel and 
the Maas. 

The beginnings of the history of this feudal state (the later 

Holland) centre round the abbey of .Egmont in whose archives 

-its records have been preserved. In oaa Charles the 

Simple gave in full possession to a count in Frisia, 

Dirk by name (a shortened form of Diederic, Latin Theodorkus), 

* the church of Egmont with all that belonged to it from S wit- 
hardeshage to Kinhem." This man, usually known as Dirk I M 
died about 039 and was succeeded by his son of the same name* 
Among the records of the abbey of Egmont is a document by 
which the emperor Arnulf gave to a certain count Gerolf the 
same land " between Swithardeshage and Kinhem," afterwards 
held by Dirk I. It is generally assumed that this Gerolf was 
his father, otherwise their deed of gift would not have been 

• preserved among the family papers. Dirk II. was 
the founder of the abbey of Egmont. His younger 

son Egbert became archbishop of Treves. His elder son Arnulf 
married Iiutgardis, daughter of Siegfried of Luxemburg and 
sister-in-law of the emperor Henry II. He obtained from the 
Bxtmt emperor Otto III., with whom he was in great favour 
of tie in 983, a considerable extension of territory, that now 
4emt— covered by the Zuider Zee and southward down to 
Abm> Nijmwegen. In the deed of gift he is spoken of as 
holding the three countships of Maasland, Kinhem or Kennemer- 
land and Texla or Texel; in other words his rule extended over 
the. whole country from the right bank of the Maas or Meuse to 
the Vlie. He appears also to have exercised authority at Ghent. 
He died in 088. Arnulf was count till 993, when he was 
slain in battle against the west Frisians, and was 
succeeded by his twelve-year-old son Dirk III. During the 
guardianship of his mother, Iiutgardis, the boy was despoiled of 
almost all bis possessions, except Kennemerland and Maas l and. 
DkkBL But "° 800Dcr was °* OTived at man's estate than 
Dirk turned upon ms enemies with courage and vigour. 
He waged war successfully with Adclbold, the powerful bishop 
of Utrecht, and made himself master not only of his ancestral 
po ssessio ns, but of the district on the Meuse known as the 
Boahland of Merweda {forttium Merweda), hitherto subject to 



the set of Utrecht. In the midstr of this marshy tract, at a 
point commanding the courses of the Meuse and the Waal, 
he built a castle (about 1015) and began to levy 
tolls. Around this castte sprang up the town of Thure* {j ^'Jf 1 
drecht or Dordrecht. The possession of this stronghold i w^-^ 
was so injurious to the commerce of Ttel, Cologne 
and the Rhenish towns with England that complaints were 
made by the bishop of Utrecht and the archbishop of Cologne 
to the emperor. Henry II. took the part of the complainants 
and commissioned Duke Godfrey of Lorraine to _.. 
chastise the young Frisian count. Duke Godfrey SSSlTi 
invaded Dirk's lands with a large army, but they were Leered**. 
impeded by the swampy nature of the country and 
totally defeated with heavy loss (July 99, 1018). The duke 
was himself taken prisoner. The result was that Dirk was not 
merely confirmed in his possession of Dordrecht and the Merweda 
Buahland (the later Holland) but also of the territory of a vassal 
Of the Utrecht see, Dirk Bavo by name, which he nufc«haj 
conquered. This victory of 1018 is often regarded as otam 
the true starting-point of the history of the county of ****** 
Holland. Having thus established bis rule in the " T 
south, Dirk next proceeded to bring into subjection the 
Frisians in the north. He appointed his brother Siegfrid or 
Sfltka as governor over them. In his later years Dirk went 
upon a pilgrimage to the Holy Land from which he returned is 
1034; and ruled in peace until his death in 1039. 

HJa son, Dirk IV., was one of the most enterprising of ms 
warlike and strenuous race. He began the long strife with the 
counts of Flanders, as to the lordship over Walcheren DbAnr 
and other islands of Zeeland; the quarrel was im- 
portant, as dealing with the borderland between French and 
German overlordahip. This strife, which lasted 400 years, did 
not at first break out into actual warfare, because both Dirk 
and Baldwin V. of Flanders had a common danger in 
the emperor Henry HI., who in 1046 occupied the 
lands in dispute. Dirk allied himself with Godfrey 
the Bearded of Lorraine, who was at war with the 
emperor, and his territory was invaded by a powerful 
imperial fleet and army (1047). But Dirk entrenched himself 
in his stronghold at Vlaardingen, and when winter came on be 
surrounded and cut off with his light boats a number of the 
enemy's ships, and destroyed a large part of their army as they 
made their way amidst the marches, which impeded their 
retreat. He was able to recover what he had lost and to make 
peace on his own terms. Two yean later he was again assailed by 
a coalition headed by the archbishop of Cologne and the bishop 
of Utrecht. They availed themselves of a very hard winter to 
penetrate into the land over the frozen water. Dirk offered a 
stout resistance, but, according to the most trustworthy account* 
was enticed into an ambuscade and was killed in the fight (1049). 
He died unmarried and was succeeded by his brother Floris L 

Floris, like his predecessors, was hard-fighting and tenacious. 
He gradually recovered possession of his ancestral lands. He 
found a formidable adversary in the able and warlike ^^^ 
William, who, becoming bishop of Utrecht in 1034* 
was determined to recover the tost possessions of his see; and 
in 1058, in alliance with Hanno, archbishop of Cologne, Egbert, 
margrave of Brandenburg, the bishop of Liege and others, 
invaded the Frisian territory. At first success attended the 
invaders and many places fell into their hands, but finally they 
were surprised and defeated near Dordrecht. The counts of 
Guelder* and Louvain were among the prisoners that fell into 
the hands of Floris. The attack was renewed in 1061. In a 
battle at Nederhemert Floris met with his death in the hour 
of victory. He is said to have been killed as, wearied with 
pursuing, he lay asleep under a tree. He was succeeded by his 
son, Dirk V., a child, under the guardianship of his w? 
mother, Gertrude of Saxony. Bishop William seems 
now to have seised his opportunity and occupied all the territory 
that he claimed. In this he was confirmed by two charters of 
the emperor Henry IV. (April 30 and May a, 1064). Among 
I the possessions thus assigned to him is found cemitatus o m n i s 



HOLLAND, COUNTY OF 



607 



Dirk V., 



h% Hollands cum o mn i b us ad 60111111111 regoUm ptrtintntUms. An 
examination of these documents shows the possessions of Dirk 
as in WtitjUnge el circa mas Rktni, i.t. west of the VHc and 
around the mouths of the Rhine. Gertrude and her son appear 
to have withdrawn to the islands of Frisia (Zetland), leaving 
William in undisturbed occupation of the disputed lands. 
In 1063 Gertrude contracted a marriage with Robert, the 
second son of Baldwin V. of Flanders, a man famous for his 
adventurous career (see Flanders). On his marriage his father 
invested him with Imperial Flanders, as an apanage 
including the islands of Frisia (Zetland) west of the 
Scheldt. He now became guardian to his stepson, 
in whose inheritance lay the islands east of the Scheldt. 
Robert thus, in his own right and that of Dirk, was 
ruler of all Frisia (Zeeland), and thus became known 
among his Flemish countrymen as Robert the Frisian. The 
death of his brother Baldwin VL in 1070 led to civil war in 
Flanders, the claim of Robert to the guardianship of his nephew 
Arnutf being disputed by Rlchllde, the widow of Baldwin. 
The issue was decided by the decisive victory of Robert at 
Cassel (February 107 1) when Arnulf was killed and RichOde 
taken prisoner (see Flandem). While Robert was thus engaged 
in Flanders, an effort was made to recover " the County of 
Holland" and other lands now held by William of Utrecht 
The people rose in revolt, but by command of the emperor 
Henry IV. were speedily brought back under episcopal rule by 
an army under the command of Godfrey the Hunchback, 
duke of Lower Lorraine. Again in 1076, at the request 
of the bishop, Duke Godfrey visited his domains in 
the Frisian borderland. At Delft, of which town 
tradition makes Godfrey the founder, the duke was 
treacherously murdered (February 26, 1076). William 
of Utrecht died on the 17th of the following April, 
now grown to man's estate, was not slow to take 
advantage of the favourable juncture. With the help of Robert 
TJ _ (his stepfather) he raised an army, besieged Conrad, 

Bi*bopof the successor of William, in the castle of Yssehnonde 
VtrmM and took him prisoner. The bishop purchased his 
1 liberty by surrendering all claim to the disputed lands. 
Henceforth the Frisian counts became definitively 
known as counts of Holland. Dirk V. died in 1001 
anil was succeeded by his son Floris II. the Fat This count 
bad a peaceful and prosperous reign of thirty-one years. 
PlortalL After his death (1122) his widow, Petronilla of Saxony, 
governed in the name of Dirk VI. f who was a minor. 
The accession of her half-brother, Lotbaire of Saxony, to the 
imperial throne on the death of Henry V. greatly strengthened 
UJrtvj, her position. The East Frisian districts, Oostergoo 
and Westergoo, were by Lotbaire transferred from 
the rule of the bishops of Utrecht to that of the counts of Holland 
(1125). These Frisians proved. very troublesome subjects to 
Dirk VI. In 113a they rose in insurrection under the leader- 
ship of Dirk's own brother, Floris the Black. The emperor 
Conrad III. (1138), who was of the rival house of Hohen- 
ttaufen, gave back these Frisian districts to the bishop; it 
was in truth somewhat of an empty gift The Frisian 
peasants and fisher folk loved their Independence, and 
were equally refractory to the rule of any distant overlord, 
whether count or bishop. Dirk VI. was succeeded in 1x57 by 
Floris III. 

Floris III. reversed the traditional policy of Ms bouse by 
allying himself with the Hohenstaufens. He became a devoted 
adherent and friend of Frederick Barbarossa. He had 
troubles with West Friesland and Groningen, and a 
war with the count of Flanders concerning their 
respective rights in West Zeeland, in which he was beaten. 
In 1 170 a great flood caused immense devastation in the north 
and helped to form the Zuider Zee. In 11 89 Floris accompanied 
Frederick Barbarossa upon the third Crusade, of which he was a 
bttva. distinguished leader. He died in z 190 at Antioch of 
pestilence. His son, Dirk VII., had a stormy, but on 
the whole successful reign. Contests with the Flemings in West 



OirkV. 



Zealand and with the West Frisians, stirred up to revolt by his 
brother William, ended m his favour. The brothers were 
reconciled and William was mads count of East Friesland. In 
1 to j, however, Dirk was defeated and taken prisoner by the 
duke of Brabant, and had to purchase peace on humiliating terms. 
He only survived his defeat a short time and died early in 
1304, leaving as his only issue a daughter, Ada, 17 years of age. 
-The question of female succession thus raised was not likely 
to be accepted without a challenge by William. It had been the 
intention of Dirk VII. to secure the recognition of his daughter's 
rights by appointing his brother her guardian. His widow 
AlJda, however, an ambitious woman of strong character, as 
soon at her husband was dead, hurried on a marriage between 
Ada and Count Louis of Loon; and attempted with the nobles 
of Holland, who now for the first time make their appearance as 
a power in the country, to oppose the claim which William bad 
made to the xountship as heir in the male line. A struggle 
ensued. William was supported by the Zeelandera waagmL 
and Ada was forced to fly to .England. William, 
by a treaty concluded with Louis of Loon in 1306, became 
undisputed count. He took an active part in the events of his 
time. He fought by the side of the emperor Otto IV. in the great 
battle of Bouvines in xii* (see Philip Augustus), and was 
taken prisoner. Two years later he accompanied Louis, the 
eldest son of Philip Augustus, in his expedition against King 
John of England. William b perhaps best known in history by 
his taking part in the fourth Crusade. He distinguished himself 
greatly at the capture of Damietta (mo). He did not long 
survive his return home, dying in mi. The earliest charters 
conveying civic privileges in the county of Holland date from 
his reign — those of Geertruidenberg (19x3) and of Dordrecht 
(1220). His son Floris IV., being a minor, succeeded nuutr 
him under the guardianship of his maternal uncle, 
Gerard III. of Gdderland. He maintained in later life close 
relations of friendship with Gerard, and supported him in his 
quarrel with the bishop of Utrecht (1214-1946). Floris was 
murdered in 1235 at a tournament at Corbie in Picardv by the 
count of Clermont. Another long minority followed h£s death, 
during which his brother Otto, bishop of Utrecht, acted as 
guardian to his nephew William II. 

William II. became a man of mark. Pope Innocent IV., 
having deposed the emperor Frederick IT, after several princes 
bad refused to anow themselves to be nominated in 
the place of the Hohenatanfen, caused the young 
count of Holland to be elected king of the Romans 
(1 247) by an assembly composed chiefly of German ecclesiastics. 
William took Aachen in 1248 and was there crowned aww 
kingr and after Frederick's death in 1250, he had a lamgot 
considerable party in Germany. He brought a war <*• 
with Margaret of Flanders (Black Margaret) to a **""* 
successful conclusion (x 253). He was on the point of proceeding 
to Rome to be crowned emperor, when in an expedition against 
the West Frisians he perished, going down, horse and armour, 
through the ice (1256). like so many of his predecessors he 
left his inheritance to a child. Floris V. was but -.. 
two years old on his father's death; and he was 
destined during a reign of forty years to leave a deeper 
impress upon the history of Holland than any other of its 
counts. Floris was a man of chivalrous character and high 
capacity, and throughout his reign he proved himself an able 
and beneficent ruler. Alike in his troubles with his turbulent 
subjects and in the perennial disputes with his neighbours 
he pursued a strong, fax-sighted and successful policy. But his 
active interest in affairs was not limited to the Netherlands. 
He allied himself closely with Edward I. of England Amne§ 
in his strife with France, and secured from the English *** 
king great trading advantages for his people; the Bdwmrti. 
staple of wool was placed at Dort (Dordrecht) and jL^^ 
the Hollanders and Zeelanders got fishing rights on Ba ^ mam ' 
the English coast. So intimate did their relations become that 
Floris sent his son John to be educated at the court of Edward 
with a view to his marriage with an English princess. To 



6o8 



HOLLAND, COUNTY OP 



TMtbigb 



balance the power of the nobles he granted charters to many of 
the towns. Flora made himself master of Amstelland and 
Gooiland; and Amsterdam, destined to become the 
chief commercial town of Holland, counts him the 
Am*** founder of its greatness. Its earliest extant charter 
* UB> dates from 1275. In x 206 Flora forsook the alliance 
of Edward I. for that of Philip IV. of France, probably because 
Edward had given support to Guy, count of Flanders, in his 
dynastic dispute with John of Avesnes, count of Hainaut, 
Floris's nephew (see Flanders). The real motives of his policy 
will, however, never be known, for shortly afterwards a con- 
spiracy of disaffected nobles, headed by Gijsbrecht van Amstel, 
Gerard van Velzen and Wolfert van Borselen, was 
formed against him. He was by them basely murdered 
in the castle of Miriden (June 37, 1206). The tragic 
event has been immortalized in dramas from the pens of 
Holland's most famous writers (see Vondel, Hooft). The 
burghers and people, who knew him to be their best friend, 
took such vengeance on his slayers as permanently to reduce 
the power of the nobles. 

John I., his son, was in England when his father was murdered; 
he was but 15 years of age, feeble in body and mind. He was 
Maf married to Eleanor, daughter of Edward I.- His 
reign was a struggle between John of Avesnes, the 
young count's guardian and next heir, and Wolfert van Borselen, 
who had a strong following in Zetland. . In 1299 van Borselen 
was killed, and a few months later John 1. died. John of 
Avesnes was at once recognized as his successor by the Hollanders. 
Thus with John I. ended the first line of counts, after a rule 
of nearly 400 years. Europe has perhaps never seen 
an abler series of princes than these fourteen lineal 
descendants of Dirk I. Excepting the last there 
is not a weak man among them. Physically handsome 
and strong, model knights of the days of chivalry, 
hard fighters, wise statesmen, they were born leaders 
of men; always ready to advance the commerce of 
the. country, they were the supporters of the growing towns, 
and likewise the pioneers in the task of converting a land 
of marshes and swamps into a fertile agricultural territory 
rich in flocks and herds. As individuals they had their 
failings, but one and all were worthy members of a high~souled 
race. 

• John of Avesnes, who took the title of John II., was the son 
of John of Avesnes, count of .Hainaut, and Alida, sister of 
MkmlT. William II. of Holland. On his succession to. the 
0ttb0 countship the Hollanders were willing to receive him, 
Mmm of but the Zeelanders were hostile; and a long struggle 
avmm*$. enluft( j before his authority was generally recognized. 
In 1301 Bishop William of Utrecht invaded Amstelland, but 
was killed in battle. John made use of his victory to secure the 
election of his brother Guy as bishop in his place. A war with 
the Flemings followed, in which the Flemings were at first 
victorious, but after a struggle of many vicissitudes they were at 
length driven out of Holland and Zeeland in 1304. John IL died 
in that year and was succeeded by his son William ILL, surnamed 
the Good (1304-1337)- In his reign the long-standing quarrel 
n /tmmmm with Flanders, which had during a century and a half 
lJU caused so many wars, was finally settled by the treaty 

of 1323, by which the full possession of West Zeeland 
was granted to William, who on his part renounced all claim in 
Imperial Flanders. The Amstelland with its capital, Amsterdam, 
which bad hitherto been held as a fief of Utrecht, was by William, 
on the death of his uncle Bishop Guy, finally annexed to Holland. 
This count did much to encourage civic life and to develop the 
resources of the country. He had dose relations through 
marriage with the three principal European dynasties of his 
time. His wife was Jeanne of Valois, niece of the French king; 
in 1323 the emperor Louis the Bavarian wedded his daughter 
Margaret; and in 1328 his third daughter, Philippa of Hainaut, 
was married to Edward HI. of England. By their alliance 
William III. occupied a position of much dignity and influence, 
which he used to further the interests and increase the welfare 



of his hereditary lands. He was in all respects a great prince 
and a wise and prudent statesman. He was succeeded by his 
son, William IV., who was the ally of his brother-in-law, -^^ 
Edward III., in his French wars. He was fond of ad ven- /St" 
ture, and in 1343 made a journey to the Holy Land in 
disguise, and on his way took part in an expedition of the 
knights of the Teutonic Order against the infidel Wends and 
Lithuanians. He was killed in battle against the Frisians in 
1345. He left no children, and the question as to the succession 
now brought on Holland a period of violent civil commotions. 
His inheritance was claimed by his eldest sister, 
the empress Margaret, as well as by Philippa of J^ u 
Hainaut, or in other words, by Edward ILL of England. mSUnc 
Margaret came in person and was duly recognised 
as countess in Holland, Zeeland and Hainaut; but returned 
to her husband after appointing her second son (the eldest, 
Louis, renounced his rights) Duke William of Bavaria, as 
stadholder in her place. William was but sixteen, and disorder 
and confusion soon reigned in the land. The sudden death of 
the emperor in 1347 added to the difficulties of his position. 
In 1349 Margaret was induced to resign her sovereignty, and 
the stadholder became count under the title of William wtmmm v. 
V. This was* the time of the formation of the famous •/<*» 
parties in Holland, known as Kabbeljauws (Cods) "**"£' 
and Hoeks (Hooks); the former, the burgher party, BarMrt * 
were the supporters of William (possibly the name was 
derived from the light blue, scaly looking Bavarian coat of 
arms), the latter the party of the disaffected nobles, who wanted 
to catch and devour the fat burgher fish. In 1350 such was 
the disorder in the land that Margaret, at the request of the nobles, 
came to Holland to take into her own hands the reins of govern- 
ment. The struggle between the nobles and the cities broke out 
into civil war. Edward HI. came to Margaret's aid, winning 
a sea-fight off Veere in 1351; a few weeks later the Hooks 
and their English allies were defeated by William and the Cods 
at Vlaardingen— an overthrow which ruined Margaret's cause. 
Edward III. shortly afterwards changed sides, and the empress 
saw herself compelled (1554) to come to an onderstanding with 
her son, he being recognized as count of Holland and Zrrland, 
she of Hainaut. Margaret died two years later, leaving William, 
who had married Matilda of Lancaster, in possession of the 
entire Hotland-Hainaut inheritance (July 1356). His tenure 
of power was, however, very brief. Before the close of 1357 
he showed such marked signs of insanity that his wife, with hit 
own consent and the support of both parties, invited 
Dake Albert of Bavaria, younger brother of William 
V., to be regent, with the title of Ruvord (1358). 
William lived in confinement for 31 years. Albert died 
in 1404, having ruled the land well and wisely for 46 years, 
first as Ruward, then as count. Despite outbreaks from time 
to time of the Hook and Cod troubles, be was able to make his 
authority respected, and to help forward in many ways the 
social progress of the country. The influence of the towns was 
steadily on the increase, and their government began to faQ 
into the hands of the burgher patrician class, who formed the 
Cod party. Opposed to them were the nobility and the lower 
classes, forming the Hook party. In Albert's latter years a 
fresh outbreak of civil war (1392-1305) was caused by the count's 
espousing the side of the Cods, while the Hooka had the support 
of his eldest son, William. Albert was afterwards reconciled 
to his son, who succeeded him as William VI. in 1404. 
On his accession to power William upheld the Hooks, 
and secured their ascendancy. His reign was much 
troubled with civil discards, but he was a brave soldier, and was 
generally successful in his enterprises. He died in 1417, leaving 
an only child, a daughter, Jacqueline (or Jacoba), 
who had in her early youth been married to John, 
heir to the throne of France. At a gathering held at 
the Hague (August 15, 14 16) the nobles and repre- 
sentatives of the cities of Holland and Zeeland had promised at 
William's request to support his daughter's claims to the suc- 
Bui John of France died (April 1417)1 «ad William VL 



HOLLAND, COUNTY OF 



6b<) 



about a month later, leaving the widowed Jacqueline at' 
17 years of age face to face with a difficult situation. She 
was at first welcomed in Holland and Zeeland, but found 
her claims opposed by her uncle, John of Bavaria, supported 
by the Cod party. Every one from whom she might have 
expected help betrayed her in turn, her second husband John 
IV. of Brabant, her third husband Humphrey of Gloucester, 
her cousin Philip the Good of Burgundy, ail behaved shamefully 
to her. Her romantic and sad life has rendered the courageous 
and accomplished Jacqueline the most picturesque figure in 
the whole history of Holland. She struggled long against her 
powerful kinsfolk, nor did she know happiness till near the end 
of her life, when she abandoned the unequal strife, and found 
repose with Francis of Borselen, Ruward of Holland, her fourth 
husband. Him Philip the Good, duke of Burgundy, craftily 
seized; and thereby in 1433 the Duchess Jacqueline was com- 
pelled to cede her rights over the counties of Holland and 
Hainaut. Consequently at her death in 1436, as she left no 
children, Philip succeeded to the full and undisputed 
possession of her lands. He had already acquired by 
inheritance, purchase or force almost all the other 
Netherland states; and now, with the extinction of 
the Bavarian line of counts, Holland ceased to have 
an independent existence and became an outlying province 
of the growing Burgundian power (see Burgundy). During 
the years that followed the accession to the sovereignty 
* of Duke Philip, Holland plays but an insignificant 
part. It was governed by a stadholder, and but 
small respect was shown for its chartered rights and privileges. 
The quarrels between the Hook and Cod factions still continued, 
but the outbreaks of civil strife were quickly repressed by the 
strong hand of Philip. Holland during this time contented 
rtomtuh herself with growing material prosperity. Her 
btgBU* herring fishery, rendered more valuable by the curing 
J* process discovered or introduced by Benkelszoon, 

"■*■•* brought her increasing wealth, and her fishermen 
were already laving the foundations o£ her future maritime 

featness. It was in the days of Duke Philip that Lorens 
oster of Haarlem contributed his share to the discovery of 
printing. During the reign of Charles the Bold (1467-147 7) 
^^^ the Hollanders, like the other subjects of that warlike 
2#3«Ll prince, suffered much from the burden of taxation. 
An outbreak at Hoorn was by Charles sternly repressed. 
The Hollanders were much aggrieved by the establishment 
of a high court of justice for the entire Netherlands at Mechlin. 
(1474). This was regarded as a serious breach of their privileges. 
The succession of Mary of Burgundy led to the grant* 
Bmjao^y. "*£ **> Holland as to the other provinces of the Nether- 
lands, of the Great Privilege of March 1477, which 
restored the most important of their ancient rights and liberties 
(see Netherlands). A high court of justice was established 
for Holland, Zeeland and Friesland, and the use of the native 
language was made official. The Hook and Cod troubles 
again disturbed the country. Hook uprisings took place at 
Leiden and Dordrecht and had to be repressed by armed 
force. 

By the sudden death of the Duchess Mary in 1482 her posses- 
sions, including the county of Holland, passed to her infant son, 
Philip, under the guardianship of his father the Arch* 
duke Maximilian of Austria. Thus the Burgundian 
dynasty was succeeded by that of the Habsburgs. 
During the regency of Maximilian the turbulence of 
the Hooks caused much strife and unrest in Holland. Their 
leaders, Francis of Brederode and John of Naaldwijk, seised 
Rotterdam and other places. Their overthrow finally ended 
the strife between Hooks and Cods. The "Bread 
and Cheese War," an uprising of the peasants in 
North Holland caused by famine, is a proof of the 
misery caused by civil discords and oppressive taxation. In 
1494, Maximilian having been elected emperor, Philip was 
declared of age. His assumption of the government was greeted 
with joy in Holland, and in his reign the province enjoyed rest 
xm n« 



pit. 



and its fisheries benefited from the commercial treaty con- 
cluded with England. The story of Holland during Tbt 
the long reign of his son and successor Charles III. Bmptnr 
(1506-1555), better known as the emperor Charles V., C kaOm% 
belongs to the general history of the Netherlands Jft"* 1 
(see Nkthmlanos). On the abdication of Charles, his 
son Philip II. of Spain became Philip III., count of Holland, the 
ruler whose arbitrary rule in church and state brought about 
the revolt of the Netherlands. His appointment of _._ _ 
William, prince of Orange, as stadholder of Holland *"**- 
and Zeeland was destined to have momentous results to the 
future of those provinces (see William tbx Silent). The 
capture of Brill and of Flashing in 157a by the Sea- watam 
Beggars led to the submission of the greater part of tforamg* 
Holland and Zeeland to the authority of the prince *** 
of Orange, who, as stadholder, summoned the states b<M * r * 
of Holland to meet at Dordrecht, This act was the beginning of 
Dutch independence. From this time forward William made 
Holland his home. It became the bulwark of the rttenvoH 
Protestant faith in the Netherlands, the focus of the •io» 
resistance to Spanish tyranny. The sieges of Haarlem, &**—* 
Alkmaar . and Leiden saved Holland from being lM-fc 
overwhelmed by the armies of Alva and Requesens and stemmed 
the tide of Spanish victory. The act of federation between 
Holland and Zeeland brought about by the influence 
of William was the germ of the larger umon of Utrecht i*r»c£i 
between the seven northern provinces in 1579. But 
within the larger union the inner and closer union between 
Holland and Zeeland continued to subsist. In 1580, when the 
sovereignty of the Netherlands was offered to the /l4 i ura . 
duke of Anjou, the two maritime provinces refused t*a of 
to acquiesce, and forced William to accept the title ***»'* 
of' count of Holland and Zeeland. In the following fJZtr 
year William in the name of the two provinces ***"°'* 
solemnly abjured the sovereignty of the Spanish king (July 24). 
After the assassination of William (2584) the title of count of 
Holland was never revived. 

In the long struggle of the united provinces with Spain, 
which followed the death of Orange, the brunt of the conflict 
fell upon Holland. More than half the burden of the charges 
of the war fell upon this one province; and with Zeeland it 
furnished the fleets which formed the chief defence of the country. 
Hence the importance attached to the vote of Holland in the 
assembly of the States-General. That vote was given by deputies 
at the head of whom was the advocate (in later times called 
the grand pensionary) of Holland, and who were responsible to, 
and the spokesmen of, the provincial states. These states, which 
met at the Hague in the same building as the States-General, 
consisted of representatives of the burgher oligarchies (regents) 
of the principal towns, together with representatives of the 
nobles, who possessed one vote only. The advocate was the 
paid minister of the states. He presided over their 
meetings, kept their minutes and conducted all a °^[% 
correspondence, and, as stated above, was their 'twund. 
spokesman in the States-General The advocate (or 
grand pensionary) of Holland therefore, if an able man, had 
opportunities for exercising a very considerable influence, 
becoming in fact a kind of minister of all affairs. It was this 
influence as exerted by the successive advocates of 
Holland, Paul Buys and Johan van Oldenbarneveldt, f££i2? 
which rendered abortive the well-meant efforts of the JJJJJb. 
earl of Leicester to centralize the government of the 
United Provinces. After his departure (1587) the advocate of 
Holland, Oldenbarneveldt, became the indispensable statesman 
of the struggling republic. The multiplicity of his functions 
gave to the advocate an almost unlimited authority in the details 
of administration, and for thirty years the conduct of affairs 
remained in his hands (see Oldenbaxneveldt). This meant 
the undisputed hegemony of Holland in the federation, in other 
words of the burgher oligarchies who controlled the town cor- 
porations of the province, and especially of Amsterdam. This* 
authority of Holland was, however, more thin counterbalanced 



6io 



HOLLAND, COUNTY OF 



by the extensive powers with which the stadholder princes 
of Orange were invested; and the chief crises in the internal 
O9mi09t history of the Dutch republic are to be found in 
Mwma the struggles for supremacy between two, in reality, 
OmPrt— different principles of government. On the one side 
toUSomit *** Pff^ple of provincial sovereignty which gave to 
mm4 pn* the voice of Holland a preponderating weight that was 
decisive; on the other side the principle of national 
sovereignty personified in the princes of Orange, to 
whom the States-General and the provincial states 
delegated executive powers that were little less than monarchical. 
The conclusion of the twelve years' truce in 1600 was a triumph 
for Oldenbarneveldt and the province of Holland over the 
opposition of Maurice, prince of Orange. In 161 7 the 
JyJJJ^/ outbreak of the religious dispute between the Remon- 
ormagt strant and Contra-remonstrant parties brought on a 
•adMHm life and death struggle between the sovereign province 
£%£" of Holland and the States-General of the union. The 
yftt, sword of Maurice decided the issue in favour of the 
States-General. The daimsof Holland were overthrown 
and the head of Oldenbarneveldt fell upon the scaffold (1619). 
The stadholder, Frederick Henry of Orange* ruled with well-nigh 
nwdiifci mo n a rchic al authority (1625-1647), but even he at the 
Hmmrr height of his power and popularity had always to. 
J*"** reckon with the opposition of the states of Holland 
****** and of Amsterdam, and many of his plans of campaign 
were thwarted by the refusal of the Hollanders to furnish supplies. 
His son William II. was but 21 yean of age on succeeding 
wmmm to the stadboldership, and the states of Holland were 
J^JJJJJ^ sufficiently powerful to carry through the negotiations 
•tonng* for the peace of MUnster (1648) in spite of his opposi- 
tion. A life and death conflict again ensued, and once 
more in 1650 the prince of Orange by armed force crushed the 
opposition of the Hollanders. The sudden death of William in 
the hour of his triumph caused a complete revolution in the 
government of the republic. He left no heir but a posthumous 
infant, and the party of the burgher regents of Holland was 
Madt °°ce more in the ascendant. The office of stadholder 
n^ was abolished, and John de Witt, the grand pensionary 
{Rood-Pensionoris) of Holland, for two decades held, 
in his hands all the threads of administration, and occupied the 
same position of undisputed authority in the councils of the land 
as Oldenbarneveldt had done at the beginning of the century. 
Amsterdam during this period was the centre and bead of the 
United Provinces. The principle of provincial sovereignty was 
carried to its extreme point in the separate treaty concluded 
with Cromwell in 1654, in which the province of Holland agreed 
to exclude for ever the prince of Orange from the office of stad- 
holder of Holland or captain-general of the union. In 167a 
another revolution took place. John de Witt was 
JJj^JJJ^ murdered, and William m. was called to fill the office 
o/Ormmg* oi dignity and authority which had been held by his 
ancestors of the house of Orange, and the stadbolder- 
ship was declared to be hereditary in his family. But William 
died without issue (see William ILL) and a stadholdeiiess period, 
during which the province of Holland was supreme in the union, 
followed till 1737. This change was effected smoothly) for 
though William had many differences with Amsterdam, he had 
in Anthony Hdnsius (van der Heim), who was grand pensionary 
of Holland from x6oo to his death in 1730, a statesman whom 
he thoroughly trusted, who worked with him in the furtherance 
of his policy during life and who continued to carry out that 
policy after his death. In 1737 there was once more a reversion 
^^^ to the sudholdership in the person of William IV., 
JJrJJ!^ whose powers were strengthened and declared heredi- 
e/ovaaj* tary both in the male and female line in 1747. But 
until the final destruction of the federal republic by 
the French armies, the perennial struggle went on between the 
Holland or federal party (Staalsg/BSindcu) centred at Amsterdam 
—out of which grew the patriot party under William V.— and the 
Orange or unionist party (Oranjeg/tsinden), which was strong in 
the smaller provinces and had much popular support among 



the lower classes. The French conquest swept away the old 
condition of things never to reappear; but allegiance to the 
Orange dynasty survived, and in 1813 became the rallying 
point of a united Dutch people. At the same time the leading 
part played by the province of Holland in the history of the 
republic has not been unrecognized, for the country ruled over 
by the sovereigns of the house of Orange is always popularly, 
and often officially, known as Holland. 

The full title of the states of Holland in the 17th and 18th 
centuries was: 04 Edde Groot Mogende Heeren Sioatcm tan 
Holland €H Wtstfriertond. After 1608 this assembly f w ^ 
consisted of nineteen members, one representing the tma*m 
nobility (riddersckap), and eighteen, the towns. The •"*• 
member for the nobles had precedence and voted first. j £K? 
The interests of the country districts (Art platte land) *——- 
were the peculiar charges of the member for the nobles. 
The nobles also retained the right of appointing repre- 
sentatives to sit in the College of Deputed Councillors, in certain 
colleges of the admiralty, and upon the board of directors of 
the East India Company, and to various public offices. The 
following eighteen towns sent representatives: South Quarter— 
(1) Dordrecht, (a) Haarlem, (3) Delft, (4) Leiden, (5) Amsterdam, 
(6) Gouda, (7) Rotterdam, (8) Gorinchem, (0) Schiedam, (10) 
Schoonhoven, (xx) Brill; North Quarter:— (12) Alkmaar, 
(13) Hoorn, (14) Enkhuizen, (15) Edam, (16) Monnikendam, 
(17) Medemblik, (18) Purmerend. Each town (as did also the 
nobles) sent as many representatives as they pleased, but the 
nineteen members had only one vote each. Each town's deputa- 
tion was headed by its pensionary, who was the spokesman 
on behalf of the representatives. Certain questions such as 
peace and war, voting of subsidies, imposition of taxation, 
changes in the mode of government, &c, required unanimity 

of votes. The grand pensionary {Racd-Pcnsioncris) ^_ ^ 

was at once the president and chief administrative JJJ^JJT* 
officer of the states. He presided over all meetings, ^^ 
conducted the business, kept the minutes, and was 
charged with the maintenance of the rights of the states, with the 
execution of their resolutions and with the entire correspondence. 
Nor were his functions only provincial He was the head and 
the spokesman of the deputation of the 'states to the States- 
General of the union; and in the stadholderless period the 
influence of such grand pensionaries of Holland as John de Witt 
and Anthony Heintius enabled the complicated and intricate 
machinery of government in a confederacy of many sovereign 
and semi-sovereign authorities without any recognized head 
of the state, to work with comparative smoothness and a remark- 
able unity of policy. This was secured by the indisputable 
predominance in the union of the province of Holland. The 
pohcy of the states of Holland swayed the policy of the generality, 
and historical circumstances decreed that the policy of the 
states of Holland during long and critical periods should be 
controlled by a succession oi remarkable men filling the office 
of grand pensionary. The states of Holland sat at the Hague in 
the months of March, July, September and November. During 
the periods of prorogation thocontinuous oversight of the business 
and interests of the province was, however, never neglected. 
This duty was confided to a body called the College r»fcj»rf 
of Deputed Councillors {hd Kotltgu der Cekcmmilteerde D *p wt»4 
Rods*), which was itself divided into two sections, g""* 
one for the south quarter, another lor the north *"* 
quarter. The more importamV-that for the south quarter 
—consisted of ten members, (1) the senior member of the 
nobility, who sat for life, (2) representatives (for periods of three 
years) of the eight towns: Dordrecht, Haarlem, Delft, Leiden, 
Amsterdam, Gouda, Rotterdam and Gorinchem, with a tenth 
member (usually elected biennially) for the towns of Schiedam, 
Schoonhoven and Brill conjointly. The grand pensionary 
presided over the meetings of the college, which had the general 
charge of the whole, provincial administration, especially of 
finance, the carrying out of the resolutions of the states, the 
maintenance of defences, and the upholding of the privileges 
and liberties of the land. With particular regard to this hut* 



HOLLAND— HDLLES 



6ir 



named duty the college deputed two of hi members to attend 
til meetings of the Hates-general, to watch the proceedings and 
report at once any proposals which they held to be contrary 
to the interests or to infringe upon the right* of the province 
of Holland. The institution of the College of Deputed Councillors 
might thus be described as a vigilance committee of the states ia 
perpetual session. The existence of the college, with its many 
weighty and' important functions, must never be lost sight of 
by students who desire to have a dear understanding of the 
remarkable part played by the province of Holland in the history 
of the United Netherlands. (G. E.) 

HOLLAND, a city of Ottawa county, Michigan, U.S.A., on 
Macatawa Bay (formerly called Black Lake), near Lake Michigan, 
and 95 m. W.S.W. of Grand Rapids. Pop. (1890) 304$; (1000) 
7790, of whom a large portion were of Dutch descent; (1004) 8966; 
(19x0) 10,490 It is served by the Pere Marquette Railroad, 
by steamboat Unes to Chicago and other lake ports, and by 
electric lines connecting with Grand Rapids, Saugatuck, and the 
neighbouring summer resorts. On Macatawa Bay are Ottawa 
Beach, Macatawa Park, Jenison Park, Central Park, Castle 
Park and Waukezoo. In the dty itself are Hope College 
(co-educational; founded in 1851 and incorporated as a college 
in 1866), an institution of the (Dutch) Reformed Church in 
America; and the Western Theological Seminary (1869; 
suspended 1877-1884) of the same denomination. Holland is a 
grain and fruit shipping centre, and among its manufactures 
are furniture, leather, grist mill products, iron, beer, pickles, 
shoes, beet sugar, gelatine, biscuit (Holland rusk), electric and 
steam launches, and pianos. In 1908 seven weekly, one daily, 
and two monthly papers (four denominational) were published 
at Holland, five of them in Dutch. The munidpatity owns its 
water-works and electric-lighting plant Holland was founded 
in 1847 by Dutch settlers, under the leadership of the Rev. 
A. C. Van Raalte, and was chartered as a dty in 1867. In 1871 
much of it was destroyed by a forest fire. 

HOLLAND, a doth so called from the country where it was 
first made. It was originally a fine plain linen fabric of a brownish 
colour— unbleached flax. Several varieties are now made: 
hollands, pale hollands and fine hollands. They are. used for 
aprons, blin ds, shirts, blo uses and d resses. 

HOLLAR, WENZEL or WENCBSLAUS (Vaclav Holas] (1607- 
1677), Bohemian etcher, was born at Prague on the 13th of Jury 
1607, -and died in London, being buried at St Margaret's church, 
Westminster, on the 28th of March 1677. His family was 
ruined by the capture of Prague in the Thirty Years' War, and 
young Hollar, who had been destined for the law, determined 
to become an artist. The earliest of his works that have come 
down to us are dated 162s and 1626; they are small plates, 
and one of them is a copy of a Virgin and Child by Dtirer, whose 
influence upon Hollar's work was always great. In 1627 he was 
at Frankfort, working under Matthew Merian, an etcher and 
engraver; thence he passed to Strassburg, and thence, in 1633, 
to Cologne. It was there that be attracted the notice of the 
famous amateur Thomas, earl of Arundel, then on an embassy 
to the imperial court; and with him Hollar travelled to Vienna 
and Prague, and finally came in 1637 to England, destined to 
be his home*for many years. Though he lived in the household 
of Lord Arundd, he seems to have worked not exdusivdy for 
him, but to have begun that slavery to the publishers which was 
afterwards the normal condition of his life. In his first year in 
England he made for Stent, the printseller, the magnificent 
View of Greenwich, nearly a yard long, and recdved thirty 
shillings for the plate, — perhaps a twentieth* part of what would 
now be paid for a single good impression. Afterwards we hear 
of his fixing the price of his work at fourpence an hour, and 
measuring his time by a sandglass. The Civil War had its effect 
on his fortunes, but none on his industry. Lord Arundel left 
England in 1642, and Hollar passed into the Service of the 
duke of York, taking with him a wife and two children. With 
other royalist artists, notably Inigo Jones and Faithorne, he 
stood the long and eventful stege of Basing House; and as we 
have some hundred plates from his hand dated during the years f 



1C43 and rc)44 he must have turned his enforced leisure to good 
purpose. Taken prisoner, he escaped or was released, and joined 
Lord Arundel at Antwerp, and there he remained eight years, 
the prime of his working Hfe, when he produced his finest plates 
of every kind, his noblest views, hfe miraculous " muffs " and 
" ahdls," and the superb portrait of the duke of York. In 1652 
he returned to London, and lived for a time with Faithorne the 
engraver near Temple Bar. During the following years were 
published many books which he illustrated:— Ogilby's Virgil 
and Homer, Stapylton's Juvenal, and Dugdale's Warwickshire, 
St PamN and Uonastiean (part i). The booksellers continued 
to impose on the simple-minded foreigner, pretending to decline 
his work that he might stiH further reduce the wretched price 
he charged them. Nor did the Restoration improve his position. 
The court did nothing for him, and in the great plague he lost 
his young son, who, we are told, might have rivalled his father 
as an artist. After the great fire he produced some of his famous 
M Views of London "j and it may have been the success of t^ese 
plates which induced the king to send him, in 1668, to Tangier, 
to draw the town and forts. During his return to England 
occurred the desperate and successful engagement fought by his 
ship the " Mary Rose," under Captain Kempthorne, against 
seven Algerine men-of-war, — a brilliant affair which Hollar 
etched for Ogilby's Africa. He lived eight years after his 
return, still working for the booksellers, and retaining to the end 
his wonderful powers; witness the large plate of Edinburgh 
(dated 1670), one of the greatest of his works. He died in extreme 
poverty, his last recorded words being a request to the baihffa 
that they would not carry away the bed on which be was dying. 

Hollar's variety was boundless; his plates number some 2740, 
and indude views, portraits, ships, religious subjects, heraldic 
subjects, landscapes, and still life in a hundred different forms. 
No one that ever lived has been able to represent fur, or shells, 
or a butterfly's wing as he has done. His architectural drawings, 
such as those of Antwerp and Strassburg cathedrals, and his 
views of towns, are mathematically exact, but they are pictures 
as well. He could reproduce the decorative works of other 
artists quite faultlessly, as in the famous chalice after Mantegna's 
drawing. His Theatrum mtdierum and similar collection* 
reproduce for us with literal truth the outward aspects of the 
people of his day; and his portraits, a branch of art in which 
he has been unfairly disparaged, are of extraordinary refinement 
and power. 

Almost complete collections of Hollar's works exist in the British 
Museum and in the library at Windsor Castle. Two admirable 
catalogues of kit plates have been made, one in 1745 (2nd ed. 1750) 
by George Vertue, and one in 1853 by Part hey. The latter, pub- 
lished at Berlin, is a model of German thoroughness and accuracy. 

HOLLBS, DENZIL HOLLES, Baxon (1 509-1680), English 
statesman and writer, second son of John Holies, 1st earl of 
Clare (c. 1564-1637), by Anne, daughter of Sir Thomas Stanhope, 
was born on the 31st of October 1590. The favourite son of his 
father and endowed with great natural abilities, Denzil Holies 
grew up under advantageous drcumstances. Destined to 
become later one of the most formidable antagonists of King 
Charles's arbitrary government, he was in early youth that 
prince's playmate and intimate companion. The earl of Clare 
was, however, no friend to the Stuart administration, being 
especially hostile to the duke of Buckingham; and on the 
accession of Charles to the throne the king's offers of favour 
were rejected. In 1624 Holies was returned to parliament for 
Mitchell in Cornwall, and in 1628 for Dorchester. He had from 
the first a keen sense of the humiliations which attended the 
foreign policy of the Stuart kings. Writing to Strafford, his 
brother-in-law, on the 29th of November 1617, he severely 
censures Buckingham's conduct of the expedition to the Isle 
of RW; "since England was England," he dedared, "it 
recdved not so dishonourable a blow "; and he joined in the 
demand for Buckingham's impeachment in 1628. To these 
discontents were now added the abuses arising from the king's 
arbitrary administration. On the 2nd of March 1629, when 
Sir John Finch, the speaker, refused to put Sir John Eliot's 
Protestations and was about to adjourn the House by the king's 



6l2 



HOLLES 



Command, Holies with another member thrust him back into 
the chair and swore " he should sit still till it pleased them to 
rise." Meanwhile Eliot, on the refusal of the speaker to read 
the Protestations, had himself thrown them into the fire; the 
usher of the black rod was knocking at the door for admittance, 
and the king had sent for the guard. But Holies, declaring that 
he could not render the king or his country better service, put 
the Protestations to the House from memory, all the members 
rising to their feet and applauding. In consequence a warrant 
was issued for his arrest with others on the following day. 
They were prosecuted first in the Star Chamber and subsequently 
in the King's Bench. When s brought upon his habeas corpus 
before the latter court Holies offered with the rest to give bail, 
but refused sureties for good behaviour, and argued that the 
court had no jurisdiction over offences supposed to have been 
committed in parliament. On his refusal to plead he was 
sentenced to a fine of 1000 marks and to imprisonment during 
the king's pleasure. Holies had at first been committed and 
remained for some time a close prisoner in the Tower of London. 
The " close " confinement, however, was soon changed to a 
" safe " one, the prisoner then having leave to take the air and 
exercise, but being obliged to maintain himself at his own expense. 
On the 30th of October Holies, with Ehot and Valentine, was 
transferred to the Marshalsea. His resistance to the king's 
tyranny did not prove so stout as that of some of his comrades 
in misfortune. Among the papers of the secretary Sir John 
Coke is a petition of Holies, couched in humble and submissive 
terms, to be restored to the king's favour) 1 having given, the 
security demanded for his good behaviour, he was liberated 
early in 1630, and on the 30th of October was allowed bail. 
Being still banished from London he retired to the country, 
paying his fine in 1637 or 1638. The fine was repaid by the 
parliament in July 1644, and the judgment was revised on a 
writ of error in 1668. In 1638 we find him, notwithstanding 
his recent experiences, one of the chief leaders in his county 
of the resistance to ship money, though it would appear that 
he subsequently made submission. 

Holies was a member of the Short and Long Parliaments 
assembled in 1640. According to Laud he was now " one of the 
great leading men in the House of Commons," and in Clarendon's 
opinion he was " a man of more accomplished parts than any 
of his party " and of most authority. He was not, however, 
in the confidence of the republican party. Though he was at 
first named one of the managers for the impeachment of Strafford, 
Holies had little share in his prosecution. According to Laud 
he held out to Strafford hopes of saving his life if he would use 
his influence with the king to abolish episcopacy, but the earl 
refused, and Holies advised Charles that Strafford should demand 
a short respite, of which he would take advantage to procure 
a commutation of the death sentence. In the debate on the 
attainder he spoke on behalf of Strafford's family, and later 
obtained some favours from the parliament for his eldest son. 
In all other matters in parliament Holies took a principal part. 
He was one of the chief movers of the Protestation of the 3rd 
of May 1 64 1, which he carried up to the Lords, urging them to 
give it their approval. Although, according to Clarendon, 
he did not wish to change the government of the church, he 
showed himself at this time decidedly hostile to the bishops. 
He took up the impeachment of Laud to the House of Peers, 
supported the Londoners' petition for the abolition of episcopacy 
and the Root and Branch Bill, and afterwards urged that the 
bishops impeached for their conduct in the affair of the late 
canons should be accused of treason. He showed equal energy 
in the affairs of Ireland at the outbreak of the rebellion, supported 
strongly the independence and purity of the judicial bench, 
and opposed toleration of the Roman Catnolics. On the 9th 
of July 1641 he addressed the Lords on behalf of the queen of 
Bohemia, expressing great loyalty to the king and royal family 
and urging the necessity of supporting the Protestant religion 
everywhere. Together with Pym, Holies drew up the Grand 
Remonstrance, and made. a vigorous speech in its support on 
* Hist. USS. Qmm. t MSS. of Earl Omtptr, L 422. 



the asnd of November 1641, in which he argued for the right 
of one House to make a declaration, and asserted: " If kmc& 
are misled by their counsellors we may, we must tell them ol 
it." On the 15th of December he* was a teller in the division 
in favour of printing it. On the great subject of the militia 
he also showed activity. He supported Hesilriges' Militia Bill 
of the 7th of December 1641, and on the 31st of December he 
took up to the king the Commons' demand for a guard under 
the command of Essex. "Holles's force and reputation," 
said Sir Ralph Veroey, " are the two things that give the success 
to all actions." After the failure of the attempt by the court 
to gain over Holies and others by offering them posts in the 
administration, he was one of the " five members " impeached 
by the king. 1 Holies at once grasped the full significance of the 
king's action, and after the triumphant return to the House 
of the five members, on the nth of January, threw himself 
into still more pronounced opposition to the arbitrary policy 
of the crown. He demanded that before anything further was 
done the members should be cleared of their impeachment; 
was himself leader in the impeachment of the duke of Richmond; 
and on the 31st of January, when taking up the militia petition 
to the House of Lords, he adopted a very menacing tone, at the 
same time presenting a petition of some thousands of supposed 
starving artificers of London, congregated round the House. 
On the 15th of June he carried up the impeachment of the nine 
Lords who had deserted the parliament; and he was one of 
the committee of safety appointed on the 4th of July. 

On the outbreak of the Civil War (see Great Rebellion) 
Holies, who had been made lieutenant of Bristol, was sent 
with Bedford to the west against the marquess of Hertford, 
and took part in the unsuccessful siege of the hatter at Sherborne 
Castle. He was present at Edgehill, where his regiment of 
Puritans recruited in London was one of the few which stood 
firm and saved the day for the parliament. On the 13th of 
November his men were surprised at Brentford during his 
absence, and routed after a stout r es is t ance, In December 
he was proposed for the command of the forces in the west, 
an appointment which he appears to have refused. Notwith- 
standing his activity in the field for the cause of the parliament, 
the appeal to arms had been distasteful to Holies from the 
first. As early as September he surprised the House by the 
marked abatement of his former "violent and fiery spirit," 
and his changed attitude did not escape the taunts of his enemies, 
who attributed it scornfully to his disaster at Brentford or to 
his new wife. He probably foresaw that, to whichever side 
victory fell, the struggle could only terminate in the suppression 
of the constitution and of the moderate party on which all his 
hopes were based. His feelings and political opinions, too, 
were essentially aristocratic, and he regarded with horror the 
transference of the government of the state from the king and 
the ruling families to the parliamentary leaders. He now 
advocated peace and a settlement of the disputes by concessions 
on both sides; a proposal full of danger because impracticable, 
and one therefore which could only weaken the parliamentary 
resistance and prolong the struggle. He warmly supported 
the peace negotiations on the aist of November and the 2 rod 
of December, and his attitude led to a breach with Pym and the 
more determined party. In June 1643 he was accused of 
complicity in Waller's plot, but swore to his innocency; and 
his arrest with others of the peace party was even proposed 
in August, when Holies applied for a pass to leave the country. 
The king's successes, however, for the moment put a stop to 
all hopes of peace; and in April 1044 Holies addressed the 
citizens of London at the Guildhall, calling upon them " to 
join with their purses, their persons, and their prayers together " 
to support the army of Essex. In November Holies and White- 
locke headed the commission appointed to treat with the king 
at Oxford. He endeavoured to convince the royalists of the 
necessity of yielding in time, before the " new party of hot men " 
should gain the upper hand. Holies and Whitclocke had a 

'The speech of January «j attributed to him and printed in 
Tkomaion Tracts, E 199 (55), is a forgery. 



HOLLES 



613 



private meeting with the king, when at Chart's request they 
drew up the answer which they advised him to return to the 
parliament. This interview was not communicated to the other 
commissioners or to parliament, and though doubtless their 
motives were thoroughly patriotic, their action was scarcely 
compatible with their position as trustees of the parliamentary 
cause. Holies was also appointed a commissioner at Uxbridge 
in January 1645 &nd endeavoured to overcome the crucial 
difficulty of the militia by postponing its discussion altogether. 
As leader of the moderate (or Presbyterian) party Holies now 
came into violent antagonism with Cromwell and the army 
faction. " They hated one another equally "; and Holies 
would not allow any merit in Cromwell, accusing him of cowardice 
and attributing his successes to chance and good fortune. 
With the support of Essex and the Scottish commissioners 
Holies endeavoured in December 1644 to procure Cromwell's 
impeachment as an incendiary between the two nations, and 
" passionately " opposed the self-denying ordinance. In return 
Holies was charged with having held secret communications 
with the king at Oxford and with a correspondence with Lord 
Digby; but after a long examination by the House be was 
pronounced innocent on the 19th of July 164s* Determined 
on Cromwell's destruction, he refused to listen to the prudent 
counsels of Sir Anthony Ashley Cooper, who urged that Cromwell 
was too strong to be resisted or provoked, and on the 29th of 
March 1647 drew up in parliament a hasty proclamation declaring 
the promoters of the army petition enemies to the state; in 
April challenging Ireton to a duel. 

The army party was now thoroughly exasperated against 
Holies. " They were resolved one way or other to be rid of 
him," says Clarendon. On the 1 6th of June 1647 eleven members 
including Holies were charged by the army with various offences 
against the state, followed on the 23rd by fresh demands for 
their impeachment and for their suspension, which was refused. 
On the 26th, however, the eleven members, to avoid violence, 
asked leave to withdraw. Their reply to the charges against 
them was handed into the House on the 19th of July, and on 
the 20th Holies took leave of the House in A grave and learned 
speech . . .After the riot of the apprentices on the 26th, for 
which Holies disclaimed any responsibility, the eleven members 
were again (30th of July) recalled to their seats, and Holies was 
one of the committee of safety appointed. On the flight of the 
speaker, however, and part of the parliament to the army, and 
the advance of the latter to London, Holies, whose party and 
policy were now entirely defeated, left England on the 22nd of 
August for Sainte-Mere Eglidc In Normandy. On the 26th of 
January 1648 the eleven members, who had not appeared 
when summoned to answer the charges against them, were 
expelled. Not long afterwards, however, on the 3rd of June, 
these proceedings were annulled; and Holies, who had then 
returned and was a prisoner in the Tower with the rest of the 
eleven members, was discharged. He returned to his seat on 
the 14th of August. 

Holies was one of the commissioners appointed to treat with 
the king at Newport on the iSth of September 1648. Aware 
of the plans of the extreme party, Holies threw himself at the 
king's feet and implored him not to waste time in useless negotia- 
tions, and he was one of those who stayed behind the rest in 
order to urge Charles to compliance. On the xst of December 
he received the thanks of the House. On the occasion of Pride's 
Purge on the 6th of December Holies absented himself and 
escaped again to France. From his retirement there he wrote 
to Charles II. in 165 1, advising him to come to terms with the 
Scots as the only means of effecting a restoration; but after 
the alliance he refused Charles's offer of the secretaryship of 
state. In March 1654 Cromwell, who in alarm at the plots being 
formed against him was attempting to reconcile some of his 
opponents to his government, sent Holies a pass " with notable 
circumstances of kindness and esteem." His subsequent move- 
ments and the date of his return to England are uncertain, but in 
1656 Cromwell's resentment was again excited against him as 
the supposed author of a tract, really written by Clarendon. 



He appears to have been imprisoned) for his release was ordered 
by the council on the and of September 1659. 

Holies took part in the conference with Monk at Northumber- 
land. House, when the Restoration was directly proposed, and 
with the secluded members took his seat again in parliament on 
the list of February 1600. On the 23rd of February he was. 
chosen one of the council to carry on the government during 
the interregnum; on the 2nd of March the votes passed against 
him and the sequestration of his estates were repealed, and on 
the 7th he was made custos rotulorum for Dorsetshire. He 
took a leading part in bringing about the Restoration, was 
chairman of the committee of seven appointed to prepare an 
answer to the king's letter, and as one of the deputed Lords 
and Commons be delivered at the Hague the invitation to Charles 
to return. He preceded Charles to England to prepare for his 
reception, and was sworn of the privy council on the 5th of June. 
He was one of the thirty-four commissioners appointed to try 
the regicides in September and October. On the soth of April 
1661 he was created Baron Holies of Iheld in Sussex, and became 
henceforth one of the leading members of the Upper House. 

Holies, who was a good French scholar, was sent as ambassador 
to France on the 7th of July 1663. He was ostentatiously 
English, and a zealous upholder of the national honour and 
interests; but his position was rendered difficult by the absence 
of home support. On the 27th of January 1666 war was declared, 
but Holies was not recalled till May. • Pepys remarks on the 
14th of November: " Sir G. Cartaret tells me that just now my 
Lord Holies had been with him and wept to think in what a 
condition we are fallen." Soon afterwards he was employed 
on another disagreeable mission in which the national honour 
was again at stake, being sent to Breda to make a peace with 
Holland in May 1667. He accomplished his task successfully, 
the articles being signed om the 21st of June. 

On the 12th of December he protested against Lord Clarendon's 
banishment and was nearly put out of the council in consequence. 
In 1668 he was manager for the Lords in the celebrated Skinner's 
case, in which his knowledge of precedents was of great service, 
and on which occasion he published the tract The Grand 
Question concerning Ike Judicature of the House of Peeres (1669). 
Holies, who was honourably distinguished by Charles as a '* stiff 
and sullen man," and as one who would not yield to solicitation, 
now became with Halifax and Shaftesbury a leader in the 
resistance to the domestic and foreign policy of the court. 
Together with Halifax he opposed both the arbitrary Conventicle 
Act of 1670 and the Test Oath of 1675, bis objection to the 
latter being chiefly founded on the invasion of the privileges 
of the peers which it involved; and he defended with vigour 
the right of the Peers to record their protests. On the 7th of 
January 1676 Holies with Halifax was summarily dismissed 
from the council On the occasion of the Commons petitioning 
the king in favour of an alliance with the Dutch, Holies addressed 
a Letter to Van Beuninghen at Amsterdam on " Love to our 
Country and Hatred of a Common Enemy," enlarging upon the 
necessity of uniting m a common defence against French aggres- 
sion and in support of the Protestant religion. " The People 
are strong but the Government is weak," he declares; and he 
attributes the cause of weakness to the transference of power 
from the nobility to the people, and to a succession of three weak 
princes. " Save what (the Parliament) did, we have not taken 
one true step nor struck one true stroke since Queen Elizabeth.", 
He endeavoured to embarrass the government this year in his 
tract on Some Considerations upon the Question whether the 
partiammt is dissohed by its prorogation for 15 months. It was. 
held by the Lords to be seditious and scandalous; while for 
publishing another pamphlet written by Holies entitled The 
Grand Question concerning the Prorogation of this Parliament 
(otherwise The Long Parliament dissolved) the corrector of the 
proof sheets was committed to the Tower and fined £1000. 
In order to bring about the downfall of Danby (afterwards duke 
of Leeds) and the disbanding of the army, which he believed 
to be intended for the suppression of the national liberties, Holies 
at this time (1677-1679) engaged, as did many others, in a 



614 



HOLLOWAY— HOLLY 



dangerous intrigue with Courtin and Barilkm, the French envoys, 
and Louis XIV.; he refused, however, the tatter's presents on 
the ground that he was a member of the council, having been 
appointed to Sir William Temple's new modelled cabinet in 
1679. Barillon described him as at this period in his old age 
" the man of all England for whom the different cabals have the 
most consideration," and as firmly opposed to the arbitrary 
designs of the court. He showed moderation in the Popish 
Plot, and on the question of the exclusion followed Halifax 
rather than Shaftesbury. His long and eventful career closed 
by his death on the 17th of February 1680. 

the character of Holies has been drawn by Burnet, with whom 
he was on terms of friendship. " Hollis was a man of great 
courage and of as great pride. ... He was faithful and firm to his 
side and never changed through the whole course of his life. . . . 
He argued well but too vehemently; for he could not bear 
contradiction. He had the soul of an old stubborn Roman 
In him. He was a faithful but a rough friend, and a severe 
but fair enemy. He had a true sense of religion; and was a 
man of an unblameable course of life and of a sound judgment 
when it was not biased by passion." l Holies was essentially 
an aristocrat and a Whig in feeling, making Cromwell's supposed 
hatred of " Lords " a special charge against him; rega r di n g the 
civil wars rather as a social than as a political revolution, and 
attributing all the evils of his time to the transference of political 
power from the governing families to the " meanest of men." 
He was an authority on the history and practice of parliament 
and the constitution, and besides the pamphlets already men- 
tioned was the author of The Case Stated concerning the Judicature 
of the House ef Peers in the Point of Appeals (167s); The Case 
Stated of the Jurisdiction of the House of Lords in the point of 
Impositions (1676); Letter of a Gentleman to his Friend showing 
that the Bishops are not to be judges in Parliament in Cases Capital 
(1679); Lord Holla his Remains, being a 2nd tetter to a Friend 
concerning the judicature of the Bishops in Parliament. . . .« He 
also published A True Relation of the unjust accusation of certain 
French gentlemen (1671), an account of Holks's intercession on 
their behalf and of his dispute with Lord Chief Justice Keeling; 
and he left Memoirs, written in exile in 1640, and dedicated 
" to the unparalleled Couple, Mr Oliver St John . . . and Mr 
Oliver Cromwell . . ." published in 1609 and reprinted in Baron 
Maseres's Select Tracts relating to the CioU Wars, i 180. Several 
speeches of Holies were printed and are extant, and his Letter 
to Van Beuningben has been already quoted. 
t Holies married (1) in 1628 Dorothy, daughter and heiress of 
Sir Francis Ashley; (2) in 164a Jane, daughter and co-heiress of 
Sir John Shirley of Ifield in Sussex and widow of Sir Walter 
Covert of Slougham, Sussex; and (3) in 1666 Esther, daughter 
and co-heiress of Gideon Le Lou of Columbiers in Normandy, 
widow of James Richer. By his first wife he left one son, Francis, 
who succeeded him as and baron. He had no children by his 
other wives, and the peerage became extinct in the person of 
his grandson Denxil, 3rd Baron Holies, in 1694* the estates 
devolving on John Holies (1662-17x1), 4th earl of Clare and duke 
of Newcastle. __ 

Holies'* brother, John Holles, and earl of Clare (1595-1666), 
was member of parliament for East Retford in three parliaments 
before succeeding to the peerage in 1637. He took some part in 
the Civil War, but " he was very often of both parties, and never 
advantaged either." The earldom of Clare, which had been 
granted in 1624 by James I. to his father, John Holies, in return 
for the payment of £5000, became merged in the dukedom of 
Newcastle in 1694, when John Hoiks, the 4th cad, was created 
duke of Newcastle. 

Holles's Life has been written by C. H. Firth Inthe Dictionary 
of National Biography, by Horace Walpole in Royal and Noble 
Authors, U. 28; by Guizot in Monk's Contemporaries (Eng. trans., 
1851); and by A. Collins in Historical Collections of Noble Families 
(t752). and in the Biographia Btilannica. See also S. R. Gardiner, 



1 Burnet's History of His Own Times, vi. 257, 268. 
a The rough draft, apparently in Holles's handwriting, it in Eftrton 
USS. ft*. 136-149. 



History ef Bmuhmd (1883-1^4). and History of me Great CM War 
(1893); Lord tiarendonT m^tfOuR&lion. edited by W. D. 
Macray; G. Burnet, History of His Own Time (1833); and B. White- 
lock. Memorials (173*).' (P.C.Y.) 

HOLLOWAY, THOMAS (1800-1883), English patent-medkine 
vendor and philanthropist, was born at Devonport, on the 22jfd 
of September 1800, of humble parents. Until his twenty-eighth 
year he lived at Penzance, where he assisted his mother and 
brother in the baker's shop which his father, once a warrant 
officer in a militia regiment, had left them at his death. On 
coming to London he made the acquaintance of Felix Albinolo, 
an Italian, from whom he obtained the idea for the ointment 
which was to carry his name all over the world. The secret of 
his enormous success in business was due almost entirely to 
advertisement, in the efficacy of which he had great faith. He 
soon added the sale of pills to that of the ointment, and began 
to devote the larger part of his profits to advertising. Hollowa/s 
first newspaper announcement appeared on the 15th of October 
1837, and in 1842 his yearly expenses for publicity had reached 
the sum of £5000; this expenditure went on steadily increasing 
as his sales increased, until it had reached the figure of £50,000 
per annum at the time of his death. It is, however, chiefly 
by the two princely foundations— the Sanatorium and the 
College for Women at Egham (?.*.), endowed by Holloway 
towards the dose of his life— that his name will be perpetuated, 
more than a minion sterling having been set apart by him for the 
erection and permanent endowment of these institutions. In 
the deed of gift of the college the founder credited his wife, who 
died in 1875, with the advice and counsel that led him to provide 
what he hoped might ultimately become the nucleus of a uni- 
versity tor women. The philanthropic and somewhat eccentric 
donor (he had an unconcealed prejudice against doctors, lawyers 
and parsons) died of congestion of the hings at SunninghiU on 
the 26th of December 1883. 

HOLLY (Ilex Aquifolium), the European representative of a 
large genus of trees and shrubs of the natural order Ilicineae, 
containing about 170 species. The .genus finds its chief develop- 
ment in Central and South America; is well developed in Asia, 
especially the Chinese -Japanese area, and has but few species 
in Europe, Africa and Australia. In Europe, where /. Aquifolium 
is the sole surviving species, the genus was richly represented 
during the Miocene period by forms at first South American and 
Asiatic, and later North American in type (Schimper, PalionL 
vtgit. Hi. 204, 1874). The leaves are generally leathery and 
evergreen, and are alternate and stalked; the flowers are com- 
monly dioecious, are in axillary cymes, fascicles or umbelhiles, 
and have a persistent four- to five-lobed calyx, a white, rotate 
four- or rarely five- or six-deft corolla, with the four or five 
stamens adherent to its base in the male, sometimes hypogynous 
in the female flowers, and a two- to twelve-celled ovary; the 
fruit is a globose, very seldom ovoid, and usually red drupe, 
containing two to sixteen one-seeded stones. 

The common holly, or Hulver (apparently the KffKaorpot of 
Theophrastus; * Ang.-Sax. holen or holegn; Mid. Eng. holyn of 
halin, whence halm and halmtree;* Welsh, cdyn; Ger. Stech- 
palme t Hulse, ffulst; 0. Fr. houx\ and Fr. Jtoulx)* I. Aquifolium, 
is an evergreen shrub or low tree, having smooth, ash-coloured 
bark, and wavy, pointed, smooth and glossy leaves, 2 to 3 in. 
long, with a spinous margin, raised and cartilaginous below, or, 
as commonly on the upper branches of the older trees, entire. 

* HisL Plant. I. 9. 3, UL 3. x, and 4. 6, it passim. On the oqtd> 
folium or aquifolia of. Latin authors, commonly regarded as the 
holly, see A de Grandsagne, Hist. Nat. de Pline K bk. xvi., •• Notes," 
pp. 199, 206. 

4 The term " holm," as indicative of a prevalence of holly, is 
stated to have entered into the names of several places in Britain, 
From its superficial resemblance to the holly, the tree Querent Ilex, 
the evergreen oak, received the appellation of M holm-oak." 

1 Skeat (Etymetog. Diet., 1879) with reference to the word holly 
remarks: " The form of the base Kul (-Teutonic Hot.) is probably 
connected with Lat. culmen, a peak, culmus, a stalk; perhaps 
because the leaves are 'pointed.' Grimm (Dent. Wbrterb. Bd. iv.) 
suggests that the term Hulst, as the O.H.G. HuUs, applied to the 
butcher's broom, or knee-holly, in the earliest times used for hedges, 
may have reference to the holly as a protecting ( kti i Un d er ) plant. 



HOLLYHOCK 



615 



—« peculiarity alluded to by Sonthey in his poem Tkt Holly 
Tret. The flowers, which appear in May, are ordinarily dioecious, 
ai in all the beat of the cultivated varieties in nurseries (Card. 
Caret*., 1877, L 140). Darwin (Dijf. Form ef Flow., 1877, p. 
197) says of the holly: " During several years I have examined 
many plants, but have never found one that was really henna* 
phrodite." Shirley Hibberd, however (.Card. Ckron., 1877, 
il 777), mentions the occurrence of M flowers bearing globose 
anthers well furnished with pollen, and also perfect ovaries. " 
In his opinion,/. Aquifoiimm changes its sex from male to female 
with age. In the female flowers the stamens ate destitute of 
pollen, though but slightly or not at all shorter than in the male 
flowers; the latter are more numerous than the female, and have 
a smaller ovary and a larger corolla, to which the filaments 
adhere for a greater length. The corolla in male plants falls 
off entire, whereas in fruit-bearers it is broken into separate 




TUx Aquifoiium. Shoot bearing leaves and fruit about \ nat. tout. 

1. Flower with abortive stamens. 4. Fruit. 

2. Flower with abortive pistil. 5. Fruit cut transversely 

3. Floral diagram snowing arrangement showing the four 

of parts m horuontal section, one-seeded stones, 

segments by the swelling of the young ovary. The holly occurs 
in Britain, north-east Scotland excepted, and in western and 
southern Europe, from as high as 6a° N. lat. in Norway to Turkey 
and the Caucasus and in western Asia. It is found generally 
in forest glades or in hedges, and does not flourish under the 
shade of other trees. In England it is usually small, probably 
oh account of its destruction for timber, but it may attain to 
60 or 70 ft. in height, and Loudon mentions one tree at Claremont, 
in Surrey, of 80 ft. Some of the trees on Bleak HiU, Shropshire, 
are asserted to be 14 ft. in girth at some di st ance from the 
ground(iV. and Q., 5th ser., xii. 508). The holly is abundant in 
France, especially in Brittany. It will grow in almost any soil 
not absolutely wet, but flourishes best in rather dry than moist 
sandy loam. Beckmann (Hist, of Intent., 1846, k 193) says that 
the plant which first induced J. di Castro to search for alum in 
Italy was the holly, which is there still considered to indicate 
that its habitat is aluminiferous. The holly is propagated by 
means of the seeds, which do not normally germinate until their 
second year, by whip-grafting and budding, and by cuttings of 
the matured summer shoots, which, placed in sandy soil and 
kept under cover of a hand-glass in sheltered situations, generally 
strike root in spring. Transplantation should be performed in 
damp weather in September and October, or, according to some 
writers, in spring or on mild days in winter, and care should be 
taken that the roots arc not dried by exposure to the air. It is 



rarely Injured by frosts In Britain, where its foliage and bright 
red berries in winter render it a valuable ornamental tree. The 
yield of berries has been noticed to be less when a warm spring, 
following on a wet winter season, has promoted excess of growth. 
There are numerous varieties of the holly. Some trees have 
yellow, and others white or even black fruit. In the fruitless 
variety laurifolia, " the most floriferous of all hollies " (Hibberd), 
the flowers are highly fragrant; the form known as fetmna is, 
on the other hand, remarkable for the number of its berries. 
The leaves in the unarmed varieties aureo-morginala and oJbo- 
morginata are of great beauty, and inferos they are studded with 
sharp prickles. The holly is of importance as a hedge-plant, 
and is patient of clipping, whkh is best performed by the knife. 
Evelyn's holly hedge at Say's Court, Deptford, was 400 ft. long, 
9 ft. high and 5 ft. in breadth. To form fences, for whkh Evelyn 
recommends the employment of seedlings from woods, the 
plants should be 9 to 12 in. in height, with plenty of small 
fibrous roots, and require to be set 1 to 1} ft. apart, in well- 
manured and weeded ground and thoroughly watered. 

The wood of the holly is even-grained and hard, especially 
when from the heartwood of large trees, and almost as white 
as ivory, except near the centre of old trunks, where it is brownish. 
It is employed in inlaying and turning, and, since it stains well, 
in the place of ebony, as for teapot handles. For engraving it 
is inferior to box. When dry it weighs about 47} lb. per cub. ft. 
From the bark of the holly bird-lime is manufactured. From 
the leaves are obtainable a colouring matter named ilixontkin, 
Hide acid, and a bitter principle, ilicin, which has been variously 
described by different analytical chemists. They are eaten by 
sheep and deer, and in parts of France serve as a winter fodder 
for cattle. The berries provoke in man violent vomiting and 
purging, but are eaten with immunity by thrushes and other 
birds. The larvae of the moths SpUnx ligustri and Pkoxopteryx 
naaana have been met with on holly. The leaves are mined 
by the larva of a fly, PMytomyga ilicis, and both on them and 
the tops of the young twigs occurs the plant-louse Aphis Uieit 
(Kaltenbach, Pflanztnfcinde, 1874, p. 427). The custom of 
employing holly and other plants for decorative purposes at 
Christmas is one of considerable antiquity, and has been regarded 
as a survival of the usages of the Roman Saturnalia, or of an old 
Teutonic practice of hanging the interior of dwellings with ever- 
greens as a refuge for sylvan spirits from the inclemency of 
winter. A Border proverb defines an habitual story-teller as 
one that " lees never but when the hollen is green." Several 
popular superstitions exist with respect to holly. In the county 
of Rutland it is deemed unlucky to introduce it into a house 
before Christmas Eve. In some English rural districts the prickly 
and non-prickly kinds are distinguished as " he " and " she " 
holly; and in Derbyshire the tradition obtains that according 
as the holly brought at Christmas into a house is smooth or 
rough, the wife or the husband will be master. Holly that has 
adorned churches at that season is in Worcestershire and Here- 
fordshire much esteemed and cherished, the possession of a 
small branch with berries being supposed to bring a lucky year; 
and Lonicerus mentions a notion in his time. vulgarly prevalent 
in Germany that consecrated twigs of the plant hung over a door 
are a protection against thunder. 



50 



HOLLYHOCK (from M.E. Aaft-doubtless because brought 
from the Holy Land, where it is indigenous (Wedg.)— end A.-S. 



6i6 



HOLLY SPRINGS— HOLMES, O. W. 



hoc, a mallow), Althaea rosea, a perennial plant of the natural 
order Malvaceae, a native of the East, which has been cultivated 
in Great Britain for about three centuries. The ordinary 
hollyhock is single-blossomed, but the florists' varieties have 
all double flowers, of white, yellow, rose, purple, violet and 
other tints, some being almost black. The plant is in its prime 
about August, but by careful management examples may be 
obtained in blossom from July to as late as November. Holly- 
hocks are propagated from seed, or by division of the root, or 
by planting out in rich sandy soil, in a dose frame, with a gentle 
bottom heat, single eyes from woodshoots, or cuttings from 
outgrowths of the old stock or of the lateral offsets of the spike. 
The seed may be sown in October under cover, the plants 
obtained being potted in November, and kept under glass till 
the following April, or, if it be late-gathered, in May or June, 
in the open ground, whence, if required, the plants are best 
removed in October or April. In many gardens, when the plants 
are not disturbed, self-sown seedlings come up in abundance 
about April and May. Seedlings may also be raised in February 
or March, by the aid of a gentle heat, in a light and rich moist 
soil; they should not be watered till they have made their 
second leaves, and when large enough for handling should be 
pricked off in a cold frame; they are subsequently transferred 
to the flower-bed. Hollyhocks thrive best in a well-trenched 
and manured sandy loam. The spikes as they grow must be 
staked; and water and, for the finest blossoms, liquid manure 
should be liberally supplied to the roots. Plants for exhibition 
require the side growths to be pinched out; and it is recom- 
mended, in cold, bleak or northerly localities, when the flowering 
is over, and the stalks have been cut off 4 to 6 in. above the soil, 
to earth up the crowns with sand. Some of the finest double- 
flowered kinds of hollyhock do not bloom well in Scotland. 
The plant is susceptible of great modification under cultivation. 
The forms now grown are due to the careful selection and 
crossing of varieties. It is found that the most diverse varieties 
may be raised with certainty from plants growing near together. 
. The young shoots of the hollyhock are very liable to the 
attacks of slugs, and to a disease occasioned by a fungus, Puccinia 
malvacearum, which is a native of Chile, attained notoriety 
in the Australian colonies, and finally, reaching: Europe in 
1869, threatened the extermination of the hollyhock, the soft 
parts of the leaves of which it destroys, leaving the venation 
only remaining. It has been found especially hurtful to the 
plant in dry seasons. It is also parasitic on the wild mallows. 
The disease appears on the leaves as minute hard pale-brown 
pustules, filled with spores which germinate without a resting- 
period, but when produced late in the season may last as resting- 
spores until next spring. Spraying early in the season with 
Bordeaux mixture is an effective preventive, but the best means 
of treatment is to destroy all leaves as soon as they show signs 
of being attacked, and to prevent the growth of other host-plants 
such as mallows, in the neighbourhood. In hot dry seasons, red- 
spider injures the foliage very much, but may be kept at bay 
by syringing the plants frequently with plenty of clean water. 

HOLLY SPRINGS, a city and the county-seat of Marshall 
county, Mississippi, U.S.A., in the N. part of the state, 45 m« 
S.E. of Memphis. Pop. (1890) 2246; (1900) 2815 (1559 
negroes); (1910) 2192, Holly Springs is served by the Illinois 
Central and the Kansas City, Memphis & Birmingham (Frisco 
System) railways. The city has broad and well-shaded streets, 
and a fine court-house and court-house square. It is the seat 
of Rust University (opened in 1867), a Methodist Episcopal 
institution for negroes; of the Mississippi Synodical College 
(1905; Presbyterian), for white girls; and of the North Missis- 
sippi Agricultural Experiment Station. The principal industries 
arc the ginning, compressing and shipping of cotton, and the 
manufacture of cotton-seed oil, but the city also manufactures 
pottery and brick from clay obtained in the vicinity, and has 
an ice factory, bottling works and marble works. The munici- 
pality owns and operates its water-works and electric-lighting 
plant. Holly Springs was founded in 1837 and was chartered 
as a city in 189& Early in December 1862 General Grant 



established hen a large depot of supplies designed for the «e 
of the Federal army while on its inarch toward Vicksburg, but 
General Earl Van Dorn, with a brigade of cavalry, surprised 
the post at daylight on the 20th of this month, burned the supplies 
and took 1500 prisoners. Holly Springs was the home and is 
the burial-place of Edward Cary Walthall (1831-1808), a Demo- 
cratic member of the United States Senate in 1885-1804 and 
in 1895-1898. 

HOLMAH, JAMES (1786-1857), known as the "Blind 
Traveller," was born at Exeter on the 15th of October 1786. 
He entered the British navy in 1798 as first-class volunteer, and 
was appointed lieutenant in April 1807. In 1810 he was invalided 
by an illness which resulted in total loss of sight. In considera- 
tion of his helpless circumstances he was in 1812 appointed one 
of the royal knights of Windsor, but the quietness of such a 
life harmonized so ill with his active habits and keen interests 
that he requested leave of absence to go abroad, and in 1810, 
1820 and 1821 Journeyed through France, Italy, Switzerland, 
the parts of Germany bordering on the Rhine, Belgium and the 
Netherlands. On his return he published The Narrative of a 
Journey through France, &c (London, 1822). He again set out 
in 1822 with the design of making the circuit of the world, but 
after travelling through Russia into Siberia, he was suspected 
of being a spy, was arrested when he had managed to penetrate 
1000 m. beyond Smolensk, and after being conducted to the 
frontiers of Poland, returned home by Austria, Saxony, Prussia 
and Hanover. He now issued Travels through Russia, Siberia, 
&c (London, 1825). Shortly afterwards he again set out to 
accomplish by a somewhat different method the design which 
had been frustrated by the Russian authorities; and an account 
of his remarkable achievement was published in four volumes 
in 1834-1835, under the title of A Voyage round the World, 
including Travels in Africa, Asia, Australasia, America, £>£., 
from 1827 to 18 j2. His last journeys were through Spain, 
Portugal, Moldavia, Montenegro, Syria and Turkey; and he 
was engaged in preparing an account of this tour when he died 
in London on the 29th of J uly 1857. 

HOLMES, OLIVER WENDELL (1809-1894), American writer 
and physician, was born on the 29th of August 1809 at Cambridge, 
Mass. His father, Abiel Holmes (1763-1837), was a Calvinist 
clergyman, the writer of a useful history, Annak of America, 
and of much very dull poetry. His mother (the second wife of 
Abiel) was Sarah Wendell, of a distinguished New York family. 
Through her Dr Holmes was descended from Governors Thomas 
Dudley and Simon Bradstreet of Massachusetts, and from hex 
he derived bis cheerfulness and vivacity, his sympathetic 
humour and wit. From Phillips (Andover) Academy he entered 
Harvard in the " famous class of '29/' made further fflostriooa 
by the charming lyrics which he wrote for the anniversary 
dinners from 1851 to 1889, dosing with the touching "After 
the Curfew." After graduation he studied law perfunctorily 
for a year and dabbled in literature, winning the public ear by 
a spirited lyric called forth by the order to destroy the old 
frigate Constitution. These verses were sung all over the land, 
and induced the Navy Department to revoke its order and save 
the old ship. Turning next to medicine, and convinced by a 
brief experience in Boston that he liked it, he went to Paris in 
March 1833. He stu&ed industriously under Iowa and other 
famous physicians and surgeons in France, and in his vacations 
visited the Low Countries, England, Scotland and Italy. Re- 
turning to Boston at the close of 1835, filled with, a high pro- 
fessional ambition, he sought practice, but achieved only 
moderate success. Social, brilliant in conversation, and a writer 
of gay little poems, he seemed to the grave Bostonians not suffi- 
ciently serious. He won prises, however, for prof essional papenv 
and lectured on anatomy at Dartmouth College. He wrote 
two papers on homoeopathy, which he attacked with trenchant 
wit; also a valuable paper on the malarial fevers of New En gland. 
In 1843 he published his essay on the Contagiousness of Putrferal 
Fever, which stirred up a fierce controversy and brought upon 
him bitter personal abuse; but he maintained his position 
with dignity, temper and judgment; and in time he was honoured 



HOLMfiB, O. W. 



617 



as the discoverer of a beneficent truth. The volume of hSs 
medical essays holds some of his most sparkling wit, his shrewdest 
observation, his kindliest humanity. In 1840 he married Amelia 
Lee Jackson, daughter of the Hon. Charles Jackson (t 775-1855), 
formerly associate justice of the State supreme jddidal court, 
a lady of rare charm alike of mind and character. She died in 
the winter of 18&7-1888. Their firstborn child, Oliver Wendell 
Holmes, afterwards became chief justice of that same bench 
on which hit grandfather sat. In 1847 Dr Holmes was appointed 
professor of anatomy and physiology in the Medical School 
of Harvard University, the duties involving the giving of in- 
struction also in kindred departments, so that, as he said, he 
occupied " not a choir, but a settee in the school. 1 ' He delivered 
the anatomical lectures until November 1882, and in later years 
these were his only link with the medical profession. They were 
fresh, witty and lively; and the students were sent to him at 
the end of the day, when they were fagged, because he alone 
could keep them awake. In later years he made few finished 
contributions to medical knowledge; his eager and impetuous 
temperament caused him to leave more patient investigators 
to push to ultimate results the suggestions thrown out by his 
fertile and imaginative mmd. 

la 1836, being in that year the Phi Beta Kappa poet at 
Harvard University, he published his first volume of Poems, 
wh kh afterwards reached a second edition. Among these earlier 
lyrics was " The Last Leaf/' one of the most delicate combina- 
tions of pathos and humour in literature. His collected poetry 
liHa three volumes. In 1856-1857 a Boston publishing house 
(Phillips, Sampson, and Co.) invited James Russell Lowell to 
*dit a new magazine, which he agreed to do on condition that 
be could secure the assistance of Dr Holmes. By this urgent 
invitation the Doctor was equally surprised and flattered, for 
heretofore he had stood rather outside the literary coterie of 
Cambridge and Boston. He accepted with pleasure, and at once 
threw himself into the enterprise with zeal. He christened it 
Th* Atlantic Monthly; and, as Mr Howells afterwards said, he 
" not only named but made " it, for in each number of its first 
volume there Appeared one of the papers of the Autocrat of the 
Breakjast Table. The opening of the Autocrat—" I was just 
going to say when I was interrupted "—is explained by the fact 
that in the old New England Magazine (183 1 to 1833) the Doctor 
had published two Autocrat papers, which, by his wish, have 
never been reprinted. In the commercial panic of 1857 the new 
magazine would inevitably have failed had it not been for these 
fascinating essays. Their originality of conception, their wit 
and humour, their suggestions of what then seemed bold ideas, 
and their expression of New Englandism, all combined to make 
them so popular that the most harassed merchant in that gloomy 
winter purchased them as a dose of cheering medicine. Thus Dr 
Holmes made The Atlantic Monthly, which in return made 
him. A success so immediate and so splendid settled the rest 
of his career; he ceased to be a physician and became an author. 
These twelve papers were immediately (1858) published as a 
volume. No sooner was the Autocrat silent than the Professor 
(1859) succeeded him at the breakfast table. The Projessor 
was preferred by more thoughtful readers, though it has hardly 
been so widely popular as the Autocrat. Its theology, which 
seemed in those days audacious, frightened many of the strict 
and old-fashioned religionists of New England, though to-day 
it seems mild enough. Twelve years later, in 1871, the Landlady 
had another boarder, who took the vacant chair — the Poet 
(published 1872). But here Holmes fell a little short. In these 
three books, especially in the Autocrat and the Professor, the 
Doctor wrote as he talked at many a dinner table in Boston, 
but less well. The animation and clash of talk roused him. The 
dinners of the Saturday Gub are among Boston's proudest 
traditions, as they were the chief pleasure of Dr Holmes's life. 
There he met Emerson, Longfellow, Whittier, Lowell, Sumner, 
Agassiz, Motley, and many other charming talkers, and among 
them all be was admitted to be the best. 

There were characters and incidents, but hardly a story, in 
the Autocrat and the Professor. Holmes had an ambition for 



more sustained work, and in 1861 his novel, Elsie Venner, at 
first called The Professor's Story, was published. The book 
was illuminated throughout by admirable pictures of character 
and society in the typical New England town. But the rattle- 
snake element was unduly extravagant, and in other respects 
toe book was open to criticism as a work of art. It was written 
with the same purpose which informed the greatest part of the 
Doctor's literary work, and which had already been scented 
and nervously condemned by the religious world. By heredity 
the Doctor was a theologian; no other topic enchained him 
more than did the stern and merciless dogmas of his Calvinist 
forefathers. His humanity revolted against them, his reason con- 
demned them, and he set himself to their destruction as his task 
in literature. The religious world of his time was still so largely 
under the control of old ideas that he was assailed as a freethinker 
and a subverter of Christianity; though before his death opinions 
had so changed that the bitterness of the attacks upon him 
seemed incredible, even to some of those who had most 
vehemently made them. None the less, undaunted and pro- 
foundly earnest, he returned, six years later, to the same line of 
thought in his second novel, The Guardian Angel (published 
1867). This, though. less well known than Elsie Venner, is in 
many respects better. No more lifelike and charming picture 
of the society of the New England country-town of the middle 
third of the 19th century has ever been drawn, and every page 
sparkles with wit and humour. In 1884 and 1885 it was followed, 
still in the same line, by A Mortal Antipathy, a production 
inferior to its predecessors. 

Holmes generally held himself aloof from politics, and from 
those " causes " of temperance, abolition and woman's rights 
which enthralled most of his contemporaries in New England. 
The Civil War, however, aroused him for the time; finding him 
first a strenuous Unionist, it quickly converted him into an 
ardent advocate of emancipation. His Interest was enhanced 
by the career of his elder son Oliver (see below), who was three 
tiroes severely wounded, and finally rose to the rank of lieut.- 
colonel in the Northern army. He wrote some ringing war 
lyrics, and in 1863 delivered the Fourth of July oration in 
Boston, which showed a masterly appreciation Of the stirring 
public questions of the day. In 1878 Dr Holmes wrote a memoir 
of the historian John Lothrop Motley, an affectionate tribute to 
one who had been his dear friend. In 1884 he contributed the 
life of Emerson to the American " Men of Letters" series. He 
admired the " Sage of Concord," but was not quite in intellectual 
sympathy with him. Both were Liberals in thought, but in 
widely different ways. But in spite of this handicap the volume 
proved very popular. In 1888 he began the papers which he 
happily christened Over the Tea Cups. As a tour de force on the 
part of a man of nearly fourscore years they are very remarkable. 

After his return from Paris in 1835 Dr Holmes lived in Boston, 
with summer sojourning* at Pittsfield and Beverly Farms, and 
occasional trips to neighbouring cities, until 1886. He then 
undertook a four months' journey in Europe, and in England 
had a sort of triumphal progress. On his return he wrote Our 
Hundred Days in Europe (1887), a courteous recognition of the 
hospitality and praise which had been accorded to him. During 
this visit Cambridge University made him Doctor of Letters, 
Edinburgh University made him Doctor of Laws, and Oxford 
University made him Doctor of Civil Law. Already, in 1880, 
Harvard University had made him Doctor of Laws. He died 
on the 7th of October 1804, and was buried from King's Chapel, 
Boston, in the cemetery of Mount Auburn. 

His eldest son Oliver Wendell (b. 1841), who graduated from 
Harvard in 1861 and fought in the Civil War, retiring from the 
army as brevet lieut.-colonel In 1864, took up the study of 
law and was admitted to the bar in Boston in 1866. He was 
for some years editor of the American Law Review, and after 
being professor in the Harvard Law School in 1882 was appointed 
in the same year a judge of the Massachusetts supreme court, 
rising to be chief justice in 1809. In 1002 he was made a judge 
of the United States Supreme Court. His work on The Common 
Low (1881) and his edition (1873) of Kent's Commentaries 



6i8 



HOLMFIRTH— HOLSTEN 



are his principal publications; and he became widely recognised 
as one of the great jurists of his day. 

Bibliography. — Holmes's Complete Works, in 13 volumes, were 
published at Boston in 1891. SeeJ.T. Morse, Life and Letters of Olwer 
Wendell Holmes (London, 1896) ; G. B. Ives, Bibliography (Boston, 
1907); and the bibliography in P. K. Foley's American Authors 
(Boston, 1897). An essay by Sir Lcdie Stephen is prefixed to the 
" Golden Treasury " edition (1903) of The Autocrat of the Break- 
fast Table. See also monographs by William Sloanc Kennedy 
(Boston, 1882); Emma E. Brown (Boston, 1884). (J. T. Mo.) 

HOLMFIRTH, an urban district in the Holmfirth parlia- 
mentary division of the West Riding of Yorkshire, England, on 
and Holme and the Ribblc, 6 m. S. of Huddcrsfield, and on the 
Lancashire and Yorkshire railway. Pop. (1901) 8977. The 
valley, walled by bold hills, is very picturesque. In 1852 great 
destruction was wrought in the town by the bursting of a reservoir 
in the vicinity. The large industrial population is employed in 
woollen manufactories, and in the neighbouring stone quarries. 
- HOLOCAUST (Gr. ikUavcrov, or oMkolvtop, wholly burnt), 
strictly a sacrifice wholly destroyed by fire, such as the sacrifices 
of the Jews, described in the Pentateuch as " whole burnt 
offerings " (see Sacrifice). The term is now often applied to a 
catastrophe on a large scale, whether by fire or not, or to a 
massacre or slaughter. 

HOLOCENE (from Gr. 5Xof, whole, xacvof, recent), in geology, 
the time division which embraces the youngest of ail the forma- 
tions; it is equivalent to the " .Recent " of some authors. The 
name was proposed in i860 by P. Gervais. The oldest deposits 
that may be included are those containing neolithic implements; 
deposits of historic times should also be grouped here; pre- 
sumably the youngest are those to be chronicled by the last man. 
The Holoccne formations obviously include all the varieties of 
deposits which are accumulating at the present day: the gravels 
and alluvia of rivers; boulder clays, moraines and fluvio-glacial 
deposits; estuarine, coastal and abyssal deposits of the seas, 
and their equivalents in lakes; screes, taluses, wind-borne dust 
and sand and desert formations; chemical deposits from saline 
waters; peat, diatomite, marls, foraminiferal and other oozes; 
coral, algal and shell banks, and other organic deposits; mud, 
lava and dust deposits of volcanic origin and extrusions of asphalt 
and pitch; to all these must be added the works of man. 

HOLROYD, SIR CHARLES (i86x~ ), British artist, was 
born in Leeds on the 9th of April 1861. He received his art 
education under Professor Legros at the Slade School, University 
College, London, where he had a distinguished career. After 
passing six months at Newlyn, where he painted his first picture 
exhibited in the Royal Academy, " Fishermen Mending a Sail " 
(1SS5), he obtained a travelling scholarship and studied for two 
years in Italy, a sojourn which greatly influenced his art. At his 
return, on the invitation of Legros, he became for two years 
assistant-master at the Slade School, and there devoted himself 
to painting and etching. Among his pictures may be mentioned 
" The Death of Torrigiano " (1886), M The Satyr King " (1889), 
" The Supper at Emmaus," and, perhaps his best picture, " Pan 
and Peasants " (1893). For the church of Aveley, Essex, he 
painted a triptych altarpiece, " The Adoration of the Shepherds," 
with wings representing " St Michael " and " St Gabriel," and 
designed as well the window, " The Resurrection.' 1 His portraits, 
such as that of "G.F. Watts, R.A.," in the Legros manner, show 
much dignity and distinction. Sir Charles Holroyd has made his 
chief reputation as an etcher of exceptional ability, combining 
strength with delicacy, and a profound technical knowledge of 
the art. Among the best known are the " Monte Oliveto " 
series, the " Icarus " series, the " Monte Subasio " series, and 
the " Eve " series, together with the plates, " The Flight into 
Egypt," " The Prodigal Son," " A Barn on Tadworth Common " 
(etched in the open air), and "The Storm." His etched 
heads of " Professor Legros," "Lord Courtney " and "Night," 
are admirable alike in knowledge and in likeness. His principal 
dry-point is " The Bather." In all his work Holroyd displays 
an impressive sincerity, with a fine sense of composition, and of 
style, allied to independent and modern feeling. He was 
appointed the first keeper of the National Gallery of British Art 



(Tate Gallery), and 00 the retirement of Sir Edward Poynier 
in 1006 he received the directorship of the National Gallery. 
He was knighted in 1903. His Michael Angela Bioneroai 
(London, Duckworth, 1003) is a scholarly work of real value 

HOLSTEIN, FRIEDRICH VON (1837-1909), German states- 
man, for more than thirty years head of the political department 
of the German Foreign Office. Holstein's importance began 
with the dismissal of Bismarck in 1800. The new chancellor, 
Capri vi, was ignorant of foreign affairs; and Holstein, as Um 
repository of the Bismarckian tradition, became indispensable. 
This reluctance to emerge into publicity has been ascribed to the 
part he had played under Bismarck in the Arnim affair, which 
had made him powerful enemies; it was, however, possibly due 
to a shrinking from the responsibility of office. Yet the weakness 
of his position lay just in the fact that he was not ultimately 
responsible. He protested against the despatch of the " Kruger 
telegram," but protested m, vain. On the other hand, where 
his ideas were acceptable, he was generally able to realize them. 
Thus it was almost entirely due to him that Germany acquired 
Kiao-chau and asserted hex interests in China, and the acquisition 
of Samoa was also largely his work. If the skill and pertinacity 
with which Holstein carried through his plans in these matters 
was learned in the school of Bismarck, he had not acquired 
Bismarck's faculty for foreseeing their ulterior consequences. 
This is true of his Chinese policy, and true also of his part in the 
Morocco crisis.. The emperor William U.'s Journey to Tangier 
was undertaken on his advice, as a protest against the supposed 
attempt at the isolation of Germany; but oi the later develop- 
ments of German policy in the Morocco question be did not 
approve, on the ground that the result would merely be to 
strengthen the Anglo-French entente; and from the 12th ef 
March 1906 onwards he took no active part in the matter. To 
the last he believed that the position of Germany would remain 
unsafe until an understanding had been arrived at with Great 
Britain, and it was this belief that determined his altitude 
towards the question of the fleet, " beside which," he wrote in 
February 1909, " all other questions are of lesser account.** 
His views on this question were summarized in a memorandum 
of December 1907, of which Herr von Rath gives a risumi. 
He objected to the programme of the German Navy League on 
three main grounds: (1) the ill-feeling likely to be aroused in 
South Germany, {2) the inevitable dislocation of the finances 
through the huge additional charges involved, (3) the suspicion 
of Germany's motives in foreign countries, which would bind 
Great Britain still closer to France. As for the idea that 
Germany's power would be increased, this — he wrote in reply 
to a letter from Admiral G?lster — was " a simple question of 
arithmetic "; for how would the sea-power of Germany be rela- 
tively increased if for every new German ship Great Britain built 
two? Herr von Holstein retired 00 the resignation of Prince 
Billow, and died on the Sth of May 1009. 

See Hermann von Rath, " Erinnerungen an Herm von Holstein ** 
in the Deutsche Revue for October 1909. He is also frequently 
mentioned passim in Prince Cbtodwig Hohenlohe's Memoirs, 

HOLSTEIlf, formerly a duchy of Germany. Until about 1 no 
the county of Holstein formed part of the duchy of Saxony, and 
it was made a ducby in 1472. From 1460 to 1864 it was ruled 
by members of the house of Oldenburg, some of whom were also 
kings of Denmark. It is now the southern part of the Prussian 
provinceof Schleswig-Holstein. (See ScHLESWic-HoLSTETN.and 
for history Schleswig-Holstein Question. 

HOLSTEN, KARL CHRISTIAN JOHANN (1825-1897), German 
theologian, was born at Gustrow, Mecklenburg, on the 31st of 
March 1825, and educated at Leipzig, Berlin and Rostock, 
where in 1852 he became a teacher of religion in the Gymnasium. 
In 1870 he went to Bern as professor of New Testament studies, 
passing thence in 1876 to Heidelberg, where he remained until 
his death on the 26th of January 1897. Holsten was an adherent 
of the Tubingen school, and held to Baur's views on the alleged 
antagonism between Petrinism and Paulinism. 

Among his writings are Zum Evangetium d. Paulus mud d. Petrus 
(1867); Pas Emngaium dts Paulus dargestelit (i860); Die *jn> 
optucken Evangdiem naeh der Form ikrts InkaUs (1886). 



HOLSTENIUS— HOLTEI 



619 



H0UTIM1B8, LUCAS, tbt Latinized name of Luc Holste 
(1596-1661), German humanist, geographer and theological 
writer, was born at Hamburg. - He studied at Leiden university, 
where he became intimate with the most famous scholars of the 
age— J. Meursius, D. Heinshu and P. Cluverius, whom he 
accompanied on his travels in Italy and Sicily. Disappointed 
at his failure to obtain a post in the gymnasium of his native 
town, be left Germany for good. Having spent two years in 
Oxford and London, he went to Paris. Here he obtained the 
patronage of N. de Peiresc, who recommended him to Cardinal 
Francesco Barberini, papal nuncio and the possessor of the most 
important private library in Rome. On the cardinal's return 
in 1627 he took Holstenius to live with him in his palace and 
made him his librarian. Although converted to Roman Catho- 
licism in 1625, Holstenius showed bis Hberal-mindedness by 
strenuously opposing the strict censorship exercised by the 
Congregation of the Index. He was appointed librarian of the 
Vatican by Innocent X., and was sent to Innsbruck by Alexander 
VII. to receive Queen Christina's abjuration of Protestantism. 
He died in Rome on the 2nd of February 1661. Holstenius was 
a man of unwearied industry and immense learning, but he 
lacked the persistency to carry out the vast literary schemes he 
bad planned. He was the author of notes on Cluvier's Italia 
antiqua (1694); an edition of portions of Porphyrins (1630), 
with a dissertation on his life and writings, described as a model 
of its kind; notes on Eusebius Against Hierocles (1628), on 
the Sayings of the later Pythagoreans (1638), and the De diis 
et mundo of the neo-Platomst Sallustius (1638); Notae et 
eastigaliones in Slepkoni Byzantuti cthnica (first published in 
1684) ; and Codex regular urn, Collection of the Early Rules of ike 
Monastic Orders (1661). His correspondence (Epistolae ad 
dhersos, ed. J. F. Boissonade, 1817) is a valuable source of 
information on the literary history of his time. 

See N. Wilckens, Leben des gelchrUn Lucas HoliUnii (Hamburg, 
1723) ; Johann MoJler, CimbrialiUrata, iii. (1744). 

HOLSTER, a leather case to hold a pistol, used by a horseman 
and properly fastened to the saddle-bow, but sometimes worn 
in the belt. The same word appears in Dutch, from which the 
English word probably directly derives. The root is kel- or kuU 
to cover, and is seen in the O. Eng. keolster, a place of shelter or 
concealment, and in " hull " a sheath or covering. The German 
word for the same object, kolftcr, is, according to the New 
English Dictionary, from a different root. 

HOLT, SIR JOHN (1642-1710), lord chief justice of England, 
was born at Thame, Oxfordshire, on the 30th of December 1642. 
His father, Sir Thomas Holt, possessed a small patrimonial 
estate, but in order to supplement his income had adopted the 
profession of law, in which he was not very successful, although 
he became sergeant in 1677, and afterwards for his political 
services to the " Tories " was rewarded with knighthood. After 
attending for some years the free school of the town of Abingdon, 
of which his father was recorder, young Holt in his sixteenth year 
entered Oriel College, Oxford. He is said to have spent a very 
dissipated youth, and even to have been in the habit of taking 
purses on the highway, but after entering Gray's Inn about 1660 
he applied himself with exemplary diligence to the study of law. 
He was called to the bar in 1663. An ardent supporter of civil 
and religious liberty, he distinguished himself in the state trials 
which were then so common by the able and courageous manner in 
which he supported the pleas of the defendants. In 1685- 1686 
he was appointed recorder of London, and about the same time 
he was made king's sergeant and received the honour of knight- 
hood. His giving a decision adverse to the pretensions of the 
king to exercise martial law in time of peace led to his dismissal 
from the office of recorder, but he was continued in the office 
of king's sergeant in order to prevent him from becoming counsel 
for accused persons. Having been one of the judges who acted 
as assessors to the peers in the Convention parliament, he took 
a leading part in arranging the constitutional change by which 
William IU. was called to the throne, and after his accession he 
was appointed lord chief justice of the King's Bench. His merits 
as a judg* are the more apparent and the more remarkable 



when contrasted with the qualities displayed by his predecessors 
in office. In judicial fairness, legal knowledge and ability, deaf- 
ness of statement and unbending integrity he has had few if 
any superiors on the English bench. Over the civil rights of his 
countrymen he exercised a jealous watchfulness, more especially 
when presiding at the trial of state prosecutions, and he was 
especially careful that all accused persons should be treated with 
fairness and respect. Ac is, however, beat known for the firmness 
with which he upheld his own prerogatives in opposition to the 
authority of the Houses of Parliament, On several occasions 
his physical as well as his moral courage was tried by extreme 
tests. Having been requested to supply a number of police 
to help the soldiery in quelling a riot, be assured the messenger 
that if any of the people were shot he would have the soldiers 
hanged, and proceeding himself to the scene of riot he was 
successful in preventing bloodshed. While steadfast in his 
sympathies with the Whig party, Holt maintained on the bench 
entire political impartiality, and always held himself aloof from 
political intrigue. On the retirement of Somers from the chan- 
cellorship in 1700 he was offered the great seal, but declined it. 
His death took place in London on the 5th of March 17 10. 
He was buried in the chancel of Redgrave church. 

Reports of Cases determined by Sir John Holt (1 681-17 10) appeared 
at London in 1738; and The Judgments delivered in the case ofAshby 
v. White and others, and in the case of John Paly and others, printed 
from original MSS., at London (1837). See Burnet's Chen Times', 
Taller, No. xiv.; a Life, published in 1764; Wclsby, Lives of Eminent 
English Judges of the iflh and 18th Centuries (1846) ; Campbell'.! 
Lives of the Lord Chief Justices; and Foas, Lives of the Judges. 

HOLTEI, KARL BDUARD VON (1798-1880), German poet 
and. actor, was born at Breslau on the 34th of January 1798, 
the son of an officer of Hussars. Having served in the Prussian 
army as a volunteer in 1815, be shortly afterwards entered the 
university of Breslau as a student of law; but, attracted by 
the stage, he soon forsook academic life and made his d£bul 
in the Breslau theatre as Mortimer in Schiller's Maria Stuart. 
He led a wandering life for the next two years, appearing less 
on the stage as an actor than as a reciter of his own poems. 
In 1821 he married the actress Luise Rogee (1800-1825), And 
was appointed theatre-poet to the Breslau stage. He next 
removed to Berlin, where his wife fulfilled an engagement at 
the Court theatre. During his sojourn here he produced the 
vaudevilles Die Wiener in Berlin (1824), and Die Berliner in Wien 
(1825), pieces which enjoyed at the time great popular favour. 
In 1825 his wife died; but soon after her death he accepted an 
engagement at the KdnigsstMdter theatre in Berlin, when he 
wrote a number of plays, notably Lenore (1829) and Der olte 
Fddherr (1829). In 1830 he married JuUe Holzbecher (1800- 
1839), an actress engaged at the same theatre, and with her 
played in Darmstadt. Returning to Berlin in 1831 he wrote 
for the composer Franz Glaser (1 798-1861) the text of the opera 
Des'Adlcrs Horst (183 s), and for Ludwig Devrient the drama, 
Der dumme Peter (1837). In 1833 Holtei again went on the 
stage and toured with his wife to various important cities, 
Hamburg, Leipzig, Dresden, Munich and Vienna. In the last 
his declamatory powers as a reciter, particularly of Shakespeare's 
plays, made a furore, and the poet-actor was given the appoint- 
ment of manager of the JosefsUdter theatre in the last-named 
city. Though proud of his successes both as actor and reciter, 
Holtei left Vienna in 1836, and from 1837 to 1839 conducted the 
theatre in Riga. Here his second wife died, and after wandering 
through Germany reciting and accepting a short engagement 
at Breslau, he settled in 1847 at Graz, where he devoted himself 
to a literary life and produced the novels Die Vagabunden (1851), 
Christian Lamm fell (1853) and Der letzie Komddiant (1863). 
The last years of his life were spent at Breslau, where being in 
poor circumstances he found a home in the Kloster der barm- 
henigen Britder, and here he died on the 12th of February 1880. 

As a dramatist Holtei may be said to have introduced the 
" vaudeville " into Germany; as an actor, although remaining 
behind the greater artists of his time, he contrived to fascinate 
his audience by the dramatic force of his exposition of character; 
as a reciter, especially of Shakespeare, be knew no rival. August 



620 



HOLTY— HOLY 



Lewald said of Holtel that by the energy of lift poetic conception 
and plastic force he brought his audience round to his own ideas; 
and he added, " an eloquence such as his I have never met with 
in any other German." 

Hoitei was not only a stage-poet but a lyric-writer of great 
charm. Notable among such productions are Scklesistke 
Gedickte (1830; aoth ed., 1893), GedichU (5th ed., 1861), Siimmen 
des Woldes (2nd ed., 1854). Mention ought also to be made 
of Holtei's interesting autobiography, Viertig Jakre (8 vols., 
1843-1850; 3rd e<L, 1862) with the supplementary volume 
Nock ein Jakr in Scklesien (1864). 

Holtei's Theater appeared in 6 vols. (1867) ; his Ertaklende Schrif- 
ten, 39 vols. (1861-1866). See M. Kurnick, Karl von Hoitei, ein 
Lebcnsbild (1880); F. Wehl, Zeii und Menschen (1889); O. Storch, 
K. von Hoitei (1898). 

HOLTT, LUDW1G HEDfRICH CHRBTOPH (1748-1776), 
German poet, was born on the 21st of December 1748 at the 
village of Mariensee in Hanover, where his father was pastor. 
In 1 769 he went to study theology at GSttingen. Here he formed 
a close friendship with J. M. Miller, J. H. Voss, H. Boie, the 
brothers Stolberg and others, and became one of the founders 
of the famous society of young poets known as the Gdttinger 
Dichlcrbund or Hain. When in 1774 he left the university he 
had abandoned all intention of becoming a clergyman; but he 
was not destined to enter any other profession. He died of 
consumption on the 1st of September 1776 at Hanover. Holly 
was the most gifted lyric poet of the Gottingen circle. He was 
influenced both by Uz and Klopstock, but his love for the 
Volkslied and his delight in nature preserved him from the 
artificiality of the one poet and the unworldHness of the other. 
A strain of melancholy runs through all his lyrics. His ballads 
are the pioneers of the rich ballad literature on English models, 
which sprang up in Germany during the next few years. Among 
his most familiar poems may be mentioned Ob* immer Trcu' und 
Redlickkeit, Tanzt dem sckdnen Mai entgegen f Rosen auf den 
Weg gestreut, and Wer wollte sick mit Grillen plagenf 

Holty's Gedichte were published by his friends Count Friedrich 
Leopold «u Stolberg and J. H. Voss (Hamburg. 1783) ; a new edition, 
enlarged by Voss, with a biography (1804); a more complete but 
still imperfect edition by F. Voigta (Hanover, 1857). The first 
complete edition was that of Karl Halm (Leipzig, 1870), who had 
access to MSS. not hitherto known. See H. Ruete, Hdity, sein Leben 
und Dkhten (Guben. 1883), and A. Sauer, Der Gdttinger DxckUrbund, 
vol. ii. (Stuttgart, 1894], where an excellent selection of Holty's 
poetry will be found. 

HOLTZENDORFF, JOACHIM WILHEUf FRAHZ PHIUPP 
VON (1820-1889), German jurist, born at Vietmannsdorf, in 
the Mark of Brandenburg, on the 14th of October 1829, was 
descended from a family of the old nobility. He was educated 
at Berlin and at Pforta, afterwards studying law at the uni- 
versities of Bonn, Heidelberg and Berlin. The struggles of 
1848 inspired him with youthful enthusiasm, and he remained 
for the rest of his life a strong advocate of political liberty. 
In 1852 he graduated LL.D. at Berlin; in 1857 he became a 
Privatdocent, and in i860 he was nominated a professor extra- 
ordinary. The predominant party in Prussia regarded his 
political opinions with mistrust, and he was not offered an 
ordinary professorship until February 1873, after he had decided 
to accept a chair at the university of Munich. At Munich he 
passed the last nineteen years of his life. During the thirty 
years that he was professor he successively taught several 
branches of jurisprudence, but he was chiefly distinguished as 
an authority on criminal and international law. He was 
especially well fitted for organizing collective work, and he has 
associated his name with a series of publications of the first 
value. While acting as editor he often reserved for himself, 
among the independent monographs of which the work was 
composed, only those on subjects distasteful to his collaborators 
on account of their obscurity or lack of importance. Among 
the compilations which he superintended may be mentioned 
his Encyclopedic der Rcchtswissenschafl (Leipzig, 1870-1871, 
2 vols.; his Handbuch des dcutschen Strcfrechts (Berlin, 1871- 
1877, 4 vols.), and his Handbuch des V bVicrrcchts auf Gruudlage 
europVischcr Staatspraxis (Berlin, 1885-1890, 4 vols.). Among 



his many Independent ' works > may ' be Tnenttmed: Das Jrfttto 
Gefdngmssyslem (Leipzig, 1859), Fremsasiscke Recktmwueemek 
(Leipzig, 1859). Die Deportation ah Strafmttid (Leipzig, 1859), 
Die KUnungsjakigkeit der FreikeUsstrafen (Leipzig, i860, Die 
Reform der Staatsanujattsckaft in DeutsckUxnd (Berlin, 1864), 
Die Umgestaltumg der StaaUanwaltschaft (Berlin, 1865), Die 
Principien der Polilih (Berlin, 1869), Das Vcrbrecken da Merle* 
und die Tedessirofe (Berlin, 1875), Rumemiens UferrecMe em 
der Donau (Leipzig, 1883; French edition, 1884)* He also 
edited or assisted in editing a number of periodical publication* 
on legal subjects. From 1866 to the time of hit death be was 
associated with Rudolf Ludwig Carl Virchow m editing Samm* 
lung gemeinversUindlichw uHssensckaftlicher Vortr&ge (Berlin). 
Von Holtzendorff died at Munich on the 4th of February 1889. 

HOLTZMAMN, HBINRICH JULI0I (183*- ). German 
Protestant theologian, son of Karl Julius Holtzmaon (1804- 
1877), was born on the 17th of May 1832 at Karlsruhe, where 
his father ultimately became prelate and counsellor to the supreme 
consistory, lie studied at Berlin, and eventually (1874) was 
appointed professor ordinarius at Strassburg. A moderately 
liberal theologian, he became best known as a New Testament 
critic and exegete, being the author of the Commentary on the 
Synoptics (1889; 3rd ed., 1901), the Johannine books (1890; 
2nd ed, 1893), and the Acts of the Apostles (1001), in the series 
Handhommentar warn Neuen Testament, On the question of 
the relationship of the Synoptic Gospels, Holtzmann in bis 
early work, Die synoptisckeu Eeangeiien, ikr Vr sprung used 
gesckicktlkker Ckarakter (1863), presents a view which has becm 
widely accepted, maintaining the priority of Mark, deriving 
Matthew in its present form from Mark and from Matthew's 
earlier " collection of Sayings," the Logia of Papias, and Luke 
from Matthew and Mark in the form in which we have them. 

Other noteworthy works are the Lehrbuck der ktstor.-krilischem 
Einleitung in das Neue Testament (188$, 3rd cd., 1892). and the 
Lehrbuck der neutestamentlichen Tkeotogie (2 vols., 1896-1897). He 
also collaborated with R. Zopffel in the preparation of a small 
Lexikonfftr Theoiogie und Kirchenwesen (1882; 3rd ed., 189s). and in 
1893 became editor of the Theol. Jahresbericht. 

HOLUB. EMIL (1847-1902), Bohemian traveller in south-, 
central Africa, was born at Holita, eastern Bohemia, on the 
7th of October 1847. He was educated at Prague University, 
where he graduated M.D. In 1872 he went to the Kimberlcy 
diamond-fields, and with the money earned by his practice 
as a surgeon undertook expeditions into the northern Transvaal, 
Mashonaland and through Bechuanaland to the Victoria 
Falls, making extensive natural history collections, which be 
brought to Europe in 1879 and distributed among over a hundred 
museums and schools. In 1883 he went back to South Africa 
with his wife, intending to cross the continent to Egypt. In 
June 1886 the party crossed the Zambezi west of the Victoria 
Falls, and explored the then almost unknown region between 
that river and its tributary the Kafue. When beyond the 
Kafue the camp was attacked by the Mashukulumbwe, and 
Holub was obliged to retrace his steps. He returned to Austria 
in 1887 with a collection of great scientific interest, of over 
13,000 objects, now in various museums* Holub died at Vienna 
on the 2 1 st of February 1002. 

His principal works are : Eine Cutlurskitse des Marutse-Mambvnda- 
reicks (Vienna, 1879); Sieben Jahre in SUdatnka, Ac. (2 vols., 
Vienna, 1880-1881), of which an English translation appeared ; Die 
Colonisation Afrikae (Vienna, 1882); and Von der Kopaadt ins Land 
der iiaschukuiumbe (2 vols.. Vienna, 181 8-1 890). 

HOLY, sacred, devoted or set apart for religious worship or 
observance; a term characteristic of the attributes of perfection 
and sinlessness of the Persons of the Trinity, as the objects of 
human worship and reverence, and hence transferred to those 
human persons who, either by their devotion to a spiritual 
ascetic life or by their approximation to moral perfection, 
are considered worthy of reverence. The word in Old Eng- 
lish was hdlig, and is common to other Teutonic languages; 
cf. Ger. and Dutch hcilig, Swed. heiig, Dan. hcllig. It is 
derived from hdl, hale, whole, and cognate with " health.'* 
The New Englisk Dictionary suggests that the sense-develop- 
ment may be from " whole," i.e. inviolate, from " health, 



HQLY ALLIANCE— HOLYHEAD 



621 



wen-being," or from " good-omen," " augury." It is impossible 
to get behind the Christian uses, in which from the earliest 
times it was employed as the equivalent of the Latin sour and 
sanctus.' ^. 

HOLyIlLLIANCE, THE. The famous treaty, or declaration, 
known by this name was signed in the first instance by Alexander 
I., emperor of Russia, Francis I., emperor of Austria, and 
Frederick William III., king of Prussia, on the 26th of September 
1815, and was proclaimed by the emperor Alexander the same 
day at a great review of the allied troops held on the Champ 
des Vertus near Paris. The English version of the text is as 
follows: — 

In the name of the Most Holy and Indivisible Trinity. - 
Holy Alliance of Sovereign* of Austria, Prussia and Russia. 

Their Majesties the Emperor of Austria, the Kiag of Prussia, and 
the Emperor of Russia, having, in consequence of the great events 
which have marked the course of the three last years in Europe, and 
especially of the blessings which it has pleased Divine Providence to 
shower down upon those States which place their confidence and 
their hope on it alone, acquired the intimate conviction of the 
necessity of settling the steps to be observed by the Powers, in their 
reciprocal relations, upon the sublime truths which the Holy Religion 
of our Saviour teaches; 

Government and Political Relations. 

They solemnly declare that the present Act has no other object 
than to publish, in the face of the whole world, their fixed resolution, 
both in the adnunistration of their respective States, and in their 
political relations with every other Government, to take for their 
sole guide the precepts of that Holy Religion, namely, the precepts 
of Justice, Christian Charity and Peace, which, far from being 
applicable only to private concerns, must have an immediate 
influence on the councils of Princes, and guide all their steps, as being 
the only means of consolidating human institutions and remedying 
their imperfections. In consequence, their Majesties have agreed 
on the following Articles: — 

Principles of the Christian Religion. 
Art. I. Conformably to the words of the Holy Scriptures which 
command all men to consider each other as brethren, the Three con- 
tracting Monarchs will remain united by the bonds of a true and 
indissoluble fraternity, and, considering each other as fellow country- 
men, they will, on all occasions and in all places, lend each other aid 
and assistance; and, regarding themselves towards their subjects 
and armies as fathers of families, they wHl lead them, in the same 
spirit of fraternity with which they are animated, to protect Religion, 
Peace and Justice. 

Fraternity and Affection. 



Accession of Foreign Powers. 
Art. III. All the Powers who shall choose solemnly to avow the 
sacred principles which have dictated the present Act, and shall 
acknowledge how important it is for the happiness of nations, too 
long agitated, that these truths should henceforth exercise over the 
destinies of mankind all the influence which belongs to them, will 
be received with equal ardour and affection into this Holy Alliance. 

The credit for inspiring this singular document was claimed by 
the Baroness von Krudener (q.v.) ; in any case it was the outcome 
of the tsar's mood of evangelical exaltation, and was in its 
inception perfectly sincere. Neither Frederick William nor 
Francis signed willingly, the latter remarking that " if it was a 
question of politics, he must refer it to his chancellor, if of 
religion, to his confessor." Metternich called it a " loud-sounding 
nothing," Casilereagh, "a piece of sublime mysticism and 
nonsense." None the less, in accordance with its last article, 
the signatures of all the European sovereigns were invited to the 



instrument, the pope and the Ottoman sultan alone being 
excepted. The prince regent courteously declined to sign, on 
the constitutional ground that all acts of the British crown 
required the counter-signature of a minister, but he sent a letter 
expressing his " entire concurrence with the principles laid down 
by the * august sovereigns ' and stating that it would always be 
his endeavour to regulate bis conduct by their ' sacred maxims.' " 
With these exceptions, all the European sovereigns sooner or 
later appended their names. 

In popular parlance, which has found its way into the language 
of serious historians, the "Holy Alliance" soon became 
synonymous with the combination of the great powers by whom 
Europe was ruled in concert during the period of the congresses, 
and associated with the policy of reaction which gradually 
dominated their counsels. For the understanding of the inner 
history of the diplomacy of this period, however, a dear dis- 
tinction must be drawn between the Holy Alliance and the Grand, 
or Quadruple (Quintuple) Alliance. The Grand Alliance was 
established on definite treaties concluded for definite purposes, 
of which the chief was the preservation of peace on the basis of 
the territorial settlement of 181 5. The Holy Alliance was a 
general treaty— hardly indeed a treaty at all— which bound its 
signatories to act on certain vague principles for no well-defined 
end; and in its essence it was so far from necessarily reactionary 
that the emperor Alexander at one time declared that it involved 
the grant of liberal constitutions by princes to their subjects. 
Its main significance was due to the persistent' efforts of the tsar 
to make it the basis of the " universal union," or general con- 
federation of Europe, which he wished to substitute for the actual 
committee of the great powers, efforts which were frustrated 
by the vigorous diplomacy of Castlereagh, acting as the 
mouthpiece of the British government (see Europe: History; 
Alexander I. of Russia; Londonderry, Robert Stewart/ 

2ND MARQUIS OF). 

As a diplomatic instrument the Holy Alliance never, as a 
matter of fact, became effective. None the less, its principles 
and the fact of its signature powerfully affected the course of 
European diplomacy during the 19th century. It strongly 
influenced the emperor Nicholas I. of Russia, to whom the 
brotherhood of sovereigns by divine right was an article of 
faith, inspiring the principles of the convention of Berlin (between 
Russia, Austria and Prussia) in 1833, and the tsar's intervention 
in 1849 to crush the Hungarian insurrection on behalf of his 
brother of Austria. That it had become synonymous with a 
conspiracy against popular liberties was, however, a mere 
accident of the point of view of those who interpreted its prin- 
ciples. It was capable of other and more noble interpretations, 
and it was avowedly the inspiration of the famous rescript of 
the emperor Nicholas II., embodied in the circular of Count 
Muraviev to the European courts (August 4th, 1808), which 
issued in the first international peace conference at the Hague 
in 1800. (W. A. P.) 

HOLYHEAD (Caergybi, the fort of Cybl, the saint mentioned 
by Matthew Arnold as meeting St Seiriol of Penm6n, Anglesey), 
a seaport and market-town of Anglesey, N. Wales, situated on 
the small Holy Island, at the western end of the county. Pop. 
of urban district (1001) 10,079. Here the London and North- 
western railway has a terminus, 263$ m. from London by rail. 
Holy Island is connected with Anglesey by an embankment, 
} m. long, over which pass the railway and main road, the tide 
flowing fast under the central piers. Once a small fishing village, 
the town has since William IV. 's reign acquired importance as 
the Dublin mail steam station. Its magnificent harbour of refuge 
was begun in 1847 and opened in September 1873. The east 
breakwater scheme, which would have covered the Platter's 
rocks—still very troublesome— and the Skinner's, was abandoned 
for buoys which mark the spots. The north breakwater is 
7860 ft. long (instead of $360, as originally planned). The 
roadstead (400 acres) and enclosed area (267 acres) together 
make a magnificent shelter for shipping. The rubble mound 
of the breakwater was very costly to the railway company, as 
time after time it was swept away by storms. On it is a central 



622 



HOLY ISLAND— HOLYOKE 



wallof some 38 ft. above low water, gad on the wall a promenade 
sheltered by a parapet The lighthouse is at the end of the 
breakwater, of which the whole cost was nearly i| million 
sterling. Additional works, begun in 1873 by the company, to 
extend the old harbour and lengthen the quay by 4000 ft., 
were opened by King Edward VIL (as prince of Wales) in 1880. 
These cost another half million. George IV. passed through 
Holyhead in 1821 on his way to Ireland, and there is a com- 
memorative tablet on the old harbour pier. The church is said 
to occupy the site of the old monastery (6th or early 7th century) 
of St Cybi, of whom there is a rude figure in the porch. The 
churchyard wall, 6 ft. thick, impossibly partly Roman. On the 
south of the harbour is an obelisk in memory of Captain Skinner, 
of the steam packets, washed overboard in 1833. Pen Caergybi 
rises perpendicularly from the sea to the height of 719 ft., at 
some 2 m. from the town; it is a mass of serpentine rocks, off 
which lie the North and South Stacks, each with a lighthouse 
with a revolving light, visible for 20 m., and 107 ft. above high 
water on the South Stack. On the hill are traces of British 
fortification, including a circular building, probably a Roman 
watch-tower. Coasting trade and fishing, with some shipbuilding 
and the Irish traffic, occupy most of the inhabitants. 

See Hon. W. Stanley's Holy Island and Holyhead. 

HOLY ISLAND, or Lindistarnb, an irregularly shaped Island 
in the North Sea, a m. from the coast of Northumberland, in 
which county it is included. Fop. (1901) 405* It is Joined to 
the mainland at low water by flat sands, over which a track, 
marked by wooden posts and practicable for vehicles, leads to the 
island. There is a station on the North-Eastern railway at 
Beal, 9 m. S.E. of Berwick, opposite the island, but i\ m. inland. 
The island measures 3 m. from E. to W. and 1) N. to S., extreme 
distances. Its total area is 1051 acres. On the N. it is sandy 
and barren, but on the S. very fertile and under cultivation. 
Large numbers of rabbits have their warrens among the sands, 
and, with fish, oysters and agricultural produce, are exported. 
There are several fresh springs on the island, and in the north- 
east is a lake of 6 acres. At the south-west angle is the little 
fishing village (formerly much larger) which is now a favourite 
summer watering-place. Here is the harbour, offering good 
shelter to small vessels. Holy Island derives its name from a 
monastery founded on it by St Aidan, and restored in 1082 as a 
cell of the Benedictine monastery at Durham. Its ruins, still 
extensive and carefully preserved, justify Scott's description 
of it as a " solemn, huge and dark-red pile." An islet, lying off 
the S. W. angle, has traces of a chapel upon it, and is believed to 
have offered a retreat to St Cuthbert and his successors. The 
castle, situated east of the village, on a basaltic rock about 90 ft 
high, dates from c. 1500. 

When St Aidan came at the request of King Oswald to preach 
to the Northumbrians he chose the island of Lindisfame as the 
site of his church and monastery, and made it the head of the 
diocese which he founded in 635. For some years the see con- 
tinued in peace, numbering among its bishops St Cuthbert, 
but in 793 the Danes landed on the island and burnt the settle- 
ment, killing many of the monks. The survivors, however, 
rebuilt the church and continued to live there until 883, when, 
through fear of a second invasion of the Danes, they fled inland, 
taking with them the body of St Cuthbert and other holy relics. 
The church and monastery were again destroyed and the bishop 
and monks, on account of the exposed situation of the island, 
determined not to return to it, and settled first at Chester-le- 
Street and finally at Durham. With the fall of the monastery 
the island appears to have become again untenanted, and 
probably continued so until the prior and convent of Durham 
established there a cell of monks from their own house. The 
inhabitants of Holy Island were governed by two bailiffs at 
least as early as the 14th century, and, according to J. Raine 
in his History of North Durham (1852), are called " burgesses 
or freemen " in a private paper dated 1728. In 1323 the bailiffs 
and community of Holy Island were commanded to cause all 
ships of the burthen of thirty tons or over to go to Ereswell 
with their ships provisioned for a month at least and under 



double manning to be ready to set out on the king's serrtoe, 
Towards the end of the 16th century the fort on Holy Island 
was garrisoned for fear of foreign invasion by Sir WflBam 
Read, who found it very much in need of repair, the guns being 
so decayed that the gunners *' dare not give fire but by trayne," 
and the master gunner bad been " miserably slain " in discharg- 
ing one of them. During the Civfl Wars the castle was held for 
the king until 1646, when it was taken and garrisoned by the 
parliamentarians. The only other historical event connected 
with the island is the attempt made by two Jacobites in 1715 to 
hold it for the Pretender. 

HOLYOAKB, GBORGB JACOB (1817-1906), English secularist 
and co-operator, was born at Birmingham, on the 13th of April 
1817. At an early age he became an Owenite lecturer, and in 
1841 was the last person convicted for blasphemy in a public 
lecture, though this had no theological rharsrtrr and the in- 
criminating words were merely a reply to a question addressed 
to him from the body of the meeting. He nevertheless under- 
went six months' imprisonment, and upon his release invented 
the inoffensive term " secularism " as descriptive of bis opinions, 
and established the Reasoner in their support. He was also 
the last person indicted for publishing an unstamped newspaper, 
but the prosecution dropped upon the repeal of the tax. His 
later years were chiefly devoted to the promotion of the co- 
operative movement among the working classes. He wrote 
the history of the Rochdale Pioneers (1857), The History of 
Co-operation in England (1875; revised ed, 1906), and Tho 
Co-operative Movement of To-day (1891). He also published 
(1892) his autobiography, under the title of Sixty Years of am 
Agitator's Life, and in 1005 two volumes of reminiscences, 
Bygones worth Remembering. He died at Brighton on the 22nd 
of January 1906. 

See J. McCabe, Life and Letters ofG. J. Bolyoahe (2 volt.. 190B); 
C. W. F. Gon, Desctipth* Bibliography of the Writings of G. J. 
Holyoahe (1908). 

HOLYOKE, a' dty of Hampden county, Massachusetts, 
U.S.A., in a bend of the Connecticut river, about 8 m. N. 
of Springfield. Pop. (1880) 21,915; (1890) 35,637; (1000) 
45,712; (1910 census) 57,730. Of the total population in 
1900, 18,921 were foreign-born, including 6991 French-Canadians, 
5650 Irish, 1602 Germans and 11 18 English; and 33,626 were 
of foreign parentage (both parents foreign-born), including 
12,370 of Irish and 11,050 of French-Canadian parentage. The 
city's area is about 17 sq. m. The city is served by the Boston 
& Maine, and the New York, New Haven & Hartford railways, 
and by an interurban line. Holyoke is characteristically an 
industrial and mercantile dty; it has some handsome public 
buildings (the dty hall and the public library, founded in 1870, 
being especially noteworthy) and attractive environs. Holyoke 
is the railway station for Mt Holyoke College, in South Hadley, 
about 4 m. N. by E. of Holyoke; the dty is connected with 
South Hadley by an dectric line. Just above Holyoke the 
Connecticut leaves the rugged highlands through a rift between 
Mt Tom (1214 ft.; ascended by a mountain-railway from 
Holyoke) and Mt Holyoke (954 ft.), and begins a meandering 
valley course, falling (in the Hadley Falls) in great volume some 
60 ft. in about i\ m. The water-power was unutilized until 
1849, when a great dam (1017 ft. long) was completed, which 
enabled vast power to be developed along a series of canals 
laid out from the river. This was, in its day, a colossal under* 
taking; and its success transformed Holyoke from a fanning 
village into a great manufacturing centre— in 1900 and 1905 
the ninth largest of the commonwealth. In 1000 a stone dam 
(1020 ft), said to be the second largest in New England, was 
completed at a cost of about $750,000. Cotton manufactures 
first, and later paper products were chief in importance, and 
Holyoke now leads all the dties in the United Sutes in the 
manufacture of fine paper. In 1905 the total value of all factory 
products was $30,731,332, of which $10,620,255 (or 34*6% of 
the total) represented paper and wood pulp; $5,010,817, cotton 
goods; $1,318,409, woollen goods; $1,756,473* book binding 
and blank books, and $2,022,759, foundry and machine-shop 



HOLYSTONE— HOLY WEEK 



623 



products. Sfflt and worsted goods are other important manu- 
factures. Opposite Holyoke, in Hampshire county, is South 
Hadley Falls. The municipality owns and operates the gas 
and electric-lighting plant* and the water works (the water* 
supply being derived from natural ponds, some of which are 
outside the city limits), and owns and leases (to the New York, 
New Haven & Hartford railroad) a railway extending (10-3 m.) 
to Westfield, Mass. Holyoke was originally a part of Springfield, 
and after 1774 of West Springfield. In 1850 it was incorporated 
as a township, and in 1873 was chartered as a city. 

HOLYSTONE, a soft kind of sandstone used by sailors for 
scrubbing and cleaning the decks of ships. The origin of the word 
is doubtful. Some authorities hold that it arose from the general 
practice of scrubbing the decks for Sunday service; while others 
think the name arises from the fact that the stone so employed 
is naturally porous and full of holes. A small flint or stone having 
a natural hole in it, and worn as a chann,is also called a holy- 
stone. 

HOLY WATER, technically the water with which Christian 
believers sign the cross on their foreheads on entering or leaving 
church. The edict of Gratian lays down that it should be 
exorcized and blessed by the priest and sprinkled with exorcized 
salt. This rite is found in the Gelaaian, Gregorian and other 
sacramentaries. In the East the water was blessed once a 
month, in the Latin Church it is now blessed every Sunday. 
In the 4th century in the East it was usual to wash the hands on 
entering the church (see Ablution). 

In the early church water was not expressly consecrated for 
baptisms and other lustrations. " Water," says Tertullian in 
his tract on baptism, " was the abode at the first of the divine 
Spirit, being more acceptable then (to God) than the other 
elements." He pictures the world in the beginning: "total 
darkness, formless as yet, without tending of stars, the melancholy 
abyss, the earth unprepared, the heaven undevelopL The liquid 
alone an ever perfect material, smiling, simple, pure in its own 
right, as a worthy vehicle underlay the God." Water was 
similarly pure in itself in the old Persian religion. 

The Canons of Hippolytus, or Egyptian church order, of about 
aj>. 250, give no prayer for consecration of fonts, but enact 
that " at cock crow the baptismal party shall take their stand 
near waving water, pure, prepared, sacred, of the sea." The 
T tacking of the A pasties, t. 100, merely insists on " living," 
that is, clear and running water. The ancient feeling, especially 
Jewish, was that in lustrations the same water must not pass 
twice over the body. A stagnant pool was useless. Bubbling 
waters too seemed to have a spirit in them. 
■ Either because running water was not always at hand, or 
as part of the growing tendency of the church to multiply 
ceremonies, rituals arose late in the 3rd century for consecrating 
water. The sacramentary of Serapion, c. 350, provides a prayer 
asking that the divine Word may descend into the water and 
hallow it, as of old it hallowed the Jordan. In the Roman order 
of baptism the priest prays that " the font may receive the grace 
of the only begotten Son from the holy Spirit, and that the latter 
may impregnate with hidden admixture of His light this water 
prepared for the regeneration of mankind, to the end that man 
through a sanctification conceived from the immaculate womb 
of the divine font, may emerge a heavenly offspring reborn as a 
new creature." The water is then exorcized and evil spirits 
warned off, and lastly blessed. During the prayer the priest 
twice signs the water with the cross, and once blows upon it. 

The first mention of a special consecration of water for other 
ends than baptism is in the Acts of Thomas (? a.d. sod); it is 
for the purgation of a youth already baptized who had killed 
his mistress because she would not live chastely with him. The 
apostle prays: " Fountain sent unto us from Rest, Power of 
Salvation from that Power proceeding which overcomes and 
subjects all eo its own will, come and dwell within these waters, 
that the Charisma (gift) of the holy Spirit may be fully perfected 
through them." The youth then washes his bands, which on 
touching the sacrament had withered up, and fa healed. 

The church shared the universal belief that holiness or the holy 



Spirit Is quasi-material and capable of being held in suspense 
in water, just as sin is a half material infection, absorbed and 
carried away by it So Tertullian writes: " The water which 
carried the Spirit of God (probably regarded as a shadow or 
reflection-soul) borrowed holiness from that which was carried 
upon it; for every underlying matter must needs absorb and 
take up the quality of that matter which overhangs it; especially 
does a corporeal so absorb a spiritual, as this can easily penetrate 
and settle into it owing to the subtlety of its substance." 

" Water, " he continues, " was generically hallowed by the 
Spirit of God brooding over it at creation, and therefore all 
special waters are holy, and at once obtain the sacrament of 
sanctification when God is invoked (over them.) For the Spirit 
from heaven instantly supervenes and is upon the waters, hallow- 
ing them out of itself, and being so hallowed they drink up a 
power of hallowing." 

What is done in material semblance, he then argues, is repeated 
in the unseen medium of the Spirit. The stains of idolatry, vice 
and fraud are not visible on the flesh, yet they resemble real dirt. 
" The waters are medicated in a manner through the intervention 
of the angel, and the Spirit is corporeally washed in the water 
and the flesh is spiritually purified in the same." 

Tertullian believed that an angel was sent down, when God 
was invoked, like that which stirred the pool of Bethesda. As 
regards rival Isiac and Mithrak baptisms, he asserts that their 
waters are destitute of divine power; nay, are rather tenanted 
by the devil who in this matter sets himself to rival God. " With- 
out any religious rite at all," he urges, " unclean spirits brood 
upon waters, aspiring to repeat that primordial gestation of the 
divine Spirit." And he instances the "darkling sprinp and 
lonely rivers which are said to snatch, to wit by force of a harmful 
spirit." In the sequel he defines the role of the angel of baptism 
who does not infuse himself in waters, already holy from the first; 
but merely presides over the washing of the faithful, and ensures 
their being made pure for the reception of the holy Spirit in the 
rite of confirmation which immediately follows. " The devil 
who till now ruled over us, we leave behind overwhelmed in the 
water." 

From all this we conclude that what is poetry to us— akin to 
the folk-lore of water-sprites, naiads, kelpies, river-gods and 
water-worship in general— was to Tertullian and to the genera- 
tions of believers who fashioned the baptismal rites, ablutions 
and beliefs of the church, nothing less than grim reality and 
unquestionable fact. 

See John, marquess of Bute, and E. A WalKs Bodge, The Blessing 
of ike Waters (London, loot); E. B. Tylor, Primitive Culture 
(London, 1903). (F. C. C.) 

HOLY WEEK (tffatiaT MrydXa, ayia or rue* aylom, bipotayia*, 
hspojcroi, also 4j*tp04 tfeflttuerwr, foipai oravpAnpat: hebdomat 
[or seMimana] major, sancta, outhentica [i.e. comonisota, du 
Cange], ultima, poenosa, lucsuosa, nigra, mojiciosa, muta, cruris, 
lamentotionum, indulgentiae), in the Christian ecclesiastical year 
the week immediately preceding Easter. The earliest allusion 
to the custom of marking this week as a whole with special 
observances is to be found in the Apostolical Constitutions 
(v. 18, 19), dating from the latter half of the 3rd century a.d. 
Abstinence from wine and flesh is there commanded for all the 
days, while for the Friday and Saturday an absolute fast ia 
enjoined. Dionysius Alexandrinus also, in his canonical epistle 
(260 a.d.), refers to the six fasting days (l{ t&* npra&r 4fitpai) 
in a manner which implies that the observance of them had 
already become an established usage in his time. There is 
some doubt about the genuineness of an ordinance attributed 
to Constantine, in which abstinence from public business wsa 
enforced for the seven days immediately preceding Easter 
Sunday, and also for the seven which followed it; the Codes 
Theodosianus, however, is explicit in ordering that all actions 
at law should cease, and the doors of all courts of law be closed 
during those fifteen days (1. ii. tit. viii.). Of the particular days 
of the " great week " the earliest to emerge into special promin- 
ence was naturally Good Friday. Next came the Sabbatum 
Magnum (Holy Saturday or Easter Eve) with its vigil, which 



624 



HOLYWELL— HOMBERG 



in the early church was associated with in expectation that the 
second advent would occur on an Easter Sunday. 
■ For detaib of the ceremonial observed in the Roman Catholic 
Church during this week, reference must be made to the Missal and 
Breviary. In the Eastern Church the week is marked by similar 
practices, but with less elaboration and differentiation of rite. See 
also Easts a, Good Friday, Maundy Thursday, Pal* Sunday 
and Passion Week. 

HOLYWELL {Tre'fynnon, well-town), a market town and 
contributory parliamentary borough of Flintshire, N. Wales, 
situated on a height near the left bank of the Dee estuary, 106 m 
from London by the London & North-Western railway (the 
station being a m. distant). Pop. of urban district (1001) 265a. 
The parish church (1769) has some columns of an earlier building, 
interesting brasses and strong embattled tower. The remains of 
Basingwerk Abbey (Maes glas, green field), partly Saxon and 
partly Early English, are near the station. It is of uncertain 
origin but was used as a monastery before 1119. In 1131 
Ranulph, and earl of Chester, introduced the Cistercians. In 
1 S3 St when its revenues were £150, 7s. 3d., it was dissolved, but 
revived under Mary I. and used as a Roman Catholic burial 
place in 1647. Scarcely any traces remain of Basingwerk castle, 
an old fort. Small up to the beginning of the 10th century, 
Holywell has increasingly prospered, thanks to lime quarries, 
lead, copper and zinc mines, smelting works, a shot manufactory, 
copper, brass, iron and zinc works; brewing, tanning and 
mineral water, flannel and cement works. St Winifred's holy 
well, one of the wonders of Wales, sends up water at the rate 
of at tons a minute, of an almost unvarying temperature, 
higher than that of ordinary spring water. To its curative 
powers many crutches and ex soto objects, hung round the well, 
as in the Lourdes Grot, bear ample witness. The stones at the 
bottom are slightly reddish, owing to vegetable substances. 
The well itself is covered by a fine Gothic building, said to have 
been erected by Margaret, countess of Richmond and mother 
of Henry VII., with some portions of earlier date. The chapel 
(restored) is used for public service, Catholics and others visit 
it in great numbers. There are swimming baths for general use. 
In 1870 a hospice for poorer pilgrims was erected. Other public 
buildings are St Winifred's (Catholic) church and a convent, 
a town hall and a markei-halL The export trade fs expedited 
by quays on the Dee. 

~ HOLYWOOD, a seaport of county Down, Ireland, on the east 
shore of Belfast tough, 4} m. N.E- from Belfast by the Belfast 
& County Down railway. Its pleasant situation renders it a 
favourite residential locality of the wealthier classes in Belfast. 
There was a religious settlement here from the 7th century, which 
subsequently became a Franciscan monastery. The old church 
dating from the late rath or early ijth century marks Its site. 
A Solemn League and Covenant was signed here in 1644 for the 
defence of the kingdom, and the document is preserved at Belfast. 

HOLZMINDEN, a town of Germany, in the duchy of Bruns- 
wick, on the right bank of the Weser, at the foot of the SoIHnger 
Mountains, at the junction of the railways Scherfede-Holz- 
minden and Soest-Bttrssum, 56 m. S.W. of Brunswick. Pop. 
(1005) 0938. It has an Evangelical and a Roman Catholic 
church, a gymnasium, an architectural school and a school of 
engineering. The prosperity of the town depends chiefly on 
agriculture and the manufacture of iron and steel wares, and of 
chemicals, but weaving and the making of pottery are abo 
carried on, and there are baryta mills and rjolishing-mills for 
sandstone. By means of the Weser it carries on a lively trade. 
Holxminden obtained municipal rights from Count Otto of 
Eberstein in 1345, and in 1410 it came into the possession of 
Brunswick. 

HOLZTROMPETE (Wooden Trumpet), an instrument some- 
what resembling the Alpenhorn (q.t.) in tone-quality, designed 
by Richard Wagner for representing the natural pipe of the 
peasant in Tristan and Isolde. This instrument is not unlike 
the cor anglais in rough outline, being a conical tube of approxi- 
mately the same length, terminating in a small globular bell, 
but having neither holes nor keys; it is blown through a cup- 
shaped mouthpiece made of horn. The Holxtrompete h in 



the key of C; the scale fe produced by overblowing, whereby 
the upper partials from the and to the 6th are produced. A 
single piston placed at a third of the distance from the mouth- 
piece to the bell gives the notes D and F. Wagner inserted a 
note in the score concerning the 
cor anglais for which the part 
was originally scored, and advised ■» -7* $ 4 $ 
the use of oboe or clarinet to H*i»oaic s*fc»« 

reinforce the latter, the effect intended being that of a powerful 
natural instrument, unless a wooden instrument with a natural 
scale be specially made for the part, which would be preferable. 
The Holztrompete was used at Munich for the first performance 
of Tristan and Isolds, and was still in use there in 1897. At 
Bayreuth it was also used for the Tristan performances at the 
festivals of 1886 and 1889, but in 1891 W. Heckel's darina, 
an instrument p a rt a kin g of the nature of both oboe and clarinet, 
was substituted for the Hoktrontpete and has been retained 
ever since, having been found more effective. 1 (K. S.) 

HOMAGE (from homo, through the Low Lat kominaHam, 
which occurs in a document of 1035), one of the ceremonies used 
in the granting of a fief, and indicating the submission of a 
vassal to his lord. It could be received only by the suzerain 
in person. With head uncovered the vassal humbly requested 
to be allowed to eater into the feudal relation; he then laid 
aside his sword and spurs, ungirt his belt, and kneeling before 
his lord, and holding ins hands extended and joined between 
the hands of bis lord, uttered words to this effect: " I become 
your man from this day forth, of hf e and limb, and will hold 
faith to you for the lands I claim to hold of you." The oath of 
fealty, which could be received by proxy, followed the act of 
homage; then came the ceremony of investiture, either directly 
on the ground or by the delivery of a turf, a handful of earth, a 
stone, or some other symbolical object. Homage was done not 
only by the vassal to whom feudal lands were first granted but 
by every one in turn by whom they were inherited, since they 
were not granted absolutely but only on condition of military 
and other service. An infant might do homage, but he did not 
thus enter into full possession of his lands. The ceremony was 
of a preliminary nature, securing that the fief would not be 
alienated; but the vassal had to take the oath of fealty, and 
to be formally invested, when he reached Us majority. The 
obligations involved in the act of homage were more general 
than those associated with the oath of fealty, but they provided 
a strong moral sanction for more specific engagements. They 
essentially resembled the obligations undertaken towards a 
Teutonic chief by the members of his " comitatus " or " gefolge," 
one of the institutions from which feudalism directly sprang. 
Besides komapum lipmm, there was a kind of homage which 
imposed no feudal duty; this was komapum per parapum, 
such as the dukes of Normandy rendered to the kings of France, 
and as the dukes of Normandy received from the dukes of 
Brittany. The act of liege homage to a particular lord did not 
interfere with the vassal's allegiance as a subject to his sovereign, 
or with Ins duty to any other suzerain of whom he might hold 



The word is also used of the body of tenants attending a 
manorial court, or of the court in a court baron (consisting of 
the tenants that do homage and make inquiries and presentments, 
termed a kma&jury). 

HOMBERG, WILHBUI (1652-1715), Dutch natural philo- 
sopher, was the son of an officer of the Dutch East India Company, 
and was born at Batavia (Java) on the 8th of January 1652. 
Coming to Europe with his family in 1670, he studied law at 
Jena and Leipzig, and in 1674 became an advocate at Magdeburg. 
In that town he made the acquaintance of Otto von Guerkke, 
and under his influence determined to devote himself to natural 
science. He, therefore, travelled in various parts of Europe for 
study, and after graduating in medicine at Wittenberg, settled 
in Paris in i68a. From 1685 to 1600 he practised as a physician 
at Rome; then returning to Paris in 1691, he was elected a 
member of the Academy of Sciences and appointed director of 

' Communicated by Madame Wagner, Decemlwr afth, 1807. 



HOMBURG- VOR-DER-HOHE— HOME, D. D. 



625 



Its chemical laboratory. Subsequently he became teacher of 
physics and chemistry (1702), and private physician (1705) to 
the duke of Orleans. His death occurred at Paris on the 14th of 
September 17 15. Hombcrg was not free from alchemistical 
tendencies, but he made many solid contributions to chemical 
and physical knowledge, recording observations on the prepara- 
tion of Kunkel's phosphorus, on the green, colour produced in 
flames by copper, on the crystallization of common salt, on the 
salts of plants, on the saturation of bases by acids, on the freezing 
of water and Us evaporation in vacuo, &c. Much of his work 
was published in the Rtcueil de VAcadimie des Sciences from 
1691 to 1714. The Sal Stdatimm Hombergi is boracic acid, 
-which he discovered in 1702, and "Homberg's phosphorus" 
b prepared by fusing sal-ammoniac with quick lime. 

HOMBURQ-VOR-DER-HttHB, a town and watering-place 
of Germany, in the Prussian province of Hesse-Nassau, prettily 
situated at the south-east foot of the Taunus Mountains, 12 m. 
N. of Frankfort -on-Main, with which it is connected by rail. 
Pop. (1905) 13,740. Homburg consists of an old and a new 
town, the latter, founded by the landgrave of Hesse-Homburg 
Frederick II. (d. 1708), being regular and well-built. Besides 
the palatial edifices erected in connexion with the mineral 
water-cure,' there are churches of various denominations, 
Lutheran, Roman Catholic, Russian-Creek and Anglican, 
schools and benevolent institutions. On a neighbouring bill 
stands the palace of the former landgraves, built in 1680 and 
subsequently enlarged and improved. The White Tower, 
183 ft. in height, is said to date from Roman times, and certainly 
existed under the lords of Eppstcin, who held the district in 
the 1 2th century. The palace is surrounded by extensive 
grounds, laid out in the manner of an English park. The* eight 
mineral springs which form the attraction of the town to 
strangers belong to the class of saline acidulous chalybeates 
and contain a considerable proportion of carbonate of lime. 
Their use is beneficial for diseases of the stomach and intestines, 
and* externally, for diseases of the skin and rheumatism. The 
establishments connected with the springs are arranged on a 
scale of great magnificence, and include the Kurhaus (built 
1841-1843), with a theatre, the Kaiser Wilhelmsbad and the 
Kurhausbad. They lie grouped round a pretty park which 
also furnishes, the visitors with facilities for various recreations, 
such as lawn tennis, croquet, polo and other games. The 
industries of Homburg embrace iron founding and the manu- 
facture of leather and hats, but they are comparatively un- 
important, the prosperity of the town being almost entirely 
due to the annual influx of visitors, which during the season 
from May to October inclusive averages 12,000. In the beautiful 
neighbourhood lies the ancient Roman castle of Saalburg, 
which can be reached by an electric tramway. 

Homburg first came into repute as a watering-place in 1834, 
and owing to its gaming-tables, which were set up soon after, 
it rapidly became one of the favourite and most fashionable 
health-resorts of Europe. In 1849 the town was. occupied by 
Austrian troops for the purpose of enforcing the imperial decree 
against gambling establishments, but immediately on their 
withdrawal the bank was again opened, and play continued 
unchecked until 1872. when the Prussian government refused 
to renew the lease for gambling purposes, which then expired. 
As the capital of the former landgraviate of Hessc-Homburg, 
the town shared the vicissitudes of that state. ^ 

Homburg is also the name of a town in BavariaT* Pop. (1000) 
4785. It has a Roman Catholic and an Evangelical church, 
and manufactures of iron goods. In the neighbourhood are the 
ruins of the castles of Karbberg and of Hohenburg. The family 
of the counts of Homburg became extinct in the 15th century. 
The town came into the possession of Zweibrucken in 1755 
and later into that of Bavaria. 

See Supp. Bad Homburg (7th ed M Homburg. 1903):. Baumstark, 
Bad Homburg und seine HeilqueUen (Wiesbaden. 1901); Schick, 
Homburg und Umpbting (Homburg. 1896); Will. Der Kurort 
Homburg, seine Mineralqueilen (Homburg. 1880); Hoeben. Bad 
Homburg und sein Heilapparat (Homburg. 1901) : and N. E. Yorke- 
Daviet, Homburg and its Waters (London, 1897). 



HOME, EARLS OP. Alexander Home or Hume, 1st earl of 
Home (e, 1566-1619), was the son of Alexander, 5th Lord Home 
(d. I57S). who fought against Mary, queen of Scots, at Carberry 
Hill and at Langside, but was afterwards one of her most stalwart 
supporters, being taken prisoner when defending Edinburgh 
castle in her interests in 1573 and probably dying in captivity. 
He belonged to an old and famous border family, an early member 
of which, Sir Alexander Home, was killed at the battle of Verneuil 
in 1424. This Sir Alexander was the father of Sir Alexander 
Home (d. 1456), warden of the marches and the founder of the 
family fortunes, whose son, another Sir Alexander (d. 1491), 
was created a lord of parliament as Lord Home in 1473, being 
one of the band of nobles who defeated the forces of King James 
III. at the battle of Sauchieburn in 1488. Other distinguished 
members of the family were: the first lord's grandson and 
successor, Alexander, 2nd Lord Home (d. 1506), chamberlain 
of Scotland; and the latter's son, Alexander, 3rd Lord Home 
(d. 1516), a person of great importance during the reign of 
James IV., whom he served as chamberlain. He fought at 
Flodden, but before the death of the king he had led his men 
away to plunder. During the minority of the new king, James 
V., he was engaged in quarrelling with the regent, John Stewart, 
duke of Albany, and in intriguing with England. In September 
1516 he was seized, was charged with treachery and beheaded, 
his title and estates being restored to his brother George in 1 522. 
George, who was killed in September 1547 during a skirmish 
just before the battle of Pinkie, was the father of Alexander, 
the 5th lord. 

Alexander Home became 6th Lord Home on his father's death 
In August 1575, and took part in many of the turbulent incidents 
which marked the reign of James VI. He was warden of the 
cast marches, and was often at variance with the Hepburns, 
a rival border family whose head was the earl of Both well; 
the feud between the Homes and the Hepburns was an old one, 
and it was probably the main reason why Home's father, the 
5th lord, sided with the enemies of Mary during the period of 
her intimacy with BothweH. Home accompanied James to 
England in 1603 and was created earl of Home in 1605; he died 
in April 1619 

His son James, the 2nd earl, died childless in 1633 when his 
titles passed to a distant kinsman, Sir James Home of Colding- 
knows (d. 1666), a descendant of the 1st Lord Home. This 
earl was in the Scottish ranks at the battle of Preston and tost 
his estates under the Commonwealth, but these were restored 
to him in 1661. His descendant, William, the 8th earl (d. 1761) 
fought on the English side at Prestonpans, and from his brother 
Alexander, the 9U1 earl (d. 1786), the present earl of Home 
is descended. In 1875 Cospatrick Alexander, tie nth earl 
(1 799-1881), was created a peer of the United Kingdom as 
Baron Douglas, and his son Charles Alexander, the 12th earl 
(b. 1834), took the additional name of Douglas. The principal 
strongholds of the Homes were Douglas castle in Haddington 
and Home castle in Berwickshire. 

See H. Drummond, Histories of Noble British Families (1846). 

HOME, DANIEL DUNOLAS (1833-1886), Scottish spiritualist, 
was born near Edinburgh on the 20th of March 1833, his father 
being said to be a natural son of the 10th carl of Home, and his 
mother a member of a family credited with second sight. He 
went with his mother to America, and on her death was adopted 
by an aunt. In the United States he came out as a spiritualistic 
medium, though, it should be noted, he never sought to make 
money out of his exhibitions. In 1855 he came to England and 
gave numerous seances, which were attended by many well- 
known people. Robert Browning, the poet, went to one of these, 
but without altering his contempt for spiritualism, and he 
subsequently gave his impression of Home in the unflattering 
poem of "Sludge the Medium" (1864); Home, nevertheless, 
had many disciples, and gave seances at several European courts. 
He became a Roman Catholic, but was expelled from Rome as 
a sorcerer. In 1866 Mrs Lyon, a wealthy widow, adopted him 
as her son, and settled £60,000 upon him. Repenting, however, 
of her action, she brought a suit for the return of her money, 



626 



HOME, J.— HOMER 



on the ground thit it had been obtained by M spiritual " influence. 
It *as held that the burden of establishing the validity of the 
gift lay on Home, and as he failed to do so the case was decided 
against him. He continued, however, to give seances, mostly 
on the Continent, and in 187 1 appeared before the tsar of Russia 
and two Russian scientists, who attested the phenomena evoked. 
Returning to England he submitted to a series of experiments 
designed to test his pretensions before Professor (subsequently 
Sir William) Crookes, which the latter declared to be thoroughly 
genuine; and Professor von Boutlerow, of the Russian Academy 
of Science, after witnessing & similar series of experiments, 
expressed the same opinion. Home published two volumes 
of Incidents of my Life and Lights and Shadow of Spiritualism. 
He married successively two well-connected Russian ladies. 
He died at Auteuil, France, on the 21st of June 1886. 

HOME, JOHN (1722-1808), Scottish dramatic poet, was born 
on the 2« ad of September 1722 at Leith, where his father, 
Alexander Home, who was distantly related to the earls of 
Home, filled the office of town-clerk. He was educated at the 
grammar school of his native town, and at the university of 
Edinburgh, where he graduated M.A. in 1742. Though he 
showed a fondness for the profession of arms, he studied divinity, 
and was licensed by the presbytery of Edinburgh in 1745- In 
the same year he joined as a volunteer against the Pretender, 
and was taken prisoner at the battle of Falkirk (1746).- With 
many others he was carried to the castle of Doune in Perthshire, 
but soon effected his escape. In July 1746 Home was presented 
to the parish of Athelstaneford, Haddingtonshire, vacant by 
the death of Robert Blair, the author of The Grave. He had 
leisure to visit his friends and became especially intimate with 
David Hume who belonged to the same family as himself. His 
first play, A lis: a tragedy, founded on Plutarch's narrative, 
was finished in 1747. He took it to London and submitted it 
to Carrick for representation at Drury Lane, but it was rejected 
as unsuitable for the stage. The tragedy of Douglas was sug- 
gested to him by hearing a lady sing the ballad of Gil Morrice 
or Child Maurice (F: J. Child, Popular Ballads, ii. 263). The 
ballad supplied him with the outline of a simple and striking 
plot. After five years' labour he completed his play, which 
he took to London for Garrick's opinion. It also was rejected, 
but on his return to Edinburgh his friends resolved that it 
should be brought out in that city. It was produced on the 
14th of December 1756 with overwhelming success, in spite 
of the opposition of the presbytery, who summoned Alexander 
Carlyle to answer for having attended its representation. Home 
wisely resigned his charge in 1757, after a visit to London, where 
Douglas was brought out at Covent Garden on the 14th of March. 
Peg Woffington played Lady Randolph, a part which found a 
later exponent in Mrs Siddons. David Hume summed up his 
admiration for Douglas by saying that his friend possessed 
" the true theatric genius of Shakespeare and Otway, refined 
from the unhappy barbarism of the one and licentiousness of 
the other." Gray, writing to Horace Walpole (August, 1757). 
said that the author " seemed to have retrieved the true language 
of the stage, which has been lost for these hundred years," but 
Samuel Johnson held aloof from the general enthusiasm, and 
averred that there were not ten good lines in the whole play 
(fl os well, Life, ed. Croker, 1848, p. 300). In 1758 Home became 
private secretary to Lord Bute, then secretary of state, and was 
appointed tutor to the prince of Wales; and in 1760 his patron's 
influence procured him a pension of £300 per annum and in 
1763 a sinecure worth another £300. Garrick produced A lis 
at Drury Lane on the 21st of February 1758. By dint of good 
acting and powerful support, according to Genest (Short Account 
&c, iv. 513 seq.), the piece kept the stage for eleven days, but 
it was lamentably inferior to Douglas. In 1760 his tragedy, 
The Siege of AquiUia, was put on the stage, Garrick taking the 
part of Aemilius. In 1760 his tragedy 01 The Fatal Discovery 
had a run of nine nights; Alonzo also (1773) had fair success 
in the representation; but his last tragedy, Alfred (1778), was 
so coolly received that he gave up writing for the stage. In 
,1778 be joined a regiment Jormedby the duke of Buccleuch. 



He sustained severe injuries in a fall from horseback which 
permanently affected his brain, and was persuaded by his 
friends to retire. From 1767 he resided either at Edinburgh 
or at a villa which he built at Kilduff near his former parish. 
It was at this time that he wrote his History of the Rebellion of 
'745* which appeared in 1802. Home died at Merdustoa 
Bank, near Edinburgh, on the 5th of September 1808, in his 
eighty-sixth year. 

The Works of John Home were collected and published by Henry 
Mackenzie in 1822 with "An Account of the Life and Writings 
of Mr John Home," which also appeared separately in the same year, 
but several of his smaller poems seem to have escaped the editor's 
observation. These are — M The Fate of Caesar, " Verses- upon 
Inveraray," " Epistle to the Earl of Eglintoun." "Prologue on the 
Birthday of the Prince of Wales, 1750 ' and several " Epigram*,** 
which are printed in vol. ii. of Original Poems by Scottish Genilemew 
(1762).' See also Sir W. Scott, "The Life and Works of John Home" 
in the Quarterly Review (June. 1827). Douglas is included in numer- 
ous collections of British drama. Voltaire published his Le Cafi, on 
I'Ecossaise (1760), Londres (really Geneva), as a translation from the 
work of Mr Hume, described as paUeur de Vtgtise d'Edimbourg, but 
Home seems to have taken no notice of the mystification. 

HOMEL, or Gomel, a town of Russia, in the government* of 
Mogilev, and 132 m. by rail S.S.E. of the town of Mogilev, on 
the Sozh, a tributary of the Dnieper. Pop. (1000) 45«o8t. 
nearly half of whom are Jews. It is an important junction of 
the railways from Vilna to Odessa and from Orel to Poland, 
and is in steamer communication with Kiev and Mogilev. In 
front of Prince Paskevich's castle stands an equestrian statue 
of the Polish general Joseph Poniatowski, and in the cathedral 
is the tomb of the chancellor Nikolai Pctrovich Rumantsev, 
by Canova. The town carries on a brisk trade in hops, corn 
and timber; there are also paper-pulp mills and oil factories. 
Homcl was founded in the 12th century, and after changing 
hands several times between Poles and Russians was annexed 
to Russia in 1772. In 1648 it suffered at the hands of the Cossack 
chieftain Bogdan Chmielnkki. 

HOME OFFICE, a principal government department in the 
United Kingdom, the creation of which dates from 1782, when 
the conduct of foreign affairs, which had previously been divided 
between the northern and southern secretaries, was handed 
over to the northern department (see Foreign Otfice). The 
home department retained control of Irish and colonial affairs, 
and of war business until 1794, when an additional secretary 
of state was re-appointed. In 1801 the colonial business was 
transferred from the home department, which now attends only 
to domestic affairs. The head of the department, the principal 
secretary of state for home affairs, or home secretary, is a 
member of the government for the time being, and of the cabinet, 
receiving a salary of £5000 a year. He is the proper medium 
of communication between the sovereign and the subject, and 
receives petitions addressed to the crown. He is responsible 
for the maintenance of the king's peace and attends to the 
administration of criminal justice, police and prisons, and 
through him the sovereign exercises his prerogative of mercy. 
Within his department is the supervision of lunatic asylums, 
reformatories and industrial schools, and it is his duty to see 
after the internal well-being of the country, to enforce the rules 
made for the health or safety of the community generally, 
and especially of those classes employed in special trades or 
dangerous occupations. He is assisted by a permanent under* 
secretary, a parliamentary secretary and several assistant 
under-secrctaries. 

See Anson, Law and Custom of the Constitution (1907). 

HOMER 1 (*Ojn7por), the great epic poet of Greece. Many of 
the works once attributed to him are lost; those which remain 
are the two great epics, the Hied and the Odyssey, thirty-three 
Hymns, a mock epic (the Battle of the Frogs and Mice), and 
some pieces of a few lines each (the so-called Epigrams). 

Ancient Accounts of Homer. —Of the date of Homer probably 
no record, real or pretended, ever existed. Herodotus (ii. 53) 
maintains that Heslod and Homer lived not more than 400 years 
1 This article was thoroughly revised by Dr D. R. Monro before his 
death in 1905; a few points have since been added by Mr. T. W. 
Allen. 



HOMER 



62> 



before his own time* consequently^ not much before 850 B.C. 
From the controversial tone in which he expresses himself it is 
evident that others had made Homer more ancient; and accord- 
ingly the dates given by later authorities, though very various, 
generally fall within the 10th and nth centuries B.C. But none 
of these statements has. any claim to the character of external 
evidence. _^ . r . 

The extant lives of Homer (edited in Westermanns Vitarum 
Scriplores Graeci minora) are eight in number, including the 
piece called the Contest of Hcsiod and Homer. The longest is 
written in the Ionic dialect, and bears the name of Herodotus, 
but is certainly spurious. In all probability it belongs to the 
time which was fruitful beyond all others in literary forgeries, 
viz. the and century of our era. 1 The other lives are certainly not 
more ancient. Their chief value consists in the curious short 
poems or fragments of vale which they have preserved—the 
so-called Epigrams, which used to be printed at the end of 
editions of Homer. These are easily recognized as " Papular 
Rhymes," a form of folk-lore to be met with in mqst countries, 
treasured by the people as a kind of proverbs. 2 In the Homeric 
epigrams the interest turns sometimes on the characteristics 
of particular localities— Smyrna and Cyme (Epigr. iv.), Ery three 
(Epigr. vi., vii.), Mt Ida (Epigr. x.), Neon Teichos (Epigr. i.); 
others relate to certain trades or occupations— potters (Epigr. 
xiv.), sailors, fishermen, goat herds, &c. Some may be fragments 
of longer poems, but evidently they are not the work of any 
one poet. The fact that they were all ascribed to Homer merely 
means that they belong to a period in the history of the Ionian 
and Aeolian colonies when ." Homer " was a name which drew 
to itself all ancient and popular verse. 

Again, comparing the "epigrams" with the legends and 
anecdotes told in the Lives of Homer, we can hardly doubt that 
they were the chief source from which these Lives were 
derived. Thus in Epigr. iv. we find a blind poet, a native of 
Aeolian Smyrna, through which flows the water of the sacred 
Meles. Here is doubtless the source of the chief incident of the 
Herodotean Life— the birth of Homer " Son of the Meles." The 
epithet Aeolian implies high antiquity, inasmuch as according 
to Herodotus Smyrna became Ionian about 688 B.C. Naturally 
the Ionians had their own version of the story — a version which 
made Homer come out with the first Athenian colonists. 

The same line of argument may be extended to the Hymns, 
and even to some of the lost works of the post-Homeric or 
so-called " Cyclic " poets. Thus: — t 

! 1. The hymn to the Delian Apollo ends with an address of 
the poet to his audience. "When any stranger comes and asks 
who is the sweetest singer, they are to answer with one voice, 
the ""blind man that dwells in rocky Chios; bis songs deserve 
the prize for all time to come." Thucydides, who quotes this 
passage, to show the ancient character of the Delian festival, 
seems to have no doubt of the Homeric authorship of the hymn. 
Hence we may most naturally account for the belief that Homer 
was a Chian. * 

2. The MargiUs—a humorous poem which kept its ground 
as the reputed work of Homer down to the time of Aristotle — 
began with the words, " There came to Colophon an old man, 
a divine singer, servant of the Muses and Apollo." Hence 
doubtless the claim of Colophon to be the native city of Homer— 
a claim supported in the early times of Homeric learning by the 
Colopbonian poet and grammarian Antimachus. 

3. The poem called the Cypria was said to have been given 
by Homer to Stasinus of Cyprus as a daughter's dowry. The 
connexion with Cyprus appears further in the predominance given 
in the poem to Aphrodite. 

4. The Little Iliad and the Pkocais, according to the Herodotean 
life, were composed by Homer when he lived at Phocaea, with 
a certain Thestorides, who carried them off to Chios and there 
gained fame by reciting them as his own. The name Thestorides 
occurs in Epigr. v. 

1 See a paper in the Diss. PhUol. Hahnses, it. 97*210. 
' Compare the Popular Rhymes of Scotland, published by Robert 
Chambers. 



5. A rdmflar story was told about the poem called the' Taking 
of Oechalia (CKxaXto "AXowtt), the subject of which was one 
of the exploits of Heracles, It passed under the name of Creo- 
phylus, a friend or (as some said) a son-in-law of Homer; but 
it was generallv believed to have been in fact the work of the 
poet himself. 

6. Finally the Tkebaid always counted as the" work of Homer. 
As to the Epigoni, which carried on the Theban story, some 
doubt seems to have been felt. 

These indications render it probable that the stories connecting 
Homer with different cities and islands grew up after his poems 
had become known and famous, especially in the new and 
flourishing colonies of Aeolis and Ionia. The contention for 
Homer, in short, began at a time when his real history was lost, 
and he had become a sort of mythical figure, an " eponymous 
hero," or personification of a great school of poetry. 

An interesting confirmation of this view from the negative 
side is furnished by the city which ranked as chief among the 
Asiatic colonies of Greece, viz. Miletus. No legend claims for 
Miletus even a visit from Homer, or a share in the authorship of 
any Homeric poem. Yet Arctinus of Miletus was said to have 
been a " disciple of Homer," and was certainly one of the earliest 
and most considerable of the " Cydic " poets.* His Aethiopis 
was composed as a sequel to the Iliad; and the structure and 
general character of his poems show that be took the Iliad as 
his model. Yet in his case we find no trace of the disputed 
authorship which is so common with other " Cyclic " poems. 
How has this come about? Why have the works of Arctinus 
escaped the attraction which drew to the name of Homer such 
epics as the Cypria, the Little Iliad, the' Tkebaid, the Epigoni, 
the Taking of Oechalia and the Phocais. The most obvious 
account of the matter is that Arctinus was never so far forgotten 
that his poems became the subject of dispute. We seem through 
htm to obtain a glimpse of an early post-Homeric age in Ionia, 
when the immediate disciples and successors of Homer were 
distinct figures in a trustworthy tradition — when they had not 
yet merged their individuality in the legendary " Homer " of the 
Epic Cycle. 

Recitation of the Poems.—*Tbe recitation of epic poetry was 
called in historical times " rhapsody " (fiaipybla). The word 
hnrfodbs is post-Homeric, but was known to Pindar, who gives 
two different explanations of it — "singer of stitched verse" 
(boxru* txiur 6o*boi), and " singer with the wand " (^x|8tos). 
Of these the first is etymologically correct (except that it should 
rather be " stitcher of verse "); the second was suggested by 
the fact, for which there is early evidence, that the reciter was 
accustomed to hold a wand in his hand — perhaps, like the 
sceptre in the Homeric assembly, as a symbol of the right to a 
hearing.* 

The first notice of rhapsody meets us at Sicyon, in the reign 
of Cleisthenes (600-560 b.c), who " put down the rhapsodists 
on account of the poems of Homer, because they are all about 
Argos and tho Argives " (Hdt. v. 67). This description applies 
very well to the Iliad, in which Argos and Argives occur on 
almost every page. It may have suited the Tkebaid still better, 
but there is no need to understand it only of that poem, as Grote 
does. The incident shows that the poems of the Ionic Homer had 
gained in the 6th century B.C., and in the Doric parts of the Pelo- 
ponnesus,, the ascendancy, the national importance and the 
almost canonical character which they ever afterwards retained. 
. At Athens there was a law that the Homeric poems should be 
recited (fiatp(faua$ai) on every occasion of the Panathenaea, 
This law is appealed to as an especial glory of Athens by the 
orator Lycurgus (Leocr. 102). Perhaps therefore the custom 
of public recitation Was exceptional, 4 and unfortunately we do 
not know when or by whom it was introduced. The Platonic 
dialogue Hipparekus attributes it to Htpparchus, son of Peisis- 
tratus. This, however, -is part of the historical romance of 

* Compare the branch of myrtle at an Athenian feast (Aristoph., 
Nub., 1364). 

* The IUad was also recited at the festival of the Brauronia, at 
Brauron in Attica (Hesych. s** fip mrpirti s) . 



628 



HOMER 



which the dialogue mainly consists. The author makes (perhaps 
wilfully) all the mistakes about the family of Peisistratus which 
t Tbucydides notices in a well-known passage (vi. 54-59)- In one 
point, however, the writer's testimony is valuable. He tells us 
that the law required the rhapsodists to recite " taking each 
other up in order U( faroX^^cws *$€#}*), as they still do." This 
recurs in a different form in the statement of Diogenes Laertius 
(i. 2. 57) that Solon made a law that the poems should be recited 
" with prompting " U£ foro/foXip). The question as between 
Solon and Hipparchus cannot be settled; but it is at least clear 
that a due order of recitation was secured by the presence of 
a person charged to give the rhapsodists their cue (wro/JdAW). 
It was necessary, of course, to divide the poem to be recited into 
parts, and to compel each contending rhapsodist to take the part 
assigned to him. Otherwise they would have chosen favourite 
or show passages. 

■ The practice of poets or rhapsodists contending for the prize 
at the great religious festivals is of considerable antiquity, 
though apparently post-Homeric. 1 1 is brought vividly before us 
in the Hymn to Apollo (see the passage mentioned above), 
and in two Hymns to Aphrodite (v. and ix.). The latter of these 
may evidently be taken to belong to Salamis in Cyprus and the 
festival of the Cyprian Aphrodite, in the same way that the 
Hymn to Apollo belongs to Delos and the Delian gathering. 
The earliest trace of such contests is to be found in the story 
of Thamyris, the Thracian singer, who boasted that he could 
conquer even the Muses in song (//. ii. 504 ff.). 

Much has been made in this part of the subject of a family 
or clan (yk*os) of Homcridae in the island of Chios. On the one 
hand, it seemed to follow from the existence of such a family that 
Homer was a mere "eponymus," or mythical ancestor; on the 
other hand, it became easy to imagine the Homeric poems 
banded down orally in a family whose hereditary occupation it 
was to recite them, possibly to add new episodes from time to 
time, or to combine their materials in new ways, as their poetical 
gifts permitted. But, although there is no reason to doubt the 
existence of a family of " Homeridae," it is far from certain that 
they had anything to do with Homeric poetry. The word 
occurs first in Pindar (Net*, a. a), who applies it to the rhapso- 
dists (' Omp&ox JMarrHv krhuv iotaol). On this a scholiast says 
that the name " Homeridae " denoted originally descendants 
of Homer, who sang his poems in succession, but afterwards was 
applied to rhapsodists who did not claim descent from him. 
He adds that there was a famous rhapsodist, Cynaethus of 
Chios, who was said to be the author of the Hymn to Apollo, and 
to have first recited Homer at Syracuse about the 69th Olympiad. 
Nothing here connects the Homeridae with Chios. The state- 
ment of the scholiast is evidently a mere inference from the 
patronymic form of the word. If it proves anything, it proves 
that Cynaethus, who was a Cbaan and a rhapsodist, made no 
claim to Homeric descent. On the other hand our knowledge of 
Chian Homeridae comes chiefly from the lexicon of Harpocratioa, 
where we are told that Acusilaus and Hellanicua said that they 
were so called from the poet; whereas Seleucus pronounced 
this to be an error. Strabo also says that the Chians put forward 
the Homeridae as an argument in support of their claim to 
Homer. These Homeridae, then, belonged to Chios, but there 
is no indication of their being rhapsodists. On the contrary, 
Plato and other Attic writers use the word to include interpreters 
and admirers— in short, the whole "spiritual kindred"— of 
Homer. And although we hear of " descendants of Creophylus " 
as in possession of the Homeric poems, there is no similar story 
about descendants of Homer himself. Such is the evidence on 
which so many inferences are based. 

. The result of the notices now collected is to show that the 
early history of epic recitation consists of (1) passages in the 
Homeric hymns snowing that poets contended for the prize at 
the great festivals, (2) the passing mention in Herodotus of 
rhapsodists at Sicyon, and (3) * law at Athens, of unknown 
date, regulating the recitation at the Panathenaea. Let us now 
compare these data with the account given in the Homeric poems. 
The word " rhapsode "docs not yet exist; we hear only of the 



'singer" (60166s), who does not carry a wand or Uuret-brancfc, 
but the lyTc (46ftuy(), with which be accompanies his "song." 
In the Iliad even the epic " singer " is not met with. It is 
Achilles himself who sings the stories of heroes (*Xea irtpur) 
in his tent, and Patrodus is waiting (respendere -faratus). to 
take up the song in his turn (//. ix. 191). Again we do not bear 
of poetical contests (except in the story of Thamyris already 
mentioned) or of recitation of epic poetry at festivals. The 
Odyssey gives us pictures of two great houses, and each has its 
singer. The song is on a subject taken from the Trojan war, at 
some point chosen by the singer himself, or by his hearers. 
Phemius pleases the suitors by singing of the calamitous return of 
the Greeks; Demodocus sings of a quarrel between Ulysses and 
Achilles, and afterwards of the wooden horse and the capture 
of Troy. 

It may be granted that the author of the Odyssey can hardly 
have been just such a singer as he himself describes. The songs 
of Phemius and Demodocus are too short, and have too much 
the character of improvisations. Nor is it necessary to suppose 
that epic poetry, at the time to which the picture in the Odyssey 
belongs, was confined to the one type represented. Yet in 
several respects the conditions under which the singer finds himself 
in the house of a chieftain like Odysseus or Alcinous are more 
in harmony with the character of Homeric poetry than those of 
the later rhapsodic contests. The subdivision of a poem like 
the Iliad or Odyssey among different and necessarily unequal 
performers must have been injurious to the effect. The highly 
theatrical manner of recitation which was fostered by the spirit 
of competition, and by the example of the stage, cannot have 
done justice to the even movement of the epic style. It is not 
certain indeed that the practice of reciting a long poem by the 
agency of several competitors was ancient, or that it prevailed 
elsewhere than at Athens; but as rhapsodists were numerous, 
and popular favour throughout Greece became more and more 
confined to one or two great works, it must have become almost 
a necessity. That it was the mode of recitation contemplated 
by the author of the Iliad or Odyssey it is impossible to believe. 

The difference made by substituting the wand or branch of 
laurel for the lyre of the Homeric singer is a slighter one, though 
not without significance.^ The recitation of the Hesiodic poems 
was from the first unaccompanied by the lyre, i.e. they were 
confessedly said, not sung; and it was natural that the example 
should be extended to Homer. For it is difficult to believe that 
the Homeric poems were ever " sung " in the strict sense of the 
word. We can only suppose that the lyre in the hands of the 
epic poet or reciter was in reality a piece of convention, a " sur- 
vival " from the stage in which narrative poetry had a lyrical 
character. Probably the poets of the Homeric school— that 
which dealt with war and adventure — were the genuine descend- 
ants of minstrels whose " lays " or " ballads M were the amuse- 
ment of the feasts in an earlier heroic age; whereas the Hesiodic 
compositions were non-lyrical from the first, and were only in 
verse because that was the universal form of literature. 

It seems, then, that if we imagine Homer as a singer in a royal 
house of the Homeric age, but with more freedom regarding the 
limits of his subject, and a more tranquil audience than is allowed 
him in the rapid movement of the Odyssey, we shall piobably 
not be far from the truth. 

Time and Place of Homer.— The oldest direct references to 
the Iliad and Odyssey are in Herodotus, who quotes from both 
poems (ii. 53). The quotation from the Iliad is of interest 
because it is made in order to show that Homer supported the 
story of the travels of Paris to Egypt and Sidon (whereas the 
Cyclic poem called the Cyprid ignored tbem), and also because 
the part of the Iliad from whk^j it comes is cited as the " Aristcia 
ofDiomede.". This was therefore a recognized part of the poem. 

The earliest mention of the name of Homer is found in a 
fragment of the philosopher Xenophanes (of the 6th century 
B.C., or possibly earlier), who complains of the false notions 
implanted through the teaching of Homer. The passage shows, 
not merely that Homer was well known at Colophon in the time 
of Xeaoehanes, but also that the great advance in. moral and 



HOMER 



629 



religious ideas which forced Plato to banish Homer from his 
republic had made itself felt in the days of the early Ionic 
philosophers. 

Failing external testimony, the time and place of the Homeric 
poems can only be determined (if at ail) by internal evidence. 
This is of two main kinds; (a) evidence of history, consisting 
in a comparison of the political and social condition, the 
geography, the institutions, the manners, arts and ideas of 
Homer with those of other times; (6) evidence of language, 
consisting in a comparison with later dialects, in respect of 
grammar and vocabulary. To these may be added, as occasion- 
ally of value, (c) much evidence of the direct influence of Homer 
upon the subsequent course of literature and art, 

(«) The political condition of Greece in the earliest times 
known to history is separated from the Greece of Homer by an 
interval which can hardly be overestimated. The great national 
names are different instead of Achaeans, Argives, Danai, we 
find Hellenes, subdivided into Dorians, Ionian*, Aeolians— 
names either unknown to Homer, or mentioned in terms more 
significant than silence. At the dawn of Greek history Mycenae 
is no longer the seat of empire; new empires, polities and 
civilizations have grown up— Sparta with its military discipline, 
Delphi with its religious supremacy, Miletus with its commerce 
and numberless colonies, Aeolis and Ionia, Sicily and Magna 
Graecia. 

While the political centre of Homeric Greece is at Mycenae, 
the real centre is rather to be found in Boeotia. The Catalogue 
of the Ships begins with Boeotia; the list of Boeotian towns b 
much the longest; and they sail, not from the bay of Argos, 
but from the Boeotian harbour of Aulis. This position is not 
due to its chiefs, who are all of inferior rank. The importance of 
Boeotia for Greek civilization is further shown by the ancient 
worship of the Muses on Mount Helicon, and the fact that the 
oldest poet whose birthplace was known was the Boeotian 
Hesiod. Nexfcfto Boeotia and the neighbouring countries, it 
appears that the Peloponnesus, Crete and Thcssaly were the 
most important seats of Greek population. 

In the Peloponnesus the face of things was completely altered 
by the Dorian conquest, no trace of which b found in Homer. 
The only Dorians known in Homer are those that the Odyssey 
(jrix. 177) places in Crete. It b difficult to connect them with the 
Dorians of history. 

The eastern shores of the Aegean, which the earliest historical 
records represent to us as the seat of a brilliant civilization, giving 
way before the advance of the great military empires (Lydia 
and afterwards Persia), are almost a blank in Homer's map. 
The line of settlements can be traced in the Catalogue from 
Crete to Rhodes, and embraces the neighbouring islands of Cos 
and Calymnos. The colonization of Rhodes by Tlepolemus b 
related (II. ii. 661 ff.), and seems to mark the farthest point 
reached in the Homeric age. Between Rhodes and the Troad 
Homer knows of but one city, Miletus— which b a Carian ally 
of Troy — and the mouth of one river, the Cayster. Even the 
Cycladet— Naxos, Paros, Melos— are unknown to the Homeric 
world. The disposition of the Greeks to look to the west for the 
centres of religious feeling appears in the mention of Dodona and 
the Dodonaean Zeus, put in the mouth of the Thessalian Achilles. 

To the north we find the Thradans, known from the stories 
of Thamyris the singer (//. ii. 50s), and Lycurgus, the enemy of 
the young god Dionysus (H. vi 130). Here the Trojan empire 
begins. It does not appear, however, that the Trojans are thought 
of as people of a different language. As this b expressly said of 
the Carians, and of the Trojan allies who were " summoned from 
afar," the contrary rather b implied regarding Troy itself. 

The mixed type of government described by Homer— con- 
sisting of a king guided by a council of elders, and bringing all 
important resolutions before the assembly of the fighting men — 
does not seem to have been universal in Indo-European com- 
munities, but to have grown up in many different parts of the 
world under the stress of similar conditions. The king b the 
commander in war, and the office probably owed its existence to 
military necessities. It b not surrounded with any special 



There were ruling families, laying claim to divine 
descent, from whom the king was naturally chosen, but his own 
fitness b the essence of his title. The aged Laertes b set aside; 
the young Telemachus does not succeed as a matter of course. 
Nor are any very definite rights attached to the office. Each 
tribe in the army before Troy was commanded by its own king 
(or kings); but Agamemnon was supreme, and was "more a 
king " (0a<riXtirepof ) than any other. The assembly b summoned 
on all critical occasions, and its approval b the ultimate sanction. 
A king therefore stands in almost as much need of oratory as of 
warlike skill and prowess. Even the division of the spoil b not 
made in the Iliad by Agamemnon, but by " the Achaeans " 
(//. L 162, 368). The taking of Briseb from Achilles was an 
arbitrary act, and against all rule and custom. The council 
b more difficult to understand. The "elders" {ykporrts) of the 
Iliad are the same as the subordinate ''kings"; they are 
summoned by Agamemnon to his tent, and form a small council 
of nine or ten persons. In Troy we hear of elders of the people 
Untxorfkpovrts) who are with Priam, and are men past the 
military age. So in Ithaca there are elders who have not gone to 
Troy with the army. It would seem therefore that the meeting 
in Agamemnon's tent was only a copy or adaptation of the true 
constitutional "council of elders," which indeed was essentially 
unfitted for the purposes of military service, The king's palace, 
if we may judge from Tiryns and Mycenae, was usually in a strong 
situation on an " acropolis." In the later times of democracy the 
acropolis was reserved for the temples of the principal gods. 

Priesthood in Homer b found in the case of particular temples, 
where an officer b naturally wanted to take charge of the sacred 
indosure and the sacrifices offered within it. It b perhaps an 
accident that we do not hear of priests in Ithaca. Agamemnon 
performs sacrifice himself, not because a priestly character was 
attached to the kingly office, but simply because he was " master 
in hb own house." 

The conception of " law " b foreign to Homer. . The later 
words for it (*opot, fopa) are unknown, and the terms which 
he uses (Unj and ft/us) mean merely " custom." Judicial 
functions are in the hands of the elders, who " have to do with 
suits" (stcoffToAot), and "uphold judgments" (ft/iurra* 
dpbarai). On such matters as the compensation in cases of. 
homicide, it b evident that there were no rules, but merely a 
feeling, created by use and wont, that the relatives of the slain 
man should be willing to accept payment. The sense of anger 
which follows a violation of custom has the name of " Nemesb " 
— righteous displeasure. 

As there b no law in Homer, so there b no morality. That 
b to say, there arc no general principles of action, and no words 
which indicate that acts have been classified as good or bad, 
right or wrong. Moral feeling, indeed, existed and was denoted 
by " Aidos " ; but the numerous meanings of this word — shame, 
veneration, pity— show how rudimentary the idea was. And 
when we look to practice we find that cruel and even treacherous 
deeds are spoken of without the least sense that they deserve 
censure. The heroes of Homer are hardly more moral agents 
than the giants and enchanters of a fairy tale. 

The religious ideas of Homer differ in some important points 
from those of later Greece. The Apollo of the Iliad has the 
character of a local Asiatic deity — " ruler of Chryse and goodly 
Cilia and Tenedos." He may be compared with the Clarian 
and the Lydan god, but he b unlike the Apollo of Dorian times, 
the " deliverer " and giver of oracles. Again, the worship of 
Dionysus, and of Demeter and Persephone, b mainly or wholly 
post-Homeric The greatest difference, however, lies in the 
absence of hero-worship from the Homeric order of things. 
Castor and Polydeuces, for instance, are simply brothers of 
Helen who died before the expedition to Troy (//. iii. 243-) 

The military tactics of Homer belong to the age when the 
chariot was the prindpal engine of warfare. Cavalry bunknown, 
and the battles are mainly derided by the prowess of the chiefs. 
The use of the trumpet b also later. It has been supposed 
indeed that the art of riding was known in Homer's own time, 
because it occurs in comparisons. But the riding which he 



630 



HOMER 



describes (//. xv. 679) is a mers exhibition of skill, such as we may 
see in a modern circus. And though he mentions the trumpet 
(//. zviiL 219), there is nothing to show that it was used, as in 
historical times, to give the signal for the charge. 

The chief industries of Homeric times are those of the carpenter 
(tUtuv),. the worker in leather (acvrordtios), the smith or 
worker in metal (xoXxefe) — whose implements are the hammer 
and pincers— and the potter (xcpopcfc); also spinning and 
weaving, which were carried on by the women. The fine arts 
are represented by sculpture in relief, carving in wood and ivory, 
embroidery. Statuary is later; it appears to have come into 
existence in the 7th century" 1 about the time when casting in 
metal was invented by Rhoecus of Samoa. In general, as was 
well shown by A. S. Murray, 4 Homeric art does not rise above the 
stage of decoration, applied to objects in common use; while 
in point of style it is characterized by a richness and variety 
of ornament which is in the strongest contrast to the simplicity 
of the best periods. It is the work, in short, not of artists but of 
skilled workmen; the ideal artist is " Daedalus," a name which 
implies mechanical skill and intricate workmanship, not beauty 
of design. 

One art of the highest importance remains. The question 
whether writing was known in the time of Homer was raised in 
antiquity, and has been debated with especial eagerness ever 
since the appearance of Wolfs Prolegomena. In this case we 
have to consider not merely the indications of the poems, but 
also the external evidence which we possess regarding the use 
of writing in Greece. This latter kind of evidence is much more 
considerable now than it was in Wolf's time. (See Wmwo 
elsewhere in these volumes.) 

The oldest known stage of the Greek alphabet appears to be 
represented by inscriptions of the islands of Thera, Melos and 
Crete, which are referred to the 40th Olympiad (620 B.C.). The 
oldest specimen of a distinctively Ionian alphabet is the famous 
inscription of the mercenaries of Psammetichus, in Upper Egypt, 
as to which the only doubt is whether the Psammetichus in 
question is the first or the second, and consequently whether 
the inscription is to be dated OL 40 or OL 47- Considering that 
the divergence of two alphabets (like the difference of two 
.dialects) requires both time and familiar use, we may gather 
from these facts that writing was well known in Greece early in 
the 7th century B.C.* 

The rise of prose composition in the 6th century bx. has 
been thought to mark the time when memory was practically 
superseded by writing as a means of preserving literature — 
the earlier use of letters being confined to short documents, 
such as lists of names, treaties, laws, &c This conclusion, 
however, is by no means necessary. It may be that down to 
comparatively late times poetry was not commonly read, but 
was recited from memory. But the question is — From what 
time are we to suppose that the preservation of long poems was 
generally secured by the existence of written copies? Now, 
without counting the Homeric poems— which doubtless had 
exceptional advantages in their fame and popularity— we find 
a body of literature dating from the 8th century B.C. to which 
the theory of oral transmission is surely inapplicable. In the 
Trojan cycle alone we know of the two epics of Arctinus, the 
Little Iliad of Lesches, the Cypria, the Nostoi. The Theban 
cycle is represented by the Thcbaid (which Callinus, who was 
of the 7th century, ascribed to Homer) and the Epigpni. Other 
ancient epics— ancient enough to have passed under the name 
of Homer-are the Taking of Oechaha, and the Pkocais. Again, 
there are the numerous works attributed to Hesiod and other 

1 Contemporary Review, vol. xxiiL p. 218 ff. 
, " The fact that the Phoenician Vau (a) was retained in the Greek 
alphabets, and the vowel u added, shows that when the alphabet was 
introduced the sound denoted by f was still in full vigour. Other- 
wise f would have been used for the ^owel », just as the Phoenician 
consonant Yod became the vowel 4. But in the Ionic dialect the 
sound of f died out soon after Homer's time, if indeed it was still 
pronounced then. It seems probable therefore that the introduction 
of the alphabet is not later than the composition of the Homeric 



poets of the didactic, mythological and quasi-historical schools— 
Eumelus of Corinth, Cinaethon of Sparta, Agias of Troezen, and 
many more. The preservation of this vast mass can only be 
attributed to writing, which must therefore have been in use for 
two centuries or more before there was any considerable prose 
literature. Nor is this in itself improbable. 

The further question, whether the Iliad and Odyssey were 
originally written, is much more difficult. External evidence 
does not reach back so far, and the internal evidence is curiously 
indecisive. The only passage which can be interpreted as a 
reference to writing occurs in the story of Bellerophon, told by 
Glaucus in the sixth book of the Iliad. Proetus, king o( Corinth, 
sent Bellerophon to his father-in-law the king of Lycia, and gave 
him " baneful tokens " M/utra Xirypa, i.e. tokens which were 
messages of death), " scratching on a folded tablet many spirit- 
destroying things, and bade him show this to his father-in-law, 
that he might perish." The king Of Lycia asked duly (on the 
tenth day from the guest's coming) for a token (free o$pa 
tftotfot), and then knew what Proetus wished to be done. In 
this account there is nothing to show exactly how the message 
of Proetus was expressed. The- use of writing for the purpose of 
the token between " guest-friends " (tessera hospitalis) is certainly 
very ancient. Mommsen (Rom\ Forsch. I 338 ff.) aptly com- 
pares the use in treaties, which are the oldest species of public 
documents.- But we may suppose that tokens of some kind- 
like the marks which the Greek chiefs make on the lots (J I. vii 
1 75. ff.)— were in use before writing was known. In any system 
of signs there were doubtless means of recommending a friend, 
or giving warning of the presence of an enemy. There is no 
difficulty, therefore, in understanding the message of Proetus 
without alphabetical writing. But, on the other hand, there 
is no reason for so understanding it. 

If the language of Homer is so ambiguous where the use 
of writing would naturally be mentioned* we cannot expect to 
find more decisive references elsewhere. Arguments have been 
founded upon the descriptions of the blind singers in the Odyssey, 
with their songs inspired directly by the Muse; upon the appeals 
of the poet to the Mutes, especially in such a place as the opening 
of the Catalogue; upon the Catalogue itself, which is a kind of 
historical document put into verse to help the memory; upon 
the shipowner in the Odyssey, who has " a good memory for his 
cargo," &c. It may be answered, however, that much of this 
is traditional, handed down from the time when all poetry was 
unwritten. Moreover it is one thing to recognise that a literature 
is essentially oral in fts form, characteristic .of an age which was 
one of hearing rather than of reading, and quite another to hold 
that the same literature was preserved entirely by oral trans- 



The result of these various considerations seems to be that 
the age which we may call the Homeric— the age which is brought 
before us in vivid outlines in the Iliad and Odyssey— tic* beyond 
the earliest point to which history enables us to penetrate. 
And so far as we can draw any conclusion as to the author 
(or authors) of the two poems, it is that the whole debate b e t w een 
the cities of Aeohs and Ionia was wide of the mark. The author 
of the Iliad, at least, was evidently a European Greek who 
lived before the colonization of Asia Minor; and the daims 
of the Asiatic cities mean no more than that in the days of their 
prosperity these were the chief seats of the fame of Homer. 

This is perhaps the place to consider whether the poems are to be 
regarded as posse wing in any degree the character of historical 
record. The question is one which in the absence of satisfactory 
criteria will generally be decided by taste and predilection. A few 
suggestions, however, may be made. 

1. The events of the Iltad take place in a real locality, the general 
features of which are kept steadily in view. There is no doubt 
about Sigeum and Rhoeteum, or the river Scamander, or the islands 
Imbros.LemnosandTenedos. It is at least remarkable that a legend 
of the national interest of the " tale of Troy •■ should be so definitely 
localised, and that in a district which was never famous as a seat of 
Greek population. It may be urged, too, that the story of the /Mod 
is singularly free from the exaggerated and marvellous character 
which belongs as a rule to the legends of primitive peoples. The 
apple of discord, the arrows of Fhiloctetes, the m vulnerability of 
Achillas, and similar fancies, are the additions of later poets. This 



HOMER 



631 



sobriety, however, belongs not to the whole Iliad, but to the events 
and characters of the war. Such figures as Bellerophon, Nlobe, the 
Amazons, which are thought of as traditions from an earlier genera- 
tion, show the marvellous element at work. 

2. Certain persons and events in the story have a distinctly 
mythical stamp. Helen is a figure of this kind. There was another 
story according to which she was carried off by Theseus, and re- 
covered by her brothers the Dioscuri. There are even traces of a 
third version, in which the Messenian twins, Idas and Lynceus, 
appear. 

3. The analogy of the French epic, the Chanson de Roland, 
favours the belief that there was some nucleus of fact. The defeat 
of Roncevaux was really suffered by a part of Charlemagne's army. 
But the Saracen army is purely mythical, the true enemy having 
been the Gascons. If similarly we leave, as historical, the plain of 
Troy, and the name Agamemnon, we shall perhaps not be far wrong. 

(b) The dialect of Homer is an early or " primitive u form of 
the language which we know as that of Attica in the classical 
age of Greek literature. The proof of this proposition is to be 
obtained chiefly by comparing the grammatical formation and 
the syntax of Homer with those of Attic. The comparison of 
the vocabulary is in the nature of things less conclusive on the 
question of date. It would be impossible to give the evidence 
in full without writing a Homeric grammar, but a few specimens 
may be of interest. 

1. The first aorist in Greek being a " weak " tense, ue. formed 
by a suffix (-<»•), whereas the second aorist is a " strong " tense, 
distinguished by the form of the root-syllable, we expect to find a 
constant tendency to diminish the number of second aorists in use. 
No new second aorists, we may be sure, were formed any more than 
new " strong " tenses, such as came or sang, can be formed in 
English. Now in Homer there are upwards of 80 second aorists 
(not reckoning aorists of " Verbs in j»«, such, as tor**, tfimr), whereas 
i n all Attic prose not more than 3c are found. 1 n this point therefore 
the Homeric language it manifestly older. In Attie poets, it is true, 
the number of such aorists is much larger than in prose. But here 
again we find that they bear witness to Homer. Of the poetical 
aorists in Attic the larger part are also Homeric. Others are not 
really Attic at all, but borrowed from earner Aeolic and Doric 
poetry. It is plain, in short, that the later poetical vocabulary was 
separated from that of prose mainly by the forms which the influence 
of Homer had saved from being forgotten*. 

2. While the whole class of strong " aorists diminished, certain 
smaller groups in the class disappeared altogether. Thus we find in 
Homer, but not in the later language:— 

(a) The second aorist middle without the " thematic " « or o? as 
f£X*-ro, wax struck; tyfft-To, perished ; aX-re, leaped. 

(b) The aorist formed by reduplication: as ttfacr, taught; 
XcXfllfef «4, to setae. These constitute a distinct formation, generally 
with a " causative " meaning; the solitary Attic specimen 1**7070* 

3. It had long been known that the subjunctive in Homer often 
takes a short vowel (e.g. in the plural. -on*r, -crc instead of -«>*«-. 
-in, and in the Mid. -e$tai, &c. instead of -wjiox, &c.). This was 
generally said to be done by " poetic licence," or metri gratia. In 
fact, however, the Homeric subjunctive is almost quite regular," 
though the rule which it obeys is a different one from the Attic. It 
may be summed up by saying that the subjunctive takes u or q when 
the indicative has oor 1, and not otherwise. Thus Homer has 
t-vm, wo go, S-ofrty, let us go. The later 1-«-jm» was at first a solecism, 
an attempt to conjugate a " verb in ju '* like the " verbs in *»." 
It will be evident that under this rule the perfect and first aorist 
subjunctive should always take a short vowel; and this accordingly 
is the case, with very few exceptions. 

4. The article (*, 4, t6) in Homer is chiefly used as an independent 
pronoun (he, she, it), a use. which in Attic appears only in a few com- 
binations (such *b d ptr ... 6 61, the one., .the other). This differ- 
ence i» parallel to the relation between the Latin ilk and the article 
of the Romance languages. 

5. The prepositions offer several points of comparison. What the 
grammarians called " tmesis," the separation of the preposition from 
the verb with which it is compounded, is peculiar to Homer. The 
true account of the matter is that in Homer the place of the pre- 
position is not rigidly fixed, as it was afterwards. Again, " with " 
is in Homer oU (with the dative), in Attic prose §urh with the 
genitive. Here Attic poetry is intermediate; the use of oi* is 
retained as a piece of poetical tradition. 

6. In addition to the particle Am, Homer has another, k<t, hardly 
distinguishable in meaning. The Homeric uses of A> and **» are 
different in several respects from the Attic, the general result being 
that the Homeric syntax is more elastic. And yet it is perfectly 
definite and precise. Homer uses no constructions loosely or without 
corresponding differences of meaning. His rules are equally strict 
with those of the later language, but they are not the same rules. 
And they differ chiefly in this, that the less common combinations 
of the earlier period were disused altogether in the later. 

7. In the vocabulary the most striking difference is that many 
't appear from the metre to have contained a sound which they 



afterwards lost, via. that which is written in some Greek alphabets 
by the " digamma " f. Thus the words 4>«|. 4<rrw, tpyor, Uof, 
and many others must have been written at one time firo!, Finrrv, 
Fkpyo*, flrot. This letter, however, died out earlier in Ionic than 
in most dialects, and there is no proof that the Homeric poems were 
ever written with it. 

These are not, speaking generally, the differences that are 
produced by the gradual divergence of dialects in a language. 
They are rather to be classed with those which we find between 
the earlier and the later stages of every language which has 
had a long history. The Homeric dialect has passed into New 
Ionic and Attic by gradual but ceaseless development of the 
same kind as that which brought about the change from Vedk 
to classical Sanskrit, or from old high German to the present 
dialects of Germany. 

The points that have been mentioned, to which many others 
might be added, make it clear that the Homeric and Attic dialects 
are separated by differences which affect the whole structure 
of the language, and require a considerable time for their develop- 
ment. At the same time there is hardly one of these differences 
which cannot be accounted for by the natural growth of the 
language. It has been thought indeed that the Homeric dialect 
was a mixed one, mainly Ionic, but containing Aeolic and even 
Doric forms; this, however, is a mistaken view of the processes 
of language. There are doubtless many Homeric forms which 
were unknown to the later Ionic and Attic, and which are found 
in Aeolic or other dialects. In general, however, these are cider 
forms, which must have existed in Ionic at one time, and may 
very well have belonged to the Ionic of Homer's time. So too 
the digamma is called " Aeolic " by grammarians, and is found 
on Aeolic and Doric inscriptions. But the letter was one of the 
original alphabet, and was retained universally as a numeral. 
It can only have fallen into disuse by degrees, as the sound 
which it denoted ceased to be pronounced. The fact that there 
are so many traces of it in Homer is ft strong proof of the antiquity 
of the poems, but no proof of admixture with Aeolic 

There is one sense, however, in which an admixture of dialects 
may be recognized. It is clear that the variety of forms in 
Homer is too great for any actual spoken dialect. To take a 
single instance: it is impossible that (he genitives in -oto and 
in -ov should both have been in everyday use together. The 
form in -oto must have been poetical or literary, like the old 
English forms that survive in the language of the Bible. The 
origin of such double forms is not far to seek. The effect of 
dialect on style was always recognized in Greece, and the dialect 
which had once been adopted by a particular kind of poetry 
was ever afterwards adhered to. The Epic of Homer was doubt- 
less formed originally from a spoken variety of Greek, but 
became literary and conventional with time. It is Homer 
himself who tells us, in a striking passage (//. iv. 437) that all 
the Greeks spoke the same language — that is to say, that they 
understood one another, in spite of the inevitable local differences. 
Experience shows how some one dialect in a country gains a 
literary supremacy to which the whole nation yields. So Tuscan 
became the type of Italian, and Anglian of English. But as 
soon as the dialect is adopted, it begins to diverge from the 
colloquial form. Just as modern poetical Italian uses many 
older grammatical forms peculiar to itself, so the language of 
poetry, even in Homeric times, had formed a deposit (so to 
speak) of archaic grammar. There were doubtless poets before 
Homer,* as well as brave men before Agamemnon; and indeed 
the formation of a poetical dialect such as the Homeric must 
have been the work of several generations. The use of that 
dialect (instead of Aeolic) by the Boeotian poet Hesiod, in a 
kind of poetry which was not of the Homeric type, tends to 
the conclusion that the literary ascendancy of the epic dialect 
was anterior to the Iliad and Odyssey, and independent of the 
influence exercised by these poems. 

What then was the original language of Homer? Where 
and when was it spoken? [The answer given to this question 
by Aug. Pick (in 1883) and still held, with modifications, by 
some European scholars can no longer be maintained. Fick's 
original statement was that in or about the 6th century B:C, 



632 



HOMER 



the poems, which had . originally worn an Aeolic dress, were 
transposed into Ionic. To this it is easily answered that such 
an event is not only unique in history, but contrary to all that 
we know of the Greek genius. At the period in question an 
Aeolic literature, the lyrics of Sappho and Alcaeus, were in 
existence. If it was found necessary to transpose the Aeolic 
Homer, why did the Aeolic lyric verse escape? If, however, 
as is the view of some of Fick's followers, the transposition took 
place several centuries earlier, before species of literature had 
appropriated particular dialects, then the linguistic facts upon 
which Fick relied to distinguish the "Aeolic" and "Ionic" 
elements in Homer disappear. We have no means of knowing 
what the Aeolic and Ionic of say the 9th century were, or if 
there were such dialects at all. Certain prominent historical 
differences between Aeolic and Ionic (the digamma and d) are 
known to be unoriginal. The view that Homer underwent 
at any time a passage from one dialect to another may be dis- 
missed. The tendency of modern dialectologists is to divide 
the Greek dialects into Dorian and non-Dorian. The non- 
Dorian dialects, Ionic, Attic and the various forms of Aeolic, 
are regarded as relatively closely akin, and go by the common 
name " Achaean." They formed the common language of Greece 
before the Doric invasion. As the scene which Homer depicts 
is prae-Dorian Greece, it is reasonable to call his language 
Achaean. The historical divergences of Achaean into Aeolian 
and Ionic were later than the Migration, and were due to the 
well-known effects of change of soil and air. 

To what local variety of Achaean Homeric Greek belonged 
it is idle to ask. Thessaly, Boeotia and Mycenae have equal 
claims. It seems clearer that when once this local variety of 
Achaean had been used by poets of eminence as their vehicle 
for national history, it established its right to be considered 
the one poetical language of Hellas. As the dialect of the Arno 
in Italy, of Castille in Spain, by the virtue of the genius 
of the singers who used them, became literary " Italian " and 
" Spanish," so this variety of Achaean elevated itself to the 
position of the volgare illustre of Greece. 1 ] (T. W A.) 

(c) The influence of Homer upon the subsequent course of 
Greek literature is a large subject, even if we restrict it to the 
centuries which immediately followed the Homeric age. It 
will be enough to observe that in the earliest elegiac poets, such 
as Archikxhus, Tyrtaeus and Theognis, reminiscences of Homeric 
language and thought meet us on every page. If the same 
cannot be said of the ancient epic poems, that is because of the 
extreme scantiness of the existing fragments. Much, however, 
is to be gathered from the arguments of the Trojan part of the 
Epic Cycle (preserved in the Codex Venetus of the Iliad, a full 
discussion of which will be found in the Journal of Hellenic 
Studies, 1884, pp. 1-40). An examination of these arguments 
throws light on two chief aspects of the relation between Homer 
and his " cyclic " successors. 

1. The later poets sought to complete the story of the Trojan 
war by supplying the parts which did not fall within the Iliad 
and Odyssey— the so-called anU-homerica and posl-homerica. 
They did so largely from hints and passing references in Homer. 
Thus the successive episodes of the siege related at length in 
the Utile Iliad, and ending with the story of the Wooden Horse, 
are nearly all taken from passages in the Odyssey. Much the 
same may be said of the Nosti. 

2. With this process of expansion and development (so to speak) 
of Homeric themes is combined the addition of new characters. 
Such, in the LiUle Iliad (cg.) t are the story of the Palladium 
and of the treachery of Sinon. Such, too, in the Cypria are the 
new legendary figures— Palamedes, Iphigenia, Telephus, Laocoon. 
These new elements in the narrative are evidently due not only 
to the natural growth of legend in a people highly endowed 
with imagination, but in a large proportion also to the new 

1 See D. B. Monro** Homer's Odyssey, books xui.-xxiv. (Oxford. 
1901, p. 45^ sqq ). and the abstract of his paper on the Homeric 
Dialect read to the Congress of Historical Sciences at Rome, 1003: 
Attidel Congresso uUemaaonaU di uiense steridu, ii. 152, 153, 1905, 
"_I1 Dialetio — " 



fa antiquity, fas* rather toW m 
It is chiefly interesting as a proa 
must have been before the Alex* 
understand the readiness of Aria 
of verses unless the state of the < 

of nuiMrmi tn»fiwtUrinn« On 



HOMER 



633 



and politics. In this movement t 
in the word Nature. The natura 
natural religion, the poetry of nai 
the English philosophers from H 
Rousseau chiefly) on the general di 
In literature the effect of these idi 
between nature and art. As poKl 
innocence prior to codes of law* 1 
unwritten poetry the freshness a 
in the prevailing styles. The bli 
the noble savage. The supposed 
fell in with this train of sentiment 
study of early popular poetry. Ha 
of inquiry. BUckwell (Professor < 
in a book published in 1735, on 
Wood (Essay on Ike Oritinal Genii 
first who maintained that Hom< 
writing, and supported his thesis 
the parallel of Osstan. Both 1 
German, and their ideas passed i 
day. Everything in short was rij 
brought together, with masterly < 
new Homeric learning, and drew 
Homer was no single poet, writin 
name which stood for a golden a 
of genius and nature. 

The part of the ProUzomata 1 
of the Homeric poems occupies 
Wolf shows bow the question of t 

1 See the chapter in Cobet's Afi 

'The existence of two groups 
noticed by Jacob La Roche, atu 
the edition of W. Dindorf (Oxfor 
Scholia, chiefly cxegetScal, a coll 
Villoison from a MS. Ven. 453 (s. 
been again edited by W. Dindoi 
portaat collection of this group isi 
(Burney 86 s. xi.) of the Britis 
(Oxford, 1 887-1 888) The vast 1 
1 2th century) marks -a third stage 
learning. 

* Prolegomena ad Homentm, sh 

genuina forwta variisque mutationi — w . , 

acriDsit Frid. Aug. Wotfius, volumen i. (1795). 



1 1 w.. .tn, «.«....«. vn s cuiniavua «ai r\ visits. Ill •«. rEiMinun ■■ nm 

1 say of himself that he "collected Homer, who was formerly 1 



63+ 



HOMER 



id mora 
Una of 
e inter- 
hbtorie 
"O eptoi 
ndency 
Regard- 
Mffflec, 
rhifche 

ienl."; 
lade by 
it steps 
in two 
and D* 

Buntain 
ins the 
of the 
ut even 
nsof m> 
■sat an 
«back> 
rhapso- 
i to be 
ddition 



r found 
rn into 
(in two 

reduced 
its of a 
m, the 



ed. In 
kit (in- 



or con- 
author 



ical in- 



actions 
n those 

« work 

le first 
which 
ninary 
uarrel, 
lerplot, 

It army 
up ha 



a from 
Trojans 
inwbile 

t from 

\ army 

dttion). 

elaus— 
Priam 



throdite 
to the 



HOMER 



635 



IX. Agamemnon stads an embassy by night, offering Achilles 

restitution end full amends— Achilles refuses. 
X. Doloneia— Night expedition of Odysseus and 

Diomede (in all probability added later). 
XT. Aristeia of Agaraem non— he is wounded — Wounding 

of Otomede and Odysseus. 
Achilles sends Antilochus to inquire about Machaon. 
XII. Storming of the wall— the Trojans reach the ships. 

XIII. Zeus ceases to watch the field — Poseidon secretly 
comes to the aid of the Greeks. 

XIV. Sleep of Zeus, by the contrivance of Hera. 

XV. Zeus awakened— Restores the advantage to the Tro- 

jans— Ajax alone defends the ships. 
XVI. Achilles is persuaded to allow Patroclus to take the held. 
Pat roc I us drives back the Trojans— kills Sarpedon— 
is himself killed by Hector. 
XVI I. Battle for the body of Patroclus-Aristeiaof Menelaus. 

XVI II. News of the death of Patroclus is brought to Achilles- 
Thetis comes with the Nereids— promises to obtain new 
armour for him from Hephaestus. 

The shield of Achilles described, 

XIX. Reconciliation of Achilles— His grief and desire to avenge 
Patroclus. 

XX. The god* come down to the plain— Combat of Achilles 



XXI. 



with Aeneas and Hector, who escape, 
slaif 



against 



The Scamander is choked with 

Achilles, who is saved by Hephaestus. 

XXII. Hector alone stands against Achilles— his flight 

round the walls — he is slain. 
XXIII. Burial of Patroclus— Funeral games. 

XXIV. Priam ransoms the body of Hector— his burial. 

Such is the " action " (rpafa) which in Aristotle's opinion 
showed the superiority of Homer to all later epic poets. But the 
proof that his scheme was the work of a great poet does not 
depend merely upon the artistic unity which excited the wonder 
of Aristotle. A number oh separate " lays " might conceivably 
be arranged and connected by a man of poetical taste in a 
manner that would satisfy all requirements. In such a case, 
however, the connecting passages would be slight and weak. 
Now, in the Iliad these passages are the finest and most character- 
istic. The element of connexion and unity is the story of the 
" wrath of Achilles "; and we have only to look at the books 
which give the story of the wrath to see how essential they are. 
Even if the ninth book is rejected {as Grote proposed), there 
remain the speeches of the first, sixteenth and nineteenth books. 
These speeches form the cardinal points in the action of ihe Iliad 
— the framework into which everything else is set; and they 
have also the best title to the name of Homer. 

The further question, however, remains, — What shorter 
narrative piece fulfilling the conditions of an independent poem 
has Lachmann succeeded in disengaging from the existing 
Hied? It must be admitted that when tried by this test his 
" lays " generally fail. The " quarrel of the chiefs," the " muster 
of the army," the " duel of Paris and Menelaus," Ac, are excellent 
beginnings, but have no satisfying conclusion. And the reason 
is not far to seek. The Iliad is not a history, nor is it a series 
of incidents in the history, of the siege. It turns entirely upon 
a single incident, occupying a few days only. The several 
episodes of the poem are not so many distinct stories, each with 
an interest of its own. They are only parts of a single main 
event. Consequently the type of epic poem which would be 
produced by an aggregation of shorter lays is not the type 
which we have in the Iliad. Rather the Iliad is itself a single 
lay which has grown with the growth of poetical art to the 
dimensions of an epic. 

But the original nucleus and parts of the incidents may be 
the work of a single great poet, and yet other episodes may be 
of different authorship, wrought into the structure of the poem 
to later times. Various theories have been based on this supposi- 
tion. Grote in particular held that the original poem, which 
he called the AchillcTs, did not include books ii.-vii., ix., X., xxiii., 
xxlv. Such a view may be defended somewhat as follows. 

Of the books which relate the events during the absence of 
Achilles from the Greek ranks (ii.-xv.), the last five are directly 
related to the main action. They describe the successive steps 
by which the Greeks are driven back, first from the plain to 
the rampart, then to their ships. Moreover, three of the chief 
heroes, Agamemnon, Diomede* and Ulysses, are wounded, and 



this circumstance, as Larhmsnn himself admitted, is steadily 
kept in mind throughout. It is otherwise with the earlier books 
(especially iL-vii.). The chief incidents in that part of the poem— 
the panic rush to the ships, the duels of Paris and Menelaus, and 
of Hector and Ajax, the Aristeia of Diomede— stand in no 
relation to the mainspring of the poem, the promise made by 
Zeus to Thetis. It is true that in the thirteenth and fourteenth 
books the purpose of Zeus is thwarted for a time by other gods; 
but in books ii.-vii. it is not so much thwarted as ignored. 
Further, the events follow without sufficient connexion. The 
truce of the third book is broken by Pandarus, and Agamemnon 
passes along the Greek ranks with words of encouragement, but 
without a hint of the treachery just committed. The Aristeia 
of Diomede ends in the middle of the sixth book; he is uppermost 
in ail thoughts down to ver. 311, but from this point, in the 
meetings of Hector with Helen and Andromache, and again in 
the seventh book when Hector challenges the Greek chiefs, 
his prowess is forgotten. Once more, some of the incidents 
seem to belong properly to the beginning of the war. The joy 
of Menelaus on seeing Paris, Priam's ignorance of the Greek 
leaders, the speeches of Agamemnon in his review of the ranks 
(in book iv.), the building of the wall— all these are in place after 
the Greek landing, but hardly in the ninth year of the siege. 

On the other hand, it may be said, the second book opens 
with a direct reference to. the events of the first, and the mention 
of Achilles in the speech of Thersites (ii. 350 sqq.) is sufficient to 
keep the main course of events in view. The Catalogue is con- 
nected with its place in the poem by the lines about Achilles 
(686-694). When Diomede is at the height of his Aristeia Helenus 
says (//. vi 99), " We did not so fear even Achilles." And when 
in the third book Priam asks Helen about the Greek captains, or 
when in the seventh book nine champions come forward to 
contend with Hector, the want of the greatest hero of all is 
sufficiently felt. If these passages do not belong to the period 
of the wrath of Achilles, how are we to account for his con- 
spicuous absence ? 

Further, the want of smoothness and unity which is visible in 
this part of the Iliad may be due to other causes than difference 
of date or authorship. A national poet such as the author of 
the Iliad cannot always choose or arrange his matter at his own 
will. He is bound by the traditions of his art, and by the feelings 
and expectations of his hearers. The poet who brought the 
exploits of Diomede into the Iliad doubtless had his reasons for 
doing so, which were equally strong whether he was* the poet .of 
the Achillefs or a later Homerid or rhapsodist. And if some of the 
incidents (those of the third book in particular) seem to belong 
to the beginning of the war, it must be considered that poetically, 
and to the bearers of the Iliad, the war opens in the third book, 
and the incidents are of the kind that is required in such a place. 
The truce makes a pause which heightens the interest of the 
impending battle; the duel and the scene on the walls are 
effective in bringing some of the leading characters on the stage, 
and in making us acquainted with the previous history. The 
story of Paris and Helen especially, and the general position of 
affairs in Troy, is put before us in a singularly vivid manner. 
The book in short forms so good a prologue to the action of the 
war that we can hardly be wrong in attributing it to the genius 
which devised the rest of the Iliad. 

The case against the remaining books is of a different kind, 
The ninth and tenth seem like two independent pictures of the 
night before the great battle of xi.-xvii. Either is enough to fill 
the space in Homer's canvas; and the suspicion arises (as when 
two Platonic dialogues bear the same name) that if either had 
been genuine, the other would not have come into existence. 
If one of the two is to be rejected it must be the tenth, which is 
certainly the less Homeric. It relates a picturesque adventure, 
conceived in a vein more approaching that of comedy than any 
other part of the Iliad. Moreover, the language in several places 
exhibits traces of post-Homeric date. The ninth book, on the 
other hand, was rejected by Grote, chiefly on the grounds that 
the embassy to Achilles ought to have put an end to the quarrel, 
and that it is ignored in later passages, especially in the speeches 



636 



HOMER 



of Achilles (ri. 600; xvi. 7a, $s). His argument, however, 
rests on an assumption which we are apt to bring with us to the 
reading of the Iliad, but which is not borne out by its language, 
viz. that there was some definite atonement demanded by 
Achilles, or due to him according to the custom and sentiment 
of the time. But in the Iliad the whole stress is laid on the anger 
of Achilles, which can only be satisfied by the defeat and extreme 
peril of the Greeks. 1 He is influenced by his own feeling, and 
by nothing else. Accordingly, in the ninth book, when they 
are still protected by the rampart (see 34ft sqq.), be rejects gifts and 
fair words alike; in the sixteenth he is moved by the tears and 
entreaties of Patroclus, and the sight of the Greek ships on fire; 
in the nineteenth his anger is quenched in grief. But he makes 
no conditions, either in rejecting the offers of the embassy or in 
returning to the Greek army. And this conduct is the result, 
not only of his fierce and inexorable character, but also (as the 
silence of Homer shows) of the want of any general rules or 
principles, any code of morality or of honour, which would have 
required him to act in a different way. 

Finally, Grote objected to the two last books that they prolong 
the action of the Iliad beyond the exigencies of a coherent 
scheme. Of the two, the twenty-third could more easily be 
spared. In language, and perhaps in style and manner, it is 
akin to the tenth; while the twenty-fourth is in the pathetic 
vein of the ninth, and like it serves to bring out new aspects 
of the character of Achilles. 

Dr E. Kammer has given some strong reasons for doubting the 
genuineness of the passage in book xx. describing the duel between 
Achilles and Aeneas (79-352). The incident is certainly very much 
out of keeping with the vehement action of that part of the poem, 
and especially with the moment when Achilles returns to the field, 
eager to meet Hector and avenge the death of his friend. The 
interpolation (if it is one) is probably due to local interests. It 
contains the well-known prophecy that the descendants of Aeneas are 
to rule over the Trojans, — pointing to the existence of an Aenead 
dynasty in the Troad. So, too, the legend of Anchises in the Hymn 
to Aphrodite is evidently local ; and Aeneas becomes more prominent 
in the later epics, especially the Cypria and the 'IXiov skpau of 
Arctious. 

. Slruclurt of the Odyssey.— 1b the Odyssey, as in the Iliad, the 
events related fall within a short space of time. The difficulty 
of adapting the long wanderings of Ulysses to a plan of this 
type is got over by the device— first met with in the Odyssey~ 
of making the hero tell the story of his own adventures. In 
this way the action is made to begin almost immediately before 
the actual return of Ulysses. Up to the time when he reaches 
Ithaca it moves on three distinct scenes: we follow the fortunes 
of Ulysses, of Telemachus on his voyage in the Peloponnesus, 
and of Penelope with the suitors. The art with which these 
threads are woven together was recognized by Wolf himself, 
who admitted the difficulty of applying his theory to the 
" admirabilis summa et compages" of the poem. Of the 
comparatively few attempts which have been made to dissect 
the Odyssey, the most moderate and attractive is that of Professor 
A. Kirchhoff of Berlin. 1 

According to Kirchhoff, the Odyssey as we have it is the result of 
additions made to an original nucleus. There was first of all a 
" Return of Odysseus," relating chiefly the adventures with the 
Cyclops, Calypso and the Phaeacians; then a continuation, the 
scene of which lay in Ithaca, embracing the bulk of books xiii.-xxiii. 
The poem so formed was enlarged at some time between OL 30 and 
01. 50 by the stories of books x.-xii. (Circe, the Sirens, Scylla. &c), 
and the adventures of Telemachus. Lastly, a few passages were 
interpolated in the time of Peisistratus. 

The proof that the scenes in Ithaca are by a later hand than the 
ancient " Return " is found chiefly in a contradiction discussed by 
Kirchhoff in his sixth dissertation (pp. 135 sqq., ed. 1869). Sometimes 
Ulysses is represented as aged and worn by toil, so that Penelope, 
for instance, cannot recognize him; sometimes he is really in the 
prime of heroic vigour, and his appearing as a beggarly old man is 
the work of Athena's wand. The first of these representations is 
evidently natural, considering the twenty eventful years that have 
passed; but the second. Kirchhoff holds, fs the Ulysses of Calypso's 



island and the PhaeacJan court. He concludes that the aged llyaees 
belongs to the " continuation " (the change wrought by Athena's 
wand oetng a device to reconcile the two views), and hence chat the 
continuation is the work of a different author. 

Ingenious as this is, there is really very slender ground for 
Kirchhoff'* thesis. The passages in the second half of the Odyssey 
which describe the appearance of Ulysses do not give tw veil- 
marked representations of him. Sometimes Athena disguises bias 
as a decrepit beggar, sometimes she bestows on him supernatural 
beauty and vigour. It must be admitted that we are not told 
exactly how long in each case the effect of these changes lasted. 
But neither answers to his natural appearance, or to the appearance 
which he is imagined to present in the earlier books. In the palace 
of Alcinous, for instance, it is noticed that he b vigorous but 
" marred by many ills " (Od. viii. 137); and this agrees with the 
scenes of recognition in the latter part of the poem. 

The arguments by which Kirchhoff seeks to prove that the stories 
of books x>xii. are much later than those of book ix. are not more 
convincing. He points out some resemblances between these three 
books and the Argonautic fables, among them the circumstance that 
a fountain Artacia occurs in both. In the Argonautic story this 
fountain is placed ia the neighbourhood of Cyzkus, and answers to 
an actual fountain known in Historical times. Kirchhoff argues that 
the Artacia of the Argonautic story must have been taken from the 
real Artacia, and the Artacia of the Odyssey again from that of the 
Argonautic story. And as Cyzicus was settled from Miletus, he 
infers that both sets of stories must be comparatively late. It is 
more probable, surely, that the name Artacia occurred independ- 
ently (as most geographical names are found to occur) in more than 
one place. Or it may be that the Artacia of the Odyssey suggested 
the name to the colonists of Cyxkus, whence it was adopted into 
the later versions of the Argonautic story. The further argument 
that the Nostoi recognized a son of Calypso by Ulysses but no son 
of Circe, consequently that Circe was unknown to the poet of the 
Nostoi, rests (in tbe first place) upon a conjectural alteration of a 
passage in Eustathius, and, moreover, has all tbe weakness of an 
argument from silence, in addition to. the uncertainty arising from 



our very slight knowledge of the author whose silence is in question. 
*" Kirchhoff finds traces in books x>xti. of their having 



Finally, when 1 



1 On this point sec a paper by Professor Packard in the Trans, of 
the American Philological Association (1876). 

» Die Composition dtr Odyssee (Berlin, 1860). A full discussion of 
this book is given by Dr E. Kammer, Die EinkeU der Odyssee (Leipzig. 
1873). 



been originally told by the poet himself instead of being pot in the 
mouth of his hero, we feel that inaccuracies of this kind are apt to 
creep in wherever a fictitious story is thrown into the form of an 
autobiography. 

Inquiries conducted with the refinement which characterises 
those of Kirchhoff are always instructive, and his book contains very 
many just observations; but it is impossible to admit his main 
conclusions. And perhaps we may infer that no similar attempt can 
be more successful. It does not indeed follow that the Odyssey is 
free from interpolations. The N«cUa of book xi. may be later (as 
Lauer maintained), or it may contain additions, which could easily 
be inserted in a description of the kind. And the last book is pro- 
bably by a different hand, as the ancient critics believed. But the 
unity of the Odyssey as a whole is apparently beyond the reach of 
the existing weapons of criticism. 

Chorisvntes.—When we are satisfied that each of the great 
Homeric poems is either wholly or mainly the work of a single 
poet, a question remains which has been matter of c ontr ov ersy 
in ancient as well as modern times— Are they the work of the 
same poet? Two ancient grammarians, Xeno and HeManscua, 
were known as the "separators" (of xupifoTei); and Arist- 
archus appears to have written a treatise against their heresy. 
In modern times some of the greatest names have been on the 
side of the " Cborizontes." 

If, as has been maintained in tbe preceding pages, the external 
evidence regarding Homer is of no value, the problem now 
before us may be stated in this form; Given two poems of 
which nothing is known except that they are of the same school 
of poetry, what is tbe probability that they are by the same 
author? We may find a fair parallel by imagining two plays 
drawn at hazard from the works of the great tragic writers. 
It is evident that the burden of proof would rest with those 
who held them to be by the same hand. 

Tbe arguments used in this discussion have been of very various 
calibre. Tbe ancient Chorizontes observed that the messenger 
of Zeus is Iris in the Iliad, but Hermes in the Odyssey, that the 
wife of Hephaestus is one of the Charites in the Iliad, but 
Aphrodite in the Odyssey; that the heroes in the Iliad do not 
eat fish; that Crete has a hundred cities according to the 
Iliad, and only ninety according to the Odyssey; that Tporipotft 
is used in the Iliad of place, in the Odyssey of time, Arc. Modern 
scholars have added to the list, especially by making careful 
comparisons of the two poems in respect of vocabulary and 



HOMER 



637 



grammatical forms. Nothing is more difficult than to assign 
the degree of weight to be given to such facts. The difference 
of subject between the two poems is so great that it leads to 
the most striking differences of detail, especially in the voca- 
bulary. For instance, the word <t>6fios, which in Homer means 
"flight in battle" (not "fear"), occurs thirty-nine times in 
the J Had, and only once in the Odyssey; but then there are 
no battles in the Odyssey* Again, the verb triryrvnt, " to 
break/' occurs forty-eight times in the Iliad, and once in 
the Odyssey,— the reason being that it is constantly used of 
breaking the armour of an enemy, the gate of a city, the hostile 
ranks, &c. Once more, the word oKora, "darkness," occurs 
fourteen times in the Iliad, once in the Odyssey, But in every 
one of the fourteen places it is used of " darkness " coining 
over the sight of a fallen warrior. On the other side, if words 
such as baajuvdos, " a bath," x*P*^, " a basin for the hands," 
\iaxq, " a place to meet and talk," &c, are peculiar to the 
Odyssey, we have only to remember that the scene in the Iliad 
is hardly ever laid within any walls except those of a tent. 
These examples will show that mere statistics of the occurrence 
of words prove little, and that we must begin by looking to the 
subject and character of each poem. When we do so, we at 
once find ourselves in the presence of differences of the broadest 
kind. The Iliad is much more historical in tone and character. 
The scene of the poem is a real place, and the poet sings (as 
Ulysses says of Demodocus) as though he had been present 
himself, or had heard from one who had been. The supernatural 
element is confined to an interference of the gods, which to the 
common eye hardly disturbs the natural current of affairs. 
The Odyssey, on the contrary, is full of the magical and romantic 
— " speciosa miracula, " as Horace called them. Moreover, these 
marvels — which in their original form are doubtless as old as 
anything in the Iliad, since in fact they are part of the vast 
stock of popular tales (AfBrehen) diffused all over the world — 
are mixed up in the Odyssey with the heroes oj the Trojan war. 
This has been especially noticed in the case of the story of 
Polyphemus, one that is found in many countries, and in versions 
which cannot all be derived from Homer. W. Grimm has pointed 
out that the behaviour of Ulysses in that story is senseless and 
foolhardy, utterly beneath the wise and much-enduring Ulysses 
of the Trojan war. The reason is simple; he is not the Ulysses 
of the Trojan war, but a being of the same world as Polyphemus 
himself— the world of giants and ogres. The question then is — 
How long must the name of Ulysses have been familiar in the 
legend (Sage) of Troy before it made its way into the tales of 
giants and ogres (Marcken), where the poet of the Odyssey 
found it? 

Again, the Trojan legend has itself received some extension 
between the time of the Iliad and that of the Odyssey, The 
story of the Wooden Horse is not only unknown to the Iliad, 
but is of a kind which we can hardly imagine the poet of the 
Iliad admitting. The part taken by Neoptolemus seems also 
to be a later addition. The tendency to amplify and complete 
the story shows itself still more in the Cyclic poets. Between 
the Iliad and these poets the Odyssey often occupies an inter- 
mediate position. 

This great and significant change in the treatment of the heroic 
legends is accompanied by numerous minor differences (such 
as the ancients remarked) in belief, in manners and institutions, 
and in language. These differences bear out the inference that 
the Odyssey is of a later age. The progress of reflection is especially 
shown in the higher ideas entertained regarding the gods. The 
turbulent Olympian court has almost disappeared. Zeus has 
acquired the character of a supreme moral ruler; and although 
Athena and Poseidon are adverse influences in the poem, the 
notion of a direct contest between them is scrupulously avoided. 
The advance of morality is shown in the more frequent use of 
terms such as " just " (SUatos), " piety " (Sabj), " insolence " 
(tfiots), "god-fearing" (0mMfi), "pure" (fryros); and also 
in the plot of the story, which is distinctly a contest between 
right and wrong. In matters bearing upon the arts of life it 
U unsafe to press the silence of the Iliad. We may note, however, 



the difference between the house of Priam, surrounded by distinct 
dwellings for his many sons and daughters, and the houses of 
Ulysses and Alcinous, with many chambers under a single roo£ 
The singer, too, who is so prominent a figure in the Odyssey 
can hardly be thought to be absent from the Iliad merely 
because the scene is laid in a camp. 

Style of Homer.— A few words remain to be said on the style 
and general character of the Homeric poems, and on the com- 
parisons which may be made between Homer and analogous 
poetry in other countries. 

The cardinal qualities of the style of Homer have been pointed 
out once for all by Matthew Arnold. " The translator of Homer," 
he says, " should above all be penetrated by a sense of four 
qualities of his author— that he is eminently rapid ; that he 
is eminently plain and direct, both in the evolution of his thought 
and in the expression of it, that is, both in his syntax and in 
his words; that he is eminently plain and direct in the substance 
of his thought, that is, in his matter and ideas; and, finally, 
that he is eminently noble " (On Translating Homer, p. 9). 

The peculiar rapidity of Homer is due in great measure to his 
use of the hexameter verse. It is characteristic of early literature 
that the evolution of the thought— that is, the grammatical 
form of the sentence— is guided by the structure of the verse; 
and the correspondence which consequently obtains between the 
rhythm and the grammar— the thought being given out in lengths, 
as it were, and these again divided by tolerably uniform pauses 
— produces a swift flowing movement, such as is rarely found 
when the periods have been constructed without direct reference 
to the metre. That Homer possesses this rapidity without 
falling into the corresponding faults— that is, without becoming 
either " jerky " or monotonous— is perhaps the best proof of 
his unequalled poetical skill. The plainness and directness! 
both of thought and of expression, which characterize Homer 
were doubtless qualities of his age; but the author of the Iliad 
(like Voltaire, to whom Arnold happily compares him) must 
have possessed the national gift in a surpassing degree. The 
Odyssey is in this respect perceptibly below the level of the Iliad. 

Rapidity or ease of movement, plainness of expression and 
plainness of thought, these are not the distinguishing qualities 
of the great epic poets— Virgil, Dante, Milton. On the contrary, 
they belong rather to the humbler epico-lyrical school for which 
Homer has been so often claimed. The proof that Homer does 
not belong to that school— that his poetry is not in any true 
sense "ballad-poetry" — is furnished by the higher artistic 
structure of his poems (already discussed), and as regards style 
by the fourth of the qualities distinguished by Arnold— the 
quality of nobleness. It is his noble and powerful style, sustained 
through every change of idea and subject, that finally separates 
Homer from all forms of " ballad-poetry "and "popular epic." 1 

But while we are on our guard against a once common error, 
we may recognize the historical connexion between the Iliad 
and Odyssey and the " ballad " literature which undoubtedly 
preceded them in Greece. It may even be admitted that the 
swift-flowing movement, and the simplicity of thought and 
style, which we admire in the Iliad are an inheritance from the 
earlier " lays "—-the jtXea ori/tir such as Achilles and Patroclus 
sang to the lyre in their tent. Even the metre — the hexameter 
verse— may be assigned to them. But between these lays and 
Homer we must place the cultivation of epic poetry as an art. 1 
The pre-Homeric lays doubtless furnished the elements of such 
a poetry — the alphabet, so to speak, of the art; but they must 
have been refined and transmuted before they formed poems 
like the Iliad and Odyssey, 

A single example will illustrate this. In the scene on the 
walls of Troy, in the third book of the Iliad, after Helen has 
pointed out Agamemnon, Ulysses and Ajax in answer to Priam's 

1 " As a poet Homer must be acknowledged to excel Shakespeare in 



a trumpet, and this is much ; but Homer, but the few artists in the 
grand style, can do more — they can refine the raw natural man, they 
can transmute him " {fin Translating Homer, p. 61). 



63* 



HOMER 



questions, she goes on unasked to name Idomeneus. 
whose mind ia full of the ballad manner, fastens upon this as an 
irregularity. " The unskilful transition from Ajax to Idomeneus, 
about whom no question had been asked," he cannnot attribute to 
the original poet of the lay (Betrachtungen, p. 15, ed. 1865). 
But, as was pointed out by A. Rfimer * this is exactly the varia- 
tion which a poet would introduce to relieve the primitive 
ballad-like sameness of question and answer; and moreover it 
forms the transition to the lines about the Dioscuri by which the 
scene is so touchingly brought to a dose. ^ 

' Analogies. — The development of epic " poetry' (properly^so 
called) out of the oral songs or ballads of a country is a process 
which in the nature of things can seldom be observed. 4 «' It seems 
clear, however, that the hypothesis of epics such as the Iliad 
and Odyssey having been formed by putting together or even 
by working up shorter poems finds no support from analogy. •«* 
• Narrative poetry of great interest is found in several countries 
(such as Spain and Servia), in which it has never attained to 
the epic stage. In Scandinavia, in Lithuania, in Russia, accord* 
ing to Gaston Paris (Histoire poiiique de Charlemagne, p. 9), the 
national songs have been arrested in a form which may be called 
intermediate between contemporary poetry and the epic. The 
true epics are those of India, Persia, Greece, Germany, Britain and 
France. Most of these, however, fail to afford any useful points of 
comparison, either from their utter nnlikmm to Homer, or 
because there is no evidence of the existence of anterior popular 
songs. The most instructive, perhaps the only instructive, 
parallel is to be found in the French " chansons de gate/' of 
which the Chanson de Roland is the earliest and best example. 
These poems are traced back with much probability to the xoth 
century. They are epic in character, and were recited by pro- 
fessional jongleurs (who may be compared to the tuoi&cL of 
Somer). But as early as the 7th century we come upon traces 
short lays (the so-called cantilenes) which were in the mouths 
of all and were sung in chorus. It has been held that the 
chansons de geste were formed by joining together " bunches " 
of these earlier cantilenes, and this was the view taken by 
Leon Gautier in the first edition of Les &pop*es franfaises (1865). 
In the second edition, of which the first volume appeared in 
1878, he abandoned this theory. He believes that the epics 
were generally composed under the influence of earlier songs. 
" Our first epic poets," he says, " did not actually and materially 
patch together pre-existent cantilenes. They were only inspired 
by these popular songs; they only borrowed from them the 
traditional and legendary elements. In short, they took nothing 
from them but the ideas, the spirit, the life; they ' found ' 
(ils ont trouve) all the rest " (p. 80). But he admits that " some 
of the old poems may have been borrowed from tradition, without 
any intermediary " (ibid.); and when it is considered that the 
traces of the " cantilenes " are slight, and that the degree in 
which they inspired the later poetry must be a matter of im- 
pression rather than of proof, it does not surprise us to find 
other scholars (notably Paul Meyer) attaching less importance 
to them, or even doubting their existence.* 
I When Leon Gautier shows how history passes into legend, 
and legend again into romance, we are reminded of the difference 

1 Die exegetischen Seholien der IJias, p. vii. 

• " On comprend que de* chants populaires nes d'un evencment 
eclatant, victoire ou defaite, puisseot contribuer & former la tradition, 
a en arrcicr les traits: ils peuvent aussi deventr le centre de legendes 
qui ae forment pour les expliquer; et de la sorte leur substance au 
moins arrive au poete epigue qui l'introduit dans sa composition. 
Voila ce qui a pu se produire pour de chants tres-courts, dont il est 
d'ailleurs aussi difficile d'affirmcr que de nier I'existence. Mais on 



e'est le systeme de Wolf sur les po&nes homeriqucs, et de Laehmann 
sur les Nibclungen. Mais, au moins en ce qui concerne ce dernier 
poeme, le systeme est d6truit. ... On tire encore argument de* 
romances espagnolcs, qui. dit-on, eont des ' cantilenes ' non encore 
arrivecs a l'ipopoe. . . . Et e'est le malheur de cette theorie: faute 
de preuves directes, elle cherche des analogies au dehors; en Espagne, 
cue trouve de* ' cantilenes,' mais pas d 'epopee; en Allemagne, une 
epopee, mais pas de cantilenes I " {/bid. p. 66). 



noticed above between the Iliad and the Odyssey, and between 
Homer and the early Cyclic poems. And the peculiar degradation 
of Homeric characters which appears in some poets (especiaUy 
Euripides) finds a parallel in the later chansons de geste.* 

The comparison of Homer with the great literary epics cans 
for more discursive treatment than would be in place here. 
Some external differences have been already indicated. Lflte 
the French epics, Homeric poetry is indigenous, and is distin- 
guished by this fact, and by the ease of movement and the 
simplicity which result from it, from poets such as Virgil, Dante 
and Milton. It is also distinguished from them by the com- 
parative absence of underlying motives or sentiment. In Virgil's 
poetry a sense of the greatness of Rome and Italy is the leading 
motive of a passionate rhetoric, partly veiled by the " chosen 
delicacy" of his language. Dante and Milton are stui more 
faithful exponents of the religion and politics of their time. 
Even the French epics are pervaded by the sentiment of fear and 
hatred of the Saracens. But in Homer the interest is purely 
dramatic. There is no strong antipathy of race or religion; 
the war turns on no political event; the capture of Troy lies 
outside the range of the Iliad. Even the heroes are not the chief 
national heroes of Greece. The interest lies wholly (so far as we 
can see) in the picture of human action and feeling. 



* A. Lang, Contemporary Renew, vol aviL, N.S* p> 588. 



HOMER, W.— HOMESTEAD AND EXEMPTION LAWS 639 



I 

lis 
he 
latter'* Homer and his Ate. I0O7). 

The Ho «e 

of G. Cur id. 

The best 1 L. 

Ahrens (G lg. 

Pick: Dii m 

vnederherg d., 

1886); W 3n 

Homeric s n* 

uhungen ( c, 

HarteTs J no 

Homer ico ur 

Geschichte J), 

ix. 294 se ter 

(Bonn, 18 6) 

are of the ...„ ^ x is- 

thai, 1842) is a useful collection of facta. Buttmana's Lexiiogus, as 
an example of method, is still worth study. 

The antiquities of Homer — using the word in a wide sense — may 
be studied in the following; books: Vdtcker, Vber homerische 
Geographic und Wcltkund* (Hanover, 1830); Nagelsbach's Homeri- 
sche Tneologie (2nd ed.. Nuremberg, 1861) ; H. Bruno, Die Kunsl bei 
Homer (Munich, 1868); W. W. Lloyd, On, the Homeric Design of 

R tos 

at 0; 

W rt, 

Si of 

G tee 

i! 

of 
& ad 

(I -d, 

b; he 

cc by 

D 

' HOMER, WINSLOW (1836-1926), American painter, was born 
in Boston, U.S.A., on the 24th of February 1836. At the age 
of nineteen he was apprenticed to a lithographer. Two years 
later he opened a studio in Boston, and devoted much of his 
time to making drawings for wood-engravers. In 1859 be re- 
moved to New York, where he studied in the night-school of the 
National Academy of Design. During the American Civil War 
he was with the troops at the front, and contributed sketches to 
Harper's Weekly. The war also furnished him with the subjects 
for the first two pictures which he exhibited (1863), one of which 
was " Home, Sweet Home." His " Prisoners from the Front "— 
perhaps his most generally popular picture— was exhibited in 
New York in 1865, and also in Paris in 1867, where he was spend- 
ing the year in study. Among his other paintings in oil are 
" Snap the Whip " (which was exhibited at the Philadelphia 
Centennial Exhibition of 1876, and, in company with "The 
Country Schoolroom," at the Paris Salon the following year), 
" Eating Water-melon," " The Cotton Pickers," " Visit from the 
Old Mistress, Sunday Morning," " The Life-Line " and " The 
Coming of the Gale." His genius, however; has perhaps shown 
better in his works in water-colour, among which are his marine 
studies painted at Gloucester, Mass., and his " Inside the Bar," 
" The Voice from the Cliffs " (pictures of English fisherwomen), 
" Tynemouth," "I Wrecking of a Vessel " and " Lost on the 



Grand Banks." His work, which principally consists of genre 
pictures, is characterized by strength, rugged directness and 
unmistakable freshness and originality, rather than by technical 
excellence, grace of line or beauty of colour. He was little 
affected by European influences. His types and scenes, apart 
from his few English pictures, are distinctly American— soldiers 
in blue, New England children, negroes in the land of cotton, 
Gloucester fishermen and stormy .Atlantic seas. Besides being 
a member Of the Society of Painters in Water-color, New York, 
he was elected in 1864 an. associate and the following year a 
member of the National Academy of Design. 

HOMESTEAD, a borough of Allegheny county, Pennsylvania, 
U.S.A., on the Monongahela river, 8 m. S.E. of Pittsburg. 
Pop. (<i8oo) 7911; (1900) 12,554, of whom 3604 were foreign-born 
and 640 were negroes; (U.S. -census, 1910) 18,7x3. It is served 
by the Pennsylvania and the Pittsburg & Lake Erie railways, 
and by the short Union Railroad, which connects with the 
Bessemer & Lake Erie and the Wabash railways. The borough 
has a Carnegie library and the CM. Schwab Manual Training 
School. Partly in Homestead but chiefly in the adjoining borough 
of MunhaH (and therefore not reported as in Homestead by tne 
U.S. Census) is one of the largest plants in the United States for 
the manufacture of steel used in the construction of bridges and 
sted-frame buildings and of steel armour-plate, and this is 
its chief industry; among Homestead's other manufactures are 
glass and fire-bricks. The water-works are owned and operated 
by the municipality. Homestead was first settled in 1871, and 
it was incorporated in 1880. In 1892 a labour strike lasting 
143 days and one of the most serious in the history of the United 
States was carried on here by the National Amalgamated 
Association of Iron and Steel Workers of the United States 
against the Carnegie Steel Company. The arrival (on the 6th 
of July) of a force of about 200 Pinkerton detectives from New 
York and Chicago resulted in a fight in which about 10 men 
were killed, and to restore order two brigades of the state militia 
were called out. See Strikes and Lockouts. 

HOMESTEAD AND EXEMPTION LAWS, laws (principally 
in the United States) designed primarily either to aid the head 
of a family to acquire title to a place of residence or to protect 
the owner against loss of that title through seizure for debt. 
These laws have all been enacted in America since about the 
middle of the 19th century, and owe their origin to the demand 
for a population of the right sort in a new country, to the con- 
viction that the freeholder rather than the tenant is the natural 
supporter of popular government, to the effort to prevent 
insolvent debtors from becoming useless members of society, and 
to the belief that such laws encourage the stability of the family. 

By the cessions of several of the older states, and by various 
treaties with foreign countries, public lands have been acquired 
for the United States in every state and territory of the Union 
except the original thirteen, and Maine, Vermont, Kentucky, 
Tennessee and Texas. For a time they were regarded chiefly 
as a source of revenue, but about 1820, as the need of revenue 
for the payment of the national debt decreased and the in- 
habitants of an increasing number of new states became eager to 
have the vacant lands within their bounds occupied, the demand 
that the public lands should be disposed of more in the interest 
of the settler became increasingly strong, and the homestead 
idea originated. Until the advent of railways, however, the 
older states of the North were opposed to promoting the develop- 
ment of the West in this manner, and soon afterwards the 
Southern representatives in Congress opposed the general 
homestead bills in the interests of slavery, so that except in 
isolated cases where settlers were desired to protect some frontier, 
as in Florida and Oregon, and to a limited extent in the case of 
the Pre-emption Act of 1841 (see below), the homestead principle 
was not applied by the national government until the Civil 
Wat had begun. A general homestead bill was passed by Congress 
in i860, but this was vetoed by President James Buchanan; 
two years later, however, a similar bill became a law. The act 
of 1862 originally provided that any citizen of the United States, 
or applicant for citizenship, who was the head of a family, or 



640 



HOMESTEAD AND EXEMPTION LAWS 



twenty-one yean of age, or, if younger, had served not less than 
fourteen days in the army or navy of the United States during an 
actual war, might apply for 160 acres or less of unappropriated 
public lands, and might acquire title to this amount of land by 
residing upon and cultivating it for five years immediately 
following, and paying such fees as were necessary to cover the 
cost of administration; a homestead acquired in this manner 
was exempted from seizure for any debt contracted prior to the 
date of issuing the patent. A commutation clause of this act 
permitted title to be acquired after only six months of residence 
by paying $1.25 per acre, as provided in the Pre-emption Act 
of 1842. Act of 1872, amended in loox, allows any soldier or 
seaman, who has served at least ninety days in the army or navy 
of the United States during the Civil War, the Spanish-American 
War or in the suppression of the insurrection in the Philippines, 
and was honourably discharged, to apply for a homestead, and 
permits the deduction of the time of such service, or, if discharged 
on account of wounds or other disability incurred in the line of 
duty, the full term of bis enlistment, from the five years otherwise 
required for perfecting title, except that in any case he shall 
have resided upon and cultivated the land at least one year 
before the passing of title. Since 1866 mineral lands have been 
for the most part excluded from entry as homesteads. 
, In accordance with the provisions of the homestead law, 
718,930 homesteads, containing 06,405,4x4 acres, were estab- 
lished in forty-two years, and besides this principal act, Congress 
has passed several minor ones of a like nature, that is, acts designed 
to benefit the actual settler who improves the land. Thus the 
Pre-emption Act of 1841 gave to any bead of a family or any single 
person over twenty-one years of age, who was a citizen of the 
United States or had declared his intention to become one, 
permission to purchase not to exceed 160 acres of public lands 
after he had resided upon and improved the same for six months; 
the Timber-Culture Act of 1873 allowed title to 160 acres of 
pubb'c prairie-land to be given to any one who should plant upon 
it 40 acres of timber, and keep the same in good growing con- 
dition for ten years; and the Desert-Land Act of 1877 «* ve to 
any citizen of the United States, or to any person who had 
declared his intention to become one, the privilege of acquiring 
title to 640 acres of such public land as was not included in 
mineral or timber lands, and would not without irrigation produce 
an agricultural crop, by paying twenty-five cents an acre and 
creating for the tract an artificial water-supply. These several 
land acts, however, invited fraud to such an extent that in time 
they promoted the establishment of large land holdings by 
ranchmen and others quite as much as they encouraged settle- 
ment and cultivation, and so great was this evil that in 189 1 the 
Timber-Culture and Pre-emption Acts were repealed, the total 
amount of land that could be acquired by any one person under 
the several land laws was limited to 320 acres, the Desert-Land 
Act was so amended as to require an expenditure of at least three 
dollars an acre for irrigation, and the original Homestead Act 
was so amended as to disqualify any person who was already 
proprietor of more than 160 acres in any state or Territory of 
the Union for acquiring any more land under its provisions; 
and in 1896 a residence of fourteen months was required before 
permitting commutation or the purchase of title. But even 
these measures were inadequate to prevent fraud. In 1894 
Congress, in what is known as the Carey Act, donated to Cali- 
fornia, Oregon, Nevada, Washington, Idaho, Montana, Utah, 
Wyoming, Arizona, New Mexico and the Dakotas so much of 
1,000,000 acres each of desert-lands as each should cause to be 
irrigated, reclaimed and occupied within ten years, 1 not leas th 
20 acres of each 160 acres to be cultivated by actual settlers; 
and in several of these states and territories irrigating companies 
have been formed and land offered to settlers in amounts not 
exceeding 160 acres to each, on terms requiring the settler to 
purchase ample and perpetual water-rights. In 1002, Congress 
appropriated the proceeds of the sales of public lands in these 
states and territories to form a reclamation fund to be used for 
1 In 1901 it was provided that the ten years should date from the 
segregation of the land* from the public domain. 



the construction and maintenance of irrigation works, and lands 
reclaimed by this means are open to homestead entries, the entry- 
man being required to pay for the cost of reclamation in ten 
equal annual instalments without interest When Tezaa was 
admitted to the Union the disposal of its public lands was 
reserved to the state, and under its laws every person who is the 
head of a family and without a homestead may acquire titk 
to 160 acres of land by residing upon and improving it for 
three years; evtry unmarried man eighteen years of age or over 
may acquire title to 80 acres in the same way. 

A short time before the National Homestead Act tor aiding 
citizens to acquire homesteads went into operation, some of 
the state legislatures had passed homestead and exemption 
laws designed to protect homesteads or a certain amount of pro- 
perty against loss to the owners in case they should become 
insolvent debtors, and by the close of the century the legislative 
of nearly every state in the Union had passed a law of this nature. 
These laws vary greatly. In most states the exemption of a 
homestead or other property from liability for debts can be 
claimed only by the head of a family, but in Georgia it may be 
claimed by any aged or infirm person, by any trustee of a family 
of minor children, or by any person on whom any woman or 
girls are dependent for support; and in California, although 
the head of a family may claim exemption for a homestead valued 
at $5000, any other person may claim exemption for a homestead 
valued at $1000. In some states exemptions may be claimed 
cither for a farm limited to 40, 80, 160 or 200 acres, or for a 
house and one or more lots, usually limited in size, in a town, 
village or city; in other states the homestead for which exemp- 
tion may be claimed is limited in value, and this value varies 
from $500 to $5000. With the homestead are usually included 
the appurtenances thereto, and the courts invariably interpret 
the law liberally; but many states also exempt a specified 
amount of personal property, including wearing apparel, furni- 
ture, provisions, tools, libraries and in some cases domestic 
animals and stock in trade. A few states exempt no homestead 
and only a small amount of personal property; Maryland, 
for example, exempts only $100 worth of property besides money 
payable in the nature of insurance, or for relief, in the event 
of sickness, injury ox death. To some debts the exemption 
does not usually apply; the most common of these are taxes, 
purchase money, a debt secured by mortgage on the homestead. 
and debts contracted in making improvements upon it; in 
Maryland the only exception is a judgment for breach of promise 
to marry or in case of seduction. If the homestead belongs to 
a married person, the consent of both husband and wife b 
usually required to mortgage it. Finally, some states require 
that the homestead for which exemption is to be claimed shall 
be previously entered upon record, others require only occupancy, 
and still others permit the homestead to be designated whenever 
a claim is presented. 

Following the example of either the United States Congress 
or the state legislatures, the governments of several British 
colonial states and provinces have passed homestead laws. In 
Quebec every settler on public lands is allowed, after receiving 
a patent, an exemption of not to exceed 200 acres from that 
of his widow, of his, her or their children and descendants in 
the direct line. In Ontario an applicant for a homestead may 
have not to exceed 200 acres of unappropriated public land for 
farming purposes by building a house thereon, occupying it 
for five years, and bringing at least fifteen acres under cultiva- 
tion; the exemption of such a homestead from liability to 
seizure for debts is, however, limited to twenty years from 
the date of application for the land, and does not extend even 
during that period to rates or taxes. Manitoba, British Colombia, 
Queensland, New South Wales, South Australia, West Australia 
and New Zealand also have liberal homestead and exemption 
laws. 

See J. B. Sanborn, " Some Political Aspects of Homestead Legisla- 
tion," in The American Historical Review (190O); Edward Manson, 
" The Homestead Acts," in the Journal of the Society of Comparctm* 
Lc&slaUon (London, 1899); S. D. Thompson, A Trtmtite om 



HOMEYER— HOMICIDE 



641 



gomesteads and Exemptions (San Francisco. 1886); P. Bureau, 
r Homestead ou Flnsaisissabtliti de la petite bropri&U fonder* 
(Paris, 1894), and L. Vaeher, Le Homestead aux Etats-Ums (Paris, 
1899). (N.D.M.) 

HOMEYER* KARL GUSTAV (1795-1874)1 German jurist, 
was bqm on the 13th of August 179s at Wolgaat in Pomerania. 
After studying law at the universities of Berlin, Gditingen 
and Heidelberg (1813-1817), he settled as a Priootdocent, in 
1821, at the university of Berlin, where he became ordinary 
professor of law in 1827. His principal works are his edition 
of the Sachsenspiegel (in 3 vols., 1897, 3rd ed., 1861, containing 
also some other important sources of Saxon or Low German 
law), which is still unsurpassed in accuracy and sagacity of 
research, and his book on Die Hous- mud H of mar hen (1870), 
in which he has given a history of the use of trade-marks among 
all the Teutonic nations of Europe, and which is full of important 
elucidations of the history of law and also contains valuable 
contributions to the history of art and civilisation. In 1850 
Homeyer, was elected a member of the Berlin Academy of 
Sciences, in the Transactions of which he published various 
papers exhibiting profound learning (Vber die Hctmat, 185a ; 
Cenealogie dor Handsckriflen des Sacksenspiegels, 1859; Die 
StadibUcher des MittelaUers, i860; Dtr Drousigstc f 1864, &c). 
He died on the 20th of October 1874. 

HOMICIDE (Lat. homicidium), the general and neutral term 
for the killing of one human being by another. The nature 
of the responsibility of the slayer to the state and to the relatives 
of the slain has been one of the chief concerns of all systems 
of law from the earliest times, and it has been variously con- 
sidered from the points of view of the sanctity of human life, 
the interests of the sovereign, the injury to the family of the 
akin and the moral guilt, i.e. the motives and intentions, of 
the slayer. 

The earliest recorded laws (those of Khammurabi) do not 
contain any sweeping general provision as to the punishment 
of homicide. The death penalty is freely imposed but not 
for homicide. " If a man strike a gentleman's daughter that 
she dies, his own daughter is to be put to death, if a pool man's 
the slayer pays imina." In the Mosaic law the general command 
" Thou shalt not kill " of the Decalogue is in terms absolute. 
In primitive law homicide, however innocent, subjected the 
slayer to the lawful vengeance of the kindred of the slain, unless. 
he could make some composition with him. This lex talionis 
(a life for a life) resulted: (1) in a course of private justice 
which still survives in the vendetta of Corsica and Albania, and 
the blood feuds arising out of " difficulties " in the southern and 
western parts of the United States; (2) in the recognition of 
sanctuaries and cities, of refuge within whkh the avenger of 
blood might not penetrate to kill an innocent manslayer; and 
(3) in the system of wite, bote and wer, by which the life of 
every man had its assessed price payable to his chief and his 
next of kin. 

It took long to induce the relatives of the slain to appreciate 
anything beyond the fact of the death of their kinsman or 
to discriminate between intentional and accidental homicide. 
By the laws of Khammurabi (206, 308) striking a man in a 
quarrel without deadly intent but with fatal effect was treated 
as a matter for compensation according to the rank of the slam. 
The Pentateuch discriminates between the man " who lieth in 
wait for" or "cometh presumptuously" on "his neighbour to 
slay him with guile " (Exodus xxL 13, 14), and the man "who 
killeth his neighbour ignorantly whom he hated not in time past " 
(Dent. xix. 4). But even killing by misadventure exposed the 
slayer to the avenger of blood. "As a man goeth into the 
wood with his neighbour to hew wood, and his hand fetcheth 
a stroke with the axe to cut down a tree and the head sh'ppeth 
from the helve and lighteth upon his neighbour that he die: 
he shall flee into one of these cities (of refuge) and live " (Dent, 
xix. 5). 

Under the early laws of Teutonic and Celtic communities 
the inconveniences of the blood feud were gradually mitigated 
(tee CanoKAL Law) by the system of wite and wer (or eric), 



but the blood feud continued long in FriesJand and Lower 
Saxony, and in parts of Switzerland until the 16th century. 
In England under the Norman system homicide became a plea 
of the crown, and the rights of the kindred to private vengeance 
and to compensation were gradually superseded in favour of 
the right of the king to forfeitures where the homicide amounted 
to a crime (felony). 

Though homicide was thus made a public offence and not 
a matter for private vengeance, it took long to discriminate 
between those forms of homicide which should and those which 
should not be punished. 

The terms of act in English law used to describe criminal 
homicide are murder (mord, meurtre, murdrum), manslaughter 
and /do de se (or suicide by a person of sound mind). 

The original meaning of the word " murder " seems to have 
been secret homicide,—" Murdrum proprie dicUur mors alicujui 
occulta cujusinterfccter ignoratur " (Diahgus de Scaccario L x.); 
and Glanville says: Duo sunt genera homicidiL unum est quid 
dictiur murdrum quod nuUo xidemte nuUo scienU dam perpetratur, 
ita quod won assignatur clamor poputoris {hue and cry), est et 
aliud homicidium quod diciter simplex homicidium. After the 
Conquest, and for the protection of the ruling race, a fine (also 
called murdrum) was levied for the king on the hundred or other 
district in which a stranger was found dead, if the slayer was not 
brought to justice and the blood kin of the slain did not present 
Engtishry, there being a presumption (in favour of the Exchequer) 
that the deceased was a Frenchman. After the assize of Clarendon 
(1x66) the distinction between the killing of Normans and 
Englishmen gradually evaporated and the term murder came to 
acquire its present meaning of deliberate as distinct from 
secret homkide. In 1267 it was provided that the murder fine 
should not be levied in cases of death by "misadventure" 
(per infortunium). 1 But at that date and for long afterwards 
homicide in self-defence or by misadventure or even while of 
unsound mind involved at the least a forfeiture of goods, and 
required a pardon. These pardons, and restitution of the goods, 
became a matter of course, and the judges appear at a later date 
to have been in the habit of directing an acquittal in such cases. 
But it was not until 1828 that the innocence of excusable homicide 
was expressly declared. The rule is now expressed in s. 7 of the 
Offences against the Person Act 1861: "No punishment or 
forfeiture shall be incurred by any person who shall kill another 
by misfortune, or in bis own defence, or in any other manner 
without felony." 

The further differentiation between different degrees of 
criminal homicide was marked by legislation of Henry VIII. 
(1531) taking away benefit of clergy in the case of "wilful 
murder with malice prepensed " (aforethought), and that phrase 
is still the essential element in the definition of " wilful murder," 
which is committed "when a person of sound memory and 
discretion unlawfully killeth any reasonable creature or being 
and under the king's peace with malice aforethought either 
express or implied " (3 Co. Inst. 47). The whole development 
of the substantive law as to murder rests on judicial rulings as 
to the meaning of malice prepense coupled with the extrajudicial 
commentaries of Coke, Hale and Foster; for parliament, though 
often tempted by bills and codes, has never ventured on a 
legislative definition. Much discussion has ranged round the 
phrase "malice aforethought," and it has undoubtedly been 
expanded by judicial decision so as to create what is described 
as "constructive" murder. According to the view of the 
criminal code commissioners of 1879 (Pari. Pap., 1879, c. 23, 45, 
p. 23) the term " malice aforethought " is now a common name 
for all the following states of mind: — 

1. An intent, preceding the act, to kill or do grievous bodily harm 

to the person or to any other person: 

2. Knowledge that the act done is likely to produce such conse- 

quences, whether coupled with an intention to produce them 
or not: 

3. An intent to commit any felony: or 

4. An intent to resist an officer of police in the execution of his duty. 



1 See Select Pleas of Crown, 1 (Selden Society Publ.) ; Pollock and 
Maitland, Hist. Eng. Law, iL 458, 476, 478. 

2a 



6+2 



HOMICIDE 



The third form of malice aforethought has been much 
controverted. When it was first recognized as creating a liability 
for wilful murder almost all felonies were capital offences: but 
even at the end of the 17th century Lord Holt expressed a view 
that it should be limited to felonies involving violence or danger 
to life, e.g. assault with intent to rob, or setting fire to a dwelling- 
house. And Sir James Stephen's opinion is that, to justify 
conviction of murder by an act done with intent to commit a 
felony, the act done must be one dangerous to life or known 
to be likely to cause death. 

Starting with the definition above given, English law still 
retains so much of its medieval character as to presume all 
homicide to be " malicious, and therefore murder, unless it is 
either justified by the command or permission of the law, excused 
on the ground of accident or self-preservation, or aUeriated 
into manslaughter by being the involuntary consequence of some 
act not strictly lawful or occasioned by some sudden and suffi- 
ciently violent provocation." The truth of the facts alleged in 
justification, excuse or alleviation, is for the jury to determine: 
the question whether If true they support the plea for which they 
are put forward is for the court. 

In the administration of the English criminal law as to homi- 
cide the consequences of too strict an adherence to the technical 
definitions of the offences are avoided (a) by the exercise of the 
jury of their powers to convict of manslaughter only even in 
cases where they are directed that the offence is murder or 
nothing; (b) by the report of Use judge as to the particular 
circumstances of each case in which a conviction of murder has 
been followed by the 'statutory sentence of death; (c) by the 
examination of all the evidence in the case by the Home Office 
in order to enable the secretary of state to determine whether the 
prerogative of mercy should be exercised. 

Homicide is justifiable and not criminal when the killing is 
done in the execution of the law. The most important case of 
justifiable homicide is the execution of a criminal in due course 
of public justice. This condition is most stringently interpreted. 
" To kill the greatest of malefactors deliberately, uncompelled, 
and extrajudicially is murder. . . . And further, if judgment of 
death be given by a judge not authorized by lawful commission, 
and execution is done accordingly, the judge is guilty of murder " 
(Stephen's Commentaries , book vi. c iv.). The execution must 
be carried out by the proper officer or his deputy: any person 
executing the sentence without such authority, were it the judge 
himself, would be guilty of murder. And the sentence must be 
strictly pursued: to execute a criminal by a kind of death other 
than that to which he has been judicially condemned is murder. 

Homicide committed by an officer of justice in the course of 
carrying out his duty, as such, is also justifiable; e.g. where a 
felon resists a legal arrest and is killed in the effort to arrest him 
(see a Pollock and Maitland, 476); where officers in dispersing 
a riotous assemblage kill any of the mob, &c. (see Riot). In these 
cases the homicide must be shown to have been absolutely 
necessary. Again, homicide is justifiable if committed in the 
defence of person or property against forcible and heinous crime, 
such as murder, violent robbery, rape or burglary. In this con- 
nexion there has been much discussion as to whether the person 
attacked is under a duty to retreat: and in substance the 
justification depends on the continuous necessity Of attack or 
defence in order to prevent the commission by the deceased of 
the crime threatened. - _ 

Homicide is excusable and not criminal at all when committed 
either by misadventure or in self-defence. In the former case 
the homicide is excused; where a man in the course of doing some 
lawful work, accidentally and without intention kills another, 
e.g. shooting at a mark and undesignedly hitting and killing a 
man. The act must be strictly lawful, and death by misadventure 
in unlawful sports is not a case of excusable homicide. Homicide 
in self-defence is excusable when the slayer is himself in immediate 
danger of death, and has done all he could to avoid the assault. 
Accordingly, if he strikes and kills his assailant after the assault 
is over, this is not excusable homicide. But if the assault has 
been premeditated, as in the case of a duel, the death of either 



antagonist has under English law always been held to be murder 
and not excusable homicide. The excuse of self-defence covers 
the case in which a person in defence of others whom it is his 
duty to protect — children, wife, master, &c — kills an assailant. 
It has been considered doubtful whether the plea of self-defence 
is available to one who has himself provoked a fray, in the course 
of which he is so pressed by his antagonist that his only resource 
is to kill him. 

In English law the term " manslaughter " is applied to those 
forms of homicide which though neither justifiable nor excusable 
are attended by alleviating circumstances which bring them 
short of wilful murder. The offence is not defined by statute, 
but only by judicial rulings. Its punishment is as a maximum 
penal servitude for life, and as a minimum a fine or recognizances 
to be of good behaviour. The quantum of punishment between 
the limits above stated is in the discretion of the court, and not, 
as under continental codes, with fixed minima; and the offence 
includes acts and omissions of very varying gravity, from acts 
which only by the charitable appreciation of a jury fall abort 
of wilful murder, to acts or omissions which can only technically 
be described as criminal, e.g. where one of two persons cng a grri 
in poaching, by pure accident gets caught in a hedge so that 
his gun goes off and kills his fellow-poacher. This may be 
described as an extreme instance of " constructive crime." 

There are two main forms of " manslaughter ":— 

x. " Voluntary " homicide under grave and sudden provoca- 
tion or on a sudden quarrel in the heat of passion, without the 
slayer taking undue advantage or acting in an unusual manner. 
The substance of the alleviation of guilt lies in the absence of 
time for cool reflection or the formation of a premeditated design) 
to kill. Under English law the provocation must be by acts 
and not by words or gestures, and must be serious and not trivial, 
and the killing must be immediately after provocation and 
while the slayer has lost his self-control in consequence of the 
provocation. The provocation need not be by assault or violence, 
and perhaps the best-recognized example is the slaying by a 
husband of a man found, committing adultery with the slayer's 
wife. In the case of a sudden quarrel it does not matter who 
began or provoked the quarrel. This used to be called ' 
medley." 

2. " Involuntary " homicide as a result of great 
or gross negligence in respect of matters involving danger to 
human life, e.g. in driving trains or vehicles, or in dealing with 
dangerous weapons, or in performing surgical operations, or in 
taking care of the helpless. 

The innumerable modes in which criminal fiabifity for kiDmg 
others has been adjudged under the English definitions of 
murder and manslaughter cannot be here stated, and can only 
be studied by reference to the judicial decisions collected and 
discussed in Russell on Crimes and other English text-books, and 
in the valuable work by Mr J. D. Mayne on the criminal law of 
India, in which the English common law rulings are stated 
side by side with the terms and interpretations of the Indian 
penal code. Much labour has been expended by many jurists 
in efforts to create a scientific and acceptable classification of 
the various forms of unlawful homicide which shall properly 
define the cases which should be punishable by law and the 
appropriate punishment. Their efforts have resulted in the 
establishment in almost every state except the United Kingdom 
of statutory definitions of the crime, beginning with the French 
penal code and going down to the criminal code of Japan. In 
the case of England, as a result of the labours of Sir James 
Stephen, a code bill was submitted to parliament in 1878. In 1879 
a draft code was prepared by Blackburn , Lush and B any , and was 
presented to parliament. It was founded on and prepared with 
Sir J. Stephen, and is a revision of his digest of the criminal law. 

After defining homicide and culpable homicide, the draft 
code <cl 174) declares culpable homidde to be murder in the 
following cases: (a) if the offender means to cause the death 
of the person killed; (b) if the offender means to cause to the 
person killed any bodily injury which is known to the offender 
to be likely to cause death, and if the offender, whether be does 



HOMICIDE 



643 



or does not mean to cause death, is reckless whether death ensues 
or not; (c) if the offender means to cause death or such bodily 
injury as aforesaid to one person, so that if that person be killed 
the offender would be guilty of murder, and by accident or 
mistake the offender kills another person though he does not 
mean to hurt the person killed; (d) if the offender for any unlaw- 
ful object does an act which he knows or ought to have known 
to be likely to cause death, and thereby kills any person, though 
he may have desired that his object should be effected without 
hurting any one. 

Further (cl. 175), it is murder (whether the offender means 
or not death to ensue, or knows or not that death is likely to 
ensue) in the following cases: — " (a) if be means to inflict 
grievous bodily injury for the purpose of facilitating the com- 
mission of any of the offences hereinafter mentioned, or the 
flight of the offender upon the commission or attempted com- 
mission thereof, and death ensues from his violence; (b) if he 
administers any stupefying thing for either of the purposes 
aforesaid and death ensues from the effects thereof; (c) it he 
by any means wilfully stops the breath of any person for either 
of the purposes aforesaid and death ensues from such stopping 
of the breath." The following are the offences referred to>- 
" high treason and other offences against the king's authority, 
piracy and offences deemed to be piracy, escape or rescue from 
prison or lawful custody, resisting lawful apprehension, murder, 
rape, forcible abduction, robbery, burglary, arson." CL 176 
reduces culpable homicide to manslaughter if the person who 
causes death does so " in the heat of passion caused by sudden 
provocation "; and " any wrongful act or insult of such a nature 
as to be sufficient to deprive any ordinary person of the power 
of self-control may be provocation if the offender acts upon it 
on the sudden, and before there has been time, for his passion 
to cool. Whether any particular wrongful act or insult amounts 
to provocation and whether the offender was deprived of self- 
control shall be questions of fact; but no one shall be deemed 
to give provocation by doing that which he had a legal right to 
do, or which the offender incited him to do in order to provide 
an excuse for killing him or doing grievous bodily harm to any 
person." Further, " an arrest shall not necessarily reduce the 
offence -from murder to manslaughter because an arrest was 
illegal, but if the illegality was known to the offender it may be 
evidence of provocation"; (cl. 177) "culpable homicide not 
amounting to murder is manslaughter." 

The definitions embodied in these clauses though not yet 
accepted by the British legislature, have in substance been 
embodied in the criminal codes of Canada (1893 as. 227-230), 
New Zealand (1893,8s. 163-166), Queensland (1899, as. 300-305), 
and Western Australia (xooi, ss. 275-280). 

From the point of view of civil as distinct from criminal 
responsibility homicide does not by the common law give any 
cause of action against the person causing the death of another 
in favour of the wife or blood relations of the deceased. In 
early law this was otherwise; and the wer or eric of the deceased 
came historically before the right of chief or state. But under 
English law the rights of relations, except by way of appeal for 
felony, 1 were swept aside in favour of the crown, on the principle 
that every homicide is presumed felonious (murder) unless the 
contrary is proved, and that in all cases of homicide not justifiable 
by law a forfeiture was incurred. The rights of the relatives 
were also defeated by application of the maxim " actio personalis 
moritur cum ptrsond " (" a personal action dies with the person ") 
to all proceedings for injury to the person or to reputation. In 
Scotland the old theory was preserved in the law as to 
assythement. 

In England the law was altered at the instance of Lord 
Campbell in 1846 (9 & 10 V. c. 93) so as to give a right of a 
claim by the husband, wife, parent or child of a person killed 
by a wrongful (or even criminal) act, neglect or default 
by another which would have given the deceased if he had sur- 

1 Appeals remained in the law till 1810, but were long oefore this 
dwuned. In the middle ages they were used as a means of getting 
compensation. 



vived a cause of action against ths wrongdoer. The com- 
pensation payable is what the surviving relative has lost by 
the death, and under the Workmen's Compensation Act 1906 
(in all cases to which, it applies) the employer is liable even 
without negligence to compensate the dependants of an employee 
killed by an accident arising out of and in the course of the 
employment; and in such cases even if the death was due to 
serious and wilful misconduct by the employee, compensation is 
payable. 

In the Indian penal code the definitions of murder are so 
drawn as to limit the offences to cases where it was actually 
intended to cause death or bodily injury by the acts or omissions 
of the slayer, and the definition of culpable homicide short 
of murder is so drawn as to exclude the forms of unintentional 
manslaughter due to neglect of duty, e.g. in the conduct of 
trains or ships or vehicles. This last omission was supplied 
in 187a The Indian code does not treat as murder either 
duelling or helping Hindu widows to commit tuttee (s. 301, 
exception 5). In most of the British possessions in Asia and 
in east Africa the Indian definitions of homicide have been 
adopted. In the rest of the colonies, except South Africa, the 
law of homicide depends on the English common law as modified 
by colonial codes or statutes. In South Africa it rests mainly 
on the Roman Dutch law. 

Europe—In European codes distinctions corresponding to 
those of the English law are drawn between premeditated 
and other forms of criminal homicide; but more elaborate 
distinctions are drawn between the degrees of deliberation 
or criminality manifested in the slaying, and the minimum or 
maximum penalty is varied accordingly. 

In the French penal code voluntary homicide is called murder 
(mevrtre, art. 295): but if committed with premeditation or 
lying in wait is styled assassinat (put-opens) (206-208). Poison- 
ing (even if the poison is not fatal), is specially punished, as 
is parricide (on the lines of the obsolete English offence of petty 
treason), and infanticide, i.e. the killing of newly-born infants. 
Assassination, poisoning and parricide are at present capital 
offences; but a bill to abolish the death sentence has been 
laid before the French parliament. 

The German code distinguishes between voluntary homicide 
which is done with deliberation and such homicide committed 
without deliberation (ss. six, 2x2), and provides for mitigation 
of punishment where the slaying was provoked without fault 
in the slayer by any wrongful act or serious insult upon the 
slayer or his relatives by the slain (213). Parricide and infanti- 
cide are specially punished (214, 215), as is killing another 
person at his express and earnest request (2x6) — an offence 
which would in England be murder— and it is a separate offence 
to cause the death of another, the penalty being increased 
if the offender was peculiarly bound by office, calling or trade 
to use a care which he did not use (222). 

The Italian code punishes as homicide those who with intention 
to kill cause the death of another (364). The death penalty is 
not imposed, but scales of punishment are provided to deal 
with aggravated forms of the offence. Thus ergasUAo (penal 
servitude for life) is the punishment in the case of homicide 
of ascendants and descendants, or with premeditation, or under 
the sole impulse of brutal ferocity or with gross cruelty (grawi 
sevizie), or by means of arson, inundation, drowning and certain 
other crimes, or to secure the gains or conceal the commission, 
or to secure immunity from the consequences, of another crime 
(366). Personal violence resulting in death inflicted without 
intention to kill is punishable minor e poend (368), and it is 
criminal to cause the death of another by imprudence, negligence 
or lack of skill in an art or profession (imperilia netla propria 
arte o professione) t or by non-observance of regulations, orders 
or instructions. 

The Spanish code has like those of Italy and France special 
punishments for parricide (4x7) *nd for assass in ation, in which 
are included killing for reward or promise of reward or by 
inundation (4x8), and for aiding another to commit suicide (421). 
Both the Italian and the Spanish codes afford a special mitigation 



64+ 



HOMILETICS— HOMILY 



to infanticide committed to avoid dishonour to the mother of 
the infant or her family. 

America. — The most notable difference between England 
and the United States in regard to the law on this subject is 
the recognition by state legislation of degrees in murder. English 
law treats all unlawful killing not reducible to manslaughter 
as of the same degree of guilt in law. American statutes seek 
to discriminate for purposes of punishment between the graver 
and the less culpable forms of murder. Thus an act of the 
legislature of Pennsylvania (22nd of April 1704) declares " all 
murder which shall be perpetrated by means of poison or by 
lying in wait or by any other kind of wilful, deliberate and 
premeditated killing, or which shall be committed in the per- 
petration of or attempt to perpetrate any arson, rape, robbery 
or burglary shall be deemed murder of the first degree; and all 
other kinds of murder shall be deemed murder of the second 
degree." This legislation has been copied or adopted in many 
if not most of the other states. There are also statutory degrees 
of manslaughter in the legislation of some of the states. The 
differences of legislation, coupled with the power of the jury 
in some states to determine the sentence, and the limitations on 
the right of the judges to comment on the testimony adduced, 
lead to very great differences between the administration of the 
law as to homicide in the two countries. 

, Authorities.— Stephen, Hist. Or. Law, Digest Criminal Law: 
Russell on Crimes (7th ed., 1909) ; Archbold, Criminal Pleading (23rd 
ed., 1905); Bishop, American Criminal Law (8th ed.); Pollock 
and Maitlaad, Hist. English Law ; Pike, History oj Crime. (W. F. C) 

HOMILETICS (Gr. 6fti\nm(6t, from btuKusr, to assemble 
together), in theology the application of the general principles of 
rhetoric to the- specific department of public preaching. It 
may be further defined as the science that treats of the analysis, 
classification, preparation, composition and delivery of sermons. 
The formation during recent years of such lectureships as the 
"Lyman Beecher" course at Yale University has resulted 
in increased attention being given to homiletics, and the published 
volumes of this series are the best contribution to the subject. 

The older literature is cited exhaustively in W. G. Blaikie, For 
the Work of the Ministry (1873); aad D. P. Kidder, Treatise on 
Homiletics (1864). 

HOMILY, a simple religious address, less elaborate than 
a sermon, and confining itself to the practical exposition of 
some ethical topic or some passage of Scripture. The word 
oiuXLa from ojuXftr (6uov, *Q*>), meaning communion, inter- 
course, *nd especially interchange of thought and feeling by 
means of words (conversation), was early employed in classical 
Greek to denote the instruction which a philosopher gave to 
his pupils in familiar talk (Xenophon, Memorabilia, L ii. 6. 15). 
This usage of the word was long preserved (Aehan, Varia Historic, 
iii. 19); and the ofuMpas of Acts xx. zx may safely be taken 
to assign not only a free and informal but also a didactic character 
to the apostle Paul's discourse in the upper chamber of Troas, 
when " he talked a long while, even till break of day." That 
the " talk " on. that occasion partook of the nature of the "exposi- 
tion" (n*T!) of Scripture, which, undertaken by a priest, 
elder or other competent person, had become a regular part 
of the service of the Jewish synagogue, 1 may also with much 
probability be assumed. The custom of delivering expositions 
or comments more or less extemporaneous on the lessons of the 
day at all events passed over soon and readily into the Christian 
Church, as may be gathered from the first Apology (c. 67) of 
Justin Martyr, where we read that, in connexion with the practice 
of reading portions from the collected writings of the prophets 
and from the memoirs of the apostles, it had by that time become 
usual for the presiding minister to deliver a discourse in which 
" he admonishes the people, stirring them up to an imitation 
of the good works which have been brought before their notice." 
This discourse, from its explanatory character, and from the 
easy conversational manner of its delivery, was for a long time 
called 6§uKLa rather than Xbyot: it was regarded as part of 

1 See Philo, Quod omnis probus liber, sec. 12 (ed. Mangey ii. 458; 
cf. ii. 630). 



the regular duty of the bishop, bat he could devolve it, if be 
thought fit, on a presbyter or deacon, or even on a layman. 
An early and well-known instance of such delegation is tnat 
mentioned by Eusebius (Hist. EeeL vi 19) in the case of Origea 
(216 aj>.). s In course of time the exposition of the lesson 
for the day came more frequently to assume a more elaborate 
character, and to pass into the category of a Myo* or even 
dnkooodia or d*\oo6faitui; but when it did so the fact was as 
far as possible denoted by a change of name, the word cpriUa 
being reserved for the expository or exegetical lecture as dis- 
tinguished from the pulpit oration or sermon. 1 While the cxusrch 
of the 3rd and 4th centuries could point to a brilliant ayccen 
sion of great preachers, whose discourses were wont to be takes 
down in shorthand and circulated among the Hrjifrfaf public 
as edifying reading, it does not appear that the supply of ordinary 
bomiletiad talent kept pace with the rapidity of church nrtmrina 
throughout the Roman empire. In the smaller and remoter 
communities it not uncommonly happened that the ******** 
was totally unqualified to undertake the work of preaching; 
and though, as is curiously shown by the case of Rome (Soeomea, 
Hist. Eccl. vii 19), the regular exposition of the appointed 
lessons was by no means regarded as part of the necessary 
business of a church, it was generally felt to be advisable that 
some provision should be made for the public instruction of 
congregations. Even in Jerome's time (De Vir. IB. c 115), 
accordingly, it had become usual to read, in the regular f*****«c» 
of the churches which were not so fortunate as to possess a com- 
petent preacher, the written discourses of celebrated fathers; 
and at.a considerably later period we have on record the canon 
of at least one provincial council (that of Vaux, probably the 
third, held in 529 aj>.), positively enjoining that if the presbyter 
through any infirmity is unable hfantHf to preach, "homilies 
of the holy fathers " (honnUae sanctorum patrum) are to be 
read by the deacons. Thus the finally fixed m— nlwg of the 
word homily as an ecclesiastical term came to be a written dis- 
course (generally possessing the sanction of some great name) 
read in church by or far the officiating clergyman when from 
any cause he was unable to deliver a sermon of his own. As 
the standard of clerical education sank during the dark ages, 
the habit of using the sermons of others became almost universal 
Among the authors whose works were found specially serviceable 
in this way may be mentioned the Venerable Bede, who is credited 
with no fewer than 140 homilies in the Basel and Cologne editions 
of his works, and who certainly was the author of many HomMioe 
de Tempore which were much in vogue during the 8th and 
following centuries. Prior to Charlemagne it is probable that 
several other collections of homilies bad obtained considerable 
popularity, but in the time of that emperor these had suffered 
so many mutilations and corruptions that an authoritative 
revision was felt to be imperatively necessary. The result was 
the well-known Homiliarium, prepared by Paul Wamefrid, 
otherwise known as Paulus Diaconus (?.?.).* It consists of 

- * Sozomen (Hist. Eccl. vii. 19) mentions that in Alexandria in his 
day the bishop alone was in the custom of pleaching; but this, he 
implies, was a very exceptional state of matters, dating only from the 
time of Arius. 

' To the more strictly exegetical lectures the names «&rr*>««, 
i£ry&iara t tfanr***. teBieus, were sometimes applied. But as no 
popular discourse delivered from the pulpit could ever be exclusively 
expository and as on the other hand every sermon professing to be 
based on Scripture required to be more or less " exegctkaf " and 
" textual," it would obviously be sometimes very hard to draw the 
line of distinction between 6/uXU and X&vot. It Would be difficult to 
define very precisely the difference in French between a " conference" 
and a " sermon " ; and the same difficulty seems to have been experi- 
enced in Greek by Photius, who says of the eloquent pulpit oratiosa 
of Chrysostom, that they were *>iA(at rather than X*roc 

4 Manuscript copies are preserved at Heidelberg, Darmstadt. 
Frankfort, Gtessen, Casscl and other places. It was first printed at 
Spires in 1482. In the Cologne edition of 1530 the title runs— 
HomiHae sen mavis sermones stoe condones ad populnm, praesiantissi- 
morumecclesiae docionm Hieronymi, AugusHm, Ambrosii, Cregorii 
Origenis, Chrysostomi, Bedae, &c, in hunt ordinem difestae per 
Alchuinum Umtam, idque injungente ei Corah M. Rom. Imp. an a 
secretis fuit. Though thus attributed here to Akuia, who is known 
to have revised the Lectionary or Comes Hieronymi, the compuatioa 



HOMOEOPATHY 



645 



17G bomflies arranged In order for an the Sundays and festivals 
of the ecclesiastical year; and probably was completed before 
the year 780. Though written in Latin, its discourses were 
doubtless intended to be delivered in the vulgar tongue; the 
«lergy, however, were often too indolent or too ignorant for this, 
although by more than one provincial council they were enjoined 
to exert themselves so that they might be able to do so. 1 Hence 
an important form of literary activity came to be the translation 
of the- homilies approved by the church into the vernacular. 
Thus we find Alfred the Great translating the homilies of Bede; 
and in a similar manner arose iElfric's Anglo-Saxon Homilies 
and the German Homiiiarium of Ottfried of Weissenburg. 
Such H (miliaria as were in use in England down to the end of 
the rsth century were at the time of the Reformation eagerly 
sought for and destroyed, so that they are now extremely rare, 
and the few copies which have been preserved are generally 
in a mutilated or imperfect form* 

The Books oj HomUies referred to in the 35th article of the 
Church of England originated at a convocation m 154a, at 
which it was agreed " to make certain homilies for stay of such 
erron as were then by ignorant preachers sparkled among 
the people." Certain homilies, accordingly, composed by digni- 
taries of the lower house, were in the following year produced 
by the prolocutor; and after some delay a volume was published 
in 1547 entitled Certain sermons or homilies appointed by the 
King's Majesty to be declared and read by all parsons, vicars, 
or curates every Sunday in their churches where they have cure. 
In 1563 a second Book of Homilies was submitted along with 
the 30 Articles to convocation; it was issued the same year 
under the title The second Tome of Homilies of such matters 
os were promised and instituted in the former part of HomUies, 
set out by the autliorily of the Queen's Majesty, and to be read in 
every Parish Church agreeably. 01 the twelve homilies contained 
in the first book, four (the 1st, and, 3rd and 4th) are probably 
to be attributed to Cranmcr, and one (the 12th) possibly to 
Latimer; one (the 6th) is by Bonner; another (the 5th) is 
by John Harpsfield, archdeacon of London, and another (the 
nth) by Thomas Beeon, one of Cranmer's chaplains. The 
authorship of the others is unknown. The second book consists 
of twenty-one homilies, of which the 1st, and, 3rd, 7th, 8th, oth, 
1 6th and 17th have been assigned to Jewel, the 4th to Grindal, 
the 5th and 6th to Pilkington and the 18th to Parker. See the 
critical edition by Griffiths, Oxford, i860. The homilies are not 
now read publicly, though they are sometimes appealed to in 
controversies affecting the doctrines of the Anglican Church. 

HOMOEOPATHY (from the Greek ftpotof, like, and raft*, 
feeling). The distinctive system of therapeutics which bears 
the name of homoeopathy is based upon the law simitia similibus 
cureniur, * the originator of which was S. C. F. Hahnemann, a 

of the Homiiiarium is in the emperor's own commission entrusted to 
. Paul, to whom it b assigned in the earlier printed editions also. A 
comparison of different editions shows that the contents increased 
with the ever-growing number of saints' days and festivals, new 
discourses by later preachers like Bernard being constantly added. 

1 Neandcr, Church History, v. I7a (Eng. trans, of 1851). 

'An ancient English metrical homiiiarium is preserved in the 
library of the university of Cambridge. Earlier versions of it have 
existed, and a portion of perhaps the earliest copy, dating from about 
Che middle of the 13th century, was published in 1862 by Mr J. Small, 
librarian to the university of Edinburgh. 

•An interesting controversy has been carried on between the 
members of the homoeopathic school as to the proper construction of 
the Latin motto which constitutes its acknowledged basis. For 
many years the verb at the conclusion of the sentence was used in the 
indicative mood, curantur, thus making the sentence a positive one. 
After extended research it has been discovered that Hahnemann 
himself never employed the word curantur as descriptive of his law 
of cure, but always wrote cureniur, which greatly modifies the meaning 
of the phrase. If the subjunctive mood be used, the motto reads, 
" Let similars be treated by similars," or " similars should be treated 
by similars." The reading similia similibus cureniur was officially 
adopted as the correct reading of the sentence by the American 
Institute of Homoeopathy at its session held in Atlantic City. N.I., 
on the 20th of June 1899; and the words are so inscribed on the 
monument erected to the memory of Hahnemann and unveiled in 
Washington, DC, on the 13rd of June toco, and also are those 
carved upon the tomb of Hahnemann in Pere-la-Chaise, Paris. 



native of Meissen in Germany, who discovered his new principle 
while he was experimenting with cinchona bark in 1700, and 
announced it in 1706. 4 The essential tenets of homoeopathy — 
with which is contrasted the " allopathy " (&XXof, other) of 
the "orthodox" therapeutics— are that the cure of disease 
is effected by drugs that are capable of producing in a healthy 
individual symptoms similar to those of the disease to be treated, 
and that to ascertain the curative virtues of any drug it must 
be "proved " upon healthy persons— that is, taken by individuals 
of both sexes in a state of health in gradually increasing doses. 
The manifestations of drug action thus produced are carefully 
recorded, and this record of " drug-diseases," after being verified 
by repetition on many " provers," constitutes the distinguishing 
feature of the homoeopathic materia medica, which, while it 
embraces the sources, preparation and uses of drugs as known 
to the orthodox pharmacopoeia, contains, in addition, ' the 
various " proving* " obtained in the manner above described. 

Besides the promulgation of the doctrine of similars^ Hahne- 
mann also enunciated a theory to account for the origin of all 
chronic diseases, which he asserted were derived cither directly 
or remotely from psora (the itch), syphilis (venereal disease) or 
sycosis (fig- wart disease). This doctrine, although at first 
adopted by some of the enthusiastic followers of Hahnemann, 
was almost immediately discarded by very many who had a 
firm belief in his law of cure. In the light of advancing science 
such theories are entirely untenable, and it was unfortunate for 
the system of medicine which he founded that Hahnemann 
should have promulgated such an hypothesis. It served as a 
target for the shafts of ridicule showered upon the system by 
those who were its opponents, and even at the present time 
there still exists in the minds of many misinformed persons 
the conviction that homoeopathy is a system of medicine that 
bases the origin of all chronic disease on the itch or on syphilis 
or fig-warts. 

Another peculiar feature of homoeopathy is its posology or 
theory of dose. It may be asserted that homoeopathic posology 
has nothing more to do with the original law of cure than the 
psora (itch) theory has, and that it was one of the later creations 
of Hahnemann's mind. Most homoeopathists believe more or 
less in the action of minute doses of medicine, but it must not 
be considered as an integral part of the system. The 1 dose Is 
the corollary, not the principle. Yet in the minds of many, 
infinitesimal doses of medicine stand for homoeopathy itself, 
the real law of cure being completely put into the background. 
The question of dose has also divided the members of the homoeo- 
pathic school into bitter factions, and is therefore a matter for 
careful consideration. Many employ low potencies, 1 i.e. mother 

♦Some points of Hahnemann's system were borrowed from 
previous writers — as he himself, though imperfectly, admits. Not 
to mention others, he was anticipated by Hippocrates, and espr- 1 -"- 



by Paracelsus (1495-1541)- The identical words similia similibus 
curantur occur in the Geneva edition (1658) of the works of Paracelsus, 
as a marginal heading of one of the paragraphs; and in the " Frag- 
menta Medica," Op. Omnia, 1. 168. 169, occurs the following 



Simile similis cura ; Hon contrarium. 

" Quisqins enim cum taude agerc Medicum volet, is has nugas 
longe vatere jubeat. Nee enim utlus unquam morbus calidus per 
frigida sanatus fuit, nee frigid us per calida. Simile autem suum 
simile frequenter curavit, scilicet Mercurius sulphur, et sulphur 
Mercurium; et sal ilia, velut et ilia sat. Interdum quidem cum 
proprietatc junctum frigidum sanavit calidum; sed id non factum 
est ratione frigidi, verum ratione naturae alterius. quam a primo Ulo 
omnino diversam facimus." 

It is very remarkable that in Hahnemann's enumeration of authors 
who anticipated him in regard to the doctrine of Similia, he makes 
no mention of the views ot Paracelsus, though the very words seem 
to be taken from the works of that physician, The other point in 
Hahnemann's doctrine — that medicines should be tried first on 
healthy persons— he admits to have been enunciated by Haller. 
Roughly it has been acted on by physicians in all ages, but certainly 
more systematically since Hahnemann's time. In the most character- 
istic feature of Hahnemann's practice — " the potcntizing," "dynam- 
izing," of medicinal substances — he appears to have been original. 

'Two methods of preparing medicines are recognized, one on the 
decimal, the other on the centesimal scale. The pure tinctures are de- 
nominated " mother tinctures," and represented by the Greek *. To 



6 4 6 



HOMOEOPATHY 



tinctures, first, second, sixth dilutions, &c, while others use 
hundred-thousandths and millionths. 

Some homocopathists of the present day still believe with 
Hahnemann that, even after the material medicinal particles 
of a drug have been subdivided to the fullest extent, the continua- 
tion of the dynamization or trituration or succussion develops a 
spiritual acurative agency, and that the higher the potency, the 
more subtle and more powerful is the curative action. Hahne- 
mann says (Orgatum, 3rd American edition, p. 101), " It is only 
by means of the spiritual influence of a morbific agent that our 
spiritual vital power can be diseased, and in like manner only 
by the spiritual operation of medicine can health be restored." 
This is absolutely denied by others. Thus there exist two schools 
among the adherents of homoeopathy. On the one hand there 
are the Hahnemannians, the "Purists" or "High Potency" 
men, who still profess to regard the Organon as their Bible, 
who believe in all the teachings of Hahnemann, who adhere 
in their prescriptions to the single dose, the. single medicine, and 
the highest possible potency, and regard the doctrine of the 
spiritual dynamization acquired by trituration and succussion 
as indubitable. On the other side there are the " Rational " 
or " Low Potency " men, who believe in the universality of 
the law of cure, but think that it cannot always be applied, on 
account of an imperfect materia medica and a Lack of know- 
ledge on the part of the physician. They believe that in many 
cases of severe and acute pain palliatives are required, and that 
they are free to use all the adjuvants at present known to science 
for the relief of suffering humanity — massage, balneology, 
electricity, hygiene, &c The American Institute of Homoeo- 
pathy, the national body of the United States, has adopted the 
following resolution and ordered it to be published conspicuously 
in each number of the Transactions of the society: " A homoeo- 
pathic physician is one who adds to his knowledge of medicine 
a special knowledge of homoeopathic therapeutics. All that 
pertains to the great field of medical learning is his by tradition, 
by inheritance, by right." 

It is claimed that the effect produced upon both the laity and 
the general profession of. medicine by the introduction of homoeo- 
pathy was salutary in many ways. It diminished the quantity 
of medicine that was formerly considered necessary for the 
eradication of disease, and thus revealed the fact that the 
vis medkatrix naturae is often sufficient, with occasional and 
gentle assistance, to cure many diseases, especially those fevers 
that run a definite and regular course. Corroboration of the 
law similia similibus curentur is seen, according to homoeopathists, 
in the adoption of the serum therapy, which consists in the 
treatment of the most malignant diseases (diphtheria, lock-jaw, 
typhoid fever, tuberculosis, bubonic plague) by introducing 
into the system a modified form (similar) of those poisons that 
produce them in the healthy individual. Hahnemann un- 
doubtedly deserves the credit of being the first to break decidedly 
with the old school of medical practice, in which, forgetful of 
the teachings of Hippocrates, nature was either overlooked or 
rudely opposed by wrong and ungentle methods. We can 
scarcely now estimate the force of character and of courage 
which was implied in his abandoning the common lines of 
medicine. More than this, he and his followers showed results 
in the treatment of disease which compared very favourably 
with the results of contemporary orthodox practice. 

make a first decimal dilution or first decimal trituration, 10 drops of 
the mother tincture, or 10 grains of a crude substance, arc mixed with 
90 drops of alcohol, or 90 grains of saccharum laclis (sugar of milk) 
respectively. The liquid is thoroughly shaken, or the powder care- 
fully triturated, and the bottles containing them marked 1 X, mean- 
ing first decimal dilution or trituration. To make the a X potency, 
10 drops or 10 grains of this first dilution or trituration are mixed 
with 90 drops of pure alcohol, or 90 grains of milk sugar, and arc 
succussed or triturated as above described, and marked a X dilution 
or trituration. This subdivision of particles may be continued to an 
indefinite degree. On the Hahnemannian or centesimal scale the 
medicines are prepared in the same manner, the difference being that 
I drop or gram is mixed with 99 drops or grains, to make the first 
centesimal, which is marked 1 c or 1 simply, and so on for the second 
and higher dilutions. 



Homoeopathy has given prominence to the therapeutical 
side of medicine, and has done much to stimulate the study 
of the physiological action of drugs. It has done service in 
directing more special attention to various powerful drugs, 
such as aconite, mix vomica, belladonna, and to the advantage 
of giving them in simpler forms than were common before the 
days of Hahnemann. But in the medical profession homoeo- 
pathy nevertheless remains under the stigma of being a dissenting 
sect. It has been publicly announced that if the hornoeopalhists 
would abolish the name " homoeopathy," and remove it from 
their periodicals, colleges, hospitals, dispensaries and asylums, 
they would be received within the fold of the regular prof essioa. 
These conditions have been accepted by a few homoeopathies 
who have become members of the most prominent medical 
association in the United States. 

Homoeopathy as it exists to-day can, in the opinion of its 
adherents, stand by itself, and its progress for a century in face 
of prolonged and determined opposition appears to its upholders 
to be evidence of its truth. There are still, indeed, in both 
schools of medical thought, men who stand fast by their old 
principles. There are homoeopathists who can see nothing 
but evil in the practice of their brothers of the orthodox school, 
as there are allopathists who still regard homoeopathy as a 
humbug and a sham. There are, however, liberal-minded men 
in both schools, who look upon the adoption of any safe and 
efficient method of curing disease as the birthright of the true 
physician, and who allow every man to prescribe for his patients 
as his conscience may dictate, and, provided he be educated 
in all the collateral branches of medical science, are ready to 



HOMOEOPATHY 647 



But'during all these yean, though the public Trutitutions were few, * homoeopathy into Italy, the general in command of the army being 



6 4 8 



HOMONYM— HONDA 



a devoted friend of Hahnemann. In 1828 Dr Count Sebastian de 
Guidi came from Lyons and assisted in spreading the doctrine. 
During the period from 1830 to i860 many physicians practised 
homoeopathy, and the literature on the subject became extensive. 
A homoeopathic clinic was established and a ward opened in Trinity 
Hospital at Naples, and a homoeopathic physician was appointed 
to the count of Syracuse. During the severe cholera epidemics of 
1854, 1855, 1865 the success of homoeopathic treatment of that 
disease was so marked under the care of Dr Rubini that the attention 
of the authorities was directed to the system. In i860 the homoeo- 
pathic practice was introduced into the Spedalc della Cesarca, and 
since that period homoeopathy has been recognized with more or less 
favour in most of the cities. The Italian Homoeopathic Institute 
• S — . u . ^ui:.u~. :-_.:....: a ; tf 

t 

:al 
nd 



of 
he 
■d- 
he 

Civil Order of Bcncficicncia. This recognition by high authority 
gave an impetus to homoeopathy which has continued ever since. 

Denmark. — Homoeopathy was unknown in Denmark until the 
year 1821, when Hans Christian Lund, a medical practitioner, 
adopted it. Hahnemann, however, had been both before and after 
that time consulted by Danes, and consequently homoeopathic 
therapeutics was recognized in different parts of the country. 
Lund translated many of Hahnemann's works, into Danish, as well 
as those of other eminent members of the new school. (W. T. H.) 

HOMONYM (Gr. d/wro/iot, having the same name, from 
it***, same, alike, and 6*o/xa t name), a term in philology for 
those words which differ in sense but are alike either in sound 
or spelling or both. Words alike only in spelling but not in sound, 
e.g. " bow," are sometimes called homographs ; and words alike 
only in sound but not in spelling, e.g. " meat," " meet," homo- 
phones. Skeat (Etymol. Diet.) gives a list of English homonyms. 

HOMS, or Hums (anc. Emesa or Ernes sa, near the Hittile 
Kodtsh), a town of Syria, on the right bank of the Oronles, 
and capita] of a sanjak in the vilayet of Syria (Damascus). 
Pop. 30,000 (20,000 Moslem, 10,000 Christian). The importance 
of the place arises from its command of the great north road 
from Egypt, Palestine and Damascus by the Orontes valley. 
Invading armies from the south have often been opposed near 
Horns, from the time of Rameses II., who had to fight the 
battle of Kadesh, to that of Ibrahim Pasha, who broke the first 
tine of Ottoman defence in 1831 by his victory there. Ancient 
Emesa, in the district of Apamea, was a very old Syrian city, 
devoted to the worship of Baal, the sun god, of whose great 
temple the emperor Heliogabalus was originally a priest (a.d. 
218). As a centre of native influences it was overawed by the 
Seleucid foundation of Apamea; but it opposed the Roman 
advance. There Aurelian crushed, in a.d. 272, the Syrian 
national movement led by Zenobia. Caracalla made it a Roman 
colony, and later it became the capital of a small province, 
Phoenicia Libanesia or ad Libanum. About 630 it was captured 
by the Moslem leader, Khalid ibn Walid, who is buried there. 
It now became the capital of &jund, or military district, which 
under the Omayyad Caliphs extended from Palmyra to the 
sea. Under the Arabs it was one of the largest cities in Syria, 
with walls and a strong citadel, which stood on a hill, occupying 
perhaps the site of the great sun temple. The ruins of this 
castle, blown up by Ibrahim Pasha, are still the most con- 
spicuous feature of Horns, and contain many remains of ancient 
buildings. Its men were noted for their courage in war, and its 



women for their beauty. The climate was extolled for it* 

excellence, and the land for its fertility. A succession of gardens 
bordered the Orontes, and the vineyards were remarkable for 
their abundant yield of grapes. When the place capitulated 
the great church of St John was divided between the Christians 
and Moslems, an arrangement which apparently lasted until 
the arrival of the Turks. At the end of the nth century it 
fell into crusading hands, but was recovered by the Moslems 
under Saladin in 1187. Its decay probably dates from the 
invasion of the Mongols (1260), who fought two important 
battles with the Egyptians (1281 and 1299) in its vicinity. The 
construction of a carriage road to Tripoli led to a partial revival 
of prosperity and to an export of cereals and fruit, and this 
growth has, in turn, been accentuated by the railway, which now 
connects it with Aleppo and the Damascus-Beirut line. The 
district is well planted with mulberries and produces much silk, 
most of which is worked up on the spot. (D. G. H.) 

HO-NAN. a central province of China, bounded N. partly 
by the Hwang-bo (which it crosses to the west of Ho-nan Fu, 
forming an arm northwards between the provinces of Shan-si 
and Chih-li), on the W. by Shen-si, on the S. by Hu-peh, and 
on the E. by Ngan-bui. It occupies an area of 81,000 sq. m., 
with a population of about 22,100,000, and contains nine 
prefectural cities. Its.capital is K'ai-feng Fu. The prefecture 
of Hwai-k'ing, north of the Hwang-ho, consists of a fertile plain, 
" rendered park-like by numerous plantations of trees and 
shrubs, among which thick bosquets of bamboo contrast with 
the gloomy groves of cypress." All kinds of .cereals grow 
luxuriantly, and the general productiveness of the district 
is indicated by the extreme denseness of the population. The 
most noticeable feature in that portion of the province which 
is properly called Ho-nan is the Fu-niu Shan range, which runs 
east and west across this part of the province. Coal is found on 
the south of the Hwang-ho in the districts of Ho-nan Fu, the 
ancient capital, Lushan and Ju Chow. The chief products 
of the province are, however, agricultural, especially in the 
valley of the Tang-ho and Pai-ho, which is an extensive and 
densely populated plain running north and south from the 
Fu-niu Shan. Cotton is also grown extensively and forms 
the principal article of export, and a considerable quantity 
of wild silk is produced from the Fu-niu Shan. Three roads 
from the east and south unite at Ho-nan Fu, and one from the 
west. The southern road leads to Ju Chow, where it forks, 
one branch going to Shi-ki-chen, connecting the trade from 
Fan-cheng, Han-kow, and the Han river generally, and the other 
to Chow-kia-kV>w near the city of Ch 'fin-chow Fu, at the con- 
fluence of the three rivers which unite to form the Sha-bo; the 
second road runs parallel with the Hwang-ho to K'ai-feng Fu; 
the third crosses the Hwang-ho at Mcngching Hien, and passes 
thence in a north-easterly direction to Hwai-k'ing Fu, Sew-wu 
Hien and Wd-hui Fu, at which place it joins the high road 
from Peking to Fan-cheng; and the western road follows the 
southern bank of the Hwang-ho for 250 m. to its great bend 
at the fortified pass known as the Tung-kwan, where it joins the 
great wagon road leading through Shan-si from Peking to Si-gan 
Fu. Ho-nan is now traversed north to south by the Peking- 
Hankow railway (completed 1905). The line crosses the Hwang- 
ho by Yung-tse and runs east of the Fu-niu Shan. Branch lines 
serve Ho-nan Fu and K'ai-feng Fu. 

HONAVAR, or Onore, a seaport of British India, in the 
North Kanara district of Bombay. Pop. (1901) 6929. It is 
mentioned as a place of trade as early as the 16th century, and 
is associated with two interesting incidents in Anglo-Indian 
history. In 1670, the English factors here had a bull-dog 
which unfortunately killed a sacred bull, in revenge for which 
they were all murdered, to the number of eighteen persons, 
by an enraged mob. In 1784 it was bravely defended for three 
months by Captain Torriano and a detachment of sepoys against 
the army of Tippoo Sultan. 

HONDA, or San Bartolomeo de Honda, a town of the 
department of Tolima, Colombia, on the VV. bank of the Magdalma 
river, 580 m. above its mouth. In 1906 Mr F. Loraine Petre 



HONDECOETER— HONDURAS 



649 



estimated the population at 7000. It is about 650 (t. above 
sea-level and stands at the entrance to a narrow valley formed 
by spurs of the Central Cordillera, through which a picturesque 
little stream, called the Guali, flows into the Magdalena. The 
town overlooks the rapids of the Magdalena, and is shut In 
closely by spurs of the Eastern and Central Cordilleras. The 
climate is hot and damp and the temperature frequently rises 
to ioa° F. in the shade. Honda dates back to the beginning of 
the 17th century, and has been one of the important centres of 
traffic in South America for three hundred years. Within the 
city there is an iron bridge across the Guali, and there is a sus- 
pension bridge across the Magdalena at the head of the rapids. A 
railway 18 m. long connects with the landing place of LaDorada, 
or Las Yeguas, where the steamers of the lower Magdalena 
discharge and receive their cargoes (the old landing at Carocali 
nearer the rapids having been abandoned), and with Arran- 
caplumas, i| m. above, where navigation of the upper river 
begins. Up to 1008 the greater part of the traffic for Bogota 
crossed the river at this point, and was carried on mule-back 
over the old camino real, which was at best only a rough bridle- 
path over which transportation to Bogota (67 m. distant) was 
laborious and highly expensive; now the transshipment is 
made to smaller steamboats on the upper river for carriage to 
Girardot, 03 m. distant, from which place a railway runs to the 
Bogota plateau. Honda was nearly destroyed by an earthquake 
in 1808. 

HONDECOETER, MELCHIOR V (c. 1636-1605), Dutch 
painter, was born at Utrecht, it is said, about 1636, and died 
at Amsterdam on the 3rd of April 1695. Old historians say 
that, being the grandson of GQlis and son of Gisbert d'Honde- 
coeter, as well as nephew of J. B. Weenix, be was brought up 
by the last two to the profession of painting. Of Wccnix we 
know that he married one Josina d*Hondecoeter in 1638. 
Melchior was, therefore, related to Weenix, who certainly 
Influenced his style. As to GiUis and Gisbert some points still 
remain obscure, and it is difficult to accept the statement that 
they stood towards each other in the relation of father and son, 
since both were registered as painters at Utrecht in 1637. Both 
it appears had practised art before coming to Utrecht, but where 
they resided or what they painted is uncertain. Unhappily 
pictures scarcely help us to clear up- the mystery. In the Fursten- 
berg collection at Donaueschingen there is a " Concert of Birds" 
dated 1620, and signed with the monogram G. D. H.; and we 
may presume that G. D. H. is the man whose " Hen and Chickens 
in a Landscape " in the gallery of Rotterdam is inscribed " G. D. 
Hondecoeter, 2652 "; but is the first letter of the monogram 
to stand for Gillis or Gisbert? In the museums of Dresden and 
Cassel landscapes with sportsmen are catalogued under the 
name of Gabriel de Heusch (?), one of them dated 1529, and 
certified with the monogram G. D. H., challenging attention 
by resemblance to a canvas of the same class inscribed G. D. 
Hond. in the Berlin Museum. The question here is also whether 
G. means Gillis or Gisbert. Obviously there are two artists 
to consider, one of whom paints birds, the other landscapes 
and sportsmen. Perhaps the first is Gisbert, whose son Melchior 
also chose birds as his peculiar subject. Weenix too would 
naturally teach his nephew to study the feathered tribe, Melchior, 
however, began bis career with a different speciality from that 
by which he is usually known. Mr de Stuers affirms that he 
produced sea-pieces. One of his earliest works is a " Tub with 
Fish," dated 1655, in the gallery of Brunswick. But Melchior 
soon abandoned fish or fowl He acquired celebrity as a painter 
of birds only, which he represented not exclusively, like Fyt, 
as the gamekeeper's perquisite after a day's shooting, or stock 
of a poulterer's shop, but as living beings with passions, joys, 
fears and quarrels, to which naturalists will tell us that birds 
are subject. Without the brilliant tone and high finish of Fyt, 
his Dutch rival's birds are full of action; and, as Burger truly 
says, Hondecoeter displays the maternity of the hen with as 
much tenderness and feeling as Raphael the maternity of 
Madonnas. But Fyt was at home in depicting the coat of 
deer and dogs as well as plumage. Hondecoeter cultivates a 



narrower field, and seldom goes beyond a cock-fight or a display 
of mere bird life. Very few of his pictures are dated, though 
more are signed. Amongst the former we should note the "Jack- 
daw deprived of his Borrowed Plumes " (1671), at the Hague, 
of which Earl Cadogan has a variety; or " Game and Poultry " 
and " A Spaniel hunting a Partridge " (1672), in the gallery of 
Brussels; or " A Park with Poultry " (1686) at the Hermitage of 
St Petersburg. Hondecoeter, in great favour with the magnates 
of the Netherlands, became a member of the painters' academy 
at the Hague in 1659. William IIL employed him to paint his 
menagerie at Loo, and the picture, now at the Hague museum, 
shows that he could at a pinch overcome the difficulty of 
representing India's cattle, elephants and gazelles. But he 
is better in homelier works, with which he adorned the royal 
chateaux of Bensberg and Oranienstein at different periods 
of his life (Hague and Amsterdam). In 1688 Hondecoeter took 
the freedom of the city of Amsterdam, where he resided till his 
death. His earliest works are more conscientious, lighter and 
more transparent than his later ones. At all times he is bold 
of touch and sure of eye, giving the motion of birds with great 
spirit and accuracy. His masterpieces are at the Hague and at 
Amsterdam. But there are fine examples in private collections 
in England, and in the public galleries of Berlin, Caen, Carisruhe, 
Cassel, Cologne, Copenhagen, Dresden, Dublin, Florence, 
Glasgow, Hanover, London, Lyons, Montpeilier, Munich, Paris, 
Rotterdam, Rouen, St Petersburg, Stuttgart and Vienna. 

HONDURAS* a republic of Central America, bounded on the 
N. by the Caribbean Sea, F.. by Nicaragua, S. by Nicaragua, 
the Pacific Ocean and Salvador, and W. by Guatemala. (Foe 
map see Central America.) Pop. (1005) 500,136; area, 
about 46*500 sq. m. Honduras is said to owe its name, meaning 
in Spanish " depths," to the difficulty experienced by its original 
Spanish explorers in finding anchorage off its shores; Cape 
Gracias a. Dios (Cape " Thanks to God ") is the name bestowed, 
for analogous reasons, on its easternmost headland, which 
shelters a small harbour, now included in Nicaragua. Modern 
navigators are not confronted by the same difficulty; for, 
although the north coast is unbroken by any remarkable inlet 
except the Carataska Lagoon, a land-locked lake on the east, 
with a narrow entrance from the sea, there are many small 
bays and estuaries, such as those of Puerto Cortes, Omoa, Ulua, 
La Ceiba and Trujillo, which serve as harbours. The broad 
basin of the Caribbean Sea, bounded by Honduras, Guatemala 
and British Honduras, is known as the bay or gulf of Honduras. 
Several islets and the important group of the Bay Islands 
iq.v.) belong to the republic On the Pacific the Hondurian 
littoral is short but of great commercial value; for it consist* 
of a frontage of some 60 m. on the Bay of Fonseca (q.v.), one of 
the finest natural harbours in the world. The islands of Tigre, 
Sacate Grande and Gueguensi, in the bay, belong to Honduras. 

The frontier which separates the republic from Nicaragua 
extends across the continent from E.N.E to W.S.W. It is 
defined by the river Segovia, Wanks or Coco, for about one- 
third of the distance; it then deflects across the watershed on 
the east and south of the river Choluteca, crosses the mala 
Nicaraguan Cordillera (mountain chain) and follows the river 
Negro to the Bay of Fonseca. The line of separation from 
Salvador is irregularly drawn, first in a northerly and then in 
a westerly direction; beginning at the mouth of the river 
Goascoran, in the Bay of Fonseca, it ends 12 m. W. of San 
Francisco city. At this point begins the Guatemalan frontier, 
the largest section of which is delimited along the crests of the 
Sierra de Merendon. On the Caribbean seaboard the estuary 
of the Motagua forms the boundary between Honduras and 
Guatemala. 

Physical Features.— The general aspect of the country is moun- 
tainous; its southern half is traversed by a continuation of the main 
Nicaraguan Cordillera. The chain does not, in this republic, approach 
within 50 or 60 m. of the Pacific ; nor docs it throughout maintain 
hs general character of an unbroken range, but sometimes turns 
back on itself, forming interior basins or valleys, within which are 
collected the headwaters of the streams that traverse the country ia 
the direction of the Atlantic Ocean. Nevertheless, viewed from the 



650 



HONDURAS 



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HONDURAS 



651 



prevented the exploitation of any of these minerals on * large scale, 
and the total value of the ores exported was only £174,800 in 190* 
and £339426 in 1005. The total value of the exports in a normal 
year ranges from about £500,000 to £600,000, arid that of the imports 
from £450,000 to £550,000. Apart from mineral* the most valuable 
commodity exported is bananas (£109,263 in 1905); coco-nuts, 
timber, hides, deer-skins, feathers, coffee, sarsaparilla and rubber are 
items of minor importance. Nearly 90 % of the exports are shipped 
to the United States, which also send to Honduras more than half of 
its imports. These chiefly consist of cotton (roods, hardware and 
provisions. The manufacturing industries of Honduras include the 
plaiting of straw hats, cigar-making, brick-making and the distilla- 
tion of spirits. 

Finance. — Owing to the greater variety of its products and the 
possession of a metallic currency, Honduras is less affected by 
fluctuations of exchange than the neighbouring republics, in which 
little except paper money circulates. The monetary unit is the silver 
Peso or dollar of 100 cents, which weighs 25 grammes, •900 fine, and 
t* worth about is. 8d.; the gold dollar is worth about 4*. The 
principal coins m circulation are the i-cent copper piece, 5, 10, 20, 
25 and 50 cents, and 1 peso stiver pieces, and 1, 5, 10 and 30 dollar 
gold pieces. The metric system of weights and measures, adopted 
officially on the 1st of April 1897, has not supplanted the older 
Spanish standards in general use. There is only one bank in the 
republic, the Banco de Honduras, with its head office at Tegucigalpa. 
Its bills are legal tender for all debts due to the state. 

In July 1909 the foreign debt of Honduras, with arrears of interest* 
amounted to £22470,510, of which more than £17,000,000 were for 
arrears of interest. The principal was borrowed between 1867 and 
1870, chiefly for railway construction; but it was mainly devoted to 
other purposes and no interest has been paid since 1872. The 
republic is thus practically bankrupt. The revenue, derived chiefly 
from customs and from the spirit, gunpowder and tobacco monopolies 
reached an average of about £265,000 during the five years 1901- 
1905; the expenditure in normal years is about £250,000. The 
principal spending departments are those of war, finance, public 
works and education. 

Constitution and Government.— The constitution of Honduras, 
promulgated in 1839 and frequently amended, was to a great 
extent recast in 1880. It was again remodelled in 1804, when 
a new charter was proclaimed. This instrument gives the 
legislative power to a congress of deputies elected for four 
years by popular vote, in the ratio of one member for every 
10,000 inhabitants. Congress meets on the xst of January 
and sits for sixty consecutive days. The executive is entrusted 
to the president, who is nominated and elected for four years 
by popular vote, and is rc-eligible for a second but not for a third 
consecutive term. He is assisted by a council of ministers 
representing the departments of the interior, war, finance, 
public works, education and justice. For purposes of local 
administration the republic is divided into sixteen departments. 
The highest judicial power is vested in the Supreme Court, which 
consists of five popularly elected judges; there are also four 
Courts of Appeal, besides subordinate departmental and district 
tribunals. The active army consists of about 500 regular soldiers 
and 20,000 militia, recruited by conscription from all able- 
bodied males between the ages of twenty and thirty. Service 
in the reserve is obligatory for a further period of ten years. 

Religion and Bdueatum.—fLotxan Catholicism is the creed of a very 
large majority of the population; but the constitution grants com- 
plete liberty to all religious communities, and no Church is supported 
By public funds or receives any other special privilege. Education is 
free, secular and compulsory for children between the ages of seven 
and fifteen. There are primary schools in every convenient centre, 
but the percentage of illiterates is high, especially among the Indians. 
The state maintains a central institute and a university at Teguci- 
galpa, a school of jurisprudence at Comayagua, and colleges for 
secondary education, with special schools for teachers, in each de- 
partment. The annual cost of primary education is about £1 1 ,000. 

History.— It was at Cape Honduras that Columbus first 
landed on the American continent in 1502, and took possession 
of the country on behalf of Spain. The first settlement was 
made in 1524 by order of Hernando Cortes, who had heard 
rumours of rich and populous empires in this region, and sent 
his lieutenant Christobal de Olid to found a Spanish colony. 
Olid endeavoured to establish an independent principality, and, 
in order to resume control of the settlers, Cortes was compelled 
to undertake the long and arduous march across the mountains 
of southern Mexico and Guatemala. In the spring of 1525 he 
reached the colony and founded the city which is now Puerto 
Cortes. He entrusted the administration to a new governor, 



whose successors were to be nominated by the king, and returned 
to Mexico in 2526. By 1539, when Honduras was incorporated 
in the captaincy-general of Gua t ema l a, the mines of the province 
had proved to be the richest as yet discovered in the New World 
and several large cities had come Into existence. Toe system 
under which Honduras was administered from 1539 to 1821, 
when it repudiated the authority of the Spanish crown, the 
effects of that system, the part subsequently played by Honduras 
in the protracted struggle for Central American unity, and the 
invasion by William Walker and his fellow-adventurers (1856* 
i860), are fully described under Central America. 

War and revolution had stunted the economic growth of 
the country and retarded every attempt at social or political 
reform; its future was mortgaged by the assumption of an 
enormous burden of debt in 1869 and 1870. A renewal of war 
with Guatemala in 1871, and a revolution three years later 
in the interests of the ex-president Medina, brought about 
the intervention of the neighbouring states and the provisional 
appointment to the presidency of Marco Aurelio Soto, a nominee 
of Guatemala. This appointment proved successful and was 
confirmed by popular vote in 1877 and 1880, when a new con- 
stitution was issued and the seat of government fixed at Teguci- 
galpa. Fresh outbreaks of civil war occurred frequently between 
1883 and 1903; the republic was bankrupt and progress again 
at a standstill. In 1903 Manuel Bonflla, an able, popular and 
experienced general, gained the presidency and seemed likely 
to repeat the success of Soto in maintaining order. As bis term 
of office drew to a close, and his re-election appeared certain, 
the supporters of rival candidates and some of his own dissatisfied 
adherents intrigued to secure the co-operation of Nicaragua 
for his overthrow. Bonflla welcomed the opportunity of con- 
solidating his own position which a successful war would offer; 
Jose" Santos Zclaya, the president of Nicaragua, was equally 
ambitious; and several alleged violations of territory had 
embittered popular feeling on both sides. The United States 
and Mexican governments endeavoured to secure a peaceful 
settlement without intervention, but failed. At the outbreak 
of hostilities in February 1907 the Hondurian forces were com- 
manded by Bonflla in person and by General Sotero Barahona 
his minister of war. One of their chief subordinates was Lee 
Christmas, an adventurer from Memphis, Tennessee, who 
had previously been a locomotive-driver. Honduras received 
active support from his ally, Salvador, and was favoured by 
public opinion throughout Central America. But from the 
outset the Nicaraguans proved victorious, largely owing to 
their remarkable mobility. Their superior naval force enabled 
them to capture Puerto Cortes and La Ceiba, and to threaten 
other cities on the Caribbean coast; on land they were aided 
by a body of Hondurian rebels, who also established a pro- 
visional government. Zclaya captured Tegucigalpa after severe 
fighting, and besieged Bonflla in Amapala. Lee Christmas 
was killed. The surrender of Amapala on the nth of April 
practically ended the war. Bonflla took refuge on board the 
United States cruiser "Chicago." A noteworthy feature 
of the war was the attitude of the American naval Officers, who 
landed marines, arranged the surrender of Amapala, and pre- 
vented Nicaragua prolonging hostilities. Honduras was now 
evacuated by the Nicaraguans and her provisional government 
was recognised by Zclaya. Miguel R. Davila was president in 
1008 and 1909. 

Bibliography.— Official documents such as the annual presi- 
dential message and the reports of the ministries are published in 
Spanish at Tegucigalpa. Other periodical publications which throw 
much light on the movement of trade and politics are the British 
Foreign Office reports (London, annual), United States consular 
reports (Washington, monthly), bulletins of the Bureau of American 
Republics (Washington), and reports of the Council of the Corpora- 
tion of Foreign Bondholders (London, annual). For a more com- 
prehensive account of the country and its history, the works of 
K. Sapper, E. G. Squier, A. H. Keane and T. Child, cited under 
Central America, are important. See also E. Pelleticr, Honduras 
et ses ports: documents oMcuds sur U ehemin-de-fer interocoautque 
(Paris, 1869); E. G. Squier. Honduras: Descriptive, Historical and 
Statistical (London, 1870); C. Charles, Honduras (Chicago, 1890); 
Handbook of Honduras, published by the Bureau of American 



653 



HONE, N.— HONE 



Republics (1802); T. R. Lombard The New Honduras (New York, 
1837); H. Jamay, La Ripubtique de Honduras (Antwerp, 1898); 
Perry, Dtreetorio national de Honduras (New York, 1899); H, G. 
Bourgeois, Breoe nohcia sobre Honduras (Tegucigalpa, 1900). 

HONE, NATHANIEL (17x8-1784), British painter, was the 
son of a merchant at Dublin; and without any regular training 
acquired in his youth much skill as a portrait-painter. Early 
in bis career he left Dublin for England and worked first in 
various provincial towns, but ultimately settled in London, 
where he soon made a considerable reputation. His oil-paintings 
were decidedly popular, but he gained his chief success by his 
miniatures and enamels, which he executed with masterly 
capacity. He became a member of the Incorporated Society 
of Artists and afterwards a foundation member of the Royal 
Academy; but he had several disagreements with his fellow- 
members of that institution, and on one occasion they rejected 
two of his pictures, one of which was regarded as a satire on 
Reynolds and the other on Angelica KaufTman. Most of his 
contributions to the Academy exhibitions were portraits. 
The quality of his work varied greatly, but the merit of his 
miniatures and enamels entitles him to a place among the ablest 
artists of the British school. He executed also a few mezzo- 
lint plates of reasonable importance, and some etchings. His 
portrait, painted by himself two years before his death, is in 
the possession of the Royal Academy. 

HONE. WILLIAM (1780-1842), English writer and bookseller, 
was born at Bath on the 3rd of June 1780. His father brought 
up his children with the sectarian narrowness that so frequently 
produces reaction. Hone received no systematic education, 
and was taught to read from the Bible only. His father having 
removed to London in 1783, he was in 1790 placed in an attorney's* 
office. After two and a half years spent in the office of a solicitor 
at Chatham he returned to London to become clerk to a solicitor 
in Gray's Inn. B ut he disliked the law, and had already acquired 
a taste for free-thought and political agitation. Hone married 
in 1800, and started a book and print shop with a circulating 
library in Lambeth Walk. He soon removed to St Martin's 
Churchyard, where he brought out his first publication, Shaw's 
Gardener (1806). It was at this time that he and his friend, 
John Bone, tried to realize a plan for the establishment of popular 
savings banks, and even had an interview on the subject with 
the president of the Board of Trade. This scheme, however, 
failed. Bone joined him next in a bookseller's business; but 
Hone's habits were not those of a tradesman, and bankruptcy 
was the result He was in 181 1 chosen by the booksellers as 
auctioneer to the trade, and had an office in Ivy Lane. Independ- 
ent investigations carried on by him into the condition of 
lunatic asylums led again to business difficulties and failure, 
but he took a small lodging in the Old Bailey, keeping himself 
and his now large family by contributions to magazines and 
reviews. He hired a small shop, or rather box, in Fleet Street 
l>ut this was on two separate nights broken into, and valuable 
books lent for show were stolen* In 1815 n « started the Traveller 
newspaper, and endeavoured vainly to exculpate Eliza Fcnning, 
a poor girl, apparently quite guiltless, who was executed on a 
charge of poisoning. From February x to October 25, 1817, 
he published the Reformer's Register, writing in it as the serious 
critic of the state abuses, which he soon after attacked in the 
famous political squibs and parodies, illustrated by George 
Cruikshank. In April 18 17 three ex-ojjkio informations were 
filed against him by the attorney-general, Sir William Garrow. 
Three separate trials took place in the Guildhall before special 
juries on the 18th, 19th and 20th of December 181 7. The first, 
for publishing Wilkes's Catechism of a Ministerial Member 
(1817), was before Mr Justice Abbot (afterwards Lord Tenterden) ; 
the second, for parodying the litany and libelling the prince 
regent, and the third, for publishing the Stnecurisl's Creed 
O817), a parody on the Athanasian creed, were before Lord 
Ellenborough (?.*.). The prosecution took the ground that the 
prints were calculated to injure public morals, and to bring the 
prayer-book and even religion itself into contempt. But there 
can be no doubt that the real motives of the prosecution were 



political; Hone had ridiculed the habits and exposed the cor- 
ruption of the prince regent and of other persons in power. He 
went to the root of the matter when he wished the jury " to 
understand that, had he been a publisher of ministerial paxxxxies, 
he would not then have been defending himself on the floor of 
that court." In spite of illness and exhaustion Hone displayed 
great courage and ability, speaking on each of the three days 
for about seven hours. Although his judges were biassed against 
him he was acquitted on each count, and the result was received 
with enthusiastic cheers by immense crowds within and without 
the court. Soon after the trials a subscription was begun which 
enabled Hone to get over the difficulties caused by his prosecution, 
Among Hone's most successful political satires were The Pcditicel 
House that Jack built (1819), The Queen's Matrimonial Ladder 
(1820), in favour of Queen Caroline, The Man in the Moon 
(1820), The Political Showman (1821), all illustrated by Cnrik- 
shank. Many of his squibs are directed against a certain *' Dr 
Slop," a nickname given by him to Dr (afterwards Sir John) 
Stoddart, of The Times. In researches for his defence he had 
come upon some curious and at that time little trodden literary 
ground, and the results were shown by his publication in iSjo 
of his Apocryphal New Testament, and in 1823 of his Ancient 
Mysteries Explained. In 1826 he published the Eoery-day 
Book, in 1827-1828 the Table-Book, and in 18*0 the Year-Book ; 
all three were collections of curious information on manners, 
antiquities and various other subjects. These are the works 
by which Hone is best remembered. In preparing them he had 
the approval of Southey and the assistance of Charles Lamb, 
but pecuniarily they were not successful, and Hone was lodged 
in King's Bench prison for debt. Friends, however, again came 
to his assistance, and he was established in a corlee-hoase in 
Gracechurch Street; but this, like most of his enterprises, ended 
in failure. Hone's attitude of mind had gradually changed to 
that of extreme devout ness, and during the latter years of his 
life he frequently preached in Weigh House Chapel, Eastcheap. 
In 1830 he edited Strutt's Sports and Pastimes, and he contri- 
buted to the first number of the Penny Magazine. He was also 
for some years sub-editor of the PatrioL He died at Tottenham 
on the 6th of November 1842. 

HONE (in O. Eng. hdn t cognate with Swcd. ken ; the root 
appears in Skt. cdna, co to sharpen), a variety of finery siliceous 
stone employed for whetting or sharpening edge tools, and for 
abrading steel and other hard surfaces. Synonyms are hone- 
stone, whetstone, oilstone and sharpening stone. Hones are 
generally prepared in the form of flat slabs or small pencils or 
rods, but some are made with the outline of the special instru- 
ment they are designed to sharpen. Their abrading action is 
due to the quartz or silica which is always present ha predominat- 
ing proportion, some kinds consisting of almost pure quartz, 
while in others the siliceous element is very intimately mixed 
with aluminous or calcareous matter, forming a uniform compact 
stone, the extremely fine siliceous particles of which impart a 
remarkably keen edge to the instruments for the sharpening 
of which they are Applied. In some cases the presence of minute 
garnets or magnetite assists in the cutting action. Hones 
are used either dry, with water, or with oil, and generally the 
object to be sharpened is drawn with hand pressure backward 
and forward over the surface of the hone* but sometimes the 
stone is moved over the cutting edge. 

The coarsest type of stone which can be included among hones 
is the bat or scythe stone, a porous fine-grained sandstone used 
for sharpening scythes and cutters of mowing machines, and for 
other like purposes. Next come the ragstoncs, which consist of 
quartzose mica-schist, and give a finer edge than any sandstone, 
Under the head of oilstones or hones proper the most famous 
and best-known qualities are the German razor hone, the Turkey 
oilstone, and the Arkansas stone. The German razor hone, 
used, as its name implies, chiefly for razors^ is obtained from 
the slate mountains near Ratisbon, where it forms a yellow 
vein of from 1 to 18 in. In the blue slate. It is sawn into thin 
slabs, and these are cemented to slabs of slate which serve as 
a support. Turkey oilstone is a close-grained bluish stone 



HONEY 



653 



containing from 70 to 75% of silica in a slate of very fine 
division, intimately blended with about 20 to 45% of caldte. 
It ia obtained only in small pieces, frequently flawed and not 
tough, so that the slabs must have a backing of slate or wood. 
It as one of the most valuable of all whetstones, abrading the, 
hardest steel, and possessing sufficient compactness to resist 
the pressure required for sharpening gravers. The stone comes 
from the interior of Asia Minor, whence it is carried to Smyrna. 
Of Arkansas stones there are two varieties, both found in the 
same district, Garland and Saline counties, Arkansas, United 
States. The finer kind, known as Arkansas hone, is obtained 
in small pieces at the Hot Springs, and the second quality, dis- 
tinguished as Washita stone, comes from Washita or Ouachita 
liver. The hones yield on analysis 98% of silica, with small 
proportions of alumina, potash and soda, and mere traces of 
iron, lime, magnesia and fluorine. They are white in colour, 
extremely hard and keen in grit, and not easily worn down 
or broken. Ceologically the materials are called novaculites, 
and arc supposed to be metamorphosed sandstone silt, chert 
or limestone resulting from the permeation through the mass of 
heated alkaline siliceous waters. The finer kind is employed 
for fine cutting instruments, and also for polishing steel pivots 
of watch -wheel* and similar minute work, the second and coarser 
quality being used for common tools. Both varieties are largely 
exported from the United States in the form of blocks, slips, 
pencils, rods and wheels. Other honestones are obtained in 
the United States from New York, New Hampshire, Vermont, 
Ohio (Deerlick stone) and Indiana (Hindostan or Orange stone). 
Among hones of less importance in general use may be noted 
the Charley Forest stone— or Whittle Hill honestone— a good 
substitute for Turkey oilstone; Water of Ayr stone, Scotch 
stone, or snake stone, a pale grey carboniferous shale hardened 
by igneous action, used for tools and for polishing marble 
and copper-plates; Idwal or Welsh oilstone, used for small 
articles; and cutlers' greenstone from Snowdon, very hard and 
dose in texture, used for giving the last edge to lancets. 

HONEY (Chin, mi ; Sansk. madku, mead, honey; cf. A.S. 
mtdo, medu, mead; Gr. fiVkt, in which $ or 6 is changed into 
X; Lat. md ; Fr. mid ; A.S. kunig ; Ger. Honig), 1 a sweet 
viscid liquid, obtained by bees (see Bee, Bee-keeping) chiefly 
from the nectaries of flowers, i.e. those parts of flowers specially 
constructed for the elaboration of honey, and, after transportation 
to the hive in the proventriculus or crop of the insects, discharged 
by them into the cells prepared for its reception. Whether the 
nectar undergoes any alteration within the crop of the bee 
is a point on which authors have differed. Some wasps, e.g. 
Myrapelra scutellaris* and the genus Nectarine, collect honey. 
A honey-like fluid, which consists of a nearly pure solution of 
uncrystalliaable sugar having the formula C*H m Ot after drying 
in vacuo, and which is used by the Mexicans in the preparation 
of a beverage, is yielded by certain inactive individuals of 
Myrmecocystus mexicanus, Wesmael, the honey-ants or poached 
ants (hormigas mieleras or mochileras) of Mexico.* The abdomen 
in these insects, owing to the distensibQity of the membrane 
connecting its segments, becomes converted into a globular 
thin-walled sac by the accumulation within it of the nectar 
supplied to them by their working comrades (Wesmael, Bull, 
de I'Acad. Roy. da Brux. v. 766, 1838). By the Rev. H. C. 
M'Cook, who discovered the insect in the Garden of the Gods, 
Colorado, the honey-bearers were found hanging by their feet, 
in groups of about thirty, to the roofs of special chambers in 
their underground nests, their large globular abdomens causing 
them to resemble " bunches of small Delaware grapes" (Proc. 
Acad. Nat. Set. Philad., 1879, p. 197). A bladder-like formation 
on the metathorax of another ant, Crematogaster inflatus (F. 
Smith, Cat. of Hymeuopiera, pt. vL pp. 136 and 300, pi. ix. fig. 1), 

1 The term honey in its various forms is peculiar to the Teutonic 
group of languages, and in the Gothic New Testament is wanting, the 
Greek word being there translated nulitk. 

' See A. White, in Ann. and Mag. Not, HisL vii. 315, pi. 4. 

* WetheriU (Ckem. Gas. xi. 72, 1853) calculates that the average 
weight of the honey is 8a times that 01 the body of the ant, or 0*3942 
grammes. 



which has a small circular orifice at each posterior lateral angle, 
appears to possess a function similar to that of the abdomen 
in the honey-ant. 

It is a popular saying that where is the best honey there 
also .is the best woof; and a pastoral district, since it affords a 
greater profusion of flowers, is superior for the production of 
honey to one under tillage. 4 Dry warm weather is that moat 
favourable to the secretion of nectar by flowers. This they pro- 
tect from rain by various internal structures, such as papillae, 
cushions of hairs and spurs, ot by virtue of their position (in 
the raspberry, drooping), or the arrangement of their con- 
stituent parts. Dr A. W. Bennett (Haw Flowers are Fertilised, 
P- 31. 1873) has remarked that the perfume of flowers is generally 
derived from their nectar; the blossoms of some plants, how- 
ever, as ivy and holly, though almost scentless, are highly 
nectariferous. The exudation of a honey-like or saccharine, 
fluid, as has frequently been attested, is not a function exclusively 
of the flowers in all plants. A sweet material, the manna of 
pharmacy, e.g. is produced by the leaves and stems of a species 
of ash, Fraxinus Onus ; and honey-secreting glands are to be 
met with on the leaves, petioles, phyllodes, stipules (as in Vkia 
saliva), or bracteae (as in the Marcgrariaceac) of a considerable 
number of different vegetable forms. The origin of the honey- 
yielding properties manifested specially by flowers among the 
several parts of plants has been carefully considered by Darwin, 
who regards the saccharine matter in nectar as a waste product 
of chemical changes in the sap, which, when it happened to be 
excreted within the envelopes of flowers, was utilized for the 
important object of cross-fertilization, and subsequently was 
much increased in quantity, and stored in various ways (see Cross 
and Self Fertilization of Plants, pp. 402 sq., 1876). It has been 
noted with respect to the nectar of the fuchsia that it is most 
abundant when the anthers are about to dehisce, and absent 
in the unexpanded flower. 

Pettigrew is of opinion that -few bees go more than 2 m. from 
home in .search of honey. The number of blossoms visited in order 
to meet the requirements of a single hive of bees must be very great: 
for it has been found by A. S. Wilson (" On the Nectar of Flowers," 
Brit. Assoc. Rep., 1878, p. 567) that 125 heads of common red clover, 
which is a plant comparatively abundant in nectar, yield but one 

I '" "2 grains) of sugar; and as each head contains about 

1 >,ooo distinct flower-tubes must on this estimate be 

< ich kilogramme (2*204 lb) of sugar collected. Among 
t es of honey are reckoned the apple, asparagus, asters, 
1 vood (Tilta americana), and the European lime or 
1 paea), beans, bonesets (Eupatorium), borage, broom, 
1 Lnip, or catmint (Netita Cataria), cherry, deome, 

< crocus, currant, dandelion, eucalyptus, figwort 
1 furze, golden-rod (Solidogo), gooseberry, hawthorn, 
I ca, horehound, hyacinth, lucerne, maple, mignonette, 
1 on (Leonurus), mustard, onion, peach, pear, poplar, 
1 aspbeny, sage, silver maple, snapdragon, sour-wood 

boreitm, D.C), strawberry, sycamore, teasel, thyme, 

1 i especially rich in pollen), turnip, violet and willows, 

ry-dew " of the leaves of the whitethorn (Bonner), 

< _ . sch and some other trees. 

Honey contains dextroglucose and laevoglucose (the former 
practically insoluble, the latter soluble in i pt. of cold strong 
alcohol), cane-sugar (according to some), mucilage, water, wax, 
essential oil, colouring bodies, a minute quantity of mineral 
matter and pollen. By a species of fermentation, the cane- 
sugar is said to be gradually transformed into inverted sugar 
(laevoglucose with dextroglucose). The pollen, as a source of 
nitrogen, is ot importance to the bees feeding on the honey. 
It may be obtained for examination as a sediment from a mixture 
of honey and water. Other substances which have been dis- 
covered in honey are mannite (Guibourt), a free add which 
precipitates the salts of silver and of lead, and is soluble in water 
and alcohol (Calloux), and an uncrystallizable sugar, nearly 
related to inverted sugar (Soubeiran, Compt. Rend. xxviiL 
774-775- 1849). Brittany honey contains couvain, a ferment 
which determines its active decomposition (Wurtx, Did. de 
Chem. ii. 430). In the honey of Polybia apicipennis, a wasp 

4 Compare Isa. vii. 15, 22. where curdled milk (A.V. " butter •*) 
and honey as exdusive articles of diet are indicative of foreign in- 
vasion, which turns rich agricultural districts into pasture lands or 
uncultivated wastes. 



654 



HONEY 



of tropical America, cane-sugar ocean in crystals of large size 
(Karsten, Pogg. Ann., C. 550). Dr J. Campbell Brown (" On 
the Composition of Honey," Analyst iii. 267, 1878) is doubtful 
as to the presence of cane-sugar in any one of nine samples, 
from various sources, examined by him. The following average 
percentage numbers are afforded by his analyses: laevulose, 
36-45; dextrose, 36* 57; mineral matter, -15; water expelled 
at ioo° C, 1 8* 5, and at a much higher temperature, with loss, 
7'8i: the wax, pollen and insoluble matter vary from a trace 
to 2*1%. The specific gravity of honey is about 1*41, 
The rotation of a polarized ray by a solution of 1626 grammes 
of crude honey in 100 cc of water is generally from -3»a° to 
-5° at 6o° F.; in the case of Greek honey it is nearly -5'5°. 
Almost all pure honey, when exposed for some time to light 
and cold, becomes more or less granular in consistency. Any 
liquid portion can be readily separated by straining through 
linen. Honey sold out of the comb is commonly clarified by 
heating and skimmimg; but according to Bonner it is always 
best in its natural state. The mel depwatum of British pharmacy 
is prepared by heating honey in a water-bath, and straining 
through flannel previously moistened with warm water. 

The term " virgin-honey " (A.-S., hunigtear) is applied to 
the honey of young bees which have never swarmed, or to 
that which flows spontaneously from honeycomb with or without 
the application of heat. The honey obtained from old hives, 
considered inferior to it in quality, is ordinarily darker, thicker 
arid less pleasant in taste and odour. The yield of honey is less 
in proportion to weight in old than in young or virgin combs. 
The far-famed honey of Narbonne is white, very granular and 
highly aromatic; and still finer honey is that procured from 
the Corbieres Mountains, 6 to 9 m. to the south-west. The 
honey of Gatinais is usually white, and is less odorous and 
granulates less readily than that of Narbonne* Honey from 
white clover has a greenish-white, and that from heather a 
rich golden-yellow hue. What is made from honey-dew is dark 
in colour, and disagreeable to the palate, and does not candy 
like good honey. " We have seen aphide honey from sycamores," 
says F. Cheshire {Prod. Bee-keeping, p. 74), " as deep in tone 
•s walnut liquor, and where mucp, of it is stored the value of 
the whole crop is practically nil." The honey of the stingless 
bees (Meliponia and Trigone) of Brazil varies greatly in quality 
according to the species of flowers from which if is collected, 
some kinds being black and sour, and others excellent (F. Smith, 
Trans. Ent. Soc., 3d ser., 1. pt. vi., 1863). That of Apis Peronii, 
of India and Timor, is yellow, and of very agreeable flavour 
and is more liquid than the British sorts. A. unicolor, a bee 
indigenous to Madagascar, and naturalized in Mauritius and 
the island of Reunion, furnishes, a thick and syrupy, peculiarly 
scented green honey, highly esteemed in Western India. A 
rose-coloured boncy is stated (Card. Chron., 1870, p. 1698) 
to have been procured by artificial feeding. The fine aroma 
of Maltese honey is due to its collection from orange blossoms. 
Narbonne honey being harvested chiefly from Labiate plants, 
as rosemary, an imitation of it is sometimes prepared by flavour- 
ing ordinary honey with infusion of rosemary flowers. 

Adulterations of honey are starch, detectable by the microscope, 
and by its blue reaction with iodine, also wheaten flour, gelatin, 
chalk, gypsum, pipe-day, added water, cane-sugar and common 
syrup, and the different varieties of manufactured glucose. Honey 
sophisticated with glucose containing copperas as an impurity is 
turned of an inky colour by liquids containing tannin, as tea. Elm 
leaves have been used in America for the flavouring of imitation 
honey. Stone jars should be employed in preference to common 
earthenware for the storage of honey, which acts upon the lead 
glare of the latter. 

Honey is mildly laxative in properties. Some few kinds 
are poisonous, as frequently the reddish honey stored by the 
Brazilian wasp Nectarine (Polistes, Latr. 1 ) Lechcguana, Shuck., 
the effects of which have been vividly described by Aug. de 
Saint-HHaire, s the spring honey of the wild bees of East Nepaul, 
said to be rendered noxious by collection from rhododendron 

1 Memoires dm Musium, xi. 313 (1824). 

* lb. xiL 293, pi. xii. fig. B (1825). The honey, according to 
Lassaigne (ib. ix. 319), is almost entirely soluble in alcohoL 



flowers (Hooker, Himalayan Journals, f. too, ed. 185$), and the 
honey of Trebizond, which from its source, the blossoms, it is 
stated, of Azalea pontka and Rhododendron pontkum (perhaps 
to be identified with Pliny's Aegoletkron), acquires the qualities 
of an irritant and Intoxicant narcotic, as described by Xenopfcoo 
(Anab. iv. 8). Pliny (Nat. Hist. xxi. 45) describes as noxious 
a livid-coloured honey found in Persia and Gaetuba. Hooey 
obtained from Kalmia latifolia, L., the calico bush, mountain 
laurel or spoon-wood of the northern United States, and allied 
species, is reputed deleterious; also that of the sour-wood is 
by some good authorities considered to possess undeniable 
griping properties; and G. Bidie (Madras Quart. Joum. Med. 
Scu, Oct, 186 1, p. 309) mentions urtication, headache, e x t r eme 
prostration and nausea, and intense thirst among the symptoms 
produced by a small quantity only of a honey from Coorg jungle. 
A South African species of Euphorbia, as was experienced 
by the missionary Moffat (Miss. Lab. p. 32, 1840), yields a 
poisonous honey. The nectar of certain flowers is asserted to 
cause even in bees a fatal kind of vertigo. As a demulcent 
and flavouring agent, hooey is employed in the oxymd, exymol 
scillae, met boracis, confecUo pipers*, eonf. scammonU and cwnf. 
terebinthinae of the British Pharmacopoeia. To the ancients 
honey was of very great importance as an article of diet, being 
almost their only available source of sugar. It was valued 
by them also for its medicinal virtues; and in recipes of the 
Saxon and later periods it is a common ingredient.* Of the 
eight kinds of honey mentioned by the great Indian surgical 
writer Susruta, four are not described by recent authors, viz. 
argha or wild honey, collected by a sort of yellow bee; chkoJra, 
made by tawny or yellow wasps; auddiaka, a bitter and acrid 
honey-like substance found in the nest of white ants; and 
ddla or unprepared honey occurring on flowers. According to 
Hindu medical writers, honey when new is laxative, and when 
more than a year old astringent (U. C Dutt, Mat. Med. of the 
Hindus, p. 277, 1877). Cerqrael, formed by mixing at a gentle 
heat one part by weight of yellow wax with four of clarified 
honey, and straining, is used in India and other tropical countries 
as a mild stimulant for ulcers in the place of animal fats, which 
there rapidly become rancid and unfit for medicinal purposes. 
The Koran, in the chapter entitled " The Bee," remarks with 
reference to bees and their honey: " There proceedeth from 
their bellies a liquor of various colour, wherein is a medidne 
for men" (Sale's Koran, chap. xvi). Pills prepared with 
honey as an exdpient are said to remain unindurated, however 
long they may be kept (Med. Times, 1857, i 209), Mead, of 
yore a favourite beverage in England (voL iv. p. 204), is made 
by fermentation of the liquor obtained by boiling in water 
combs from which the honey has been drained. In the pre- 
paration of sack-mead, an ounce of hops is added to each gallon 
of the liquor, and after the fermentation a small quantity of 
brandy. Metheglin, or hydromel, is maufactured by ferment- 
ing with yeast a solution of honey flavoured with boiled hops 
(see Cooky, Cyclop.). A kind of mead is largely consumed 
in Abyssinia (vol. i. p. 64), where It is carried on journeys in 
large horns (Stern, Wanderings, p. 317, 1862). In Russia a 
drink termed lipet is made from the dendous honey of the 
linden. The mulsum of the ancient Romans consisted of honey, 
wine and water boiled together. The darre, or piment, of Chaucer's 
time was wine mixed with honey and spices, and strained ull 
dear; a similar drink was bracket, made with wort of ale instead 
of wine. L. Maurial (VInsectologie Agricote for 1868, p. 206) 
reports unfavourably as to the use of honey for the production 
of alcohol; he recommends it, however, as superior to sugar 
for the thickening of liqueurs, and also as a means of sweetening 
imperfectly ripened vintages. It is occasionally employed 
for giving strength and flavour to ale. In ancient Egypt it 
was valued as an embalming material; and in the East, for 
the preservation of fruit, and the making of cakes, sweetmeats, 

1 For a list of fifteen treatises concerning honey, dating from 1625 
to 1868, see Waring. Btbt. Therap. u. 559. New Svd. Soc 0*79}. 
On sundry ancient uses for honey, see Beckmann, Hist, of /sweat l 
287 (1846). 



HONEYCOMB— HONEY-EATER 



*55 



and other articles of food, it is largely consumed. Grafts, seeds 
and birds' eggs, for transmission to great distances, are some- 
times packed in honey. In India a mixture of honey and milk, 
ox of equal parts of curds, honey and clarified butter (Sansk., 
madku-parka), is a respectful offering to a guest, or to a bride- 
groom on his arrival at the door of the bride's father; and 
one of the purificatory ceremonies of the Hindus (Sansk., madhu- 
Prdsana) is the placing of a little honey in the mouth of a new- 
born male infant. Honey is frequently alluded to by the writers 
of antiquity as food for children; it is not to this, however, 
as already mentioned, that Isa. vii. 15 refers. Cream or fresh 
butter together with honey, and with or without bread, is 
a favourite dish with the Arabs. 

Among the observances at the Fandroana or New Year's 
Festival, in Madagascar, is the eating of mingled rice and honey 
by the queen and her guests; in the same country honey is 
placed in the sacred water of sprinkling used at the blessing 
of the children previous to circumcision (Sibree, The Great 
African Is. pp. 219, 3x4, 1880). Honey was frequently em- 
ployed in the ancient religious ceremonies of the heathen, but 
was forbidden as a sacrifice in the Jewish ritual (Lev. ii. 11). 
With milk or water it was presented by the Greeks as a libation 
to the dead (Odyss. xi. 27; Eurip. Orest. 115). A honey- 
cake was the monthly food of the fabled serpent-guardian 
of the Acropolis (Herod, viii. 41). By the aborigines of Peru 
honey was offered ' '' 

The Hebrew wore on 

of the English Bibli ch 

are ja'ar or ja'orith I nd 

uopketh (Ps. xix. u le- 

notes bee-honey (as na 

of trees, by some wr • " 

eaten by John the 1 be 

fruits themselves; a 11 

and Ex. xxvii. 17) t ng 

thin molasses, in us he 

name of dibs (sec Ki 1). 

Joeephus (B.J., iv. 8 10. 

consisting of the ej id 

Herodotus (iv. 194] he 

Gyzantians in Nort ey 

most esteemed by tl y, 

and of Mount Hym tn 

Greece, p. 148, 2nd e >y 

no means so good a to 

say of the heather I », 

and more especially ly 

hills towards Cleon; ry 

and wax, still largel ;n 

times the' chief pr< tie 

13th and 14th cent d. 

a gallon, and occasionally was disposed of by the swarm or hive, or 
ruscha (Rogers, Hist, of Agric. and Prices in Eng., i. 418). At 
Wrexham, Denbigh, Wales, two honey fairs are annually held, one 
on the Thursday next after the 1st of September, and the other — the 
more recently instituted and by far the larger — on the Thursday 
following the first Wednesday in October. In Hungary the amounts 
of honey and of wax are in favourable years respectively about 
100,000 and 12,000 cwt., and in unfavourable years, as, e.g. 1874, 
about 12,000 and 3000 cwt. The hives there in 1870 numbered 
617,407 (or 40 per 1000 of the population, against 45 in Austria). 
Of these 365,711 were in Hungary Proper, and 91,348 (87 per 1000 
persons) in the Military Frontier (Kclcti, Uberstcnt der Bevoik. 
Vngams, 1871 ; Schwickcr s 5toJtrti* d. K. Ungam, 1877). In Poland 
the system of bee-keeping introduced by Dohnowski has been found 
to afford an average of 40 lb of honey and wax and two new swarms 
per hive, the common peasant's hive yielding, with two swarms, 
only 3 lb of honey and wax. In forests and places remote from 
villages in Podolia and parts of .Volhynia, as many as 1000 hives may 
be seen in one apiary. In the district of Ostrolenka, in the govern- 
ment of Plock, and in the woody region of Poksia, in Lithuania, a 
method is practised of rearing bees in excavated trunks of trees 
(Stanton, " On the Treatment of Bees in Poland," Technologist, vi. 
45, 1866). When, in August, in the loftier valleys of Bormio, Italy, 
flowering ceases, the bees in their wooden hives are by means of 
spring-carts transported at night to lower regions, where they obtain 
from the buckwheat crops the inferior honey which serves them for 
winter consumption (lb. p. 38). 

In Palestine, " the land flowing with milk and honey * n (Ex. Hi. 
17; Numb. xiii. 27), wild bees are very numerous, especially in the 



wilderness of Judaea, and the selling of their produce, obtained from 
crevices in rocks, hollows in trees and elsewhere, is with many of 
the inhabitants a means of subsistence. Commenting on I Sam. 
xiv. a6, J. Roberts (Oriental Illust.) remarks that in the East " the 
forests literally flow with honey; large combs may be seen hanging 
on the trees, as you pass along, full of honey." In Galilee, and at 
Bethlehem and other places in Palestine, bee-keeping is extensively 
carried on. The hives are sun-burnt tubes of mud, about 4 ft. in 
length and 8 in. in diameter, and, with the exception of a small 
central aperture for the passage of the bees, closed at each end with 
mud. These are laid together in long rows, or piled pyramidally, 
and are protected from the sun by a covering of mud and of boughs. 
The honey is extracted, when the ends have been removed, by means 

~f -_:___ u l. /c «r»_:_.. »t_j zz.*_« _.*• ii. »-i«- 



of an iron hook. (See Tristram, Nat. Hist, of the Bible, pp. 322 sqq. f 
and ed., 1868). Apiculture in Turkey is in a very rude condition. 
The Bali-dagh, or <f Honey Mount," in the plain of Troy, is so called 



1 In Sanskrit, modhu-kulyd. a stream of honey, is sometimes used 
to express an overflowing abundance of good things (Monier Williams, 
Satuk.-Eng. DicL % p. 736, 1872). 



on account of the numerous wild bees tenanting the caves in its 
precipitous rocks to the south. In various regions of Africa, as on 
the west, near the Gambia, bees abound. Cameron was informed by 
his guides that the large quantities of honey at the cliffs by the river 
Makanyazi were under the protection of an evil spirit, and not one 
of his men could be persuaded to gather any {Across Africa, i. 266). 
On the precipitous slopes of the Teesta valley, in India, the procuring 
of honey from the pendulous bees'-nests, which are sometimes large 
enough to be conspicuous features at a mile's distance, is the only 
means by which. the idle poor raise their annual rent (Hooker, Him, 
Journ. ii. 41). 

To reach the large combs of Ap*s dor sola and A. Ustacea, the 
natives of Timor, by whom both the honey and young bees are 
esteemed delicacies, ascend the trunks of lofty forest trees by the 
use of a loop of creeper. Protected from the myriads of angry insects 
by a small torch only, they detach the combs from the under surface 
of the branches, and lower them by slender cords to the ground 
(Wallace, Jour*. Linn. Soc., Zool., vol. xi.). (F. H. B.) 

HONEYCOMB, a cloth, so called because of the particular 
arrangement of the crossing of the warp and weft threads which 
form cells somewhat similar to those of the real honeycomb. 
They differ from the latter in that they are rectangular instead 
of hexagonal. The bottom of the cell is formed by those threads 
and picks which weave " plain," while the ascending sides of 
the figure are formed by the gradually increasing length of float 
of the warp and weft yarns. 

The figure shows two of the commonest designs which are used for 
these cloths, design A being what is often termed. the " perfect honey- 
comb " ; in the figure it will ■«__^___^_ 

be seen that the highest 
number of successive white 
squares is seven, while the 
corresponding highest num- 
ber of successive black 
squares is five. Two of 
each of these maximum 
floats form the top or 
highest edges of the cell, 
and the number of sue- A B 

cessive like squares decreases as the bottom of the cell is reached 
when the floats are one of black and one of white (see middle 
of design, &c). The weave produces a reversible cloth, and it is 
extensively used for the embellishment of quilts and other fancy 
goods. It is also largely used in the manufacture of cotton and linen 
towels. B is, for certain purposes, a more suitable weave than A, 
but both are very largely used for the latter dass of goods. 

HONEY-EATER, or Honey-sucker, names applied by many 
writers in a very loose way to a large number of birds, some of 
which, perhaps, have no intimate affinity; here they are used in 
a more restricted sense for what, in the opinion of a good many 
recent authorities, 1 should really be deemed the family Meti- 
phagidae — excluding therefrom the Nectariniidae or Sun-bisd* 
(q.v.) as well as the genera Promerops and ZosUrops with what- 
ever allies they may possess. Even with this restriction, the 
extent of the family must be regarded as very indefinite, owing 
to the absence of materials sufficient for arriving at a satis- 
factory conclusion, though the existence of such a family is 
probably indisputable. Making allowance, then, for the imperfect 
light in which they must at present be viewed, what are here 
called Meliphagidae include some of the most characteristic 
forms of the ornithology of the great Australian region- 
members of the family inhabiting almost every part of it, and a 
single species only, Ptilotis limbala, being said to occur outside 
its limits. They all possess, or are supposed to possess, a long 

* Among them especially A. R. Wallace, Gtogr. Distr. Animals, ii. 
275. 




656 



HONEY-GUIDE— HONEYMOON 



protrusible tongue with a brush-like tip, differing, it is believed, 
in structure from that found in any other bird — Promcrops 
perhaps excepted — and capable of being formed into a suctorial 
tube, by means of which honey is absorbed from the nectary 
of flowers, though it would seem that insects attracted by the 
honey furnish the chief nourishment of many species, while 
others undoubtedly feed to a greater or less extent on fruits. 
The McUphagidac, as now considered, are for the most part 
small birds, never exceeding the size of a missel thrush; and 
they have been divided into more than 20 genera, containing 
above 300 species, of which only a few can here be particularized. 
Most of these species have a very confined range, being found 
perhaps only on a single island or group of islands in the region, 
but there are a few which are more widely distributed — such 
as Glycyphila rufifrons, the white-throated 1 honey-eater, found 
over the greater part of Australia and Tasmania. In plumage 
they vary much. Most of the species of Ptilotis are characterized 
by a tuft of white, or in others of yellow, feathers springing 
from behind the ear. In the greater number of the genus 
Myzometa* the males are recognizable by a gorgeous display 
of crimson or scarlet, which has caused one species, M. sanguino- 
lenla, to be known as the soldier-bird to Australian colonists; 
but in others no brilliant colour appears, and those of several 
genera have no special ornamentation, while some have a 
particularly plain appearance. One of the most curious forms 
is Prosthemadera— the tui or parson-bird of New Zealand, so 
called from the two tufts of white feathers which hang beneath 
its chin in great contrast to its dark silky plumage, and suggest 
a likeness to the bands worn by ministers of several religious 
denominations when officiating. 5 The bell-bird of the same 
island, Anthornis melanura — whose melody excited the admira- 
tion of Cook the morning after he had anchored in Queen 
Charlotte's Sound — is another member of this family, and 
unfortunately seems to be fast becoming extinct. But it would 
be impossible here to enter much further into detail, though 
the wattle-birds, Anthochaera, of Australia have at least to be 
named. Mention, however, must be made of the friar-birds, 
Tropidorkynchus, of which nearly a score of species, five of them 
belonging to Australia, have been described. With their stout 
bills, mostly surmounted by an excrescence, they seem to be 
the most abnormal forms of the family, and most of them are 
besides remarkable for the baldness of some part at least of their 
head. They assemble in troops, sitting on dead trees, with a 
loud call, and are very pugnacious, frequently driving away 
hawks and crows. A. R. Wallace {Malay Archipelago, ii. 
150-153) discovered the curious fact that two species of this 
genus — T. bottrensis and T. subcornuius — respectively inhabit- 
ing the islands of Bourn and Ceram, were the object of natural 
" mimicry " on the part of two species of oriole of the genus 
Mimcta, M. bourouensis and M. forsteni, inhabiting the same 
islands, so as to be on a superficial examination identical in 
appearance — the honey-eater and the oriole of each island pre- 
senting exactly the same tints — the black patch of bare skin 
round the eyes of the former, for instance, being copied in the 
latter by a patch of black feathers, and even the protuberance 
on the beak of the Tropidorkynchus being imitated by a similar 
enlargement of the beak of the Mimeta. The very reasonable 
explanation which Wallace offers is that the pugnacity of the 

1 The young of this species has the throat yellow. 

■W. A. Forbes published a careful monograph of this genus in 

the Proceedings of the Zoologies' "- ' ' ' - - *-- 

• This bird, according to Sir d, 

p. 88), while uttering its wild i n, 

which adds to the suggested of 

mimicry, and is a favourite < id 

colonists. On one occasion, s ge 

meeting of Maories on a matte e, 

when immediately on the coi he 

old chief to whom my argumer to 

reply, a tui, whose netted cage ?d 

in a dear, emphatic way, ' Tito ly 

caused much merriment amor lie 

gravity of the venerable old chi ie, 

laughing, ' your arguments. an ry 
wise bird, and he is not yet co 



former has led the smaller birds of prey to respect it, and it 
is therefore an advantage for the latter, being weaker and less 
courageous, to be mistaken for it. (A. N.) 

HONEY-GUIDE, a bird so called from its habit of pointing 
out to man and to the ratel (Mettivora capensis) the nests of 
bees. Stories to this effect have been often told, and may be 
found in the narratives of many African travellers, from Bruce 
to Livingstone. But Layard says (B. South Africa, p. S42) 
that the birds will not infrequently lead any one to a leopard 
or a snake, and will follow a dog with vociferations, though its 
noisy cry and antics unquestionably have in many cases the 
effect signified by its English name. If not its first discoverer, 
Sparrman, in 1777, was the first who described and figured this 
bird, which he met with in the Cape Colony (Phil. Trans ^ 
lxvii. 43-47, pi. i.), giving it the name of Calculus indicator, 
its zygodactylbos feet with the toes placed in pairs — two before 
and two behind— inducing the belief that it must be l ef erre d 
to that genus. Vicillot in 1816 elevated it to the rank of a geaus, 
Indicator; but it was still considered to belong to the family 
Cuculidae (its asserted parasitical habits lending force to that 
belief) by all systematists except Blyth and Jerdon, until it 
was shown by Blanford (06;. Gtol. and Zoot. Abyssinia, pp. 
308, 309) and Sclater (Ibis, 1870, pp. 176-180) that it was more 
allied to the barbets, Capitonidae, and, in consequence, was then 
made the type of a distinct family, Indicatoridae. In the mean- 
while other species had been discovered, some of them differing 
sufficiently to warrant SundevalTs foundation of a second genus, 
Prodotiscus, of the group. The honey-guides arc small birds, 
the largest hardly exceeding a lark in size, and of plain plumage, 
with what appears to be a very sparrow-like bill. Bowdler 
Sharpc, in a revision of the family published in 1876 (Prn. 
Miscellany, i. 192-209), recognizes ten species of the genus 
Indicator, to which another was added by Dr Reichenow (Journ. 
fiir Ornithologic, 1877, p. no), and two of Prodotiscus. Four 
species of the former, including /. spamnani, which was the 
first made known, arc found in South Africa, and one of the 
latter. The rest inhabit other parts of the same continent, 
except /. archipelagicus, which seems to be peculiar to Borneo, 
and /. xanlhonotus, which occurs on the Himalayas from the 
borders of Afghanistan to Bhutan. The interrupted geographical 
distribution of this genus is a very curious fact, no species having 
been found in the Indian or Malayan peninsula to connect 
the outlying forms with those of Africa, which must be regarded 
as their metropolis. (A.N.) 

HONEY LOCUST, the popular name of a tree, GUditsia 
triacanthos, a member of the natural order Leguminosae, and 
a native of the more eastern United States of North America. 
It reaches from 75 to 140 ft. in height with a trunk 2 or 3, or 
sometimes 5 or 6 ft. in diameter, and slender spreading branches 
which form a broad, flattish crown. The branchlets bear numer- 
ous simple or three-forked (whence the species-name triacanthos) 
sharp stiff spines, 3 to 4 in. long, at first red in colour, then 
chestnut brown; they are borne above the leaf -axils and 
represent undeveloped branchlets; sometimes they are borne 
also on the trunk and main branches. The long-stalked leaves 
are 7 to 8 in. long with eight to fourteen pairs of narrowly 
oblong leaflets. The flowers, which are of two kinds, are borne 
in racemes in the leaf-axils; the staminate flowers in larger 
numbers. The brown pods are often 12 to 18 in. long, have 
thin, tough walls, and contain a quantity of pulp between the 
seeds; they contract spirally when drying. The tree was first 
cultivated in Europe towards the end of the 17th century 
by Bishop Compton in his garden at Fulham, near London, 
and is now extensively planted as an ornamental tree. The 
name of the genus commemorates Johann Gottlieb Gledilsch 
(17 14-1786), a friend of Linnaeus, and the author of one of 
the earliest works on scientific forestry. 

HONEYMOON, the first month after marriage. Lord Avebury 
in his Origin of Civilization suggests that the seclusion usually 
associated with this period is a survival of marriage by capture, 
and answers to the period during which the husband kept his 
wife in retirement, to prevent her from appealing to her relatives 



HONEYSUCKLE—HONG-KONG 



657 



for release. Others suggest that as the moon commences to 
wane as soon as it is at its full, so does the mutual affection 
of the wedded pair, the " honeymoon " (with this derivation) 
not necessarily referring to any definite period of time. 

HONEYSUCKLE (Mid. Eng., honysodc, i.e. any plant from 
which honey may be sucked,— -cf. A.-S. kuni~$uge, privet; Ger. 
Ceissblait; Fr. ch&trcjeuUU), botanical name LanUera, a genus 
of climbing, erect or prostrate shrubs, of the natural order 
CafrifoHaeeat, so named after the 16th-century German botanist 
Adam Lonicer. The British species is L. Periclymcnwn, the 
Woodbine; L, Caprifdium and L. Xytosteum are naturalized 
in a tew counties in the south and east of England. Some of 
the garden varieties of the woodbine are very beautiful, and 
axe held in high esteem tor their delicious fragrance, even the 
wild plant, with its pale flowers, compensating for its sickly looks 
♦'with never-doying odours." The North American sub- 
evergreen. L. sanpervirens, With its fine heads of blossoms, 

commonly called the 
trumpet honeysuckle, 
the most handsome of 
all the cultivated honey- 
suckles, is a distinct and 
beautiful species pro- 
ducing both scarlet and 
yellow flowered varie- 
ties, and the Japanese 
L. fiexmsa var. aura* 
reticulata is esteemed 
1 for its charmingly varie- 
gated leaves netted with 
golden yellow. The fly 
honeysuckle, L, Xyios- 
Ukm, a hardy shrub of 
dwarfish, erect habit, 
and L. tatorico, of 
similar habit, both 
European, are amongst 
the oldest English gar- 
den shrubs, and bear 
axillary flowers of 
various colours, occur- 
Honeysuckle.— («) Flowering branch; ring two on a peduncle. 
0) flower, nat. size; (c) fruit, slightly There are numerous 
reduced- other species, many of 

them introduced to our gardens, and well worth cultivating in 
Shrubberies or as climbers on walls and bowers, either for their 
beauty or the fragrance of their blossoms. 

In the western counties of England, and generally by agricul- 
turists, the name honeysuckle is applied to the meadow clover, 
Trijolium praUnse, Another plant of the same family (Legu- 
minosae) Hedysarum armarium, a very handsome hardy 
biennial often seen in old-fashioned collections of garden plants, 
is commonly called the French honeysuckle. The name is 
moreover applied with various affixes to several other totally 
different plants. Thus white honeysuckle and false honeysuckle 
are names for the North American Azalea viscosa; Australian 
or heath honeysuckle is the Australian Banksia serrala, Jamaica 
honeysuckle, Passiflora laurifolia, dwarf honeysuckle the widely 
spread Cornus saecica, Virgin Mary's honeysuckle the European 
Pulmonaria officinalis, wjiile West Indian honeysuckle is Tecoma 
copensis, and is also a name applied to Dcsmodium. 

The wood of the fly honeysuckle is extremely hard, and 
the dear portions between the joints of the Stems* When their 
pith has been removed, were stated by Linnaeus to be utilized 
in Sweden for makingOobacco-pipes. The wood is also employed 
to make teeth for rakes; and, like that of L. taiarua, it is a 
favourite material for walking-sticks. 

Honeysuckles (Loniccra) flourish in any ordinary garden soil, 
but are usually sadly neglected in regard to pruning. This 
should be done about March, cutting out some of the old wood, 
and shortening back. some of the younger growths of the pre- 
ceding year. (J. Ws.) 




HONFLEUR, a seaport of north-western France, in the 
department of Calvados, 57 m. N.E. of Caen by rail. Pop. (1006) 
8735. The town is situated at the foot of a semicircle of hills, 
on the south shore of the Seine estuary, opposite Havre, with 
which it communicates by steamboat. Honfleur, with its dark 
narrow lanes and old houses, has the typical aspect qf an old- 
fashioned seaport.- The most noteworthy of its buildings is the 
church of St Catherine, constructed entirely of timber work, 
with the exception of the facade added in the 18th century, 
and consisting of two parallel naves, of which the more ancient 
is supposed to date from the end of the 15th century. Within 
the church are several antique statues and a painting by J. 
Jordaens — " Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane." The church 
tower stands on the other side of a street. St Leonard's dates 
from the 17th century, with the exception of its fine ogival 
portal and rose-window belonging to the i6th, and its octagonal' 
tower erected ki the 18th. The rums of a 16th-century castle 
known as the Lleutenance and several houses of the same period 
are also of antiquarian interest. The hotel de ville contains 
a library and a museum. On the rising ground above the town 
is the chapel of Ndtre-Dathe-de-Grace, a shrine much resorted 
to by pilgrim sailors, which is said to have been founded in 1034 
by Robert the Magnificent of Normandy and rebuilt in 1606. 
The town has a tribunal and a chamber of commerce and a 
communal college. The port, which is protected from the 
west winds by the height known as the Cote de Grace, consists 
of the tidal harbour and four floating basins— The West basiri, 
dating from the 17th century, and the Centre, East and Carnot 
basins. A reservoir affords the means of sluicing the channel and 
supplying the basins. The surface available for vessels is about 27 
acres. Numerous fishing and coasting vessels frequent the 
harbour. In 1007 there entered 37$ vessels, of 133,87a tens, 
more than half this tonnage being British. The exports go mainly 
to England and include poultry, butter, eggs, cheese, chocolate, 
vegetables, fruit, seeds and purple ore. There is regular com- 
munication by steamer with Southampton. Timber from 
Scandinavia, English coal and artificial manures form the 
bulk of the imports. There are important saw-mills, as weH 
as shipbuilding yards, manufactories of chemical manures and 
axon foundries. 

Honfleur dates from the xlth century and is thus four or 
five hundred years older than its rival Havre, by which it was 
supplanted during the x8th century. During the Hundred 
Years' War it was frequently taken and re-taken, the last occupa- 
tion by the English ending in 1440. In 1562 the Protestant 
forces got possession of it only after a regular siege of the suburb 
of Ct Leonard; and though Henry IV. effected its capture in 
1500 he bad again to invest it in 1594 after all the rest of 
Normandy had submitted to his arms. In the earlier years of 
the 17th century Honfleur colonists founded Quebec, and Hon- 
fleur traders established factories in Java and Sumatra and a 
fishing establishment in Newfoundland. 

HONG-KONO (properly Hiang-Kiano, the place of " sweet 
lagoons"), sn important British island-possession, situated 
off the south-east coast of China, opposite the province of 
Kwang-tung, on the east side of the estuary of the Si-kiang, 
38 m. E. of Macao and 75 S.B. of Canton, between 22° 9' and 
2a 1' N., and 114° 5* and 1 14 18* E. It is one of a small duster 
named by the Portuguese " Ladrones " or Thieves, on account 
of the notorious habits of their old inhabitants. Extremely 
irregular in outline, it has an area of 29 sq. m., measuring 10} m. 
in extreme length from N.E. to S.W., and varying in breadth 
from 2 to 5 m. A good military road about 22 m. longencircles 
the island. From the mainland it is separated by a narrow 
channel, which at Hong-Kong roads, between Victoria, the island 
capital, and Kowloon Point, is about 1 m. broad, and which 
narrows at Ly-ee-mun Pass to little over aim. The 
southern coast in particular is deeply indented; and there 
two bold peninsulas, extending for several miles into the sea, 
form two capacious natural harbours, namely, Deep Water 
Bay, with the village of Stanley to the east, and Tytam Bay, 
which has a safe, well-protected entrance showing a depth oi 



66o 



HONORIUS 



deepened it* entrance from m ft. to 50 ft Six mHes to the W. 
is the much more spacious Pearl Harbor (a U. S. Naval Station), 
the bar.at the entrance of which was removed (1003) by the U.S; 
government. Pearl Harbor and the harbour of Honolulu are the 
only safe ports in the archipelago. The streets of Honolulu are 
wide, and are macadamized with crushed or broken lava. The 
business houses are mostly of brick or stone, and range from two 
to six storeys in height. About most of the residences there are 
many tropical trees, flowering shrubs and plants. Wood is 
the most common material of which the residences are built, 
a large portion of these residences are one-storey cottages; 
broad verandahs are common; and of the more pretentious 
residences the lanai, a semi-outdoor drawing-room with con- 
servatories adjoining, is a notable feature. Throughout the city 
there is a marked absence of poverty and squalor. There are 
good hotels in the city and its suburbs. The gov er nment 
buildings are extensive and have a pleasing appearance; that 
of the executive, in a beautiful park, was formerly the royal 
palace and still contains many relics of royalty. Facing the 
judiciary building is ah heroic statue in bronze of Kamehameha 
the Great. About 2 m. W. of the business centre of the city is the 
Bemice Pauahi Bishop Museum, a fine stone building on a com- 
manding site, and containing a large collection of Hawaiian and 
Polynesian relics and curios, especially Hawaiian feather-work, 
and notable collections of fish and of Hawaiian land shells and 
birds. Four miles S.E. of the business centre, at the foot ol 
Diamond Head, is Waikiki sea-beach, noted for its surf-riding, 
boating and bathing, and Kapiolani Park, a pleasure resort, near 
which is a famous aquarium of tropical fishes. Honolulu has 
other parks, a fine Botanical Garden, created by the Bureau of 
Agriculture, several public squares, several hospitals, a maternity 
home, the Lunalilo Home for aged Hawaiian*, an asylum for the 
insane, several, schools of high rank both public and private — 
notably Oahu College on the £. edge of the city, first founded as 
a school for the children of missionaries in 1841; the Honolulu 
High School, founded in 1833 as the Oahu Charity School, to 
teach English to the half whites; the Royal School, -which was 
founded in 1840 for the sons of chiefs; and the Normal School, 
housed in what was in 1006 the most expensive building on the 
island of Oahu— a library containing about 14.000 volumes and 
the collections of the Hawaiian Historical Society, a number of 
benevolent, literary, social and political societies, and an art 
league, and is the see of both an Anglican and a Roman Catholic 
bishop. In 1007 the Pacific Scientific Institution lor the 
advancement of scientific knowledge of the Pacific, its islands 
and their people, was established here. Among the dubs of the 
city are the Pacific Club, founded in 1853 as the British Club, 
the Scottish Thistle Club (1801), of which Robert Louis Stevenson 
was a member; the Hawaii Yacht Club, and the Polo, Country 
and University Clubs. There are various journals and periodi- 
cals, five languages being represented. The chief industries are 
the manufacture of machinery (especially machinery for sugar- 
refineries) and carriages, rice-milling and ship-building. Hono- 
lulu's total exports for the fiscal year 1908 were valued at 
$42,338,455, and its imports at $10,085,724. There is a privately 
owned electric street car service in the dty. The water-works and 
electric-lighting plant are owned and operated by the Territorial 
government, and to the plentiful water-supply is partly due 
the luxuriant vegetation of the dty. Honolulu's safe harbour, 
discovered in 1704, made it a place of resort for vessels (especially 
whalers) and traders from the beginning of the xoth century. 
Kamehameha I. (the Great) lived here from 1803 until 1811. 
In 18 16 was built a fort which stood until 1857. In 1820 the 
city became the prindpal residence of the sovereign and soon 
afterwards of foreign consuls, and thus practically the seat of 
government. In 1907 an act was passed by which the former 
county of Oahu, induding the island of Oahu and the small 
islands adjacent, was made a munldpal corporation under the 
name of the " dty and county of Honolulu "; this act came into 
effect on the xst of January 1900. 

HONORIUS, the name of four popes and one antipope 
(Honorius II.; i.e. ? below). 



x. Honokius I., pope from 625 to 638, was of a noble Roman 
family, his father Petronius having been consul. He was very 
active in carrying on the work of Gregory the Great, es pec ially 
in England, Bede (Hist. Eccl. ii. 17) gives a letter of his to King 
Edwin of Northumbria, in which he admonishes him diligently 
to study Gregory's writings; and it was at Edwin's request 
that Honorius conferred the pallium on the bishops of Canterbury 
and York (ib. ii 18). He also admonished the Irish for not 
following the custom of the Catholic Church in the celebration 
of Easter (ib. ii. 19), and commissioned Birinus to preach 
Christianity in Wesscx (ib. iii. 7). It is, however, in connexion 
with the Monolhelite heresy that Honorius is most remembered, 
his attitude in this matter having acquired fresh importance 
during the controversy raised by the promulgation of the dogma 
of papal infallibility in 1870. In his efforts to consolidate the 
papal power in Italy, Honorius had been hampered by the 
schism of " the three chapters " in Istria and Venetia, a schism 
that was' ended by the deposition in 628 of the schismatic 
patriarch Fortunatus of Aquileia-Grado and the devation of 
a Roman sub-deacon to the patriarchate. It is suggested that 
help rendered to him in this matter by the emperor Heradius, 
or by the Greek exarch, may have-inclined the pope to take the 
emperor's side in the Monothefite controversy, which broke out 
shortly afterwards in consequence of the formula proposed by 
the emperor with a view to reconciling the Monophysites and 
the Catholics. However that may be, he joined the patriarchs 
of Constantinople and Alexandria in supporting the doctrine 
of " one will " in Christ, and expounded this view forcibly, if 
somewhat obscurely, in two letters to the patriarch Scrgius 
(Epist. 4 and 5 in Migne, Patrologia. Set. Lot. lxxx. 470, 474). 
For this he was» more than forty years after his death (October 
638), anathematized by name along with the Moootbelfte heretics 
by the council of Constantinople (First Trullan) in 681; and this 
condemnation was subsequently confirmed by more than one 
pope, particularly by Leo IL See Hefde, Die IrrUkre dtt 
Honorius u. die vatkanisclie Lchrc der UnfehlbarkeU (1871), 
who, however, modified his view in his ConciiicngesckkkU (1877). 
Honorius L was succeeded by Severinus. 

See the articles by R. Zoptfel and G. Kruger in Herxog-Haock, 
RealeneyklopddieCcd. 1900), and by T. Grisar in Wetzer and Welre's 
KirchenUxikon (Freiburg, 1889). In addition to the bibliographiet 
there given see also U. Chevaner; Repertoire des sources hixt.. Ac, 
Bio-bibhographie, s. •• Honorius I. " (Paris, 1905) (W A. P.) 

2. Honorius II. (d. 1072), antipope, was the name taken 
by Peter Cadalus, who was horn at Verona and became bishop 
of Parma in 1046. After the death of Pope Nicholas II. in July 
1061 he was chosen pope by some German and Lombard bishops 
at Basel in opposition to Alexander II., who had been dected 
by the party led by Hildebrand, afterwards Pope Gregory VII. 
Taking the name of Honorius II., Cadalus was thus the repre- 
sentative of those who were opposed to reforms in the Church. 
Early in 1062 he advanced towards Rome, and though his 
supporters defeated the forces of his rival outside the dty, he 
soon returned to Parma to await the decision of the advisers 
of the young German king, Henry IV., whose mother Agnes 
had supported his election. About this time, however, Agnes 
was deprived of her power, and the chief authority in Germany 
passed to Anno, archbishop of Cologne, who was hostile to 
Cadalus. Under these circumstances the antipope again marched 
towards Rome in 1063 and entered the dty, but was soon 
forced to take refuge in the castle of St Angdo. The ensuing 
war between the rival popes lasted for about a year, and then 
Cadalus left Rome as a fugitive. Refusing to attend a council 
held at Mantua in May 1064, he was deposed, and be died in 
1072, without having abandoned his daim to the papal chair. 

See the article on Honorius 11, in Hauck's Realeneyktefddie, 
Band viu. (Leipzig, 1900). (A. W. H>) 

3. HoKOftrtJS II. (Lamberto Scannabecchi), pope from the 
15th of December it 24 to the xjth ol February 1130, a native 
of Fagnano near Imola, of considerable learning and great 
religious zeal, successively archdeacon at Bologna, cardinal- 
priest of Sta Prassede under Urban II:, cardinal-bishop of Ostia 
and Vdletri under Paschal II., shared the exile of Gdasius IX 



HONORIUS 



66 1 



in France, and helped CaBxtus II. to conclude the Concordat 
of Worms (1122), which settled the investiture contest. He 
owed his election in large measure to force employed by the 
Frangipani, but was consecrated with general consent on the 
axst of December n 24. By means of a close alliance with that 
powerful family, he was enabled to maintain peace at Rome, 
and the death of Emperor Henry V. (11 as) further strengthened 
the papal position. He recognized the Saxon Lothair III. as 
king of the Romans and later as emperor, and excommunicated 
his rival, Conrad of Hohenstaufen. He sanctioned the Prae- 
monstratensian order and that of the Knights Templars. He 
excommunicated Count William of Normandy for marriage 
in prohibited degree; brought to an end, through the influence 
of Bernard of Oairvaux, the struggle with Louis VL of France; 
and arranged with Henry I. for the reception of papal legates 
in England. He laid claim as feudal overlord to the Norman 
possessions in southern Italy (July 1x27), and excommunicated 
the claimant, Duke Roger of Sicily, but was unable to prevent 
the foundation of the Neapolitan monarchy, for Duke Roger 
defeated the papal army and forced recognition in August 
xi 28. Honorius appealed to Lothair for assistance, but died 
before it arrived. His successor was Innocent II. 

The chief sources for the life of Honorius II. are his " EpUtolae et 
Privilegia," in I. P. Migne, Patrol. Lot. vol. 166. and the Vita* of 
Cardinals Pandulf and Boso in J. M. Wattcrich, Pontif. Roman, 
vitae, vol. 2 (Leipzig, 1862); also " Cod ice diplomatico c bollario di 
Onorio II." in Fr. Lnerani otere, vol. 4 (Macerata, 1859), and 
Jaffe-Wattcnbach, Regesta ponttf. Roman. (1885-1888). 

See J. Langen. Ceschtchte der rdmischen Kirche von Gregor VII. bis 
Innocent III. (Bonn, 1893); F. Gregorovius, Rome in the Middle 
Ages, vol. 4, trans, by Mrs G. W. Hamilton (London, 1896); H. H. 
Mtlman, Latin Christianity, vol. 4 (London, 1899); Fr. Liverani, 
" Lamberto da Fiagnano in Opere, vol. 3 (Macerata, 1859); A. 
Wagner, Die unterttaUschen Normannen und das Papsltum 1086- 
1150 (Breslau, 1885); E. Bcmheim, Zur Geschichte des Wonnser 
Concordats (Gdttingen, 1878); Vol k mar, "Das Verh&ltnis Lothars 
III. xur Investitunrage," in Forschungen tur deutschen Geschichte, 
vol. 26. (C. H. Ha.) 

1 4. Honorius HI. (Cendo Savelli), pope from the 18th of 
July X2i6 to the 18th of March X227, a highly-educated and 
pious Roman, successively canon of Sta Maria Maggiore, cardinal- 
deacon of Sta Lucia in Silicc, vice-chancellor, chamberlain 
and cardinal-priest of Sti Giovanni e Paolo, was the successor 
of Innocent III. He made peace with Frederick II., in accord- 
ance with which the emperor was crowned with his wife Constance 
in St Peter's on the 22nd of November 1220, and swore to accord 
full liberty to the church and to undertake a crusade. Honorius 
was eager to carry out the decrees of the Lateran Council of 1 21 5 
against the Albigenses and to further the crusade proclaimed 
by his predecessor. He crowned Peter of Courtenay emperor 
of Byzantium in April 12x7; espoused the cause of the young 
Henry III. of England against the barons; accepted the Isle 
of Man as a perpetual fief; arbitrated differences between 
Philip II. of France and James of Aragon; and made special 
ecclesiastical regulations for the Scandinavian countries. He 
sanctioned the Dominican order (22nd of November 1216), 
making St Dominic papal major-domo in 1218; approved the 
Franciscan order by bull of the 29th of November 1223; and 
authorized many of the tertiary orders. He maintained, on 
the whole, a tranquil rule at Rome; but Frederick II. 's refusal 
to interrupt his reforms in Sicily in order to go on the crusade 
gave the pope much trouble. Honorius died in 1227, before 
the emperor had fulfilled his oath, and was succeeded by 
Gregory IX. 

1 Honorius III. left many writings which have been collected and 
published by Abbe Horoy in the Mcdii aevi bibliotheca patristica, 
vols, i.-ii. (Paris, 1 879-1 883). Among them are five books of 
decretals, compiled about 1226; a continuation of the Liber Penti- 
ficalisi a life of Gregory VII.; a coronation form; and a large 
number of sermons. His most important work is the Liber censuum 
Romanae tcclesiae, written in 1192 and containing a record of the 
income of the Roman Church and of its relations with secular 
authorities. The last named is admirably edited by P. Fabre in 
Bibtiotkeque des IcoUs francaises d'Athhus et de Rome (Paris. 1892). 
The letters'of Honorius are in F. Liverani, Spictlegium Liberianum 
(1863). There are good Regesta in Latin and Italian, edited by 
P. Preasutti (Rome. 1888. &c.). 



Rt 



5. Honorius IV. (Jacopo Savelli), pope from the 2nd of 
April 1285 to the 3rd of April 1287, a member of a prominent 
Roman family and grand-nephew of Honorius m. f had studied 
at the university of Paris, been made cardinal-deacon of Sta 
Maria in Cosmedin, and succeeded Martin IV. Though aged 
and so crippled that he could not stand alone he displayed 
remarkable energy as pope. He maintained peace in the states 
of the Church and friendly relations with Rudolph of Habsburg, 
and his policy in the Sicilian question was more liberal than that 
of his predecessor. He showed special favours to the mendicant 
orders and formally sanctioned the Carmelites and Augustinian 
Eremites. He was the first pope to employ the great banking 
houses in northern Italy for the collection of papal dues. He 
died at Rome and was succeeded by Nicholas IV. 

See M. Bouquet, Recueil des historians des Catdes etdela France, 
new ed., vols. 20-22 (Paris, 1894) for the chief sources; A. 
Potthast, Regesta fontif. Roman, vol. 2 (Berlin, 1875); M. Proa, 
" Les registres d* Honorius IV. " in Bibliothhqne des icoles francaises 
d'Athenes et de Rome (Paris, 1888) ; B. Pawiicki, Patst Honorius IV. 
(MQnster, 1896}; F. Gregorovius, Rome in the Middle Ages, vol 5, 
trans, by Mrs G. W. Hamilton (London, 1900-1902). (C.H.Ha.) 

t HONORIUS, FLAVIUS (384-433), son of Theodosius I., 
ascended the throne as " emperor of the West " in 395. The 
history of the first thirteen years of the reign of Honorius is 
inseparably connected with the name of Stilicho (4.9.), his 
guardian and father-in-law. During this period the revolt of 
the African prince Gildo was suppressed (398); Italy was 
successfully defended against Alaric, who was defeated at 
Pollentia (402) and Verona (403); and the barbarian hordes 
under the Goth Radagaisus were destroyed (406). After the 
downfall and murder of Stilicho (408), the result of palace 
intrigues, the emperor was under the control of incompetent 
favourites. In the same year Rome was besieged, and in 410, 
for the second time in its history, taken and sacked by Alaric, 
who for a short time set up the city prefect Attalus as a rival 
emperor, but soon deposed him as incapable. Alaric died in 
the same year, and in 4x2 Honorius concluded peace with his 
brother-in-law and successor, Ataulphus ( Adolphus) , who married 
the emperor's sister Placidia and removed with his troops to 
southern GauL A number of usurpers laid claim to the throne, 
the most important of whom was Constantine. In 409 Britain 
and Armorica declared their independence, which was confirmed 
by Honorius himself, and were thus practically lost to the empire. 
Honorius was one of the feeblest emperors who ever occupied 
the throne, and the dismemberment of the West was only tempor- 
arily averted by the efforts of Stilicho, and, later, of Constantius, 
a capable general who overthrew the usurpers and was rewarded 
with a share in the government. It was only as a supporter 
of the orthodox church and persecutor of the heathen that 
Honorius displayed any energy. In 309 the exercise of the 
pagan cult was prohibited, and the revenues of the temples, 
which were to be appropriated for the use of the public or pulled 
down, were confiscated to defray the expenses of the army. 
Honorius was equally severe on heretics, such as the Donatists 
and Manichaeans. He is also to be credited with the abolition 
of the gladiatorial shows in 404 (although there is said to be 
evidence of their existence later), a reduction of the taxes, 
improvements in criminal law, and the reorganization of the 
defensores ctntatum, municipal officers whose duty it was to 
defend the rights of the people and set forth their grievances. 
Honorius at first established bis court at Milan, but, on the 



662 



HONOUR— HONOURABLE 



report of the invasion of Italy, Bed to Ravenna, where he resided 
till his death on the 27th of August 423. 

See Gibbon, Decline and Fall, chs. 28-33: J. B. Bury, Later 
Roman Empire, L chs. 1-5, ii. ch». 4, 6; E. A. Freeman, " Tyrants of 
Britain, Gaul and Spain" in Ent. HisL Review (January 1886); 
T. Hodglrin, Italy and her Invaders (Oxford, 1892), L chs. 13, 15-18. 

HONOUR (Lat. konos or honor, honoris', in English the 
word was spelled with or without the u indifferently until 
the 17th century, but during the x8th century it became fashion- 
able to spell the word "honor"; Johnson's and Webster's 
Dictionaries stereotyped the English and American spellings 
respectively), a term which may be defined as respect, esteem 
or deference paid to, or received by, a person in consideration 
of his character, worth or position; also the state or condition 
of the person exciting the feeling or expression of such esteem; 
particularly a high personal character coupled with conduct 
in accordance with or controlled by a nice sense of what is right 
and true and due to the position so held. Further, the word is 
commonly used of the dignities, distinctions or titles, granted 
as a mark of such esteem or as a reward for services or merit, 
and quite generally of the credit or renown conferred by a 
person or thing on the country, town or particular society to 
which he or it belongs. The standard of conduct may be laid 
down not only by a scrupulous sense of what is due to lofty 
personal character but also by the conventional usages of society, 
hence it is that debts which cannot be legally enforced, such 
as gambling debts, are called "debts of honour." Similarly 
in the middle ages and later, courts, known as " courts of honour," 
sat to decide questions such as precedence, disputes as to coat 
armour &c (see Chivalry); such courts, chiefly military, 
are found in countries where duelling has not fallen into desuetude 
(see Duel). In the British House of Lords, when the peers 
sit to try another peer on a criminal charge or at an impeachment, 
on the question being put whether the accused be guilty or not, 
each peer, rising in his place in turn, lays his right hand on his 
breast and returns his verdict " upon my honour." As a title 
of address, " his honour " or " your honour " is applied in the 
United States of America to all judges, in the United Kingdom 
only to county court judges. In university or other examina- 
tions, those who have won particular distraction, or have under* 
gone with success an examination of a standard higher than 
that required for a " pass " degree, are said to have passed 
" with honours," or an " honours " examination or to have taken 
an " honours degree." In many games of cards the ace, king, 
queen and knave of trumps are the " honours. " 

Funeral or military honours are paid to a dead officer or 
soldier. The usual features of such a burial are as follows: 
the coffin is carried on a gun-carriage and attended by troops; 
it is covered by the national flag, on which rests the soldier's 
head-dress, sword or bayonet; if the deceased had been a 
mounted soldier, his charger follows with the boots reversed 
in the stirrups; three volleys are fired over the grave after 
committal, and " last post " or another call is sounded on 
the bugles or a roll on the drums is given. 
I A military force is said to be accorded " the honours of war " 
when, after a specially honourable defence, it has surrendered 
its post, and is permitted by the terms of capitulation to march 
out with colours flying, bands playing, bayonets fixed, &c 
and retaining possession of the field artillery, horses, arms and 
baggage. The force remains free to act as combatants for the 
remainder of the war, without waiting for exchange or being 
considered as prisoners. Usually some point is named to which 
the surrendering troops must be conveyed before recommencing 
hostilities; thus, during the Peninsular War, at the Convention 
of Cintra 1808, the French army under Junot was conveyed 
to France by British transports before being free to rejoin 
the combatant troops in the Peninsula. By far the most usual 
case of the granting of the " honours of war " is in connexion 
with the surrender of a fortress. Of historic examples may be 
mentioned the surrender of Lille by Marshal Bouffiers to Prince 
Eugene in 1708, that of Huningen by General Joseph Bar- 
bsnegre (1772-1830) to the Austrians in 1813, and that of 



Belfort by Colonel P. Denfert Rochereau to the Germans i» 
1871. 

In English law the term " honour " is used of a seigniory 
of several manors held under one baron or lord paramount. The 
formation of such lordships dates back to the Anglo-Saxon 
period, when jurisdiction of sac and soc was frequently given 
in the case of a group of estates lying close together. The 
system was encouraged by the Norman lords, as tending to 
strengthen the principles of feudal law, but the legislation 
of Henry II., which increased the power of the central ad- 
ministration, undoubtedly tended to discourage the creation 
of new honours. Frequently, they escheated to the crown, 
retaining their corporate existence and their jurisdictions; 
they then either remained in the possession of the king or were 
regraftted, diminished in extent. Although an honour contained 
several manors, one court day was held for all, but the various 
manors retained their separate organisations, having their 
" quasi several and distinct courts." 

HONOURABLE (Fr. honorable, from Lat honorabiJis, worthy 
of honour), a style or title of honour common to the United 
Kingdom, the British colonies and the United States of America. 
The terms honorobilis and honorabilitas were in use in the middle 
ages rather as a form of politeness than as a stereotyped style; 
and though Gibbon assimilates the late Roman title of darissi- 
tnus to " honourable," as applied to the lowest of the three grades 
of rank in the. imperial hierarchy, the analogy was good even in 
his day only in so far as both styles were applicable to those who 
belonged to the less exalted ranks of the titled classes, for the 
title " honourable " was not definitely confined to certain classes 
until later. As a formal address it is found frequently in the 
Paslon Letters (15th century), but used loosely and interchange- 
able with other styles; thus John, Viscount Beaumont, is 
addressed alternately as " my worshipful and reverent Lord " 
(ii. 88, ed. 1004) and as " my right honorabull Lord " (ii. 118), 
while John Paston, a plain esquire, is H my right hohurabyll 
maister." More than two centuries later Selden, in his Tides 
of Honor (1672), does not include " honourable " among the 
courtesy titles given to the children of peers. The style was, 
in fact, used extremely loosely till well on into the 18th century. 
Thus we find in the registers of Westminster Abbey records of the 
burial (in 1710) of " The Hon. George Churchill, Esq.," who was 
only a son of Sir Winston Churchill, and of " The Hon. Sir 
William Godolphin," who had only been created a baronet; 
in 1 71 7 was buried "The Hon. Colonel Henry Cornwall," who 
was only an esquire and the son of one ; in 1743 a rear-admiral 
was buried as " The Hon. Sir John Jennings, Kt."; in 1746 
" The Hon. Major-Gencral Lowther," whose father was only a 
Dublin merchant; and finally, in 1747, " The Hon. Lieutenant- 
General Guest," who is said to have begun life as an hostler. 
From this time onwards the style of " honourable " tended to 
become more narrowly applied; but the whole matter is full 
of obscurity and contradictions. The baronets, for invanrr, 
allege that they were usually styled " the honourable " until 
the end of the 18th century, and in 1835 they petitioned for the 
style as a prefix to their names. The Heralds' College officially 
reported on the petition (31st of October 1835) that the evidence 
did not prove the right of baronets to the style, and that its use 
" has been no more warranted by authority than when the same 
style has been applied to Field Officers in the Army and others." 
They added that " the style of the Honourable is given to the 
Judges and to the Barons of the Exchequer with others because by 
the Decree of xo James I., for settling the place and precedence 
of the Baronets, the Judges and Barons of the Exchequer were 
declared to have place and precedence before the younger sons 
of Viscounts and Barons." This seems to make the style a 
consequence of the precedence; yet from the examples above 
given it is clear that it was applied, eg. in the case of field 
officers, where no question of precedence arose. It is not, indeed, 
until 1874 that we have any evidence of an authoritative limita- 
tion of the title. In this year the wives of lords of appeal, life 
peers, were granted style and precedence as baronesses; but 
it was provided that their children were not " to assume or use 



HONTHEIM— HONTHORST 



663 



the prefix of Honourable, or to be entitled to the style, tank or 
precedence of thn children of a Baron." In 1898, however, 
this was revoked, and it was ordained " that such children shall 
have and enjoy on all occasions the style and title enjoyed by 
the children of hereditary Barons together with the rank and 
precedence, &c." By these acts of the Crown the prefix of 
" honourable " would seem to have been restricted and stereo- 
typed as a definite title of honour; yet in legal documents the 
sons of peers are still styled merely " esquire," with the addition 
of " commonly called, &c." This latter fact points to the time 
when the prefix " honourable " was a mark of deference paid 
by others rather than a style assumed by right, and relics of this 
doubtless survive in the United Kingdom in the conventions 
by which an " honourable " does not use the title on his visiting 
card and is not announced as such. 

As to the actual use and social significance of the style, the 
practice in the United Kingdom differs considerably from that 
in the colonies or in the United States. In the United Kingdom 
marquesses are " most honourable "; earls, viscounts and 
barons "right honourable," a style also borne by all privy 
councillors, including the lord mayor of London and lord provost 
of Edinburgh during office. The title of " honourable " is in the 
United Kingdom, except by special licence of the Crown (e.g. in 
the case of retired colonial or Indian officials), mainly confined 
to the sons and daughters of peers, and is the common style of 
the younger sons of earls and of the children of viscounts, 
barons and legal Kfe peers. The eldest sons of dukes, marquesses 
and earls bear " by courtesy " their father's second title, the 
younger sons of dukes and marquesses having the courtesy 
title Lord prefixed to their Christian name; while the daughters 
of dukes, marquesses and earls are styled Lady. The title of 
"honourable" is also given to aO present or past maids of 
honour, and to the judges of the high court being lords 
justices or lords of appeal (who are " right honourable ") . A county 
court judge is, however, "his honour." The epithet is also 
applied to the House of Commons as a body and to individual 
members during debate ("the honourable member for X ")• 
Certain other corporate bodies have, by tradition or grant, the 
right to bear the style; e.g. the Honourable Irish Society, 
the Inns of Court (Honourable Society of the Inner Temple, &c.) 
and the Honourable Artillery Company; the East India Company 
also had the prefix "honourable." The style may not be 
assumed by corporate bodies at will, as was proved in the case 
of the Society of Baronets, whose original style of " Honourable " 
Society was dropped by command. 
.In the British colonies the title "honourable" is given to 
members of the executive and legislative bodies, to judges, &c, 
during their term of service. It is sometimes retained by royal 
licence after a certain number of years' service. 

In the United States of America the title is very widespread, 
being commonly given to any one who holds or has held any office 
of importance in state or nation, more particularly to members 
of Congress or of the state legislatures, judges, justices, and 
certain other judicial and executive officials. Popular amenity 
even sometimes extends the title to holders of quite humble 
government appointments, and consoles with it the defeated 
candidates for a post. See also the article Precedence. 
^ HONTHBIM, JOHANN N1K0LAUS VON (1701-1700), German 
historian and theologian, was born on the 27th of January 1701 
at Trier. He belonged to a noble family which had been for 
many generations connected with the court and diocese of the 
archbishop-electors, his father, Kaspar von Hontheim, being 
receiver-general of the archdiocese. At the age of twelve young 
Hontheim was given by his maternal uncle, Hugo Friedrich 
von Anethan, canon of the collegiate church of St Simeon 
(which at that time still occupied the Roman Porta Nigra at 
Trier), a prebend in his church, and on the 13th of May 17 13 he 
received the tonsure. He was educated by the Jesuits at Trier 
and at the universities of Trier, Louvain and Leiden, taking 
his degree of doctor of laws at Trier in 1724. During the follow- 
ing years he travelled ia various European countries, spending 
*>me -time at the German College in Rome; in 1728 he was 



ordained priest and, formally admitted to the chapter of St 
Simeon in 1732, he became a professor at the university of Trier. 
In 1738 he went to Coblenz as official to the archbishop-elector. 
In this capacity he had plentiful opportunity of studying the 
effect of the interference of the Roman Curia in the internal 
affairs of the Empire, notably in the negotiations that preceded 
the elections of the emperors Charles VII. and Francis I. in which 
Hontheim took part as assistant to the electoral ambassador. 
It appears that it was the extreme claims of the papal nuncio on 
these occasions and his interference in the affairs of the electoral 
college that first suggested to Hontheim that critical examination 
of the basis of the papal pretensions, the results of which be 
afterwards published to the world under the pseudonym of 
" Febronius." In 1747, broken down by overwork, he resigned 
his position as official and retired to St Simeon's, of which he was 
elected dean in the following year. In May 1 748 he was appointed 
by the archbishop-elector Francis George (von Schflnbora) as 
his suffragan, being consecrated at Mainz, in February 1749, 
under the title of bishop of Myriophiri in parlibus. The arch- 
bishop of Trier was practically a great secular prince, and upon 
Hontheim as suffragan and vicar-general fell the whole spiritual 
administration of the diocese; this work, in addition to that of 
pro-chancellor of the university, he carried on single-handed until 
1778, when Jean Marie Cuohot d'Herbain was appointed his 
coadjutor. On the 21st of April 1779 he resigned the deanery 
of St Simeon's on the ground of old age. He died on the 2nd of 
September 1790 at his chateau at Montquentin near Orval, 
an estate which be had purchased. He was buried at first in St 
Simeon's; but the church was ruined by the French during the 
revolutionary wars and never restored, and in 1803 the body 
of Hontheim was transferred to that of St Gervasius., 

As a historian Hontheim's reputation rests on his contributions 
to the history of Trier. He had, during the period of his activity 
as official at Coblenz, found time to collect a vast mass of printed 
and MS. material which he afterwards embodied in three works 
on the history of Trier. Of these the Historic Trevirensis 
diplomalica el pragmatic* was published in 3 vols, folio in 1750, 
the Prodromus historic* Trevirensis in 2 vols, in 1757. They give, 
besides a history of Trier and its constitution, a large number 
of documents and references to published authorities. A third 
work, the Historiae seriptorum et monmmentarum Trevirensis 
amplissima colleetio, remains in MS. at the dty library of Trier. 
These books, the result of an enormous labour in collation and 
selection in very unfavourable circumstances, entitle Hontheim 
to the fame of a pioneer in modern historical methods. It is, 
however, as " Febronius " that Hontheim is best remembered. 
The character and effect of his book on " the state of the Church 
and the lawful power of the Roman pontiff " is described else- 
where (see Febronianism). The author of the book was known 
at Rome almost as soon as it was published; but it was not 
till some years afterwards (1778) that he was called on to retract. 
The terrors of the spiritual power were reinforced by a threat 
of the archbishop-elector to deprive not only him but all his 
relations of their offices, and Hontheim, after much wavering 
and correspondence, signed a submission which was accepted 
at Rome as satisfactory, though he still refused to admit, as 
demanded, ut proinde meriio monarchicum ecdesiae regimen a 
catholicis doctoribns appdldur. The removal of the censure 
followed (1781) when Hontheim published at Frankfort what 
purported to be a proof that his submission had been made of 
his own free will {J us tint Febronii acti commentarius in suam 
retraclalionem,\ &c). This book, however, which carefully 
avoided all the most burning questions, rather tended to show 

is indeed his correspondence proves— Hhat Hontheim had 
not essentially shifted his standpoint. But Rome left him 
thenceforth in peace. 

. See Otto Mejer, Febronius, Weikbischof Jdhann Nihdaus vm 
Hontheim und sein Widerruf (Tubingen, 1880), with many original 
letters. Of later date is the biography by F. X. Kraus in the AUgt- 
meine deutsche Biograpkie (1881J, which gives numerous references. 

HONTHORST, GERARD VAN (1 590-1656), Dutch painter 
of Utrecht, was brought up at the school of Bloemart, who 



66 4 



HOOCH, P. DE 



exchanged the style of the Franckens for that of the paeudo- 
Iulians at the beginning of the x6th century. Infected thus 
early with a mania which came to be very general in Holland, 
Honthorst went to Italy, where he copied the naturalism and 
eccentricities of Michelangelo da Caravaggio. Home again 
about 1614, after acquiring a considerable practice in Rome, 
he set up a school at Utrecht which flourished exceedingly; 
and he soon became so fashionable that Sir Dudley Carleton, 
then English envoy at the Hague, recommended his works to 
the earl of Arundel and Lord Dorchester. At the same time 
the queen of Bohemia, sister of Charles I. and electress palatine, 
being an exile in Holland, gave him her countenance and asked 
him to teach her children drawing; and Honthorst, thus ap- 
proved and courted, became known to Charles I., who invited 
him to England. There he fainted several portraits, and a vast 
allegory, now at Hampton Court, of Charles and his queen as 
Diana and Apollo in the clouds receiving the duke of Buckingham 
as Mercury and guardian of the king of Bohemia's children. 
Charles I., whose taste was flattered alike by the energy of Rubens 
and the elegance of Van Dyck, was thus first captivated by the 
fanciful mediocrity of Honthorst, who though a poor executant 
had luckily for himself caught, as Lord Arundel said, " much 
of the manner of Caravaggio's colouring, then so much esteemed 
at Rome." It was his habit to transmute every subject into 
a night scene, from the Nativity, for which there was warrant 
in the example of Correggio, to the penitence of the Magdalen, 
for which there was no warrant at all. But unhappily this 
caprice, though " sublime in Allegri and Rembrandt," was but 
a phantasm in the hands of Honthorst, whose prosaic pencil 
was not capable of more than vulgar utterances, and art gained 
little from the repetition of these quaint vagaries. Sandrart 
gave the measure of Honthorst's popularity at this period 
when he says that he had as many as twenty apprentices at one 
time, each of whom paid him a fee of xoo florins a year. In 1623 
he was president of his gild at Utrecht. After that he went 
to England, returning to settle anew at Utrecht, where he married. 
His position amongst artists was acknowledged to be important, 
and in 1626 he received a visit from Rubens, whom he painted 
as the honest man sought for and found by Diogenes Honthorst. 
In his home at Utrecht Honthorst succeeded, in preserving 
the support of the English monarch, for whom he finished in 
1631 a large picture of the king and queen of Bohemia " and all 
their children." For Lord Dorchester about the same period 
he completed some illustrations of the Odyssey; for the king of 
Denmark he composed incidents of Danish history, of which 
one example remains in the gallery of Copenhagen. In the 
course of a large practice he had painted many likenesses — 
Charles I. and his queen, the duke of Buckingham, and the king 
and queen of Bohemia. He now became court painter to the 
princess of Orange, settled (1637) at the Hague, and painted in 
succession at the Castle of Ryswick and the Houscin the Wood. 
The time not consumed in producing pictures was devoted to 
portraits. Even now his works arc very numerous, and amply 
represented in English and Continental galleries. His most 
attractive pieces are those in which he cultivates the style of 
Caravaggio, those, namely, which represent taverns, with players, 
singers and eaters. He shows great skill in reproducing scenes 
illuminated by a single candle. But he seems to have studied 
too much in dark rooms, where the subtleties of flesh colour 
are lost in the dusky smoothness and uniform redness of tints 
procurable from farthing dips. Of great interest still, though 
rather sharp in outline and hard in modelling, are his portraits 
of the Duke of Buckingham and Family (Hampton Court), 
the King and Queen of Bohemia (Hanover and Combe Abbey), 
Mary de Medici (Amsterdam town-hall), 1628, the Stadtholders 
and their Wives (Amsterdam and Hague), Charles Louis and 
Rupert, Charles I.'s nephews (Louvre, St Petersburg, Combe 
Abbey and Willin), and Lord Craven (National Portrait 
Gallery). His early form may be judged by a Lute-player 
(1614) at the Louvre, the Martyrdom of St John in S. M. 
della Scala at Rome, or the Liberation of Peter in the Berlin 
Museum; his latest style is that of the House in the Wood 



(1648), where he appears to disadvantage by the aide «C 
Jordaens and others. 

Honthorst was succeeded by his brother William* born 
at Utrecht in 1604, who died, it is said, in 1666. He lived 
chiefly in his native place, temporarily at Berlin. But be 
has left little behind except a portrait at Amsterdam, 
and likenesses in the Berlin Museum of William and Mary of 
England. 

HOOCH, PIETBR DB (1620-? 1678), Dutch painter, was 
born in 1629, and died in Amsterdam probably shortly after 
1677. He was a native of Rotterdam, and wandered early to 
Haarlem and the Hague. In 1654 we find him again at Rotter- 
dam, where in that year he married a girl of Delft, Jannetje 
van der Burch. From 1655 to 1657 he was a member of the 
painter's gild of Delft, but after that date we have no traces 
of his doings until about 1668, when his presence is recorded 
in Amsterdam. His dated pictures prove that he was still 
alive in 1677, but his death followed probably soon after this 
year. De Hooch is one of the kindliest and most charming 
painters of homely subjects that Holland has produced. He 
seems to have been born at the same time and taught in the 
same school as van der Meer and Maes. All three are disciples 
of the school of Rembrandt. Houbraken mentions Nicolas 
Berchem as De Hooch's teacher. De Hooch only once painted 
a canvas of large size, and that unfortunately perished in a fire 
at Rotterdam in 1864. But his small pieces display perfect 
finish and dexterity of hand, combined with great power of 
discrimination. Though he sometimes paints open-air scenes, 
these are not his favourite subjects. He is most at home in 
interiors illuminated by different lights, with the radiance of the 
day, in different intensities, seen through doors and windows. 
He thus brings together the most delicate varieties of tone, 
and produces chords that vibrate with harmony. The themes 
which he illustrates are thoroughly suited to his purpose. Some- 
times he chooses the drawing-room where dames and cavaliers 
dance, or dine, or sing; sometimes — mostly indeed — he prefers 
cottages or courtyards, where the housewives tend their children 
or superintend the labours of the cook. Satin and gold are as 
familiar to him as camlet and fur; and there is no article of 
furniture in a Dutch house of the middle class that he does 
not paint with pleasure. What distinguishes him most besides 
subtle suggestiveness is the serenity of his pictures. One of bis 
most charming was the canvas formerly in the Ashburton 
collection, now burnt, where an old lady with a dish of apples 
walks with a child along a street bounded by a high wall, 
above which gables and a church steeple are seen, while the 
sun radiates joyfully over the whole. Fine in another way is 
the " Mug of Beer " in the Amsterdam Museum, an interior 
with a woman coming out of a pantry and giving a measure 
of beer to a little girt The light flows in here from a small 
dosed window; but through the door to the right we look into 
a drawing-room, and through the open sash of that room we 
see the open air. The three lights are managed with supreme 
cunning. Beautiful for its illumination again is the " Music 
Party," with its contending indoor and outdoor lights, a gem in 
the late A. Thieme collection at Leipzig. More subtly suggestive, 
in the museum of Berlin, is the " Mother seated near a Cradle.** 
" A Card Party," dated 1658, at Buckingham Palace, is a good 
example of De Hooch's drawing-room scenes, counterpart as 
to date and value of a " Woman and Child " in the National 
Gallery, and the " Smoking Party," formerly in Lord Enfield's 
collection. Another very fine example is the " Interior " with 
two women, bought by Sir Julius Wernher. Other pictures 
later in the master's career are — the " Lady and Child in a 
Courtyard," of 1665, in the National Gallery, and the " Lady 
receiving a Letter," of 1670, in the Amsterdam Museum (Van 
der Hoop collection). 



It is possible to bring together over 250 examples of De Hooch. 
There are three at St Petersb ' ' "* * * ' -.---•-- 



together over 250 examples of De Hooch. 

rsburg. three in Buckingham Palace, three 
in the National Gallery, two in the Wallace Collection, six in the Am- 
sterdam Museum, some in the Louvre and at Munich and Darmstadt: 
many others are in private galleries in England. For Englaod was 
the first country to reoogmze the merit of De Hooch, who only 



HOOD, J. B.— HOOD, VISCOUNT 



665 



began, to be valued in Holland to the middle of the 18th century. A 
celebrated picture at Amsterdam, sold for 450 florins in 1765, fetched 
4000 in 1817, and in 1876 the Berlin Museum gave £5400 for a De 
Hooch at the Schneider sale— "A Dutch Dwelling-room " (820 B). 

See Hofstede de Groot's Catalogue rauonni, vol. L, London, 1907. 

HOOD, JOHN BELL (1831-1870), American soldier, lieut.- 
general of the Confederate army, was born at OwingsviUe, 
Kentucky, in 1831, and graduated from West Point military 
academy in 1853. As an officer of the and U.S. cavalry (Colonel 
Sidney Johnston) he saw service against Indians, and later he 
was cavalry instructor at West Point. He resigned from the 
U.S. service in 1861, and became a colonel in the Confederate 
army. He was soon promoted brigadier-general, and at the 
battle of Gaines's Mill, where he was wounded, won the 
brevet of major-general for his gallant conduct. With the 
famous " Texas brigade " of the Army of Northern Virginia 
he served throughout the campaign of i8 V 2. At Gettysburg 
he commanded one of the divisions of Longs trcct's corps, 
receiving a wouncj. which disabled his arm. With Longstrect 
he was transferred in the autumn of 1863 to the Army of 
Tennessee. At the battle of Chickamauga (September 19th, 
20th) Hood was severely wounded again and his leg was ampu- 
tated, but after six months he returned to duty undaunted. 
He remained with the Army of Tennessee as a corps commander, 
and when the general dissatisfaction with the Fabian policy of 
General J. E. Johnston brought about the removal of that officer, 
Hood was put in his place with the temporary rank of general 
He had won a great reputation' as a fighting general, and it was 
with the distinct understanding that battles were to be fought 
that he was placed at the head of the Army of Tennessee. But 
in spite of skill and courage he was uniformly unsuccessful in 
the battles around Atlanta. In the end he had to abandon the 
place, but he forthwith sought to attack Sherman in another 
direction, and finally invaded Tennessee. His march was pushed 
with the greatest energy, but he failed to- draw the main body 
of the enemy after him, and, while Sherman with a picked force 
made his " March to the Sea," Thomas collected an army to 
oppose Hood. A severe battle was fought at Franklin on the 
30th of November, and finally Hood was defeated and his army 
almost annihilated in the battle of Nashville. He was then 
relieved at his own request (January 23rd, 1865). After the war 
he was engaged in business in New Orleans, where he died of 
yellow fever on the 30th of August 1879. His experiences in 
the Civil War are narrated in his Advance and Retreat (New 
Orleans, 1880). Hood's reputation as a bold and energetic 
leader was well deserved, though his reckless vigour proved 
but a poor substitute for Johnston's careful husbanding of his 
strength at this declining stage of the Confederacy. 

HOOD, SAMUEL HOOD, Viscount (1724-1816), British 
admiral, was the son of Samuel Hood, vicar of Butleigh in 
Somerset, and prebendary of Wells. He was born on the 12th 
of December 1724, and entered the navy on the 6th of May 
1741. He served part of his time as midshipman with Rodney 
in the "Ludlow," and became lieutenant in 1746. He was 
fortunate in serving under active officers, and had opportunities 
of seeing service in the North Sea. In 1753 he was made com- 
mander of the "Jamaica" sloop, and served in her on the 
North American station. In 1756, while still on the North 
American station, he attained to post rank. In 1757, while in 
temporary command of the " Antelope " (50), he drove a French 
ship ashore in Audierne Bay, and captured two privateers. 
His zeal at racted the favourable notice of the Admiralty and 
he was appointed to a ship of his own. In 1759, when captain 
of the "Vestal" (32), he captured the French "Bellona" 
(3 2) after a sharp action. During the war his services were wholly 
in the Channel, and he was engaged under Rodney in 1759 
in destroying the vessels collected by the French to serve as 
transports in the proposed invasion of England. In 1778 he 
accepted a command which in the ordinary course would have 
terminated his active career. He became commissioner of the 
dockyard at Portsmouth and governor of the Naval Academy. 
These posts were generally given to officers who were retiring 
from the sea. In 1780, on the occasion of the king's visit to 



Portsmouth, he was made a baronet. The circumstances of 
the time were not ordinary. Many admirals declined to serve 
under Lord Sandwich, and Rodney, who then commanded 
in the West Indies, had complained of want of proper support 
from his subordinates, whom he accused of disaffection. The 
Admiralty was naturally anxious to secure the services of 
trustworthy flag officers, and having confidence in Hood pro- 
moted him rear-admiral out of the usual course on the 26th of 
September 1780, and sent him to the West Indies to act as 
second in command under Rodney, to whom he was personally 
known. He joined Rodney in January 1781, and remained 
in the West Indies or on the coast of North America tul the 
dose of the War of American Independence. The calculation 
that he would work harmoniously with Rodney was not altogether 
justified by the results. The correspondence of the two shows 
that they were far from being on cordial personal terms with 
one another, but Hood always discharged hie duty punctually, 
and his capacity was so great, and so signally proved, that no 
question of removing him from the station ever arose. The 
unfortunate turn taken by the campaign of 1781 was largely 
due to Rodney's neglect of his advice. If he had been allowed 
to choose his own position there can be no doubt that he could 
have prevented the comte de Grasse (1722-1788) from reaching 
Fort Royal with the reinforcements from France in April (see 
Rodney, Lord). When the fleet went on to the coast of North 
America during the hurricane months of 1781 he was sent to 
serve with Admiral Graves (i725?-i8o2) in the unsuccessful 
effort to relieve the army at Yorktown. But his subordinate 
rank gave him no chance to impart a greater measure of energy 
to the naval operations. * When, however, he returned to the 
West Indies he was for a time in independent command owing 
to Rodney's absence in England for the sake of his health. The 
French admiral, the comte de Grasse, attacked the British Islands 
of St Kitts and Nevis with a much superior force to the squadron 
under Hood's command. The attempt Hood made in January 
1782 to save them from capture, with 22 ships to 99, was not 
successful, but the series of bold movements by which he first 
turned the French out of their anchorage at the Basse Terra 
of St Kitts, and then beat off the attacks of the enemy, were 
the most brilliant things done by any British admiral during the 
war. He was made an Irish peer for his share in the defeat of 
the comte de Grasse on the 9th and lath of April near Dominica. 
During the peace be entered parliament as member for West- 
minster in the fiercely contested election of 1784, was promoted 
vice-admiral in X787, and in July of 1788 was appointed to 
the Board of Admiralty under the second earl of Chatham. On 
the outbreak of the revolutionary war he was sent to the Medi- 
terranean as commander-in-chief. His period of command, 
which lasted from May 1793 to October 1704, was very busy. 
In August he occupied Toulon on the invitation of the French 
royalists, and in co-operation with the Spaniards. In December 
of the same year the allies, who did not work harmoniously 
together, were driven out, mainly by the generalship of Napoleon. 
Hood now turned to the occupation of Corsica, which be had 
been invited to take in the name of the king of England by 
Paoli. The island was for a short time added to the dominions 
of George in., chiefly by the exertions of the fleet and the 
co-operation of Paoli. While the occupation of Corsica was being 
effected, the French at Toulon had so far recovered that they 
were able to send a fleet to sea. In June Hood sailed in the 
hope of bringing it to action. The plan which he laid to attack 
it in the Golfe Jouan in June may possibly have served to some 
extent as an inspiration, if not as a model, to Nelson for the 
battle of the Nile, but the wind was unfavourable, and the attack 
could not be carried out. In October he was recalled to England 
in consequence of some misunderstanding with the admiralty, 
•or the ministry, which has never been explained. He had 
attained the rank of full admiral in April of 1794. He held no 
further command at sea, but in 1796 he was named governor 
of Greenwich Hospital, a post which be held till his death 
on the 27th of January 1816. A peerage of Great Britain was 
conferred on his wife as Baroness Hood of CaUaeringtoa in 



666 



HOOD, SIR S.— HOOD, THOMAS 



S 



179S, and he wu himself created Viscount Hood of Whitley in 
1706. The titles descended to his son, Henry (1753-1836), 
the ancestor of the present Viscount Hood. There are several 
portraits of Lord Hood by Abbot in the Guildhall and in the 
National Portrait Gallery. He was also painted by Reynolds 
and Gainsborough. 

There is no good life of Lord Hood tin 

by M* Arthur, his secretary during tl in 

the Naval Chronicle, vol. u. Charm 39. 

Biog. i., may also be consulted. his 

command in America has been p »rd 

Society. The history of his campaifj ms 

of the wars in which he served: n's 

Naval and Military Memoirs; for 1 
vol. i., for the English side, and fo 

novates de la France, U. and iii., and m* 

franchise pendant la guerre de Vindt\ mt 

la BApubltque. 

HOOD. SIR SAMUEL (1762-1814), British vice-admiral, 
cousin of Lord Hood and of Lord Bridport, entered the Royal 
Navy in 1776. His first engagement was the battle off Ushant 
in 1778, and, soon afterwards transferred to the West Indies, 
he was present, under the command of his cousin Sir Samuel 
Hood, at all the actions which culminated in Rodney's victory 
of April xath, 1782. After the peace, like many other British 
naval officers, he spent some time in France, and on .bis return 
to England was given the command of a sloop, from which he 
proceeded in succession to various frigates. In the " Juno " 
his gallant rescue of some shipwrecked seamen won him a 
vote of thanks and a sword of honour from the Jamaica assembly. 
Early in 1793 the " Juno " went to the Mediterranean under 
Lord Hood, and her captain distinguished himself by an audacious 
feat of coolness and seamanship in extricating his vessel from 
the harbour of Toulon, which he had entered in ignorance of 
Lord Hood's withdrawal. Soon afterwards he was put in com- 
mand of a frigate squadron for .the protection of Levantine 
commerce, and in 1797 he was given the " Zealous " (74), in which 
he was present at Nelson's unsuccessful attack on Santa Cruz. 
It was Captain Hood who conducted the negotiations which 
relieved the squadron from the consequences of its failure. 
The part played by the " Zealous " at the battle of the Nile 
was brilliant. Her first opponent she put out of action in twelve 
minutes, and, passing on, Hood immediately engaged other 
ships, the " Gucrrier " being left powerless to fire a shot. When 
Nelson left the coast of Egypt, Hood commanded the blockading 
force off Alexandria and Rosctta. Later he rejoined Nelson 
on the coast of the two Sicilies, receiving for his services the 
order of St Ferdinand. 

In the " Venerable " Hood was present at the action of 
Algesiras and the battle in the Straits of Gibraltar (1801). In 
the Straits his ship suffered heavily, losing 130 officers and men. 
A year later Captain Hood was employed in Trinidad as a com- 
missioner, and, upon the death of the flag officer commanding 
the Leeward station, he succeeded him as Commodore. Island 
after island fell to him, and soon, outside Martinique, the French 
had scarcely a foothold in the West Indies. Amongst other 
measures taken by Hood may be mentioned the garrisoning 
of Diamond Rock, which he commissioned as a sloop-of-war 
to blockade the approaches of Martinique (see James, Naval 
History* iii- *45). For these successes he received, amongst 
other rewards, the K.B. In command next of the squadron 
blockading Rochefort, Sir Samuel Hood had a sharp fight, on 
25th September 1805, with a small French squadron which was 
trying to escape. Amongst the few casualties on this occasion 
was the Commodore, who lost an arm. Promoted rear-admiral 
a few days after this action, Hood was in 1807 entrusted with the 
operations against Madeira, which he brought to a successful 
conclusion, and a year later went to the Baltic, with his flag 
in the " Centaur," to take part in the war between Russia and 
Sweden. In one of the actions of this war the "Centaur" 
and " Implacable," unsupported by the Swedish ships (which 
lay to leeward), cut out the Russian 80-gun ship " Sevolod " 
from the enemy's line and, after a desperate fight, forced her 
to strike. The king of Sweden rewarded the admiral with the 



Grand Cross of the Order of the Sword. Present in the roads of 

Corunna at the re-embarkation of the army of Sir John Moore, 
Hood thence returned to the Mediterranean, where for two 
years he commanded a division of the British fleet. In 181 1 
he became vice-admiral. In his last command, that of the 
East Indies station, he carried out many salutary reforms, 
especially in matters of discipline and victualling. He died 
at Madras, 24th December 1814. A lofty column was raised 
to his memory on a hill near Butkigh, Somersetshire, and in 
Butlcigh Church is another memorial, with an inscription 
written by Southey. 

See Naval Chronicle, xvii. 1 (the material was furnished by Hood 
himself; it does not go beyond 1806). 

His elder brother, Captain Alexander Hood (1758-1708), 
entered the Royal Navy in 1767, and accompanied Captain 
Cook in his second voyage round the world. Under Howe and 
Rodney he distinguished himself in the West Indies, and at the 
victory of April x 2th, 1 782, he was in command of one of Rodney's 
frigates. Under Sir Samuel Hood he then proceeded to the 
Mona passage, where he captured the French corvette " Ceres." 
With the commander of his prize, the Baron de Peroy, Hood 
became very intimate, and during the peace be paid a long 
visit to France as his late prisoner's guest. In the early part of 
the Revolutionary war, ill health kept him at home, and it was 
not until 1797 that he went afloat again. His first experience 
was bitter; his ship, the " Mars," was unenviably prominent 
in the mutiny at Spithead. On April 21st, 1798, occurred the 
famous duel of the " Mars " with the " Hercule," fought in 
the dusk near the Bee du Raz. The two ships were of equal force, 
but the " Hercule " was newly commissioned, and after over 
an hour's fighting at close quarters she struck her flag, having 
lost over three hundred men. The captain of the " Mars * 
was mortally wounded early in the fight, and died as the sword 
of the French captain was being put in his hand. The latter, 
L'Heritier, also died of his wounds. 

Sec Naval Chronicle, vi. 175; Ralfe, Naval Biographies, rv. 48; 
James, Naval History, and Chevalier, Hist, de la marine franchise 
sous la premiere ripublique. 

HOOD, THOMAS (1700-1845), British humorist and poet, 
the son of Thomas Hood, bookseller, was born in London on 
the 23rd of May 1709. " Next to being a citizen of the world," 
writes Thomas 'Hood in his Literary Reminiscences, " it must 
be the best thing to be born a citizen of the world's greatest 
city." On the death of her husband in 181 x Mrs Hood removed 
to Islington, where Thomas Hood had a schoolmaster who 
appreciated his talents, and, as he says, " made him fed it im- 
possible not to take an interest in learning while he seemed so 
interested in teaching." Under the care of this M decayed 
dominie," whom he has so affectionately recorded, be earned a 
few guineas— his first literary fee — by revising for the press a 
new edition of Paul and Virginia. Admitted soon after into 
the counting-house of a friend of his family, he " turned his 
stool into a Pegasus on three legs, every foot, of course, being 
a dactyl or a spondee "; but the uncongenial profession affected 
his health, which was never strong, and he was transferred to 
the care of his father's relations at Dundee. There he led a 
healthy outdoor life, and also became a large and indiscriminate 
reader, and before long contributed humorous and poetical 
articles to the provincial newspapers and magazines. As a proof 
of the seriousness with which he regarded the literary vocation, 
it may be mentioned that he used to write out his poems in printed 
characters, believing that that process best enabled him to under- 
stand his own peculiarities and faults, and probably unconscious 
that Coleridge had recommended some such method of criticism 
when he said he thought " print settles it." On his return to 
London in 18x8 he applied himself assiduously to the art of 
engraving, in which he acquired a skill that in after years became 
a most valuable assistant to his literary labours, and enabled 
him to illustrate his various humours and fancies by a pro- 
fusion of quaint devices, which not only repeated to the eye 
the impressions of the text, but, by suggesting amusing analogies 
and contrasts, added considerably to the sense and effect of 
the work. 



HOOD, TOM 



667 



In x8ax Mr John Scott, the editor of the London Magarine, 
was killed in a duel, and that periodical passed into the hands 
of some friends of Hood, who proposed to make him sub-editor. 
His installation into tins congenial post at once introduced him 
to the best literary society of the time; and in becoming the 
associate of Charles Iamb, Cary, de Quincey, Allan Cunningham, 
Proctor, Talfourd, Hartley Coleridge, the peasant-poet Clare 
and other contributors to the magazine, he gradually developed 
bis own intellectual powers, and enjoyed that happy intercourse 
with superior minds for which his cordial and genial character 
was so well adapted, and which he has described in his best 
manner in several chapters of Hood's Own. He had married 
in 1825, and Odes and Addresses — his first work — was written 
in conjunction with his brother-in-law Mr J. H. Reynolds, the 
friend of Keats. S. T. Coleridge wrote to Charles Lamb averring 
that the book must be his work. The Pita of the Midsummer 
Fairies (1827) and a dramatic romance, Lamia, published 
later, belong to this time. The Plea of the Midsummer Fairies 
was a volume of serious verse, in which Hood showed himself 
a by no means despicable follower of Keats. But he was known 
as a humorist, and the public, which had learned to expect 
Jokes from him, rejected this little book almost entirely. There 
was much true poetry in the verse, and much sound sense and 
keen observation in the prose of these works; but the poetical 
feeling and lyrical facility of the one, and the more solid qualities 
of the other, seemed best employed when they were subservient 
to his rapid wit, and to the ingenious coruscations of his fancy. 
This impression was confirmed by the series of the Comic Annual, 
dating- from 1830,- a kind of publication at that time popular, 
which Hood undortook and continued, almost unassisted, for 
several years. Under that somewhat frivolous title he treated 
all the leading events of the day in a fine spirit of caricature, 
entirely free from grossness and vulgarity, without a trait 
of personal malice, and with an under-current of true sympathy 
and honest purpose that will preserve these papers, like the 
sketches of Hogarth, long after the events and manners they 
illustrate have passed from the minds of men. But just as the 
agreeable jester rose into the earnest satirist, one of the most 
striking peculiarities of his style became a more manifest defect. 
The attention of the reader was distracted, and his good taste 
annoyed, by the incessant use of puns, of which Hood had written 
in his own vindication: — 

" However critics may take offence, 
A double meaning has double sense." 

Now it is true that the critic must be unconscious of some 
Of the subtlest charms and nicest delicacies of language who 
would exclude from humorous writing all those impressions 
and surprises which depend on the use of the diverse sense 
of words. The history, indeed, of many a word lies hid in 
its equivocal uses; and it in no way derogates from the dignity 
of the highest poetry to gain strength and variety from the 
ingenious application of the same sounds to different senses, 
any more than from the contrivances of rhythm or the accom- 
paniment of imitative sounds. But when this habit becomes 
the characteristic of any wit, it is impossible to prevent it 
from degenerating into occasional buffoonery, and from supplying 
a cheap and ready resource, whenever the true vein of humour 
becomes thin or rare. Artists have been known to use the 
left hand in the hope of checking the fatal facility which practice 
had conferred on the right; and if Hood had been able to 
place under some restraint the curious and complex machinery 
of words and syllables which his fancy was incessantly pro- 
ducing, his style would have been a great gainer, and much real 
earnestness of object, which now lies confused by the brilliant 
kaleidoscope of language, would have remained definite and clear. 
He was probably not unconscious of this danger; for, as he gained 
experience as a writer, his diction became more simple, and his 
ludicrous illustrations less frequent. In another annual called 
the Gem appeared the poem on the story of " Eugene Aram," 
which first manifested the full extent of that poetical vigour 
which seemed to advance just in proportion as his physical 
health declined. He started a magarine in his own name, 



for which he secured the assistance of many literary men of 
reputation and authority, but which was mainly sustained 
by his own intellectual activity. From a sick-bed, from which 
he never rose, he conducted this work with surprising energy, 
and there composed those poems, too few in number, but im- 
mortal in the English language, such as the " Song of the Shirt " 
(which appeared anonymously in the Christmas number of 
Punch, 1843), the " Bridge of Sighs " and the " Song of the 
Labourer," which seized the deep human interests of the time, 
and transported them from the ground of social philosophy 
into the loftier domain of the imagination. They are no clamor- 
ous expressions of anger at the discrepancies and contrasts 
of humanity, but plain, solemn pictures of conditions of life, 
which neither the politician nor the moralist can deny to exist, 
and which they are imperatively called upon to remedy. Woman, 
in her wasted life, in her hurried death, here stands appealing 
to the society that degrades her, with a combination of eloquence 
and poetry, of forms of art at once instantaneous and permanent, 
and with great metrical energy and variety. 

Hood was associated with the Athenaeum, started in 1828 
by J. Silk Buckingham, and he was a regular contributor for 
the rest of his life. Prolonged illness brought on straitened 
circumstances; and application was made to Sir Robert Peel 
to place Hood's name on the pension list with which the British 
state so moderately rewards the national services of literary 
men. This was done without delay, and the pension was con- 
tinued to his wife and family after his death, which occurred 
on the 3rd of May 1845. Nine years after a monument, raised 
by public subscription, in the cemetery of Kensal Green, was 
inaugurated by Monckton Milnes (Lord Houghton) with a 
concourse of spectators that showed how well the memory 
of the poet stood the test of time. Artisans came from a great 
distance to view and honour the image of the popular writer 
whose best efforts had been dedicated to the cause and the 
sufferings of the workers of the world; and literary men of all 
opinions gathered round the grave of one of their brethren 
whose writings were at once the delight of every boy and the 
instruction of every man who read them. Happy the humorist 
whose works and life are an illustration of the great moral truth 
that the sense of humour is the just balance of all the faculties 
of man, the best security against the pride of knowledge and 
the conceits of the imagination, the strongest inducement 
to submit with a wise and pious patience to the vicissitudes of 
human existence. This was the lesson that Thomas Hood left 
behind him. (H.) 



Bibliography.— The list of Hood's separately published works is 

~ " n People (1825); Whims and 

The Plea of the Midsummer 



lypubui 
as follows: Odes and Addresses to Great People (1825); Whims and 
Oddities (two series, 1826 and 1827); The Plea of the Midsummer 
Fairies, Hero and Leander, Lycus the Centaur and other Poems (1827), 
his only collection of serious verse; The Dream of Eugene Aram, the 
Murderer (1831); Tylney Hall, a. novel (3 vols., 1834); The Comic 
Annual (t 830-1 842); Hood's Own; or, Lauthtetfrom Year to Year 
(1838, second series, 1861); Up the Rhine (1840); Hood's Magazine 
and Comic Miscellany (1844-1848); National Tales (2 vols., 1837), a 
collection of short novelettes; Whimsicalities (1844). with illustra- 
tions from Leech's designs; and many contributions to contempo- 
ra ?--■•--■- 

graphy are: Memorials of Thomas 
H dited by his daughter (i860); his 

" r ,ood's Own; Alexander Elliott Hood 

in nemoir of Hood's friend C. W. Dilke, 

by e, prefixed to Papers of a Critic : and 

-' There is an excellent edition of 



4s., 1807), with a biographical intro- 
lon Alfred Ainger. 



HOOD, TOM (1835-1874), English humorist, son of the poet 
Thomas Hood, was born at Lake* House, Wanstead, Essex, 
on the 19th of January 1835. After attending University College 
School and Louth Grammar School he entered Pembroke College, 
Oxford, in 1853, where he passed all the examinations for the 
degree of B.A., but did not graduate. At Oxford he wrote his 
Farewell to the Swallows (1853) and Pen and Pencil Pictures 
(1857). He began to write for the Lisheard Gazette in 1856, and 
edited that paper in 1858-1859. He then obtained a position in 
the War Office, which be filled lor five years, leaving in 1865 



668 



HOOD OF AVALON— HOOFT 



to become editor of Fun, the comic paper, which became very 
popular under his direction. In 1867 he first issued Tom Hood's 
Comic Annual. In 1861 had appeared The Daughters of King 
Daher, and other Poems, after which he published in conjunction 
with his sister, Frances Freeling Broderip, a number of amusing 
books for children. His serious novels, of which Captain M asters' s 
Children (1865) is the best, were not so successful. Hood drew 
with considerable facility, among his illustrations being those 
of several of his father's comic verses. In private life his geniality 
and sincere friendliness secured him the affection and esteem of a 
wide circle of acquaintance. He died on the 20th of November 
1874. 

A memoir by his sister, F. F. Broderip, is prefixed to the edition 
of his poems published in 1877. 

HOOD OF AVALON, ARTHUR WILLIAM ACLAND HOOD, 

Baron (1824-1901), English admiral, born on the 14th of July 
1824, was the younger son of Sir Alexander Hood of St Andries, 
Somerset, 2nd baronet, and grandson of Captain Alexander 
Hood, R.N., who, when in command of the " Mars," fell in 
action with the French 74-gun ship " Hcrcule," *aist of April 
1798. At the age of twelve Hood entered the navy, and whilst 
still a boy saw active service on the north coast of Spain, and 
afterwards on the coast of Syria. After passing through the 
established course of gunnery on board the " Excellent " in 
1844-1845, he went out to the Cape of Good Hope as gunnery 
mate of the " President," the flagship of Rear-Admiral Dacres, 
by whom, on the 9th of January 1846, he was promoted to be 
lieutenant. As gunnery lieutenant he continued in the " Presi- 
dent " till 1849; *nd in the following year he was appointed 
to the " Arethusa " frigate, then commissioned for the Medi- 
terranean by Captain Symonds, afterwards the well-known 
admiral of the fleet. The outbreak of the Russian war made 
the commission a very long one; and on the 27th of November 

1854 Hood was promoted to be commander in recognition 
of his service with the naval brigade before Sebastopol. In 

1855 he married Fanny Henrietta, daughter of Sir C. F. Maclean. 
In 1856 he commissioned the "Acorn" brig for the China 
station, and arrived in time to take part in the destruction 
of the junks in Fatshan creek on the 1st of June 1857, and 
in the capture of Canton in the following December, for which, 
in February 1858, he received a post-captain's commission. 
From 1 86 a to 1866 he commanded the "Py lades" on the 
North American station, and was then appointed to the command 
of the " Excellent " and the government of the Royal Naval 
College at Portsmouth. This was essentially a gunnery appoint- 
ment, and on the expiration of three years Hood was made 
Director of Naval Ordnance. He was thoroughly acquainted 
with the routine work of the office and the established armament 
of the navy, but he had not the power of adapting himself 
to the changes which were being called for, and still less of 
initiating them; so that during his period of office the armament 
of the ships remained sadly behind the general advance. In 
June 1874 he was appointed to the command of the " Monarch " 
in the Channel Fleet, from which he was relieved in March 
1876 by his promotion to flag rank. From 1877 to 1879 he was 
a junior lord of the Admiralty, and from 1880 to 1882 he com- 
manded the Channel Fleet, becoming vice-admiral on 23rd 
July 1880. In June 1885 he was appointed first sea lord of the 
Admiralty. The intense conservatism of his character, however, 
and his antagonistic attitude towards every change, regardless 
of whether it was necessary or not, had much to do with the 
alarming state of the navy towards 1889. In that year, on 
attaining the age of sixty-five, he was placed on the retired 
list and resigned his post at the Admiralty. After two years 
of continued ill-health, he died on the 15th of November 1901, 
and was buried at Butleigh on the 23rd. He had been promoted 
to the rank of admiral on the 18th of January 1886; was made 
K.C3. in December 1885; G.C.B. in September 1889; and in 
February 1892 was raised to the peerage as Lord Hood of 
Avalon, but on his death the title became extinct. (J* K. L.) 

HOOD, a covering for the head. The word is in O. Eng. hod, 
cognate with Dutch hoed and Ger. Hut, hat, both masculine; 



11 hood * and " hat ° are distantly related; they may be con- 
nected with the feminine hoed or Hut, meaning charge, care, 
Eng. " heed." Some form of hood as a loose covering easily 
drawn on or off the head has formed a natural part of outdoor 
costume both for men and women at all times and in all quarters 
of the globe where climatic conditions called for h. In the 
middle ages and later both men and women are found wearing 
it, but with men it tended to be superseded by the hat before 
it became merely an occasional and additional bead-covering 
in time of bad weather or in particularly rigoro us climates. 
For illustrations and examples of the hood as worn by men and 
women in medieval and later times see the article Costume; 
for the hood or cowl as part of the dress of a religious see Cowl, 
and as forming a distinctive mark of degree in academic costume 
see Robes. The word is applied to many objects resembling 
a bood in function or shape, such as a folding cover for a carriage 
to protect the occupants from rain or wind, the belled co v et in g 
for the head of a hawk trained for falconry, the endmost planks 
in a ship's bottom at bow or stern, and, in botany and zoology, 
certain parts of a flower or of the neck of an animal which in 
arrangement of structure or of colour recall this article of dress. 

In architecture a " hood-mould " is a projecting r"4»»Hyqg 
carried outside the arch of a door or window; it is weathered 
underneath, and when continued horizontally is better known 
as a dripstone. The ends of the hood-mould are generally stopped 
on a corbel, plain or carved with heads in European churches, 
but in those of central Syria terminating in scrolls. Although 
in its origin the object of the projecting and weathered hood- 
mould was to protect the face of the wall below irom rain, 
it gives more importance to, and emphasizes, the arch-moulds, 
so that it is often employed decoratively inside churches. 

The suffix " -hood, like the cognate -head," was originally a 
substantive meaning rank, status or quality, and was constantly used 
in combination with other substantives; ct. in O. Ehg.ctW-Aorf, child- 
hood ; later it ceased to be used separately and became a mere sanuc 
denoting condition added to adjectiva; cf. " falsehood," as well as 
to substantives. 

HOOFT, PIETER CORMEUSSEH (1581-1647), Dutch poet 
and historian, was born at Amsterdam on the 16th of March 
1 581. His father was one of the leading citizens of Holland, 
both in politics and in the patronage of letters, and for some 
time burgomaster of Amsterdam, As early as 1598 the young 
man was made a member of the chamber of rhetoric In Litfde 
blociende, and produced before that body his tragedy of Achilles 
and Polyxena, not printed until 1614. In June 1598 he left 
Holland and proceeded to Paris, where on the 10th of April 
x 599 he saw the body of Gabrielle d'Estrees lying in state. He 
went a few months later to Venice, Florence and Rome, and in 
1600 to Naples. During his Italian sojourn he made a deep 
and fruitful study of the best literature of Italy. In July 1600 
he sent home to the In Liefde blociende a very fine letter in verse, 
expressing his aspirations for the development of Dutch poetry. 
He returned through Germany, and after an absence of three 
years and a half found himself in Amsterdam again on the 8th 
of May 1 601. In 1602 he brought out his second tragedy, 
Theseus and Ariadne, printed at Amsterdam in 1614. In 1605 
he completed his beautiful pastoral drama Cranida, not published 
until 161 5. He studied law and history at Leiden from x6oo 
to 1609, and in June of the latter year received from Prince 
Maurice of Orange the appointment of steward of Muiden, 
bailiff of Gooiland, and lord of Weesp, a joint office of great 
emolument. He occupied himself with repairing and adorning 
the decayed castle of Muiden, which was his residence during 
the remainder of his life. There, he entertained the poet Vondd, 
the scholar Barlaeus, * Constantin Huygens, Vossius, Laurens 
Reael and others. Hooft had been a suitor for the hand of 
Anna Roemer Visscher, and after the death of Roemer Visscher 
both the sisters visited Muiden. Anna's sympathies were in 
time diverted to the school of Jacob Cats, but Marie Tessclschade 
maintained dose ties with Hooft, who revised her translation 
of Tasso. In August 1610 he married Christina van Erp, an 

'Kaspar van Baerie (1 584-1648), professor of rhetoric at 
Amsterdam, and famous as a Latin poet. 



HOOGSTRATEN— HOOK, J. C. 



669 



accomplished lady who died in 1623, and four years later he 
married Eleonora HeUemans. In 161 a Hooft produced his 
national tragedy of Geeraerdt *m Vehen (pr. 1613), a story of 
the reign of Count Floris V. In 1614 was performed at Coster's 
academy Hooft's comedy of Ware-nar, an adaptation of the 
Aulularia of Plautus, first printed in 1617. In 1616 he wrote 
another tragedy, Baeto, or the Origin of the Dutch, not printed 
until 1626. It was in 1618 that he abandoned poetry for history, 
and in 1626 he published the first of his great prose works, the 
History of Henry the Great (Henry IV. of France). His neat 
production was his Miseries of the Princes of the House of Medici 
(Amsterdam, 1638). In 1642 he published at Amsterdam a 
folio comprising the first twenty books of his Dutch History, 
embracing the period from 1555 to 1585, a magnificent per- 
formance, to the perfecting of which he had given fifteen years 
of labour. The seven concluding books were published posthum- 
ously in 1654. His idea of history was gained from Tacitus, 
whose works he translated. Hooft died on a visit to the Hague, 
whither he had gone to attend the funeral of Prince Frederick 
Henry, on the 21st of May 1647, and was buried in the New 
Church at Amsterdam. 

• Hooft is one of the most brilliant figures that adorn Dutch 
literature at its best period. He was the first writer to introduce 
a modern and European tone into belles lettres, and the first 
to refresh the sources of native thought from the springs of 
antique and Renaissance poetry. His lyrics and his pastoral 
of Granida are strongly marked by the influence of Tasso and 
Sannazaro; his later tragedies belong more exactly to the 
familiar tone of his native country. But high as Hooft stands 
among the Dutch poets, he stands higher— he holds perhaps the 
highest place — among writers of Dutch prose. His historical 
style has won the wannest eulogy from "so temperate a critic 
as Motley, and his letters are the most charming ever published 
in the Dutch language. After Vondel, he may on the whole 
be considered the most considerable author that Holland has 
produced. 

Hooft's poetical and dramatic works were collected in two volumes 
(1871, 187O by P. Leendertt. His letter* were edited by B. Huyde* 
coper (Leiden, 1738) and by van Vloten (Leiden. 4 vols., 1859). The 
best original account of Hooft is given by G. Brandt in his Leven van 
P. C. Hooft (1677), and his funeral address (1647), edited together by 
J. C. Matthes (Groningen, 1S74). There i* an account of the Muiden 
circle in Edmund Goste's Literatures of Northern Europe, Many 
editions exist of his prose works. 

HOOGSTRATER, SAMUEL DIRKIZ VAN, Dutch painter, 
was born, it is said, in s6s7 at the Hague, and died at Dort 
on the 19th of October 1678. This artist, who was first a pupil 
of his father, lived at the Hague and at Dort till about 1640, 
when on the death of Dirk Hoogstraten he changed his residence 
to Amsterdam and entered the school of Rembrandt, A short 
time afterwards he started as a master and painter of portraits, 
set out on a round of travels which took him (1651) to Vienna, 
Rome and London, and finally retired to Dort, where he married 
in 1656, and held an appointment as " provost of the mint." 
Hoogstraten's works are scarce; but a sufficient number of 
them has been preserved to show that he strove to imitate 
different styles at different times. In a portrait dated 164s 
in the Lkhtenstein collection at Vienna he imitates Rembrandt; 
and he continues fas this vein as late as 1653, when be produced 
that wonderful figure of a Jew looking out of a casement, which 
is one of the most characteristic example* of his manner in the 
Belvedere at Vienna. A view of the Vienna Hofburg, dated 
1652, in the same gallery displays his skill as a painter of archi- 
tecture, whilst in a piece at the Hague rep r esenting a Lady 
Reading a Letter as she crosses a Courtyard, or a Lady Consulting 
a Doctor, in the Van der Hoop Museum at Amsterdam, be 
imitates de Hooch. One of his latest works is a portrait of 
Mathys van den Brouck, dated 1670, in the gallery of Amsterdam. 
The scarcity of Hoogstraten 's pictures Is probably due to his 
versatility. Besides directing a mint, he devoted some time 
to literary labours, wrote a book on the theory of painting 
(1678) and composed sonnets and a tragedy. We are indebted 
to him for sons of the familiar aayings of .Rembrandt. He 



was an etcher too, and some of Ms plates are still pre- 
served. His portrait, engraved by himself at the age of fifty, 
still exists. 

HOOK, JAMES CLARKE (181^1907), English painter, was 
born in London on the 21st of November 1819. His father, 
James Hook, a Northumbrian by descent, Judge Arbitrator 
of Sierra Leone, married the second daughter of Dr Adam 
Clarke, the commentator on the Bible, who gave to the painter 
his second name. Young Hook's first taste of the sea was on 
board the Berwick smacks which took him on his way to Woolcr. 
He drew with rare facility, and determined to become an artist; 
and accordingly, without any supervision, be set to work for 
more than a year in the sculpture galleries of the British Museum. 
In 1836 he was admitted a student of the Royal Academy, 
where he worked for three years, and elsewhere learned a good 
deal of the scientific technique of painting from a nephew of 
Opie. His first picture, called " The Hard Task," was exhibited 
in 1837, and represented a girl helping ber sister with a lesson. 
Unusual facility in portraiture and a desire to earn hjs own 
living took the student into Ireland to paint likenesses of the 
Waterford family and others; here he produced landscapes of 
the Vale of Avoca, and much developed his taste for pastoral 
art; later, he was similarly engaged in Kent and Somersetshire. 
In 1842 his second exhibited work was a portrait of " Master 
J. Finch Smith ": in this year he gained silver medals at the 
Royal Academy, and in 1843 he was one of the competitors 
in the exhibition of cartoons in Westminster Hall, with a xo 
by 7 ft. design of " Satan in Paradise." In 1844 the Academy 
contained a picture of a kind with which his name was long 
associated, an illustration of the Decameron, called " Paraphilius 
relating his Story," a meadow scene in bright light, with 
sumptuous ladies, richly clad, reclining on the grass. The British 
Institution, 1844 and 1845, set forth two of Hook's idylls, subjects 
taken from Shakespeare and Burns, which, with the above,, 
showed him to be cultivating those veins of romantic sentiment 
and the picturesque which were then in vogue, but in a character- 
istically fresh and vigorous manner. "The Song of Olden 
Times " (Royal Academy, 1845) marked the artist's future path 
distinctly in most technical respects. It was in this year Hook 
won the Academy gold medal for an oil picture of " The Finding 
the Body of Harold." The travelling studentship in painting 
was awarded to him for " Rizpah watching the Dead Sons of 
Saul " in 1846; and he went for three years to Italy, having 
married Miss Rosalie Burton before he left England, .Hook 
passed through Paris, worked diligently for some time in the 
Louvre, traversed Switzerland, and, though he stayed only 
part of three years in Italy, gained much from studies of Titian, 
Tintoret, Carpaccio, Mansueti and other Venetians. Their 
influence thenceforth dominated the coloration of his pictures, 
and enabled him to apply the principles to which they had 
attained to the representation (as Bonington before him had 
done) of romantic subjects and to those English themes of the 
land and sea with which the name of the artist is inseparably 
associated. "A Dream of Ancient Venice" (RA, 1848)— 
the first fruit of these Italian studies—" Bayard of Brescia " 
(R.A., 1849), " Venice " (B.I., 1849) and other works assured 
for Hook the Assodateship of the Royal Academy in 1851. 
Soon afterwards an incomparable aeries of English subjects was 
begun, in many pastorals and fine brilliant idylls of the sea 
and rocks. " A Rest by the Wayside " and " A Few Minutes 
to Wait before Twelve o'clock " proved his title to appear, 
in 1854, as a new and original painter. After these came 
" A Signal on the Horizon " (1857), " A Widow's Son going to 
Sea," " The Ship-boy's Letter," "Oifldren'a Cbadren are the 
Crown of Old Men," " A Coast-boy gathering Eggs," a scene 
at Lundy; the perfect "Luff, Boy!" (1859), about which 
Ruskln broke into a dithyrambic chant, *• The Brook," " Stand 
Clear ! " " O Well for the Fisherman's Boy! " (1860), •• Leaving 
Cornwall for the Whitby Fishing," " Sea Urchins," and a score 
more as fine as these. The artist was elected a full Academician 
on the 6th of March i860, to the place of James Ward. He died 
on the 14th of April 1907. 



670 



HOOK, T. E.— HOOKE 



See A. H. Palmer, N J. C. Hook, R.A.." Pcrtfelio (t888); F. G. 
Stephens, " J. C Hook, Royal Academician: Hia Life and Work/' 
Art Annual (London, 1888}; P. G. Hamerton, Etching and Etchers 
(London, 1877). 

HOOK, THEODORE EDWARD (1788-1841), English author, 
was born in London on the 22nd of September 1788. He spent 
a year at Harrow, and subsequently matriculated at Oxford, 
but he never actually resided at the university. His father, 
James Hook (1746-1827), the composer of numerous popular 
songs, took great delight in exhibiting the boy's extraordinary 
musical and metrical gifts, and the precocious Theodore became 
41 the little pet lion of the green room." At the age of sixteen, 
In conjunction with his father, he scored a dramatic success 
with The Soldier's Return, a comic opera, and this he rapidly 
followed up with a series of over a dozen sparkling ventures, 
the instant popularity of which was hardly dependent on the 
inimitable acting of John List on and Charles Mathews. But Hook 
gave himself up for some ten of the best years of his life to the 
pleasures of the town, winning a foremost place in the world of 
fashion by his matchless powers of improvisation and mimicry, 
and startling the public by the audacity of his practical jokes. 
His unique gift of improvising the words and the music of songs 
eventually charmed the prince Regent into a declaration that 
" something must be done for Hook." The prince was as good 
as his word, and Hook, in spite of a total ignorance of accounts, 
was appointed accountant-general and treasurer of the Mauritius 
with a salary of £2000 a year. For five delightful years he 
was the life and soul of the island, but in 1817, a serious deficiency 
having been discovered in the treasury accounts, he was arrested 
and brought to England on a criminal charge. A sum of about 
£12,000 had been abstracted by a deputy official, and for this 
amount Hook was held responsible. 

' During the tardy scrutiny of the audit board he lived obscurely 
and maintained himself by- writing for magazines and newspapers. 
In 1820 he launched the newspaper John Bull, the champion of 
high Toryism and the virulent detractor of Queen Caroline. 
Witty, incisive criticism and pitiless Invective secured it a large 
circulation, and from this source alone Hook derived, for the 
first year at least, an Income of £2000.. He was, however, 
arrested for the second time on account of his debt to the state, 
which he made no effort to defray. In a sponging-house, where 
he was confined for two years, he wrote the nine volumes of stories 
afterwards collected under the title of Sayings and Doings 
(1826-1829). In the remaining twenty-three years of his life 
he poured forth no fewer than thirty-eight volumes, besides 
numberless articles, squibs and sketches. His novels are not 
works of enduring interest, but they are saved from mediocrity 
by frequent passages of racy narrative and vivid portraiture. 
The best are Maxwell (1830), Lou and Pride (1833), the autobio- 
graphic Gilbert Gurney (1836), Jack Brag (1837), Gurney Married 
(1838), and Peregrine Bunce (1842). Incessant work had already 
begun to tell on his health, when Hook returned to his old social 
habits, and a prolonged attempt to combine industry and dissipa- 
tion resulted in the confession that he was " done up in purse, 
in mind and in body too at last." He died on the 24th of August 
1841. His writings in great part are of a purely ephemeral 
character; and the greatest triumphs of the improvisatore 
may be said to have been writ in wine. Putting aside, however, 
his claim to literary greatness, Hook will be remembered as one 
of the most brilliant, genial and original figures of Georgian 
times. 

See the Rev. R. H. D. Barham's Life and Remains of Hook (3rd ed., 
1877); and an article by I. G. Lockhart in the Quarterly Review 
(May 1843). 

HOOK, WALTER TARQUHAR (1708-1875). English divine, 
nephew of the witty Theodore, was born in London on the 13th 
of March 1798. Educated at Tiverton and Winchester, he 
graduated at Oxford (Christ Church) in 1821, and after holding 
an incumbency in Coventry, 1820-1837, and in Leeds, 1837- 
1850, was nominated dean of Chichester by Lord Derby. He 
received the degree of D.D. in 1837. His friendship towards 
the Tractarians exposed him to considerable persecution, but 
his simple manly character and zealous devotion to parochial 



work ga in ed him the support of widely divergent chutes, ffis 
stay in Leeds was marked by vigorous and far-reaching church 
extension, and his views on education were far in advance of 
his time. Among his many writings art An Ecclesiastical 
Biography >, containing the Liou of Ancient Fathers and Modem 
Divines (8 vohu, 1845-1852), A Church Dictionary, The Menus 
of Rendering more Effectual the Education of the People, 
The Cross of Christ (1873), The Church and its Ordinances 
(sermons, 4 vols., 1876), and Uses of the Archbishopi of Cornier- 
bury (12 vols., 1860-1876). He died on the soth of October 
x87S. 

See Life and Letters of Dean Book, by his ton-in-law, W. R. W. 
Stephens (a vols., 1978). 

HOOKAH (the English spelling of the Persian and Hindustani 
huqqu, an adaptation of the Arabic huqqah, a vase or casket, 
and by transference a pipe for smoking, probably derived from- 
the Arabic huoq, a hollow place), a pipe with a long nexftso 
tube attached to a large bowl containing water, often scented, 
and resting upon a tripod or stand. The smoke of the tobacco 
is made to pass through the water in the bowl, and is t h us cooled 
before reaching the smoker. The narghile of India is in principle 
the same as that of the hookah; the word is derived from nargil, 
an Indian name for the coco-nut tree, as when the nergkiU 
was first made the water was placed in a coco-nut. This re- 
ceptacle is now often made of porcelain, glass or metal. In 
the hubble-bubble the pipe is so contrived that the water in 
the bowl makes a bubbling noise whue the pipe is being 
smoked. This pipe is common in India, Egypt and the East 
generally. 

HOOKE, ROBERT (1635-1703), English experimental 
philosopher, was born on the x8th of July 1635 at Freshwater, 
in the Isle of Wight, where his father, John Hooke, was »m>rfrt*t 
of the parish. After working for a short time with Sir Peter 
Lely, he went to Westminster school; and in 1653 he entered 
Christ Church, Oxford, as servitor. After 1655 he was employed 
and patronized by the Hon. Robert Boyle, who turned his sktO 
to account in the construction of his air-pump. On the 12th 
of November 1662 he was appointed curator of experiments 
to the Royal Society, of which he was elected a fellow in 1663, 
and filled the office during the remainder of his life. In 1664 
Sir John Cutler instituted for his benefit a mechanical lectureship 
of £50 a year, and in the following year he waa nominated 
professor of geometry in Gresham College, where he subsequently 
resided. After the Great Fire of xnoo he constructed a model 
for the rebuilding of the city, which was highly approved, although 
the design of Sir C Wren was preferred. During the pr ogres s 
of the works, however, be acted as surveyor, and accumulated 
in that lucrative employment a sum of several thousand pounds, 
discovered after his death in an old iron chest, which bad 
evidently lain unopened for above thirty years. He fulfilled 
the duties of secretary to the Royal Society during five years 
after the death of Henry Oldenburg in 1677, publishing in 1681- 
x68a the papers read before that body under the title of Philo- 
sophical Collections* A protracted controversy with Johann 
HeveUus, in' which Hooke urged the advantages of telescopic 
over plain sights, brought him little but discredit. His reasons 
were good; but his offensive style of argument rendered them 
unpalatable and himself unpopular. Many circumstances 
concurred to embitter the latter years of his life. The death, 
in 1687, of his niece, Mrs Grace Hooke, who had Kved with him 
for many years, caused him deep affliction; a law-suit with Sir 
John Cutler about his salary (decided, however, in his savow 
in 1696) occasioned him prolonged anxiety; and the repeated 
anticipation of his discoveries inspired him with a morbid 
jealousy. Marks of public respect were not indeed wanting to 
him. A degree of M.D. was conferred on him at Doctors* 
Commons in 1691, and the Royal Society made him, in 1606, 
a grant to enable him to complete his philosophical inventions. 
While engaged on this task he died, worn out with disease, 
on the 3rd of March 1703 in London, and was buried in St 
Helen's Church, Bishopsgate Street. 
. In personal appearance Hooke made but a sorry show. His 



HOOKER, J.—HOOKER, SIR J. D. 



671 



figure was crooked, his limbs shrunken; his hair hung in' dis- 
hevelled locks over his haggard countenance. His temper was 
irritable, his habits penurious and solitary. He was, however, 
blameless in morals and reverent in religion. His scientific 
achievements would probably have been more striking if they 
had been less varied. He originated much, but perfected 
little. His optical investigations led him to adopt in an imperfect 
form the undulatory theory of light, to anticipate the doctrine 
of interference, and to observe, independently of though sub- 
sequently to F. M. Grimaldi (1618-1663), the phenomenon of 
diffraction. He was the first to state clearly that the motions 
of the heavenly bodies must be regarded as a mechanical problem, 
and he approached in a remarkable manner the discovery of 
universal gravitation. He invented the wheel barometer, 
discussed the application of barometrical indications to meteoro- 
logical forecasting, suggested a system of optical telegraphy, 
anticipated E.F.F. Chladni's experiment of strewing a vibrating 
bell with flour, investigated the nature of sound and the function 
of the air in respiration and combustion, and originated the 
idea of using the pendulum as a measure of gravity. He is 
credited with the Invention of the anchor escapement for clocks, 
and also with the application of spiral springs to the balances 
of watches, together with the explanation of their action by 
the principle Ui knsio sic vis (1676). 

His principal writings are Microtrophia (1664); Lectio*** Cutter- 
ianae (1674-1679); and Posthumous Works, containing a sketch 
of his " Philosophical Algebra/' published by R. Waller in 1705. 
- HOOKER, JOSEPH (18x4-1879), American general, was born 
in Hadley, Massachusetts, on the 13th of November 18x4. 
He was educated at the military academy at West Point (1833- 
2837), and on graduating entered the xst U. S. Artillery. In the 
war with Mexico (1846-48) he served as a staff officer, and rose 
by successive brevets for meritorious services to the rank of 
lieutenant-colonel. In 1853 he left the service and bought a large 
farm near Sonoma, Cal., which he managed successfully till 
1858, when he was made superintendent of military roads in 
Oregon. Upon the opening of hostilities in the Civil War of 
2861-65, he sacrificed his fine estate and offered his sword to the 
Federal Government. He was commissioned brigadier-general 
of volunteers on the 17th of May x86x and major-general 
on the 5th of May x86a. The engagement of Williamsburg 
(May 5th) brought him and his subordinate Hancock into 
prominence, and Hooker received the soubriquet of "Fighting 
Joe." He was engaged at the battle of Fair Oaks, and did 
splendid service to the Union army during the A Seven Days." 
In the campaign of Northern Virginia, under General Pope 
(August 1S61), he led his division with fiery energy at Bristoe 
Station, Manassas and Chantilly. In the Maryland campaign 
(September) he was at the head of the I. corps, Army of the 
Potomac, forced the defile of South Mountain and opened the 
way for the advance of the army. The I. corps opened the great 
battle of the Antietam, and sustained a sanguinary fight with the 
Confederates under Stonewall Jackson. Hooker himself was 
severely wounded. He was commissioned brigadier-general 
in the United States army on the aoth of September x86a, and 
in the battle of Fredericksburg (q.v.), under Burnside, he com- 
manded the centre grand division (III. and V. corps). He had 
protested against the useless slaughter of his men on that 
disastrous field, and when Burnside resigned the command 
Hooker succeeded him. The new leader effected a much-needed 
re-organization in the army, which had fought many battles 
without success. In this task, as in subordinate commands 
in battle, Hooker was excelled 4>y few. But his grave defects 
as a commander-in-chief were soon to be obvious. By a well- 
planned and well-executed flanking movement, he placed himself 
on the enemy's flank, but at the decisive moment he checked 
the advance of his troops. Lee turned upon him, Jackson 
surprised and destroyed a whole army corps, and the battle of 
Chancellorsville (see Wildesness), in which Hooker was himself 
disabled, ended in a retreat to the old position. Yet Hooker 
had not entirely forfeited the confidence of his men, to whom 
he was still " Fighting Joe." The second advance of Lee into 



Union territory, which led to the battle of Gettysburg, was 
strenuously resisted by Hooker, who would have inflicted a 
heavy blow on Lee's scattered forces had he not been condemned 
to inaction by orders from Washington. Even then Hooker 
followed the Confederates a day only behind them, until, finding 
himself distrusted and forbidden to control the movements of 
troops within the sphere of operations, he resigned the command 
on the eve of the battle (June 28, 1863). Faults of temper 
and an excessive sense of responsibility made his continued 
occupation of the command impossible, but when after a signal 
defeat Rosecrans was besieged in Chattanooga, and Grant 
with all the forces of the West was hurried to the rescue, two 
corps of the Army of the Potomac were sent over by rail, and 
Hooker, who was at least one of the finest fighting generals 
of the service, went with them in command. He fought and won 
the " Battle above the Clouds " on Lookout Mountain which 
cleared the way for the crowning victory of the army of the 
Cumberland on Missionary Ridge (see Chattanooga). And in 
command of the same corps (consolidated as the XX. corps) 
he took part in all the battles and combats of the Atlanta 
campaign of X864. When General McPherson was killed before 
Atlanta, the command of Grant's old Army of the Tennessee 
fell vacant. Hooker, who, though only a corps commander, 
was senior to the other army commanders, Thomas and Scbofield, 
was normally entitled to receive it, but General Sherman feared 
to commit a whole army to the guidance of a man of Hooker's 
peculiar temperament, and the place was given to Howard. 
Hooker thereupon left the army. He was commissioned brevet- 
major-general in the United States army on the 13th of March 
1865, and retired from active service with the full rank of major- 
general on the 15th of October x868, in consequence of a 
paralytic seizure. The last years of his life were passed in the 
neighbourhood of New York. He died at Garden City, Long 
Island, on the 31st of October 1879. 

HOOKER, SIR JOSEPH DALTON (18x7- J, English 
botanist and traveller, second son of the famous botanist Sir 
W J.Hooker, was born on the 30th of June 18x7, at Halesworth, 
Suffolk. He was educated at Glasgow University, and almost 
immediately after taking, his M.D. degree there in 1839 joined 
Sir James Ross's Antarctic expedition, receiving a commission 
as assistant-surgeon on the " Erebus." The botanical fruits of the 
three years he thus spent in the Southern Seas were the Flora 
Antarctica, Flora Nova* Zclandiae and Flora Tasmanica, which 
he published on his return. His next expedition was to the 
northern frontiers of India (1847-X851), and the expenses in 
this case also were partially defrayed by the government. The 
party had its full share of adventure. Hooker and his friend 
Dr Campbell were detained in prison for some time by the raja of 
Sikkim, but nevertheless they were able to bring back important 
results, both geographical and botanical. Their survey of 
hitherto unexplored regions was published by the Calcutta 
Trigonometrical Survey Office, and their botanical observations 
formed* the basis of elaborate works on the rhododendrons 
of the Sikkim Himalaya and on the flora of India. Among 
other journeys undertaken by Hooker may be mentioned those 
to Palestine (i860), Morocco (1871), and the United States 
(1877), all yielding valuable sden tine-information. In the midst 
of all this travelling in foreign countries he quickly built up for 
himself a high scientific reputation at home. In 1855 he was 
appointed assistant-director of Kew Gardens, and in 1865 he 
succeeded bis father as full director, holding the post for twenty 
years. At the early age of thirty he was elected a fellow of the 
Royal Society, and in 1873 he was chosen its president; he 
received three of its medals— a Royal in 1854, the Copley in 
1887 and the Darwin in* 1892. He acted as president of the 
British Association at its Norwich meeting of 1868, when his 
address was remarkable for its championship of Darwinian 
theories. Of Darwin, indeed, he was an early friend and sup- 
porter: it was he who, with Lyell, first induced Darwin to 
make his views public, and the author of The Origin of Species 
has recorded his indebtedness to Hooker's wide knowledge and 
balanced judgment. Sir Joseph Hooker is the author of numerous 



67* 



HOOKER, R. 



•dentine papers and monograph!, and his larger books include, 
in addition to those already mentioned, a standard Student's 
Flora of the British Isles and a monumental work, the Genera 
plantar urn, based on the collections at Kew, in which he had the 
assistance of Bentham. On the publication of the last part of 
his Flora of British India in 1607 he was created G.C.S.I., of 
which order he had been made a knight commander twenty 
years before; and twenty years later, on attaining the age of 
ninety, he was awarded the Order of Merit. 

HOOKER, RICHARD (1553-1600), English writer, author of 
the Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity, son of Richard Vowellor Hooker, 
was born at Heavitree, near the city of Exeter, about the end of 
1553 or beginning of 1554. Vowell was the original name of 
the family, but was gradually dropped, and in the 15th century 
its members were known as Vowell alias Hooker. At school, 
not only his facility in mastering his tasks, but his intellectual 
inquisitiveness and his fine moral qualities, attracted the special 
notice of his teacher, who strongly recommended his parents 
to educate him for the church. Though well connected, they 
were, however, somewhat straitened in their worldly circum- 
stances, and Hooker was indebted for admission to the university 
to his uncle, John Hooker aKas Vowell, chamberlain of Exeter, 
and in his day a man of some literary repute, who induced 
Bishop Jewel to become his patron and to bestow on him a 
clerk's place in Corpus Christi College,. Oxford. To this Hooker 
was admitted in 1568. Bishop Jewel died in September 1571, 
but Dr William Cole, president of the college, from the strong 
interest he felt in the young man, on account at once of his 
character and his abilities, spontaneously offered to take the 
bishop's place as his patron; and shortly afterwards Hooker, 
by his own labours as a tutor, became independent of gratuitous 
aid. Two of his pupils, and these his favourite ones, were Edwin 
Sandys, afterwards author of Euro pee speculum, and George 
Cranmer, grand-nephew of the archbishop. Hooker's reputation 
as a tutor soon became very high, for be had employed his 
five years at the university to such good purpose as not only to 
have acquired great proficiency in the learned languages, but 
to have joined to this a wide and varied culture which had 
delivered him from the bondage of learned pedantry; in addition 
to which he is said to have possessed a remarkable talent for 
communicating knowledge in a clear and interesting manner, 
and to have exercised a special influence over his pupils' in- 
tellectual and moral tendencies. In December 1573 he was 
elected scholar of his college; in July 1577 he proceeded to M.A., 
and in September of the same year he was admitted a fellow. 
In 1579 he was appointed by the chancellor of the university 
to read the public Hebrew lecture, a duty which he continued 
to discharge till he left Oxford. Not long after his admission 
into holy orders, about 1581, he was appointed to preach at 
St Paul's Cross; and, according to Walton, he was so kindly 
entertained by Mrs Churchman, who kept the Shunamites 
house where the preachers were boarded, that he permitted 
her to choose him a wife, " promising upon a fair summons to 
return to London and accept of her choice." The lady selected 
by her was" her daughter Joan," who, says the same authority, 
" found him neither beauty nor portion; and for her conditions 
they were too like that wife's which is by Solomon compared to 
a dripping house." It is probable that Walton has exaggerated 
the simplicity and passiveness of Hooker in the matter, but 
though, as Kcble observes with justice, his writings betray 
uncommon shrewdness and quickness of observation, as well as 
a vein of keenest humour, it Would appear that either gratitude 
or some other impulse had on this occasion led his judgment 
astray. After his marriage he was, about the end of 1584, pre- 
sented to the living of Drayton Beauchamp in Buckinghamshire. 
In the following year he received a visit from his two pupils, 
Edwin Sandys and George Cranmer, who found him with the 
Odes of Horace in his hand, tending the sheep while the servant 
was at dinner, after which, when they on the return of the 
servant accompanied him to his house, " Richard was called 
to rock the cradle." Finding him so engrossed by worldly 
and domestic cores, " they stayed but till the next morning," 



and, greatly grieved at his narrow circumstances and unhappy 
domestic condition, " left him to the company of his wife Joan." 

The visit had, however, results of the highest moment, not 
only in regard to the career of Hooker, but in regard to En g lish 
literature and English philosophical thought. Sandys prevailed 
on his father, the archbishop of York, to recommend Hooker 
for presentation to the mastership of the Temple, and Hooker, 
though his " wish was rather to gain a better country living,'* 
having agreed after some hesitation to become a candidate, the 
patent conferring upon him the mastership was granted 00 the 
17th of March 1584/5. The rival candidate was Walter Travers, 
a Presbyterian and evening lecturer in the same church. Being 
continued in the lectureship after the appointment of Hooker, 
Travers was in the habit of attempting a refutation in the even- 
ing of what Hooker had spoken in the morning, Hooker again 
replying on the following Sunday; so it was said " the forenoon 
sermon spake Canterbury, the afternoon Geneva." On account 
of the keen feeling displayed by the partisans of both, Archbishop 
Whitgift deemed it prudent to prohibit the preaching of Travers, 
whereupon he presented a petition to the council to have the 
prohibition recalled. Hooker published an Answer to the Petition 
of Mr Travers t and also printed several sermons bearing on special 
points of the controversy; but, feeling strongly the unsatisfactory 
nature of such an isolated and fragmentary discussion of separate 
points, he resolved to compose an elaborate and exhaustive 
treatise, exhibiting the fundamental principles by which the 
question in dispute must be decided. It is probable that the 
work was begun in the latter half of 1.586, and he had made 
considerable progress with it before, with a view to ks completion, 
he petitioned Whitgift to be removed to a country parsonage, 
in order that, as he said, " I may keep myself in peace and 
privacy, and behold God's blessing spring out of my mother 
earth, and eat my own bread without oppositions." His desire 
was granted in 1 501 by a presentation to the rectory of Boscombe 
near Salisbury. There he completed the volume containing the 
first four of the proposed Eight Boohs of the Law of Ecclesiastical 
Polity, It was entered at Stationers' Hall on the 9th of March 
X592, but was not published till 1503 or 1504- In July 1595 he 
was promoted by the crown to the rectory of Bishopsbourne near 
Canterbury, where he lived to see the completion of the fifth 
book in 1597. In the passage from London to Gravesend some 
time in 1600 he caught a severe cold from which he never 
recovered; but, notwithstanding great weakness and constant 
suffering, he " was solicitous in his study," his one desire being 
" to live to finish the three remaining books of Polity." Ha death 
took place on the and of November of the same year. A volume 
professing to contain the sixth .and eighth books of the Polity 
was published at London in 2648, but the bulk of the sixth 
book, as has been shown by Keble, is an entire deviation from 
the subject on which Hooker proposed to treat, and doubtless 
the genuine copy, known to have been completed, has been 
lost. The seventh book, which was published in a new edition 
of the work by Gauden in 1662, and the eighth book, may be 
regarded as in substance the composition of Hooker; but, as, 
in addition to wanting his final revision, they have been very 
unskilfully edited, if they have not been manipulated for theo- 
logical purposes, their statements in regard to doubtful matters 
must be received with due reserve, and no reliance can be placed 
on their testimony where their meaning contradicts .that of 
other portions of the Polity. 

The conception of Hooker in his later years, which we form- 
from the various accessible sources, is that of a person of low 
stature and not immediately impressive appearance, much bent 
by the influence of sedentary and meditative habits, of quiet 
and retiring manners, and discoloured in complexion and worn 
and marked in feature from the hand mental toil which he had 
expended on his great work. There seems, however, exaggera- 
tion in Walton's statement as to the meanness of his dress; 
and Walton certainly misreads his character when he portrays 
him as a kind of ascetic mystia Though he was unworldly 
and simple in his desires, and engrossed in the purpose to whkh 
he had devoted his life— the " completion of the Polity "—hit 



HOOKER, R. 



673 



writings i 
dispositioi 
fa everydi 
meter in a 
delight in 
Cod's biei 
much of h 
towards t 
dignity w 
a preachei 
the appla 
of the moi 
of his tho 
modifying 
ineffective 
aightednes 
and, accoi 
music wit! 
tion norg 

To ace© 
Ecclesiastic 
prose liters 
injustice tc 
influence, t 
curstons in 
and not 01 
ipeare, Spt 
as the mas 
have had 
regarded a 
Puritanism 
confined to 
ism been si 
thought. 1 
enough of 1 
palate of n 
the old chn 
English pre 
before him 
Sidney, the 
the Bible, I 
to light mi 
latent in tt 
in English 
grasp of its 
literary sty 
of express* 
great aptnc 
and such a 
ment as all 
hampered; 
uniform an 
and phrase 
and to exp 
appropriate 
more relatii 
and partly 
seemingly c 
ally led hin 
earned for 
the solidity 
in the chai 
hensivc ma 
conception! 
regions of t 
duced, in 1 
harmony tl 
Milton, h 
variety cha 
after the la 
his sentenc 
often tautc 
clauses; b 
some respe 
original an< 
lapse of net 

Tbedira 
and politics 
it possessed 
theology sh 
theological 

• » If Baco 
sophical sta 
than that oi 



t the intellectual 
hkh surrounded 
sipulses enabling 
c thought which 
ich a higher and 
luguratc modern 
lis principles are 
ight out— that H 
;ncies leading to 
> in his argument 
eaning^ which he 
»bscunty simply 
^holding in his 

their own ideas, 
» instead of ac- 

defintte form of 
heir notions and 
nveloped in mist 
ciples in the first 
Ikatton of these 
ork its sUndard 
in answer to the 
ity and customs, 
ianism from the 
rorlc must rather 
round chosen by 
's exact position 
iv be held in all 

cate Episcopacy 
e attains a result 
The fundamental 
: unity and all- 
beautifully says, 
1 world." Law— 
vidual character 
1 governments — 
he divine order 
awion in various 
between natural 
itable, the other 
liency; and ha 
are positive and 
eir application la 
strengthened by 



The leadin 

. -" ugn 
1 could be made 



ison, for, thoui 



gn 



rates reason into 
ind the standard 
at eternal. "It 
1 or possibly can 
the same time he 
1 theorizing by a 
ecu rate study of 
er use of reason. 
5 says, " as the 
lave at all times 
i, God being the 
" Applying his 
morality is, ac* 
'which God from 
this law is to be 
on teaches us to 
conception and 
perfection: first 
itself rcquircth, 
maments there- 
ngs which none 
with; lastly, a 
into we tend by 
n unto them/' 
community, he 
ecclesiastical as 
s the basis of the 
-ocke developed 
suctioned. The 
ves from public 
es immediately 
their ancestors, 
perfect power to 
utterly without 
> commandment 
ten that society 
isented, without 
[reement." Hit 
ind application! 
ret philosophical 
■ded in the suc- 
ks in England 



67+ 



HOOKER, T.— HOOKER, SIR W. J. 



and gradually modified its constitution. One of the corollaries of hi* 
principles is his theory of the relation of church and state, according 
to which, with the qualifications implied in his theory of govern- 
ment, he asserts the royal supremacy in matters of religion, and 
identifies the church and commonwealth as but different aspects of 
the same government. 

Bibliography. — A life of Hooker by Dr Gauden was published in 
his edition of Hooker's works (London, 1662). To correct the errors 
in this life Walton wrote another, which was published in the 2nd 
edition of Hooker's works in 1666. The standard modern edition 
of Hooker's works is that by Keble, which first appeared in 1836, and 
has since been several times reprinted (1888 edition, revised by Dean 
Church and Bishop Paget). The first book of the Laws of Ecclesi- 
astical Polity was edited for the Clarendon Press by Dean R. W. 
Church (1868-1876). (T. F. H.) 

HOOKER, THOMAS (1586-1647), New England theologian, 
was born, probably on the 7th of July 1586, at Marfield, in the 
parish of Til ton, County of Leicester, England. He graduated 
B.A. in 1608 and M.A. in 161 1 at Emmanuel College, Cambridge, 
the intellectual centre of Puritanism, remained there as a fellow 
for a few years, and then preached in the parish of Esher in 
Surrey. About 1626 be became lecturer to the church of St 
Mary at Chelmsford, Essex, delivering on market days and 
Sunday afternoons evangelical addresses which were notable 
for their moral fervour. In 1629 Archbishop Laud took measures 
to suppress church lectureships, which were an innovation of 
Puritanism. Hooker was placed under bond and retired to 
Little Baddow, 4 m. from Chelmsford. In 1630 he was cited 
to appear before the Court of High Commission, but he forfeited 
his bond and fled to Holland, whence in 1633 he emigrated 
to the Colony of Massachusetts Bay in America, and became 
pastor at Newtowne (now Cambridge), Mass., of a company 
of Puritans who had arrived from England in the previous year 
and in expectation of his joining them were called " Mr Hooker's 
Company." Hooker seems to have been a leader in the formation 
of that sentiment of discontent with the Massachusetts govern- 
ment which resulted in the founding of Connecticut. He publicly 
criticized the limitation of suffrage to church members, and, 
according to a contemporary historian, William Hubbard 
(General History of New England), " after Mr Hooker's coming 
over it was observed that many of the freemen grew to be very 
jealous of their liberties." He was a leader of the emigrants 
who in 1636 founded Hartford, Connecticut. In a sermon before 
the Connecticut General Court of 1638, he declared that " the 
choice of public magistrates belongs unto the people by God's 
own allowance" and that " they who have the power to appoint 
officers and magistrates, it is in their power, also, to set the 
bounds and limitations of the power and place unto which they 
call them." Though this theory was in advance of the age, 
Hooker had no idea of the separation of church and state — 
" the privilege of election, which belongs to the people," he said, 
must be exercised " according to the blessed will and law of God." 
He also defended the right of magistrates to convene synods, 
and in the Fundamental Orders of Connecticut (1639), which 
he probably framed, the union of church and state is presupposed. 
Hooker was pastor of the Hartford church until his death on 
the 7th of July 1647. He was active in the negotiations which 
preceded the formation of the New England Confederation 
in 1643. In the same year he attended the meeting of Puritan 
ministers at Boston, whose object was to defend Congrega- 
tionalism, and he wrote a Survey of the Summe of Chunk 
Discipline (1648) in justification of the New England church 
system. His other works deal chiefly with the experimental 
phases of religion, especially the experience precedent to con- 
version. In The Souk's Humiliation (1637), he assigns as a test 
of conversion a willingness of the convert to be damned if 
that be God's will, thus anticipating the doctrine of Samuel 
Hopkins in the following century. 

See George L. Walker's Thomas Hooher (New York, 1891J; the 
appendix of which contains a bibliography of Hooker's published 
works. 



HOOKER, SIR WILLIAM JACKSON (1785-1865), English 
botanist, was born at Norwich on the 6th of July 1785. His 
father, Joseph Hooker of Exeter, a member of the same family 
as the celebrated Richard Hooker, devoted much of his time 



to the study of German literature and the cultivation of < 
plants. The son was educated at the high school of Norwich, 
on leaving which his independent means enabled him to travel 
and to take up as a recreation the study of natural history, 
especially ornithology and entomology. He subsequently eon- 
fined his attention to botany, on the recommendation of 
Sir James E. Smith, whom he had consulted respecting a rare 
moss. His first botanical expedition was made in Iceland, in 
the summer of 1809, at the suggestion of Sir Joseph Banks; 
but the natural history specimens which he collected, with 
his notes and drawings, were lost on the homeward voyage 
through the burning of the ship, and the young botanist himself 
had a narrow escape with his life. A good memory, however, 
aided him to publish an account of the island, and of its in- 
habitants and flora (Tour in Iceland, 1809), privately circulated 
in 181 1, and reprinted in 1813. In 1810-1811 he made extensive 
preparations, and sacrifices which proved financially serious, 
with a view to accompany Sir R. Brownrigg to Ceylon, but the 
disturbed state of the island led to the abandonment of the 
projected expedition. In 18 1 4 he spent nine months in botanizing 
excursions in France, Switzerland and northern Italy, and in 
the following year he married the eldest daughter of Mr Dawson 
Turner, banker, of Yarmouth. Settling at Halesworth, Suffolk, 
he devoted himself to the formation of his herbarium, which 
became of world-wide renown among botanists. In 1816 
appeared the British Jungermanniae, his first scientific work, 
which was succeeded by a new edition of William Curtis's 
Flora Londincnsis, for which he wrote the descriptions (1817- 
1828); by a description of the Plantae cryptogamicae of A. von 
Humboldt and A. Bonpland; by the Uuseologia Britannic*, 
a very complete account of the mosses of Great Britain and 
Ireland, prepared in conjunction with Dr T. Taylor (18x8); 
and by his Musci exoUci (2 vols., 18x8-1820), devoted to new 
foreign mosses and other cryptogamic plants. In 1820 he 
accepted the regius professorship of botany in Glasgow University 
where he soon became popular as a lecturer, his style being both 
clear and ready. The following year he brought out the Flora 
Scotica, in which the natural method of arrangement of British 
plants was given with the artificial. Subsequently he pre- 
pared or edited many wprks, the more important being the 
following: — 



Niger Flora (1849); Victoria Regia (1851 
Botany at Kern (1855); FUices exoticae ' 
Ferns (1861-1862) ; A Century of Ferns 
of Ferns (1860-1861). 



1): Mi 

(1854) J 



iiuseums ef&conomk 

1859); The British 

A Second Century 



It was mainly by Hookers exertions that botanists were 
appointed to the government expeditions. While his works 
were in progress bis herbarium received large and valuable 
additions from all parts of the globe, and bis position as a botanist 
was thus vastly improved. He was made a knight of Hanover 
in 1836 and in 1841 he was appointed director of the Royal 
Botanical Gardens at Kew, on the resignation of W. T. Alton, 
Under his direction the gardens expanded from 11 to 75 acres, 
with an arboretum of 270 acres, many new glass-houses were 
erected, and a museum of economic botany was established 
He was engaged on the Synopsis filicum with J. G. 



HOOLE— HOOPER 



675 



when he wis attacked by a throat disease then epidemic at 
Kew, where he died on the 12th of August 1865. 

HOOLE, JOHN (1727-1803), English translator and dramatist,, 
son of a watchmaker and machinist, Samuel Hook, was born at 
Moorfields, London, in December 1727. He was educated at 
a private school at Hoddesdon, Hertfordshire, kept by James 
Beanet, who edited Ascham's English works. At the age of 
seventeen he became a clerk in the accountants' department 
of the East India House, and before 1767 became one of the 
auditors of Indian accounts. His leisure hours he devoted to 
the study of Latin and especially Italian, and began writing 
translations of the chief works of the Italian poets. He pub- 
lished translations of the Jerusalem Delivered of Tasao in 1765, 
the Orlando Furioso of Ariosto In 1773-1783, the Dramas of 
Metastasio in 1767, and Rtnddo, an early work of Tasso, in 
1792. Among his plays are: Cyrus (1768), Timantkes (1770) 
and Cleoniee, Princess of Bithynia (1775), none of which achieved 
success. The verses of Hook were praised by Johnson, with 
whom he was on terms of intimacy, but, though correct, smooth 
and flowing, they cannot be commended for any other merit. 
His translation of the Orlando Furioso was superseded by the 
version (1825-1831) of W. S. Rose. Hoole was also the friend 
of the Quaker poet John Scott of Amwell (1730-1783), whose 
life he wrote; it was prefixed to Scott's Critical Essays (1785). 
In 1773 he was promoted to be chief auditor of Indian accounts, 
an office which he resigned in 1785. In 1786 he retrred to the 
parsonage of Abinger, Surrey; and afterwards lived at Tenterden, 
Kent, dying at Dorking on the 2nd of April 1803. 

See A necdotes of the Life of the late Mr John Hoole, by his surviving 
brother, Samuel Hoole (London, 1803). Some of his plays are re- 
printed in J. Bell's British Theatre (1797). 

HOOLIGAN, the generally accepted modern term for a young 
street ruffian or rowdy. It seems to have been first applied to 
the young street ruffians of the South-East of London about 
1800, but though popular in the district, did not attract general 
attention till later, when authentic information of its origin 
was lost, but it appears that the most probable source was a 
comic song which was popular in the lower-class music-hall 
in the late 'eighties or early 'nineties, which described the doings 
of a rowdy family named Hooligan (i.e. Irish Houlihan). A 
comic character with the same name also appears to have been 
the central figure in a series of adventures running through 
an obscure English comic paper of about the same date, and 
also in a similar New York paper, where his confrere in the 
adventures is a German named Schneider (see Notes and Queries, 
oth series, vol. ii. pp. 227 and 316. 1898, and 10th series, vol. vil p. 
115, 1001). In other countries the " hooligan " finds his counter- 
part. The Parisian Apache, so self-styled after the North 
American Indian tribe, is a much more dangerous character; 
mere rowdyism, the characteristic of the English " hooligan," 
is replaced by murder, robbery and outrage. An equally 
dangerous class of young street ruffian is the " hoodlum " of 
the United Slates of America; this term arose in San Francisco 
in 1870, and thence spread. Many fanciful origins of the name 
have been given, for some of which see Manchester (N.H.) 
Notes and Queries, September 1883 (cited in the New English 
Dictionary). The " plug-ugly " of Baltimore is another name 
for the same class. More familiar is the Australian " larrikin," 
which apparently came into use about 1870 in Melbourne. 
The story that the word represents an Irish policeman's pro- 
nunciation of n larking " is a mere invention. It is probably 
only an adaptation of the Irish M Larry," short for Lawrence. 
Others suggest that it is a corruption of the slang Leary Kinchen, 
i.e. knowing, wide-awake child. 

HOOPER, JOHN (d. 1555), bishop of Gloucester and Worcester 
and martyr, was born in Somerset about the end of the 15th 
century and graduated B.A. at Oxford in 1519. He is said to 
have then entered the Cistercian monastery at Gloucester; 
but in 1538 a John Hooper appears among the names of the 
Black friars at Gloucester and also among the White friars. at 
Bristol who surrendered their houses to the king. A John Hooper 
was likewise canon of Wormesley priory in Herefordshire; 



but identification of any of these with the future bishop is doubt- 
ful. The Greyfriars' Chronicle say* that Hooper was " sometime 
a white monk "; and in the sentence pronounced against him 
by Gardiner he is described as " dim monachus de Cliva Ordiuis 
Cisterciensis," i.e. of the Cistercian house at Cleeve in Somerset. 
On the other hand* at his deprivation he was not accused, like 
the other married bishops who had been monks or friars, of 
infidelity to the vow of chastity; and his own letters to Bullinger 
are curiously reticent on this part of his history. He there 
speaks of himself as being the only son and heir of his father 
and as fearing to be deprived of his inheritance if he adopted 
the reformed religion. Before 1546 he had secured employment 
in the household of Sir Thomas Arundel], a man of influential 
connexions. Hooper speaks of himself at this period as being 
" a courtier and living too much of a court life in the palace 
of our king." But he chanced upon some of Zwingli's works 
and Bullinger's commentaries on St Paul's epistles; and after 
some molestation in England and some correspondence with 
Bullinger on the lawfulness of complying against his conscience 
with the established religion, he determined to secure what 
property he could and take refuge on the continent. He bad 
an adventurous journey, being twice imprisoned, driven about 
for three months on the sea, and reaching Strassburg in the 
midst of the Schmalkaldic war. There he married Anne de 
Tscrclaes, and later on he proceeded by way of Basle to Zurich, 
where his Zwinglian convictions were confirmed by constant 
intercourse with Zwingli's successor, Bullinger. 

It was not until May 1549, after he had published various 
works at Zurich, that Hooper again arrived in England. He 
at once became the principal champion of Swiss Protestantism 
against the Lutherans as well as the Catholics, and was appointed 
chaplain to Protector Somerset. Somerset's fall in the following 
October endangered Hooper's position, and for a time he was 
in hourly dread of imprisonment and martyrdom, more especially 
as he had taken a prominent part against Gardiner and Bonner, 
whose restoration to their sees was now anticipated, Warwick, 
afterwards duke of Northumberland, however, overcame the 
reactionaries in the Council, and early in 1550 the Reformation 
resumed its course. Hooper became Warwick's chaplain, and 
after a course of Lent lectures before the king he was offered 
the bishopric of Gloucester. This led to a prolonged contro- 
versy; Hooper had already denounced the " Aaronic vestments " 
and the oath by the saints prescribed in the new Ordinal; and 
he refused to be consecrated according to its rites. Cranmer, 
Ridley, Bucer and others urged him to submit in vain; confine- 
ment to his house by order of the Council proved equally in- 
effectual; and it was not until he had spent some weeks in the 
Fleet prison that the "father of nonconformity" consented 
to conform, and Hooper submitted to consecration with the 
legal ceremonies (March 8, 1551). 

Once seated in his bishopric Hooper set about, his episcopal 
duties with exemplary vigour. His visitation of his diocese 
(printed in English Hist. Rev. Jan. 1904, pp. 98-121) revealed 
a condition of almost incredible ignorance among his clergy. 
Fewer than half could say the Ten Commandments; some could 
not even repeat the Lord's Prayer in English. Hooper did his 
best in the time at his disposal; but in less than a year the 
bishopric of Gloucester was reduced to an archdeaconry and 
added to Worcester, of which Hooper was made bishop in succes- 
sion to Nicholas Heath (q.v.). He was opposed to Northumber- 
land's plot for the exclusion of Mary from the throne; but this 
did not save him from speedy imprisonment. He was sent to the 
Fleet on the 1st of September 1553 on a doubtful charge of 
debt to the queen; but the real cause was his stanchness to a re- 
ligion which was still by law established. Edward VL's legislation 
was, however, repealed in the following month, and in March 
1554 Hooper was deprived of his bishopric as a married man. 
There was still no statute by which he could be condemned to 
the stake, but Hooper was kept in prison; and the revival of 
the heresy acts in December 1554 was swiftly followed by 
execution. On the 29th of January 1555, Hooper, Rogers, 
Rowland Taylor and others were condemned by Gardiner and 



678 



HOP 



In hop gardens a few male plants, usually three or four to an 
acre, are sometimes planted, that number being deemed sufficient 
to fertilize the female flowers. The blossoms are produced in 
August, and the strobiles are fit for gathering from the beginning 
of September to the middle of October, according to the weather. 

The cultivation of hops for use in the manufacture of beer 
dates from an early period. In the 8th and 9th centuries hop 
gardens, called " humularia " or " humuleta," existed in France 
and Germany. Until the 16th century, however, hops appear 
to have been grown in a very fitful manner, and to a limited 
extent, generally only for private consumption; but after 
the beginning of the 17th century the cultivation increased 
rapidly. The plant was introduced into England from Flanders 
in 1525; and in America its. cultivation was encouraged by 
legislative enactments in 1657. Formerly several plants were 
used as well as hops to season ale, hence the name " alehoof " 
for Nepeta Clechoma, and " alecost " for Balsamila tulgaris. 
The sweet gale, Uyrica Gale, and the sage, Salvia officinalis, 



«*>' 



Fig. a.— Fruit of Hop. 



were also similarly employed. Various hop substitutes, in the 
form of powder, have been offered in commerce of late years, 
most of which appear to have quassia as a chief ingredient. 
The young tender tops of the hop are in Belgium cut off in spring 
and eaten like asparagus, and are forced from December to 
February. 

Medical Use. — The principal constituents of the strobiles are 
lupulin, one of the few liquid alkaloids; lupulinie acid, a bitter 
crystalline body, soluble in ether, which is without any other phar- 
macological action than that common to bitter substances; VaJerol, 
a volatile oil which in old hops undergoes a change to the malodorous 
body valerianic add; resin; trimethvlamine; a peculiar modifica- 
tion of tannin known as humulotannic acid; and a sesquiterpene. 
The British pharmacopoeia contains two preparations of the strobiles, 
— an infusion (dose, 1-2 ox.) and a tincture (dose, J-i drachm). The 
glands obtained from the strobiles are known in pharmacy as lupulin, 
a name which tends to confusion with that of the alkaloid. They 
occur in commerce as a bright yellow-brown powder, seen under a 
lens to consist of minute glandular particles. The dose of this so- 
called lupulin is 2-5 grains. From it there is prepared the Tinctura 
Lupulinae of the United States pharmacopoeia, which is given in 
doses of x 0-60 minims. Furthermore, there are prepared hop pillows. 



designed to procure sleep; but these act, when at all. mafcalybp 
suggestion. The pharmacological action of hops is determined first 
by the volatile oil they contain, which has the actions of its class. 
Similarly the lupulinie acid may act as a bitter tonic The prepara- 
tions of hops, when taken internally, are frequently hypnotic, though 
unfortunately different specimens vary considerably in c o m p osit io n . 
none of the preparations being standardized. It is by no row ns 
certain whether the hypnotic action of hops is due to the alkaloid 
lupulin or possibly to the volatile oil which they contain. Medical 
practice, however, is acquainted with many more trustworthy and 
equally safe hypnotics. The bitter acid of hops may endow boss* 
containing it with a certain value in cases of impaired gastric 
digestion, and to the hypnotic principle of hops may partly be 
ascribed — as well as to the alcohol — the soporific action of beer 
in the case of some individuals. 

Hop Production in England ' 

The cultivation of hops in the British Isles is restricted to 
England, where it is practically confined to half-a-dozen counties 
— four in the south-eastern and two in the west-midland districts. 
In 1901 the English crop was reported by the Board of Agri- 
culture to occupy 51,127 acres. The official returns as to 
acreage do not extend back beyond 1868, in which year the total 
area was reported to be 64,488 acres. The largest area recorded 
since then was 71,789 acres in 1878; the smallest was 44,938 
acres in 1007. The extent to which the areas of bops in the 
chief hop-growing counties vary from year to year is sufficiently 
indicated in Table I., which shows the annual acreages over a 
period of thirteen years, 1895 to 1007. The proportions in 
which the acres of hops are distributed amongst the counties 
concerned vary but little year by year, and as a rule over 60% 
belongs to Kent. 

Table I.— Hop Areas of England j8qs to 1907. Acres. 



55 


Kent. 


Hereford. 


Sussex. 


Worcester. 


Hants. 


Surrey. 


35.0I8 

as? 

30,941 
31,988 


7553 
6895 


7489 
5908 


40*4 
3800 


2875 
2494 
2306 
2263 
2319 


t7»3 
1623 


1899 


7227 


5J74 
4829 
4949 


3591 

S3 


1416 

8» 


1900 


31,514 


7287 


4823 


3964 


2231 


1300 


1 901 


31.24a 


7497 

as 

6707 
6851 
6481 


4800 


4029 


3133 


1232 


1902 


29,649 


454« 


3779 
3697 


2003 


969 


1903 


29.933 
29,841 

30.655 


4454 


1920 


IS 

843 


1904 
1905 
1906 


S8 


3752 
38o7 


1900 
1978 


29.296 


4379 


3672 


1939 


777 


1907 


28,169 


6143 


4243 


3622 


1842 


744 



Less than 200 acres in all are annually grown in the other hop- 
growing counties of England, these being Shropshire, Gloucester- 
shire and Suffolk. 

The average yield per acre in cwt. in the six counties during 
the decade 1897 to 1906 was as follows: — 

Table It. 



Kent. 


Hereford. 


Sussex. 


Worcester. 


Hants. 


Surrey. 


9'3« 


714 


941 


779 


878 


723 



Table III. shows the average acreage, yield and total home 
produce of England during the decades 1888-1897 and 1898- 
1.907. 

Table II I 



Periods. 


Average Annual 
Acreage. 


Average Annual 

Yield per acre 

(cwt.). 


Average Annual 

Home Produce 

(cwt.). 


1 888-1897 
1 898-1907 


56.370 
48,841 


1% 


438.215 
434.567 



The wide fluctuations in the home production of hops are worthy 
of note, as they exercise a powerful influence upon market 
prices. The largest crop between 1885, the first year in which 
figures relating to production were collected, and 1907 was 

1 Sce Report from the Select Committee on the Hop Industry 
(London, 1908). 



HOP 



679 



that of 776,144 cwt. in 1886, and the smallest that of 381,291 
cwt. in 1888. the former being more than 2} times the size of 
the latter. The crop of 1809, estimated at 661,373 cwt., was so 
large that prices receded to an extent such as to leave no margin 
of profit to the great body of growers, whilst some planters were 
able to market the crop only at a loss. The calculated annual 
average yields per acre over the years 1885 toioo7 ranged between 
12*76 cwt. in 1899 and 4-81 cwt. in 1888. No other staple crop 
of British agriculture undergoes such wide fluctuations in yield 
as are here indicated, the size of the crop produced bearing no 
relation to the acreage under cultivation. For example, the 
71,327 acres in 1885 produced only 509,170 cwt., whereas the 
51,843 acres in 1899 produced 661,373 cwt. — 19.484 aces less 
under crop yielded 152,203 cwt. more produce. 

Comparing the quantities of home-grown hops with those of 
imported hops, of the total available for consumption about 
70% on the average is home produce and about 30% is imported 
produce. The imports, however, do not vary so much as the 
home produce. Table IV. shows the average quantity of 
imports to and exports (home-grown) from Great Britain during 
the decades 1877-1886, 1887-1896 and 1897-1906. 

Table IV. 



Periods. 


Annual Average 
Imports (cwt.). 


Annual Average 
Exports (cwt). 


1877-1886 
I 887-1 896 
1897-1906 


215.219 


10.805 

14,808 



The highest and lowest imports were 266,952 cwt. in 1885 and 
14.^122 cwt. in 1887, the latter in the year following the biggest 
home-grown crop on record. On a series of years the largest 
proportion of imports is from the United States. 

During the twenty-five years 1881-1005 the annual values of 
the hops imported into England fluctuated between the wide 
limits of £2,962,631 in 1882 and £427.753 in 1887. In five other 
years besides 1882 the value exceeded a million sterling. The 
annual average value over the whole period was £921,000, 
whilst the annual average import was 194,000 cwt., consequently 
the average value per cwt. was nearly £4, 15s., wjuch is approxi- 
mately the same as that of the exported product. The quantities 
and values of the imported hops that are again exported are 
almost insignificant. 

Hop Production in the United States 

The distribution of the area of hop-cultivation in the United 
States showed great changes during the last decades of the 19th 
and the first decade of the 20th century. During the earlier 
portion of that period New YotIc was the chief hop-growing 
state of the Union, but toward the end of it a great extension 
of hop-growing took place on the Pacific coast (in the states of 
Oregon, California and Washington), where the richness of the 
soil and mildness of the climate are favourable to the bines. 

The average annual produce of hops in the United States 
from 1900 to 1906 was 423,471 cwt.; of this quantity 80 % was 
raised in the three states of the Pacific coast, where the yield 
per acre is much larger than in New York. In the latter state 
the yield does not appear to exceed 5 or 6 cwt. per acre, whereas 
in Oregon it is 9 or 10 cwt., and in Washington and California 
from 12 to 14 cwt. The average annual export (chiefly to Great 
Britain) in the years from 1809 to 1005 was 108,400 cwt.; the 
average import (chiefly from Germany) is about 50,000 cwt. 

Hop Cultivation 

As the county of Kent has always taken the lead in hop- 
growing in England, and as it includes about two-thirds of the 
bop acreage of the British Isles, the recent developments in 
hop cultivation cannot be better studied than in that county. 
They were well summarized by Mr Charles Whitehead in his 
sketch of the agriculture of Kent, 1 wherein he states that the 
bop grounds — or hop gardens, as they are called in Kent— of 
% Jour. Roy. Agnc. Soc 1899. 



poor character and least suitable for hop production have been 
gradually grubbed since 1894, on account of large crops, the 
importation of hops and low prices. At the beginning of the 
19th century there were 290 parishes in Kent in which hops 
were cultivated. A century later, out of the 4x3 parishes in 
the county, as many as 331 included hop plantations. The hops 
grown in Kent are classified in the markets as " East Kents," 
" Bastard East Kents," " Mid Kents " and " Wealds," according 
to the district of the county in which they are produced. The 
relative values of these four divisions follow in the same order, 
East Kents making the highest and Wealds the lowest rates. 
These divisions agree in the main with those defined by geo- 
logical formations. Thus, " East Kents " are grown upon the 
Chalk, and especially on the outcrop of the soils of the London 
Tertiaries upon the Chalk. " Bastard East Kents " are produced 
on alluvial soil and soils formed by admixtures of loam, clay- 
loams, chalk, marl and clay from the Gault, Greensand and 
Chalk formations. u Mid Kents " are derived principally from 
the Greensand soils and outcrops of the London Tertiaries in 
the upper part of the district. " Wealds " come from soils 
on the Weald Clay, Hastings. Sand and Tunbridge Wells Sand. 
As each " pocket " of hops must be marked with the owner's 
name and the parish in which they were grown, buyers of hops 
can, without much trouble, ascertain from. which of the four 
divisions hops come, especially if they have the map of the 
hop-growing parishes of England, which gives the name of each 
parish. There has been a considerable rearrangement of the 
hop plantations in Kent within recent years. Common varieties 
as Colegate's, Jones's, Grapes and Prolines have been grubbed, 
and Goldings, Brandings and other choice kinds planted in their 
places. The variety known as Fuggle's, a heavy-cropping 
though slightly coarse hop, has been much planted in the Weald 
of Kent, and in parts of Mid Kent where the soil is suitable. 
In very old hop gardens, where there has been no change of 
plant for fifty or even one hundred years in some instances, 
except from the gradual process of filling up the places of plants 
that have died, there has been replanting with better varieties 
and varieties ripening in more convenient succession; and, 
generally speaking, the plantations, have been levelled up in 
this respect to suit the demand for bright hops of fine quality. 
A recent classification* of the varieties of English hops arranges 
them in three groups: (1) early varieties (e.g. Prolific, Branding,. 
Ainos's Early Bird); (2) mid-season or main-crop varieties 
(e.g. Farnham Whitebine, Fuggle's, Old Jones's, Golding); 
(3) late varieties (e.g. Grapes, Colgate's). 

The cost of cultivating and preparing the produce of an acre 
of hop land tends to increase, on account of the advancing rates 
of wages, the intense cultivation more and more essential, and 
the necessity of freeing the plants from the persistent attacks of 
insects and fungi. In 1893 Mr Whitehead estimated the average 
annual cost of an acre* of hop land to be £35, ice., the following 
being the items:— 

Manure (winter and summer) £6 10 o 

Digging o 19 O 

Dressing (or cutting) O 6 O 

Poling, tying, earthing, ladder-tying, stringing, 

lewing 930 

Shimming, ntdgeting, digging round and hoeing 

hills • 300 

Stacking, stripping, making bines, Ac . . . o 17 o 

Annual renewal of poles a 10 O 

Expense of picking, drying, packing, carriage, 

sampling, selling, &c, on average crop of, say, 

7 cwt. per acre 10 5 • 

Rent, rates, taxes, repairs of oast and tacks, interest 

on capital 600 

Sulphuring 

Washing (ofteh two, three or four times) . 



Total 



too 
200 

£35 10 o 



Seven years later the average cost per acre in Kent had risen to 
quite £37. 

• J. Perdval, "The Hop and its English Varieties," Jour. Roy. 
A gnc. Soc, 1901. 



68o 



HOP 



The hope in Kent are usually planted in October 
or November, the plants being 6 ft. apart each 
way, thus giving 1210 hills or plant-centres per 
acre. Some planters still grow potatoes or 
mangels between the rows the first year, as the 
plants do not bear much until the second year; 
but this is considered to be a mistake, as it 
encourages wire-worm and exhausts the ground. 
Many planters pole hop plants the first year with 
a single short pole, and stretch coco-nut-fibre 
string from pole to pole, and grow many hops in 
the first season. Much of the hop land is ploughed 
between the rows, as labour is scarce, and the 
spaces between are dug afterwards. It is far better 
to dig hop land if possible, the tool used being the 
Kent spud. The cost of digging an acre ranges 
from x8s. to sxs. Hop land is ploughed or dug 
between November and March. After this the plants are 
" dressed," which means that all the old bine ends are cut off 
with a sharp curved hop-knife, and the plant centres kept level 
with the ground. 

Manuring. — Manure is applied in the winter, and dug or ploughed 
in. London manure from stables is used to an enormous extent. 
It comes by barge or rail, and is brought from the wharves and 
stations by traction engines; it costs from 7s. od. to 9s. per load. 
Rags, fur waste, sprats, wool waste and shoddy are also pot on 
in the winter. In the summer, rape dust, guano, nitrate of soda 
and various patent hop manures are chopped in with the Canter- 
bury hoe. Fish guano or desiccated fish is largely used: it is 
very stimulating and more lasting than some of the other forcing 



WeitntofRU+dried Fuufi's Bops per Acre. 

















Average 


Plot. 


Annual Manuring per Acre. 


1896 


1897 


1898 


1899 


I9OO 


of5 
Years. 






Cwt. 


Cwt. 


Cwt. 


Cwt. 


Cwt. 


Cwu 


A 


Pli 1 . 


I3f 


7ft 


81 


20J 


8 


lift 


B 


PI id 














C 


PI d 

1 . 


16* 


91 


10* 


2»ft 


9* 


131 


16, 


12 


I2ft 


23 


11 


15 


D 


Pi id 
















1 . 


15J 


K 3 


13 


22, 


io| 


X4l 


E 


PI id 
















* . 


15 


13ft 


1ST 


23* 


11 


15ft 


F 


Pt id 
















da 


15 


13 


15 


24i 


iol 


15! 


X 


30 


















13 


8 


9! 


24ft 


ioi 


I3i 



The recent investigations into the subject of hop-manuring made 
by Dr Bernard Dyer and Mr F. W. E. Shrivell, at Golden Green, near 
Tonbridge, Kent, are of interest. In the 1901 report l it was stated 
that the object in view was to ascertain how far nitrate of soda, in 
the presence of an abundant supply of phosphates and potash, is 
capable of being advantageously used as a source of nitrogenous food 
for hops. An idea long persisted among hop-growers that nitrate of 
soda was an unsafe manure for hops, being likely to produce rank 
growth of bine at the expense of quality and even quantity of hops. 
During recent years, however, owing very largely to the results of 



In only one year did the very large dressing of 10 cwt. of nitrate 
of soda per acre afford any better result than was produced by the 
less heavy dressing of 8 cwt per acre, and this was in 1899. a seasoa 
of such abundance and such low prices that it may be regarded as an 
abnormal season. If the effect of this one season on the avenge be 
eliminated, the best results, as regards quantity, were obtained 00 
plot E, receiving 8 cwt. of nitrate of soda per acre. But plot C. with 
4 cwt. only of nitrate of soda per acre, has been on the average not 
more than ft cwt. per acre behind plot E. 

Valuations of the hops made by merchants and factors show that, 
on the whole, the market quality of the produce is very little affected 
by manuring. Moreover, chemical investigation of the hops appears 
to indicate that the brewing quality is not in any constant or definite 
way influenced by the manuring, except where the quantity of nitrate 
of soda has amounted to the large dressing of 8 cwt. or more per acre, 
a quantity which in some seasons would seem to have been pre- 
judicial, although in one season it happened that the highest brewing 
value appertained to a sample grown with as much as 10 cwt. per 
acre. 

The results of modern investigation show that it is very largely 
to the presence and proportion of soft resin that hops owe thesr 
preservative value, although the quality of hops is by no means 
wholly dependent on this one feature. The resin percentages on the 
samples grown on the several plots in 1898, 1899 and X900 were the 
following:— 



Plot. 


Annual Manuring per Acre, 


1898 


1899 


1900 


Total Resin. 


Soft Resin. 


Total Resin. 


Soft Resin. 


Total Resin. 


Soft Resin. 


A 
B 
C 
D 
E 
F 
X 


Phosphates and potash 

Phosphates, potash and 2 cwt. nitrate of soda 
Phosphates, potash and a cwt. nitrate of soda 
Phosphates, potash and 6 cwt. nitrate of soda 
Phosphates, potash and 8 cwt. nitrate of soda 
Phosphates, potash and 10 cwt. nitrate of soda 
30 loads (about 1 5 tons) London dung . . 


Per Cent. 
14-15 
1430 
14-06 
13*57 
I4-U 

12-21 

13-93 


Per Cent. 
921 
920 

V& 

885 
791 
8-66 


Per Cent. 
1507 
1659 
I5-57 
14*90 
14-49 
15-47 
1492 


Per Cent. 
860 
883 
027 
8-70 
896 


Per Cent. 
14-53 
15-09 
1446 
1346 
13-30 
12-77 
14-78 


Per Cent. 
8-90 
8-51 
816 
7-6a 
718 
677 
9-07 



on 
ich 
nd 
op 
ict 
:en 
of 
or 

*iy 

t>tS 

ten 
to 
he 
ite 
as 
:he 
me 
*g. 

2 

ith 
he 

district is very dry. 
The table given above shows the annual yield of hops per acre 

on each plot, and also the average for each plot over the five years 

1 896-1900. 

1 Six Years' Experiments on Hop Manuring (London, 1901). 



The general results seem to show that the purchase of town dung 
for hops is not economical, unless under specially favourable terms 
as to cost of conveyance, and that it should certainly not be relied 
upon as a sufficient manure. Home-made dung is in quite a different 
position, as not only is it richer, but it costs nothing for -railway 
carriage. As a source of nitrogenous manure, purchased dung is 09 
the whole too expensive. There is a large variety of other nitrogen- 
ous manures in the market besides nitrate of soda, such, for instance 
as Peru vian and DamaraJand guano, sulphate of ammonia, fish giuuio* 
dried blood, rape dust, furriers' refuse, horn shavings, hoof parings* 
wool dust t shoddy, &c All of these may in turn be used for helping 
to maintain a stock of nitrogen in the soil; and the degree to which 
manures of this kind have been recently applied in any hop garden 
will influence the grower in deciding as to the quantity of nitrate of 
soda he should use in conjunction with them, and also to some extent 
in fixing the date of its application* 

Dressings of 8 or 10 cwt. of nitrate of soda per acre, such as are 
applied annually to plots E and F, would be larger than would be put 
on where the land has been already dressed with dung or with otter 
nitrogenous manures; and even, in the drcunistanccs under notice, 
although these plots have on the average beaten the others in weight, 
the hops in some seasons have been distinctly coarser than those more 
moderately manured — though in the dry season of 1899 the most 
heavily dressed plot gave actually the Best quality as well as the 
greatest quantity of produce. 

With regard to the application of nitrate of soda in case the season 
should turn out to be wet, present experience indicates that, on a 
soil otherwise liberally manured, 4 cwt. of nitrate of soda per acre 



HOP 



68 1 



applied not too late, would be a thoroughly •*?* dressing. In the case 
of neither dung nor any other nitrogenous fertilizers having been 
recently applied, there seems no reason for supposing that, even in 
a wet season, 6 cwt. of nitrate of soda per acre applied early would be 
otherwise than a safe dressing, considering both quantity and quality 
of produce. In conjunction with dung, or with the early use of other 
nitrogenous manures, such as fish, guano, rape dust, Ac, it would 
probably be wise not to exceed 4 cwt. of nitrate of soda per acre. 

As to the date of application, April or May is the latest time at 
which nitrate of soda should, in most circumstances, be applied, and 
probably April is preferable to May. The quantity used should be 
applied in separate dressings of not more than a cwt. per acre each, 
put on at intervals of a month. Where the Quantity of nitrate of soda 
used is large, and constitutes the whole of the nitrogenous manure 
employed, the first dressing may, on fairly deep and retentive soils, 
be given as early as January; or, if the quantity used is smaller, say 
in February; while February will, in most cases, probably be early 
enough for the first dressing in the case of lighter soils. The condition 
of the soil and the degree and distribution of rainfall during both the 
•previous autumn and the winter, as well as in the spring itself, 
produce such varying conditions that it is almost impossible to frame 
general rules. 

The commonly accepted notion that nitrate of soda is a manure 
which should be reserved for use during the later period of the growth 
of the bine appears to be erroneous. The summer months, when the 
growth of the bine is most active, are the months in which natural 
nitrification is going on in the soil, converting soil nitrogen and the 
nitrogen of dung, guano, fish, rape dust, shoddy or other fertilizers 
into nitrates, and placing this nitrogen at the disposal of the plants; 
and it appears reasonable, therefore, to suppose that nitrate of soda 
will be most useful to the hops at the earlier stages of their growth, 
before the products of that nitrification become abundant. This 
would especially be so in a season immediately following a wet 
autumn and winter, which have the effect of washing away into the 
drains the residual nitrates not utilized by the previous crop. 

The necessity, whether dung is used * of 

nitrogenous manure is employed, of als an 

abundance of phosphates, cannot be toe of 

phosphates for hops was long neglectc en 

now there are many growers who do not of 

heavy phosphatic manuring. On soils of 

lime no better or cheaper phosphatic an 

.ordinary superphosphate, of which as mi be 

applied without the slightest tear of ha de- 

cidedly calcareous — that is to say, if it \ is 

stirred up with some diluted hydrochlori 1st, 

phosphatic guano or basic slag should os- 

phates, at the rate of not less than ic im 

soils, which, without being distincl ess 

contain a just appreciable quantity of ca >ly 

a good plan to use the latter class of ma er- 

phosphate, year and year about; but i ds- 

phates in sortie form or other every yeai ley 

are inexpensive, and without them m la, 

ammonia salts nor organic manures car >th 

a full vigorous growth of bine and at t *ed 

crop of lull- weighted, well-conditioned hops. 

The use of potash salts, on most soils^ is probably not needed when 
good dung is freely used; but where this is not the case it is safer in 
most seasons and on most soils to give a dressing of potash salts. 
On some soils their aid should on no account be dispensed with. 

Experiments in hop-manuring have also been conducted in con- 
nexion with the South- Eastern Agricultural College, Wye, Kent. 
The main results have been to demonstrate the necessity of a liberal 
supply of phosphates, if the full benefit is to be reaped from applica- 
tions of nitrogenous manure. 

Tying, Poling and Picking.— Tying the bines to the poles or 
strings is essentially women's work. It was formerly always 
piecework, each woman taking so many acres to tie, but it is 
found better to pay the women is. 8d. to 2s. per day, that they 
may all work together, and tie the plants in those grounds where 
they want tying at once. The new modes of poling and training 
bop plants have also altered the conditions of tying. 

Many improvements have been made in the methods of poling 
and training bops. Formerly two or three poles were placed to 
each hop-hill or plant-centre in the spring, and removed in the 
winter, and this was the only mode of training. Recently systems 
of training on wires and strings fastened to permanent upright 
poles have been introduced. One arrangement of wires and 
strings much adopted consists of stout posts set at the end of 
every row of hop-hills and fastened with stays to keep them in 
place. At intervals in each row a thick pole is fixed. From post 
to post in the rows a wire Is stretched at a height of $ ft. 
from the ground, another about 6 ft. from the ground, and another 



along the tops of the posts, so that there are three wires. Hooks 
are clipped on these wires at regular intervals, and coco- nut- 
fibre strings are threaded on them and fastened from wire to 
wire, and from post to post, to receive the hop bines. The string 
is threaded on the hooks continuously, and is put on those of the 
top wire with a machine called a stringer. There are several 
methods of training hops with posts or stout poles, wire and 
string, whose first cost varies from £20 to £40 per acre. The 
system is cheaper in the long run than that of taking down the 
poles every year, and the wind does not blow down the poles 
or injure the hops by banging the poles together. In another 
method, extensively made use of in Kent and Sussex, stout posts 
are placed at the ends of each row of plants, and, at intervals 
where requisite, wires are fastened from top to top only of these 
posts, whilst coco-nut-fibre strings are fixed by pegs to the 
ground, close to each hop-stock, whence they radiate upwards for 
attachment to the wires stretching between the tops of the posts. 
This method is more simple and less expensive than the system 
first described, its cost being from £24 to £28 per acre. In this 
case the plants require to be well " lewed," or sheltered, as the 
strings being so light are blown about by the wind. These 
methods are being largely adopted, and, together with the practice 
of putting coco-nut-fibre strings from pole to pole in grounds 
poled in the old-fashioned manner, are important improvements 
in hop culture, which have tended to increase the production 
of hops. Where the old system of poling with two or three 
poles is still adhered to they are always creosoted, most growers 
having tanks for the purpose; and, in the new methods of poling, 
the posts and poles are creosoted, dipped or kyanized. 

At Wye College, Kent, different systems of planting and 
training have been tried, the alleys varying in width from xo ft: 
down to 5 ft., and the distance between the hills varying quite 
as widely, so that the number of hills to the acre has ranged from 
12 to down to 660. The biggest crop was secured on the plot 
where hills were 8 ft. apart each way. As a rule, indeed, a 
wide alley and abundant space between the plants, thus allowing 
the hops plenty of air and light, produced the best results, besides 
effecting some saving in the cost of cultivation, as there were only 
660 or 680 hills per acre. Of the various methods of training, 
the umbrella system gave the biggest crop in each of the three 
years, 1 890, 1900, 1001; and it seemed to be the best method, 
except in seasons when washing was required early, in which 
case the plants were not so readily cleared of vermin. 

Much attention is required to keep the bines in their places 
on the poles, strings or wire, during the summer. This gives 
employment to many women, for whose service in this and fruit- 
picking there is considerable demand, and a woman has no 
trouble in earning from is. 6d. to is. xod. per day from April 
till September at pleasant and not very arduous labour. The 
hop-picking follows, and at this women sometimes get 4s. 
and even 5s. per day. This is the real Kent harvest, which 
formerly lasted a month or five weeks. Now it rarely extends 
beyond eighteen days, as it is important to secure the hops 
before the weather and the aphides, which almost invariably 
swarm within the bracts of the cones, discolour them and spoil 
their sale, as brewers insist upon having bright, "coloury" 
hops. Picking is better done than was formerly the case. 
The hops are picked more singly, and with comparatively few 
leaves, and the pickers are of a somewhat better type than the 
rough hordes who formerly went into Kent for "hopping." 
Kent planters engage their pickers beforehand, and write to 
them, arranging the numbers required and the date of picking. 
Many families go into Kent for pea-and fruit-picking and remain 
for hop-picking. Without this great immigration of persons, 
variously estimated at between 45,000 and 65,000, the crops 
of hops could not be picked; and fruit-farmers also would be 
unable to get their soft fruit gathered in time without the help 
of immigrant hands. The fruit-growers and hop-planters of 
Kent have greatly improved the accommodation for these 
immigrants. 

Concerning the general question as to the advisability or 
otherwise of cutting the hop bine at the time of picking, A.D. 



682 



HOPE, ANTHONY 



Hall has ascertained experimentally that if the bine is cut dose 
to the ground at a time when the whole plant is unripe there 
are removed in the bine and leaves considerable quantities 
of nitrogen, potash and phosphoric acid which would have 
returned to the roots if the bine had not been cut until ripe. 
The plant, therefore, would retain a substantial store of these 
constituents for the following year's growth if the bine were 
left. Chemical analyses have shown that about 30 lb of nitrogen 
per acre may be saved by allowing the bines to remain uncut, 
this representing practically one-third of the total amount of 
nitrogen in the hops, leaf and bine together. There are also 
from 25 tb to 30 lb of potash in the growth, of which nine-tenths 
would return to the roots, with about half the phosphoric acid 
and a very small proportion of the lime. It has been demon- 
strated that by the practice of cutting the bines when the hops 
are picked the succeeding crop is lessened to the extent of about 
one-tenth. As to stripping off the leaves and lower branches 
of the plant, it was found that this operation once reduced 
the crop 10 % and once 20 % but that in the year 1809 it did 
not affect the crop at all. The inference appears to be that 
when there is a good crop it is not reduced by stripping, but 
that when there is less vigour in the plant it suffers the more. 
Hence, it would seem advisable to study the plant itself in 
connexion with this matter, and to strip a little later, or 
somewhat less, than usual when the bine is not healthy. 

Drying. — After being picked, the hops are taken in pokes — 
long sacks holding ten bushels— to the oasts to be dried. The 
oasts are circular or square kilns, or groups of kilns, wherein 
the green hops are laid upon floors covered with horsehair, 
under which are enclosed or open stoves or furnaces. The 
heat from these is evenly distributed among the hops above 
by draughts below and round them. This is the usual simple 
arrangement, but patent processes are adopted here and there, 
though they are by no means general. The hops are from nine 
to ten hours drying, after which they are taken off the kiln 
and -allowed to cool somewhat, and are then packed tightly 
into " pockets " 6 ft. long and 2 ft. wide, -weighing x§ cwt., 
by means of a hop-pressing machine, which has cogs and 
wheels worked by hand. Of late years more care has been 
bestowed by some of the leading growers upon the drying of 
hops, so as to preserve their qualities and volatile essences, and 
to meet the altered requirements of brewers, who must have 
bright, well-managed hops for the production of light clear 
beers for quick draught. The use, for example, of exhaust 
fans, recently* introduced, greatly facilitates drying by drawing 
a large volume of air through the bops; and as the temperature 
may at the same time be kept low, the risk of getting over- 
fired samples is considerably reduced, though not entirely ob- 
viated. The adoption of the roller floor is another great advance 
in the process of hop-drying, for this, used in conjunction with 
a raised platform for the men to stand on when turning, pre- 
vents any damage from the feet of the workmen, and reduces 
the loss of resin to a minimum. The best results are obtained 
when exhaust fans and the roller fjoor are associated together. 
In such cases the roller floor, which empties its load automati- 
cally, pours the hop cones into the receiving sheets in usually as 
whole and unbroken a condition as that in which they went 
on to the kiln. 

Pests of ike Hop Crop.— -In recent years the difficulties attendant 
upon hop cultivation have been aggravated, and the expenses in- 
creased, by regularly recurring attacks of aphis blight— due to the 
insect Aphis (Phoroion) kumuti — which render it necessary to spra; 



by regul 

phis (Pkoroaon) Humid*— which render it necessary to spray 
or syringe every hop plant, every branch and leaf, with insecticidal 



solutions three or lour times, and sometimes more often, in each 
season. Quassia and soft-soap solutions are usually employed; 
they contain from 4 lb to 8 lb of soft soap, and the extract of from 
8 lb to 10 lb of quassia chips to 100 gallons of water. The soft soap 
serves as a vehicle to retain the bitterness of the quassia upon the 
bines and leaves, making them repulsive to the aphides, which are 
thus starved out. Another pest, the red spider, Tctranychus UUxrius 
— really one of the " spinning mites " — is most destructive in very 
hot summers. Congregating on the under surfaces of the leaves, the 
red spiders exhaust the sap and cause the leaves to fall, producing 
the effect known in Germany as " fire-blast." The hop- wash of soft 
soap and quassia, so effective against aphis attack, is of little avail 



in the case of red spider. Some success, however, has attended the 
use of a solution containing 8 lb to 10 tb of soft soap to 100 galkms of 
water, with three pints of paramo added. 1 1 is necessary to apply the 
washes with great force, in order to break through the webs with 
which the spiders protect themselves. Hop-washing is done by 
means of large garden engines worked by band, but more frequently 
with horse engines. Resort b sometimes had to steam engines, 
which force the spraying aotution along pipes laid between the rows 
of hops. 

Mould or mildew is frequently the source of much loss to bop- 
planters. It is due to the action of the fungus Podospkaera cosfogass, 
and the mischief is more especially that done to the cones. The only 
trustworthy remedy is sulphur, employed usually in tbe form of 
flowers of sulphur, from 40 lb to 60 tt> per acre being applied at each 
sulphuring. The powder is distributed by means of a machine 
drawn by a horse between the rows. The sulphur is fed from a 
hopper into a blast-pipe, whence it is driven by a fan actuated by 
the travelling wheels, and falls as a dense, wide-spreading dood upon 
the hop-bines. The first sulphuring takes place when the plants 
fairly up the poles, and is repeated three or four weeks later; 1 
even again if indications of mildew are present. It may be J 
that sulphur is also successfully employed in the form of at 
line sulphide, such as solution of ''liver of sulphur," a variety of 
potassium sulphide. (W. Fa.) 

HOPS, ArJTHONY, the pen-name of Anthony Horn 
Hawkins (1863- ), British novelist, who was born on the 
Qth of February 1863, the second son of the Rev. E. C. Hawkins, 
Vicar of St Bride's, Fleet Street, London. He was educated at 
Marlborough and Balliol College, Oxford, where be was president 
of the Union Society, and graduated with first classes in Modera- 
tions and Final Schools. He was called to the bar at the Middle 
Temple in 1 877. He soon began contributing stories and sketches 
to the St J anus's Gazette, and in 1800 published bis first novel, 
A Man of Mark. This was followed by Father Stajford (1891), 
Mr Witt's Widow (1892), Change of Air and Sport Royal aid 
Other Stories (1893). By this time he had attracted by his 
vivacious talent the attention of editors and readers; but it 
was not till the following year that he attained a great popular 
success with the publication (May 1804) of The Prisoner of 
Zenda. This was followed a few weeks later by The Dolly Dia- 
logues (previously published in separate instalments in the 
Westminster CateUe). Both books became parents of a numerous 
progeny. The Prisoner of Zenda, owing something to the Prince 
Otto of R. L. Stevenson, established a fashion for what was 
christened, after its fictitious locality, " Ruritanian romance H ; 
while the Doily Dialogues, inspired possibly by " Gyp " and other 
French dialogue writers, was the forerunner of a whole school 
of epigrammatic drawing-room comedy. The Prisoner of Zenda, 
with Mr Alexander as " Rupert Rassendyll," enjoyed a further 
success in a dramatized form at the St James's Theatre, which 
did still more to popularize the author's fame. In 1894 also 
appeared The God in the Car, a novel suggested by the 
ambiguous influence on English society of Cecil Rhodes's career, 
and Haifa Hero, a complementary study of Australian politics. 
The same year saw further the publication of The Indiscretion 
of the Duchess, in the style of the Dolly Dialogues, and of another 
collection of stories named (after the first) The Secret of Wardole 
Court. In 189s Mr Hawkins published Count Antonio, and 
contributed to Dialogues of the Day, edited by Mr Oswald Craw- 
furd. Comedies of Courtship and The Heart of the Princes* 
Osra followed in 1806; Phroso in 1897; Simon Dale and 
Rupert of HcnUau (sequel of the Prisoner of Zcuda) 1898; and 
The King's Mirror, a Ruritanian romance with an infusion of 
serious psychological interest, 1800* Tbe author was advancing 
from his light comedy and gallant romantic inventions to the 
graver kind of fiction of which The God in the Cor had been an 
earlier essay. Quisante, published in iodo, was a study of 
English society face to face with a political genius of an alien 
type. Tristram of Blent (1901) embodied an ethical study of 
family pride. The Intrusions of Peggy reflected the effects on 
society of recent financial fashions. In 1004 he published 
Double Harness^ and in 1905 A. Servant of the Public, two novels 
of modern society, containing somewhat cynical pictures of tbe 
condition of marriage. With increasing gravity the novelist 
sacrificed some of the charm of his earlier irresponsible gaiety 
and buoyancy; but bis art retained its wit and urbanity whik 



HOPE, T.— HOPE-SCOTT 



683 



It gained in grip of the social conditions of contemporary life. 
He wrote two plays, The Adventure of Lady Ursula (1808) and 
Pilker ton's Peerage (1902), and his later novels include The Great 
Miss Driver (1908) and Second String (1909). Mr Hawkins's 
attractive and cultured style and command of plot give him a 
high place among the modern writers of English fiction. In 1003 
be married Miss Elizabeth Somerville Sheldon of New York. 

HOPE, THOMAS (c. 1770-1831), English art -collector, and 
author of Anastasius, born in London about 1770, was the eldest 
son of John Hope of Amsterdam, and was descended from a 
branch of an old Scottish family who for several generations 
were extensive merchants in London and Amsterdam. About 
the age of eighteen he started on a tour through various parts 
of Europe, Asia and Africa, where be interested himself especi- 
ally in architecture -and sculpture, making a large collection of 
the principal objects which attracted his attention. On his 
return to London about 1706 he purchased a house in Duchess 
Street, Cavendish Square, which he fitted up in a very elaborate 
style, from drawings made by himself. In 1807 he published 
sketches of his furniture, accompanied by letterpress, in a folio 
volume, entitled Household Furniture and Interior Decoration, 
which had considerable influence in effecting a change in the 
upholstery and interior decoration of houses, notwithstanding 
that Byron had referred scornfully to him -as " House-furnisher 
withal, one Thomas hight." Hope's furniture designs were in 
that pseudo-classical manner which is generally called " English 
Empire.** It was sometimes extravagant, and often heavy, 
but was much more restrained than the wilder and later flights 
of Sheraton in this style. At the best, however, it was a not 
very inspiring mixture of Egyptian and Roman motives. In 
1809 he published the Costumes of the Ancients, and in 1819 
Designs of Modem Costumes, works which display a large amount 
of antiquarian research. He was also, as his father had been — 
t)*c elder Hope's country house near Haarlem was crowded with 
fine pictures—a munificent patron of the highest forms of art, 
and both at his London house and his country seat at Deepdene 
near Dorking he formed large collections of paintings, sculpture 
and antiques. Deepdene in his day became a famous resort 
of men of letters as well as of people of fashion, and among the 
luxuries suggested by his fine taste was a miniature library 
in several languages in each bedroom. Thorvaldsen, the Danish 
sculptor, was indebted to him for the early recognition of his 
talents, and he also gave frequent employment to Chantrey and 
Flaxman— it was to his order that the latter illustrated Dante. 
In 1819 he published anonymously his novel Anastasius, or 
Memoirs of a Modern Creek, written at the dose of the 18th century, 
a work which, chiefly on account of the novel character of its 
subject, caused a great sensation. It was at first generally 
attributed to Lord Byron, who told Lady Blessington that he 
wept bitterly on reading it because he had not written it and 
Hope had.. But, though remarkable for the acquaintance it 
displays with Eastern life, and distinguished by considerable 
imaginative vigour and much graphic and picturesque descrip- 
tion, its paradoxes are not so striking as those of Lord Byron; 
and, notwithstanding some eloquent and forcible passages, 
the only reason which warranted its ascription to him was the 
general type of character to which its hero belonged. Hope 
died on the 3rd of February 183 1. He was the author of two 
works published posthumously — the Origin and Prospects 
of Man (183 1 ), in which his speculations diverged widely from 
the usual orthodox opinions, and an Historical Essay on Archi- 
tecture (1835), an elaborate description of the architecture of 
the middle ages, illustrated by drawings made by himself in 
Italy and Germany. He is commonly known in literature as 
"Anastasius" Hope. He married (1806) Louisa de la Poer 
Beresford, daughter of Lord Decies, archbishop of Tuam. 

HOPEDALE, a township of Worcester county, Massachusetts, 
U.S.A.; pop. (1005; state census) 2048; (1910) 2188. It is 
served by the Milford & Uxbridge (electric) street railway, and 
(for freight) by the Grafton & Upton railway. The town lies 
5n the ** dale ** between Milford and Mendon, and is cut from 
N.W. to S.E. by the Mill river, which furnishes good water 



power at its falls. The principal manufactures are textiles, 
boots and shoes, and, of most importance, cotton machinery. 
The great cotton machinery factories here are owned by the 
Draper Company. Hopedale has a public park on the site of 
the Ballou homestead, with a bronze statue of Adin Ballou; 
a memorial church erected by George A. and Eben S. Draper; 
the Bancroft Memorial Library, given by Joseph B. Bancroft in 
memory of his wife; and a marble drinking fountain with 
statuary by Waldo Story, the gift of Susan Preston Draper, 
General W. F. Draper's wife. The village is remarkable for the 
comfortable cottages of the workers. 

The history of Hopedale centres round the Rev. Adin Ballou 
(1803-1800), a distant relative of Hosea Ballou; 1 he left, in 
succession, the ministry of the Christian Connexion (1823) 
and that of the Universalist Church (1831), because of his 
restoration 1st views. In 183 1 he became pastor of an independent 
church in Mendon. An ardent exponent of temperance, the 
anti-slavery movement, woman's rights, the peace cause and 
Christian non-resistance (even through the Civil War), and of 
" Practical Christian Socialism,** it was in the interests of the 
last cause that he founded Hopedale, or " Fraternal Community 
No. 1," in Milford, in April 1842, the first compact of the com* 
munity having been drawn up in January 1841. Thirty persons 
joined with him, and lived in a single house on a poor farm of 
258 acres, purchased in June 1841. Ballou was for several years 
the president of the community, which was run on the plan that 
all should have an equal voice as to the use of property, in spite of 
the fact that there was individual holding of property. The 
community, however, owned the instruments of production, with 
the single exception of the important patent rights held by 
Ebenecer D. Draper. The result was bickerings between those 
who were joint stockholders and those whose only profit came 
from their manual labour. In a short time the control of the 
community came into the hands of its richest members, E. D. 
Draper and his brother, George Draper (1817-1887), who owned 
three-fourths of the joint stock. In 1856 there was a total deficit 
of about $12,000. The Draper brothers bought up the joint 
stock of the community at par and paid its debts, and the com- 
munity soon ceased to exist save as a religious society. After 
George Draper's death the control of the mills passed to his sons. 
These included General William Franklin Draper (1842-1910), 
a Republican representative in Congress in 1892-1897 and U.S. 
ambassador to Italy in 1 897-1 900, and Eben Sumner Draper 
(b. 1858), lieutenant-governor of Massachusetts in 1006- 1008 and 
governor in 1009-1911. In 1867 the community was merged 
with Hopedale parish, a Unitarian organization, Hopedale was 
separated from Milford and incorporated as a township in 1886. 

See Adin Ballou 's History of Milford (Boston. 1882), his History of 
the Hopedale Community, edited by William S. Heywood (Lowell, 
1897). his Biography by the same editor (Lowell, 1806) and his 
Practical and Christian Socialism (Hopedale, 1854) I George L. Carey, 
" Adin Ballou and the Hopedale Community fin the ricw World, 
vol. vii., 1898); Lewis G. Wilson, " Hopedale ana Its Founder " (in 
The New England Magazine, vol. x., 1891); and William F. Draper, 
Recollections of a Varied Career (Boston, 1908). 

HOPE-SCOTT, JAMES ROBERT (181 2-1873), English barrister 
and Tractarian, was born on the 15th of July 1812, at Great 
Marlow, Berkshire, the third son of Sir Alexander Hope, and 
grandson of the second earl of Hopetoun. He was educated 
at Eton and Oxford, where he was a contemporary and friend 
of Gladstone and J. H. Newman, and in 1838 was called to the 
bar. Between 1840 and 1843 he helped to found Trinity College, 
Glenalmond. He was one of the leaders of the Tractarian 
movement and entirely in Newman*s confidence. In 185 1 he was 
received with Manning into the Roman Catholic church. At 
this time he was making a very large income at the Parliamentary 
bar. tie only commenced serious practice in this branch of 
his profession in 1843, but by the end of 1845 he stood at the head 
of it and in 1849 was made a Queen's Counsel. In 1847 be 
married Miss Lockhart, granddaughter of Sir Walter Scott, and 
on her coming into possession of Abbotsford six years later, 

'Adin Ballou wrote An Elaborate History and Genealogy of the 
Ballous in America (Providence. R.I.. 1888) 



68 4 



HOPFEN— HOPKINS, M. 



assumed the surname of Hope-Scott. He retired from the bar 
in 1870 and died on the 29th of April 1873. 

HOPFEN, HANS VON (1835-1004), German poet and novelist, 
was born on the 3rd of January 1835, at Munich. He studied 
law, and in 1858, having shown marked poetical promise, he 
was received into the circle of young poets whom King Maxi- 
milian II. had gathered round him, and thereafter devoted 
himself to literature. In 1862 he made his debut as an author, 
with Lieder undBalladen, which were published in the Munchener 
Dichlerbuck, edited by E. Geibel. After travelling in Italy (1862), 
France (1863) and Austria (1864), he was appointed, in 1865, 
general secretary of the " Scbillerstiftung," and in this capacity 
settled at Vienna. The following year, however, he removed to 
Berlin, in a suburb of which, Lichterfelde, he died on the 19th of 
November 1904. Of Hopfen's lyric poems, GcdickU (4th ed., 
Berlin, 1883), many are of considerable talent and originality; 
but it is as a novelist that he is best known. The novels Pcre- 
grctto (1864); Verdorben tu Paris (1868, new ed. 1892); Arge 
Sitten (1869); Der graue Freund (1874, 2nd ed., 1876); and 
VerfehUe Liebe (1876, 2nd ed., 1879) are attractive, while 
of his shorter stories Tiroler Geschkhten (1884-1885) command 
most favour. 

An autobiographical sketch of Hopfen is contained in K. E. 
Franzos, Geschkhte des Erstlingswerkes (1904). 

HOPI, or Moki (Moquis), a tribe of North American Indians 
of Shoshonean stock. They are Pueblo or town-building Indians 
and occupy seven villages on three lofty plateaus of northern 
Arizona. The first accounts of them date from the expedition 
of Francisco Vasquez de Coronado in 1540. With the town- 
building Indians of New Mexico they were then subdued. 
They shared in the successful revolt of 1542, but again suffered 
defeat in 1586. In 1680, however, they made a successful 
revolt against the Spaniards. They weave very fine blankets, 
make baskets and are expert potters and wood-carvers. Their 
houses are built of stone set in mortar. Their ceremonies are 
of an elaborate nature, and in the famous " snake-dance " the 
performers carry live rattlesnakes in their mouths. They 
number some 1600. (See also Pueblo Indians.) 

For Hopi festivals, see ant Ann, Report Bureau of Amer. Ethnology 
(1899-1900). 

H0PKEN, ANDERS JOHAN, Count von (1742-1789), 
Swedish statesman, was the son of Daniel Niklas Hdpken, one of 
Arvid Horn's most determined opponents and a founder of the 
Hat party. When in 1738 the Hats came into power the younger 
Hdpken obtained a seat in the secret committee of the diet, and 
during the Finnish war of 1741-42 was one of the two com- 
missioners appointed to negotiate with Russia, During the 
diet of 1 746-1 747 Hdpken 's influence was of the greatest import- 
ance. It was chiefly through his efforts that the estates issued 
a " national declaration " protesting against the arrogant 
attitude of the Russian ambassador, who attempted to dominate 
the crown prince Adolphus Frederick and the government. 
This spirited policy restored the waning prestige of the Hat 
party and firmly established their anti-Muscovite system. In 
1746 Hdpken was created a senator. In 1751 he succeeded 
Gustaf Tessin as prime minister, and controlled the foreign policy 
of Sweden for the next nine years. On the outbreak of the 
Seven Years' War, he contracted an armed neutrality treaty with 
Denmark (1756); but in the following year acceded to the 
league against Frederick II. of Prussia. During the crisis of 
1760-1762, when the Hats were at last compelled to give an 
account of their stewardship, Hdpken was sacrificed to party 
exigencies and retired from the senate as well as from the premier- 
ship. On the 22nd of June 1762, however, he was created a 
count. After the revolution of 1772 he re-entered the senate 
at the particular request of Gustavus III., but no longer exercised 
any political influence. His caustic criticism of many of the 
royal measures, moreover, gave great offence, and in 1780 he 
retired into private life. Hdpken was a distinguished author. 
The noble style of his biographies and orations has earned 
for him the title of the Swedish Tacitus. He helped to found 
the Vetenskaps Akadcmi, and when Gustavus III. in 1786 



established the Swedish Academy, be gave Hdpken the fir* 

place in it. 

See L. G. de Geer, Minne of GrefveA. J. mm Hdpken (Stockholm, 
1882); Carl Silfvemolpe, Grefve Hopkens Skrtfler (Stockholm, 
1890-1893). (R- N. B.) 

HOPKINS, EDWARD WASHBURN (1857- ), American 
Sanskrit scholar, was born in Northampton, Massachusetts, 
on the 8th of September 1857. He graduated at Cohmmia 
University in 1878, studied at Leipzig, where he received the 
degree of Ph.D. in 1881, was an instructor at Columbia in 1881- 
1885, and professor at Bryn Mawr in 1885-1895, and became 
professor of Sanskrit and comparative philology in Yak Uni- 
versity in 1895. He became secretary of the American Oriental 
Society and editor of its Journal, to which he contributed many 
valuable papers, especially on numerical and temporal categories 
in early Sanskrit literature. He wrote Caste in Ancient India 
(1S81); Menu's Lawbook (1884); Religions of India (1895); 
The Great Epk of India (1901); and India Old and New 
(1001). 

HOPKINS, BSEK (1718-1802), the first admiral of the 
United States navy, was born at Scituate, Rhode Island, in 
1 718. He belonged to one of the most prominent Puritan 
families of New England. At the age of twenty he went to sea, 
and rapidly came to the front as a good sailor and skilful trader. 
Marrying, three years later, into a prosperous family of Newport, 
and thus increasing his influence in Rhode Island, he became 
commodore of a fleet of seventeen merchantmen, the movements 
of which he directed with skill and energy. In war as well as 
peace, Hopkins was establishing his reputation as one of the 
leading colonial seamen, for as captain of a privateer he made 
more than one brilliant and successful venture during the Seven 
Years' War. In the interval between voyages, moreover, be 
was engaged in Rhode Island politics, and rendered efficient 
support to his brother Stephen against the Ward faction. At 
the outbreak of the War of Independence, Hopkins was appointed 
brigadier-general by Rhode Island, was commissioned, December 
1775. by the Continental Congress, commander-in-chief of the 
navy, and in January 1 776 hoisted his flag as admiral of the eight 
converted merchantmen which then constituted the navy of the 
United States. His first cruise resulted in a great acquisition of 
material of war and an indecisive fight with H.M.S. " Glasgow." 
At first this created great enthusiasm, but criticism soon made 
itself heard. Hopkins and two of his captains were tried for 
breach of orders, and, though ably defended by John Adams, were 
censured by Congress. The commands, nevertheless, were not 
interfered with, and a prize was soon afterwards named after the 
admiral by their orders. But the difficulties and mutual distrust 
continually increased, and in 1777 Congress summarily dismissed 
Hopkins from his command, on the complaint of some of bis 
officers. Before the order arrived, the admiral had detected 
the conspiracy against him, and had had the ringleaders tried 
and degraded by court-martial. But the Congress followed 
up its order by dismissing him from the navy. For the rest of 
his life he lived in Rhode Island, playing a prominent part in 
state politics, and he died at Providence in 1802. 

See Edward Field. Life ofEsek Hopkins (Providence, 1 898) ; also aa 
article by R. Grieve in the New England Magazine of November 
1897.. 

HOPKINS, MARK (1802-1887). American educationist, 
great-nephew of the theologian Samuel Hopkins, was bom in 
Stockbridge, Massachusetts, on the 4th of February 1802. 
He graduated in 1824 at Williams College, where he was a tutor 
in 1825-1827, and where in 1830, after having graduated in the 
previous year at the Berkshire Medical College at Pitts field, 
he became professor of Moral Philosophy and Rhetoric In 
1833 he was licensed to preach in Congregational churches* 
He was president of Williams College from 1836 until 1872. 
He was one of the ablest and most successful of the old type 
of college president. His volume of lectures on Evidences of 
Christianity (1846) was long a favourite text-book. Of his other 
writings, the chief were Lectures on Moral Science (1862), The 
Law of Love and Love as a Law (1869), An Outline Study of Man 



HOPKINS, S.— HOPKINSQN, F. 



685 



(1873), The Scriptural Idea of Man (1883), and Teachings and 
Counsels (1884)* D* Hopkins took a lifelong interest in Christian 
missions, and from 1857 until bis death was president of the 
American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions (the 
American Congregational Mission Board). He died at Williams- 
town, on the 17th of June 1887. His. son, Henky Hopkins 
(1837-1908), was also from 1903 till his death president of 
Williams College. 

See Franklin Carter's Mark Hopkins (Boston, 1892), in the 
" American Religious Leaders " series, and Leveret* W. Spring's 
Mark Hopkins, Teacher (New York, 1888), being No. 4, vol. i., of 
the " Monographs of the Industrial Educational Association." 

Mark Hopkins's brother,ALBERTHopKiNs( 1807-187 2),was long 
associated with him at Williams College, where he graduated in 
1826 and was successively a tutor (1827-1829), professor of 
mathematics and natural philosophy (1820-1838), professor of 
natural philosophy and astronomy (1838-1868) and professor 
of astronomy (1868-1872). In 1835 he organized and conducted 
a Natural History Expedition to Nova Scotia, said to have been 
the first expedition of the kind sent out from any American 
college, and in 1837, at his suggestion and under his direction, 
was built at Williams College an astronomical observatory, said 
to have been the first in the United States built at a college 
exclusively for purposes of instruction. He died at Williams- 
town on the 24th of May 1872. 

See Albert C. Sewall's Life of Professor Albert Hopkins (1879). 

HOPKINS, SAMUEL (1 721-1803), American theologian, 
from whom the Hopkinsian theology takes its name, was born 
at Waterbury, Connecticut, on the 17th of September 1721. 
He graduated at Yale College in 1741; studied divinity at 
Northampton, Massachusetts, with Jonathan Edwards; was 
licensed to preach in 1742, and in December 1743 was ordained 
pastor of the church in the North Parish of Sheffield, or Housa- 
tonick (now Great Barrington), Massachusetts, at that time a 
small settlement of only thirty families. There he laboured — 
preaching, studying and writing — until 1769, for part of the 
time (1751-1758) in intimate association with his old teacher, 
Edwards, whose call to Stockbridge he had been instrumental 
in procuring. His theological views having met with much 
opposition, however, he was finally dismissed from the pastorate 
on the pretext of want of funds for his support. From April 
1770 until his death on the 20th of December 1803, he was 
the pastor of the First Church in Newport, Rhode Island, though 
during 1776-1780, while Newport was occupied by the British, 
he preached at Newburyport, Mass., and at Canterbury and 
Stamford, Conn. In 1799 he had an attack of paralysis, from 
which he never wholly recovered. Hopkins's theological views 
have had a powerful influence in America. Personally he was 
remarkable for force and energy of character, and for the utter 
fearlessness with which he followed premises to their conclusions. 
In vigour of intellect and in strength and purity of moral tone 
he was hardly inferior to Edwards himself. Though he was 
originally a slave-holder, to him belongs the honour of having 
been the first among the Congregational ministers of New 
England to denounce slavery both by voice and pen; and to his 
persistent though bitterly opposed efforts are probably chiefly 
to be attributed the law of 1774, which forbade the importation 
of negro slaves into Rhode Island, as a|so that of 1784, which 
declared that all children of slaves born in Rhode Island after 
the following March should be free. His training school for negro 
missionaries to Africa was broken up by the confusion of the 
American War of Independence. Among his publications are a 
valuable Life and Character of Jonathan Edwards (1799), *nd 
numerous pamphlets, addresses and sermons, including A 
Dialogue concerning the Slavery of the Africans, showing U to be 
the Duty and Interest of the American States to emancipate all their 
African Slates (1776), and A Discourse upon the Slave Trade and 
the History of the Africans (1793). His distinctive theological 
tenets are to be found in his important work, A System 
of Doctrines Contained in Divine Revelation, Explained and 
Defended (1793)* which has had an influence hardly inferior 
to that exercised by the writings of Edwards himself. They may 



be summed up as follows: God so rales the universe as to pro- 
duce its highest happiness, considered as a whole. Since God's 
sovereignty is absolute, sin must be, by divine permission, a 
means by which this happiness of the whole is secured, though 
that this is its consequence, renders it no less heinous in the 
sinner. Virtue consists in preference for the good of the whole 
to any private advantage; hence the really virtuous man must 
willingly accept any disposition of himself that God may deem 
wise — a doctrine often called " willingness to be damned." All 
have natural power to choose the right, and are therefore re- 
sponsible for their acts; but all men lack inclination to choose 
the right unless the existing " bias " of their wills is transformed 
by the power of God from self-seeking into an effective inclination 
towards virtue. Hence preaching should demand instant sub- 
mission to God and disinterested goodwill, and should teach the 
worthlessness of all religious acts or dispositions which are less 
than these, while recognizing that God can grant or withhold 
the regenerative change at his pleasure. 

>f Hopkins's Works is that published in three 
in 1852, containing an excellent biographical 
Edwards A. Park. In 1854 was published 
1 Treatise on the Millennium, which originally 
m of Doctrines and in which he deduced from 
and Revelation that the millennium would come 
d of the twentieth century." Sec also Stephen 
he Life of the bale Reverend Samuel Hopkins 
05), Franklin B. Dexter's Biographical Sketches 
Yale College and Williston Walker's Ten New 



w York, 1901). 



(W.Wr.) 



HOPKINS, WILLIAM (1793-1866), English mathematician 
and geologist, was born at Kingston-on-Soar, in Nottingham- 
shire, on the 2nd of February 1793. In his youth he learned 
practical agriculture in Norfolk and afterwards took an extensive 
farm in Suffolk. In this he was unsuccessful. At the age of 
thirty he entered St Peter's College, Cambridge, taking his 
degree of B.A. in 1827 as seventh wrangler and M.A. in 1830. 
In 1833 he. published Elements of Trigonometry. He was dis- 
tinguished for his mathematical knowledge, and became emi- 
nently successful as a private tutor, many of his pupils attaining 
high distinction. About 1833, through meeting Sedgwick at 
Barmouth and joining him in several excursions, he became 
intensely interested in geology. Thereafter, in papers published 
by the Cambridge Philosophical Society and the Geological 
Society of London, he entered largely into mathematical in- 
quiries connected with geology, dealing with the effects which 
an elevatory force acting from below would produce on a portion 
of the earth's crust, in fissures, faults, &c. In this way he dis- 
cussed the elevation and denudation of the Lake district, the 
Wcalden area, and the Bas Boulonnais. He wrote also on the 
motion of glaciers and the transport of erratic blocks. So ably 
had he grappled with many difficult problems that in 1850 the 
Wollaston medal was awarded to him by the Geological Society 
of London; and in the following year he was elected president. 
In his second address (1853) he criticized £lie de Beaumont's 
theory of the elevation of mountain-chains and showed the 
imperfect evidence on which it rested. He brought before the 
Geological Society in 1851 an important paper On the Causes 
which may hate produced changes in the Earth* s superficial Tempera- 
ture. He was president of the British Association for 1853. 
His later researches included observations on the conductivity 
of various substances for heat, and on the effect of pressure 
on the temperature of fusion of different bodies. He died at 
Cambridge on the 13th of October 1866. 

Obituary by W. W. Smyth, in Quart. Journ. Ceal. Soc. (1867), 
p. xxix. 

HOPKINSON, FRANCIS (1 737-J790, American author and 
statesman, one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence, 
was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on the 2nd of October 
>737* He was a son of Thomas Hopkinson (1700-1751), a 
prominent lawyer of Philadelphia, one of the first trustees of 
the College of Philadelphia, now the University of Pennsylvania, 
and first president of the American Philosophical Society. 
Francis was the first student to enter the College of Philadelphia. 



688 



HORACE 



In one of his latest writings (Epist. i!. 2. 42, &c.) Horace gives 
a further account of his education; but we hear no more of his 
father, nor is there any allusion in his writings to the existence 
of any other member of his family or any other relative. After 
the ordinary grammatical and literary training at Rome, he 
went (45 b.c.) to Athens, the most famous school of philosophy, 
as Rhodes was of oratory; and he describes himself while there 
as " searching after truth among the groves of Academus " as 
well as advancing in literary accomplishment. His pleasant 
residence there was interrupted by the breaking out of the civil 
war. Following the example of his young associates, he attached 
himself to the cause of Brutus, whom he seems to have accom- 
panied to Asia, probably as a member of his staff; and he 
served at the battle of Philippi in the post of military tribune. 
He shared in the rout which followed the battle, and henceforth, 
though he was not less firm in his conviction that some causes 
were worth fighting for and dying for, he had but a poor opinion 
of his own soldierly qualities. 

He returned to Rome shortly after the battle, stripped of his 
property, which formed part of the land confiscated for the 
benefit of the soldiers of Octavianus and Antony. It may have 
been at this time that he encountered the danger of shipwreck, 
which he mentions among the perils from which his life had been 
protected by supernatural aid (Carm. iii. 4. 28). He procured 
in some way the post of a clerkship in the quaestor's office, and 
about three years after the battle of Philippi, he was introduced 
by Virgil and Varius to Maecenas. This was the turning-point 
of his fortunes. He owed his friendship with the greatest of 
literary patrons to his personal merits rather than to his poetic 
fame; for he was on intimate terms with Maecenas before the 
first book of the Satires (his first published work) appeared. 
He tells us in one of his Satires (i. 10. 31) that his earliest ambition 
was to write Greek verses. In giving this direction to his 
ambition, he was probably influenced by his admiration of the 
old iambic and lyrical poets whom he has made the models 
of his own Epodcs and Odes. His common sense as well as his 
national feeling fortunately saved him from becoming a second* 
rate Greek versifier in an age when poetic inspiration had passed 
from Greece to Italy, and the living language of Rome was a 
more fitting vehicle for the new feelings and interests of men 
than the echoes of the old Ionian or Aeolian melodies. His 
earliest Latin compositions were, as he tells us, written under 
the instigation of poverty; and they alone betray any trace of 
the bitterness of spirit which the defeat of his hopes and the 
hardships which he had to encounter on his first return to Rome 
may have temporarily produced on him. Some of the Epodcs, 
of the nature of personal and licentious lampoons, and the second 
Satire of book i., in which there is some trace of an angry republi- 
can feeling, belong to these early compositions. But by the time 
the first book of Satires was completed and published (35 B.C.) 
his temper had recovered its natural serenity, and, though he 
bad not yet attained to the height of his fortunes, his personal 
position was one of comfort and security, and his intimate 
relation with the leading men in literature and social rank was 
firmly established. 

About a year after the publication of this first book of Satires 
Maecenas presented him with a farm among the Sabine hills, 
near the modern Tivoli. This secured him pecuniary independ- 
ence; it satisfied the love of nature which had been implanted 
in him during the early years spent on the Venusian farm; and 
it afforded him a welcome escape from the distractions of city 
life and the dangers of a Roman autumn. Many passages in the 
Satires, Odes and Epistles express the happiness and pride 
with which the thought of his own valley filled him, and the 
interest which he took in the simple and homely ways of his 
Country neighbours. The inspiration of the Satires came from 
the heart of Rome; the feeling of many of the Odes comes direct 
from the Sabine hills; and even the meditative spirit of the 
later Epistles tells of the leisure and peace of quiet days spent 
among books, or in the open air, at a distance from " the smoke, 
wealth and tumult " of the great metropolis. 

The second book of Satires was published in so ȣ.; the 



Epodcs (spoken of by himself as iambx) apparently about a year 
earlier, though many of them are, as regards the date of their 
composition, to be ranked among the earliest extant writings 
of Horace. In one of his Epistles (i. 19. 25) be rests his first 
claim to originality on his having introduced into Latram the 
metres and spirit of Archiiochus of Paros. He may have natural- 
ized some special form of metre employed by that poet, and it 
may be (as Th. Pltisz has suggested) that we should see in the 
Epodcs a tone of mockery and parody. B ut his personal lampoon 
are the least successful of his works; while those Epodcs which 
treat of other subjects in a poetical spirit are inferior in metrical 
effect, and in truth and freshness of feeling, both to the lighter 
lyrics 0/ Catullus and to his own later and more carefully 
meditated Odes. The Epodcs, if they are serious at all, are 
chiefly interesting as a record of the personal feelings of Horace 
during the years which immediately followed his return to Rome, 
and as a prelude to the higher art and inspiration of the first 
three books of the Odes, which were published together about the 
end of 24 or the beginning of 23 B.C. 1 The composition of these 
Odes extended over several years, but all the most important 
among them belong to the years between the battle of Actraxa 
and 24 B.C. His lyrical poetry is thus, not,. like that of Catullus, 
the ardent utterance of his youth, but the mature and finished 
workmanship of his manhood. The state of public affairs was 
more favourable than it had been since the outbreak of the civil 
war between Caesar and Pompey for the appearance, of lyrical 
poetry. Peace, order and national unity had been secured by 
the triumph of Augustus, and the enthusiasm in favour of the 
new government had not yet been chilled by experience of it* 
repressing influence. The poet's circumstances were, at the 
same time, most favourable for the exercise of his lyrical gift 
during these years. He lived partly at Rome, partly at his 
Sabine farm, varying his residence occasionally by visits to 
Tibur, Praeneste or Baiae. His intimacy with Maecenas was 
strengthened and he had become the familiar friend of the great 
minister. He was treated with distinction by Augustus, and by 
the foremost men in Roman society. He complains occasionally 
that the pleasures of his youth are passing from him, but be 
does so in the spirit of a temperate Epicurean, who found new 
enjoyments in life as the rest for the old enjoyments decayed, 
and who considered the wisdom and meditative spirit—" the 
philosophic mind that years had brought "—an ample compensa- 
tion for the extinct fires of his youth. 

About four years after the publication of the three books 
of Odes, the first book of the Epistles appeared, introduced, 
as his Epodcs^ Satires and Odes had been, by a special address 
to Maecenas. From these Epistles, as compared with the Satires, 
we gather that he had gradually adopted a more retired and 
meditative life, and had become fonder of the country and of 
study, and that, while owing allegiance to no school or sect of 
philosophy, he was framing for himself a scheme of life, was 
endeavouring to conform to it, and was bent on inculcating it on 
others. He maintained his old friendships, and continued to 
form new intimacies, especially with younger men engaged 
in public affairs or animated by literary ambition. After the 
death of Virgil he was recognised as pre-eminently the greatest 
living poet, and was accordingly called upon by Augustus to 
compose the sacred hymn for the celebration of the secular 
games in 17 B.C. About four years later he published the fourth 
book of Odes (about 13 B.C.) having been called upon to do so 
by the emperor, in order that the victories of his stepsons 
Drusus and Tiberius over the Rhaeti and Vindelici might be 
worthily celebrated. He lived about five years longer, and 
during these years published the second book of Epistles, and the 
Epistle to the Pisos, more generally known as the " Ars poetic*.* 
These later Epistles are mainly devoted to literary criticism, 
with the especial object of vindicating the poetic claims of his 
own age over those of the age of Ennius and the other early 

1 The date is determined by the poem on the death of QutntiUus 
Varus (who died 24 B.C.), and by the reference in Ode i. 12 to the 
young Marcellus (died in autumn 23 B.C.) as still alive. Cf . Wickham'S 
introduction to the Oder. 



HORACE 



689 



poets of Rome. He might have been expected, as a great critic 
and lawgiver on literature, to have exercised a beneficial influence 
on the future poetry of his country, and to have applied as much 
wisdom to the theory of his own art as to that of a right life. 
But his critical Epistles are chiefly devoted to a controversial 
attack on the older writers and to the exposition of the laws of 
dramatic poetry, on which his own powers had never been 
exercised, and for which either the genius or circumstances 
of the Romans were unsuited. The same subordination of 
imagination and enthusiasm to good sense and sober judgment 
characterizes his opinions on poetry as on morals. 

He died somewhat suddenly on the 17th of November of the 
year 8 B.C. He left Augustus to see after his affairs, and was 
buried on the EsquilineHill, near Maecenas. 

Horace is one of the few writers, ancient or modern, who 
have written a great deal about themselves without laying 
themselves open to the charge of weakness or egotism. His 
chief claim to literary originality is not that on which he himself 
rested his hopes of immortality — that of being the first to adapt 
certain lyrical metres to the Latin tongue — but rather that of 
being the first of those whose works have reached us who 
establishes a personal relation with his reader, speaks to him 
as a familiar friend, gives him good advice, tells him the story 
of his life, and shares with him bis private tastes and pleasures — 
and all this without any loss of self-respect, any want of modesty. 
or breach of good manners, and in a style so lively and natural 
that each new generation of readers might fancy that he was 
addressing them personally and speaking to them on subjects 
of every day modern interest. In his self-portraiture, far from 
wishing to make himself out better or greater than be was, he 
seems to write under the influence of an ironical restraint which 
checks him in the utterance of his highest moral teaching and of 
his poetical enthusiasm. He affords us some indications of his 
personal appearance, as where he speaks of the "nigros angusta 
front© capillos" of his youth, and describes himself after 
he had completed his forty-fourth December as of small 
stature, prematurely grey and fond of basking in the sun 
(Epist. i. 2a 24). 

In his later years his health became weaker or more uncertain, 
and this caused a considerable change in his habits, tastes and 
places of residence. It inclined him more to a life of retirement 
and simplicity, and also it stimulated his tendency to self- 
introspection and self-culture. In his more vigorous years, when 
he lived much in Roman society, he claims to have acted in all 
his relations to others in accordance with the standard recognized 
among men of honour in every age, to have been charitably 
indulgent to the weakness of his friends, and to have been 
exempt from petty jealousies and the spirit of detraction. 
If ever he deviates from his ordinary vein of irony and quiet 
sense into earnest indignation, it is in denouncing conduct 
involving treachery or malice in the relations of friends (Sat. 
I 4. 81, &c). 

He claims to be and evidently aims at being independent 
of fortune, superior to luxury, exempt both from the sordid 
cares of avarice and the coarser forms of profligacy. At the 
same time he makes a frank confession of indolence and of 
occasional failure in the pursuit of his ideal self-mastery. He 
admits his irascibility, his love of pleasure, his sensitiveness 
to opinion, and some touch of vanity or at least of gratified 
ambition arising out of the favour which through all his life 
he had enjoyed from those much above him in social station 
(Epist. L so. 23). Yet there appears no trace of any unworthy 
deference in Horace's feelings towards the great. Even towards 
Augustus he maintained his attitude of independence, by 
declining the office of private secretary which the emperor 
wished to force upon him; and he did so with such tact as 
neither to give offence nor to forfeit the regard of his superior. 
His feeling towards Maecenas is more like that of Pope towards 
Bolingbroke than that which a client in ancient or modern 
times entertains towards his patron. He felt pride in his protec- 
tion and in the intellectual sympathy which united him with one 
whose personal qualities had enabled him to play so prominent 



and beneficent a part in public affairs. Their friendship was 
slowly formed, but when once established continued unshaken 
through their lives. 

There is indeed nothing more remarkable in Horace than 
the independence, or rather the self-dependence, of his character. 
The enjoyment which he drew from his Sabine farm consisted 
partly in the refreshment to his spirit from the familiar beauty 
of the place, partly in the "otia Uberrima " from the claims 
of business and society which it afforded him. His love poems, 
when compared with those of Catullus, TibuUus and Properties, 
show that he never, in his mature years at least, allowed his 
peace of mind to be at the mercy of any one. They are the 
expressions of a fine and subtle and often a humorous observation 
rather than of ardent feeling. There is perhaps a touch of 
pathos in his reference in the Odes to the early death of Cinara, 
but the epithet he applies to her in the Epistles, 

"Quem scis unmunem Cinarae placuisse rapaci," 
shows that the pain of thinking of her could not have been very 
heartfelt. Even when the Odes addressed to real or imaginary 
beauties are most genuine in feeling, they are more the artistic 
rekindling of extinct fires than the utterance of recent passion. 
In his friendships he had not the self-forgetful devotion which 
is the most attractive side of the character of Catullus; but he 
studied how to gain and keep the regard of those whose society 
he valued, and he repaid this regard by a fine courtesy and by a 
delicate appreciation of their higher gifts and qualities, whether 
proved in literature, or war, or affairs of state or the ordinary 
dealings of men. He enjoyed the great world, and it treated 
him well; but he resolutely maintained his personal independence 
and the equipoise of his feelings and judgment. If it is thought 
that in attributing a divine function to Augustus he has gone 
beyond the bounds of a sincere and , temperate admiration, 
a comparison of the Odes in which this occurs with the first 
Epistle of the second book shows that he certainly recognized in 
the emperor a great and successful administrator and that his 
language is to be regarded rather as the artistic expression of 
the prevailing national sentiment than as the tribute of an 
insincere adulation. 

The aim of Horace's philosophy was to " be master of oneself," 
to retain the " mens aequa " in all circumstances, to use the 
gifts of fortune while they remained, and to be prepared to part 
with them with equanimity; to make the most of life, and to 
contemplate its inevitable end without anxiety. Self-reliance 
and resignation are the lessons which he constantly inculcates. 
His philosophy is thus a mode of practical Epicureanism combined 
with other elements which have more affinity with Stoicism. 
In his early life he professed his adherence to the former system, 
and several expressions in his first published work show the 
influences of the study of Lucretius. At the time when the first 
book of the Epistles was published he professes to assume the 
position of an eclectic rather than that of an adherent of either 
school (Epist. i. z. 13-19). We note in the passage here referred 
to, as in other passages, that he mentions Aristippus of Cyrene, 
rather than Epicurus himself, as the master under whose influence 
he from time to time insensibly lapsed. Yet the dominant tone 
of his teaching is that of a refined Epicureanism, not so elevated 
or purely contemplative as that preached by Lucretius, but yet 
more within the reach of a society which, though luxurious 
and pleasure-loving, had not yet become thoroughly frivolous 
and enervated. His advice is to subdue all violent emotion of 
fear or desire; to estimate all things calmly— "nil admirari"; 
to choose the mean between a high and low estate; and to find 
one's happiness in plain living rather than in luxurious indulgence. 
Still there was in Horace a robuster fibre, inherited from the 
old Italian race, which moved him to value the dignity and 
nobleness of life more highly than its ease and enjoyment. 
In some of the stronger utterances of his Odes, where he expresses 
sympathy with the manlier qualities of character, we recognize 
the resistent attitude of Stoicism rather than the passive acquiesc- 
ence of Epicureanism. The concluding stanzas of the address 
to Lollius (Ode iv. 9) exhibit the Epicurean and Stoical view 
of life so combined as to be more worthy of human dignity than 



690 

the fl 

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HORACE 



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HORAE— HORAPOLLON 



691 



■nd modern t 

apparently im 

mastery over 

first book are I. 

the other met 

the older poet 

&c. He has b. 

while in some t 

that in which > 

strain/' he ha t 

movement, th 

and reflection, 

reproduces th< 

he gives them ' 

his own expei I 

to such penec 

his mastery o 1 

metres accord 

Thus his great i 

majesty in addition to the energy and impetus originally imparted 

to it by Alcaeus. The Sapphic metre he employs with a pecufiar 

lightness and vivacity which harmonise admirably with his gayer 

moods 

Again in regard to his diction, if Horace has learned his subtlety 
and moderation from his Greek masters, he has tempered those 
qualities with the masculine characteristics of his race. No writer is 
more Roman in the statelincss and dignity, the terseness, occasionally 
even in the sobriety and bare literalness, of his diction. 

While it is mainly owing to the extreme care which Horace gave 
to form, rhythm and diction that his own prophecy 
" Usque ego posters 
Crescam laude recens " 
has been so amply fulfilled, yet no greater injustice could be done to 
him than to rank him either as poet or critic with those who consider 
form everything in literature. With Horace the mastery over the 
vehicle of expression was merely an essential preliminary to making 
a worthy and serious use of that vehicle. The poet, from Horace^ 
point of view, was intended not merely to give refined pleasure to a 
lew, but above all things, to be " utilis urbl Yet he is saved, in his 
practice, from the abuse of this theory by his admirable sense, his 
ironical humour, his intolerance of pretension and pedantry. 
Opinions will differ as to whether he or Catullus is to be regarded as 
the greater lyrical poet. Those who assign the palm to Horace will 
do so, certainly not because they recognize in htm richer or equally 
rich gifts of feeling, conception and expression, but because the 



ITCU Kllll> Ul 1CC11I1K, ONHXpUUU UUU CJW1C3MUU, WM UCUIUK IIIC 

subjects to which his art has been devoted have a fuller, more varied, 
more mature and permanent interest for the world. 

Authorities. — For the life of Horace the chief authorities are his 
own works and a short ancient biography which is attributed to 
Suetonius. The apparatus criticus is most fully described in O. 
Keller's preface to vol. L of the and ed. (1899) of Keller and Holder's 
recension of Horace's works. This edition also gives by far the largest 
collection of variants and emendations to the text and of the ttsti- 
monia of ancient writers. 

What might have proved the most important manuscript of 
Horace, the so-called vetustissimus Blandinius, is now lost.and we 
know it only from the account of J. Cruquius who saw it in 1565. 
The relations of the extant MSS. to each other and the presumed 
archetype present an intricate problem; and Keller's solution has 
not proved generally acceptable. See a risuntf of the controversy 
Horatkriiik sett 1880 by J. Bick (Leipzig, 1906) and F. Voilmer in 
Philologus. Supp. x. 2, pp. 261-322. Many MSS. of Horace contain 
ancient scholia which are copied or taken with abridgment from the 
commentaries of Porphyrio, who lived about a.d. 200, and Helenius 
Aero, a still earlier granimarian. These scholia also have been 
collected and c " «■««•• .... ,, - ,j - '-^2) 
and the " Acron 4). 

R. Bentley's epc an 

index by Zangt the 

most useful are ch- 

felder and J. K A. 

Kicssltng (revis 06, 

Epistles. 1898). of 

E. C. Wickham ish 

notes are those < 3), 

A. S. Wilkins 96, 

Satires, i., 1901) L). 

L. MulleTs elat led 

posthumously ( x's 

still holds the I ra) 

is a necessary it's 

materials on a n n's 

(1867) and C. V ro) 

deserve mentior on 

lately reprinted e's 

new Corpus p >l's 

Geschichte far 1 t), 

§1234-240, and ier 

rOmischen Litter ) 



HORAB (Lat. hora, hoar), the Hours, in Greek mythology 
'fyat, originally the personification of a series of natural pheno- 
mena. In the Iliad (v. 749) they are the custodians of the gates 
of Olympus, which they open or shut by scattering or condensing 
the clouds; that is, they are weather goddesses, who send down 
or withhold the fertilizing dews and rain. In the Odyssey, 
where they are represented as bringing round the seasons in 
regular order/ they are an abstraction rather than a concrete 
personification. The brief notice in Hesiod (Tkeog. 901), 
where they are called the children of Zeus and Themis, who 
superintend the operations of agriculture, indicates by the 
names assigned to them (Eunomia, Dike, Eirene, i.e. Good 
Order, Justice, Peace) the extension of their functions as goddesses 
of order from nature to the events of human life, and at the same 
time invests them with moral attributes. Like the Moerae 
(Fates), they regulate the destinies of man, watch over the newly 
born, secure good laws and the administration of justice. The 
selection of three as their number has been supposed to refer 
to the most ancient division of the year into spring, summer and 
winter, but it is probably only another instance of the Greek 
liking for that particular number or its multiples in such 
connexions (three Moerae, Charites, Gorgons, nine Muses). 
Order and regularity being indispensable conditions of beauty, 
it was easy to conceive of the Horae as the goddesses of youthful 
bloom and grace, inseparably associated with the idea of spring- 
time. As such they are companions of the Nymphs and Graces, 
with whom they are often confounded, and of other superior 
deities connected with the spring growth of vegetation (Demeter, 
Dionysus). At Athens they were two (or three) in number: 
ThaQo and Carpo, the goddesses of the flowers of spring and of 
the fruits of summer, to whom Auxo, the goddess of the growth 
of plants, may be added, although some authorities make her 
only one of the Graces. In honour of the Horae a yearly festival 
(Horaea) was celebrated, at which protection was sought against 
the scorching heat and drought, and offerings were made of 
boiled meat as less insipid and more nutritious than roast. 
In later mythology, under Alexandrian influence, the Horae 
become the four seasons, daughters of Helios and Selene, each 
represented with the conventional attributes. Subsequently, 
when the day was divided into twelve equal parts, each of them 
took the name of Hora. Ovid (Metam. ii. 26) describes them as 
placed at* equal intervals on the throne of Phoebus, with whom 
are also associated the four seasons. Norm us (5th century aj>.) 
in the Dionysiaca also unites the twelve Horae as representing 
the day and the four Horae as the seasons in the palace of Helios. 

See C Lehrs, Potod&re Aufs&lte (1856) ; J. H. Krause, Die Afusen, 
Cratien, Horen, una Nympken (1871); and the articles in Daremberg 
and Saglio's Dutiormaire des anhquMs, J. A. Hild; and in Roscher's 
Lexikon der Mythdogie, W. Rapp, 

HORAPOLLON, of Phaenebythis in the nome of Panopolis 
in Egypt, Greek grammarian, flourished in the 4th century a.d. 
during the reign of Theodosius I. According to Suidas, he 
wrote commentaries on Sophocles, Alcaeus and Homer, and a 
work (Tepovxd) on places consecrated to the gods. Phothis 
(cod. 279), who calls him a dramatist as well as a grammarian, 
ascribes to him a history of the foundation and antiquities of 
Alexandria (unless this is by an Egyptian of the same name, 
who lived in the reign of Zeno, 474-491). Under the name of 
Horapollon two books on Hieroglyphics are extant, which profess 
to be a translation from an Egyptian original into Greek by 
a certain Phih'ppus, of whom nothing is known. The inferior 
Greek of the translation, and the character of the additions in 
the second book point to its being of late date; some have 
even assigned it to the 15th century. Though a very large 
proportion of the statements seem absurd and cannot be 
accounted for by anything known in the latest and most fanciful 
usage, yet there is ample evidence in both the books, in individual 
cases, that the .tradition of the values of the hieroglyphic signs 
was not yet extinct in the days of their author. 

Bibliography.— Editions by C. Leemans (1835) and A. T. Cory 
(1840) with English translation and notes; see also G. Rathgeber in 
Ersch and Gruber's AUgemeine Eruyciopadie; H. Schifer. Zeilsckrijt 
Jir dgyptiuke Sprack* (1905). p. 7*. 



69a 



HORATII AND CURIATII— HORIZON 



HORATII god CURIATII* In Roman legend, two sets of three 
brothers bora at one birth on the same day — the former Roman, 
the latter Alban — the mothers being twin sisters. During the 
war between Rome and Alba Longa it was agreed that the issue 
should depend on a combat between the two families. Two of 
the Horatii were soon slain; the third brother feigned flight, 
and when the Curiatii, who were all wounded, pursued him 
without concert he slew them one by one. When he entered 
Rome in triumph, his sister recognized a cloak which he was 
wearing as a trophy as one she had herself made for her lover, 
one of the Curiatii. She thereupon invoked a curse upon her 
brother, who slew her on the spot. Horatius was condemned 
to be scourged to death, but on his appealing to the people 
his life was spared (Livy i. 25, 26; Dion. Halic iii. 13-22). 
Monuments of the tragic story were shown by the Romans 
in the time of Livy (the altar of Janus Curiatius near the sororium 
tigiUum, the " sister's beam," or yoke under which Horatius had 
to pass; and the altar of Juno Sororia). The legend was 
probably invented to account for the origin of the provocatio 
(right of appeal to the people), while at the same time it points 
to the close connexion and final struggle for supremacy between 
the older city on the mountain and the younger city on the 
plain. Their relationship and origin from three tribes are 
symbolically represented by the twin sisters and the two sets of 
Jhree brothers. 

• For a critical examination of the rtory, tee Schwegler, Rommke 
Ceschickte, bk. xit. 11. 14; Sir G. Cornewall Lewis, Credibility of 
Early Roman History, ch. xi 15; W. Ihne, HisL of Rome, \.\ E. Pais, 
Storta di Roma, i. ch. 3 (1898), and Ancient Legends of Roman 
History (Eng. trans., 1006), where the story is connected with the 
ceremonies performed in. honour of Jupiter Tkijlus and Juno 
Sororia; C. Pascal, Fatti e legende di Roma antica (Florence. 1903); 
O. Gilbert, Geschichte und Topographs der Stadt Rom im AUertum 
(1883-1885).. 

HORATIUS COCLES, a legendary hero of ancient Rome. 
With two companions he defended the Sublician bridge against 
Lars Porsena and the whole army of the Etruscans, while the 
Romans cut down the bridge behind. Then Horatius threw 
himself into the Tiber and swam in safety to the shore. A 
statue was erected in his honour in the temple of Vulcan, and 
he received as much land as he could plough round in a single 
day. According to another version, Horatius alone defended 
the bridge, and was drowned in the Tiber. 

There is an obvious resemblance between the legend of Horatius 
Codes and that of the Horatii and Curiatii. In both cases 
three Romans come forward as the champions of Rome at a 
critical moment of her fortunes, and only one successfully holds 
his ground. In the one case, the locality is the land frontier, 
in the other, the boundary stream of Roman territory. E. Pais 
finds the origin of the story in the worship of Vulcan, and 
identifies Codes (the " one-eyed ") with one of the Cyclopes, 
who in mythology were connected with Hephaestus, and later 
with Vulcan. He condudes that the supposed statue of Codes 
was really that of Vulcan, who, as one of the most ancient 
Roman divinities and, in fact, the protecting ddty of the state, 
would naturally be confounded with the hero who saved it by 
holding the bridge against the invaders. He suggests that the 
legend arose from some religious ceremony, possibly the practice 
of throwing the stuffed figures called Argei into the Tiber from 
the Pons Sublidus on the ides of May. The conspicuous part 
played in Roman history by members of the Horatian family, 
who were connected with the worship of Jupiter Vulcanus, will 
explain the attribution of the name Horatius to Vulcan-Codes. 

See Lhry ii. 10; Dion. Halic v. 23-25; Polybius vi. 55; Plutarch, 
Popiicola, 16. For a critical examination of the legend, see Schwegler, 
Romische Ceschickte, bk. xxi. 18; W. Ihne, History of Rome, i.; 
E. Pats, Storia di Roma, i. ch. 4 (1898), and Ancient Legends of 
Roman History (Eng. trans., 1906). 

HORDE, a manufacturing town of Germany, in the Prussian 
province of Westphalia, is 2 m. S.E. from Dortmund on the 
railway to Soest. Pop. (1005) 28,461. It has a Roman Catholic 
and an Evangelical church, a synagogue and an old castle dating 
from about ?ioo. There are large smdting-works, foundries, 



puddling-works, rolling-mills and manufactures of iron and 
plated wares. In the neighbourhood there are large iron and 
coal mines. A tramway connects the town with Dortmund. 

HOREB, the ancient seat of Yahwch, the tribal god of the 
Kenites, adopted by His covenant by Israel. This is the name 
preferred by the Elohistic writer (E) whose work is interwoven 
into the Old Testament narrative, and he is followed by the 
Deuteronomist school (D). The Yahwistk writer (J), on the 
other hand, prefers to call the mountain Sinai (q.v.), and so 
do the. priestly writers (P). This latter form became the more 
usual. There is no ground for distinguishing between Horeb 
as the range and Sinai as the single mountain, or between Horeb 
and Sinai as respectivdy the N. and S. parts of the range. 

HORBHOUND (O. Eng. harkune, Ger. Andorn, Fr. mcrrube). 
Common or white horehound, Marrubium vulgar e, of the natural 
order Labioiae, is a perennial herb with a short stout rootsiock* 
and thick stems, about 1 ft. in height, which, as well as their 
numerous branches, are coated with a white or hoary felt — whence 
the popular name of the plant. The leaves have long petioles, 
and are roundish or rhombic-ovate, with a bluntly toothed 
margin, much wrinkled, white and woolly below and pale green 
and downy above; the flowers 
are sessile, in dense whorls or 
dusters, small and dull-white, 
with a xo-toothed calyx and the 
upper lobe of the corolla long 
and bifid. . The plant occurs in ( 
Europe, North Africa and West 
Asia to North-West India, and 
has been naturalized in parts 
of America. In Britain, where 
it is found generally on sandy ( 
or dry chalky ground, it is far 
from common. White horehound 
contains a volatile oil, resin, a 
crystallizable bitter principle 
termed marrubiin and other 
substances, and has a net un- 
pleasant aromatic odour, and 
a persistent bitter taste. For- 
merly it was official in British 
pharmacopoeias; and the infusion, syrup or * confection of 
horehound has long been in popular repute for the treatment 
of a host of dissimilar affections. Black horehound, BaUota 
nigra, is a hairy perennial herb, belonging to the same order, of 
foetid odour, is 2 to 3 ft. in height, and has stalked, roundish- 
ovate, toothed leaves and numerous flowers, in dense axillary 
dusters, with a green or purplish calyx, and a pale red-purple 
corolla. It occurs in Europe, North Africa and West Asia, and 
in Britain south of the Forth and Clyde, and has been introduced 
into North America. 

HORGEN, a small town in the Swiss canton of Zurich, situated 
on the left or west shore of the Lake of Zurich, and by rail 
10} m. S.E. of the town of Zurich. Pop. (1000) 6883, mostly 
German-speaking and Protestants. It possesses many industrial 
establishments of various kinds, and is a centre of the Zurich 
silk manufacture. It came in 1406 into the p oss es sion of 
ZOrich, with which it communicates- by means of steamers on 
the lake, as well as by rail. 

HORIZON (Gr. opffcrfp, dividing), the apparent circle around 
which the sky and earth seem to meet. At sea this circle is 
well defined, the line being called the sea horizon, which divides 
the visible surface of the ocean from the sky. In astronomy 
the horizon is that great circle of the sphere the plane of which 
is at right angles to the direction of the plumb line. Sometimes 
a distinction is made between the rational and the apparent 
horizon,' the former being the horizon as determined by a plane 
through the centre of the earth, paralld to that through the 
station of an observer. But on the celestial sphere the great 
drdes of these two planes are coinddent, so that this distinction 
is not necessary (see Astronomy: Spkerieaf). The Dip of the 
horizon at sea is the angular depression of the apparent sea 




Horehound. 



HORMAYR— HORMIZD 



693 



horizon, or circle bounding the visible ocean, below the apparent 
celestial horizon as above defined. It is due to the rotundity 
of the earth, and the height of the observer's eye above the water. 
The dip of the horizon and its distance in sea-miles when the 
height of the observer's eye above the sea-level is k feet, are 
approximately given by the formulae: Dip»o'*o7 V*; Distance 
»x"'i7 V*. The difference between the coefficients 0*07 and 
1*17 arises from the refraction of the ray, but for which they 
would be equal. 

HORHAYH, JOSEPH, Baron von (1 782-1848), German 
statesman and historian, was born at Innsbruck on the 20th 
of January 1782. After studying law in his native town, and 
attaining the rank of captain in the Tirolese Landwehr, the 
young man, who had the advantage of being the grandson of 
Joseph von Hormayr (1705-1778), chancellor of Tirol, obtained 
a post in the foreign office at Vienna (1801), from which he rose 
in 1803 to be court secretary and, being a near friend of the 
Archduke John, director of the secret archives of the state and 
court for thirteen months. In 1803 he married Therese Anderler 
von Hohenwald. During the insurrection of 1809, by which 
the Tirolese sought to throw off the Bavarian supremacy con- 
firmed by the treaty of Prcssburg, Hormayr was the mainstay 
of the Austrian party, and assumed the administration of 
everything (especially the composition of proclamations and 
pamphlets); but, returning home without the prestige of success, 
he fell, in spite of the help of the Archduke John, into disfavour 
both with the emperor Francis I. and with Prince Metternich, 
and at length, when in 1813 he tried to stir up a new insurrection 
in Tirol, he was arrested and imprisoned at Mnnkatt. In 1816 
some amends were made to him by his appointment as imperial 
historiographer; but so little was he satisfied with the general 
policy and conduct of the Austrian court that in 1828 he accepted 
an invitation of King Louis I. to the Bavarian capital, where he 
became ministerial councillor in the department of foreign 
affairs. In 1832 he was appointed Bavarian minister-resident at 
Hanover, and from 1837 to 1846 he held the same position at 
Bremen. Together with Count Johann Friedrich von der 
Decken (1760- 1840) he founded the Historical Society of Lower 
Saxony (Historischcr Vcrein fur Nicdersachsen). The last two 
years of his life were spent at Munich as superintendent of the 
national archives. He died on the 5th of October 1848. 

Hormayr's literary activity was closely conditioned by the 
circumstances of his political career and by the fact that Johannes 
von Mailer (d. 161 1) was his teacher: while his access to original 
documents gave value to his treatment of the past, his record 
or criticism of contemporary events received authority and 
interest from his personal experience. But his history of the 
Tirolese rebellion is far from being Impartial; for he always 
liked to put himself into the first place, and the merits of Andreas 
Hofer and of other leaders are not sufficiently acknowledged. 
In his later writings he appears as a keen opponent of the policy 
of the court of Vienna. 



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Unterhaltung (1849): Wurzbach, dsterreickisckes biogmpkisches 
Lexikon, ix. (1863); K. Th. von Heigel in the AUgentetne dentsche 
Biographit (1881) and F. X. Wegele. GesckicJUederdeutschen Htstono- 
grabkie (Munich and Leipzig, 1885): F. v. Kronen, Aus OsUrreichs 
stilUn und bewegten Jakren 1810-181$ ; Biographte und Brief e an Erthz. 
Johann (Innsbruck, 1892) ; Him, TiroUr A uf slant (1909). (J- Hn.) 

R0RH18DAS, pope from 514 to 523 in succession to 
Symmachus, was a native of Campania. He is known as having 
succeeded in obtaining the reunion of the Eastern and Western 
Churches, which had been separated since the excommunication 
of Acacius in 484. After two unsuccessful attempts under the 
emperor Anastasius I., Hormisdas had no difficulty in coming 
to an understanding in 518 with his successor Justin. Legates 
were despatched to Constantinople; the memorial of the 
schismatic patriarchs was condemned; and union was resumed 
with the Holy See. 

Details of this transaction have come down to us !n the CoBetHo 
Aveliana {Cor bus script, ecd. Vindobon., vol. xxv., Nos. 1 05-203; 
cf. Andreas Thicl, Epp. Rom. Pont. i. 741 scq.). 

HORMIZD, or Hormbdas, the name of five kings of the 
Sassanid dynasty (see Persia: Ancient History). The name 
is another form of Ahuramazda or Ormuzd (Ormazd), which 
under the Sassaaids became a common persona] name and was 
borne not only by many generals and officials of their time (it 
therefore occurs very often on Persian seals), but even by the 
pope of Rome noticed above. It is strictly an abbreviation of 
Hormuxd-dad, "given by Ormuzd," which form is preserved 
by Agathias iv. 24-25 as name of King Hormizd I. and II. 
CQmuoUt*). 

1. Hormizd I. (279-273) was the son of Shapur I., under 
whom, he was governor of Khorasan, and appears in his wars 
against Rome (TrebeUius PoUio, Trig. Tyr. 2, where Ndldeke has 
corrected the name Odomastes into Oromastes, ix. Hormizd). 
In the Persian tradition of the history of Ardashir I., preserved 
in a Pahlavi text (Noldeke, GeschlckU its Artashsir J. fapahdn). 
he is made the son of a daughter of Mithrak, a Persian dynast, 
whose family Ardashir had extirpated because the magians had 
predicted that from his blood would come the restorer of the 
empire of Iran. Only this daughter is preserved by a peasant; 
Shapur sees her and makes her his wife, and her son Hormizd 
is afterwards recognized and acknowledged by Ardashir. In this 
legend, which has been partially preserved also in Tabari, the 
great conquests of Shapur are transferred to Hormizd. In 
reality he reigned only one year and ten days. 

a. Hormizd II., son of Narseh, reigned for seven years five 
months, 502-309. Of his reign nothing is known. After his 
death his son Adarnases was killed by the grandees after a very 
short reign, as he showed a cruel disposition; another son, 
Hormizd, was kept a prisoner, and the throne reserved for the 
child with which a concubine of Hormizd II. was pregnant and 
which received the name Shapur IL Hormizd escaped from 
prison by the help of his wife in 323, and found refuge at the 
court of Constantine the Great (Zosim. ti. 27; John of Antiocb, 
fr. 178; Zonar. 13*5). In 363 Hormizd served in the army of 
Julian against Persia; his son, with the same name, became 
consul in 366 (Ammian. Marc. 26. 8. 12). 

3. Hormizd IIL, son of Yazdegerd I., succeeded his father in 
457. He had continually to fight with his brothers and with the 
Ephthalites in Bactria, and was killed by Peroz in 459. 

4. Hormizd IV., son of Chosroes I., reigned 578-500. He 
seems to have been imperious and violent, but not without some 
kindness of heart. Some very characteristic stories are told 
of him by Tabari (Noldeke, GeschickU d. Perser und Araber unter 
den Sasamidcn, 264 ff.). His father's sympathies had been with 
the nobles and the priests. Hormizd protected the common 
people and introduced a severe discipline in his army and court. 
When the priests demanded a persecution of the Christians, he 
declined on the ground that the throne and the government 
could only be safe if it gained the goodwill of both concurring 
religions. The consequence was that he raised a strong opposi- 
tion in the ruling classes, which led to many executions and 
confiscations. When he came to the throne he killed his brothers, 



6g+ 



HORMUZ 



according to the oriental fashion. From his father he had 
inherited a war against the Byzantine empire and against the 
Turks in the east, and negotiations of peace had just begun 
with the emperor Tiberius, but Hormizd haughtily declined 
to cede anything of the conquests of his father. Therefore the 
accounts given of him by the Byzantine authors, Theophylact, 
Simocatta (iii. 16 ff.)> Menander Protector and John of Ephesus 
(vi. 22), who give a full account of these negotiations, are far 
from favourable. In 588 his general, Bahrain Chobin, defeated 
the Turks, but in the next year was beaten by the Romans; 
and when the king superseded him he rebelled with his army. 
This was the signal for a general insurrection. The magnates 
deposed and blinded Hormizd and proclaimed his son Chosrocs II. 
king. In the war which now followed between Bahrain Chobin 
and Chosrocs II. Hormizd was killed by some partisans of his 
son (500). 

5. Hormizd V. was one of the many pretenders who rose, 
after the murder of Chosroes II. (628). He maintained himself 
about two years (631, 632) in the district of Nisibis. (Ed. M.) 

HORMUZ (Hurmta, Ormuz, Ormus), a famous city on the 
shores of the Persian Gulf, which occupied more than one position 
in the course of history, and has now long practically ceased to 
exist. The earlfest mention of the name occurs in the voyage 
of Nearchus (325 B.C.). When that admiral beached his fleet 
at the mouth of the river Anamis on the shore of Harmozia, a 
coast district of Carmania, he found the country to be kindly, 
rich in every product except the olive. The Anamis appears 
to be the river now known as the Minab, discharging into the 
Persian Gulf near the entrance of the latter. The name Hormuz 
is derived by some from that of the Persian god Honnuzd 
(Ormazd), but it is more likely that the original etymology was 
connected with khurma, " a date "; for the meaning of Moghistan 
the modern name of the territory Harmozia is " the region of 
date-palms." The foundation of the city of Hormuz in this 
territory is ascribed by one Persian writer to the Sassanian 
Ardashir Ba began {c. 230 aj>.). Bat it must have existed 
at an earlier date, for Ptolemy takes note of • 'Apuopfa v6\ts 
(vi8). 

Hormuz is mentioned by Idrisi, who wrote a 1150, under 
the title of Hormuz-al-sihillah, " Hormuz of the shore " (to 
distinguish it from inland cities of the same name then existing), 
as a large and well-built city, the chief mart of Kirman. Siraf 
and Kish (&ais), farther up the gulf, had preceded it as ports of 
trade with India, but in the 13th century Hormuz had become 
the chief seat of this traffic. It was at this time the seat also of 
a petty dynasty of kings, of which there is a history by one of 
their number (Turan Shah); an abstract of it is given by the 
Jesuit Teixeira. According to this history the founder of the 
dynasty was Shah Mohammed Dkhem-Kub (" the Drachma- 
coiner "), an Arab chief who crossed the gulf and established 
himself here. The date is not given, but it must have been 
before 1100 ajd., as RuVnuddln Mahmud, who succeeded in 1246, 
was the twelfth of the line* These princes appear to have been 
at times in dependence necessarily on the atabegs of Fan and 
on the princes of Kirman. About the year 1300 Hormuz was so 
severely and repeatedly harassed by raids of Tatar horsemen 
that the king and his people abandoned their dty On the mainland 
and transferred themselves to the island of Jerun (Organa of 
Nearchus), about 12 m. westward and 4 m.. from the nearest 
shore. 

The site of the continental or ancient Hormuz was first traced 
• in modern times by Colonel (Sir Lewis) Pelly when resident at 
B ushirc. It stands in the present district of Minab, several miles 
from the sea, and on a creek which communicates with the 
Minab river, but is partially silted up and not now accessible 
for vessels. There remain traces of a long wharf and extensive 
ruins. The new dty occupied a triangular plain forming the 
northern part of the island, the southern wall, as its remains 
still show, being about 2 m. in extent from east to west. A 
suburb with a wharf or pier, called Turan Bagh (garden of Turan) 
after one of the kings, a name now corrupted to Trumpak, stood 
•bout 3 m. from tile town to the south-east. 



Odoric gives the earliest notice we have of the new city 
(c. 13 zo). He calls it Ormes, a dty strongly fortified and abound- 
ing in costly wares, situated on an island 5 m. distant from the 
main, having no trees and no fresh water, unhealthy and (as 
all evidence confirms) incredibly hot. Some years later it was 
visited more than oace by Ibn Batuta, who seems to speak ot 
the old dty as likewise still standing. The new Hormuz, called 
also Jerun (U. still retaining the original name of the island), 
was a great and fine dty rising out of the sea, and serving as a 
mart for all the products of India, which were distributed hence 
over all Persia^ The hills on the island were of rock-salt, from 
which vases and pedestals for lamps were carved. Near the gate 
of the chief mosque stood an enormous skull, apparently that of a 
sperm-whale. The king at this time was Kulbuddln Tahamtan, 
and the traveller gives a curious description of him, seated on 
the throne, in patched and dirty raiment, holding a rosary of 
enormous pearls, procured from the Bahrein fisheries, which 
at one time or another belonged, with other islands in the gulf 
and on the Oman shores from RSs-d-had (C. Rosalgat of the 
Portuguese) on the ocean round to Julfar on the gull, to the 
princes of Hormuz. Abdurazzak, the envoy of Shah Rukh on 
his way to the Hindu court of Vijayanagar, was in Hormuz in 
1442, and speaks of it as a mart which had no equal, frequented 
by the merchants of all the countries of Asia, among which 
he enumerates China, Java, Bengal, Tenasserim, Shahr-I-nao 
(i.e. Siam) and the Maldives. Nikitia, the Russian (c. 1470), 
gives a similar account; he calls it " a vast emporium of all the 
world." 

In September 1507 the king of Hormuz, after for some time 
hearing of the terrible foe who was carrying fire and sword along 
the shores of Arabia, saw the squadron of Alphonso d' Albuquerque 
appear before his dty, an appearance speedily followed by 
extravagant demands, by refusal of these from the ministers 
of the young king, and by deeds of matchless daring and cruelty 
on the part of the Portuguese, which speedily broke down 
resistance. The king acknowledged himself tributary to Portugal, 
and gave leave to the Portuguese to build a castle, which was at 
once commenced on the northern part of the island, commanding 
the dty and the anchorage on both sides. But the mutinous 
conduct and desertion of several of Albuquerque's captains 
compelled him suddenly to abandon the enterprise; and it was 
not till 1514, after the great leader had captured Goa and 
Malacca, and had for five years been viceroy, that he returned 
to Hormuz (or Ormuz, as the Portuguese called it), and without 
encountering resistance to a name now so terrible, laid his grasp 
again on the island and completed his castle. For more than a 
century Hormuz remained practically in the dominions of 
Portugal, though the hereditary prince, paying from his revenues 
a tribute to Portugal (in lieu of which eventually the latter took 
the whole of the customs collections), continued to be the 
instrument of government. The position of things during the 
Portuguese rule may be understood from the description of 
Cesare de' Federici, a Venetian merchant who was at Hormuz 
about 1565. After speaking of the great trade in spices, drugs, 
silk and silk stuffs, and pearls of Bahrein, and in horses for export 
to India, he says the king was a Moor (i.e. Mahomraedan), chosen 
by and subordinate to the Portuguese. " At the election of the 
king I was there and saw the ceremonies that they use . . . The 
old king being dead, the captain of the Portugals chooseih 
another of the blood-royal, and makes this election in the castle 
with great ceremony. And when he is elected the captain 
sweareth him to be true ... to the K. of Portugal as his lord and 
governor, and then he giveth him the sceptre regal After this 
. . . with great pomp ... he is brought into the royal palace in the 
city. The king keeps a good train and hath sufficient revenues, 
. . . because the captain of the castle doth maintain and defend 
his right ... he is honoured as a king, yet he cannot ride abroad 
with his train, without the consent of the captain first had " 
(in Hakluyt).i 

1 In Bams, Die. II. book x. c. 7, there is a curious detail of 
the revenue and expenditure of the kingdom of Ormus. which would 
seem to exhibit the former as not mote than £100.000. 



HORN, A. B, 



695 



The rise of the English trade and factories in the Indian 
seas in the beginning of the 17th century led to constant jealousies 
and broils with the Portuguese, and the successful efforts of the 
English company to open traffic with Persia especially embittered 
their rivals, to whom the possession of Hormuz had long given 
a monopoly of that trade. The officers of Shah Abbas, who 
looked with a covetous and resentful eye on the Portuguese 
occupation of such a position, were strougly desirous of the aid 
of English ships in attacking Hormuz. During 1620 and 162 1 
the ships of Portugal and of the English company had more than 
once come to action in the Indian seas, and in November of the 
latter year the council at Surat had resolved on what was 
practically maritime war with the Portuguese flag. There was 
hardly a step between this and the decision come to in the 
following month to join with " the duke of Shir&z " (Imam KOlI 
Khan, the governor of Fare) in the desired expedition against 
Hormuz. There was some pretext of being forced into the 
alliance by a Persian threat to lay embargo on the English goods 
at Jashk; but this seems to have been only brought forward 
by the English agents when, at a later date, their proceedings 
were called in question. The English crews were at first unwilling 
to take part in what they justly said was " no merchandizing 
business, nor were they engaged for the like," but they were 
persuaded, and five English vessels aided, first, in the attack 
of Kishm, where (at the east end of the large island so called) 
the Portuguese had lately built a fort, 1 and afterwards in that 
of Hormuz itself. The latter siege was opened on the 18th of 
February 1622, and continued to the 1st of May, when the 
Portuguese, after a gallant defence of ten weeks, surrendered. 
It is to be recollected that Portugal was at this time subject to 
the crown of Spain, with which England was at peace; indeed, it 
was but a year later that the prince of Wales went on his wooing 
adventure to the Spanish court. The irritation there was 
naturally great, though it is surprising how little came of it. 
The company were supposed (apparently without foundation) 
to have profited largely by the Hormuz booty; and both the 
duke of Buckingham and the king claimed to be " sweetened," 
as the record phrases it, from this supposed treasure. The 
former certainly received a large bribe (£10,000). The conclusion 
of the transaction with the king was formerly considered doubtful; 
but entries in the calendar of East India papers seem to show 
that James received an equal sum. 1 

Hormuz never recovered from this blow. The Persians 
transferred their establishments to Gombroon on the mainland, 
about 12 m. to the north-west, which the king had lately set up 
as a royal port under the name of Bander Abbasi. The English 
stipulations for aid had embraced an equal division of the 
customs duties. This division was apparently recognized by the 
Persians as applying to the new Bander, and, though the trade 
with Persia was constantly decaying and precarious, the company 
held to their factory at Gombroon for the sake of this claim to 
revenue, which of course was most irregularly paid. In 1683- 
1684 the amount of debt due to the company in Persia, including 
their proportion of customs duties, was reckoned at a million 
sterling. As late as 1 600-1 60 1 their right seems to have been 
admitted, and a payment of 3495 sequins was received by them 
on this account. The factory at Gombroon lingered on till 1759, 
when it was seized by two French ships of war under Comte 
d'Estaing. It was re-established, but at the time of Niebuhr's 
visit to the gulf a few years later no European remained. Niebuhr 
mentions that in his time (r. 2765) Mulla 'Ali Shah, formerly 
admiral of Nadir Shah, was established on the island of Hormuz 
and part of Kishm as an independent chief. 

See also Barros, Asia; Commentaries of Albuquerque, trans, by 
Birch (Hak. Society); Relaciones de Pedro Tetxewa (Antwerp, 1610); 
Narratives in Hakluyt's Collection (reprint in 1809. vol. ii.) and in 
Purchas's Pilgrims, vol. ii.: Pietro delta Valle, Persia, lett. xii.- 
xvii.; Calendar of E. /. Papers, by Sainsbury, vol. iii.; Ritter, 
Erdkunde, xii. ; Jour. Roy. Ceog. Sot., Kempthorne in vol. v., White- 



1 The attack on Kishm was notable in that one of the two English- 
men killed there was the great navigator Baffin. 

1 Colonial Series, E. Indies, by Sainsbury, vol. iii. passim, especi- 
ally see pp. 296 and 339. 



locke in vol. viii.. Pelly in vol.xxxiv.; Fraser, Narrative of a Journey 
into Khorasan (1825); Constable and Stiffe, Persian Gulf Pilot 
(1864) ; Bruce, Annals of the E. I. Company, &c (1810). (H. Y.) 

The island has a circumference of 16 m. and its longest axis 
measures 4! m. The village is in 27 6' N., 56° 29' E. The 
Portuguese fort still stands, but is sadly out of repair and much 
of its western wall has been undermined and washed away by 
the action of the sea. It is a bastioned fort with orillons and 
loopholed casemates under the ramparts and was separated 
from the town by a deep moat, now silted up, cut E.-W. across 
the isthmus and crossed by a bridge. It has three cisterns for 
collecting rainwater; two are 17-18 ft. deep, have a capacity 
of about 60,000 gallons and are covered by arched roofs supported 
on six stone pillars. The third cistern is smaller and has no 
roof. Five rusty old iron guns are lying prone on the roof; 
six others on the strand before the village are used for fastening 
boats, another serves as a socket for a flagstaff before the repre- 
sentative of the government. The island is under the jurisdiction 
of the governor of the Persian Gulf ports who resides at Busbire. 
Of the old city hardly anything stands except a minaret, 70 ft. 
high, with a winding staircase inside and much worn away at the 
base, part of a former mosque used by the Portuguese as a 
lighthouse, but the traces of buildings, massive foundations 
constructed of stone quarried in the hills on the island, of many 
cisterns (some say 300), &c*t are numerous and extensive. The 
modern settlement, situated south of the fort on the eastern shore, 
has a population of about 1000 during the cool season, but less 
in the hot season, when many people go over to Minab on the 
mainland to the east. Most of the people live in huts constructed 
of the branches and leaves of the date palm. They own about 
sixty small sailing vessels trading to Muscat and other ports and 
also do some pearl-fishing. At Turan Bagh on the east coast 
4§ m. S.E. of the fort are some considerable ruins, irrigation 
awals, an extensive burial ground and some huts occupied by 
a few families who cultivate a small garden on a terrace supported 
by old retaining walls. On a hill near the shore ij m. S.E. of 
the fort is the ruin of a small chapel called " Santa Lucia" 
on an old map in Astley's Collection of Voyages, and on the 
summit of a salt hill i) m. south of the fort are the remains of 
another chapel called " N.S. de la Pena " on the same map, 
and a " Monastery " in a sketch of Hormuz made by David 
Davies, a mate on board the East India Company's snip 
" Discovery " in 1627. With the exception of the northern 
part, where the old city stood, and the little patch at Turan 
Bagh, the island is covered with reddish brown hills with sharp 
serrated ridges composed of gypsum, rock-salt and clay. These 
hills, which do not exceed 300 ft. in height, are broken through 
in four places by conical, whitish peaks of volcanic rocks (green- 
stone, trachyte); the highest of these peaks with an altitude of 
690 ft. is situated almost in the centre of the island. 

The island has extensive beds of red ochre in which nodules 
of very pure hematite are often found. The ochre, here called 
gllck, has been an important article of export for centuries' 
and great quantities of it are exported at the present time to 
England (in 1006-1907, 10,000 tons; local price 27s. the ton). 
The climate of Hormuz, although hot, is, according to medical 
experts, the best in the Persian Gulf. Rain falls in January, 
February and March, and the annual rainfall is said to be about 
the same as that of Bushire, xa to 13 in. 

Capt. A. W. Stiffe in Geogr. Mag. (April 1874); Wffltaro Foster in 
Ceogr. Journal (Aug. 1894) ; writer s notes taken on island. (A.H.-S.) 

HORN, ARVID BERNHARD, Count (1664-174*). Swedish 
statesman, was born at Vuorentaka in Finland on the 6th of 
April 1664, of a noble but indigent family. After completing 
bis studies at Abo, he entered the army and served for several 
years in the Netherlands, in Hungary under Prince Eugene, 
and in Flanders under Waldeck (1600-1695). He stood high 

■ " Reddle or Red Ochre from the Forest of Dean in Gloucester- 
shire is very little inferior to the Sort brought from the Island of 
Or muz in the Persian Gulph and so much valued and used byour 
Painters under the name of Indian Red " (Sir John Hill, Theo- 
pkrastus's History of Stones, London* 1774). 



696 



HORN, COUNT OF— HORN (KING) 



in the favour of the young Charles XII. and was one of his fore- 
roost generals in the earlier part of the great Northern War. 
In 1704 he was entrusted with his first diplomatic mission, 
the deposition of Augustus II. of Poland and the election of 
Stanislaus I., a mission which he accomplished with distinguished 
ability but absolute unscrupulousness. Shortly afterwards he 
was besieged by Augustus in Warsaw and compelled to surrender. 
In 1705 he was made a senator, in 1706 a count and In 1707 
governor of Charles XII. 's nephew, the young duke Charles 
Frederick of Holstein-Gottorp. In 1710 he succeeded Nils 
Gyldenstolpe as prime minister. Transferred to the central 
point of the administration, he had ample opportunity of 
regarding with other eyes the situation of the kingdom, and in 
consequence of his remonstrances he fell rapidly in the favour 
of Charles XII. Both in 1710 and 17x3 Horn was in favour 
of summoning the estates, but when in 17x4 the diet adopted 
an anti-monarchical attitude, he gravely warned and ultimately 
dissolved it. In Charles XII. 's later years Horn had little to do 
with the administration. After the death of Charles XII. (1718) 
it was Horn who persuaded the princess Ulrica Leonora to 
relinquish her hereditary claims and submit to be dated queen 
of Sweden. He protested against the queen's autocratic 
behaviour, and resigned both the premiership and his senatorship. 
He was elected landlmarskalk at the diet of 1720, and contributed, 
on the resignation of Ulrica Leonora, to the election of Frederick 
of Hesse as king of Sweden, whose first act was to restore to him 
the office of prime minister. For the next eighteen years he so 
absolutely controlled both the foreign and the domestic affairs 
of Sweden that the period between 1720 and 1738 has well been 
called the Horn period. His services to his country were indeed 
inestimable. His strong hand kept the inevitable strife of the 
parliamentary factions within due limits, and it was entirely 
owing to his provident care that Sweden so rapidly recovered 
from tin wretched condition in which the wars of Charles XII. 
had plunged her. In his foreign policy Horn was extremely wary 
and cautious, yet without compromising either the independence 
or the self-respect of his country. He was, however, the promoter 
of a new principle of administration which in later days proved 
very dangerous to Sweden under ministers less capable than be 
was. This was to increase the influence of the diet and its 
secret committees in the solution of purely diplomatic questions, 
which should have been left entirely to the executive, thus 
weakening the central government and at the same time facilitat- 
ing the interference of foreign Powers in Sweden's domestic 
affairs. Not till 1731 was there any appearance of opposition 
in the diet to Horn's "system"; but Horn, piqued by the 
growing coolness of the king, the same year offered his resignation, 
which was not accepted. In 1734, however, the opposition was 
bold enough to denounce his neutrality on the occasion of the 
war of the Polish Succession, when Stanislaus I, again appeared 
upon the scene as a candidate for the Polish throne; but Horn 
waa still st rong enough to prevent a nipt ure with Russia. Hence- 
forth he was bitterly but unjustly accused of want of patriotism, 
and in 1738 was compelled at last to retire before the impetuous 
onslaught of the triumphant young Hat party. For the rest 
of his life he lived in retirement at his estate at Ekebyhoim, where 
he died on the 17th of April 1742. Horn in many respects 
greatly resembled his contemporary Walpole. The peculiar 
situation of Sweden, and the circumstances of his time, made 
his policy necessarily opportunist, but it was an opportunism 
based on excellent common sense. 

See V. E Svedelius, A rtid Bernard Horn (Stockholm. 1879); R. N. 
Bain. Guslavus III., vol. i. (London, 1894). and Charles XII. (189$), 
C. F. Horn, A. B. Horn: hams ie/mad (Stockholm, 1852). (R. N. B.) 

HORN, PHILIP DE MONTMORENCY, Count of (1518-1568), 
a man of illustrious descent and great possessions in the Nether- 
lands, became in succession under Charles V. and Philip II. 
stadtholder of Gelderland, admiral of Flanders and knight of 
the Golden Fleece. In 1559 he commanded the stately fleet 
which conveyed Philip II. from the Netherlands to Spain, and 
he remained at the Spanish court till 1563. On his return be 
placed himself with the prince of Orange and Count Egmont 



at the head of the party which opposed the policy of Cardinal 
Granvella. When Granvella retired the three great nobles 
continued to resist the introduction of the Spanish Inquisition 
and of Spanish despotic rule into the Netherlands. But though 
Philip appeared for a time to give way, he had made up his mind 
to visit the opponents of his policy with ruthless punishment. 
The regent, Margaret, duchess of Parma, was replaced by the 
duke of Alva, who entered the Netherlands at the head of a 
veteran army and at once began to crush all opposition with a 
merciless hand. Orange fled from the country, but Egxnont 
and Hom, despite his warning, decided to remain and face the 
storm. They were both seized, tried and condemned as traitors, 
and were executed on the 5th of June 1568 in the great square 
before the town hall at Brussels. 

Sec biographical notices in A. J. van der Aa, Biographisck Woerden- 
boeh derNederianden (Haarlem, 1851-1879); J. Kok. Vaderlmndscn 
Woordenboek (Amsterdam, 1783-1799); also bibliography to chaps, 
vi. vii. and xix. in Cambridge Modern History, vol. iu. pp. 798*809 
(1904). 

HORN, English hero of romance. King Hom is a heroic 
poem or gest of 1 546 lines dating from the 13th century. W urry 
(or Allof), king of Sudcnne* (Surrey and Sussex?) is slain by 
Saracen pirates who turn his son Horn adrift with twelve other 
children. The boat drifts to Westerncsse * (Cornwall?), where 
the children are received by King Aylmer (Aethclxnaer). 
Presently Horn is denounced by one of his companions as the 
lover of the king's daughter Rymenhild (Rimel) and is banished, 
taking with him a ring, the gift of his bride and a talisman against 
danger. In Ireland, under the name of Godmod, he serves 
for seven years, and slays in battle the Saracens who had killed 
his father. Learning that Rymenhild is to be married against 
her will to King Mody. he returns to Westernesse disguised 
as a palmer, and makes himself known to the bride by dropping 
the ring into the cup she offers him, with the words " Drink to 
Horn of Horn." He then reconquers his father's kingdom and 
marries Rymenhild. 

The other versions of the story, which are founded on a common 
tradition, but are not immediately dependent on one another, are: 
(t) the longer French romance of Horn et RtmenMd by "mestre 
Thomas," describing mote complex social conditions than those of 
the English poem; (2) a slightly shorter Middle English poem. 
Horn Childe and Maiden Rimnild; (3) the Scottish ballad of ''Hind 
Horn ; ** (4) a prose romance founded on the French Horn, entitled 
Ponius et Sidoine (Lyons, 1480, Eng. trans, pr. by Wynkyn de Word*. 
151 1 ; German trans. Augsburg, 1483). 

There is a marked resemblance between the story of Horn 
and the legend of Havelok the Dane, and it is interesting to 
note how closely Richard of Ely followed the Horn tradition 
in the X2th century De testis Heravardi Saxonis. Hereward 
also loves an Irish princess, flees to Ireland, and returns in time 
for the bridal feast, where he is presented with a cup by the 
princess. The orphaned prince who recovers his father's kingdom 
and avenges his murder, and the maid or wife who waits years for 
an absent lover or husband, and is rescued on the eve of a 
forced marriage, are common characters in romance. The 
second of these motives, with almost identical incidents, occurs 
in the legend of Henry the Lion, duke of Brunswick; it a 
the subject of ballads in Swedish, Danish, German, Bohemian, 
&c, and of a Historia by Hans Sachs, though some magic 
elements are added; it also occurs In the ballad of Der eHe 
Moringer (14th century), well known in Sir Walter Scott's 
translation; in the story of Torello in the Decameron of Boccaccio 
(10th day, 9th tale); and with some variation in the Russian 
tale of Dobrynya and Nastasya. 

King Hom was re-edited for the Early English Text Soc. by 
G. H. McKnight in 1901 ; Horn et RmunhiU was edited with the 
English versions for the Bannatyne Club by F. Michel (Paris, 1845); 
Horn Child* and Maukn Rimndd in J. Ritson's Metrical Remanm. 
vol. iiL; and " Hind Horn " in F. J. Child's English and StMhih 



1 There was a barrow in the Isle of Purbeck, Dorsetshire./ 
Horncsbeorh; and there are other indications which point to a 
possible connexion between Hom and Dorset (see H. L. Ward. Cat. 
of Romances, i. 451). 

'Sudenne and Westernesse are tentatively identified also with 
Isle of Man and Wirral {Cambridge Hisl. of Eng LiL> 1 304) 



HORN 



697 



Popular Ballads (vol. 1, 1882), with an introductory note on similar 
legends. See also H. L. Ward, Catalogue of Romances, vol. L, where 

J be relation between Havelok and Horn U discussed ; Hist. litt. de la 
'ranee (vol. xxii., 1853) ; W. Soderhjelm. Sur t'identiti du Thonm 
auteur de Tristan el du Thomas auteur de Horn (Romania, xv., 1886) ; 
T. Wissmann, " King Horn " (1876) and " Das Lied von King Horn " 
(188 1) in Nos. 16 and 45 of Quellen und Forschungen zurSpr. und 
Culturgesch. d. german. Vdlker (Strassburg and London); Rrinfrid 
von Braunschweig, a version of the legend of Henry the Lion, edited 
by K. Bartsch (Stuttgart, 1871); and a further bibliography in 
O. Hartcnstein. Sludien sur Hornsage (Heidelberg, 1902). 

HORN (a common Teutonic word, cognate with Lat. cornu; 
cf . Gr. tdpas). The weapons which project from the heads of 
various species of animals, constituting what are known as horns, 
embrace substances which are, in their anatomical structure 
and chemical composition, quite distinct from each other; and 
although in commerce also they are known indiscriminately as 
horn, their uses are altogether dissimilar. These differences in 
structure and properties were thus indicated by Sir R. Owen; — 
" The weapons to which the term horn is properly or technically 
applied consist of very different substances, and belong to two 
organic systems, as distinct from each other as both are from the 
teeth. Thus the horns of deer consist of bone, and are processes 
of the frontal bone; those of the giraffe are independent bones 
or ' epiphyses ' covered by hairy skin; those of oxen, sheep 
and antelopes are 'apophyses' of the frontal bone, covered 
by the corium and by a sheath of true horny material; those 
of the prong-homed antelope consist at their basis of bony 
processes covered by hairy skin, and are covered by horny 
sheaths in the rest of their extent. They thus combine the 
character of those of the giraffe and ordinary antelope, together 
with the expanded and branched form of the antlers of deer. 
Only the horns of the rhinoceros are composed wholly of horny 
matter, and this is disposed in longitudinal fibres, so that the 
horns seem rather to consist of coarse bristles compactly matted 
together in the form of a more or less elongated sub-compressed 
cone." True horny matter is really a modified form of epidermic 
tissue, and consists of the albuminoid " keratin." It forms, not 
only the horns of the ox tribe, but also the hoofs, claws or nails 
of animals generally, the carapace of the tortoises and the 
armadilloes, the scales of the pangolin, porcupine quills, and 
birds' feathers, &c. 

Horn is employed in the manufacture of combs, buttons, the 
handles of walking-sticks, umbrellas, and knives, drinking-cups, 
spoons of various kinds, snuff-boxes, &c. In former times it was 
applied to several uses for which it is no longer required, although 
such applications have left their traces in the language. Thus 
the musical instruments and fog signals known as horns indicate 
their descent from earlier and simpler forms of apparatus made 
from horn. In the same way powder-horns were spoken of long 
after they ceased to be made of that substance; to a small 
extent lanterns still continue to be " glazed " with thin trans- 
parent plates of horn. 

HORN (Lat. corrnr, corresponding terms being Fr. cor, 
trompe; Ccr. Horn; Hal. corno), a class of wind instruments 
primarily derived from natural animal horns (see above), and 
having the common characteristics of a conical bore and the 
absence of lateral holes. The word "horn" when used by 
modern English musicians always refers to the French horn. 

Modem horns may be divided into three classes: (1) the 
short horns with wide bore, such as the bugles (q.v.) and the 
post-horn. (2) The- saxhorns (q.v.), a family of hybrid instru- 
ments designed by Adolphe Sax, and resulting from the adapta- 
tion of valves and of a cup-shaped mouthpiece to instruments 
of the calibre of the bugle. The Flugelhom family is the German 
equivalent of the saxhorns. The natural scale of instruments 
of this class comprises the harmonics from the second to the 
eighth only. (3) The French horn (Fr. cor de chasse or trompe 
de chasse, cor d pistons', Ger. Waldkorn, Ventilhorn; Ital. 
corno or corno di caccia), one of the most valuable and diffi- 
cult wind instruments of the orchestra, having a very slender 
conical tube wound round in coils upon itself. It consists of 
four principal parts — the body, the crooks, the slide and the 
mouthpiece. 



(a) The body is the main tube, having a bore of the form known as 
trunco-conieal, measuring approximately 7 ft. 4 in. in length, in which 
the increase in the diameter of the bore is very gradual in proportion 
to the length, the cone becoming accentuated only near the bell. 
In the valve horn the bore is only theoretically conical, the extra 
lengths of tubing attached to the valves being practically cylindrical. 
The body is coiled spirally, and has at one end a wide-mouthed bell 
from II to 12 in. in diameter having a parabolic curve, and at the 
other a conical ferrule into which fit the crooks.. 

(6) The crooks (Fr. corps or tons de reckange; Ger. Krummbogeu, 
Stimmbogen, Einsetxbogen) arc interchangeable, spiral tubes, tapering 
to a diameter of a quarter of an inch at the mouthpiece end andvary- 
ing in length from 16 in. for the B> alto crook to 125 in. for the Bb 
basso. Each crook is named according to the fundamental tone 
which it produces on being added to the body. By lengthening the 
tube at will the crook lowers the pitch of the instrument, and conse- 
quently changes the key in which it stands. Although the harmonic 
series remains the same for all the crooks, the actual sounds produced 
by overblowing are lower, the tube being longer, and they now 
belong to the Key of the crook. The principle of the crook was 
known early in the 17th century: it had been applied to the trumpet, 
trombone and Jftgertrummet * before being adapted to the horn. 
Crooks are merely transposing agents; they are powerless to fill up 
the gaps in the scale of the horn in order to make it a chromatic or 
even a diatonic instrument, for they require time for adjustment. 
The principle of the crook doubtless suggested to Stdlzel the system 
of valves, which is but an instantaneous application of the general 
principle to the individual notes of the harmonic series, each of which 
n thereby lowered a semitone, a tone or a tone and a half, as long 
as the valve remains in operation. The body of the horn without 
cr ._,„ =- -r ...- .- — ^ _..— « ,. ^ __ _, < L ndard( 

be which 
th 

hat of 

th of the 

m c form 

of iffkult 

at st bear 

a olumn 

of r skill; 



th 








lemay 


w 








(to be 


ta 








horns 


m 
ea 








(more 
illowcr 


m 








called 


"J 








st of a 


I* 








cr, by 


ni 








ic. and 


w 








tuning 


si 








(•horn. 


ai 








le con- 


n< 








gh the 


si 








under- 


St 








; fixed 


n< 








e dim- 


ci 








e wind 


inow ««.,...«, ^ 


JVM ^^ v 


•W ..«#..., V,. «*• 


»V.U HV 0UU,1V>9 UHI IK 


*,.oduced 


without conscious adjustment of lips 


and breath, and but few without 


the additional 


use of some such contrivance as slide, crook 


piston or 


of the hand in 


the bell, 


in the case of the natural or hand horn. 



The production of sound in wind instruments has a fourfold 
object: (1) pitch; (2) range or scale of available notes; (3) 
quality of tone or timbre; (4) dynamic variation, or 
crescendo and diminuendo. The pitch of the horn, 
as of other wind instruments, depends Almost exclusively on 
the length of the air-column set in vibration, and remains 
practically uninfluenced by the diameter of the bore. In the 
case of conical tubes in which the difference in diameter at the 
two extremities, mouthpiece and bell, is very great, as in the 
horn, the pitch, of the tube will be slightly higher than its theo- 
retical length would warrant. 4 When, for instance, three tubes 
of the same length are sounded— No. 1, conical diverging; No. 2, 

1 See Michael Praetorius, De organographia (WolfenbGttel, 161 8), 
tab. viii., where crooks for lowering the key by one tone on trumpet 
and trombone are pictured. 

* See Victor Mahillon, Les Elements d'acousHaue nuuicale tt instru- 
menlale (Brussels, 1874), pp. 96, 07, &c.; Fried rich Zamminer, Die 
Musik und die tnusikaliscken Instrument (Gies " % 



where diagrams of the mouthpieces are given. 



'. 1855). P. 3iOi 



See Joseph Frdhlich, VoUst&ndige tkeorcttsch-praktische Musik' 
schule (Bonn, 181 1), iii. 7, where diagrams of the two mouth- 
pieces for first and second horn are given. 

4 See Gottfried Weber, " Zur Akustik der Blasinstrumente," in 
Atlgemeine musikaliscke Zeitung (Leipzig, 18 16). p. 38, 



$9* 



HORN 



conical converging in the direction from mouthpiece to bell; 
No. 3, cylindrical— No. i gives a fundamental tone somewhat 
higher, No. 2 somewhat lower, than No. 3. Victor Mahillon 1 
adds that the rate of vibration in such conical tubes as the horn 
is slightly less than the rate of vibration in ambient air; therefore, 
as the rate of vibration (i.e. the number of vibrations per second) 
varies in the inverse ratio with the length of the tube, it follows 
that the practical length of the born is slightly less than the 
theoretical, the difference for the horn in Bfc> normal pitch 
amounting to 13*9 cm. (approximately 5} in.). ^ 

The tube of the horn behaves as an open pipe. £. F. F. 
Chladni' states that the mouthpiece end is to be considered 
as open in all wind instruments (excepting reed instruments), 
even when, as in horns and trumpets, it would seem to be dosed 
by the lips. Victor Mahillon, although apparently holding the 
opposite view, and considering as closed the tubes of all wind 
instruments played by means of reeds, whether single or double, 
or by the lips acting as reeds, gives a new and practical explana- 
tion of the phenomenon.' The result is the same in both cases, 
for the closed pipe of trunco-conical bore, whose diameter at the 
bell is at least four times greater than the diameter at the 
mouthpiece, behaves in the same manner, when set in vibration 
by a reed, as an open pipe, and gives the consecutive scale of 
harmonics. 4 

In order to produce sound from the horn, the performer, stretching 
his lips across the funnel-shaped mouthpiece from rim to rim, blows 
into the cavity. The lips, vibrating as the breath passes through the 
aperture between them, communicate pulsations or series of inter- 
mittent shocks to the thin stream of air, known as the exciting 
current, which, issuing from them, strikes the column of air in the 
tube, already in a state of stationary vibration.* The effect of this 
scries of shocks, without which there can be no sound, upon the 
column of air confined within the walls of the tube is to produce 
sound-waves, travelling longitudinally through the tube. Each 
sound-wave consists of two half-lengths, one in which the air has been 
compressed or condensed by the impulse or push, the second in 
which, the push being spent, the air again dilates or becomes rare- 
fied. In an open pipe, the wave-length is theoretically equal to the 
length of the tube. The pitch of the note depends on the frequency 
per second with which each vibration or complete sound-wave 
reaches the drum of the ear. The longer the wave the lower the 
frequency. The velocity of the wave is independent of its length, 
being solely conditioned by the rate of vibration of the particles 
composing the conveying medium: while one individual particle 
performs one complete vibration, the wave advances one wave- 
length.* The rate of particle vibration or frequency is therefore 
inversely proportional to the corresponding wave-length.' Sound- 
waves generated by the same exciting current travel with the same 
velocity whatever their length, the difference being the frequency 
number and therefore the pitch of the note. As long as the per- 
former blows with normal force, the same length of tube produces the 
same wave-length and therefore the same frequency and pitch. By 
" blowing with normal force " is understood the proper relative 
proportions to be maintained between the wind-pressure and the 
lip-tensionnr-a ratio which is found instinctively by the performer 
but was only suspected by the older writers.* If the shocks or 
vibrations initiated by the lips through the medium of the exciting 
current be sharper owing to the increased tension of the lips, and at 
the same time succeed each other with greater velocity, the wave- 
length breaks up, and two, three or more proportionally shorter 

mservatoire royal da 
Le Cor, son histoire, 
on, 1907), p. 38. 

# This apparent dis- 
ity on the acoustics 
li, when speaking of 
ylindrical and red- 
nd, draws a distinc- 
n a practical manner 
must overblow the 
od of producing the 

* See Gottfried Weber, toe. tit. 

* See Ernst Heinrich and Wilhelm Weber, WtUenlehre (Leipzig. 
rtaS). P- 519. 1 281, and A Text-Book of Physics, part. u\, " Sound/' 
by J. H. Poynting and J. J. Thomson (London, 1906), pp. 104 
and 105. 

* See Sedley Taylor, Sound and Music (1896), p. 91. 
' Id. pp. 23-25. 

•See Gottfried Weber, op. cit., pp. 39-41, and Ernst H. and 
Wilhelm Weber, op. tit. p. 522, end of 1 285. 



ead of one, and traverse the pipe within the 
lucing sounds proportionally higher by aa 
:cording to the character of the initiatory 
berefore add this proposition: the rate of 
1 as the number of segments into which the 
rithin it is divided, in order to obtain the 
mer's lips must be loose and the winbV 
ly, so that the exciting current may issue 
cam. To set in vibration a column of air 
feat of extreme difficulty; that is why it is 
a horn-player who can sound the f unda- 
> basso horns. In the organ, where even a 
he wind-pressure and the lip-opening corn- 
rent are mechanically regulated for each 
note being required from each. In order, 
rolumn of air within the tube to break up 
ts, the exciting current must Decompressed 
and more incisive stream. There is in fact 
ure for each degree of tension of the lips 
can be produced. 

le harmonics are obtained by increasing the 
:rescendo by increasing the pressure of the 
1 M accounts for the harmonics by i n cre a sed 
evident that the greater the tension of the 
e of wind required to set them vibrating; 
locity of -the air must vary with the tension 
roduce a steady or musical sound. D. J. 
e ratio of increase in lips and breath fellow* 
cs. The tension of the lips has the effect 
the slit or aperture between them and the 
irrent. While increasing its density the 
therefore, either expend itself in increasing 
cquency of the pulses, which influences the 
s in increasing the extent of excursion or 
►ns, which influences the dynamic force of 
If the aperture be narrowed without pro- 
nease of wind-pressure, the harmonic over- 
either the intonation will suffer or the in- 
: reduced, because the farce required to set 
bration is insufficient to give the vibrations 
s well as the frequency. If the force ex- 
nore than the maximum required to ensure 
proportional to the increased tension, the 
sepend itself in increasing the amplitude of 
>te of a greater degree of loudness as well as 
sduccd. The converse is equally true; the 
te the slower the pulses or vibrations and 
ip and the gentler the force of Current 
(rating. To draw a parallel from organ- 
nd-pressure is maintained, the mouthpiece 
to the length of tube, the pipe gives out 
rnamic intensity; increase the pressure of 
are heard, but it is impossible to obtain a 
ithpiece be dispensed with and a free reed 

>een made above to the difficulty of obtain- 
ubes of great length and narrow bore like 
ipass of the born, therefore, begins with the 
Jf its length would give ; the Germans term 
calibre naif instruments, and those of wide 
\d tubas, whole instruments* since in them 
P the tube is available in practice, 
f the horn, or the open notes obtainable 
rooks, is written as for the alto horn in C 
1 the standard of notation. Notes written 
try, for some unexplained reason, placed aa 
1 sounds. 




10 tt ta ij 14 is 1 



mtary Treatise on Physics, translated by 
ondon, 1902), p. 266, | 282, " In the horn 
iced by altering the distance of the lips.** 
eading statement is worse than useless. 
Thomson, op. cit. p. 113. 
11, { 18; pp. 6 ana 7, I 8. 
ne is here borrowed from Sedley Taylor. 
not enter into the practical application of 
d clearly. 

rhautl's article on musical instruments, 
htilunts Commistion'bei der AJtg. Deutscktn 
S4 (Munich, 1855/, pp. 169-170; also F. 



HORN 



699 



All the crook*, a list of the principal of which Is appended, therefore | French horn* are made with either two or three valve*. To the 
oeceasanry give real sounds lower than the above series according to first valve is attached sufficient length of tubing to lower the pitch 
their individual length. | of the instrument a tone, so that any note played upon the horn in F 

Talk of Principal Crooks now in Use. 1 



Key of 
JCrook. 



Bbalto 
All 

Ab 
G 
F 

E 
E> 

D 

C basso 

Btr 



Actual Sounds of Range of Useful Harmonics. 



srm 



• 3 45*780>« 

■ 34. 5 6 7 8 9 IO 



134 5*78010 

t 3 4 5 6 y S 9 10 tt i» 



a J 4 3 6 7 8 9 10 11 u ij 14 is 16 



* J 4 3 6 7 8 9 to 11 11 19 14 is 16 



s 3 4 S 6 7 8 9 10 11 11 13 14 if 16 



■=3= 



=1= 



• J 4 S 6 ) I 1 is 11 n D 14 t) t( 



g^^fe^ ? ^w~= 



3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 II 1*«I3 14 ts it 



m^M4^m&^= 



3 4 3 6 7 8 9 10 II It U 14 IS 16 



and to 10th 
and to 10th 

and to 10th 
and to lath 
and to 16th 
and to 1 6th 
and to 16th 

and to x6th 
3rd to 16th 

3rd to 16th 



Length of 

Crook in 

Inches. 



16 

*9i 

361 
5** 
61 
7ot 



"5 



Transposes to 



major 2nd lower 

minor 3rd n 

major 3rd „ 

perfect 4th m 

perfect 5th „ 

minor 6th „ 

major 6th „ 

minor 7th „ 

8*t „ 

major 9th „ 



The practical aggregate compass of the natural horns from Bb 
basso at the service of composers therefore ranges (actual sounds) 



from @ 



or with 3 valves @? 
from — : 



By means of hand-stopping, «U. the practice of thrusting the hand 
into the bell in order to lower the sound by a tone or a semitone, or 
by the adaptation of valves to the horn, this compass may be 
rendered chromatic almost throughout the range. 

The principle of the valve as applied to wind instruments differs 
entirely from that of keys. The latter necessitate lateral holes bored 
through the tube, and when the keys are raised the vibrating column 
of air within the tube and the ambient air without are set in com- 
munication, with the result that the vibrating column is shortened 
and the pitch of the note raised. The valve system consists of valves 
or pistons attached to additional lengths of tubing, the effect of 
„.k.-u :. : —-.wi.. *~ 1 »u :^u » j n t j, e ^^ ^ valve 



Shaw and Adolphe 

r the abandonment of 

these systems, which in any case were the exception and not the rule. 
The valves, placed upon the U-shaped slides in the centre of the horn, 
are worked by means of pistons or fevers, opening or closing the wind- 
ways at will, so that when they are in operation the vibrating 
column of air no longer takes its normal -course along the main Tube 
and directly through the slides, but makes ad6toor through the extra 
length of tubing before completing its course. Thus the valves, 
unlike the keys, do not open any communication with the ambient 
air. Even authoritative writers * have confused the two principles, 
believing them to be one and the same. 



1 The measurements are for the high philharmonic pitch a « 452*4. 
V. Mahillon, " Le cor " (p. 32), gives a table qf the lengths of crooks 
in metres. 

1 Robert Eitner, editor of the Monatshefte fir Musikwissenschap, 
published therein an article in 1881, p. 41 s*q., " Wer hat die Ventil- 



while the first valve is depressed takes effect a tone lower, or a* 
though the horn were in Eb. The second valve opens a passage into 
a shorter length of tubing sufficient to lower the pitch oi the instru- 
ment a semitone, as though the instrument were for the time being 
in E. The third valve similarly lowers the pitch a tone and a hall. 
It will thus be seen that the principle applied in the crook and the 
valve is in the main the same, but the practical value of the valve is 
immeasurably superior. Thank* to the valve system the performer 
is able to have the extra lengths of tubing necessary to grve the horn 
a chromatic compass permanently incorporated with the instrument, 
and at will to connect one or a combination of these lengths with the 
main tube of the instrument during any interval of time, however 
short. The three devices, crooks, valves and slides, are in fact all 
based upon the same principle, that of providing additional length 
of tubing in order to deepen the pitch of the whole instrument at 
will and to transpose it into a different key. Valves and slides, being 
instantaneous in operation, give to the instrument a chromatic 
compass, whereas crooks merely enable the performer to play in 
many keys upon one instrument instead of requiring a different 
instrument for each key. The slide is the oldest of these devices, and 
probably suggested the crook as a substitute on instrument* of 
conical bore such as the horn. 
The invention of the valve, although a substantia! improvement, 



trompete erfunden,*' in which, after referring to the Klappmwald- 
horn and Trompete (keyed horn and trumpet) made by Weidinger 
and played in public in 1802 and 1813 respectively, he goes on to 
state that Schilling in his Lexicon makes the comical mistake of 
looking upon the Klaptcntrombete (keyed trumpet) and Ventit* 
trompete (valve trumpet) as different instruments. He accordingly 
sets matters right, as he thinks, by according to Weidinger the 
honour of the invention of valves, hitherto wrongfully attributed to 
/Stdlzcl; and in the Qvellenlexikon (1904) he leaves out Stolzel's 
name. %nd names Weidinger as the inventor of the Klappen or 
Vcntti, referring readers for further particulars to his article, just 
quoted, in the MonaishefU. 



706 



HORN 



was found to fall short of perfection in ft* operation on the tubes of 
wind instruments so soon as the possibility of using the three valves 
in combination to produce six different positions or series of 
harmonics was realized, and for the following reason. In order to 
deepen the pitch one tone by means of valve I, a length of tubing 
exactly proportional to the length of the main tube must be thrown 
into communication with the latter. If, in addition to valve I, 
valve 3 be depressed, a further drop in pitch of ii tone should be 
effected ; but as the length of tubing added by depressing valve 3 
b calculated in proportion to the main tube, and the latter has 
already been lengthened by depressing valve I, therefore the addi- 
tional length supplied by opening valve 3 is now too short to produce 
a drop ota minor third strictly in tune, and all notes played while 
valves 1 and 3 are depressed will be too sharp. Means of compensat- 
ing slight errors in intonation are provided in the U-shaped slides 
mentioned above. 

The timbre of the natural horn is mellow, sonorous and rich in 
harmonics; it is quite distinctive and bears but little resemblance to 
that of the other members of the brass wind. In listening to its 
sustained notes one receives the impression of the tone being breathed 
out as by a voice, whereas the trumpet and trombone produce the 
effect of a rapid series of concussions, and in the tuba and cornet the 
concussions, although still striking, are softened as by padding. 



The timbre of the hand-stopped notes is veiled and suggestive of 
mystery ; so characteristic is the timbre thatpassages in the Rhein- 
gold heard when the magic power of the Tarnhelm reveals itself 



sound meaningless if the weird chords are played by means of the 
valves instead of by hand-stopping. The timbre of the piston 
notes is more resonant than that of the open notes, partaking 
a little of the character of the trombone, which is probably due to 
the fact that the strictly conical bore of the natural horn has 
been replaced by a mixed cylindrical and conical as in trumpet and 
trombone. 

The form of the mouthpiece (q.v.) at the point where* it joins the 
main bore of the tube must also exercise a certain influence on the 
form Of vibration, which it helps to modify in conjunction with the 
conformation of each individual horn-player's lip. In the horn the 
cup of the mouthpiece is shaped like a funnel, the bore converging 
insensibly into the narrow end of the main conical bore without 
break or sharp edges as in the mouthpieces, more properly known as 
cup-shaped, of trumpet and bombardon. 

The brilliant sonorousness and roundness of the timbre of the horn 
are due to the strength and predominance of the partial tones up to 
the 7th or 8th. The prevalence of the higher harmonics from the 
10th to the 1 6th, in which the partial tones lie very close together, 
determines the harsh quality of the trumpet timbre, which may be 
easily imitated on the horn by forcing the sound production and 
using a trumpet mouthpiece, and by raising the bell, an effect which 
is indicated by composers by the words " Raise the Bells.'* 1 

The origin of the horn most be sought in remote prehistoric 
times, whenj by breaking off the tip of a short animal horn, one 
_ or at best two notes, powerful, rough, unsteady, only 

nm * ry% barely approximating to definite musical sounds, 
were obtained. This was undoubtedly the archetype of the 
modern families of brass wind instruments, and from it evolved 
the trumpet, the bugle and the tuba no less than the horn. 
The common characteristics which link together these widely 
different modern families of instruments are: (1) the more 
or less pronounced conical bore, and (2) the property possessed 
in a greater or lesser degree of producing the natural sounds by 
what has been termed overblowing the harmonic overtones 
If we follow the evolution of the animal horn throughout the 
centuries, the ultimate development leads us not to the French 
horn but to the bugle and tuba. 

Before civilization had dawned in classic Greece. Egypt, Assyria 

and the Semitic races were usimr wind instruments of wood and metal 



an octave higher than the modern horn in Efc (which 1 

13 ft.), but on the tur the fundamental Efr can be reached owing to 

the wider calibre of the bore * 

Among the Romans the wind instruments derived from the horn 
were well represented, and included well-developed types which do 
not differ materially from the natural instruments of modern times. 
The buccina developed directly into the trumpet and trombone 
during the middle ages, losing no characteristic of importance but the 
bent form, which was perforce abandoned when the art of bending 
hollow tubes was lost after the fall of the Roman Empire. The name 
clung through all the changes in form and locality to the one type. 
and still remains at the present day in the German Posaune (trom- 
bone). There were four instruments known by the name of cornu 
among the Romans. (1) the short animal horn used by shepherds; 
(2) the longer, semicircular horn, used for signals, and (3) the still 
longer comu, bent and carried like the buccina, which had the wide 
bore of the modern tuba. But whereas on the buccina the higher 
harmonics were easily obtained, on the cornu the natural scale con- 
sisted of the first eight harmonics only. The cornu, although shorter 
than the buccina, had a deeper pitch and more sonorous tone. for. 
owing to the wider calibre of the bore, the fundamental was easily 
reached. In the reliefs on Trajan's Column, where the two instru- 
ments may be compared, the wider curve of the buccina forms a 
ready means of identification. In addition to these was (4) the small 
instrument like the medieval hunting-horn or post-horn, with the 
single spiral turn similar to one which figures as service badge in 
many British infantry regiments,* such as the first battalion erf the 
King's Own Light Infantry. A tcrra-cotta model, slightly broken, 
but with the spiral intact, was excavated at Ventoux in France and 



Ti 

Susa.« " 

Interesting evidence of a collegium comicinum (gild of horn- 
players) is furnished by an altar stone in the Roman catacombs, 
erected to the memory of one " M. Julius victor ex Collegio Liticinum 
Comicinum," on which are carved a lituus, a cornu and a pan's pipe, 
the cornu being similar to those on Trajan's Column. 

All three Roman instruments, the tuba, the buccina and the 
cornu, had well-formed mouthpieces, differing but little from the 
modern cup-shaped form in use on the trumpet, the trombone, the 
tubas, &cJ It would seem that even the short horn »• the 4th 



* See Victor Mahillon, Catal. descriplif des instruments de music*. 
&c, vol ii p. 388, No. Ii£6, where an illustration is given. See also 
Dr August Hammerich (French translation by E. Beauvair ), " Cher 
altnoraische Luren" in Vierteljakrschrtfl Jur Jdusik-Wissenschajl 
x. (1894). 

' See Major J H. L. Archer, The Brtiuh Army Records (London. 
1888), pp. 402, &c. 

4 De re mtlttarx, iii. 5 (Basel, 1532) The successive editions and 
translations of this classic, both manuscript and printed, throughout 
the middle ages afford useful evidence of the evolution of these three 
wind instruments. 

•Sec Wilhclm Froehner, La Cotourte Trajane d'aprls U sut- 
moulage exhuii a Rome en 1861-1862 (Paris, 1872-1874). On pL 
51 is a cornu framing the head of a cornicen or horn-player. See also 
the fine plates in Conrad Cichonus, Die Reliefs der TraiansiuU 
(Bertin, 1896, &c). 

* Ermanno Ferrero, L'Arc d' August* ji Suse (Segusio, 9-8 B.C.) 
(Turin, 1901). 

1 Sec the mouthpiece on the Pompeian buccinas preserved in the 
museum at Naples, reproduced in the article Buccina. The museums 
of the conservatoires of Paris and Brussels and the Collection Kraus 
in Florence possess facsimiles of these instruments: see Victor 
Mahillon, Catalogue, vol ii. p. 30. Cf. also the pair of f- 



Etruscan cornua. No. 2714 in the department of Greek sad 1 
antiquities at the British Museum, which possess well-preserved 
cup-shaped mouthpieces. 



HORN 



century was provided with a mouthpiece, 1 judging from a carved 
specimen on an ivorv capsa or pyxis dating from the period im- 
mediately preceding the (all of the Roman Empire, preserved among 
the precious relics at Xantea. 

After the fall of the Roman Empire, when instrumental music had 
fallen into disrepute and had been placed under a ban by the church, 



Ron Gonad Ckborfus, DU Rditjt tot TraUntiuU, by penniuioii of Ccoig Rdmeff. 

Fig. i. — Roman Cornua and Buccina. 

the art of playing upon such^highly-dcveloped instruments gradually 
died out in western Europe. With the disappearance of the civilisa- 
tion and culture of the Romans, the skilled crafts also gradually 
vanished, and the art of making metal pipes of delicate calibre and 
of bending them was completely forgotten, and had to be reacquired 
step by step during the middle ages from the more enlightened East 
The names of the instruments and representations of them survived 
in MSS. and monuments of art, and as long as the West was content 
to turn to late Roman and Romano-Christian art for its models, nc 
difficulties were created for the future archaeologist. By the time 
the Western races had begun to express themselves and to develop 
their own characteristics, in the nth century, the arts of Persia, 
Arabia and the Byzantine Empire had bid their mark upon the 
West, and confusion of models, and more especially of names, 
ensued. The greatest confusion of all was created by the numerous 
translations and glosses of the Bible and by the attempts of minia< 
turists to illustrate the principal scenes. In Revelation, for instance 
(ch. via.), the seven angels with their trumpets arc diversely repre- 
sented with long tubas, with curved horns of various Lengths, and 
with the buisinc, busaun or posaune, the descendant of the buccina. 

We know from the colouring used in illuminated MSS., gold and 
pale blue, that horns were made of metal early in the middle ages. 
The metal was not cast in moulds but hammered into shape, 
Vtollct-Ic-Duc * reproduces a miniature from a MS. of the end oi 
the ijth century (Paris, Bibliothequc du corps legislatif), in which 
two metal-workers arc shown hammering two large horns. 

The early medieval horns had no mouthpieces, the narrow end 
being merely finished with a rim on which the lips rested. The tow 

^suffered in 



quence, being un 
certain, rough anc 
tremulous, when 
fore it was indie 
ated by the neunu 
known as quilisma 
" Est vox tremula 
sicut est sonui 
flatus tubae ve 
cornu et designatui 
per neumam, qua< 
vocatur quilisma." 
During th< 
middle ages th< 
— J| bugle-horn or bull'i 
horn^ was exten 
sively used as i 
signal instrument 



Pic. 2. — Medieval Hunting-Horn with the 
Tablature in use in the 14th Century, 
on land and sea (see Bugle), by the night-watchmen in cities 
in. the watch tower of the feudal castle and by foresters am 

* Sec Bock, " Gebrauch der Hdrner im Mittclalter," in Gustai 
Hdder's MilUlalUriicke Kunstdenkmaler Osterreichs (Stuttgart, 1858- 

1860). 

* Dictionnaire raisonni du mobilier franeais (Paris, 1889), ii. p. 246 

* Engelbertus Admontcnsis in De Musica Scriptores, by Martii 
Cerbcrt, Bd. ii. lib. it. cap. 29; and Edward Buhlc, Die Musika 
lischen Instrument* in den Miniaturen des fruhen MtUelalUrs, pt. i. 
" Die Blasinstrumente " (Leipzig, 1903), p. 16. 



70I 

born was generally represented as small 
hich abound in illuminated MSS. and 
; was crescent-shaped and was worn 
over one shoulder and resting on the 
*ed it was held with the wide end 
: of the huntsman's head. A kind of 
s in use in France in the 14th century; 
reproduced (fig 2) from a 14th-century 
snery. 4 Only one note is indicated, the 
)cing based chiefly on rhythm, and the 
e and skill of the huntsman. The inter* 
de chasse d* veue seen in the figure is aa 

I3JJJJJJJ ' 
i J J J J J3 J J3 J J3 

a list of these signs with the names by 

venery. 

England the hunting-horn sometimes had 

1 half-way between mouthpiece and bell 

as apparently added solely in order to 

harmonics not being used for the hunting 

c's Noble Arte of Venerie (1576; facsimile 

" measures of blowing according to the 
these dayes in this Realme of Englande " 
D. One of these, given in fig. 3, is the 
ng call, corresponding to the 14th-century 
€ veue given above. 

rthptt (nut. WfttatflftMi 



f |inri7iTfl]Tin| ; 

1 iinf mrnif nil 



is* (!$76).byp«nnMooo£ thsCkrssdoo Prat. 
, 3.— Hunting Call. 

sther in its simplest form, or with the 

lie bell upwards on a level with the hunts- 

it.« 

1 calibre as the French horn, 3 or 4 ft. in 

ike the curve of the body, was in use in 

the 15th century.' It was held slanting 

bell already slightly parabolic, at arm's 

torn* were favourite emblems on medieval 
ally in Germany * and Bohemia, 
point to draw attention to the fact that 
>rid having affinities with both trumpet 
n, or with buccina and cornu, and that 
ently misnamed and confused by medieval 
bsisted side by side.evolving independently 
o-called French horn. Both buccina and 
; Roman Empire, while Western arts and 



\r Hardouin, seigneur de Fontaines-Cuirin 
Metz, 1856); the first part was edited by 
1$$), with an historical introduction by 



rard Buhlc, op. cit., p. 23. 
. also 1. du Fouilloux, La Vinerie (Paris, 
ions of 1650 and of 1562, where the horn 
It the verb comer; Juliana Bernes, Boke 
frontispiece of which is a hunting scene 
wide bore, without bell. Only half the 

du xv* siedc en argent niclle. Collection 
ithschild, Vtenne." in CateUe archiaiogiaue 
pL 38, where other instruments are also 

pen und Slammbuch (1589)* A reprint in 
sd by Georg Hirth as vol. tii. of Lubhaber 
). See arms of Sultzbcrger aus Tirol 
in," and of the Herzoc, von Wittenberg; 
ms of Wurthemberch in pi. xxii. vol. 11. 
: armorial de 1334 & 137* (miniatures of 
, edited by Victor Bouton (Pans, 1883). 



702 



HORN 




Fic. 4.— Medieval 
Circular Horn. 



Fio. 5. — Medieval 



crafts were in their infancy, were made straight, being then known 
as the busine or straight trumpet (busaun or posaun in Germany), 
and the long horn, Herkorn, slightly curved. 1 

From two medieval representations of instruments like the 
Roman cornu one might be led to conclude that the instrument 
had been revived and was in use from the 14th century. A wooden 
bas-relief on the under part of the seats of the choir of Worcester 
cathedral, 1 said to date from the 14th century, shows a musician in 
a robe with long sleeves of fur playing the horn (fig. 4). The tube 

winds from the mouth 
in a circle reaching 
to his waist, passes 
under the right arm 
across the shoulders 
with the bell stretch- 
ing out horizontally 
over his left shoulder. 
The tube, of strictly 
conical bore, is made 
in three pieces, the 
joints being strength- 
ened by means of 

two rings. The other 

Circular Horn, 1589. example is German, 
and figures in the 
ite 
he 
a; 
te 



it- 
of 
ta- 
ri- 
cd 
lid 
of 

WIS 

vd 
ed 
on 
lei. 
•K- 
es. 
nd 

proportions of the' French horn, which* is still a test of fine work- 
u:_ l~j 1 r..ii .1 — 1 1- - a illustrated edition 

1 emanating 
_ : illustrations, 

the lines (Aen. viii. 1-2) " Ut belli signum Laurenti Turnus ab arce 
Extulit : ct rauco strepuerunt cornua cantu " are illustrated by two 
soldiers, one with the sackbut (posaune, the descendant of the 
buccina), the other with a horn wound spirally round his body in 
three coils, which appear to have a conical bore from the funnel- 
shaped mouthpiece to the bell which extends at the back of the head 



1 For illustrations see autotype facsimile of Utrecht Psalter, 
9th century; British Museum, Add. MS. 10,546, Ps. 150,9th century; 
Add. MS. 24, 199, 10th century; Eadwine Psalter, Trin. Coll. Camb.. 
1 1 th century, and Cotton MS., Nero, D.IV., 8th century ; also Edward 
Buhle, ot>. cit., pL ii. and pp. 12-24. 

a See John Carter, Specimens of Ancient Sculpture and Paintings 
(London, 1780-1794), i. p. 53 (plates unnumbered); also reproduced 
in H. Lavoix, Hxsioire de la musique (Paris, 1884). 

* See Jost Amman, op. cit. 

*Musica getulsckt und ausgesogen (Basel, T511), p. 30. The 
names are not given under the drawings, but the above is the order 
in which they occur, which is probably reversed. 

• Harmonic universale (Paris, 1636). p. 245. 

•Syntagma Musicum (WolfenbQttel, 1618], pi. vii. No. tl, p. 39. 



horizontally over the left shoulder (fig. 6). There is ample room for 
the performer's head and shoulders to pass through the circle'; 
the length of the tube could not therefore have been much lesy 
than 16 ft. long, equivalent to the horn in C or 
Bb basso. In the same book (pi. ccci.) is 
another horn, smaller, differing slightly in the 
disposition of the coils and held like the modern 
horn in front. 

These horns were not used for hunting but 
for war in conjunction with the draw-trumpet. 
Brant could not have imagined these instru- 
ments, and must have seen the originals or at 
least drawings of them; the instruments prob- 
ably emanated from the famed workshops of 
Nuremberg, being intended mainly for use in 
Italy, and had not been generally adopted in 
Germany. The significance of these drawings 
of natural horns in a German work of the dawn 
of the 1 6th century will not be lost. It dis- 
poses once and for all of the oft-repeated fable 
that the hunting-horn first assumed its present 
form in France about 1680, a statement ac- 
cepted without question by authorities of all 
countries, but without reference to any pxtce 
justificative other than the story of the Bohemian Fic. 6. — Spirally 
Count Sporken first quoted by Gerbcr. T and Coiled Horn from 
repeated in most musical works without the Virgil's Works 
context. The account which gave rise to (1502), folio cccvin. 
this statement had been published in 1782 versa, 
in a book by Faustinus Prochaska:* "Vue 
Parisiis inflandi cornua venatoria inventa ars quum delectatua 
suavitate cantus duos ex hominibus sibi obnoxiis ca instituendos 
curavit. Id principium apud nos artis, qua hodie Bohcmi exccllere 
putantur." In a preceding passage alter the count's name, Franx 
Anton, Graf von Sporken, are the word* " anno saecuti superioris 
octogesimo quum iter in extcrnas provincias susccpisset, Ac 
There is no reference here to the invention of the horn in Paris or 
to the folding of the tube spirally, but only to the manner of eliciting 
sound from the instrument. Count Sporken, accustomed to the 
medieval hunting fanfares in which the tone of the horn approxi- 
mated to the blare of the trumpet, was merely struck by the musical 



years after, without reference to the source from which it was 
obtained, finds no corroboration from French sources. Had the 
French really made any substantial improvement in the hunting- 
horn at the end of the 17th century, transforming it from the primi- 
tive instrument into an orchestral instrument, it would only be 
reasonable to expect to find some evidence of this, considering the 
importance attached to the art of music at the court of Louis XIV., 
whose musical establishments, la Chapelle Musique, * la Musique de 
la Chambre du Roi and la Musique de la Grande Ecurie, included 
the most brilliant French artists. One would expect to find horns of 
that period by French makers among the relics of musical instruments 
in the museums of Europe. This does not seem to be the case. 
Moreover, in Diderot and d'Alcmbert's Encyclopedic (1767) the 
information given under the heading trompe ou cor de chasse pond 
ct petit is very vague, and contains no hint of any special merit due 
to France for any improveme n t in construction. Among the plate*) 
(vol. v., pi. vii.) is given an illustration of a horn very similar Co the 
instruments made in England and Germany nearly a century 
earlier, but with a funnel-shaped mouthpiece. Dr Julius ROhlmana 
states that there are two horns by Raoux, bearing the date 1703.* 
in the Bavarian National Museum in Munich, 11 but although fine 
examples, one in silver, the other in brass (fig. 6) by Raoux, they 
turn out on inquiry 11 to bear no date whatever. ROhlmann? 
statement in the same article, that in the arms of the family of 
Wartenberg-Kolb (now extinct), which goes back to 1169, there is 
a hunting-horn coiled round in a complete circle is also misleading. 



17 



(Leipzig, 1790- 

ei Moravia fata 

tie musique des 
echerches sur la 
depuis Philippe 
musicale (Pans, 
*e, La CkafxUe 
Brenet, "Deux 
)," Intern. Mus. 
ques documenta 
em. Mum. Ccs., 

baierischen NaL 
105 and 106. 
t director. 



The horn (a pott-horn) did not a- 
in question until 1699, when the fir 
was created hereditary Post-Master 
Statements in the work of noted n 




Ptam • Photo by K. Teofal. 

Fig. 7.— Early Raoux Horn (Mun 

Both horns measure across the cc 
*7|. They are practically the sail 
use in French and Belgian militar 
the coil enabling the performer to 1 
orchestral horn was given a narrow 
its being held in front of the perfor 
stopping the bell with the right hand 
a horn of German construction, bea 
Schmid in Nurnberg " and the tr 
A horn in Eb of French make, ha\ 
rim of the bell, and measuring onl 
exterior edge of the bell— therefore 
in the Grand. Ducal Museum at Dan 
F in modern high pitch), having th 
the inscription ^* Fait a Paris, Caf 
gives the harmonics from the 3rd t< 
is 20 in. 4 Carlin, who lived at rue 
about 1780. The earliest dated he 
one preserved in the Hohenzollcrn M 
Wilhelm Haas, Nurnberg, 1688." « 
engraved " Machts Heinr. Rich. Pfe 
in Paul de Wit's museum in Leipzi 
rest of the collection to Cologne, is < 
The horn must have been well 1 
for there are 17th-century horns of 1 
one, for instance, in the collection 
William Dull, dated 1699.' In 1701 
by means of which two horns in din" 
payed by moans of one mouthpie 
passage into the airways of one or 
will ol the performer. Another hor 
1700 was exhibited at the South 
bearing No. 337 in the catalogue, ir 
are given. Enough examples hai 
judging from the specimens exta 
France, if not actually ahead, in tl 
horns. Data are wanting conceri 

1 See Musee du Conservatoire N 
des instruments de musique (Paris, l 

'See Captain C. R. Day, Desa 
Instruments exhibited at the MUitc 

P ' » f £e V°*Manillon, Catal. vol. i. N 

• See Captain C. R. Day, Catal. I 

'For an illustration sec Catalog 

Ancient Musical Instruments at S 

(London, 1873), p. 25, No. 332. 

•See Katalog des musikhtstoriseh 

(Leipzig, 1904), p. 142, No. 564, wh< 

pete after Praetorius; it has a trurr 

'For an illustration see F. J. ( 

No. 12. 

• 'See Ignatz and Anton Bock ir 
Felix J. Upowslti (Munich, 1811), j 



HORN 703 

obabty prove to be the earliest of alt, and as brass 

nts arc perishable are perhaps for that very reason 

at the present day. 

t the present stage in its evolution was also well 

nong the illustrations of the musical literature in 

ing the first half of the 18th century, and references 

mt. 

orchestral music for the horn occurs In the operas 
I Cesti, leaders of the Venetian Opera in the 17th 
idy in 16(39 Cavalli in his opera he Nozne M m*kt. 
lei (act i. sc. 1) introduced a short scena, **■■«* 
la Caccia " * in C major for four horns on a basso 

examination of the scoring in C clefs On the first, 
and fourth lines shows, by the use of the note 

F=p~ in the bass part and in the secorid tenor of 



= the 5th harmonic of the series, that the funds- 

lave been no other t han the 16-ft C; the highest 

ble part is t j & ! , the 12th harmonic of the 8-ft. 

, now obsolete. It is dear therefore that horns with 
ively 8 ft. and 16 ft. long, which must have been 
Is as in the present day, were in use in Italy before 
;he 17th century, fifty years before the date of their 
ion in Paris. 

opera, act i. sc 4, " Coro di Cavalier! " is a stirring 
>f elemental grandeur, in which occur the words: 
la gucrricri corni e tamburi e trombe, ogni campo 
ni nmbombe." There arc above the voice parts four 
sble and C def signatures above the bass, and, al- 
truments are indicated, the music written thereon, 
es with the voices but does not accompany them, 
intended for no instruments but trumpets and horns, 
mt the indications in the text. The horn is here once 
be same use as the Roman cornu, and associated in 
ith the descendant of the bucdna in a call to arms, 
ily a coinddence that the early illustration of a horn 
g wound in coils round the body in the Strassburg 
ed above was put to the same use and associated 
instrument. 

s likewise contain many passages evidently intended 
although the instruments are not specified in the 
as nothing unusual at the time. Lulh composed the 
ic f or a ballet, La Princesse d' Elide, which formed 
t*s divertissement, " Lcs plaisirs de Tile enchantec," 
peat festival at Versailles on the 7th of May 1664. 
nusic for this ballet, made about 1680, is preserved in 
the FitzwilUam Museum, Cambridge. The music 
e entitled " Les violons et les core de chasse," written 
;yle as Cavatli's scena; there are but two staves, 
ic music is characteristic of the horn, with which the 

)Iay in unison. The piece finishes on Bb ■ 1 ■ ■ 

fiis note as the second of the harmonic series, the 
ot being obtainable, the tube of the horn must have 
ft. long. Among Philidor's copies of Lulli's ballets 
te library of the Paris Conservatoire of Music (vol. 
1 a more complete copy of the above. The second 
" Air des valets de chiens et des chasseurs avec les 
" which is substantially the same as the one in the 
iseum, but set for five horns in Bb. Here again the 
fifth note of the harmonic series, indicates that the 



a tone lower than the C horn 



Tavalli, and known as Bb basso. Victor Mahillon u 
the music reveals the fact that it was written for 
5 degrees (chromatic semitones) above 32-ft. C, or 

ng a wave-length of 1*475 m. To this statement 

le to subscribe. The quintette required four horns in 
ng and one Bb basso about 17 ft. long. It is obvious 
t custom of plsdng the bass notes of the horn on the 

ance, frontispiece of Walther's Musihalisches Lexikon 
; 1. F. B. C. Majer's Musik-Saal (Nuremberg, 1741, 
; ton. Christ. Kolb, Pinacotheca Davidica (Augsburg, 
; ,T Componimenti Musicali per il cembalo Dr Theofilo 
sta di sua. Sacra Maesta Carlo VI. Imp." (1690), 
mkmdler d. Tonkunst in Oesterreich, Bd. iu. 
Goldschmidt, " Das Orchcster der italieniscaen Oper 
lert," Intern. Mus. Ces., Smbd. ii. I, p. 73. 
*or," pp. 23 and 24, and DUtiomnaire de Cacad, de* 
iv., art. " Cor. 




7°+ 



aza 

roc 
lie 

n i 
Fre 
th 
vid 
ill 
icn 
e o 
ha< 
ho< 



ird 

b: 

hci 



of the natural horn into 
not occur until much late 
Deidamie, and then only ! 
had already won a place in 
orchestras * of Germany, a 
the orchestra in London 
of George I. 

Although the Italians ' 
the horn into the orchestra, 
instrument of the chase, 
scenes or calls to arms. F 
the orchestra we must ti 
founder of German opera, s 
introduced two horns in 
Odavia in 1705, where the 
and the oboes; they play 
and 9. The compass use 
alto is the following: — 



jppljii 



Wilhelm Kleefeld draws 1 
differed in the three acts, 
in L'Inganno Fedde (1714 
from Mattheson 4 his much 
of the orchestral horn: " 
bei itzigcr Zcit schr en voi 
von Natur sind als die 1 
Facilili kSnnen tractirct 
und mit den Trompctcn a 
auch dicker und fallen bes 
ende Clarinen, wcil sic urn 
Lotti in his Ciove in A 
two horns in C, writing fc 
sc. 1). Examples of C. H 
respectively in Polydorus ( 
the complete emancipate 
limitations; it serves not 
enrich the harmony and < 
the early scores of Cavalli 
fakrtmusik 1 (1717) and of 

1 Mersenne's drawings 
have no bell and are all of t 
animal horn. He mentio 
used for signals and fanfa 
four parts Tor horns alone 
hunt. 

« See William Tans'ur S 
1772); Br. V. Dictionary 
in the hand of Samuel W 
Mus. 

- • A horn-player, Johani 
1706 at the Saxon court 
aus dent Gtbiete hislor. a 
1882), p. 503; also Wilhc 
burger Oper, 1678-1738," 
where the appearance of t 
traced. 

4 Das neu-er6ffneU Orche 

•Sec Moritz Furstenau, 
m Dresden (Dresden, 1861 

•See "Carl Hcinrich < 
Mayer-Rcinach, Intern, a 

1 Cf. Chrysander, Haend 



HORN 

r customary, had not yet been | shows the rapid pro gress made by the horn, even at a time when fen 

prince of Anhalt-Cothen *• 
that horns in several keys 
mian horn-players, Johann 
im, were added to the court 
ition is stated to have taken 
bable that as in Paris so in 
1 which the horn waa heard 
ion of musicians long before 
d'Oro, printed in Vienna in 
redding ceremonies of Kaiser 
un. A horn in E (former F 

conservatoire bears the k»> 
Schneidcr in Wien, I7I3-"* 
as in Vienna during the first 

1 the evolution is approached 
al horn. The pedal octave 
onic was altogether wanting;; 
d and 3rd harmonics or the 
ivc, the 8ve, its major 3rd. 
e, a diatonic scale with a few 
n that the compass was very 
f grouping horns in different 
mmand was gained by the 
notes. 
Mnent of the horn has now 

is generally credited M with 
to the middle of the body of 
ece, which greatly improved 

means of the crooks. The 
J-shaped tubes, thus forming 
Ham pel's Inventionskorn. as 
tnique), is said to date from 
:n made for him by Johann 
Dresden. The same invention 
uu. u Others again mention 
•tadt* probably confusing his 
ins, as the slide contrivance 
;t in 1780. The Inventions- 
int principle which has also 
I instruments with valves as 
nation, did not add to the 
fore 1762 it would seem that 
i on which hand-stopping U 

Gcr. gestdpfUToue) xs undcr- 
[ with palm outstretched and 



erliche HofkoppeBe in Win 

kscriptif, vol. ii. No. 1160, 

u Op. cit. ii. 60. 
vea for Saxony in Dresden 
>w any light upon this point, 
tor, the following facts have 
* concerning Anton Joseph 
1 by his son, Johann Michael 
igust I IT. of Saxony, dated 
lys that the post of his father 
1 — in which he had already 
t — may be awarded to him. 
1 Ludcvica Hampeltn, to the 
I770i wherein 6he announces 
>f March 1771, who had been 
y thirty-four years as hom- 
mthly pension for herself and 
inds herself in the most un- 
illusion in either letter to any 

arly type, supposed to date 
1 Paul de Wit's fine collection 
ipzig and now transferred to 

x arts, vol. iv. (Paris), article 

ersal Lexikon der Tanhunst 
:e " ; also Capt. C. R. Day. 
miion is quite misunderstood 
t in Caecilia (Mains, 1835). 

1 Lexikon docs not mention 
iographical article; we may 
sonally acquainted with him. 
of the electoral orchestra in 
in Leipzig. In the edition of 



HORN 



705 



fingers drawn together, forming a long, shallow cap, into the bdl of 
the horn; the effect is similar to that produced in wood wind 
instruments, termed d'amore, by the pear-shaped bell with a narrow 
opening, i*. a veiled mysterious quality* and, according to the 
arrangement of the hand and fingers (which cannot be taught 
theoretically, being inter-dependent on other acoustic conditions), 
a drop in pitch which enables the performer merely to correct the 
faulty intonation of difficult harmonics or to lower the pitch exactly 
a semitone or even a full tone by inserting the hand well up the 
bore of the bell. J. Frohlich 1 gives drawings of the two principal 
positions of the hand in the horn. The same phenomenon may be 
observed in the flute by closing ail the holes, so that the fundamental 
note of the pipe speaks, and then gradually bringing the palm of 
the hand nearer the open end of the flute. As a probable explanation 
may be offered the following suggestion. The partial closing of the 
opening of the bell removes the boundary of ambient air, which 
determines the ventral segment of the half wave-length some 
distance beyond the normal length; this boundary always lies 
beyond the end of the tube, thus accounting for the discrepancy 
between the theoretical length of the air-column and the practical 
length actually given to the tube. 1 Harapel is also said to have 
been the first to apply the sordini * (Fr. sourdine) or mute, already 
in use in the 17th century for the trumpet. 4 to the horn. The 
original mute did not affect the pitch of the instrument, but only 
the tone, and when property constructed may be used with the valve 
horn to produce the mysterious veiled quality of the hand-stopped 
notes. No satisfactory scientific explanation of the modifications 
in the pitch effected by thejnrtial obstruction of the bell, whether 

- vet 
xt 
of 
ell 
of 



Ue 



by the hand or by means of certain mechanical devicer 
been offered. D. J. Blaikley suggests that in cases wh 
of hand-stopping appears to be to raise the pitch of 
the harmonic series, the real result of any contractior 
mouth (as by the insertion of the hand) is always a 
pitch accompanied by the introduction of a distorted 01 
scale, of such a character that for instance, the c, d, c, 
and 10th notes of the original harmonic scale become 
d# *# of a fundamental raised a semitone, but Db, El 
to the 9th, 10th and nth notes of a disturbed or dii 
having a fundamental lower than that of the normal horn. 

With regard to the discovery of this method of obtaining a 
chromatic compass for the horn, which rendered the instrument 
very popular with composers, instrumentalists and the public, and 

f)rocured for it a generally accredited position in the orchestra, the 
bllowing is the sum of evidence at present available. In the Kgl. 
Offentlscne Bibliothek, Dresden, is preserved, amongst the musical 
%mcc «._ _..., . , ._— u .—i..__ _f ..... _..___ __.:.i,^j Lection Pro 

nng filled 
, no letter- 
press of any description belonging to the MS. method for the horn, 
nor is any book or pamphlet explaining the Inventionshorn or the 
method of hand-stopping by Harapel extant or known to have 
existed. He has apparently left no record of his accomplishment. 
A few typical extracts copied and selected from the original MS., 
courteously communicated by the director of the Royal Library, 
Hofrath, P. £. Richtcr (a practical musician and performer on horn 
and trumpet), do not prove conclusively that they were intended 
to be played on hand-stopped horns, with the exception, perhaps. 



^^^^^g^ jpffffewa 



p. 133. No. 21. 



p. 133, No. 22. 
of the A. Uth harmonic from C, which could not easily be obtained 
except by hand-stopping on the hand-horn. On the blank sheet 
preceding the exercises is an inscription in the hand of Moritz 
Furstenau, former custodian of the Royal Private Musical Collection 
(incorpor at ed with the public library in 1896): "Anton Joseph 
BampeU by whom these exercises for the horn were written, was a 
celebrated horn-player, a member of the Orchestra of the Electoral 
Prince of Saxony. He invented the so-called Inventionshorn. 
Cf. Neves biot.-hisi. Lexicon der Tonk&nsUer by Gerber, pt. i. col. 
493; also Zur Gesch. der Musik u, des Theaters mm Hofe s» Dresden. 
by M. Furstenau, Bd. ii." It will be seen that Furstenau gives 
Gerber as his authority for the attribution of the invention to Hampel, 
although he searched the archives, to which he had free access, for 
material for his book. 

' * VoUstdndige ikeor«Hsck-praktuch$ Musikscmule (Bonn, 1811), 
pt. iii. p. 7. 

•* See Victor Mahillon, " Le Cor," p. 28; Chladni, op. eit. p. 87. 

• See Frohlich, op. eit. 7; and Gerber, Lexikon (td. 1812), p. 493; 
" Le Cor." pp. 34 and 53. 

4 See Praetortus and Mersenne, op. eit.; the latter gives an 
illustration of the trumpet mute. 

nu. u 



Schubert (i7*8=-i8h), 
n, wrote the following: 
r: " Franz Schubert, 
e Kgl. Polnischen u< 
hLimpel, a celebrated 
in; from the standard 
es in the " Lection ". 
f humouring the pro* 

an open question to 
on and of altering the 
hen, therefore, Fran* 

by Hampel, we may 
statements. Further 
k on the horn written 
:elebrated horn-player 
tomnich junior settled 

first professor of the 
1 the mute (sourdine) 
1 hollow cone, having 
e of the horn without 
g for this the pad of 
the oboe, found with 
was to raise the pitch 
ove). By this means, 

was obtained. Later 
tomnich duly ascribes 
but erroneously states 

the first instrument, 
had not practised the 
em in slow musk, and 
discovery was due to 
sbrated horn virtuoso, 

ct that hand-stopping 
was folded in a circle 
The reduction of the 
How the performer to 
lging the bell in front 
hand-stopping, must 
bj. In the absence of 
fiange was effected for 
ilation of the slides or 
1 of the horn could not 
ring its mark on the 
ot occur, as far as we 
century. The rapid 
tvery of hand-stopping 
glish work on music, 
•he end of the preface 
icients have been so 
defective notes of the 
nd by a little stopping 

» the inventive faculty 
£ first the result was 
be mentioned, if only 
nian horn virtuoso at 
: many years in vain 
st, in 1760, he applied 
ipenhorn (the bugle is 
Kolbel's experiment 
iring his lifetime, but 
nade a keyed trumpet 7 
al circles and gave a 
on brass instruments. 
>ld son of the above* 
orn % (or keyed French 
ra. Victor Mahillon* 
t invention to Kdlbel: 
rhich on being opened 
xuraent a whole tone. 
> on the normal length 
cey shortening the air 
obtained in the third 



key 



key 8 



e. 1807). Thef 
nmunicatcd by Hofrat 
, There is no copy of 



ipxig), Nov. 1802, p. 
k, CesckickU des Cm* 



2a 



706 



HORNBEAM— HORNBILL 



In 1812 Dikhutfc,* horn-player in the orchestra of the *rand-duke 
of Baden at Mannheim, constructed a horn in which a slide on the 
principle of that of the trom- 
bone was intended to replace 
hand-stopping and to lower 
^the pitch at will a semitone.* 

The roost felicitous, far- 
reaching and important of all 
improvements was the inven- 
tion of valves (q.v.), pistons 
or cylinders (the principle of 
which has already been ex- 
plained), by Heinnch StClxel,* 
who applied them first of all 
to the horn, the trumpet 
and the trombone^ thus 
endowing the brass wind with 
a chromatic compass obtained 
with perfect ease throughout 
the compass. The inherent 
defect ol valve instruments 
already explained, which 
causes faulty intonation need- 
ing correction when the pis- 
tons are used in combination, 
has now been practically 
overcome. The numerous 
FlO. 8.— Modern Horn (Boosey& Co.) attempts to solve the diffi- 
culty, made with varying suc- 
cess by makers of brass instruments, are described under Valvb, 
Bombardon and Cornet.* (K. S.) 

HORNBEAM {Carpinus betulus), a member of a small genus of 
trees of the natural order Corylaceae. The Latin name Carfnnus 
has been thought to be derived from the Celtic car, wood, and 
pin or pen, head, the wood of hornbeams having been used for 
yokes of cattle (see Loudon, Ency. of PI. p. 792, new ed. 1855, 
and Littre, Diet. ii. 556). The common hornbeam, or yoke-elm, 
Carpinus betulus (Ger. Hornbaum and Horubttcke, Fr. char me), 
is indigenous in the temperate parts of western Asia and of 
Asia Minor, and in Europe, where it ranges as high as 55° and 
56 N. lat. It is common in woods and hedges in parts of Wales 
and of the south of England. The trunk is. usually flattened, 
and twisted as though composed of several stems united; the 
bark is smooth and light grey; and the leaves are in two rows, 
2 to 3 in. long, elliptic-ovate, doubly toothed, pointed, numerously 
ribbed, hairy below and opaque, and not glossy as in the beech, 
have short stalks and when young are plaited. The stipules 
of the leaves act as protecting scale-leaves in the winter-bud 
and fall when the bud opens in spring. The flowers appear with 
the leaves in April and May. The male catkins are about i\ in. 
long, and have pale-yellow anthers, bearing tufts of hairs at 
the apex; the female attain a length in the fruiting stage of 2 to 
4 in., with bracts 1 to ij in. long. The green and angular fruit 
or " nut " ripens in October; it is about J in. in length, is in 
shape like a small chestnut, and is enclosed in leafy, 3-lobed 
bracts. The hornbeam thrives well on stiff, clayey, moist soils, 
into which its roots penetrate deeply; on chalk or gravel it 
does not flourish. Raised from seed it may become a tree 40 to 
as much as 70 ft. in height, greatly resembling the beech, except 

'See the description of the instrument and of other attempts 
to obtain the same result by Gottfried Wcbcr, "Wichtige Vcr- 
besscrung des Horns." in AUg. tnusik. Ztg. (Leipzig, 1812), pp. 758, 
&c; also 1815, pp. 617 and 638 (the regent or keyed bugle). 

' See AUg. mustk. Ztg., 1815, May, p. 309, the first announcement 
of the invention in a paragraph by Captain G. B. Bicrey. 

'Ibid., 1 81 7, p. 814, by F. Schneider, and Dec. p. 558; 181 8. 

f). 531. An announcement of the invention and of a patent granted 
or the same for ten years, in which Blumel is for the first time 
associated with Stolzel as co-inventor. See also CaecUia (Mainz, 
1835), Bd. xvii. pp. 73 scq., with illustrations, an excellent article 
by Gottfried Weber on the valve horn and valve trumpet. 

♦For a very complete exposition of the operation of valves in 
the horn, and of the mathematical proportions to be observed in 
construction, see Victor Mahillon's Le Cor," also the article by 
Gottfried Weber in CaecUia (1835), to which reference was made 
above. A list of horn-players ol note during the 1 8th century is 
given by C. Gottlieb Murr in Journal f. Kunstgesckkht* (Nuremberg, 
1776,), vol. ii. p. 27. See also a good description of the style of 
playing of the virtuoso J. Nislc in 1767 in Schubart, Aestkitik a\ 
Tonkunst, p. 161, and Leben u. Gesinnungen (1791), Bd. ii. p. 92; 
or in L. Scniedermair, " Die Blutezeit d. Ottingen-Wallenstcinschcn 
Hofkapclie." Intern. Mus. Ges. Smbd. be (1), 1907, pp. 83-J30. 



in its rounder and closer head. ' It Is, however, rarely grown 
as a timber-tree, its chief employment being for hedges, " In 
the single row," says Evelyn (SyUa, p. 29, 1664), " it makes the 
noblest and the stateliest hedges for long Walks in Gardens or 
Parks, of any Tree whatsoever whose leaves are deciduous." 
As it bears clipping well, it was formerly much used in geometric 
gardening. The branches should not be lopped in spring, on 
account of their tendency to bleed at that season. The wood 
of the hornbeam is white and close-grained, and polishes 31, 
is of considerable tenacity and little flexibility, and is extremely 
tough and hard to work—whence, according to Gerard, the name 
of the tree. It has been found to lose about 8% of its weight 
by drying. As a fuel it is excellent; and its charcoal is much 
esteemed for making gunpowder. The inner part of the bark 
of the hornbeam is stated by Linnaeus to afford a yellow dye. 
In France the leaves serve as fodder. The tree is a favourite 
with hares and rabbits, and the seedlings are apt to be destroyed 
by mice. Pliny {Nal. Hist. xxvi. 26), who describes its wood as 
red and easily split, classes the hornbeam with maples. 

The American hornbeam, blue or water beech, is Carpinus 
amerieana (also known as C. caroiiniana); the common hop- 
hornbeam, a native of the south of Europe, is a member of a 
closely allied gonus, Ostrya vulgaris, the allied American species, 
O. vtrgitdana, is also known as ironwood from its very hard, 
tight, dose-grained wood. 

^ HORNBILL, the English name long generally given to all the 
birds of the family Bucerotidae of modern ornithologists, from 
the extraordinary horn-like excrescence (epitktma) developed 
on the bill of most of the species, though to which of them it 
was first applied seems doubtful. Among classical authors 
Pliny had heard of such animals and mentions them {Hist\ 
Nat. lib. x, cap. lxx.) under the name of Tragofan; but he 
deemed their existence fabulous, comparing them with Peptsi 
and Gry phones— in the words of Holland, his translator (voL L 
p. 296) — " I thinke the same of the Tragopanadcs, which many 
men affirme to bee greater than the iEgle; having crooked 
homes like a Ram on either side of the head, of the colour of 
yron, and the head oncly red." Yet this is but an exaggerated 
description of some of the species with which doubtless his 
informants had an imperfect acquaintance. Medieval writers 
found Pliny's bird to be no fable, for specimens of the beak 
of one species or another seem occasionally to have been brought 
to Europe, where they were preserved in the cabinets of the 
cunous, and thus Aldrovandus was able to describe pretty 
fairly and to figure (Ornithologia, lib. xii. cap. xx. tab. x. fig. 7) 
one of them under the name of " Rhinoceros Avis," though the 
rest of the bird was wholly unknown to him. When the explora- 
tion of the East Indies had extended farther, more- examples 
reached Europe, and the " Corvus Indian cornutus " of Bontius 
became fully recognized by Willughby and Ray, under the 
title of the " Horned Indian Raven or Topau called the Rhino- 
cerot Bird." Since the time of those excellent ornithologists 
our knowledge of the hornbills has been steadily increasing, but 
up to the third quarter of the 19th century there was a great 
lack of precise information, and the publication of D. G. Elliots 
" Monograph of the Bucerotidae," then supplied a great want. 
He divides the family into two sections, the Buccrotinae and the 
Bucorvinae. The former group contains most of the species, 
which are divided into many genera. Of these, the most remark- 
able is RMnoplax, which seems properly to contain but one 
species, the Buceros vigil, B. scutatus or B. geleatus of authors, 
commonly known as the helmet-hornbill, a native of Sumatra 
and Borneo. This is easily distinguished by having the front 
of its nearly vertical and slightly convex tpithema composed 
of a solid mass of horn* instead of a thin coating of the light 

Apparently correlated with this structure is the carious thicken- 
ing of the " prosencephalic median septum " of the cranium as also of 
that which divides the " prosencephalic " from the " mesencephalic 
chamber," noticed by Sir R. Owen (Cat. Osted. Ser. Mus. Roy. Cell. 
Surg. England, i. 287 ) ; while the solid horny mass is further strength- 
ened by a backing of bony props, directed forwards and meeting ki 
base at right angles. This last singular arrangement is not perceptible 
m the skull of any other species examined by the present writer. 



HORNBLENDE 



707 



an/i cellular structure found in the others. So dense and hard 
b this portion of the " helmet " that Chinese and Malay artists 
Carve figures on its surface, or cut it transversely into plates, 
which from their agreeable colouring, bright yellow with a scarlet 
rim, are worn as brooches or other ornaments. This bird, which 
is larger than a raven, is also remarkable for its long graduated 
tail, having the middle two feathers nearly twice the length 
of the rest. Nothing is known of its habits. Its head was 
figured by George Edwards in the 18th century, but little else 
had been seen of it until 1801, when John Latham described 
the plumage from a specimen in the British Museum, and the 
first figure of the whole bird, from an example in the Museum 
at Calcutta, was published by General Hardwicke in 1823 
(Trans. Linn. Society, ziv. pi. 33). Yet more than twenty 
years elapsed before French naturalists became acquainted 
with it. 

In the Bnconinae we have only the genus Bvcorvus, or 
Bucorcx as some call it, confined to Africa, and containing at 



Great Indian Hornbill (B. bkornis). (After TickeU's drawing in 
the Zoological Society's library.) 

least two and perhaps more species, distinguishable by their 
longer legs and shorter toes, the ground-hornbills of English 
writers, in contrast to the Bucerotinae which are chiefly arboreal 
in their habits, and when not flying move by short leaps or hops, 
while the members of this group walk and run with facility. 
Fro A the days of James Bruce at least there are few African 
travellers who have not met with and in their narratives 
more or less fully described one or other of these bwds, 
whose large size and fearless habits render them conspicuous 
objects. 

As a whole the hornbills, of which mote than 50 species have 
been described, form a very natural and fn some respects an 
isolated group, placed by Huxley among his Coceygomorpkot. 
It has been suggested that they have some affinity with the 
hoopoes (Upupidae), and this view is now generally accepted. 
Their supposed alliance to the toucans (Rhamphastidae) rests 
only on the apparent similarity presented by the enormous 
beak, and is contradicted by important structural characters. 
In many of their habits, so far as these are known, all hornbills 
seem to be much alike, and though the modification in the form 
of the beak, and the presence or absence of the 'extraordinary 



excrescence, 1 whence their name is derived, causes great diversity 
of aspect among them, the possession of prominent eyelashes 
(not a common feature in birds) produces a uniformity of expres- 
sion which makes it impossible to mistake any member of the 
family. Hornbills are social birds, keeping in companies, not to 
say flocks, and living chiefly on fruits and seeds; but the bigger 
species also capture and devour a large number of snakes, while 
the smaller are great destroyers of insects. The older writers 
say that they eat carrion, but further evidence to that effect 
is required before the statement can be believed. Almost every 
morsel of food that is picked up is tossed into the air, and then 
caught in the bill before it is swallowed. They breed in holes 
of trees, laying large white eggs,, and when the hen begins to 
sit the cock plasters np the entrance with mud or day, leaving 
only a small window through which she receives the food he 
brings her during her incarceration. 

This remarkable habit, almost simultaneously noticed by 
Dr Mason in Burma, S. R. Tickell in India, and Livingstone in 
Africa, and since confirmed by other observers, especially 
A. R. Wallace* in the Malay Archipelago, has been connected 
by A. D. Bartlett (Proc. Zool. Society, 1869, p. 14a) with a 
peculiarity as remarkable, which he was the first to notice. 
This is the fact that hornbills at intervals of time, whether 
periodical or irregular is not yet known, cast the epithelial 
layer of their gizzard, that layer being formed by a secretion 
derived from the glands of the proventriculus or some other 
upper part of the alimentary canal. The epithelium is ejected 
in the form of a sack or bag, the mouth of which is closely folded, 
and is filled with the fruit that the bird has been eating. The 
announcement of a circumstance so extraordinary naturally 
caused some hesitation in its acceptance, but the essential 
truth of Bartlett's observations was abundantly confirmed by 
Sir W. H. Flower and especially by Dr J. Murie. These castings 
form the hen bird's food during her confinement. (A. N.) 

HORMBLBHDB, an important member of the amphibolc 
group of rock-forming minerals. The name is an old one of 
German origin, and was used for any dark-coloured prismatic 
crystals from which metals could not bo extracted. It is now 
applied to the dark-coloured aluminous members of the mono- 
clinic ampbiboles, occupying in this group the same position 
that augite occupies in the pyroxene group. The monoclink 
crystals are prismatic in habit with a six-sided 
cross-section; the angle between the prism- 
faces (if), parallel to which there are perfect 
cleavages, is 55° 49'. The colour (green, brown 
or black) and the specific gravity (3-o-3*3) vary 
with the amount of iron present. The pleo- 
chroism is always strong, and the angle of 
optical extinction on the plane of symmetry 
(x in the figure) varies from o° to 37 . The 
chemical composition is expressed by mix* 
tures in varying proportions of the molecules 
Ca(Mg,Fe) ) (SiQ 1 )4, (Mg,Fe)(Ai,Fe)<SiG« and 
NaAl(SiOi)*. Numerous varieties have been 
distinguished by special names: edenite, from EdenviUe in New 
York, is a pale-coloured aluminous amphibole containing little 
iron; pargasite, from Pargas near Abo in Finland, a green 
or bluish-green variety; common hornblende includes the 
greenish-black and black kinds containing more iron. The 
dark-coloured porphyritk crystals of basalts are known as 
basaltic hornblende. 

Hornblende occurs as an essential constituent of many kinds 

' ' BufFon, as was his manner, enlarges on the cruel injustice done to 
these birds by Nature in encumbering them with this deformity, 
which he declares must hinder them from getting their food with 
ease. The only corroboration his perverted view receives is afforded 
by the observed fact that hornbills, in captivity at any rate, never 
have any fat about them. 

» In The Malay Arckipetato (i. 213). Wallace describes a nestling 
hornbill (B. bicornis) which he obtained as " a most curious object, 
as large as a pigeon, but without a particle of plumage on any part of 
it. It was exceedingly plump and soft, and with a semi-transparent 
skin, so that it looked more like a bag of jelly, with head and feet 
stuck on, than like a real bird. ' 



708 



HORN-BOOK— HORNE, G. 



of igneous rocks, such as hornblende-granite, syenite, diorite, 
hornblende-andesite, basalt, &c; and in many crystalline 
schists, for example, amphibolite and hornblende-schist which 
are composed almost entirely of this mineral. Well-crystallized 
specimens are met with at many localities, for example: brilliant 
black crystals (syntagmatite) with augitc and mica in the sanidine 
bombs of Monte Somma, Vesuvius; large crystals at Arendal 
in Norway, and at several places in the state of New York; 
isolated crystals from the basalts of Bohemia. (L. J. S.) 

i HORN-BOOK* a name originally applied to a sheet containing 
the letters of the alphabet, which formed a primer for the use 
of children. It was mounted on wood and protected with 
transparent horn. Sometimes the leaf was simply pasted against 
the slice of horn. The wooden frame had a handle, and it was 
usually hung at the child's girdle. The sheet, which in ancient 
times was of vellum and latterly of paper, contained first a large 
cross— Hbe criss-crosse — from which the horn-book was called 
the Christ Cross Row, or criss-cross-row. The alphabet in 
large and small letters followed. The vowels then formed a line, 
and their combinations with the consonants were given in a 
tabular form. The usual exorcism — " in the name of the Father 
and of the Sonne and of the Holy Ghost, Amen " — followed, then 
the Lord's Prayer, the whole concluding with the Roman 
numerals. The horn-book is mentioned in Shakespeare's 
Love's Labour's Lost, v. x, where the 6a, the a, e, i, o, u, and the 
horn, are alluded to by Moth. It is also described by Ben 
Jonson — 

" The letters may be read, through the horn^ 
That make the story perfect." 
HORNBY, SIR GEOFFREY THOMAS PHIPPS (1825-1805), 
British admiral of the fleet, son of Admiral Sir Phipps Hornby, 
the first cousin and brother-in-law of the 13th earl of Derby, 
by a daughter of Lieut. -General Burgoyne, commonly 
distinguished as " Saratoga " Burgoyne, was born on the 20th 
of February 182 5. At the age of twelve he was sent to sea in the 
flagship of Sir Robert Stopford, with whom he saw the capture 
of Acre in November 1840. He afterwards served in the flagship 
of Rear-Admiral JosceUne Percy at the Cape of* Good Hope, 
was flag-lieutenant to his father in the Pacific, and came home 
as a commander. When the Derby ministry fell in December 

1852 young Hornby was promoted to be captain. Early in 

1853 he married, and as the Derby connexion put him out of 
favour with the Aberdeen ministry, and especially with Sir 
James Graham, the first lord of the Admiralty, he settled down 
in Sussex as manager of his father's property. He had no 
appointment in jthe navy till 1858, when he was sent out to 
China to take command of the " Tribune " frigate and convey 
a body of marines to Vancouver Island, where the dispute with 
the United States about the island of San Juan was threatening 
to become very bitter. As senior naval officer there Hornby's 
moderation, temper and tact did much to smooth over matters, 
and a temporary arrangement for joint occupation of the island 
was concluded. He afterwards commanded the "Neptune" 
in the Mediterranean under Sir William Fanshawe Martin, was 
flag-captain to Rear-Admiral Dacres in the Channel, was corn* 
modore of the squadron on the west coast of Africa, and, being 
promoted to rear-admiral in January 1869, commanded the 
training squadron for a couple of years. He then commanded 
the Channel Fleet, and was for two years a junior lord of the 
Admiralty. It was early in 1877 that he went out as commander- 
in-chief in the Mediterraean, where his skill in manoeuvring 
the fleet, his power as a disciplinarian, and the tact and deter- 
mination with which he conducted the foreign relations at the 
time of the Russian advance on Constantinople, won for him 
the K.C.B. He returned home in 1880 with the character of 
being perhaps the most able commander on the active list of the 
navy. His later appointments were to the Royal Naval College 
as president, and afterwards to Portsmouth as commander- 
in-chief. On hauling down his flag he was appointed G.C.B., 
and in May 1888 was promoted to be admiral of the fleet. From 
1886 he was principal naval aide-de-camp to Queen Victoria, 
and in that capacity, and as an admiral of the fleet, was appointed 



on the staff of the German emperor during his visits to England 
in 1889 and 1800. He died, after a short illness, on the 3rd at" 
March 1895. By his wife, who predeceased him, he left several 
children, daughters and sons, one of whom, a major in the 
artillery, won the Victoria Cross in South Africa in 1900. 

His hfe was written by his daughter, Mrs Fred. Egertoo, (1896). 

HORNCASTLE, a market-town in the S. Lindsey or Horncastie 
parliamentary division of Lincolnshire, England, at the foot of a 
line of low hills called the Wolds, at the confluence of the Bain 
and Waring streams; the terminus of a branch line of the Great 
Northern railway, 130 m. N. from London. Pop. of urban 
district (1901) 4038. The church of St Mary is principally 
Decorated and Perpendicular, with some Early English remains 
and an embattled western tower. Queen Elizabeth's grammar 
school was founded in 156a. Other buildings are an exchange, 
a court-house and a dispensary founded in 1 789. The prosperity 
of the town is chiefly dependent on agriculture and its well-known 
horse fairs. Brewing and malting are carried on, and there is 
some trade in coal and iron. 

Remains have been found here which may indicate the exist- 
ence of a Roman village. The manor of Horncastie (Hornecastre) 
belonged to Queen Edith in Saxon times and was royal demesne 
in 1086 and the head of a large soke. In the reign of Stephen 
it apparently belonged to Alice de Cundi, a partisan of the 
empress Maud, and passing to the crown on her death it was 
granted by Henry III. to Gerbald de Escald, from whom it 
descended to Ralph de Rhodes, who sold it to Walter Mauderc, 
bishop of Carlisle in 123a The sec of Carlisle retained it till the 
reign of Edward VI. when it was granted to Edward, Lord Clinton, 
but was recovered in the following reign. In 1230 Henry III. 
directed the men of Horncastie to render a reasonable aid to 
the bishop, who obtained the right to try felons, hold a court 
leet and have free warren. An inquisition of 1275 shows that 
the bishop had then, besides the return of writs, the assize of 
bread and ale and waifs and strays in the soke. Horncastie was 
a centre of the Lincolnshire rebellion of 1536. Royalist troops 
occupied the town in 1643, * n ^ wcrc pursued through its streets 
after the battle fought at Winceby. It was never a municipal 
or parliamentary borough, but during the middle ages it was 
frequently the residence of the bishops of Carlisle. Its prosperity 
has always depended largely on its fairs, the great horse fair 
described by George Borrow in Romany Rye being granted 
to the bishop in 1230 for the octave of St Lawrence, together 
with the fair on the feast of St Barnabas. The three other fairs 
are apparently of later date. 

See George Weir, Historical and Descriptive Sketches of the Town, 
and Soke of Horncastie in Ike County of Lincoln and of Several Places 
adjacent (London, 1820). 

HORN DANCE, a medieval dance, still celebrated during the 
September " wakes " at Abbots Bromley, a village on the borders 
of Needwood Forest, Staffordshire. Six or seven men, each 
wearing a deer's skull with antlers, dance through the streets, 
pursued by a comrade who bestrides a mimic horse, and whips 
the dancers to keep them on the move. The horn-dance usnaHy 
takes place on the Monday after Wakes Sunday, which is the 
Sunday next after the 4th of September. Originally the dance 
took place on a Sunday. 

See Strand Magazine for No v ember 1896; also Fo lk h n, voL viL 
(1896), p. 381. 

HORNS, GEORGE (1730-1792), English divine, was born on 
the xst of November. 1730, at Otharn near Maidstone, and 
received his education at Maidstone school and University 
College, Oxford. In 1749 he became a fellow of Magdalen, 
of which college he was elected president in x 768. As a preacher 
he early attained great popularity, and was, albeit unjustly, 
accused of Methodism. His reputation was helped by several 
clever if somewhat wrong-headed publications, including a 
satirical pamphlet entitled The Theology and Philosophy ej 
Cicero's Somuium Scipionis (1751), a defence of the Hutchin- 
sonians in A Pair, Candid and Impartial State of the Cas4 
between Sir Isaac Newton and Mr Hutchinson (1753)* ««* critiques 
upon William Law (1758) and' Benjamin Kennkott (1760). 
in 1771 he published his witt-kMTiQ, Commentary on the P*$lmj> 



HORNE, R. H.— HORNER, F. 



709 



a series of expositions based on {he Messianic idea. In 1776 he 
was chosen vice-chancellor of his university; in 1781 he was 
made dean of Canterbury, and in 1790 was raised to the see of 
Norwich. He died at Bath on the 17th of January 1792. 

His collected Works were published with a Memoir by WuTiam 
Jones in 1799. 

HORXB, RICHARD. HENRY, or HBNGIST (1803-X884), 
English poet and critic, was born in London on. New Year's 
Day 1803. He was intended for the army, and entered at 
Sandhurst, but receiving no commission, he kft his country 
and joined the Mexican navy. He served in the war against 
Spain, and underwent many adventures. Returning to England, 
he became a journalist, and in 1836-1837 edited The Monthly 
Repository. In 1837 he published two tragedies, Cosmo de 
Medici and The Death of Marlowe, and in 1841 a History of 
Napoleon. The book, however, by which he lives is his epic of 
Orion, which appeared in 1843. It was published originally at 
a farthing, was widely read, and passed through many editions. 
In the next year he set forth a volume of critical essays called 
A New Spirit of the Age* in which he was assisted by Elizabeth 
Barrett (Mrs Browning), with whom, from 1839 to her marriage 
in 1846, he conducted a voluminous correspondence. In 1852 
he went to Australia in company with William Howitt, and 
did not return to England until 1869. He received a Civil List 
pension in 187^ and died at Margate on the 13th of March 1884* 
Home possessed extraordinary versatility, but, except in the 
case of Orion, he never attained to a very high degree of distinc- 
tion. That poem, indeed, has much of the quality of fine poetry; 
it is earnest, vivid and alive with spirit. But Home early 
drove his talent too hard, and continued to write when he had 
little left to say. In criticism be had insight and quickness. 
He was one of the first to appreciate Keats and Tennyson, and 
he gave valuable encouragement to Mrs Browning when she was 
still Miss Elizabeth Barrett. 

HORXB, THOMAS HARTWELL (1780-1862), English theo- 
logian and bibliographer, was born in London on the 20th of 
October 1780, and was educated at Christ's Hospital, with 
S. T. Coleridge as an elder contemporary. On leaving school he 
became clerk to a barrister, but showed a keen taste for author- 
ship*. As early as 1800 he published A Brief View of the Necessity 
and Truth of the Christian Revelation, which was followed by 
several minor works on very varied subjects. In 18x4, having 
been appointed librarian of the Surrey Institution, he issued 
his Introduction to the Study of Bibliography* This was followed 
in 1818 by his long matured work, the Introduction to the Critical 
Study of the Holy Scriptures, which rapidly attained popularity, 
and secured for its author widespread fame and an honorary M.A. 
degree from Aberdeen. In 18x9 he received ordination from 
William Howley, bishop of London, and after holding two 
smaller livings was appointed rector of the united parishes 
of St Edmund the King and Martyr, and St Nicolas Aeons in 
London. On the breaking up of the Surrey Institution in 1823, 
he was appointed (1824) senior assistant librarian in the depart- 
ment of printed books in the British Museum. After the project 
of making a classified catalogue had been abandoned, he took 
part in the preparation of the alphabetical one, and his connexion 
with the museum continued until within a few months of his 
death on the 27th of January 1862. 

Home's works exceed forty in number. The Introduction, edited 
by John Ayre and S. P. Tregelles, reached a 12th edition in 1869; 
but, owing to subsequent advances in biblical scholarship, it feM into 



HORMBU* a city of Steuben county, New York, U^A., 
on the Canisteo river, 00 m. S.E, of Buffalo. Pop. (1800). 10,996; 
(1900) 11,918, of whom 1230 were foreign-bora; (tpxo census) 
13,617. Horaell is served by the Erie and the Pittsburg, Shawmut 
& Northern railways; the latter connects at Wayland (20 m. 
distant by rail) with the Delaware, Lackawanna k Western* 
railroad. In the city are St Ann's Academy, the St James 
Mercy Hospital, the Steuben Sanitarium, a public library, and 
a county court-house— terms of the county court being held here 
as well as in Bath (pop. in 1905, 3695), the county-seat, and in 
Corning. Horaell has extensive car shops of the Erie railroad, 



and among its manufactures are suit goods (silk gloves being a* 
specially important product), sash, doors and blinds, leather, 
furniture, shoes, white-goods, wire-fences, foundry and machine 
shop products, electric motors, and brick and tile. The value 
of the factory product in 1905 was $3,162,677, an increase of 
30*1% since xooo. The first settlement here was made in 1790, 
within the district of Erwin (then in Ontario county); after 
1796 it was a part of Canisteo township, and the settlement itself 
was known as Upper Canisteo until 1820, when a new township 
was formed and named HorneDsville in honour of Judge George 
Horaell (d. 18 13). The village of Hornellsville was incorporated 
in 1852, and in 1888 was chartered as a city; and by act of the 
state legislature the name was changed to Horaell in 1906. 

See G. H. McMaster, History of the Settlement of Steuben County 
(Bath. New York. 1849). 

HQRNEMANN. FREDERICK (fl. 1796-1800), German traveller 
in Africa, was born at Hilrfathmm He was a young man when* 
early in 1706* he offered his services to the African Association 
of London as an explorer in Africa, By the association he was 
sent to G$ttingen University to study Arabic and otherwise 
prepare for an expedition into the unknown regions of North 
Africa from the east. In September 1797 he arrived in Egypt, 
where he continued his studies. On the invasion of the country 
by the French he was confined in the citadel of Cairo, to preserve 
him from the fanaticism of the populace. Liberated by the 
French, he received the patronage of Bonaparte. On the $th 
of September 1798 he joined a caravan returning to the Maghrib 
from Mecca, attaching himself to a party of Fecran merchants 
who accompanied the pilgrims. As an avowed Christian would 
not have been permitted to join the caravan Hornemann awmnrd 
the character of a young mamelukc trading to Fewan. He then 
spoke, but indifferently, both Arabic and Turkish, and he was 
accompanied as servant and interpreter by Joseph Freudenburg, 
a German convert to Islam, who had thrice made the pilgrimage 
to Mecca. Travelling by way of the oases of Siwa and Aujua, 
a " black rocky desert " was traversed to Temissa in Fezsan, 
Murzuk was reached on the 17th of November 1798. Here 
Hornemann lived till June 1799, going thence to the city of 
Tripoli, whence in August of the same year he despatched his 
journals to London. He then returned to Murzuk. Nothing 
further is known with certainty concerning him or his companion. 
In Murzuk Hornemann had collected a great deal of trustworthy 
information concerning the peoples and countries of the western 
Sahara and central Sudan, and when he left Tripoli it was his 
intention to go direct to the Hausa country, which region he 
was the first European definitely to locate. " If I do not perish 
in my undertaking," be wrote in his journal, " I hope in five 
years I shall be abls to make the Society better acquainted with 
the people of whom X have given this short description." The 
British consul at Tripoli heard from a source believed to be 
trustworthy that about June 1803 Jusef (Hornemann's Mahom- 
medan name) was at Casna, «'.«, Katsena, in Northern Nigeria, 
" in good health and highly respected as a marabout." A report 
reached Murzuk in 1819 that the traveller had gone to " Noofy " 
(Nupe), and had died there. Hornemann was the first European 
in modern times to traverse the north-eastern Sahara, and up to 
1910 no other explorer had followed his route across the Jebel-es* 
Suda fromAujila to Temissa. 

The original text of Hornemann's journal, which was written in 
German, was printed at Weimar in 1801; an English translation, 
Travels from Cairo to Mounouh, &c. ( with maps and dissertations 
by Major James Rennell, appeared in London In 1802. A French 
translation of the English work, made by order of the First Consul, 
and augmented with notes and a memoir on the Egyptian oases by 
L. Langlds, was published In Paris in the following year. The French 
version is the most valuable of the three. Consult also the Proceedings 
of the African Association (1810), and the Ceog . Jnl. Nov. 1906. 

HORNER, FRARCIS (1778-18x7), British economist, was 
born at Edinburgh on the x 2th of August x 778. After passing 
through the usual courses at the trigb school and university 
of his native dty, he devoted five years, the first two in England, 
to comprehensive but desultory study, and in 1800 was called 
to the Scottish bar. Desirous, however, of a wider sphere. 
Horner removed to London in 1802, and occupied the interval 



JIQ 



HOJINER, L— HORNFELS 



that elapsed before his admission to the English bar in. 1807 
with researches in law, philosophy "and political economy. 
In February xSo6 be became one of the commissioners for 
adjusting the claims against the nawab of Arcot, and in November 
entered parliament as member for St Ives. Next year he sat 
for Wendover, and in 181a for St Mawes, in the patronage 
of the marquis of Buckingham. In 1811, when Lord Grenville 
was organizing a prospective ministry, Horner had the offer, 
which he refused, of a treasury secretaryship. He had resolved 
not to accept office till he could afford to live out of office; and 
his professional income, on which he depended, was at no time 
proportionate to his abilities. His labours at last began to tell 
upon a constitution never robust, and in October 18x6 his 
physicians ordered him to Italy, where, however, he sank under 
his malady. He died at Pisa, on the 8th of February 18x7. 
He was buried at Leghorn, and a marble statu© by Chantrey 
was erected to his memory in Westminster Abbey. 

Without the advantages of rank, or wealth, or even of genius, 
Francis Horner rose to a high position of public influence and 
private esteem. His special field was political economy. Blaster 
of that subject, and exercising a sort of moral as well as intellectual 
influence over the House of Commons he, by his nervous and 
earnest rather than eloquent style of speaking, could fix its 
attention for hours on such dry topics as finance, and coinage, 
and currency. As chairman of the parliamentary committee 
for investigating the depreciation of bank-notes, for which he 
moved in x8io, he extended and confirmed his fame as a political 
economist by his share in the famous Bullion Report. It was 
chiefly through his efforts that the paper-issue of the English 
banks was checked, and gold and silver reinstated in their true 
position as circulating media; and his views on free trade and 
commerce have been generally accepted at their really high 
value. Horner was one of the promoters of the Edinburgh 
Review in 1802. His articles in the early numbers of that 
publication, chiefly on political economy, form his only literary 
legacy. 

See Memoirs and Correspondence of Francis Horner. M.P., pub- 
lished by his brother (see below) in 1843. Also the Edinburgh and 
Quarterly Reviews for the same year; and Blackwood's Magazine, 
vol. L 

HORNER, LEONARD (1 785-1864), Scottish geologist, brother 
of Francis Horner (above), was born in Edinburgh on the 17th 
of January x 785. His father, John Horner, was a linen merchant 
in Edinburgh, and Leonard, the third and youngest son, entered 
the university of Edinburgh in 1709. There in the course of the 
next four years he studied chemistry and mineralogy, and 
gained a love of geology from Playfair's Illustrations of the 
Huttonicn Theory. At the age of nineteen he became a partner 
in a branch of his father's business, and went to London. In 
1808 be joined the newly formed Geological Society and twb 
years later was elected one of the secretaries; Throughout his 
long life he was ardently devoted to the welfare of the society; 
he was elected president in 1846 and again in i860. In x8xi 
he read his first paper *' On the Mineralogy of the Malvern Hills " 
(Trans. Gcd. Soc. vol. i.) and subsequently communicated other 
papers on the " Brine-springs at Droitwich," and the " Geology 
of the S.W. part of Somersetshire." He was elected F.R.S. 
in 1813. In 1815 he returned to Edinburgh to take personal 
superintendence of his business, and while there (1821) he was 
instrumental id founding the Edinburgh School of Arts for 
the instruction of mechanics, and he was one of the founders 
of the Edinburgh Academy. In 1837 he was invited to London 
to become warden of the London University, an office which he 
held for four years; he then resided at Bonn for two years and 
pursued the study of minerals and rocks, communicating to the 
Geological Society on his return a paper on the " Geology of the 
Environs of Bonn," and another "On the Quantity of Solid 
Matter suspended in the Water of the Rhine." In 1833 he was 
appointed one of the commissioners to inquire into the employ- 
ment of children in the factories of Great Britain, and he was 
subsequently selected as one of the inspectors. In later years 
he devoted much attention to the geological history of the 



alluvial lands of Egypt; and in 1843 he published his IJf* «f 
his brother Francis. He died in London on the 5th of Maxcjb 
1864- 

See Memoir of Leonard Horner, by Katherine M. Lyefl (1*90) 
(privately printed). 

HdRNES, MORITZ (1815-1868), Austrian 'palaeontologist, 
was born in Vienna on the 14th of July 1815. He was educated 
in the university and graduated Ph.D. He then became assistant 
in the Vienna mineralogkal museum. He was distinguished 
for his researches on the Tertiary moUusca of the Vienna Basin, 
and on the Triassfc mollusca of Alpine regions. Most of his 
memoirs were published in the Jakrbuek der K. K. geol. Reickscn- 
stail. In 1864 be introduced the term Keogene to include 
Miocene and Pliocene, as- these formations arc not always to 
be clearly separated: the fauna of the lower division being 
subtropical and gradually giving place in the upper division to 
Mediterranean forms. He died in Vienna on the 4th of November 
1868. His son Dr Rudolf Hdrnea (b. 1850), professor of g eology 
and palaeontology in the university of Craz, has also carried on 
researches among the Tertiary mollusca, and is author of Elevtenit 
der PolaeontologU (1884). 

HORNFELS (a German word meaning hornstone), the group 
designation for a series of rocks which have been baked and 
indurated by the heat of intrusive granitic masses and have 
been rendered massive, hard, splintery, and in some cases 
exceedingly tough and durable. "Most hornfelses are fine-grained, 
and while the original rocks (such as sandstone, shale and slate, 
limestone and diabase) may have been more or less fissile owing 
to the presence of bedding or cleavage planes, this structure is 
effaced or rendered inoperative in the hornfels. Though tbey 
may show banding, due to bedding, &c., they break across this 
as readily as along it; in fact they tend to separate into cubical 
fragments rather than into thin plates. The commonest hornfelses 
(the " biotite hornfclses ") are dark-brown to black with a 
somewhat velvety lustre owing to the abundance of smaB crystals 
of shining black mica. The " lime hornfelses " are often white, 
yellow, pale-green, brown and other colours. Green and dark- 
green are the prevalent -tints of the hornfelses produced by the 
alteration of igneous rocks. Although for the most part the 
constituent grains are too small to be determined by the unaided 
eye, there are often larger crystals of garnet or andaiusite 
scattered through the fine matrix, and these may become very 
prominent on the weathered faces of the rock. 

The structure of the hornfelses is very characteristic. Very 
rarely do any of the minerals show crystalline form, but the 
small grains fit closely together like the fragments. of a mosaic; 
they are usually of nearly equal dimensions and from the resem- 
blance to rough pavement work this has been called pJUsUr 
structure or, pavement structure. Each mineral may also 
enclose particles of the others: in the quartz, for example, 
small crystals of graphite, biotite, iron oxides, sillimanke or 
felspar may appear in great numbers. Often the whole of the 
grains are rendered semi-opaque in this way. The minutest 
crystals may show traces of crystalline outlines; undoubtedly 
they are of new formation and have originated in situ. This 
leads us to believe that the whole rock has been recrystallized 
at a high temperature and In the solid state, so that there was 
little freedom for the mineral molecules to build up weH- 
individualized crystals. The regeneration of the rock has been 
sufficient to efface most of the original structures and to replace 
the former minerals more or less completely by new ones. But 
crystaUkation baa been hampered by the soBd condition of the 
mass and the new minerals are formless and have been unable 
to reject impurities, hot have grows around them. 

States, shales and clays yield biotite hornfclses in which 
the most conspicuous mineral is black mica, in small scales which 
under the microscope are transparent and have a dark reddish- 
brown colour and strong dkhroism. There is also quarts, and 
often a considerable amount of felspar, while graphite, tourmaKne 
and iron oxides frequently occur in lesser quantity. In these 
biotite hornfelses the minerals, which consist of aluminhun 
silicates, are commonly found; they are usually andaiusite tad 



HORNING— HORKOCKS, JEREMIAH 



slffimamte, but kyanite appears also in hornfelses, especially in 
those which have a schistose character. The andalusite may be 
pink and is then often pleochroic in thin sections, or it may 
b* white with the cross-shaped dark enclosures of the matrix 
which are characteristic of chiastolite. Sillimanite usually forms 
exceedingly minute needles embedded in quartz. In the rocks 
of this group cordlerite also occurs, not rarely, and may have 
the outlines of imperfect hexagonal prisms which are divided 
up into six sectors when seen in polarized light* In biotite 
hornfelses a faint striping may indicate the original bedding 
of the unaltered rock and corresponds to small changes in the 
nature of the sediment deposited. More commonly there is a 
distinct spotting, visible on the surfaces of the hand specimens. 
The spots are round or elliptical, and may be paler or darker 
than the rest of the rock. In some cases they are rich in graphite 
or carbonaceous matters; in others they are full of brown mica; 
some spots consist of rather coarser grains of quartz than occur 
in the matrix. The frequency with which this feature reappears 
in the less altered slates and hornfelses is rather remarkable, 
especially as it seems certain that the spots are not always of 
the same nature or origin. " Tourmaline hornfelses " are found 
sometimes near the margins of tourmaline granites; they are 
black with small needles of schorl which under the microscope 
are dark brown and richly pleochroic As the tourmaline con- 
tains boron there must have been some permeation of vapours 
from the granite into the sediments. Rocks of this group are 
often seen in the Cornish tin-mining districts, especially near 
the lodes. 

A second great group of hornfelses are the calc-silicate-horn- 
felses which arise from the thermal alteration of impure lime- 
stones. The purer beds recrystallLse as marbles, but where there 
has been originally an admixture of sand or clay lime-bearing 
silicates are formed, such as diopsidc, cpidote, garnet, sphene, 
vesuvianite, scapolite; with these phlogopite, various felspars, 
pyrites, quartz and actinolite often occur. These rocks are fine- 
grained, and though often banded are tough and much harder 
than the original limestones. They are excessively variable 
in their mineralogical composition, and very often alternate 
in thin seams with biotite hornfels and indurated quartzites. 
When perfused with boric and fluoric vapours from the granite 
they may contain much axinite, fluorite and datolite, but the 
aluminous silicates (andalusite, &c.) are absent from these rocks. 

From diabases, basalts, andesites and other igneous rocks 
a third type of hornfels is produced. They consist essentially 
of felspar with hornblende (generally of brown colour) and 
pale pyroxene. Sphene, biotite and iron oxides are the other 
common constituents, but these rocks show much variety of 
composition and structure. Where the original mass was decom- 
posed and contained calrite, zeolites, chlorite and other secondary 
minerals either in veins or in cavities, there are usually rounded 
areas or irregular streaks containing a suite of new minerals, 
which may resemble those of the calc silicate hornfelses above 
described. The original porphyritic, fluidal, vesicular or frag- 
mental structures of the igneous rock are clearly visible in the 
less advanced stages of homfelsing, but become less evident 
as the alteration progresses. 

In some districts horhfelsed rocks occur which have acquired 
a schistose structure through shearing, and these form transitions 
to schists and gneisses which contain the same minerals as the 
hornfelses, but have a schistose instead of a hornfels structure. 
Among these may be mentioned cordierite and sillimanite 
gneisses, andalusite. and kyanite mica schists, and those schistose 
calc silicate rocks which' are known as dpolins. That these are 
sediments which have undergone thermal alteration is generally 
admitted, but the exact conditions under which they were formed 
is not always clear. The essential features of homfelsing are 
ascribed to the action of heat, pressure and permeating vapours, 
regenerating a rock mass without the production of fusion (at 
least on a large scale). It has been argued, however, that often 
there is extensive chemical change owing to the introduction 
of matter from the granite into the rocks surrounding it. The 
formation of pew felspar in the hornfelses is pointed out as 



711 

evidence of this. While this "felspathizatton" may have occurred 
in a few localities, it seems conspicuously absent from others. 
Most authorities at the present time regard the changes as being 
purely of a phy sical a nd not of a chemical nature. (J. S. F.) 

HORNING, LETTERS OF, a term in Scots law. Originally 
in Scotland imprisonment for debt was enforceable only in 
certain cases, but a custom gradually grew up of taking the 
debtor's oath to pay. If the debtor broke his oath, he became 
liable to the discipline of the Church. The civil power, further, 
stepped in to aid the ecclesiastical, and denounced him as a 
rebel, imprisoning his person and confiscating his goods. The 
method declaring a person a rebel was by giving three blasts 
on a horn and publicly proclaiming the fact; hence the expres- 
sion, " put to the horn. " The subsequent process, the warrant 
directing a messenger-at-arms to charge the debtor to pay or 
perform in terms of the letters, was called " letters of horning." 
This system of execution was simplified by an act of 1837 
(Personal Diligence Act), and execution is now usually by 
diligence (see Execution). 

BOHNPIPB, originally the name of an instrument no longer 
m existence, and now the name of an EngKsh national, dance. 
The sailors* hornpipe, although the most common, is by no 
means the only form of the dance, for there is a pretty tunt 
known as the " College Hornpipe," and other specimens of a 
similar kind might be cited. The composition of hornpipes 
flourished chiefly in the t8th century, and even Handel did not 
disdain to use the characteristic rhythm. The hornpipe may 
be written in f or in common time, and is always of a lively, 
nature* 

HORNSEY, a municipal borough in the .Hornsey parliamentary 
division of Middlesex, England, suburban to London, 6 m. N. 
of St Paul's Cathedral, on the Great Northern railway. Pop, 
(1801) 44,523; (1001) 79,056. It is chiefly occupied by small 
residences of the working classes. The manor, called in the 
13th century HorittgM (a name Which survives as Harringa?), 
belonged from an early date to the see of London, the bishops 
having a seat here. In 1387 the duke of Gloucester, uncle of 
Richard II., assembled in Hornsey Park the forces by the 
display of which he compelled the king to dismiss his minister 
de la Pole, earl of Suffolk; and in 1483 the park was the scene of 
the ceremonious reception of Edward V., under the charge oi 
Richard, duke of Gloucester, by Edmund Shaw, lord mayor of 
London. The parish church of $t Mary, Hornsey, retains its 
Perpendicular tower (c. 1500) and a number of interesting 
monuments. Finsbury Park, of 1 ao acres, and other smaller 
public grounds, are within the borough. Hornsey was incorpor- 
ated in 1003 under a mayor, 10 aldermen and 30 councillors. 
Area, 98 75 acr es. 

HOROWITZ, ISAIAH (c. r55$-t.- 1630), Jewish rabbi and 
mystic, was horn at Prague, and died at Safed, then the home 
of Jewish Kabbah. His largest work is called Skdah (abbrevi- 
ated from the initials of the full title Shens lukotk ka-berit, 
"Two Tables of the Covenant"). This is a compilation of 
ritual,' ethics and mysticism, and had a profound influence 
on Jewish life. It has been often reprinted, especially in an 
abbreviated form. ' 

For an account of the Jewish mystics at Safed see S. Seoecter, 
Studies in Judaism, series u. (1908). 

HORREUM, the Latin word for a magazine or storehouse for 
the storage of grain and other produce of the earth, and occasion- 
ally for that of agricultural implements. The storehouses of 
Rome were of the most extensive character, there being no 
fewer than 290 public horrea at the time of Constantine. They 
were used for the storage of food and merchandize of all kinds, 
being part of the great Roman system of providing food for the 
population, and they were supplied constantly with corn and 
other provisions from Africa, Spain and elsewhere. 

HORROCKS, JEREMIAH (1610-1641), English astronomer, 
was born in 1610 at Toxteth Park, near Liverpool His family 
was poor, and the register of Emmanuel College, Cambridge, 
testifies to his entry as sizar on the 18th of May 1632. Isolated 
in his scientific tastes, and painfully straitened in means, he 



7*2 

(pursued amid innumerable difficulties his purpose of self-educa- 
tion. His university career lasted three years, and on its 
termination be became a tutor at Toxteth, devoting to astrono- 
mical observations bis brief intervals of leisure. In 1636 he met 
with a congenial spirit in William Crab tree, a draper of Broughton, 
near Manchester; and encouraged by his advice he exchanged 
the guidance of Philipp von Lansberg, a pretentious but in- 
accurate Belgian astronomer, for that of Kepler. He now set 
himself to the revision of the Rudolphine Tables (published by 
Kepler in 1627), and in the progress of his task became convinced 
that a transit of Venus overlooked by Kepler would nevertheless 
occur on the 24th of November (O.S.) 1639. He was at this time 
curate of Hoole, near Preston, having recently taken orders 
in the Church of England, although, according to the received 
accounts, he had not attained the canonical age, The 94th 
of November falling on a Sunday, his clerical duties threatened 
fatally to clash with his astronomical observations; be was, 
however, released just in time to witness the punctual verification 
of his forecast, and carefully noted the progress of the phenomenon 
during half an hour before sunset (3* 15 to 3*45). This transit: of 
Venus is remarkable as the first ever observed, that of 1631 
predicted by Kepler having been invisible in western Europe. 
Notwithstanding the rude character of the apparatus at his 
disposal, Horroeks was enabled by his observation of it to 
introduce some important corrections into the elements of the 
planet's orbit, and to reduce to its exact value the received 
estimate of its apparent diameter. 

After a year spent at Hoole, he returned to Toxteth, and 
there, on the eve of a long-promised visit to his friend Crabtree, 
he died, on the 3rd of January 1641, when only in his twenty- 
second year. To the inventive activity of the discoverer he had 
already united the patient skill of the observer and the practical 
sagacity of the experimentalist. Before he was twenty he had 
afforded a specimen of his powers by an important contribution 
to the lunar theory. He first brought the revolutions of our 
satellite within the domain of Kepler's laws, pointing out that 
her apparent irregularities could be completely accounted for 
by supposing her to move in an ellipse with a variable eccen- 
tricity and directly rotatory major axis, of which the earth 
occupied one focus. These precise conditions were afterwards 
demonstrated by Newton to follow necessarily from the law 
of gravitation. 

In his speculations as to the physical cause of the celestial 
motions, his mind, though not wholly emancipated from the 
tyranny of gratuitous assumptions, was working steadily towards 
the light. He clearly perceived the significant analogy between 
terrestrial gravity and the force exerted in the solar system, and 
by the ingenious device of a circular pendulum illustrated the 
composite character of the planetary movements. He also 
reduced the solar parallax to 14* (less than a quarter of Kepler's 
estimate), corrected the sun's semi-diameter to 15* 45*, recom- 
mended decimal notation, and was the first to make tidal 
observations. 

Only a remnautof the papers left by Horroeks was preserved by 
the care of William Crabtree. After his death (which occurred soon 
after that of his friend) these were purchased by Dr Worthington, 
of Cambridge; and from his hands the treatise Venus in sole visa 
passed Into those of HeveBus, and was published by him in 1662 

with his own ob * : *— — : * - f " * u *-* — 

fragments were, 

by Dr WaWs 1.. ....... .. . . „ 

Keptcriana defensa el promote, and published with numerous extracts 
from the letters of Horroeks to CraDtree, and a sketch of the author's 
life, in a volume entitled Jeremiae Horroccii opera postkuma (London, 
1672). A memoir of his life by the Rev. ArundeU Blount Whatton, 
prefixed to a translation of the Venus in sole pira, appeared at London 
in 1859. 

For additional particulars, see J. E. Bailey's Palatine NoU-Book, 
li. 253, Hi. 17; Bailey's "Writings of Horroeks and Crabtree" 
(from Notes and Queries, Dec 2, 1882); Notts and Queries, 
series, vol. v., 5th series, vols, it, iv.; Martio's BiograPhia 



HORROCKS, pHN—HORSE 



fha 



jhUosophica, p. 271 (1764); R. Brickel, Transits of Venus, 1630- 
J874 (Preston, 1874); Astronomical Register, xii. 293; Hevefii, 
Mercurius m sole visus, pp. 116-140; S. Rtgaud's Correspondence 
*f Scientific Men: Th. Birch, History of Ike Royal Society, i. 386, 
395. 470; Sir E. Sherburne's Sphere of M. ManUius, p. 92.(1675); 



Sir J. A. Ptcton's Memorials of Limp**, SL sfit; M 




i - -- -1 - ll J* l V* 

I' astronomic moderne. u. 495; Hist, de V astronomic an XVII J* tikde. 
pp. 28, 61 f 74; W. Whewell, Hist, of the Inductive Sciences, L 331. 
R. Grant, Hist, of Physical Astronomy, pp. 4*0, 545; J. Midler, 
Ceschichte der HimmeUhmde, L 375; M. Marie, Hist, des Sciences, 
iv. 168, vi. 90; J. C. Houzeau, BibL Astr. u. 167. (A. M. C) 

HORROCKS, JOHN (1768-1804), British cotton manufacturer, 
was born at Edgeworth, near Bolton, in 1768. His father was 
the owner of a small quarry, and John Horroeks spent his 
early days in dressing and polishing millstones. The Lancashire 
cotton industry was then in its infancy, but Horroeks was 
greatly impressed with its future possibilities, and he managed 
to obtain a few spinning-frames which he erected in a corner 
of his father's offices. For a time he combined cotton-spinning 
on a very small scale with stone-working, but finally devoted 
himself entirely to cotton-spinning, working the frames with bis 
Own hands, and travelling through the Lancashire manufactur- 
ing districts to sell the yarn. His goods obtained a reputation 
for quality, and his customers increased so rapidly that in 1791 
he removed to Preston, where he began to manufacture cotton 
shirtings and long-dot hs in addition to spinning the cotton yarn. 
By taking full advantage of the machinery invented for manu- 
facturing textiles, and by rigidly maintaining the quality of his 
goods, Horroeks rapidly developed his business, and with the 
aid of the capital of a local banker, whom he took into partnership, 
erected within a year of his arrival in Preston his first large mflL 
securing shortly afterwards from the East India Company a 
monopoly of the manufacture of cottons and muslins for the 
Indian market. The demand for Horrocks's goods continued to 
increase, and to cope with the additional work he took first 
an elder brother and in 1801 a Mr Whitehead and a Mr Miller 
into partnership, the title of the firm being altered to Horrockses, 
Miller & Co. In 1802 he entered parliament as tory member 
for Preston. He died in London in 1804 of brain-fever resulting 
from over-work. 

HORSE (a word common to Teutonic languages in such forms 
as kors, hros, ros; cf. the Ger. ross), a name properly restricted 
to the domesticated horse (Bquus cabaOus) and its wild or half- 
wild representatives, but in a zoological sense used as a general 
term for all the members of the family Equidae. 

Specks 

The distinctive characteristics of the family, and its position 
in the zoological system, are given in the articles Equidae and 
Perissodactyla. Here attention is concentrated on the lead- 
ing features of the horse as contrasted with the other members 
of the same family, and subsequently on the anatomical structure 
of the former animal The evolution of the existing representa- 
tives of the family from primitive extinct animals is summarized 
in the article Equidae. 

Horse, Wild Horse, .Pony. — The horse (Equus caballus) is 
distinguished from the others by the long hairs of the tail being 
more abundant and growing quite or nearly from the base as 
well as the end and sides, and also by possessing a small bare 
callosity on the inner side of the hind leg, just below the "hock" 
or heel joint, in addition to the one on the inner side of the 
fore-arm above the carpus or " knee," common to all the genus. 
The mane is also longer and more flowing, and the ears are shorter, 
the limbs longer, and the head smaller. 

Though existing horses are usually not marked in any definite 
manner, or only irregularly dappled, or spotted with light 
surrounded by a darker ring, many examples are met with 
showing a dark median dorsal streak like that found in all the 
other members of the genus, and even with dark stripes on the 
shoulders and legs. 

Two distinct types of horse, in many instances largely modified 
by interbreeding, appear to exist. (1 ) The northern, or dun type, 
represented by the dun pomes of Norway {Equus caballus 
lypkus), the closely allied Celtic pony (£. cxcUicus) of Iceland, the 



species) HORSE 

Hebrides, &c, and the wfld pony of Mongolia (E. c. pnewalskit), 
with which the now extinct tarpan of the Russian steppes 
appears to have been identical. The prevalent colour is yeliow- 
dun, with dark brown or black mane, tail and legs; in the wild 
forms the muzzle is often white and the root of the tail short- 
haired; while the bead is relatively large and heavy. No 
depression exists in the skull in front of the eye. Most of the 
ordinary horses of N.W. Europe are descended from the dun 
type, with more or less admixture of Barb blood. (2) The 
southern, or Barb type, represented by Barbs. Arabs, thorough- 
breds, &c (ELc. asiaticus or hbycut), in which the typical colour 
is bay with black *' points " and often a white star on the forehead, 
and the mane and taQ are long and full. The skull generally 
shows a slight depression in front of the socket of the eye, which, 
although now serving as the attachment for the muscle running 
to the nostril, may represent the face-gland of the extinct 
Hip potion. Many of the dark-coloured horses of Europe have 
Barb or Arab blood in their veins, this being markedly the case 
with the Old English black or Shire horse, the skull of which 
shows a distinct depression in front of the eye-socket. This 
depression is still more marked in the extinct Indian E. sivalensis, 
which may have been the ancestral form. 

In Europe wild horses were abundant in the prehistoric 
Neolithic or polished-stone period. Judging from the quantity 
of their remains found associated with those of the men of that 
time, the chase of these animals must have been among man's 
chief occupations, and horses must have furnished him with 
one of his most important food-supplies. The characters of the 
bones preserved, and certain rude but graphic representations 
carved on "bones or reindeers' antlers, enable us to know that 
they were rather small in size and heavy in build, with large 
beads and rough shaggy manes and tails, much like, in fact, the 
recently extinct tarpans or wild horses of the steppes of the 
south of Russia, and the still-surviving Mongolian wild pony 
or " Przewalski's horse." These horses were domesticated 
by the inhabitants of Europe before the dawn of history. Horses 
are now diffused by the agency of man throughout almost the 
whole of the inhabited parts of the globe, and the great modifica- 
tions they have undergone in consequence of domestication, 
crossing, and selective breeding are well exemplified by comparing 
such extreme forms as the Shetland pony, dwarfed by uncongenial 
dhnate, the thoroughbred racer, and the London dray-horse. 
In Australia, as in America, horses imported by European 
settlers have escaped into unreclaimed lands and multiplied 
to a prodigious extent, roaming in vast herds over the wide 
and uncultivated plains. 

Ass, Zebra, Quagga. — The next group is formed by the Asiatic 
wild asses, or kiangs and onagers, as they might well be called, 
in order to distinguish them from the wild asses of Africa. These 
asses have moderate ears, the tail rather long, and the back-stripe 
dark brown and running from head to tail. On the neck and 
withers this stripe is formed by the mane. There are two 
species of Asiatic wild ass, with several varieties. The first and 
largest has two races, the chigetai (Equus kemionus) of Mongolia, 
and the kiang (£. k. Jriaffjt) of Tibet, which is a redder animal. 
The onager (£. onager), of which there are several races, is 
smaller, with a broader dorsal stripe, bordered with white; 
the colour varying from sandy to greyish. This species ranges 
from Baluchistan and N.W. India to Persia, Syria and Arabia. 
These asses inhabit desert plains or open table-land; the kiang 
dwelling at elevations of about 14.000 ft. They are generally 
found in herds of from twenty to forty, although occasionally 
in larger numbers. AH are fleet, and traverse rough ground 
with speed. On the lowlands they feed on dry grasses, and in 
Tibet on small woody plants. In India and Persia tbey are 
difficult to approach, although this is not the case in Tibet. 
Their sandy or chestnut colouring assimilates them to the horse, 
and separates them widely from the African wild asses, which 
are grey. The kiang has also larger and more horse-like hoofs, 
and the tail is haired higher up, thus approximating to Equus 
cabaUus prtacaiskii. 

Among the striped species, or zebras and quaggas of Africa, 



713 

the large Grevy's zebra (Equus grevytt) of Somalfland and 
Abyssinia stands apart from the rest by the number and narrow- 
ness of its stripes, which have an altogether peculiar arrangement 
on the hind-quarters, the small size of the callosities on the 
fore-legs, the mane extending on to the withers and enormous 
rounded ears, thickly haired Internally. The large size of the 
ears and the narrow stripes are in some degree at any rate 
adaptations to a life on scrub-clad plains. 

Next comes the closely allied species with small pointed ears, 
of which the true quagga (E. quagga) of South Africa is now 
extinct. This animal has the dark stripes limited to the head, 
neck and shoulders, upon a brown ground. In the typical 
form, now also extinct, of the bonte-quagga, dauw, or Burchell's 
zebra (E. burckeUi), the ground-colour is white, and the stripes 
cover the body and upper part of the limbs. This was the 
commonest species in the great plains of South Africa, where 
it roamed in large herds, often in company with the quagga and 
numerous antelopes. The species ranges from the Orange river 
to the confines of Abyssinia, but its more northern representatives 
show a gradual increase in the striping of the legs, culminating 
in the north-east African E. burehdli grant t, in which the stripes 
extend to the hoofs. The markings, too, are alternately black 
and white, in place of brown and creamy, with intermediate 
" shadow stripes," as in the southern races. 

Lastly, there is the true or mountain zebra (£. tebra), typically 
from the mountain ranges of Cape Colony, where it is now 
specially protected, but represented by £. zebra penricci m 
south-west Africa. In its relatively long ears and general build 
it approaches the African wild asses, from which it chiefly differs 
by the striping (which is markedly different from that of the 
quagga -group) and the reversal of the direction of the hairs along 
the spine. 

The African wild ass (£. asinus) h the parent of the domesti- 
cated breed, and is a long-eared grey animal, with no forelock, 
and either a shoulder-stripe or dark barrings on the legs. There 
are two races, of which the Nubian £. a. ojriconus is the smaller, 
and has a continuous dorsal stripe and a shoulder-stripe but no 
bars on the legs. The Somali race ( £. a somaliensis) , on the other 
hand, is a larger and greyer animal, with an interrupted dorsal 
and no shoulder-stripe, but distinct leg-barrings. 

Hybrids. — There are thus eight modifications of the horse-type 
at present existing, sufficiently distinct to be reckoned as species 
by most zoologists, and easily recognizable by their external 
characters. They are, however, all so closely allied that each 
will, at least in a state of domestication or captivity, breed with 
any of the others. Cases of fertile union are recorded between 
the horse and the quagga, the horse and the bonte-quagga or 
Burchell's zebra, the horse and the onager and kiang or Asiatic 
wild asses, the common ass and the zebra, the ass and bonte- 
quagga, the ass and the onager, the onager and the zebra, and 
the onager and the bonte-quagga. The two species which are 
farthest removed in structure, the horse and the ass, produce, as 
is well known, hybrids or mules, which in certain qualities useful 
to man excel both their progenitors, and in some countries and 
for certain kinds of work are in greater requisition than either. 
Although occasional more or less doubtful instances have been 
recorded of female mules breeding with the males of one or other 
of the pure species, it is more than doubtful if any case has 
occurred of their breeding inter se, although the opportunities 
of doing so must have been great, as mules have been reared in 
immense numbers for at least several thousands of years. We 
may therefore consider it settled that the different species of the 
group are now in that degree of physiological differentiation 
which enables them to produce offspring with each other, but 
does not permit of the progeny continuing the race, at all events 
unless reinforced by the aid of one of the pure forms. 

The several members of the group show mental differences 
quite as striking as those exhibited by their external form, and 
more than perhaps might be expected from the similarity of their 
brains. The patience of the ass. the high spirit of the horse, 
t he obstinacy of the mule, have long been proverbial. It is very 
remarkable that, out of so many species, two only should have 



7H 



shown any aptitude (or domestication, and that these should 
have been from time immemorial the universal and most useful 
companions and servants of man, while all the others remain in 
their native freedom to this day. It is, however, still a question 
whether this really arises from a different mental constitution 
causing a natural capacity for entering into relations with man, 
or whether it may not be owing to their having been brought 
gradually into this condition by long-continued and persevering 
efforts when the need of their services was felt. It is possible 
that one reason why most of the attempts to add new species 
to the list of our domestic animals in modern times have ended in 
failure is that it does not answer to do so in cases in which existing 
species supply all the principal purposes to which the new ones 
might be put. It can hardly be expected that zebras and boote- 
quaggas fresh from their native mountains and plains can be 
brought into competition as beasts of burden and draught with 
horses and asses, whose useful qualities have been augmented 
by the training of thousands of generations of progenitors. 

Not infrequently instances occur of domestic horses being 
produced with a small additional toe with complete hoof, usually 
on the inside of the principal toe, and, though far more rarely, 
three or more toes may be present. These malformations are 
often cited as instances of reversion to the condition of some of 
the earlier forms of equine animals previously mentioned. In 
some instances, however, the feet of such polydactyle horses 
bear little resemblance to those of the extinct Hip par ion or 
Anchitherium, but look rather as if due to that tendency to 
reduplication of parts which occurs so frequently as a monstrous 
condition, especially among domesticated animals, and which, 
whatever its origin, certainly cannot in many instances, as the 
cases of entire limbs superadded, or of six digits in man, be 
attributed to reversion. 

Anatomy 

The anatomical structure of the horse has been described 
in detail in several works mentioned in the bibliography at the 
end of this section, though these have generally been written 
from the point of view of the veterinarian rather than of the 
comparative anatomist. The limits of the present article 
will only admit of the most salient points being indicated, 
particularly those in which the horse differs from other Ungulata. 
Unless otherwise specified, it must be understood that all that 
is staled here, although mostly derived from observation upon 
the horse, applies equally well to the other existing members 
of the group. 



he 
8*1 

;he 
nd 

-en 

arrangement not met with in other mammals. The closure of the 
orbit behind distinguishes the skull of the horse from that of its allies 
the rhinoceros and tapir, and also from all of the pcrissodaetyles of 
the Eocene period. In front of the brain cavity, the great tubular 
nasal cavities are provided with well-developed turbirurl bones, and 
•re roofed over by large nasals, brood behind, and ending in front 
in a narrow decurved point. The opening of the anterior nostrils 
is prolonged backwards on each side of the face between the nasals 
and the elongated slender premaxillae. The latter expand in front, 
•nd are curved downwards to form the semicircular alveolar border 
which" supports the large incisor teeth. The palate is narrow in the 
interval between the incisor and molar teeth, in which are situated 



HORSE (AMATOMY 

the large anterior palatine foramina. Between the molar teeth it is 
broader, and it ends posteriorly in a rounded excavated border 
opposite the hinder border of the penultimate molar tooth. It is 
mainly formed by the maxillae, as the palatines are very nanoi. 
The pterygoids are delicate sleader slips of bone attached to the 
hinder border of the palatines, and supported externally by. and 
generally welded with, the rough pterygoid plates of the ahspheooid, 
with no pterygoid fossa between. They slope obliquely forward's, and 
end in curved, compressed, bamular processes. There is a dm met 
alisphenoid canal for the passage of the internal maxillary artery. 
The base of the cranium is long and 'narrow; the alisphenoid is very 
obliquely perforated by the foramen roiundum. but the forantes 
ovale is confluent with the large foramen lacerum medium behind 
The glenoid surface for the articulation of the mandible is greatly 
extended transversely, concave from side to side, convex from 
before back wards in front, and hollow behind, and is bounded 
posteriorly at its inner part by a prominent post-glcnoid process. 
The squamosal enters considerably into the formation of the te m poral 
fossa, and, besides sending the sygomatic process forwards, n sends 
down behind the meatus auditorius a post-tympanic process which 
aids to hold in place the otherwise loose tympano-pcriotic bane. 
Behind this the exoccipital gives off a long paroccipital process. 



Fie. 



PJiix, 
Ux. 
Na, 
Ma. 

L. 

Pf, 

Pa, 



l. —Side view of Skull of Horse, with the bone removed 
so as to expose the whole of the teeth. 



Tugal or malar bone. 
Lacrymal bone. 
Frontal bone. 
Squamosal bone. 
Parietal bone. 
Occipital condyle. 
Paroccipital process. 



Premaxtlla. c. The canine tooth. 

Maxilla. pin 1 . The situation of the rmb- 

Nasal bone. mentary first premolar, 

which has been lost ia 
the lower, but is present 
in the upper jaw. 
pm % , pm», and Pm*. The three 
fully developed pre- 
molar teeth. 
pp. Paroccipital process. m 1 . m*. and m'. The three true 

t*. t», and i*. The three incisor teeth. molar teeth. 

The periotic and tympanic are welded together, but not with the 
squamosal. The former has a wide but shallow AoccuUr fossa ox 
its inner side, and sends backwards a considerable " pars mastoide*.** 
which appears on the outer surface of the skull between the post- 
tympanic process of the squamosal and the exoccipital. The 
tympanic forms a tubular meatus auditorius externa* directed out- 
wards and slightly backwards. It is not dilated in to a distinct bulla, 
but ends in front in a pointed rod-like process. It completer/ 
embraces the truncated cylindrical tympanohya!, which is ot great 
size, corresponding with the large development of the whole anterior 
arch of the avoid. This consists mainly of a long and compressed 
stylohyal, expanded at the upper end. where it sends off a triangular 
posterior process. The basi-hyal is remarkable for the long, median, 
pointed, compressed " glossohyal " process, which it sends forward 
iTom its anterior border into the base of the tongue. A similar but 
less developed process is found in the rhinoceros and tapir. The 
lower Law is large, especially the region of the angle, which is ex- 



panded and flattened, giving great surface for the attachment ol 
sclc. The condyle is greatly elevated above the 
its articular surface is very wide transversely, and 



the masseter muscle, 
alveolar border; its ai 

narrow and convex from before backwards. The coro n oid process 
is slender, straight, and inclined backwards. The horizontal ramus, 
long, straight, and compressed, gradually narrows towards the sym- 
physis, where it expands laterally to form with the ankvlostfd 
opposite ramus the wide, semicircular, shallow alveolar border for 
the incisor teeth. 

The vertebral column consists of seven cervical, eighteen dorsal 
six lumbar. Ave sacral, and fifteen to eighteen caudal rcrtcbrae 



ANATOMY) 



HORSE 



7»5 



There may be nineteen rib-bearing vertebrae, in which case five 
only will be reckoned as belonging to the lumbar series. The 
odontoid process of the axis is wide. flat, and hollowed above, as in the 
ruminants. The bodies of the cervical vertebrae are elongated, 
strongly keeled, and markedly opisthocoelous, or concave behind 
and convex in front. The neural laminae are broad, the spines 
almost obsolete, except in the seventh, and the transverse processes 
not largely developed. In the trunk vertebrae the opisthocoelous 
character of the centrum gradually diminishes. The spinous pro- 
cesses of the anterior thoracic region are high and compressed. To 
these is attached the powerful elastic ligament {ligamentum nuchar, 
or " paxwax ") which, passing forwards in the middle line of the 
neck above the neural arches of the cervical vertebrae — to which it 
is also connected— is attached to the occiput and supports the weight 
Of the head. The transverse processes of the lumbar vertebrae are 
long, flattened, and project horizontally outwards or slightly forward 
from the arch. The mctapophyscs are moderately developed, and 
there are no anapophvses. The caudal vertebrae, except those 
quite at the base, are slender and cylindrical, without processes and 
without chevTon bones beneath. The ribs arc eighteen or nineteen 
in number on each side, flattened, and united to the sternum by 
short, stout, tolerably well ossified sternal ribs. The sternum con- 
sists of six pieces; the anterior or presternum is compressed and 
projects forwards like the prow of a boat. The segments which 
follow gradually widen, and the hinder part of the sternum is broad 
and flat. 

As in all other ungulates, there arc no clavicles. The scapula is 
long and slender, the supra-scapular border being rounded, and 
slowly and imperfectly ossified. The spine is very slightly developed ; 
rather above the middle its edge is thickened and somewhat turned 
backwards, but it gradually subsides at the lower extremity without 
forming any acromial process. The coracoid is a prominent rounded 
nodule. The humerus is stout and rather short. The ulna is rudi- 
mentary, being represented by little more than the olecranon. 
The shaft gradually tapers below and is firmly welded to the radius. 
The latter bone is of nearly equal width throughout. The three 
bones of the first row of the carpus (scaphoid, lunar and cuneiform) 
are subequal in size. The second row consists of a broad and flat 
magnum, supporting the great third metacarpal, having to its 
radial side the trapezoid, and to its ulnar side the unciform, which 
are both small, and articulate infcriorally with the rudimentary 
second and fourth metacarpals. The pisiform is large and prominent , 
flattened and curved; it articulates partly with the cuneiform and 
partly with the lower end of the radius. The large metacarpal is 
called in veterinary anatomy "cannon bone"; the small lateral 
metacarpals, which gradually taper towards their lower extremities, 
and lie in close contact with the large one. are called " splint bones." 
The single digit consists of a moderate-sized proximal {os sujjragmis, 
or large pastern), a short middle {os corona?, or small pastern), and 
a wide, semi-lunar, ungual phalanx (os pedis, or coffin bone). There 
b a pair of large nodular sesamoids behind the metacarpophalangeal 
articulation, and a single large transversely-extended sesamoid 
behind the joint between the second and third phalanx, called the 
" navicular bone." 

The carpal joint, corresponding to the wrist of man. is commonly 
called the " knee " of the horse, the joint between the metacarpal 
and the first phalanx the " fetlock,' that between the first and 
second phalanges the " pastern," and that between the second and 
third phalanges the " coffin joint." 

In the hinder limb the femur is marked, as in other perissodactyles, 
by the presence of a " third trochanter," a flattened process, curving 
forwards and arising from the outer side of the bone, about one-third 
of the distance from the upper cud. The fibula is reduced to a 
mere rod-like rudiment of the upper end. The lower part is absent 
or completely fused with the tibia. The calcaneum has a long and 
compressed calcaneal process. The astragalus has a large flat 
articular surface in front for the navicular, and a small one for the 
cuboid. The navicular and the external cuneiform bones are broad 
and flat. The cuboid is small, and the internal and middle cuneiform 
bones are small and united together. The metapodals and phalanges 
resemble very closely those of the fore limb, but the principal 
metatarsal is more laterally compressed at its upper end than is the 
corresponding metacarpal. The joint between the femur and tibia, 
corresponding to the knee of man, is called the " stifle-joint "; that 
between the tibia and tarsus, corresponding to the ankle of man, 
the " hock." The bones and joints of the foot have the same names 
as in the fore limb. The horse is eminently " digit igrade." standing 
on the extremity of the single digit of each loot, which is kept habitu- 
ally in a position approaching to vertical. 

The muscles of the limbs are modified from those of the ordinary 
mammalian type in accordance with the reduced condition of the 
bones and the simple requirements of flexion and extension of the 
joints, no such actions as pronation and supination, or opposition of 
digits, being possible or needed. The muscles therefore which pcr« 
form these functions in other quadrupeds are absent or rudimentary. 

Below the carpal and tarsal joints, the fore and hind limbs corre- 
spond almost exactly in structure as well as function. On the 
anterior or extensor surface of the limb a powerful tendon (7 in fig. 2), 
that of the anterior extensor of the phalanges (corresponding to the 
extensor communis digitorum of the arm and extensor longus dtgitorum 



of the foot of man) passes down over the metacarpal bone and 
phalanges, to be inserted mainly into the upper edge of the anterior 
surface of the last phalanx or pedal bone. There is also a much 
smaller second extensor on the outer side of this in each limb, the 
lateral extensor of the phalanges. In the fore-leg the tendon of this 
muscle (which corresponds with the extensor minimi digiti of man) 
receives a slip from that of the principal extensor, and is inserted 
into the first phalanx. In the hind-leg (where it is the homologue 
apparently ot the beroneus brevis of man) the tendon becomes 
blended with that of the large extensor. 

A strong ligamentous band behind the metapodium, arising from 
near the upper extremity of its posterior surface, divides into two 
at its lower end. and each division, being first connected with one 
of the paired upper sesamoid bones, passes by the side of the first 
phalanx to join the extensor tendon of the phalanges. This is 
called in veterinary anatomy the " suspensory ligament of the 
sesamoids." or of the " fetlocfc " (10 in fig. 2); but its attachments* 
and relations, as well as the occasional presence of museubr fibres 
in its substance, show that it is the homologue of the interosseous 
muscles of other mammals, modified in structure and function, to 



. Flo. 1.— Section of Foot of Horse. 



1 , Metacarpal bone. 10, 

2, First phalanx {os $uffraginis). 

3, Second phalanx {os coronae). 11, 

4, Third or ungual phalanx (os 

pedis, or coffin bone). 12, 

5, One of the upper sesamoid 

bones. 

6, Lower sesamoid or navicular 13, 

bone. 14. 

7, Tendon of anterior extensor 

of the phalanges. 15, 

8, Tendon of superficial flexor 

fjl. perforates) . 16, 

9, Tendon of deep flexor UL 17* 

ptr/orans). 18, 



Suspensory ligament of fet- 
lock. 

Inferior or short sesamoid 
ligament. 

Derma or skin of the foot, 
covered with hair, and 
continued into 

The coronary cushion, 

The podophyllous or laminar 
membrane, and 

The keratogenous membrane 
of the sole. 

Plantar cushion. 

Hoof. 

Fatty cushion of fetlock. 



suit the requirements of the horse's foot. Behind or superficial to 
this are placed the two strong tendons of the flexor muscles, the 
most superficial, ox flexor perforatus (8) dividing to allow the other 
to pass through, and then inserted into the middle phalanx. The 
flexor perforata (9) is as usual inserted into the terminal phalange. 
In the fore-leg these muscles correspond with those similarly named 
in man. In the hind-leg, the perforated tendon is a continuation of 
that of the plantaris, passing pulley- wise over the tuberosity of the 
calcaneum. The perforating tendon is derived from the muscle 
corresponding with the long flexor of man, and the smaller tendon 
of the oblique flexor {tibialis porticus of man) is united with it. 

The hoof of the horse corresponds to the nail or claw of other 
mammals, but is so constructed as to form a complete and solid 
case to the expanded termination of the toe, giving a firm basis of 
support formed of a non-sensitive substance, which is continually 
renewed by the addition of material from within, as its surface 
wears away by friction. The terminal phalange of the toe is greatly 
enlarged and modified in form to support this hoof, and the size of 
the internal framework of the foot is increased by a pair of lateral 
nbro-canilaginous masses attached on each side to the hinder edges 
of the bone, and by a fibro-cellular and fatty plantar cushion in the 
median pan. These structures arc all enclosed in the middle sub- 
corneous integument, a continuation of the ordinary skin of the 
limb, but extremely vascular, and having its superficial extent 

? really increased by being developed into papillae or laminae, 
rom this the horny maternal which constitutes the hoof is exuded. 
A thickened ring encircling the upper part, called coronary cushion 
(13) and the sole (15), are covered with numerous thicldy-«et 



jib 



HORSE 



(ANATOMY 



papillae or villi, and take the greatest share in the formation of the 
hoof; the intermediate part constituting the front and side of the 
foot (14), corresponding with the wall of the hoof, is covered with 
parallel fine longitudinal laminae, which fit into corresponding 
depressions in the inner side of the horny hoof. # % 

The horny hoof is divided into a wall or crust consisting of the 
front and sides, the flattened or concave sole, and the frog, a 
triangular median prominence, notched posteriorly, with the apex 
turned forwards, situated in the hinder part of the sole. It is formed 
of pavement epithelial cells, mainly grouped in a concentric manner 
around the vascular papillae of the subcorneous integument, so that 
a section near the base of the hoof, cut transversely to the long axis 
of these papillae, shows a number of small circular or oval orifices, 
with cells arranged concentrically round them. The nearer the 
surface of the hoof, or farther removed from the seat of growth* the 
more indistinct the structure becomes. 

. Small round or oval plates of horny epithelium called " chestnuts,*' 
callosities growing^ like the hoof from enlarged papillae of the skin, 
are found on the inner face of the fore-arm, above the carpal joint 
in all species of Equidae, and in the horse CE, cabaUui) similar 
structures occur near the upper extremity of the inner fact of the 
metatarsus. They are evidently rudimentary structures which it 
is suggested mav represent glands (Lydekker, Proc Zool. Soc. 
London, toot. vol. L). 



cir 
eqi 
tec 
rec 
of 



» . ' v . .. • ._ _ . conspicuous from its 

Fic. 3— Longitudinal and Transverse Section da r k colour, and con- 

of Upper ljicisor of Horse. stitutes the M mark " 

P, Pulpcavity ; by which the age of 

d, Dentine or ivory. the horse is judged, 

e, Enamel. as in consequence of 
c. Outer layer of cementum or crusta pttrosa. i U only extending to 
c, Inner layer of cementum, lining a, the pit a certain depth in 

or cavity of the crown of the tooth. the crown it becomes 
obliterated as the latter wears away, and then the tooth assumes 
the character of that of an ordinary incisor, consisting only of 
a core of dentine, surrounded by the external enamel layer. 
It is not quite so deep in the lower as in the upper teeth. 
The canines arc either rudimentary or absent in the female. 
In the male they are compressed, pointed, and smaller than the 
incisors, from which they are separated by a slight interval. The 
teeth of the cheek series are all in contact with each other, but 
separated from the canines by a considerable toothless space. The 
anterior premolars are quite rudimentary, sometimes not developed 
at all. and generally fall by the time the animal attains maturity, 
6P that there are but six functional cheek teeth, — three that have 
predecessors in the milk-dentition, and hence are considered as 
premolars, and three molars, but otherwise, except the first and last 
of the series, not distinguishable in form or ati ucture. These teeth 
in both upper and lower jaws are extremely long-crowned or hypso- 
dont, successive portions being pushed out as the surface wears 
away, a process which continues until the animal becomes advanced 
in age. The enamelled surface is infolded in a complex manner (a 
modification of that found in other perissodactyles). the folds ex- 
tending quite to the base of the crown, and the interstices being 
filled and the surface covered with a considerable mass of cement, 
which binds together and strengthens the whole tooth. As the teeth 
wear, the folded enamel, being harder than the other constituents, 
she dentine and cement, forms projecting ridges on the surface 



arranged in a definite pattern, which give it great efficiency as a 
grinding instrument (see fig. a, in article EovtdaeJ. The free 
surfaces of the upper teeth are quadrate, except the first and last. 
which are nearly triangular. The lower teeth are much narrower 
than the upper. 

The milk-dentition consists of t. I. c. J, m. |-?#,— the canines 
and first or rudimentary premolars having apparently no prede- 
cessors. In form and structure the milk-teeth much resemble the 
permanent ones, having the same characteristic enamel-foldings. 
Their eruption commences a few days after birth, and is complete 
before the end of the first year, the upper teeth usually appearing 
somewhat earlier than the lower. The first teeth which appear are 
the first and second milk-molars (about five days), then the central 
incisor (from seven to ten days); this is followed by the second 
incisor (at one month), then the third molar, and finally the third 
incisor. Of the permanent teeth the first molar appears a little 
after the end of the first year, followed by the second molar before 
the end of the second year. At about two and a half years the first 
premolar replaces its predecessor. Between two ana a half and 
three years the first incisor appears. At three years the second aod # 
third premolars, and the third molar have appeared, at from three 
and a half to four years the second incisor, at four to four and a 
half years the canine, and, finally, at five years, the third incisor, 
completing the permanent dentition. Up to this period the age of 
the horse is dearly shown by the condition of dentition, and for 
some time longer indications can be obtained from the wear of the 
incisors, though this depends to a certain extent upon the hardness 
of the food or other circumstances. As a general rule, the depression 
caused by the infolding of the surface of the incisor (the " mark ") 
is obliterated in the first or central incisor at six years, in the second 
at seven years, and in the third at eight years. In the upper teeth, 
as the depressions are deeper, this obliteration does not take place 
until about two years later. After this period no certain indications 
can be obtained of the age of the horse from the teeth. 

Direslive Organs. — The lips are flexible and prehensile; and the 
membrane that lines them and the cheeks smooth. The palate it 
long and narrow; its mucous surface has seventeen pairs of not very 
sharply defined oblique ridges, extending as far back as the last 
molar tooth, beyond which the velum pcUUi extends for about 3 in.. 
having a soft corrugated surface, and ending posteriorly in an arched 
border without a uvula. This embraces the base of the epiglottis, 
and, except while swallowing food, shuts off all communication 
between the cavity of the mouth and the pharynx, respiration being, 
under ordinary circumstances, exclusively through the nostrils. 
Between the mucous membrane and the bone of the hard palate ia 
a dense vascular and nervous plexus. The membrane lining the 
jaws is soft and corrugated. An elongated raised glandular mass, 

J\ in. long and I in. from above downwards, extending backwards 
rom the root of the tongue along the side of the jaws, with openings 
on the surface leading into crypts with glandular walls, represents 
the tonsil. The tongue, corresponding to the form of the mouth, 
is long and narrow. It consists of a compressed intermolar portion 
with a flat upper surface, broad behind and becoming narrower in 
front, and of a depressed anterior part rather shorter than the 
former, which is narrow behind ana widens towards the evenly 
rounded apex. The dorsal surface generally Is soft and smooth. 
There are two large circumvallate papillae near the base, rather 
irregular in form, about a quarter of an inch in diameter and half an 
inch apart. The conical papillae are small and dose set, though 
longer and more filamentous on the intermolar portion. There are 
no fungiform papillae on the dorsum, but a few inconspicuous ones 
scattered along the sides of the organ. 

Of the salivary glands the parotid is by far the largest, elongated 
in the vertical direction, and narrower in the middle than at other 
end. Its upper extremity embraces the lower surface of the cartila- 
ginous ear-conch; its lower end reaches the level of the inferior 
margin of the mandible, along the posterior margin of which it is 
placed. Its duct leaves the inferior anterior angle, at first descends 
a little, and runs forward under cover of the rounded inferior border 
of the lower jaw, then curves up along the anterior margin of the 
masseter muscle, becoming superfitial, pierces the bucdnator.and 
enters the mouth by a simple aperture opposite the middle of the 
crown of the third premolar tooth. It is not quite so thick as a goose- 
quill when distended, and nearly a foot in length. 

The submaxillary gland is of very similar texture to the last, 
but much smaller; it is placed deeper, and Kes with its main axis 
horizontal. It is elongated and slender, and flattened from within 
outwards. Its posterior end rests against the anterior surface of 
the transverse process of the atlas, from which it extends forwards 
and downwards, slightly curved, to beneath the ramus of the jaw. 
The duct which runs along its upper and internal border passes 
forwards in the usual course, lying in the inner side of the sublingual 
gland, to open on the outer surface of a distinct papilla, situated on 
the floor of the mouth, half an inch from the middle line, and midway 
between the lower incisor teeth and the attachment of the fraenum 
linguae. The sublingual is represented by a mass of glands lying 
just beneath the mucous membrane of the floor of the mouth on 

I the side of the tongue, causing a distinct ridge, extending from the 
fraenum backwards, the numerous ducts opening separately along 
the summit of the ridge. The buccal glands are am and in two 



HISTORY] 



HORSE 



717 



7 i8 



HORSE 



fare, and exposed to the rigour of the seasons, he was probably 
the little hardy thing we yet see him; but in the marshes of 
the Nen and the Witham, and on the borders of the Tees and the 
Clyde, there would be as much proportionate development of 
frame and strength as we find at the present day." After the 
occupation of the country by the Romans, it appears that the 
horses of their cavalry were crossed with the native mares, and 
thus there was infused into the breed new blood, consisting 
probably of strains from every quarter from which Roman 
remounts were procured. As to the effect of this cross we are^ 
not, however, in a position to judge. We are also quite uncertain 
as to the extent to which the Jutes and Saxons may in their 
turn have again introduced a new breed of horses into England; 
and even to the close of the Anglo-Saxon period of English 
history allusions to the horse are still very infrequent. The 
horstkegn we know, however, was from an early period a high 
court official; and from such a law as that of Athelstari pro- 
hibiting the exportation of horses except as presents, it may be 
inferred that the English breed was not only much valued at 
home but also in great request abroad. 1 

The period of the Norman Conquest marks an important 
stage in the history of the British horse. William the Conqueror's 
own horse was of the Spanish breed, and others of the same kind 
were introduced by the barons on their estates. But the Norman 
horses included many varieties, and there is no doubt that to the 
Conquest the inhabitants of Britain were indebted for a decided 
improvement in the native horse, as well as for the introduction 
of several varieties previously unknown. According to Oiraldus 
Cambrensis, Roger de Bellesme, a follower of William I., after- 
wards created earl of Shrewsbury, imported some stallions from 
Spain into England; their produce was celebrated by Drayton 
the poet. It is curious to notice that agriculture seems to be the 
last use to which the horse has been put. The earliest suggestion 
that horses were used in agriculture is derived from a piece of 
the Bayeux tapestry, where a horse is represented as drawing 
a harrow. This, however, must have been an exceptional case, 
for we know that oxen were used until a comparatively late time, 
and that in Wales a law existed forbidding horses to be used for 
ploughing. 

In i iai two Eastern horses are said to have been imported, — 
one of them remaining in England, and the other being sent as a 
present by Ring Alexander I. to the church of St Andrews, in 
Scotland. It has been alleged that these horses were Barbs 
from Morocco, but a still more likely theory is that they existed 
only in name, and never reached either England or Scotland. 
The crusades were probably the means of introducing fresh 
strains of blood into England, and of giving opportunity for 
fresh crossings. The Spanish jennet was brought over about 
ti82. jKing John gave great encouragement to horse-breeding: 
one of his earliest efforts was to import a hundred Flemish 
stallions, and, having thus paved the way for improving the 
breed of agricultural horses, he set about acquiring a valuable 
stud for his own use. 

Edward III. was likewise an admirer of the horse; he procured 
fifty Spanish horses, probably jennets. At this time there was 
evidently a tendency to breed a somewhat lighter and speedier 
horse; but, while the introduction of a more active animal 
would soon have led to the displacement of the ponderous but 
powerful cavalry horse then in use, the substituted variety 
would have been unable to carry the weight of armour with 
which horse and rider were alike protected; and so in the end 
the old breed was kept up for a time. „With the object of pre- 
serving to England whatever advantages might accrue from 
her care and skill in breeding an improved stamp of horses, 
Edward III. forbade their exportation; they consequently 
improved so rapidly in value that Richard II. compelled dealers 
to limit their prices to a fixed maximum. In the ninth year of 
his reign, Edward received from the king of Navarre a present 

•Some fragments of legislation relating to the horse about this 
period may be gleaned from Ancient Laws and Institutes of England 
(fol., London, 1840), and Ancient Laws and Institutes 0/ Wales 
tfoL, London, 1841). 



(HISTORY 

of two running horses, supposed to have been valuable. The 
wars of 1346 checked the improvement of hones, and undid 
much of what had been previously accomplished, for we read that 
the cavalry taken into France by Edward III. were but in- 
differently mounted, and that in consequence he had to purchase 
large numbers of foreign horses from Hainault and elsewhere 
for remounts. The reign of Richard III. does not seem to have 
been remarkable for the furtherance of horse-breeding; but it 
was then that post-horses and stages were introduced. 

Our information on the whole subject is but scanty down to 
the reign of Henry VII., who continued the enactment against 
the exportation of stallions, but relaxed it in the case of mares 
above two years old. His object was to retain the best horses 
in the country, and to keep the price of them down by limiting 
the demand and encouraging the supply. In hi* reign gelding k 
believed to have had its origin, on account of numerous herds 
of horses belonging to different proprietors grazing together, 
especially in time of harvest. Henry VIII. was particularly 
careful that horse-breeding should be conducted on right prin- 
ciples, and his enactments, if somewhat arbitrary, were singularly 
to the point. In the thirty-second year of this reign, the " bul 
for the breed of horses " was passed, the preamble of which runs 
thus: — " Forasmuch as the generation and breed of good nod 
strong horses within this realm extendeth not only to a great 
help and defence of the same, but also is a great commodity 
and profit to the inhabitants thereof, which is now much decayed 
and diminished, by reason that, in forests, chases, moors and 
waste grounds within this realm, little stoned*borses and nags 
of small stature and of little value be not only suffered to pasture 
thereupon, but also to cover mares feeding there, whereof 
cometh in manner no profit or commodity." Section 2 of the 
act provides that no entire horse being above the age of two 
years, and not being of the height of is " handfalls," shall be 
put to graze on any common or waste land in certain counties; 
any one was to be at liberty to seize a horse of unlawful 
height, and those whose duty it was to measure horses, but who 
refused to do so, were to be fined 40s. By section 6 all forests, 
chases, commons, &c, were to be " driven " within fifteen days of 
Michaelmas day, and all horses, mares and colts not giving 
promise of growing into serviceable animals, or of producing 
them, were to be killed. The aim of the act was to prevent 
breeding from animals not calculated to produce the class of 
horse suited to the needs of the country. By another act 
(27 Henry VIII. chapter 6), after stating that the " breed of good 
strong horses " was likely to diminish, it was ordered that the 
owners of all parks and enclosed grounds of the extent of one 
mile should keep two mares 13 hands high for breeding purposes, 
or, if the extent of the ground was 4 m., four mares. The 
statute was not to extend to the counties of Westmorland, 
Cumberland, Northumberland or the bishopric of Durham. 
Henry took great pains to improve the royal stud: according 
to Sir Thomas Chaloner— a writer in the reign of Elizabeth — 
he imported horses from Turkey, Naples and Spain. 

Queen Elizabeth is reputed to have been an accomplished 
horsewoman, and to have indulged in riding late in life. In the 
first year of her reign she revived an act passed by Henry VHI. 
making it felony " to sell, exchange or deliver within Scotland, 
or to the use of any Scottishman, any horse " ; this, however, 
was very naturally repealed by James I. Carriages were soon 
after introduced, and the use of them speedily became so fashion- 
able that a bill was brought in " to restrain the excessive and 
superfluous use of coaches." Prior to the introduction of carriages 
horseback was the means of locomotion, and Queen Elizabeth 
rode in state to St Paul's on a pillion; but even after carriages 
were used, horseback was held to be more dignified, for James L 
and his judges rode on horseback to Westminster HalL One 
advantage of the introduction of carriages was that it created 
a demand for a lighter and quicker sort of horse, instead of the 
ponderous animal which, despite all attempts to banish him, 
was still the horse of England— the age of chivalry having been 
the first epoch of the British horse. 

Gunpowder, too, was invented; and now that the weight 



HISTORY] 



HORSE 



719 



of tbe cavalry soldier was diminlihed by the substitution of 
lighter armour, a quicker and better bred bone was thought 
desirable for military service. The introduction of carriages 
and the invention of gunpowder thus opened out a new industry 
in breeding; and a decided change was gradually creeping 
on "by the time that James I. came to the throne (1603), which 
commences the second epoch. James was a thorough sportsman, 
And his taste for racing, in which he freely indulged, caused 
him to think but little of the speed of even the best English 
horses. With the laudable motive, therefore, of effecting improve- 
ment in horses, he gave tbe then large sum of 500 guineas for 
an Arab stallion which had been procured from Constantinople 
by a Mr Markham, since known as the " Markham Arabian." 
Tliis is the first authentic account we have of the importation 
of Arab blood, and the Stud- Book says he was the first of that 
breed ever seen in England. The people having to do with 
horses at that time were as conservative in their notions as most 
of the grooms are now, and the " Markham Arabian " was not 
at all approved of. The duke of Newcastle, in his treatise on 
horsemanship, said that he had seen the above Arabian, and 
described him as a small bay horse and not of very excellent 
shape. In this instance, however, prejudice (and it is difficult 
to believe that it was anything else) was right, for King James's 
first venture does not appear to have been a success either as a 
race-horse or as a sire, and thus Arabian blood was brought 
Into disrepute. The king, however, resolved to give Eastern 
blood another trial, and bought a horse known as Place's White 
Turk from a Mr Place, who subsequently held some office in 
connexion with the stable under Cromwell. Charles I. followed 
in thefootatepsof James, and lent such patronage to the breeding 
of a better kind of horse that a memorial was presented to him, 
asking that some measures might be taken to prevent the old 
stamp of horse " fit for the defence of the country" from dying 
out. 

We now come to a very important period in the history 
of the British horse, for Charles II. warmly espoused the introduc- 
tion of Eastern blood into England. He sent his master of the 
horse abroad to purchase a number of foreign horses and mares 
lor breeding, and the mares brought over by him (as also many 
of their produce) were called "royal mares"; they form a 
conspicuous feature in the annals of breeding. The Stud-Book 
shows of what breed the royal mares really were: one of them, 
the dam of Dodsworth (who, though foaled in England, was a 
natural Barb), was a Barb mare; she was sold by (he stud- master, 
after Charles II.'s death, for forty guineas, at twenty years old, 
when in foal by the Hehrisley Turk. 

James II. was a good horseman,' and had circumstances 
been more propitious he might have left his mark in the sporting 
annals of the country. In his reign, according to the Slud-Book, 
the Stradling or Lister Turk was brought into England by the 
duke of Berwick from the siege of Buda. 

The reign of William III. is noteworthy'as the era in which, 
among other importations, there appeared the first of three 
Eastern horses to which the modern thoroughbred race-horse 
traces back as the founders of his lineage. This was the Byerly 
Turk, of whom nothing more is known than that— to use the 
words of the first volume of the Stud- Book— he was Captain 
Byerly 's charger in Ireland in King WHliam's wars.' The second 
of the three horses above alluded to was the Darley Arabian, 
who was a genuine Arab, and was imported from Aleppo by a 
brother of Mr Darley of Aldby Park, Yorkshire, about the end 
of the reign of William III. or the beginning of that of Anne. 
The third horse of the famous trio, the Godolphin Arabian 
or Barb, brought to England about five-and- twenty years after 
(he Darley Arabian, will be more particularly referred to further 
on. All the horses now on the turf or at the stud trace their 
ancestry in the direct male line to one or other of these three — 
the Byerly Turk, the Darley Arabian, and the Godolphin Arabian 
or Barb. In the female line their pedigrees can be traced to 
other sources, but for atl practical purposes it suffices (0 regard 
one or other of these three animals as the ultima Thulc of racing 
pedigree. Of course there is a large interfusion of the blood of 



each of the trio through the dams of horses of the present day; 
indeed, it is impossible to find an English race-hone which does 
not combine the blood of all three. , 

The Kace-korses- The third and last epoch of the British 
horse, via. that of the thoroughbred racer, may be taken to date 
from the beginning of the 18th century. By thoroughbred is 
meant a horse or mare whose pedigree is registered in the Slud- 
Book kept by Messrs. Weatherby, the official agents of the 
Jockey Club—originally termed the keepers of the match-book— 
as weU as publishers of the Racing Calendar. The first attempt 
to evolve order out of the chaos which had long reigned supreme 
was made in 1701, for we find in the preface of the first volume of 
the Stud-Boek, published in x8o8, that " with a view to correct 
tbe then increasing evil of false and inaccurate pedigrees, the 
author was in the year 1791 prevailed upon to publish an Intro- 
duction to General Stud- Book, consisting of a small collection 
of pedigrees which he had extracted from racing calendars and 
sale papers and arranged on a new plan." It will be seen that 
the compiler pf the volume on which so much depends had to 
go back fully a century, with little else to guide him but odds 
and ends in the way of publications and tradition. Mistakes 
under such circumstances are pardonable. The Stud-Booh then 
(vol. i.), which is the oldest authority we have, contains the names 
and in most cases the pedigrees, obscure though they may be, 
of a very large number of horses and mares of note from the 
earliest accounts, but with two exceptions no dates prior to the 
18th century are specified in it. These exceptions are the 
Byerly Turk, who was H Captain Byerly 's charger in Ireland 
in King William's wars (1689, &c.),"and ahorse called Counsellor, 
bred by Mr Egerton in 1694, by Lord D'Arcy's Counsellor by 
Lord Lonsdale's Counsellor by the Shaftesbury Turk out of 
sister to Spanker— all tbe dams in Counsellor's pedigree tracing 
back to Eastern mares. There is not the least doubt that many 
of the animals named in the Stud-Booh were foaled much earlier 
than the above dates, but we have no particulars as to time; 
and after all it is not of much consequence. 

The Stud- Booh goes on to say of the Byerly Turk that he did 
not cover many bred mares, but was the sire of the duke of 
Devonshire's Basto, Halloway's Jigg, and others. Jigg, or Jig, 
is a very important factor, as will be seen hereafter. The Slud- 
Book, although silent as to the date of hb birth, says he was a 
common country stallion in Lincolnshire until Partner was six 
years old— and we know from the same authority that Partner 
was foaled in 1718; we may therefore conclude that Jigg was 
a later foal than Basto, who, according to Wbyte's History of 
the Turf, was a brown horse foaled in 1703. 

The reign of Queen Anne, however (170J-1714), » that 
which will ever be inseparably connected with the thoroughbred 
race-horse on account of the fame during that period of the 
Darley Arabian, a bay stallion, from whom our very best horses 
are descended. According to the Stud- Book, " Darley's Arabian 
was brought over by a brother of Mr Darley of Yorkshire, who,' 
being an agent in merchandise abroad, became member of a 
hunting club, by whkh means he acquired interest to procure 
this horse." The Stud- B 06k is silent, and other authorities 
differ, as to the date of the importation of this celebrated Arab, 
some saying he came over in the year 1700, others that he 
arrived somewhat later; but we know from the Slud-Book 
that Manica (foaled in 1707), Aleppo (1711). Almanxor (1713). 
and Flying Childers (1715) were got by him, as also was Bartlett's 
Childers, a younger brother of Flying Childers. It is (generally 
believed that he was imported in Anne's reign, but the exact 
date is immaterial, for, assuming that he was brought over as 
early as 1700 from Aleppo, he could scarcely have had a foal 
living before 1701, the first year of the 18th century. The 
Darley Arabian did much to remove the prejudice against 
Eastern blood which had been instilled into the public mind 
by the duke of Newcastle's denunciation of the Markham 
Arabian. Prince George of Denmark, consort of Queen Anne, 
was himself a large horse-owner; and it was in a great measure 
owing to his intervention that so many valuable stallions were 
imported during her reign 



720 



At this period we find, among a mass of bones and mares 
in the Stud- Book without any dates against their names, many 
animals of note with the earliest chronology extant, from Grey 
Ramsden (1704) and Bay Bolton (1705) down to a mare who 
exercised a most important influence on the English blood-horse. 
This was Roxana (17 18) by the Bald Galloway, her dam sister 
to Chanter by the Akaster Turk, from a daughter of Leedes's 
Arabian and a mare by Spanker. Roxana threw in 1732 the 
bay colt Lath by the Godolphin Arabian, the sorrel colt Round- 
head by Childers in 1733, and the bay colt Cade by the Godolphin 
Arabian in 1734, in which year she died within a fortnight after 
foaling, the produce — Cade— being reared on cow's milk. The 
Godolphin Barb or Arabian, as he was commonly called, was a 
brown bay about 15 hands in stature, with an unnaturally high 
crest, and with some white on his off hind heel. He is said to 
have been imported into England from France by Mr Coke, 
where, as the editor of the Stud-Book was informed by a French 
gentlemen, he was so little thought of that he had actually 
drawn a cart in the streets of Paris. Mr Coke gave him to a 
Mr. Williams, who in his turn presented him to the earl of 
Godolphin. Although called an Arabian, there is little doubt 
he was a Barb pure and simple. In 1 73 1 , being then the property 
of Mr. Coke, he was teazer to Hobgoblin, and on the latter 
refusing his services to Roxana, the mare was put to the 
Godolphin, and the produce was Lath (1732), the first of his get, 
and the most celebrated race-horse of his day after Flying 
Childers. He was also the sire of Cade, own brother to Lath, 
and of Reguius the maternal grandsire of Eclipse. He died 
at Gogmagog in Cambridgeshire, in the possession of Lord 
Godolphin, in 1753, being then, as is supposed, in his twenty- 
ninth year. He is believed to have been foaled in Barbary 
about 1724, and to have been imported during the reign of 
George II. 

In regard to the mares generally, we have a record of the royal 
mares already alluded to, and likewise of three Turk mares 
brought over from the siege of Vienna in 1684, as well as of other 
importations; but it is unquestionable that there was a very 
large number of native mares in England, improved probably 
from time to time by racing, however much they may have been 
crossed at various periods with foreign horses, and that from 
this original stock were to some extent derived the size and 
stride which characterized the English race-horse, while his 
powers of endurance and elegant shape were no doubt inherited 
from the Eastern horses, most of which were of a low stature, 
14 hands or thereabouts. It is only necessary to trace carefully 
back the pedigree of most of the famous horses of early times 
to discover faults on the side of the dam — that is to say, the 
expression " dam's pedigree unknown," which evidently means 
of original or native blood. Whatever therefore may be owing 
to Eastern blood, of which from the middle of the 17th to the 
beginning of the 18th century a complete wave swept over the 
British Isles, some credit is unquestionably due to the native 
mares (which Blaine says were mostly Cleveland bays) upon 
which the Arabian, Barb, or Turk blood was grafted, and which 
laid the foundation of the modern thoroughbred. Other nations 
may have furnished the blood, but England has made, the 
race-horse. 

Without prosecuting this subject further, it may be enough 
here to follow out the lines of the Darley Arabian, the Byerly 
Turk, and the Godolphin Arabian or Barb, the main ancestors 
of the British thoroughbred of the 18th and 19th centuries, 
through several famous race-horses, each and all brilliant 
winners,— Flying Childers, Eclipse, Herod and Matchcm,-— to 
whom it is considered sufficient to look as the great progenitors 
of the race-horse of to-day. 

1. The Darley Arabian's line is represented in a twofold degree — 
first, through his son Flying Childers, his grandsons Blaze and 
Snip, and his great-grandson Snap, and, secondly, through his 
other son Bartlett's Childers and his great-great-grandson Eclipse. 
Flying or Devonshire Childers, so called to distinguish him from 
other horses of the same name, was a bay horse of entirely Eastern 
blood, with a blaze in his face and four white feet, foaled in 17 15. 
He was bred by Mr Leonard Childers of Carr House near Doncaster, 



HORSE [HISTORY 

and was purchased when young by the duke of Devonshire. He 
was got by the Darley Arabian from Betty Leedes, by Careless from 
sister to Leedes, by Leedes's Arabian from a mare by Spanker out 
of a Barb mare, who was Spanker's own mother. Spanker himself 
was by D'Arcy's Yellow Turk from a daughter of the Morocco Ba*t» 
and Old Bald Peg, by an Arab horse from a Barb mare. Careless 
was by Spanker from a Barb mare, so that Childers's dam was closely 
in-bred to Spanker. Flying Childers — the wonder of his time — 
was never beaten, and died in the duke of Devonshire's stud in 
1741, aged twenty-six years. He was the sire of, among other 
horses. Blase 0733) and Snip (1736). Snip too had a celebrated so* 
called Snap (1750), and it is chiefly in the female line through the 
mares by these horses, of which there are fully thirty in the Stud- 
Book, that the blood of Flying Childers is handed down to us. 

The other representative line of the Darley Arabian is through 
Bartlett's Childers, also bred by Mr Leonard Childers, and sold to 
Mr Bartlett of Masham, in Yorkshire. He was for several years 
called Young Childers, — it being generally supposed that he was a 
younger brother of his Flying namesake, but his date of birth b not 
on record,— and subsequently Bartlett's Childers. Thjs horse, who 



was never trained, was the aire of Squirt (1732). whose son Marske 

' 1 750) begat Eclipse and Young Marske ( 1 762), sire of Shuttle ( 1793). 

his at least is the generally accepted theory, although Eclipse s 



dam is said to have been covered by Shakespeare as well as by 
Marske. Shakespeare was the son of Hobgoblin by Aleppo, and 
consequently the male line of the Darley Arabian would come 
through these horses instead of through Bartlett's Childers, Squirt, 
and Marske; the Stud-Book, however, says that Marske was the sire 
of Eclipse. This last-named celebrated ho r s e - p erh aps the most 
celebrated in the annals 01 the turf— was foaled on the 1st of April 
1764. the day on which a remarkable eclipse of the sun occurred, 
and he was named after it. He was bred by the duke of Cumberland, 
after whose decease he was purchased by a Mr WUdman, and subse- 
quently sold to Mr D. O'Kclly, with whom he will ever be identified. 
His dam Spiletta was by Reguius, son of the Godolphin Barb, from 
Mother Western, by a son of Snake from a mare by Old Montague 



supposed to be of native blood. Eclipse was a chestnut horse with 
a white blaze down his face; his off hind leg was white from the 
hock downwards, and he had black spots upon his rump — this 
peculiarity coming down to the present day in direct male descent. 
His racing career commenced at five years of age, viz. on the 3rd 
May 1769, at Epsom, and terminated on the 4th October 1770, at 
Newmarket. He can or walked over for eighteen races, and was 
never beaten. It was in his first race that Mr O'Kelly took the 
odds to a large amount before the start for the second heat, that he 
would place the horses. When called upon to declare, he uttered 
the exclamation, which the event justified, " Eclipse first, and the 
rest nowhere." 

Eclipse commenced his stud career in 177 1, and had an enormous 
number of foals, of which four only in the direct male line have 
come down to us, viz. Potoooooooo, or, as he is commonly called, 
Pot-8-os (1773)* his most celebrated son, King Fergus (i77S)« Joe 
Andrews (1778), and Mercury (1778), though several others are 
represented in the female line. Pot-8-os was the sire of Waxy 
(1790) out of Maria (1777) by Herod out cf Lisette (1772) by Soap. 
Waxy, who has been not inaptly termed the ace of trumps in the 
Stud-Book, begat Whalebone (1807), Web (1808), Woful (1809). 
Wire (1811), Whisker <i8ia), and Waxy Pope (1806). aB but the 
last being out of Penelope (1798) by Trumpator (1783) from Prunella 
(1788) by Highflyer out of Promise by Snap, while Waxy Pope was 
out of Prunella, dam of Parasol (1800) by Pot-8-os. Trumpator 
was a son of Conductor, who was by Matchem out of.a mare by 
Snap. 

O 
Sii 
(1 



grandsire; and Doncaster was the sire of the chestnut Bend Or 
T1877). 

To turn to Eclipse's other sons. King Fergus (1775) was the 
sire of Bcningbrough (1791), whose son was Orville (1779), whence 
comes some of the stoutest blood on the turf, including Emilius 
(1820) and his son Priam (1827). Plenipotentiary (1B31), Muley 
(1810), Chesterfield (1834). and the Hero (184%). Joe Andrews 
(1778) was the sire of Dick Andrews (1797). and from him descend 
Tramp (1810), Lottery (1820), Liverpool (1828). Sheet Anchor 
(1832), Lanercost (1835), Weatherbit (1842), Beadsman (1855), and 



Plate II. 



HORSE 



-I 

P4 



HISTORY) 

Bl 
lb 
gr 

th 

£ 

so 
Ai 
th 



HORSB 



721 



of 
m 

■"! 

ur ra* 

a ice 

with uncommon power and sTamina or lasting qualities. He was 
bred by William, duke of Cumberland, uncle of King George III. 
He commenced his racing career in October 1763, when he was 
five years old, and ended it on the 16th of May 1767. He ran ten 
times, winning six and losing four races. He died in 1780, and 

among c" L •-*" ' — * Mi—-!—.— '— ^ 

whose da lin 

Barb, bu an 

and the tel 

(1763) b of 

Regulus, »- 

mitted I >ct 

male line ne 

of his ot he 

sire of B re 

celebrate 0. 

all three no 

thereby 1 ler 

(1782) oi er 

of Alfred 3). 

whose d< j). 

Sultan (1 13) 

and Mid &). 

PantaloG 7) 

and his 1 3). 
are repre 

Highfl Sir 

Peter T< ws 

Papillon on 

(1700),. cf. 

Paulowit 2). 

and his 1 1st 

Walton 

and his si 3), 

Venison' on 

Sweet me an 

0857), a *). 

It may t ire 
nearly a 

3. Th< ler 
was the ras 
foaled in re- 
senting 1 gh 
long sut cv 
Arabian. Ms 
off hind of 
Carlisle, id. 
His dam iro 
Farewell a 
daughtci irk 
frdm ad re; 
while B re. 
Matcher 53. 
and tern pe- 
ments hi :y- 
three y» by 
Snap; C as, 
Sorcerer he 
Codolph th- 
sayer (1 as 
the sire ne 
(1834). « w. 
includiaj air 
Athol. a 
eclebrati by 
Touchstone. 

The gems of the three line* may be briefly enumerated thus; 
(1) of the Darky Arab's line— Snap, Shuttle, Waxy, and Orville— 

the stoutest blood on the turf; (2) of the Byerly Turk's line — 
Buzzard and Sir Peter — speedy blood, the latter the stouter of the 

two; (3) of the Codolphin Barb's line — Sorcerer — often producing 
large-sized «nimats. but showing a tendency to die out, and becoming 



On the principle Chat as a rule like begets like, it has been the 
practice to select as sires the best public performers on the turf, 
and of two horses of like blood it is sound sense to choose the 
better as against the inferior public performer. But there can 
be little doubt thai the mating of mares with horses has been 
often pursued on a haphazard plan, or on no system at all; 
to this the Stud-Book testifies too plainly. In the article Horse- 
Racing mention is made of some of the great horses of recent 
years; but the following list of the principal sires of earlier 
days indicates also how their progeny found a place among the 
winners of the three great races, the Derby (D), Oaks (0), and 
StLeger(L):— 
Ei 

Hi 

M 

Fl 



<L). 



Priam (D): Miss SeJu (O), Industry (O), Crucifix (O). 
Sirflercules : Coronation (D), Faugh-a-Ballagh (L), Birdcatcher (L). 
Touchstone (L): Cotherstone (D£ Orlando (D), Surplice (D, L), 

Mendicant (Q), Blue Bonnet (L), Newminster (L). 
Birdcatcher (L) : Daniel O'Rourke (D), Songstress (O), Knight of 



The Baron (L): Stockwell (L). 
Melbourne: West Australian (D, L), 1 



Blink Bonny (D, 0), Sir Tattoo 

Musjid (D), Hermit (D), Lord Clifden (L). 

roni (D), Mincemeat (O), Mincepie (O). 

Stockwell (L) : Blair Athol (D, L), Lord Lyon (D, L), Doncaster (D), 



Sykes (L). 
Newminster (L): 



Sweetmeat'. Macaroni (D), Mincemeat (O), Mincepie (6). 
~ hoelt (L) : Blair Athol (D, L), Lord Lyon (D. L), Doncaster (D), 
Regalia (0), St Albans (L), Caller Ou (L), The Marquis (L), 



Achievement (L). 
King Tom: Kingcraft (D), Tormentor (O), Hippia (O), Hannah 

(O. L). 
Rataplan (son of the Baron): Kettledrum (D). 
Monarque: Cladiatcur (D, L). 

Parmesan (son of Sweetmeat): Favonius (D), Cremome (D). 
Buccaneer: Kisber (D), Formosa (O, L), Brigantine (O). 
Lord Clifden (L) : Jannette (O, L), Hawthornden (L), Wcnlock (L). 

Petrarch (L). 
Adventurer: Pretender (D), Apology (O, L), Wheel of Fortune (O). 
Blair Athol (D. L): Silvio (D, L)! Craig Millar (L). 

In regard to mares it has very frequently turned out that 
animals which were brilliant public performers haye been far 
less successful as dams than others which were comparatively 
valueless as runners. Beeswing, a brilliant public performer, 
gave birth to a good horse in Newminster; the same may be said 
of Alice Hawthorn, dam oi Thormanby, of Canezou, dam of 
Fazzoletto, of Crucifix, dam of Surplice, and of Blink Bonny, 
dam of Blair Athol; but many of the greatest winners have 
dropped nothing worth training. On the other hand, there are 
mares of little or no value as racers who have become the mothers 
of some of the most celebrated horses on the turf; among them 
we may cite Queen Mary, Pocahontas and Paradigm. Queen 
Mary, who was by Gladiator out of a daughter of Plenipotentiary 
and Myrrha by Whalebone, when mated with Melbourne pro- 
duced Blink Bonny (winner of the Derby and Oaks); when 
mated with Mango and Lanercost she produced Haricot, dam 
of Caller Ou (winner of the St Legcr). Pocahontas, perhaps the 
most remarkable mare in the Stud- Book, never won a race on 
the turf, but threw Stockwell and Rataplan to the Baron, son of 
Birdcatcher, Ring Tom to Harkaway, Knight of St Patrick to 
Knight of St George, and Knight of Kars to Nutwith— all these 
horses being 16 hands high and upwards, while Pocahontas was 



722 

a long low mare of about 15 hands or a trifle more. She also 
gave birth to Ayacanora by Birdcatcher, and to Araucaria by 
Ambrose, both very valuable brood mares, Araucaria being the 
dam of Chamant by Mortemer, and of Rayon d'Or by Flageolet, 
son of Plutus by Touchstone. Paradigm again produced, among 
several winners of more or less celebrity, Lord Lyon (winner of 
the Two Thousand Guineas, Derby and St Leger) and Achieve- 
ment (winner of the St Leger), both being by Stockwell. Another 
famous mare was Manganese (1853) by Birdcatcher from Moon- 
beam by Tomboy from Lunatic by the Prime Minister from 
Maniac by Shuttle. Manganese when mated with Rataplan 
threw Mandragora, dam of Apology, winner of the Oaks and St 
Leger, whose sire was Adventurer, son of Newminstcr. She 
also threw Mineral, who, when mated with Lord CUfden, pro- 
duced Wenlock, winner of the St Leger, and after being sold to 
go to Hungary, was there mated with Buccaneer, the produce 
being Kisbcr, winner of the' Derby. 

We append the pedigree of Blair Athol, winner of the Derby 
and St Leger in 1864, who, when subsequently sold by auction, 
fetched the then unprecedented sum of 12,000 guineas, as it 
contains, not only Stockwell (the emperor of stallions, as he has 
been termed), but Blink Bonny and Eleanor— in which latter 
animal arc combined the blood of Eclipse, Herod, Matchcm and 
Snap,— the mares that won the Derby in 1801 and 1857 respec- 
tively, as well as those queens of the stud, Eleanor's great- 
granddaughter Pocahontas and Blink Bonny's dam Queen Mary. 
Both Eleanor and Blink Bonny won the Oaks as well as the 
Derby. 



Bta!rAthol«t 
(i860 



Stockwril! 
(1*49) 



.Tke B«ronJ 
(184a) 



Bii4cfttchert(i8)j)J 



rSr Hercnlcs 
OSrt) 



lEchkfau (tSjS) 



'Glcncoe OSjo 



„Marpma(i8jo) 



lOaicdoli(iSaj) 

{Econonbt (1825) 
Mia Prttt (iSas) 
f Sultan (i8t6) 



{ 



08*4> 



.Melbourne 



Humphrey Clinker 
(181a) 



Queen Mary 
(184J) 



ofOSis)- 



Gladiator (1833) 



{Comus (il 
OmLerioj 
fCtmntctd 

hssr- 

^Paulina (il 



-f 



(1811) 



• Wta*r»ftb« Derby. 



0t(lS40)| 

LMyrrha (1830) 
tWianrrtf the Oiks. 



The shape of a race-horse is of considerable importance, 
although it is said with some degree of truth that they win in I 



HORSJS IHISTORY 

all shapes. There are the neat and elegant animals, like the 
descendants of Saunlexer and Sweetmeat; the large-framed, 
plain-looking, and heavy-headed Melbournes, often with top 
ears; the descendants of Birdcatcher, full of quality, and of 
more than average stature, though sometimes disfigured with 
curby hocks; and the medium-sized but withal speedy descend- 
ants of Touchstone, though in some cases characterized by 
somewhat loaded shoulders. In height it will be found that the 
most successful racers average from 15 to 1 6 J hands, the former 
being considered somewhat small, while the latter is unquestion- 
ably very large; the mean may be taken as between is) and 16 
hands (the hand - 4 in.). The head should be light and lean, 
and well set on; the ears small and pricked, but not too short; 
the eyes full; the forehead broad and flat; the nostrils large and 
dilating; the muzzle fine; the neck moderate in length, wide, 
muscular, and yet light; the throat clean; the windpipe 
spacious and loosely attached to the neck; the crest thin, not 
coarse and arched. The withers may be moderately high and 
thin; the chest well developed, but not too wide or deep; the 
shoulder should lie well on the chest, and be oblique and well 
covered with muscle, so as to reduce concussion in galloping; 
(he upper and lower arms should be long and muscular; the 
knees broad and strong; legs short, flat and broad; fetlock 
joints large; pasterns strong and of moderate length; the feet 
should be moderately large, with the heels open and frogs sound 
—with no signs of contraction. The body or barrel should be 
moderately deep, long and straight, the length being really in 
the shoulders and in the quarters; the back should be strong 

and muscular, with 
the shoulders and 
loins running well 
in at each end; 
the loins them- 
selves should have 
great breadth and 
substance, this 
being a vital neces- 
sity for weight- 
carrying and pro- 
pelling power 
uphill. The hips 
should be long and 
wide, with the stifle 
and thigh strong, 
long and propor- 
t ionat ely de- 
veloped, and the 
hind quarters well 
let down. The 
hock should have 
plenty of bone, and 
be strongly affixed 
to the leg, and 
show no signs of 
curb; the bones 
below the hock 
should be flat, and 
free from adhe- 
sions; the liga- 
ments and tendons 
well developed , and 
te7) standing out from 

the bone; the joints 
well formed and 
wide, yet without 
undue enlarge- 
ment; the pasterns 
and feet similar to 
those of the fore- 
hand. The tail 
should be high set on, the croup being continued in a 
straight line to the tail, and not falling away and drooping 



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BREEDS) HORSE 

to a low-set tail. Fine action is the best criterion of every- 
thing fitting properly, and all a horse's points ought to 
harmonize or be in proportion to one another, no one point 
being more prominent than another, such as good shoulders, 
fine loins or excellent quarters. If the observer is struck 
with the remarkable prominence of any one feature, it is 
probable that the remaining parts are deficient. A well-made 
horse wants dissecting in detail, and then if a good judge can 
discover no fault with any part, but finds each of good propor- 
tions, and the whole to harmonize without defect, deformity 
or deficiency, he has before him a well-shaped horse; and of two 
equally well-made and equitably proportioned horses the best 
bred one will be the best. As regards hue, the favourite colour 
of the ancients, according to Xenophon, was bay, and for a long 
time it was the fashionable colour in England; but for some 
time chestnut thoroughbreds have been the most conspicuous 
figure on English race-courses, so far as the more important 
events are concerned. Eclipse was a chestnut; Castrel, Sclim 
and Rubens were chestnuts; so also were Glencoc and Pantaloon, 
of whom the latter had black spots on his hind quarters like 
Eclipse; and also Stock well and Doncaster. Birdcatcher was 
a chestnut, so also were Stockwell and his brother Rataplan, 
Manganese, Mandragora, Thormanby, Kettledrum, St Albans, 
Blair Athol, Regalia, Formosa, Hermit, Marie Stuart, Doncaster, 
George Frederick, Apology, Craig Millar, Prince Charlie, Rayon 
d'Or and Bend Or. The dark browns or black browns, such as 
the Sweetmeat tribe, are not so common as the bays, and black 
or grey horses are almost as unusual as roans. The skin and 
hair of the throughbred arc finer, and the veins which underlie 
the skin arc larger and more prominent than in other horses. 
The mane and tail should be silky and devoid of curl, which is a 
sign of impurity. 

Whether the race-horse of to-day is as good as the stock to 
which he traces back has often been disputed, chiefly no doubt 
because he is brought to more early maturity, commencing to 
win races at two years instead of at five years of age, as in the 
days of Childers and Eclipse; but the highest authorities, and 
none more emphatically than the late Admiral Rous, have 
insisted that he can not only stay quite as long as his ancestors, 
but also go a good deal faster. In size and shape the modern 
race-horse is unquestionably superior, being on an average fully 
a hand higher than the Eastern horses from which he is descended; 
and in elegance of shape and beauty of outline he has certainly 
never been surpassed. That experiments, founded on the study 
of his nature and properties, which have from time to time been 
made to improve the breed, and bring the different varieties 
to the perfection in which we now find them, have succeeded, 
is best confirmed by the high estimation in which the horses of 
Great Britain are held in all parts of the civilized world; and it is 
not too much to assert that, although the cold, humid and 
variable nature of their climate is by no means favourable to 
the production of these animals in their very best form, English- 
men have by great care, and by sedulous attention to breeding, 
high feeding and good grooming, with consequent development 
of muscle, brought them to the highest state of perfection of 
which their nature is capable. (E. D. B.) 

Breeds op Horses 

The British breeds of light horses include the Thoroughbred, 
the Yorkshire Coach-horse, the Cleveland Bay, the Hackney and 
the Pony; of heavy horses, the Shire, the Clydesdale and the 
Suffolk. 

The Thoroughbred is probably the oldest of the breeds, and 
it is known as the " blood-horse " on account of the length of 
time through which its purity of descent can be traced. The 
frame is light, slender and graceful. The points of chief import- 
ance are a fine, dean, lean head, set on free from collar heaviness; 
a long and strongly muscular neck, shoulders oblique and covered 
with muscle; high, long withers, chest of good depth and narrow 
But not extremely so; body round in type, back rib well down; 
depth at withers a little under half the height; length equal 
to the height at withers and croup; lotos level and muscular; 



723 

croup long, rather level; tail set on high and carried gracefully; 
the hind quarters long, strongly developed, and full of muscle 
and driving power; the limbs clean-cut and sinewy, possessing 
abundance of good bone, especially desired in the cannons, which 
are short, broad and fiat; comparatively little space between 
the fore legs; pastern joints smooth and true; pasterns strong, 
dean and springy, sloping when at rest at an angle of 45*; 
feet medium size, wide and high at the heels, concave below and 
set on straight. The action in trotting is generally low, but the 
bending of the knee and the flexing of the hock is smooth, free 
and true. The thoroughbred is apt to be nervous and excitable, 
and impatient of common work, but its speed, resolution and 
endurance, as tested on the race-course, are beyond praise. 

Many 0/ the best hunters in the United Kingdom are thorough- 
breds, but of the substantial weight-carrying type. The Hunters 
Improvement Society, established in 1885, did not restrict 
entries to the Hunters* Stud- Book to entirely dean-bred animals, 
but admitted those with breeding enough to pass strict inspec- 
tion. This society acts in consort with two other powerful 
organizations (the Royal Commission on Horse-breeding, 
which began its work in 1888, and the Brood Marc Society, 
established in 1003), with the desirable object of improving the 
standard of light horse breeding. The initial efforts began by 
securing the services of thoroughbred stallions for specified 
districts, by offering a limited number of H Queen's Premiums," 
of £200 each, to sdected animals of four years old and upwards. 
Since the formation of the Brood Mare Society mares have 
come within the sphere of influence of the three bodies, and 
wdl-concdved inducements are offered to breeders to retain 
their young mares at home. The efforts have met with gratifying 
success, and they were much needed, for while in 1004 the Dutch 
government, took away 350 of the best young Irish mares, Great 
Britain was paying the foreigner over £2,000,000 a year for 
horses which the old system of management did not supply at 
home. The Royal Dublin Society also keeps a Register 0/ 
Thoroughbred Stallions under the horse-breeding scheme of 1892, 
which, like the British efforts, is now bearing fruit. 

The Yorkshire Coach-horse is extensively bred in the North 
and East Ridings of Yorkshire, and the thoroughbred has taken 
a share in its devdopment. The colour is usually bay, with 
black or brown points. A fine head, sloping shoulders, strong 
loins, lengthy quarters, high-stepping action, flat bone and 
sound feet are characteristic. The height varies from 16 hands 
to 16 hands 2 in. 

The Cleveland Bay is an ancestor of the Yorkshire Coach-horse 
and is bred in parts of Yorkshire, Durham and Northumberland. 
He is adapted alike tor the plough, for heavy draught, and for 
slow saddle work. Some specimens make imposing-looking 
carriage horses, but they have low action and are lacking in 
quality. The colour is light or dark bay, with black legs. Though 
rather coarse-headed, the Cleveland Bay has a well-set shoulder 
and neck, a deep chest and round barrd. The height is from 
16 to 17 hands. 

The Hackney has come' prominently to the front in recent 
years. The term Nog, applied to the active riding or trotting 
horse, is derived from the A.S. hnegan, to neigb. The 
Normans brought with them their own word haquenie, or 
hacquenie t a French derivative from the Latin equus, a horse, 
whence the name hackney. Both nag and hackney continue 
to be used as synonymous terms. Frequent mention is made of 
hackneys and trotters in old farm accounts of the 14th century. 
The first noteworthy trotting hackney stallion, of the modern 
type, was a horse foaled about 175s* and known as the Schales, 
Shields or Shales horse, and roost of the recognized hackneys 
of to-day trace back to him. The breeding of hackneys is 
extensivdy pursued in the counties of Norfolk, Cambridge, 
Huntingdon, Lincoln and York, and in the showyard competi- 
tions a keen but friendly rivalry is usually to be noticed between 
the hackney-breeding fanners of Norfolk and Yorkshire. The 
high hackney action is uncomfortable in a riding horse. Excd- 
lent results have sometimes followed the use of hackney sires 
upon half-bred mares, i.e. by thoroughbred stallions and trotting 



724 



HORSE 



[MANAGEMENT 



marcs, but it is not always so. As regards the movement, or 
" action," of the hackney, he should go tight in hand, and the 
knee should be well elevated and advanced during the trot, and, 
before the foot is put down, the leg should be well extended. 
The hackney should also possess good hock action, as distin- 
guished from mere fetlock action, the propelling power 
depending upon the efficiency of the former. The hackney 
type of the day is " a powerfully built, short-legged, big horse, 
with an intelligent head, neat neck, strong, level back, powerful 
loins, and as perfect shoulders as can be obtained, good feet, 
flat-boned legs, and a height of from 15 hands 2 in. to 15 hands 
3} in. Carriage-horses hackney-bred have been produced over 
17 hands high. 

The Pony differs essentially from the hackney in height, the 
former not exceeding 14 hands. There is one exception, which 
is made clear in the following extract from Sir Walter Gilbey's 
Ponies Past and Present (woo):— 

«3 

ras 
ah 
lis 
re- 
ird 
xt 
:ht 

he 
lis 
he 
tic 
ed 
ed 
of 

• Native ponies include those variously known as Welsh, New 
Forest, Exmoor, Dartmoor, Cumberland and Westmorland, 
Fell, Highland, Highland Garron, Celtic, Shetland and Conne- 
mara. Ponies range in height from 14 hands down to 8 hands, 
Shetland ponies eligible foT the Stud-Book not exceeding the 
latter. As in the case of the hackney, so with the pony, 
thoroughbred blood has been used, and with good results, 
except in the case of those animals which have to remain to breed 
In their native haunts on the hills and moorlands. There the 
only possible way of improvement is by selecting the best native 
specimens, especially the sires, to breed from. The thin-skinned 
progeny of thoroughbred or Arab stock is too delicate to live 
unless when hand-fed — and hand-feeding is not according to 
custom. Excellent polo ponies are bred as first or second crosses 
by thoroughbred stallions on the mares of nearly all the varieties 
of ponies named. The defective formation of the pony, the 
perpendicular shoulder and the drooping hind quarters, are 
modified; but neither the latter, nor bent hocks, which place 
the hind legs under the body as in the zebra, are objected to, 
as the conformation is favourable to rapid turning. One object 
of the pony breeder, while maintaining hardiness of constitu- 
tion, is to control size — to compress the most valuable qualities 
into small compass. He endeavours to breed an animal 
possessing a small head, good shoulders, true action and perfect | 
manners. A combination of the best points of the hunter with 
the style and finish of the hackney produces a class of weight- 
carrying pony which is always saleable. 

The Shire horse owes its happily-chosen name to Arthur 
Young's remarks, in* the description of his agricultural tours 
during the closing years of the 18th century, concerning the 
large Old English Black Horse, " the produce principally of the 
Shire counties in the heart of England." Long previous to this, 
however, the word Shire, in connexion with horses, was used in 
the statutes of Henry VIII. Under the various Dames of the War 
Horse, the Great Horse, the Old English Black Horse and the 
Shire Horse, *the breed has for centuries been cultivated in the 
rich fen-lands of Lincolnshire and Cambridgeshire, and in many 
counties to the west. The Shire is the largest of draught horses, 
the stallion commonly attaining a height of 17 to 17*3 hands. 
Though the black colour is still frequently met with, bay and 
brown are more usually seen. With their immense size and 



weight— t8oo lb to noo lb— the Shires combine great strength, 
and they are withal docile and intelligent. They stand on short 
stout legs, with a plentiful covering— sometimes too abundant — 
of long hair extending chiefly down the back but also round the 
front of the limbs from knees and hocks, and when in full feather 
obscuring nearly the whole of the hoofs. The head is a good 
size, and broad between the eyes; the neck fairly long, with the 
crest well arched on to the shoulders, which are deep and strong. 
and moderately oblique. The chest is wide, full and deep, the 
back short and straight, the ribs are round and deep, the hind 
quarters long, level and well let down into the muscular thighs. 
The cannon-bones should be flat, heavy and clean, and the feet 
wide, tough, and prominent at the heels. A good type of Shire 
horse combines symmetrical outlines and bold, free action. 
There is a good and remunerative demand for Shire geldings 
for use as draught horses in towns. 

The Clydesdale, the Scottish breed named from the valley of 
the Clyde, is not quite so large as the Shire, the average height 
of stallions being about 16 hands 2 in. The popular colour is 
bay, particularly if of a dark shade, or dappled. Black is not 
uncommon, but grey is not encouraged. White markings on 
one or more of the legs, with a white ctar or stripe on the face, 
are characteristic. The long hair on the legs is not so abundant 
as in the Shires, and it is finer in texture. It is regarded as an 
indication of good bone. The bones of the legs should be short , 
flat, clean and hard; the feet large, with hoofs deep and concave 
below. With its symmetry, activity, strength and endurance 
the Clydesdale is easily broken to harness, and makes an excellent 
draught horse. This breed is growing rapidly in favour in 
Canada, but m the United States the Pcrelieron, with its round 
bone and short pasterns, holds the field. A blend of the Shire 
and Clydesdale strains of the British rough-legged draught horse 
(virtually sections of the same breed) is a better animal than 
cither of the parents. It is an improvement upon the Shire due 
to the quality contributed by the Clydesdale, and it surpasses 
the Clydesdale in strength and substance, as a result of the Shire 
connexion. To secure success the two Stud-Books will require 
to be opened to animals eligible to be entered in either record. 
The blend is being established in U.S.A. as a National breed. 

The Suffolk is a horse quite distinct from the Shire and the 
Clydesdale. Its body looks too heavy for its limbs, which arc 
free from the " feather " so much admired in the two other 
heavy breeds; it possesses a characteristic chestnut colour. 
How long the Suffolks have been associated with the county 
after which they are named is unknown, but they are mentioned 
in 1 586 in Camden's Britannia. With an average height of about 
16 hands they often have a weight of as much as 2000 lb., and 
this may explain the appearance which has given rise to the name 
of the Suffolk Punch, by which the breed is known. The Suffolk 
is a resolute and unwearying worker, and is richly endowed with 
many of the best qualities of a horse. The Suffolk Stud-Book 
and History of the Breed, published in 1880, is the most exhaustive 
record of its kind in England. (W. Fa.; R. W.) 

Management 

Breeding/— Animals to breed from should be of good blood, 
sound and compactly built, with good pluck and free from 
nervous excitability and vicious tendency. A mare used to be 
put to the horse at three years old, but latterly two has become 
the common age. Young sires begin to serve in moderation at 
two. May is considered the best month for a mare to foal, as 
there is abundance of natural food and the weather is mild enough 
for the mare to lie out. Show specimens generally profit by 
being born earlier. The period of gestation in the mare is about 
eleven months. No nursing mare should go to work, if this can 
possibly be avoided. A brood mare requires plenty of exercise 
at a slow pace and may work, except between shaftsoron a road, 
till the day of foaling. 

To avoid colic an animal has to be gradually prepared by 
giving small quantities of green food for a few days before going 
to grass. Shelter against severe storms is needed. Succulent 
food encourages the flow of milk, and the success of the foal 



HORSE LATITUDES— HORSE-MACKEREL 



725 



greatly depends on its milk supply. Mares most readily conceive 
when served at the " foal heat " eleven days after foaling. A 
mature stallion can serve from eighty to one hundred mares per 
annum. 

l Foals are weaned when nve or six months old, often in October, 
and require to be housed to save the foal-flesh, and liberally but 
not overfed; but from the time they ate a month old they 
require to be "gentled" by handling and kindly treatment, 
and the elementary training of leading from time to time by 
a halter adjusted permanently to the head. When they are hand- 
reared on cow's milk foals require firm treatment and must have 
no fooling to teach them tricks. Young horses that are too highly 
fed are apt to become weak-limbed and top-heavy 

Breaking. — Systematic breaking begins at about the age of two 
years, and the method of subduing a colt by " galvayning M is as 
good as any. It is a more humane system than " rareying," 
which overcame by exhaustion under circumstances which were 
not fruitful of permanent results. Galvayning is accomplished 
by bending the horse's neck round at an angle of thirty-five to 
forty degrees and tieing the halter to the tail, so that when he 
attempts to walk forward he holds himself and turns " round and 
round, almost upon his own ground." The more strenuous his 
resistance the sooner he yields to the inevitable force applied 
by himself. A wooden pole, the " third hand," is then gently 
applied to all parts of the body until kicking or any form of 
resistance ceases. " Bitting " or " mouthing," or the familiariz- 
ing of an animal to the bit in his mouth, and to answer to the 
rein without bending his neck, is still a necessity with the 
galvayning method of breaking. Experience can only be gained 
by a horse continuing during a considerable time to practise 
what he has been taught. 

Three main characteristics of a successful horse-breaker are 
firmness, good temper and incessant vigilance. Carelessness in 
trusting too much to a young colt that begins its training by 
being docile is a fruitful source of untrustworthy habits which 
need never have developed. Driving with long reins in the field 
should precede the fastening of ropes to the collar, as it accustoms 
the animal to the pressure on the shoulders of the draught, later 
to be experienced in the yoke. If a young horse be well handled 
and accustomed to the dummy jockey, mounting it is not 
attended with much risk of resistance, although this should 
invariably be anticipated. An animal ought to be in good con- 
dition when being broken in, else it is liable to break out in 
unpleasant ways when it becomes high-spirited as a result of 
improved condition. It should be well but not overfed, and 
while young not overworked, as an overtired animal is liable to 
refuse to pull, and thus contract a bad habit. Most bad habits 
and stable tricks are the result of defective management and 
avoidable accidents. 

Feeding.— Horses have small stomachs relatively to ruminating 
animals, and require small quantities of food frequently. While 
grazing they feed almost continually, preferring short pasture. 
No stable food for quick work surpasses a superior sample of 
fine-hulled whole oats like " Garton's Abundance " (120 tt> per 
week), and Timothy hay harvested in dry weather. The un- 
bruised oats develop a spirit and courage in either a saddle or 
harness horse that no other food can. A double handful of 
clean chaff, or of bran mixed with the oats in the manger, prevents 
a greedy horse from swallowing a considerable proportion whole. 
Unchewed oats pass out in the faeces uninjured, so that they 
are capable of germination, and are of less than no value to a 
horse. Horses doing slow or other than " upper ten " work 
may have pats crushed, not ground, and a variety of additions 
made to the oats which are usually the basis of the feed— for 
example, a few old crushed beans, a little linseed meal, ground 
linseed cake or about a wine-glassful of unboiled linseed oil. 
Indian pulses are to be avoided on account of the danger of 
Lathyrus poisoning. A seasoning of ground fenugreek or spice is 
sometimes given to shy feeders to encourage them to eat. A 
little sugar or roolascuit added to the food will sometimes serve 
the same purpose. Newly crushed barley or cracked maixe, 
even in considerable proportion to the rest of the food, gives good. 



results with draught, coach, 'bus and light harness horses gener- 
ally. Boiled food of any kind is unnatural to a horse, and is 
risky to give, being liable to produce colic, especially if the 
animal bolts its food when hungry, although it generally pro- 
duces a glossy coat. Too much linseed, often used in preparing 
horses for market, gives a similar appearance, but is liable to 
induce fatty degeneration of the liver; given in moderation it 
regulates the bowels and stimulates the more perfect digestion 
of other foods. In England red-clover hay, or, better still, 
crimson-clover or lucerne hay, is liberally fed to farm horses 
with about 10 lb per day of oats, while they usually run in open 
yards with shelter sheds. Bean straw is sometimes given as part 
of the roughage in Scotland, but not in England. In England 
hunters and carriage horses are generally fed on natural hay, in 
Scotland on Timothy, largely imported from Canada, or ryegrass 
hay that has not been grown with nitrate of soda. Heavily 
nitrated hay is reputed to produce excessive urination and 
irritation of the bladder. Pease straw, if not sandy, and good 
bright oat straw are good fodder for horses; but with barley 
and wheat straw, in the case of a horse, more energy is consumed 
during its passage through the alimentary canal than the digested 
straw yields. Three or four Swedish turnips or an equivalent 
of carrots is an excellent cooling food for a horse at hard work. 
The greater number of horses in the country should have green 
forage given them during summer, when the work they do will 
permit of it, as it is their natural food, and they thrive better 
on it than on any dry food. 

When a horse has been overstrained by work the best remedy 
is a long rest at pasture, and, if it be lame or weak in the limbs, 
the winter season is most conducive to recovery. The horse 
becomes low in condition and moves about quietly, and the frost 
tends to brace up the limbs. In autumn all horses that have 
been grazing should be dosed with some vermifuge to destroy 
the worms that are invariably present, and thus prevent colic 
or an unthrifty or anaemic state. On a long journey a horse 
should have occasional short drinks, and near the end a long 
drink with a slower rate of progression with the object of cooling 
off. In the stable a horse should always be provided with rock 
salt, and water to drink at will by means of some such stall 
fixture as the Mundt hygienic water-supply fittings. Overhead 
hay-racks are unnatural and are liable to drop seeds into a 
horse's eye. 

Literature.— For riding, &c see Riding, Driving, Horsemaw- 

sn J " " "^seaaeuof the horse see VBTBRiNAar 

Sc »e horse and its history and uses 

is ip to 1887 in Huth's Works on 

Ht rd of hippology. See also, besides 

th rious books by Capt. M. Horace 

Hi and ed., 1897); Stable Manage- 

nu ted Horse-breaking (1889, and ed., 

18 893) (with Mrs -Hayes); E. L. 

Ai (1884): W. Day, The Horse: 

Hi 88); W. Ridgeway, Origin and 

Jn '■ (1905) ; Major-General Tweedie, 

Tl sy Axe, The Horse; its Treatment 

in Wallace, Farm Livestock of Great 

Br lydney Galvayne, The Twentieth 

Ce C. Bruce Low, Breeding Race* 

ha ); J. H. Wallace, The Horse oj 

A 1 ?7): Weather!/ s Celebrated Race' 

ho Turf; T. A. Cook, History of the 

£1 Uud-Book (issued quinquen nialty ) ; 

aiu. «.^ w _--.~-. w. breed societies. (R. W.) i 

HORSE LATITUDES, the belts of calms and variable breezes 
at the polar edge of the N.E. and S.E. trades. According to the 
New English Dictionary two explanations have been given of 
the origin of the name: one that the calm kills horses on a 
sailing ship, the other that the name signifies the unruly and 
boisterous nature of these winds compared with the pleasant 
trades. The name is commonly applied to the permanent belt 
of high atmospheric pressure which encircles the globe in 30 to 
35° from the equator. 

HORSE-MACKEREL, the name applied to a genus of fishes 
(Caranx) found in abundance in almost all temperate and 
especially in tropical seas. The designation " cavalli," given to 
them by the early Portuguese navigators, and often met with 



7«6 



«0!OSEMANSHIP— HORSB^tAONQ 



in the accounts of the adventures of the buccaneer*, is still in 
frequent use among the sailors of all nations. Some ninety 
different kinds are known — the majority being wholesome food, 
and some of the species attaining a length of 3 ft. and more. 
The fish to which the name horse-mackerel is applied in Great 
Britain is Caranx Irackurus, distinguished by having the lateral 
line in its whole length armed with large but narrow bony plates. 
Horse-mackerel are found singly on the coast all the year round, 
but sometimes they congregate in shoals of many thousands. 
Although well-flavoured, they are much more frequently used 
for bait than for food. This species has a most extraordinary 
range, being found almost everywhere within the temperate and 
tropical zones of the northern and southern hemispheres. 

HORSEMANSHIP, the art of managing the horse from his 
back and controlling his paces and the direction and speed of 
bis movement. The ordinary procedure is dealt with in the 
articles on Riding and cognate subjects (see also Horse-, section 
Management). A special kind of skill is, however, needed in 
breaking, training, bitting and schooling horses for a game like 
polo, or for the evolutions of what is known as the haute tcolc. 
It is with the latter, or " school " riding, that we deal here. The 
middle ages had seen chivalry developed into a social distinction, 
and horsemanship into a form of knightly prowess. The Re- 
naissance introduced the cultivation of horsemanship as an art, 
with regular conditions and rules, instead of merely its skilful 
practice for utility and exercise. In Italy in the 16th century 
schools of horsemanship were established at Naples, Rome and 
other chief cities; thither flocked the nobility of France, Spain 
and Germany; and Henry VIII. of England and other monarch* 
of his time had Italians for their masters of the horse. The 
academy of Pignatelli at Naples was the most famous of the 
schools in the middle of the 16th century, but a score of other 
less renowned masters devoted themselves to teaching the 
riders and training the horses. Trappings of all sorts multiplied ; 
the prescribed tricks, feats and postures involved considerable 
dexterity; they were fatiguing to both man and beast, and 
were really useless except for show. This elaborate art, en- 
thusiastically followed among the Romance nations, was the 
parent of later developments of the haute bole, and of the circus- 
performances of modern days. In England, however, the 
continental style did not find favour for long. The duke of 
Newcastle's Mtlhode nouvelle de dresser Us chevaux (1648) was 
the leading text-book of the day, and in 1761 the earl of Pem- 
broke published his Manual of Cavalry Horsemanship, In France 
a simplification was introduced in the early part of the 18th 
century by La Guenniere (£cole de cavalerie) and others. The 
French military school thus became the model for Europe, 
though the English style remained in opposition, forming a 
sort of compromise with the ordinary method of riding across 
country. In more modern times France again came to the front 
in regard to the haute icolc, through the innovations of the 
vicorate d'Aure (1708-1863) and Francois Baucher (1706-1873). 
Baucher was a circus-rider who became the greatest master of 
his art, and who had an elaborate theory of the principles in- 
volved in training a horse. His system was carried on, with 
modifications, by masters and theorists like Captain Raabe, 
Jd. Barroil and M. Fillis. In more recent times the style of the 
haute icote has also been cultivated by various masters in the 
United States, such as H. L. de Bussigny at Boston. 

See d'Aure, Traiii d'iquitation (1847): Hunderedorf, Equitation 
aUemande (Bruxelles, 1843); Baucher, Fasse-Umps iguestres (1840), 
Mithode d'iquitation (1 867) ; Raabe, MHhode de haute eeole d'iquitation 

J 1863); Barroil. Art tquestre; Fillis, Principe* de dressage; Hayes, 
tiding on the flat, &e. (1882)4 

HORSBWS, a market town of Denmark, at the head of Horsens 
Fjord-, on the east side of Jutland, 32 m. by jail S.W. of Aarhua, 
In the ami (county) of that name-. Pop. ( 1001) 21,243. It is the 
junction of branch railways to Bryrup and to Tarring Intend, 
and to Juelsminde on the coast. The exports are chiefly bacon 
and butter; the imports, iron, yarn, coal and timber. The 
town is ancient; there is a disused convent church with tombs 
of the 17th century, and the Vor-Frebers-Kirke has ft carved 
pulpit of the same period. Horsens is the birthplace of the 



navigator Vitus Bering or Bchrlng (1680), the Arctic 4 

To the north lies the picturesque lake district between Skander- 

borg and Silkeborg (see Aakbus) 

HORSE-POWER. The device, frequently seen in farmyards, 
by which the power of a horse is utilized to drive threshing or 
other machinery, is sometimes described as a " horse-power,* 
but this term usually denotes the unit in which the performance 
of steam and other engines is expressed, and which is defined as 
the rate at which work is done when 33,000 lb axe raised on* 
foot in one minute. This value was adopted by James Watt 
as the result of experiments with strong dray-horses, but, as be 
was aware, it is in excess of what can be done by an average 
horse over a full day's work. It is equal to 746 watts. On the 
metric system it is reckoned as 4500 kilogram-metres a minute, 
and the French cheval^opeur is thus equal to 32,549 foot-pounds 
a minute, or 0*9863 of an English horse-power, or 736 watts. 
The ''nominal horse-power" by which engines are sometimes 
rated is an arbitrary andobsolescent term of indefinite significance. 
An ordinary formula for obtaining it is rfcwWI S for high* 
pressure engines, and qfoD 1 ^ S for condensing engines, whew 
D is the diameter of the piston in inches and S the length of the 
stroke in feet, though varying numbers are used for the divisor. 
The "indicated horse-power" of a reciprocating engine is 
given by ASPN/ 33,000, where A is the area of the piston in 
square inches, S the length of the stroke in feet, P the mean 
pressure on the piston in lb per sq. in., and N the number of 
effective strokes per minute, namely, one for each revolution of 
the crank shaft if the engine is single-acting, but twice as many 
if it is double-acting. ' The mean pressure P is ascertained from 
the diagram or "card" given by an indicator (see Steam- 
engine). In turbine engines this method is tnapplirahk, 
A statement of indicated horse-power supplies a measure of the 
force acting in the cylinder of an engine, but the power available 
for doing external work off the crank-shaft is less than this by 
the amount absorbed in driving the engine itself. The useful 
residue, known as the " actual," " effective " or " brake " 
horse-power, can be directly measured by a dynamometer (?■»-) ; 
it amounts to about 80% of the indicated horse-power for good 
condensing engines and about 85% for non-condensing engines, 
or perhaps a little more when the engines are of the largest sizes. 
When turbines, as often happens in land practice, are directly 
coupled to electrical generators, their horse-power can be 
deduced from the electrical output. When they are used for the 
propulsion of ships recourse is had to " torsion meters " which 
measure the amount of twist undergone by the propeller shafts 
while transmitting power. Two points are selected on the surface 
of the shaft at different positions along it, and the relative dis- 
placement which occurs between them round the shaft when 
power is being transmitted is determined either by electrical 
means, as in the Denny-Johnson torsion-meter, or optically, 
as in the Hopkinson-Thring and Bevis-Gibson instruments. 
The twist or surface-shear being proportional to the torque, jhe 
horse-power can be calculated if the modulus of rigidity of the 
steel employed is known or if the amount of twist correspond- 
ing to a given power has previously been ascertained by direct 
experiment on the shaft before it has been put in place, 

HORSE-RACING. Probably the earliest instance of the use 
of horses in racing recorded in literature occurs in //. xxin. 
222-650, where the various incidents of the chariot-race at the 
funeral games held in honour of Patrodus are detailed with 
much vividness. According to the ancient authorities the 
four-horse chariot-race was introduced into the Olympic games 
as early as the 23rd Olympiad; to this the race with mounted 
horses was added in the 33rd; while other variations (such 
sa two-horse chariot-races, mule races, loose-horse races, special 
races for under-aged horses) were admitted at a still later period. 
Of the training and management of the Olympic race-horse we 
are left in ignorance; but it is known that the equestrian 
candidates were required to enter their names and send their 
horses to Elis at least thirty days before the celebration of the 
games commenced, and that the charioteers and riders, whether 
owners or proxies, went through a prescribed course of exeroM 



GREAT BRITAIN] 



HORSE-RACING 



727 



during the intervening month. At all the other national games 
of Greece (Pythian, Isthmian, Nemean), as well as at many of 
the local festivals (the Athenian Olympia and Panathenaea), 
similar contests had a prominent place. Some indication of 
the extent to which the passion for horse-racing was indulged 
in at Athens, for example, about the time of Aristophanes may- 
be obtained from the scene with which The Cloud* opens; 
while it is a significant fact that the Boeotians termed one of the 
months of their year, corresponding to the Athenian Hecatom- 
baeon, Hippodromras (" Horse-race month "; see Plutarch, 
Cam. 15). For the chariot-races and horse-races of the Greeks 
and Romans, see Circus and Games. 

Gssat Britain 

There fs no direct historical evidence to show that the ancient 
Britons addicted themselves to any form of this amusement; but 
there are indications that among some at least of the Germanic 
tribes, from a very early period, horse-racing was an accompani- 
ment of their religious cultus. There can be no doubt that the 
Romans encouraged the pursuit in Britain, if they did not intro- 
duce it; traces of race-courses belonging to the period of their 
occupation have been frequently discovered. TBe influence of the 
Christian Church was everywhere at first strongly against the 
practice. The opinion of Augustine and other fathers of the 
church with regard to attendance at the spectacles, whether of 
theatre or of circus, is well known; those who performed in 
them were rigidly excluded from church fellowship, and some- 
times even those who merely frequented them. Thus the first 
council of Aries, in its fourth canon, declared that those members 
of the church who drove chariots at the public games should, 
so long as they continued in that employment, be denied com- 
munion. (Compare the rule in the A p. Const. viiL 31 ; op* 
Bingham, A nt. Chr. Church, xvi. 4, 10.) In many cases, however, 
the weight of ecclesiastical authority proved insufficient to cope 
with the force of old custom, or with the fascination of a sport 
the unchristian character of which was not very easily demon- 
strable; and ultimately in Germany and elsewhere the old local 
races appear to have been admitted to a recognized place among 
the ceremonies peculiar to certain Christian festivals. 

The first distinct indication which contemporary history 
affords of horse-racing as a sport occurs in the Description of 
the City of tondon of William Fitzstephen (c. 1174). He says 
that in a certain " plane field without one of the gates (quidam 
planus campus re et nomine — Smithficld, quasi Smoothfield) 
every Friday, unless it be one of the more solemn festivals, is a 
noted show of well-bred (nobilium) horses exposed for sale. 
The earls, barons and knights who are resident in the city, as 
well as a multitude of citizens, flock thither either to look on 
or buy." After describing the different varieties of horses 
brought into the market, especially the more valuable chargers 
(dcxirarios prcciosos), he says: " When a race is to be run by 
such horses as these, and perhaps by others which, in like manner, 
according to their breed are strong for carriage and vigorous for 
the course, the people raise a shout and order the common horses 
to be withdrawn to another part of the field. The jockeys, who 
are boys expert in the management of horses* which they regulate 
by means of curb bridles, sometimes by threes and sometimes 
by twos, as the match is made, prepare themselves for the con- 
test. Their chief aim is to prevent a competitor from getting 
before them. The h.orses too, after their manner, are eager for 
' the race; • their limbs tremble, and impatient of delay they 
cannot stand still; upon the signal being given they stretch out 
their limbs, hurry on the course, and are borne along with un- 
remitting speed. The riders, inspired with the love of praise and 
the hope of victory, clap spurs to their flying horses, lashing them 
with whips, and inciting them by their shouts " (see Stow's 
Translation). 

In the reign of Richard I. knights rode at Whitsuntide on 
steeds and palfreys over a three-mile course for " forty pounds 
of ready gold," according to the old romance of Sir Bevys of 
Hampton. The feats of the tilt-yard, however, seem to have 
surpassed horse-racing in popular estimation at the period of the i 



crusades. That the sport was to some extent indulged in by 
Ring John is quite possible, as running horses are frequently 
mentioned in the register of royal expenditure; and we know 
that Edward HJ. had a number of running horses, but it is prob- 
able they were chiefly used for field sports, 

An evidence of the growing favour in which horse-racing was 
held as a papular amusement is furnished by the fact that public 
races were established at Chester in 1 51 1. 'Randle Holme of that 
city tells us that towards the latter part of Henry VlU.'s reign, 
on Shrove Tuesday, the company of saddlers of Chester presented 
to " the drapers a wooden 1 ball embellished with flowers, and 
placed upon the point of a lance. This ceremony was performed 
In the presence of themayw at the cross of the Roody or Roodee, 
an open place near the city; but this year (1540) the ball was 
changed into a silver beH, valued at three shillings and sixpence 
or more, to be given to him who shall run beat and furthest on 
horseback before them on the same day, Shrove Tuesday; these 
bells were denominated St George's bells." In the reign of 
Elizabeth there is evidence from the poems of Bishop Hall 
( 1 507) that racing was in vogue, though apparently not patronized 
by the queen, or H would no doubt have formed part of the 
pastimes at Kenrlworth;^ indeed, it seems then to have gone 
much out of fashion. 

The accession of the- Stuarts opened up an era of prosperity 
for the sport, for James I., who, according to Youatt, had 
encouraged if not established horse-racing in Scotland, greatly 
patronized it in England when he came to the throne. Not only 
did he run rates at Croydon and Enfield, but he endeavoured to 
Improve the breed of horses by the purchase for a jiigb figure of 
the Arab stallion known as Mark ham's Arabian, which little 
horse, however* was beaten in every race he ran. 

In 1607, according to Camden's Britannia, races were run near 
York, the prize being a little golden bell. Camden also mentions 
as the prize for running horses in Gatheriey Forest a little golden 
ball, which was apparently anterior to the bell. In 1609 Mr 
Robert Ambrye, sometime sheriff of the city of Chester, caused 
three silver bells to be made of good value, which bells he 
appointed to be run for with horses on St George's day upon the 
Roodee, the first horse to have the best bell and the money put 
in by the horses that ran— in other words, a sweepstake — the 
bells to be returned that day twelvemonth as challenge cups 
are now; towards the expenses he had an allowance from the 
city. In 1613 subscription purses are first mentioned. Kicholls, 
in his Progress of James I., makes mention of racing in the years 
1617 and 1610. Challenge bells appear to have continued to 
be the prizes at Chester, according to Randle Holme the younger, 
and Ormerod's History of Chester, until 1623 or 1624, when Mr 
John Brereton, mayor of Chester, altered the course and caused 
the horses to run five times round the Roodee, the bell to be of 
good value, £8 or £10, and to be a free bell to be held for ever— 
in other words, a presentation and not a challenge prize. 

During James's reign public race meetings were established at 
Gatheriey or Garterley, near Richmond in Yorkshire, at Croydon 
in Surrey, and at Enfield Chase, the last two being patronized 
by the king, who not only had races at Epsom during his residence 
at Nonsuch, but also built a house at Newmarket -for the purpose 
of enjoying hunting, and no doubt racing too, as we find a. note 
of there having been horse-races at this place as early as 1605. 
Races are also recorded as having taken place at Linton near 
Cambridge, but they were probably merely casual meetings. 
The prizes were for the most part silver or gold bells, whence 
the phrase " bearing away the bell." The turf indeed appears 
to have attracted a great deal of notice, and the systematic 
preparation of running horses was studied, attention being 
paid to their feeding and training, to the instruction of jockeys— 
although private matches between gentlemen who rode their 
own horses were very common, — and to the adjustment of 
weights, which were usually about re stone. The sport also 
seems to have taken firm hold of the people, and to have become 
very popular. 

The reign of Charles I., which commenced in 1625, saw still 
more marked strides made, for the king not only patronized the 



7*8 



HORSE-RACING 



racing at Newmarket, which we know was current in 1640, but 
thoroughly established it there, and built a stand house in 1667, 
since which year the races have been annual. Mention is likewise 
made in the comedy of the Merry Beggars, played in 1641, of 
races, both horse and foot, in Hyde Park, which were patronized 
by Charles I., who gave a silver cup, value 100 guineas, to be 
run for instead of bells. Butcher, in his survey of the town of 
Stamford (1646), also says that a race was annually run in that 
town for a silver and gilt cup and cover, of the value of £7 or £8, 
provided by the care of the aldermen for the time being out of 
the interest of a stock formerly made by the nobility and gentry 
of the neighbourhood. 

In 1648 Clarendon tells us that a meeting of Royalists was 
held at Banstead Downs, as Epsom Downs were then called, 
" under the pretence of a horse-race," so that horse-racing at 
Epsom was not unknown early in the 17th century; Pepys, 
too, in his Diary of 1063, mentions his having intended to go to 
Banstead Downs to see a famous horse-race. Cromwell is said 
to have kept running horses in the year 1653, but in 1654 he 
appears to have gone so far as to forbid racing for six and 
eight months respectively. After the Reformation in 1660, a new 
impetus was given to horse-racing, which bad languished during 
the civil wars, and the races at Newmarket, which had been 
suspended, were restored and attended by the king; and as an 
additional spur to emulation, according to Youatt, royal plates 
were given at each of the principal courses, and royal mares, 
as they were called, were imported from abroad. Charles II. 
rebuilt the house originally erected at Newmarket by James I., 
which had fallen into decay. The Round course Was made in 
1666, and racing at the headquarters of the turf was regulated 
in the most systematic way, as to the course, weights and other 
conditions. Charles II. was the first monarch who entered and 
ran horses in his own name; and, besides being a frequent 
visitor at the races on Newmarket Heath, and on Burford 
Downs, near Stockbridge, where the Bibury Club meeting was 
held, he established races at Datchet. In the reign of James II. 
nothing specially noteworthy occurred, but William III. con- 
tinued former crown donations and even added to them. 

Anne was much devoted to horse-racing, and not only gave 
royal plates to be competed for, but ran horses for them in her 
own name. In 1703 Doncaster races were established, when 
4 guineas a year were voted by the corporation towards a plate, 
and in 1 7 16 the Town Plate was established by the same authority 
to be run on Doncaster Moor Nearly a century, however, 
elapsed before the St Leger was instituted Matches at New- 
market had become common, for we find that Basto, one of the 
earliest race-horses of whom we have any authentic account, 
won several matches there in 1708 and 1709. In the latter 
year, according to Camden, York races were established, the 
course at first being on Clifton lngs. but it was subsequently 
removed to Knavesmire, on which the races are now run. In 
1 7 10 the first gold cup said to have been given by the queen, 
of 60 guineas value, was run for by six -year-old horses carrying 
12 stone each, the best of three 4-mile heals, and was won by 
Bay Bolton. In 1711 it was increased to 100 guineas In 171a 
Queen Anne's gelding Pepper ran for the Royal Cup of £100 at 
York, and her Mustard, a nutmeg-grey horse, ran for the same 
prize in 1713. Again in 1 714 her Majesty's bay horse Star won 
a sweepstake of 10 guineas added to a plate of £40 at the same 
place, in four heats, carrying 11 stone. In 1716 the Ladies' 
Plate at York for five-year-olds was won by Aleppo, son of the 
Darley Arabian. Racing and match-making continued to be a 
regular sport at Newmarket, and at York and Ham We ton, and 
we also find a record of a race at Lincoln in August 1717 for 
a silver tea-board, won by Brocklesby Betty, as was the Queen's 
Plate at Black Hambleton in the year before. 

Between 1714 and 1720 there were races at Pontefract in 
Yorkshire for plates or money. The best of two out of three 
heats was to be the winner, provided the said horse was not 
distanced in the third heat — the distance post being 1 furlong 
from the winning post; and this appears to have been a usual 
condition. In or about the year 1721 Flying Childers is said to 



(GREAT BRITAIN 

have run a trial against Almanzor and Brown Betty oro the 
Round course at Newmarket (3 m. 4 f. 93 y.) in 6 m. 40 *-. and 
another trial ovet the Beacon course (4 m. 1 f. 138 y.) in 7 ra. 30 a. 
—which is fast even for a six-year old, but it is just possible that 
in those days the art of time-taking was anything but perfect. 
In 1721 George I. gave 100 guineas in specie in lieu of the geld 
cup at York presented by Anne, and the king's or queen's 
plates have been given in cash ever since. In 1725 a ladies* 
plate was run for on the 14th of September by female ndets on 
Ripon Heath in Yorkshire. In 1 7 27 Mr John Cheney established 
the Racing Calendar— *tx historical list of all the horse matches 
run, and of all plates and prises run for in F.figlan^ and Wales 
of the value of £10 or upwards in 1727, &c No systematic 
records had till then been preserved of the running of the race- 
horses of the day, and it is only through the performances of 
certain celebrated horses and mares that we have any informa- 
tion of what actually took place, and even that is more or less 
of a fragmentary kind. At this time racing was thoroughly 
established as a national and popular sport, for there were 
upwards of a hundred meetings in England and Wales, but the 
plates or sweepstakes run for were for the most part of small 
value, as £10, £20, £30, £40, and sometimes £50. In 1727, 
according to Whyte, there were only a dozen royal plates run for 
in England: one at Newmarket in April for six-year-old bones 
at it stone each, in heats over the Round course — first called 
the King's Plate course; one for five-year-old mares at 10 stone 
each, in one heat, and another in October for six-year-old horses 
at 12- stone, in beats over the same course; one at York (which 
commenced in 1711) for six-year-old horses, 12 stone each, 
4-m. heats; one at Black Hambleton, Yorkshire (of which no 
regular account was kept until 1715), for five-year-old mares, 
10 stone, 4 m.; one at each of the following places, Nottingham, 
Lincoln, Guildford, Winchester, Salisbury and Lewes, for six- 
year-old horses, 12 stone each, 4-m. heats; and one at Ipswich 
for five-year-old horses, 10 stone each. A royal plate was also 
run for at Edinburgh in 1728 or 1729, and one at the Curragh 
of Kildare in 1741. 

In 1739 an act was passed to prevent racing by ponies and 
weak horses, 13 Geo. 11 cap. 10, which also prohibited prizes 
or plates of less value than £50. At this period the best horses 
seldom ran more than five or six times, and some not so often, 
there being scarcely any plates of note except royal ones, and 
very few sweepstakes or matches of value except at Newmarket 
until after 1750, moreover, as the races were run in heats, 
best three out of four, over a course of several miles in length, the 
task set the horses before winning a plate was very severe, and 
by no means commensurate with the value of the prize. In 
1 751 the great subscription races commenced at York, the city 
also giving £50 added money to each day's racing. At New- 
market there were only two meetings, one in April and the 
other in October, but in 1753 a second spring meeting was 
established, and in that year the Jockey Club, which was founded 
in 1750, established the present racing ground In 1762 a 
second October meeting was added, in 1765 the July meeting, 
in 1770 the Houghton meeting, and in 1771 the Craven meeting, 
lo 1766 Tattersall's was established at Hyde Park Comer by 
Richard Tattersall for the sale of horses, it remained the great 
emporium of horses, and the rendezvous for betting on horse 
races, until 1865, when, the lease of the premises at the Corner 
having run out, it was removed to Knightsb ridge 

We now come to a very important period— that at which the 
great three-year-old races were instituted 

The St Leger was established in 1776 by Colonel St Leger, who 
resided at Park hill, near Doncaster. On the 24th of September, 
during the Doncaster races, which took place annually m^ m 
in the autumn, at his suggestion a sweepstake of f.« fL 
25 guineas each for three-year-old colts and fillies 
was run over a ?-m. course; there were six competitors, the 
property of as many subscribers, — a very small beginning, it 
must be owned. The race was won by a filly by Sampson, 
belonging to Lord Rockingham, which was afterwards named 
Allabaculia. In the following year the same stake had twelve 



GREAT BRITAIN! 



HORSE-RACING 



729 



• subscribers, and ten starters, and was woo' by Mr Sotheroo's 
Bourbon. It was not, however, until the succeeding year, 1778, 
that it was named the St Leger, in compliment to the founder, 
at the suggestion of the marquis of Rockingham. The stakes 
were increased in 1832 to 50 sovs. each, and the weights have 
been raised from time to time to keep pace with modern re- 
quirements. The Doncaster Cup, a weight for age race for three- 
year-olds and upwards, was established in 1801. The course is 
nearly flat, of an oval or kite shape, about 1} m. round the 
town-moor. 

The Epsom Derby and Oaks were established in 1779 and 
1780, the Oaks in the former and the Derby in the latter year. 

It is true that in 1730 Epsom races became annual, but 
mitSSi tn€ prizes were nothing more than the usual plates 

run for in heats, the money required being raised by 
voluntary subscriptions, as well by the owners of booths on 
the downs as by the parties more immediately interested, 
whence arose the custom of charges being made by the lord of 
the manor for permission to erect booths, &c. during the race- 
meetings. On the 14th of May 1779 the twelfth earl of Derby 
originated the Oaks slakes (named after his seat or hunting-box 
" The Oaks " at Woodmansteroe), a sweepstake for three-year- 
old fillies run on a course i\ m. long. The race was won by 
Lord Derby's bay filly Bridget, bred by himself— her sire 
being Herod and her dam Jemima. In the following year the 
earl established a sweepstake of 50 sovs. each, half forfeit, for 
three-year-old colts. This, the first Derby, was won by Sir C. 
Bunbury's chestnut colt Diomed by Florizel, son of Herod, who 
beat eight opponents, including the duke of Bolton's Bay 
Bolton and Lord Grosvenor's Diadem. These two races have 
since been run for regularly every year, the Derby, which before 
1839 was run on the Thursdiy, now taking place on the Wednes- 
day, and the Oaks on the Friday, in the same week at the end 
of May. 

Ascot races, which are held on Ascot Heath, were established 
by the duke of Cumberland, uncle* of George III., and arc 

patronized by royalty in state 6r semi-state. They are 

mentioned in the first Racing Calendar, published in 

1727, but the races were for the most part plates and 
other prizes of small importance, though a royal plate for hunters 
appears to have been given in 1 785. The Gold Cup was first given 
In 1807, and has been regularly competed for ever since, though 
from 1845 to 1853 inclusive it went by the designation of the 
Emperor's Plate, the prize being offered by the emperor of Russia. 
In 1854, during the Crimean War, the cup was again called the 
Ascot Gold Cup, and was given from the race fund. The Queen's 
Vase was first given in 1838, and the Royal Hunt Cup in 1843, 
while in 1865 a new long-distance race for four-year-olds and 
upwards was established, and named the Alexandra Plate, after 
the Princess of Wales. 

Goodwood races were established by the duke of Richmond 
on the downs at the northern edge of Goodwood Park in 1802, 
, upon the earl of Egremont discontinuing races in his 

park at Pctworth. The races take place at the end 
of July, on the close of the London season. The Goodwood 
Cup, the chief prize of the meeting, was first given in 1812; 
but from 1815 to 1824 inclusive there was no race for it, with 
the single exception of 1816. 

During the latter half of the 18th century horse-racing de- 
clined very much in England, and numbers of meetings were 
^^ discontinued, the wars which took place necessarily 

"*"~ causing the change. From the beginning of the 19th 

' century, and especially after the conclusion of the 

French war in 1815, racing rapidly revived, and many 
new meetings were either founded or renewed after a period of 
suspension, and new races were from time to time established. 
Among others the Two Thousand Guineas at Newmarket for 
three-year-old colts and fillies, and the One Thousand Guineas 
for fillies, were established in 1809 and 1814 respectively, the 
Goodwood Stakes in 1823, the Chester Cup and Brighton Stakes 
in 1824, the Liverpool Summer Cup in 1828, the Northumberland. 
Plate in 1833, the Manchester Cup in X&34, the Ascot Stakes 



and is* Cesarewitch and Cambridgeshire Handicaps at New- 
market in 1839, the Stewards' and Chesterfield Cups at Goodwood 
in 1840, the Great Ebor Handicap at York in 1843, and, to omit 
others, the City and Suburban Handicap at Epsom in 1854, 
and the Lincoln Handicap in 1853, 

Two-year-old racing was established very shortly after the 
great three-year-old races, and on a similar footing, that is to 
say, the competitors carried the same weights, with the exception 
of a slight allowance for sex,— the July Stakes at the Newmarket 
Midsummer Meeting having been founded as early as 1 786. The 
Woodcote Stakes at Epsom succeeded in 1807, the Champagne 
Stakes at Doncaster in 1823, the Criterion Stakes at the Houghton 
Meeting in 1829, the Chesterfield Stakes at the Newmarket 
July meeting in 1834, the New Stakes at Ascot in 1843, the 
Middle Park Plate (or two-year-old Derby, as it is sometim e s 
called) at the Newmarket Second October Meeting in 1866, the 
Dewhuntt Plate at the Houghton Meeting in 1875, and the Rich- 
mond Stakes at Goodwood in 1877. (E. D. B.) 

Prescml Condiiions.—Honc-iSicing, usually described as " the 
national sport," has greatly advanced in general popularity 
in the British Isles. There is no doubt that the best 
specimens of the English thoroughbred horse are the JjJJJJ, 1 )^ 
finest animals of their kind in existence ; the value of an n«jh«rf 
infusion of the blood for chargers, hunters, hacks, and 
other varieties is scarcely to be overestimated; and the only way 
of ascertaining what animals may be most judiciously employed 
for breeding purposes is to submit them to the tests of preparation 
for and performance on the turf. Racing is therefore a practical 
necessity. On some accepted authority, the origin of which is 
not to be traced, five races run each season by three-year-olds 
are distinguished as " classic." Of these the chief, by universal 
consent, is the Derby, which takes place at Epsom during the 
week which includes the 3 1st May. The Epsom course, on which 
the Derby has been ran since its origin in 1780, is by no means 
a good one, in consequence of the abrupt turn at Tattenham 
Corner; and the severe descent after this turn is made is also 
held to be a disadvantage, though a really good horse shoujd be 
able to act on ascents, descents and level ground with equal 
relative facility. In many respects the St Leger, run at Don- 
caster about the middle of September, is a better test, as here 
colts and fillies meet when both are presumably able to do 
themselves the fullest justice. September, indeed, has been 
called " the Mares' Month," for though fillies are eligible to run 
in the Derby, they are very frequently out of sorts and always 
more or less uncertain in their performances during the summer — 
only four have been successful in 129 contests for the stake— 
whereas in the autumn their numerous victories in the St Leger 
prove them to be at their best. It was the recognition of this 
fact which induced an alteration of the weights to the year 1882, 
previously to which fillies had carried 5 lb less than colls; the 
weights, formerly 8 st. 10 lb and 8 st. 5 lb, are now 9 si. and 
8 st. 1 1 lb. The Doncaster course is superior for racing purposes 
to that at Epsom, where the Oaks, another of the ** classic 
races," is run on the Friday following the Derby; the other 
two contests which come into this category being the Two 
Thousand Guineas for colts and fillies, and the One- Thousand 
Guineas for fillies only. These races take place at Newmarket 
during the First Spring Meeting, the former always on a 
Wednesday, the latter on Friday. The expression " a Derby 
horse " is common, but has no precise significance, as the three- 
year-olds vary much in capacity from year to year. It is 
generally understood, for instance, that Ormonde, who won 
the Derby in 1886, must have been at least 21 lb superior to 
Sir Visto or Jeddah, who were successful in 1895 and 1898. By 
their ability to carry weight the value of horses is estimated 
on the turf. Thus one horse who beats another by a length 
over a distance of a mile would be described as a 5-lb better 
animal. 

The term " handicap horse M once had an adverse significance 
which it does not now possess. In handicaps horses carry 
weight according to their presumed capacity, as calculated 
by handicappers who are licensed by the Jockey Club and 



73P 



HORSE^RACING 



(GfcEAT BRTTAIH 



employed by the directors of different meetings. The idea of a 
hatuiirap is to afford chances of success to anjmsls who would 
have no prospect of winning if they met their rivals on 
equal terms; but of late years the value of handicaps 
has been so greatly increased that few Owners resist 
the temptation of taking part in them.* Horses nowadays who 
do not run in this kind of contest are very rare, though a few, 
such as Ormonde, Isinglass, and Persimmon, never condescended 
to this class of sport. The duke of Westminster did not hesitate 
to put his Derby winner Bend Or into some of the chief handicaps ; 
and it is, of course, a great test of merit when horses carrying 
heavy weights show marked superiority in these contests to 
rivals of good reputation more lightly burdened.* St Gatien, 
who dead-heated with Harvester in the Derby of 1S84; Robert 
the Devil, who won the St Leger in 1880 and on several occasions 
beat the Derby winner Bend Or; and La Fleche, who won the 
Oaks and the St Leger in 1892, added to the esteem in which they 
were held by their successes under heavy weights, the colts in the 
Cesarewitch, the filly in (be Cambridgeshire. Of the chief handi- 
caps of the year, special mention may be made of the City and 
Suburban, run at the Epsom Spring Meeting over ij m.; the 
Kempton Park Jubilee, over 1 m.: the 1 Ascot Stakes, a m., and 
the Royal Hunt Cup, 1 m.; the Stewards' Cup at Goodwood, 
six furlongs; the Cesarewitch Stakes and the Cambridgeshire 
Stakes at Newmarket, the former i\ m., the latter now a mile and 
a furlong— till lately it was "a mile and a distance"— "a 
distance " on the Turf being a fixed limit of 340 yds. The cups at 
Manchester, Newbury, and Liverpool are also handicaps of some 
note, though it may be remarked that the expression " a cup 
horse " is understood to imply an animal capable of distinguish- 
ing himself over a long distance at even weights against the 
best opponents. There are many other valuable stakes of 
almost equal importance, diminishing to what are known as 
" selling handicaps," the winners of which are always put up for 
sale by auction immediately after the race, in the lowest class 
of them the condition being that the winner is to be offered for 
£50. No stake of less than £100 can be run for under Jockey 
Club roles, which govern all reputable tat racing in England, 
nor is any horse ever entered to be sold for less than £50. As 
horses mature they are natwally able to carry heavier weights. 

ScoJe of Weight for Age. 

The following scale of weight for age is published under the sanc- 
tion of the Stewards of the Jockey Cub as a guide to managers 



A*. 


Mtfud 

April 


M*y 


June. 


July. 


Aug 


Srpt 


Oct tad 

No* 


Fvte Furlongs— 


St. lb 


St. lb 


st. lb 


st. lb 


St. 


Jb 


St. 


lb 


St. lb 


Two years .... 


6 


6 2 


6 7 


6 9 


1 





1 


4 


7 7 


Three years . . 


8 2 


8 3 


8 5 


8 7 


9 


10 


8 11 


Four yean .... 


9 


9 


9 


9 


9 





9 





9 


Five, six and aged 


01 


9 


9 


9 


9 





9 





9 


Six Furlongs- 
Two years .... 
Three years ., . . 


6 
8 4 


%% 


6 7 

8 8 


6 11 
8 10 


I 



12 


7 
9 


5 




7 7 

9 2 


Fouryears . . 


9 7 


9 7 


9 7 


9 7 


9 


7 


9 


7 


9 7 


Five, six and aged 


9 9 


9 8 


9 7 


9 7 


9 


7 


9 


7 


9 7 


OneMtle— 




















Two years .... 














6 


5 


6 7 


Three years . . . 


7 9 


7 '" 


7 »3 


8**2 


8 


4 


8 


5 


8 6 


Fouryears . . . 


9 


9 


9 


9 


9 


0. 


9 





9 


Five, six and aged 
One Mile and Half— 


9 4 


9 3 


9 * 


9 


9 





9 





9 


Two year* 














6 





* 4 


Three years ... 


7*7 


7 9 


7 »» 


7 13 


8* 


I 


8 


3 


8 5 


Four yean .... 


9 


9 *> 


9 


9 


9 





9 





9 


Five, six and aged 


9 5 


9 4 


9 3 


9 * 


9 


t 


9 





9 


Two Miles— 




















Two yean .... 














6 





6 2 


Three years 


7**8 


7 il 


7 « 


8"o 


8* 


3 


8 


4 


8 5 


Four yean .... 


9 4 


9 4 


9 t 


9 4 


9 


t 


9 


4 


9 4 


Five, six and aged 
Three Miles— 
Three yean . . . 


9 10 


9 9 


9 8 


9 7 


9 


9 


5 


9 4 


7 1 


7 4 


7 5 


7 7 


7 


9 


7 


11 


7 «3 


Four yean .... 


9 


9 


9 


9 


9 





9 





9 


Five yean .... 


9 8 


9 7 


9 6 


Si 


9 


5 


9 


4 


9 3 


Sixandaged . . . 


9 10 


9 » 


9 7 


9 


5 


9 


4 


9 3| 



of race mrrrihgs, bat is not istmdod to be — w 

as regards the weights of two- and three-year olds relatively to tJee 
old horses in selling races early in the year. It is founded on the 
scale published by Admiral Rous, and revised by him in 1873, bat 
has been modified in accordance with suggestions from the pr incipa l 
trainers and practical authorities. 

In the year 1884 the managers of Sandown Park formulated 
the scheme of a race for a prize of £10,000, to be called the 
Eclipse Stakes, and to be run over a distance of i\ m. 
In order to secure a large entry, horses were to be 
nominated soon after their birth; owners who per- 
ceived the hopelessness of their nominations could withdraw 
at stated intervals by the payment of increasing forfeits; If 
their animals finally went to the post a stake amounting in 
all to £115 would have to be paid for them; and thus It wffl be 
seen that owners were really running for their own money, though 
if there were an insufficient number of entries the funds of the 
club might be taxed to supply the deficiency. The scheme was 
found to be attractive, and the example was followed at Leicester 
and at Manchester, at both of which places, however, it lapsed. 
At Newmarket, under the immediate auspices of the Jockey Club, 
the £10,000 races succeeded, and there were two of them each 
year. The Princess of Wales's Stakes was run for the first time in 
1804 at the First July Meeting, and the Jockey Club Stakes at 
the First October. The former has, however, now been reduced 
to £2000 added to a sweepstake of £30 each with a minor forfeit. 
In the year 1000 a fourth race of similar character, the Century 
Stakes, was originated at Sandown, but the exoeriment proved 
a failure, and the contest was discpntlnued. 

The age of the thoroughbred horse is always dated from the 
1st January. Foals are generally born in February, March or 
April, though not a few good horses have been born in , 
May; they become yearlings, therefore, on the 1st ^JJ 
January following, two-year-olds twelve months later, 
and many of them begin to race in the following March, for flat. 
racing always starts during the week which contains the 25th, 
except when Easter falls unusually early. In France no two- 
year-olds run until the tst August, and discussion is frequently 
raised as to the respective wisdom of the English and French 
systems. It happens, however, that some young horses " come 
to hand " soon, and deteriorate with equal rapidity. They are, 
in fact, able lo win races at the beginning of the season, and fail 
to hold their own later in the year against bigger and more 
powerful animals of their own age who have taken longer to 
mature, so that there is some argument in favour of the earlier 
date. The first noteworthy two-year-old race is the 
Brocklesby Stakes, run at Lincoln during the first 
week of the season. Sometimes the winner of the 
Brocklesby is really a good animal, as was the case 
with The Bard in 1885 and Donovan in 1888, but as 
a general rule when the autumn comes he is found to 
be far inlcrior to the winners of subsequent two-year- 
old races of good class. It is seldom that a first-class 
two-year-old appears before the Ascot Meeting about 
the middle of June, though horses of character some- 
times run for the Woodcote Stakes at Epsom and in 
other contests elsewhere. The names of many of the 
most famous horses on the turf are found in the IUt 
of winners of the New Stakes at Ascot, which was first 
run in 1843 and maintains its character. In 1800 the 
Coventry Stakes was originated, and is regarded as a 
race of practically equal importance. The July Stakes 
at Newmarket is the oldest of existing two-yemr-old 
races, having been first run in 1786. The list of 
winners h a brilliant one. The Chesterfield Stakes 
ranks with it. The best two-year-olds arc usually 
seen out at Goodwood, and as a general rule those 
that have chiefly distinguished themselves during the 
year, and are to make names for themselves later in 
life, are found contesting the Middle Park Plate at 
the Newmarket Second October Meeting and the 
Dewhurst -Plate at the Newmarket Houghton. The 
Middle Park Plate is generally worth over £2000, the 



GREAT BHITAIN1 



HORSEwRACING 



73» 



other race* named are between £1000 and £3000 la value; 
but these are not the richest two-year-old prizes of the 
year, the value of the National Breeders' Produce Stakes at 
Sandown, run on the day following the Eclipse, being between 
£4000 and £5000, and the Imperial Stakes at Kempton Park 
falling not very far short of £3000. As a rule, a colt who 
has been specially successful as a two-year-old maintains 
his capacity later in life, unless it be found that he cannot 
" stay "—that is to say, is unable to maintain his best speed 
over more 'than five or six furlongs; but it is frequently the 
case 'that fillies who have won good races as two-year-olds 
entirely lose their form and meet with little or no success 
afterwards. 

Newmarket is called with reason " the headquarters of the 
Turf." There are about forty training establishments in the 
town, each trainer being in charge of an average of 
thirty to forty horses, irrespective of mares, foals and 
yearlings. During the year eight race meetings are 
held on the Heath: the Craven; the First and Second Spring; 
the First and Second October — the First October usually 
occurring at the end of September; and the Houghton. These 
are contested on "the Flat," the course which includes the Rowley 
Mile. It is said that the Rowley Mile is so called from the 
fact of its having been a favourite race-ground with Charles II. 
The First and Second July Meetings take place on another 
course, known as "Behind the Ditch/* the Ditch being the 
huge embankment which runs through several counties and 
has existed from lime immemorial. The Craven Stakes for 
three-year-olds is an event of some importance at the first meeting 
of the year. It used to finish on an ascent at what is called 
the " Top of the Town/' a course over which the handicap for the 
Cambridgeshire was run. This course has now been abandoned 
and the stand pulled down. At the First Spring Meeting the 
Two Thousand Guineas and the One Thousand Guineas occur, 
as already stated, but the names do not represent the values of 
the stakes, which are, in fact, usually worth close on £5000 each. 
The July Stakes and the Princess of Wales' Stakes are run at 
the First July Meeting. The Jockey Club Stakes is the leading 
event of the First October; the Cesare witch and the Middle 
Park Plates follow in the Second October; the Criterion Stakes, 
another of the few races that once finished at the " Top of the 
Town/' the Cambridgeshire and the Dewhurst Plate take place at 
the Houghton Meeting. The majorit y of races finish at the Rowley 
Mile post; but there are three other winning-posts along the 
Rowley Mile. " Behind the Ditch " races finish at two different 
posts, one of which enables horses to avoid the necessity of gallop- 
ing up the severe ascent of the " Bunbury Mile. 1 ' Although, as 
a rule, there is no better racing to be seen than the best events 
at Newmarket, the programmes are often spun out by 
Aicotmod ^Uing plates and paltry handicaps, and a high level is 
nowhere so consistently maintained as at Ascot. 
The Ascot meeting is distinguished by the entire 
absence of selling plates, and much more "added money" is 
given than on any other course. Added money is the sum sup- 
plied by the directors of a race meeting, derived by them from the 
amounts paid for entrances to stands and enclosures; for in many 
races— the Ten Thousand prizes, for instance— owners run mainly 
or entirely for money which they have themselves provided. 
The Ascot Cup is generally spoken of as a race success in which 
sets the seal to the fame of a good horse. It is a prize of the highest 
distinction, and of late years has been of considerable value, the 
winner in 1909 having gained for his owner £3430. That the 
number of runners for this race should be invariably small— 
the average for many years past has been about six — is not a 
matter of surprise to those who are familiar with the Turf. 
There are very few horses possessing sufficient speed and staying 
power to make it worth the while of their owners to submit 
them to the exceedingly severe test of a preparation for this race, 
which is run over i\ m. of ground at a time of year when the 
turf is almost always extremely hard everywhere, and harder at 
Ascot than almost anywhere else. There is no course on which 
maze good horses have hopelessly broken down. All the prizes 



are handsome/ and success at Ascot confers much prestige, 
for the reason that the majority of horses that run are good 
ones; but annually there is a list of victims that never recover 
from the effects of galloping on this ground. Goodwood also 
attracts horses of high character, though some unimportant 
races fill out the programme. Formerly there were many 
meetings around London, which fell into disrepute in consequence 
of the manner in which they were conducted. These have been 
replaced by well-managed gatherings in enclosed parks, and here 
the value of the prizes fs often so high that the best horses in 
training are attracted. These meetings include Sandown, 
Kempton, Gatwick , Lingfield, Newbury and Hurst Park. Liver- 
pool, Manchester, Birmingham, Brighton,York and various other 
towns have race meetings twice or oftener in the course of each 
year. At the various fixtures over half a million of money is 
annually given in stakes. The largest sum ever won by a horse 
was the £57,185 gained by Isinglass in 1892-1895. Donovan 
follows with £54,935* Iu all probability these large totals would 
have been considerably exceeded had not Flying Fox — who had 
won in his first two seasons £40,090— been disqualified by the 
death of his owner, the duke of Westminster, as this colt was 
engaged in the four £10,000 races of 1900, in which to alt appear- 
ance he could not have been beaten, so much was he superior 
to his contemporaries. The death of an owner of horses dis- 
qualifies the animals he has entered— a necessary regulation, as 
otherwise an heir might be burdened with a stable of horses the 
possession of which would entail heavy expense and serious 
responsibility on a person who perhaps had no knowledge of or 
taste for racing 

The value of an unquestionably good horse is enormous. 
It has been seen what handsome prizes are offered for competition, 
and when withdrawn from the Turf the horse may 
secure a large income to his owner at the stud. A tor—* 
stallion's fee of 600 guineas (as in the case of St 
Simon) should mean well over £20,000 a year; and fees of 100 
guineas and more are common. Proved merit on the Turf is 
considered essential in a sire, though there have been instances 
of horses, unsuccessful during their racing career, who have 
distinguished themselves at the stud: Wisdom, sire of the Derby 
winner Sir Hugo, and several notable examples might be cited. 
Mares are much more uncertain in this respect. On the whole, 
the famous mares that have won the Oaks, the St Leger and 
other leading races, have been apt to fail in the paddocks; but 
there is always a hope of success with them, and the large sum 
of 12,600 guineas was paid lor La Fleche when she had ceased 
from active service on the Turf. For Nonc-t he- Wiser 7200 
guineas was given; and 4600 guineas for Wedlock when well 
advanced in years, on the strength of her having been the dam 
of a good horse called Best Man. Well-bred mares that have 
shown no capacity for racing are, however, frequently the dams 
of good winners. Breeding is a lottery. An Australian enthusiast 
some years since published a book the object of which was to 
enable breeders to produce good horses by a species of mathe- 
matical calculation; • but the fallacy of the " Figure System " 
was at once proved by the simple circumstance that in vfery 
many cases the own brothers and sisiers of good winners, whose 
breeding conformed entirely to the system, proved to be utterly 
worthless for racing purposes. It is a fact difficult of explanation 
that the majority, of famous winners have been privately bred 
by their owners. . Many persons breed for sale, in some cases 
sparing no expense or trouble in the endeavour to secure good 
results, and yearlings sold by auction have fetched prices of 
from 10,000 guineas (paid for Sceptre, a daughter of Persimmon 
and Ornament, in 1900) downwards; sums of over 1000 guineas 
being frequently given. That so large a proportion of high- 
priced yearlings should turn out failures is not at all a matter 
for surprise, considering the uncertainties of the Turf, but It 
by no means follows that a high-priced yearling is necessarily 
an expensive animal; 5560 guineas was, for instance, given for 
La Fleche, who won for her owner £34.585 in stakes, and, as 
already observed, was subsequently .sold for 13,600 guineas. 
The principal yearling sales take place during the July meeting 



73* 



HORSE-RACING 



(GREAT BRITAIN 



at Newmarket and the Doncaster meeting in September. There 
are also sales at Ascot and elsewhere. The Royal Stud at Bushey 
Park, where Memoir, La Fleche, Best Man and other good 
animals were bred, has now been abandoned. 

In many cases trainers have graduated from jockeys. The 
usual charge to an owner is 50s. a week per horse, but, as regards 
the cost of a horse in training, to this there are various 
additions irrespective of entrances to races, forfeits, 
travelling, jockey's fees, &c. The recognized sum 
paid to a jockey is 3 guineas for a losing mount, 5 
guineas for winning. In many cases special terms are made; 
the principal owners usually have a claim on a rider's services, 
and for this call as much as £$000 per annum, exclusive of the 
usual riding fees, has been given. 

From time immemorial until within a very recent period 
jockeys rode in much the same style, though, of course, with 
varying degrees of skill. Many hundreds of boys exercise daily 
at Newmarket and other training grounds, all of them necessarily 
having a firm seat in the saddle, for the thoroughbred horse is, 
as a rule, high-couraged and apt to play violent tricks; but 
though most of these lads find chances to distinguish themselves 
in trials and races for apprentices, probably not 5 % grow 
into professional jockeys, increasing weight keeping many from the 
business, as a jockey has few chances unless be can ride well 
under 9 stone. Knowledge of pace is a rare gift or acquisition 
which is essential to successful jockeyship. The rider must 
also be quick to perceive how his own horse is going — what he 
has " left in him "; he must understand at a glance which of 
his rivals arc beaten and which are still likely to be dangerous; 
must know when the moment comes for the supreme effort to 
be made, and how to balance and prepare the horse for that 
critical struggle. At the beginning of the race the jockey used 
to stand in his stirrups, with the idea of removing weight from 
the horse's back and preserving perfect steadiness; towards the 
end of the race, if it were necessary to drive the animal home, 
he sat down " to finish." 

This method used to be adopted in all countries, but recently 
a new system came into practice in America. Instead of putting 
the saddle in the middle of the horse's back, where it had always 
been placed previously, it was shifted forward on to the animal's 
withers. The jockey rode with very short stirrups, leaning 
forward over the neck and grasping the reins within a few 
inches of the horse's mouth. The appearance of this was un- 
gainly in the extreme and an entire departure from ancient ways 
(though Fordham and a few other riders of great reputation had 
always sat much more forward than their contemporaries), 
but it was found to be remarkably effective. From the position 
thus adopted there was less resistance to the wind, and though 
the saving in this respect was largely exaggerated, in racing, 
where success or failure is frequently a matter of a very few inches, 
every little that helps is to be considered. The value of the 
discovery lay almost entirely in the fact that the horse carries 
weight better— and is therefore able to stride out more freely— 
when it is placed well forward on his shoulders. With char- 
acteristic conservatism the English were slow to accept the 
new plan. Several American jockeys, however, came to England. 
In all the main attributes of horsemanship there was no reason 
to believe that they were in the least superior to English jockeys, 
but their constant successes required explanation, and the only 
way to account for them appeared to be that horses derived a 
marked advantage from the new system of saddling. A number 
of English riders followed the American lead, and those who 
did so met with an unusual degree of success. Race-riding, in- 
deed, was in a very great measure revolutionized in the closing 
years of the 19th century. 

Of late years American horses— bred, it must always be 
remembered, from stock imported from England — have won 
many races in England. Australian horses have also 
been sent to the mother country, with results re- 
munerative to their owners, and the intermixture of 
blood which will necessarily result should have beneficial con- 
sequences. French horses—*.*, horses bred in France from 



immediate or from more or lets remote English 
have also on various occasions distinguished themselves on 
English racecourses. That coveted trophy, the Ascot Cup, was 
won by a French horse, Elf II., in 1808, it having fallen also to 
the French-bred Verneuil in 1878, to Boiard in 1874, to Henry is 
187a and to Mortemer in 1871. In the Cesarewitch Plaimntrrie 
(3 yr*-> 7 st. 8 lb) and Tenebreuse (4 yes., 8 st. 12 lb) were suc- 
cessful in 188s and 1888; and Plaisanterie also carried off the 
Cambridgeshire as a three-year-old with the heavy weight of 
8 st. 12 lb in a field of 27 runners. In most respects racing 
in France is conducted with praiseworthy discrimination. These 
are scarcely any of the five- and six-furlong scrambles for horses 
over two years old which are such common features of English 
programmes. 

That the horses who have covered various distances in the 
shortest times on record must have been exceptionally speedy 
animals is obvious. The times of races, however, TJmm. 
frequently form a most deceptive basis in any attempt 
to gauge the relative capacity of horses. A good animal will 
often win a race in bad time, for the reason that his opponents 
are unable to make him exert himself to the utmost. Not seldom 
a race is described as having been " won in a canter," and 
this necessarily signifies that if the winner had been harder 
pressed he would have completed the course more quickly. 
The following figures show the shortest times that had been 
occupied in winning over various distances up to the spring 
of 1910: — 



•■I 



Mirida (2 years), Epsom, 190$ ) 

Lc Buff (aged), Epsom, 1903 > o 

Master Willie (aged), Epsom, 1903 ) 
Master Willie (5 yean), Epsom, 1901 1 
Vav (4 years), Epsom, 1907 * 

Caiman (4 years), Lingfield, 1900 l 
Housewife (3 years), Brighton, 1904 2 
Zinfandcl (3 years), Manchester, 1903 2 : 
Golden Measure (4 years), York, 1906 2 
Pradella (aged). Ascot, 1906 3 

Bachelor's Button. Ascot, 1906 4 : 

Conic Roy, Ascot, 1884 $ 



Five furlongs 

Six furlongs 

Seven furlongs . . 

Mile 

Mile and a quarter 
Mile and a half . . 
Mile and three quarters 
Two miles .... 
Two miles and a half . 
Three miles . . . 

It may be noted that, as compared with similar records in 1901. 
only three of these latter held good in 19 10, f.#. the mile, the six fur- 
longs and the three miles. The fastest times over a mile and a half 
(the Derby and Oaks distance) up to 1901 may be repeated here as 
of some interest: Avidity, 3 min. 30} sees., in September 1901 at 
Doncaster; Santoi, 2 nun* 31 sees., in May 1901 at Hurst Park; 
Kinp's Courier, 1 min. 31 sees., in 1900 at Hurst Park; Landrail, 
2 mm 34 sees., in September 1899 at Doncaster; Carbiston, 2 min. 
37i sees., in August 1899 at York; Bend Or, 2 min. 40 sees., in f88r 
at Epsom (gold cup): Volodyovski won the Derby in 1901, and 
Memoir the Oaks in 1890, in 2 min. 4©! sees. 

As regards time in famous races, Ormonde, perhaps the best 
horse of the 19th century — one, at any rate, that can scarcely 
have had a superior — occupied 2 minutes 45! seconds in winning 
the Derby; and Lonely, one of the worst mares that have won 
the Oaks, galloped the same mile and a half in 2 seconds less. 
Ormonde's St Leger time was 3 m. *\\ s., and Sir Visto, one of 
the poorest specimens of a winner of the great Doncaster race, 
took 3 m. x8| s. The regulation of the weight to be carried 
serves to " bring the horses together," as the popular sporting 
phrase runs— that is to say, it equalizes their chances of 
winning; hence handicaps, the carrying of penalties by winners 
of previous races, and the granting of " maiden allowances." 
A horse that has never won a race, and is therefore known as a 
" maiden," often has an allowance of as much as 7 lb made in 
its favour. 

Sport is carried on under the auspices of the Jockey Club, a self- 
elected body of the highest standing, whose powers are absolute 
and whose sway is judicious and beneficent. Three 
stewards, one of whom retires each year, when a £ ^"" 
successor is nominated, govern the active— and ex- 
tremely arduous — work of the club. They grant licences 
to trainers and jockeys and all officials, and supervise the 
whole business of racing. The stewards of the Jockey Club 
are ex ojfkio stewards of Ascot, Epsom, Goodwood and 



GREAT BRITAIN) 



HORSE-RACING 



733 



Doncaster. All other meetings are controlled by stewards, 
usually well-known patrons of the Turf invited to act by 
the projectors of the fixture, who settle disputed points, bear 
mad adjudicate on objections, &&, and, if special difficulties 
arise, report to the stewards of the Jockey Club, whose decision 
is final. 

Steeplechasing has altered entirely since the first introduction 
of this essentially British sport. In early days men were 
accustomed to match their hunters against each other 
and ride across country to a fixed point near to some 
steeple which guided them on their way; and this is 
no doubt, in several respects, a class of sport superior to that now 
practised under the name of steeplechasing; for it tested the 
capacity of the horse to jump fences of all descriptions, and 
provided the rider with opportunities of showing his readiness and 
skill in picking the best line of country. But racing of this kind 
afforded spectators a very small chance of watching the struggle; 
and made-up steeplechase courses the whole circuit of which 
could be viewed from the enclosures, came into existence. 
The steeplechase hone has also changed. The speed of the 
thoroughbred is so much greater than that of all -other breeds 
that if one were in the field, if he only stood up and could jump 
a little, his success was certain; consequently, except in " point- 
to-point " races, organized by various hunts, where a qualifica- 
tion is that all starters must have been regularly ridden with 
bounds, few other than thoroughbred horses are nowadays 
ever found in races run under the rules of the National Hunt 
Committee, the body which governs the sport of steeplechasing. 
A considerable proportion of existing steeplechase horses have 
done duty on the flat. Members of certain equine families 
display a special aptitude for jumping; thus the descendants 
of Hermit, who won the Derby in 1867, are very frequently 
successful in steeplechases— Hermit's son Ascetic, the sire 
of Cloister, Hidden Mystery and other good winners, is a notable 
case in point. The sons and daughters of Timothy and of several 
other Hermit horses often jump welL When a flat-race horse 
appears to have comparatively poor prospects of winning under 
Jockey Club rules, he is frequently, if he " looks like jumping, "- 
schooled for steeplechasing, generally in the first place over 
hurdles, and subsequently over what is technically called " a 
country/' beginning with small fences, over which be canters, led 
by some steady animal who is to be depended on to show the way. 
A great many steeplechase horses also come from Ireland. They 
are usually recognizable as thoroughbred, though it is possible 
that in some cases the name of an ancestor may be missing from 
the Stud Book. Irish horse-masters are for the most part particu- 
larly skilful in schooling jumpers, and the grass and climate of 
Ireland appear to have beneficial effects on young stock; 
but, as a rule, the imported Irish horse improves consider- 
ably in an English training-stable, where he is better fed 
and groomed than in most Irish establishments. All steeple- 
chase courses must at the present time contain certain regula- 
tion jumps, the nature of which is specified in the National 
Hunt rules:— 

44. In all steeplechase courses there shall be at least twelve 
fences (exclusive of hurdles) in the first 2 m.. and at least six fences 
in each succeeding m. There shall be a water jump at least 12 ft. 
wide and 2 ft. deep, to be left open, or guarded only by a perpendi- 
cular fence not exceeding 2 ft. in height. There shall be in each m. 
at least one ditch 6 ft. wide and 3 ft. deep on the takingr-off side of 
the fence, which ditch may be guarded by a single rafl, or left open, 
and which fence must be 4 ft. in. in height, and, if of dead brush- 
wood or gorse, 2 ft. in width. 

45. In all hurdle-race courses there shall be not less than eight 
flights of hurdles in the first 2 nu, with an additional flight of hurdles 
for every quarter of a m. or part of one beyond that distance, the 
height of the hurdles being not less than 3 ft. 6 in. from the bottom 
bar to the top bar. 

Natural fences would no doubt be desirable if they could be 
utilized; but it is obvious that fences must be made up, because 
when the same hedge is jumped frequently, and for the most 
part in the same place — as ft is the object of riders to go the 
shortest way round—gaps would necessarily be made. The use of 



these made courses naturally renders the sport somewhat 
artificial, but under existing conditions this is unavoidable; 
and as a matter of fact, by reason of the conformation of the 
ground, the ar r ang em e n t and make of the fences, courses do vary 
in no small degree. The steeplrrhase horse diners from the 
hunter in his method of jumping. In riding to hounds a ™?n 
usually steadies his horse at a fence, and in almost every case 
the animal " dwells " more or less after the leap. In a steeple- 
chase, where speed is everything, horses must be taught to dash 
resolutely at their iumps without hesitation, and to get away 
with no pause on the other side; .as a rule, therefore, an old 
steeplechasehorse who is employed as a hunter is rarely a pleasant 
mount for any but a bold rider. It has been remarked that 
steeplechase horses are usually in the first place schooled over 
.hurdles, and many animals remain hurdle racers till the end. 
More speed is required for hurdles than for a steeplechase course, 
and there is more money to be won over hurdles than over " a 
country.'* No hurdle race is worth so much as the Grand 
National or the Lancashire Handicap Steeplechase, the two 
richest prizes now offered; but, with the exception of these, 
hurdle-race stakes are as a rule of greater value. Except as a 
spectacle, there is little to be said in defence of this mongrel 
business, which is neither one thing nor the other; but hurdle 
races are popular and are therefore likely to continue. A few 
years ago an attempt was made to discriminate between what 
were called " hunters " and handicap steeplechase horses, and 
certain races were only open to the former class. It proved, 
however, to be a distinction without a difference; thoroughbred 
horses crept into the ranks t>f the. so-called hunters, and when 
nominal hunters began to be entered for, and in some cases to 
win, the Grand National and other important steeplechases, 
for which they could be nominated by abandoning their qualifica- 
tion of hunter, the meaningless title was relinquished. Still more 
absurd were the hunters* flat races of a former day. In order to 
compete in these the rule was that an owner must produce a 
certificate from a master of hounds to the effect that his horse 
had been hunted. Thoroughbreds who lacked speed to win 
under Jockey Club rules used to be ridden to a meet, perhaps 
cantered across a field or two, and were then supposed to have 
become hunters. Animals who were genuinely and regularly 
utilized for the pursuit of foxes had of course no chance against 
these race-horses in shallow disguise. What are called National 
Hunt flat races still exist, the qualification being that a horse 
must have been placed first, second or third in a steeplechase 
in Great Britain or Ireland, after having jumped all the fences 
and completed the whole distance of the race to the- satisfac- 
tion of at least two of the stewards, to whom previous notice 
must have been given in writing. There are no handicaps 
for such animals* and none is allowed to carry less than 
11 stone. No race under National Hunt rules can be of a 
shorter distance than 2 m., except for three-year-olds, who 
sometimes run a mile and a half over hurdles; and the 
lowest weight carried can never be less than 10 stone except in 
a handicap steeplechase of 3} m. or upwards, when it may be 
9 st. 71b. 

Horses are ridden in these races either by gentlemen, or 
qualified riders or jockeys. The first of these classes comprises 
officers on full pay in the army or navy, persons holding com- 
missions under the Crown, bearing titles either in their own 
right or by courtesy, or members of certain social and racing 
clubs. Qualified riders may be fanners holding at least a 
hundred acres of land, their sons if following the same occupation, 
and persons elected by members of the National Hunt Com- 
mittee, a proviso being that they must never have ridden for 
hire; but it is feared that this rule a in not a few cases evaded. 
Professional jockeys are paid £5 for each mount or £10 if they 
win. The sport is governed by the National Hunt Committee, 
a body which receives delegated powers from the Jockey Club, 
and six stewards are elected every year to supervise the business 
of the various meetings. Steeplechases and hurdle races are 
either handicaps or weignt-for-age races according to the following 
scale:— 



73+ 



HORSE-RACING 



fNOmtf 



For S teeplechas e s of J miles and upwards . 
From the 1st of January to the 30th of June, both inclusive:— 
4 yrs. 5 yrs. 6 and aged 

10 st. 3 lb list. 8 lb last.^Ib 

From the 1st of July to the 31 $t of December, both inclusive:— 
4 yrs. • 5 yrs. - 6 and aged 

list. 11 st. 12 lb 12 st. 3 lb 

For Steeplechases of less Push j miles. 
From the 1st of January to the 30th of June, both inclusive:—' 
4 yrs. 5 yrs. 6andaged 

10 st. 10 lb list. 10 lb last. 3 lb " 
From the 1st of July to the 31st of December, both inclusive.*— 

4 yrs. 5 yrs. 6 and aged 

11 st. 6 lb 12 st. 12 st. 3 lb 

For Hurdle Races. 
From the 1st of January to the 31st of August, inclusive*— 
4 yrs. 5 ys. 6 and aged 

list. 6 1b list. 10 lb 12 st. o lb 

From the 1st of Seoteraber to the 31st of December, inclusive:— 
3 yrs. 4 y«- 5. 6, and aged 

lost. 7 lb list. 12 lb last. 3 lb . 

The great test of merit in a steeplechase hone is success in the 
Grand National, which is always run at Liverpool during the 
first week of the flat-racing season. The course is 
4} m., and includes thirty jumps, the fences being for 
the most part larger than are found elsewhere. The 
average time occupied is well under ten minutes. The stake has 
varied in value since the race was originated in 1839; it now 
amounts to close on £2500. Only a very small percentage of 
steeplechase horses possess the speed and staving power to give 
them a chance in this race, and the number of entries year by 
year falls considerably short of a hundred, the prospects of 
many of these usually appearing hopeless to all but unduly 
sanguine owners. The average number of starters during the 
period 1 860-1 901 was rather over twenty. As many as thirty-two 
competed in 1909, when the French-bred Latteur III. won; in 
1883, when Zoedone, ridden by her owner, Count Kinsky.was suc- 
cessful, only ten went to the post. Mishaps are almost invariably 
numerous; in most years about one-third complete the course. 
So severe is the task that for a long time many good judges of 
steeplechasing believed that no horse with more than x? stone 
on his back could possibly win. In 1893, however, Cloister won 
in a canter by forty lengths carrying 12 st. 7 lb, and with the 
same weight Manifesto also won in 1809. The race which most 
nearly approaches the Grand National in importance is the 
Lancashire Handicap Steeplechase, run at Manchester over 3} m. 
early in April. The stake is worth about £1750. An interesting 
steeplechase called the Grand Sefton takes place at Liverpool 
about the middle of November; the distance is 3 m. During 
the winter, and extending into the spring, steeplechasing and 
hurdle racing are carried on at Sandown, Kempton, Gatxrick, 
Iingfield, Newbury and Hurst Park; at Ludlow, Newmarket, 
Aldershot, Birmingham, Manchester, Windsor and other places. 
A race called the National Hunt Steeplechase, under the immedi- 
ate patronage of the National Hunt Committee, is run annually 
over a 4-mile course, the stake being £1000. Managers of 
various courses bid for the privilege of having the race on their 
ground, and it is therefore found in different localities. A con- 
dition is that no horse who has ever won a race can compete; 
and, *s few- owners are willing to keep their animals with a 
view to success in this event, the field consists either of unknown 
horses or of those that have been beaten. 

Australia 

Racing in Australia has its headquarters at Sydney, under the 
government of the Australian Jockey Club, the principal course being 
at Ranwtck; and at Melbourne} where the Victoria Jockey Club 5 
supreme, the principal course being at Flemington. In New Zealand 
sport is carried on under the authority of delegates from the chief 
racing clubs, who meet in conference. There is a Sydney Derby 
and a Victoria Derby, and a notable event at Flemington is the 
Champion Race, weight-forage, for three-year-olds and upwards, 
which usually attract* the best horses in training, as the fee at 
which a sire stands depends in a great measure on his success in this 
contest. This race is over a distance of 3 m., and to ensure a good 
pace there is a regulation that the time in which it b run must not 
exceed 5 minutes 40 seco n ds , though the stewards have oower to 



(UNITED STATES 

extend this In case the ground should be made exceptionally heavy 
by rainy weather. The Melbourne Cup b regarded as one of the 
most important races in the state. Thb b a handicap, and in com* 
parison with Engtbh races may perhaps be ranked with the Cesare* 
witch. The birth of horses dates from the 1st of August, which 
corresponds as nearly as possible to the 1st of February In FnglaaH, 
so that the Australian horses are practically seven months younger 
than the English — a matter of some importance in the case of those 
sent to run in England. There are few races which dose long before 
the date of decision, and practically all the good animals ran U 
handicaps. The five- and six-furlong races for other than two-year* 
olds, so common in Great Britain, are extremely rare; and it ss 
asserted by colonial sportsmen that their horses stay better than 
those bred in England, a circumstance which b largely attributed 
to the fact that mares and foals have much more libertv and c ami ss 
than is the case in the mother country. 

United States 

Hone-racing was irfrinlgrd in' to a limited extent in Maryland 
and Virginia as early as the middle of the 17th century, particu- 
larly in the latter onjony. Most of the inhabitants of both were 
either from the British Isles or were descended from parents who 
had immigrated from them, and they inherited a taste for the 
sport. The animals used for thb purpose, however, were not 
highly prised at the time, and the pedigree of not even one of 
them has been preserved. A. horse called Bully Rock by the 
Darley Arabian out of a mare by the Byerly Turk, granddam by 
the Lister Turk, great-granddam a royal mare, foaled 1718, 
b the first recorded importation of a thoroughbred horse into 
America. He was imported into Virginia in 1730. In 17*3 the 
duke of Bolton bred a mare named Bonny Lass by hb celebrated 
hone Bay Bolton out of a daughter of the Darley Arabian. 
She became celebrated in England as a brood mare, and wms the 
first thoroughbred mare, according to the records, that was 
carried to America. Thb b supposed to have been in or after 
1740, as the Stud-Book shows she produced in England after 
1 739 a filly by Lord Lonsdale's Arabian, and subsequently became 
familiar to the public as the granddam of Zamora. The im- 
portations increased very rapidly from thb period, and many 
valuable shipments were made before the war which resulted in 
a separation of the colonies from the mother country. This 
acquisition of thoroughbred stock increased the number and 
value of racing prizes, and extended the area of operations into 
the Carolinas in the South, and New Jersey and New York in 
the North. The first race run in South Carolina was in February 
1734 for £30. It took place over " the Green," on Charleston 
Neck. This shows that the earlier races in America were actually 
on the turf, as they have always been in England. The next 
year a Jockey Club was orgnnired at Charleston (i73S)» and a 
course was prepared, such as those which came later into general 
use throughout the states, the turf being removed and the 
ground made as level as possible, _ 

After 1776, when the United States declared their independence 
of Great Britain, the importation of thoroughbred horses from 
England became quite common, and selections were made from 
the best stocks in the United Kingdom. Thb continued and 
even increased as the country became developed, down to 1S40. 
The following Derby winnera were among those carried into 
the states: Diomed, who won the first Derby in 1780; Saftram, 
winner in 1783; John Bull, winner in 1792; Spread Eagle, 
winner in 179s; Sir Harry, winner in 1708; Archduke, winner 
in 1709; and Priam, who won in. 183a The most important and 
valuable importations, however, proved to be Jolly Roger, 
Fearnought, Medley, Traveller, Diomed, Glencoe, Leviathan, 
Tranby, Lexington, Margrave, Yorkshire Buzzard, Albion 
and Leamington. The best results were obtained from Diomed 
and Glencoe. Diomed sired one horse, Sir Archy, who founded 
a family to which nearly all the blood horses of America trace 
back. He was foaled in 1805, in Virginia, and became celebrated 
as a sire. The superiority of hb progeny was so generally con- 
ceded that they were greatly sought after. From thb period, too, 
the number and value of races increased; still they were com- 
paratively few in number, and could not compare in value with 
those, of Great Britain. Up to i860 the value of radng prises 
was quite inadequate to develop large breeding nlahlhhmemt. 



UNITED STATES] 



HORSE-RACING 



735 



or to sustain extensive training stables. Then the civil war 
. between the North and the South broke out, which mged lor 
four years. Breeding establishments were broken up during 
that time; the horses were taken by the armies lor cavalry 
purposes, for which service they were highly prized; and racing 
was completely paralysed. It took some time to regain its 
strength; but an era of prosperity set in about 1870, and since 
then the progress in interest has been continuous: 
• In the United States interest in trotting races more than rivals* 
that felt in the contests of thoroughbred horses. This interest 
dates back to the importation to Philadelphia from England, 
in 1788, -of the thoroughbred horse Messenger, a grey stallion, 
by Mambrino, 1st dam by Turf, and dam by Regulus, 3rd dam 
by Starling, 4th dam by Fox, 5th dam Oipsey, by Bay Bolton, 
6th dam by duke of Newcastle's Turk, 7th dam by Byerly Turk, 
Stb dam by Taffolet Barb, oth dam by Place's White Turk. 
He was eight years old when imported to the United States. 
He was at the stud for twenty years, in the vicinity of Phila- 
delphia and New York, serving a number of thoroughbred mares; 
but a far greater number of cold-blooded mares, and in the 
progeny of the latter the trotting instinct was almost invariably 
developed, while his thoroughbred sons, who became scattered 
over the country, were afeo noted for transmitting the trotting 
Instinct. The first public trotting race of which there is any 
account in the United States was in 1818, when the grey gelding 
Boston Blue was matched to trot a mile in 3 minutes, a feat 
deemed impossible; but he- won, though the time of his perform- 
ance has not been preserved. From about that date interest in 
this gait began to increase; breeders of trotters sprang up, and 
horses were trained for trotting contests. The proolem of 
breeding trotters has been necessarily found to be a much more 
complex one than that of breeding the thoroughbred, as in the 
latter case pure blood lines of long recognized value could be 
relied upon, while in the former the best results were constantly 
being obtained from most unexpected sources. Among the 
leading families came to be the Hambletonian, of which the 
modern head was Rysdyk's Hambletonian, a bay horse foaled 
in 1849, got by Abdaltah (traced to imp. Messenger on the side 
of both sire and dam) out of the Charles Kent mare, by imp. 
(i.e. imported) Bellfounder, with two crosses to imp. Messenger 
on her dam's side; the Mambrinos, whose modern head was 
Mambrino Chief, foaled 1B44, by Mambrino Paymaster, a 
grandson of imp. Messenger; the Bashaws, founded by Young 
Bashaw, foated f8)2> by Grand Bashaw, an Arabian horse, 
dam Pearl, by First Consult the Clays, springing from Henry 
Clay, a grandson of Young Bashaw through Andrew Jackson; 
the Stars, springing from Stockholm's American Star, by Duroc, 
son of imp. Diomed; the Morgans, whose founder was Justin 
Morgan, foaled 1703, by a horse called True Briton, or Beautiful 
Bay, who was probably thoroughbred; the Black Hawks, a 
branch of the Morgan family; the Blue Bulls, descended from 
Doyle's Blue Bull, foaled 1855, a pacer, sired by a pacer of the 
same name, dam by Blacknose, son of Medoc; the Canadians, 
whose best representatives were St Lawrence and pacing Pilot, 
horses of unknown pedigree; the Gold Dusts, another branch 
of the Morgan family; and the Royal Georges, springing from 
Tippoo, a horse who was probably by Ogden's Messenger, son; 
of imp. Messenger. But trotters of great speed have been pro- 
duced which do not trace to any of the sources mentioned. Very 
large prices are paid. Stein way, a three-year-old colt, was sold 
in 1879, to go to California, for $13,000; and in 1878 $31,000 
was paid for the four-year-old filly Maud S., after she had trotted 
a mile in public in 2 m. 17$*. Much larger sums have been paid, 
however, for matured trotters, such as $40,600 for the stallion 
Smuggler, $38,000 for Pocahontas, $35,000 for Dexter, $36,000 
for Rams, and long prices for many others; St Julien, the 
trotter with the fastest record at the close of 1879, was held at 
$50,000, while Rysdyk's Hambletonian, Messenger Duroc and 
Volunteer were valued, in their prime, at $100,000 each. 

Compared with the early days of American trotting, the 
advance has been rapid and the changes marked. After the 
performance of Boston Blue, mentioned above, more attention 



was paid to the gait, but for a long time the races were generally 
under saddle, and at long distances, 3 m. being rather the 
favourite. The best of the old time trotters were Edwin Forrest, 
who trotted a mile in 2 m. 31 J s. in 1834; Dutchman, who did 
3 m. under saddle in 7 m. 32} s.; Rip ton; Lady Suffolk, who 
trotted ar mile in am. 26J s. in 1843, and headed the list of 
performers; Mac, Tacony, &c. After- 1850, however, the taste of 
the people settled upon the style of race called " mile beats, best 
three put of five, in harness " as the favourite. By " in harness " 
is meant that the horse draws a sulky, a light two-wheeled 
vehicle in which the driver sits dose to the horse, with his legs 
on each side of his flanks. These sulkies often weigh less than 
40 lb. The driver is required to weigh, with the blanket on 
which he sits, 150 tt>, while for saddle races the regulation weight 
is 145 lb, or xo st. 5 lb. Each heat of a mile is a separate race; 
so minutes is allowed between heats; and the horse that first 
places three heats to his credit wins the race. There are various 
penalties imposed upon a horse that breaks into a run in a trotting 
race. The driver is required to pull him to a trot as quickly as 
possible; if the horse gains by running, the judges set him back 
at the finish twice the distance he has gained, in their estimation, 
by running; and for repeated " breaks " they can declare him 
distanced* The first-class tracks are of oval shape, with long 
stretches and easy curves, measuring 1 m. at 3 ft. distance from 
the * pole," as the inner railing of the track is called. The time 
in which the leading horse trots each heat is accurately kept, 
placed on a blackboard in front of the judges' stand for the 
information of the public, and also placed in the book of the 
course. The fastest time that any trotter has is thus entered 
as his " record." This is one of the distinctive features of 
trotting in America. 

Prior to 1866 purses lor trotters were small; match races were 
more in vogue, and the trotting turf was in bad odour. In that 
year an association was formed at Buffalo, N.Y., which in- 
augurated its efforts by offering the then unprecedented sum 
of $10,500 for a trotting meeting of four days' duration. The 
experiment was successful; other cities followed the example 
of Buffalo; larger and larger purses were given; and at Buffalo 
in 1872 the prises amounted to $70,000. Since then the amount 
offered in the United States and Canada, during a single year, 
has reached $1,500,000. Individual trotters, in the course of a 
long turf career, earn enormous amounts. A remarkable instance 
of this was the mare Goldsmith Maid, by Alexander's Abdallsh 
(a son of Rysdyk's Hambletonian) r out of an Abdallah mare. 
She began trotting in i860, and left the turf in 1878, when twenty- 
one years old, and her winnings amounted to over $200,000. 

In 1869 the National Trotting Association was formed, under 
which an elaborate code of rules has been published. 

In trotting races, it will be noted, the time test is supreme, 
differing from ntnnmg races, in which time is of comparatively 
little consequence. The animal which has the fastest record for 

1 mile in harness is, until deposed, theking or queen of the trotting 
turf. Lady Suffolk, with her record of a m. «6i s., in 1843, held 
this honour until 1853, when Tacony trotted in 2 m. 25$ s. under 
saddle; Flora Temple wrested it from him in 1856 by trotting in 

2 m. 24} s. in harness. This latter mare, in 1859, trotted a mile 
in a m. rof s., a feat which the best horsemen thought would 
never be repeated, but since that time forty-two trotters have 
beaten 2 m. 20 s. Dexter's record was 1 m. 17 J ft. in 1867, and 
Goldsmith Maid's in 1871 was 2 m. 17 s., which she reduced, by 
successive efforts, to 2 m. xof s., 2 m. 16 s., 2 m. 15 s., 2 m. 14} s., 
and finally, in 1874, to 2 m. 14 s. In 1878 Rams trotted a mile 
in 2 m. 13! s., and in October 1870 the bay gelding St Julien, 
by Volunteer, son of Rysdyk's Hambletonian, dam by Henry 
Clay, trotted a mile in California in 2 m. iaf s. Other notable 
performances reducing the record were Maud S. in 1881, 2 m. 
ioj s.; Maud S. in 1885, s m. 8J s;; Sunol in 1801, 2 m. S\ s.; 
Nancy Hanks in 1802, 2 m. 4 s.; Alix in 1804, 2 m. 3! s.; 
Cresceus in 1001, 2 m. a J s.; Lou Dillon in 1005, x m. 58! s. Im- 
proved times have doubtless been the result of improved methods, 
as well as of care in the breeding of the trotter. Some vtty severe 
training rules used to be sedulously observed, about 1870, for 



'736 



HORSE-RACING 



(FRANCE 



instance, a hone never had water the night before a race, and 
the system generally appears to have overtaxed the animal's 
strength. A prominent consideration in trotting races is the 
adjustment of toe-weights, which are fastened on to the horses' 
feet to equalize their action, and it is found that horses improve 
their time to the extent of several seconds when properly 
shod. 

Pacing races are also frequent in the United States. In trotting 
the action may be described as diagonal; the pacer moves both 
legs on the same side at the same time, and both feet stride as 
one. A similar " gait," to employ the American term, was called 
in England some centuries ago an " amble." The pacer moves 
more easily and with apparently kss exertion than the trotter, 
and the mile record <niade by Prince Alert in 1003) stands at 
x m. 57 s. 

„ Owing to the vast site of the country there ace various centres 
of sport, which can be classified with reasonable accuracy as 
' follows: the Eastern States, dominated by the Jockey Club, 
founded in New York in 1804, and recognized by a state law in 
1805; the Middle Western States, under the control of the 
Western Jockey Club, whose headquarters are in Chicago; 
the Pacific Coast, with San Francisco for its centre; and the 
Southern and South-Western States, with Louisville as the most 
important centre. The passage of the racing law in New York 
State marked the opening of a new era. Supreme even over the 
Jockey Club is a State Radng Commission of three, appointed 
by the governor of the state. While the Jockey Club is onry 
recognized by law in its native state, it hasassumed and maintains 
control of all racing on the eastern seaboard, within certain lines 
of latitude and longitude, extending as far north as the Canadian 
border and south to Georgia. There is small question that 
other states, both east and west, will follow suit and enact 
similar laws. The Western Jockey Chib, though not Tecognized 
by law, controls practically all the racing through the middle 
west, south-west and south; but the racing associations of the 
Pacific Coast have maintained a position of independence. 

What New York is to the east, Chicago is to the middle west, 
and a very large proportion of American racing is conducted 
close to these centres. In New York. State the Coney Island 
Jockey Club, at Sheepshead Bay; the Brooklyn Jockey Club, 
at Gravesend; the Westchester Racing Association, at Morris 
Park; the Brighton Beach Racing; Association, at Brighton 
Beach; the Queen's County Jockey Club, at Aqueduct; and 
the Saratoga' Racing Association, at Saratoga, are the leading 
organizations; and all these racecourses, with the exception 
of Saratoga, are within a radius of 20 miles of the city. The 
Empire City Jockey Club, near Yonkers, and another club with 
headquarters near Jamaica, Long Island, have also become 
prominent institutions. The Washington Park Club, at Chicago, 
is the leading Turf body of the west, and the only one on an 
equal footing with the prominent associations of New York 
State. With this single exception the most important and valu- 
able stakes of the American Turf are given in the east; and 
so great has the prosperity of the Turf been since the Jockey 
Club came into existence that the list of rich arizes is growing 
at a surprising rate. In this respect the principal fault is the 
undue encouragement given to the radng) of two-year-oMs. 
At the winter meetings held at New Orleans and San Francisco, 
two-year-olds are raced from the very beginning of the year; 
and under the rules of the Jockey Club of New York they run 
as early as March. The Westchester Racing Association, with 
which are closely identified some of the principal members o( 
the Jockey Club, gives valuable two-year-old stakes in May, 
The Futurity Stakes, the richest event of the year— on one 
occasion it reached a value of $67,675—13 for two-year-olds, 
and is run at Sheepshead Bay in the autumn. The institution 
of races, either absolutely or practically at weight-for-age, 
and over long courses, has engaged much attention. The 
Coney Island Jockey Club has the leading three-year-old stake 
in the Lawrence Realization, over x mile 5 furlongs, wkh an 
average value of about $30,000. The Westchester Racing 
Association's two principal three-year-old stakes, the Withers, 



over a mule, run hi May, and the Belmont, 1 mile and 3 furlong. 
run later in the same month, are of less value, but are much 
older-established and have a species of " classic " prentice, 
dating from the old Jerome Park race-course in the 'sixties. The 
Coney Island Jockey Club's Century and the Annual Champion 
Stakes, both for three-year-olds and upwards, over a mEe and 
a half and two miles and a quarter respectively, are fair specimens 
of the races the associations have founded. At Saratoga a 
stake of $50,000 for three-year-olds and upwards, distance 
a mile and a quarter, was opened, and run for first in 1004. 
The hope is to wean owners from the practice of overtaxing 
their two-year-olds, which has resulted practically in a positive 
dearth, almost a total absence, of good four-year-olds and 
upwards of late years. Handicaps play a more important part 
than in England. The principal events of this character, such 
as the Brooklyn Handicap at Gravesend and the Suburban nt 
Sheepshead Bay, have for years drawn the largest attendances 
of the racing season. 

Practically all flat racing in the United States is held on 
"dirt-tracks," i.e. courses with son specially prepared for 
racing, instead of turf courses. At Sheepshead Bay there is 
a turf course, but it is only used for a minority of races. Dirt- 
tracks, which are, like many other things in American radng, 
a legacy from the once hugely popular harness-racing, are 
conducive to-great speed, but are costly in the e i t i e u ie strain 
on horses' legs. Steeplechases axe run on turf. This branch 
of the sport in the east is now flourishing under the administra- 
tion of the National Steeplechase and Hunt Association, a sister 
body of the Jockey Club. Comparatively few races are, however, 
run under these rules, as the weather conditions render it im- 
possible to have a separate season for cross-country sport and 
steeplechases, and hurdle races are incorporated in programmes 
of flat racing held through the spring, summer and autumn, 
though the ground is frequently so hard as to be unsafe. 
Since the National Steeplechase and Hunt Association assumed 
control, regulation courses, practically similar in every respect 
to those used in England, have been insisted upon in the east, 
the " open ditch " figuring under the name of the " Liverpool" 
In the west and south there is not the same uniformity, and so 
far the sport has not flourished 

France 
Racing in France as conducted on modem lines may be said 
to date from the year 1833, when the French Stud- Book was 
originated, and a body formed, somewhat after the model of 
the English Jockey Club, under the title of the Society d 'En- 
couragement pour 1' Amelioration des Races de Cbevaux en 
France. Races took place in the Champs de Mars, and an 
unsuccessful attempt was made in 1834 to arrange for a course, 
or " hippodrome," as it is termed in France, at Maisons Lafiute. 
Chantnly was, however, fixed upon as the principal racing centre; 
on the 22nd April 1836 the first meeting was held there, with 
five races on the card, the principal being the Prix d'Orleans, 
a stake of 3500 francs, named after the due d'Orleans, one of 
the chief promoters of the fixture. Next day the first race 
for the Prix du Jockey Club was run, and won by Frank, the 
property of Lord Henry Seymour, who was at the time taking a 
very active part in French sport. The Prix du Jockey Club was 
then worth 5000 francs; the value has since increased to 200,000 
francs. This race occupies in France the place of the English 
Derby. The Prix de Diane, which corresponds to the English 
Oaks, was first run in 1843. Chantilly still continues an important 
centre of the French Turf, and a great many horses are trained 
in the district. Attempts bad been made to popularize racing 
at Longchamps prior to the year 1856, when the Societe d' En- 
couragement obtained a lease, erected stands, laid out the 
course, and held their first meeting on the 27th August 1857. 
Next season two meetings were held, one of four days in the 
spring and another of three in the autumn; at the present 
time the sport is vigorously carried on from March to the end 
of October, except during a summer recess. In 1857 meetings 
under the auspices of the Societe d'Encouragement began to 



HORSERADISH 



737 



take place at Amiens, Caen, Nantes, Versailles, MpnHns and 
Other towns; and there were stakes for two-year-olds in the 
spring, though of late years the appearance of the young horses 
has been postponed to the ist of August. Progress was rapid, 
and in 1863 two important events were contested for the first 
time, the Prix du Prince Imperial, which was designed to balance 
the English St Leger, but for obvious reasons faded out of the 
programme, and the Grand Prix de Paris, an international 
race for three-year-olds, run at Longchamps over a distance 
of x mile 7 furlongs, and now the most valuable stake in Europe. 
In 1909 the prize was £14,071. The first Grand Prix fell to an 
English horse, Mr Savile's The Ranger; two years later it 
was won by Gladiateur, winner of the English Derby and the 
property of the comte de Lagrange, who raced equally in France 
and in England; the duke of Beaufort's Ceylon was successful 
In 1866, and the marquis of Hastings 1 Earl in 1868. Mr 
Savile's Cremorne followed up his Derby victory by a victory 
at Longchamps in 1873, as did Mr Baltazzi's Kisber four years 
later. English horses were also victorious in 1874 (Mr W. R. 
Marshall's Trent), in 1878 (Prince Soltykoff's Thurio), in 1880 
(Mr C. Brewer's Robert the Devil), in 188 1 (Mr Keeneti Foxhall, 
who, however, should rather rank as an American horse), in 1882 
(Mr Rymill's Bruce), in 1885 (Mr Cloete's Paradox), in 1886 (Mr 
Vyner's Minting); and in 1006 Major Eustace Loder's Derby 
winner Spearmint. During the first 23 years of the Grand 
Prix (owing to the war the race did not take place in 187 1) 
the stake fell to English horses— if Kisber and Foxhall 
be included— on twelve occasions, and generally to English 
jockeys. In recent years, however, French owners have held 
their own. In not a few respects racing is managed more 
judiciously than in England. The courses, for one thing, are 
better tended and maintained. The five- and six-furlong races 
for others than two-year-olds, which are so common at English 
meetings, are comparatively rate in France, and the value of 
the prizes in an average day's racing is considerably higher 
across the Channel than in England. A very large percentage 
of trainers and jockeys are Eoglish, and the former are, as 
a rule, quite as expert as at Newmarket and elsewhere. 
Transatlantic methods have been introduced by American 
jockeys since 1809. From the middle of February until the 
middle of December a race meeting within easy reach of Paris 
takes place almost every day, except during August, when the 
sport is carried on in the provinces, notably at Deauville. Near 
Paris, the chief centre after Longchamps is Maisons Laffitte. 
At Longchamps, early in October, a race called the Prix du 
Conseil Municipal, worth £4000, for three-year-olds and upwards, 
over a mile and a half, was organized in 1893, and has usually 
attracted English horses, Mr Wallace Johnstone's Best Man 
having been successful in 1804, and Mr Sullivan's Wink field's 
Pride the following year. Except when the Whip is challenged 
for and the challenge decided over the Beacon Course at New- 
market, no race is run in England over a longer distance than 
two miles and 6 furlongs; but in France the Prix Gladiateur, of 
£1200 and a work of art value £100, 3 miles 7 furlongs, creates 
considerable interest at Longchamps in the autumn. 

The first recognized steeplechase in France took place 
at Croix de Berny, and was won by the comte de Vaublanc's 

May-fly, all the horses at that time being ridden 
chaSa* by gentlemen. Sport does not seem to have been 

carried on with much spirit, for it is said that the 
death of an animal called Barcha, in 1839, nearly led to the 
abandonment of the meeting; and it was not till 1863, 
when the Soci€te des Steeplechases de France was founded, 
that the business was resolutely taken in hand. Gravelle and 
Vincennes were the principal centres until 1873, when the 
Societe obtained possession of the ground at Auteuil, where 
the excellent course now in use was laid out. In 1874 twelve 
days' racing took place here, the card each day including three 
steeplechases and a hurdle race, the " hurdles," however, being 
small fences, as they are at present. The Grand Steeplechase 
d'Auteuil was then for a stake of 30,000 francs, at the time 
the most valuable offered in any country; but, as in racing 
XIII. »• 



on the flat, the stakes have enormously increased in value, and 
in 1901 the Paris Grand Steeplechase, as the chief event is now 
called, credited the winner with £6020, the hurdle race being 
worth rather more than half as much. In England there is 
scarcely any steeplechasing between March and November, 
except at hunt meetings, but in Paris cross-country sport is 
pursued almost all through the year, the chief races at Auteuil 
taking place in June, about the time of the Grand Prix, which is 
usually run for between the English Epsom and Ascot meetings. 
The Auteuil course is laid out in the shape of the figure 8, with 
varied fences, several of which really test a horse's jumping 
capacity; and variety is further obtained by starting the fields 
in different places and traversing the course in different ways. 
St Ouen, a meeting within half an hour's drive of the Louvre, 
is entirely devoted to steeplechasing; and jumping is also 
carried on at Vincennes, Colombes, Enghien, and elsewhere 
near Paris, as also at Nice in the winter, at Dieppe and other 
places in August. As a rule, the stakes run for, especially at 
Auteufl, are very much larger than in England. There are none of 
the clubs and special enclosures such as at Sandown, Kempton, 
Hurst, Lingfield, Gatwick, &c., though portions of the stand 
are set apart for privileged persons. A fee of 20 francs is 
charged for admission to the chief French race-courses, with 
half as much for a lady's voucher, and the tickets give 
access everywhere but to the very few reserved portions. At 
Vincennes, St Cloud, and some other courses trotting races are 
also contested. 



HORSERADISH (Ger. Meemttig; Fr. rtifmi — tadne forte, 
cran de Bretagtu ; Swed. Peppar-rct ; Russ. ckren), known 
botanically as Cochlearia Armoracia, a perennial plant of the 
natural order Cruciferae, having a stout cylindrical rootstock 
from the crown of which spring large radical leaves on long 
stalks, 4 to 6 in. broad, and about a foot in length with a deeply 
crenate margin, and coarsely veined; the stem-leaves are short- 
stalked or sessile, elongated and tapering to their attachment, 
the lower ones often deeply toothed. The flowers, which appear 
in May and June, are j in. in width, in flat-topped panicles, with 
purplish sepals and white petals; the fruit is a small silicula, 
which does not ripen in the climate of England. The horse- 
radish is indigenous to eastern Europe. Into Western Europe 
and Great Britain, where it is to be met with on waste ground, 
it was probably introduced. It was wild in various parts of 
England in Gerard's time. 

The root, the armoraciae radix of pharmacy, is \ to 2 in. or 
more in diameter, and commonly 1 ft., sometimes 3 ft. in 
length; the upper part is enlarged into a crown, which is annu- 
lated with the scars of fallen leaves; and from the numerous 
irregular lateral branches are produced vertical stolons, and 
also adventitious buds, which latter render the plant very 
difficult of extirpation. From the root of Aconite (q.v.), which 
lias occasionally been mistaken for it, horseradish root differs 
in being more or less cylindrical from a little below the crown, 
and in its pale yellowish (or brownish) white hue externally, 
acrid and penetrating odour whan scraped or bruised, and 



73« 



HORSB-SHQES— HORSETAIL 



pungent and cither sweetish or bitter taste. Under the influence I 
of a ferment which it contains, the fresh root yields on distillation 
with water about -05% of a volatile oil, butyl sulphocyanide, 
C 4 H,CNS. After drying, the root has been found to afford 
n- 15% of ash. Horseradish root is an ingredient in the spiriius 
ormoraciae compositus (dose 1-2 drachms) of the British Pharma- 
copoeia. It is an agreeable flavouring agent. In common with 
other species of Cockicaria, the horseradish was formerly in high 
repute as an antiscorbutic. The root was, as well as the leaves, 
taken with food by the Germans in the middle ages, whence the 
old French name for it, moutardc des AlUmands; and Coles, 
writing in 1657, mentions its use with meat in England, where it 
is still chiefly employed as a condiment with beef. 

For the successful cultivation of the horseradish, a light and 
friable damp soil is the most suitable; this having been trenched 
3 ft. deep in autumn, and the surface turned down with a liberal 
supply of farm-yard manure, a second dressing of decomposed 
manure should in the ensuing spring be dug in 2 ft deep, and 
pieces of the root 6 in. in length may then be planted a foot apart 
in narrow trenches. During summer the ground requires to be 
kept free of weeds; and the application of liquid manure twice pr 
thrice in sufficient quantity to reach the lowest roots is an 
advantage. When dug the root may be long preserved in good 
condition by placing it in sand. 

See Gerard, Herbatl, p. 240, ed. Johnson (1636); Fludrigerand 
Hanbury, Phormacographia, p. 71 (2nd ed.» 1879); Bentley and 
Trimen, Med. PI., I 21 (18** 

. HORSE-SHOES. The horny casing of the foot of the horse 
and other Solidungulates, while quite sufficient to protect the 
extremity of the limb under natural conditions, is found to wear 
away and break, especially in moist climates, when the animal 
is subjected to hard work of any kind. This, however, can be 
obviated by the simple device of attaching to the hoof a rim of 
iron, adjusted to the shape of the hoof. The animal itself has 
been in a very marked manner modified by shoeing, for without 
this we could have had neither the fleet racers nor the heavy 
and powerful cart-horses of the present day. Though the ancients 
were sufficiently impressed by the damage done to horses' 
hoofs to devise certain forms of covering for them (in the shape 
of socks or sandals), the practice of nailing iron plates or rim-shoes 
to the hoof does not appear to have been introduced earlier than 
the 2nd century B.C., and was not commonly known till the close 
of the 5th century a.d., or in regular use till the middle ages. 
The evidence for the earlier date depends on the doubtful 
interpretations of designs on coins, &c. As time went on, how- 
ever, the profession of the farrier and the art oi the shoesmith 
gradually grew in importance. It was only in the 19th century 
that horse-shoeing was introduced in Japan, where the former 
practice was to attach to the horse's feet slippers of straw, 
■ which were renewed when necessary, a custom which may 
indicate the usage of early peoples, In modem times much 
attention has been devoted to horse-shoeing by veterinary 
science, with the result of showing that methods formerly 
adopted caused cruel injury to horses and serious loss to their 
owners. The evils resulted from (1) paring the sole and frog; 
(a) applying shoes too heavy and of faulty shape; (3) employing 
too many and too large nails; (4) applying shoes too small and 
removing the wall of the hoof to make the feet fit the shoes, and 

(5) rasping the front of the hoof. In rural districts, where the 
art of the farrier is combined with general blacksmith work, 
too little attention is apt to be given to considerations which have 
an important bearing on the comfort, usefulness and life of the 
horse. According to modern principles ( 1) shoes should be as light 
as compatible with the wear demanded of them; (a) the ground 
face of the shoe should be concave, and the face applied to the foot 
plain; (3) heavy draught horses alone should have toe and heel 
calks on their shoes to increase foothold; (4) the excess growth 
of the wall or outer portion of horny matter should only be re- 
moved in re-shoeing, care being taken to keep both sides of the 
hoof of equal height; (5) the shoe should fit accurately to the 
circumference of the hoof, and project slightly beyond the heel; 

(6) the shoes should be fixed with as few nails as possible, six or 



seven in fore-shoes and eight in hind-shoes, and (7) the 1 
should take a short thick hold of the wail, so that old naU-holea 
may be removed with the natural growth and paring of the 
horny matter. Horse-shoes and nails are now made with great 
economy by machinery, and special forms of shoe or plate are 
made for race-hotses and trotters, or to suit abnormalities of 
the hoof. 

HORSETAIL (Equisetum), the sole genus oi the botanical 
natural order Equisetaceae, consisting of a group of vascular 
cryptogamous plants (see Ptebjdofkyta) remarkable Cor the 
vegetative structure which resembles in general appearance 
the genera of flowering plants Casuarina and Ephedra, They 
are herbaceous plants growing from an underground muds- 



v 



Fta» Stt M b a r ia'» UUrkuh dv BtUmik, by permiattoaol Guttav Fhcfccr 

Eqnutt um arvtnsc. 
A, Fertile shoot, springing £, C, Sporophylls bearing sporangia, 
from the rhizome, which which in C have opened, 

also bears tubers; the D, Spore showing the two spiral 
vegetative shoots have bands of the perinium. 

not yet unfolded. £, Dry spores showing the es- 

F, Sterile vegetative shoot. tended spiral bands. 

U, F, reduced. B, C, Z>, E, enlarged.) 

branched rootstock from which spring slender aerial shoots 
which are green, ribbed, and bear at each node a whorl of leaves 
reduced to a toothed sheath. From the nodes spring whorls of 
similar but more slender branches. Some shoots are sterile 
while others are fertile, bearing at the apex the so-called fructifica- 
tion—a dense oval, oblong conical or cylindrical spike, consisting 
of a number of shortly-stalked peltate scales, each of which has 
attached to its under surface a circle of spore-cases (sporangia) 



HORSHAM=~HORSLEY, J. C. 



which open by a longitudinal slit on their inner side. The spore* 
differ from those of ferns in their outer coat (oospore) being 
split up into four club-shaped hygroscopic threads (elaters) 
which are curled when moist, but become straightened when 
dry. la most species the fertile and sterile shoots are alike, both 
being green and leaf-bearing, but in a few species the fertile are 
more or less different, ej. in E. orvenu the fertile shoots appear 
first, in the spring, and are unbranched and not green. Any 
portion of the underground rhizome when broken off is capable 
of producing a new plant; hence the difficulty of eradicating 
them when once established. There are 24 known species of 
the genus which is universally distributed. 

The corn horsetail E. anense, one of the commonest species, 
is a troublesome weed in clayey cornfield* (see fig.). The 
fructification appears in March and April, terminating in short 
unbranched stems. It is said to produce diarrhoea in such cattle 
as eat it. The bog horsetail, E. paluslre, is said to possess similar 
properties. It grows in marshes, ditches, pools and drains in 
meadows, and sometimesobstructs the flow of water with its dense 
matted roots. The fructification in this species is cylindrical, 
and in that of E. limosum, which grows in similar situations, 
it is ovate in outline. The largest British species, E. maximum, 
grows in wet sandy declivities by railway embankments or 
streams, &c, and is remarkable for its beauty, due to the abund- 
ance of its elegant branches and the alternately green and white 
appearance of the stem. In this species the fructification is 
conical or lanceolate, and is found in April on short, stout, un- 
branched stems which have large loose sheaths. Horses appear 
to be fond of this species, and in Sweden it is stored for use 
as winter fodder. E. hyemale, commonly known as the Dutch 
rush, is much more abundant in Holland than in Britain; it is 
used for polishing purposes. E. voriegatum grows on wet sandy 
ground, and serves by means of its fibrous roots to bind the 
sand together. The horsetails are remarkable for the large 
quantity of silica they contain in the cuticle (hence their value 
in polishing), which often amounts to half the weight of the 
ash yielded by burning them; the roots contain a quantity of 
starch. 

HORSHAM, a market town in the Horsham parliamentary 
division of Sussex, England, 38 m. S. by W. from London by 
the London, Brighton and South Coast railway. Pop. of 
urban district (1901) 9446. It is pleasantly situated in the 
midst of a fertile country near the source of the Arun. A 
picturesque avenue leads to the church of St Mary, principally 
Early English and Perpendicular, with remains of Norman 
work, having a lofty tower surmounted by a spire, and containing 
several fine monuments, tombs and brasses. Other buildings 
include the grammar school, founded in 1532 and rebuilt in 
1893, a town hall and corn exchange, erected in 1866 in Italian 
style, with an assembly room. In the vicinity are several fine 
mansions. The buildings of Christ's Hospital (q.v.) at West 
Horsham were opened in 1002, the school being removed hither 
from London. The town has industries of tanning, founding, 
carriage-building and flour-milling. 

Some neolithic remains have been found at Horsham. The 
town is not mentioned in Domesday Book, but the Rape of 
Bramber, in which it lies, belonged at that time to William de 
Braose. His descendants held the borough and the manor 
of Horsham, and through them they passed to the family of 
MQwbray, afterwards dukes of Norfolk There are traces of 
burgage tenure at Horsham in 1210, and it was called a borough 
in 1236. It has no charter of incorporation. Horsham 
sent two representatives to parliament from 1295 until 1832, 
when the number was reduced to one. In 1885 it was dis- 
franchised. In 1233 Henry HI. granted William de Braose 
a yearly three-days' fair at his manor of Horsham. In the 
reign of Edward I. William de Braose claimed to have a free 
market on Wednesdays and Saturdays. Fairs are held on 
the 5th of April, 18th of July, 17th of November and 27th 
of November. Market days are Monday and Wednesday. 
" Glovers " of Horsham are mentioned in a patent roll of 1485, 
and a brewery existed here in the time of Queen Anne. 



739 

HORfLBY, JOHN (c. 1685-1732), British archaeologist 
John Hodgson (1779- 184 5), the historian of Northumberland, 
in a short memoir published in 1831, held that he was born in 
2685, at Pinkie House, in the parish of Inveresk, Midlothian, 
and that his father was a Northumberland Nonconformist, who 
had migrated to Scotland, but returned to England soon after 
the Revolution of 1688. J. H. Hinde, in the Archaeohgia Aeliana 
(Feb. 1865), held that he was a native of NewcasUe-on-Tyne, 
the son of Charles Horsley, a member of the Tailors' Company 
of that town. He was educated at Newcastle, and at Edinburgh 
University, where he graduated M.A. on the 39th of April 1701. 
There is evidence that he " was settled in Morpeth as a Presby- 
terian minister as early as 1709." Hodgson, however, thought 
that up to 1721, at which time he was residing at Widdrington, 
" he had not received ordination, but preached as a licentiate.'* 
Even if he was ordained then, his stay at the latter place was 
probably prolonged beyond that date; for he communicated 
to the Philosophical Transactions (xxxiL 328) notes on the 
rainfall there in the years 1722 and 1723. Hinde shows that 
during these years " he certainly followed a secular employment 
as agent to the York Buildings Company, who had contracted 
to purchase and were then in possession of the Widdrington 
estates." At Morpeth Horsley opened a private school. Re- 
spect for his character and abilities attracted pupils irrespective 
of religious connexion, .among them Newton Ogle, afterwards 
dean of Westminster. He gave lectures on mechanics and 
hydrostatics in Morpeth, Alnwick and Newcastle, and was 
elected F.R.S. on the 23rd of April 1730. It is as an archae- 
ologist that Horsley is now known. His great work, Britannia 
Romano, or the Roman Antiquities of Britain (London, 1732), 
one of the scarcest and most valuable of its class, contains the 
result of patient labour. There is in the British Museum a copy 
with notes by John Ward (c. 1670-1758), biographer of the 
Gresham professors. Horsley died of apoplexy on the 12th 
of January 1732, on the eve of the publication of the Britannia 
Romano. He also published two sermons and a handbook to 
his lectures on mechanics, &c, and projected a history of 
Northumberland and Durham, collections for which were 
found among his papers* 

J. P. Wood (d. 1838) (Parish of Cromond, 1794, and Anecdotes of 
Bowyer, 1782, p. 371) says that his wife was a daughter of William 
Hamilton, D.D., minister of Cramood, afterwards professor of 
divinity in Edinburgh University, but probably the John Horsley 
in question was another, the father of Samuel Horsley ($.*.). 

HORSLEY, JOHN CALLCOtT (1817-1003), English painter, 
son of William Horsley, the musician, and grand-nephew of Sir 
Augustus Callcott, was born in London, on the 29th of January 
1817. He studied painting in the Academy schools, and in 1836 
exhibited " The Pride of the Village " (Vernon Gallery) at the 
Royal Academy. This was followed by numerous genre pictures 
at subsequent exhibitions up to 1893, the best known of these 
being " Malvolio," " L' Allegro and H Penseroso " (painted for 
the Prince Consort), " Le Jour des Morts," " A Scene from 
Don Quixote," &c. In i843 nis cartoon of "St Augustine 
Preaching " won a prize in the Westminster Hall competition, 
and in 1844 he was selected as one of the six painters commissioned 
to execute frescoes for the Houses of Parliament, his " Religion " 
(1845) being put in the House of Lords; he also painted the 
" Henry V. assuming the Crown " and " Satan surprised at 
the Ear of Eve." In 1864 he became R.A., and in 1882 was 
elected treasurer, a post which he held till 1897, when he resigned 
and became a " retired Academician." Mr Horsley had much 
to do with organizing the winter exhibitions of " Old Masters w 
at Burlington House after 1870. When, during the 'eighties, 
the example of the French Salon began to affect the Academy 
exhibitors, and paintings of the nude became the fashion, he 
protested against the innovation, and his attitude caused Punch 
to give him the punning sobriquet of " Mr J. C (lothes) Horsley." 
He died on the 18th of October 1903. His son, Sir Victor 
Horsley (b. 1857), became famous as a surgeon and neuropatho- 
logist, and a prominent supporter of the cause of experimental 
research. 



74* 



HORTICULTURE 



and a fragrance, and fruits a size and savour denied to them 
in their native haunts. It behooves the judicious gardener, 
then, not to be too slavish in his attempts to imitate natural 
conditions, and to bear in mind that such attempts sometimes 
end in failure. The most successful gardening is that which 
turns to the best account the plastic organization of the plant, 
and enables it to develop and multiply as perfectly as possible. 
Experience, coupled with observation and reflection, as well 
as the more indirect teachings of tradition, are therefore of 
primary importance to the practical gardener. 

We propose here to notice briefly the several parts of a flower- 
ing plant, and to point out the rationale of the cultural procedures 
connected with them (see the references to separate articles 
at the end of article on Botany). 

The Root— The root, though not precluded from access of air, 
is not directly dependent for its growth on the agency of light. 
The efficiency of drainage, digging, hoeing and like operations is 
accounted for by the manner in which they promote aeration of 
the soil, raise its temperature and remove its stagnant water. # Owing 
to their growth in length at, or rather in the immediate vicinity of, 
their tips, roots are enabled to traverse long distances by surmount- 
ing some obstacles, penetrating others, and insinuating themselves 
into narrow crevices. As they have no power of absorbing solid 
materials, their food must be of a liquid or gaseous character. 
It is taken up from the interstices between the particles of soil 
exclusively by the finest subdivisions of the fibrils, and in many 
cases by the extremely delicate thread-like cells which project from 
them and which are known as root-hairs. The importance of the 
root-fibres, or " feeding roots " justifies the care which is taken By 
every good gardener to secure their fullest development, and to 
prevent as far as possible any injury to them in digging, potting 
and transplanting, such operations being therefore least prejudicial 
at seasons when the plant is in a state of comparative rest. 

Root-Pruning and Lifting. — In apparent disregard of the general 
rule just enunciated is the practice of root-pruning fruit trees, 
when, from the formation of wood being more active thai* that of 
fruit, they bear badly. The contrariety u more apparent than real, 
as the operation consists in the removal of the coarser roots, a 
process which results in the development of a mass of fine feeding 
roots. Moreover, there is a generally recognised quasi-antagonism 
between the vegetative and reproductive processes, so that, other 
things being equal, anything that checks the one helps forward 
the other. 

Watering.— So far as practical gardening is concerned, feeding 
by the roots after they have been placed in suitable soil is confined 
principally to the administration of water and, under certain cir- 
cumstances, of liquid or chemical manure; and no operations 
demand more judicious management. The amount of water re- 
quired, and the times when it should be applied, vary greatly 
according to the kind of plant and the object for which it is grown, 
the season, the supply of heat and light, and numerous other con- 
ditions, the influence of which is to be learnt by experience only. 
The same may be said with respect to the application of manures. 
The watering of pot-plants requires especial care. Water should as 
a rule be used at a temperature not lower than that of the sur- 
rounding atmosphere, and preferably after exposure for some time 
to the air. 

Bottom-HeaL— The " optimum " temperature, or that best suited 
to promote the general activity of roots, and indeed of all vegetable 
organs, necessarily varies very much with the nature of the plant, 
and the circumstances in which it is placed, and is ascertained by 
practical experience. Artificial heat applied to the roots, called by 
gardeners "bottom-heat," is supplied by fermenting materials 
such as stable manure, leaves; Sec, or by hot-water pipes. In winter 
the temperature of the soil, out of doors, beyond a certain depth is 
usually higher than that of the atmosphere, so that the roots are 
in a warmer and more uniform medium than are the upper parts 
of the plant. Often the escape of heat from the soil is prevented by 
" mulching," i.e. by depositing on it a layer of litter, straw, dead 
leaves and the like. 

The Stem and its subdivisions or branches raise to the light and 
air the leaves and flowers, serve as channels for the passage to them 
of fluids from the roots, and act as reservoirs for nutritive substances. 
Their functions in annual, biennial and herbaceous perennial plants 
cease after the ripening of the seed, whilst in plants of longer duration 
layer after layer of strong woody tissue is formed, which enables 
them to bear the strains which the weight of foliage and the exposure 
to wind entail. The gardener aims usually at producing stout, 
robust, short-jointed stems, instead of long lanky growths defective 
in woody tissue. To secure these conditions free exposure to light 
and ah* is requisite; but in the case of coppices and woods, or 
where long straight spars are needed by the forester, plants am 
allowed to grow thickly so as to ensure development in an upward 
rather than in a lateral direction. This and like matters will, how- 
ever, be more fitly considered in dealing hereafter with the buds 
and their treatment. 



(PRINCIPLES 

Lnms.—Thtmatk of the leaves may briefly be stated to cm sin 
of the processes of nutrition, respiration and tranapirarioa. Nutri- 
tion (assimilation) by the leaves includes the inhalation of air, and 
the interaction under the influence of light and in the presence of 
chlorophyll of the carbon dioxide of the air with the water received 
from the root, to form carbonaceous food. Respiration in plants. 



and more transportable substances. This process, which _ __ 
yet imperfectly understood, is attended by the coruumptbe. of 
oxygen, the liberation of energy in the form of heat, and the ex- 
halation of carbon dioxide and water vapour. Transpiration u 
loss of water by the plant by evaporation, chiefly from the minute 
pores or stomata on the leaves. In xerophytic plants (e-g. cacti 
euphorbias, &o.) from hot, dry and almost waterless regions where 
evaporation would be excessive, the leaf surface, and consequently 
the number of stomata. are reduced to a minimum, as it would be 
fatal to such plants to exhale vapour as freely in those regions as the 
broad-leaved plants that grow in places where there is abundance of 
moisture. Although transpiration is a necessary accompaniment of 
nutrition, it may easily become excessive, especially where the plant 
cannot readily recoup itself. In these circumstances " syringing " 
and " damping down " are of value in cooling the temperature of 
the air in hothouses and greenhouses and increasing its humidity, 
thereby checking excessive transpiration. Shading the glass -with 
canvas or washes during the summer months has the same object 
in view. Syringing is also beneficial in washing away dirt and 
insects. 

Buds. — The recognition of the various forms of buds and their 
modes of disposition in different plants is a matter of the first 
consequence u the operations of pruning and training. Flower- 
buds are produced either on the old wood, i.e. the shoots of the 
past year's growth, or on a shoot of the present year. The peach, 
horse-chestnut, lilac, moreno cherry, black currant, rhododendron 
and many other trees and shrubs develop flower-buds for the next 
season speedily after blossoming, and these may be stimulated into 
premature growth. The peculiar short, stunted branches or " spurs M 
which bear the flower-buds of the pear, apple, plum, sweet cherry, 
red currant, laburnum, &c, deserve special attention. In the rote, 
passion-flower, clematis, honeysuckle. Ac., in which the flower- 
buds are developed at the ends of the young shoot of the year, 
we have examples of plants destitute of flower-buds during the 
winter. 

Propagation by Buds. — The detached leaf-buds (gemmae or bulbils, 
of some plants are capable under favourable conditions of forming 
new plants. The edges of the leaves of BryofhyUum calycittiom 
and of Cardamine firatensis, and the growths in the axils of the 
leaves of Litium bulbiferum, as well as the fronds of certain ferns 
(e.g. Aspitnium butbijentm), produce buds of this character. It is 
a matter of familiar observation that the ends of the shoots of 
brambles take root when bent down to the ground. In some in- 
stances buds form on the roots, and may be used for purposes of 
propagation, as in the Japan quince, the globe thistle, the sea holly, 
some sea lavenders, Boceonto, Acanthus, &c. Of the tendency in boos 
to assume an independent existence gardeners avail themselves in 
the operations of striking " cuttings, and making " layers " and 
" pipings," as also in budding and grafting. In taking a slip or 
cutting the gardener removes from the parent plant a shoot ha vine 
one or more buds or M eyes," in the case of the vine one only, and 
places it in a moist and sufficiently warm situation, where, as 
previously mentioned, undue evaporation from the surface is pre- 
vented. For some cuttings, pots filled with light soil, with the 
Erotection of thepropagating-house and of bell-glasses, are requisite; 
ut for many of our hardy deciduous trees and shrubs no such 
precautions are necessary, and the Insertion of a short shoot about 
half its length into moist and gritty ground at the proper season 
suffices to ensure its growth. In the case of the more delicate plants. 
the formation of roots is preceded by the production from the 
cambium of the cuttings of a succulent mass of tissue, the coMux. 
It is important in some cases, e.g. zonal pelargoniums, fuchsias, 
shrubby calceolarias, dahlias, carnations, &c., to retain on the 
cutting some of its leaves, so as to supply the requisite food for 
storage in the callus. In other cases, where the buds themselves 
contain a sufficiency of nutritive matter for the young growths, the 
retention of leaves is not necessary. The most successful mode of 
forming roots is to place the cuttings in a mild bottom-beat, which 
expedites their growth, even in the case of many hardy plant* whose 
cuttings strike roots in the open soil. With some bard- wooded 
trees, as the common white-thorn, roots cannot be obtained without 
bottom-heat. It is a general rule throughout plant culture thai 
the activity of the roots shall be in advance of that of the leaves. 
Cuttings of deciduous trees and shrubs succeed best if planted 
early in autumn while the soil still retains the solar heat absorbed 
during summer. For evergreens August or September, and for 
greenhouse and stove-plants the spring and summer months, are 
the times most suitable for propagation oy cuttings, 

Layering consists simply in bending down a branch and keeping 
it in contact with or buried to a small depth in the soil until roots 
are formed; the connexion with tha parent plant may then be 



PRINCIPLES] 



HORTICULTURE 



743 



Many plants can be far norm easily propagated thus than 

by cuttings. 

Crafting or " worki the 

" graft " or " scion," is 

termed the " stock." the 

growing tissues, or ca ely 

to the corresponding ees 

and peaches, a single t illy 

the promotion of the t Iter 

of the same or allied ich 

being removed, the ft nil 

union is established, i its 

original attachments. ing 

to the kind of plant ti ses 

that the affinity betw be 

neatly effected, and t rth 

of stock and scion be similar. 

The selection of suitable stocks is a matter still requiring much 
scientific experiment. The object of grafting is to expedite and 
increase the formation of flowers and fruit. Strong-growing pears, 
for instance, are grafted on the quince stock in order to restrict 
their tendency to form " gross " shoots and a superabundance of 
wood in place of flowers and fruit. Apples, for the same reason, are 
" worked " on the " paradise " or doucin " stocks, which from 
their influence on the scion are known as dwarfing stocks. Scions 
from a tree which is weakly, or liable to injury by frosts, are 
strengthened by engrafting on robust stocks. Lindley has pointed 
out that, while in Persia, its native country, the peach is probably 
best grafted on. the peach, or on its wild type the almond, ra England, 
where the summer temperature of the soil U much lower than that 
of Persia, it might be expected, as experience has proved, to be 
most successful on stocks of the native plum. 

The soil in which the stock grows is a point demanding attention. 
From a careful scries of experiments made in the Horticultural 
Society's Garden at Chiswick, it was found that where the soil is 
loamy, or light and slightly enriched with decayed vegetable matter, 
the apple succeeds best on the doucin stock, and the pear on the 
quince; and where it is chalky it is preferable to graft the apple 
on the crab, and the pear on the wild pear. For the plum on loamy 
soils the plum, and on chalky and light soils the almond, are the 
most desirable stocks, and for the cherry on loamy or light rich 
soils the wild cherry, and on chalk the " mahaleb " stock. 

The form and especially the quality of fruit is more or less affected 
by the stock upon which it is grown. The Stanwick nectarine, so 
apt to crack and not to ripen when worked in the ordinary way, is 
•aid to be cured of these propensities by being first budded close 
to the ground, on a very strong-growing Magnum Bonum plum, 
worked on a Brussels stock, and by then budding the nectarine on 
the Magnum Bonum about a foot from the ground. The fruit of 
the pear is of a higher colour and smaller on the quince stock than 
on the wild pear; still more so on the medlar. On the mountain ash 
the pear becomes earlier. 

The effects produced by stock on scion, and more particularly 
by scion on stock, are as a rule with difficulty appreciable. Never- 
theless, in exceptional cases modified growths, termed "graft- 
hybrids," have been obtained which have been attributed to the 
commingling of the characteristics of stock and scion (see H ybrjdism). 
Of these the most remarkable example is Cytisus Adami, a tree 
which year after year produces some shoots, foliage and flowers 
like those of the common laburnum, others like those of the # very 
different looking dwarf shrub C. purpureas, and others again inter- 
mediate between these. We may hence infer that C. purpureas 
was grafted or budded on the common laburnum, and that the 
intermediate forms are the result of graft-hybridization. Numerous 
simitar facts have been recorded. Among gardeners the general 
opinion is against the possibility of gralt-bybridizatjon. The 
wonder, however, seems to be that it does not occur more frequently, 
seeing that fluids must pass from stock to scion, and matter elaborated 
in the leaves of the scion must certainly to some extent enter the 
stock. It is clear, nevertheless, from examination that as a rule 
the wood of the stock and the wood of the scion retain their external 
characters year by year without change. Still, as in the laburnum 
just mentioned, in the variegated jasmine and in AbulUon Darurinii, 
in the copper beech and in the horse-chestnut, the influence of a 
variegated scion has occasionally shown itself in the production 
from the stock of variegated shoots. At a meeting of the Scottish 
Horticultural Association (see Card. Chron., Jan. 10, 1880, figs. 12-14) 
specimens of a small roundish pear, the " Aston Town," and of the 
elongated kind known as " Beurro Clairgeau," were exhibited. 
Two more dissimilar pears hardly exist. The result of working the 
Beurre Clairgeau upon the Aston Town was the production of fruits 
precisely intermediate in size, form, colour, speckling of rind and 
other characteristics. Similar, though less marked, intermediate 
characters were obvious in the foliage and flowers. 

Double grafting (French. gre£e sur greffe) is sufficiently explained 
by its name. By means, of it a variety may often be propagated. 
or its fruit improved in a way not found practicable under ordinary 
circumstances. For its successful prosecution prolonged experiments 
in different localities and in gardens devoted to the purpose are 
requisite. 



Planting .—By removal from one place to another the growth of 
every plant receives a check. How this check can be obviated or 
reduced, with regard to the season, the state of atmosphere, and the 
condition and circumstances of the plant generally, is a matter to 
be considered by the practical gardener. 

As to season, it is now admitted with respect to deciduous trees 
and shrubs that the earlier in autumn planting is performed the 
better; although some extend it from the period when the leaves 
fall to the first part of spring, before the sap begins to move, if 
feasible, the operation should be completed by the end of November, 
whilst the soil is still warm with the heat absorbed during summer. 
Attention to this rule is specially important in the case of rare 
and delicate plants. Early autumn planting enables wounded 
parts of roots to be healed over, and to form fibrils, which will be 
ready in spring, when it is most required, to collect food for the 
plant. Planting late in spring should, as far as possible, be avoided, 
tor the buds then begin to awaken into active hfe, and the draught 
upon the roots becomes great. It has been supposed that because 
the surface of the young leaves is small transpiration is correspond- 
ingly feeble; but it must be remembered, not only that their newly- 
formed tissue is unable* without an abundant supply of sap from the 
roots to resist the excessive drying action of the atmosphere, but 
that, in spring, the lowness of the temperature at that season in 
Great Britain prevents the free circulation of the sap. The com- 
parative dryness of the atmosphere in spring also causes a greater 
amount of transpiration then than in autumn arid winter. Another 
fact in favour of autumnal planting is the production of roots in 
winter. 

The best way of performing transplantation depends greatly on 
the size of the trees, the soil in which they grow, and the mechanical 
appliances made use of in lifting and transporting them. The 
smaller the tree the more successfully can it be removed. The more 
argillaceous and the less siliceous the soil the more readily can balls 
of earth be retained about the roots. All planters lay great stress 
on the preservation of the fibrils; the point principally disputed is 
to what extent they can with safety be allowed to be cut off in 
transplantation. Trees and shrubs in thick plantations, or in 
sheltered warm places, are ill fitted for planting in bleak and cokl 
situations. During their removal it is important that the roots 
be covered, if only to prevent desiccation by the air. Damp days 
are therefore the best for the operation; the dryest months are the 
most unfavourable. Though success in transplanting depends much 
on the humidity of the atmosphere, the most important requisite 
is warmth in the soil; humidity can be supplied artificially, but 
heat cannot. 

Pruning* or the removal of superfluous growths, is practised in 
order to equalize the development of the different parts of trees, 
or to promote it in particular directions so as to secure a certain 
form, and, by checking undue luxuriance, to promote enhanced 
fertility. In, the rose-bush, for instance, in which, as we have seen, 
the flower-buds are formed on the new wood of the year, pruning 
causes the old wood to " break," ix. to put forth a number of new 
buds, some of which wQI produce flowers at their extremities. The 
manner and the time in which pruning should be accomplished, and 
its. extent, vary with the plant, the objects of the operation, i.e. 
whether for the production of timber or fruit, the season and 
various other circumstances. So much judgment and experience 
does the operation call for that it is a truism to say that bad pruning 
is worse than none. The removal of weakly, sickly, overcrowded 
and gross infertile shoots is usually, however, a matter about which 
there can be few mistakes when once the habit of growth and the 
form and arrangement of the buds are known. Winter pruning 
is effected when the tree is comparatively at rest, and is therefore 
less liable to " bleeding " or outpouring of sap. Summer pruning or 

!>incbing off the tips ofsuch of the younger shoots as are not required 
or the extension of the tree, when not carried to too great an extent, 
is preferable to the coarser more reckless style of pinning. The 
injury inflicted is less and not so concentrated; the wounds are 
smaller, and have time to heal before winter sets in. The effects 
of badly-executed pruning, or rather backing, are most noticeable 
in the case of forest trees, the mutilation of which often results in 
rotting, canker and other diseases. Judicious and timely thinning 
so as to allow the trees room to grow, and to give them sufficiency 
of light and air. will generally obviate the need of the pruning-saw, 
except to a relatively small extent. 

Training is a procedure adopted when it is required to grow plants 
in a limited area, or in a particular shape, as in the case of many 
plants of trailing habit. Judicious training also may be of import- 
ance as encouraging the formation of flowers and fruit. Growth 
in length is mainly in a vertical direction, or at least at the ends of 
the shoots; and this should be encouraged, in the case of a timber 
tree, or of a climbing plant which it is desired should cover a wall 
quickly: but where flowers or fruit are specially desired, then, 
when the wood required is formed, the lateral shoots may often be 
trained more or less downward to induce fertility. The refinements 
of training, as of pruning, may, however, be carried too far; and not 
unfrequently the symmetrically trained trees of the French excite 
admiration in every respect save fertility. 

Sports or Bud Variations. -—Hen we may conveniently mention 
certain variations from the normal condition in the sise, form or 



744 



HORTICULTURE 



[PRINCIPLES 



disposition of buds or shoots on a given plant. An inferior variety 
of pear, for instance, may suddenly produce a shoot bearing fruit of 
superior quality; a beech tree, without obvious cause, a shoot 
with finely divided foliage; or a camellia an unwontedly fine flower. 
When removed from the plant and treated as cuttings or grafts, 
such sports may be perpetuated. Many garden varieties of flowers 
and fruits have thus originated. The cause of their production is 
very obscure. 

Formation of Flowers.— Flowen, whether for their own sake or 
as the necessary precursors of the fruit and seed, are objects of the 
greatest concern to the gardener. As a rule they are not formed 
until the plant has arrived at a certain degree of vigour, or until a 
sufficient •upply of nourishment has been stored in the tissues of 
the plant. The reproductive process of which the formation of the 
flower is the first stage being an exhaustive one, it is necessary that 
the plant, as gardeners say, should get " established " before it 
flowers. Moreover, although the green portions of the flower do 
indeed perform the same office as the leaves, the more highly coloured 
and more specialised portions, which are further removed from the 
typical leaf-form, do not carry on those processes for which the 
presence of chlorophyll is essential; and the floral organs may, 
therefore, in a rough sense, be said to be parasitic upon the green 
parts. A check or arrest of growth in the vegetative organs seems 
to be a necessary preliminary to the development of the flower. 

A diminished supply of water at the root is requisite, so as to check 
energy of growth, or rather to divert it from leaf-making. Partial 
starvation will sometimes effect this; hence the grafting of free- 
growing fruit trees upon dwarfing stocks, as before alluded to, 
and also the " ringing '* or girdling of fruit trees, i*. the removal 
from the branch of a ring of bark, or the application of a tight 
cincture, in consequence of which the growth of the fruits above 
the wound or the obstruction is enhanced. On the same principle 
the use of small pots to confine the roots, root-pruning and lift- 
ing the roots, and exposing them to the sun, as is done in the case 
of the vine in some countries, are resorted to. A higher temperature, 
especially with deficiency of moisture, will tend to throw a plant 
into a flowering condition. This is exemplified by the fact that 
the temperature of the climate of Great Britain is too low for the 
flowering, though sufficiently high for the growth of many plants. 
Thus the Jerusalem artichoke, though able to produce stems and 
tubers abundantly, only flowers in exceptionally not seasons. 

Forcing.— The operation of forcing is based upon the facts just 
mentioned. By subjecting a plant to a gradually increasing tempera- 
ture, and supplying water in proportion, its growth may be ac- 
celerated; its season of development may be, as it were, anticipated; 
it is roused from a dormant to an active state. Forcing therefore 
demands the most careful adjustment of temperature and supplies 
of moisture and light. 

Deficiency of light is less injurious than might at first be expected, 
because the plant to be forced has stored up in its tissues, and 
available for use, a reserve stock of material formed through the 
agency of light in former seasons. The intensity of the colour of 
flowers and the richness of flavour of fruit are, however, deficient 
whercthere is feebleness of light. Recent experiments show that 
the influence of electric light on chlorophyll is similar to that of 
sunlight, and that deficiencies of natural light may to some extent 
be made good by its use. The employment of that light for forcing 
purposes would seem to be in part a question of expense. The 
advantage hitherto obtained from its use has consisted in the 
rapidity with which flowers have been formed and fruits ripened 
..-.i__ ._ _•_!» .... rhich go towards compensating 

the period of flowering in certain 
e artificial application of cold 
mdition induced by low winter 
merctal purposes, crowns of lily 
», and such deciduous woody 
s of rhododendron, while in a 
toss and introduced into cold- 
le kept in a state of quiescence, 
summer. The temperature cf 
e freezing-point of water, to a 
leeds of the plants under treat- 
are removed to cool sheds to 
I to higher temperatures. The 
ue: — (a) they may be flowered 
ly induced to flower at those 
: to respond to forcing. Cold* 
:he equipment of most of the 
arc grown for market. 
te day. demands that M double 
Though in many instances, as 
I than single ones, they always 
yicscriu we au vantage 01 oeuiK ■?» evanescent. Under the vague 
term "double" many very different morphological changes are 
included. The flower of a double dahlia, e.g. offers a totally different 
condition of structure from that of a rose or a hyacinth. The double 

Kinscttia, again, owes its so-called double condition merely to the 
Teased number of its scarlet involucral leaves, which are not 
parts of the flower at all. It is reasonable, therefore, to infer chat 



the causes leading to the p ro du c ti on of double flowers ate varied. 
A good deal of difference of opinion exists as to whether they are 
the result of arrested growth or of exuberant development, and 
accordingly whether restricted food or abundant supplies of nourish- 
ment are the more necessary for their production, ft must suffice 
here to say that double flowers are most commonly the result of the 
substitution of brightly-coloured petals for stamens or pistils or 
both, and that a perfectly double flower where all the stamens 



and pistils are thus metamorphosed is necessarily barren. Such a 
plant must needs be propagated by cuttings. It rarely happens, 
however, that the change is quite complete throughout the flower. 



and so a few seeds may oe formed, some of which may be expected 
to reproduce the double-blossomed plants. By continuous select km 
of seed from the best varieties, and roguing or eliminating plants 
of the ordinary type, a " strain " or race of double flowers is gradually 
produced. 

In fertilization — the influence 
in the pollen tube upon the egg- 

eel re are many circumstances of 

im therefore, brief reference must 

be ing, are either self-fertilized, 

en fertilization occurs when the 

po gg-cell of the same individual 

no n in manner and degree, la 

th( me flower fertilizes the ovules 

of g to the stamens arriving at 

tm ater than the pistils. 

y occur when the flowers are 
st! in which the male and female 

flo mi the same plant, and in the 

wL_. . ... __._„ _._ j, or on different plants. A 

conspicuous example of a dioecious plant is the common aucuba. of 
which for years only the female plant was known in Britain. When, 
through the introduction of the male plant from Japan, its fertiliza- 
tion was rendered possible, ripe berries, before unknown, became 
common ornaments of the shrub. 

The conveyance of pollen from one flower to another in cross- 
fertilization is effected naturally by the wind, or by the agency of 
insects and other creatures. Flowers that require the aid of insects 
usually offer some attraction to their visitors in the shape of bright 
colour, fragrance or sweet juices. The colour and markings Of a 
flower often serve to guide the insects to the honey, in the obtaining 
of which they are compelled either to remove or to deposit pollen. 
The reciprocal adaptations of insects and flowers demand attentive 
observation on the part of the gardener concerned with the growing 
of grapes, cucumbers, melons and strawberries, or with the raising 
of new and improved varieties of plants. In wind-fertilized plants 
the flowers are comparatively inconspicuous and devoid of much 
attraction for insects; and their pollen is smoother and smaller, 
and better adapted for transport by the wind, than that of insect- 
fertilized plants, the roughness of which adapts it for attachment 
to the bodies of insects. 

It is very probable that the same flower at certain times and 
seasons is sell-fertilizing, and at others not so. The defects which 
cause gardeners to speak of certain vines as " shy setters," and of 
certain strawberries as " blind," may be due either to unsuitable 
conditions of external temperature, or to the non-accompl i shment, 
from some cause or other, of cross-fertilization. In a vinery, tomato- 
house or a peach-house it is often good practice' at the time of 
flowering to tap the branches smartly with a stick so as to ensure 
the dispersal of the pollen. Sometimes more delicate and direct 
manipulation is required, and the gardener has himself to convey 
the pollen from one flower to another, for which purpose a small 
camet's-hair pencil is generally suitable. The degree of fertility 
varies greatly according to external conditions, the structural and 
functional arrangements just alluded to, and other causes which 
may roughly be called constitutional. Thus, it often happens that 
an apparently very slight change in climate alters the degree of 
fertility. In a particular country or at certain seasons one flower 
will be self-sterile or nearly so, and another just the opposite. 

Hybridiaatum. — Some of the most interesting results and many of 
the gardener's greatest triumphs have been obtained by hybridiza- 
tion, i.e. the crossing of two individuals not of the same but of 
two distinct species of plants, as, for instance, two species of 
rhododendron or two species of orchid (see Hybridism). It is 
obvious that hybridization differs more in degree than in kind from 
cross-fertilization. The occurrence of hybrids in nature explains the 
difficulty experienced by botanists in deciding on what is a species, 
and the widely different limitations of the term adopted by different 
observers in the case of willows, roses, brambles, Sec. The artificial 



even the corolla from the flower to be impregnated, as its own pottea 
or that of a flower of the same species is often found to be *' — 



potent." There are, however, cases, r.g. some passion-flowers and 
rhododendrons, in which a flower is more or less sterile with its 
own, but fertile with foreign pollen, even when this is from a distinct 
species. It is a singular circumstance- that reciprocal crows are 
not always or even often possible; thus, one rhododendron saay 



PRACTICE) 



HORTICULTURE 



7+S 



afford pollen perfectly potent on the stigma of another kind, by the 
pollen of which latter its own stigma is unaffected. 

The object of the hybridizer is to obtain varieties exhibiting 
improvements in hardihood, vigour, size, shape, colour, fmkfumess, 
resistance to disease or other attributes. His success depends not 
alone on skill and judgment, for some seasons, or days even, are 
found more propitious than others. Although promiscuous and 
hap-hazard procedures no doubt meet with a measure of success, 
the best results are those which are attained by systematic work with 
a definite aim. 

Hybrids are sometimes less fertile than pure-bred species, and 
are occasionally quite sterile. Some hybrids, however, are as 
fertile as pure-bred plants. Hybrid plants may be again crossed, 
or even re-hybridized, so as to produce a progeny of very mixed 
parentage. This is the case with many of our roses, dahlias, begonias, 
pelargoniums* orchids and other long or widely cultivated garden 
plants. 

Reversion.— \n modified forms of plants there b frequently a 
tendency to " sport " or revert to parental or ancestral charac- 
teristics. So markedly is this the case with hybrids that in a 
few generations all traces of a hybrid origin may disappear. The 
dissociation of the hybrid element in a plant must be obviated by- 
careful selection. The researches of Gregor Johann Mendel (1822- 
1884), abbot of the Augustinian monastery at Brunn, in connexion 
with peas and other plants, apparently indicate that there is a 
definite natural law at work in the production of hybrids. Having 
crossed yellow and green seeded peas both ways, he found that the 
progeny resulted in all yellow coloured seeds. These gave rise in due 
course to a second generation in which there were three yellows to 
one green. In the third generation the yellows from the second 
generation gave the proportion of one pure yellow, two impure 
yellows, and one green : while the green seed of the second generation 
threw only green seeds in the third, fourth and fifth generations. 
The pure yellow in the third generation also threw pure yellows in the 
fourth and fifth and succeeding generations. The impure yellows, 
however, in the next generation gave rise to one pure yellow, one pure 
green, to two impure yellows, and so on from generation to genera- 
tion. Accordingly as the green or the yellow predominated in the 
progeny it was termed ''dominant," while the colour that dis- 
appeared was called " recessive." It happened, however, that a 
recessive cotour in one generation becomes the dominant in a suc- 
ceeding one. 

Germination. — The length of the period during which seeds 
remain dormant after their formation is very variable. The con- 
ditions for germination are much the same as for growth m general. 
Access to light is not required, because the seed contains a sufficiency 
of stored-up food. The temperature necessary varies according to 
the nature and source of the seed. Some seeds require prolonged 
immersion in water to soften their shells; others are of so delicate a 
texture that they would dry up and perish if not kept constantly 
in a moist atmosphere. Seeds buried too deeply receive a deficient 
supply of air. / ' J ' « to be sown more deeply in 

proportion to th< ess of the soil. 

The time reqi in the most favourable cir- 

cumstances van in the same species, and in 

seeds taken fror e seeds of Primula japonica, 

though sown ur conditions, yet come up at 

very irregular in lination is often slower where 

there is a store < lie perisperm, or in the endo- 

sperm, or in the here this is scanty or wanting. 

In the latter cas ly to shift for itself, and to 

form roots and 1< f its needs. 

Selection. — Su| have been developed, it is 

found that a larj escnt considerable variations, 

some being cspet xuliar in size or form. Those 

most suitable foi _ r _. r .ardener are carefully selected 

for propagation, while others not so desirable are destroyed; and 
thus after a few generations a fixed variety, race or strain superior 
to the original form is obtained. Many garden plants have originated 
solely by selection; and much has been done to improve our breeds 
of vegetables, flowers and fruit by systematic selection. 

Large and well-formed seeds are to be preferred for harvesting. 
The seeds should be kept in sacks or bags in a dry place, and if from 
plants which are rare, or liable to lose their vitality, they are ad- 
vantageously packed for transmission to a distance in hermetically 
sealed bottles or jars filled with earth or moss, without the addition 
of moistare. 

It will have been gathered from what has been said that seeds 
cannot always be depended on to reproduce exactly the character- 
istics of the plant which yielded them; for instance, seeds of the 
greengage plum or of the Ribston pippin will produce a plum or 
an apple, but not these particular varieties, to perpetuate which 
grafts or buds must be employed. (M. T. M. ; W. R. W.) 

Part II.— The Practice op Horticulture 

The' details of horticultural practice naturally range under 
the three heads of flowers, fruits and vegetables (see also Fruit 
AKD Flower Farming). There are, however, certain general 



aspects of the subject which will be more conveniently noticed 
apart, since they apply alike to each department. We shall 
therefore first treat of these- under four headings: formation 
and preparation of the garden, garden structures and edifices, 
garden materials and appliances, and garden operations. 

I. Formation and Preparation of the Garden. 

Site.— The site chosen for the mansion will more or less 
determine that of the garden, the pleasure grounds and flower 
garden being placed so as to surround or lie contiguous to it, 
while the fruit and vegetable gardens, either together or separata, 
should be placed on one side or in the rear, according to fitness 
as regards the nature of the soil and subsoil, the slope of the 
surface or the general features of the park scenery. In the 
case of villa gardens there is usually little choice; the land 
to be occupied is cut up into plots, -usually rectangular, and 
of greater or less breadth, and in laying out these plots there 
is generally a smaller space left in the front of the villa residence 
and a larger one behind, the front plot being usually devoted 
to approaches, shrubbery and plantations, flower beds being 
added if space permits, while the back or more private plot 
has a piece of lawn grass with flower beds next the house, and a 
space for vegetables and fruit trees at the far end, this latter 
being shut off from the lawn by an intervening screen of ever- 
greens or other plants. Between these two classes of gardens 
there are many gradations, but our remarks will chiefly apply 
to those of larger extent. 

The almost universal practice is to have the fruit and vegetable 
gardens combined; and the flower garden may sometimes 
be conveniently placed in juxtaposition with them. When the 
fruit and vegetable gardens are combined, the smaller and choicer 
fruit trees only should be admitted, such larger-growing hardy 
fruits as apples, pears, plums, cherries, kc, being relegated to 
the orchard. 

Ground possessing a gentle inclination towards the south 
is desirable for a garden. On such a slope effectual draining 
is easily accomplished, and the greatest possible benefit is 
derived from the sun's rays. It is well also to have an open 
exposure towards the east and west, so that the garden may 
enjoy the full benefit of the morning and evening sun, especially 
the latter; but shelter is desirable on the north and north-east, 
or in any direction in which the particular locality may happen 
to be exposed. In some places the sooth-western gales are so 
severe that a belt of trees is useful as a break wind and shelter. 

Soil and Subsoil. — A hazel-coloured loam, moderately light 
in texture, is well adapted for most garden crops, whether 
of fruits or vegetables, especially a good warm deep loam resting 
upon chalk; and if such a soil occurs naturally in the selected 
site, but little will be required in the way of preparation. If 
the soil is not moderately good and of fair depth, it is not so 
favourable for gardening purposes. Wherever the soil is not 
quite suitable, but is capable 0/ being made so, it is best to remedy 
the defect at the outset by trenching it all over to a depth 
of t or 3 ft., incorporating plenty of manure with it. A heavy 
soil, although at first requiring more labour, generally gives far 
better results when worked than a light soil. The latter is 
not sufficiently retentive of moisture and gets too hot in 
summer and requires large quantities of organic manures 
to keep it in good condition. It is advantageous to possess 
a variety of soils; and if the garden be on a slope it will 
often be practicable to render the upper part light and dry, 
while the lower remains of a heavier and damper nature. 

Natural soils consist of substances derived from the decom- 
position of various kinds of rocks, the bulk consisting of 
day, silica and lime, in various proportions. As regards pre- 
paration, draining is of course of the utmost importance. 
The ground should also be trenched to the depth of 3 ft. at 
least, and the deeper the better so. as to bring up the subsoil— 
whether it be clay, sand, gravel, marl, &c— for exposure to 
the weather and thus convert it from a sterile mass into a living 
soil teeming with bacteria. In this operation all stones larger 
than a man's fist must be taken out, and all roots of trees and of 



746 



HORTICULTURE 



perennial weeds carefully cleared away. When the whole 
ground has been thus treated, a moderate liming will, in general, 
be useful, especially on heavy clay soils. After this, supposing 
the work to have occupied most of the summer, the whole may 
be laid up in ridges, to expose as great a surface as possible 
to the action of the winter's frost. 

Argillaceous or clay soils are those which contain a large per- 
centage (45-50) of day, and a small percentage (5 or less) of lime. 
These are unfitted for garden purposes until unproved by draining, 
liming, trenching and the addition of porous materials, such as 
ashes, burnt ballast or sand, but when thoroughly improved they 
are very fertile and less liable to become exhausted than most other 
soils. Loamy soils contain a considerable quantity (30-43%) 
of clay, and smaller quantities of lime, humus and sand. Such 
soils properly drained and prepared are very suitable for orchards, 
and when the proportion of clay ir smaller (20-30%) they form 
excellent garden soils, in which the better sort of fruit trees luxuriate. 
Marly soils are those which contain a considerable percentage 
(io-ao) of lime, and are called clay marls, loamy marls and sandy 
marls, according as these several ingredients preponderate. The 
clay marls are, like clay soils, too stiff for garden purposes until 
well worked and heavily manured; but loamy marls are fertile 
and welt suited to fruit trees, and sandy marls are adapted for 
producing early crops. Calcareous soils, which may also be heavy, 
intermediate or light, are those which contain more than 20% of 
lime, their fertility depending on the proportions of clay and sand 
which enter into their composition; they are generally cold and wet. 
Vegetable soils or moulds, or humus soils, contain a considerable 
percentage (more than 5) of humus, and embrace both the rich 
productive garden moulds and those known as peaty soils. 

The nature of the subsoil is of scarcely- less importance than 
that of the surface soil. Many gardeners are still afraid to dis- 
turb an unsuitable subsoil, but experienced growers have proved 
that by bringing it up to the surface and placing plenty of 
manure in the bottoms of the various trenches, the very best 
results are attained in the course of a season or so. An uneven 
subsoil, espedally if retentive, is most undesirable, as water 
is apt to collect in the hollows, and thus affect the upper soil. 
The remedy is to make the plane of its surface agree with that 
of the ground. When there is a hard pan this should be broken 
up with the spade or the fork, and have plenty of manure mixed 
with it. When there is an injurious preponderance of metallic 
oxides or other deleterious substances, the roots of trees would 
be affected by them, and they must therefore be removed. When- 
the subsoil is too compact to be pervious to water, effectual 
drainage must be resorted to; when it is very loose, so that it 
drains away the fertile ingredients of the soil as well as those 
which are artificially supplied, the compactness of the stratum 
should be increased by the addition of clay, marl or loam. The 
best of all subsoils is a dry bed of day overlying sandstone. 

Plan.— In laying out the garden, the plan should be prepared 
in minute detail before commencing operations. The form 
of the kitchen and fruit garden should be square or oblong, 
rather than curvilinear, since the working and cropping of 
the ground can thus be more easily carried out. The whole 
should be compactly arranged, so as to facilitate working, 
and to afford convenient access for the carting of the heavy 
materials. This access is espedally desirable as regards the 
store-yards and framing ground, where fermenting manures 
and tree leaves for making up hot beds, coals or wood for fuel 
and ingredients for composts, together with flower-pots and 
the many necessaries of garden culture, have to be accom- 
modated. In the case of villas or picturesque residences, 
gardens of irregular form may be permitted; when adapted 
to the conditions of the locality, they assodate better with 
surrounding objects, but in such gardens wall space is usually 
limited. 

The distribution of paths must be governed by circumstances. 
Generally speaking, the main paths for cartage should be 8 ft. 
wide, made up of in. hard core covered by 4 in. of gravd 
or ash, with a gentle rise to centre to throw off surface water. 
The smaller paths, not intended for cartage, should be 4 ft. 
to 6 ft. wide,, according to circumstances, made up of 6 in. 
hard core and 3 in. of gravel or ash. and should be slightly 
raised at centre. 

A considerable portion of the north wall is usually covered 



(FORMATION OF GARDE* 

in front with the glazed structures called forcing-houses, and to 
these the nouses for ornamental plants are sometimes attached; 
but a more appropriate site for the latter is the flower garden* 
when that forms a separate department. It is well, however, 
that everything connected with the forcing of fruits or flowers 
should be concentrated in one place. The frame ground, in- 
dueling melon and pine pits, should occupy some weil-sheltcred 
spot in the slips; or on one side of the garden, and adjoining to 
this may be found a suitable site for the compost ground, in 
which the various kinds of soils are kept in store, and in which 
also composts may be prepared. 

As walls afford valuable space for the growth of the choicer 
kinds of hardy fruits, the direction in which they are built 
is of considerable importance. In the wanner parts of the 
country the wall on the north side of the garden should be ao 
placed as to face the sun at about an hour before noon, or a 
little to the east of south; m less favoured localities ft should 
be made to face direct southland in still more unfavourable 
-districts it should face the sun an hour after noon, or a little 
west of south. The east and west walls should run paraJld 
to each other, and at right angles to that on the north side, 
in all the most favoured localities; but in colder or later ones, 
though paralld, they should be so far removed from a right angle 
as to get the sun by eleven o'clock. On the whole, the form of 
a parallelogram with its longest sides in the proportion of about 
five to three of the shorter, and running east and west, may be 
considered the best form, since it affords a greater extent of 
south wall than any other. 

Fig. 1 r epr es en ts a garden of one acre and admits of nearly double 
the number of trees on the south aspect as compared with the east 
and west ; it allows a greater number of espalier or pyramid trees 
to face the south; and it admits of being divided into equal principal 
compartments, each of 
which forms nearly a 
square. The size of course 
can be increased to any 
requisite extent. That of 
the royal gardens at Frog- 
more, 760 ft. from east to fcj 
west and 440 ft. from 
north to south, is nearly 
of the same proportions. 

The spaces between 

the walls and the outer 

fence are called " slips." 

A considerable extent is 

sometimes thus enclosed, rt/% _ „. ~, ra „i„„ „„ atwm - „_ 
j .•«• _i * ., rlC. I.— rlan 01 Uaracn an acre in arca. 
and utilised for the 

growth of such vegetables as potatoes, winter greens and sea- 
kale, for the small bush fruits, and for strawberries. The 
slips are also convenient as affording a variety of aspects, 
and thus helping to prolong the season of particular vegetable 
crops. 

Skelter. — A screen of some kind to temper the fury of the 
blast is absolutdy necessary. If the situation is not naturally 
well sheltered, the defect may be remedied by masses of forest 
trees disposed at a considerable distance so as not to shade the 
walls or fruit trees. They should not be nearer than, say, 50 yds., 
and may vary from that to 100 or 150 yds. distance according 
to rircumstances, regard being had especially to peculiarities 
occasioned by the configuration of the country, as for instance to 
aerial currents from adjacent eminences. Care should be taken, 
however, not to hem in the garden by crowded plantations, shelter 
from the prevailing strong winds being all that is required, while 
the more open it is in other directions the better. The trees 
employed for screens should include both those of deciduous 
and of evergreen habit, and should suit the peculiarities of local 
soil and climate. Of deriduotis trees the sycamore, wych-elm, 
horse-chestnut, beech, lime, plane and poplar may be used, — the 
abele or white poplar, PopuLus alba, being one of the most rapid- 
growing of all trees, and, like other poplars, well suited for 
nursing other choicer subjects; while of evergreens, the holm 
oak, holly, laurel (both common and Portugal), and such conifers 
as the Scotch, Weymouth and Austrian pines, with spruce and 



-jJb* 



(South.) 

JM*. n 



GARDEN SHWCTOHESJ 



HORTICULTURE 



74-7 



silver firs and yews, are suitable. The conifers make the most 
effective screens. 

' Extensive gardens in exposed situations are often divided 
into compartments by hedges, so disposed as to break the force 
of high winds. Where these are required to be narrow as well 
as lofty, holly, yew or beech is to be preferred; but, if there 
Is sufficient space, the beautiful laurel and the bay may be 
employed where they will thrive. Smaller hedges may be 
formed of evergreen privet or of tree-box. These subordinate 
divisions furnish, not only shelter but also shade, which, at 
certain seasons, is peculiarly valuable. 

Belts of shrubbery may be placed round the slips outside 
the walls; and these may in many cases, or in certain parts, 
be of sufficient breadth to furnish pleasant retired promenades, 
at the same time that they serve to mask the formality of the 
walled gardens, and are made to harmonize with the picturesque 
scenery of the pleasure ground. 

Water Supply. — Although water is one of the most important 
elements in plant life, we do not find one garden in twenty where 
even ordinary precautions have been taken to secure a competent 
supply. Rain-water is the best, next to that river or pond 
water, and last of all that from springs; but a chemical analysis 
should be made of the last before introducing it, as some spring 
waters contain mineral ingredients injurious to vegetation. Iron 
pipes are the best conductors; they should lead to a capacious 
open reservoir placed outside the garden, and at the highest 
convenient level, in order to secure sufficient pressure for effective 
distribution, and so that the wall trees also may be effectually 
washed. Stand-pipes should be placed at intervals beside the 
walks and in other convenient places, from which water may at 
all times be drawn; and to which a garden hose can be attached, 
so as to permit of the whole garden being readily watered. 
The mains should be placed under the walks for safety, and also 
that they may be easily reached when repairs are required. 
Pipes should also be laid having a connexion with all the various 
greenhouses and forcing-houses, each of which should be pro- 
vided with a cistern for aerating the daily supplies. In fact, 
every part of the garden, including the working sheds and 
offices, should have water supplied without stint. 

Fence. — Gardens of large extent should be encircled by an 
outer boundary, which is often formed by a sunk wall or ha-ha 
surrounded by an invisible wire fence to exclude ground game, 
or consists of a hedge with low wire fence on its inner side. 
Occasionally this sunk wall is placed on the exterior- of the 
screen plantations, and walks lead through the trees, so that 
views are obtained .of the adjacent country. Although the 
interior garden receives its form from the walls, the ring fence 
and plantations may be adapted to the shape and surface of 
the ground. In smaller country gardens the enclosure or outer 
fence is often a hedge, and there is possibly no space enclosed 
by walls, but some divisional wall having a suitable aspect is 
utilised for the growth of peaches, apricots, &c., and the hedge 
merely separates the garden from a paddock used for grazing. 
The still smaller gardens of villas are generally bounded by a wall 
or wood fence, the inner side of which is appropriated to fruit 
trees, i For the latter walls are much more convenient and 
suitable than a boarded fence, but in general these are too low to 
be of much value as aids to cultivation, and they are best covered 
with bush fruits or with ornamental plants of limited growth. 

Walks.— The best material for the construction of garden 
walks is good binding gravel The ground should be excavated 
to the depth of a foot or more— the bottom being made firm and 
slightly concave, so that it may slope to the centre, where a drain 
should be introduced; or the bottom may be made convex and 
the water allowed to drain away at the sides. The bottom 9 in. 
should be filled in compactly with hard, coarse materials, such 
as stones, brickbats, clinkers, burned clay, &c, on which should 
be laid a or 3 in. of coarse gravel, and then 1 or s in. of firm 
binding gravel on the surface. The surface of the walks should be 
kept well rolled, for nothing contributes more to their elegance 
and durability. 
All the principal Unes of walk should bs broad enough to allow 



at least three persons to walk abreast; the others may be 
narrower, but a multitude of narrow walks has a puny effect. 
Much of the neatness of walks depends upon the material of 
which they are made. Gravel from an inland pit is to be pre- 
ferred; though occasionally very excellent varieties are found 
upon the sea-coast. Gravel walks must be kept free from weeds, 
either by hand weeding, or by the use of one of the many weed 
killers now on the market. In some parts of the country the 
available material does not bind to form a close, even surface, 
and such walks are kept clean by hoeing. 

Grass walks were common in English gardens during the pre- 
valence of the Dutch taste, but, owing to the frequent humidity 
of the climate, they have in a great measure been discarded. 
Grass walks are made in. the same way as grass lawns. When the 
space to be thus occupied is prepared, a torn layer of sand or poor 
earth is laid upon the surface and over this a similar layer of 
good soil. This arrangement is adopted in order to prevent 
excessive luxuriance in the grass. In many modern gardens 
pathways made of old paving stones lead from the house to 
different parts. They give an old-fashioned and restful appear- 
ance to a garden, and in the interstices cha r mi n g little plants like 
thyme, lontpsidium aeaule, &c, are allowed to grow. 

Edgings. — Walks are separated from the adjoining beds and 
borders in a variety of ways. If a living edging is adopted, 
by far the best is afforded by the dwarf box planted closely 
in line. It is of extremely neat growth, and when annually 
clipped will remain in good order for many years. Very good 
edgings, but of a less durable character, are formed by thrift 
(Armeria vulgaris), double daisy (Belhs perennis), gentianella 
(Gentutna acautis) and London pride (Saxifrage umbrosa), 
CerasHum tomeatasttm, Stackys lavata and the beautiful ever- 
green Veronica mpestris with sheets of bright blue flowers 
dose to the ground, or by some of the finer grasses very carefully 
selected, such as the sheep's fescue (Fcstuca otina) or its 
glaucous-leaved variety. Indeed, any low-growing herbaceous 
plant, susceptible of minute division, is suitable for an edging. 
Amongst shrubby plants suitable for edgings are the evergreen 
candytuft (Iberis sempervirens), Euonymus radiums variegala, 
ivy, and Esumymus micrepkytius—m charming little evergreen 
with small serrated leaves. Edgings may also be formed of 
narrow slips of sandstone flag, slate, tiles or bricks. One 
advantage of using edgings of this kind, especially in kitchen 
gardens, is that they do not harbour slugs and similar vermin, 
which all live edgings do, and often to a serious extent, if they 
are left to grow large* In shrubberies and large flower-plots,' 
verges of grass-turf, from 1 to 3 ft. in breadth, according to the 
size of the border and width of the walk, make a very handsome 
edging, but they should not be allowed to rise more than an 
inch and a half above the gravel, the grass being kept short by 
repeated mowings, and the edges kept trim and well-defined 
by frequently clipping with shears and cutting once or twice a 
year with an edging iron. ■ 

II. Garden Structures. 

Walls.— The position to be given to the garden walls has 
been already referred to. The shelter afforded by a wall, and the 
increased temperature secured by its presence, are indispensable 
in the climate of Great Britain, for the production of all the 
finer kinds of outdoor fruits; and hence the inner side of a north 
wall, having a southern aspect, is appropriated to the more 
tender kinds. It is, indeed, estimated that such positions 
enjoy an increased temperature equal to. 7° of latitude— that 
is to say, the mean temperature within a few inches of the wall 
is equal to the mean temperature of the open plain 7° farther 
south. The eastern and western aspects are set apart for fruits 
of a somewhat hardier character. 

Where the inclination of the ground is considerable, and the 
presence of high walls would be objectionable, the latter may 
be replaced by sunk walls. These should not rise more than 
3 ft. above the level of the ground behind them. As dryness is 
favourable to an increase of heat, such walls should be either 
built hollow or packed behind to the thickness of 3 or 4 ft. 



7+8 



HORTICULTURE 



(GARDEN STRUCTURES 



with rubble stones, flints, brickbats or similar material, thoroughly 
drained at bottom. For mere purposes of shelter a height of 
6 or 7 ft. will generally be sufficient for the walls of a garden, 
but for the training of fruit trees- it is found that an average 
height of 12 ft. is more suitable. In gardens of large size the 
northern or principal wall may be 14 ft., and the side walls 1 2 ft. in 
height; while smaller areas of an acre or so should have the 
principal walls 12 and the side walls 10 ft. in height. As brick 
is more easily built hollow than stone, it is to be preferred for 
garden walls. A 14-in. hollow wall will take in its construction 
12,800 bricks, while a solid o-in. one, with piers, will take 11,000; 
but the hollow wall, while thus only a little more costly, will 
be greatly superior, being drier and warmer, as well as more 
substantial Bricks cannot be too well burnt for garden walls; 
the harder they are the less moisture will they absorb. Many 
excellent walls are built of stone. The best is dark-coloured 
whinstone, because it absorbs very little moisture, or in Scotland 
Caithness pavement 4 in. thick. The stones can be cut (in the 
quarries) to any required length, and built in regular courses. 
Stone walls should always be built with thin courses for conveni- 
ence of training over their surface. Concrete walls, properly coped 
and provided with a trellis, may in some places be cheapest, and 
they are very durable. Common rubble walls are the worst of all. 

The coping of garden walls is important, both for the preserva- 
tion of the walls and for throwing the rain-water off their surfaces. 
It should not project less than from 2 to 2} in., but in wet 
districts may be extended to 6 in. Stone copings are best, 
but they are costly, and Portland cement is sometimes sub- 
stituted. Temporary copings of wood, which may be fixed 
by means of permanent iron brackets just below the stone coping, 
are extremely useful in spring for the protection of the blossoms 
of fruit trees. They should be 9 in. or z ft. wide, and should 
be put on during spring before the blossom buds begin to expand; 
they should have attached to them scrim cloth (a sort of thin 
canvas), which admits light pretty freely, yet is sufficient to 
ward off ordinary frosts; this canvas is to be let down towards 
evening and drawn up again in the morning. These copings 
should be removed when they are of no further utility as pro- 
tectors, so that the foliage may have the full benefit of rain 
and dew. Any contrivance that serves to interrupt radiation, 
though it may not keep the temperature much above freezing, 
will be found sufficient. Standard fruit trees must be left to 
take their chance; and, indeed from the lateness of their flower- 
ing, they are generally more injured by blight, and by drenching 
rains, which wash away the pollen of the flowers, than by the 
direct effects of cold. 

Espalier Raits. — Subsidiary to walls as a means of training 
fruit trees, espalier rails were formerly much employed, and 
are still used in many gardens. In their simplest form, they 
are merely a row of slender stakes of larch or other wood driven 
into the ground, and connected by a slight rod or fillet at top., 
The use of iron rails has now been almost wholly discontinued 
on account of metallic substances acting as powerful conductors 
of both heat and cold in equal extremes. Standards from 
which galvanized wire is tightly strained from one end to the 
other are preferable and very convenient Trees trained to 
them are easily got at for all cultural operations, space is saved, 
and the fruit, while freely exposed to sun and air, is tolerably 
secure against wind. They form, moreover, neat enclosures 
for the vegetable quarters, and, provided excess of growth 
from the centre is successfully grappled with, they are productive 
in soils and situations which are suitable. 

Plant Houses. — These include all those structures which are 
more intimately associated with the growth of ornamental 
plants and flowers, and comprise conservatory, plant stove, 
greenhouse and the subsidiary pits and frames. They should 
be so erected as to present the smallest extent of opaque surface 
consistent with stability. With this object in view, the early 
improvers of hot-house architecture substituted metal for wood 
in the construction of the roofs, and for the most part dispensed 
with back walls; but the conducting power of the metal caused 
a (treat irregularity of temperature, which it was found difficult 



to control; and, notwithstanding the elegance of metallic 
houses, this circumstance, together with their greater coat, 
has induced most recent authorities to give the preference to 
wood. The combination of the two, however, shows dearly 
that, without much variation of heat or loss of light, any extent 
of space may be covered, and houses of any altitude constructed. 

The earliest notice we have of such structures is given in the Latin 
writers ot the 1st century (Mart. Epigr. vjii. 14 and 68); the 
'ASuMJof kj}«-<x, to which allusion is made by various Creek authors, 
have no claim to be mentioned in this connexion. Columella 
(xi. 3. Si, 52) and Pliny {II. N. xix. 23) both refer to their use ia 
Italy for the cultivation of the rarer and more delicate aorta of plants 
and trees. Seneca has given us a description of the appUcattoa of 
hot water for securing the necessary temperature. The botanist 
*" """ ""'int houses at Altdorf in Switzerland; those of 
I lerchant. and the conservatory in the Apotbe- 

i len at Chelsea, were among the first structures 

4 in British gardens. These were, however. iO 

1 th of plants, as they consisted of little else than 

j masonry, having large windows in front, with 

t paque. The next step was taken when it became 

I conservatories attached to mansions, instead of 

I pleasure grounds. This arrangement brought 

I evince of architects, and for nearly a century 

1 ' the cultivation of plants were sacrificed, as itdl 

L , , ._ the unity of architectural expression between 

the conservatory and the mansion. 

Plant houses must be as far as possible impervious to wet and 
cold air from the exterior, provision at the same time being 



made for ventilation, while the escape of warm air from the interior 
must also be under control. The most important part of the 
enclosing material is necessarily glass. But as the rays of light, 
even in passing through transparent glass, lose much of their 
energy, which is further weakened in proportion to the distance 
it has to travel, the nearer the plant can be placed to the glass 
the more perfectly will its functions be performed; hence the 
importance of constructing the roofs at such an angle as wiD 
admit the most light, especially sunlight, at the time it is most 
required. Plants in glass houses require for their fullest develop- 
ment more solar light probably than even our best hot -houses 
transmit— certainly much more than is transmitted through 
the roofs of houses as generally constructed. . 

Plant houses constructed of the best Baltic pine timber an 
very durable, but the whole of the parts should be kept as light 
as possible. In many houses, especially those where ornament 
is of no consequence, the rafters are now omitted, or only used 
at wide intervals, somewhat stouter sash-bars being adopted, and 
stout panes of glass (usually called 11 -ax.) 1 2 to 18 in. wide, made 
use of. Such houses arc very light; being also very dose, they 
require careful ventilation. The glass roof is commonly designed 
so as to form a uniform plane or slope from back to front in lean-to 
houses (fig. 2), and from centre to sides in span-roofed houses. 
To secure the greatest possible influx of light, some horticulturists 
recommend curvilinear roofs; but the superiority of these is 
largely due to the absence of rafters, which may also be dis- 
pensed with in plain roofs. They are very expensive to build 
and maintain. Span and ridge-and-furrow roofs, the forms bow 
mostly preferred, are exceedingly well adapted for the ad miss i on 
of light, especially watn they are glazed to within a; few inches 



GARDEN STRUCTURES) 



HORTICULTURE 



of the ground. They can be made, too, to cover in any extent 
of area without sustaining walls. Indeed, it has been proposed 
to support such roofs to a great extent upon suspension principles, 
the internal columns of support being utilized for conducting 
the rain-water off the roof to underground drains or reservoirs. 
The lean-to is the least desirable form, since it scarcely admits of 
elegance of design, but it is necessarily adopted in many cases. 

In glazing, the greater the surface of glass, and the less space 
occupied by rafters and astragals as well as overlaps, the greater 
the admission of light. Some prefer that the sash-bars should 
be grooved instead of rebated, and this plan exposes less putty 
to the action of the weather. The simple bedding of the glass, 
without the use of over putty, seems to be widely approved; but 
the glass may be fixed in a variety of other ways, some of which 
are patented. 

The Conservatory is often buflt in connexion with the mansion, 
so as to be entered from the drawing-room or boudoir. But when 
so situated it is apt to suffer from tne shade of the building, and 
is objectionable on account of admitting damp to the drawing-room. 
Where circumstances will admit, it is better .to place it at some 
distance from the house, and to form a connexion by means of a 

8 lass corridor. In order that the conservatory may be kept gay with 
owers, there should be a subsidiary structure to receive the plants 
as they go out of bloom. The conservatory may also with great 
propriety be placed in the flower garden, where it may occupy an 
elevated terrace, and form the termination of one of the more im- 
portant walks. 

Great variety of design is admissible in the conservatory, but it 
ought always to be adapted to the style of the mansion of which it 
is a prominent appendage. Some very pleasing examples are to be 
met with which have the form of a parallelogram with a lightly 
rounded roof; others of appropriate character are square or nearly 
so, with a ridge-aad-furrow roof. Whatever the form, there must be 
light in abundance; and the shade both of buildings and of trees 
must be avoided. A southern aspect, or one varying to south-east or 
south-west, is preferable: if these aspects cannot be secured, the 
plants selected must be adapted to the position. The central part of 
the house may be devoted to permanent plants; the side stages and 
open spaces in the permanent beds should be reserved for the 
temporary plants. 

The Gretnheusg is a structure designed for the growth of such 
exotic plants as require to be kept during winter in a temperature 
considerably above the freezing-point. The best form is tne span- 
roofed, a single span being better even than a series of spans such 
as form the ridge-and-furrow roof. For plant culture, houses at a 
comparatively low pitch are better than higher ones where the plants 
have to stand at a greater distance from the glass, ' and therefore in 
greater gloom. Fig. 3 represents a convenient form of greenhouse. 

It is 20 ft. wide and 
12 ft. high, and may 
be of any convenient 
length. The side 
walls are surmounted 
by short upright 
sashes which open 
outwards by ma- 
chinery a, and the 
roof is provided with 
sliding upper sashes 
for top ventilation. 
The upper sashes 
may als? be made to 
lift, and are in many 
respects more con- 
venient to operate. 
In the centre is a 




Fio. *. ■ Sec tion of Greenhouse. 



749 

ted into two of the former of opposite 
mg the centre. Except where space 
building to be introduced, a lean-to 
: a house of this class may often be 
a half-span or hipped roof — that is, 
nd a longer in front, 
re specimens has to be carried on, a 
height and larger dimensions may 
space for this class of plants may 
of the smaller elevation, simply by 
ler the staging erected for smaller 
ones to stand on or nearer the floor, 
respect from the greenhouse except 
hot-water pipes for the purpose of 
at, although, as the plants in stove 




■ig. 4.— Section of Plant Stove. 

ecause more easily managed as to the 
it will be seen (fig. 4) that along the 
m or lantern light b, b is introduced, 
ivo continuous ventilators, one along 
ted and foul air, openings a, a being 
opposite the hot-water pipes for the 
is type of house is also very suitable 
I not need so much heating apparatus, 
return pipes respectively will be re- 
> the heat proposed to be maintained, 
stoves require more care than green- 
id in which consequently the staging 
>vcs the stages should be of slate or 
e supports of iron. These should be 
. of some coarse gritty material, such 
d obtained on the sea-coast, on which 
is to absorb moisture, and gradually 
le plants. The pathways should be 
or made of concrete and cement, and 
tinded so that the water required for 
sides while the centre is sufficiently 
also have brick or stone edgings to 
leaking away at the sides and thus 

>al of these are the vinery, peach 
house and orchard house. These, 
pr a portion of them, 
especially the vineries 
and peacheries, are 
frequently brought 
together into a range 
along the principal 
interior or south wall 
of the garden, where 
they are well exposed 
to sun and light, an 
ornamental plant 
house being somo- 




can-to Vinery. 

ntxe of the range in order to give 

mfldings. When thus associated, 

I the houses are* usually of the lean-to class, which have the 



7$* 



HORTICULTURE 



and with the means of giving sufficient ventilation to keep the air 
sweet. It should also be sufficiently commodious to permit of the 
fruit being arranged in single layers on the shelves or trays. A 
type of building which Is becoming increasingly popular for this 
purpose, and which b in many respects superior to the older, and 
often more expensive structures, is built of wood, with or without 
brick foundations, and is thickly thatched with reeds or other 
non-conducting material externally— on walls and roof— while 
the interior is matchboarded. Ventilation is afforded at the 
ends, usually by tilting laths, operated by a cord. Two doors 
are provided at one end — an inner, and an outer— the inner 
being glazed at the top to admit light. They are generally span- 
roofed, about 6 ft. high at the eaves, and 8 or 10 ft. high at the 
ridge, according to width. 

The length and breadth of these stores should be go ver n e d by the 
amount and character of the storage accommodation to be provided. 
If intended for storage only, a width of 9 ft. 6 in. would suffice, but if 
intended to combine display with storage, the internal diameter 
should be about 13 ft. In the former type, the walls are fitted with 
four row* of shelves, about 3 ft. wide, and about 1 ft. 6 in. apart. 
The shelves are of deal strips, 2 or 3 in. wide, laid about 1 in. apart 
for ventilation. These are being superseded, however, by sliding-out 
trays of convenient lengths and about 9 in. deep, working on fixed 
framework. By this means the storage accommodation is nearly 
doubled and the fruit is more easily manipulated. The central 

Kngwav is about 3 ft. 6 in. wide. In the latter a central exhibition 
nch about 3 ft. wide and of convenient height is provided. Gang- 
ways ai ft. wide flank this, while the shelves or drawers with which 
the walls are fitted are about 2* ft. wide. 

Care of the Fruit Room* — This consists mainly in the storing only 
of such fruits as are dry and in proper condition ; in judicious 
ventilation, especially in the presence of large quantities of newly- 

Sthered fruit ; in the prompt removal of alldecaying fruit ; and in 
e exclusion of vermin. It is also advisable to wash all woodwork 
and gangways annually with a weak solution of formalin, or other 
inodorous germicide. 

Heating Apparatus.— Want houses were formerly heated in 
a variety of ways— by fermenting organic matter, such as dung, 
by smoke flues, by steam and by hot water circulating in iron 
pipes. The last-named method has proved so satisfactory in 
practice that it is now in general use for all ordinary purposes. 
The water is heated by a furnace, and is conveyed from the boiler 
into the houses by a main or " flow " pipe, connected by means 
of syphon branches with as many pipes as it is intended to serve. 
When cooled it is returned to the boiler by another main or 
" return " pipe. Heat is regulated in the structures by means of 
valves on the various branch pipes. The flow pipe is attached 
to the boiler atita highest point, to take the heated water as it 
ascends. The return pipe is connected with the boiler at or near 
its lowest point. The highest points of the pipes are fitted with 
small taps, for the removal of air, which would retard circulation 
if allowed to remain. Heating by hot water may be said to 
depend, in part, on the influence of gravity on water being to 
some extent overcome by heating in a boiler. It ascends the 
.flow pipe by convection, where its onward journey would 
speedily end if it were not for the driving force of other molecules 
of water following, and the suction set up by the gravitation into 
the boiler of the cooled water by the return pipe. The power 
of water to conduct heat is very low. The conducting power 
of the iron in which it is conveyed is high. It is, however, prob- 
able that conduction is to some extent a factor in the process. 

Pipes. — It is a mistake to stint the quantity of piping, since it is 
far more economical and better for the plants to have a larger 
surface heated moderately than a smaller surface heated excessively. 
In view of the fact that air expands, becomes lighter and rises, under 
the influence of heat, the pipes should be set near the floor. If 
intended to raise the temperature of the structure, they should be 
set on iron or brick supports just clear of walls, earth or other heat- 
absorbing bodies. Those intended to provide bottom heat, however, 
are set in (a) water tanks running under the beds, or (ft) in enclosed 
dry chambers under the beds, or are (c) embedded in the soil or 
plunging material. The first-named method is distinctly superior to 
the others. .Pipes of 2 in., 3 in., 4 in. and 6 in. diameters are mostly 
used, the 4 in. siie being the most convenient for general purposes. 
The joints are packed or caulked with tow, smeared with a mixture 
of white and red lead. Flanged joints are made to bolt together on 
washers of vulcanised rubber. 

Batfcr*.— There are numerous types of boilers m use, illustrative 
of efforts to secure as much exposure aa possible to the action of the 



I MATERIALS AND APPLIANCES 

fl "** ""' nulttpje waterways, constats of a 

n ether in various ways. Sosse of 

tl t cone, snd srelutosmsscosscal 

ti ith the tubes arranged h or is os t - 

a ibular boilers. The majority of 

tl shaped. Boilers with a stagfe 

s 1, the Cornish, the saddle and the 

nth the furnace occupying abost 

h he saddle is so named from ft* 

si It is set to span the furnace, 

a tecured in a variety of way* by 

fl er is direct on its inner surface, 

a Tubular boilers, especially the 

h I and economical. The Coratsfc 

t oilec, and is much used for pro- 

v saddle boiler is very commonly 

e ierately sised and small areas. 

E L Conical boilers are more ex- 

p pe, and are not so convenient to 

n . All the above types require a 

a lers are convenient for beating 

s i to instsl than those described 

a twever, owing to loss of beat from 

t ailed sectional boilers as used is 

/ re being introduced to British 

g >r taken away according to the 
a 

tr in the boilers should be made 

Imtrolled by means of a ball-cock. 
ie boiler as practicable. The feed 
near the point at which it esters 

to be excavated to admit of the 
I the pipes they sre intended ts 
1, the draining of stokeholds often 
>e taken to allow sufficient room 
id to store fuel. It is important 
mcknt as practicable, especially 

e furnaces is relatively easy, and 
intensity of the fires to particular 
m of flues, ashpits and especially 
r ordinary hard coal are used, the 
ne systematically, and the fires 
uld not be stirred more than is 
t be fed in driblets. They require 
ire must be taken not to give too 
to melt or soften the nre-bars. 
by opening or closing the bottom 
er on the smoke shaft. The latter 
>rding to circumstances, to secure 

tun heat to the fleneral well-being 
: production 01 flowers and the 
been appreciated in horticulture, 
r in the afternoon, Le. the closing 
aging snd damping of surfaces to 
for its object the conservatioo of 

i admission of sir for thfc purpose 
nsphere and for the regulation of 

ventilation in all plant houses 
iro places— as near the floor as 
echanical contrivances whereby 
operated simultaneously are now 
? convenient and economical than 

ventilator separately. Efhoest 
the exercise of common sense and 
> avoid cold draughts through the 

lb and Appliances. 

indpal soils used in gardens, 
rhat are called composts, are — 
id various mixtures and com- 
nit the different subjects under 

t gardener; It is not only used 
pie state, but enters into most 
Uy for his plants. For garden 
unctuous or soapy to the touch 
inging nor adhesive, and should 
ssed handful is thrown on the 
tely it is too heavy and requires 
of gritty material; if it has 
little or no coh e sio n when squeezed tightly m the band, it is 



MATERIALS AMD APPLIANCES) 



HORTICULTURE 



753 



too light, and needs to be improved by the addition of heavier 
or clayey material. Sound friable loam cut one sod deep from 
the surface of a pasture, and stacked up for twelve months in 
a heap or ridge, is invaluable to the gardener. When employed 
for making vine borders, loam of a somewhat heavier nature can 
be used with advantage, on account of the porous materials 
which should accompany it. For stone fruits a calcareous 
loam is best; indeed, for these subjects a rich calcareous loam 
used in a pure and simple state cannot be surpassed. Somewhat 
heavy loams are best for potting pine apples, for melons and 
strawberries, fruit trees in pots, &c, and may be used with the 
addition of manures only; but for ornamental plants a loam 
of a somewhat freer texture is preferable and more pleasant 
to work. Loam which contains much red matter (iron) should 
be avoided. 

Sand is by itself of little value except for striking cuttings, 
for which purpose fine dean sharp silver sand is the best; and 
a somewhat coarser kind, if it is gritty, is to be preferred to 
the comminuted sands which contain a large proportion of 
earthy matter. River sand and the sharp grit washed up 
sometimes by the road side are excellent materials for laying 
around choice bulbs at planting time to prevent contact with 
earth which is perhaps manure-tainted. Sea sand may be 
advantageously used both for propagating purposes and for 
mixing in composts. For the growth of pot plants sand is an 
essential part of most composts, in order to give them the needful 
porosity to carry off all excess of moisture from the roots. If 
the finer earthy sands only are obtainable, they must be rendered 
sharper by washing away the earthy particles. Washed sand 
is best for all plants like heaths, which need a pure and lasting 
peaty compost. 

Peat soil is largely employed for the culture of such plants 
as rhododendrons, azaleas, heaths, &c In districts where 
heather and gritty 6oil predominate, the peat soil is poor and 
unprofitable, but selections from both the heathy and the 
richer peat soils, collected with judgment, and stored in a dry 
part of the compost yard, are essential ingredients in the cultiva- 
tion of many choice pot plants, such as the Cape heaths and 
many of the Australian plants. Many monocotyledons do well 
in peat, even if they do not absolutely require it. 

Leaf-mould is eminently suited for the growth of many free- 
growing plants, especially when it has been mixed with stable 
manure and has been subjected to fermentation for the forma- 
tion of hot beds. It any state most plants feed greedily upon 
it, and when pure or free from decaying wood or sticks it is a 
very safe ingredient in composts; but it is so liable to generate 
fungus, and the mycelium or spawn of certain fungi is so injurious 
to the roots of trees, attacking them if at all sickly or weakened 
by drought, that many cultivators prefer not to mix leaf-mould 
with the soil used for permanent plants, as peaches or choice 
ornamental trees. For quick growing plants, however, as 
for example most annuals cultivated in pots, such as balsams, 
cockscombs, globe-amaranlhs and the like, for cucumbers, 
and for young soft-wooded plants generally, it is exceedingly 
useful, both by preventing the consolidation of the soil and as 
a manure. The accumulations of light earth formed on the 
surface in woods where the leaves fall and decay annually are 
leaf-mould of the finest quality. Leaves collected in the autumn 
and stored in pits or heaps, and covered with a layer of soil, 
make beautiful leaf-mould at the end of about twelve months, 
if frequently drenched with water or rain during this period. 

Composts are mixtures of the foregoing ingredients in varying 
proportions, and in combination with manures if necessary, 
so as to suit particular plants or classes of plants. The chief 
point to be borne in mind in making these mixtures is not to 
combine in the same compost any bodies that are antagonistic 
in their nature, as for example time and ammonia. In making 
up composts for pot plants, the fibrous portion should not be 
removed by sifting, except for small-sized pots, but the turfy 
portions should be broken up by hand and distributed in smaller 
or larger lumps throughout the mass. When sifting is had 
recourse to, the fibrous matter should be rubbed through the 



meshes of the sieve along with the earthy particles. Before being 
used the turfy ingredients of composts should lie together in 
a heap only long enough for the roots of the herbage to die, not 
to decompose. 

Manures (see Manure).— These are of two classes, organic 
and inorganic—the former being of animal and vegetable, the 
latter of mineral origin. The following are organic manures: 

Farm-yard manure consists of the mixed dung of horses and cattle 
thrown together, and more or less soaked with liquid draining* of the 
stable or byre. It is no doubt the finest stimulant for the growth of 
plants, and that most adapted to restore the fertile elements which 
the plants have abstracted from exhausted soils. This manure is 
best fitted for garden use when in a moderately fermented state. 

Horse dung is generally the principal ingredient in all hot bed 
manure; and, in its partially decomposed state, as afforded by ex- 
haustcd hot beds, it is well adapted for garden use. It is most 
beneficial on cold stiff soils. It should not be allowed to lie too long 
unmoved when fresh, as it will then heat violently, and the ammonia 
is thus driven off. To avoid this, it should be turned over two or 
three times if practicable, and well moistened — preferably with 
farm-yard draining*. 

Cow dung is less fertilizing than horse dung, but being slower in 
its action it is more durable; it is also cooler, and therefore better 
for hot dry sandy soils. Thoroughly decayed, it is one of the best of 
all manures for mixing in. composts for florists' flowers and other 
choice plants. 

Pig qunf is very powerful, containing more nitrogen than horse 
dung; it is therefore desirable that it should undergo moderate 
fermentation, which will be secured by mixing it with litter and a 
portion of earth. When weeds are thrown to the pigs, this fermenta- 
tion becomes specially desirable to kill their seeds. 

Night-soil is an excellent manure for all bulky crops, but requires 
to be mixed with earth or peat, or coal-ashes, so as both to deodorize 
it and to ensure its being equally distributed. Quicklime should not 
be used, as it dispels the greater part of the ammonia. When 
prepared by drying and mixing with various substances, night-soil 
is sold as desiccated night-soil or native guano, the value of which 
depends upon the materials used for admixture. 

Malt-dust is an active manure frequently used as a top-dressing, 
especially for fruit trees in pots. It is rapid in its action, but its 
effects arc not very permanent. Rape dust is somewhat similar in its 
character and action. 

Bones arc employed as a manure with decided advantage both to 
vegetable crops and to fruit trees, as well as to flowers. For turnips 
bone manure is invaluable. The effects of bones are no doubt 
mainly due to the phosphates they contain, and they are most 
effectual on dry soils. They are roost quickly available when dis- 
solved in sulphuric acid. 

Cuano is a valuable manure now much employed, and may be 
applied to almost ottvy kind of crop with decided advantage. It 
should be mixed with six or eight times its weight of loam or ashes, 
charred peat, charcoal-dust or some earthy matter, before it is 
applied to the soil, as from its causticity it is otherwise not unlikely 
to kill or injure the plants to which it is administered. Peruvian 

Sano is obtained from the excreta of South American sea-birds, and 
b guano from the waste of fish. Both are remarkable for the 
quantity of nitrates and phosphates they contain. 

Pigeon dung approaches guano in its power as manure. It should 
be laid up in ridges of good loamy soil in alternate layers to form a 
compost, which becomes a valuable stimulant for any very choice 
subjects if cautiously used. The dung of the domestic fowl is very 
similar in character. 

Horn, hoof-parings, woollen rags, fish, blubber and blood, after treat- 
ment with sulphuric acid, are all good manures, and should be utilized 
if readily obtainable. 



the constituents of manures generally, since it is the chief source 
whence plants derive their nitrogen. It is largely supplied in all the 
most fertilizing of organic manures, but when required in the in* 
organic state must be obtained from some of the salts of ammonia, as 
the sulphate, the muriate or the phosphate, all of which, being 
extremely energetic, require to be used with great caution. These 
salts of ammonia may be used at the rate of from 2 to ^ cwt. per acre 
as a top-dressing in moist weather. When dissolved in water they 



754 



HORTICULTURE 



form active liquid manures. The most commonly used nitrogenous 
manures are nitrate of soda, nitrate of potash and sulphate of 
ammonia, the prices of which arc constantly fluctuating. 

Potash and soda are also valuable inorganic manures in the form 
of carbonates, sulphates, silicates and phosphates, but the most 
valuable is the nitrate of potash. The price, however, is generally so 
high that its use is practically nil, except in small doses as a liquid 
manure for choice pot plants. Cheaper substitutes, however, are 
now found in sulphate of potash, and muriate of potash and kainit. 
The two last-named must not be applied direct to growing crops, but 
to the soil some weeks in advance of sowing or cropping. The 
manures of this class are of course of value only in cases where the 
soil is naturally deficient in them. On this account the salts of soda 
are of less importance than those of potash. The value of wood ashes 
as a manure very much depends upon the carbonate and other 
salts of potash which they contain. 

Phosphoric acid, in the form of phosphates, is a most valuable 
plant food, and is absorbed by most plants in fairly large quantities 
from the soil. It induces the earlier production of flowers and 
fruits. In a natural state it is obtained from bones, guano and 
wood ashes; and in an artificial condition from basic slag or Thomas's 
phosphate, coprolites and superphosphate of lime. 

Lime in the caustic state is beneficially applied to soils which 
contain an excess of inert vegetable matter, ana hence may be used 
for the improvement of old garden soils saturated with humus, or 
of peaty soils not thoroughly reclaimed. It does not supply the 
place of organic manures, but only renders that which is present 
available for the nourishment of the plants. It also improves the 
texture of clay soils. 

Gypsum, or sulphate of lime, applied as a top-dressing at the rate 
of 2 to 3 cwt. per acre, has been found to yield good results, 
especially on light soils. It is also employed in the case of liquid 
manures to fix the ammonia. 

Gas lime, after it has been exposed to the air for ajew months is 
an excellent manure on heavy soils. In a fresh state it is poisonous 
and fatal to vegetation, and is often used for this reason to dress land 
infested with wircworms, grubs, club-root fungus, &c. 

Burnt day has a very beneficial effect on clay land by improving 
its texture and rendering soluble the alkaline substances it contains. 
The clay should be only slightly burnt, so as to make it crumble 
down readily; in fact, the fire should not be allowed to break 
through, but should be constantly repressed by the addition of 
material. The burning should be effected when the soil is dry. 

Vegetable refuse of all kinds, when smother-burned in a similar 
way. becomes a valuable mechanical improver of the soil : but the 

Cefcrable course is to decompose it in a heap with quicklime and 
ycrs of earth, converting it into leaf-mould. Potato haulms, and 
club-rooted cabbage crops should, however, never be mixed with 
ordinary clean vegetable refuse, as they would be most likely to 
perpetuate the terrible diseases to which they are subject. The 
refuse of such plants should be burned as early as possible. The ash 
may be used as manure. 

Soot forms a good top-dressing; it consists principally of charcoal, 
but contains ammonia and a smaller proportion of phosphates and 
potash, whence its value as a manure is derived. It should be kept 
dry until required for use. It may also be used beneficially in pre- 
venting the attacks of insects, such as the onion gnat and turnip fly, 
by dusting the plants or dressing the ground with it. 

Common salt acts as a manure when used in moderate quantities, 
but in strong doses is injurious to vegetation. It suits many of 
the esculent crops, as onions, beans, cabbages, carrots, beet-root, 
asparagus, &c; the quantity applied varies from 5 to 10 bushels 
per acre. It is used as a top-dressing sown by the hand. Hyacinths 
and other bulbs derive benefit from slight doses, while to asparagus 
as much as 20 lb to the rood has been used with beneficial effect. 
At the rate of from 6 to 10 bushels to the acre it may be used on 
garden lawns to prevent worm casts. For the destruction of weeds 
on gravel walks or in paved yards a strong dose of salt, applied' 
either dry or in a very strong solution, is found very effective, 
especially a hot solution, but after a time much of it becomes washed 
down, and the residue acts as a manure ; its continued application is 
undesirable, as gravel so treated becomes pasty. 

Garden Tools, 6>c. — Most of these are so well known that we 
shall not discuss them here. They axe, moreover, illustrated 
and described in the catalogues of most nurserymen and dealers 
in horticultural sundries. 

Tallies or Labels.— The importance of properly labelling plants 
can hardly be over-estimated. For ordinary purposes labels of 
wood of various sizes (sold in bundles) are the most convenient. 
These should be wiped with a little white paint or linseed oil, and 
written with a soft lead pencil before the surface becomes dry. 
Copying-ink pencils should not be used, as water will wash away 
the writing. For permanent plants, as trees, roses, &c, metallic 
labels with raised type arc procurable from dealers, and are 
neat, durable and convenient. Permanent labels may also be 
made from sheet lead, the names being punched in by means 



[GARDEN OPERATIONS 

bids, fens, 
iteriab are 



prodnctioo 

l t is one of 
ning opera- 
ted, wfakk 



sof i 

is to be re- 

eproductio* 

olved in the 

iVe may get 



rogeny very 
s degrees of 

a partially 
rpt for some 

thoroughly 
inerich soil, 
e of outdoor 

to cover all 

should only 
1 only a Una 
table degree 

be covered 
iccording to 
nailer seeds 
. under the 

bcinq light 
that is, the 
,nd forwards 

the ground 

them; this 
arden crops, 
more readuy 
. AH seeds 
For tropical 
th a bottom 
i absolutely 
ild hot bed. 
it ; while of 
temperature 
; sown when 
lanuny wkh 



dug up may 
: roots, and, 
rithout much 
e propagated 
re ordinarily 
cy require to 
into parts or 
v examples, 
working fins 



GARDEN OPERATIONS) 

soil in amongst the base of the stems, and giving them time to throw 
out roots before parting them. 

5. By Suckers. — Root suckers are young shoots from the roots of 
plants, chiefly woodypiants, as may often be seen in the case of the 
elm and the plum. The shoots when used for propagation must be 
transplanted with all the roots attached to them, care being taken 
not to injure the parent plant. If they spring from a thick root it is 
not to be wantonly severed, but the soil should be removed and the 
sucker taken off by cutting away a clean slice of the root, which will 
then heal and sustain no narm. Stem suckers are such as proceed 
from the base of the stem, as is often seen in the case of the currant 
and lilac. They should be removed in any case; when required for 
propagation they should be taken with all the roots attached to 
them, and they should be as thoroughly disbudded below ground as 
possible, or they are liable to continue the habit of suckcring. In 
this case, too, the soil should be carefully opened and the shoots re- 
moved with a suckcring iron, a sharp concave implement with long 
iron handle (fig. 14). When the number of roots is limited, the tops 



HORTICULTURE 



755 



Fig. 14. — Suckering Iron. 



<m 



should be shortened, and some care in watering and mulching should 
be bestowed on the plant if it is of value. 

6. By Ru*n*rs.~-Tht young string-like shoots produced by the 
strawberry are a well-known example of runners. The process of 
rooting these runners should be facilitated by fixing them close down 
to the soil, which is doae by small wooden hooked pegs or by stones; 
hair-pins, short lengths of bent wire, &c, may also Be used. After 
the roots are formed, the strings are cut through, and the runners 
become independent plants. 

7. By Proliferous Buds. — Not unlike the runner, though growing 
in a very different way, are the bud-plants formed on the fronds of 
several kinds of ferns belonging to the genera A spleuium, Woodwardia* 
Potystuhum, Lastrea, Adiantum, Cystopieris, &c. In some of these 
(Adiantum coudatum, PotysHchum lejndocauUm) the rachis of the 
frond is lengthened out much like the string of the strawberry 
runner, and bears a' plant at its apex. In others (Potysliekum 
angulart proliferttm) the stipes below and the rachis amongst the 
pinnae develop buds, which are often numerous and crowded. In 
others again {Woodwardia orient aHs, AsbUnium bulbiferum), buds are 
numerously produced on the upper surface of the fronds. These will 
develop on the plant if allowed to remain. For propagation the 
bu\biferous portion is pegged down on the surface of a pot of suitable 
soil ; if kept close in a moist atmosphere, the little buds win soon 
strike root and form independent plants. In Cystopteris the buds 
are deciduous, falling off as the fronds acquire maturity, but, if 
collected and pressed into the surface of a pot of soil and kept close, 
they will grow up into young plants the following season. In some 

f;encra of flowering plants, and notably in Bryophyllum, little plants 
orm on various parts of the leaves. In some Monocotyledons, ordin- 
arily in Chlorophytum, and exceptionally in Phalaenopsis and others, 
new plants arise on the flower stems. 

8. By Layers. — Layering consists in preparing the branch of a 
plant while still attached to the parent, bending it so that the part 
operated on is brought under ground, and then fixing it there by 
means of a forked peg. Some plants root so freely that they need 
only pegging down; but in most casts the arrest of the returning sap 
to form a callus, and ultimately young roots, must be brought about 
artificially, either by twisting the branch, by splitting it, by girding 




Fig. 15.— Propagation by Layers— a, tonguing; 6, ringing. 



it closely with wire, by taking off a ring of bark, or by " tonguing.*' 
In tonguing the leaves are cut off the portion which has to be brought 
under ground, and a tongue or slit is then cut from below upwards 
close beyond a joint, of such length that, when the cut part of the 
layer is pegged an inch or two <or in larger woody subjects 3 or 4 in.) 
below the surface, the elevation of the point of the shoot to an upright 
position may open the incision, and thus set it free, so that it may 



be surrounded by earth to Induce k to form roots. The whole 
branch, except a few buds at the extremity, is covered with soil. 
The best seasons for these operations are early spring and mid- 
summer, that Is, before the sap begins to flow, and after the first 
flush of growth has passed off. One whole summer, sometimes two, 
must elapse before the layers will be fully rooted in the case of woody 
plants; but such plants as carnations and picotees, which are 
usually propagated in this way, in favourable seasons take only a 
few weeks to root, as they are layered towards the end of the bloom- 
ing season in July, and are taken off and planted separately early in 
the autumn. Fig. 15 shows a woody plant with one layer prepared 
by tonguing and another by ringing. 

In general, each shoot makes, one layer, but in plants like the 
Wistaria or Clematis, which make long shoots, what is called serpent- 
ine layering may be adopted; that is, the shoot is taken alternately 
below and above the surface, as frequently as its length permits. 
There must, however, be a joint at the underground part where it is 
to be tongued and pegged, and at least one sound bud in each ex- 
posed part, from which a shoot may be developed to form the top of 



the young plant. 
- Ci 



branch operated on. The branch is to be prepared by ringing or 
notching or wiring as in layering, and a temporary stand made to 
support the vessel which is to contain the soil The vessel may be a 
flower-pot sawn in two, so that the halves may be bound together 
when used, or it may be a flower-pot or box with a side slit which 
will admit the shoot ; this vessel is to be filled compactly with suit- 
able porous earth, the opening at the slit being stopped by pieces of 
slate or tile. The earth must be kept moist, which is perhaps best 
done by a thick mulching of moss, the moss being also bound closely 
over the openings irt the vessel, and all being kept damp by frequent 
syringing*. Gardeners often dispense with the pot, using sphagnum 
moss and leaf-mould only when propagating indtarubbcr plants, 
perpetual carnations, dracaenas, &c. 

10. By Crafts.— Grafting is so extensively resorted to that it is im- 
possible here to notice all its phases. It is perhaps of most import- 
ance as the principal means 01 propagating our hardy kinds of fruit, 
especially the apple and the pear: but the process is the same with 
most other fruits and ornamental hardy trees and shrubs that are 
thus propagated. The stocks are commonly divided into two 
classes:— (1) free stocks, which consist of seedling plants, chiefly 
of the same genus or species as the trees from which the scions are 
taken; and (2) dwarfing stocks, which are of more diminutive 
growth, either varieties of the same species or species of the same or 
some allied genus as the scion, which have a tendency to lessen the 
expansion of the engrafted tree. The French Paradise is the best 
dwarfing stock for apples, and the quince for pears. In determining 
the choice of stocks, the nature of the soil in which the grafted trees 
are to grow should have full weight. In a soil, for example, naturally 
moist, it is proper to graft pears on the quince, because this plant 
not only thrives in such a soil, but serves to check the luxuriance 
thereby produced. The scions should alwavs be ripened portions of 
the wood of the preceding year, selected from healthy parents; in 
the case of shy-bearing kinds, it is better to obtain them from the 
fruitful branches. The scions should be taken off some weeks before 
they are wanted, and half-buried in the earth, since the stock at the 
time of grafting should in point of vegetation be somewhat in advance 
of the graft. During winter, grafts may be conveyed long distances, 
if carefully packed. If they have been six weeks or two months 
separated from the parent plant, they should be grafted low on the 
stock, and the earth should be ridged up round them, leaving only 
one bud of the scion exposed above ground. The best season for 
grafting apples and similar hardy subjects in the open air is in March 
and April ; but it may be commenced as soon a» the sap in the stock 
is fairly in motion* 

Whip-grafting or Tongue-grafting (fig. 16) is the most usual mode 
of performing the operation when there is no great difference in 
thickness between the stock and scion. The stock is beaded off by 
an oblique transverse cut as shown at a, a slice is then pared off the 
side as at b, and on the face of this a tongue or notch is made, the cut 
being in a downward direction; the scion c is pared off in a similar 
way try a single clean sharp cut, and this is notched or tongued in the 
opposite direction as the figure indicates; the two are then fitted 
together as shown at d, 90 that the inner bark of each may come in 
contact at least on one side, and then tied round with damp soft 
bast as at r; next some grafting clay is taken on the forefinger and 
pushed down on each side so as to fill out the space between the 
top of the stock and the graft, and a portion is also rubbed over 
the ligatures on the side where the graft is placed, a handful of the 
clay is then taken, flattened out, and rolled closely round the whole 
point of junction, being finished off to a tapering form both above and 
below, as shown by the dotted line f. To do this deftly, the hands 
should be plunged from time to time in dry ashes, to prevent the clay 
from sticking to them. Various kinds of grafting wax are now 
obtainable, and are a great improvement upon the clay process* 
Some cold mastics become very pliable with the warmth of the hands. 
They are best applied with a piece of flat wood ; or very liquid waaea 
may be applied with a brush. 



756 



HORTICULTURE 



(GARDEN OPERATIONS 



Cleft-grafting (fig. 17) is another method in common uie. The 
ock a is deft down from the horizontal cut d (but not nearly so 



stock 



Fie. 16. — Whip-grafting or Tongue-grafting. 

much as the sketch would indicate), and the scion, when cut to a thin 
wedge form, as shown at c and e, is inserted into the cleft ; the whole 
is then bound up and clayed as in the former case. This is not so 
good a plan as whip-grafting ; it is improved by sloping the stock 
on one side to the size of the graft. 

Croum-grafting or Rind-grafting (fig. 18) is preferable to cleft- 
grafting, inasmuch as it leaves no open spaces in the wood. The 
stock b is cut off horizontally or nearly so in January or February. 
At grafting time a slit is cut in the bark/,/, a wedge-shaped piece of 





Fie. 17.— Oeft-Grafting. 



Fig. 1 8.— Crown-Grafting. 



iron or a small chisel being inserted to raise the bark; the scion is 
then but to the same wedge-shaped form g, h, and inserted in the space 
opened for it between the alburnum and the bark, after which it is 
tied down and clayed or waxed over in the manner already described. 

Side-grafting is performed like whip-grafting, the graft being 
inserted on the side of a branch and not at the cut end of the stock. 
It may be practised for the purpose of changing a part of the tree. 
and is sometimes wry useful for filling out vacant spaces, in trained 
trees especially. 

Inarching is another form of side-grafting. Here the graft is fixed 
to the side of the stock, which is planted or potted close to the plant 
to be worked. The branches are applied to the stock while yet 
attached to the parent tree, and remain so until united. In the 



ease of trained trees, a young shoot is sometimes inarched to its 
parent stem to supply a bi 
in the ordinary way. 



arent stem to supply a "branch where one has not been developed 



For the propagation by grafts of stove and greenhouse plants the 
process adopted a whip-grafting or a modification of it. The parts 
are. however, sometimes so small that the tongue of the graft is 
dispensed with, and the two stems simply pared smooth ana bound 
together. In this way hardy rhododendrons of choice sorts, green- 
house azaleas, the varieties of the orange family, camellias, roses, rare 
conifers, clematises and numerous other plants are increased. 
Raffia — which has taken the place of bast — is generally used for 
tying, and grafting wax is only used occasionally with such plants 
under glass. All grafting of this kind is done in the propagating 
house, at any season when grafts are obtainable in a fit state— the 
plants when operated on being placed in close frames wanned to a 
suitable temperature. Roses and clematis, however, are generally 
grafted from January to March and April. 

Root-grafting is sometimes resorted to where extensive increase b 
an object, or where stem-grafting or other means of prop -gat ion are 
not available. In this case the scion is grafted directly on to a 
portion of the root of some appropriate stock, both graft and stock 



being usually very small; the grafted root is then potted so as to 
cover the point of junction with the soil, and is plunged in the bed 
of the propagating house, where it gets the slight stimulus of a 
gentle bottom heat. Dahlias (fig. 19), pa eon ie s , and Wistarias may be 




Fig. 19.— Root-grafting 
of Dahlia. 



Fig. 20.— Root -grafting of 
Woody Plant. 



grafted by inserting young shoots into the neck of one of the fleshy 
roots of each kind respectively — the best method of doing so being 
to cut a triangular section near the upper end of the root, just large 
enough to admit the young shoot when slightly pared away oa two 
sides to give it a similar form. In the case of large woody plants thus 
worked (fig- 30) the grafted roots, after the operation is completed, 
are planted in nursery beds, so that the upper buds only are exposed 
to the atmosphere, as shown in the figure. 

1 1. By Buds. — Budding is the inserting of a bud of a choice variety 
cut with a portion of bark into the bark of the stock of an inferior 
nature where it is bound gently but firmly. Stone fruits, such as 
peaches, apricots, plums, cherries, &c, are usually propagated in this 
way, as well as roses and many other plants. In the propagating 
house budding may be done at any season when the sap is in motion ; 
but for fruit trees, roses, &c. ( in the open air, it is usually done in July 
or August, when the buds destined for the following year are com- 
pletely formed in the axils of the leaves, and when the bark separates 
freely from the wood it covers. Those buds are to be preferred, as 
being best ripened, which occur on the middle portion of a young 
shoot, and which are quite dormant at the time. 

The simplest and most generally practised form of budding is that 
called shield-budding or T -budding (fig. 21). The operator should be 




Fig. a 1. —Shield-budding. 



provided with a sharp budding knife having a thin ivory or bone 
handle, for raising the bark of the stock. A horizontal incision a 
made in the bark quite down to the wood, and from this a perpen- 
dicular slit is drawn upwards to the extent of perhaps an inch, so that 
the slit has a resemb lan ce to the letter T, as at «. A bod is then cot 
by a dean incision from the tree intended to be propagated, havings 
portion of the wood attached to it. and so that the whole may be 
about 1 in. long, as at d. The bit of wood « must be gently withdrawn, 
care being taken that the bud adheres wholly to the bark or shield, 



GARDEN OPERATIONS) 



HORTICULTURE 



757 



•ft it is called, of which / is a side view. The bark on each side of the 
perpendicular slit being then cautiously opened, as at b, with the 
handle of the knife, the bud and shield are inserted as shown at c. 
The upper tip of the shield is cut off horizontally, and brought to fit 
the bark of the stock at the transverse incision. Slight tics of soft 
cotton wool or worsted, or moist raffia, are then applied. In about a 
month or six weeks the ligatures may be removed or slit with the 
knife to allow for the swelling stem, when, if the operation has been 
successful, the bud will be fresh and full, and the shield firmly 
united to the wood. In the following spring a strong shoot will be 
thrown out, and to prevent its being blown out by the wind, must be 
fastened to a stake, or to the lower portion of the old stock which 
has been left for the purpose. 

To be successful the operation should be performed with a quick 
and light hand, so that no part of the delicate tissues be iniared, as 
would happen if they were (eft for a time exposed, or if the bud were 
forced in like a wedge. The union is effected as in grafting, by means 
of the organixable sap or cambium, and the less this is disturbed until 
the Inner bark of the shield is pressed and fixed against it the better. 
Trees to be grown in the form of a bush are usually budded low down 
on the stem of the stock as near the root as possible to obviate the 
development of wild suckers later on. Standard trees, however, are 
budded on a sturdy young shoot close to the top. In either case the 
Stocks should have been carefully planted at least the previous 
November when the work is to be done in the open air the following 
July or August. 

12. By Branch Cuttings.'- Propagation by cuttings is the mode 
of increase most commonly adopted, next to that by seeds. It is 
effected by talcing a portion from a branch or shoot of the plant, 
and placing it in the soil. There are great differences to be observed 
in the selection and treatment of cuttings. Sometimes soft green 
leafy shoots, as in Verbena (fig. 22, a), are used ; sometimes the shoot* 



Flc. 22.— Propagation by Cuttings. 

must be haff-ripened, and sometimes fully matured. So of the mode 
of preparation ; some will root if cut off or broken off at any point 
and thrust into wet earth or sand in a warm place (fif. 22, a); others 
require to be cut with the utmost care just below a joint or leaf-base, 
and by a keen blade so as to sever the tissues without tearing or 
bruising; and others again after being cut across may be split up for 
a short distance, but there seems to be no particular virtue in this. 
It is usual and in most cases necessary to cut away the lower portion 
of a cutting up to just below the node or joint (fig. 22, b, d, e). The 
internodal parts will not often divide so as to form separate individual 
plants; sometimes, however, this happens; it is said that the 
smallest piece of Torenia asiatka, for instance, will grow. Then as to 
position, certain cuttings grow readily enough if planted outdoors in 
the open soil, some preferring shade, others sunshine, while less 
hardy subjects must be covered with a bell-glass, or must be in a close 
atmosphere with bottom heat, or must have the aid of pure silver 
sand to facilitate their rooting (fig. 22. c). Cuttings should in all 
cases be taken from healthy plants, and from shoots of a moderate 
degree of vigour. It is also important to select leafy growths, and 
hot such, as will at once run up to flower. Young shoots which have 
become moderately firm generally make the best cuttings, but some- 
times the very softest snoots strike more readily. For all indoor 
plants in a growing state spring is a good time for taking cuttings, but 
at any time during the summer months is also favourable if cuttings 
are obtainable. 

Cuttings of deciduous plants should be taken off after the fall 
of the leaf. These cuttings should be about 6 In. to 1 ft. in length, and 
should be planted at once in the ground so as to leave only the top 
with the two or three preserved buds exposed. If a clean stem, 
however, is desired, a longer portion may be left uncovered. Goose- 
berries, currants, roses and many hardy deciduous trees and shrubs 
are easily propagated in this way if the cuttings are inserted in well- 
drained soil about the end of October or early in November. 

Cuttings of growing plants are prepared by removing with a sharp 
knife, and moderately close, the few leaves which would otherwise 
be buried in the soil; they are then cut clean across just below a 
Joint; the fewer the leaves thus removed, however, the better. 




Fig. 23.— Leaf Cuttings. 



as if kept from being exhausted they help to supply the elaborated 
sap out of which the roots are formed. Free-rooting subjects strike 
in any lightish sandy mixture; but difficult subjects should have 
thoroughly well-drained pots, a portion of the soil proper for the 
particular plana made very sandy, and a surfacing of dean sharp 
silver sand about as deep as the length of the cutting. 

Such difficult plants as heaths are reared in silver sand, a stratum 
of which is placed over the sandy peat soil in a specially prepared 
cutting pot, and _ 

thus the cuttings, 
though rooting in 
the sand under a 
bell-glass, find at 
once on the emis- 
sion of roots oon- 
gcnial soil for 
them to grow la 
(fi %■ 

si 
pa 

P r 

cu « 

du 



of 

P*l 

an 

afa 

pa™. „ r , „ 

renewed in this 

way both in spring 

and in autumn. 

13. By Leaf 
Cuttings. — Many 
plants may be pro- 
pagated by plant* 
ing their leaves or portions of the leaves as cuttings, as, for example, 
the Gloxinia, (fig. 23, a) and Gesnera, the succulent Sempenivum, 
Bcheveria. Pachypkytum and their allies, and such hard-leaved plants 
as Tkeopkrasta (fig. 23, b). The leaves are best taken off with the 
base whole, and should be planted in well-drained sandy soil; in 
due time they form roots, and ultimately from some latent bud 
a little shoot which forms the young plant. The treatment is 
precisely like diat of branch cuttings. Gloxinias, bcgonias„&c., grow 
readily from fragments of the leaves cut clean through the thick 
veins and ribs, and planted edgewise like cuttings. This class of 
subjects may also be fixed flat on the surface of the cutting pot, by 
means of little pegs or hooks, the 

main ribs being cut across at in- 
tervals, and from these points roots, 
and eventually young tubers, will be r-, 
produced (fig. 24). / ' 

14. By Root Cuttings.— Some « < 
plants which are not easily increased \ 
by' other means propagate readily 
from root cuttings. Amongst the 
indoor plants which may be 90 
treated, Bouvardia t Pdargonium, 
Aratia and Wigandta may be men- 
tioned. The modus operandi is to Fig. 24, — Leaf- Propagation of 
turn the plant out of its pot, Begonia. 

shake away the soil so as to free 

the roots, and then select as many pieces of the stouter roots as may 
be required. These are cut up into half-inch lengths (more or less}, 
and inserted in light sandy soil round the margin 01 a cutting pot, so 
that the upper end of the root cutting may be level with the soil or 
only just covered by it. The pots should be watered so as to settle the 
soil, and be placed in the dose atmosphere of the propagating pit or 

1 

■ similarly 
1 mamcntal 

I , Bocconia 

1 tea hollies 

( ital poppy 

I xo fukher, 

i 1 tne open 

f es in well- 

1 ed in pots 

mg shoots 



1 

lis way, as 
J ^st shrubs. 

n is put is, 

1 . -— r .-..is used as 

stocks for working the choicer stone fruits. The method in the 
latter case is to select roots averaging the thickness of the little 
finger, to cut these into lengths of about 3 or 4 in., and to plant them 



758 



HORTICULTURE 



(GARDEN OPERATIONS 




Fio. 25.— Cutting of Single Eye. 



tn tines just beneath the surface in nursery beds. The root cuttings 
of rose-stocks are prepared and treated in a similar way. 

<S* By Cuttings of Single Eyes. — This mode of propagation is 
by cutting the ripened young branches into short lengths, each con- 
taining one well-matured bud or eye, with a short portion of the 

stem above and below. 
"* It is a common mode of 

propagating vines, the 
eyes being in this case 
cut from the ripened 
leafless wood. The eyes 
(fig. 25, o) are planted 
just below the surface, in 
pots of light soil, which 
are* placed in a hot bed 
or propagating pit, and 
in due time each pushes 
\ / up a young shoot which 
forms the future stem, 
while from about jta 
base the young roots are 
produced (fig. 25, b) 
which convert it into 
an independent plant. 
In the case of plants 
with persistent leaves, 
the stem may be cut 
through just above and 
below the bud, retaining 
the leaf which is left on 
the cutting, the old 
wood and eye being 
* placed beneath the soil 
and the leaf left ex- 
posed. In this way the 
india-rubber tree (Fiats 
elastica), for example* 
and many ether tender 
plants may be increased 
with the aid of a brisk 
bottom heat. Many of 
the free-growing soft-wooded plants may also be grown from cut- 
tings of single joints of the young wood, where rapid increase is 
desired; and in the case of orjposite-lcaved plants two cuttings 
may often be made from one joint by splitting the stem longi- 
tudinally, each cutting consisting of a leaf and a perfect bud 
attached to half the thickness of the stem. 

Planting and Transplanting.— In preparing a fruit tree for 
transplantation, the first thing to be done is to open a trench 
round it at a distance of from 3 to 4 ft., according to sire. The 
trench should be opened to about two spades' depth, and any 
coarse roots which may extend thud far from the trunk may be 
cut clean off with a sharp knife, The soil between the trench 
and the stem is to be reduced as far as may seem necessary or 
practicable by means of a digging fork, the roots as soon as they 
are liberated being fixed on one side and carefully preserved. 
By working in this way all round the ball, the best roots will be 
got out and preserved, and the ball lightened of all superfluous 
soil. The tree will then be ready to lift if carefully prised up from 
beneath the ball, and if it does not lift readily, it will probably 
be found that a root has struck downwards, which will have to 
be sought out and cut through. Whenever practicable, it is best 
to secure a ball of earth round the roots. On the tree being lifted 
from its hole the roots should be examined, and all which have 
been severed roughly with the spade should have U16 ends cut 
smooth with the knife to facilitate the emission of fibres. The 
tree can then be transported to its new position. The bole for its 
reception should be of sufficient depth to allow the base of the 
ball of earth, or of the roots, to stand so thatthe point whence the 
uppermost roots spring from the stem may be 2 or 3 in. below 
the general surface level. Then the bottom being regulated so 
as to leave the soil rather highest in the centre, the plant is to 
be set in the hole in the position desired, and steadied there by 
hand. Next the roots from the lower portion of the ball are to 
be sought out and laid outwards in lines radiating from the stem, 
being distributed equally on all sides as nearly as this can be done; 
some fine and suitable good earth should be thrown amongst 
the roots as they are thus being placed, and worked in well 
up to the base of the ball. The soil covering the roots may be 
gently pressed down, but the tree should not be pulled up and 
down, as is sometimes done, to settle the soiL This done, 



another set of roots higher up the ball must be laid out ia Lb* 
same way, and again another, until the whole of the roots, Una 
carefully laid, are embedded as firmly as may be in the soil, which 
may now receive another gentle treading. The stem should 
next be supported permanently, either by one stake or by three, 
according to its size. The excavation will now be filled up about 
two-thirds perhaps; and if so the tree may have a thorough 
good watering, sufficient to settle the soil closely about its roots. 
After twenty-four hours the hole may be levelled in, with 
moderate treading, if the water has soaked well in, the surface 
being left level and not sloping upwards towards the stem of the 
tree. In transplanting trees of the ornamental class, less need 
be attempted in respect to providing new soil, although the soil 
should be made as congenial as practicable. Generally speaking, 
fruit trees are best transplanted when three or four years of age, 
in which time they will have acquired the shape given by the 
nurseryman, who generally transplants his stock each autumn 
to produce large masses of root fibres. Nowadays, however, 
quite large trees, chiefly of an ornamental character, and perhaps 
weighing several tons, are lifted with a large ball of soil attached 
to the roots, by means of a special tree-lifting machine, and are 
readily transferred from one part of the garden to another, or 
even for a distance of several miles, without serious injury. 
The best season for transplanting deciduous trees is during 
the early autumn months. As regards evergreens opinions are 
divided, some preferring August and September, others April 
or May. They can be successfully planted at either- period, but 
for subjects which are at all difficult to remove the spring 
months are to be preferred. v, 

In transplanting smaller subjects, such as plants for the flower 
garden, much less effort is required. The plant must be lifted 
with as little injury to its rootlets as possible, and carefully set 
into the hole, the soil being filled in round it, and carefully 
pressed close by the hand. For moving small plants the garden 
trowel is a very convenient tool, but we are inclined to give the 
preference to the hand-fork. For larger masses, such as strong- 
growing herbaceous plants, a spade or digging-fork will be 
requisite and the soil may be trodden down with the feet. 

When seedlings of vigorous plants have to be " pricked out," 
a dibble or dibber is the best implement to be used. The ground 
being prepared and, if necessary, enriched, and the surface made 
fine and smooth, a hole is made with the dibble deep enough and 
large enough to receive the roots of the seedling plants without 
doubling them up, and the hole is filled in by working the soil close 
to the plant with the point of the dibble. The pricking but of 
seedlings in pots in the propagating pit is effected in a similar 
way. The plants, indeed, often require to be removed and set 
from I in. to x in. apart before they have become sufficiently 
developed to admit of being handled with any* degree of facility, 
and for these a pointed stick of convenient size is used as a dibble. 
In delicate cases, such as seedling gloxinias and begonias, it is 
best to lift the little seedling on the end of a flattish pointed 
stick, often cleft at the apex, pressing this into the new soil where 
the plant is to be placed, and liberating it and closing the earth 
about it by the aid of a similar stick held in the other hand. 

Potting and Repotting.— Garden pots are made with a com- 
paratively large bole in the bottom, and those of the largest size 
have also holes at the side near the bottom; these openings 
are to prevent the soil becoming satu- 
rated qr soured with superabundant 
water. To prepare the pot for the 
plant, a broadish piece of potsherd, 
called a " crock," is placed over the 
large hole, and if there be side holes 
they also are covered. The bottom 
crock is made from a piece of a broken 
garden pot, and is laid with the con- 
vex side upwards; then comes a layer FlG 36 —Section of Pot 
of irregular pieces of crock of various showing Crocks, 
sizes, about 1 in. deep in a 5-in. pot, 
2 in. in an n-in. or xs-in. pot, &c. The mode of crocking a 
pot is shown in fig.. 26. A few of the coarser lumps from the outer 




GARDEN OPERATIONS) 



HORTICULTURE 



759 



edge of the heap of potting toil are spread over the crocks. 
The same end, that of keeping the finer particles of the soil from 
muting with the drainage crocks, may be attained by shaking 
in a little dean moss. A handful or two of the soil is then put 
in, and on this the plant with its roots spread out is to be set, a 
trifle higher than the plant should stand in the, pot when finished 
off; more soil is to be added, and the whole pressed firmly with 
the fingers, the base of the stem being just below the pot- rim, 
and the surface being smoothed on* so as to slope a little outwards. 
When finished off, the pots should be watered well, to settle the 
soil; but they should stand till the water has well drained away, 
since, if they are moted about while the fresh soil is very wet, 
there will be a risk of its becoming puddled or too much con- 
solidated: Larger plants do not need quite such delicate treat- 
ment, but care should be taken not to handle the roots roughly. 
The soil for these may be somewhat coarser, and the amount of 
drainage material more ample. Larger bodies of soil also require 
to be more thoroughly consolidated before watering; otherwise 
they would settle down so as to leave an unsightly void at the 
pot-rim. 

Some plants, especially when potted temporarily, may be 
dealt with in a simpler way. A single crock may be used in some 
cases, and in others no -crock at all, but a handful of half -decayed 
leaves or half-decayed dung thrown into the bottom of the pot. 
This mode of potting does well for bulbs, such as hyacinths, 
which are either thrown away or planted out when the bloom 
is over. The bedding plants generally may be potted in this way, 
the advantage being that at planting-out time there is less risk 
of disturbing the roots than if there were potsherds to remove. 
Plants of thi* character should be potted a little less irmly than 
specimens which are likely to stand long in the pot, and indeed the 
soil shoutf be made comparatively light by the intermixture 
of leaf-mould or some equivalent, in order that the roots may run 
freely and quickly into it. 

For epiphytal plants like orchids the most thorough drainage 
must be secured by the abundant use of potsherds, small pots 
being sometimes inserted inside the larger ones, or by planting 
in shallow pots or pans, so that there shall be no large mass of soil 
to get consolidated. For most of these the lightest spongy but 
sweet turfy peat must be used, this being packed lightly about 
the roots, and built up above the pot-rim, or in some cases freely 
mixed before use with chopped sphagnum moss and small pieces 
of broken pots or nodules of charcoal. The plants under these 
conditions often require to be supported by wooden pegs or sticks. 
Some of the species grow better when altogether taken out of 
(he soil and fixed to blocks of wood, but in this case they require 
a little coaxing with moss about the roots until they get estab- 
lished. In other cases they are planted in open baskets of wood 
or wire, using the porous peat and sphagnum compost. Doth 
blocks and baskets are usually suspended from the roof of the 
house, hanging free, so that no accumulation of water is possible. 
These conditions of orchid-growing have undergone great changes 
of late years, and the plants are growm much as other stove and 
greenhouse plants in ordinary pots with composts not only of peat 
but of leaf-mould, and fibres from osmonda and polypodium 
ferns. 

When repotting is adopted as a temporary expedient, as in 
the case of bedding-out plants which it is required to push for- 
ward as much as possible, it will suffice if provision is made to 
prevent the drainage hole from getting blocked, and a rich light 
compost is provided for the encouragement of the roots. When, 
however, a hard-wooded plant has to be repotted, the ease is 
different; it may stand without farther potting for one yen 
er two years or more, and therefore much more care is necessary. 
The old ball of earth must be freed from all or most of the old 
crocks without doing injury to the roots, and the sharp edge of 
the upper surface gently rubbed off. If there be any sour er 
sodden or effete soil into wbkh the roots have not run, this 
should be carefully picked out with a pointed stick. The ball 
is to- be set on the new soil just high enough* that when finished 
the base of the stem may be somewhat below the pot-rim, and 
the space between the old ball and the akfes of the pot is to 



be filled in gradually with the prepared compost, which is from 
time to time to be pressed down with a blunt-ended flat piece 
of wood called a potting-stick, so as to render the new soil as 
solid as the o)d. The object of this is to prevent the plant from 
starving by the water applied all running off by way of the new 
soil, and not penetrating the original ball of earth, When this 
amount of pressure is necessary, especially in the case of loamy 
composts, the soil itself should be rather inclined to dryness, and 
should in no case be sufficiently moist to knead together into a 
pasty mass. In ordinary cases the potting soil should be just so 
far removed from dryness that when a handful is gently pressed 
it may hang together, but may lose its cohesion when dropped* 

When plants are required to stand in ornamental china pots 
or vases, it b better, both for the plants and for avoiding risk 
of breakage, to grow them in ordinary garden pots of a size that 
will drop into the more valuable vessels. Slate pots or tubs, 
usually square, are sometimes adopted, and are durable and 
otherwise unobjectionable, only, their sides being less porous, the 
earth does not dry so rapidly* and some modification of treatment 
as to watering is necessary. For large conservatory specimens 
wooden tubs, round or square, are frequently used; these should 
be coated with pitch inside to render them more durable. 

Various other contrivances take the place of garden pots for 
special purposes. Thus shallow square or oblong wooden 
boxes, made of light, inexpensive wood, are very useful for seed- 
sowing, for pricking out seedlings, or for planting cuttings. 
When the disturbance of the roots incidental to all transplanting 
is sought to be avoided, the seed or plant is started in some 
cases in squares of turf (used grassy-side downwards), which can 
when ready be transferred to the place the plant is to occupy* 
Cucumber and melon plants and vines reared from eyes are some- 
times started in this way, both for the reason above mentioned 
and because it prevents the curling of the roots apt to take 
place in plants raised in pots. Strips of turf are sometimes used 
for the rearing of early peas, which are sown in a warmish house 
or frame, and gradually hardened so as to bear exposure before 
removal to the open air. 

Watering. — The guiding principle ia watering plants is to do 
it thoroughly when it is required, and to abstain from giving 
a second supply till the first has been taken up. 

When watering becomes necessary for kitchen-garden crops, 
the hose should be laid on and the lines of esculents allowed to 
drink their fill, if fresh succulent vegetables are desired. So also, 
if well-swelled and luscious fruits, such as strawberries, are 
required, there must be no parching at the roots. This applies 
even more strongly to conservatory borders and to forcing- 
houses than to the outside fruit-tree borders, because from these 
the natural rain supply is in most cases more distinctly cut off. 
In the case of forcing-houses, the water should be heated before 
being applied to the borders containing the loots of the trees. 

In the watering of pot plants the utmost care is requisite if 
the plant be a shy-growing or valuable one, and yet it is almost 
impossible to give any intelligible Instruction for performing 
the operation. The roots should never be suffered either to get 
thoroughly dry or to get sodden with' excess of water. An adept 
will know by the ring of the pot on striking it with his knuckles 
whether Water is wanted or not, according as it rings loud and 
clear or dull and heavy. With very choice subjects watering 
may be necessary two or three times a day in drying summer 
weather. It is a wrong though common practice to press the 
surface of the soil in the pot in order to feel if it is moist enough, 
as this soon consolidates it, and prevents it from getting the full 
benefit of aeration. 

In all heated houses the water used should be warmed at 
least up to the temperature of the atmosphere, so as to avoid 
chilling the foots. This is also necessary in the case of water 
used for syringing the plants, which should be done two or three 
times a day in all stoves and forcing-houses, especially during 
the period when the young growth is being developed. The 
damping of all absorbent surfaces, such as the floors or bare 
walls, &c, n frequently necessary several times a day In the 
growing season, so as to fceer) up * humid atmosphere; hence 



760 



HORTICULTURE 



(GARDEN OPERATIONS 



the advantage of laying the floors a little rounded, as then the 
water draws off to the sides against the kerbstone, while the 
centre remains dry for promenaders. 

In cooler structures it becomes necessary in the dull season 
of the year to prevent the slopping of water over the plants 
or on the floor, as this tends to cause "damping off,"— the 
stems assuming a state of mildewy decay, which not infrequently, 
if it onoe attacks a plant, will destroy it piece by piece. For 
the same reason cleanliness and free ventilation under favourable 
weather conditions are of great importance. 

Pruning. — Pruning is a very important operation in the 
fruit garden, its object being twofold — (x) to give form to the 
tree, and (2) to induce the free production of flower buds as the 
precursors of a plentiful crop of fruit. To form a standard tree, 
either the stock is allowed to grow up with a straight stem, by 
cutting away all side branches up to the height required, say 
about 6 ft., the scion or bud being worked at that point, and 
the head developed therefrom; or the stock is worked close 
to the ground, and the young shoot obtained therefrom is allowed 
to grow up in the same way, being pruned in its progress to 
keep it single and straight, and the top being cut off when the 
desired height is reached, so as to cause the growth of lateral 
shoots. If these are three or four in number, and fairly balanced 
as to strength and position, little pruning will be required. 
The tips of unripened wood should be cutback about one-third 
their length at an outwardly placed bud, and the chief pruning 
thereafter required will be to cut away inwardly directed shoots 
which cross or crowd each other and tend to confuse the centre 
of the tree. Bushy heads should be thinned out, and those 
that are too large cut back so as to remodel them. If the shoots 
produced are not sufficient in number, or are badly placed, or 
very unequal in vigour, the head should be cut back moderately 
dose, leaving a few inches only of the young shoots, which should 
be pruned back to buds so placed as to furnish shoots in the 
positions desired. When worked at the top of a stem formed 
of the stock, the growth from the graft or bud must be pruned 
in a similar way. Three or four leading shoots should be selected 
to pass ere long into boughs and form a well-balanced framework 
for the tree; these boughs, however, will soon grow beyond 
any artificial system the pruner may adopt. 

To form a dwarf or bush fruit tree the stock must Be 'worked 
near the ground, and the young shoot produced from the scion 
or bud must be cut back to whatever height it is desired the 
dwarf stem should be, say x§ to 2 ft. The young shoots produced 
from the portion of the new wood retained are to form the 
framework of the bush tree, and must be dealt with as in the 
case of standard trees. The growth of inwardly directed shoots 



Fig. 27.— Dwarf-Tree Pruning. 

is to be prevented, and the centre kept open, the tree assuming 
a cup-shaped outline. Fig. 27, reduced from M. Hardy's 



excellent work, Train de la tattle des arbre: fruiliars, will give 
a good idea how these dwarf trees are to be manipulated, a 
showing the first year's development from the maiden tree after 
being headed back, and b the form assumed a year or two later. 
In forming a pyramidal tree, the lateral growths, instead of 
being removed, as in the standard tree, are encouraged to 
the utmost; and in order to strengthen them the upper part 
of the leading shoot is removed annually, the side branches 
being also shortened somewhat as the tree advances in size. 
In fig. 28, reduced from M. Hardy's work, o shows a young 



FIG. 28.— Pyramid Pruning. 

tree with its second year's growth, the upright shoot of the maiden 
tree having been moderately headed back, being left longer 
if the buds near the base promise to break freely, or cut shorter 
if they are weak and wanting in vigour. The winter pruning, 
carried out with the view to shape the tree into a well-grown 
pyramid, would be effected at the places marked by a cross line. 
The lowest branch would have four buds retained, the end one 
being on the lower side of the branch. The two next would be 
cut to three buds, which here also are fortunately so situated 
that the one to be left is on the lower side of the branches. 
The fourth is not cut at all owing to its shortness and weakness, 
its terminal bud being allowed to grow to draw strength into it. 
The fifth is an example where the bud to which the shoot should 
be cut back is badly placed; a shoot resulting from a bud left 
on the upper side is apt instead of growing outwards to grow 
erect, and lead to confusion in the form of the tree; to avoid 
this it is tied down in its proper place during the summer by a 
small twig. The upper shoots are cut closer in. Near the base 
of the stem are two prominent buds, which would produce two 
vigorous shoots, but these would be too near the ground, and 
the buds should therefore be suppressed; but, to strengthen 
the lower part, the weaker buds just above and below the lowest 
branch should be forced into growth, by making a transverse 
incision close above each. Fig. 28, &, shows what a similar tree 
would be at the end of the third year's growth. 



GARDEN OPERATIONS! 



HORTICULTURE 



In order to bring a young free into the cordon thane, aH its 
aide branches are shortened back, either to form permanent 
spurs, as in the case of pears, or to yield annual young shoots, 
as in peaches and nectarines. The single-stemmed cordon may 
be trained horizontally, obliquely at any required angle, or 
vertically if required, the first two arrangements being preferable. 
If a double cordon is required, the original young stem must be 
beaded back, and the two best shoots produced must be selected, 
trained right and left, and treated as for the single cordon. 

The forms chiefly adopted for trees trained to walls and 
espalier rails are the tan-shaped, the half-fan and the horizontal, 
with their various modifications. 

The maiden tree is beaded down, and two shoots led away 
right and left. Two laterals should be allowed to grow from 
the upper side of them, one from near the base, the other from 
near the middle, all others being pinched out beyond the second 
or third leaf during summer, but cut away to the last bud in 
winter. The tree will thus consist of six shoots, probably j ft. 
to 4 fL long, which are not to be pruned unless they are unequal 
m strength, a defect which is rather to be remedied by summer 
pinching than by winter pruning. The second year three young 
shoots are to be left on each of the six, one dose to the base, 
one about the middle, and one at the point, the rest being rubbed 
off. These three shoots will produce laterals, of which one or 
two may be selected and laid in; and thus a number of moder- 
ately strong fertile shoots will be obtained, and at the end of 
the season a comparatively large tree will be the result. 

The method of pruning formerly adopted for the formation 
of a fan-shaped tree was to head down the maiden plant to 
about two eyes, so placed as to yield a young shoot on each 
side (fig. 29), the supernumerary shoots being rubbed off while 
quite young, and the reserved shoots trained against the wall 





Fig. 30.— Pruning for Fan* 
shaped Tree. 



Fie. 30.— The same- 
third year. 



during the summer so as to get them well matured. The next 
year they were cut back again, often nearly to the base, in 
order that the lower pair of these shoots might each produce 
two well-placed young shoots, and the upper pair three young 
shoots. The tree would thus consist of ten shoots, to be laid 
out at regular distances, and then if closely cut the frame-work 
of the tree would fan as in fig. 30. These main shoots were not 
again to be shortened back, but from each of them three young 
shoots were to be selected and trained in two, on the upper side, 
one near the base, and the other halfway up, and one on the lower 
side placed about midway between these two; these with the 
leading shoot, which was also to be nailed in, made four branches 
of the current year from each of the ten main branches, and 
the form of the tree would therefore be that of fig. 31. The 

other young shoots 
produced were 
•pinched off while 
quite young, to throw 
all the strength of 
the tree into those 
which were to form 
its basis, and to secure 
abundant light and 
air. In after years 
the leading shoot was 
Fig. 31-The same-fourth year. not to be cut back, but 

all the lateral shoots 
were to be shortened, and from these year by year other shoots 
were to be selected to fill up the area occupied by the tree. 




761 



In priming for a horizontal tree the young maiden tree has 
to be headed back nearly to its base, and from the young snoots 
three are to be selected, the two best-placed lower ones to form 
an opposite or nearly opposite pair of main branches, and the 
beat-placed upper one to continue the erect stem (fig. 3a). This 
upper shoot is at the next winter pruning to be cut down to 
within about a foot of the point whence it sprung, and its buds 
rubbed off except the upper one for a leader, and one on each 
side Just below it to furnish another pair of side shoots; these 
being trained in position, the tree would -appear as in fig. 33. 



-a^JU^-- 

Fio. 32.— Pruning for 
Horizontally trained Tree. 




Fio. 33-.— The sa 
third year. 



The same course is to be followed annually tul the space is filled. 
Sometimes in very favourable soils and with vigorous trees 
two pairs of branches may be obtained in one season by summer- 
stopping the erect shoots and selecting others from the young 
growths thus induced, but more commonly the trees have to 
be built up by forming one pair of branches annually. The 
shoots are not at first lowered to the horizontal Hne, but are 
brought down gradually and tied to thin stakes; and while 
the tree is being formed weak shoots may be allowed to grow 
in a more erect position than it is ultimately intended they 
should occupy. . Thus in four Or five years the tree will have 




Fie. 34.— The same— fifth year, 

acquired something of the character of fig. 34, and will go on 
thus increasing until the space is filled. 

The half-fan is a combination of the two forms, but as regards 
pruning does not materially differ from the horizontal, as two 
opposite side branches are produced in succession upwards 
till the space is filled, only they are not taken out so abruptly, 
but are allowed to rise at an acute angle and then to curve 
into the horizontal line. 

In all the various forms of cordons, in horizontal training, 
and in fan and half-fan training, the pruning of the main branches 
when the form of the tree is worked out will vary in accordance 
with the kind of fruit under treatment. Thus in the peach, 
nectarine, apricot, plum and cherry, which are commonly 
trained fan-fashion, the first three (and also the morcllo cherry 
if grown) will have to be pruned so as to keep a succession of 
young annual shoots, these being their fruit-bearing wood. 
The others are generally pruned so as to combine a moderate 
supply of young wood with a greater or less number of fruit 
spurs. In the pear and apple the fruit is borne principally on 
spurs, and hence what is known as spur-pruning has to be 
adopted, the young shoots being all cut back nearly to their 
base, so as to cause fruit buds to evolve from the remaining 
eyes or buds. Cordons of apples and pears have to be similarly 
treated, but cordons of peaches and nectarines are pruned so as 
to provide the necessary annual succession of young bearing 
wood. 



762 



HORTICULTURE 



(GARDEN OPERATIONS 





Fruit trees trained as espaliers, fans or cordons against walls, 
trellises or fences, are not only pruned carefully in the winter 
but must be also pruned during the early summer months. 
Many of the smaller, useless shoots are rubbed out altogether; 
the best are allowed to grow perhaps' a foot or more in length, 
and then either have the tips pinched out with the finger and 
thumb, or the ends may be cracked or broken, and allowed 
lo hang down, but are not detached completely. This is called 
summer pruning, and is an important operation requiring 
knowledge on the part of the gardener to perform properly. 
Shoots of peaches, nectarines and morello cherries are "laid 
in," that is, placed in between fruiting shoots where there is the 
space to be ripened for next year's crop. 

Summer Pruning should be performed while the shoots arc yet 
young and succulent, so that they may in most cases be nipped 
off with the thumb-nail. It is very necessary in the case of trees 
trained to a flat surface, as a wall or espalier rail, to prevent 
undue crowding. In some cases , as, for example, with peaches, 
the superfluous shoots arc wholly removed, and certain selected 
shoots reserved to supply bearing wood for next year. -In others, 
as pears, the tops of the young slpots are 
removed, leaving three or four leaves 
and their buds at the base, to be de- 
veloped into fruit buds by the additional 
nourishment thus 
thrown into them 
(fig. 35, a). One 
or two may push 
out a late summer 
growth, 6; this 
will serve as a 

_ „ - . . ,. vent for the vigour 

Fie. 35.— Summer Pruning for Spurs. of lhe tree> ^j 

if the lowermost only go to the formation of a fruit spur, the 
object will have been gained. They are cut to the last dormant 
bud in winter. 

But summer pruning has been much extended since the 
introduction of restricted growth and the use of dwarfing stocks. 
Orchard-house trees, and also pyramidal and bush trees of apples, 
pears and plums, are mainly fashioned by summer pruning; 
in fact, the less the knife is used upon them, except in the 
necessary cutting of the roots in potted trees, the better. In 
the case of orchard-house plants no shoots are suffered to lengthen 
out, except as occasionally wanted to fill up a gap in the outline 
of the tree. On the contrary, the tops of all young shoots are 
pinched off when some three or four leaves are formed, and this 
is done again and again throughout the season. When this 
pruning is just brought to a balance with the vigour of the roots, 
the consequence is that fruit buds are formed all over the tree, 
instead of a thicket of sterile and useless wood. Pyramidal 
and bush trees out of doors arc, of course, suffered to become 
somewhat larger, and sufficient wood must be allowed to grow 
to give them the form desired; but after the first year or two, 
when the framework is laid out, they are permitted to extend 
very slowly, and never to any great extent, while the young 
growths are continually nipped off, so as to clothe the branches 
with fruit buds as closely placed as will permit of their healthy 
development. 

The nature of the cut itself In pruning is of more consequence, 
especially in the case of fruit trees, than at first sight may appear. 
The branches should be separated by a clean cut at an angle* of 
about 45°, just at the back of a bud, the cut entering on a level 
with the base of the bud and passing out on a level with its 
top (fig. 36, a), for when cut in this way the wound becomes 
rapidly covered with new wood, as soon as growth recommences, 
whereas if the cut is too close the bud is starved, or if less close an 
ugly and awkward snag is left. Fig 36, b and c, arc examples of 
the former, and d, e, f of the latter. In fact there is only one 
right way to cut a shoot and that is as shown at a. 

The Pruning of flowering plants is generally a much lighter 
matter than the pruning of fruit trees. If a young seedling 
or cutting of any soft-wooded plant is to be bushy it must have 



its top nipped out by the thumb-nail or praning-scissors at a 
very early stage, and this stopping must be repeated frequently. 
If what is called a well-furnished plant is required, an average 
of from a to 3 ink is all the extension that must be permitted— 




Fig. 36.— Cuts— Good and Bad. 

sometimes scarcely so much— before the top is nipped out; and 
this must be continued until the desired size is attained, whether 
that be large or small. Then generally the plant is allowed to 
grow away till bloom or blooming shoots are developed. To 
form a pyramidal plant, which is a very elegant and usefal 
shape to give to a decorative pot plant, the main stem should 
be encouraged to grow upright, for a length perhaps of 6 or 8 in. 
before H is topped; this induces the formation of laterals, and 
favours their development. The best-placed upper young shoot 
is selected and trained upright to a slender stake, and this also 
is topped when it has advanced 6 or 8 in. farther, in order to 
induce the laterals on the second portion to push freely. This 
process is continued till the requited size is gained. With all the 
difficult and slow-growing plants of the hard- wooded section, all 
the pruning must be done in this gradual way in the young wood 
as the plant progresses. 

Some plants, like pelargoniums, can only be kept handsomely 
formed and well furnished by cutting them down severely every 
season, after the blooming is over. The plants should be prepared 
for this by keeping them rather dry at the root, and after cutting 
they must stand with little or no water till the stems heal over, 
and produce young shoots, or " break," as it is technically termed. 
The appearance of a specimen pelargonium properly pruned is 
shown in fig. 37, in which a shows a young plant, the head of 
which has been 
taken off to form 
a cutting, and 
whose buds are 
ready to break 1 
into young ' 
shoots. Three 
shoots will be 
produced, arid 
these, after 
growing from 4 
to6 in. m length, 
should be stopped by pinching out the point, this giving rise to 
lateral shoots. These will blossom in due course, and, after being 
ripened thoroughly by full exposure to the sun, should be cut 
back as shown at b. This is the proper foundation for a good 
specimen, and illustrates how all such subjects should be pruned 
to keep them stocky and presentable in form. 

Root-prtmirtg\smost commonly practised in fruit-tree cultiva- 
tion. It is often resorted to as a means of restoring fertility in 
plants which have become over rank from an excess of nourishment 
in the soil, or sterile from want of it. The effect of root-pruning 
in the first case is to reduce the supply of crude sap lo the 
branches, and consequently to cause a check in their develop- 
ment. In the second case all roots that have struck downwards 
into a cold uncongenial subsoil must be pruned off tf they cannot 
be turned in a lateral direction, and all the lateral ones that 
have become coarse and fibreless must also be shortened back by 
means of a clean cut with a sharp knife, while a compost of rich 
loamy soil with a little bone-meal, and leaf -mould or old manure, 
should be filled into the trenches from which the old sterile 
soil has been taken. The operation is best performed early in 
autumn, and may be safely resorted to in the case of fruit trees 



Fig. 37. 




GARDEN OPERATIONS) 



HORTICULTURE 



763 



of moderate age, and even of old trees if due care be exercised 
la transplanting trees all the roots which may have become 
bruised or broken in the process of lifting should be cut clean 
away behind the broken part, as they then more readily strike 
out new roots from the cut parts. In all these cases the cut 
should be a clean sloping one, and made in an upward, and out- 
ward direction. 

The root-pruning of pot-plants is necessary in the case of many 
soft-wooded subjects which are grown on year after year — 
pelargoniums and fuchsias, for example. After the close pruning 
of the branches to which they are annually subjected, and when 
the young shoots have shot forth an inch or two in length, they are 
turned out of their pots and have the old soil shaken away from 
their roots, the longest of which, to the extent of about half the 
existing quantity, are then cut clean away, and the plants 
repotted into small pots. This permits the growing plant to be 
fed with rich fresh soil, without having been necessarily trans- 
ferred' to pots of unwieldy size by the time the flowering stage 
is reached. 

Ringing.— One of the expedients for inducing a state of fruit- 
fulness in trees is the ringing of the branches or stem, that is, 
removing a narrow annular portion of the bark, by which means, 
it is said, the trees are not only rendered productive, but the 
quality of the fruit is at the same time improved. The advantage 
depends on the obstruction given to the descent of the' sap. 
The ring should be cut out in spring, and be of such a width that 
the bark may remain separated for the season. A tight ligature 
of twine or wire answers the same end. The advantages of the 
operation may generally be gained by judicious root pruning, 
and it is not at all adapted for the various stone fruits. 

TVaintwf.— -What is called training is the guiding of the 
branches of a tree or plant in certain positions which they would 
not naturally assume, the object being partly to secure their 
full exposure to light, and partly to regulate the flow and dis- 
tribution of the sap. To secure the former object, the branches 
must be so fixed as to shade each other as little as possible; and 

to realize the 
second, the 
branches must 
have given to 
them an upward 
or downward 
direction, as they 
may require to 
be encouraged 
or repressed. 
Something of the 
same vegetative 
vigour which is 
given to a plant 
or tree by hard 
pruning is afforded by training in an upward direction so as 
to promote the flow of the sap; while the repression effected 
by summer pruning is supplemented by downward training, 
which acts as a check. One main object is the preservation 
of equilibrium in the growth of the several parts of the tree; 
and for this various minor details deserve attention. Thus 
a shoot will grow more vigorously whilst waving m the air 
than when nailed dose to the wall; consequently a weak 
shoot should be left free, whilst its stronger antagonist should 
be restrained; and a luxuriant shoot may be retarded for 
some time by having its tender extremity pinched off to allow 
a weaker shoot to overtake it. 

By the prudent use of the knife, fruit trees may be readily 
trained into the forms indicated below, which are amongst the 
best out of the many which have been devised. 

The training of standard and bush trees in the open ground has 
been already referred to under the section Pruning. When the 
growth of pyramids is completed, the outline is something like 
that of fig. 39, and very pretty trees are thus formed. It is 
better, however, especially if the tendency to bear fruit is rather 
slack, to adopt what the French call en quinouille training 




Fig. 38. 



-Diagram illustrating Branch 
Distribution. 



(fig. 40), which consists in tying or wrightmg the tips of- thi 
branches so as to give them all a downward curve. Pear trees 



FiC. 39. — Pyramidal Training. Fig. 40. — Training en quenoutile, 

worked on the quince stock, and trained en quetumttle, are 
generally very fertile; 

Wall trees, it must be evident, are placed in a very unnatural 
and constrained position, and would in fact soon be reduced to a 
state of utter confusion if allowed to grow unrestricted; hence 
the following modes of training have been adopted. 

Horizontal Training (fig. 41) has long been a favourite form in 
England. There is one principal ascending stem, from which 




Fig. 41. — Horizontal Training. 

the branches depart at right angles, at intervals of about a foot. 
Horizontal training is best adapted to the apple and the pear; 
and for the more twiggy growing slender varieties, the forms 
shown in fig. 4a have been recommended. In these the horizontal 
branches are placed wider, 18 to 20 in. apart* and the smaller 
shoots arc trained between them, cither on both sides, as at a, 
or deflexed from the lower side, as at b. The latter is an ex- 
cellent method of reclaiming neglected trees. Every alternate 



branch -should be taken away, and the spurs cut off, after which 
the young shoots are trained in, and soon produce good fruit. 

In Fm Training (fig. 45) there is no leading stem, but the 
branches spring from the base and are arranged somewhat like 
the ribs of a fan. This mode of training is commonly adopted 
for the peach, nectarine, -apricot and morello cherry, U which 



764 



HORTICULTURE 



(GARDEN OPERATIONS 



It is best adapted. Though sometimes adopted, it is not so 
well suited as the horizontal form for apples and pears, because, 
when the branches reach the top of the wall, where they must 



Fxc. 43. — Fan Training. 

be cut short, a hedge of young shoots is inevitable. A modifica- 
tion of the fan shape (fig. 44) is sometimes adopted for stone 
fruits, such as the plum and apricot. In this the object is to 
establish a number of mother branches, and on these to form a 
series of subordinate members, chiefly composed of bearing wood. 
The mother branches or limbs should not be numerous, but 
well marked, equal in strength and regularly disposed. The 



Fig. 44. — Modified Fan Training. 

side branches should be pretty abundant, short and not so 
vigorous as to rival the leading members. 

The Half-fan mode of training, which is intermediate between 
horizontal and fan training, is most nearly allied to the former, 
but the branches leave the stem at an acute angle, a disposition 
supposed to favour the more equal distribution of the sap. Some- 
times, as in fig. 45, two vertical stems are adopted, but there is no 
particular advantage in this, and a single-stemmed tree is more 
manageable. The half-fan form is well adapted for such fruits 



Fig. 45.— Half-Fan Training. . 

as the plum and the cherry; and, indeed, for fruits of vigorous 
habit, it seems to combine the advantages of both the foregoing. 
Trees must be fixed to the walls and buildings against which 
they are trained by means of nails and shreds (neat medicated 
strips are now sold for this purpose), or in cases where it is 
desired to preserve the wall surface intact, by permanent nails 
or studs driven in in regular order. Sometimes the walls arc 
furnished with galvanized wires, but this has been objected to 
as causing cankering of the shoots, for which, however, painting 
is recommended as a remedy. By crossing the tying material 



between the wire And the wood, however, and so preventing 
them from coming in contact, there is no danger. If they arc 
adopted, the wires should be a few inches away from the wall, to 
allow free circulation of air between it and the tree, and tbwa 
avoid the scorching or burning of leaves and fruits during the 
summer months in very hot places. Care should be taken that 
the ties or fastenings do not eventually cut into the bark as the 
branches swell with increased age. When shreds and nails are 
used, short thick wire nails and " medicated shreds " arc the 
best; the ordinary cast iron wall nails being much too brittle 
and difficult to drive into the wall. It must be remembered that 
nails spoil a wall sooner or later, whereas a wire trellis is not only 
much neater, but enables the gardener to tie his trees up much 
more quickly. 

Foe tying plants to trellises and stakes soft tarred string or 
raffia (the fibre from the Raphia palm of Madagascar) is used. 

In training greenhouse plants the young branches should be 
drawn outwards by means of ties fastened to a string or wire 



Fig. 46.— Clematis trained on Balloon-Shaped Trellis. 

under the pot-rim; the centre then fills up, and slender stakes 
are used as required; but the fewer these are in number the 
better. Climbers arc trained from the bottom around or across 
trellises, of which the cylindrical or the balloon-shaped, or 
sometimes the fiat oval or circular, are the best forms. The size 
should be adapted to the habit of the plant, which should cover 
the whole by the time flowers arc produced. Bast fibre and 
raffia fibre are to be preferred for light subjects of this character, 
as they can be split to any degree of fineness. Very durable 
trellises for greenhouse climbers are made of slender round iron 
rods for standards, having a series of hooks on the inner edge, 
into which rings of similar metal are dropped; the rings may be 
graduated so as to form a broad open top, or may be all of the 
same size, when the trellis will assume the cylindrical form. 
Fig. 46 shows a pot specimen of clematis trained over a balloon- 
shaped trellis. 

The training of certain bedding plants over the surface of 
the soil is done by small pegs of birch wood or bracken, by 
loops of wire or cheap hair-pins, or sometimes by loops of raffia 
having the ends fixed in the soil by the aid of the dibble. The 
object is to fill up the blank space as quickly and as evenly as 
possible. 

Forcing is the accelerating, by special treatment, of the growth 
of certain plants, which are required to be had in leaf, in flower 
or in fruit before their natural season,— as, for instance, the leaves 
of mint at Eastertide or the leafstalks of sea-kak and rhubarb 



FtOWEItt) 



HORTICULTURE 



765 



at Christmas, the flower* of summer in the depth of winter, or 
some of the choicest fruits perfected so much before their normal 
period as to complete, with the retarded crops of winter, the circle 
of the seasons. 

In the management of artificial heat for this purpose, a 
considerable degree of caution is required. The first stages 
of forcing should, of course, be very gentle, so that the whole 
growth of the plants may advance in harmony. The immediate 
application of a very hot atmosphere would unduly force the 
tops, while the roots remained partially or wholly inactive; and 
a strong bottom heat, if it did not cause injury by its excess, would 
probably result In abortive growth. 

Any sudden decrease of warmth would be very prejudicial 
to the progress of vegetation through the successive stages of 
foliation, inflorescence and fructification. But it is not necessary 
that one unvarying range of temperature should be kept up at 
whatever pains of risk. Indeed, in very severe weather it is 
found better to drop a little from the maximum temperature by 
fire heat, and the loss so occasioned may be made good by a little 
extra heat applied when the weather is more genial. Night 
temperatures also should always be allowed to drop somewhat, 
the heat being increased again in the morning. In other words, 
the artificial temperature should increase by day and decrease 
by night, should rise in summer and fall in winter, should, in 
abort, imitate as nearly as possible the varying influence of the 
tun. 

For the growth of flowers generally, and for that of all fruits, 
every ray of light to be obtained in the dull winter season is 
required, and therefore every possible care should be taken to 
keep the glass dean. A moist genial atmosphere too is essential, 
m, point requiring unremitting attention on account of the 
necessity of keeping up strong fires. With moisture as with heal, 
the cultivator must hold his hand somewhat in very severe or 
very dull weather; but while heat must not drop so as to chill 
the progressing vegetation, so neither must the lack of moisture 
parch the plants so as to check their growth. 
: There are some few subjects which when forced do not require 
a light house. Thus amongst flowers the white blossoms of the 
lilac, so much prized during winter, are produced by forcing 
purple-flowered plants in darkness. Rhubarb and sea-kale among 
esculents both need to be forced in darkness to keep them crisp 
and tender, and mushrooms also are always grown in dark 
structures. In fact, a roomy mushroom house b one of the most 
convenient of all places for forcing the vegetables just referred 
to. The lilac would be better placed in a dark shed heated to 
about 70 or 8o°, in which some dung and leaves could be 
allowed to He and ferment, giving off both a genial heat 
and moisture. 

One of the most important preliminaries to successful forcing 
is the securing to the plants a previous state of rest. The 
thorough ripening of the preceding season's wood in fruit trees 
and flowering plants, and of the crown in perennial herbs like 
strawberries, and the cessation of all active growth before the 
time they are to start into a new growth, are of paramount im- 
portance. The ripening process must be brought about by free 
exposure to light, and by the application of a little extra heat with 
dryness, if the season should be unfavourable; and both roots 
and tops mutt submit to a limitation of their water supply. 
When the ripening is perfected, the resting process must be 
aided by keeping the temperature in which they await the forcing 
process as low as each particular subject can bear. _(Sce Re- 
tardation above.) 

V. Flowers. 

Flower Garden and Pleasure Grounds.— Wherever there is a 
flower garden of considerable magnitude, and in a separate 
situation, it should be constructed on principles of Its own. 
The great object must be to exhibit to advantage the graceful 
forms and glorious hues of flowering plants and shrubs. Two 
varieties of flower gardens have chiefly prevailed in Britain. 
In one the ground is turf, out of which flower-beds, of varied 
patterns, are cut; in the other the flower-beds are separated 



by gravel walks, without the introduction of grass. When 
the flower garden is to be seen from the windows, or any other 
elevated point of view, the former is to be preferred; but where 
the surface is irregular, and the situation more remote, and 
especially where the beauty of flowers is mainly looked to, the 
choice should probably fall on the latter. 

The flower garden may include several different compartments. 
Thus, for example, there is the " Rock Garden," which should 
consist of variously grouped masses of large stones, those which 
are remarkable for being figured by water-wearing, or containing 
petrifactions or impressions, or showing something of natural 
stratification, being generally preferred. In the cavities between 
the stones, filled with earth, alpine or trailing plants are inserted, 
and also some of the choicest flowers. In proper situations, a 
small pool of water may be introduced for the culture of aquatic 
plants. In these days the rock-garden is a most important 
feature, and it requires a good deal of care and skill to arrange 
the boulders, walks, pools or streams in natural and artistic 
fashion. The selection of suitable alpines, perennials and 
shrubs and trees also necessitates considerable knowledge 
on the part of the gardener. A separate compartment laid out 
on some regular plan is often set apart for roses, under the name 
of the " Roscry." A moist or rather a shady border, or a section 
of the pleasure ground supplied with bog earth, may be devoted 
to what is called the " American Garden," which, as it includes 
the gorgeous rhododendrons and azaleas, forms one of the 
grandest features of the establishment during the early summer, 
while if properly selected the plants are effective as a garden 
of evergreens at all seasons. The number of variegated and 
various-coloured hardy shrubs is now so great that a most 
pleasant plot for a " Winter Garden " may be arrayed with plants 
of this class, with which may be associated hardy subjects which 
flower during that season or very early spring, as the Christmas 
rose, and amongst bulbs the crocus and snowdrop. Later the 
spring garden department is a scene of great attraction; and 
some of the gardens of this character, as those of Cliveden and 
Belvoir, are among the most fascinating examples of horti- 
cultural art. The old-fashioned stereotyped flower garden 
that one met with almost everywhere is rapidly becoming a 
thing of the past, and grounds are now laid out more in accord* 
ance with their natural disposition, their climatic conditions 
and their suitability for certain kinds of plants. Besides the 
features already mentioned there are now bamboo gardens, 
Japanese gardens, water gardens and wall gardens, each 
placed in the most suitable position and displaying its own 
special features. 

Lawns.— In the formation of lawns the ground must be 
regularly broken up so that it may settle down evenly, any deep 
excavations that may have to be filled in being very carefully 
rammed down to prevent subsequent settlement. The ground 
must also be thoroughly cleared of the roots of all coarse, perennial 
weeds, and be worked to a fine 
tilth ready for turfing or sow- 
ing. The mere expeditious 
method is of course to lay 
down turf, which should be free 
from weeds, and is cut usually 
in strips of 1 ft. wide, 3 ft. long, 
and about z m. in thickness. 
This must be laid very evenly 
and compactly, and should then 
be beaten down firmly with the 
implement called a turf-beater 
(fig. 47). When there is a large 
space to cover, it is much the 




cheaper plan to sow the lawn 



Fie. 47.— Turf-Beater. 



with grass-seeds, and equally effective, though the sward takes 
much longer to thicken. It is of the utmost importance that 
a good selection of grasses be made, and that pure seeds 
should be obtained (see GtAss /wo Grassland). The follow- 
ing sorts can be recommended, the quantities given being those 
for sowing an acre of ground: — 



768 



HORTICULTURE 



(FLOWHIS 



the front Hoe planted between suitable pieces of stone, or they 
may be relegated to a particular spot, and placed on an artificial 
rockery. Most of the hardy bulbs will do well enough in the border, 
care being taken not to disturb them while leafless and dormant. 

Some deep-rooting perennials do not spread much at the surface, 
and only require refreshing from time to time by top-dressings. 
Others, as the asters, spread rapidly; those possessing this habit 
should be taken up every second or thud year, and, a nice patch being 
selected for replanting from the outer portions, the rest may be either 
thrown aside, or reserved for increase; the portion selected for 
replanting should be returned to its place, the ground having mean* 
while been well broken up. Some plants are apt to decay at the base, 
frequently from exposure caused by the lilting process going on 
dunng their growth; these should be taken up annually in early 
autumn, the soil refreshed, and the plants returned to their places, 
care being taken to plant them sufficiently deep. 

Only a section of some of the best of the decorative hardy per- 
ennials can be noted, before we pass on to those popular subjects of 
this class which have been directly influenced by the hybridizer and 
improver. Many more might be added to the subjoined list:— 

Acaena. — Neat trailing plants adapted for rockwork, thriving in 
sandy soil. A. microphyUa and A. myriopkytta have pretty spiny 
heads of flowers. 

ihapcd 
in bear 

ox ft. 
md A. 
ssimus 

H easy 

imson; 
Others 
bright 
lowers; 
Zlaven- 

led by 
is deep 
e dark 
flowers 
owers; 
p blue 
a new 

i blue, 
-I ft.. 

it soil, 
[lowers 
ies. 
n., has 
idsome 

which 
ureum, 
/ellow; 
tetrum, 
, 9 in., 

which 

3 {t-. 

Oj ft., 

Deep 

loamy 
if easy 



yellow 
Uanum 

i front 
Jh and 
• b^e 

italic*, 
:„ rich 

Androsace.—Pntty dwarf rock plants, requiring rather careful 
management and a gritty soil. A . Viiahana , yellow ; A . Wulfeniana, 
purplish-crimson; A. vtllosa, white or pale rose; A. lactea, white 
with yeUow eye; A. lanuginosa, delicate rose; and A. Chamaejasme, 
delicate rose, are some of the best. 

Anemone— The Japanese kinds, A. japonic*, flowers white and 
purple, are very easily grown and are particularly fine in autumn. 
The scarlet A. fulgens, and A. coronario, the poppy anemone, are 
useful for the front, or in nooks in the rockery; while the 



hepatica(4.k|«Jt»)withitsbrigl*bliieflDwm 

place. 

Antennana, — Composite plants, with everlasting flowers. A. 
margarilacea, i| to a ft., has white woolly stems and leaves, and 
white flower-heads. 

i4«^r»ci^.—Chaniung border flowers. A. LiHastrum, St Bruno'* 
Lily, it ft., bears pretty white sweet-scented flowers in May; A. 
Hoohert (Chrysobactron), a ft., with long racemes of bright golden 
yellow flowers, requires cool peaty soil. 

AouiUgia.— The Columbine family, consisting of beautiful border 
flowers in great variety, ranging from I to a or 3 ft. in height. Besides 
the common purple A. vuigaru with its numerous varieties, double 
and single, there are of choice sorts A. alpina and A. pyrenaica, blur; 
A. glandulosa, A. tucunda, and A. coerule*, blue and white: A. 
teptoceras, blue and yellow; A. canadensis, A. Skinnori, and A. 
truncata (calif orntca) t scarlet and yellow; A. chrysantka, veflov; 
and A. fragrant, white or flesh-colour, very fragrant. Light rich 
garden soil. 

Arabis. — Dwarf close-crowing evergreen cruciferous plants, 
adapted for rockwork and the front part of the flower border, and 
of the easiest culture. A. albida forms a conspicuous mass of greyish 
leaves and white blossoms. There is also a charming double variety. 
A. lucid*, which is also white-flowered, bears its bright green leaves 
in rosettes, and has a variety with prettily gold-margined leaves. 

A renaria — Evergreen rock plants of easy culture, A . pvmmtfdia 
and A. laricifolia arc tufted, with grassy foliage and white flowers, 
while A. baUarica, a creeping rock plant, has tiny leaves and solitary 
white flowers. 

Ann4ri*.—Tht Thrift or Sea- Pink, of which the common form A. 
maritima is sometimes planted as an edging for garden walks; there 
are three varieties, the common pale pink; the deep rose, and the 
white, the last two being the most desirable. A. cephalotes. i| ft_. 
is a larger plant, with tufts of linear lance- shaped leaves, and 
abundant globular heads of deep rose flowers, in June and July. 

Asdepias. — A. tuberose is a handsome fleshy-rooted plant, very 
impatient of being disturbed, and preferring good peat soil; it 
grows i to i } ft. high, and bears corymbs of deep yellow and orange 
flowers in September. A. incarnata, 2 to 4 ft., produces deep rose 
sweet-scented flowers towards the end of summer. 

Asperula odorata. — The woodruff, a charming white-flowered 
plant with leaves in circles. Well adapted for carpeting the border 
or rockery. 

i4*£*«fcfN*.-*--Handsomc liliaceous plants, with fleshy roots, erect 
stems, and showy flowers, thriving in any good garden soil. A. 
albus K 4 ft., A. aestivus, 4 ft., and A. ramosus, 4 ft., have all long 
tapering keeled leaves, and simple or branched spikes of white 
flowers; A. lutens, 2 ft., has awl-shaped leaves and dense spikes 
of fragrant yellow flowers; A. capillar ts is similar to A. Intent, but 
more slender and elegant. 

Aster.— A. very large family of autumn-blooming composites, in- 
ch " • -'" -" -* '*- — ■ ** 

th« 
bit 
A. 



ie ornamental species, all of the easiest culture. Of 
nnus, J ft., and A. A melius, \\ ft., with its var. bessara- 
broadish blunt leaves, and large starry bluish flowers; 
s formosus, 2 ft., bright rosy lilac; A. elegans, 3 to 5 ft., 
purple or whitish J A. laxus, a ft., purplish-blue; A. 



ft!, white, changing to rose; A. pyrtnaeus, 2 to 3 ft., 
* '-•-■"■ - j f». f mauvencoloured. are show 

_. ngltae, 5 to 6 ft., rosy-violet; /. 

t., blue-lilac; and A. grandijlorus, 3 ft., violet, are 



I. IWWNKHIH, * W ; 

ts; and A. Novo* A 



T7. 



es| ef ul from their late-flowering habit. 

A.japcnica, I to I J ft., better known as Hoteia japonic* 
or hponica, thrives m peaty or sandy soil; its glossy 

tri r javes, and feathery panicles of white flowers early ia 

summer, are very attractive. It proves to be a fine decorative pot- 
plant, and invaluable (or forcing during the spring. 

Astragalus. — Showy pea -flowered plants, the smaller species 
adapted for rockwork; sandy soil. A. dasy glottis, 6 in., has bluish- 
purple flowers in August and September; and A. monspessnianus, 
8 in., crimson-purple in July; while A. kypoglottis, 6 in., produces 
in summer compact beads of pretty flowers, which are either purple 
or white. There are many very ornamental kinds. 

A ubrietia. — Beautiful dwarf spring-blooming rock plants, forming 
carpcty tufts of flowers of simple cruciferous form. A. deUcidea a 
of a deep lilac-blue; A. CampbeUioe is more compact and rather 
darker, approaching to purple; A. grandiflora and graeca are rather 
larger, but of a lighter hue. Light sandy soil. 

Bambusa.— The bamboo family are elegant arborescent grasses 
(see Bamboo). 

Baptist*.— Stoutish erect-growing, 2 to 3 ft., with smooth foliage 
and spikes of pea-like flowers. 3. australU is purplish-blue, 
B. alba, white, B. exaltaia, deep blue; all flowering in the summer 
months. . # 

Bellis.—B. perennis fiore-bXeno, the Double Daisy, consists of 
dwarf showy plants 3 to 4 in. high, flowering freely in spring if grown 
in rich light soil, and frequently divided and transplanted. The 
white and pink forms, with the white and red quilled, and the varie- 
gated-leaved aucubaefolia, are some of the best. 

B occonia. — Stately poppyworts, 6 to 8 ft. B. coriata has heart- 
shaped lobed leaves, and large panicles of small flesh-coloured 
flowen. Sometimes called Madeaya. Deep sandy loam. 



FLOWERS] 

Brodiaea,— Pretty buttm* plants. B. gmndiflora, I ft, haft large 
bluish-purple flowers; B. couinta, a to 3 ft., has tubular campauulate 
sodding flowers of a rich crimson with green tips. Sam ' 

Bu i bo c od iu m. — Pretty spring-flowering crocus*like 

wermum, 4 to 6 in. high, purplish-lilac, blooms in March. Good 
garden sou. 

Bnpkikalmum. — Robust composite herbs with striking foliage, for 
the back of herbaceous or shrubbery borders. B. cardtfolium, 4 ft., 
has large cordate leaves, and heads of rich orange flowers in cymose 
panicles in July. Abo called Teidria speciosa. 

Calandrinia.— -Showy dwarf plants for sunny r ock wot k, in light 

sandy soil. C. umbellate, £ to 4 in., much branched, with 

n flowers in 



HORTICULTURE 



7^9 



hairy leaves, and corymbs of 
months. 



the summer 



Wies, 
U-drained soiL 
albus, ekgans, 

rgins of lakes, 
ft., has double 

Jal roots, C. 
k convolvuloid 

to 3 ft high 

and character. 
i, nodding, on 

broad-belled; 
t, long-belled, 
, a fine border 

in Jury; and 
ng spikes, axe 

laracter; com* 
silvery leaves, 
; C. 



kwork, banks, 

j „ 1 ily all summer, 

and varies with rosy, or crimson, or white flowers. It clothes the 
chalk cuttings on some English railways with a sheet of colour in 
the blooming season. 

Chdrantkus.— Pretty rock plants, for light stony soils. C. alpinus, 
6 In., grows in dense tufts, and bears sulphur-yellow flowers in May. 
C. ochroleueus is similar in character. 

C%ionodoxai-— Charming dwarf hardy bulbous plants of the 
liliaceous order, blooming in the early spring in company with Scilla 
sibirica, and of eoually easy cultivation. C. LucMat, 6 in., has star* 
shaped flowers 01 a brilliant blue with a white centre. C. gigonte* 
is the finest of the few known species* It blooms from February to 
April. 

Chrysanthemums— Apart from the florist's varieties of C. indicum 
there are a few line natural species. One of the best for the flower 
border is C. maximum and Us varieties — all with beautiful white 
flowers having yellow centres. C. lati/olium is also a fine species. 

Cdkkicmm.^-Showy autumn-blooming bulbs (corms), with crocus- 
like flowers, all rosy-purple or white. C. sptewsum, C. autumnal*, 
single and double, C bysantinstm, and C. varitgatum are all worth 
growing. 

ConvaUaria.—C. majalis, the lily of the valley, a well-known 
sweet-scented favourite spring; flower, growing freely in rich garden 
soil; its spikes, 6 to o in. high, of pretty white fragrant bells, are 
produced in May ana June* Requires shady places, and plenty of 
old manure each autumn. 

Coreopsis. — Effective composite plants, thriving in good garden 
soil. C. durieutata, 2 to 3 ft., has yellow and brown flowers m July 
and August; C* Janteolala, 2 to 3 ft., bright yellow, in August; 
next to the biennial C. grandiflora it is the best garden plant. 

Corydalis. — Interesting and elegant plants, mostly tuberous, 
growing in good garden soil. C. bracUata, 9 in., has sulphur-coloured 
flowers in April, and C. nobiJis, 1 ft., rich yellow, in May; C. soHda, 
with purplish, and C. tubtrosa, with white flowers, are pretty spring- 
flowering plants, 4 to 6 in. high. C. tkoMctriJolia, 1 ft, yellow, May 
to October. 

Cyclamen,— Charming tuberous-rooted plants of dwarf habit, 
suitable for sheltered rockeries, and growing in light gritty soil. 
C. —ropatwm, reddisfa-purpk, flowers in summer, and C. hakrae- 
faliwm in autumn. 

Cypriptdium.— Beautiful terrestrial orchids, requiring to be 
planted in peat soil, in a cool and rather shady situation. C. spetta- 
hii, I i to 2 ft., white and rose colour, in June, is a lovely species. 
as is C. Caktolus, 1 ft, yellow and brown, in May; all are full of 
interest and beauty. 

Delphinium.— The Larkspur family, tall showy plants, with spikes 
of blue flowers in July. Distinct sorts are D. grandifiorum and D. 
grandifUrum fiore-pUuo, 2 to 3 ft., of the richest dazzling blue, 
Ba wimig on till September; D. chinenst, 2 ft., blue, and its 4ouble- 
toweced variety, ate good, as is D, Bottom, 3 ft, a brilliant double 
JML 14 



e. D. uudicouts, 2 ft, orange-scarlet, very showy, Is best 
i a biennial, its brilliant flowers being produced freely 



blue-purple. 

treated as a 

in the second year from the seed. 

Dumtknj.—Chte&y rock plants with handsome and fragrant 
flowers, the smaller sorts growing in light sandy soil, and the larger 
border plants in rich garden earth. Of the dwarfer sorts for rock 
gardens, D. alpinus, D. caesius, D. dHtoides, D. dreJonis, D. nodastut, 
D. pttracus, and D. glaaatis are good examples; while for borders 
or larger rockwork 22. plumarius, D. superbus, D. Fisckcri, OK 
cruaUus, and the dove section of D. CaryopkyUus are most desirable; 

Dicentra. — Very elegant plants, of easy growth in good soli 
D. spcetabiUs, a to 3 ft, has paeony-like foliage, and gracefully 
drooping •pikes of heart-shaped pink flowers, about May, but it 
should have a sheltered place, as it suffers f«om spring frosts and 
winds; D.formosa and X>. exsmsa, 1 ft, are also pretty rosy-flowered 

teristicand attractive 
1 tall racemes of irre- 
rverywfaere glandular, 



rith long; racemes of 
po D. purpurea, or fox- 

gk tuple flowers, spotted 

ira garden varieties that 

ha grows itself so freely 

as rect flowered form is 

cal tax and D.grandifiora 

an it renewal from seedci 

wth in ordinary- solL 
D. both yellow-flowered, 

bk antogmtum ascalsum, 

31 

D. alpina, D. essesdr*. 
D. rellow flowers in early 

spi flowers. Gritty well* 

drained soil. 

Dracocephalum. — Handsome labiate plants, requiring a warm 
and well-drained soil. D. argumnue, if it., D. ausiriacum, 1 ft., 
D. grandifiorum, 1 ft, and D. Ruysckiauum, i\ ft., with its van 
japonicum, all produce showy blue flowers during the summer 
months. 

zscntMcco,— Stout growing showy composites for late summer aiid 
autumn flowering, requiring rich deep soil, and not to be often die* 
turbed. E. anptstifolup, 3 to 4 ft, light purplisb-roie, and E. inter* 
media, 3 to 4 ft., reddish-purple, are desirable kinds.: £. purpund 
(often called Rudbeclda) is the showiest species. Height 3 to 4 it., 
with rosy-purple flowers. 

Eonucon chionautkus. — A lovely p op p y wot t about x ft high, 
with pure white flowers 2 to 3 in. across. Root-stocks thick, creeping;* 

Epimedium.—'Pntty plants, growing about 1 ft. high, win 
elegant foliage, and curious flowers. E. macranthum, white flowers, 
and E. rubrum, red, are distinctly spurred; E. pinnatum and & 
PerraUtrianum, yellow, less so. They bloom in tpring, and prefer 
a shady situation and a peaty soil. 

" «A chan 



Erantkis kyemalis.- ._ 

winter aconite. Flowers bright yellow, January to March, dose to 
the ground. 

£r«n«nw.— Noble plants with thick rootstocks, large sword-like 
leaves, and f pikes of flowers from 3 to 10 ft high. They require 
warm sunny spots and rich gritty sou. The best kinds are robustus\ 
pink, 6 to 10 ft; mrnalaicuSy 4 to 8 ft, white; AHchisoui. 3 to 5 ft, 
red; BuntH, 2 to 3 ft, yellow; and auranJiacus, 2 to 3 It r orange* 
yellow. There are now several hybrid forms. 

Erigeron. — Composite planta, variable in character, E. purpmrtns, 
1} ft., with pink flower-heads, having narrow twisted ray^noretai 
B. Roytki, 1 ft, dark blue; and £. ptddtdlus, t ft, rich orange, 
flowering during the summer, are among the best kinds. Good 
ordinary garden soil. , 

Erinus.—E. oJpinu? b a beautiful ' little alpine for rockwork. 
3 to 6 in., of tufted habit, with sma!l*toothed leaves, and heads of 
pinkish-purple or, in -a variety, white flowers, early in summer. 
Sandy well-drained soil. 

Erodiuwu — Handsome dwarf tufted plants. B, Mouescavi, 1 to 
1 1 ft, has large purplish-red flowers m summer; E, Rtkhardi, a 
minute stemless plant, has small heart-shaped leaves in rosette-like 
tufts, and white flowers striped with pink, produced succ e ssively^ 
Light soO. 

Eryngium.-^Vety remarkable plants of the ambellifesous order, 
mostly of an attractive character. B. awuUhystinum, 2 ft, has the 
upper part of the stem, the bracts, and heads of flowers all of an 
amethystine blue. Some of more recent introduction have the 
aspect of the pine-apple, such as E btvmdwefoUnn^&pttndam^okmm 
and E eburneunu Deep light soil. 

Ertthroniunu—E. dens<anis, the Dog's Tooth Violet, b a- pretty 
dwarf bulbous plant with spotted leaves, and rosy or white flowers 
produced in spring, and having reflexed petals. Mixed peaty find 
loamy soil, deep and cooL Several charming American species* are. 
now in cultivation. < 

EicpAortoa,— Plants whose beauty resides in the bracts or floral 
leaves which surround the inconspicuous flowers. E^dtppk+iiu 

2a 



77° 



HORTICULTURE 



and E. Ckotacias, 2 to 3 ft., with green bracts, are fine plants for 
rockwork or sheltered corners. 

Ferula. — Gigantic umbelliferous plants, with magnificent foliage, 
adapted for shrubbery borders or open spots on lawns. They have 
Chick fleshy roots, deeply penetrating, and therefore requiring deep 
soil, which should be of a light or sandy character. F. communis. 

F. riouca, and F. Hngitana, the last with glossy foaenge-shaped 
leaflets, grow 8 to 10 ft. high; F. Fendago, with more finely cut 
leaves, grows 5 to 6 ft. high. They flower in early spring, and all 
have a fine appearance when in bloom, on account of their large 
showy umbels of yellow flowers. 

Fnlillaria.—A large genus of liliaceous bulbs, the best known of 
which is the crown imperial (F. imperialis) and the snake's head 
(F. Mcleagris). There are many charming species grown, such as 
murea, fmdica, rtcuno, se w e novri , askabadensu, Sac 

Funkia. — Pretty liliaceous plants, with simple conspicuously 
longitudinal-ribbed leaves, the racemose flowers funnel-shaped and 
deflexed. F. Sieboldiana, 1 ft., has Ulac flowers; F. rrandiflora, 
IB in., is white and fragrant; F. coerulea, 18 in., is violet-blue; F. 
albo-marpnata, 15 ul, has the leaves edged with white, and the flowers 
lilac Rich garden soil. 

Gaittardia. — Showy composite plants, thriving in good garden soil. 

G. aristaUL 2 ft, has large yellow flower-heads, 2 or 3 in. across, in 
summer; G. Baesdari and G. Loisdii have the lower part of the ray- 
florets red, the upper part yellow. 

Galantkus. — The Snowdrop. Early spring-flowering amaryllidace* 
ous bulbs, with pretty drooping flowers, snow-white, having the tips 
of the enclosed petals green. The common sort is G. nivalis, which 
blossoms on the first break of the winter frosts; G, Impavti, G. 
Ehoesi and G. tlicaUu have larger flowers. 

. Galax aphyUa.—A neat little rock plant, 6 to 8 in. high, with 
pretty round leaves and white flowers. Requires moist peaty soil. 

Galega officinalis. — A strong-growing leguminous plant, 2 to 5 ft. 
ives, and masse ' ' • " L • ■••-- 



high, with pinnate leaves, and masses of pinkish 'purple pea-like 
flowers. Also a white variety. Grows anywhere. 
, Galtonia eandicans. — A fine bulbous punt, 3 to 4 ft. high, with 
drooping white flowers. 

Gaura.—G. Lindkeimeri, 3 to 5 ft., b much branched, with elegant 
white and red flowers of the onagraceous type, in long slender 
'ramose spikes during the late summer and autumn months. Light 
garden soil ; not long-lived. 

GenHama, — Beautiful tufted erect-stemmed plants preferring a 
strong rich loamy soil. G. acaulis, known as the Gentianella, forms 
a dose carpet of shining leaves, and in summer bean large erect 
tubular deep blue flowers. (7. Andrrwsii, 1 ft., has, during summer, 
large deep blue flowers in dusters, the corollas dosed at the mouth; 
G. ascUptadea, 18 in., purplish-blue, flowers in July. 

Geranium.— Showy Dorder flowers, mostly growing to a height 
of ij or 2 ft., having deeply cut leaves, and abundant saucer- 
shaped blossoms of considerable size. G. tbericum, platypctalum, 
arn unu m and Endressi are desirable purple- and rose-flowered sorts; 
G. sanguineum+m tufted grower, has the flowers a deep rose colour: 
and the double-flowered white and blue forms of G. pratense and 
G.jpbaticum make pretty summer flowers. Good garden soil. 

Gtrbcra, — A South African genus of composites requiring very 
warm sunny spots and rich gritty soil. G. Jamesoni, with large 
scarlet marguerite-like flowers, and G. viridiflora, with white flowers 
tinged with lilac, are best known. Numerous hybrids have been 
raised, varying in colour from creamy white to salmon, pink, yellow, 
red and orange. 

Geum. — Pretty rosaceous plants. The single and double flowered 
forms of G. chuoense and its varieties grandiflorum and miniatum, 
2 ft., with brilliant scarlet flowers; G. ceccineum, 6 to 12 in., scarlet, 
and G. moniana, 9 in., yellow, are among the best sorts. Good 
garden soil. 

Gillenia trifoUala.—A pretty rosaceous plant about 2 ft, high. 
Flowers white in graceful panicles; flourishes in a mixture of sandy 
peat and loam. 

Gunnera, — Remarkable rhubarb-like plants with huge lobed 
leaves, often 6 ft. across. They should be grown near water as they 
like much moisture, and a good loamy soil, G. manicata and G. 
scabra are the two kinds grown. 

Gyncrium.—Thc Pampas-Grass, a noble species, introduced from 
Buenos Aires; it forms huge tussocks, 4 or 5 ft. high, above which 
towards autumn rise the bold dense silvery plumes of the inflorescence. 
it does best in shdtered nooks. 

Gw>j<^W<j.— Interesting caryophyllaceous plants, thriving in 
dryish situations.- G. panictdata, 2 ft., from Siberia, forms a dense 
semi-globular mass of small white flowers from July onwards till 
autumn, and is very useful for cutting. 

HaberUa rkodopensis.—A pretty rock plant with dense tufts of 
leaves and bluish-lilac flowers. . It likes fibrous peat in fissures of the 
rocks. 

HtUninm. — Showy composites of free growth in lightish soil. 
H. omtdmnaU, a ft., bears a profusion of yellow-rayed flower-heads 
In August and September. 

Heuantkemum. — Dwarf subshrubby plants well suited for rockwork. 
and called Sun-Roses from their blossoms resembling small wild 
roses and their thriving best in sunny spots. Some of the hand- 
somest are A rosemm, mmiabiU. cupreum mad rhodonikmm, with red 



(FLOWERS 



flowerst tnrtvmg in gooa aecp nsasst son. a. swnnsysnv* s ss>« 
forms noble tufts of palmate leaves, and long spikes of bhrish- 

purple or white flowers in June and July ; L. arboreta is 1 
and has yellow flowers. 



Lyekms. — Brilliant erect-growing caryophyllaceous plants, thriv- 
ing best in beds of peat earth or of deep sandy loam. JL thmlrednmiem, 
3 ft., has dense heads of bri " 
double, in June and July; L.J 



ndvloam 
ght scarlet flowers, both 

, 1 ft., vermilion :L.if< 



flowers) HORTICULTURE 771 

l( ft, scarlet ; and L. grandiJUra, i to * ft, wttn dusters of scarlet, . OKrwfa,— Handsome scrophulariaceous plants, from Chile, thriving 

crimson, pink and white flowers. All Urge-flowered and showy ' -* s - — «-■—*—■ •• ----- ■ - • "* 

but require a little protection in winter. 

Lysimacki*.— The best known is the Creeping Jenny, X. Num 
mularia. much used for trailing over rockeries and window boxes , 

with bright yellow flowers. The variety aurta with golden leave 
is also popular. Other species that grow from 2 to 3 ft. high, anc 
are good border plants, are L. detkroides, with white spikes oi 
flowers; L. vulgaris, L. IhyrHfioro, L. ciliata, L. verticiuata and 
L. punctata, all yellow. 

Ma*ta.—Ii. masehala, a ft., with a profusion of pale pink or whiti 
flowers, and musky deeply cut leaves, though a British plant, ii 
worth introducing to the flower borders when the soil is light and 
free. 

Masanopsis.— The Welsh poppy, Ii. cambrica, t to a ft. high, 
yellow, and M. Wallieki, from the Himalayas, 4 to 6 ft. high with 
pale blue flowers, are the best known perennials of the genus. The 
last-named, however, is best raised from seeds every year, and treated 
Hke the biennial kinds. 

Jfcrfemfo. — Ii. virgnrica, 1 to if ft, azure blue, shows flowers in 
drooping panicles in May and June. It does best in shady peal 



Mimulus. — Monkey-flower. Free-blooming, showy serophulari- 
aceous plants, thriving best in moist situations. Ii. cardinalis, 
2 to 3 ft. has scarlet flowers, with the limb segments reflexed; Af. 
Uttaus and its many garden forms, 1 to 1} ft., are variously coloured 
and often richly spotted; and Ii. cupreus, 8 to 10 in., is bright 
coppery-red. if. moschatus is the Musk-plant, of which the variety 
Harrison* is a greatly improved form, with much larger yellow 



Monarda. — Handsome labiate plants, flowering towards autumn, 
and preferring a cool soil and partially shaded situation. Ii. didyma, 

3 ft., scarlet or white; li.Astulosa, 3 ft., purple; and if. purpurea, 
2 ft., deep purple, are good border flowers. 

Museari. — Pretty dwarf spring-flowering bulbs. if. bofryoides 
(Grape Hyacinth), 6 in., blue or white, is the handsomest; Ii. 
mosckotum (Musk Hyacinth), 10 in., has peculiar livid greenish- 
yellow flowers and a strong mttsky odour; if. monslroswn (Feather 
Hyacinth) bears sterile flowers broken up into a feather-like mass. 
Good garden soil. 

Mycsotidinm nobUe.—K remarkable plant, 1 J to 2 ft. high, with 
large blue forget-me-not-like flowers. Requires gritty peat soil and 
cool situations, but must be protected from frost in winter. 

Myositis. — Forget-me-not. Lovely boraginaceous plants. Ii. 
disiiHflora, 6 to B in., with large, handsome and abundant sky-blue 
flowers, Is the best and earliest, flowering from February onwards; 
it does wefl in light cool soils, preferring peaty ones, and Should be 
re ne wed annually from seeds or cuttings. is. rupicolo, 2 to 3 in., 
intense blue, is a fine rock plant, preferring shady situations and 
gritty soil: Ii. sylvatica, 1 ft., blue, pmk or white, used for spring 
Bedding, should be sown annually in August s 
, Jva*tt*w*.-rSee Narcissus. 

Nepeta. — JV.. Mussinh, 1 ft., is a compactly spreading greyish- 
leaved labiate, with lavender-blue flowers, and is sometimes used for 
bedding or for marginal lines in large compound beds. 

Nierembergia. — N. rhwlaris, 4 in., from La Plata, has slender, 
creeping, rooting stems, bearing stalked ovate leaves, and large 
funnel-shaped white flowers, with a remarkably long slender tube; 
especially adapted for rockwork, requiring moist sandy loam. 

Nymphoeo.—Stx Watsh-Lily. 

Oenothera.— The genus of the Evening . Primrose, consisting of 
showy species, all of which grow and blossom freely in rich deep 
soils. Ot. missouritnsis (macrocarpa), 6 to 12 in., has stout trailing 
branches, lance-shaped leaves ana large yellow blossoms; Ot. 
taraxneifotia, 6 to 12 in., has a stout crown from which the trailing 
branches spring out, and these bear very large white flowers, changing 
to delicate rose; this perishes in cold soils, and should therefore be 
raised from seed annually. Of erect habit are Ot. speciosa, 1 to 2 ft., 
with large white flowers; Ot. fruiuosa, 2 to 3 ft., with abundant 
yellow flowers; and Oe. serotina. 2 ft., also bright yellow. 

Ompkalodes. — Elegant dwarf boraginaceous plants. O. verna, 

4 to 6 in., a creeping, shade-loving plant, has bright blue flowers 
in the very early spring; O. Luciliae, 6 in., has much larger lilac-bine 
flowers, and is an exquisite rock plant for warm, sheltered spots. 
Light sandy soil. 

Onosma. — 0. taurica, 6 to 8 in., is a charming boraginaceous plant 
from the Caucasus, producing hispid leaves and cymose heads of 
drooping, tubular, yellow flowers. It is of evergreen habit, and 
requires a warm position on the rockwork and well-drained sandy 
sou; or a duplicate should be sheltered during winter in a cold, dry 
frame. 

OrnUhogalttm.— The Star of Bethlehem. O. arabicum can only 
be grown in the warmest part* of the kingdom, and then requires 
protection in winter. Other species, all bulbous, are O. nutans, 
O. pyramidalt,- O. pyrtnaieunt, and the common Star of Bethlehem, 
O. umbdUtum; all are easily grown, and have white flowers. 

Ostrowshya magnifiea. — A magnificent bellflower from Bokhara, 

4 to 5 ft. high, and white flowers tinted and veined with lilac, 3 to 

5 in. across. Requires rich, gritty loam of good depth, as it produces 
tuberous roots 1 to 2 ft long. 



V7* 



HORTICULTURE 



0FL0WER3 



four, are but a 

ante, requiring 
'mottled leaves 
>ut has broader 

er, but of easy 
te double white 
P. uliginoium, 
a October; P. 
eeping species, 
covering slopes 

y dwarf plant* 
toistr peaty soil 
ing root-leaves, 
tary, or two to 

vated form of 
, i ft., white; 
iety it aconiti- 
uxts fiore-pleno 
y. . Of dwarfer 
; R. gramrtuus, 
; ana it rutae- 

oily. R. podo- 
irgc lobes, and 
resembling one 
wish-white; R. 
%. sambucifolia, 
, They require 

ith large white 

___ ,__„ „ . . . <^>* »* sunilar. 

Both require very warm, sunny spots and rich, sandy soil, and 
should not be disturbed often. 

Rudbeckda. — Bold-habited composite plants, well suited for 
shrubbery borders, and thriving in light loamy soil. The flower- 
heads have a dark-coloured elevated disk. R. Drutnmondii, 2 to 
Sft., with the ray-florets reflcxed, yellow at the tip and purplish* 
rown towards the base; R. fulgida, 2 ft. golden-yellow with dark 
chocolate disk, the flower-heads 2 to 3 in. across; and R. speciosa, 
a to 3 ft., orange-yellow with blackish-purple disk, the flower-beads 
3 to 4 in. across, are showy plants. 

Sagittoria.— Graceful water or marsh plants with hastate leaves, 
and tuberous, running and fibrous roots. S. japonic* pUna; S. 
kind/alia, S. macrophytia and S. sagittijolia, are among the best 
kinds, all with white flowers. 

Salvia,— The Sage a large genus of labiates, often very handsome; 
but sometimes too tender for English winters. 5. Sciarea, 5 to 6 ft., 
is a very striking plant little more than a biennial, with branched 
panicles of bluish flowers issuing from rosy-coloured bracts; S, 
paUnSi 2 ft., which is intense azure, has tuberous roots, and may be 
taken up, stored away and replanted in spring like a dahlia. 5 t 
praUiuii, 2 ft-, blue, a showy native species, is quite hardy ; the 
.variety lupinoidts has the centre of the lower Up white. 



Saxifrara. — A very large genus of rock and border plants of easy 
culture. The Mupu* group, to which 5. lieulata, S. cordifolia and 
$. crassifoiia belong, are early-flowering kinds of great beauty. 



with fleshy leaves and large cymose clusters of flowers of various 
shades of rose, red and purple. Another very distinct group with 
silvery foliage— ;the crustaceous group— contains some of our 
choicest Alpines. Of these .$. caesia, S. cdlycifora, S. Cotyledon are 
among the best known. Some of the species look more like lichens 
than lowering plants. The green moss-like saxifrages are also a 
very distinct group, with dense tufted leaves which appear greener 
in. winter than in summer. The flowers arc borne on erect branching 
•terns and are chiefly white in colour. Saxifraga umbrosa (London 
Pride) and S. Ceum belong to still another group, and are valuable 
alike on border and rockery. 5. pdtata is unique owing to its large 

Klute leaves, often i t ft. to 18 in. across, with stalks 4 to 2 ft. long, 
owers in April, white or pinkish. Likes plenty of water and a 
moist peaty soil or marshy place. 5. sarmentosa, the, well-known 
" mother of thousands," is often grown as a pot plant in cottagers' 
windows. 

SciUa. — Beautiful dwarf bulbous plants, thriving in well-worked 
sandy loam, or sandy peat. S. bifoiux, 3 in., and 5. sibiriay, 4 in., 
both intense blue, are among the most charming of early spring 
flowers; 3. potula, 6 to 8 in., and $. campmutata, I fu, with 
tubular greyisjt-b4ue flowers, freely produced, are fine border plants, 
as is the later-blooming S. peruviana, 6 to 8 in., dark blue or white. 

Sedum. — Pretty succulent plants of easy growth, and mostly 
suitable for rackwork. They are numerous, varied in the colour of 
both leaves and foliage, and mostly of compact tufted growth. 
&. spectabiU, 1 to 1 J ft., pink, in great cymose heads, is a fine plant 
for the borders, and worthy also of pot-culture for greenhouse 
decoratioo. Mention may also be made of the common 5.. act* 
(Stonecrep). 3 in.* yelW, and its variety with yellow-tipped leaves, 

. iSf mptrvim m— -House-Lcgk. Neat-growing, succulent plants, 



forming rosettes of fleshy leaves close to the y asyd* ■pd ra P 



mow. and 
pped widb 
s, and & 



tit closely 



' craceful- 
E leathery 




nculaceous 
frrfsfoas, 
t glaucous, 
stwhat rtr 

unental in 



.useful ia 
but gritty 
B, grow* 1 



fifth 



Lraerica, is 
peaty so3 
KMdc with 



,»iu 



tnctiea.of 
large and 



sandy sou". 



^.^irro>^a7^1nT,'kvaD^-hl£ AnTX. — JK, 



HORTICULTURE 



FLOWERS) 

6 in., white, are both pretty plants of the easiest culture, either for 
borders or rockeries. 

Tritoma.— Splendid stouturo-growing plants of noble aspect, 
familiarly known as the Poker plant, from their erect, rind spikes 
of flame-coloured flowers; sometimes called Kniphofia. T. Uiaria, 

ito 4 ft., bright orange-red, passing to yellow in the lower flowers, 
a fine autumnal decorative plant. They should be protected 
from frosts by a covering of ashes over the crown during winter. 
I Trollius. — Showy ranunculaceous plants, of free growth, flowering 
about May and June. T. europaous, 18 in., lemon globular; Ti 
asiaiicus, 2 ft., deep yellow: and T. napdMolius, a to a| ft., 
golden yellow, are all fine showy kinds. Rich and rather moist 
•oil. 

• r*/i>i.— Splendid dwarfish bulbs, thriving in deep, sandy, well* 
enriched garden soil, and increased by offsets. They bloom during 
the spring and early summer months. T. Cosntriana. the parent 
of the florists' tulip, 12 to 18 in., crimson and other colours; 
T. EickUri, i ft., cnmson with dark spot; T. Greigi, i ft., orange 
with dark spot edged with yellow, and having dark spotted leaves; 
T. octUus solis, l ft., scarlet with black centre; and T. syhestris, 
la to 1 8 in., bright yellow, are showy kinds. 

Veratrum.— Distinct liliaceous plants with bold ornamental leaves 
regularly folded and plaited. V. album, 3 to 5 ft., has whitish 
blossoms in dense panicles, 1 to 2 ft. long. V. nigrum, 2 to 3 ft., has 
blackish-purple flowers, also V. Maacki, 2 ft. Rich sandy loam and 
peat. 

> Verbascum. — Showy border flowers of erect si of 

the "easiest culture. V. Chaixii, 4 to 5 ft., yellow, 1 Jal 

panicles; V. photniceum, 3 ft., rich purple or wr or- 

mosum, 6 ft., golden yellow in dense panicles, are < s. 

Veronica, — The Speedwell family, containing 1 tal 

members; all the hardy species are of the easi in 

ordinary garden soil. The rotate flowers are in c :es, 

sometimes branched. V. crassifolia, 2 ft., dark bl 4a, 

If ft., flesh-colour; V. corymbose, 1} ft., pale blu< ly- 

arranged racemes; V. gentianoides, 2 ft., grey v les; 

V. spicata, blue, and its charming white variet V. 

vtrtinico, 5 ft., white, are distinct. 

" Vinca.— Periwinkle. Pretty rock plants, growing freely in ordinary 
soil. V. herbacta, of creeping habit, with purplish-blue flowers; 
V. minor, of trailing habit, blue; and V. major, t to a ft. high, also 
trailing, are suitable for the rock garden. The last two are ever- 
green, and afford varieties which diner in the colour of their flowers, 
while some are single and others double. 



V*bJa~- Violet. Charming dwarf plants, mostly evergreen and of 
tufted habit, requiring well-worked rich sandy soil. V. calcarola, 
6 in., light blue; V. cornuta, 6 to 8 in., blue; V. lutea, 4 in., yellow; 



V. aUalca, 6 in!, yellow or violet with yellow eye ; V. . 
6 to 8 in., lavender-blue; V. pedata* 6 uu, pale blue; and V. odorata, 
the Sweet Violet, in its many single and double flowered varieties, 
are all desirable. 

. Yucca. — Noble sobarborescent lifiaceoua plants, which should be 
grown in every garden. They do well in light, well-drained soils, 
and have a close family resemblance, the inflorescence being a 
panicle of white, drooping, tulip«shaped flowers, and the foliage 
rosulate, sword-shaped and spear-pointed. Of the more shrubby- 
habited sorts. Y. gliriosa, rtcurvifolia and Treculeana are good and 
distinct; and of the dwarfer and mare herbaceous sorts Y. jtltv 
utentosa, flaccida and angustifolia are distinct and interesting kinds, 
the first two flowering annually. 

'» The taste for cultivation of the class of plants, of which the fore- 
going list embraces some of the more prominent members, is on the 
Increase, and gardens will benefit by its extension. 

Hardy Trees and Shrubs.— Much of ihe beauty of the pleasure 
garden depends upon the proper selection' and disposition of orna- 
mental trees and shrubs. We can only afford space here for lists of 
some of the better and more useful ana ornamental trees and shrubs, 
old and new. 

The following list, which is not exhaustive, furnishes material 
from which a selection may be made to suit various soils and situa- 
tions. The shrubs marked * are climbers. 

Hardy Deciduous Tmt. 



Acer— Maple. 
Aesculus— Horse-Chest nut. 
AHantus— Tree of Heaven. 
Alnus — Alder. 
Amygdalus — Almond. 
Betula— Birch. 
Carpinus— Hornbeam. 
Carya — Hickory. 
Castanea— Sweet Chestnut. 
Catalpa. 

Celtis— Nettle Tree. 
Cercis— Judas Tree. 
Cotoneaster (some species). 
Crataegus — Thorn. 
Davidia. 
Diospyros. 
Fagus— Beech. 



Fraxinus — Ash. 
Ginkgo— Maidenhair Tree. 
Gleditschia— Honey Locust. 
Gymnocladus — Kentucky Coffee 
\ Tree, 

Tugla ns — Walnut. 
Kolrcuteria. 
Laburnum. 
Larix — Larch. 
Liriodendron— Tulip-tree. 
Magnolia. 
Moms — Mulberry. 
Negundo— Box-Elder. 
Ostrya— Hop Hornbeam. 
Paulownia. 
Planera. 



773 

Sanx-^WuTow; 
Sophora. 
Ac). TaxocUum— Deciduous Cypress. 
Tdia— Lime. 
Ulmus— Elm. 
Virgilia. 
Xanthoceras. 

rdy Bmpotu Trots. 

Libocedrus. 

Magnolia grandiflora. 
e. Picea— Spruce Fir. 

Pinus — Pine. 

Quercus Ilex—Holm-Oak 

RetinospOra. 

Sciadopuys— Umbrella Pine 
ar. Sequoia (Wellingtonia). 

Taxus— Yew. 

Thuiopsts. 

Thuya— Arbor Vitae. 

Tsuga. 

•dy Dmduous Shrubs. 



llspice. 



kindle 



rdy Efcrgrem Shrubs. 

Griseiinia. 

Hedera*— Ivy. 

Hypericum— 5t John's Wort. 

Ilex— Holly. 

Jasmin urn *— Jasmine. 

Kadsura.* 

Lardizabala.* 

Laurua— Sweet Bay. 

Liguetrum — Privet. 

Lonicera*— Honeysuckle. 

Osmanthus. 
Ac Pernettya. 

Phillyrea. 

Phottnia. 
rfrt Rhamnus Alaternu*. 

Rhododendron— Rose-Bay, 

Rosa*— Rose, 

Ruscus. 

Skimmia. 

Smttax.* 

Stauntonia.* 

Ulex— Forte.. 

Viburnum — Laurustinus. 

Vinca— Periwinkle. 

Yucca — Adam's Needle. 

lis term Is chiefly applied to those summer* 
iry-leaved and zonal pelargoniums, petunias, 
, Ac., which are employed in masses for 
netrical parterre. Of late years, however, 
n bestowed on arrangements of brilliant 
we of fine foliage, and the massing also of 
its in parterre fashion has been very greatly 
its thrive best in a light loam, liberally 
ly rotten dung from an old hotbed or 
ow droppings and leaf-mould. 



774 



HORTICULTURE 



{FLOWERS 



ik- 

V. 
Ja. 
as 

srl 
or 
Snowdrop. 

I Summer Bedding. — There Si great variety amongst die plant* 
which are used for bedding-out in the garden during the summer 
months, but we can note only, some of the most important of them. 
Amongst them are the Ageratums, the old tall-frowing sorts of 
which have been superseded by dwarfer blue ana white flowered 
varieties;' Alternanthera*, the principal of which are A. amoena, 
amoena spectabilis, magnifica, paronychioides major aurea and 
amabilis; Alyssum marittmum variegatum; some of the dwarf 
varieties of Antirrhinum ma jus; Arunao Donax variegate; Begonias; 
Calceolarias; Cannas; Centaurea ragusina; Clematises, of which 
the hybrids of the Jackmanni type are best;- Dahlia variabilis. 
and the single-flowered forms of D. eoccinea; Echeverias, of 
which E. secunda and E. metallica are much employed; Gazanias; 
Heliotropes; Iresincs; Lantanas; Lobelias; Mesembryantkemum 
cordifoUum variegatum) Pelargoniums, of which the various classes 
of zonal or bedding varieties are unapproachable for effect and general 
utility; Petunias; Phloxes; PoXemonium cotruUum variegatum*, 
Pyretkrum Parthenium aureum, the well-known Golden Feather, 
especially useful as an edging to define the outline of beds upon 
grass; Tropaeoluma, especially some of the varieties of T. Lob* 
bianum; and Verbenas, the offspring of Tweedieama, chamaedrifolia 
and others. Few bulbs come into the summer flower gardens, but 
amongst those which should always be well represented are the 
Gladiolus, the Lilium, the Tigridia and the Montbretia. 
I Subtropical Bedding. — Foliage and the less common flowering 
plants may be used either in masses of one kind, or in groups ar- 
ranged for contrast, or as the centres of groups of less imposing or 
of dwarfer- flowering subjects; or they may beixanted as single 
specimens in appropriate open spaces, in recesses, or as distant 
striking objects terminating a vista. 

Carpet Bedding consists in covering the surface of a bed, or a 
scries of beds forming a design, with close, low-growing plants, in 
which certain figures arc brought out by means of plants of a different 
habit or having different coloured leaves. Sometimes, in addition 
to the carpet or ground colour, individual plants of larger sice and 
handsome appearance are dotted symmetrically over the beds, an 
arrangement which is very telling. Some of the best plants for 
carpeting the surface of the beds are: Antennaria tomentosa and 
Leucobhytum Browni, white; Sedum acre. dasyphvUum, corsicun 
and glaucum, grey: and Sedum Lydium, Mentha rulegium gibrat- 
tarica, Sagina subulata and Herniaria glabra, green. The Alternan- 
theras, Amaranthuses, Iresincs and Coleus Verschaffelti furnish high 
and warm colours; while Pyretkrum Parthenium aureum yields 
greenish-yellow; Thymus citriodorus aureus, yellowish: . Mesem* 
bryanthemum cordijolium variegatum, creamy yellow; Centaureas 
and others, white; Lobelia Erinus, blue; and the succulent Eche- 
verias and Scmpervivums, glaucous rosettes, which last add much 
to the general effect. In connexion with the .various designs such 
fine plants as Agave americanoy Dracaena indima are often used as 
centre-pieces. 

Greenhouse Plants. — These are plants requiring the shelter of 
a glass house, provided with a moderate degree of neat, of which 
45* Fahr. may be taken as the minimum in winter. The house 
should be opened for ventilation in all mild weather in winter, and 
daily throughout the rest of the year. The following is a select list 
of genera of miscellaneous decorative plants (orchids, palms and 
ferns excluded; climbers are denoted by*; bulbous and tuberous 
plants by f); 

Abutilon Aspidistra Brugmansia 

Acacia Asystasia (Mackaya) Calceolaria 

Agapanthus Azalea Camellia 

Agathaea Bauera Campanula 

Apave Begonia f Canna 

Alonsoa Blandfordia Celosia 

Aloysia Bomarea* Ccstrum* 

Amaryllisf Boronia Chorizema* 

Ardiaia Bougainville** Chrysanthemun 

A&paragus Bouvardia. Cineraria 



Cliantbus Pleat Nerinef 

Clivia Fuchsia Nerium 

Cobaea* Grevillea Pelargonium 

Coleus Haemanthusf Petunia 

Coproema Heiiotrophim PimeKa . 

Cordytine Hibiscus Plumbago* 

Correa Hoya* Pbtianthest 

Cuphea Hydrangea Primula 

Cyclamen f Impatiens Rhododendron 

Cyperus Jasminum* Richardta (CaHa)f 

Cytisus lusticia Salvia 

Darwinia (Gcnetyllis) Katosanthes -Sarraceaia 

Diosma Lachenaliat Solanum* 

Dracaetia Lantana Sparmannia 

Eccfemocarpuft* Lapageria* Static* 

Epacris Lihumt Strefctria 

EpiphylliMB Lophospermum* Streptocarpos 

Erica Mandevillea* Swamsoaia 

Eriosteraon Manettia* Tacsonia* 

Erythrioa Mutisia* Tecom* . 

Eucalyptus MyrsiphyHum* Tradescantia 

Eupatorium Maurandya* Vallotaf 

Eurya 

Stove Plants.— For the successful culture of stove plants two 
houses at least, wherein different temperatures can be maintained, 
should be devoted to their growth. The minimum temperature 
during winter should range at night from about 55° in the cooler 
to 65 in the warmer house, and from 65. to 75° by day, allowing a 
few degrees further rise by sun heat. In summer the temperature 
may range io° higher by artificial heat, night and day, and wul 
often by sun heat run up to 90° or even 95°, beyond which it should 
be kept down by ventilation and frequent syringing and damping 
down of the pathways. During the growing period the atmosphere 
must be kept moist by damping the walls and pathways, and by 
syringing the plants according to their needs; when growth is 
completed less moisture will be necessary. Watering, which, except 
during the resting period, should generally be copious, is best done 
in the forenoon ; while syringing should be done early in the rooming 
before the sun becomes too powerful, and late in the afternoon to 
admit of the foliage drying moderately before night. The following 
is a select list of genera 6f stove plants (climbers are denoted by , 
bulbous and tuberous plants by f) : 

Musa 

Nelumbiumf 

Nepenthes 

Nymphaeat 

Oxera* 

Pancratium t 

Pandanu* 

Passiflbra* 

Pavetta 

Petraea* 

Pleroma* 

Poinsettia 

Ronddetia 

Sancheaia 

Schubert ia* 

Scutellaria 

Stephanotia 

TabcTnaeroontana 

Terminalia 

Thunbergia 

Torenia 

Thyrsacanthus 

Tydaea 

Vinca 

0»cnios.— For the successful cultivation of a mixed collection 
of tropical orchids, it is necessary that two or three houses, in which 
different temperatures can be maintained, should be provided. 
The greater number of them are. epiphytes or plants that grow on 
others without absorbing nourishment from them, and beat and 
moisture afford all or nearly all the nourishment they require. At 
one time It was thought the plants themselves were better for being 
associated with such objects as. ferns and palms, but they are best 
grown by themselves. 

The East Indian orchid house takes in those species which are 
found in the warm parts of the eastern hemisphere, as well as those 
from the hottest parts of the western, and its temperature should 
range from about 70 to 8o° duringthe summer or growing season 
and from 65* to 70* during winter. The Mexican or Brazilian orchid 
house accommodates the plants from the warm parts of South 
America, and its temperature should range from about 65* to 75* 
during summer and from 60 ° to 65° in winter. A structure called 
the cool orchid house is set apart for the accommodation of the many 
lovely mountain species from South America and India, such aa 
edontoglossums, masdevallias, Sec, and in this the more uniform the 
temperature can be kept the better, that in summer varying between 



Acalypha 


Cyanophyllum 


Achimenesf 


/ (Miconia) 


Aeschynanthus 


Cycas 


Allamanda* 


Dssffenbachia 


Alocasiat 


Dipladenia* '' 


Amaryllisf 


Dracaena 


Anthuriura 


Eranthemum 


Aphelandra 


Eucharist 


Aralia 


Euphorbia 


Ardisia 


Ficus 


Arisaemaf 


Franciscea 


Aristdochia'v 


Gardenia 


Ataccia 


Gesnera 


Beffotiia 


Gloriosa*. 


& 


Gloxiaiaf 


Bi 


Hclkooiat 


Bi 


Hoffmannia 


G 


Ipocaaea* 


Ci 


lxora 


G 
G 
Ci 


lacobinia >, 
Jasminum* 
Luculia 


CI 


Maranta • 


G 


Medinilla 


G ton) 


Meyenia 



FRWITS] 



HORTICULTURE 



775 



6o* and 65*, and in winter from 45* to 60*. A genial moist at- 
mosphere must be kept up in the hottest houses during the growing 
season, with a free circulation of air admitted very cautiously by 
well-guarded ventilators. In winter, when the plants are at rest, 
little water will be necessary; but in the case of those plants which 
have no fleshy pseudobulbs to fall back upon for sustenance, they 
must not be suffered to become so dry as to cause the leaves to 
J shrivel. In the Mexican house the plants will generally be able to 

f withstand greater drought occasionally, being greatly assisted by 

their thick pseudobulbs. In the cool or odontoglossam house a 
1 considerable degree of moisture must be maintained at all times, 

for in these the plants keep growing more or less continuously. 
1 t For potting or basketing purposes, or for plants requiring block- 

culture, the materials used are light fibrous peat, special leaf-mould, 
oerounda or polypodium fibre and living sphagnum moss* which 
» supply free drainage for the copious supply of water required. 

Good turfy loam is also used for some, such as cypripediums and 
atlantkes. Indeed the composts now used are varied considerably 
according to the particular group of orchids. The water should. 
1 however, be so used as not to run down into the sheathing b ases of 

the leaves. While in flower, orchids may with advantage be re- 
moved to a drier and cooler situation, and may be utilized in the 
t drawing-room or boudoir. Of late years not only have many fine 

I hybrids been raised artificially between various species, but some 

. remarkable bigcoeric hybrids (between what are considered two 

[ distinct genera) have also been produced (indicated in the list 

j below by •). To keep a valuable collection of orchids in good 

, condition requires the services of an expert orchid grower. 

, The following is a select list of genera in cultivation :— 

Adnata CymbkHum Pertsteria 

, Ada Cypripedium Pescatorea 

1 Aerides Cyrtopodium Phajus 

Angraecum Dendrobium Pbaio-calanthe* 

; Anguloa Diacrium Phalaenopsis 

AnoectochQus Diss Pilumna 

\ Ansellia Epidendrum PlatycHnis 

Arachnanthe Eulophia Pleione 

Arpophyllum Eulophiella Pleurothallis 

Barkeria Galeandra Polystachya 

Batemannia Gongora Promenaea 

Bifrenaria Grammatopbyllum Renanthcra 

Brassavola Habenaria Restrepia 

Brassia Houlletia Rodrjguezia 

Brasso-Cattleya* Ionopsis Saccolabium 

Broughtonia Ipsea Schomburgkia 

Bulbophylhim Laelia Scuticaria 

Burlingtonia Laelio-Cattleya* Sobralia 

Calanthe Leptotes Sophro-cattleya* 

Catasctum Lissochilus Sophronitis 

Cattleya Lvcaste Spathoglottis 

Chysis MasdevaUia Stanhopea 

Cirrhopetalum MUtonia Thunia 

Cochlioda Mormodes Trichopilia 

Coelia Odontoglossum Trichosma 

Codogyne Odontioda* Vanda 

Comparettia Oncidium Zygo-colax* 

Cycaoches Pachyttoma ZvgopstaltH* 

Palms. — These form charming table and drawing-room plants 
when quite young. When more fully developed, and long before 
their full growth is attained, they are among the most decorative 
plants known for the conservatory and for subtropical gardening. 
They are easily cultivated, but should not be allowed to become 
dry. Tbs soil should consist of about 3 parts turfy loam, 1 part leaf 
mould, 1 part coarse silver sand, with enough chemical or other 
manure added to render the whole moderately rich. The older 
plants will occasionally require the roots pruned in order to keep 
then in as small pots as possible without being starved. This 
should be done early in the spring* and the plants beaVily shaded 
until feeding roots are again produced. It is of advantage to afford 
stove culture while the plants are quite young. A little later most 
of the genera succeed well under moderately cool conditions. 
The following genera are among those most commonly cultivated: 

Acanthophoenix Chamaerops MartlnezU 

Acanthorhiza Cocos Oreodoxa 

Areca Corypha Phoenix 

Bactris Ceonoma Pritchardia 

Brahea Hyophorbe Rhapis 

Calamus Kentia Sabal 

Caryota ' Latania Stevensonia 

Ceroxylon Ltvistonia Thrinax 
Chamaedorea 



FlMNsv-Thes* 



popular plants ant usually 
'' dust " produced on the 



their spores, the " dust " produced on the back of their fronds, 
The spores should be sown in well-drained pots or seed pans on the 
surface of a mixture of fibrous sifted peat and small broken crocks or 
sandstone; this soil should be firmly pressed and well-watered, and 
the spores scattered over it, and at once covered with propagating 
glasses or pieces of sheet glass, to prevent water or dry air getting 



to the surface. The pot* should be placed in pans full of water, 
which they will absorb as required. A shady place is desirable, 
with temperature of 50* to « # by night and 65* to 70° by day, or 
they may be set on a shelf in an ordinary propagating pit. The 
spores may be sown as soon as ripe, and when the young plants can 
be handled, or rather can be lifted with the end of a pointed flat 
stick, they should be pricked out into well-drained pots or pans 
filled with similar soil and should be kept moist ana shady. As 
they become large enough, pot them singly in 3- in. pots, and when 
the pots are fairly filled with roots shift on into larger ones. 1 

The best time for a genera] repotting of ferns is in spring, just 
before growth commences. Those with creeping rhizomes can be 
propagated by dividing these into well-rooted portions, and, if a 
number of crowns is formed, they can be divided at that season. 
In most cases this can be performed with little risk, but the glei- 
chenias, for example* must only be cut into large portions, as small 
divisions of the rhizomes are almost certain to die; in such cases, 
however, the points of the rhizomes can be led over and layered into 
small pots, several in succession, and allowed to remain unsevered 
from the parent plant until they become well-rooted. In potting 
the well-established plants, and aU those of considerable size, the 
soil should be used in a rough turfy state, not sifted but broken, 
and one-sixth of broken crocks or charcoal and as much sand as will 
insure free percolation should be mixed with it. 

The stove ferns require a day temperature of 65* to 75*, but do 
not thrive in an excessively high or close dry atmosphere. They 
require only such shade as will shut out the direct rays of the sun, 
and, though abundant moisture must be supplied, the atmosphere 
should not be overloaded with it. Ferns should not be allowed to 
become quite dry at the root, and the water used should always be 
at or near the temperature of the bouse in which the plants- are 
growing. Some ferns, as the different kinds of Gymnogramme and 
CheHanthes, prefer a drier atmosphere than others, and the former 
do not well bear a lower Winter temperature than about 60* by 
night. Most other stove ferns, if dormant, will bear a temperature 
as low as 55° by night and 6o° by day from November to February. 
About the end of the latter month the whole collection should be 
turned out of the pots, and redrained or repotted into larger pots 
as required. This should take place before growth has commenced. 
Towards the end of March the night t em p erature may be raised to 
6o°, and the day temperate*? to 70° or 75 *, the plants being shaded 
in bright weather. Such ferns as Gymnogramme*, which have their 
surface covered with golden or silver powder, and certain species of 
scaly-surfaced Cheilanthes and Nothochlaena, as they cannot bear 
to have their fronds wetted, should never be syringed; but most 
other ferns may have a moderate sprinkling occasionally (not 
necessarily daily), and as the season advances, sufficient air and 
light must be admitted to solidify the tissues. 

Hardy British ferns belonging to such genera as Asplenium, 
Nephrodium, Aspidium, Scolopendrtum, have become fairly popular 
of (ate years, and many charming varieties are now used in borders 
and rockeries. Spores may be sown as above described, but in a 
much lower temperature. 
The following is a select list of genera:— 
>Acrosticnum Davallia 

Actlniopteris Dicksonia 

Adiantum/ Gleichenia 

Alsophila Gymnogramme 

Aspidium' Hymcnophyllum 

Asplenium Lastrea 

Bkchnum . Lomaria 

Cheilanthes; Lvgodium 

Cibotium Nephrodium 

Cyathea Nephrolepis 

VI. Fruits. 

Fruit-Tret Boriert.— No pains should be spared, in the pre- 
paration of fruit-tree borders, to secure their thorough drainage. 
In case of adhesive clayey subsoil this can generally be secured 
by placing over the sloping bottom a good layer of coarse rabbly 
material, communicating with a drain in front to carry off the 
water, while earthenware drain tubes may be laid beneath the 
rubble from 8 to 10 ft. apart, so as to form air drains, and 
provided with openings both at the aide of the walk and also 
near the base of the wall. Over. this rubbly matter, rough turfy 
soil, grass-side downwards, should be laid, and on this the good 
prepared soil in which the trees are to be planted. 

The borders should consist of 3 parts rich turfy loam, 
the top spit of a pasture, and 1 part light gritty earth, such 
as road-grit, with a small portion (one-sixth) of fine brick rubbish. 
iThey should not be leas than 13 ft. m breadth, and may vary 
up to x$ or 18 ft., with a fall from the wall of about x in. in 
$ ft. The border itself should be raised a foot or more above 
the general kveL^The bottom of the border as well as that 



Osmunda 

Onocfea 

Phlebodium 

Platycerium 

Polypodium 

Pterfs 

Scolopendrium 

Todea 

Trichomanes 

Woodwardia 



776 



HORTICULTURE 



[VEGETABLES 



of the drain matt be kept' lower than the general level of the 
subsoil, ebe the soakage will gather in all the little depressions 
of its surface. Fruit-tree borders should not be at all cropped 
with culinary vegetables, or very slightly so, as the process of 
digging destroys the roots of the trees, and drives them from 
near the surface, where they ought to be. 
r Shallow planting, whether of wall trees or standards, is. gener- 
ally to be preferred, a covering of a few inches of soil being 
sufficient for the roots, but a surface of at least equal size to the 
surface of the hole should be covered with dung or litter so as 
to restrain evaporation and preserve moisture. In the case 
of wall trees, a space of 5 or 6 in. is usually left between the 
stem at the insertion of the roots and the wall, to allow for 
increase of girth. Young standard trees should be tied to 
Stakes so as to prevent their roots being ruptured by the wind- 
waving of the stems and to keep them erect. The best time 
for planting fruit trees in the open air is from the end of September 
till the end of November in open weather. 
I In the selection and distribution of fruit trees regard must of 
course be had to local situation and climate. The best walls 
having a south or south-east aspect are devoted to the peach, 
nectarine, apricot, dessert pears, plums and early cherries. 
Cherries and the generality of plums succeed very well either 
on an east or a west aspect. Morello cherries, apples and stewing 
pears succeed well on a north wall In Scotland the mulberry 
requires the protection of a wall, and several of the finer apples 
and pears do not arrive at perfection without this help and a 
tolerably good aspect. The wall-trees intended to be permanent , 
are called dwarfs, from their branches springing from near 
the ground. Between these, trees with tall stems, called riders, 
are planted as temporary occupants of the upper part of the 
walL The riders should have been trained in the nursery into 
good-sized trees, in order that when planted out they may come 
into bearing as speedHy as possible. 

Standard Fruit Trees should not be planted, if it can be avoided, 
in the borders of the kitchen garden, but in the outer slips, 
where they either may be allowed to attain their full size or 
may be kept dwarfed. Each sort of fruit should be planted 
by itself, for the sake of orderly arrangement, and in order to 
facilitate protection when necessary by a covering of nets. 
Their produce is often superior in flavour to that of the same 
kind of fruit grown on walk. 

• Orchard-house Trees. — Peaches, nectarines, ' apricots, figs 
and dessert plums, cherries, apples and pears are commonly 
cultivated in the orchard-house. Peaches and nectarines are 
generally planted out, while the rest are more commonly culti- 
vated in pots. This allows of the hardier pot plants being re- 
moved out of doors while those planted out are in need of the 
room. The pot plants are overhauled in the autumn, the roots 
pruned, a layer being cut off to allow new soil to be introduced. 
Surface dressing and feeding by liquid manure should also be 
afforded these plants while the fruit is swelling. Every effort 
should be made to complete the growth of peaches and nectarines 
while the sun is sufficiently strong to ripen them. Tomatoes 
are frequendy employed to fill gaps m the orchard-house. Should 
it be provided with a central path, requiring shade, Hambro 
and Sweet-water grapes serve the purpose well, and in favourablt 
seasons afford excellent crops of fruit. 

VII. Vegetables.. 

Under this head are included those esculents which are largely 
eaten as " vegetables '• or as " salads.' 1 The more important 
are treated under their individual headings (see Aittchoke, 
Aspabagus, Bean, &&-&&). The culinary herbs used for 
flavouring and garnishing are for the most part dwarf perennial 
plants requiring to be grown on a rich soil in an open sunny 
aspect, or annuals for which a warm sheltered border is the most 
suitable place ; and they may therefore be conveniently grown 
together in the same compartment— a herb garden. The 
perennials should be transplanted either every year or every 
second year. For winter use the tops of the most useful kinds 
of herbs should be cut when in flower or full leaf and quite 



dry, and spread out in an airy but shady place so as to part 
slowly with the moisture they contain and at the same time 
retain their, aromatic properties. When quite dry they should 
be put into dry wide-mouthed bottles and kept closely corked. 
In this way such herbs as basil, marjoram, mint, sage, savory, 
thyme, balm, chamomile, horehound, hyssop and rue, as wel 
as parsley, may be had throughout the season with almost the 
full flavour of the fresh herb. 

Intensive Cultivation. — This name has been applied to the 
method of forcing early vegetables and salads during the winter 
and spring months in the market gardens in the neighbourhood 
of Paris. The system is now popularly known in England as 
" French gardening." Although a few assert that it is an old 
English one that has been discarded in favour of superior methods, 
there seems to be little or no evidence in support of this con- 
tention. The system itself has been practised for about 300 
years in the "marais" gardens round Paris. At one time 
these gardens were in the centre of the city itself, but owing to 
modern improvements they have been gradually pushed out 
beyond the dty boundaries farther and farther. Most of these 
gardens are small— not more than a couple of acres in extent, 
and the rent paid by the maratcher, or market gardener, is very 
high — as much as £30 to £40 per acre. 

The French marakher does not use hot-water apparatus 
for forcing his plants into early growth. He relics mainly upon 
the best stable manure, a few shallow frames about 4) ft. wide 
covered with lights, and a number of large bell glasses or 
" cloches/' The work is carried on from October till the end of 
March and April, after which, with the exception of melons, the 
cultures are carried on in the open air. 

The chief crops grown for early supplies, or " prfmeurs " as 
they are called, are special varieties of cos and cabbage lettuces, 
short carrots, radishes, turnips, cauliflowers, endives, spinach, 
onions, corn salad and celery. To these is added a very important 
crop of melons, a special large-fruited variety known as the 
Prescott Canteloup being the most favoured. 

It is astonishing how much produce is taken off one of these 
small intensive gardens during the year, and especially during 
the worst months when prices usually run fairly high. The 
fact that rents are so heavy around Paris is in itself an indication 
of the money that is realised by the growers not only in the Paris 
markets, but also in Covent Garden. 

During the winter season narrow beds are made up of manure, 
either quite fresh or mixed with old manure, according to the 
amount of heat required. These beds are covered with a few 
inches of the fine old mould obtained from the decayed manure 
of previous years. In the early stages seeds of carrots and 
radishes are sown simultaneously on the same beds, and over 
them young lettuces that have been raised in advance are 
planted. In this way three crops are actually on the same beds 
at the same time. Owing, however, to the difference in their 
vegetative growth, they mature one after the other instead of 
simultaneously. Thus with the genial warmth and moisture of the 
hotbeds, all crops grow rapidly, but the radishes mature first, 
then the lettuces are taken off in due course, thus leaving the 
beds to finish up with the carrots by themselves. Later on in the 
season, perhaps small cauliflowers will be planted along the 
margins of the beds where the carrots are growing, and will be 
developing into larger plants requiring more space by the time 
all the carrots have been picked and marketed. So on throughout 
the year with other crops, this system of intercropping or 
overlapping of one crop with another is carried out in a most 
ingenious manner, not only under glass lights, but also in the open 
air. Spinach, corn salad, radishes and carrots are the favourite 
crops for sowing between others such as lettuces and cauli- 
flowers. 

Although enormous quantities of water are required during the 
summer season, great care must be exercised in applying water 
to the winter crops. When severe frost prevails the lights or 
cloches are rarely taken off except to gather mature specimens; 
and no water is given directly overhead to the plants for fear 
of chilling them and checking .growth! They must secure their 



CALENDAR (GREAT BRITAIN)) 



HORTICULTURE 



777 



■apply of moisture from the rain that falls on the glass, and 
flows into the narrow pathways from 9 In. to 1 2 in. wide between 
each range of frames. As the beds are only about 4J ft- wide, 
the water from the pathways is soaked up on each side by 
capillary attraction, and in this way the roots secure a sufficient 
supply. 

Besides an abundance of water in summer there must also 
be an enormous quantity of good stable manure available during 
the winter months. This is necessary not only to make up the 
required hotbeds in the first place, but also to fill in the path- 
ways between the frames, wherever it is considered advisable to 
maintain the heat within the frames at a certain point. As it is 
impossible to use an ordinary wheelbarrow in these narrow 
pathways, the workman carries a specially made wicker basket 
called a " hotte '* on his shoulders by means of two straps. 
In this way large quantities of manure arc easily transported 
to any required spot, and although the work looks hard to an 
English gardener, the Frenchman says he can carry more 
manure with less fatigue in half a day than an Englishman can 
transport in a day with a wheelbarrow. 

This is merely an outline of the system, which is now being 
taken up in various parts of the United Kingdom, but not too 
rapidly. The initial expenses for frames, lights, cloches, mats 
and water-supply are in many cases prohibitive to men with 
the necessary gardening experience, while on the other hand 
those who have the capital lack the practical knowledge so 
essential to success. 

For full details of tht9 system see Frenek Marhet*Gardening, with 
details of Intensive Cultivation, by John Weathers (London, 1909). 

VllL— Calendar of Garden Operations (A) for Gnat Britain. 
January 

Kitchen Garden. — Wheel out manure and compost ity 

weather; trench vacant ground not turned up rougl in. 

Sow early peas in a cold frame for transplanting. So\ op 

peas, early in the month, and William 1. towards I rly 

Seville and Early Longpod beans; and short-topped wo 

or three sowings, at a week's interval, all on a war Iso 

Hardy Green and Brown cos lettuce in a frame or or cr. 

Plant shallots and Ashleaf potatoes on a warm b< ect 

broccoli as it becomes fit for use, or remove to a dry ir; 

lettuces and endive, which are best planted in franu ley 

in frames so as to be accessible. 

Fruit Car<fcn.— Plant fruit trees in open weather, if not done in 
autumn, which is the proper season, mulching, over the roots to 
protect them from frost, and from drought which may occur in 
spring. Prune fruit trees in mild weather or in moderate frosts, 
nailing only in fine weather. Wash trees infested with insects with 
one of the many insecticides now obtainable. Take off grafts, and 
lay them aside in moist earth in a shady place. 

Forcing. — Prepare manure for making up hotbeds for early 
cucumbers and melons, where pits heated with hot water are not in 
use; also for Ashleaf potatoes. Sow also in heat mustard and cress 
for salads, onions for salads; tomatoes, celery to be pricked out for 
an early crop; and Early Horn carrot and kidney-beans on slight 
hotbeds. Force asparagus, sea-kale and rhubarb, in hotbeds, in 
pits, in the mushroom-house or in the open garden by the use of 
covers surrounded with warm litter; for cucumbers a top heat of 
70°; for vines in leaf and flower a temperature ranging from 65° 
to 70°. Keep forced strawberries with swelling fruit well watered. 
Plant vine eyes for propagation in a brisk heat. 

Plant Houses. — Give abundance of air to the greenhouse, con- 
servatory and alpine frame in mild weather, but use little water. 
A supply of roses, kalmias, rhododendrons, &c., and of hardy flowers 
and bums, as lily of the valley, hyacinths, tulips, daffodils, &c. t 
should be kept up by forcing. 

Flower Garden.— Pi^nt out tubers and bulbs of border flowers, 
where neglected in autumn, deferring the finer florists* flowers till 
next month. Transplant herbaceous plants in light soils, if not 
done in autumn; also deciduous trees, shrubs and hedges. Lay 
edgings in fine weather. Sow mignonette, stocks, Ac. in pots; 
sow sweet peas and a few hardy annuals on a warm border. Give 
auriculas and carnations abundance of air, bat keep the roots rather 
dry to prevent damping off. 

February 
Kitchen Garden. — Sow successional crops of Early Seville beans, 
and William I., American Wonder or other peas in the beginning 
and end of the month; early cabbages to follow the last sowing in 
August; red cabbages and savoys towards the end. Sow also Early 
Horn carrot; Early Purple-top Munich turnip: onions for a full 
crop in light soils, with a few leeks and some parsley. Sow lettuce 



for succession , with radishes and Round-leaved spinach, twice in the 
course of the month; and small salads every fortnight. Plant 
Jerusalem artichokes, shallots, garlic, horse-radish and early 
potatoes. Transplant to the bottom of a south wait a portion of 
the peas sown in pots in frames in November and January for the 
first crop. Sow Brussels sprouts in gentle heat for an early crop. 

Fruit Garden. — Prune apricots, peaches, nectarines and plums, 
before the buds are much swelled; finish pruning apples, pears, 
cherries, gooseberries, currants and raspberries, before the end of 
the month; also the dressing of vines. Keep the fruit-room free 
from spoiled fruit, and shut it close. Cut down the double-bearing 
raspberries to secure strong autumn-fruiting shoots. Head back 
stocks preparatory to grafting. 

Forcing. — Sow melons and cucumbers on hotbeds and in pits. 
Sow carrots, turnips, early celery, also aubergines or egg-plants, 
capsicums, tomatoes and successional crops of kidney-beans; 
cauliflower and Brussels sprouts, in gentle heat, to be afterwards 
planted out. Plant early, potatoes on slight hotbeds. Continue 
the forcing of asparagus, rhubarb and sea-kale. Commence or 
continue the forcing or the various choice fruits, as vines, peaches, 
figs, cherries, strawberries, Ac Pot roots of mint and place in heat 
to produce sprigs for mint sauce. Be careful to protect the stems 
of vines that are outside the forcing-houses. 

Plant Houses.— Let the greenhouse and conservatory have plenty 
of air in mild weather. Pot and start tuberous-rooted begonias and 
gloxinias. Pot young plants of Hippcastrum, and start the 
established ones. Propagate chrysanthemums in cool-house or 
vinery under hand lights or frames. Put plants of fuchsias, petunias, 
verbenas, heliotropes, salvias and other soft-wooded subjects, into 
a propagating house to obtain cuttings, Ac, for the flower garden. 
Sow stocks, dahlias and a few tender and half-hardy annuals, on 
a slight hotbed, or in pots. Propagate old roots of dahlias by 
cuttings of the young shoots In a hotbed. Sow petunias in heat, 
and prick out and harden for bedding out; also gloxinias to be 
grown on in heat tilt the flowering season. 

Fimoer Garten.— \n dry open weather plant dried roots, including 
most of the finer florists' flowers; continue the transplanting of 
hardy biennial flowers and herbaceous plants. Sow In the last 
week mignonette, and hardy annuals, in a warm border, for subse- 
quent transplanting. 

March 



lei 



of 



Aran 



J\TKU, 

Kitchen Garden.— Sow asparagus, sea-kale, Turnip-rooted beet, 
salsafy, scorzonera, skirret, carrots and onions on heavy soils; also 
marrow peas, Longpod and Windsor beans, turnips, spinach, celery, 



778 



HORTICULTURE 



(CALENDAR (GREAT BRITAIN) 



oli 
nd 

ow 

Lilt 

of 
es. 

Jid 
up 



lib 
iw. 
iicr 
try 
ing 



itts 
for 
on 
am 
red 
*d 
re. 
lit, 



ice 

S 

iry 
fcr 
ide 

>P» 
on 

KC 

ias 
by 
ay 
Us 
nd 

IUS 

lie 

nd 
th. 



perennial grass-seeds; mow die lawnt frcqaen^yTpUnt evergreen*. 

May 

Kitchen Garden.— Sow mail all 

salads every week, radishes a 

fortnight, carrots and onions he 

first week and together with it; 

endive for an early crop; a tot 

beans, cauliflowers, Early Y< els 

sprouts, borecole, broccoli, a >w 

vegetable marrows and hard) he 

last week ; sow cardoons in tn ler 

glass shelter; sow chicory for h- 

mg up the several crops. 

Fruit Garden.— Disbud peaches, nectarines and other early trees 
against the walls, also attend to the thinning of fruit. Give 
occasional washings with the engine to keep down insects. Pick 
caterpillars from gooseberries and wall trees on their first appearance. 
Remove from raspberries and strawberries all suckers and runners 
that are not wanted. 

Forcing.— Plant melons »nd cucumbers on the hotbeds prepared 
for vegetables in February, and now free. Plant out vegetable 
marrows and pumpkins on dung-ridges, under hand-glasses. Sow 
Late crops of cucumbers and melons. 

Plant Houses.— Turn out hardy plants about the middle, and the 
more tender at the latter end of the month. Sow Under annuals 
for succession, potting and shifting those sown at an earlier period; 
sow cinerarias for succession; and a few hardy annuals and ten- 
week stock, Ac, for late crops. Pot off all rooted cuttings. Put 
in cuttings of the different desirable species which are now fit for 
that purpose. Plant out in rich soil Richardias, to be potted up in 
autumn for flowering. Bedding plants should be placed to harden 
in sheltered positions out of doors towards end of month. Towards 
the end of the month many of the main stock of chrysanthemums 
will be ready for the final potting. 

Flower Garden.— Sow annuals for succession in the last week, 
also biennials and perennials in the nursery compartment, for 
planting out next year. Propagate plants of which more stock is 
required cither by cuttings or by dividing the roots. Plant out. 
during the last week, dahlias, hardy pelargoniums, stocks and 
calceolarias, protecting the dahlias from slight frosts. By the end 
of the month, masses of the following plants may be formed with 



safety in warm localities:— pelargonium, ttdiotfopsutn. fuchsia, 
petunia, nierembergia. salvia, verbena, bouvardia and tobebj. 
Protect tulips, ranunculuses and anemones from the mid-day son. 
and from rains and winds. Remove the coverings from all tender 
plants in the open air. 

Shrubbery.— : Tnt\tpUnt all kinds of evergreens, this moeth aa* 
September being the proper seasons. The rarer conifers should 
be planted now and in June, after they have commenced to grow. 
Proceed with the laying down of lawns and gravel-walks, and keep 
the former regularly mown. 

Junb 

Kitchen Garden.— Sow kidney-beans for succession: also the 
wrinkled marrow peas and Seville Longpod and Windsor beans for 
late crops. Sow sabding every ten days; also carrots, omasa 
and radishes for drawing young; and chicory for salads; sow 
endive for a full crop. In the first week sow Early Munich and 
Golden Ball turnips for succession, and in the third week for a full 
autumn crop. Sow scarlet and white runner beans for a late crop, 
and cabbages for coleworts. Make up successional mushroom beds 
early in the month. Plant full crops of broccoli, Brussels sprouts, 
savoys, kales, leeks and early celery, with successional crops of 
cabbage and cauliflower. In the first fortnight of the month, plant 
hardy cucumbers for pickling, in a warm border, placing hand- 
glasses over them towards the end of the month. Plant out capsi- 
cums and tomatoes in sunny positions, and stake and tie securely. 
Pull and store winter onions, if ripe. 

Fruit Garden. — Train and prune the summer shoots of wall and 
trellis and other trained trees. Mulch and water fruit trees and 
strawberries in dry weather, desisting when the fruit begins to ripen. 
Net over cherry-trees. Destroy aphides and other insects by 
syringing with tobacco water, or by fumigating, or by dusting «ith 
tobacco powder. 

Forcing. — Proceed with planting melons, cucumbers and toma- 
toes. Keep up the necessary temperatures for the ripening of 
the various fruits. Ventilation will still require constant care. 
Tomatoes will now be fruiting freely; thin out judiciously, 
avoiding excessive pruning at one time. Attend to the gathering 
of fruit as it ripens. 

Plant Houses. — These will now be occupied with tender green- 
house plants and annuals, and the more hardy plants from the store. 
Shift, repot and propagate all plants that are desirable. Sow fragrant 
or showy annuals to flower in pots during winter; and grow on a 
set of decorative plants for the same object. Continue the final 
potting of chrysanthemums as the plants become ready. 

Flower Garden. — Plant out dahlias and other tender subjects, if 
risk of frost is past. Take up bulbs and tuberous roots and dry 
them in the shade before removing them to the store-room. Fill 
up with annuals and greenhouse plants those beds from which the 
bulbs and roots have been raised. After this season, keep always 
a reserve of annuals in pots, or planted on beds of thin layers ai 
fibrous matter, so as to be readily transplanted. Layer carnations 
and pipe pinks in the end of the month. Keep the lawns closely 
mown. 

July 

Kitchen Garden." Watering will be necessary in each department, 
if the weather is hot and dry. In the first week, sow peas for the last 
crop of the season; also Longpod beans and French beans. In the 
last week, sow red globe or Chirk Castle turnip for a full winter crop, 
spinach for an early winter supply and Enfield Market cabbaee 
for early summer use. Sow endive, for autumn and winter use, is 
the beginning and end of the month; also successional crops of 
lettuce and smalt salads. Make up successions! mushroom beds. 
Plant full crops of celery, celeriac, endive about the middle and end 
of the month; late crops of broccoli, cauliflower and coleworts in the 
last week. Gather and dry herbs; also propagate these by slips 
and cuttings. 

Fruit Garden. — Continue the pruning and training of wall and 
espalier trees, and the destruction of noxious insects. Pot straw- 
berries for forcing next winter, and make new beds out of doors as 
soon as well-rooted runners can be obtained. Propagate the different 
sorts of stone fruit trees by budding on other trees or on prepared 
stocks. Gather fruits of all kinds as they ripen. 

Ftrting.—Pmtit melons and cucumbers, giving air and water and 
maintaining heat, Ac. Continue the routine treatment in the tomato* 
bouses. Feed the plants artificially as soon as good crops are set; 
do not wait for signs of distress. The forcing-houses ought to have 
abundance of fresh air and moisture where required, along with the 
necessary heat. 

Plant Houses.— Ventilation will be necessary to keep down ex- 
cessive heat; and attention must be paid to potting, shifting and 
putting in cuttings, and giving abundance of water to the potted 
plants, both indoors and out. Sow seed of herbaceous calceolarias; 
shift heaths, if they require it; cut down pelargoniums past flower- 
ing, and plant the cuttings. 

Flower Garden and Shrubbery. — Take up the remaining tuberous 
roots, such as anemones, ranunculuses. &c., by the end of the first 
week; fill up their places, and any vacancies that may have oc- 
curred, with annuals or bedding plants from the i 



CALENDAR (GREAT BRITAIN)) 

Repot auricula*, aad sow auricula toed in boms under glass. Pro- 

Kgate herbaceous and other plants that have gone out of flower, 
means of cuttings and slips, especially those required for spring 
bedding; propagate also the various summer bedding plants in- 
creased b 



HORTICULTURE 



779 



_ d by cuttings. # Increase roses and American shrubs, by layer- 
ing, budding or cuttings, and go on with the layering of carnations 
and picotees. Stake and tie up dahlias and strong herbaceous 



p tent f. 



August 



he 

Z 

ter 
xy 



pi 
lor 



Kitchen Garden. — Sow winter and spring spina 
and about the end of the month; parsley and v 
full crop, in the first week; cabbages about 
month, lor planting out in spring; cauliflowei 
(Scotland) and in the second half (England) of 
Hammersmith and Brown Cos lettuce in the ft 
small salads occasionally; and Black Spanish 
crops. Plant out kales and broccoli for late < 
(earthing up the advancing crops as required), en m, 

and a few cole worts. Take up shallots, garlic, &c. 

Fruit Garden. — Proceed in training and regulating the summer 
shoots of all fruit trees as directed for the last three months. Net 
up. in dry weather, gooseberry and currant bushes, to preserve the 
fruit till late in the autumn. Make new strawberry beds if required. 
Preserve the ripening fruits on the wall and other trees from in- 
sects, and destroy wasp nests. Gather fruits as they ripen. 

Forcing. — The routine of cultivation in hotbeds and pits may be 
continued. Sow tomatoes and cucumbers for a winter crop. Make 
up mushroom beds. In the forcing-houses, where the crops are past, 
part of the sashes may be removed, so as to permit thorough ventila- 
tion. 

Plant Houses.— Attend to the propagation of all sorts of green- 
house plants by cuttings, and to the replacing in the greenhouse and 
stoves the more tender species, by the end ot the month in ordinary 
seasons, but in wet weather in the second week. Sow half-hardy 
annuals, as Nemophila, Collinsia, Schizanthus, Rhodanthe, &c, to 
flower during winter. 

Flower Garden and Shrubbery.— Sow in the second and the last 
week, on a warm border of a light sandy soil, with an east aspect, 
any free-flowering hardy annuals as Silene pendula, Nemophila, &c, 
for planting in spring; and auricula and primula seeds in pots 
and boxes. Propagate all sorts of herbaceous plants by rooted 
5?ips or suckers; take off layers of carnations, picotees and 
pansies. Plant cuttings of bedding plants, and of bedding pelar- 
goniums in boxes for convenience of removal. Layer the tops of 
chrysanthemums, to obtain dwarf flowering plants. Transplant 
evergreens in moist weather, about the end of tnc month; and pro- 
:>agate them by layers and cuttings. Pot Neapolitan violets for 
forcing ; or plant out on a mild hotbed. Clip box edgings. , 

September .. 

Kitchen Garden.— Sow small salad ing for late crops; and lettuce 
and spinach, if not done last month, for spring crops. Plant endive 
and lettuce at the foot of a south wall to stand the winter; plant 
out cabbages from the chief autumn sowing. Plant cauliflowers' on 
a warm border in spaces such as can be protected by hand-lights. 
Thin the winter spinach, when large enough, that it may have space 
to grow. If broccoli be too rank or tall to withstand the winter, 
Hft and lay nearly up to the neck in the earth, the beads sloping 
towards the north. Lift onions, and lay them out to ripen on a 
dry border or gravel-walk. Lift potatoes and store them. 

Fruit Garden.— Finish the summer pruning and training. Where 
the walls are heated, assist the maturing of peaches and nectarines, 
and the ripening of the young wood for next year, by fires during 
the day. Gather and lay up in the fruit-room with care the autumnal 
sorts of apples and pears. Prepare borders and stations for fruit 
trees during dry weather. Plant strawberries for a main crop. 
Repot orchard-house trees, disrooting if necessary. 

Forcing — Take care that late melons, cucumbers and tomatoes be 
not injured by getting too much water and too little air. Sow a few 
kidney beans for an early forced crop. Expel damp, and assist the 
ripening of late grapes and peaches with fires during the day. 
Prune early vines and peaches. 

Plant Houses— The various pot plants should now be put in 
t heir winter quarters. Keep up moderate temperatures in the stove, 
and merely repel frosts in the greenhouse, guarding against damp, 
by ventilation and by the cautious use of water. Pot hyacinths, 
tulips and other bulbs for forcing', and propagate half-hardy 
plants by cuttings. Begin the housing of the main stock of chrys- 
anthemums. 

FUrmee Garden, cVc — Sow in the beginning of this month all half- 
hardy annuals required for early flowering; also mignonette in pots, 
thinning the plants at an early stage; the different species of primula; 
and the seeds of such plants as, it sown in "spring, seldom come up 
the same season, but if sown in September and October, vegetate 
readily the succeeding spring. Put in cuttings of bedding pelar- 
goniums in boxes, which may stand outdoors exposed to the sun, but 
should be sheltered from excessive rains. Continue the propagation 
of herbaceous plants, taking off the layers of carnations, picotees, 



the end of the'month: choice 
ted aad wintered in cold frames 
il. Plant evergreens: lay and 
hard-wooded sorts of shrubby 

(BE, 

aiding- and radishes in the first 
lallow hotbed for planting out in 
they will be somewhat earlier 
January. Plant parsley in pots 
»se very severe weather occurs, 
ows till wanted in spring; and 
eive the protection of frames, or 
itoes, beet, salsafy, scorzoncra, 
e end of the month. Band and 

I have dropped their leaves may 
eason for transplanting (though 
irhether the leaves have fallen or 
cr proves frosty, as soon as they 
raspberries. The orchard-house 
■e the end of the month. Gather 
pears, the longest-keeping sorts 
the weather be mild, 
hotbeds and pits by means of 
* of air in mild bright weather, 
id repair the forcing-houses, and 

see it is in good working con- 
on hotbeds for blanching. Sow 
il winter mushroom beds. 

of greenhouse plants. Fill the 
; and hardy annuals for planting 
F the hardy sorts of greenhouse 
loroughly ventilated, except in 
ill spring keep succulent plants 
wee roses, hyacinths and a few 
ing decoration. Plant hyacinths 
the pot chrysanthemums should 
ek. 

of hardy annuals in a frame, or 
tal spring use if required. Plant 
der bulbs, as hyacinths, narcissi, 
e end of the month, with a few 
tsplant strong plants of biennials 
mis; also the select plants used 
ilants, stage auriculas, and choice 
frames; and tea roses and other 
r protective material. Take up k 

tubers at the end of the month; 
■ plants from the open borders, 
sens and shrubs, especially in dry 
ut in cuttings of all sorts of ever- 
xts of roses* y 



recant" ground as soon as cleared 
>ugh as possible. Sow early peas 
i the second week, for an early 
nting. Protect endive, celery, 
litter or fern, or by planting the 
lower, early broccoli and lettuces, 
lay them in an open shed; earth 
aragus beds. 

fruit trees in fine weather— the 
Protect fig-trees. Commence 
tore the latest apples and pears. 
\ all decayed fruit. 

degree of heat in hotbeds and 
rill require more than ordinary 
b and sea-kale, in the mushroom- 
under boxes or cases surrounded 
die dung and leaves. Sow Early 
id radishes, on hotbeds. In the 
i trees; fork over and dress the 
been already done. 

the greenhouse and conservatory 
i generally. Continue the forcing 
intaining large-flowered Japanese 
i kept dry, airy and moderately 
F petals, 
tubers of border flowers, but the 

till spring. Plant tulips in the 
cuttings of bedding calceolarias, 
run up to flower. Protect such 
idy sheltered. Plant deciduous 
rather continues favourable, and 
>lar heat absorbed during summer. 

and shrubberies as may now be 

herbaceous plants. 



78a 



HORTICULTURE 



(CALENDAR <UNITED STATES! 



DlCttfBBR 

Kitchen Garden.— Collect and smother-burn all vegetable refute, 
and apply it at a dressing to the ground. Sow a few peas and beans, 
in case of accident to those sown in November, drawing up the soil 
towards the stems of those which are above ground as a protection; 
earth up celery; blanch endive with flower-pots; sow radishes in a 
very sheltered place. Attend to trenching and digging in dry 
weather. 

Fruit Garden.— Plant all aorta of fruit trees in mild weather. 
Proceed with pruning and nailing wall-trees. Examine the fruit- 
room every week, removing promptly all decaying fruit. 
i Forcing.— The same degree of attention to hotbeds and pits will be 
necessary as in the last month. Continue the forcing of asparagus, 
rhubarb and sea-kale, in pits and in the mushroom-house. Proceed 
with the usual routine of culture commenced last month. Make 
the necessary preparations to begin forcing early or succession crops 
by the last week of this or the first of next month. 

Plant Houses, Frames, 6rc— Carnations and picotees in pots must 
be kept rather dry to prevent damping off. Heaths and Australian 
plants must be very sparingly watered, and kept with only fire heat 
enough to repel frost. Cut down plants of chrysanthemums, which 
should be placed in a cool pit, near the glass, in order to afford hard 
sturdy cuttings in February. Shy plants should be given gentle 
bottom heat to induce growth, which should be gently hardened by 
exposure under cooler conditions. 

Flower Garden. &c. — Plant shrubs in open weather. Prune shrubs. 
Sweep and roll the lawns, and put in repair the gravel-walks, keeping 
the surface frequently rolled. (J. Ws. ; W. R. W.) 

(B) For Ihc United States {ekiefiyfor the latitude of New York). 
January 

Flower Garden and Greenhouse.— Little is to be done in either. 
In the greenhouse care must be used to protect against frost. Venti- 
late but little, and with care; raise the ventilating sash only high 
enough to let the heated air from the greenhouse drive back the 
outer air so as not to chill the plants. To destroy the red spider, 
syringe the plants copiously at night, and splash the paths with 
water. The aphis, or green fly," must also be destroyed; tobacco 
may be used. Various new preparations are coming on the market 
for the destruction of greenhouse pests. # Several new effective 
preparations of tobacco have been brought into use. The white-fly 
U now a common pest in greenhouses, the nymphs being greenish 
scale-like objects on the under sides of the leaves, and adults very 
small white flics. The remedy is to spray with kerosene emulsion 
Or whale-oil soap; or if on cucumbers or tomatoes, it is best to 
fumigate with hydrocyanic acid gas, using one ounce of potassium 
cyanide to each iooo cubic ft. of space. (This material is very 
poisonous.) Many greenhouse insects can be kept more or less in 
check by careful and effective hosing of the plants at proper times. 
At this season roses, grape vines ana other plants are often affected 
by mildew ; an effectual remedy b to paint the hot-water pipes with 
a mixture of sulphur and lime, put on as thick as ordinary white- 
wash, once each week until it is checked; but care must be taken 
not to apply it on any surface at a higher temperature than 212*. 
Hyacinths and other bulbs that have been kept in a cellar or other 
dark cool place may now be brought into the light of the greenhouse 
or sitting-room, provided they have filled the pots with roots. If 
they are not well rooted, leave them until they are, or select such of 
them as arc best, leaving the others. In the outside flower garden 
little can be done except that shrubs may be pruned, or new work, 
such as making walks or grading, performed, if weather permits. See 
that the ornamental plants and trees are not injured by heavy 
weights of ice or snow. 

i Fruit Garden. — Pruning, staking up or mulching can be done if the 
weather is such that the workmen can stand out. In all warm or 
comfortable days the fruit trees may be pruned. 
• Grapery. — Graperies used for the forcing of foreign grapes may be 
started, beginning at a temperature of 50 at night, with 10* or 15* 
higher dunng the day. The borders must be covered sufficiently 
deep with leaves or manure to prevent the soil from freezing, as it 
would be destruction to the vines to start the shoots if the roots were 
frozen; hence, when forcing is begun in January, the covering should 
be put on in November, before severe frosts begin. 

Vegetable Garden. — But little can be done in the northern states 
except to prepare manure, and get sashes, tools, &c. in working 
order; but in sections of the country where there is little or no frost 
the hardier kinds of seeds and plants may be sown and planted, such 
as asparagus, cabbage, cauliflower, carrot, leek, lettuce, onion, par- 
snip, peas, spinach, turnip, &c. In any section where these seeds can 
be sown in open ground, it is an indication that hotbeds may be 
started for the sowing of such tender vegetables as tomatoes, egg 
and pepper plants, &c; though, unless in the extreme southern 
states, hotbeds should not be started before the beginning or middle 
of February. Make orders for the spring seeds. . 

February 
Flower Garden and Greenhouse.— The directions for January will in 
the main apply to this month, except that now some of the hardier 



annuals may be town m hotbed or greenhouse, and also the propaga- 
tion of plants by cuttings may be done rather better now than i* 
January, as the greater amount of light gives more vitality to the 
catting. 

Fruit Garden.— But little can be done in most of the northern 
states as yet, and in sections where there is no frost in the ground 
it is likely to be too wet to work; but in many southern states thin 
will be the best month for planting fruit trees and plants of all kinds, 
particularly strawberries, raspberries, blackberries, pear and apple 
trees, while grape vines will do, though they will also do well quae a 
month later. Continue the pruning. Fruit trees for spring planting 
should be ordered, if not already done. 

Grapery.— The graperies started last month at 50* at night may 
now be increased to 60*. with a correspondingly higher day tempera- 
ture. Great care most be taken to syringe the leaves thoroughly at 
least once a day, and to dduge the paths with water, so as to produce 
a- moist atmosphere. Paint the hot- water pipes with s u lph u r 
mixture, as recommended in January. 

Vegetable Garden. — Leaves from the woods, house manure or 
refuse hops from breweries may be got together towards the latter 
part of this month, and mixed and turned to get " sweetened " 
preparatory to forming hotbeds. Cabbage, lettuce and cauliflower 
seeds, if sown early this month in hotbed or greenhouse, will make fine 
plants if transplanted into hotbed in March. This is preferable 
to the use of fall-sown plants. Manure that is to be used for the crop 
should be broken up as fine as possible, for the more completely 
manure of any kind can be mixed with the soil the better the crop 
will be, and, of course, if it is dug or ploughed in in large unbroken 
lumps it cannot be properly commingled. 

March 

Flower Garden and Greenhouse.— -The long days and bright sun- 
shine will now begin to tell on the plants under glass. Examine afl 
plants, that are vigorous and healthy j if the roots have matted the 
'' ball of earth they must be shifted into a larger-sized pot. Plants 
from cuttings struck last month may now be shifted, and the props- 

Bition of all plants that are likely to be wanted should be continued, 
ardier kinds of annuals may be sown; it is best done in shallow 
boxes, say 2 in. deep. 

Lawns can be raked off and mulched with short manure, or rich 
garden earth where manure cannot be obtained. Flower-beds 00 
fight soils may be dug up so as to forward the work of the coming 
busy spring season. Lawns may be benefited by a good dressing, in 
addition to the manure, of some reliable commercial fertilizer. If 
the lawn is thin in spots, these places may be raked over heavily and 
new grass seed sown. 

Fruit Garden. — In many sections, planting may now be done with 
safety, provided the soil is light and dry, but not otherwise. Although 
a tree or plant will receive no injury when its roots are undisturbed 
in the sou should a frost come after planting, the same amount of 

frr — ? '" — J **— J "es, greatly injure the plant if the roots 

si- 
ted in January will have set its fruit, 
wl ne-third. The temperature may now 

be night, with 15* higher in the daytime, 

Tl e used against mildew and insects as 

gi wanted for su ccess io n may be started 

in 

a busy month. In localities where 
th , if it is not wet, seeds of the hardier 

vc s list of seeds given for the southern 

st * used at the north, while for most of 

th etables, such as egg plant, okra, sweet 

pc toes, tomatoes, Sec, may be sown and 

pi be all started. In March flower seeds 

an wn in boxes or flats in the greenhouse, 

or ar the kitchen stove. Unless one has 

sp ds, in which the plants may be trans- 

pi the open ground, it is well not to start 

th as the plants are likely to become too 

lai 1 become dzawa. 

April 

Flower Garden and Greenhouse.-* Window and greenhouse plants 
require more water and ventilation. Due attention must be paid to 
shifting well-rooted plants into larger pots; and, if space b desired, 
many kinds of hardier plants can be safely pot out in cold frames. 
Towards the end of the month it may be necessary slightly to shade 
the glass of the greenhouse. All herbaceous plants and hardy shrubs 
may be planted in the garden. The coveri ng of leaves or litter shook) 
be taken off bulbs and tender plants that were covered up for winter, 
so that the beds can be lightly forked and raked. Sow tender annual 
flower seeds in boxes inside. 

frail Garden. — Strawberries that have been covered up with straw 
or leaves should be relieved around the plants, leaving the covering 
between them. Special care must be exercised that the mulch be 
not left on too long; the plants should not become whitened or 
drawn." Raspberries, grape vines, &c, that have been laid down 
may now be uncovered and tied up to stakes or trellises, and all new 



CALENDAR {DOTTED STATES)! 

plantation* of these and Other fruits may now be made. Fruit trees 
may be grafted. 

Vegetable Cordon.— Asparagus, rhubarb, spinach, Ac., should be 
uncovered, and the bed* hoed or du* lightly. Hardier sorts of 
vegetable seeds and plants, such a* beets, cabbage, cauliflower, 
celery, lettuce, onions, parsley, parsnips, peas, potatoes, radishes. 
spinach, turnip, Ac, should all be sown or planted by the middle of 
the month H the soil b dry and warm, and in all cases, where practic- 
able, before the end of the month. It is essential, in sowing seeds 
now, that they be welt firmed in the soil. Any who expect to get 
early cabbage, cauliflower, lettuce or radishes, while planting or 
sowing b delayed until the time of sowing tomato and egg plant in 
May, are sure to be disappointed of a full crop. Frequent rotation of 
crops should be practised in the vegetable garden, in order to head 
off insects and diseases; and also to make tne best use of the land. 
Every three or four years the vegetable garden should be laid out in 
some new place; but if this cannot be done, the crops should be 
rotated on different; parts of the old garden. , 

May 

' Flower Garden and Greenhouse.— Window and greenhouse plants 
should be in their finest bloom. Firing may be entirely dispensed 
with, though care must still be exercised in ventilating. If weather b 
cold and backward, however, and in very northern regions, care must 
be taken not to stop firing too soon, or the plants will mildew and 
become stunted. Every precaution must be used to keep the air 
moist. " Moss culture " may be tried, the common sphagnum or 
moss of the swamps, mixed with one-twentieth of its bulk of bone- 
dost, being laid as a mulch on the top of the earth of the flower-pots; 
its effect is to shield the pots from the sun, and at the same time 
stimulate the roots to come to the surface. By the end of the month 
all of the plants that are wanted for the summer decoration of the 
flower border may be planted out, first loosening a little the ball of 
earth at the roots. If the weather is dry, water freely after planting. 
When the greenhouse is not to be used during the summer months, 
camellias, azaleas and plants- of that character should be set out of 
doors under partial shade; but most of the other plants usually 
grown in the conservatory or window garden in winter may be set 
in the open border. Flower-beds should be kept well hoed and raked, 
to prevent the growth of weeds next month. 

Pelargoniums, pinks, monthly roses and all the half-hardy kinds of 
flowering plants should be planted early, but coleus, heliotrope and 
the more tender plants should be delayed until the end of the month. 
Annuals that have been sown in the greenhouse or hotbed may be 
planted out, and seeds of such sorts as mignonette, sweet alyssum, 
Phlox Drummondti, portulaca, Ac, may be sown in the beds or 
borders. The china aster is now one of the most popular of summer 
and fall plants. The seed may be sown in the north as late as the 
middle of May, or even the first of June, with good results for fall 
blooming. If the plants are started early in the greenhouse, they are 
likely to spend themselves before fall, and therefore a later sowing 
should be provided. 

Lawns should be mown, and the edgings trimmed. 

Fruii Garden.— Th* hay or leaf mulching on the strawberry beds 
should be removed and the ground deeply hoed (if not removed in 
April in the more forward places), after which it may be placed on 
again to keep the fruit dean and the ground from drying. Where it 
has not been convenient before, most of the smaller fruits may yet 
be planted during the first part of the month. Tobacco dust will 
dislodge most of the numerous kinds of slugs, caterpillars or worms 
that make their appearance on the young shoots 01 viner ~- *-"ra. 
Fruit trees, may be planted this month, if they were not j in 

March or April. If they have been kept fresh and dorm ey 

should still be in good condition. The broken roots shot ut 

back to fresh wood, and the tops should be headed back in p >n. 

Vegetable Garden. — Attention should be given to new so< nd 

plantings for succession. Crops sown last month will hi be 

thinned out if large enough. Hoe deeply all transplanted ci ch 

as cabbage, cauliflower, lettuce, Ac. Tender vegetables as 

tomatoes, egg and pepper plants, sweet potatoes, Ac, can t ed 

out. Seeds of Lima beans, sweet corn, melon, okra, cucumrjers, etc., 
should be sown; and sow for succession peas, spinach, lettuce, beans, 
radishes, Ac, every ten days. 

. Jon* -. 

Flower Garden and Greenhouse. — Tropical plants can now be used 
to fill up the greenhouse during the summer months. It should be 
well shaded, and fine specimens of fancy catadiums) dracaenas, 
coleus, crotons, palms, ferns and such plants as are grown for the 
beauty of their foliage, will make a very attractive show. If these 
cannot be had, common geraniums may be used. The "moss 
culture " will be found particularly valuable for these plants. Hya- 
cinths, tulips and other spring bulbs may be dug up, dried and placed 
away for next fall's planting, and their places filled with bedding 
plants, such as coleus, achyranthes, pelargoniums, and the various 
white and coloured leaf plants. It will be necessary to mow the lawn 
once a week, and sometimes oftener. 

Frrtif Garden. — The small fruits should be mulched about the roots, 
if this has not yet been done. If the fruit garden is large enough to 



BOrtiGVtTVM 



78* 



admit of horse culture, It Is best to*fceep the bush-fruits wet! cultivated 
during the season; this tillage conserves the moisture and helps to 
make a full and plump crop of berries. In small areas the mulching 
system b sometimes preferable. 

Vegetable Garden. — Beets, beans, carrots, corn, cucumbers, lettuce, 
peas and radishes may be sown for succession. This is usually a busy 
month, as many crops have to be gathered, and, if hoeing is not 
promptly seen to, weeds are certain to give great trouble. Tomatoes 
should be tied up to trellises or stakes if fine-flavoured and handsome 
fruit is desired, tor if left to ripen on the ground they are apt to have 
a gross earthy flavour. - 

/JOLT* 

Flower Garden and Greenhouse.— Watering, ventilating and fumi- 
gating (or the use of tobacco in other forms for destruction of aphides) 
must be attended to. The atmosphere of the greenhouse must be 
kept moist. Watch the plants that have been plunged out of doors, 
and see if any require repotting. AU plants that require staking, such 
as dahlias, roses, gladioli and many herbaceous plants, should now 
be looked to. Carnations and other plants that are throwing -up 
flower stems, if wanted to flower in winter, should be cut back, that 
is, the flower stems should be cut off to say 5 in. from the ground. | 

Fruit Garden*— -If grape vines show any signs of mildew, dust 
them over with dry sulphur, selecting a still warm day. The fruit 
having now been gathered from strawberry plants, if new beds are to' 
be formed, the system of layering the plants in small pots is the best. 
In general, field strawberries are not grown from potted layers, but 
from good strong layers that strike naturally in the field. In the' 
north, spring planting of strawberries b generally advised for market 
conditions; although planting ia early fall or late summer b 
successful when the ground b well prepared and when it does not 
suffer from drought. Where apples, pears, peaches, grapes, Ac, have 
set fruit thickly, thin out at least one-half to two-thirds of the young 
fruit* 

Vegetable Garden,-- The first ten days of this month will yet be 
time enough to sow sweet corn, beets, lettuce, beans, cucumbers and 
ruta-baga turnips. Such vegetables as cabbage, cauliflower, celery, 
Ac, wanted for fall or winter use, are best planted thb month, though 
in some sections they will do later. Keep sweet potatoes hoed to 
prevent the vines rooting at the joints. 

August 

Flower Garden and Greenhouse. — But little deviation b required ia 
these departments from the instructions for July* See that wft Vfo m) 
water b applied; the walks may be wet in the houses. , 

Fruit Garden. — Strawberries that have fruited will now be maldnf 
" ru nners,' ' or young plants. These should be kept cut off dose to the 
old plant, so that the full force of the root b expended in making the 
" crowns " or fruit buds for next season's crop. If plants are re- 
quired for new beds, only the required number should beallowed to 
?ow, and these .may be layered in pots aa recommeaded ia July. 1 
he otd stems of raspberries and blackberries that have borne fruit 
should be cut away, and the young shoots thinned to three or foul 
canes to each bill or plant. If tied to stakes and topped when 4 or 
5 ft. high, they will form three or four branches on a cane, and will 
make stronger fruiting plants for next year. 

Vegetable Garden.— Hoc deeply such crops as cabbage, cauliflower 
and celery. The earthing up of celery thb month b not to be 
recommended, unless a little very early supply b wanted. Onions ia 
many sections can be harvested. The proper condition b when the 
tops are turning yellow and falling down. They are dried best by 
placing them in a dry shed in thin layers. Sow spinach for fall use, 
but not yet for the winter crop. Red topi white globe, and yellow 
Aberdeen turnips should now be sown; ruta-baga turnips sown last 
month will need thinning, and in extreme southern states they may 
yet be sown. 

SBrTBMBBR 

Flower Garden and Greenhouse.— -The flower-beds in the lawn should 
be at their best. If planted in " ribbon lines M or " massing," strict 
attention must be given to pinching off the tops, so that the lines or 
masses will present an even surface. Tender plants will require to 
be put in the greenhouse or housed in some way towards the end of 
this month; but be careful to keep them as cool as possible during 
the day. Cuttings of bedding plants may now be made freely u 
wanted for next season, as young cuttings rooted in the fall make 
better plants for next spring's use than old plants, in the case of such 
soft-wooded plants as pelargoniums, fuchsias, verbenas, heliotropes, 
Ac. ; with roses and plants of a woody nature, however, the old 
plants usually do best. Dutch bulbs, such as hyacinths, tulips, 
crocus, Ac, and most of the varieties of lilies, may be planted. 
Violets that are wanted for winter flowering will now be growing 
freely, and the runners should be trimmed oft. Sow seeds of sweet 
alyssum, candytuft, daisies, mignonette, pansies, Ac. Vbit the 
roadsides and woods for interesting plants to put in the hardy 
borders. 

Fruit Garden.— Strawberry plants that have been layered in polj 
may yet be planted, or in southern districts the ordinary ground 
layers may be planted. The sooner in the month both are planted 
the better crop they will give next season; and, as these plants soon, 



782 



HORTICULTURE ^calendar (united states) 

be put away before the end of the month in all section* north of 
Virginia; south of that it may be left in most places where grown 
throughout the winter if well covered up. The sulks of the asparagus 
bed should be cut off , and burned if there are berries oa them, as the 
seeds scattered in the soil sometimes produce troublesome weeds. 
Mulch the beds with a or 3 in. of rough manure. All vegetable rosea 
that are yet in the ground, and not designed to be leit there over 
winter, must be dug up in this latitude before the middle of the 
month or they may be frozen in. Cover up onions, spinach, aproots, 
cabbage or lettuce plants with a covering of 2 or* in of leaves, hay, 
or straw, to protect them during the winter. Cabbages that have 
headed may usually be preserved against injury by frost until the 
middle of next month, by simply pulling them up and packing thrsa 
closely in a dry spot in the open field with the heads down and roots 
up. On approach of cold weather in December they should be co vered 
up with leaves as high as'the tops of the roots, or, if the soil is light, 
it may be thrown over them, if leaves are not convenient. Cabbages 
will keep this way until March if the covering has not been put oa 
too early. Plough all empty ground if practicable, and, whenever 
time will permit, do trenching and subsoiling. Cabbage. cauls- 
flower and lettuce plants that are in frames should be regularly 
ventilated by lifting the sash on warm days, and on the approach 
of very cold weather they should be covered with straw mats or 
shutters. In the colder latitudes, and even in the middle states, it 
is absolutely necessary to protect cauliflower in this way, as it is much 
more tender than cabbage and lettuce plants, jr 

December 

Flower' Garden and Greenhouse.'— Clooc attention must be paid to 
protecting all tender plants, for it is not uncommon to have the care 
of a whole year spoiled by one night's neglect. Vigilance and extra 
hot fires will have to be kept up when the thermometer falls to 34* 
or 35* in the parlour or conservatory. It is well to set the plants 
under the benches or on the walks of the greenhouses; if they are in 
the parlour move them away from the cold point and protect theni 
with paper; this will usually save them even if the thermometer 
falls to 24* or a6 # . Another plan in the greenhouse is to dash water 
on the pipes or flues, which causes steam to rise to the glass and 
freeze there, stopping up all the crevices. With plants outside that 
require strawing up or to be mulched, this will have now to be 
finished. 



T. Weathers, GardenlFUnoers for Town and Country (33 col plates); 
Chas. Baltet, The Art of Grafting and Budding', W. Thomson, Tie 
Grape Vine-, Thos. Baines, Greenhouse and Stove Plants: R. Irwin 
Lynch, The Booh of the Iris; G. Jekyll, Lilies fet English Gardens; 
E. A. Ormerod, Manual of Injurious Insects: Dr A. B. Griffiths* 
Manures for Fruit and other Trees; F. W. Burbridge and J. G. Baker, 
The Narcissus (48 coL plates); H. A. Burberry, The Orchid Culti- 
vator's Handbook; B. S, Williams, The Orchid Grower's Mammal; 



HORTON, C— HOSE 



}. Vejteh & Son*, Manual of a r 

and F. E. Weiss, Physiology of r 
Culture and Management', G. 

Foster-Melliar, Boot of ike Ron » 

col. plates); G. Jckyll and E. N ; 

k Weathers, ito*« /or Garden a L 

5« Society, Handbook on Prui , 

Roses, their History, Development ; 

A Booh about Roses; J. Hoffm, t 

Book (20 col. plates; tranalat , 

Seaside Planting of Trees and 9 

Strawberry; W. Iggulden, 77k* J 

Shrubs/or English and Irish Gc t 
Cie., 77uf Vegetable Garden (Eng. 
Viftct asd K«m Culture; G. Jel 

Robinson, 77wr n/«U Ganfc*; L. k 
(New York, 1908),. 

HORTON, CHRISTIANA' (;7 1606-^x756), English actress, 
first appeared in London as Melinda in The Recruiting Officer 
in 17x4 at Dmry Lane. Here she remained twenty years, 
followed by fifteen at Covent Garden. At both houses during 
this long career she played all the leading tragedy and comedy 
parts, and Barton Booth (who " discovered " her) said she was 
the best successor of Mrs. Oldfield. She was the original Mariana 
in Fielding's Miser (1733). 

HORTON, ROBERT FORMAN (1855- ), British Noncon- 
formist divine, was bora in London on the x8th of September 
1855. He was educated at Shrewsbury school and New College, 
Oxford, where he took first classes in classics. He was president 
of the Oxford Union in 1877. He became a fellow of his college 
in 1879, and lectured on history for four years. In 1880 he 
accepted an influential invitation to become pastor of the Lynd- 
hnrst Road Congregational church, Hampstead, and sub- 
sequently took a very prominent part in church and denomina- 
tional work generally. He delivered the Lyman Beecher 
lectures at Yale in 1893; in 1808 he was chairman of the London 
Congregational Union; and in 1903 of the Congregational Union of 
England and Wales. In 1909 he took a prominent part in the 
75th anniversary celebration of Hartford Theological Seminary. 
His numerous publications include books on theological, critical, 
historical, biographical and devotional subjects. 

HORTON, SAMUEL DANA (1844-1895), American writer 
on bimetallism, was born in Pomeroy, Ohio, on the x6th of 
January 1844. He graduated at Harvard in 1864, and at the 
Harvard Law School in 1868, studied Roman law in Berlin in 
1869, and in 187 1 was admitted to the Ohio bar. He practised 
law in Cincinnati, and then in Pomeroy until 1885, when he gave 
up law for the advancement of bimetallism. His attention had 
been turned to monetary questions by the "greenback cam- 
paign " of 1-875 in Ohio, in which, as in former campaigns, he 
had spoken, particularly effectively in German, for the Republican 
party. He was secretary of the American delegation to the 
Monetary Conference which met in Paris in 1878, and edited 
the report of the delegation. To the conference of 1881 he was 
a delegate, and thereafter he spent much of his time in Europe, 
whither he was sent by President Harrison in 1889 as special 
commissioner to promote the international restoration of silver. 
He died in Washington, D.C., on the 23rd of February 1895. 
Horton's principal works were The Silver Pound (1887) and 
Silver in Europe (1890), a volume of essays. 

HORUS (Egyptian Hdr), the name of an Egyptian god, 
if not of several distinct gods. To all forms of Horns the falcon 
was sacred; the name Hdr, written with a standing figure of that 

bird, v^i is connected with a root signifying " upper," and 

probably means " the high-flyer." The tame sacred falcon on 

its perch J& is the commonest symbol of divinity in early 

hieroglyphic writing; the commonest title of the king in the 
earliest dynasties, and his first title later, was that which named 
him Horus. Hawk gods were the presiding deities of Poi (Pe) 
and Nekhen, which had been the royal quarters in the capitals 
of the two primeval kingdoms of Upper and Lower Egypt, at Buto 
.and opposite El Kab. A principal festival in very early times 



7»S 



was the " worship of Hords," and the kings of the prehistoric 
dynasties were afterwards called ". the worshippers of Horns." 
The Northern Kingdom, in particular was under the patronage 
of Horus. He was a solar divinity, but appears very early in 
the Osiris cycle of deities, a son of Isis and probably of Osiris, 
and opponent of Seth. On monuments of the Middle Kingdom 
or somewhat later we find besides H6r the following special 
forms: Har-behtet, i.e. Hor of Bent, the winged solar disk, 
god of Edfu (ApolUnopolis Magna); Har-khentekthai, god of 
Athribis; Har-mesen (whose principal sacred animal was a 
lion), god of the Sethroite (?) nome; Har-khentemna, Le. the 
blind (?) Horns (with a shrew-mouse) at Letopolis; Har-mert 
(" of two eyes ") at Pharbaethns; Har-akht, Ra-har-akht, or 
Har-m-akrri (HannaUns, " Hor of the horizon "), the sun-god 
of Hdiopolis. 

As a sun-god Horus not only worsted the hostile darkness and 
avenged his father, but also dairy renewed himself. He was thus 
identical with his own father from one point of view. In the 
mythology, especially that of the New Kingdom, or of quite late 
times, we find the following standing epithets applied to more or 
less distinct forms or phases: Harendotes (Har-ent-yotf)> 
U. " Hor, avenger of his father (Osiris) "; Harpokhrates 
(Har-p-khrat), i.e. "Hdr the child," with finger in mouth, 
sometimes seated on a lotus-flower; Harsiesis (Har-si-£si), 
i.e. " Hor, son of Isis," as a child; Har*en-khebi, " Hor in 
Chemmis," a child nursed by Isis in the papyrus marshes; 
Haroeris (Har-uCr), i.e. " the elder Hor," at Ombos, &&, human- 
headed or falcon-headed; Harsemteus (Har-sem-teu), %je. 
" H6r, uniter of the two lands," and others. 

In the judgment scene Horus introduces the deceased to Osiris. 
To the Greeks Horus was equivalent to Apollo, but in the name 
of Hennopolis Parva (see Damanhur), which must have been 
among the first of the Egyptian dries to. be known to them, he 
was apparently identified with Hermes. Although the falcon 
was the bird most properly sacred to Horus, not only its varieties, 
but also the sparrow-hawk, kestrel and other small hawks were 
mummified in his honour in late times. 

See Egypt: section Religion; Meyer, art. " Horos " in Rdacber, 
Lexicon der Griech. und Rom. Mythofogie. (F. La. G.) 

HORWICH, an urban district in the Westhoughton parlia- 
mentary division of Lancashire, England, 4 m. W.N.W. of 
Bolton, on the Lancashire and Yorkshire railway. Pop. (ioot) 
15,084. It lies beneath the considerable elevation of Rivington 
Pike, where formerly was a great forest. It has extensive 
locomotive works, and there are large stone quarries in the 
district. Bleaching and cotton-spinning and the manufacture 
of fire-bricks and tiles are carried on. 

HOSANNA, the cry of praise or adoration shouted in recogni- 
tion of the Messiahship of Jesus on his entry into Jerusalem 
(Matt. xxi. 9, 15; Mark. xi. 9 sq.; John xii. 13), and since used 
in the Christian Church. It is also a Jewish liturgical term, 
and was applied specifically to the " hosanna " branches carried 
in procession in the Feast of Booths or Tabernacles, the seventh 
day of which was called the Hosanna-day (so also in Syrian 
usage; cf. " Palm " Sunday). This festival (for which see Lev. 
xxiii. 39 sqq.; 2 Mace x. 7; Jos. Ant. xii. 10. 4, xiii. 13. 15; and 
the Talmudic tractate Suhkah) already suggested a Dkmysiac 
celebration to Plutarch {Symp. iv. 6), and was associated with 
a ceremonial drawing of water which, .it was believed, secured 
fertilizing rains in the following year; the penalty for abstinence 
was drought (cf. Zech. xiv. 16 seq.). The evidence (see further 
Ency. Bib. cols. 3354, 4880 seq.; I. Levy, Rev. des £t. juries, 
1961, pp. 192 sqq.) points to rites of nature-worship, and it 
is possible that in these the term Hosanna had some other 
application. 

The old interpretation "save, now!" which may be a popular 
etymology, is based on Ps. cxviii. a$ (Heb. hdshVak-nnH), but this 
does not explain the occurrence of the word in the Gospels, a compli- 
cated problem, on which see the articles of J. H. Thayer in Hastings's 
Diet. Bib., and more especially T. K. Cheyne, Ency. Bib. s.v. 

HOSE (a word common to many Teutonic languages; cf. 
Dutch, boos, stocking, Ger. Hose, breeches, tights; the 
ultimate origin is unknown), the name of an article of dress* 



7*4 



HOSEA 



used as a covering for the kg and foot. The word has been 
used for various forms of a long stocking covering both the foot 
and leg (see Hosiery), and this is the usual modern sense. But 
it also formerly meant a kind of gaiter covering the leg from the 
knee to the ankle only, of the long tight covering for the whole 
of the lower limbs, and later of the short puffed or slashed 
breeches worn with the doublet — at this period, from the early 
part of the 16th century onwards, comes the distinction between 
the " hose " or " trunk hose " and the stocking (see Costume). 
The term is applied to certain objects resembling such a covering, 
as in its application to flexible rubber or canvas piping used 
for conveying water (see Hosepipe), and in botany, to the 
" sheath " covering, e.g. the ear of corn. The term " hose-in- 
bose " is thus used in botany for a flower in which the corolla 
has become doubled, as though a second were insetted in the 
throat of the first; it occurs sometimes in the primrose. 

HOSEA, the son of Been, the first in order of the minor 
prophets of the Old Testament. The name Hosea (srf", LXX. 
'Qmt, Vulg. Osee, and so the English version in Rom. ix. 25) 
ought rather to be written Hoshea, and is identical with that 
borne by the last king of Ephraim,i and by Joshua in Num. 
xiii. 16, DeuL xxxii. 44. Of the life of Hosea 1 we know nothing 
beyond what can be gathered from his prophecies. That he 
was a citizen of the northern kingdom appears from the whole 
tenor of the book, but most expressly from L 2, where " the 
land," the prophet's land, is 'the realm of Israel, and vii. 5, 
where u our king " is the king of Samaria. The date at which 
Hosea flourished is given in the title, i. 1, by the reigning kings 
of Judah and Israel. He prophesied (1) in the days of Uzriah, 
Jotham, Ahaz and Hczekiah, kings of Judah; (2) in the days 
of Jeroboam the 6<m of Joash, king of IsraeL The dates in- 
dicated by the title, which may be regarded as editorial, tare, 
for the four kings of the southern kingdom, 780-740, 730-734, 
733-7 J 1 and 720-693 B.C respectively; and, for Jeroboam II., 
782-743 (cf. Ency. Bib. col. 797-708). The book itself, however, 
plainly belongs to the period prior to 734 B.C. since, in that 
year, (a) the Syro-Ephraimitic war began, to which there is 
here no reference, nor is Assyria yet the open foe it then became; 
(b) Gilead became Tiglath-Pilcscr's (2 Kings xv. 29), whereas 
it is here described as still part of the territory of Israel (vi. 8; 
xii. 11 ; cf. the included place-names of v. 1). On the other hand, 
the prophet connects with the birth of his eldest child the 
approaching (all of the house of Jehu (i. 4), thus anticipating 
the death of Jeroboam II. in 743, and the period of anarchy 
which followed (2 Kings xv.). Thus the prophetic work of 
Hosea may be dated, with practical certainty, as beginning 
from some point previous to 743 and extending not later than 
734.* This is corroborated by the general character of the 
book. Of its two parts, i.-iii. reflects the wealth and prosperity 
of the reign of Jeroboam II., whilst iv.-xiv. contains frequent refer- 
ences to the social disorder and anarchy of the subsequent years. 

d 
:c 
id 
e- 
>r 



The first part of Hosea's prophetic work, corresponding to 

chs. i.-iii., lay in the years of external prosperity immediately 
preceding the catastrophe of the house of Jehu in or near the year 
743. The second part of the book is 4 summary of prophetic 
teaching during the subsequent troublous reign of Menahem, 
and, perhaps, that of his successor, Pckahiah, and must have 
been completed before 734 B.C. Apart from the narrative 
in chs. i.-iii., to which we shall presently recur, the book throws 
little or 00 light on the details of Hosea's life. It appears from 
ix. 7, 8, that his prophetic work was greatly embarrassed by 
opposition: " As for the prophet, a fowler's snare is in all his 
ways, and enmity in the house of his God." The enmity which 
had its centre in the sanctuary probably proceeded from the 
priests (comp. Amos vii.), against whose profligacy and pro- 
fanation of their office our prophet frequently declaim s - pcx h aps 
also from the degenerate prophetic gilds which had their seats 
in the holy cities of the northern kingdom, and with whom 
Hosea's elder contemporary Amos so indignantly refuses to 
be identified (Amos vii. 14). In ch. iv. 5 Hosea seems to 
comprise priests and prophets in one condemnation, thus placing 
himself in direct antagonism to all the leaders of the religious 
life of his nation. He is not less antagonistic to the kings and 
princes of his day (vii. 3-7, viii.-4, viii. 10 Septuagint, a. 7-15, 
xiii. u).' In view of the familiarity shown with the intrigues 
of rulers and the doings of priests, it has been conjectured that 
Hosea held a prominent position, or even (by Duhm) that he 
was himself a priest (Marti, p. 2). 

The most interesting problem of Hosea's history lies in the 
interpretation of the story of his married life (chs. L-iu\). We 
read in these chapters that God's revelation to Hosea began 
when in accordance with a divine command he married a profligate 
wife, Corner, the daughter of Diblaim* Three children were born 
in this marriage and received symbolical names, illustrative of 
the divine purpose towards Israel, which are expounded in ch. 
L In ch. ii. the faithlessness of Israel to Jehovah (Yahweh), 
the long-suffering of God, the moral discipline of sorrow and 
tribulation by which He will yet bring back His erring people 
and betroth it to Himself for ever in righteousness, love and 
truth, are depicted under the figure of the relation of a husband 
to an erring spouse. The suggestion' of this allegory lies in 
the prophet's marriage with Comer, but the details are worked 
out quite independently, and under a rich multiplicity of figures 
derived from other sources. In the third chapter we return 
to the personal experience of the prophet. His faithless wife 
had at length left him and fallen, under circumstances which are 
not detailed, into a state of misery, from which Hosea, still 
following her with tender affection, and encouraged by a divine 
command, brought her back and restored her to his bouse, 
where he kept her in seclusion, and patiently watched over 
her for many days, yet not readmitting her to the privileges 
of a wife. 

In these experiences the prophet again recognizes a parallel 
to Yahweh's long-suffering love to Israel, and the discipline 
by which the people shall be brought back to God through a 
period in which all their political and religious institutions are 
overthrown. Throughout these chapters personal narrative 
and prophetic allegory are interwoven with a rapidity of transi- 
tion very puzzling to the modern reader; but an unbiassed 
exegesis can hardly fail to acknowledge that chs. i, and iii. 
narrate an actual passage in the prophet's life. The names of the 
three children are symbolical, but Isaiah in like manner gave 
symbolical, names to his sons, embodying prominent points 

* Some scholars hold that his attack is directed against the very 
principle of monarchy (Nowack, p. 8; Smend, p. 209: " Hosea 
rejects the kingship in itself "; Wellhausen, p. 125: " The making 
of kings in Israel is for him, together with the heathen cultua, the 
fundamental evil "). This view depends on a disputed interpreta- 
tion of the reference to Gibeah (x. 9; cf. ix. 0); and on the words: 
" I give thee kings in mine anger, and 1 take them away in my 
wrath ** (xiii. 11), which may refer to the rise and fall of contem- 
porary kings (cf . Marti, ad loc.). In any case, as Wcllhatraefi himseff 
says (p. 132): "He does not start from a dogmatic theory* but 
•imply from historical experience." 



HOSEA 



7»S 



in hi* prophetic teaching (Sfcar-jashub, Is*, vii. 3, comp. x.21; 
Maher-shalal-hash-baz, viii. 3). And the name of Corner bath 
Diblaim is certainly that of an actual person, upon which all 
the allegorists, from the Targum, Jerome and Ephraem Syrus 
downwards, have spent their arta hi vain, whereas the true sym- 
bolical names in the book are perfectly easy of interpretation. 1 
That the ancient interpreters take the whole narrative as a mere 
parable is rk> more than an application of their standing rule that ' 
everything In the Biblical history is allegorical which in hi Kteral 
sense appears offensive to propriety (comp. Jerome's proem to 
the book): But the supposed offence to propriety seems to rest 
on mistaken exegesis and too narrow a conception of the way 
in which the Divine word was communicated to the prophets. 1 
There is no reason to suppose that Hosea knowingly married 
a woman of profligate character. The point of the allegory 
in 1. 2 is plainly infidelity after marriage as a parallel to Israel's 
departure from the covenant God, and a profligate wife (o*iu? ism) 
is not the same thing- with an open prostitute (ma). The 
marriage was marred by Comer's infidelity; and the straggle 
of Hosea's affection for his wife with this great unhapptness— - 
a struggle inconceivable unless his first love had been pure and 
full of trust in the purity of its object— furnished him with a new 
insight into Yahweh's dealings with Israel. Then he recognised 
that the great calamity of his life was God's own ordinance and 
appointed means to communicate to him a deep prophetic lesson. 
The recognition of a divine command after the fact has its 
parallel, as Wellhausen observes, In Jer. xxxfi. 8. 

It was in the experiences of his married life, and In the spiritual 
lessons opened to him through these, that Hosea first heard 
the revealing voice of Yahweh (i. 2).' Like Amos (Amos iii. 8), 
he was called to speak for God by an inward constraining voice, 

* Theodoras Mope, remarks very justly, xoi vA tVo/is ml rim voripa 

wpayu&rurw. 

•This explanation of the 1 , 

is now generally accepted. I : 

a psychological key to the co I 

(i. a) as the spouse of Yah , 

but in the later part of the b t 

the nation as God's son. Thi 1 

of contact with notions previ 1 

of Semitic heathenism. On r 

usage to represent the land a 
sentation of worshippers as, < 

xxi. 29, where the Moa bites 1 

early and widespread throug 

Artk vi. 438; Jour. «f Pku : 

two notions gives at once tt » 

husband of the land. On the 1 

as Baal, which, in accordant , 

means husband as well as to „ r 

Israelites in early times, perhaps, indeed, down to Hosea's age 
(ii. 16). Now it is highly t probable that among the idolatrous 
Israelites the idea of a marriage between the deity and individual 
worshippers was actually current and connected with the immorality 
which Hosea often condemns in the worship of the local Baalim 
whom the ignorant people identified with Yahweh. For wc have 
a Punic woman's name, Spanr-nt, " the betrothed of Baal " (Euting, 
Punisch* Steine, pp. 9, 15), and a similar conception existed among 
the Babylonians (Herod. 1. 181, 182). But Hosea takes the idea of 
Yahweh as husband, and gives it an altogether different turn, 
filling; it with anew and profound meaning, based on the psychical 
experiences of a deep human affection in contest with outraged 
honour and the wilful sett-dctrradation of a spouse. It can hardly 
be supposed S hat all that lies in, these chapters is an abstract study 
in the psychology of the emotions. It sb actual human experience 
that gives Hoses the key to divine truth. 

* Davidson (D.B. ii. 422) remarks that " it was not his mis- 
fortunes that gave Hosea his prophetic word. Israel's apostasy was 
plain to him. sstd, he foreshadowed her doom in jleznel, the name 
01 Ins, first child 1 before any misfortunes overtook him. At most, 
his misfortunes may at a later time have given a complexion to his 
prophetic thoughts. ' Wellhausen (p. 108) objects to the emergence 
of the call from the experience, on the ground that the name given 
to the first child gives no indication that Hosea had yet reached his 
specific message, the infidelity of his wife and of Israel, though it 
snows him already as a prophet. Marti (p. 15) agrees with Davidson 
in making the order (a) call, (b) marriage and birth of three children, 
(c) comprehension of the significance of the marriage for himself 
and for Israel. The statement made above must be interpreted of 
Hosea's sptciJU message from Yahweh, as recorded in his book. 



and there is no reason to think that he had any connexion with 
the recognized prophetic societies, or ever received such outward 
adoption to office as was given to Elisha. His position in Israel 
was one of tragic isolation. Amos, when he had discharged his 
mission at Bethel, could return to his home and to his friends; 
Hosea was a stranger among his own people, and his home was 
full of sorrow and shame. Isaiah in the gloomiest days of Judah's 
declensions had faithful disciples about him, and knew that there 
was a believing remnant in the land. Hosea knows no such 
remnant, and there is not a line in his prophecy from which 
we can conclude that his words ever found an obedient ear. 

As already stated, this prophecy falls into two clearly dis- 
tinguished sections, 4 the former (i.-iii.), already dealt with, 
accounting for the general standpoint of the latter (iv.-xiv.). 
It is not possible to make any convincing subdivisions of this 
latter section (cf. G. A. Smith, L p. 223) which is best regarded 
as a series of separate discourses on certain recurrent topics, 
viz. (a) the cult us, (b) the social disorder and immorality, (c) 
political tendencies (alliance with either Assyria or Egypt sought). 1 
In regard to each of these topics, the attitude of the prophet 
involves the discernment of present guilt, and the assertion 
of future punishment. For him the present condition of the 
people contained no germ or pledge of future amendment, and 
he describes the impending judgment, not as a sifting process 
(Amos ix. o, xo) in which the wicked perish and the righteous 
remain, but as the total wreck of the nation which has wholly 
turned aside from its God. In truth, while the idolatrous feasts of 
Ephraim still ran their joyous round, while the careless people 
crowded to the high places, and there in unbridled and licentious, 
mirth flattered themselves that their many sacrifices ensured the 
help of their God against all calamity, the nation was already 
in the last stage of internal dissolution. To the prophet's eye 
there was " no truth, nor mercy, nor knowledge of God in the 
land — nought but swearing, and lying, and killing, and stealing 
and adultery; they break out, and blood toucheth blood" 
(iv. 1, 2). The root of this corruption lay in total ignorance of 
Yahweh, whose precepts were no longer taught by the priests, 
while in the national calf -worship, and in the local high places, 
this worship was confounded with the service of the Canaanite 
Baalim. Thus the whole religious constitution of Israel was 
undermined. And the political state of the realm was in Hosea's 
eyes not more hopeful. The dynasty of Jehu, still great and 
powerful when the prophet's labours began, is itself an incorpora- 
tion of national sin. Founded on the bloodshed of Jezreel, it 
must fall by God's vengeance, and the state shall fall with it 
(i. 4, iii. 4). This sentence stands at the head of Hosea's pre-, 
dictions, and throughout the book the civil constitution of 
Ephraim is represented as equally lawless and godless with the 
corrupt religious establishment. The anarchy that followed 
on the murder of Zachariah appears to the prophet as the natural 
decadence of a realm not founded on divine ordinance. The 
nation had rejected Yahweh, the only helper. And now the 
avenging Assyrian* is at hand. Samaria's lung shall pass away 
as foam on the water. Fortress and city shall fall before the 
ruthless iuvader, who spares neither age nor sex, and thistles shall 
cover the desolate altars of Ephraim. 

In our present book of Hosea, this condemnatory judgment on 
contemporary Israel culminates in a chapter of appeal lor penitence, 
with promise of divine forgiveness. The question of the authenticity 
of this and of other " restoration" passages 7 forms the chief problem 



4 Marti disregards this generally accepted division, arguing that 
(a) i.-iii. was not written earlier than iv.-xiv., {b)ui. is not Hoseanic, 
U) ii. is much more akin to iv.-xiv. than to u-iii. (Comm. p. 1 j cf. 
Enc. Bib. 2123 n»*). He holds that another wife, not Gomcr, is 
intended in iii., which is an allegory referring to Israel, as Gomer 
referred to J udah. His arguments are not convincing. 

* So, practically, Davidson, D.B. ii. p. 423 seq., where the detailed 
references will be found. 

* This is too definite for the data; cf. Davidson,. Ix. " Hosea has 
no clear idea of the instrument or means of Israel's destruction, 
It is 'the sword ' (vii. 16, xi. 6). the ' enemy ' (viii. 3, v. 8-q)j 
or it is natural, internal decay (vii. 8-9, ix. 16), the moth and 
rottenness (v. 12)." 

7 e.g. L 10-ii. 1. ii. 14 f., iii. $, v. 15-vi. 3, xi. 10-1 1. 



786 



HOS&-WPE 



for literary criticism pretexted by the book. 1 Among* the more 
recent commentators, Davidson, G. A. Smith and Nowack regard 
Hosea xiv. as written by the prophet, though the second admits 
its chronological misplacement and the third its later expansion. 
On the other hand, it is altogether rejected by Cheyne, Wellhausen, 
Marti and Harper. These claim that the passage reflects the later 
standpoint of completed punishment, and is therefore inconsistent 
in the prophet who anticipates that punishment. But the case is 
different from that of the epilogue to Amos, since Hosca's personal 
experience covers forgiveness as well as discipline (Marti consistently, 
though without ground, rejects this experience also). There seems, 
therefore, to be no sufficient evidence for denying thoughts of 
restoration to Hosea, whilst it is highly probable that such passages 
would be amplified in a later age. Indeed, the importance of these 
passages for the interpretation of Hosea is apt to be overrated, 
tor, as one of those rejecting them remarks, though Hosea " promised 
nothing," yet he " contributed a conception of Yahweh which made 
such a future not only possible but even probable " (Harper, p. cliii.). 
We may therefore read the closing chapter as, at least, the explicit 
statement of a hope implicit in Hosca's teaching. 

Hosea could discern no faithful remnant in Ephraim, yet 
Ephraim in all his corruption 1s the son of Yahweh, a child 
nurtured with tender love, a chosen people, whose past history 
declares in every episode the watchful and patient affection 
of his father. And that father is God and not man, the Holy 
One who will not and cannot sacrifice His love even to the justest 
indignation (chap. xi.). To the prophet who knows this love of 
Yahweh, who has learned to understand it in the like experience 
of his own life, the very ruin of the state of Israel is a step in the 
loving guidance which makes the valley of trouble a door of hope 
(il. 15), and the wilderness of tribulation as full of promise as 
the desert road from Egypt to Canaan was to Israel of old. Of the 
manner of Israel's repentance and conversion Hosea presents no 
clear image — nay, it is plain that on this point he had nothing to 
tell. The certainty that the people will at length return and 
seek Yahweh their God rests, not on any germ of better things 
in Israel, but on the invincible supremacy of Yahweh's love. 
And so the two sides of his prophetic declaration, the passionate 
denunciation of Israel's sin and folly, and the not less passionate 
tenderness with which he describes the final victory of divine 
love, are united by no logical bond. The unity is one of feeling 
only, and the sob of anguish in which many of his appeals to a 
heedless people seem to end turns once and again with sudden 
revulsion into the dear accents of evangelical promise, which in 
the closing chapter swell forth in pure and strong cadence out 
of a heart that has found its rest with God from all the troubles 
of a stormy life. 

■ The strongly emotional temperament of Hosea suggests com- 
parison with that of Jeremiah, who like himself is the prophet 
of the decline and fall of a kingdom. The subsequent influence 
of Hosea on the literature of the Old and New Testaments is 
very marked. Not only is it seen in the conception of the 
relation between God and His people as a marriage, which 
he makes current coin (cf. Marti, p. 15), but still more in the 
fact that his conception of the divine character becomes the 
inspiration of the book of Deuteronomy and so of the whole 
canon of Scripture. "In a special degree, the author of 
Deuteronomy is the spiritual heir of Hosea." a 

Recent Literature (where references to older works will be 
found): Cheyne, "Hosea" ~ ' "~ 



, . sea" in Cambridge Bible (1884); W. R. 

Smith, The Prophets of Israel? with Cheyne's introduction (1895); 

G. A. Smith, " The Book of the Twelve," i.. in The Expositor's Bible 

1896); Nowack, Die Kleinen Propheten (1897); Wellhausen, Die 

"leinen Propheten* (1898); Smend, Alttest. Rdiponsgesehiehte,* 

. 204 f. (1809); Davidson, art. " Hosea " in Hastings' Dictionary 

the Bible, 11. pp. 419 f. (1900); Marti, art " Hosea" in Ency. 






1 Apart from glosses and minor alterations, the only other critical 
problem of importance is that of the references to fudah scattered 
throughout the book (i. 7, iv. I5 2 v. 5, v. 10 f., vL 4, n, viii. 
14, x. 11, xi. 15). There is no inherent improbability in some 
mention of the sister kingdom; but some of the actual references 
do suggest interpolation, especially t 7, where the deliverance of 
Judah from Sennacherib in 701 B.C. seems intended. Each case, 
as Wellhausen implies, is to be considered on its merits. On 
these and other suspected passages, cf. Cheyne, Intro, to W. R. 
Smith's Prophets of Israel, pp. xvii.-xxii.; Marti, p. 8; Harper, 
p. clix. 

* Driver, Deuteronomy, p. xxvii. 



Btbltca, u, c. 2119 (1001) (a revision of the original article by W. R. 

Smith, in the Ency. Briton* tea, partially reproduced above); Marti, 
Dodeka£rofheton (1903); W. R. Harper, r 'Amos and Hosea" is 
Inter, Critical Commentary (1903) (with copious bibliography). 

{ V» . K. 3. ; ri. W. K. ) 

H06B-PIPB, or simply " hose," the name given to flexible 
piping by means of which water may be conveyed from one? 
place to another. One end of the pipe is connected to the source 
of the water, while the other end is free, so that the direction of 
the stream of water which issues from the pipe may be changed 
at will. The method of manufacture and the strength of the 
materials used depend naturally upon the particular use to 
which the finished article is to be put Simple garden hose is 
often made of india-rubber or composition, but the hose intended 
for fire brigade and similar important pur pose s must be of a much 
more substa n tial material. The most satisfactory material is 
the best long flax, although cotton is also extensively used for 
many types of this fabric 

The flax fibre, alter having been carefully spun into yarn, 
is boiled twice and then beetled; these two p ro cesses remove 
all injurious matter, and make the yarn soft and lustrous. The 
yarn is then wound on to large bobbins, and made into a chain; 
the number of threads in the chain depends upon the sue erf the 
hose, which may be anything from half an inch to 15 in. or even 
more in diameter. When the chain is warped, it is beamed 
upon the weaver's beam, and the ends— either double or triple — 
are drawn through the leaves of the cambs of heddles, passed 
through the reed and finally tied to the doth beam. The prepara- 
tion of the warp for any kind of loom varies very little, but the 
weaving may vary greatly. In all cases (he hose fabric is 
essentially circular, although it appears quite flat during the 
weaving operation. 

There are very few .hand-made fabrics which can compete 
with the machine-made article, but the very best type of hose- 
pipe is certainly one of the former class. The doth can be made 
much more cheaply in the power-loom than in the hand -loom, but, 
up to the present, no power-loom has been made which can weave 
as substantial a doth as the hand-loom product; the weak 
part in all hose-pipes is where the weft passes round the sides front 
top to bottom of the fabric or vice versa, that is, the side corre- 
sponding to the selvages in an ordinary doth; the hand-loom 
weaver can draw the weft tighter than is possible in the power- 
loom, hence the threads at the sides can be brought close to- 
gether, and by this means the fabric is made almost, but not 
quite, as perfect here as in other parts. It is essential that the 
warp threads be held tightly in the loom, and to secure this, they 
pass alternately over and under three or four back rests before 
reaching the heddles or cambs, which are almost invariably 
made of wire. Although the warp yarn is made vtry soft and 
pliable by boiling and beetling, the weaver always tallows 
it in order to make it work more easily. 

The commonest type of hose-pipe is made on the doubte-ptaia 
principle of weaving, the doth being perfectly plain but woven ia 
such a manner that the pipe is without scams of any kind. Fig. 1 
is a design showing two repeats or eight shots in the way of the weft, 
and six repeats or twenty-four threads in the way of the warp, 
consequently the weave is complete on four threads, or leaves, and 
four picks. Fig. 2 illustrates the method of interlacing the threads 




Fig. 1. 



Fig. 2. 



and the picks r this figure shows that twenty-three threads only are 
used, the first thread — shown shaded in fie. 1— having been left out. 
It is necessary to use a number of threads which is either oaaJeai 
or one more than some multiple of four — the number of threads ia 
the unit weave. The sectional view (fie. 2), although indicating 
the crossings of the warp and the weft, Is quite different from an 
actual section through the threads: the warp is almost invariably 
two or three ply, and in addition two or more of these twisted 
threads pass through the same heddle-eye in the carab; moreover, 
they arc set very closely together—so dosdy, indeed, that the threads 
entirely conceal the weft ; It is, therefore, impossible togive a correct 



HOSHANGABAD— HOSHIARPUR 



7*7 



tart torn 1 view with satisfactory clearness, as the thread* are so very 
rank, but fig. 3 gives some idea of the structure of the fabric This 
view. shows ninety-nine threads and one complete round of weft; 
this round is, of course, equal to two picks or shots— one pick for 
the top part of the cloth and one for the bottom part. A com- 
parison of this figure with fig. a will, 




perhaps, make the description clearer. 
The weft h " ' " 



Fig. 3-— Section through 
the Warp. 



t in fig. 3 is thinner than the 

but, in practice, it is always 

thicker, and may consist of 

> from two to seventy threads twisted 
I together. 
I Hose-pipes are also woven with the 

> three-leaf twill on both sides, and 
1 occasionally with the four-leaf twill. 

These pipes, woven with the twill 
weaves, are usually lined with a pure 
rubber tube which is fixed to the 
inside of the cloth by another layer 
of rubber after the cloth leaves the 
loom. Such pipes have usually, but 
. not invariably, a smoother inner sur- 

face than those which are unlined, hence, when they are used, less 
friction is presented to the flow of water, and there is less ten- 
dency for the pipe to leak. They are, therefore, suitable for 
hotels, public buildings and similar places where their temporary 
use will not result in undue damage to articles of furniture, carpets 
and general decoration. 

we 
cle 

Uy 

as 

Si 



the Nerbudda division of the Central Provinces. The town 
stands on the left bank of the Nerbudda, 1009 ft. above the sea, 
and has a railway station. Pop. (1001), 14,940. It is supposed 
to have been founded by Hoshang Shah, the second of the Ghori 
kings of Malwa, in the 15th century; but it remained an in* 
significant place till the Bhopal conquest about 1720, when a 
massive stone fort was constructed, with its base on the river, 
commanding the Bhopal road. It sustained several sieges during 
the 18th century, and passed alternately into the hands of the 
Bhopal and Nagpur rulers. Since 181 8 it has been the residence 
of the chief British officials in. charge of the district. It has a 
government high school, and agricultural school and a brass- 
working industry. 

The District 07 Hosbangabad has an area of 3676 sq. m. 
Pop. (ioox), 449,165, showing a decrease of 10% in the decade, 
due to famine. It may be described as a valley of varying 
breadth, extending for 150 m. between the Nerbudda river and 
the Satpura mountains. The soil consists chiefly of black basaltic 
alluvium, often more than 20 ft. deep; but along the banks of the 
Nerbudda the fertility of the land compensates for the taraeness 
of the scenery. Towards the west, low stony hills and broken 
ridges oat up the level ground, while the Vindhyas and the 
Satpuras throw out jutting spurs and ranges. In this wilder 
country considerable regions are covered with jungle. On the 
south the lofty range which shuts in the valley is remarkable 
in mountain scenery, surpassing in its picturesque irregularity 
the Vindhyan chain in the north. Many streams take their 
rise amid its precipices, then, winding through deep glens, flow 
across the plain between sandy banks covered with low jungle till 
they swell the waters of the Nerbudda. None is of any impor- 
tance except the Tawa, which is interesting to the geologist on 
account of the many minerals to be found along its course. The 
boundary rivers, the Nerbudda and Tapli, are the only con- 
siderable waters in Hosbangabad. The principal crops are 
wheat, millets and oil-seeds. The district is traversed through- 
out its length by the Great Indian Peninsula railway. 

H06HBA (Heb. for " deliverance "), the last king of Israel, 
in the Bible. The attempt of his predecessor Pekah to take 
Jerusalem with the help of his ally Rasun (Rezin) of Damascus 
was frustrated by the intervention of Tiglath-Pileser IV. 
(see Ahaz), who attacked Gilead, Galilee and the north frontier, 



and carried off some of it* population (cp. 1 Chron. v. 26). 
Pekah's resistance to Assyria led to a conspiracy in which 
he lost his life, and Hoshea the son of Elan became king 
(2 Kings xv. 37-30). The Assyrian king held him as his vassal 
(and indeed claims to have set him on the throne), and exacted 
from him a yearly tribute. Meanwhile, Damascus was besieged 
(733-732 b.c), Rasun was slain and the inhabitants deported 
(a Kings xvi. 9; LXX. omits " to Kir," but see Amos i. 5). 
The impending fate of Damascus is illustrated by Isaiah (vii. x6| 
viii. 4, xviL 1-11), who also gives a vivid description of the 
impression left by the Assyrian army (v. 26-30). After the 
death of Tiglath-Pileser, Israel regained confidence (Isa. ix. 8-x. 4) 
and took steps to recover its independence. Its policy vacillated 
— " like a silly dove " (Hos. vii. n), and at length negotiations 
were opened with Misraim. The annual payment of tribute 
ceased and Shalmaneser IV. (who began to reign in 727 B.C.) 
at once laid siege to Samaria, which fell at the end of three years 
(723-721 b.c). The achievement is claimed by his successor 
Sargon. Hoshea was killed, the land was again partly-depopu- 
lated and a governor appointed (2 Kings xviii. 0-12; cp. xvii. 
z aqq.). For other allusions to this period see Hosea, Isaiah. 

fii 



Ji 
ar 
A 
P- __. . 

HOSHIARPUR, a town of British India, in the Jullundur 
division of the Punjab. Pop. (ioox), 17,549. It was founded, 
according to tradition, about the early part of the 14th century. 
In 1809 it was occupied by Ranjit Singh. The maharaja and 
his successors maintained a considerable cantonment x m. S.E. 
of the town, and the British government kept it up for several 
years after the annexation of the Punjab in 1849. There are 
manufactures of cotton goods, inlaid woodwork, lacquered ware, 
shoes and copper vessels. 

The District of HosHiAapua comprises an area of 2244 
sq. m.; pop. (1901) 989,782, showing a decrease of 2% in the 
d>cade, compared with an increase of 12% during the previous 
decade. It falls into two nearly equal portions of hill and 
plain country. Its eastern face consists of the westward slope 
of the Solar Singhi Hills; parallel with that ridge, a line of 
lower heights belonging to the Siwalik range traverses the 
district from south to north, while between the two chains 
stretches a valley of uneven width, known as the Jaswan Dun. 
Its upper portion is crossed by the Sohan torrent, while the 
Sutlej sweeps into its lower end through a break in the hills, 
and flows in a southerly direction till it turns the flank of the 
central range, and debouches westwards upon the plains. This 
western plain consists of alluvial formation, with a general 
westerly slope owing to the deposit of silt from the mountain 
torrents in the sub-montane tract. The Beas has a fringe of 
lowland, open to moderate but not excessive inundations, and 
considered very fertile. A considerable area is covered by 
government woodlands, under the care of the forest department. 
Rice is largely grown, in the marshy flats along the banks of 
the Beas. Several religious fairs are held, at Anandpur, Mukerian 
and Chintpurni, all of which attract an enormous concourse 
of people. The district, owing to its proximity to the hills, 
possesses a comparatively cool and humid climate. Cotton 
fabrics are manufactured, and sugar, rice and other grains, 
tobacco and indigo are among the exports. 



7*9 



HOSIERY 



The country around Hoshiarpur formed part of the old Hindu 
kingdom of Katoch in Jullundur. The state was eventually 
broken up, and the present district was divided between the 
rajas of Ditarpur and Jaswan. They retained undisturbed 
possession of their territories until 1750, when the rising Sikh 
chieftains commenced a series of encroachments upon the hill 
tracts. In 1815 the aggressive maharaja, Ran jit Singh, forced 
the ruler of Jaswan to resign his territories in exchange for 
an estate on feudal tenure; three years later the raja of Ditarpur 
met with similar treatment. By the close of the year 1818 the 
whole country from the Sutlej to the Bcas had come under 
the government of Lahore, and after the first Sikh war in 1846 
passed to the British government. The deposed rajas of Ditarpur 
and Jaswan received Cash pensions from the new rulers, but 
expressed bitter disappointment at not being restored to their 
former sovereign position. Accordingly the outbreak of the 
second Sikh war, in 1848 found the disaffected chieftains ready 
for rebellion. They organized a revolt, but the two rajas and 
the other ringleaders were captured, and their estates con- 
fiscated. 

HOSIERY, a term used to designate all manufactured textile 
fabrics which in their process of manufacture have been built 
on the principle of looping or loop structure. The origin of the 
term is obvious, being derived from " hose " or stocking, this 
being one of the earliest garments made by the process of 
knitting (q.v.). While it still forms one of the staples of the 
trade, it is only one of a very numerous and diversified range 
of applications of the entire industry. The clastic structure 
of knitting makes it very adaptable for all kinds of body or 
underwear. There is scarcely a single textile article manufactured 
but can be reproduced on the knitting or loop structure principle. 
The art of knitting is of very modern origin as compared with 
that of weaving. No certain allusion to the art occurs before 
the beginning of the 15th century. In an act of parliament 
of Henry VII. (1488) knitted woollen caps are mentioned. It 
is supposed that the art was first practised in Scotland, and 
thence carried into England, and that caps were made by knitting 
for some period before the more difficult feat of stocking-making 
was attempted. In an act of Edward VI. (1553) " knitte hose, 
knitte peticotes, knitte gloves and knitte sleeves " are enumer- 
ated, and the trade of hosiers, among others, included in an act 
dated 1563. Spanish silk stockings were worn on rare occasions 
by Henry VIII., and the same much-prized articles are also 
mentioned in connexion with the wardrobe of Edward VI. 

Knitting, or loop formation by mechanical means, is divided 
into two distinct principles— frame-work knitting and warp 
knitting. Both principles may be employed in the formation 
of a large variety of plain and fancy stitches or a combination 
of the two. 

Frame-work Knitting in its simplest form consists of rows of 
loops supporting each other — built from one continuous thread of 
yarn ana running from one side of the fabric to the other and back 

ton 






\ jr&^u^BsmM 






Fio. 1.— -The Stitch or Loop 
Structure of Plain Knitting 
(back of fabric). 



Fie. 2.— A Single Thread 
formed into a Chain of 
Crocket Work, showing the 
Loop Structure of the plain 
Warp-knitted Fabric. It 
is built up as shown in the 
diagram by a number of 
threads running up the fabric. 



(fig. 1). It is on this principle of stitch that the greatest amount 
of nosicry is built (hose, shirts, pants). 

Warp Knitting in its simplest form consists of rows of loops, but 
the number of threads employed arc coual to the number of loops 
in the width of the fabric. Thus it will be seen that the threads 
run lengthwise of the fabric (fig. 2). This principle gives greater 
scope for reproducing designs in openwork and colour than that of 



frame-work knitting. For this reason It Is largely ased fa the shawl 
glove and fancy hosiery industries. 

Machinery. — In hand knitting the implements employed (a few 
needles or wires) are very simple and inexpensive, .la the nano- 
facturing industry 
the most complex 
and ingenious 
machinery is used. 
In 1589 the Rev. 
William Lee, a 
graduate of St 
John's College, 
Cambridge, while 
acting as curate (or 
vicar) of Calverton, 
Nottinghamshire, 




produce a looped or 
knitted fabric. This 
frame or machine of 
Lee's was the origin 
of all the hosiery 
and lace machines 
at present in use. 
One of the most 
remarkable points 
about his invention 
was its complete- 
ness and adapt- 
ability for the work 
for which its inven- 
tor intended it. The 
main principles of 
Lee's frame are em- 



day. 



Fxc. 3.— Hand Stocking Frame. 

rotary or power frames of the preset 
1 Tie of the present day. 

indefinite number of loops are skewered on 
1 ee's frame, an individual hooked or bearded 

1 the support and formation of each loop ia 

t rsc. This needle consists of a shank with a 

t hook (or beard), the point of which can be 

I roove or eye in the shank. For method by 

1 -med on the needles of the frame sec fig. 4. 

e's hooked or bearded needles having the old 

L„r „„.„ . ..... round the needle shanks. The thread of 

yarn which is to form the new row of loops is laid over the needle 
shanks and waved or looped between each pair of needles. This 
waving or looping ensures sufficient yarn being drawn and loops of 
a uniform site being made, so that a regular and level fabric wBI be 
produced. The looping or waving is obtained by having thin plates 
of shaped metal, called sinkers, which have a nose-shaped poist 
and hang between 
the needles. When 
looping they have 
an individual 
movement down- 
wards between the 
needles, and as 
they fall the nose- 
shaped paint cas* 

ries the yarn down, l 

thus forming the 
new loop (fig. 5). 
The size of the loop 
is regulated by the 
distance the wnkee 
is allowed to fall. y lG . 4. 

oY' yarn th has th been *• The leads into wmcb the needlc * (B) •"» 
'the P netdle e X C n C li "$- The old loops or work, 
by the^ifkert ?h? ^JT™ [o °** formed ind h ™* 1 ""^ 
loops are brought «* beards. 

forward under the needle beards or hooks. A presser bar in 
now brought down to close or press all the points of the needle 
beards into the eye in the shank. Thus all the hook ends of the 
needles are temporarily closed, with the newly formed loops under 
them. While in this position, the old loops hanging round the 
shank are brought forward and landed on to the top of the needle 
beard and off the needle altogether, being thus left hanging rownd, 
or supported by the loops newly formed. The needlc beards are now 
released, and the loops drawn back along the shanks to be in positioa 
for next new course of loops. The foregoing is only an outline of 
how the loops are formed on the needles. It is not ne cessa ry here 
to enter into a description of the complex mechanical movements 
of Lee's stocking-frame. The first fabric made by Lee was of a 



HOSIERY 7*9 



79° 



HOSIUS— HOSKINS 




the upper end being turned into m hook. Near the hook end 
and attached to the stem by a pin is the spoon-shaped latch, 
which closes over the hook as required. Machines fitted with latch- 
needles have grooves in which the stem of the needle works. Cams, 

which act on the 
needle butts, give 
the needles their 
individual knit- 
ting action in rota- 
tion. This needle 
is self-acting, in 
that it is made to 
draw its own loop, 
sinkers being dis- 
pensed with. 

Fig. 9 shows the 
looping action of 
this needle. The 
needles when not 
knitting have a 
Fig. 8.— Various Shapes of the Latch Needle, loop round their 

shank, thus hold- 
ing the latch open. When about to knit, they are raised individually 
and in rotation (by the cams acting on the needle butts) to receive 
the new looo of vara. 

eb 
of 
eb 
rm 
by 
at 
of 
ne 
of 
ter 
km 

Ins 
ir. 
ter 
he 

n K 
invented, fitted to 
work with latch- 
needles. Among 
others there was the 
latch-needle circular 
frame, invented by 
Thomas Thompson, 
which was the origin 
of the English latch- 
needle circular frame, 

irgely 
for the production 



di frame largely used 
for the production 
of wide circular 
fabric. 

A circular knitting 
machine of American 
origin is the type of 
Fig. o,— Individual Action of the Latch machine on which is 
Needle. produced the seam- 

less hosiery of to-day. 
Like the sewing machine it is largely used in the home as well as in 
the factory. From this machine all the circular automatic power 
machines for making plain and rib seamless hose and half hose 
have been developed. The " flat " or " lamb " type of machine, 
an American invention, was introduced by J. W. Lamb in 1863. 
This machine has two needle beds or rows of needles sloping at an 
angle of nearly 90°. 

A great many varieties of this type of machine have been invented 
for the production of all kinds of plain and fancy hosiery. It is 
built in small sizes to be wrought by hand or in large power machines. 
A large variety of sewing, seaming and linking machines are em- 
ployed in the hosiery industry for the purpose of putting together 
or joining all kinds of hosiery and knitted goods. # These machines 
have almost entirely superseded the sewing or joining of the gar- 
ments by hand. 

The principle centres in Great Britain of the hosiery industry are 
Leicester ana Nottingham and the surrounding districts. It Is also 
an industry of some extent in the south of Scotland. (T. B.*) 

HOSIUS. or Osius (c. 357-359), bishop of Cordova, was born 
about a.d. 257, probably at Cordova, although from & passage 
in Zosimus it has sometimes been conjectured that he was 
believed by that writer to be a native of Egypt. Elected to 
the see of Cordova before the end of the 3rd century, he narrowly 
escaped martyrdom in the persecution of Maximian (303-305). 
In 305 or 306 he attended the council of Illiberis or Elvira (his 



name appearing second in the list of those present), and upheld 
its severe canons concerning such points of discipline as the 
treatment of the lapsed and clerical marriages. In 3 13 he appears 
at the court of Constantinc, being expressly mentioned by 
name in a constitution directed by the emperor to Caecilianus 
of Carthage in that year. In 323 he was the bearer and possibly 
the writer of Conslantine's letter to Bishop Alexander of Alex- 
andria and Arius his deacon, bidding them cease disturbing 
the peace of the church; and, on the failure of the negotiations 
iii Egypt, It was doubtless with the active concurrence of Hosius 
that the council of Nicaea was convened in 325. He certainly 
took part in its proceedings, and was one of the large number 
of " confessors " present; that he presided is a very doubtful 
assertion, as also that he was the principal author of the Niccne 
Creed. Still he powerfully influenced the judgment of the 
emperor in favour of the orthodox party. After a period of quiet 
life in his own diocese, Hosius presided in 343 at the fruitless 
synod of Sardica, which showed itself so hostile to Arianism; 
and afterwards he spoke and wrote in favour of Athanasius in 
such a way as to bring upon himself a sentence of banishment 
to Sirmium (355). From his exile he wrote to Constantius D. 
his only extant composition, a letter not unjustly characterized 
by the great French historian Sebastian Tillemont as displaying 
gravity, dignity, gentleness, wisdom, generosity and in fact 
all the qualities of a great soul and a great bishop. Subjected 
to continual pressure the old man, who was near his hundredth 
year, was weak enough to sign the formula adopted by the 
second synod of Sirmium in 357, which involved communion 
with the Arians but not the condemnation of Athanasius. He 
was then permitted to return to his diocese, where he died in 359* 
"See S. Tillemont, Mimoires. vii. 300-321 (1700); Hefele, Cam- 
cilienteschicktt, vol. i.; H. M. Gwatkin, Studies of Arianism 
(Cambridge. 1882, 2nd ed.. 1900); A. W. W. Dale. The Synod ej 
Elvira (London, 1882); and article s.v. in Herzog-Haock, ReaL 
encytiopddie (3rd ed., 1900), with bibliography. 

HOSIUS, STANISLAUS (1 504-1 579), Polish cardinal, was 
born in Cracow on the 5th of May 1504. He studied law at 
Padua and Bologna, and entering the church became in 1549 
bishop of Kulm, in 155 1 bishop of Ermland, and in 1561 cardinal. 
Hosius had Jesuit sympathies and actively opposed the Pro- 
testant reformation, going so far as to desire a repetition of 
the St Bartholomew massacre in Poland, Apart from its being 
" the property of the Roman Church," he regarded the Bible 
as having no more worth than the fables of Aesop. Hosius 
was not distinguished as a theologian, though he drew up the 
Conjcssio fidei Christiana caiholica adopted by the synod of 
Piotrkow in 1557. He was, however, supreme as a diplomatist 
and administrator. Besides carrying through many difficult 
negotiations, he founded the lyceum of Braunsberg, which 
became the centre of the Roman Catholic mission among 
Protestants. He died at Capranica near Rome on the 5th 
of August 1579. 

A collected edition of his works was published at Cologne in 1584. 
Life by A. Ekhhorn (Mainz, 1854), 2 vols. 

HOSKINS, JOHN (d. 1664), English miniature painter, the 
uncle of Samuel Cooper, who received his artistic education in 
Hoskins's house. His finest miniatures are at Ham House, 
Montagu House, Windsor Castle, Amsterdam and in the Pierpont 
Morgan collection. Vertue stated that Hoskins had a son, and 
Redgrave added that the son painted a portrait of James IL 
in 1686 and was paid £10, 5s. for it, a statement for which there 
must have been some evidence, although it is not supported 
by any reference in the State Papers. Some contemporary 
inscriptions on the miniatures at Ham House record them as 
the work of "Old Hoskins," but the fact of the existence 
of a younger artist of the same name is settled by a miniature 
in the Pierpont Morgan collection, signed by Hoskins, and 
bearing an authentic engraved inscription on its contemporary 
frame to the effect that it represents the duke of Berwick at 
the age of twenty-nine in 1700. The elder Hoskins was buried 
on the 2 and of February 1664, in St Paul's, Covent Garden, and 
as there is no doubt of the authenticity of this miniature or of 



HOSMER— HOSPITAL 



79* 



the signature upon it, it is evident that he had * son who survived 
him thirty-six years and whose monogram we And upon this 
portrait. The frame of it has also the royal coat of arms de- 
bruised, the. batons of a marshal of France, the collar of the 
Golden Fleece and the ducal coronet, (G. C. W.) 

HOSMER, HARRIET GOODHUE (1830- 1008), American 
sculptor, was born at Watertown, Massachusetts, on the 9th 
of October 1830. She early showed marked aptitude for model* 
ling, and studied anatomy with her father, a physician, and 
afterwards at the St Louis Medical College. She then studied 
in Boston until 1852, when, with her friend Charlotte Cushman, 
the went to Rome, where from 1853 to i860 she was the pupil of 
the English sculptor John Gibson. She lived in Rome until a few 
years before her death. There she was associated with Nathaniel 
Hawthorne, Thorwaldsen, Flaxman, Thackeray, George Eliot and 
George Sand; and she was frequently the guest of the Brownings 
at Casa Guidi, in Florence. Among her works are " Daphne " 
and " Medusa," ideal heads (1853); " Puck " (1855), a spirited 
and graceful conception which she copied for the prince of 
Wales, the duke of Hamilton and others; "Oenone" (1855), 
her first life-sized figure, now in the St Louis Museum of Fine 
Arts; "Beatrice Cenci" (1857), for the Mercantile Library 
of St Louis; " Zenobia, Queen of Palmyra, in Chains " (1859), 
now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City; " A 
Sleeping Faun " (1867); " A Waking Faun "; a bronze statue 
of Thomas H. Benton (1868) for Lafayette Park, St Louis; 
bronze gates for the earl of Brownlow's art gallery at Ashridge 
Hall; a Siren fountain for Lady Marian Alford; a fountain for 
Central Park, New York City; a monument to Abraham 
Lincoln; and, for the Columbian Exposition, Chicago, 1893, 
statues of the queen of Naples as the " heroine of Gatta," and 
of Queen Isabella of Spain. Miss Hosmer died at Watertown, 
Mass., on the 21st, of February 1908. 

HOSPICE (Lat. kosptiium, entertainment, hospitality, inn, 
kospes, host), the name usually given to the homes of rest and 
refuge kept by religious houses for pilgrims and guests. The 
most famous hospices are those of the Great and little St 
Bernard Passes in the Alps. 

HOSPITAL (Lat. hospitalis, the adjective of hot pes, host or 
guest), a term now in general use for institutions in which 
medical treatment is given to the sick or injured. The place 
where a guest was received was in Lat. kosptiium (Fr. hospice), 
but the terms hospitalis (sc. domus), hospital* (sc cubiculum) and 
hospilaiia (sc eubicula) came into use in the same sense. Hence 
were derived on the one hand the Fr. hospital, kdpital, applied 
to establishments for temporary occupation by the sick for the 
purpose of medical treatment, and kospic* to places for permanent 
occupation by the poor, infirm, incurable or insane; on the 
other, the form h&tci, which became restricted (except in the 
case of k6tel-Dieu) to private or public dwelling-houses for 
ordinary occupation. In English, while " hostel " retained the 
earlier sense and " hotel " has become confined to that of a 
superior inn (?.*.), " hospital " was used both in the sense of a 
permanent retreat for the poor infirm or for the insane, and also 
for a regular institution for the temporary reception of sick 
cases; but modern usage has gradually restricted it mainly to 
the latter, other words, such as almshouse and asylum, being 
preferred in the former cases. 

The Origin of Hospitals.— In spite of contrary opinions the 
germ of the hospital system may be seen in pre-Christian times 
(see Charity and Charities). Ptnel goes so far as to declare 
that there were asylums distinctly set apart for the insane in 
the temples of Saturn in ancient Egypt. But this is probably 
an exaggeration, the real historical facts pointing to the existence 
of medical schools in connexion with the temples generally, to 
the knowledge that the priests possessed what medical science 
existed, and finally tp the rite of " Incubation," which involved 
the visit of sick persons to the temple, in the shade of which they 
slept, that the god might inform them by dreams of the treat- 
ment they ought to follow. The temples of Saturn are known 
to have existed some 4000 years before Christ; and that those 
temples were medical schools in their earliest form is beyond 



question. The reason why bo records of these temples have 
survived is due to the fact that they were destroyed in a religious 
revolution which swept away the very name of Saturn from the 
monuments in the country. Professor Georg Ebers of Leipzig, 
whose possession of that important handbook of Egyptian 
medicine called the Papyrus Ebers constitutes him an authority, 
says the Heliopolis certainly had a clinic united to the temple. 
The temples of Dendera, Thebes and Memphis, are other ex* 
ample*. Those early medical works, the Books of Hermes, were 
preserved in the shrines. Patients coming to them paid con- 
tributions to the priests. The most famous temples in Greece for 
the cure of disease were those of Aesculapius at Cos and Trikka, 
while others at Rhodes, Cnidus, Pergamum and Epidaurus were 
less known but frequented. Thus it is dear that both in Egypt 
and in Greece the custom of laying the skk in the precincts of 
the temples was a national practice. 

Alexandria again was a famous medical centre. Before 
describing the European growth of the hospital system in 
modern times, to which its development in the Roman Empire 
is the natural introduction, it will be well to dispose very briefly 
of the facts relating to the hospital system in the East. Harun 
al-Rashid (aj>. 763-809) attached a college to every mosque, 
and to that again a hospital. He placed at Bagdad an asylum 
for the insane open to all believers; and there was a large number 
of public infirmaries for the skk without payment in that city. 
Benjamin, the Jewish traveller, notes an efficient scheme for the 
reception of the sick in aj>. i 173, which had long been in existence. 
The Buddhists no less than the Mahommedanshad their hospitals, 
and as early as 260 B.C. the emperor Asoka founded the many 
hospitals of which Hindustan could then boast. The one at 
Sural, made famous by travellers, And considered to have been 
built under the emperor's second edict, is still in existence. 
These hospitals contained provision so extensive as to be quite 
comparable to modern institutions. In China the only records 
that remain are those of books of very early date dealing with 
the theory of. mecHcine. To return to India, the hospitals of 
Asoka were swept away by a revival of Brahmanisrn, and a 
practical hiatus exists between the hospitals he introduced 
and those that were refounded by the British ascendancy. 
Hadrian's reign contains the first -notice of a'mifitary hospital in 
Rome. At the beginning of the Christian em we hear of the 
existence of open surgeries (of various price and reputation), 
the specialisation of the medical profession, and the presence 
of women practitioners, often as obstetricians. Iatria, or 
tabcrnae-medicae, are described by Galen and Placetus: many 
towns built them at their own cost. These iatria attended 
almost entirely to out-patients, and the system of medicine 
fostered by them continued without much development down 
to the middle of the 18th century. It is to be noted that these 
out-patients paid reasonable fees. In Christian days no estab- 
lishments were founded for the relief of the skk till the time of 
Constantine. A law of Justinian referring to various institutions 
connected with the church mentions among them the Nosocomia, 
which correspond to our idea of hospitals. In aj>. 370 Basil 
had one built for lepers at Caesarea. St Chrysostom founded 
a hospital at Constantinople. At Alexandria an order of 600 
Parabokni attended to the skk, being chosen for the purpose 
for their experience by the prelate of the city (aj>. 4x6). Fabiota, 
a rich Roman lady, founded the first hospital at Rome possessed 
of a convalescent home in the country. She even became a nurse 
herself. St Augustine founded one at his see of Hippo. These 
Nosocomia fell indeed almost entirely into the hands of the 
church, whkh supported them by its revenues when necessary 
and controlled their administration. Salerno became famous as a 
school of medicine; its rosiest days were between aj>. 1000 and 
1050. Frederick II. prescribed the course for students there, 
and founded a rival school at Naples. At this period the con- 
nexion between monasteries and hospitals becomes a marked 
one. The crusaders also created another bond between the 
church and hospital development, as the route they traversed 
was marked by such foundations. Lepers were some of the 
earliest patients for whom a specialised treatment was recognised, 



792 



HOSPITAL 



and in iiz* a leprosarium was built in London for isolation 
purposes. Russia seems the one country where the intercon- 
nexion of hospital and monastery was not to be observed. 
After the period already reached, the 13th century, hospitals 
became common enough to demand individual or at any rate 
national treatment. 

History of the Hospital Movement.— We have now to consider 
the principles upon which the provision of the best form of 
medical care In hospitals can be secured for all classes of people. 
Though hospitals cannot be claimed as a direct result of Chris- 
tianity, no doubt it softened the relations between men, and 
gradually tended to instil humanitarian views and to make 
them popular with the civilized peoples of the world. These 
principles, as civilization grew, education improved, and the 
tastes and requirements of the common people were developed, 
made men and women of many races realize that the treatment 
of disease in buildings set apart exclusively for the care of the 
sick was, in fact, a necessity in urban districts. The establishment 
of a hospital freed the streets of the abuses attendant upon 
beggars and other poor creatures, who made then* ailments the 
chief ground of appeal for alms. As the knowledge of hygiene and 
of the doctrine of cleanliness and purity in regard not only to 
dwellings and towns, but also in relation to food of aU descrip- 
tions, including water, became known and appreciated, hospitals 
were found to be of even greater importance, if that is possible, 
to the healthy in crowded communities, than to the sick. 
It took many centuries before sound hygiene really began to 
occupy the position of importance which it is now known to 
possess, not only in regard to the treatment and cure of disease, 
but to its prevention and eradication. So the history of the 
world shows, that, whereas, a few of the larger towns in most 
countries contained hospitals of sorts, up to and including the 
middle ages, it was not until the commencement of the 18th 
century that inhabitants of important but relatively small towns 
of from 50,000 to 100,000 inhabitants began to provide themselves 
With a hospital for the care of the sick. Thus, twenty-three 
of the principal English counties appear to have had no general 
hospital prior to 17 10, while London itself at that date, so 
far as the relief of the sick was concerned, was mainly, if not 
entirely, dependent upon St Bartholomew's and St Thomas's 
Hospitals. These facts are interesting to note, because we are 
enabled from them to deduce from recent events that hospital 
buildings in the past, though the planning of most of them 
was faulty to begin with and became more and more faulty as 
extensions were added to the Original buildings, did in fact 
Suffice to satisfy the requirements of the medical profession for 
nearly two centuries. In Other words, under the old condition 
of affairs the h'fe of a building, devoted to the care of the sick 
might be considered as at! least 150 years. To-day, under the 
conditions which modern science impose upon the management, 
probably few hospital buildings are likely to be regarded as 
efficient for the purpose of treating the sick for more than from 
30 to 50 years. 

The foregoing statement is based upon the history of British 
hospitals of importance throughout the country, but the same 
remark will apply in practice to hospital buildings . almost 
everywhere throughout the world. In truth, hospitals have 
been more developed and improved in Great Britain than in 
Other countries, though, since the last quarter. of the 19th century, 
German scientists especially have added much to the efficiency 
of the accommodation for the sick, not only at hospitals but 
in private clinics, and many German ideas have been accepted 
and copied by other countries. In Great Britain hospitals for 
the treatment of general and special diseases are mainly main- 
tained upon what is known as the voluntary system. On the 
European continent, hospitals as a rule are maintained by the 
state or municipalities, and this system is so fully developed in 
Sweden and elsewhere that a sound economical principle baa 
been embroidered upon the hospital system, to the great physical 
and morel advantage of all classes of the community. The system 
referred to confers great benefits upon inhabitants in large towns 
by bringing the poor-law and voluntary institutions into more 



intimate association, although they may be managed by separate 
governing bodies. The plan pursued (s to demand payment 
from all patients who are admitted to the hospital under a scale 
of charges divided into three or four grades. The first grade 
pays a substantial sum and obtains anything or everything the 
patient may care to have or to pay for, subject to the control 
of the medical attendant. The second pays much less, tmt 
a remunerative rate, for all they receive at the hospital; and 
the third and fourth classes are very poor people or paupers, 
who are paid for on a graduated scale by the poor-law authorities, 
or the communal government, or the municipality. Under this 
System well-to-do thrifty artisans and improvident pampers are 
all treated by one staff, controlled by one administration, and 
are located in immediate proximity to each other though in 
separate pavilions. We have no doubt, as the result of many 
years' investigation and an accurate knowledge of the working of 
the system, that this is the true principle to enforce in providing 
adequate medical relief fof large urban populations everywhere 
throughout the world. It should be accompanied by a system 
of government Insurance, whereby all classes who desire to be 
thrifty may pay a small annual premium in the days of health, 
and secure adequate hospital treatment and care when ilL 
Provided that pay wings were added to the existing voluntary 
and municipal hospitals, it should be found that the relatively 
small annual premium of £5 per annum should enable the 
policyholders to defray the cost of medical treatment in a pay 
ward or at a consultation department of a great hospital as a 
matter of business. In the United States of America most large 
towns have great hospitals, usually known as city hospitals, 
administered and mainly supported by the municipality. Many 
such institutions have pay wards, but nowhere, so far as we have 
been able to discover, has the system of medical relief in its 
entirety been organized as yet upon the business system we have 
just referred to. 

As to the relative merits and demerits of the systems of 
government of municipal hospitals and voluntary hospitals a 
few words may he useful. There can be no doubt that the 
voluntary hospital in Great Britain has had a remarkable effect 
for good upon all classes in the making of modern England. 
The management of these institutions is frequently representative 
of all classes of the people, while the voluntary system, as the 
Hospital Sunday collections all over the country, and aU over the 
English-speaking world, prove, has united all creeds in the good 
work of caring and providing for the sick and injured members 
of each community. Again the voluntary system makes for 
efficiency in the adnunistration of all hospitals. Each voluntary 
hospital is dependent upon its popularity and efficiency, in 
large measure, for the financial support it receives. In this way 
an ill-managed voluntary hospital, or one which has censed to 
fulfil any useful public purpose, is sure to disappear In due coarse 
urider the voluntary system. Voluntary hospitals are always 
open to, as well as supported by, the public, and, owing largely 
to the example so. prominently set .by King Edward VIL and 
members of the royal family, moos people tvtry year devote 
some time in some way to the cause of the hospitals. Attached 
to the voluntary hospitals are the principal medical and nursing 
schools upon which the public depend for the supply of doctors 
and nurses. The education of students and nurses in a clinical 
hospital makes that hospital the most desirable place for every- 
body when they are really ill. In such a hospital no patient 
can be overlooked, no wrong or imperfect diagnosis can long 
remain undiscovered and unrectified, and nowhere else have 
the patients so continuous a guarantee that the treatment they 
receive will be of the best, while the provision made for their 
comfort and welfare, owing to the unceasing and' ever varying 
quality of the criticism to which the work of everybody, from 
the senior physician to the humblest official, is subjected in a 
clinical hospital, is unequalled anywhere else. At a great 
voluntary hospital, not: only o> hundreds of medical students 
and nurses work in the wards, but thousands of people, in the 
persons of the patients' friends, and those members of the public 
who take aa interest in hospitals, pass through the wards in the 



HOSPITAL 



793 



course of every year. Agrin, each v©lantary hospital has to Kve 
by competition, a fact which guarantees that everything in the 
way of new treatment and scientific development shall in due 
course find its proper place within the walls of such an establish- 
ment. Open as they are to the full inspection of everybody 
whose knowledge and presence can promote efficiency, the 
voluntary hospitals have shown, especially since the last quarter 
of the ioth century, a continuous development and improve- 
ment. Here the patients are treated with invariable kindness 
and consideration, as human beings rather than cases, to the 
great benefit of the whole human family as represented by the 
officials, the patients and the students, with their relations and 
friends, the honorary medical officers, hundreds of medical 
practitioners and nurses, who receive their medical training 
in the hospitals, and the ever-increasing number of governors and 
supporters by whoso contributions voluntary hospitals live. 
The great missionary and social value of the voluntary hospitals 
to the whole community cannot be questioned, and they have 
been of inestimable value to the churches by inculcating the 
higher principles of humanity, while removing the many acerbities 
which might otherwise prevail between rich and poor in large 
cities. 

The voluntary hospitals are attended, however, by certain dis- 
advantages which do not attach to municipal institutions. A 
municipality which undertakes the provision of hospitals for 
the entire community is largely able to plan out the urban area, 
and to provide that each hospital site selected shall not only be 
suitable for the purpose, but that it shall be so chosen as to 
Contribute to make the whole system of hospital provision easily 
accessible to all classes who may require its aid. The voluntary 
hospitals, on the contrary, have grown up without any com- 
prehensive plan of the districts or any real regard to the con- 
venience or necessities of their poorer inhabitants. Voluntary 
hospital sites were almost invariably selected to suit the con- 
venience of the honorary medical staff and the general con- 
venience of the hospital economy rather than to save the patients 
and their friends long journeys in search of medical aid. The 
best of the municipal systems too enables economy to be en- 
forced in the administration by a plan which provides a central. 
office in every town where the number of vacant beds in each 
hospital is known, so that the average of occupied beds in all 
the hospitals can be well maintained from an economical point 
of view. This speedy and ready inter-communication between 
aU hospitals in a great city, which might perfectly well be secured 
under the voluntary system if the managers could enly be brought 
into active co-operation, prevents delay in the admission of urgent 
cases, promotes the absence of waste by keeping the average of 
beds occupied in each establishment high and uniform, and has 
often proved a real gain to the poor by the diminution in cost to 
the patients and their friends, who under the best municipal 
systems can find a hospital within reasonable distance of their 
home in a large city wherever it may be placed. Another 
advantage of the municipal system should be that central control 
makes for economical administration. Unfortunately a close 
study of this question tends to prove that municipal hospitals 
for the most part, have resulted in a dead monotony of relative 
inefficiency, often entailing great extravagance in buildings, and 
accompanied by much waste in many directions. Existing 
municipal hospital systems are attended by several grave 
disadvantages. The administration shows a tendency to lag 
and grow sleepy and inert The absence of competition, and the 
freedom from continuous publicity and criticism such as the 
voluntary hospitals enjoy, make for inefficiency and indifferent 
work. Rate-supported hospitals, as a rule, are administered by 
permanent officials who reside in houses usually situated on 
the hospital sites, and who are paid salaries which attract the 
younger men, who, once appointed, tend to continue in office 
for a Jong period of years. This fixture of tenure is apt to cause 
a decline in the general interest in the work of the municipal 
hospital, due mainly to the absence of a continuous criticism 
from outside, and so the average of efficiency, both in regard to 
treatment and other important matters, may become lower 



and lower. Those who hate habitually inspected great rate- 
supported hospitals must have met instances over and over 
again where a gentleman who has held office for twenty or thirty 
years has frankly stated that his income is fixed, that his habits 
have become crystallized, that he finds the work terribly monoton- 
ous, and yet, as he hopes ultimately to retire upon a pension, 
be has felt there was no course open to him but to continue in 
office, even though he may feel conscientiously that a change 
would be good for the patients, for the hospital and for himself. 
Under the voluntary system evils of this kind are seldom or 
never met with, nor have these latter establishments, within 
living memory, ever been so conducted as to exhibit the grave 
scandals which have marred the administration of rate-supported 
hospitals not only in Great Britain but in other parts of the 
world. We believe that the more thoroughly the advantages 
and disadvantages of rate-supported and voluntary hospitals for 
the care of the sick are weighed and considered, and the more 
accurate and full the knowledge which is added to the Judgment 
upon which a decision can be based, the more certain wiO it be 
that every capable administrator will come to the conclusion 
that on the whole it is good for the aick and for the whole com- 
munity that these establishments should, at any rate fn Great 
Britain, be maintained upon the voluntary system. Of course 
it is essential to have rate-supported hospitals where cases of 
Infectious disease and the poorest of the people who are dependent 
largely upon the poor-law for their maintenance can be cared for. 
It is satisfactory to be able to state that of late years the admini- 
stration of both these types of rate-supported hospitals has 
greatly improved. The added importance now given aU over 
the country to medical officers of health, and the disposition 
exhibited, both by parliament and government departments, 
to make the position of these officers more important and 
valuable than ever before, have tended largely to improve the 
administrative efficiency of hospitals for infectious diseases. N6 
doubt the whole community would benefit if residents in every 
part of the country could be moved to take a personal interest 
in the infectious hospital in their immediate neighbourhood. 
Amongst the smaller of these establishments there has been so 
marked an inefficiency at times as to cause much avoidable 
suffering. The existence of such inefficiency casts a grave 
reflection upon the local authorities and others who are re- 
sponsible for the evils which undoubtedly exist in various places 
at the present time. Unfortunately knowledge has not yet 
sufficiently spread to enable the public to overcome its fear and 
dread of infectious maladies. It is therefore very difficult to 
induce people to take an active interest In one of these hospitals, 
but we look forward to the time when, owing to the activity of 
the medical officers of health who have immediate charge of 
buildings of this kind, this difficulty may be overcome, when the 
avoidable dangers and risks and the appalling discomfort which 
a poor sufferer from a severe infectious disease in a rural district 
may suddenly have to encounter under existing circumstances, 
would be rendered Impossible. 

The poor-law Infirmary in large cities, so far as the buildings 
and equipment are concerned, very often leaves little to desire. 
Poor-law infirmaries lack, however, the stimulus and the checks 
and advantages which impartial criticism continuously applied 
brings to a great voluntary hospital Such disadvantages might 
be entirely removed if parliament would decide to throw open 
every poor-law infirmary for Clinical purposes, and to have con- 
nected with each such establishment a responsible visiting 
medical staff, consisting of the best qualified men to be found in 
the community which each hospital serves. The old prejudice 
against hospital treatment has disappeared, for the least in- 
telligent members of the population now understand that, when 
a citizen is sfck, there b no place so good as the wards of a we* 
administered hospital. Looking at the question of hospfta! 
provision in Great Britain, and indeed in all countries at the 
present time, it may be said, that there is everywhere evidence 
of improvement and development upon the right lines, so that 
never before in the history of the world has the lot of the sick 
man or woman been so relatively fortunate and safe as it is is 



794- 



HOSPITAL 



the present day. Probably it is not too much to say that to-day 
hospitals occupy the most important position in the social 
economy of nations. 

Classification of Hospitals. — Having dealt with hospitals as a 
whole it may be well very briefly to classify them in groups, and 
explain as tersely as possible what they represent and how far it 
may be desirable to eliminate by consolidation or to increase by 
disintegration the number of special hospitals. 

General Hospitals. — These establishments consist of two kinds, 
(o) clinical and (b) non-clinical, each of which, under the 
modern system, should include every department of medicine 
and surgery, and every appliance and means for the alleviation 
of suffering, the healing of wounds, the reduction of fractures, 
the removal of mal-formations and foreign growths, the surgical 
restoration of damaged and diseased organs and bones, and 
everything of every kind which experience and knowledge prove 
to be necessary to the rapid cure of disease. The clinical hospital 
means an institution to which a medical school is attached, where 
technical instruction is given by able and qualified teachers to 
medical students and others. A non-clinical hospital is one 
which is not attached to a medical school, and where no medical 
instruction is organized. 

Special Hospitals.— Up to about 1840 the general hospital 
was, speaking generally, the only hospital in existence. Twenty 
years later, as the population increased and medical science 
became more and more active, some of the more ardent members 
of the medical profession, especially amongst the younger men, 
pressed continuously for opportunities to develop the methods of 
treatment in regard to special diseases for which neither accom- 
modation nor appliances were at that time forthcoming in general 
hospitals. In a few cases, -where the managers of the great 
general hospitals were men of action and initiative special 
departments were introduced, and an attempt was made to 
make them efficient. The conservative spirit which, on the 
whole, represents the British character for the most part, resulted, 
however, in a steady resistance being offered by the older 
members of the medical staffs and existing committees to the 
advocates of special departments. In the result, especially as 
such special departments as there were in connexion with general 
hospitals were too often starved for want of means and men for 
their development and improvement, the younger spirits called 
their friends together and began to start special hospitals. 
To-day every really efficient clinical general hospital has within 
its walls special departments of almost every description, which 
have been made as efficient and up-to-date as money and 
knowledge can make them. Unfortunately the causes already 
referred to led to the establishment of hundreds of the smaller 
special hospitals, many of which were started in unsuitable 
buildings, and some of which have ever since maintained a 
struggling existence. Others, on the contrary, through the 
energy of their original promoters and the excellence of the work 
they have done, have obtained a position of authority and 
reputation which has had a very important bearing for good 
upon the development of medical science in the treatment of 
disease. If the world had to-day to organize the very best 
system of hospital accommodation which could be evolved, 
there is no doubt that few or none of the special hospitals would 
find any place in that system. As matters stand, however, 
the special hospital has had to be accepted, and nothing which 
King Edward's Hospital Fund has done in London has met with 
greater popularity and professional approval than the labours 
which its council have undertaken in promoting the amalgama- 
tion of the smaller special hospitals of certain kinds, so as to secure 
the provision of one really efficient special hospital for each 
speciality. No doubt this policy of amalgamation will be steadily 
pursued, and in the course of years every great city will gradually 
reorganize its hospital methods so as to secure that, whether the 
patients aie treated in a general hospital or in a special hospital, 
the average efficiency in every institution shall be as high and 
as good as possible. 

We will take now the special hospitals in detail 

Cancer Hospitals.— The justification for efficient cancer hospitals 
must be found in the circumstance that most scientific men of 



expe r ience believe that, if adequate resources were placed at the 

disposal of the medical profession, the origin of cancer r~ '~*^ *" 



discovered, and so the human race would be freed from one of the 
most awful diseases which affect humanity. Pending such a dis- 
covery the experience of the cancer department connected with the 
Middlesex Hospital in London proves to demonstration that the 
provision of adequate and special accommodation for the exclusive 
treatment of cases of cancer is not only desirable but necessary on 
humanitarian grounds alone. 

Hospitals for Consumption.— -For many years h was held that this 
group of hospitals was not a necessity, and the patients were trcntes 
in the ordinary medical wards of the general hospitals. Since the 
contagious character of tuberculosis became known, and improved 
methods of treatment have been developed, every one agrees that 
this type of special hospital is desirable, though it is believed by the 
more advanced school of scientists that before long it may be happily 
rendered obsolete owing to the discovery of methods of treatment 
which will stay the disease at its commencement and restore the 
patient to health. 

Children's Hospitals.— -These hospitals were very much opposed 
at the outset. There can be no doubt that the children's ward or 
wards in a big voluntary hospital is a most valuable asset to the 
managers, so long as the children are treated in separate wards. 
There is no reason of course why a hospital should confine its work 
to the treatment of children, exclusively. Still this special hospital 
is popular with the public; it has led to many discoveries and 
developments in the treatment of children's diseases; on the whole 
the administration of these establishments has been good; and we 
believe they will continue to flourish, however many children '• 
wards may be provided in general hospitals. Children's hospitals 
with country branches for the treatment of chronic ailments, such 
as hip disease, are a valuable addition to the relief of sufteriag in 

cities. __ 

established originally is 
18 , Surrey, haw fulfilled a 

re very efficient both is 
re ey have become essential 

to are of rural populations, 

as best members of the pro- 

fe cottage hospital, to keep 

th at all classes of the coss- 

m ype of hospitaL 

s history of this type of 
be reason we have given 
[>itals in the first instance, 
inducted throat hospitals 
ints of great cities, 
dealt with these insttto- 
he rates and administered 
■e paid by the county or 

his is one .of the oldest 

. great deal of good in its 

atment and hygienic de» 

..^r— . WVM occupied a stronger posit inn 



til 

than it does to-day. 

Menial Hospitals. — In Great Britain the insane are provided for 
in asylums (see Insanity, ad fin.), though such establishments, if 
properly conducted, are essentially hospitals. Scientific and pabhc 
opinion tend towards the establishment of mental hospitals to 
w i.:-u -11 — » e —1 j: — ^ ^^m be g rst relegated for 

ti arc consigned to a permanent 

It on on an organised plan has 

b >f mental disease in its clinical 

a ibie, therefore, that the advent 

o o important developmeats ia 
ti 

ial hospitals this is one which 

* ry, providing general hospitals 

e > and organized. No special 

h i in the material sense by the 

fi fford to pay for their treatment 

a il of the existing ophthalmic 

h expenditure, and their modern 

6 

doubtful whether this type of 
h ssary. Its necessity may be 

a pacdic cases may require pro- 

le sure upon the beds of general 

h ys so great as to render the 

o than ever before. 

— Seeing that the percentage 
o y paralysis and nervous disease 

si ise under modern conditions of 

u ^pe are necessary, and Lostdoa 

a s of importance, posse sacs, at 

p for this class of case. 

the end of the 19th century 
h a constant cause of scandal and 

c lam methods of treatment by 



HOSPITAL 



795 



Ufcto And electricity, uwludhw. phototherapy, tot fjvea an im- 
portance to this department and treatment which it did not previ- 
ously possess. We arc of opinion that, on the whole, it is better and 
more economical to treat these cases in properly equipped depart- 
ments of general hospitals than in separate institutions. 

"' -■--*- tJntl>itnl* ..TImm hncnkala am via* ahanlittwl 



tpac. several m iticni nave uuuc kawcucui wwi*. iciucmutimj iw 

that women constitute the majority of the population, there seems 
to be some reason for their continuance. 

The BuMtn of Ike Modern Hospital.— The evolution of 
the modern hospital affords one of the most marvellous evidences 
of the advance of scientific and humanitarian principles which 
the world has ever seen. At the outset hospitals were probably 
founded by the healthy more for their own comfort than out of 
any regard for the sick. Nowadays the healthy, whilst they 
realise that the more efficient they can make the hospital, 
the mote certain, in the human sense, is their own chance of 
prolonged life and health, are, as the pr o gre ss of the League 
of Mercy has shown in recent years, genuinely anxious for the 
most part to do something as individuals in the days of health 
in the cause of the sick. Formerly the hospital was merely 
a building or buildings, very often unsuitable for the purposes 
to which it was put, where sick and injured people were retained 
and more frequently than not died. In other words the hygienic 
condition, the methods of treatment and the hospital atmosphere 
were all so relatively unsatisfactory as to yield a mortality 
in serious cases of 40%. Nowadays, despite, or possibly 
because of, the fact that operative interference is the rule rather 
than the exception in the treatment of hospital patients, and in 
consequence of the introduction of antiseptic and aseptic methods, 
the mortality in hospitals is, in all the circumstances, relatively 
less, and probably materially less, than it is eves amongst 
patients who are attended in their own homes. Originally 
hospitals were unsystematic, crowded, ill-organized necessities, 
which wise people refused to enter, if they had any voice in the 
matter. At the present time in ail large cities, and in crowded 
communities in civilized countries, great hospitals have been 
erected upon extensive sites which are so planned as to. con- 
stitute in fact a village with many hundreds of inhabitants. 
This type of modern hospital has common characteristics. 
A multitude of separate buildinsa are dotted over the site, 
which may cover so acres or upwards. In one such in* 
stitution, within an area of ao acres, there are 6 m. of 
drains, 20 m. of water and steam pipes, 3 m. of roof 
gutters, 41 m. of electric wires, and 43 separate buildings, 
which to all intents and purposes constitute a series of 
distinct, isolated hospitals, in no case containing more than 
forty-six patients. On the continent of Europe buildings of 
this class are usually of one storey; in the United States, 
owing to the difficulty of obtaining suitable sites and for 
reasons of economy, some competent authorities strenuously 
advocate high buildings with many storeys for town hospitals. 
In England the majority have two to three storeys each, the 
ward unit containing a ward for twenty beds and two 
Isolation wards for one and two beds respectively. The two 
storeys in modern fever hospitals, however, are absolutely 
distinct— that is, there is no internal staircase going from one 
ward to the others, for each is entered separately from the 
outsider This system carries to its extreme limits the principle 
of separating the patients as much as possible into small groups; 
the acute cases are usually treated in the upper ward, and 
as they become convalescent are removed downstairs. In 
this way the necessity for an entirely separate convalescent 
block is dose away with and the patients are kept under, the 
tame charge nurse, an a r r angem ent which promotes necessary 
discipline. The unit of these hospitals is the pavilion, not the 
ward, and consists of an acute ward, a convalescent ward, 
separation wards, nurses 1 duty rooms, store-rooms for linen, 
an open-air balcony upstairs into which beds can be wheeled 
in suitable weather, and a large airing-ground for convalescent 
patients directly accessible from the downstairs ward. Each 
of the pavilions is raised above the ground level, ao that -air 



can circulate freely underneath* The wall, floor and air spaces 
in the scarlet fever wards of one of these hospitals are respectively 
12 ft, 15& ft and aosS ft per bed; and in the enteric and 
diphtheria wards they have been increased to 15 ft, 195 ft 
and S535 ft respectively. The provision of so large a floor 
and linear space, especially in the diphtheria wards, is an ex* 
perhnent the effect of which will be watched with considerable 
interest. A building of this type is a splendid example of the 
separate pavilion, hospital, and is doing great service in the 
treatment of fevers wherever it has been introduced. Some 
idea of a hospital village, some of the wards of which we have 
been describing, may be gathered from the circumstances 
that it costs from £300,000 to £400,000, that it usually coat sins 
from 500 to 700 beds, and that the staff numbers from 350 to 
500 persons. The medical superintendent lives in a separate 
house of his own. The nurses are provided with a home, con- 
sisting of several blocks of buildings under the control of the 
matron; the charge nurses usually occupy the main block, 
where the dining and general sitting-rooms are placed, the 
day assistant-nurses another block; and lastly, by a most 
excellent arrangement, the night nurses, 80 to 1 so in number, 
have one whole block entirely given up to their use. The female 
servants have a second home under the control of the house- 
keeper, and the male servants occupy a third home under the 
supervision of the steward. The two main ideas aimed at are 
to disconnect the nouses occupied by the staff from the infected 
area, and to place the members of each division of the staff 
together, but in separate buildings, under their respective heads. 
These objects are highly to be commended,as they have important 
bearings upon the well-being and discipline of the whole establish- 
ment and constitute a lesson for all who have to do with buildings 
where a great number of people are constantly employed. ' 

The Hospital City.— We have shown that the modem hospital 
where an adequate site is available under the most favourable 
conditions has developed into a hospital village. No one who 
is familiar with the existing disadvantages of many of the 
sites and their surroundings of town hospitals in many a large 
dty can have any doubt that, if the well-being of the patients 
and the good of the whole community, combined with economical 
and administrative reasons, together with the provision of an 
adequate system for the instruction and training of medical 
students and nurses, are to be the first considerations with 
those responsible for the hospitals of the future, the time will 
come, and is probably not far distant, when each great urban 
community will provide for the Whole of its sick by removing 
them to a hospital city, which will be situated upon a specially 
selected and most salubrious site some distance from the town 
itself. The atmosphere of a great city grows less and less suitable 
to the rapid and complete recovery of patients who may undergo 
the major operations or be suffering from the severe and acute 
forms of disease. Asepsis, it is true, has reduced the average 
residence in hospital from about 35 to less than ao days. It 
has thereby added quite one million working days each year 
to the earning power of the artisan classes in London alone. 
Medical opinion is more and more favouring the provision of 
convalescent and suburban hospitals, to which patients suffering 
from open wounds may be removed from the city hospitals. 
This course, which entails much additional expenditure, is 
advocated to overcome the difficulty arising from the fact 
that, in operation and other cases, the patients cease to continue 
to make rapid progress towards recovery after the seventh 
or ninth day's residence in a city hospital. A change of such 
cases to the country restores the balance and completes the 
recovery with a rapidity often remarkable. 

Thinking out the problem here presented in all its bearings, 
realising the great and ever-increasing cost of sites for hospitals 
in great cities, the heavy consequential taxes and charges which 
they have to meet there, and all the attendant disadvantages 
and drawbacks, the present writer has ventured upon an antici- 
pation which he hopes may prove intelligent and well-founded. 
Nearly every difficulty in regard to the cost of hospitals and 
in respect to all the many problems presented by securing 



79* 



HOSPITAL 



the material required, under present systems, foe the efficient 
training of students and nurses, would be removed by the 
erection of the Hospital City, which, he foresees, must ultimately 
be recognized by intelligent communities throughout the 
dvillzed world. Why should we not have, on a carefully selected 
site well away from the contaminations of the town, and 
adequately provided with every requisite demanded from the 
site of the most perfect modern hospital which the mind of 
man can conceive, a "Hospital City"? Here would be con- 
centrated all the means for relieving and treating every form 
of disease to the abiding comfort of all responsible for their 
adequacy and success. At the present time all the traffic and all 
the citizens give way to fire engines and the ambulance in the 
public streets* Necessarily the means of transit to and from 
the " Hospital City," and its rapidity, would be the most perfect 
in the world. So the members of the medical staff, the friends 
of the patients, and all who had business in the " Hospital 
City," would find it easier and less exacting in time and energy 
to be attached to one of the hospitals located therein than to 
one situated in the centre of a big population in a crowded town. 
To meet the urgent and accident cases a few receiving houses, 
or outpost relief stations, with a couple of wards, would be 
situated in various quarters of the working dty, where patients 
could be temporarily treated, and whence they could be removed 
to the " Hospital City " by an efficient motor ambulance service. 
The writer can see such a " Hospital City " established, can 
realise the comfort it will prove in practice to the medical pro- 
fession, to the patients' friends, to those who have to manage 
the hospitals and train the medical and nursing students, and 
indeed to all who may go there as well as to the whole community. 
The initial cost of hospital buildings should be reduced at 
once to a quarter or less of the present outlay. They could 
then be built of the cheapest but most suitable material, which 
Would have many advantages, whilst the actual money forth- 
coming from the realization and sale of the existing hospital sites 
In many dries would, in all probability, produce a sum which in 
the whole might prove adequate, or nearly a de q u ate, or even in 
tome eases more than adequate, to defray the entire cost of 
buHdiug the u Hospital City " and of equipping it too. The 
cost of administration and working must be everywhere reduced 
to a minimum. The hygienic completeness of the whole city, 
its buHdmgs and appliances, must expedite recovery to the 
maxinram extent. In all probability the removal of the skk 
from contact' with the healthy would tend in practice so to 
Increase the healthiness of the town population, ix. of the 
workers of the city proper, as to free them from some of the 
most burdensome trials which now cripple their resources and 
m'rniimh materially the happiness of their lives. Probably 
the United States (where a dty has sometimes sprung up in 
twelve months)- may be the home where this idea may first 
find its realization in accomplished fact. The writer may 
never live to see such a city in actual working or in its entirety, 
but he makes bold to believe its adoption will one day. solve 
the more difficult of the problems involved in providing ade- 
quately for the sick in crowded communities. He has formulated 
the idea because it seems desirable to encourage dis cu ssio n as 
to the best method of checking the growing tendency to make 
hospital buildings everywhere too costly. If the idea of the 
" Hospital City " commends itself to the profession and the 
public, the practice of treating all the hospital accommodation 
fn each dty as a whole will gradually increase and spread, 
unto most of the present pressing difficulties may disappear 
altogether. That is a consummation devoutly to be wished. 
The Problem of Hospital Administration.— A study of the 
hospital problem m various countries, and especially in different 
portions of the English-speaking world, convinces the writer 
that, apart from local differences, the features presented are 
everywhere practically identical. A number of hospitals under 
Independent administration, dependent in whole or in part 
on voluntary contributions, administered under different regula- 
tions originally representing the idiosyncracies of individual 
managers for the time being, without any standard of efficiency 



or any system of co-operation, which would bring' the whole 
of the medical establishments of each or all of the great cities 
of the world under one administration which the combined 
wisdom and experience of hospital managers as a whole might 
agree to be the best, must mean in practice a material gain in 
every way to each and all of the hospitals and their au ppo rters 
on economical, sdentific and other grounds. Such an absence of 
system throughout the world has everywhere led to overlapping, 
to the perpetuation of many abuses, to the admission of an 
increasing number of patients whose sodal position does not 
entitle them to claim free medical relief at ail, and, often too, 
to the admission of patients belonging to a humbler grade of 
society who are already provided for by the rates in institutions 
which they do not care to enter and who find their way to the 
wards of hospitals which were established to provide for patients 
of an entirely different social grade. These evils have continued 
to grow and increase almost everywhere, despite many and 
varied attempts to grapple with and remove them. Amongst 
these attempts we may mention the assembling of hospital 
conferences, the establishment of special funds and committees, 
and the holding of inquiries of various kinds in London and 
other British dties and also in the United States. The roost 
remarkable proof of the impossibility of inducing those re- 
sponsible to act together and enforce the necessary reforms is 
afforded by the historical fact that the famous Commission on 
Hospital Abuse, known as Sir William Fergusson's Commission, 
in 1871,- after an exhaustive inquiry, made the following recom- 
mendations: (1) to improve the administration of poor-law 
medical relief; (2) to place all free dispensaries under the control 
of the poor-law authorities; (3) to establish an adequate system 
of provident dispensaries; (4) to curtail the unrestricted system 
of gratuitous relief, partly by the selection of cases possessing 
special clinical interest and partly by the esdusion of those 
who on social grounds are not entitled to gratuitous medical 
advice; (5) the payment of the medical staff engaged in both 
in- and out-patient work, and the payment of fees by patients 
in the pay wards and in the consultation departments of 
the voluntary hospitals. Other commissions have since been 
appointed, have repo rted, and have disappeared, with the result 
that nothing practical had been done up to 1910 in the way of 
reform. Yet it is an undoubted met that, if the foregoing re- 
commendations of Sir William Fergusson's Commission had 
been carried out in their entirety at the time they were made, 
practically all the abuses from which British hospitals afterwards 
suffered would have been removed, and the charitable pobfac 
might have been saved several millions of pounds sterling. 
It may be well, therefore, briefly to indicate exactly what these 
changes amount to, and how they can be made effective at 
any time by those responsible for the working of a hospital 
There is no doubt that all the facts available tend to prove that 
the voluntary hospitals are used to an increasing extent by persons 
able to make payment or partial payment for the treatment 
which they receive. The evidence and statistics demonstrating 
these facts may be readily gathered from a study of the Report 
(1000) and Evidence of the Royal Commission on the Poor Laws 
and Relief of Distress (Lord George Hamilton's Commission) 
and in the authorities mentioned at the end of this article. The 
underlying cause of the abuse was that no means existed whereby 
persons of moderate income could obtain efficient treatment 
and hospital care when ill at a rate which they could afford to 
pay. The system, or want of system, whereby medical relief is 
granted to practically all applicants by the voluntary hospitals 
grew up without any combined attempt to organise it efficiently 
or to check abuses. Such a system rests upon a wrong basis, and 
the best interests of every class of the population demand its 
abolition in favour of one which shall afford the maximum of 
justice <i) to the poor, (2) to those who can afford to pay in pari 
or in whole the cost of their medical treatment and care at a 
hospital, (3) to the medical profession, (4) to the subscribers and 
supporters of voluntary hospitals, whose gifts should be strictly 
applied to the purposes they were intended to serve, and (s) 
to the ratepayers, who are entitled to a guarantee that the 



HOSPITAL 



997 



matfmtim efidency is secured by the poor-law system of 
tnedical relief. The remedy is very simple and easy of application. 
Every voluntary hospital, while admitting all accidents and 
urgent cases needing immediate attention, should institute a 
system whereby each applicant would be aaked to prove that 
he or she was a fit object of charity. The only real attempt 
at reform, up to 1009, was the appointment by many of the larger 
hospitals of almoners to ascertain whether certain selected 
patients were in a position to pay or not. By putting the burden 
of proof of eligibility to receive free medical relief upon the 
patients and. their friends, all abuse of every kind must speedily 
Cease. There would be no hardship entailed upon the patients by 
such a system, as experience has proved, but, to make it effective, 
the system of providing for in- and out-patients in Great Britain 
requires radical change, for, in existing circumstance, if a 
voluntary hospital attempted to enforce this simple method, it 
would be met with the difficulty that, where it was found that 
a patient or his friends could pay at any rate something, no 
department connected with British hospitals existed— as is the 
case in regard to hospitals in the United States— enabling such 
In-patients to be transferred to accommodation provided in 
paying wards. In the same way, directly the out-patients 
were dealt with under such a system, it would be made apparent, 
where a case could be properly treated under the poor law, 
that no plan of co-operation to secure this was organized under 
existing conditions: If the patient, being of a better class, were 
suffering from a minor ailment, and could be properly dealt with 
at a provident dispensary, the fees of which he could easily 
pay, the same absence of co-operation must make it practically 
impossible readily to enforce the system. When, again, an out- 
patient of the better class was entitled, from the severity of his 
ailment, to receive the advantages 0/ a consultation by the 
medical staff* no method existed whereby this aid could be 
tendered to him, and his transfer afterwards to the care of a 
medical practitioner attached to some provident dispensary, 
or resident near the patient's, home, could be properly carried 
out. It follows that adequate reform required that methods 
should be adopted with a view to some part or all the cost 'of 
treatment being provided by the patient or his friends through 
an entire reorganization of the system of medical relief not only 
at the voluntary hospitals, but under the poor-law system. The 
reforms required in regard to voluntary hospitals are that every 
large hospital shall have connected with the in-patient depart- 
ment, In separate buildings, but under the administration of 
the managers, pay wards for. the reception of those patients who 
are able to pay some part or all of the cost of treatment; that, 
as regards out-patients, the existing out-patient department 
should be abolished; that in substitution for.it -each. hospital 
should have a casualty department and a department for 
consultation. In the casualty department every applicant 
should be seen once, and be there disposed of by being handed on 
to the consultation department; if his case was sufficiently 
important, he should then be transferred to some provident 
or poor-law dispensary, or be referred to a private medical 
attendant. It would no doubt take time to overcome the in- 
cidental difficulties which would necessarily arise in effecting 
so radical a reform as u here contemplated, but if all voluntary 
hospitals adopted the same system, and were to be brought into 
active co-operation with provident dispensaries and poor-law 
dispensaries and private medical practitioners, the new system 
might be successfully introduced and made effective within 
twelve months, and probably within sis months, from the date 
of its commencement. This opinion is based upon tlje assump- 
tion that the provident dispensaries would be standardized, 
and that every one of them would be brought up to a State of the 
highest efficiency. In the town of- Northampton the Royal 
Victoria Dispensary has been wdrked with the maximum of 
success, so far as the patients and the medjeal practitioners are 
concerned. In London and in other large towns like Manchester 
and elsewhere the provident dispensary has net succeeded as 
it has done in Northampton, because so many members of the 
medical profession are not alive to the importance of making 



it their first business to provide that every patient connected 
with the provident dispensary who attends at the surgery of a 
private medical practitioner shall receive at least equal attention 
and accommodation to that afforded to every other private 
patient, whatever the fee he may pay. In the same way, poor* 
law dispensaries must beuadically reformed. 'Everything which 
tends to excite a feeling of shame on the part of the patient 
attending the poor-law dispensary, such as the printing of the 
word " pauper " at the beginning of the space on which the 
patient's name is entered, must be abolished, and the class of 
medical service and all the arrangements for the treatment 
of the patients, however poor, at the poor-law dispensary, 
must be made at least as efficient as those provided by voluntary 
hospitals. There undoubtedly is considerable overlapping 
between the voluntary hospitals and the poor law in Great 
Britain. The Royal Commission on the Poor Laws and Relief 
of Distress (1009) deals with this point with a view to set up a 
standard of medical relief to be granted by each dass and type 
of hospitals, provides for adequate co-operation between alt 
classes of institutions; and these reforms may be commended. 
It is too often forgotten that the function of the poor law is the 
relief of destitution, while it should be the object and duty of 
each voluntary hospital and indeed of all hospitals other than 
poor-law institutions to apply their resources entirely to the 
prevention of destitution, by stepping in to grant free medical 
relief to the pro v iden t and thrifty when, through no fault of 
their own, they meet with an accident or are overtaken by 
disease. An adequate system of co-operation would preserve 
the privilege of the voluntary hospitals, which save such patients 
from the necessity of requiring the relief which it is the object 
of the poor law to supply. 

We have dealt with the relative advantages and disadvan- 
tages of rate-supported hospitals and voluntary hospitals. We 
should regard the establishment of a complete state-provided or 
rate-provided system of gratuitous medical relief either for in- 
dqor patients or for out-door patients, or for both, as a grave evil* 
Such a system must eventually lead to the extinction of voluntary 
hospitals. If this disaster ever happens, it must result in the 
gravest evils, for it could not fall t6 injure the morale of all 
classes and tend to harden unnecessarily the relations between 
the rich and poor, who, under the voluntary system, have come 
to share each other's sufferings and to be animated by respect and' 
confidence towards each other. 

Hospital Construction. Locality and £##.-— Hospitals are required 
for the use of the community in a certain locality, and to be of use 
they must be within reach of the centre of population. Formerly 
the greater difficulty of locomotion made it necessary that they 
should be actually in the midst of towns and cities, and to soma 
extent this continues to prevail. It is now proved to demonstration 
that this Is not the best plan. Fresh and pure air being a prime 
necessity, as well as a conaderable amount of space of actual area ia 



necessity, j_, , r , „ 

proportion to population, it would certainly.be better to place 
hospitals as much in the outskirts as is consistent with considerations 
of usefulness and convenience. In short, the best site would be open 
fields: but if that be impracticable, a large space. " a sanitary 
zone as it is called by Toilet, should be kept permanently tree 
between them and surrounding buildings, certainly never less than 
double the height of the highest building. In the selection of a site 
various factors must be taken into consideration. If the hospital 
is to be used as the clinical school of a university or medical college, 
then the most suitable ground available within easy reach of the 
univei 
hc~ u 



university or college must be secured. If, on the other hand, the 

mple 

out of the wards receiving the maximum of sun* 



liege n .... 

^ be used as a teaching school, a site more in the 
e favoured. In any case ample ground must be 
* the wards receiving the maximum of sun-. 
_, -_,.ily of fresh air, and leave room for possible 
, The site should be self-contained ; it should be 
n as to prevent the hospital being shadowed by 
i the neighbourhood, and, unless the' site is along- 
k, it should be entirely surrounded by streets of; 
in width. It is also necessary to secure that ade- 
• serve the site, and that the system of sewers be. 
ige purposes. 

between the expense of purchase of land in a town 
his is generally considerable, and this is therefore 
son for choosing a suburban locality. Even with 
it would be m most cases pecuniarily advantageous. 
>resent building and site and retain only a receiving 
u St ThooWsta London, the Houl-Dieum Pact) 



79» 



HOSPITAL 



Id be waxed sad 

B rendered MOO* 

ith solid paratsa 
EraDy agreed that 



Is with window* 
sad with balcony; 
Eeen beds, bat for 
should be not less 
ps on three sides; 
DC first (•) is the 
nded byDrCF. 
end (e) h*m been 
Mr. /nr rTfiswseisss 

bss distinct ad- 
bare constructed 
ion of superficial 
Is contained in a 
Northern Central 

events the nurses 
eds. In practice 
it can be avoided 
rard, if desirable, 

.to i ft. from the 
wi bis gives 7} ft. 00 

eft msce is necessary, 

so x as a favourable 

wi ao ft.; but some 

ex m, and the Kew 

R< u, 29; and Larv 

bo r 26 for a ward of 

tin Enter there ought 

to ^___ ... „ ^Jng to get s wade 

space thoroughly ventilated. There ought to be only two rows of 
beds, one down each wall, with a window on each side of each bed. 
For ventilation two' things are required— sufficient space and 
sufficiently frequent change or renewal of air. As regards space. 
this must be considered with reference both to total space and to 
lateral or floor space.- Unless a minimum of floor space be bid 
down, we shall always be in danger of over cr owding, for cubic space 
may be supplied vertically with little or no advantage to the occupier. 
If we allow a minimum distance of 4 ft. bet we en the beds sad 10 ft. 
between the ends of the beds, this give* 100 sq. ft. of apace per 
bed; less than this is undesirable. In severe surgical cases, fever 
cases and the like, a much larger space is required; and in the 
Edinburgh Infirmary 150 sq. ft. is allowed. Cubic space must be 
regulated by the means of ventilation; we can rarely change the 
air oftener than three times in an hour, and therefore the space 
ought to be at least one-third of the hourly supply. This ought not 
to be less than 4000 cubic ft. per bed, even in ordinary cases of ssckness 

r this amount, aad 



the third of 'that b xm cubic ft. of space. With 100 sq. ft. 
of floor space a ward of 13J ft. high would supply th' 

there b but little to be gained by raising the ceiling 1 _ 

12 ft. is practically enough. The experiments of Drs Cowles and 
Wood of Boston (see Report of State Board of Health of Massachusetts 
for 1879) showthat above u ft. there b little or no movement is the 
air except towards the outlet ventilator; the space above is there- 
fore of little value as ventilation space. Authorities nowadays* 
however, fix 10 ft. 6 in. as the maximum, and any height above thb 
may be disregarded for purposes of ventilation. Additional height 
adds also to the cost of construction, increases the expense of w arm - 
ing, makes cleaning more difficult, and to some extent *t— 
ventilation. Whatever be the height of wards, the windows must 
reach to the- ceiling, or there must be ventilators in the ceiling or 
at the top of the side walb. If thb be not arranged for. a mass of 
foul air b apt to stagnate sear the ceiling, and sooner or Inter to be 
driven down upon the inmates. The reasons for a large and constant 
renewal of air are, of course, the immediate removal and dilution of 
the organic matter given off by the inmates; as thb is greater in 
quantity and more offensive and dangerous in ssckness than in 
health, the change of sir is the former case must be greater than in 
the Utter. Hence is serious cases an amount of air prectkaUy 
unlimited b desirable — the aim of true ventilation being to approach 
as near as possible to the condition of pure external air. Without 
going too much into details, a few general rules may be laid down. 
(1) Fresh air ought, if possible, to be brought in at the lowest part 
of the ward, warmed u necessary: (?) foul air ought to be takes 
out at the highest part of the ward; (3) fresh air should reach each 
patient without passing over the bed of any other; (4) the vitiated 
air should be removed from each patient without passing over the 
bed of any other; (5) 4000 cubic ft. of fresh air per head per hour 
should be the minimum in ordinary cases of sickness, to be increased 
without limit in severer cases; (6) the air should move in 00 part of 
a ward at a greater rate than 1) ft. per second, except at the point 
of entry, where it should not exceed 5 ft. p er second , and at the 



HOSPITAL 



799 



outlet, where the i 
of inlet am 



the wards 
done with 
Warminj 
•specially i 
system of 
portion of 
too great I 
too strong! 
direction o 
are very fe 
foul air tk 
such as t> 
have been 
treatment. 
all grounds 
sphere. F< 
and surgic 
Various pi 
a combinai 
with radta 
sufficient t 
sir may be 
k enters tl 
or stove, 01 
however, t 
that no gei 
Thelighl 
means of c 
is used eac 
bust ion pre 
Th* F* 
absorbent! 
bottoms wi 
The wat 
ful; 50 gall 
estimate. 

Thedos 

earthen wai 

perfect, an 

own closet 

ventilated 

should be < 

traps, the 1 

over trapp 

placed out 

Each ward 

the pstienl 

Each wa 

special coo 

surgeon, ai 

cooking sh 

drying of li 

Hospital 

system of 

system of 

condition < 

that can t 

system doe 

maintenani 

tmprovemc 

It has take 

of hospital 

great funds 

This syste 

1869, "and 

William Li 

practice th 

Seamen's I 

adopted sp 

where the 

In order to 

of the itei 

Index of d 

Annual of 

the many i 

be adopte< 

secretaries, 

Fund, revi 

new index 

io January 

Fund appi 

imitated b 

In 1906 th 

King's Fui 

hospital se 

a further r 

ottheyeat 



: about 6a so. in. . Hosnital Saturday Funds. The publication of a book by Sir Henry 

doption of the system in several of the British 
suit of the action taken in the British Empire 
1 of Accounts has recently been set up and 
apal hospitals of the United States of America. 
George V.) testified to the value of this system in 
t expenditure, and Sir Henry Burdett adapted 
authorities of all charities of every class. It is 
rie reform has had a greater influence for good 
ion of charitable institutions than the evolution 
he uniform system of accounts, 
■aogemenu for nursing the sick have greatly 



imes, although controversy still goes on as to 
arrying it out. In arranging for the nursing in 
ency and economy have to be considered. No* 



spital for acute cases should contain more than 
Is with clinical schools, the proportion of nurses 
s about one nurse to every three patients, and 
i should have a probationer on duty at night in 
t nurse. In all well-conducted hospitals it is 
te nurses on night duty have a hot meal served 
room during the night, and this is only possible 
1 probationer are allowed for each ward. The 
ild be separate from the hospital proper, and 
ervatory or cov er ed way. Each nurse should 
00m, measuring not less than 12 ft. long, o. ft* 
;h. A bath should be allowed for every eight 
rr-closets and sinks should, if possible, be ia 
ff from the mam block of buildings, 
it to a large extent determine the arr _ 

e on the whole that the work of a nurse 1 . 

jle ward at a time if possible. The duties of 
x distinctly confined to attendance on the sick, 
, such as scrubbing floors and the like, should 
m; a proper staff of servants ought to beem- 
rposes. It is also desirable that a separate 
he nurses should be set apart, and that fair and 
rest and recreation should be allowed. Some 
1 place as to the advisability of placing the 
1 tn the hands of a sisterhood or a separate 
, however, be admitted that the best plan is 
of each hospital to be special and under one 
iblishment itself, even though it may be con- 
ain institution outside. The nursing must, of 
in accordance with the directions and treatment 
1 surgeons. 

chen, laundry, dispensary and other offices 
:e pavilion or pavilions, away from the. wards, 
it access. A separate pavilion for isolation of 
esirablew This may be a wooden hut, or ia 
tent; either is probably preferable to a per- 
ildings. A disinfecting chamber ought to be 
can pe applied to clothes and bedding, for the 
vermin ana of the germs of disease. It b ad- 
1 bedding and clothing to its influence after 
r. Although this may entail additional expense. 
m of fabric, it is worth the outlay to secure 
se. This plan is rigidly followed at the Royal 
try at Southampton. It is of great importance 
d be periodically emptied and kept unoccupied 
te month ia each year,- and longer if possible, 
thorough cleansing and flushing with air could 
1 to prevent any continuous deposit of organic 

mission Block. — If the efficiency of a hospital 
smooth working of its departments are to be 
management and control of the admission 
greatest importance. Whefl one considers for 
er of applicants of all ages in various stages of 
ber of accident cases of every degree of severity 
Ives every day seeking admission, it will be- 
lt careful supervision must be exercised on the 
essential that every precaution be taken against 
unsuitable case, or the refusal, without careful 
patient 'seeking admission. It is only necessary 
of a patient with delirium tremens being ad- 
ard at a late hour, or a case of infectious disease 
n overlook, or a case refused admission and 
1 home, in order to illustrate the danger and 
arise should the supervision exercised over this 
rstemattc, stringent and thorough, 
iper control it is necessary that the. admission 
* designed on a definite plan suitable for the 
is not sufficient to utilize any available rooms, 
of the building, where patients may be casually 
>uae surgeon or physician. This department 
f designed and equipped as any other depart* 

rs much more attention has been devoted to 
ictton than was. formerly considered necessary, 



8oo 



HOSPITAL 



but even in the best type of hospital there Is still much to be desired 
In this respect. It is essential lor an architect in designing any 
building to have before him an accurate idea of all the requirements* 
and the nse to which each foot of space is to be put; for unless he 
n famished with this information it is not possible for him to design 
his building so as to give effect to all the details which are so neces- 
sary. The following is an endeavour in a general way to enumerate 
the various points which an architect should have before him in 
designing the admission department of a general hospital >— 
. The admission department should be conveniently placed on the 
ground floor of the hospital*— or it may be a detached building—- 
with a large court where ambulance wagons or other vehicles may 
easily pass each other on approaching or retiring from the institu- 
tion. The entrance to the admission department tor patients should, 
if possible, be entirely separate and distinct from that for the staff 
and students. An additional entrance should be provided for 
patients' friends on visiting days, in order that they may be able 
to enter the hospital without passing through the patients' entrance, 
or coming into contact with an accident case or other patient seeking 
admission. The main entrance door should be protected by a 
covered porch so that patients may be removed from the ambulance 
or cab to the examination room without being exposed to the weather 
or the gaze of inquisitive onlookers; This door should be sufficiently 
wide to allow two hand ambulances or barrows to pass should they 
require to be brought out to the ambulance or cab, and to facilitate 
this the floor of the entrance hall should be as nearly as possible on 
a level with that of the outside porch. Adjoining the entrance 
vestibule, . lavatory accommodation 
should be provided for males and 
females who may accompany- the 
patient. * Lavatory accommodation 
Should also be provided for porters 
on duty, and all lavatories should 
have a cut-off ventilating passage. 
. A recess to store ambulance barrows 
should adjoin the entrance, and this 
recess must be in proportion to the sire 
of the hospital, in order that a hand 
ambulance may always be available 
when an accident or urgent case 
arrives. The vestibule should lead into 
a large waiting-hall with an inquiry 
office at its entrance, provided with a 
telephone exchange, private exchange 
box, also letter and parcel racks. If 
possible a window of the inquiry office 
should command a view of the main 
entrance. A room should be provided 
for the medical officer on duty, so that 
a medical officer may be always at 
hand and that no delay will occur in 
attending to a patient on arrival. ' „, 

Leading off from this waiting-hall, wen-lit examination rooms 
should be available for the thorough examination of patients, both 
male and female, the number of rooms, of course, varying with the 
size of the hospital and the amount of work to be done. Each of 
these rooms should be fitted with a wash-hand basin and sink, and 
a plentiful supply of hot and cold water. 

. Two rooms, with recovery rooms adjoining, should' be fitted up 
as smalt operating-rooms for the treatment of minor casualties. 
A special room should also be furnished with an X-ray outfit, and 
arrangements should be made whereby this room can be readily 
darkened so that suspected fractures, &c, may be examined with 
the fluorescent screen. 

Adjoining the admission department two small wards should be 

Kovided for the accommodation of drunk or noisy cases unfit to 
: placed in the, general wards. To these "emergency wards" 
must be attached the usual bathroom and lavatory accommodation, 
nurses' room, ward kitchen and urine-test room or small lavatory. 
These wards should have double windows in order to prevent noise 
being heard outside if the wards are near other buildings. 
, The interior walls of the admission department should, as far as 
possible, have a smooth and impervious surface, in order that they 
may, be easily cleaned. All angles should be avoided and all corners 
rounded. Although glazed tiles arc open to the criticism that they 
have numerous joints, they probably make the most suitable wall 
yet devised, as they can be easily washed down at very small cost. 
The corridors and waiting-ball should be tiled to a height of 6 ft. . 
6 in., and the upper walls covered with Parian or Kean's cement, 
and be treated with three coats of flat paint and two coats of enamel, 
or, what is equally suitable and less costly, enamellette. The floors 
of the passages and corridors throughout the department should be 
covered with terrazso, which is a mixture of Portland cement and 
marble chips. A margin of I ft. round the rooms should be treated 
in this way, and the terrazzo carried up this same distance on the 
wall to join the tiles. The remainder of the floors should be covered 
with hard wood, such as American maple or teak. As these floors 
( require to be frequently washed, oak is not so suitable. Oak very 
toon becomes destroyed with water • the same trouble is experienced 
with pitch pine, The doors should also pe made of a bard wood, 



preferably teak, and have no msuldmgs or grooves where dust cam 
lodge. They should be wide enough to admit an ambulance barrow/ 
or bed with ease. In no case should the doors of an cnmnmt'n m 
room be less than 3 ft. 6 in. in width. 

As an aid to a complete understanding of the varied work which 
has to be provided for, aad the most effective method of carrying it 
out, the accompanying plana are given of an admission block de* 

to embody the 




principles 
govern the const 
of such a department. 

All accident* and 
patients seeking admis- 
sion to this hospital enter 
through the central gate- 
way, and on the Idt is 
shown the porters' room, 
where a porter is always 
in readiness to attend to 
any applicant. This 
room has -suitable ac- 
commodation for parcels, 
letters, telephones, Ac, 
and adjoining it is a 
email lavatory for the 
use of porters. At the 
side of the porters' room 



nans of oroond Moor aad Basement of a Hospital. 

is the entrance to the central waiting-hall, which is Ht from the *• 
roof. On one side of this hall are examination and dressing-rooms 
for males, with lavatory accommodation; and on the other side 
similar provision for females, with the addition of a nurses* duty 
room. At the end of the central hail are two operating theatres, 
with recovery room adjoining each; one theatre for males, and the 
other for females. Between these theatres are rooms for sterilizers 
and dressings! An X-ray examination room is provided beyond the 
male examination room on the right of the hall. In the basement, 
under the entrance-haR and operating theatres are two bathrooms 
for males and two for females, with WJC's for each. The remainder 
of the basement is used as a store for patients' clothes, and a hot- 
air chamber is provided for purposes of disinfection. The basement 
can be reached by a lift or by a wide staircase which is situated at 
the end of the waiting-hall. 

In the above plan provision U made for a sitting-room for the 
medical officer on duty. This is a new and essential feature in the 
admission block unit of all hospitals in large cities, for it should 
secure that no patient is kept waiting for many minutes before being 
seen. One of the blots on the management of many hospitals s 
that regrettable delays often take place, and much dissatufactioa 
and avoidable suffering may arise from this difficulty In the ad- 
ministration of a general hospital. We have given this plan of a 
model gatehouse or admission block for a modem general hospital, 
because the block as it stands contains all the elements necessary 
for a receiving-house block in cities in connexion with a great 
Hospital city situated outside its area, in fulfilment of the suggestion 
for a Hospital city made above. Apart from its interest as a new 
feature which all new hospitals should adopt, the gatehouse or 
admission block has an importance in the wider sense, that it may 
come to form the key to the solution pf the, problem of hpw best to 
provide hospital accommodation for the poor in great cities under 
the best hygienic conditions, white protecting them from the misery 
and danger of prolonged delay in first treatment, especially in con- 
nexion with accidents and other cases of urgency. 

Bibliography.— Sir H. Burdett, Cottage Hospitals, General. Fener 
and Convalescent, their Construction, Management and Work (London, 
1877 1880 and 1896); Toilet, Lcs Edifices kospitaliers depuisUmr 



HOSPITIUM— HOSTAGE 



801 



ariejne jusqu'a 
and Asylums oj 
scale (London, 
the information 
J. S. Billings,! 
Application (U 



1893): ToUet, 

and Hurd, Sugi 

1895); Oswald 



5&J 



. i part, 5th 1 to 

Johns Hopkins vd 

of Health for hi 

HOSPmtJH he 

Greeks and R< e ; 

(2) public. 

(1) In Homeric times all strangers without exception were 
regarded as being under the protection of Zeus Xenios, the god of 
strangers and suppliants. It is doubtful whether, as is commonly 
assumed, they were considered as ipso facto enemies; they 
were rather guests. Immediately on his arrival, the stranger 
was clothed and entertained, and no inquiry was made as to 
his name or antecedents until the duties of hospitality had 
been fulfilled. When the guest parted from his host he was 
often presented with gifts (£4?ta), and sometimes a die 
C&oTpaYaXos) was broken between them. Each then took a 
part, a family connexion was established, and the broken die 
served as a symbol of recognition; thus the members of each 
family found in the other hosts and protectors in case of need. 
Violation of the duties of hospitality was likely to provoke 
the wrath of the gods; but it does not appear that any- 
thing beyond this religious sanction existed to guard the 
rights of a traveller. Similar customs seem to have existed 
among the Italian races. Amongst the Romans, private hospit- 
ality, which had existed from the earliest times, was more 
accurately and legally defined than amongst the Greeks, the 
tie between host and guest being almost as strong as that 
between patron and client It was of the nature of a contract, 
entered into by mutual promise, the clasping of hands, and 
exchange of an agreement in writing (tabula hbspitalis) or of 
a token (tessera or symbolum), and was rendered hereditary 
by the division of the tessera. The advantages thus obtained 
by the guest were, the right of hospitality when travelling and, 
above all, the protection of his host (representing him as his 
patron) in a court of law. The contract was sacred and inviolable, 
undertaken in the name of Jupiter Hospitalis, and could only 
• / be dissolved by a formal act. 

(a) This private connexion developed into a custom according 
to which a state appointed one of the citizens of a foreign state 
as its representative Orpofctos) to protect any of its citizens 
travelling or resident in his country. Sometimes an individual 
came forward voluntarily to perform these duties on behalf of 
another state (tfcWpogeros). The proxenus is generally 
compared to the modern consul or minister resident. His 
duties were to afford hospitality to strangers from the state 
whose proxenus he was, to introduce its ambassadors, to procure 
them admission to the assembly and seats in the theatre, and 
in general to look after the commercial and political interests 
of the state by which he had been appointed to his office. Many 
cases occur where such an office was hereditary; thus the 
family of Callias at Athens were proxeni of the Spartans. We 
find the office mentioned in a Corcyraean inscription dating 
probably from the 7th century B.C., and it continued to grow 
more important and frequent throughout Greek history. There 
is no proof that any direct emolument was ever attached to 
the office, while the expense and trouble entailed by it must 
often have been very great. Probably the honours which 
it brought with it were sufficient recompense. These consisted 
partly in the general respect and esteem paid to a proxenus, 
and partly in many more substantial honours conferred by 
special decree of the state whose representative he was, such 
as freedom from taxation and public burdens, the right of 
acquiring property in Attica, admission to the senate and popular 
assemblies, and perhaps even full citizenship. Public hospitium 
seems also to have existed among the Italian races; but the 
XUL Ha 



circumstances of their history prevented it from becoming so 
important as in Greece. Cases, however, occur of the establish- 
meat of public hospitality between two cities (Rome and Caere, 
Livy v. 50), and of towns entering into a position of dienlsbip 
to some distinguished Roman, who then became patronus of 
such a town. Foreigners were frequently granted the right 
of public hospitality by the senate down to the end of the re- 
public. The public hospes had a right to entertainment at the 
public expense, admission to sacrifices and games, the right of 
buying and selling on bis own account, and of bringing an action 
at law without the intervention of a Roman patron. 

A full bibliography of the subject will be found in the article in 
Darcmberg and baglio, Dictionnaire des anliquitis, to 'which may 
be added R. von Jhering. Die Gaslfreandschaft im Altertum (1887); 
•ee also Smith's Dictionary of Creek and Roman Antiquities (3rd ed., 
1890). 

HOSPODAR* a term of Slavonic origin, meaning "lord" 
(Russ. gospodar). It is a derivative of gospod, "lord," and 
is akin to gosudsr, which primarily means " sovereign," and is 
now also used in Russia as a polite form of address, equivalent 
to " sir." The pronunciation as hospodar of a word written 
gospodar in all but one of the Slavonic languages which retain 
the Cyrillic alphabet is not, as is sometimes alleged,, due to the 
influence of Little Russian,, but to that of Church Slavonic 
In both of these g is frequently pronounced A. In Little Russian 
the title hospodar is specially applied to the master of a house 
or. the head of a family. The rulers of Walachia and Moldavia 
were styled hospodars from the 15th century to 1866. At the 
end of this period, as the title had been held by many vassals 
of Turkey, its retention was considered inconsistent with the 
growth of Rumanian independence. It was therefore discarded 
in favour of domn (dominus, " lord "), which continued to be 
the official princely title up to the proclamation of a Rumanian 
kingdom in 1881. 

HOST, (x) (Through the O. Fr. osie or hoste, modern kdU, 
from Lat. hospes, a guest or host; hospes being probably from 
an original hostipes, one who feeds a stranger or enemy, from 
kosiis and the root of pascere), one who receives another into 
his house and provides him with lodging and entertainment, 
especially one who does this in return for payment. The word 
is thus transferred, in biology, to an animal or plant upon which 
a parasite lives, (a) (From Lat. /testis, a stranger or enemy; 
in Med. Latin a military expedition), a very large gathering 
of men, armed for war, an army, and so used generally of any 
multitude. In biblical use the word is applied to the company 
of angels in heaven; or to the sun, moon and stars, the " hosts 
of heaven," and also to translate "Jehovah Sabaoth," the 
Lord God of hosts, the lord of the armies of Israel or of the hosts 
of heaven. (3) (From Lat. kostia, a victim or sacrifice), the 
sacrifice* of Christ's body and blood in the Eucharist, more 
particularly the consecrated wafer used in the service of the 
mass in the Roman Church (sec Eucharist). 

HOSTAGE (through Fr. ostcge, modern otagt\ from Late 
Lat obsidalicum, the state of being an obsts or hostage; Med. 
Lat. ostatimm, ostagium), a person handed over by one of two 
belligerent parties to the other or seized as security for the 
carrying out of an agreement, or as a preventive measure against 
certain acts of war. The practice of taking hostages b very 
ancient, and has been used constantly in negotiations with 
conquered nations, and in cases such as surrenders, armistices 
and the like, where the two belligerents depended for its proper 
carrying out on each other's good faith. The Romans were 
accustomed to take the sons of tributary princes and educate 
them at Rome, thus holding a security for the continued loyalty 
of the conquered nation and also instilling a possible future 
ruler with ideas of Roman civilization. This practice was also 
adopted in the early period of the British occupation of India, 
and by France in her relations with the Arab tribes in North 
Africa. 1 The position of a hostage was that of a prisoner of war. 

1 The sultan of Bagicmi, in Central Africa, in 1906 sent his nephew 
to undergo military training with a squadron of Spahis, and at the 
same time to serve as a guarantee of his fidelity to the French 
(Bulletin du ComM de VAfnque fran$aise, Oct. 1906). 



802 



HDSTE— HOSUR 



to be retained till the negotiations or treaty obligations were 
carried out, and liable to punishment (in ancient times), and even 
to death, in case of treachery or refusal to fulfil the promises 
made. The practice of taking hostages as security for the carrying 
out of a treaty between civilized states is now obsolete. The 
last occasion was at the treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle in 1748, 
when two British peers, Henry Bowes Howard, nth earl of 
Suffolk, and Charles, oth Baron Cat heart, were sent to France 
as hostages for the restitution of Cape Breton to France. 

In modern times the practice may be said to be confined 
to two occasions: (1) to secure the payment of enforced con* 
tributions or requisitions in an occupied territory and the 
obedience to regulations the occupying army may think fit to 
issue; (2) as a precautionary measure, to prevent illegitimate 
acts of war or violence by persons not members of the recognized 
military forces of the enemy. During the Franco-Prussian War 
of 1870, the Germans took as hostages the prominent people 
or officials from towns or districts when making requisitions and 
also when foraging, and it was a general practice for the mayor 
and adjoint of a town which failed to pay a fine imposed upon it 
to be seized as " hostages " and retained till the money was paid. 
The last case where " hostages " have been taken in modern 
warfare has been the subject of much discussion. In 1870 
the Germans found it necessary to take special measures to put 
a stop to train-wrecking by parties in occupied territory not 
belonging to the recognized armed forces of the enemy, an 
illegitimate act of war. Prominent citizens were placed on the 
engine of the train " so that it might be understood that in every 
accident caused by the hostility of the inhabitants their com- 
patriots will be the first to suffer." The measure seems to have 
been effective. In 1000 during the Boer War, by a proclamation 
issued at Pretoria (June xoth), Lord Roberts adopted the plan 
for a similar reason, but shortly afterwards (July 29) it was 
abandoned (see The Times* History of the War in S. Africa, 
iv. 492). The Germans also, between the surrender of a town 
and its final occupation, took " hostages " as security against 
outbreaks of violence by the inhabitants. Most writers on 
international law have regarded this method of preventing such 
acts of hostility as unjustifiable, on the ground that the persons 
taken as hostages are not the persons responsible for the act; l 
that, as by the usage of war hostages are to be treated strictly 
as prisoners of war, such an exposure to danger is transgressing 
the rights of a belligerent; and as useless, for the mere temporary 
removal of important citizens till the end of a war cannot be 
a deterrent unless their mere removal deprives the combatants 
of persons necessary to the continuance of the acts aimed at 
(see W. E. Hall, International Law, 1904, pp. 418, 475). On the 
other hand it has been urged (L. Oppenheim, International Law, 
1005, vol. ii., " War and Neutrality," pp. 271-773) that the acts, 
the prevention of which is aimed at, are not legitimate acts on 
the part of the armed forces of the enemy, but illegitimate acts 
by private persons, who, if caught, could be quite lawfully 
punished, and that a precautionary and preventive measure 
is more reasonable than "reprisals.*! It may be noticed, 
however, that the hostages would suffer should the acts aimed at 
be performed by the authorized belligerent forces of the enemy. 

Iii France, after the revolution of Prairial (June x8, 1799), 
the so-called " law of hostages " was passed, to meet the insurrec- 
tion in La Vendee. Relatives of Imigres were taken from dis- 
turbed districts and imprisoned, and were liable to execution 
at any attempt to escape. Sequestration of their property and 
deportation from France followed on the murder of a republican, 
four to every such murder, with heavy fines on the whole 
body of hostages. The law only resulted in an increase in the 
insurrection. Napoleon in 1706 had used similar measures to 
deal with the insurrection in Lombardy (Carres pondance do 
Napoleon I. i. 323, 327, quoted in Hall, International Law). 

1 Article 50 of the Hague War Regulations lays it down that 
11 no general penalty, pecuniary or otherwise, can be inflicted on the 

Kpulation on account of the acts of individuals for which it cannot 
regarded as collectively responsible." The regulations, however, 
do not allude to the practice of taking hostage. 



In May 1871, at the close of the Paris Commune, took place 
the massacre of the so-called hostages. Strictly they were not 
" hostages," for they bad not been handed over or seized as 
security for the performance of any undertaking or as s preventive 
measure, but merely in retaliation for the death of their leaden 
E. V. Duval and Gustave Flourens, It was an act of maniaral 
despair, on the defeat at Mont Vaterien on the 4th of April aad 
the entry of the army into Paris on the 2 1st of May. Among the 
many victims who were shot in batches the most noticeable were 
Monsignor Darboy, archbishop of Paris, the Abbe" Deguery, cure" 
of the Madeleine, and the president of the Court of Cassati on . 
Louis Bernard Bonjean. 

HOSTS, SIR WILLIAM (1780-1828), British naval captain, 
was the son of Dixon Hoste, rector of God wick and TittlesbiO 
in Norfolk. He was born on the 26th of August 1780 at Ingc4ds~ 
thorpe, and entered the navy in April 1793, under the special care 
of Nelson, who had a lively affection for him. He became 
lieutenant in 1708, and was appointed commander of the 
" Mutine " brig after the battle of the Nile, at which he was present 
as lieutenant of the '* Theseus." In 1802 he was promoted post 
captain by Lord St Vincent. During all his active career, he 
was employed in the Mediterranean and the Adriatic. From 
x8o8 to 1814 he held the command of a detached force of frigates, 
and was engaged in operations against the French who held 
Dalmatia at the time, and in watching, or, when they came out, 
fighting, the ships of the squadron formed at Venice by Napoleon's 
orders. The work was admirably done, and was also lucrative, 
and Hoste, although he occasionally complained that his exertions 
did not put much money in his pocket, made a fortune of at least 
£60,000 by the capture of Italian and Dalmatian merchant 
ships. He also made many successful attacks on the French 
military posts on shore. His most brilliant feat was performed 
on the 13th of March 181 1. A Franco- Venetian squadron of six 
frigates and five small vessels, under the command of a French 
officer named Dubourdieu, assailed Hoste's small force of four 
frigates near the island of Lissa. The French officer imitated 
Nelson's attack at Trafalgar by sailing down on the English 
line from windward with his ships in two lines. But the rapid 
manoeuvring and gunnery of Hoste's squadron proved how little 
virtue there is in any formation in itself. Dubourdieu was killed, 
one of the French frigates was driven on shore, and two of the 
Venetians were taken. After the action, which attracted a 
great deal of attention, Hoste returned to England, but in 1811 
he was back on his station, where he remained till the end of the 
war. During the peace he did not again go to sea, and he died 
on the 6th of December 18 28. He married Lady Harriet WalpcJe 
in April 1817, and left three sons and three daughters. 

In i8v$ his widow published his Memoirs and Letters. See abo 
Marshall, Roy. Nov. Btog. vol. iii., and James, Nasal History. 

HOSTEL, the old name for an inn (see Hospital, ad mil); 
also employed at Oxford and Cambridge to designate the 
lodgings which were in ancient times occupied by students 
of the university and to a certain extent regulated by the 
authorities. In some English public schools what is known 
as the " hostel " system provides for an organization of the 
lodging accommodation under separate masterships. 

HOSTIUS, Roman epic poet, probably flourished in the snd 
century B.C. He was the author of a Bcllum Histriatm in at 
least seven books, of which only a few fragments remain. The 
poem is probably intended to celebrate the victory gained in 
129 by Gaius Sempronius Tuditanus (consul and himself aa 
annalist) over the Illyrian Iapydes (Appian, Iltyrica, 10; Livy, 
epit. 59). Hostius is supposed by some to be the " doctus avus " 
alluded to in Propertius (iv. 20. 8), the real name of Propertius** 
Cynthia, according to Apuleius {Apologia x.) and the scholiast 
on Juvenal (vi. 7), being Hostia (perhaps Roscia). 

Fragments in E. Bihrens, Fragmenta poHamm Romanontm 
(1884); A. Wekhert, Poetanm Latinorum reliquiae (1830). 

HOSUR, a town of British India, In the Salem district of 
Madras, 24 m. E. of Bangalore. Pop. (root) 6695. It contains 
an old fort, frequently mentioned in the history of the Mysore 
wars, and a fine castellated mansion built by a former collector. 



HOTCH-POT— HOTHAM, BARON 



803 



Close by is the remount depot, established in 182B, where 
Australian hones are acclimatized and trained lor artillery 
And cavalry use in southern India. 

HOTCH-POT, or Hotch-potch (from Fr. hocker, to shake; 
used as early as 1292 as a law term, and from the 15th century 
in cookery for a sort of broth with many ingredients, and so 
used figuratively for any heterogeneous mixture), in English law, 
the name given to a rule of equity whereby a person, interested 
along with others in a common fund, and having already received 
something in the same interest, is required to surrender what 
has been so acquired into the common fund, on pain of being 
excluded from the distribution. " It seemeth," says Littleton, 
44 that this word hotch-pot is in English a pudding; for in a 
pudding is not commonly put one thing alone, but one thing 
with other things together." The following is an old example 
given in Coke on Littleton: "If a man seized of 30 acres 
of land in fee hath issue only two daughters, and he gives with 
one of them 10 acres in marriage to the man that marries her, 
and dies seized of the other 20; now she that is thus married, 
to gain her share of the rest of the land, must put her part 
given in marriage into hotch-pot; i.e. she must refuse to take 
the profits thereof, and cause her land to be so mingled with the 
other that an equal division of the whole may be made between 
ber and her sister, as if none had been given to her; and thus 
for her xo acres she shall have 15, or otherwise the sister will 
have the so." In the common law this seems to have been 
the only instance in which the rule was applied, and the reason 
assigned for it is that, inasmuch as daughters succeeding to lands 
take together as coparceners and not by primogeniture, the 
policy of the law is that the land in such cases should be equally 
divided. The law of hotch-pot applies only to lands descending 
m fee-simple. The same principle is noticed by Blackstone 
as applying in the customs of York and London to personal 
property. It is also expressly enacted in the Statute of Dis- 
tributions (§ 5) that no child of the intestate, except his heir-at- 
law, who shall have any estate in land by the settlement of the 
Intestate, or who shall be advanced by the intestate in his 
lifetime by pecuniary portion equal to the distributive shares 
of the other children, shall participate with them in the surplus; 
but if the estate so given to such child by way of advancement 
be not equivalent to their shares, then such part of the surplus as 
will make it equal shall be allotted to him. It has been decided 
that this provision applies only to advancements by fathers, on 
the ground that the rule was founded on the custom of London, 
which never affected a widow's personal estate. The heir-at-law 
is not required to bring any land which he has by descent or 
otherwise from the deceased into hotch-pot, but advancements 
made to him out of the personal property must be brought 
in. The same principle is to be found in the coUoiio bonorum 
of the Roman law: emancipated children, in order to share 
the inheritance of their father with the children unemandpated, 
were required to bring their property into the common fund. 
It is also found in the law of Scotland. 

HOTEL-DB-VILLB, the town ball of every French munici- 
pality. The most ancient example still in perfect preservation 
is that at St-Antonin (Tarn -et- Garonne) dating from the middle 
of the 1 2th century. Other fine town halls are those of Com- 
pidgne, Orleans, Saumur, Beaugency and St Qientin. The 
Hotel de VUle in Paris built in the 16th century was burnt by 
the Commune in 1871 and has since been rebuilt on an extended 
site, the central portion of the main front being a reproduction 
of the old design. There is only one town hall in a French town, 
those erected for the mayors of the different arrondissemenU 
In Paris being called mairits. 

H6TEL-D1EU, the name given to the principal hospital in 
any French town. The Hdtel-Dieu in Paris was founded in the 
year a.d. 660, has been extended at various times, and was 
entirely rebuilt between 1868-1878. One of the most ancient 
in France is at Angers, dating from 1153. The H6lel-Dieu of 
Beaune (Cote-d'Or), founded 1443, ** one of the most interesting, 
as it retains the picturesque disposition of its courtyard, with 
covered galleries on two storeys and large dormer windows; 



and riie great hall of the Hotel-Dieu at Totmerre, Yonae (1358), 
nearly 60 ft. wide and over 300 ft. long, is still preserved as part 
of t he chi ef hospital of the town. 

HOTHaHV SIR JOHN (d. 1645), English parliamentarian, 
belonged to a Yorkshire family, and fought on the continent 
of Europe during the early part of the Thirty Years' War. In 
i6«a he was made a baronet, and he was member of parliament 
for Beverley in the five parliaments between 1625 and 1640, 
being sheriff of Yorkshire in 1635. In 1639 he was deprived 
by the king of his office of governor of Hull, and joining the 
parliamentary party refused to pay ship-money. In January 
164a Hotham was ordered by the parliament to seise Hull, 
where there was a large store of munitions of war; this was 
at once carried out by his son John. Hotham took command 
of Hull and in April 1642 refused to admit Charles I. to the 
town. Later he promised his prisoner, Lord Digby, that be 
would surrender it to the king, but when Charles appeared 
again he refused a second tame and drove away the besiegers. 
Meanwhile the younger Hotham was taking an active part in 
the Civil War in Yorkshire and Lincolnshire, but was soon at 
variance with other parliamentary leaders, especially with the 
Fairfaxes, and complaints about his conduct and that of bis 
troops were made by Cromwell and by Colonel Hutchinson. 
Soon both the Hothaxas were corresponding with the earl of 
Newcastle, and the younger one was probably ready to betray 
Hull; these proceedings became known to the parliament, 
and in June 1643 father and son were captured and taken to 
London. After a long delay they were tried by court-martial, 
were found guilty and were sentenced to death. The younger 
Hotham was beheaded on the 2nd of January 1645, and in 
spite of efforts made by the House of Lords and the Presbyterians 
to save him, the elder suffered the same fate on the following 
day. Sir John Hotham had two other tons who were persons 
of some note: Charles Hotham (161 5-*. 1672), rector of Wigan, 
a Cambridge scholar and author of A d pkUosophiom Ttutomcam 
Manuiuctio (1648); and Durant Hotham (1617-1601), who 
wrote a Lif$ of Jacob Boekme (1654). 

HOTHAM, WILLIAM HOTHAM, ist Baron (1736-1813), 
British Admiral, son of Sir Beaumont Hotham (d. 1771), a 
lineal descendant of the above Sir John Hotham, was educated 
at Westminster School and st the Royal Naval Academy, 
Portsmouth. He entered the navy in 1751, and spent most of his 
midshipman's time m American waters. In 175s he became 
lieutenant in Sir Edward Hawke's flagship the " St George," and 
he soon received a small command, which led gradually to higher 
posts. In the " Syren " (20) he fought a sharp action with the 
French " TeJemaque " of superior force, and in the " Fortune " 
sloop be carried, by boarding, a 20-gun privateer. For this 
service he was rewarded with a more powerful ship, and from 
17 57 onwards commanded various frigates. In 1750 his ship 
the " Melampe," with H.M.S. " Southampton," fought a spirited 
action with two hostile frigates of similar force, one of which 
became their prise. The " Melampe " was attached to KeppeTs 
squadron in 1761, but was in the main employed in detached 
duty and made many captures. In 1776, as a commodore, 
Hotham served in North American waters, and he had a great 
share in the brilliant action in the Cul de Sac of St Lucia (Dec. 
15th, 1778). Here he continued till the spring of 1781, when he 
was sent home in charge of a large convoy of merchantmen. 
Off Scilly Hotham fell in with a powerful French squadron, 
against which he could effect nothing, and many of the merchant- 
men went to France as prizes. In 1782 Commodore Hotham 
was with Howe at the relief of Gibraltar, and at the time of the 
Spanish armament of 1790 he flew his flag as rear-admiral 
of the red. Some time later he was made vice-admiral As 
Hood's second-in-command in the Mediterranean he was engaged 
against the French Revolutionary navy, and when his chief 
retired to England the command devolved upon him. On March 
1 2th, 1794 he fought an indecisive fleet action, in which the brunt 
of the fighting was borne by Captain Horatio Nelson, and some 
months later, now a full admiral, he again engaged, this time 
under conditions which might have permitted a decisive victory; 



804 



HOTHO— HOT SPRINGS 



of this affair Nelson wrote home that it was a " miserable action." 
A little later he returned to England, and in 1797 he was made 
a peer of Ireland under the title of Baron Hotham of South 
Dalton, near Hull. He died in 1813. Hotham lacked the fiery 
energy and genius of a Nelson or a Jervis, but in subordinate 
positions he was a brave and capable officer. 

As Hotham died unmarried his barony passed to his brother; 
Sir Beaumont Hotham (1 737-1814), who became 2nd Baron 
Hotham in May 1813. Beaumont, who was a baron of the 
exchequer for thirty years, died on the 4U1 of March 18x4, and 
was succeeded as 3rd baron by his grandson Beaumont Hotham 
( 1 704-1870), who was present at the battle of Waterloo, being 
Afterwards a member of parliament for forty-eight years. He died 
unmarried in December 1870 and was succeeded by his nephew, 
Charles (1836-1873), and then by another nephew, John (1838- 
1007). In 1007 his cousin Frederick William (b. 1863) became 
the 6th baron. 

Other distinguished members of this family were the and 
baron's son, Sir Henry Hotham (1777-1833), a vice-admiral, who 
saw a great deal of service during the Napoleonic wars; and Sir 
William Hotham (1772-1848), a nephew of the 1st baron, who 
served with Duncan in 1707 off Camperdown. and elsewhere. 

See Charnock, Biograpkia navalis % vi. 336. 

HOTHO, HEINRICH GUSTAV (1802-1873), German historian 
of art, was born at Berlin in 1802, and died in his native city on 
Christmas day 1873. During boyhood he was affected for two 
years with blindness consequent on an attack of measles. But 
recovering his sight he studied so hard as to take his degree at 
Berlin in x8a6. A year of travel spent in visiting Paris, London 
and the Low Countries determined his vocation. He came home 
delighted with the treasures which he had seen, worked labori- 
ously for a higher examination and passed as "decent" in 
aesthetics and art history. In 1829 he was made professor at 
the university of Berlin. In 1833 G.F. Waagen accepted him 
as assistant in the museum of the Prussian capital; and in 1858 
he was promoted to the directorship of the print-room. During 
a long and busy life, in which his time was divided between 
literature and official duties, Hotho's ambition had always been 
to master the history of the schools of Germany and the Nether- 
lands. Accordingly what he published was generally confined 
to those countries. In 1842-1843 he gave to the world his account 
of German and Flemish painting. From 1853 to 1858 he revised 
and published anew a part of this work, which he called " The 
school of Hubert van Eyck, with his German precursors and 
contemporaries." His attempt later on to write a history of 
Christian painting overtasked his strength, and remained 
unfinished. Hotho is important in the history of aesthetics 
as having developed Hegel's theories; but he was deficient in 
knowledge of Italian painting. 

HOTI-MARDAN, or Mabdan, a frontier cantonment of British 
India in the Peshawar district of the North-West Frontier 
Province, situated 15 m. N. of Nowshera. Pop. (xooi) 3572. 
It is notable as the permanent headquarters of the famous 
corps of Guides, and also contains a cavalry brigade belonging 
to the 1st division of the northern army. 

HOTMAN, FRAMC0I8 (1524-1500), French publicist, eldest 
son of Pierre Hotman, was born on the 23rd of August 1524. 
at Paris, his family being of Silcsian origin. His name is latin- 
ised by himself Hotomanus, by others Hotomannus and Hotto- 
raannus. His father, a zealous Catholic, and a counsellor of 
the parlement of Paris, destined him tor the law, and sent him 
at the age of fifteen to the university of Orleans. He obtained 
his doctorate in three years, and became a pleader at Paris. The 
arts of the barrister were not to his taste; he turned to the study 
of jurisprudence and literature, and in 1546 was appointed 
lecturer in Roman Law at the university of Paris. The fortitude 
of Anne Dubourg under torture gained his adhesion to the 
cause of Reform. Giving up a career on which he bad entered 
with high repute, he went in 1547 to Lyons, and thence to Geneva 
and to Lausanne, where, on the recommendation of Calvin, he 
was appointed professor of belles-lettres and history, and 
married Claudine AubeUn, a refugee from Orleans. On the 



invitation of the magistracy, he lectured at Strassburg 00 law 
in 1555, and became professor in 1556, superseding Fraacofc 
Baudouin, who had been his colleague in Paris. His fame waa 
such that overtures were made to him by the courts of Prussia 
and Hesse, and by Elizabeth of England. Twice he visited 
Germany, in 1556 accompanying Calvin to the Diet at Fraaklon. 
He was entrusted with confidential missions from the Hugutnut 
leaders to German potentates, carrying at one time credentials 
from Catherine de MedicL In 1560 he was one of the pciodpal 
instigators of the conspiracy of Araboise; in September of that 
year he was with Antoine of Navarre at Nerac In 1562 he 
attached himself to Condi. In 1564 he became prof esaor of civil 
law at Valence, retrieving by ins success the reputation of its 
university. In 1567 he succeeded Cujas in the chair of juris- 
prudence at Bourges. Five months later his house and library 
were wrecked by a Catholic mob; he tied by Orleans to Paris, 
where L'Hopital made him historiographer to the king. As 
agent for the Huguenots, he was sent to Blois to negotiate the 
peace of 1568. He returned to Bourges, only to be again driven 
away by the outbreak of hostilities. At Sancerre, during its siege, 
he composed his ConsolaHo (published in 1593). The peace of 1570 
restored him to Bourges, whence a third time he fled, in con- 
sequence of the St Bartholomew massacre (1 572). In x 573, after 
publishing his Pranco-GaUia, he left France for ever with his 
family, and became professor of Roman law at Geneva. On 
the approach of the duke of Savoy he removed to Basel in 1570. 
In x 580 he was appointed councillor of state to Henry of Navarre. 
The plague sent him in 1582 to Montbeliard; here he lost his wile. 
Returning to Geneva in 1584 he developed a kind of scientific 
turn, dabbling in alchemy and the research for the philosophers 
stone. In 1589 he made his final retirement to Basel, where he 
died on the xsth of February 1500, leaving two sons and four 
daughters; he was buried in. the ca'thedraL 

Hotman was a man of pure life, real piety (as his Consoialio 
shows) and warm domestic virtues. His constant removals were 
inspired less by fear for himself than by care for bis family, and 
by a temperament averse to the conditions of warfare, and a 
constitutional desire for peace. He did much for xoth-century 
jurisprudence, having a critical knowledge of Roman sources, and 
a fine Latin style. He broached the idea of a national code of 
French law. His works were very numerous, beginning with 
his De gradtims cognatioms (1546), and including a treatise on 
the Eucharist (1566); a treatise (Anti-Tribonien, 1567) to show 
that French law could not be based on Justinian; a life of 
Coligny (1575); * polemic (Bntium fulmen, 1585) directed 
against a bull of Siztus V., with many other works on law, 
history, politics and classical learning. His most important 
work, the Franco-Gallis (1573), was in advance of his age, and 
found favour neither with Catholics nor with Huguenots in its 
day; yet its vogue has been compared to that obtained later by 
Rousseau's Contra* Social. It presented an ideal of Protestant 
statesmanship, pleading for a representative government and 
an elective monarchy. It served the purpose of the Jesuits in 
their pamphlet war against Henry IV. 

See Bayle, Diciitmairei R. Dareste, Esm sar F. Hotman (1850); 
E. Gregoue, in NoweUe Biog. gtntroh (1858). (A. Go,*) 

HOT SPRINGS, a city of Arkansas, U.S.A, the county-seat of 
Garland county, at the easterly base of the Ozark mountains, 
55 m. by rail W.S.W. of Little Rock. Pop. (1880) 3554; (1890) 
8086; (1000) 0973, of whom 3x02 were of negro descent and 
561 were foreign-born; (19x0 census) 14,434. The transient 
population numbers more than 100,000 annually. Hot Springs 
is served by the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific, the Little Rock 
& Hot Springs Western, and the St Louis, Iron Mountain & 
Southern railways. The city lies partly in several mountain 
ravines and partly on a plateau. A creek, flowing through the 
valley but walled over, empties into the Ouachita river several 
miles from Hot Springs. The elevation of the surrounding hifla 
is about 1200 ft. above the sea and 600 above the surrounding 
country. The scenery is beautiful, and there is a remarkable 
view from a steel tower observatory 150 ft. high, on the top 
of Hot Springs mountain. The climate is delightful. The 



HOT SPRINGS— HOTTENTOTS 



805 



avenge rainfall lor the year is about 55 in. The spring! are 
about forty-four in number, rising within an area of 3 acres 
on the slope of Hot Springs mountain. They are all included 
within a reservation held by the United States government, 
which (since 1003) exercises complete jurisdiction. The daily 
flow from the springs used is more than 800,000 gallons. Their 
temperature varies from 95° to 147* F. The waters are tasteless 
and inodorous, and contain calcium and magnesium bicarbonates, 
combinations of hydrogen and silicon, and of iodides, bromides 
and lithium. The national government maintains 'at Hot 
Springs an army and navy hospital, and a bath-house open 
gratuitously to indigent bathers. The business of Hot Springs 
consists mainly in caring for its visitors. Fruit-raising and 
•mall gardening characterize its environs. There are sulphur, 
Bthia and other springs near the dty, and, an ostrich farm and 
an alligator farm in the suburbs. The finest of the novaculite 
rocks of central Arkansas are quarried near the dty. The total 
value of its factory product in 1905 was $597,029, an increase 
of 213-1% since 1900. 

The Springs were first used by the itinerant trappers. They 
were visited about 1800 by French hunters; and by members 
of the Lewis and Clark party in 1804 under instructions from 
President Thomas Jefferson. The permanent occupation of the 
town site dates only from 1828, though as early as 1807 a 
temporary settlement was made. In 1876 Hot Springs was 
incorporated as a town, and in 1879 it was chartered as a dty. 
In 1832 Congress created a reservation, but the right of the 
government as against private claimants was definitely settled 
only in 1876, by a decision of the United States Supreme Court. 
The dty was almost destroyed by fire in 1878, and was greatly 
improved in the rebuilding. 

HOT SPRINGS, a hamlet and health-resort in Cedar Creek 
District, Bath county, Virginia, U.S.A., 25 m. by rail (a branch 
of the Chesapeake & Ohio railway) N. by E. of Covington and 
near the N.W. border of the state. It lies in a narrow valley, 
about 22190-2500 ft. above the sea, with rugged mountains on 
either side. Pop. of the district (1900) 1761 ; (1910) 2472. The 
mean summer temperature is only 69 F., and the summer nights 
are always cool. There is a good golf-course. Mineral waters 
(with magnesia, soda-lithia and alum) issue from several springs, 
some at a temperature as high as 106 F., and are used both for 
drinking and for bathing. The Warm Sulphur Springs (about 
08* F.) are 5 m. N.; Healing Springs (85 F.) are 2| m. S. of 
Hot Springs; and a few miles to the S.E., in Rockbridge county, 
are. Rockbridge and Jordan Alum Springs. 

HOTTENTOTS, an African people of western Cape Colony and 
the adjoining German territory, formerly widely spread through- 
out South Africa. The name is that given them by the early 
D utch settlers at the Cape, bang a Dutch word of an onomatopoeic 
kind to express stammering, in reference to the staccato pro- 
nundation and clicks of the native language. Some early writers 
termed them Hodmadods or Hodraandods, and others Hot-nots 
and Ottentots— all corruptions of the same word. Thdr name 
for themsdves was Khoi-Khoin (men of men), or Quae Quae, 
Kwekhcna, t'Kuhkeub, the forms varying according to the 
several dialects. Early authorities believed them to be totally 
distinct from all other African races. The researches of Cuslav 
Fritsch, Dr E. T. Hamy, F. Shrubsall and others have demon- 
strated, however, that they are not so much a distinct or inde- 
pendent variety of mankind as the result of a very old cross 
between two other varieties— the Bantu Negro (containing 
a distinct Hamilic element) and the Bushman. Hamy calls them 
simply "Bushman-Bantu half-breeds, 4 ' the Bushman element 
being seen in the leathery colour, compared to that of the " sere 
and yellow leaf"; in the remarkably prominent cheek-bones 
and pointed chin, giving the face a peculiarly triangular shape; 
and lastly, in such highly spedaf&ed characters as the tabtier 
and the steatopygia of the women. The cranial capacity is also 
nearly the same (133 r c.c. in the Bushman, 1365 c.c. in the 
Hottentot), and on these anatomical grounds Shrubsall concludes 
that the two are essentially one race, allowing for the undeniable 
•train of Bantu blood in the Hottentot. This view is further 



strengthened by the vast range in- prehistoric times of the 
Hottentot variety, which, since the time of Martin H.K. Li ch ten- 
stein (1800- 1 804), was known to have comprised the whole of 
Africa south of the Zambezi, and has since been extended as 
far north as the equatorial lake region. 

Fritsch divides the Hottentots into three bodies; the Cape 
Hottentots, from the Cape peninsula eastward to Kaffraria, 
the Koranna, chiefly on the right bank 0/ the Orange river, but 
also found on the Harts and the Vaal, and the Namaqua in the 
western portion of South Africa. Of these all save the last 
mentioned have ceased to exist in any racial purity. The name 
which the Namaqua give to themsdves is Khoi-Khoin, and this 
name must be distinguished from that of the Berg-Damara or 
Hau-Khoin, since the latter are physically of Bantu origin 
though they have borrowed their speech from the Hottentots. 
While the Namaqua preserve the racial type and speech, the 
other so-called Hottentots are more or less Hottentot-Dutch 
or Hottentot-Bantu half-breeds, mainly of debased Dutch 
speech, although the Koranna still here and there speak a 
moribund Hottentot jargon flooded with Dutch and English 
words and expressions. When the Cape Colony became a part 
of the British empire the protection given to the natives 
arrested the process of extermination with which the Hottentots 
were then threatened, but it did not promote racial purity. 
Sir John Barrow, describing the condition of the Hottentots in 
1798, estimated their number at about 15,000 souls. In 1806 
the offidal return gave a Hottentot population of 9784 males 
and 10,042 females. In 1824 they had increased to 31,000. 
At the census of 1865 they numbered 8^589, but by this time 
the offidal classification u Hottentot " signified little more 
than a half-breed. The returns for 1904 showed a " Hottentot " 
population of 85,892, Very few of these were pure-bred Hotten- 
tots, while the offidal estimate of those in which Hottentot blood 
was strongly marked was 56,000. 

Customs and Culture. — The primitive character of the race having 
greatly chanced, the best information as to their original manners 
and customs Is therefore to be found in the older writers. AU these 
agree in describing the Hottentots as a gentle and friendly people. 
They held in contempt the man who could eat, drink or smoke alone. 
They were hospitable to strangers, even to the point of impoverishing 
themselves. Although mentally and physically indolent, they were 
active in the care of their cattle ancf, within certain limits, clever 
hunters. They were of a medium hdght, the females rather smaller 
than the men, slender but well proportioned, with small hands and 
feet. Their skin was of a leathery brown colour; their face oval, 
with prominent cheekbones; eyes dark brown or black and wide 
apart; nose broad and thick and flat at the root; chin pointed 
and mouth large, with thick turned-out lips. Thdr woolly hair grew 
in short thick curly tufts and the beard was very scanty. Amongst 
the women abnormal developments of fat were somewhat common; 
and cases occurred of extraordinary elongation of the labia minora 
and of the praeptttium clitoridis. 1 

Their dress was a skin cloak (kaross) worn across the shoulders 
and a smaller one across the loins. They wore these cloaks all the 
year round, turning the hairy side inward in winter and outward in 
summer; they slept in them at night, and when they died they were 
buried in them. They had suspended around thdr necks little bags 
or pouches, containing their Vnivcs, their pipes and tobacco or 
dakka (Cannabis, or hemp), and an amulet of burnt wood. On their 
arms were rings of ivory. Sometimes they wore sandals and carried 
a jackal's tail fastened on a stick, which served as handkerchief 
and fan. The women wore, besides the kaross, a little apron to 
which were hung their ornaments; and underneath this one or 
two fringed girdles; and a skin cap. Both sexes smeared themselves 
and even thdr dress with an ointment made of soot, butter or fat, 
and the powdered leaves of a shrub called by them buccku (Diosma 
crenata). 

Thdr villages were usually on meadow grounds. They never 
entirely exhausted the grass but kept moving from one pasture to 
another. The huts were in circles, the area, of which varied with 
the pastoral wealth of the community. In the centre of the huts 
a hole served for a fire-place, and at each side of this small excavations 
an inch or two deep were made in the ground in which both sexes, 
rolled up in their karosses, slept. A few earthen vessels, well-made 
bowls of wood, tortoise shells for spoons and dishes, calabashes, 
bamboos and skins for holding milk and butter, and mats of rushes 
interwoven with bast, were all their furniture. Their weapons 
were primarily bows and arrows, but they al so possessed ai 

— I ' gA ' HL-. \l W_.— J U ' .lJL ' !- t\..~. /* ' a, 



1 See paper by Messrs Flower and Mune in J burn. Comb. Anal, 
and Physiology (1867); and Fritsch, Vie Eingebornon Sad-AJrikas 
(Breslau, 1873). 



8o6 



HOTTENTOTS 



and knob-kerries. To woman much respect was shown; the most 
sacred oath a Hottentot could take was to swear by his sister or 
mother; yet the females ate apart from the men and did all the 
work 6i the kraal with the exception of the tending. of cattle and of 
the curing of the hides; the men, however, assisted in the erection of 
the framework of the huts. The usual food of the Hottentots was 
milk, the flesh of the buffalo, hippopotamus, antelope or other 
game, and edible roots and bulbs or wild fruits. On the coast fish 
captured by hooks and lines or spears were also eaten. Cows' milk 
was commonly drunk by both sexes, but ewes' milk only by the 
women, and when cows' milk was scarce the women were obliged to 
keep to ewes' milk or water. Milk was drunk fresh, and not allowed 
to turn sour as among the Bantu. Meats were eaten either roasted 
or boiled, but for the most part half raw, without salt, spices or 
bread. From some meats they carefully abstained, such as swine's 
flesh. Hares and rabbits were forbidden to the men, but not to the 
women; the pure blood of beasts and the flesh of the mole were 
forbidden to the women, but not to the men. 

In occupation they were essentially cattle-breeders, and showed 
great skill in this pursuit, especially the Namaqua, who were capable 
of training the horns of their cattle so that they grew in spirals. 
Their social pleasures consisted in feasting, smoking, dancing and 
singing. Dances were held every first quarter of the moon and 
lasted all night, often for eight days in succession. Every signal 
event of life, and every change of abode and condition was celebrated 
with a feast. On the formation of a new kraal an arbour was con- 
structed in the centre, and the women and children adorned* and 
perfumed it with flowers and branches of trees and odoriferous herbs. 
The fattened ox was killed and cooked, and the men ate of it in the 
arbour, while the women sitting apart regaled themselves with broth. 
Upon such occasions the only intoxicant was tobacco or dakka. 

Circumcision, which is common to the Kaffir tribes, was unknown 
to the Hottentots, out when a youth entered upon manhood a 
ceremony was performed. One of the elders, using a knife of quartz, 
made incisions in the young man's body, afterwards besprinkling 
them with urine. When a man lolled his first elephant, hippopota- 
mus or rhinoceros, similar marks were made on his body, and 
were regarded as insignia of honour. Finger mutilation was common, 

especially amc * u: : - A - r: - -*- ' -' — or 

two joints of I Jie 

next. The rei of 

mourning, or, sen 

regarded as m ;nt 

between the n [irl 

herself being a or, 

accompanied 1 ;he 

house of his rs; 

the oxen were ial 

ceremony was lir. 

Among the so id; 

but they are ige 

river. Polygamy was allowed: divorce was common. Farauy 
names were perpetuated in a peculiar manner — the sons took the 
family name of the mother, the daughters that of the father. The 
children were very respectful to their parents, by whom they were 
kindly and affectionately treated. Yet the agea father or mother 
was sometimes put in the bush and left to die, Namaqua says this 
was done by very poor people if they had no food for their parents. 
But even when there was food enough, aged persons, especially 
women, who were believed to be p os sessed of the evil spirit, were so 
treated. 

The Hottentots had few musical instruments. One named the 
" gorah " was formed by stretching a piece of the twisted entrails 
pf a sheep from end to end of a thin hollow stick about 3 ft. in length 
in the manner of a bow and string. At one end there was a piece 
of quill fixed into the stick, to which the mouth of the player was 
applied. The " rommel-pot " was a kind of drum shaped like a 
bowl and containing water to keep the membrane moist. Reeds 
several feet long were used as flutes. 

Government and Laws. — The system of government was patriarchal. 
Each tribe had its hereditary " khu-khoi " or " gao-ao " or chief, 
and each kraal its captain. These met in council whenever any great 
matters had to be decided. The post was honorary, and the coun- 
cillors were held in great reverence, and were installed in office 
with solemnities and feasting. In certain tribes the hind part of 
every bullock slaughtered was sent to the chief* and this tie dis- 
tributed among the males of the village. He also collected sufficient 
milk at the door of his hut to deal out amongst the poor. A Dart of 
every animal taken in hunting was exacted by the chief, even 
though it was in a state of putrefaction when brought to him. 
The captains, assisted by the men of each kraal, settled disputes 
regarding property and tried criminals. A murderer was beaten or 
stoned to death; but if one escaped and was at large for a whole 
year, he was allowed to go unpunished. Adultery seldom occurred; 
if any one found parties in the act and killed them he was no 
murderer, but on the contrary received praise for his deed. Women 
found offending were burnt. Theft, especially cattle-stealing, was 
severely punished. The thief was bound hand and foot, and left 
on the ground without food for a long time; then, if his offence 
was slight, he received some blows with a stick, but if the case was 



an aggravated one, he was severely beaten, and then unloosed and 
banished from the kraal. The family of even the worst criminal 
suffered nothing on his account in reputation, privilege or property. 
The duel was an institution. If any one was insulted he challenged 
his enemy by offering him a handful of earth. If the latter seized 
the hand and the dust fell to the ground, the challenge was accepted. 
If it was not accepted, the challenger threw the dust in his foe's 
face. The duel took place by kicking, with dubs, or with the spear 
and shield. 

Religious Ideas.— The religious ideas of the Hottentots were very 
obscure. Francois le Vail la nt says they had " neither priests nor 
temples, nor idols, nor ceremonials, nor any traces of the notion of 
a deity. Other authorities state that they believed in a benevolent 
deity or " Great Captain." whom they named Tik-guoa (Tsu-goab). 
There were other " captains " of less power, and a black captain 
named Gauna, the spirit of evil. The moon was a secondary divinity, 
supposed to govern the weather; and its appearance each month 
was hailed with dancing and singing. 1 George Schmidt, the first 
missionary to the Hottentots, says they also celebrated the annual 
appearance of the Pleiades' above the eastern horizon. As soon as 
the constellation appeared, all the mothers ascended the nearest 
hill, carrying their babies, whom they taught to stretch their arms 
towards the friendly stars. Some of the tribes are said to worship 
a being whom they name Tusib, the rain god. An old Namaqua was 
once heard to say " The stars are the souls of the deceased, and a 
Hi iy misfortune 

fi 

stor-worshtpw 
Tl him endless 

st( hat he was a 

nc ce ruled the 

K f his enemies, 

wl ie knee, from 

wl Ie had ex.ua- 

or itinued to be 

in According to 

th s-Eibib came 

f n huts towards 

th their vehicles 

il rds the east. 

Al at the face of 

th leitw Eibib is 

su rer a heathen 

H a an offering, 

at d protection. 

Jc proofs which 

iu (the supreme 

be were believed 

to 1 beings and 

re v, understood 

th 

il influence of 
gt >. If a Khoi- 

R 1 assiduously 

w; inguished her 

hi fire, she went 

to ind, believing 

th getting game* 

C of particular 

sh ind the nedc 

Tl was a snake, 

ar mild continue 

to Main it would 

ce the fountain. 

Ir ene rated the 

m "the praying 

m t made in its 

he was strictly 

fo h-doctors, or 

so he patient to 

lie all over until 

tfa s bone, small 

sn ave extracted 

f r ied, the person 

w; d, the corpse 

w In skins, and 

pi eapied in the 

so k very stoical 

manner. 

Language. — The existence of a fundamental connexion between 
the language of the Hottentot and that of the Bushman was 



l An interesting notice of this form of worship occurs in the 
journal of an expedition which the Dutch governor, Kyk van Tulbagh, 



sent jo the Great Namaqua in 1752, which reached as far as tl 
Kamob or Lion river (about 27° S. Tat). 

* On the religion and antiquities see Theophilus Hahn'a papers. 
" Graves of the Heitsi-Eibib," in Cape Monthly Maganmo (1879.). 
and " Der hottentottischc Zai-goab und der gricchische Zeus,' in 
Zeilukf. fir Ceogr. (Berlin, 1870). 



HOTTINGER— HOUDENC 



807 



suggested by Or Bleek and is supported by further evidence ad- 
vanced by Benin. 

The Hottentot language was regarded by the early travellers and 
colonists as an uncouth and barbarous tongue. The Portuguese 
called the native manner of speaking stammering; and the Dutch 
compared it to the " gobbling of a turkey-cock." These phonetic 
characteristics arose from the common use of "dicks," — sounds 



produced by applying; the tongue to the teeth or to various parts of 
the gums or root of the mouth, and suddenly j 
Three-fourths of the syllabic elements of the langi w 
these dicks, and combined with them are several hard and deep 



ig it back, 
begin with 



.... gums or root ol the moutn, and suddenly jerkinj 
Three-fourths of the syllabic elements of the language 
these dicks, and combined with them are several ban 
gutturals and nasal accompaniments. The difficulty a European 
has in acquiring an accurate pronunciation is not so much in pro- 
ducing the clicking sound singly as in following it immediately 
with another letter or syllable. The four recognized clicks, with 
the symbols generally adopted to denote them, are as follows: 
dental - | ; palatal - #; lateral * I ; cerebral - U According to 
Tindall. one of the best grammarians of the language, the dental 
click (similar to a sound of surprise or indignation) is produced by 
pressing the top of the tongue against the upper front teeth, and 
then suddenly and forcibly withdrawing it. The palatal click 

(like the crac' ' L!% ? —-..—-. .- lth 

as flat a surfa at 

the gums, so int 

teeth and the en 

forcibly withe to 

the popping c by 

curling up th< ad 

withdrawing : lar 

to the sound ed 

by covering * ng 

the sound as ng 

the tongue ag he 

easiest Hotter ed 

by the Kaffir of 

the past Hot he 

clicking decrc to 

their distance 

The languaj ir. 

Dr Bleek desc ix- 

pronominal or na 

are identical 1 he 

nouns. The ' th 

two exception its 

neither /, nor/ al, 

and a deeper j le, 

but the defim he 

gender. In tl a) 

nouns are fori ig- 

nating person sc. 

dual (kha), fei ir. 

(-«), com. du un 

or referred to on 

of the nouns he 

language as ' in 

original structure, with the GaDa and others. 

There are four dialectical varieties of the language, each with 
well-marked characteristics: the Nama dialect, spoken by the 
Namaqua as well as by the Hau-Khoin or Hill Damara; the Kora 
dialect, spoken by the Koranna, or Koraqua, dwelling about the 
middle and upper part of the Orange, Vaal and M odder rivers; 
the Eastern dialect, spoken by the Gona or Gonaqua on the borders 
of Kaffirland; and the Cape dialect, now no 'longer spoken but 
preserved in the records of early voyagers and settlers. Ot the Nama 
dialect there are three grammars: Wallmann's (1857) and Hahn's 
in German, and Tindall s (1871) in English, the last being the best; 
and the four Gospds, with a large amount of missionary literature, 
have been published in it. 

The vocabulary is not limited merely to the expression of the 
rude conceptions that are characteristic of primitive races. It 
possesses such words as koi, human being; khoi-st, kindly or friendly ; 
koi-si-b, philanthropist; khei-si-s, humanity; # «', to think; 
# ei-s, thought; amo, eternal: amo-si-b, eternity; tsa, to feel; 
Isa-b, feeling, sentiment; tsa-hha. to condole; amo, true; ama-b, 
the truth; anu, sacred; anu-si-b, holiness; cso, pretty; anu-xo, 
full of beauty. 

Literature and History.— Much traditionary literature— fables, 
myths and legends — existed amongst the Hottentots,— a fact first 
made known by Sir James Alexander, who in his journeying* through 
Great Namaqualand in 1835 jotted down the stones told him 
around the camp fire by his Hottentot followers. These Hottentot 
tales generally have much of the character of fables; some are in 
many points identical with northern nursery tales, and suggestive 
of European origin or of contact with the white man; but the 
majority bear evidence of being true native products. Block's 
Reynard th* Fox in South Africa (1864) contains a translation of a 
legend written down from the lips of the Namaqua by the Rev. j 
G. Krdnldn, which is regarded as an excellent sperimen of the 
national style. Another legend relating to the moon and the hare 
Conveys the idea of aa early conception of the hope of immortality. ' 



It is found in various versions, and, like many other stories, occurs 
in Bushman as well as in Hottentot mythology. 

The earliest accounts of the Hottentots occur in the narratives of 
Vasco da Gama's first voyage to India round the Cape in 1497-1498. 

Ir **■- " ^ " -' "*• * 

Al 

OB 
Of 
Ot 

be 

ar 
In 
fn 
ot 

an 

St 
ft 
Si 

£ 

in 
bo 
CI 
U 
P. 
Jo 

logist and theologian, was born at Zurich on the 10th of March 
1620. He studied at Geneva, Groningcn and Leiden, and after 
visiting France and England was in 1642 appointed professor 
of church history in his native town. The chair of Hebrew 
at the Carolinum was added in 1643, and in 1653 he was ap- 
pointed professor ordinarius of logic, rhetoric and theology. 
He gained such a reputation as an Oriental scholar that the 
elector palatine in 1655 appointed him professor of Oriental 
languages and biblical criticism at Heidelberg. In 1661, however, 
he returned to Zurich, where in 1662 he was chosen principal of 
the university. In 1667 he accepted an invitation to succeed 
Johann Hoornbeck (16x7-1666) as professor in the university 
of Leiden, but he was drowned with three of his children by the 
upsetting of a boat while crossing the river Limmat. His chief 
works are Historic ecclestastica Nov. Test. (1651-1667) ; Thesaurus 
philologicus seu clavis scripturae (1649; 3 r d ed. 1698); Etynuh 
logicon orientale, jive lexicon harmonicum heptaglotton (1661). 
He also wrote a Hebrew and an Aramaic grammar. 

His son, Johann Jakob Hotttncer (1652-1735), who became 
professor of theology at Zurich in 1698, was the author of a work 
against Roman Catholicism, Hehetiscke Kirchengeschichte (4 vols., 
1698-1729); and his grandson, Johann Heinjuch Hottincex 
(1681-1750), who in 1721 was appointed professor of theology 
at Heidelberg, wrote a work on dogmatics, Typus doctrinae 
Christianas (1714). 

HOUBRAKEN, JACOBUS (1698-1780), Dutch engraver, 
was born at Dort, on the 25th of December 1698. All that his 
father, Arnold Houbraken (1660-1719), bequeathed to him was 
a fine constitution and a pure love for work. In 1707 he came 
to reside at Amsterdam, where for years he had to struggle 
incessantly against difficulties. He commenced the art of 
engraving by studying the works of Cornells Cort, Suyderhoef, 
Edelinck and the Visschers. He devoted himself almost entirely 
to portraiture. Among his best works are scenes from the 
comedy of De Ontdcktc Schijndeugd, executed in his eightieth 
year, after Cornells Troost, who was called by his countrymen 
the Dutch Hogarth. He died on the 14th of November 1780. 

See A. Ver Hull, Jacobus Houbraken et son encore (Arnhem, 1875), 
where 120 engraved works are fully described. 

HOUDENC (or Houdan), RAOUL DE, 12th-century French 
trouvdre, takes his name from his native place, generally 
identified with Houdain (Artois), though there are twelve places 
bearing the name in one or other of its numerous variants. 
It has been suggested that he was a monk, but from the scattered 
hints in his writings it seems more probable that he followed the 
trade of jongleur and recited his chansons, with small success 
apparently, in the houses of the great. He was well acquainted 
with Paris, and probably spent a great part of his life there. 
His undoubted works are: Le Songc d'enfer, La Vote de paradis, 
Le Roman des eUs (pr. by A. Scheler in Trouveres beiges, New 



8o8 



HOUDETOT— HOUGHTON, BARON 



Series, 1897) and the romance of Miraugis de Porthsgua, 
edited by M. MicheUnt (1869) and by Dr M. Friedwagner 
(Halle, 1897). Houdcnc was an imitator of Chretien de Troyes; 
and Huon de M6ri, in his Tournoi de V antichrist (1226) praises 
him with Chr&ien in words that seem to imply that both were 
dead. Miraugis de Portlcsgucs, the hero of which perhaps 
derives his name from Lesguez, the port of Saint Brieuc in 
Brittany, i$ a ronton d'aventurcsloosdy attached to the Arthurian 
cycle. 

See Gaston Paris In Hist. Kit. de la France, xxx. 220-237; 
W. Zingerle, Ober Raoul de Houdenc und seine Werke (Erlangen, 
1880); and O. Boerner, Raoul de Houdenc. Eine stilistische Unter- 
suchunt (1885). 

HOUDETOT, a French noble family, taking its name from 
the lordship of Houdetot, between Arques and St Val6ry. 
Louis de Houdetot went with Robert, duke of Normandy, to 
Palestine in 1034, and the various branches of the family trace 
descent from Richard I. de Houdetot (fl, 1229), who married 
Marie de Montfort. Charles Louis de Houdetot received a 
marquisate in 1722, and on his son Claude Constance Cesar, 
lieutenant-general in the French army, was conferred the 
hereditary title of count in 1753. His wife (see below) was 
the Madame de Houdetot of Rousseau's Confessions. Their son 
Cesar Louis Marie Francois Ange, comte de Houdetot (x 749-1825), 
was governor of Martinique (1803-1809) and lieutenant-general 
(1814) under the Empire. His son Frederic Christophe, comte 
de Houdetot (1 778-1859), was director-general of indirect 
imposts in Prussia after Jena, and prefect of Brussels in 1813. 
He acquiesced in the Restoration, but had to resign from the 
service after the Hundred Days. He became a peer of France 
in 1819, and under the Second Empire he was returned by the 
department of Calvados to the Corps Legislatif . His half-brother, 
Charles Ile-de-France, comte de Houdetot (1789-1866), was 
wounded at Trafalgar and transferred to the army, in which he 
served through the Napoleonic wars. He retired at the Restora- 
tion, but returned to the service in 1823, and in 1826 became 
aide-de-camp to the duke of Orleans, becoming lieutenant-general 
in 1842. He sat in the Chamber of Deputies from 1837 to 1848, 
when he followed Louis Philippe into exile. A third brother, 
Cesar Francois Adolphe, comte dc Houdetot (1799-1869), was 
a well-known writer on military and other subjects. 

HOUDETOT* ELISABETH FRANQOISB SOPHIE DB LA LIVE 
DE BBLLEGARDE, Comtesse de (1 730-1813), was born in 
1730. She married the comte de Houdetot (see above) in 1748. 
In 1753 she formed with the marquis de Saint Lambert (q.v.) 
a connexion which lasted till his death. Mme de Houdetot 
has been made famous by the chapter in Rousseau's Confessions 
in which he describes his unreciprocated passion for her. When 
questioned on the subject she replied that he had much ex- 
aggerated. A view differing considerably from Rousseau's 
is to be found in the Mi moires of Mme d'Epinay, Mme de 
Houdetot's sister-in-law. 

For a discussion of her relations with Rousseau see Saint-Mart- 
Girardin in the Revue des deux mondes (September 1853). 

HOUDON, JEAN ANTOINE (1 740-1828), French sculptor, 
was born at Versailles on the 18th of March 1740. At the age 
of twelve he entered the ficole royale de Sculpture, and at 
twenty, having learnt all that he could from Michel Ange Slodtz 
and Pigalle, he carried off the prix de Rome and left France for 
Italy, where he spent the next ten years of his life. His brilliant 
talent, which seems to have been formed by the influence of that 
world of statues with which Louis XIV. peopled the gardens of 
Versailles rather than by the lessons of his masters, delighted 
Pope Clement XIV., who, on seeing the St Bruno executed 
by Houdon for the church of St Maria degli Angeli, said " he 
would speak, were it not that the rules of his order impose silence." 
In Italy Houdon had lived in the presence of that second 
Renaissance with which the name of Winckelmann is associated,, 
and the direct and simple treatment of the Morpheus which he 
sent to the Salon of 1771 bore witness to its influence. This 
work procured hira his " agrlgation " to the Academy of Painting 
and Sculpture, of which he was made a full member in 1775. 
Between these dates Houdon had not been idle; busts of 



Catharine II., Diderot and Prince Gatitzm were remarked at tbt 

Salon of 1773, and at that of 1775 he produced, not only his 
Morpheus in marble, but busts of Turgot, Cluck (in which the 
marks of small-pox in the face were reproduced with striking 
effect) and Sophie Arnould as Iphigeneia (now in the Wallace 
Collection, London), together with his well-known marble relief, 
" Grive suspendue par les pattes." He took also an active part 
in the teaching of the academy, and executed for the instruction 
of his pupils the celebrated £corcbe* still in use. To every Salon 
Houdon was a chief contributor; most of the leading men of 
the day were his sitters; his busts of d'Alcmbert, Prince Henry 
of Prussia, Gerbier, Buffon (for Catharine of Russia) and Mtra- 
beau are remarkable portraits; and in 1778, when the news, of 
Rousseau's death reached him, Houdon started at once for 
Ermenonville, and there took a cast of the dead man's face, from 
which he produced the grand and life-like head now in the Louvre. 
In 1779 lik bust of Moliere, at the Thlatre Francais, won universal 
praise, and the celebrated draped statue of Voltaire, in the 
vestibule of the same theatre, was exhibited at the Salon of 1781, 
to which Houdon also sent a statue of Marshal de Tourville, com- 
missioned by the king, and the Diana executed for Catharine 1L 
This work was refused; the jury alleged that a statue of Diana 
demanded drapery; without drapery, they said, the goddess 
became a " suivante de Venus," and not even the proud and 
frank chastity of the attitude and expression could save the 
Diana of Houdon (a bronze reproduction of which is in the 
Louvre) from insult. Three years later he went to America, there 
to carry out a statue of Washington. With Franklin , whose bust he 
had recently executed, Houdon left France in 1785, and, staying 
some time with Washington at Mount Vernon, be modelled 
the bust, with which he decided to go back to Paris, there 
to complete the statue destined for the capitol of the State 
of Virginia. After his return to his native country Houdon 
executed for the king of Prussia, as a companion to a statue of 
Summer, La Frileuse, a naif embodiment of shivering cold, 
which is one of his best as well as one of his best-known works. 
The Revolution interrupted the busy flow of commissions, and 
Houdon took up a half-forgotten project for a statue of St 
Scholastica. He was immediately denounced to the convention, 
and his life was only saved by his instant and ingenious adapta- 
tion of St Scholastica into an embodiment of Philosophy. Under 
Napoleon, of whom in 1806 he made a nude statue now at Dijon, 
Houdon received little employment; he was, however, com- 
missioned to execute the colossal reliefs intended for the decora- 
tion of the column of the " Grand Army " at Boulogne (which 
ultimately found a different destination); be also produced a 
statue of Cicero for the senate, and various busts, amongst 
which may be cited those of Marshal Ney, of Josephine and of 
Napoleon himself, by whom Houdon was rewarded with the 
legion of honour. He died at Paris on the 16th of Jury 1828. 

See memoir by £mile Delerot and Arsene Legreue in Mtmtnm 
de la soctilt aes sciences morales . . . de Sctne-et-Oise, it. 49 
et seq. (1857); Anatole de Montaiglon and Georges Duptessb 10 
Revue unxverselle des arts, i. and ii. (1855-1856); Hermann 
Dierks, Houdons Leben und Werke (Gotha, 1887); Albert Terrade, 
Autour de la statue de Jean Houdon (Versailles, 1892); P. E. Man- 
geant, Sur une statuette de Voltaire par J. Houdon (Paris, 1896). 

HOUFFAUZE, a small town occupying an elevated position 
(nearly 1100 ft.) in the extreme south-east of the province of 
Luxemburg, Belgium, much visited during the summer on 
account of its fine bracing air. There arc the ruins of an old 
castle, and some remains of the still older abbey of Val Ste 
Catherine. The parish church dates from the 13th or 14th 
century. It contains two old black marble tombs to Thierry of 
Houffalizc and Henri his son, the latter killed at Wocringen in 
1288. Houffalize is on the eastern Ourtbe, and is connected 
by a steam tramway with Bourcy on the line from Libramoat 
to Bastogne, Spa and Liege. Pop. (1004) i486. 

HOUGHTON. RICHARD MONCKTON MILNES, 1ST Bakom 
(1800-1885), English poet and man of letters, son of Robert 
Pemberton Milnes, of Fry stem Hall, Yorkshire, and the Hon. 
Henrietta Monckton, daughter of the fourth Lord Galway, was 
bom In London on the .19th of June 1809. Be was educated 



HOUGHTON-LE-SPRING— HOURS, CANONICAL 



809 



privately, and catered Trinity College, Cambridge, to 18*7- 
There he was at once drawn into a literary set, and became a 
member of the famous " Apostles " Club, widen then included 
Tennyson, Hallam, Trench, J. W. Blakeslcy, afterwards dean of 
Lincoln, and others. After taking his degree, Milnes travelled 
abroad, spending some time at Bonn University. Thence 
he went to Italy and Greece, and published in 1834 a volume 
of Memorials of a Tour in some Parts 0/ Greece, describing his 
experiences. He returned to London in 1837, and was in that 
year elected to Parliament as member for Pontefract. His 
parliamentary career was marked by much strenuous activity. 
He interested himself particularly in the question of copyright 
and the conditions of reformatory schools. He left Peel's party 
over the Corn Law controversy, and was afterwards identified 
in politics with Palmerston, at whose instance he was made a 
peer in 1863. His literary career was industrious and cultured, 
without being exceptionally distinguished. Church matters 
had always a claim upon him: he wrote a striking tract m 
1841, which was praised by Newman; and took part in the 
discussion about " Essays and Reviews," defending the tractarian 
position in One Tract More (1841). He published two volumes 
of verse in 1838, Memorials of Residence upon the Continent and 
Poems of Many Years, Poetry for the People in 1840 and Palm 
Leaves in 1844. He also wrote a Life and Letters of Keats in 1848, 
the material for which was largely provided by the poet's friend, 
Charles Armitagc Brown. Milnes also contributed largely to 
the reviews. His poetry is meditative and delicate; some of 
his ballads were among the most popular of their day, and all 
his work was marked by refinement. But his chief distinctions 
were his keen sense of literary merit in others, and the judgment 
and magnanimity with which he fostered it. He was surrounded 
by the most brilliant men of his time, many of whom he had been 
the first to acclaim. His chief title to remembrance rests on the 
part he played, as a man of influence in society and in moulding 
public opinion on literary matters, in connexion with his large 
circle of talented friends. He secured a pension for Tennyson, 
helped to make Emerson known m Great Britain, and was one 
of the earliest champions of Swinburne. He helped David Gray 
and wrote a preface for The Luggie. He was, in the old sense of 
the word, a patron of letters, and one who never abused the 
privileges of his position. MilneS married in 1851 the Hon. 
Annabel Crewe (d. 1874). He died at Vichy on the nth 
of August 1885, and was buried at Fryston. His son, the 
second Baron Houghton, was created Earl of Crewe (q.v.) in 
1895. 

See The Lift, Letters and Friendships of Richard Monehton Milnes, 
first Lord Houghton (1890), by Sir T. Wemyss Reid. . 

HOUGHTON-LE-SPRING, an urban district in the Houghton - 
le-Spring parliamentary division of Durham, England, 6 m. N.E. 
of the city of Durham. Pop. (1001) 7858. It is well situated 
at the head of a small valley branching from that of the Wear. 
St Michael's church is a cruciform Early English and Decorated 
building, with a "picturesque embattled rectory adjoining. 
Bernard GHpin, " the Apostle of the North," was rector of this, 
parish from 1 556 to 1 583, and the founder of the grammar school. 
The principal public buildings are a town hall, market house 
and church institute. Houghton Hall is a fine mansion of the 
late 1 6th century. In the orchard stands a tomb, that of the 
puritan Sir Robert Hutton (d. 1680), of whom a curious tradition 
states that he desired burial beside his war-horse, the body of 
which was denied interment fn consecrated ground. The main 
road from Durham to Sunderland here passes through a remark- 
able cutting in the limestone 80 ft. deep. The district affords 
frequent evidence of ice activity in the glacial period. The 
town is the centre of a large system of electric tramways. The 
population is mainly dependent on the neighbouring collieries, 
but limestone quarrying is carried on to some extent. 

HOtJND, a dog, now used, except in poetry, only of dogs of 
the chase, and particularly of the breed used in hunting the fox, 
the " hound " par excellence. OtheT breeds have a defining 
word prefixed, e.g. boar-hound, stag-hound, &c. (sec Doc). 
The O. Eng. kknd h the common Teutonic name for the animal, 



cf. Du. kond, Ger. Hund, Ac., and is cognate with Sansk. cwi* t 
Gr. (fop, Lat. camr, It. and Gael. cu. 

HOUNSLOW, a town in the Brentford parliamentary division 
of Middlesex, England, 12} m. W. by S. of St Paul's Cathedral, 
London, on the District and London *z South Western railways. 
Pop. (1901) 11,377. It has grown into an extensive residential 
suourb of London. Its situation at the junction of two great 
roads from the west of England made it an important coaching 
station, and some 500 coaches formerly passed through it daily. 
A priory of friars of the Holy Trinity was founded at Hounslow 
in 1206, and existed till the dissolution of the monasteries. 
The priory chapel was used as a church till 1830, after which 
its place was taken by the existing church of the Holy Trinity 
(1835). Hounslow Heath, west of the town, had, according to 
the survey of 1546, an area of 4293 acres. It was the site of 
Roman and British camps, and in the wars of the r 7th century 
was the scene of several important military rendezvous. It 
was a favourite resort of highwaymen, whose bodies were 
exposed on gibbets along the road. In 1784 the base-line of the 
first trigonometrical survey in England was laid down on the 
heath. In 1793 large cavalry barracks were erected upon it, 
and it is also the site of extensive powder milk. It began to be 
enclosed towards the end of the reign of George III. In Osteriey 
Park, N.E. of Hounslow, Sir Thomas Gresham built a mansion 
in 1577, and this was rebuilt with great magnificence by Francis 
and Robert Child c. 1770. Hounslow is divided between the 
parishes of Heston and Isleworth. Pop. of urban district of 
Heston and Isleworth (1001) 30,863. 

HOUR, the twenty-fourth part of a civil day, the twelfth 
part of a natural day or night, a space of time of sixty minutes* 
duration. The word is derived through the O. Fr. ure, ore, 
Moure, mod. heme, from Lat. hora, Gr. &po, season, time of day, 
hour (see Calendar}. 

HOUR ANGLE, the angular distance of a heavenly body from 
the meridian, as measured around the celestial pole. It is 
equal to the angle at the pole between the hour circle through 
the body and the meridian, but is usually expressed in time. 

HOUR-GLASS, a device for measuring intervals of time, also 
known as sand-glass, and as log-glass when used in conjunction 
with the common log for ascertaining the speed of a ship. It 
consists of two pear-shaped bulbs of glass, united at their apices 
and having a minute passage formed between them. A quantity 
of sand (or occasionally of mercury) is enclosed fn the bulbs, 
and the size of the passage is so proportioned that this sand will 
completely run through from one bulb to another in the time 
it is desired to measure— e.g. an hour or a minute. Instruments 
of this kind, which have no great pretensions to accuracy, were 
formerly common in churches. In the English House of Commons, 
as a preliminary to a division, a two-minute sand-glass is still 
turned, and while the sand is running the " division belb H are 
set in motion in every part of the building, to give members 
notice that a division is at hand. 

HOURI, -the term for a beautiful virgin who awaits the 
pdevout Mahommedan in Paradise. The word is the French 
representative of the Pers. hitrl, Arab. kawr&\ a black-eyed 
virgin, from hawira, to be black-eyed, like a gazelle. 

HOURS, CANONICAL, certain portions of the day set apart by 
rule (canon) of the church for prayer and devotion. The Jewish 
custom of praying three times a day, i.e. at the third, sixth and 
ninth hours, was perpetuated in the early Christian Church 
(Acts ii. 15, iii. x, x. 9), and to these were added midnight (when 
Paul and Silas sang in prison), and the beginning of day and of 
night. Ambrose, Augustine and Hilary commended the example 
of the psalmist who gave praise M seven times a day M (Ps. cxix. 
164). The seventh (Compline, Comptetorlum) was added by 
Benedict. These hours were adopted especially in the monasteries 
as a part of the canonical life, and spread thence to the cathedral 
and collegiate chapters. 

Since the 6th century the number and order of the hours have 
been fixed thus: matins, lauds, prime, terce, sext, none, 
vespers*, compline. 

Matins theoretically belongs to midnight, but Jo Italy It it 



8io 



HOUSE 



said about 7 or 8 am. and in France often on the preceding 
evening in accordance with the statement " evening and morning 
were one day." At matins is said the Veniie (Ps. zcv.) and a 
hymn, followed by a Nocturne or night-watch (on Sundays three) 
which consists of twelve psalms. After the nocturne comes a 
lesson divided into three parts, one biblical and two patristic, and 
finally the Te Deum. 

Lauds is proper to sunrise, but is mostly grouped with matins. 
It consists of four psalms, a canticle, psalms 148-150, a hymn, 
the Bencdictus (Luke L 68-79) and prayers. 

Prime (6 a.m.), Tcrce (9 a.m.), Scxl (noon) and None (3 p.m.) 
are called the Little Day Hours, are often said together, and 
are alike in character, consisting of a hymn and some sections 
of Ps. orix., followed by a prayer. On Sundays the Athanasian 
Creed is said at prime. 

Vespers or Evensong consists of five varying psalms, a hymn, 
the Magnificat (Luke i. 46-55) and prayers. It belongs theoretic- 
ally to sunset. 

Compline, technically 9 p.*., but usually combined with 
vespers, is a prayer for protection during the da rk ness. It con- 
sists of the general confession, four fixed psalms, a hymn, the 
Nunc dimiuis (Luke u. 39-32), prayers and a Commemoration 
of the Virgin. 

The term " canonical hours " is also used of the time during which 
English marriages may be solemnized without special licence, (A 
between 8 a.m. and 3 P.M. 

HOUSE (0. Eng. hits, a word common to Teutonic languages, 
cf. Dut. kuis, Ger. Haus; in Gothic it is only found in gudhUs, 
a temple; it may be ultimately connected with the root of 
** hide/' conceal), the dwelling-place of a human being (treated, 
from the architectural point of view, below), or, in a transferred 
sense, of an animal, particularly of one whose abode, like that 
of the beaver, is built by the animal itself, or, like that of the 
snail, resembles in some fancied way a human dwelling. Apart 
from the numerous compound uses of the word, denoting the 
purpose for which a building is employed, such as custom-house, 
lighthouse, bakehouse, greenhouse and the like, there may be 
mentioned the particular applications to a chamber of a legislative 
body, the Houses of Parliament, House of Representatives, &c; 
to the upper and lower assemblies of convocation; and to the 
colleges at a university; the heads of these foundations, known 
particularly as master, principal, president, provost, rector, &&, 
are collectively called heads of houses. At English public 
schools a " house " is the usual unit of the organization. In the 
" houses " the boys sleep, have their " studies " and their meals, 
if the school is arranged on the " boarding-house " system. 
The houses have their representative teams in the school games, 
but have no place in the educational class-system of the school. 
It may be noticed that in Scotland the words " house " and 
" tenement " are used in a way distinct from the English use, 
" tenement " being applied to the large block containing 
" houses," portions, i.e., occupied by separate families. " The 
House " is the name colloquially given to such different institu- 
tions as the London Stock Exchange, the House of Commons or 
Lords and to a workhouse. ' 

In the transferred sense, "house " is used of a family, genea- 
logically considered, and of the audience at a public meeting or 
entertainment, especially of a theatre. A " house-physician " 
and " house-surgeon " is a member of the resident medical staff 
of a hospital. In astrology the twelve divisions into which the 
heavens are divided, and through which the planets pass, are 
known as houses, the first being called the "house of life." 
The word " house," " housing/' used of the trappings of a horse, 
especially of a covering for the back and flanks, attached to the 
saddle, is of quite distinct origin. In medieval Latin it appears 
as hucia, koussia and kousia (see Ducangc, Clossarium. s.v. 
kousia), and comes into English from the O. Fr. kucke t modern 
kousse. It has been supposed to have been adopted, at the time 
of the crusades, from the Arabic yuskiak, a covering. 

Architecturally considered, the term " house " is given to a 
building erected for habitation, in contradistinction to one built 
for secular or ecclesiastical purposes. _ The term extends, there- 



fere, to a dwelling of any size, from a smgfe-room building to one 
containing as many rooms is a palace; thus in London tome 
of the largest dwellings are those inhabited by royalty, suds as 
Marlborough House, or others by men of rank, such as Devon- 
shire House, Bridgewater House, Spencer House, &c; and even 
those which, formerly built as habitations, have subsequently 
been devoted to other purposes, such as Somerset House and 
Burlington House, retain the term. In Paris the larger houses 
thus named would be called hdtet. 

So far as the history of domestic architecture is concerned, the 
earliest houses of which remains have been found are those of the 
village of Kahun in Egypt, which were built for the workmen 
employed in the building of the pyramid at Illahun, and deserted 
on its completion. They varied in size from the habitations of 
the -chief inspectors to the single room of the ordinary labourer, 
and were built in unburnt brick with open courts in the larger 
examples, to give light and air to the rooms round. The models 
found in 1007 at Deir-Rifa opposite Assiut in Upper Egypt, 
by Flinders Petrie, and assumed by him to be those of " soul- 
houses," suggest that the early type of building consisted of a 
hut, to which later a porch or lean-to, with two poles in front, 
has been added; subsequently, columns replaced the poles, and 
a fiat roof with parapet, suggesting the primitive forms of the 
Egyptian temple. 

The only remains of early houses found in Mesopotamia are 
those within the precincts of the Temple of Bel, at Nippur, 
occupied by the king; but beyond the fact that the walls were 
built in unburnt brick and were sometimes of great thickness, 
nothing is known. 

The houses in Crete would seem to have been small in area, 
but this was compensated for in height, as the small plaques 
found in the palace at Cnossus show houses in two or three 
storeys, with gable roofs and windows subdivided by mullions and 
transomes, corresponding with those of the 15th to 17th centuries 
in England. The stone staircase in the palace rising through 
two storeys shows that even at this early period the houses in 
towns had floors superposed one above the other; to a certain 
extent the same extension existed in the later Greek houses found 
in Delos, in two of which there was clear evidence of wooden 
staircases leading within to the roof or to an upper storey. 
The largest series hitherto discovered is that at Priene in Asia 
Minor, where the remains of some thirty examples were found, 
varying in dimensions, but all based on the same plan; this 
consisted of an entrance passage leading to an open court, on 
the north side of which, and therefore facing south, was an open 
portico, corresponding to the prostas in Vltruvius (vL 7), and in 
the rear two Large rooms, one of which might be the oecus or 
sitting-room, and the other the thalamos or chief be dr oo m . 
Other rooms round the court were the triclinium, or dining 
room, and cubicula or bedchambers. The largest of these 
houses occupied an area measuring 75X30 ft. Those found in 
Delos, though fewer in number, arc of much greater importance, 
the house in the street of the theatre having twelve rooms 
exclusive of the entrance passage and the great central court, 
surrounded on all four sides by a peristyle; in this house the 
oecus measured 26X18 ft. In a second example the prostas 
consisted of a long gallery, the whole width of the site, which was 
lighted by windows at each end, the sills of which were raised 
8 ft. or 9 ft. from the floor. 

The remains of the houses found in the Peiraeus are of the 
same simple plan as those at Priene, and suggest that the Greek 
house was considered to be the private residence only for the 
members of the family, and without any provision for entertaining 
guests as in Rome and Pompeii. From the descriptions given 
by Vitruvius (ii. 8) it may be gathered that in his time many 
of the houses in Rome were built in unburnt brick, the walls of 
which, if properly protected at the top with a course of burnt 
brick projecting over the face of the brickwork, and coated 
inside and outside with stucco, were considered to be more 
lasting than those built in soft stone. Vitruvius refers also to 
Greek houses thus built, and states that in the house of Mausolus. 
at Halicarnassus, the walls were of unburnt brick, and the 



HOUSE 



*!» 



plastering with which they were covered wis to polished that 
they sparkled like glass. In Rome, however, be points out, such 
walls ought to be forbidden, as they are not fit to carry an 
upper storey, unless they are of great thickness, and as upper 
storeys become necessary in a crowded city such walls would 
occupy too much space. The houses in Pompeii (?.«.) were 
built in rubble masonry with clay mortar, and their walls were 
protected at the top by burnt brick courses and their faces with 
stucco; they were, however, of a second- or third-rate class 
compared with those in Rome, the magnificence of which is 
attested in the descriptions given by various writers and sub- 
stantiated by the remains occasionally found in excavations. 
Vitruvius refers to upper storeys, which were necessary in 
consequence of the limited area in Rome, and representations 
in mosaic floors and in bas-relief sculpture have been found on 
which two or three storeys are indicated. The plans of many 
Roman houses are shown on the Marble Plan, and they resemble 
those of Pompeii, but it is probable that the principal reception 
rooms were on an upper storey, long since destroyed. The house 
of Livia on the Palatine Hill was in two storeys, and the decora- 
tion was of a much finer character than those of Pompeii; this 
house and the House of the Vestals might be taken as representa- 
tive of the Roman house in Rome itself. In those built in colder 
climates, as in England and Germany, account has to be taken 
of the special provision required for warming the rooms by 
hypocausts, of which numerous examples have been found, 
with rich mosaic floors over them. 

Of the houses in succeeding centuries, those found in the 
cities of central Syria, described in the article Architecture, 
are wonderfully perfect, in consequence of their desertion at 
the time of the Mahommedan invasion in the 7th century. 
Very little is known of the houses in Europe during the dark 
ages, owing to the fact that they were generally built in wood, 
with thatched roofs. The only examples in stone which have 
been preserved are those in the island of Skellig Michael, Kerry, 
which were constructed like the beehive tombs at Mycenae 
with stone courses overlapping inside until they closed in at the 
top. These houses or cells were rectangular inside and round 
or oval outside, with a small low door at one end, and an opening 
above to let the smoke out. 

The houses, even in large towns like London, were buQt mainly 
in wood, in some cases down to the 17th century; in the country, 
the smaller houses were constructed with trunks of trees in 
pairs, one end of the trunk being sunk in the ground, the other 
bent over and secured by a ridge piece, thus forming a pointed 
arch, the opening of which was about n ft. The pairs were 
fixed 16 ft. apart, and the space included constituted a bay, any 
requisite increase in the size of the house being made by doubling 
or trebling the bays. The roofs were thatched with straw on 
battens, and sometimes with a collar beam carrying a floor, 
which constituted an upper storey. The end walls were closed 
with wooden studs and wattle-and-dab filling. The pairs of 
trees were known as forks or cracks. Vitruvius (ii. 1) suggests 
a similar kind of building in ancient times, except that the 
interlaced twigs were covered with day, so as to carry off the 
rain. In Yorkshire there was another type of house, known as 
a coit, which was a dwelHng-house and bam (shippon) united; 
the latter contained the cow-stalls with loft above, and the 
former was in two storeys, with a ladder inside the room leading 
to the upper floor. 1 

Passing now to structures of a less ephemeral character, the 
earliest houses of which there still remain substantial relics are 
those built in stone (see Manor House). The Jew's House at 
Lincoln, 12th century, is one of the best-known examples, and 
still preserves its street front in stone, with rich entrance door- 
way and first-floor windows righting the principal room, which 
seems invariably in those early houses to have been on the first 
floor, the ground floor being used for service and stores (see 
Plate I. fig. 5). To the 13th century belongs the old Rec- 
tory House at West Dean, Sussex, and to the 14th century the 

1 A complete description of these houses will be found In TO* 
Bmhttion of the English House, by S. O. Addy. 



Parsonage House at Market Deeping, Lincolnshire. The principal 
examples of the domestic architecture of this early period in the 
country are castles, manor bouses and farm buildings, as town 
houses occupied sites too valuable to be left untouched; this, 
however, is not the case in France, and particularly in the 
south, where streets of early houses are still to be found in good 
preservation, such as those at Cluny (fig. x) and Cordes (Tarn), 
and others at Montferrand, Cahors, Figeac, Angers, Provins, 
Sarlat (fig. 2), St Emilion, Pengueux, Soissons and Beauvais, 
dating from the 12th to the 14th centuries, One of the moat 
remarkable examples is the Musician's House at Reims (see 
Plate I., fig. 4), with large windows on the first floor, between 
which are niches with life-size figures of musicians seated in 
them. Generally speaking, the ground storeys of these houses, 
which in many cases were occupied by shops, have been trans- 
formed, but occasionally the old shop fronts remain, as in 
Dinan, Morlaix and other old towns in Brittany. Houses of 
the first Renaissance of great beauty exist in Orleans, such as 
the house of Agnes Sorel; and the example in the Market Place 
illustrated in fig. 3; in Tours, Tristan's house in brick with stone 



Fig. 1. — Houses at Cluny. 

quoins and dressings to windows; in Rouen, Caen, Bayeux, 
Toulouse, Dijon and, in fact, in almost every town throughout 
France. Of houses of large dimensions, which in France are 
termed httcls, there are also many other fine examples, the best 
known of which are the h6tel de Jacques Coeur (see Plate II., 
fig. 7), at Bourges, and the h6tel de Cluny at Paris (see 
Plate I., fig. 6). In the 15th and x6th centuries in France, 
owing to the value of the sites in towns, the bouses rose to many 
storeys, the upper of which were built in half-timber, sometimes 
projecting on corbels and richly carved; of these numerous 
examples exist at Rouen, Beauvais, Bayeux and other towns in 
Normandy and Brittany. Of such structures in English towns 
(see Plate II. fig. 9) there are still preserved some examples 
in York, Southampton, Chester, Shrewsbury, Stratford-on- 
Avon, and many smaller towns; the greatest development in 
half-timber houses in England is that which is found more 
particularly throughout Kent, Sussex and Surrey, in houses of 
modest dimensions, generally consisting of ground and first floor 
only, with sometimes additional rooms in the roof; in these the 
upper storey invariably projects in front of the lower, giving 
increased dimensions to the rooms in the former, but adopted in 
order to protect the walls of the ground storey from rain, which 
in the upper storey was effected by the projecting eaves of the 
roof. In the north and west of England, where stone could 
be obtained at less cost than brick, and in the east of England, 
where brick, often imported from the Low Countries, was largely 
employed, the ordinary souses were built in those materials. 



8l2 



HOUSE 



and In consequence of their excellent construction many nouses 
of the 16th and 17th centuries have remained in good preservation 
down to the present day; they are found in the Cotswolds 
generally, and (among small towns) at Broadway in Worcester- 
shire and (of brick) throughout Essex and Suffolk. Among the 
larger half-timber houses built in the 15th and idth centuries, 
mention may be made of Bramhall Hall, near Manchester; 
Speke Hall, near Liverpool (see Plate III., fig. 10); The Oaks, 
West Brorawich; and Moreton Old Hall, Cheshire, one of the 
most elaborate of the series (see Plate in., fig. 11). 

On the borders of the Rhine, as at Bacharach and Rhense, 
and throughout Germany, half-timber houses of the most 



Fig. 2.— House at Sarlat. 

picturesque character are found in every town, large and small, 
those of Hildesheim (see Plate II., fig. 8) dating from the 15th 
and 1 6th centuries, and in some cases rising to a great height 
with four or five storeys, not including those in the lofty roofs. 
Houses in stone from the 12th to the 16th century are found in 
Cologne, Metz, Trier, Hanover and Mttnster in Westphalia, 
where again there are whole streets remaining; and in brick 
at Rostock, Stralsund, Ltibeck, Greifswald and Dantzig, forming 
a very remarkable series of 15th and 16th-century work. 

Of half-timber work in Italy there are no examples, but 
sometimes (as at Bologna) the rooms of the upper floors are 
carried on arcades, and sometimes on corbels, as the casa dci 
Carracci in the same town. The principal feature of the Italian 
house is the courtyard in the rear, with arcades on one or more 
sides, the front in stone or brick, or both combined, being of the 
greatest simplicity (examples in San Gimignano and Pisa). At 
Viterbo are small houses in stone, two of which have external 
stone staircases of fine design, and the few windows on the 
ground floor suggest that the rooms there were used only for stores. 



Houses with external staircases, but without any architectural 
pretension*, are found throughout the Balkan provinces. 

The introduction of the purer Italian style into England in the 
17th century created a great change in domestic architecture. 
Instead of the projecting wings and otherwise picturesque 
contour of the earlier work the houses were made square or 
rectangular on plan, in two or three storeys, crowned with a 
modillion cornice carrying a roof of red tiles; the only embellish- 
ments of the main front were the projecting courses of stone 
on the quoins and architraves round the windows, and flat 
pilasters carrying a hood or pediment flanking the entrance 
doorway. In the larger mansions more thought was bestowed 



Fig. 3.— Detail of house at Orleans. 

on the introduction of porticoes (scarcely necessary in the 
English climate), with sometimes great flights of steps up to the 
principal floor, which was raised abeve a basement with cold 
and dark passages; a great saloon in the centre of the block, 
lighted from above, took the place of the great entrance hall of 
the Tudor period, and the rooms frequently led one out of the 
other, without an independent entrance door. On the other hand, 
in the ordinary bouses, the deficiency in external ornament 
was amply made up for by the comfort in the interior and the 
decoration of the staircase and other rooms. Towards the close 
of the century the square mullioned and transomed windows, 
with opening casements, gave way to sash windows, introduced 
from Holland, and these with moulded and stout sash-bars gave 
a certain character to the outside of the houses, which are valued 
now for their quiet unpretentious character and excellent con- 
struction. In the closes of many English cathedrals, on the 
outskirts of London, and in some of the older squares, as Lincoln's 
Inn Fields and Queen Square, are examples of this style of 
house. The substitution of thin sash-bars in the 19th century, 



HOUSEHOLD, ROYAL 



813 



and their omission occasionally, in fa vourof plate-glass, deprived 
the house-front of one of its chief attractions; but the old 
English casements and oriels or bow-windows have been again 
introduced, and a return has been made to the style which 
prevailed in the beginning of the 18th century, commonly known 
as that of Queen Anne. 

Perhaps in one respect the greatest change which has been 
made in the English house is the adoption of " flats "; com- 
menced some time in the 'fifties in Ashley Gardens, Westminster, 
they have spread throughout London. In consequence of the 
great value of the sites on which they are sometimes built, to 
which must be added the cost of the houses pulled down to 
make way for them, the question of expense in material and 
rich decoration has not always been worth considering, so that 
frontages in stone, with the classic orders brought in with 
many varieties of design, have given the character of a palace 
to a structure in which none of the rooms exceeds the modest 
height of 10 ft. The increasing demand for these, however, 
shows that they meet, so far as their accommodation and comfort 
are concerned, the wants and tastes of the upper and middle 
classes. In some of the London streets, where shops occupy the 
ground floor, a far finer type of house has been erected than that 
which could have been afforded for the shopkeeper's residence 
above, as in old times, so that London promises in time to 
become a city of palaces. The same change in the aspects of 
its streets has long been evident in Paris, but there is one feature 
in the latter city which has never yet found its way into London, 
much to the surprise of French visitors, viz. the porte-cochere, 
through which the occupants of the house can in wet weather 
drive and be landed in a covered hall or vestibule. This requires, 
of course, a small court at the back, so small that one wonders 
sometimes how it is possible for the carriage to turn round in it. 
The porte<ochere also, from its dimensions, is a feature of more 
importance than the ordinary street doorway, even when a 
portico of some kind is added; on the other hand, the strict 
regulations in Paris as regards the projection of cornices and 
other decorative accessories gives to the stranger the appearance 
of monotony in their design, which certainly cannot be said of 
the houses in flats lately built in London. Within recent years 
an old English feature, known as the bow-window, has been 
introduced into Paris, the primary object of which does not 
seem yet to have been thoroughly understood by the French 
architect. An English bow-window, by its slight projection in 
front of the main wall, increases greatly the amount of light 
entering the room, and it is generally placed between solid piers 
of stone or brick. The French architects, however, project 
their piers on immense corbels, and then sink their windows 
with deep external reveals, so that no benefit accrues to the 
room, so far as the increased light is concerned. In Paris, since 
1900, there has been a tendency to introduce a style of design in 
French nouses which is known as 'Tart nouveau," a style 
which commenced in furniture as a reaction against the revival 
of the Empire and Louis XIV. and XVL periods, and was then 
extended to house fronts; this style has unfortunately spread 
through the various towns in France and apparently to Germany, 
again as a reaction against the formal classic style of the latter 
half of the 19th century. It is probable that in Italy and Spain 
" l'art nouveau " may meet with the same success, and for the 
same reasons, so that in the latter country it will be a revival, 
with modifications, of the well-known Churrigueresque style, 
the most debased Rococo style whkh has ever existed. In 
England it has never met with any response. (R. P. S.) 

HOUSEHOLD, ROYAL. In all the medieval monarchies of 
western Europe the general system of government sprang from, 
and centred in, the royal household. The sovereign's domestics 
were his officers of state, and the leading dignitaries of the 
palace were the principal administrators of the kingdom. The 
royal household itself had, in its turn, grown out of an earlier and 
more primitive institution. It took its rise in the comitatus 
described by Tacitus, the chosen band of comites or companions 
who, when the Roman historian wrote, constituted the personal 
following, in peace as well as in war, of the Teutonic chieftain. In 



England before the Conquest the comitatus had developed or 
degenerated into the thegnbood, and among the most eminent and 
powerful of the king's thegns were his dishthegn, his bowerthegn, 
and his horsethegn or staller. In Normandy at the time of the 
Conquest a similar arrangement, imitated from the French 
court, had long been established, and the Norjnan dukes, like 
their overlords the kings of France, had their seneschal or 
steward, their chamberlain and their constable. After the 
Conquest the ducal household of Normandy was reproduced in 
the royal household of England; and since, in obedience to 
the spirit of feudalism, the great offices of the first had been 
made hereditary, the great offices of the second were made 
hereditary also, and were thenceforth held by the grantees and 
their descendants as grand-scrjeanties of the crown. The con- 
sequence was that they passed out of immediate relation to the 
practical conduct of affairs either in both state and court or In 
the one or the other of them. The steward and chamberlain of 
England were superseded in their political functions by the 
justiciar and treasurer of England, and in their domestic functions 
by the steward and chamberlain of the household. The marshal 
of England took the place of the constable of England in the 
royal palace, and was associated with him in the command of 
the royal armies. In due course, however, the marshalship as 
well as the constableship became hereditary, and, although the 
constable and marshal of England retained their military 
authority until a comparatively late period, the duties they had 
successively performed about the palace had been long before 
transferred to the master of the horse. In these circumstances 
the holders of the original great offices of state and the household 
ceased to attend the court except on occasions of extraordinary 
ceremony, and their representatives either by inheritance or by 
special appointment have ever since continued to appear at 
coronations and some other public solemnities, such as the 
opening of the parliament or trials by the House of Lords. 1 

The materials available for a history of the English royal 
household are somewhat scanty and obscure. The earliest 
record relating to it is of the reign of Henry II. and is contained 
in the Black Book of the Exchequer. It enumerates the various 
inmates of the king's palace and the daily allowances made to 
them at the period at which it was compiled. Hence it affords 
valuable evidence of the antiquity and relative importance of the 
court offices to which it refers, notwithstanding that it is silent 
as to the functions and formal subordination of the persons who 
filled them.* In addition to this record we have a series of far 
later, but for the most part equally meagre, documents bearing 
more or less directly on the constitution of the royal household, 
and extending, with long intervals, from the reign of Edward III. 
to the reign of William and Mary. 9 Among them, however, are 
what are known as the Black Book of the Household and the 
Statutes of Eltham, the first compiled in the reign of Edward IV. 
and the second in the reign of Henry VIII., from which a good 
deal of detailed information may be gathered concerning the 
arrangements of the court in thr 15th and x6th centuries. The 
Statute: of Eltham were meant for the practical guidance* merely 
of those who were responsible for the good order and the sufficient 
supply of the sovereign's household at the time they were issued. 

we hare 
pa dogue of 

th are still 

dt'i If the 

r« (Norman 

a st.i. 343, 

set utline we 



Ik 
K 

a 

ar 

a 



Regis do 
Scaccarii, 
i. note s, 

mrnentof 
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ly before 
the Privy 
deal with 



8 14 



HOUSES-HOUSING 



But the Black Book of Ike Household, besides being a sort of 
treatise on princely magnificence generally, professes to be based 
on the regulations established for the governance of the court by 
Edward I1L, who, it affirms, was " the first setter of certeynties 
among his domesticall meyne, upon a grounded rule" and 
whose palace it describes as " the house of very polide and 
flowre of England "; and it may therefore possibly, and even 
probably, take us back to a period much more remote than that 
at which it was actually put together. 1 Various orders, returns 
and accounts of the reigns of Elizabeth, James L, Charles I., 
Charles IL, and William and Mary throw considerable light on 
the organisation of particular sections of the royal household in 
times nearer to our own.* Moreover, there were several parlia- 
mentary inquiries into the expenses of the royal household in 
connexion with the settlement or reform of the civil list during 
the reigns of George III., George IV. and William IV.' But they 
add little or nothing to our knowledge of the subject in what 
was then its historical as distinguished from its contemporary 
aspects. So much, indeed, is this the case that, on the accession 
of Queen Victoria, Chamberlayne's Present State of England, 
which contains a catalogue of the officials at the court of Queen 
Anne, was described by Lord Melbourne the prime minister as the 
" only authority " which the advisers of the crown could find for 
their assistance in determining the appropriate constitution and 
dimensions of the domestic establishment of a queen regnant. 4 

In its main outlines the existing organization of the royal 
household is essentially the same as it was under the Tudors or 
the Plantagcnets. It is now, as it was then, divided into three 
principal departments, at the head of which are severally the 
lord steward, the lord chamberlain and the master of the horse, 
and the respective provinces of which may be generally described 
as " below stairs," " above stairs " and " out of doors." The 
duties of these officials, and the various officers under their 
charge are dealt with in the articles under those headings. When 
the reigning sovereign is a queen, the royal household is in some 
other respects rather differently arranged from that of a king and 
a queen consort. When there is a king and a queen consort there 
is a separate establishment " above stairs " and " out of doors " 
for the queen consort. She has a lord chamberlain's department 
of her own, and all the ladies of the court from the mistress of the 
robes to the maids of honour are in her service. At the com- 
mencement of the reign of Queen Victoria the two establishments 
were combined, and on the whole considerably reduced. On the 
accession of Edward VII. the civil list was again reconstituted; 
and while the household of the king and his consort became larger 
than during the previous reign, there was a tendency towards 
increased efficiency by abolishing certain offices which were 
either redundant or unnecessary. 

The royal households of such of the continental monarchies 
of Europe as have had a continuous history from medieval times 
resemble in general outlines that described above. There are, 

1 Liber niger domus Regis Edward IV, and Ordinances for the 
Household made at Eltham in the seventeenth year of King Henry 
VIII. , a J). 1526, are the titles of these two documents. The earlier 
documents printed in the same collection are Household of King 
Edward III. in Peace and War from the eighteenth to the twenty-first 
year of his reign; Ordinances of the Household of King Henry IV. 
in the tkjrty-third year of his reign, aj>. idSS* and Articles ordained 
by King Henry VI I. for the Regulation of his Household, a J). J494- 

* The Booh of the Household of Queen Elisabeth as it was. ordained 
in the forty-thtrd year of her Reign delieered to our Sovereign Lord 
King James, &c, is simply a list of officers' names and allowances. 
It seems to have been drawn -up under the curious circumstances 
referred to in Archaeologia fail. 80-85). For *** **** °* t0e8e 
document* see Ordinances and Regulations, &c, pp. 199, 340, 347, 
352. 368 and 380. 

a Burke's celebrated Act " for enabling His Majesty to discharge 
the debt contracted upon the civil list, and for preventing the same 
from being in arrear tor the future, etc.," 22 Geo. III. c 82, was 
passed in 178a. But it was foreshadowed in his great speech on 
'• Economical Reform " delivered two years before. Since the 
beginning of the 19th century select committees of the House of 
Commons have reported on the civil list and royal household in 
1803, 1804, 1815. 18^1 and 1901. 

'Torrens's Mewtotrs of William, second Viscount Melbourne, 
H. 303. 



common to many, certain great offices, which have become, 
in course of time, merely titular and sometimes hereditary. 
In most cases, as the name of the office would suggest, they were 
held by those who discharged personal functions about the 
sovereign. Gradually, in ways or for reasons which might vary 
in each individual case, the office alone survived, the duties either 
ceasing to be necessary, or being transferred to officers of less 
exalted station and permanently attached to the sovereign's 
household. For example, in Prussia, there are certain great 
titular officers, such as the Oberstmarschall (great chamberlain); 
the Oberstjlgermeister (grand master of the hunt); the Oberst- 
schenk (grand cup-bearer) and the Obersttruchsess (grand 
carver), while, at the same time, there are also departments which 
correspond, to a great extent— both as to offices and their 
duties— to those of the household of the English sovereigns. 
This is a feature which must necessarily be reproduced in any 
monarchical country, whatever the date of its foundation, 
to a more or less limited extent, and varying in its constitution 
with the needs or customs of the particular countries. 

See also Loan Steward: Lord Chahbemjuh; Masts* of tsb 
Hoass; Paivv Purse; and Civil List. 

HOUSE!* the English name, until the time of the Reformation, 
for the Eucharist. The word in O. Eng. was husel. Its proper 
meaning is "sacrifice," and thus the word hunsl appears in 
Uifilas' Gothic version of Matt. ix. 13, " I will have mercy and 
not sacrifice/' The ultimate origin is doubtful. The New 
English Dictionary connects it with a Teutonic stem meaning 
" holy "; from which is derived the Lithuanian stweiUas, and 
Lettish suits. Skeat refers it to a root meaning " to kill," 
which may connect it with Gr. acutacr. 

HOUSBLBEK, Sempernvum, a genus of ornamental e f cigiun 
plants belonging to the natural order Crassulaeeae. About 
30 species are known in gardens, some of which are hardy 
perennial herbs, and grow weH in dry or, rocky situations; the 
others are evergreen shrubs or undershmbs, fit only for cultivation 
in the greenhouse or conservatory. The genus Sempermmsn 
is distinguished from the nearly allied Sedum by having mors 
than five (about 12) petals, and by the glands at the base of the 
ovary being ladniated if present. The common houseleek, 
S. tectorum (Ger. Hausumnel, Fr. joubarbe), is often met with ia 
Britain on roofs of outhouses and wall-tops, but is not a native. 
Originally it was indigenous in the Alps, but it is now widely 
dispersed in Europe, and has been introduced into America, 
The leaves are thick, fleshy and succulent, and are arranged 
in the form of a rosette lying close to the soil. The plant pro- 
pagates itself by onsets on all sides, so that it forms after a time 
a dense cushion or aggregation of rosettes. The flowering stem, 
which is of rather rare occurrence, is about 1 ft. high, reddish, 
cylindrical and succulent, and ends in a level-topped cyme, re- 
flexed at the circumference, of reddish flowers, which bloom 
from June to September. The houseleek has been known 
variously as the houselick, homewort or great houseleek. Scsfssss 
acre (stone-crop) is styled the little houseleek. In Germany il fa 
sometimes called Donnerkrant, from being supposed to protect 
the house on which it grows from thunder. The leaves are said to 
contain malic acid in considerable quantity, and have been eaten 
as salad, like Portulaca. S. glutinasum and S. balsasmfcrum, 
natives respectively of Madeira and the Canary Islands, contain 
a very viscous substance in large quantity, and are used for the 
preparation of bird-lime; fishermen in Madeira, after dipping 
their nets in an alkaline solution, rub them with this substance, 
rendering them as tough as leather. 5. numtamum, indigenous 
in Central Europe, according to Gmelin, causes violent purging; 
5. arboreum, to /srya <Uffwo» of Dioscorided, is employed in 
Cyprus, the East, and northern Africa as an external remedy for 
malignant ulcers, inflammations and burns, and internally for 
mucous discharges. 

HOUSING. The housing of the poorer classes has become 
a pressing problem in all populous Western countries, and has 
engaged, in a varying but constantly increasing measure, the 
attention of legislative and administrative bodies and of phil- 
anthropic individual* and societies, _ The general interest was 



HOUSING 



815 



•us 






signalised fay an International Congress held in London in 1007. 
The recognition of the problem is due in the first instance to the 
science of public health, the rise el which dates from the second 
quarter of the xotH century; and in the second instance to the 
growth of urban populations consequent on the development 
of manufacturing industries and of trading and transporting 
agencies, both of which tend to mass increasing numbers of people 
in convenient centres. To have a clear view of the subject it 
is necessary to distinguish these factors and their respective 
influence upon the problem. Urban congestion is quite secondary, 
and only important because and so far as it has a prejudicial 
effect upon health and strength. Further, the requirements on 
the scientific side, made on behalf of public health, are of very 
much wider application and more expansive than those which 
arise from the mere growth of urban population. That is obvious 
at once from the fact that they extend to rural housing, which 
has indeed become a prominent feature of the question in 
recent years. To ascribe the housing problem to the " factory 
system/' as some writers have done, is to put forward an in- 
adequate and misleading view of it. It is, in fact, particularly 
acute in some places totally devoid of factories and least acute 
in some purely factory towns. If the factory system were 
abolished with all its effects the housing question would remain. 
But there is a more important distinction than extent of applica- 
tion. The requirements of public health are indeterminate and 
interminable; knowledge increases, or rather changes, and the 
standard constantly rises. It is the changing standard which 
gives most trouble; housing at one period thought good enough 
is presently condemned. Fifty years ago no house existed 
which would satisfy modern sanitary standards, and the mansions 
of the great were in some respects inferior to the worst quarters 
to-day. And to this process there is no end. It is quite con- 
eeivable that urban congestion might cease to be a difficulty at 
all. That actually happens in particular towns where the 
population is stationary or diminishing. One whole nation 
(France) has already reached that point, and others are moving 
towards it at varying rates. But even where the supply of 
houses exceeds the demand and many stand empty, the housing 
problem remains; condemnation of existing accommodation 
continues and the effort to provide superior houses goes on. In 
other words, there are two main aspects of the housing question, 
quality and quantity; they touch at various points and interact, 
but they are essentially distinct. The problem of quantity may 
be " solved," that of quality has no finality. 

The importance attached to bousing is much enhanced by 
the general tendency to la^ stress on the material conditions 
of life, which characterizes the present age. Among material 
conditions environment takes a leading place, largely under the 
influence of the theory of evolution in a popular and probably 
erroneous form; and among the factors of environment the 
home assumes a more and more prominent position. There is 
reason in this, for whatever other provision be made for work 
or recreation the home is after all the place where people spend 
most of their time. Life begins there and generally ends there. 
At the beginning of life the whole time is spent there and home 
conditions are of paramount importance to the young, whose 
physical welfare has become the object of increasing care. But 
the usual tendency to run to extremes has asserted itself. It 
may be admitted that it is extremely difficult to raise the 
character and condition of those who live in thoroughly bad 
home surroundings, and that an indispensable or preliminary 
step is to improve the dwelling. But if in pursuit of this object 
other considerations are lost sight of, the result is failure. Bad 
housing is intimately connected with poverty; it is, indeed,' 
largely a question of poverty now that the difference between 
good and bad housing is understood and the effects of the latter 
are recognized. The poorest people live under the worst housing 
conditions because they are the cheapest; the economic factor 
governs the situation. Poverty again is associated with bad 
habits, with dirt, waste, idleness and vice, both as cause and 
as effect. These factors cannot be separated in real life; they 
act and react upon each other in such- a way that it is impossible 



to disentangle their respective shares in producing physical 
and moral evils. To lay all responsibility upon the structural 
environment is an error constantly exposed by experience. 
• Defective quality embraces some or all of the following 
conditions — darkness, bad air, damp, dirt and dilapidation. 
Particular insanitary conditions independent of the structure 
are often associated, namely defects of water-supply, drainage, 
excrement and house refuse removal, back-yards and surround- 
ing ground; they contribute to dirt, damp and bad air. De- 
fective quantity produces high rents and overcrowding, both of 
which have a prejudicial effect upon health; the one by diminish- 
ing expenditure on other necessaries, the other by fouling the 
atmosphere and promoting the spread of infectious illness. 
The physical effects of these conditions have been demon- 
strated by comparative statistics of mortality general and 
special; among the latter particular stress is laid on the mortality 
of infants, that from consumption and from " zymotic " diseases. 
The statistical evidence has been especially directed to the 
effects of overcrowding, which can be stated with greater pre- 
cision than other insanitary conditions. It generally takes the 
form of comparing the death-rates of different areas having widely 
contrasted densities of population or proportions of persons 
to a given space. It is not necessary to quote any of these 
figures, which have been produced in great abundance. They 
broadly establish a connexion between density and mortality; 
but the inference that the connexion can be reduced to a precise 
numerical statement and that the difference of mortality shown 
is all due to overcrowding or other housing conditions is highly 
fallacious. Many other factors ought to be taken into account, 
such as the age-distribution of the population, the birth-rate, 
the occupations, means, character and habits of the people, 
the geographical situation, the number of public institutions, 
hospitals, workhouses, asylums and so forth. The fallacious 
use of vital statistics for the purpose of proving some particular 
point has become so common that it is necessary to enter a 
warning against them; the subject of housing is a popular 
field for the exercise of that art, though there is no need of it. 

The actual state of housing in different countries and localities, 
the efforts made to deal with it by various agencies, the sub- 
sidiary points which arise in connexion with it and the results 
attained— all these heads embrace such a vast mass of facts 
that any attempt to treat them fully in detail would run to 
inordinate length. It must suffice to review the more salient 
points; and the most convenient way of doing so is to deal 
first with Great Britain, which has led the way historically 
in extent of need, in its recognition and in efforts to meet it, 
adding some notes upon other countries, in which the question 
is of more recent date and for which less information is available. 

The United Kingdom 

The importance of housing and the need of improvement 
had by xopo received public recognition in England for nearly 
70 years, a period coinciding almost exactly with the systematic 
study of sanitation or public health. The active movement 
definitely began about 184 1 with voluntary effort in which 
Lord Shaftesbury was the most prominent and active figure. 
The motive was philanthropic and the object was to improve 
the condition of the working classes. It took the form of 
societies; one was the " Metropolitan Association for Improving 
the Dwellings of the Industrial Classes," incorporated in 1845 
but founded in 1841; another was the "Society for Improv- 
ing the Condition of the Labouring Classes/' originally the 
"Labourers' Friend Society," of which the Prince Consort 
became president. That fact and the statement of the Society 
concerning improved housing that " the moral were almost 
equal to the physical benefits," sufficiently prove that public 
interest in the subject and a grasp of its significance already 
existed at that date. Legislation followed not long after and 
has continued at intervals ever since. 

Lttislatum.— Twenty-eight Housing and Health Acts, passed 
between 1851 and 1003, are enumerated by Mr Dewsnup, whose 
monograph en Tkt Housing FnbUm in En&xnd is the fullest account 



8i6 



HOUSING 



it* 



he 
he 
he 

Act, was concurrentiy'pureued, and for some 'years more actively 
than the destructive; but after 1866 the 4 latter became more pro- 
minent, and though the other was not lost sight of it fell into the 
background until revived by the Royal Commission of 1885 and the 
housing legislation which followed, particularly the Housing of the 
Working Classes Act of 1890, amending and consolidating previous 
acts. 

The laws in operation at the beginning of 2909 were the 
Public Health Acts of 1875 and 1891 (London), as amended by 
subsequent minor measures, and the Housing of the Working 
Classes Act of 1890, amended in 1894, 1900 and 1903. The 
Public Health Acts place upon the local sanitary authority 
the obligation of securing, under by-laws, the proper construction, 
draining and cleaning of streets, removal of bouse refuse and 
building of houses, including structural details for the prevention 
of damp and decay, the provision of sanitary conveniences and 
an adequate water-supply; also of inquiring into and removing 
nuisances, which include any premises in such a condition as 
to be a nuisance or injurious to health and any house so. over- 
crowded as to be dangerous or injurious to health. For the 
purpose of carrying out these duties the local authority has the 
power of inspection, of declaring a building unfit for human 
habitation and of closing it by order. The Housing Acts give 
more extended power to the local authority to demolish in- 
sanitary dwellings and clear whole areas or " slums/' and also 
to construct dwellings for the working classes with or without 
such clearance; they also retain the older provisions for encourag- 
ing private enterprise in the erection of superior dwellings for 



the working classes. The p roced ur e for dealing with insanitary 
property under these Acts is too intricate to be stated in detail; 
but, briefly, there are two ways of proceeding. In the first 
the local authority, on receiving formal complaint of an unhealthy 
area, cause an inspection to be made by their medical officer, 
and if the report in their opinion justifies action, they may 
prepare an " improvement scheme," which is submitted to the 
Local Government Board. The Board holds an inquiry, and, if 
satisfied, issues a provisional order, which has to be confirmed 
by a special act of parliament, under which the local authority 
can proceed to demolish the houses concerned after paying 
compensation to the owners. This procedure, which is authorised 
by part i. of the act of 1800, is obviously both cumbrous and 
costly. The second way, provided for by part ii. of the act, 
is much simpler and less ambitious; it only applies to single 
houses or groups of bouses. The medical officer in .the coarse 
of his duty reports to the local authority any houses which are 
in his opinion unfit for human habitation; the local authority 
can then make an order to serve notices on the owners to repair 
the houses at their own expense. Failing compliance 00 the 
part of the owners, an order for closing the houses can be obtained; 
and if nothing is done at the end of three months an order for 
demolition can be made. Buildings injurious by reason of their 
obstructive character (e.g. houses built back to back so as to 
be without through ventilation and commonly called M back-to- 
back " houses) can be dealt with in a similar manner. Small 
areas containing groups of objectionable houses of either kind 
may be made the subject of an improvement scheme, as above. 
Where areas are dealt with under improvement schemes there 
is a certain obligation to re-house the persons displaced. Building 
schemes are provided for under part iii. of the act. Land may 
be compulsorily purchased for the purpose and the money 
required may be raised by loans under certain conditions. The 
provisions thus summarised were considerably modified by the 
" Housing, Town Planning, &c, Act," passed at the end of xooo. 
Jt rendered obligatory. the adoption (previously permissive) 
of the housing provisions (part iii.) of the act of 1890 by local 
authorities, simplified the procedure for the compulsory purchase 
of land required for the purpose and extended the facilities for 
obtaining loans. It further gave power to the Local Government 
Board to compel local authorities to put in force the act of 1&90 
in regard both to existing insanitary housing and the provision 
of new housing. Power was also given to county councils to 
act in default of rural district councils in regard to new housing. 
The procedure for dealing with insanitary houses by dosing 
and demolition under part ii. (see above) was rendered more 
stringent. The general intention of the new act was partly 
to facilitate the administration of the previous one by local 
authorities and partly to provide means of compelling supine 
authorities to take action. Its town-planning provisions are 
noted below. 

Effects of Legislation.— -The efficacy of laws depends very largely 
on their administration; and when they are permissive and 
dependent on the energy and discretion of local bodies their 
administration varies greatly in different localities. That has 
been the case with the British housing and health laws, and is 
one cause of dissatisfaction with them. But in the aggregate 
they have effected very great improvement. Public action has 
chiefly taken effect in sanitary reform, which includes the 
removal of the worst housing, through demolition or alteration, 
and general sanitary improvements of various kinds. In some 
Urge towns the worst parts have been transformed, masses of 
old, narrow, crowded, dilapidated and filthy streets and courts 
have been swept away at one blow or by degrees; other parts 
have been reconstructed or improved. The extent to which 
this has been accomplished is not generally recognized. It 
is not easily demonstrated, and to realize it local knowledge, 
observation and memory are needed. The details of the story 
are hidden away in local annals and official reports, and writers 
on the subject are usually more concerned with what has not 
than with what has been done. Both the Public Health and the 
Housing Acts have had a share in, the improvement effected. 



Photo, Neurdei*. Fig. 6.— Hdtel de Cluny, Paris. 



Plate II. HOUSE 



Photo, F. Frith fir Co. 
Fig. 8. — Half-Timbered House at Hildesheim. Fig. 9. — House of John Harvard's Mother, 

Stratford-on-Avon. 



HOUSE Plate III. 



Photo, F. Frith & Co. 

Fig. io.— Speke Hall, Near Liverpool. 



Photo, F. Frith & Co, 

Fig. ii.— Moreton Old Hall, Near Congleton, Cheshire. 



From Gotch, Architecture of the Renaissance in England, 1894. By permission of B. T. Batsford. 

Fig. 13.— Moyns Park, Essex, 1580. 



ATE V. 



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Plate VI. HOUSE 



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Plate VIII. HOUSE 



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HOUSING 817 



The operation of the former fa slow and gradual, but ii 
ous and far more general than that of the latter. ] 
many details which are not usually taken into accoun 
ing housing, but which have as much bearing on the 
of the home as the structure itself. The Public I 
have further had a certain preventive influence in L 
a standard for the erection of new houses by tl 
commercial agencies. Such houses are not ideal, 
commercial builder studies economy and the quest! 
but the standard has risen, and building plans in 
sufficient light and air, such as once were general 
for several years been forbidden almost everywhe 
vision of commercial building is, in fact, vastly mop 
than the erection of dwellings by public or philanthroj 
because it affects a vastly larger proportion of the 
The influence of the Public Health Acts in improvini 
tions of home life cannot be estimated or sum mar 
is reflected in the general death-rate, which fell ste 
United "Kingdom from 211 per 1000 in 1878 to 15 
in 1007. 

Insanitary Areas 4— The operation of the Housi 
more susceptible of being stated in figures, though tx 
prehensive information is available. The original Shal 
of J 851 for erecting municipal lodging-houses appears t 
practically inoperative and little or nothing was doiu 
many years. In 1864, however, Liverpool obtained a 
and entered on the policy of improvement by the d 
insanitary dwellings on a considerable scale, following i 
by re-bousing. In 1866 Glasgow, also under a private 
an Improvement Trust, administered by the city count 
barked on a large scheme of improvement. These si 
been the earliest examples. The Torrens Act of 1 868, whi 
the improvement policy, did not produce much effect. 
to a parliamentary return, during the years 1883-1888, 
were only taken under this act in respect of about aa 
London and four provincial towns. More advantage 1 
the Cross Act of 1875, which was intended to promo 
provement schemes. Between 1875 and 1885 23 scheni 
a total area of 51 acres and a population of about 
undertaken, in London ; and 11 schemes in provincial 
far the most important of these, and the largest single 
undertaken, was one carried out in Birmingham. It 
area of 93 acres and involved a net cost of £550,000. 
between £4,000,000 and £5,000,000 were raised for i 
schemes under those acts. After the Housing Act 
clearance policy was continued in London and exte 
provinces. During the period 1891-1905 loans to th< 
about £2,300,000 were raised for improvement schi 
provincial towns in England and Wales. The largest c 
Leeds (£923,000), Manchester (£285,000), Liverpool 
Sheffield (£131,000), Brighton (£1 12,000). The Le 
affected an area of 75 acres, which was cleared at a cost 
In London the area cleared was raised to a total of io> 

Ecost, down to March 31, 1908, was £m»7.337. 
4,096, and the number of persons displaced 48,52 
tnder its Improvement Trust cleared an area of 8 j 

a population of 51,000. . At the same time the polic 
with houses unfit for habitation singly or in small gro 
peiling owners to improve them has been pursued I 
number of local authorities. In the six years 1890- 
was taken each year on the average in respect of about 
by some 400 local authorities large and small outs 
Representations were made against 33,746 houses, 
rendered fit for habitation, closing orders were obta 
4220 and demolition orders against 748. These figure 
chide cases in which action was taken under local act 
Health Acts. In Manchester, between 1885 and 1905, 1 
" back-to-back " houses were closed and about half 
opened after reconstruction. Hull, an old seaport t 
great deal of extremely bad housing, has made very eff 
the method of gradual improvement and has transforn 
areas without appearing in any list of improvement f 
recent years this procedure has been systematically 
Birmingham and other places, and has been strongly a 
Mr J. 5. Nettlefold {Practical Housing) in preference 
provement schemes on account of the excessive expei 
by the latter in buying up insanitary areas. In the six 
1907 Birmingham dealt with 41 11 houses represented 
habitation; 1780 were thoroughly repaired, 1005 were 
the rest were under notice or in course of repair at th 
period. Among other towns which have adopted thi 
Liverpool, Cardiff, York, Warrington and two London 
Building. — On the constructive side the operation of 
Act* has Men less extensive and much less general. 



X 



8i8 



HOUSING 



have been buUt in 67 places, chiefly mall towns and suburban 
districts. Of the large towns which have adopted this class of 
dwellings Salford stands first with 633 cottages; three London 
boroughs, all on the south side of the Thames, have built 234; 
Manchester has 228, Sheffield 173, Huddersfield 157. Birmingham 
103. The number of rooms in municipal cottage* ranges from 
three to eight, but the great majority of these dwellings have four 
or five rooms. , 

Some further details of municipal housing in particular towns are 
of interest. In London, the work of the London County Council 
down to March 31 , 1908, not including three lodging-homes containing 
1845 cubicles* is given in the official volume of London Statistics, 
published by the Council, as follows.— 

Buildings Erected and in Course of Erection. 



No. of 
Dwellings. 


No. of 
Rooms. 


Cost of Land 
and Building. 


No. of Persons 
in Occupation. 


8.373 


22.939 


£2.438,263 


26,687 



With regard to the cost, it is to be noted that the actual cost of the 
land purchased for improvement schemes was very much greater 
than that stated, having been written down to an arbitrary figure 
called "housing valuation." The financial accounts of L.C.C. 
dwellings for the year ending March 31 , 1908, are thus summarized .— 

London County Council Dwellings, Accounts 1907-1908. 



Gross 
Rental. 



£180,169 



Deductions for 
Empties, &c. 



£19.455 



Net Receipts. 



£160,714 



Expenditure 
including 
Interest. 



£i57.Hi 



Net 
Returns. 



£3.573 



It appears from this that if the actual commercial cost of the land 
were taken the housing of the Council would be run at a considerable 
annual loss. The occupations of the tenants are stated in the 
following proportions: labourers 789. clerks 312, policemen 251, 
shop assistants 202, warehousemen 183, printers 182, charwomen 
182 tailors 155, cabinetmakers 146, canvassers 122, cigarette 
makers 118, widows 116, tram drivers no, postmen 107, packers 97, 
engineers 87, dressmakers 41, coachmen 31. motormen 26, milliners 
10 These proportional figures show that though a considerable 
number of labourers have been housed, the great majority of the 
occupants of London municipal dwellings are of a superior class. 
The mean weekly rent in London County Council dwellings is 
2». 10M. per room against 2s. 4d. in dwellings erected by other 
agencies. The most important feature of the County Council s 
policy in recent years has been the acquisition of suburban sites for 
the erection of cottages. There are four such sites, two on the 
south, one on the north and one on the west side 01 London; the 
total area is 349 acres, and the total accommodation contemplated 
is for 66,000 persons at an estimated cost of £3,105,840; the present 
accommodation is for about 8000. In addition to the housing 
provided by the County Council, fourteen London Borough Councils 
and the City Corporation had at the beginning of 1909 erected or 
adapted 3136 dwellings containing^ 7999 rooms. 

^Liverpool, down to 1907. about £920,000 had been spent in 
clearing insanitary areas and building new dwellings; the de- 
molition of about 8000 houses and purchase of land cost about 
A00.000: and the erection of 2046 dwellings, containing 4961 
roomsYcost about £350,000. The sue of the dwellings and the 
number of each class are: 1 room, 193; 2 rooms, 965; 3 rooms, 
719; 4 rooms, 167. The great majority are in tenement houses of 
three storeys. The mean weekly rent is is. 6Jd. per room, but a 
large number are let at less. The net return on the total outlay is 
just over 1%, on the building outlay it is 2i% The principal 
classes of persons occupying the dwellings are labourers 675, carters 
120, charwomen 103, firemen 93, porters 80, hawkers 64, sailors 45. 
scavengers 40. These all belong to the poorest classes, living by 
casual or irregular work. Liverpool has, in fact, succeeded more 
than any other town in providing municipal dwelling* in which the 
really poor can afford to live. 

In Manchester 956 dwellings have been built at a total cost for 
building and improvement of £451. 932? of the whole number 420 
are in blocks, 308 in tenement houses and 228 in cottages. 1 ne 
rents are much higher than in Liverpool; in the tenement houses 
the mean weekly rent is about 6d. per room more than in Liverpool. 
The gross profit on the block dwellings is i\ % on the capitel outlay, 
on the tenement houses 3% on the cottages 2!% The total 
loss during the last seven to ten years, including loan charges, has 
amounted to about £54.240 " (Thompson). 

In Glasgow the corporation has built under improvement schemes 
2280 new dwellings containing 4013 rooms and 241 shops. The 
dwellings, which are all in blocks and centrally situated, are occupied 
chiefly by artisans; only 28% have been reserved for the poorest 
class of tenants. The total amount taken from the rates on this 
account in 30 years is £600,000. Dwellings valued at £400,000 for 



building and £300,000 for land give a net return of 3«o6% on ©at* 

lay; dwellings valued at £280,000 for land and building return 
303% on outlay; leaving the sinking fund charges to be defrayed 
out of rates. ._«.## 

In Edinburgh insanitary areas have been bought for £107/123 
and new dwellings containing 1032 rooms have been built for£»7,97©. 
Nearly all the dwellings are of one or two rooms only. Toe rents 
charged average about 2s. a week per room; actual rents received 
average is. 4<i per room and they nave to be subsidized out of the 
rates to the extent of 2s. 3d. per room to meet the coat of site. 

In Dublin provision has been or was in 1909 shortly to be made 
for housing 5394 families dr 19,000 persons; of which 1041 families, 
or about one-fifth, are housed by the Corporation, the rest by 
companies and private persons. Altogether it was estimated that 
£500,000 would be spent under the act of 1890. Fifteen streets, 
containing 1665 houses, have been declared unhealthy areas by the 
medical officer, and between 1879 and 1909 more than 3000 bouses 
were closed as unfit for habitation. 

Cooperative Building. — Municipal and philanthropic housing by no 
means exhaust the efforts that have been made to provide working- 
class dwellings outside the ordinary building market. Their special 
function has been to substitute better dwellings for pre-existing 
bad ones, which is the most costly and difficult, as well as the most 
urgent, part of the problem in old towns. But in the provision of 
new dwellings alone they have been far surpassed by organised self- 
help in different forms. Down to 1906 there had been built 46,707 
houses by 413 co-operative societies at a cost of nearly £10,000.000. 
They are most numerous in the manufacturing towns and partka- 
larly in the north-western district of England. Of the whale 
number 8530 were owned by the societies which built them; 5577 
had been sold to members, and 32,600 had been built by members 
on money lent by the societies. These figures do not include the 
particular form of co-operative building known as co-partnership 
housing, which will be mentioned later on, or the operations of the 
so-called building societies, which are really companies lending 

*o persons on mortgage for the purpose of building. The 

» between them and the co-operative societies which do 
thing is that the latter retain the element of co-operation 
ig only to their own members, whereas the building ■ o cieoes 
the open market. Their operations are on an immmsr 
the end of 1908 the invested funds of the registered budd- 
ies exceeded £72,000,000. An agency working en tins 
ich far exceeds the operations of all the others put together, 
sly an important factor in housing. The number of nouses 

_st help to relieve congestion, and since they are built to 

suit the owners or tenants they cannot be of the worst class. They 
also represent a form of thrift, and deserve notice on that account. 

The Small Dwellings Acquisition Act of 1899, which baa not 
previously been mentioned, was intended to facilitate the building 

Sase of small houses by their tenants by means of loans 

I by local authorities. Down to 1906 about £8a,ooo had 
advanced by 5 county boroughs, 17 urban councils and 1 
:rict council. 

ig by Employers. — No comprehensive information is avail- 
his head, but it has not been an important factor in towns* 
iefly confined to agricultural, mining and suburban mano- 
; districts. The former two belong to the subject of Rural 
', which is separately discussed below; the third has an 
>f its own on account of its connexion with " model scttle- 
The building of houses for. their workpeople by industrial 
employers has never been widely adopted in this country, but it 
has attracted considerable attention at two different periods. Sir 
Titus Salt was a pioneer in this direction, when he built his wooUea 
mills at Saltaire, on the outskirts of Bradford, and housed his work- 
people on the spot. That plan was maintained by bis successors, 
who still own some 900 excellent and cheap cottages, and was 
adopted by a few other manufacturers in the same neighbourhood. 
Saltaire was a model settlement with many institutions for the 
benefit of the mill-hands, and as such it attracted much attention; 
but the example was not generally followed, and the interest lapsed. 
Recently it has been revived by the model settlements at Port 
Sunlight, near Liverpool, started about 1888, Bournvilk near 
Birmingham {1895), and Earswick, near York (1004), which are of a 
much more elaborate character. Elsewhere, employers setting down 
works in some new locality where no provision existed. h*vc had to 
build houses for their workmen; but they have done so in a plain 
way, and this sort of housing has not assumed large proportion*. 

Conditions in loop— It has been said above thai great improve- 
ments have been effected, and of that there is no doubt at alL 
Both quantity and quality are more satisfactory than they were, 
though both are still defective. The conditions vary greatly 
in different places, and no general indictment can be sustained. 
The common practice of citing some exceptionally bad cases, 
and by tacit inference generalizing from them to the whole 
country, is in nothing more misleading than in the matter of 
housing. Local differences are due to several causes— age, 



HOUSING 



819 



population, occupations and means of the people, public opinion 
and municipal energy. The first three chiefly determine the 
difficulty and extent of the problem, the last two influence its 
treatment. The difficulty is greatest in towns whkh are old, 
bave large populations and a high percentage of poor. Such 
pre-eminently are the large seaports, where much casual labour 
is employed. London, Liverpool, Glasgow, the Tyoe, Hull, 
Sunderland are examples. Old inland towns having a large 
trading as well as an industrial element present the same features. 
Such are Manchester, Birmingham, Leeds, Sheffield and Bradford. 
Jn all these, and some others like them, the past has left a heavy 
legacy of bad housing by malconstruction and dilapidation, 
which has been increased by growth of population and over- 
crowding. They have attacked it with varying degrees of 
energy according to the prevalent local spirit and with varying 
results. 

Overcriwdtkg. — The one condition which permits of precise 
and comprehensive statement is overcrowding. A standard 
has been officially adopted in England based on the number of 
persons to a room in each dwelling; and the facts in relation 
to this standard are embodied in the census returns. It is a 
much better criterion than that of " density " or number of 
persons per acre, which is very deceptive; for an apparently 
low density may conceal much overcrowding within walls and 
an apparently high one may be comparatively guiltless. The 
room-density is the important thing in actual life. Some light 
is also thrown on this question by the number of rooms contained 
in each dwelling, and that is also given in the census. The 
standard of overcrowding is more than two persons to a room. 
In 1 00 1 there were in England and Wales 2,667,506 persons 
or 8*2% of the population living in a state of overcrowding 
according to this definition. Their distribution is extremely 
irregular and capricious. In rural districts the proportion was 
only 5-8%, in urban districts 8*9%; but these summary 
figures give no idea of the actual state of things in different 
localities. In both rural districts and in towns the' proportion 
of overcrowding varies in different localities from less than 1 % 
to over 30% of the population. The towns are the most im- 
portant and we shall confine attention chiefly to them. A list 
of 84 having a population of 50,000 and upwards, exclusive of 
London, is given by Mr Dewsnup. The overcrowding ranges 
from 34-54% in Gateshead and 32-42% in South Shields to 
097% in Northampton and 0-62% in Bournemouth. Of the 
whole number exactly one-half have less than 5%; 15 have less 
than 2% and 22 have 10% or more. Neither size nor character 
has much to do with the variation. Bournemouth, at the bottom 
of the list with 0-62%, is a residential place and health resort 
with a population of about 50,000; so is Tynemouth, which is 
nearly at the top, with 30* 7 1 %. The two largest towns, Liverpool 
and Manchester, are 26th and 32nd on the list, with only 7-04% 
and 6-28% respectively, or considerably less than the average; 
and on the other hand none of the first 17 towns with the highest 
proportion of overcrowding are of the largest size. Again, with 
regard to character, Leicester and Northampton, which are 
almost at the bottom of the list, with 1*04% and 0*97% respec- 
tively, are both purely industrial towns. The most striking facts 
are that the six towns, which alone have more than 20% of 
overcrowding, namely Gateshead (34*5), South Shields (32*4), 
Tynemouth (30-7), Newcastle (30-4), Sunderland (30-10), 
Plymouth (20-1) are all old seaports, that four of them at the 
head of the list are on the Tyne and the fifth on the Wear. 
This points strongly to special local conditions and it is borne out 
by the facts with regard to rural districts. Northumberland and 
Durham show a great excess of overcrowding over other counties; 
and some of their rural districts even surpass any of the towns. 
The highest of all is the district of Tynemouth, with 38*18% of 
overcrowding. The explanation lies in a special combination 
of large families and small houses prevalent in this area. All 
the rural districts are seats of coal-mining, and miners are the 
most prolific section of the population. They also live in small 
houses of a traditional and antiquated character, often of one 
storey only or built back to back. Many are built by colliery I 



proprietors. Large famiBes and small houses also prevail in the 
towns. Some of them contain coal-pits and the rest of their 
industrial population is engaged chiefly in engineering and 
shipbuilding works, occupations also usually associated with a 
high birth-rate. The men live as near their work as possible 
and the practice of living in flats or occupying part of a house 
prevails extensively. 

In London the number of persons Irving in ov ercr o wded 
conditions in xoox was 726,006 or 16 0% of the population. 
The proportion varied from 2*6% in Lewisham to 35-2% in 
Finsbury, but in 23 out of the 29 boroughs into which the county 
is divided it exceeded the urban mean for the whole country, 
and in 9 boroughs having an aggregate- population of 1,430,000 
it was more than double the mean. Conditions in London an 
evidently untypical of English towns. 

In the light of the census figures it is clear that no large 
proportion of the English industrial population is living under 
conditions of serious overcrowding, outside the special districts 
mentioned and that the expression " house famine " cannot be 
properly applied to England or English towns in general. In the 
House of Commons, on the 16th of August 1009, the president of 
the Local Government Board, Mr John Burns, gave a list of the 
number of unoccupied houses and tenements in each of the 
London boroughs and in the eight largest provincial towns, 
including Glasgow; the total was 104,107. By a further 
analysis of the census returns Mr Dewsnup shows that a great 
deal of the overcrowding is of a comparatively mild character 
and that it is due to a relatively small excess of population. 
Bradford, for instance, is credited with 40,806 overcrowded 
persons, representing the high percentage of 14*61 of the 
population; but In the case of nearly 20,000 the excess over the 
standard is very slight, and the proportion of gross overcrowding 
comes down to 7*55%. Moreover, this serious overcrowding 
is produced by no more than 2-79 of the population, so that 
its cure presents no insuperable difficulty. The argument 
is confirmed by the very substantial diminution which actually 
took place bctweeen 1891 and 1901. The facts are so striking 
that they deserve to be presented in tabular form: — 

Percentage of Population Overcrowded. 





1891 


1901 


England and Wales. . 


11*23 


8-20 


Gateshead .... 


4078 


34*54 


Newcastle 








3508 


30-47 


Sunderland 








3285 


30-10 


Plymouth 








26-27 


20-19 


Halifax . . 








21-31 


14*49 


Bradford . 








20-61 


14*61 


Huddersficld. 








1989 


1288 


London . 








1970 


i6-oi 


Leeds. • . 








1646 


10-08 


St Helens. 








1572 


10-86 


Birmingham 








1427 


10*32 


Burnley . 
Sheffield . 








1274 
11*58 


714 
950 
6-50 


Bolton . 








11-22 


Liverpool. 








IO-96 


7*94 


Oldham . 








10-13 


7-4* 


Salford . 








939 


7*54 


West Ham 








934 


927 


Wolvcrhampt 


on. 






9-3* 


4-67 


Swansea . 
Stockport 
Manchester . 








9*25 
8-50 
825 


6-28 


Bristol . 
Hull . . . 








$ 


355 
6- 1 2 


Blackburn 








7*05 


yv* 


Birkenhead . 








680 


5*02 


Norwich . 








491 


3*34 


Brighton . 








4-56 


307 


Cardiff . 








4*3 1 


£5 


Preston . 








4*13 


Nottingham . 








362 


365 


Croydon • 
Derby. . 








276 
269 


2-74 
118 


Leicester . 








2-22 


IO4 


Portsmouth 








1-74 


1-19 



820 



HOUSING 



To what is this remarkable movement doe? It Is far too 
general to be attributed to the operation of the Housing Acts; 
for, though they have helped in some cases, a great diminution 
has occurred in many places in which no use has been made of 
them. Towns of all kinds and in all parts of the country exhibit 
the same movement in some degree; those which had little 
and those which had much overcrowding, the worst and the 
best In London the precentage fell by 3*7, and the number 
of persons overcrowded was reduced by 103,669 in spite of an 
increase of population of 324,798. In Gateshead a fall of 6-3%, 
in Newcastle one of 4*6% took place; while at the other end 
of the scale Leicester and Derby reduced their already very 
low proportions by more than one-half. Nottingham is the 
only exception in the whole list. And in 38 out of the 35 towns 
the decrease of overcrowding was absolute as well as relative 
in spite of a large increase of population. London has been 
cited. The other large towns may be tabulated with it, thus: — 



Town. 


Increase of 
Population. 


Decrease of 

Overcrowded 

Persons. 


London • . . . . 
Liverpool . « , , 
Manchester « * . 
Birmingham j . . 
Leeds . . 4 . , 
Sheffield .... 
Bristol . » '. , 
Bradford . •* . . 


324.89* 
166,978 

61U63 
56.550 
107.367 
63406 


103,669 
3,381 
7.545 
14.390 

IS 

6,105 
3.696 



The very divergencies make the uniform diminution of over- 
crowding the more remarkable. The large increase of population 
jn Liverpool and Bristol no doubt means extension of boundaries, 
which might have the effect of reducing the proportions of over- 
crowding, but it cannot account for the actual decrease of 
overcrowded persons. The change seems to be due to three 
factors all of which have been in general operation though in 
varying degrees. They are (1) the centrifugal movement pro- 
moted by improved locomotive facilities, (2) the declining 
birth-rate, (3) public health administration: (1) The first is the 
most important and the chief element has been tramways, of 
which a great extension accompanied by electrification took 
place in the decade. Thus the process of urbanization has been 
modified by one of suburbanization. Bristol is a prominent 
case; its overcrowding has been reduced by more than one-half 
without any large and costly municipal interference, mainly 
through the operation of ordinary economic forces. Tramways 
have made the outskirts accessible and builders have 
utilized the opportunity. They have built good 
houses, too, under supervision, and Bristol, though 
an old seaport and industrial town with much 
poverty, has the lowest general death-rate and 
the lowest infantile death-rate of all the great 
towns. (3) The birth-rate and the size of families 
are conditions which affect overcrowding in a 
very marked degree, though no attention is paid 
to them in that connexion. The case of the 
mining districts and the towns on the Tyne has 
been mentioned above; the same thing is seen 
in London, where all the most overcrowded dis- 
tricts (Finsbury, Stepney, Shoreditch and Bethnal 
Green) have high birth-rates, ranging from 31-3 to 36-4 per 
1000 in 1902-1906. The necessity imposed on poor parents 
of putting several children into a cheap and therefore small 
dwelling accounts for a large proportion of overcrowding, which 
automatically diminishes with a falling birth-rate. The ultimate 
advantage of this method of reducing overcrowding is a question 
on which opinions may differ, but there is no doubt about the 
fact. (3) Public health administration is the third general 
cause; it attracts no notice and works very gradually, but it 
does work. The last annual report (for 1007) of the medical 
officer to the London County Council says of overcrowding: 
" There is reason for thinking that in recent years greater 



attention has been paid by sanitary authorities to the 1 
of the nuisance, and Dr Newman states that in Finsbnry then 
has been an enormous reduction in overcrowding, the redaction 
having been effected ^mainly in the years 1001-1905." The 
medical officers of the metropolitan boroughs reported in 1907 
3613 dwellings overcrowded in 33 boroughs and 3316 suck 
dwellings remedied in 37 boroughs. It should not be forgotten 
that a good deal of overcrowding is voluntary. Famines which 
have not enough room for their own members nevertheleaa take 
in lodgers; and in some places, of which London is the most 
conspicuous but not the only example, foreigners herd together 
thickly in a very small space. 

The improvement shown by the statistics of overcrooViing is 
confirmed by those relating to the size of dwellings. Between 
1891 and 190X the percentage of the population Irving in very 
small dwellings appreciably diminished thus — in 1 -r oomed 
dwellings, from 3*3 to i-6%; in 3-toomed dwellings, from 8-j 
to 6*6%; in 3-roomed dwellings, from ix«i to a-8%; while the 
proportion living in dwellings of 5 rooms and upwards increased 
from 54*9 to 60-1%. This again is referable to the suburb** 
movement and a higher standard of requirements. Six-roomed 
houses with a bathroom tend to replace the old four-roomed type. 
The general report accompanying the census says: " However 
the tenement figures for England and Wales are compared it is 
impossible to avoid the conclusion that the comparison affords 
satisfactory evidence of distinct improvement in the boosing of 
the people during the ten years 1891-1901." In short, the 
problem of quantity it only acute in a few places and steadily 
becoming less so. 

The foregoing facts apply only to England and Wales. In Scotland 
the state of things is much less satisfactory. No statistics of over- 
crowding are available, but the following comparative table sW 
how different the bousing conditions are in the two countries: — 

Site of Dwellings, England and Scotland, toot. 



Dwelling. 


Percentage of Population. 


England. 


Scotland. 


x room . • • • . 

3 rooms ' • « • • 

3 rooms » • • • 

4 rooms ...» 

5 rooms and over . < 


1-6 

6-6 

9.8 

21-9 

60-1 


u-l 
39*5 
19-9 
91 
30-4 



Over 50% of the population of Scotland live in tenements of one 
or two rooms; only 8*3 % in England. A comparison of the largest 
towns in the two countries gives the following result: — 

Percentage of Population. 



Scotland. 


England. 


Town. 


1 Room. 


3 Rooms. 


Town. 


1 Room. 


3 Rooms. 


Glasgow . . 
Edinburgh . 
Dundee , . 
Aberdeen . 
Paisley • . 
Greenock 
Kilmarnock .- 


16-3 

89 

6' l 
13-5 

1 8-9 


38-9 
33-4 
5»7 
332 
49*9 
47-6 
433 


London . . 
Liverpool 
Manchester . 
Birmingham . 
Leeds , . 
Sheffield . . 
Bristol . . 


6-7 

a 

o-3 
o-4 


13s 

5-9 
4-ot 
34 
9-5 
4^> 
5-7 


Mean . . 


13-7 


434 


Mean . . 


18 


*7 



The conditions in Scottish towns where very tan tenement houses 
are common, resemble those in other countries, in which over cr owd" 
tng is far greater than in England. All these matters are co m parative, 
and the superiority of conditions in England ought to be recognised. 
Yet, in Scotland, too, great improvements have been effected. In 
1861 there were 33,959 houses without windows; in 1901 only 130. 
These facts throw Tight on the long standing of the housing question, 
the rhange of standard and the improvement effected. 

In Ireland there is more overcrowding than in England, though 
probably less than in Scotland, with the possible exception of 
Dublin, which has a larger proportion of one-roomed dwellings than 
any Scottish town, namely, 34*7 %. The percentage of population 
living tn overcrowded conditions in the principal towns »— Dubfin 
40-6. Limerick 31*7, Cork 33-4* Waterford 200, Londonderry 16-7, 



HOUSING 



821 



Sanitary Conditions.— With regard to the quality of existing 
housing reference has already been made to the effect of the 
Public Health Acts and the general improvement in sanitation. 
The only numerical measure is afforded by the death-rates, 
which have fallen in England from 209 per 1000 in 187 1-1875 to 
<5'4 P«r IOO ° in 1003-1007 and in the United Kingdom from 
si*3 to 15-7 per 1000 in the same period. The condition of toe 
dwelling must be credited with a considerable share in this rail. 
There have, in fact, been great changes and all in the direction 
of improvement. The rise and development of sanitation, of 
house and main drainage and sewage disposal, the purification of 
water and provision of a constant service in. the house, the 
removal of refuse, the segregation of infectious illness, sanitary 
inspection — all these, apart from the demolition of the worst 
housing and the* provision of better, have raised the general 
healthiness of the dwellings of the people, in face of these facts 
nod of the vital statistics, to say that the people arc physically 
deteriorating through the influence of bad housing is to talk 
obvious nonsense, for all conditions have been improving for 
more than a generation. If physical deterioration is going on, 
of which there is no proof, either it is not caused by bad housing 
or there is less than there was. Deterioration may be caused by 
the continued process of urbanization and the congregating of an 
ever larger proportion of the population in towns; but that is a 
different question. If the town has any injurious influence it is 
not due to the sanitary condition of the houses, which is in general 
superior to that of houses in the country, but to the habits and 
occupations of the people or to the atmosphere and the mere 
aggregation. But much misapprehension prevails with regard to 
towns. The most distinctive and the most valuable feature of 
English housing is the general predominance of the small house or 
cottage occupied by a single family. Only in London and a few 
other towns do blocks of large tenement houses of the continental 
type exist, and even there they are comparatively few. In 
England and Wales 84% of the population live in dwellings of 
4 rooms and upwards, which means broadly separate houses. 
Now the prevalence of small houses involves, spreading out and 
the covering of much ground with many little streets, which 
produce a monotonous effect; a smoky atmosphere makes them 
grimy and dull skies contribute to the general dinginess. The 
whole presents to the eye a vast area of dreary meanness and 
monotony. Thus the best feature of English national housing 
turns to its apparent disadvantage and the impression is gained 
by superficial observers that the bulk of our working-class 
populations lives in " slums." The word " slum " has no precise 
meaning, but if it implies serious sanitary defects it is not applic- 
able to most of our town housing. There are real slums still,.but 
the bulk of the working class population do not live in them ; they 
live in small houses, often of a mean and dingy exterior but in 
essential respects more sanitary than the large and often hand- 
tome blocks to be seen in foreign towns, which are not put down 
as slums because they do not look dirty. A smoky atmosphere is 
injurious to health, but it must be distinguished from defects of 
housing. Ideal houses in a smoky place soon look bad ; inferior 
ones in a clean air look brighter and deceive the eye. The worst 
of the old housing has disappeared; the filthy, dilapidated, air- 
less and sunless rookeries-— the real slums — and the underground 
dwellings have been swept away in most cases, and what remains 
of them is not so bad as what has gone. But reform has been 
very regularly applied. Some towns have done much, others 
little. The large towns, in which the evil was most intense and 
most conspicuous in bulk, have as a class done far more than 
smaller ones in which the need perhaps was less great, but in 
which also a less healthy public spirit prevailed. The worst 
bousing conditions to-day are probably to be found in old towns 
of small and medium size, in which the ratepayers have a great 
disinclination to spend money on anything, and the control of 
local affairs is apt to be in the hands of the owners of the most 
insanitary property. Nor is this state of things altogether con- 
fined to old places. Some of recent growth have been allowed, 
lor the same reason, to spring up and develop without any regard 
to sanitary principles or the requirements of public health. 



There is therefore abundant scope for further reform and in not 
a few cases urgent need of it. On the other hand, we have a 
number of towns, particularly manufacturing towns, both large 
and small in the midlands and the north of England, which have 
already reached a good general standard of housing in all essential 
requirements, and only need the regular and steady exercise of 
vigilance by the public health service to remove such defects as 
still remain or may reveal themselves with the lapse of time. 

Rents.— Rent is a^ matter of great importance from every point 
of view, and that is now being realized. A quantity of official 
information on the subject has been collected and made available 
by an elaborate inquiry ordered by the Board of Trade in 1905 and 
published in 1908 (Cd. 3864). It relates to working class dwellings 
m the principal industrial towns in the United Kingdom, 9a in an: 
namely. 77 in England and Wales, 11 in Scotland and 6 in Ireland. 
The following tables give in a condensed form the chief statistical 
results obtained in October 1905 : — 

Predominant Range of Weekly Rents. 





England and Wales. 


Scotland. 


Ireland. 


. London. 


Provincial 
towns. 


One room . 
Two rooms 
Three „ 
Four „ 
Five ,, 
Six „ 


a/6 to 7/6 
6/- to 9/- 
7/6 to 10/6 
9/- to 13/- 
10/6 to 15/6 


3/- to*3/6 . 
3/9 to 4/6 
4/6 to 5/6 
5/6 to 6/6 
6/6 to 7/9 


2/- to 2/6 
3/10 to a/3 
5/2 to 6/5 


1/6 to 2/6 
2/6 to 3/6 
4/- to 5/- 
5/6 to 6/9 



Rents are lowest in, Ireland and next lowest in English provincial 
towns, considerably higher in Scotland and highest of all in London, 
for which further special details are given. It is divided into three 
zones (1) central, (2) middle, (3) outer, which have the following 
mean weekly rents: — 

London Mean Weekly Rents. 





Zone. 


Central. 


Middle. 


Outer. 


One room. - . - 
Two rooms ... 
Three „ .... 
Four „ . . . . 

Five 

Six 


4/6 


3/9 

67- 

7/6 

9/- 

11/- 

13/- 


6/6 
7/9 
9/6 
11/- 



In central London — which extends to Stepney in the East, Lambeth 
in the South, Islington in the North, and includes Westminster, 
Holborn, Finsbury, Marylebonc, Shoreditch, most of Bethnal Green, 
Southwark and Bermondsey^tbe rent of a single room may be 
as high as 6s. or even 6s. 6d. (Holborn) a week. It is here that 
overcrowding is greatest, and block-tenements, philanthropic and 
municipal, most numerous. The rentals of the block dwellings have 
not been taken into account in the foregoing official statistics; 
they range as follows: I room, 2s. 6d. to 5s. ; 2 rooms, 5s. to 8s.; 
three rooms, 6s. 6d. to Us. The lowest rent for which a single 
ro L --1-*-! -- j m t hU area is 2s. 6d. a week. In no English 

to so high as in London. If 100 is taken as the 

in : in London the nearest towns to it (Croydon 

»r ach 81 , and one town on the list (Macclesfield) 

index number of twenty-one towns out of the 
, and these include a number of important 
lull, Leicester, Blackburn, Northampton. 
r, Crewe and others. The index numbers of 
Liverpool 65, Manchester and Salford 62, 
Is 56. Sheffield 55. Bristol 53, Bradford 59» 
ay the level of rents in these towns is little 
1 London. This is one more proof of the un« 
ty ondon, and of the fallacy of generalizing from 

it »untry. Even in the overcrowded towns on 

T it run to three-fourths of the London level. 

W divided into geographical groups the index 

m ondon too, Northern Counties 62, Yorkshire 

Kt leshire 54, Midlands 51, Eastern Counties 50* 

S< Wales and Monmouth 60. Rents are always 

hi d Edinburgh complies with the rule; but it is 

vt ice of Glasgow, and in Scotland generally the 

ra than in England. Dublin, on the other hand, 

is the other Irish towns as widely as London 

ressive rise in rents has been talcing place for 
many years, the following index numbers for the great towns are 



822 



HOUSING 



¥*ven in the second series of meinoranda published by the Board of 
rade in 1904 (Cd. 1761) :— 

Rglatm Working-CUu Rents. 
1880 .... 86-6 I 189s . . . « 96-3 
1885 .... oo- 1 I 1900 .... IO0-O 
1890 . . . . 899 I 

The tendency to rise is attributable to incrcasec ur. 

due to higher wages and less work, increased cost 1 md 

higher rates. Weekly working-class rents general tea 

which are paid by the landlord. Housing reform ted 

to the rise, both directly and through the rates, lias 

thrown a heavy burden tn various ways. When si red 

away and replaced by superior dwellings the new re illy 

higher than the old and this fact has proved a great 1 ost 

of the improved housing is beyond the means of tl I it 

most, and thcyseek other quarters resembling the ol rly 

as possible. The example of Liverpool, which 1 est 

proportion of casual and ill-paid labour of all the f ind 

has been the most successful in providing new dvi. ». w . «. .'air 

Suality, centrally situated and not in blocks, at really low rates, 
lows that the problem is not insoluble; but as a rule too little 
attention is paid to the question of rent in housing reform, especially 
in building undertaken by municipalities. It is not ignored, out the 
importance attached to it by the poor is not realized. To them it is 
the first consideration after four walls, a roof and a fire-place; 
and 6d. a week makes a vast difference in their calculations. Reform 
which aims at raising the lowest classes of tenants by improving 
their dwellings defeats itself when it drives them away. 

Rural Bousing. — Little has hitherto been said about rural 
housing. It is of less importance than urban housing because 
it concerns a much smaller proportion of the population, and 
because in rural life the influence of inferior housing on health is 
offset by other conditions; but it has recently attracted much 
attention and was made the subject of inquiry by a Select Com- 
mittee of the House of Commons in 1906. .The report laid stress 
chiefly on the inaction of local rural authorities under the Public 
Health and Housing Acts, and on various obstacles in the way 
of improving existing houses and of providing more and better 
ones at rents which agricultural labourers can afford to pay. 
The available facts with regard to rural housing arc scrappy and 
unsatisfactory. The word " rural " has no precise meaning and 
it includes several very different sections of the population; for 
instance, the inhabitants of suburbs, mining villages and mill 
villages as well as the real agricultural population. Complaint 
is made of both the quantity and the quality of rural housing. 
With regard to quantity it is said that in spite of migration to 
the towns there is a dearth of cottages through dilapidation and 
demolition without rebuilding. That may happen in particular 
localities, but there is no evidence to support a general allegation. 
Inquiries issued by the Board of Trade to agricultural corre- 
spondents brought the following replies: insufficient 56, sufficient 
ixi, more than sufficient 324 Similar inquiries of land agents and 
owners resulted thus: insufficient 9, sufficient it, more. than 
sufficient 4, variable 6. From which it appears that insufficiency 
exists but is not general The official evidence- with regard to 
overcrowding is that it is much less acute than- in the towns. 
The proportion of the rural population in England living in 
overcrowded conditions in 1001 was 5*8%; if the rural mining 
districts, the exceptional overcrowding of which has been noted 
above, be eliminated, the rest cannot be very bad. Moreover, 
the percentage has appreciably diminished; in 1891 it . was 
8-46. The complaint of bad quality is better founded. Some 
landowners take great pride in the state of their property, and 
excellent cottages may be found in model villages and elsewhere 
in many parts of the country; but much rural housing is of an 
extremely insanitary character. A good deal of evidence on this 
head has of late years been published in the reports of medical 
inspectors to the Local Government Board. And local authorities 
are very .reluctant to set the law in motion against insanitary 
dwellings. On the other band, they have in some cases hindered 
and prevented building by too rigid insistence on by-laws, 
framed with a view to urban housing and quite unsuited to rural 
conditions. A few rural authorities have taken action with 
regard to building schemes under Part III. of the Housing Act. 
A list of 31 in 17 counties is given in " Housing up to Date "; 13 
applications were refused and 13 granted by the respective county 



councils and others were dropped. Details are given by the 
same authority of 54 houses built by 17 rural district council*, 
Public action may thus be said to amount to nothing at aJL 
Landowners, however, have borrowed under the Improvements 
of Lands Acts upwards of £1,250,000 for building labourers' 
cottages; and this is probably only a fraction of the amount 
spent privately. 

In Ireland a special condition of affairs exists. A series 
of about a dozen arts, dating from 1881 and culminating in the 
Labourers (Ireland) Act of 1906, have been passed for promoting 
the provision of labourers' cottages; and under them 20,634 
cottages had been built and some thousands more authorized 
previous to the act of 1906, which extended the pce-extHing 
facilities. The principle is that of the English Housing Acts 
applied to rural districts, but the procedure is simpler and 
.quicker. The law provides that a representation may be made 
to the local authority by three ratepayers or resident labourers 
that "the existing house accommodation for agricultural 
labourers and their families is deficient having regard to the 
ordinary requirements of the district, or is unfit for human 
habitation owing to dilapidation* want of air, light, ventilation 
or other convenience or to any other sanitary defects," whereupon 
the local authority shall make an improvement scheme. It may 
also initiate a scheme without representation, or the Local 
Government Board may do so in default of the local authority. 
The scheme is published, an inquiry held, notice given and an 
order made with very much less delay and expense than under 
the English law. Land is purchased by agreement, or com- 
pulsorily and the money for land and building raised by loan. 
Loans amounting to about 3) millions sterling had been raised 
down to 1006. The great majority of the cottages built are it 
Munster and Lemstcr. They must have at least 1 be d room s 
and a kitchen, and the habitable rooms must be 8 ft. high. One 
of the most remarkable features is the low cost— about £*iso— 
at which these cottages have been built, including land and the 
expenses of procedure. 

Recent Dc*ehpmeuls.—lt is clear from a general review of 
the subject that the problem of housing the working classes in 
a satisfactory manner has proved more complex than was at 
one time realized. Experience has falsified hopes and fed to a 
change of attitude. It is seen that there are limits to drastic 
interference with the normal play of economic forces and to 
municipal action on a large and ambitious scale. A reaction 
has set in against it. At* the same time the problem is bring 
attacked on other sides and from new points of departure. 
The tendency now is towards the more effectual application of 
gradual methods of improvement, the utilization of other means 
and the exercise of prevention in preference to cure. Under 
each of these heads certain movements may be noted. 

The most troublesome problem is the treatment of existing 
bad housing. In regard to this the policy of large improvement 
schemes under which extensive areas are bought up and 
demolished has had its day, and is not likely to be revived to any 
considerable extent. That is not only because it is extremely 
costly but also because it has in the main done its work. It 
has done what could not have been done otherwise, and has swept 
away the worst of the old bousing en masse. To call it a failure 
because it is costly and of limited application would be as great a 
mistake as to regard it as a pa n a c ea. The procedure which seems 
to be coming into favour in place of it is that adopledin Birming- 
ham and advocated by Mr J. S. Nettkfold {Practical Housing 
coupled with a more general and effective use* of the Publk 
Health Acts. The principle is improvement in detail effected 
by pressure brought to bear on owners by public authority. 
The embodiment of this principle forms an important part of the 
Housing and Town Planning Bill introduced by the Local 
Government Board in 1908, which contained clauses empowering 
the central authority to compel apathetic local authorities 
to do their duty in regard to the closing of unfit bouses, and 
authorising local authorities both to issue closing orders and 
to serve notices on landlords requiring them " to execute such 
works as the local authority may specify as being necessary to 



HOUSING 



823 



snake the house in all respect* reasonably fit for human habita- 
tion." 

Among the other and leas direct means to which attention 
is being turned is the policy of getting people away from the 
towns. The effect of Improved travelling facilities in reducing 
urban overcrowding has been noted above. That object was 
not specifically contemplated in the building and electrification 
of tramways, and in the development of other means of cheap 
, local travel, but the beneficial effect has caused them to be 
recognized as an important factor in relation to housing and to 
, be more systematically applied in that connexion. A newer 
departure, however, is to encourage migration not to the outskirts 
i of towns but altogether into the country by facilitating the 
, acquisition of small holdings of land. This has been done by 
private landowners in an experimental way for some years, and 
, in 1907 the policy was embodied in the Small Holdings Act, 
! which gives county and borough councils power to purchase or 
hire land compulsoriry and let it in holdings of not more than 
50 acres or £50 annual value. Failing action on their part the 
Board of Agriculture may frame schemes. Power is also 
conferred on the Board and on County Councils to establish 
co-operative agricultural societies and credit banks. These 
measures have been adopted from foreign countries, and particu- 
larly from Denmark and Germany. A very large number of 
applications for holdings have been made under this act, but it 
is too early to state the effects. They will depend on the success 
of tenants in earning a livelihood by agricultural produce. 

Another new and quite different departure is the attempt 
to establish a novel kind of town, called a " Garden City," 
which shall combine the advantages of the town and. the country. 
The principal points are the choice of a site, which must be 
sufficiently convenient to enable industries to be carried on, 
yet with rural surroundings, the laying out of the ground in 
such a way as to ensure plenty of open space and variety, the 
insistence on building of a certain standard and the limitation 
of size. One has been established at Lelchworth in Hertfordshire, 
54 m. from London, and so far seems to be prospering. It consists 
of an area of 3800 acres, bought from the previous owners by a 
company registered in 1003 and entitled First Garden City Ltd., 
with a capital of £300,000 in £5 shares. The interest is limited 
to a dividend of 5%, all further profits to be devoted to the 
benefit of the town. The estate is divided into a central urban 
area of 1200 and a surrounding agricultural belt of 2600 acres. 
The town is planned for an eventual population of 30,000 and 
at present (1000) has about 5000. Some London printing 
works and other small industrial establishments have been 
planted there, and a number of model cottages have been built. 
In this connexion another recent novelty has appeared in the 
shape of an exhibition of cottages. The idea, originated by 
Mr St Loe Strachey, was to encourage the art of designing and 
building cheap but good and convenient cottages, especially 
for the country. Two exhibitions have been held at Letchworth 
m 1005 and 1007, and others at Sheffield (1007) and Newcastle 
(1908). The two latter were held on municipal land, and it is 
proposed by the National Housing Reform Council to hold one 
every year. 

The " Garden City M has led to the " Garden Suburb," an 
adaptation of the same idea to suburban areas. One was 
opened near Hampstcad Heath in 1907: it consists of 240 acres, 
of which 72 have been reserved for working-class cottages with 
gardens. These developments, with which may be associated 
the model industrial villages, mentioned above, at Bournville, 
Port Sunlight and Earswick, represent an aspiration towards 
a higher standard of housing for families belonging to the upper 
ranks of the working classes; and the same movement is 
demonstrated in a Still more interesting fashion by a particular 
form of co-operative activity known as Co-partnership Housing. 
The first complete example of this method of organization was 
the Ealing Tenants Limited, a society registered under the 
Industrial and Provident Societies Act in 1001, though the 
Tenant Co-operators Limited, formed in 1888, was a precursor 
on very nearly the same lines. The essential principle h self-help 



applied by combination to the provision of superior homes, and 
the chief material feature is the building of houses which are 
not only of good design and workmanship, but disposed on a 
systematic plan so as to utilize the pound to the best advantage. 
Land is bought and houses are built with combined capital to 
which each tenant contributes a substantial share; the houses 
are let at rents which will return 5% on share capital and 4% 
on loan capital after defraying all expenses, and the surplus 
profits are divided among the tenant members in proportion 
to the rents paid by them. Each tenant's share of profits is 
credited to him in snares until his share capital equals the value 
of the house he occupies, after which k is paid in cash. There 
is thus common ownership of the whole group, which forms a 
little community. This system has caught on in a remarkable 
way and has spread with great rapidity. In 1005 a central 
organizing body was formed called the Co-partnership Housing 
Council, for the purpose of promoting the formation of societies 
and assisting them with advice; it is supported by voluntary 
contributions. In 1900 twelve societies, including the original 
Tenant Co-operators, had been formed with a total investment 
of £536,300. The/ are situated at Ealing, Letchworth, Seven- 
oaks, Leicester, Manchester, Hampstead (two), Harborne near 
Birmingham, Fallings Park, Stoke-on-Trent, Wayford and 
Derwentwater. The rapidity with which the movement has 
developed and spread since the establishment of the Co-partner- 
ship Housing Council indicates great vitality, and since it is 
based on thoroughly sound lines it has probably a large future. 
It .is the most interesting and in many respects the best of all 
recent developments. The Report of the Select Committee on 
Rural Housing mentioned above suggested that a Co-partner- 
ship Housing Society should be formed, in every county in 
England. 

All the enterprises just described have one feature in common, 
namely, the laying out of sites on a plan which takes cognizance 
of the future, secures a due proportion of open space, variety in 
the arrangement of streets and the most advantageous disposition 
of the houses and other buildings. They go beyond sanitary 
requirements and take account of higher needs. They have 
lent force to the advocacy of municipal " town-planning," as 
practised by several towns in Germany; and provision was made 
for this procedure in the Housing and Town Planning Act of 
1909. The act contains clauses giving local authorities power 
to prepare plans with reference to any land which appears 
likely to be used for building purposes within or near their own 
boundaries; and also to purchase land comprised in a town- 
planning scheme and either build on it themselves or let plots 
for building in accordance with the plan. The chief object is to 
safeguard the future, prevent the repetition of past defects 
and encourage a higher standard of housing. 

These new developments represent an upward movement at 
the higher end of the scale. They cater for the superior ranks 
of working classes, those who attach some importance to 
the aesthetic and moral influence of pleasant and wholesome 
surroundings, and are willing to sacrifice immediate gratifications 
to a higher end. They embody an aspiration, set an example and 
exercise an educative influence. But they have nothing to do 
with the housing of the really poor, which is the great difficulty; 
and their very attractiveness seems m some danger of drawing 
attention from it. Garden cities and suburbs will never house 
the poor or even the bulk of our working class population, and 
it would be a pity if the somewhat sentimental popularity of 
romantic schemes led to a distaste for the plodding effort which 
alone can effect a real cure of deep-seated social evils of long 
standing. All the new schemes and legislative proposals leave 
untouched the greatest difficulty of all, which ties not in the 
dwelling but in the tenant. It is comparatively easy to afford 
better opportunities to those who are willing to take advantage 
of them, but how to raise those who are not ? The lesson taught 
by Miss Octavia Hill's classical experiment is, if not forgotten, 
certainly neglected in the presence of more showy efforts. Or 
perhaps it would be more true to say that half of it is neglected. 
Bliss Hill was one of the pioneers in the comparatively modest 



8*+ 



HOUSING 



35 

bed 
ilty 



tae- 
for 



the 

era! 
la 



the 
res 
ex* 
ing 
«« 
for 
teal 

S 

IB- 

iad 



icfc 
A 

«7 



eal 
to 
fa. 



ixd 



E 

la 



s; 



dtopomwloa for M public porpote*" No town has coostenctofl • Gtnmny.~ln ao country t* Che pvobkn of boottaf mete ante 



HOUSING 



825 



than in Germany, where the increase of population, the growth of 
manufacturing industry and the urbanization of the people have 
proceeded at an exceptionally rapid pace in recent years and have 
combined with increasing wealth and a rising standard of living to 
force the question into prominence. Up to 1909 no uniform legisla- 
tion for the empire had been framed and no central authority 
existed for dealing with housing: but the several states have their 
own public health and housing laws, and great activity has been 
developed in various directions. The most general difficulty is 
deficiency of quantity consequent on the rapid: change in the dis- 
tribution of the population. The proportion of the whole population 
living in the great towns increased from 7*2 % to i6-a %, or more 
than doubled between 1890 and 1900; in England it only increased 
by about one-tenth. Slums are a " ' r 

than in England because of the co 

of German towns, but where old q 1 

in Hamburg, the conditions are qui 1 

towns, and call for similar measure) r 

is still as a whole less advanced 1 

cases it ia superior and in genera i 

administration of sanitary laws, as I 

uniform, and less subject to evask ; 

comparative absence of slums. Ai 1 

has perhaps the greatest influence r 

manner in which German homes F 

inadequate quantity is urgent; 

crowding, and the development of s 

which are becoming the prevailing 1 

led to many and varied efforts t 1 

attempts go back to an early date. r 

was formed in Berlin in 1849, Al » 

" colonies " at Essen in 1863, Barn 1 

there were other cases; but genet : 

been drawn to the subject by the r 
achwingh at Bielefeld about 1884 in 

In short housing reform in Gcrma t 

20 years. The first efficient by- 1 

Berlin were not adopted till 1887; 1 

from 1853 permitted many abuses 1 

bad housing was constructed, cs] t 

of the empire and the beginning t s 

capital. 

The worst feature is the general prevalence of dwellings con- 
taining a very small number of rooms — from 1 to 3 — and consequent 
overcrowding. The following figures arc extracted from the Report 
to the Board of Trade on Rents, Housing, &c„ in Germany (1908, 
Cd. 4032). They indicate the proportion of dwellings containing 
I, 2 or 3 rooms, or (in a few cases) the proportion of the population 
living in such dwellings. The towns are those for which the in- 
formation is given. They are not selected as particularly bad 
specimens but as representative, and they include most of the 
capitals and chief industrial centres. The figures relate to the year 
1900, except in a few cases, in which they arc taken from a municipal 
house census in 1905. 

Percentage of Dwellings or Population living tn Dwellings containing 













Town. 


1 Room. 


2 Rooms. 


3 Rooms. 


4 Rooms. 


Berlin . . . 


80 


37-2 


30*6 


758 


Aachen . . . 


13-7 


32-0 


219 


676 


Barmen (pop.) . 


3'2(?) 


268 


288 


U-7 (?) 


Bremen . 


26- 1 


Breslau (pop.) 


39 


46*0 


24-4 


83 


Chemnitz (pop.) 


1-7 


34-« 


29-9 


Dantzig . . . 


3*3 


45*o 


*9'9 


802 


Dortmund * . 


4'7 


455 


30-0 


Dresden . . . 


0-8 


35 
26-4 


278 


32- 1 


DQsseldorf . . 


t-4(r-) 


22-7 


67.0 (?) 


Elberfeld - . 


36*9 


217 


Essen • 


2-9 


354 


30-0 


68t 
29*6 


Hamburg. . . 


10 


3*9 


33 


Konigshuttefpop.) 


100 


60-4 


872 


Leipzig (pop.) . 
Mannheim 


04 


1-7 


«4'5 


166 


3*1 


22-1 


404 


656 


Munich (pop.) . 


4-6 


24-1 


21*8 


57* t 


Plauen (pop.) 


1-3 


14-2 


36-3 



The figures must be read with a certain amount of caution, as they 
are not in every case compiled on a precisely uniform method with 
regard to inclusion of kitchens and attics. For this reason the 
position of Bremen and Elberfeld is probably more unfavourable 
than it ought to be. But broadly the table shows that in most of 
the large towns in Germany more than half, and in some cases more 
than three-quarters of the dwellings have less than 4 rooms. Leipzig 
is the most striking exception. IT working-class quarters alone are 
taken it is found that dwellings of more than 3 rooms are so few 
aa to be negligible. In Stuttgart, where housing is very dear, the 



percentages for working-class quarters are — I room 2i«o, 2 rooms 
51 -8, 3 rooms 269; total under 4 rooms 987. Kdnigshuite, the chief 
coal and iron centre in Silesia and a purely working-class town, 
shows the same state of things; 60% of the whole population live 
in dwellings of 2 rooms and 87 % in less than four. It is interesting 
to compare English towns. The proportion of dwellings containing 
less than 4 rooms in London was (1901) 52-2%. in Berlin 758%; 
the proportion of the population living in such dwellings was — 
London 387%, Berlin 71 5%. Not only is the proportion of small 
dwellings very much higher in Berlin but the proportion of the 
population living in them shows a far greater discrepancy. This 
indicates a much higher degree of overcrowding. The only point 
in which Berlin has the advantage is the smaller number of single- 
room dwellings. The proportions are London 14*7%, Berlin 8-o% 
But it is to be observed that overcrowding is not so common in 
1 -room dwellings, which are often occupiedby a single person, as 
in those with 2 or 3 rooms, which are occupied by families, though 
probably the most extreme cases of overcrowding occur in particular 
1 -room dwellings. In the English county boroughs the proportion of 
dwellings with less than 4 rooms was 24-0 %, in other urban districts 
17-4, and in all urban areas including London 264%. When all 
allowance is made for minor errors and discrepancies it may be 
broadly concluded that the proportion of small dwellings containing 
less than 4 rooms is at least twice as great in German aa in English 
towns, and that the conditions aa to accommodation which in 
England prevail only in London are general in urban Germany. 
As a set-off German rooms are generally larger than English ones 
and in block dwellings there is often a little ante-room or landing 
which docs not count but really increases the space. 

The German census docs not take cognisance of overcrowding and 
there is no general official standard; but some towns have adopted 
a standard of their own, namely, six or more persons to 1 room and 
ten or more to 2 rooms. In Breslau, which is one of the worst 
towns. 17-5% of the population ($3,000) of the "city" or inner 
ring were overcrowded on this basis in 1000. In Barmen, which is 
not one of the worst, 20% of the 2-roomed and 17 % of the 3-roomed 
dwellings (together housing more than half the population) were 
overcrowded according to the English standard. Overcrowding 
and other bad conditions are worst in the basement or cellar dwell- 
ings, of which some towns have a very large number. In Breslau 
15,000 persons were living in 3853 such dwellings in 1900; in 
Berlin 91,426 persons were living in 24,088 basements. Some of 
these are free from objection, but IM47. housing 38,663 persons, 
were situated in back buildings and unfit for habitation on account 
of darkness, damp, dilapidation and the like. " Back " houses 
are a feature of old towns; they are houses which do not give on 
the street but lie behind and are approached by a passage; they are 
what we call courts and quite aa insanitary as anything of the kind 
in English towns. 

With regard to rents the Board of Trade (London) Report gives 
the following figures for Berlin and a number of other towns*— 



No. of Rooms 
per Dwelling. 


Predominant Range of Weekly Rents. 


Berlin. 


Other Towns. 


2 rooms . 

3 rooms . . 

4 rooms . 


5M06/- 
7/- to 9/3 


a/8 to 3/6 
3/6 to 4/9 
4/3 to 6/- 



Rents are higher in Berlin than in any other town, though 
Stuttgart comes very near it. The following table of index numbers 
shows the relations of 32 towns to Berlin: — 



Town. 


Index 
Number. 


Town. 


Index 
Number. 


Berlin .... 


100 


Nuremberg . . 


53 


Stuttgart . . . 


97 


Aachen . . . 


S3 


Dusseldorf . . . 


79 


Crefeld. . . . 


53 


Dortmund . . . 


68 


Bremen . . . 


53 


Anchaffenburg 

H " * • • • 


67 
66 


Plauen . , . 
Leipzig . . . 


53 
51 


M im . • . 


64 


Dantzig . . . 


3 


K erg , . 


62 


MQlhausen » . 


w .... 


63 


KonigshOtte . . 


47 


E .... 


62 


Stettin . . . 


46 


& ... 


61 


Magdeburg . . 


43 


B ... 


57 


Chemnitz . . . 


40 


E 1 . . . 


57 


Zwickau . . . 


38 


B ... 


5 


Brunswick . . 


37 


R Jid . . . 


Stassfurt . - . 


S 


Breslau . . . 


56 


Oschcrsteben . . 


Dresden . . . 


54 







Comparing rents in Germany and England, the Board of Trade 
Report gives the following table, to which the corresponding ratio 
of French towns has been added. 



826 



HOUSING 



No. of Rooms. 


Predominant Weekly Rents. 


Ratio of 

German to 

English (ioo) 




England. 


Germany. 


Ei 


a rooms . . 

3 rooms . . . 

4 rooms . . . 


3/- to 3/6 
3/9 to 4/6 
4/6 to 5/6 


a/8 to 3/6 
3/6 to 4/9 
4/3 to 6/. 


95 
too 

I02 





If the mean of the English and German figures be taken it shows 
a very slight difference in favour of Germany ; the mean weekly rent 

Evr room being is. sd. in England and is. 4id. in Germany. But in 
ngland rent usually includes local taxation (rates) whereas in 
Germany it does not ; if this be added German rents are to English 
as tat to ioo. or nearly one-fourth more. 



ial 



Lxayuooo. eke 
itbe other states 
e tnunicipaHtiea. 
limited to buAaV 
nsurance Boards 
re let to persons 
l The develop* 
promoted by the 
iations of which 
f for the Rhiae 
nosing provided 
tie was followed 
y employers has 
■y. State* aad 
i employers, the 
ney to societies 
is been dooc by 
veilings housing 
amous example; 
and Westphalia 
mtaiaing 63.559 
f the families so 
9 various cnami- 
ial development 
housing by cn> 
sr instance over 
ed. At Nnrein- 
edan interesting 
s, by which 722 

using Act were 
f housing reform 
general sanitary 
9nd ordains that 
id for the main* 

. - r ^_. J inspect existing 

dwellings, order improvements or repairs or demolition ; em p o m era 
them to take land compulsorily for the purposes of the act. to 
prohibit building or rebuilding on sites reserved for public purposes 
and to make grants or loans to societies or companies operating 
exclusively for the improvement of working-class dwellings. If 
they fail to make by-laws the provincial authorities may take 
actton. Land buying with a view to extensions has been adopted 
by a number of municipalities including Amsterdam, Rotterdam, 
Utrecht and other important towns, and the practice is increasing. 
Amsterdam has also begun the systematic planning of extensions. 
There has been a little municipal building in some small places, but 
it is on an insignificant scale ; the tendency is rather to favour societies 
of public utility as in France, Germany and Belgium. The new taws 
are too recent to have had much effect and housing reform is as yet 
in an early stage. Rents are high in the large towns, namely. 1 
ro — - OJ ^ * . 6d. to 6s; 



lc 

tt 



•cr 


V 


3 


di 


nt 


A 


tea 


re 


he 


of 


n« 


of 


w. 


di 


li- 


bl 


ne 


ot 


>e, 




ut 


St 


lly 


to 


ht 


cc 


ite 


hi 


on 


as 


tie 


su 


in* 


p< 


ut 


th 


on 


cc 


tes 


T 


oy 


cc 


ire 


m 


rly 


of 


in* 


te 


eir 


ac 


OR 


St 


oi 


re 


ng 


di 


ey 


cc 


cy 


di 


tnt 


m 


In- 


01 


ids 


Si 


he 


n 


'g: 


ai 



workmen's 
land coav 
» dwellings, 
ue building 
le thickness 
at quanttry 
tent a very 
jst founded 
iject among 
persons, 
the United 
>nly be said 
igatioos by 
in London 
stonaswefl 
re been the 
!bem to the 
> accept a3 
fcanceshavt 
1 great city. 
1 — in which 
large tene- 
■ant tnrwsh 
filled the* 
aticmahtic* 
r backward 
r evasion of 
ion of bad 
Kite by cx- 
Du«Dg ccm- 
St on. Ba] ti- 
ttles* many 
the United 
Me is more 
rkness, dirt 
Hups three 



HOUSMAN— HOUSSAYB 



827 



families, are common, but they have more room space than is usual 
in Europe. The 18th annual report (1903) of the Commissioner 
of Labour gives the result of a special inquiry embracing 23.447 
families distributed in 33 states. The average number of rooms 
was 4*95 per family and 1*04 per individual. It is a fair inference 
that overcrowding is confined to a comparatively small number of 
exceptional places. A large number of the schedules were furnished 
by the eminently urbanized and manufacturing states of New 
York, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Ohio and Illinois; and in all 
these the average number of rooms to a family exceeded 4, ranging 
from 4*2 in Ohio to 5-5 in Massachusetts. The condition of homes 
as to sanitation and cleanliness was statistically stated thus: 
Sanitary condition— good 61-46 %. f ~ : - •--•"■ 0/ U ~ A •-** %; 
Cleanliness— good 79*63 %, fair 14 ler 

special inquiries have been carried < In 

1891-1892 the tenements in Bostoi he 

Massachusetts Labour Bureau, whicl ins 

without outside windows and about 8 in 

conditions objectionable from one < 92 

Congress authorized a special inquiry of 

New York, Chicago, Philadelphia and I ch 

were published in the seventh special ed 

States Commissioner of Labour. It tal 

" slum population " (presumably th< n- 

ditions) was— New York 360,000, CI lia 

35,000, Baltimore 25.000. In Baltim< 
1648 persons, were living in single ro 
persons to a room; in Philadelphia 40 
an average of 3-1 1 persons to a room 
dwellings was less in New York and Ch 
or nearly half the families investif 
2-roomed dwellings, in Baltimore 27-8 
and in Chicago 19*14 %• These figi 
European conditions reproduce thci 
Poverty was not the cause, as the i 
ranged from (3, 43. a week in Baltimor 

Another official investigation in New 95 

bv the Tenement House Commission a 'w 

York. It reported " many houses in I n- 

dition which absolutely unfits them for ils 

have been compiled from the census t on 

of Churches, chiefly relating to density In 

1900, out of a total of nearly 250,00c ,„r-r W ,„- - /o) 

contained from 2 to 6 persons, 60,672 (24*2 %)Trom 7 to 10 persons 
and 89,654 (35*9 %) 1 1 persons or more. The density of population 
for the whole city as now constituted was 19 persons to the acre, 
in Manhattan 149; in the south-eastern district of Manhattan 
382 and in one ward 73s Between 1900 and 1905 the density 
increased in every district, and in the latter year there were 12 bloc Its 
with from 1000 to 1400 persons to the acre. The number of persons 
to the acre in London (1901) is 6o-6; in the most densely populated 
borough 182, and in the most densely populated district (a very 
small one) 396. This will give a measure of comparison. The large 
tenement blocks in New York have been constructed with far less 
regard to health than those in Berlin, and reproduce in an aggravated 
form the same evil of insufficient light and air. In place of the 
inadequate courts round which many are built in Berlin, the New 
York tenements have merely narrow air shafts. In 1904 there were 
reported to be 362,000 dark interior rooms, that is with no outside 
windows. 

If American cities have nothing to learn from other countries in 
regard to bad housing, they have nothing to teach in the way of 
reform. They are following Europe slowly and a long distance 
behind. There is no serious attempt to deal with insanitary areas 
as they have been dealt with in England, or to prevent the creation 
of new ones by regulation and planning of extensions as in Germany, 
or to promote the provision 01 superior houses by organized public 
effort as in several countries. A little has been done in New York 
to improve the worst housing. A Tenement House Act was passed 
afterthe '- — — *-•--*-» -. ~ ^cd 

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employers. The former are co-operative provident societies; they 
are widely diffused throughout the United States and their operations 
are on a very large scale. They date from 1831, when the Oxford 
Provident Building Association was formed at Frankfort, near 
Philadelphia. Pennsylvania has still the largest number of associa- 
tions, but from 1843 onwards the movement spread rapidly and 
continuously in other states. The high-water mark appears to have 
been reached in 1 897,. when the total assets of the associations 
amounted to about £133,000,000. In 1903 there were 5326 associa- 
tions with an aggregate membership of 1,686,611 and assets of 
about /i30,ooo.ooo. The states of Pennsylvania and Ohio bead 
the list, oui the movement is very strong in many others. It accounts 
for the comparatively large number of houses owned by working- 
class families in the United States. With regard to housing by 
employers, no comprehensive information is available, but the total 
amount is certainly considerable though probably not so large as 
in Germany or in France. Some of the better-known instances are 
the Pclzcr Manufacturing Company at Pclzcr in South Carolina, 
which has built about 1000 dwellings; the Maryland Steel Company 
at Sparrows Point, Maryland, 800 dwellings; Ludlow Manufacturing 
Associates at Ludlow, Mass., 500 dwellings; Whitin Machine 
Works at Whitinsvilk, Mass.. 600 dwellings; Westinghouse Air 
Brake Co. at Wilmerding, Pcnn., 360 dwellings: Draper Co., Hope- 
dale, Mass., 250 dwellings. These arc all more or less " model '* 
settlements, not in cities, but in outlying or country places, where 



artist, was born on the 18th of June 1867. Having studied 
at South Kensington, he first made a reputation as a book- 
illustrator. Some of his best pictorial work may be seen in the 
editions of Meredith's Jump to Glory Jane (1892), the Weird 
Tales of Jonas Lie (1892), Jane Barlow's Land of Elfinloun 
(1894), Christina Rossetti's Goblin Market (1893), Werewolf 
(1896), by his sister, Miss Clemence Housman, Shelley's Sensitive 
Plant (1898), and his own Farm in Fairyland (1894). His 
designs were engraved on wood by Miss Housman. His volumes 
of verse include Green Arras (1896), Rue (1899), Spikenard 
(1898) and Mendicant Rhymes (1006); and the mysticism which 
characterizes the devotional poems in Spikenard recurs in his 
half-allegorical tales, All Fellows (1806), The Blue Moon (1904) 
and The Cloak of Friendship (1906). His nativity play, Bethlehem, 
was presented in the Great Hall of London University at South 
Kensington for a week in December 1902. In 1900 he published 
anonymously An Englishwoman's Love Letters, which created 
a temporary sensation; and he followed this essay in popular 
fiction by the novels A Modern Antaeus (1901) and Sobrina 
Warham (1904). On the 23rd of December 1904 his fantastic 
play Prunella, written in collaboration with Mr Granville 
Barker, was produced at the Court Theatre. 

His brother, Alfred Edward Housman (b. 1859), an accom- 
plished scholar, professor of Latin at University College, London, 
is known as a poet by his striking lyrical series, A Shropshire 
Lad (1896). 

HOUSSAYB, ARSfcNB (1815-1896), French novelist, poet 
and man of letters, was born at Bruyeres (Aisne), near Laon, on 
the 28th of March 181 5. His real surname was Housset In 
1832 he found his way to Paris, and in 1836 he published two 
novels. La Couronne de bluets and La Picheresse. He had many 
friends in Paris, among them Jules Janin and Theophile Gautier, 
and he wrote in collaboration with Jules Sandeau. He produced 
art criticism in VHistoire de la peinture fiamande et kollandaise 
(1846), semi-historical sketches in Mile de la Valliere el Mme 
de MonUspan (i860) and Galerie de portraits du XVII' Steele 
(1844); literary criticism in Le Rot Voltaire (1858) and his 
famous satirical Histoire du quarante el unihne fauteuil de 
Vacadtmie franchise (1855); drama in his Comtdiennes (1857), 
poetry in his SymphonU des tingt ans (1867), Cent el «» sennets 



828 



HOUSTON, S.— HOUSTON 



(1873), &c.; and novels, Les FUUs tf&u (1852) and many others. 
In 1849, through the influence of Rachel, he was entrusted with 
the administration of the Theatre Francais, a position he filled 
with unfailing tact and success until 1850, when he was made 
inspector-general of works of art. He died on the 26th of 
February 1806. 

His Confessions, souvenirs fun dhni-siede appeared in 1885- 
1891. See also J. Lemahre, Arshne Houssaye (1697), with a biblio- 
graphy. 

His son, Henry Houssaye (1848- >, the historian, was 
born in Paris. His early writings were devoted to classical 
antiquity, studied not only in books but on the actual Greek 
sites which he visited in 1868. He published successively 
Histoire d'Apelles (1867), a study on Greek art, VArmte dans 
la Crece antique (1867); Histoire d'Alcibiade ct de la ripublique 
atkinienne depuis la mart de Pericles jusqu'd Vavtnement des 
trente tyrans (1873); Papers on Le N ombre des citoytns d'Athbies 
au V*— stick avant Vbre chritienne (1882); La Loi agraire d 
S parte (1884); U Premier Siege de Paris en 52 av. J.-C. (1876), 
and two volumes of miscellanies, Athbnes, Rome, Paris, I histoire 
et Its mmurs (1879), and Aspasie, CUopaire, Thtodora (6th ed. 
1889). The military history of Napoleon I. then attracted him. 
His first volume on this subject, called 1814 (1888), went through 
no fewer than forty-six editions. It was followed by 1&15, the 
first part of which comprises the first Restoration, the return 
from Elba and the Hundred Days (1893), the second part, 
Waterloo (1899), and the third part, the second abdication 
and the White Terror (1005). He was elected a member of the 
French Academy in 1895. 

HOUSTON, SAM, or Samuel ( 1 793-1863), American general and 
statesman, of Scotch-Irish descent, was born near Lexington. 
Virginia, on the 2nd of March 1703. Hia father, who had 
fought in the War of Independence, died in 1806, and soon 
afterward Samuel removed with his mother to the frontier in 
Blount county, Tennessee. When he was about fifteen his 
elder brothers obtained for him a place as clerk in a trader's 
store, but he ran away and lived with the Cherokee Indians of 
East Tennessee for nearly three years. On his return he opened 
a country school, and later attended a session or two of the 
Academy at Maryville. During the War of 181 2 he served under 
Andrew Jackson against the Creek Indians, and his bravery 
at the battle of Tohopcka, in which he was disabled by several 
wounds, won promotion to a lieutenancy. In 1817 he was 
appointed sub-agent in managing the business relating to the 
removal of the Chcrokees from East Tennessee to a reservation 
in whet is now Arkansas, but he was offended at a rebuke from 
John C. Calhoun, then secretary of war, for appearing before 
him in Indian garments, as well as at an inquiry into charges 
affecting his official integrity, and be resigned in 1818. He 
entered a law office in Nashville, and was admitted to the bar, 
and was soon elected a district attorney. From 1823 to 1827 
Houston represented the ninth district of Tennessee in Congress, 
and in 1827 was elected governor of the state by the Jackson 
Democrats. He married Eliza Allen in January 1829; his wife 
left him three months later, and he resigned his office of governor, 
again took up his residence among the Chcrokees, who were at 
this time about to remove to Indian Territory, and was formally 
adopted a member of their nation. 

In 1830 and again in 1832 he visited Washington to expose 
the frauds practised upon the Chcrokees by government agents, 
and attracted national attention by an encounter on the 13th 
of April 1832 with William Stanberry, a Congressman from 
Ohio, who intimated that Houston himself was seeking to defraud 
them. Commissioned by President Jackson, Houston went to 
Texas in December 1832 to negotiate treaties with the Indian 
tribes there for the protection of American traders on the border. 
He decided to remain in Texas, and was elected a delegate to 
the constitutional convention which met at San Felipe on the 
1st of April 1833 to draw up a memorial 10 the Mexican Congress 
asking for the separation of Texas from CoahuUa, in which the 
ami-American party was in control, as well as to frame a con- 
stitution lor the commonwealth as a new member of the Mexican 



Republic, and he served as chairman of the drafting committer, 

and took a prominent part in the preparations for war when 
next year the petition was refused. In October 1835. soon afteT 
the outbreak of the War for Texan Independence, the committees 
of the township of Nacogdoches chose Houston as commander- 
in-chief of the forces in eastern Texas, and after the San Felipe 
convention in November he was chosen commander-in-chief 
of the Texan army. On the 21st of April 1836, while in com- 
mand of 743 raw troops, he met on the bank of the Saa 
Jacinto about 1600 Mexican veterans led by Santa Anna and 
completely routed them; on the next day Santa Anna was 
taken prisoner. 

Texan independence was won by this victory (although the Mex- 
ican government repudiated the treaty negotiated by Santa Anna), 
and Houston was elected president of Texas (1st of September) 
and was inaugurated on the 22nd of October. His term expired 
in December 1838; he was elected again in 1841 and served until 
1844. During his first term a newly founded city was named ta 
his honour and this was the scat of government in 1837-39 and ia 
1842-45. Texas having been admitted as a state of the American 
Union in 1845, Houston was elected one of its first two United 
States senators. He served as a stalwart Union Democrat from 
March 1846 until 1859; he opposed the Kansas-Nebraska 
bill in an able speech (3rd March 1854), and spoke frequently 
in defence of the rights of the Indians. In 1859 be was elected 
governor of Texas and tried to prevent the secession of his state; 
upon his refusal, in March 1861, to swear allegiance to the 
Confederacy he was declared deposed. He died at Huntsvifie, 
Texas, on the 26th of July 1863. Houston was an able soldier, 
wary, intrepid and resolute; and was a legislator of rare fore- 
sight, cool discrimination and fearless candour. 

See A. M. Williams, Sam Houston and the War of Independent* 
in Texas (Boston, 1893), Henry Bruce, Ltfe of General Houston 
(New York. 1891); and W. C. Crane. Life and Select Literary Re- 
mains of Sam Houston (Philadelphia, 1684). 

HOUSTON, a city and the county-scat of Harris county, Texas, 
U.S.A., at the head of deep-sea navigation on Buffalo Bayou, 
a tributary of Galveston Bay, 50 m. N.W. of Galveston, and 
about 325 m. W. of New Orleans. Pop. (1880) 16,513; (1800) 
27 1 557; (1900) 44,633, of whom 4415 were foreign-born and 
14,608 were negroes; (1910 census) 78,800. The land area 
in 1906 was 16-02 sq. re.; in 1008, about 20 so. m. It is served 
by the Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio (Southern Pacific), 
the Galveston, Houston & Henderson, the Gulf, Colorado 
& Santa Fe, the Houston & Texas Central (Southern Pacific), 
the Houston, East & West Texas, the International & Great 
Northern, the Missouri, Kansas & Texas, the San Antonio k 
Aransas Pass, the Trinity & Brazos Valley, the St Louis, Browns- 
ville & Mexico, the Texas & New Orleans, and the Houston Belt 
& Terminal railways, several of which have their headquarters 
at Houston. The Federal government has greatly unproved 
the natural channel from the city to the Gulf of Mexico, straighten- 
ing, widening and deepening it to a depth of 25 ft. for the entire 
distance from the Galveston jetties to the Houston turning 
basin — where the municipality has constructed free municipal 
wharves. The city occupies an unusually fine site on both sides 
of the Buffalo Bayou. Among the principal buildings *xt a 
Carnegie library, the Houston Lyceum, the Federal building, 
the Masonic temple, the dty high school, the dty hall and 
market house, the Harris County Court House, the Cotton 
Exchange, and the First and Commercial National banks. 
Houston is the seat of the Texas Dental College, of St Thomas 
College (1903), and of the Houston, Annunciation and St Agnes 
academies; and the will (1901) of William Marsh Rice provided 
an endowment (valued in 1908 at about $7,000^00) for the 
William M. Rice Institute for the Advancement of Literature. 
Science and Art, of which Dr Edgar Odell Lovett, formerly 
professor of mathematics (1 900-1905) and of astronomy (1005- 
1008) in Princeton University, was made president in 1908. 
The dty is the most important railway and shipping centre of 
South Texas, and has a large trade in cotton (trie receip ts for 
the year ending Aug. 31, 1907 being 2,967,535 bales), cotton-seed 



HOUWALD— HOWARD 



829 



oU, sugar, rice, 1 lumber and citrus fruits. Houston is important 
also as a manufacturing centre, its factory product being valued 
at $13,564,019 in 1005, an increase of 81% over the factory 
product in 1900. There are extensive railway car-shops, cotton- 
seed oil, petroleum and sugar refineries, cotton gins and com- 
presses, steel rolling mills, car-wheel factories, boiler, pump and 
engine works, flour mills, rice mills and a rice elevator, breweries, 
planing and saw-mills, pencil factories, and brick and tile factories. 
Its proximity to the Texas oil fields gives the city a cheap factory 
fuel The assessed valuation of taxable oropcrty in the city 
increased from $27,480,808 in 1000 to $51,513,615 in 1908. 
The No-Tsu Oh Carnival week each November is a distinctive 
feature of the city. Houston, like Galveston, adopted in 1005 
a very successful system of municipal government by commission, 
a commission of five (one of whom acts as mayor) being elected 
biennially and having both executive and legislative powers. 
The waterworks are owned and operated by the municipality, 
which greatly improved them from the city's surplus under the 
first two years of government by commission. In 1008 extensive 
improvements in paving, drainage and sewerage were under- 
taken by the city. The payment of an annual poll-tax of $2-50 is 
a prerequisite to voting. Houston was settled and laid out in 
1836, and was named in honour of General Sam Houston, whose 
home in Caroline Street was standing in 1008. In 1837-1839 
and in 1842-1845 Houston was the capital of the Republic of 
Texas. About 15 m. E.S.E. of the city is the battleground of 
San Jacinto, which was bought by the state in 1906 for a public 
memorial park. 

HOUWALD, CHRISTOPH ERNST, Freiheui von (1778- 
1845), German dramatist and author, was born at Straupitz 
in Lower Lusatia, a son of the president of the district court of 
justice, on the 28th of November 1778. He studied law at the 
university of Halle, and on completion of his academic studies 
returned home, married, and managed the family estates. In 
18 1 6 he afforded a home to his friend K. W. S. Contessa (1777- 
1825), himself a poet, who had met with serious reverses of 
fortune; Contessa lived with Houwald, assisting and stimulating 
him in his literary work, for eight years. In 2821 Houwald was 
unanimously elected syndic for Lower Lusatia, an office which 
placed him at the head of the administration of the province. 

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HdVA, the name originally applied to the middle-class Malayo- 
Iodoneslan natives of Madagascar (?.«.), as distinct from the 
noble class A ndriana and the slave class A ndevo. Hdva has now 
come to mean the most numerous and powerful of the tribes 
which form the native population of Madagascar. The Hdva, 
who occupy the province of Imerina, the central plateau of the 
island, are of Malayo-Indonesian origin. The period at which 
the Hdva arrived in Madagascar is still a subject of dispute. 
Some think that the immigration took place in very early times, 
before Hinduism reached the Malay Archipelago, since no trace 
of Sanskrit is found in Malagasy. Others believe that the Hdva 
did not reach the island until the 12th or 13th century. At the 
French conquest of Madagascar (1895), the Hdva were the most 
powerful and, politically, the dominant people; but were far 
from having subjected the whole of the island to their rule. 
The Hdva are short and slim, with a complexion of a yellowish 
olive, many being fairer than the average of southern Europeans. 
Their hair is long, black and smooth but coarse. Their heads 

* Much rice is cultivated in the yicinity of Houston by Japanese 
farmers. 



are round, with flat straight foreheads, flat faces, prominent 
cheekbones, small straight noses, fairly wide nostrils, and small 
black and slightly oblique eyes. The physical contrast to the 
negro is usually very obvious, but, especially among the lower 
classes, there is a tendency to thick lips, kinky hair and dark 
skin. In many of their customs, such as taboo, infanticide, 
marriage and funeral rites, they show their Indonesian origin. 
Most of them now profess Christianity. 

HOVE, a municipal borough of Sussex, England, adjoining the 
watering-place of Brighton on the west, on the London, Brighton, 
& South Coast railway. Pop. (1901) 3°\535. The great sea- 
wall of Brighton continues along the front at Hove, forming a 
pleasant promenade. Here is the Sussex county cricket ground. 
The municipal borough, incorporated in 1898, includes the 
parishes of Hove and Aldrington, of which the first is within the 
parliamentary borough of Brighton, but the second is in the 
Lewes division of the county. The corporation consists Of a 
mayor, 10 aldermen and 30 councillors. Area, 1521 acres. 

HOVENDEN, THOMAS (1840-1895), American artist, was 
born in Dunmanway, Co. Cork, Ireland, on the 28th of 
December 1840. He was a pupil of the South Kensington Art 
Schools and those of the National Academy of Design, New 
York, whither he had removed in 1863. Subsequently he went 
to Paris and studied in the Ecole des Beaux Arts under Cabanel, 
but'passed most of his time with the American colony in Brittany, 
at Pont-Aven, where he painted many pictures of the peasantry. 
Returning to America in z88o, he became an academician in 
1882, and attracted attention by an important canvas of " The 
Last Moments of John Brown" (now in the Metropolitan 
Museum of Art). His "Breaking Home Ties," a picture o( 
American farm life, was engraved with considerable popular 
success. Hovenden was mortally injured in a heroic effort to 
save a child from a railroad train in the station at Germantown, 
near Philadelphia, and died at Norristown, Pennsylvania, on the 
14th of August 1895. Among his principal works are: — "News 
from the Conscript " (1877), " Loyalist Peasant Soldier of La 
Vendee " (1879). " A Breton Interior," " Image Seller " and 
" Jerusalem the Golden " (in the Metropolitan Museum of Art), 

HOW, WILLIAM WALSHAM (1823-1897), English divine, son 
of a Shrewsbury solicitor, was born on the 13th of December 
1823, and was educated at Shrewsbury school and Wadham 
College, Oxford. He was ordained in 1646, and for upwards of 
thirty years was actively engaged in parish work at Whittington 
in Shropshire and Oswestry (rural dean, i860). He refused 
preferment on several occasions, but his energy and success made 
him well known, and in 1879 he became a suffragan bishop in 
London, under the title of bishop of Bedford, his province being 
the East End. There he became the inspiring influence of a 
revival of church work. He founded the East London Church 
Fund, and enlisted a large band of enthusiastic helpers, his 
popularity among all classes being immense. He was particularly 
fond of children, and was commonly called "the children's 
bishop." In 1888 he was made bishop of Wakefield, and in the 
north of England he continued to do valuable work. His sermons 
were straightforward, earnest and attractive; and besides 
publishing several volumes of these, he wrote a good deal of 
verse, including such well-known hymns as "Who is this so 
weak and helpless," " Lord, Thy children guide and keep." In 
1 863-1 868 he brought out a Commentary on the Four Gospels; 
and he also wrote a Manual for the Holy Communion. In the 
movement for infusing new spiritual life into the church services, 
especially among the poor, How was a great force. He died on 
the xoth of August 1897. He was much helped in his earlier 
work by his wife, Frances A. Douglas (d. 1887). 

See his Life by his son, F. D. How (1898). 

HOWARD (Family). Among English families, the house of 
Howard has long held the first place. Its head, the duke of 
Norfolk, is the first of the dukes and the hereditary earl marshal 
of England, while the carls of Suffolk, Carlisle and Effingham and 
the Lord Howard of Glossop represent in the peerage its younger 
lines. 

Its founder was a Norfolk lawyer, William Howard or Ha ward, 



830 



HOWARD 



who wis summoned to parliament as a justice in 1295, being 
appointed a justice of the common pleas in 1297. Over the 
parentage of this man genealogists have disputed for centuries. 
The pedigree-makers have hailed him in turn as the descendant 
of a Norman " Aubcr, earl of Passy " and as the heir of Here* 
ward, " the last of the English." But out of the copies of Norfolk 
deeds and records collected for Thomas, earl of Arundel, in the 
early part of the 17th century, it seems dear enough that he 
sprang from a Norfolk family, several of whose members held 
lands at Wiggenhall near Lynn. These notes from deeds, 
evidently collected by an honest inquirer, make no extravagant 
claims of ancient ancestry or illustrious origin for the Howards, 
although the facts contained in them were recklessly manipulated 
by subservient genealogists. Doubtless the judge was the son 
of John Howard of Wiggenhall, living about 1260, whose widow 
Lucy, called by the genealogists the daughter of John Germund, 
was probably the wife of John Germund by her second marriage, 
William Howard was employed as counsel by the corporation of 
Lynn, and it is worthy of note that the " crosslets filchy " in his 
shield of arms suggest the cross with which the dragon was 
discomfited by St Margaret, the patroness of Lynn. Prospering 
by the law, William Howard of Wiggenhall tose to knight's 
rank and acquired by purchase Grancourt's manor in East 
Winch, near Lynn, where he had his seat in a moated house 
whose ruins remain. He was probably dead and buried in his 
chapel at East Winch before November 27, 1308, the date of the 
patent by which Henry Scrape succeeded him as a commissioner 
of trailbaston. His two wives, Alice Ufford and Alice Fitton— 
heir of Fitton's manor in Wiggenhall— were both daughters of 
knightly houses. Before his death his eldest son, John Howard, 
was a knight and already advanced by his marriage with Joan of 
Cornwall, one of the bastard line founded by Richard of Cornwall, 
king of the Romans. 

Sir John Howard served in Edward II. 's wars in Scotland and 
Gascony, was sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk and governor of 
Norwich Castle. When he died in 133 1 he was seised of many 
Norfolk manors. His son and heir, another Sir John, admiral of 
the king's navy in the north, was a banneret who displayed his 
banner in the army that laid siege to Calais. By the admiral's wife 
Alice, sister and heir of Sir Robert de Boys, the Howards had the 
Boys manor of Fersfield, near Diss, which is still among the 
possessions of the dukes of Norfolk. His son Sir Robert Howard, 
who had married a daughter of Sir Robert Scales (Lord Scales), 
died in 1 388. From Sir John Howard, the only son of Sir Robert, 
two branches of the house of Howard spring. The elder line was 
soon extinct. By his first wife, Margaret, daughter and heir of 
Sir John Plays, Sir John Howard had a son who died before him, 
leaving a daughter through whom descended to her issue, the 
Veres, earls of Oxford, the ancient Norfolk estates of the Howards 
at East Winch and elsewhere, with the lands of the houses of 
Scales, Plays and Walton, brought in by the brides of her fore- 
fathers. After the death of Margaret Plays, her widower found, 
with the peculiar instinct of his race, a second well-endowed 
wife. By her, the heir of the Tendrings of Tendring, he had a 
second son, Sir Robert Howard, a knight who fought under 
Henry V. in France, and died, like his half-brother, before the old 
knight's career ended in 1436. 

It is to the marriage of this young knight that the house of 
Howard owes the tragedy of its greatness. He was a younger 
son, although he had some of his mother's inheritance. Had he 
married the landless daughter of a neighbour he might have been 
the ancestor of a line of Essex squires, whose careers would have 
had the parish topographer for chronicler. But his bride was 
Margaret Mowbray, daughter of the banished duke of Norfolk. 
Although this was a noble alliance, it is probable that the lady 
had no great portion. The head of her elder brother, the boy 
earl marshal, had been stricken off in the cornfield under the 
walls of York, but her younger brother's right to his father's 
dukedom was allowed by parliament in 1425. 

Sir John Howard, only son of the match between Howard 
and Mowbray, took service with his cousin the third duke of 
Norfolk, who had him returned as knight of the shire for Norfolk, 



where, according to the Paston Letters, this Howard of the 
Essex branch was regarded by the gentry as a strange man. 
He followed the White Rose and was knighted at the crowning 
of King Edward IV., who pricked him for sheriff of Norfolk and 
Suffolk. In the duke's quarrel he brawled with the Pastons, 
his wife boasting that, should her husband's men meet with 
John Paston " there should go no penny for his hfe." " And 
Howard," writes Clement Paston, " hath with the king a great 
fellowship." Offices and lands came to John Howard by reason 
of that fellowship. Henry VI., when restored, summoned him 
to parliament in 1470 as Lord Howard, a summons which may 
have been meant to lure him to London into Warwick's power, 
but he proclaimed the Yorkist sovereign on his return and 
fought at Barnet and Tewkesbury. When peace was made, 
Edward summoned him again as a baron and gave him the 
Garter and the trcasurership of his household. After Edward's 
burial, at which he bore the king's banner, Howard, an enemy 
of the Wydviks, linked his fortunes with those of the duke of 
Gloucester. At this time came his sudden lifting to the highest 
rank in the peerage. The last of the dukes of Norfolk had left 
a child heir, Anne Mowbray, married to the infant duke of York, 
the younger of the princes doomed by Richard in the Tower. 
By the death of this little girl, John Howard became one of the 
coheirs of her illustrious house, which was now represented by 
the issue of Margaret Mowbray, his mother, and of her sister 
Isabel, who had married James, Lord Berkeley. A lion's share 
of the Mowbray estates, swollen by the great alliances of the 
house, heir of Brcouse and Segrave, and, through Segrave, of 
Thomas of Brotherton, son of Edward I., fell to Howard, who, 
by a patent of June 28, 1483, was created duke of Norfolk and 
earl marshal of England with a remainder to the heirs male of 
his body. On the same day the lord Berkeley,. the other coheir, 
was made earl of Nottingham. High steward at Richard's 
crowning, the duke bore the crown and rode as marshal into 
Westminster Hall. For the rest of his IHe he was Richard's 
man, and though warned by the famous couplet that " Dykoa 
his master " was bought and sold, " Jack of Norfolk M Jed tbe 
archer vanguard at Bos worth and died in the fight, from which 
his son the earl of Surrey was carried away a wounded prisoner. 
An attainder by the first parliament of Henry VII. extinguished 
the honours of the father with those of the son, who had been 
created an earl when the lord Howard was raised to the dukedom. 
Their estates were forfeit. 

Thomas Howard, a politic mind, loyal to the powers that be, 
was released from the Tower of London in 1489, his earldom 
of Surrey and his Garter restored. Accepting the position 
in which the Tudor king would have his great nobles, he become 
the faithful soldier, diplomatist and official of the new power. 
In his seventieth year, as lieutenant-general of the North, be 
led the English host on the great day of Floddcn, earning a 
patent of the dukedom of Norfolk, dated 1 February 1 513/4. 
and that strange patent which granted to him and his heirs 
that they should bear in the midst of the silver bend of their 
Howard shield a demi-lion stricken in the mouth with an arrow, 
in the right colours of the arms of the king of Scotland. This 
augmentation has been interpreted as a golden scocheon with tbe 
demi-lion within the Scottish tressure. Thus charged on the 
silver bend, it makes bad armory and it is worthy of note thai, 
although the grant of it is dearly to the duke and his heirs in 
fee simple, Howards of all branches descending from the duke 
bear it in their shields, even though all right to it has long passed 
from the bouse to the duke's heirs general, the Slourtons and 
Petres. \ 

Tbe victor of Flodden is the common ancestor of all living 
Howards that can show a descent from the main stock. The 
second duke, twice married, was father of at least eleven sons 
and six daughters, the sons including Edward the lord high 
admiral, killed in boarding Present's galleys at Brest, Edmund 
the knight marshal of the army at Flodden, and William the 
first Lord Howard of Effingham. The eldest son, Thomas, 
succeeded as the third duke of his name, although the second 
under the patent of 1514. He had fought as captain of the 



HOWARD 



83* 



vanguard at Flodden and alter the victory was created earl of 
Surrey. When Richard III. was allying himself with the Howards, 
Thomas Howard, a boy of eleven, had been betrothed to Anne, 
daughter of the late King Edward IV., and Henry VII. allowed 
the marriage with his queen's sister to take place in 1405. This 
royal bride died of consumption, leaving no living child, 
and her husband took in 15x3, as his second wife, Elizabeth 
Stafford, daughter of that duke of Buckingham upon whom the 
old duke of Norfolk, the tears upon his cheeks, was forced to 
pass sentence of death. Succeeding his father in 1524, Norfolk 
was created earl marshal in 1533. An unsuccessful diplomatist, 
his chief services in arms were the butchery in the north after 
the Pilgrimage of Grace and the raid into Scotland which ended 
with the rout of Solway Moss. He left his wife for a mistress, 
Elizabeth Holland, was in discord with his family, and lived to 
see his two nieces, Anne Bolcyn and Catherine Howard, and his 
son Surrey, the fiery-tempered poet, go in turn to the block. 
He himself was attainted and was lying a prisoner in the Tower, 
doomed to die in the morning, on the night of the death of 
Henry VIII. He was not released until the accession of Mary, 
parliament restoring his dukedom on his petition for reversal 
of the attainder. His grandson Thomas succeeded him in 1554, 
and m 2556 made the second of those marraiges which have 
given the Howards their high place among the English nobility. 
The bride was Mary, sole heir in her issue of her father Henry, 
the last of the Fitzalan earls of Arundel. Her father's line and 
the royal Stewards of Scotland sprang from one forefather, 
Alan, son of Flaald the Breton. The Mowbray match had already 
brought to the Howards the representation of an elder line 
of the Fitzalan earls, who sat in the scats of their ancestors, 
the Aubignys and Warennes, great earls near akin to their 
sovereigns. And now the younger line, earls of Arundel and 
Lords Mautravers, were also to have a Howard to represent 
them. From this time the spreading genealogy of the Howards^ 
drew its origins from most of the illustrious names of the houses' 
founded after the Norman Conquest 

The young duchess died in her seventeenth year after giving 
birth to a son, and the duke took a second wife from a humble 
stock, newly enriched and honoured, the daughter of Henry 
VIII.'s subservient chancellor, the Lord Audley of Walden. 
Within ten years he married a third time, the lady being Elizabeth 
Leybourne, the widow of Lord Dacre of Gflsland. She survfved 
her marriage but a few months and her husband then obtained 
the wardship of her Dacre offspring, a son who died young, and 
three daughters whom the duke, with the true Howard eye for 
a rich inheritance, gave as brides to three of his sons. After three 
such good fortunes by marriage Norfolk in his folly looked for 
a crown with a fourth match, listening to the laird of Lcthington 
when he set forth the scheme by which the duke was to marry 
a restored queen of Scots and rule Scotland with her who should 
be recognized as Elizabeth's successor. Ten months in the Tower 
under strong' suspicion would have warned another man, but 
Norfolk was unstable and false. After promising fidelity and 
{he abandonment of the Scots marriage scheme, Cecil took him 
corresponding with Mary and tampering with the Ridolfi pldt. 
He died on Tower Hill in 1572 for an example to the disloyal 
counties, protesting innocence and repentance, warning his 
children in a last letter to discredit all " false bruits " that he 
was a papist. 

By his attainder the Norfolk titles were once more forfeited. 
But Philip Howard, the son and heir, succeeded to the ancient 
earldom of Arundel in 1580, on the death of his maternal grand- 
father, while the Lord Lumley, his uncle by marriage, surrendered 
to him his rife interest in the castle and honour of Arundel. 
The next year an act of parliament restored the earl in blood. 
After a profligate youth at court, he followed his wife in pro- 
fessing trie Roman faith, and in 1585 made an attempt to leave 
England to seek safety from the penal laws. But his ship was 
boarded in the Channel and the earl, condemned by the Star- 
Chamber to a heavy fine and to imprisonment during the queen's 
pleasure, suffered a harsh captivity in the Tower. After the 
defeat of the Armada he had been condemned to death on a 



charge of high treason, founded on the tale drawn by torture from 
a priest, that Arundel had urged him to say a mass for the success 
of the Spaniards. But he was allowed to linger in his prison 
until 1505 when he died, the sight of bis wife and children being 
cruelly refused to the dying man. Thus it befell that, of the chiefs 
of the Howards born since the great Mowbray alliance, two had 
died by the axe and one in the prison from which a fourth had 
hardly escaped. A fifth had fallen in a lost battle, and only one 
had died in peace in his own house. 

The ill fate of the Howards seemed to be appeased by the 
death of Philip, earl of Arundel. Tudor policy did its work well, 
and noblemen, however illustrious their pedigrees, could no 
longer be counted as menaces by the Crown, which was, indeed, 
finding another rival to its power. In the first year of James I., 
Thomas, the young son of Earl Philip, was restored in blood and 
given the titles of Arundel and Surrey. But the lands belonging 
to these titles remained with the Crown and he had to repair his 
fortunes by one of those marriages which never failed his house, 
his wife being Alathea Talbot, who was at last the heir of Gilbert, 
earl of Shrewsbury. To the grief of his mother he left the Roman 
church. A knight of the Garter, he was in 1621 created earl 
marshal for life, and revived the jurisdiction belonging to the 
office. An act of 1627, one of several such aimed at aggrandizing 
families by diverting the descent of dignities in fee from heirs 
genera], entailed the earldom and castle of Arundel upon Thomas, 
earl of Arundel and Surrey and the heirs male of his body " and 
for default of such issue, to the heirs of his body." His pride 
and austerity made him unpopular at court and he left the 
country in 2642, settling at last in Padua, where he died in 
2646, impoverished by the sequestrations of the parliament, 
whose forces had taken and retaken his castle of Arundel 
In answer to his petition for the dukedom, the king had, on 
the 6th of June 2644, given him a patent of the earldom of 
Norfolk, in order, as it would seem, to flatter him by suggesting 
that the title of Norfolk would at least be refused to any other 
family. He is celebrated as a collector of paintings, books, gems 
and sculptures, his "Arundel marbles" being given by his 
grandson in 2667 to the University of Oxford. The dukedom 
for which Arundel had petitioned Charles I. in vain was restored 
by act of the first parliament of Charles II. to his grandson 
Thomas, a lunatic living at Padua, on whose death in 2677 it 
passed to this Thomas's brother, Henry Frederick, who had been 
created earl of Norwich and hereditary earl marshal of England 
in 2672. In 2777 Edward, the ninth of the Howard dukes, died 
childless in fas ninety-second year. With him ended the earldom 
of Norwich, while the representation of the Mowbrays and 
Scgraves passed to his nieces, the Ladies Stourton and Pctrc, 
the abeyance of the two baronies being determined in 2878 in 
favour of Lord Stourton. Under the act of 2627 the earldom 
of Arundel and the castle passed with the dukedom to a second 
cousin, Charles Howard of Greystock (d. 2786), an eccentric 
recluse. At his death in 2786 he was succeeded by his son 
Charles, the notorious "Jockey of Norfolk," the big, coarse, 
generous, slovenly, hard-drinking Whig of whom all the memoir- 
writers of his age have their anecdotes. He conformed to the 
Church of England and spent a vast sum in restoring Arundel 
Castle. A third cousin succeeded him in 2825, Bernard Edward 
Howard, who, although a Roman Catholic, was enabled, by the 
act of 2824, to act as earl marshal. This was the grandfather 
of the fifteenth duke, earl of Arundel, Surrey and Norfolk, and 
hereditary earl marshal of England. 

The eldest of the cadet branches of the ducal house has its origin 
in William (c. 1 510-1573), eldest son of the victor of Flodden by his 
second marriage. He survived the reign of Henry VIII., that 
perilous age for the Howards, with no worse misadventure than the 
conviction of himself and his wife of misprision of treason in concealing 
the offences of his niece, Queen Catherine. But both were pardoned. 
In 1553 he had the office of lord admiral of England, and in the next 
year the Garter. For his services against Sir Thomas Wyat he 
was created (March 21, 2553/4) Lord Howard of Effingham, the 
title being taken from a Surrey manor granted him by Edward VI. 
Queen Elizabeth continued his employment in diplomacy, and bad 
he been richer he might have had an earldom. His eldest son 
Charles (1536-2634), lord admiral of England in 2585, sailed n 



832 



HOWARD, CATHERINE— HOWARD, J. 



mada, and. although 
,nd his other officers, 
©us. He was created 
The legend that the 
ity. Two of his sons 
Sham, extinct on the 
r William Howard of 
(lira!, carried on the 
to the barony on the 
th Lord Howard of 
731, a title extinct in 
1837 for the eleventh 
the Peninsular earn- 
er. 

(1540-1614), younger 
1 peerage which ended 
>l his house. 
c's marriage with the 
Walden, founded the 
ire and of the extinct 
sward of Walden has 
Howard (1563-1640), 
auld Willie " of more 
the fourth duke and 
' the three co-heirs of 
Elizabeth more than 
mate earl of Arundel. 
' the Dacre lands, to 
id. a border patriarch, 
isioncr of the borders. 
i fledged in a nest of 
:er for the parliament, 
louse of Lords, but he 
are in Booth's insur- 
ited, in 1661, carl of 
Gilsland, titles which 
r Francis Howard, a 
ild Willie," come the 
ranch without a here- 
ditary title. 

William Howard, Viscount Stafford, was the fifth is. 

earl of Arundel, and grandson of Philip the prise ng 

the sister and heir of the fifth Lord St a fiord, who < he 

and his wife were created Baron and Baroness Staff nt 

of 1640, with remainder, in default of heirs male, le. 

A giant of the precedence enjoyed by the bride's fa Id 

illegal, her husband was in the same year created Vi -d. 

Roger Stafford, the impoverished heir male of the ai is, 

had been forced to surrender his barony to the king I ed 

in the preceding year, a piece of injustice which is in all 

modern conceptions of peerage law. The Viscount £ ne 

of the " five Popish lords " committed to the Tower in 1678 as a 
result of the slanders of Titus Oates and he died by the axe in 1680 
upon testimony which, as the diarist Evelyn protested, "should not 
be taken against the life of a dog." But three carls of his own 
house— Carlisle, Suffolk and Berkshire — and the Lord Howard of 
Escrick, an ex-trooper of Cromwell's guard and an anabaptist 
sectary, gave their votes against him. his nephew Mowbray being 
the only peer of his name in the minority for acquittal. In 1688 his 
widow was created countess of Stafford for life, and his eldest son, 
Henry, had the earldom of Stafford, with special remainder to his 
brothers. This earldom ended in 1762, out the attainder was 
reversed by an act of 1824 and in the following year Sir George 

ierningham, the heir general, established his claim to the Stafford 
arony of 1640. 

Authorities. — State papers;* patent, close and plea rolls. 
Tieroey, History of Arundel; G. E. C, Compute Peerage; J. H. 
Round, Peerage Studies; Howard of Corby, Memorials of lie Family 
of Howard; Brenan and Statham, House of Howard; Howard, 
Historical Anecdotes of the Howard Family; Morant, Essex; Blome- 
field, Norfolk. (0. Ba.) 

HOWARD, CATHERINE (d. 1542), the fifth queen of Henry 
VIII., was a daughter of Lord Edmund Howard and a grand- 
daughter of Thomas Howard, 2nd duke of Norfolk (d. 1524). 
Her father was very poor, and Catherine lived mainly with 
Agnes, widow of the and duke of Norfolk, meeting the king 
at the house of Stephen Gardiner, bishop of Winchester. Henry 
was evidently charmed by her; the Roman Catholic party, 
who disliked the marriage with Anne of Cleves, encouraged 
his attentions; and after Anne's divorce he was privately 
married to Catherine at Oatlands in July 1 540. Soon afterwards 
she was publicly acknowledged as queen. Before her marriage 
Catherine had had several lovers, among them being a musician, 
Henry Mannock, or Manox; her cousin, Thomas Culpepper; 
and Francis Dereham, to whom she had certainly been betrothed. 



After becoming queen she occasionally met Dereham and 
Culpepper, and in November 1541 Archbishop Cranmer informed 
Henry that his queen's past life bad not been stainless. Cranmer 
had obtained his knowledge indirectly from an old servant of th* 
duchess of Norfolk. Dereham confessed to his relations with 
Catherine, and after some denials the queen herself admitted 
that this was true, but denied that she had ever been betrothed 
to Dereham, or that she had misconducted herself since her 
marriage. Dereham and Culpepper were executed in December 
1 54 1 and their accomplices were punished, but Catherine was 
released from prison. Some fresh information, however, very 
soon came to light showing that she had been unchaste since 
her marriage; a bill of attainder was passed through pa rl ia m ent, 
and on the 13th of February 1542 the queen was beheaded. 

See A. Strickland, Lives of the Queens of England (vol. ni. 1877)- 

HOWARD, JOHN (1726-1700), English philanthropist and 
prison reformer, was born at Hackney, probably on the and of 
September 1726. His childhood was passed at Carding! on, 
near Bedford, where his father, a retired merchant of independent 
means, had a small estate. He was apprenticed to a firm of 
grocers in the city of London, but on the death of bis father in 
1742, by which he inherited considerable property, be bought 
up his indenture, and devoted more than a year to foreign traveL 
Never constitutionally strong, he became, on his return to 
England, a confirmed invalid. Having been nursed through an 
acute illness by an attentive landlady, a widow of some fifty- 
three years of age, Howard, in return for her kindness, offered 
her marriage and they were united in 1 752. Becoming a widower 
in less than three years, he determined to go abroad again, 
Portugal being his destination. The ship, however, in which 
he sailed was taken by a French privateer, the crew and passengers 
being carried to Brest, where they were treated with great 
severity. Howard was permitted to return to England on 
parole to negotiate an exchange, which he accomplished, as 
well as successfully representing the case of his fellow-captives. 
He now settled down on his Cardington property, interesting 
himself in meteorological observations. He was admitted a 
member of the Royal Society in 1756. In 1758 he married 
Henrietta, daughter of Edward Leeds, of Croxton, Cambridge- 
shire. He continued to lead a secluded life at Cardington and 
at Wat combe, Hampshire, busying himself in the construction 
of model cottages and the erection of schools. In 1765 bis 
second wife died after giving birth to a son. In the following 
year Howard went for a prolonged foreign tour, from which he 
returned in 1770. 

In 1773 the characteristic work of his life may be said to 
have begun by his acceptance of the office of high sheriff of 
Bedford. When the assizes were held he did not content himself 
with sitting out the trials in open court, his inquisitiveness and bis 
benevolence alike impelled him to visit the gaol Howard found 
it, like all the prisons of the time, wretchedly defective in its 
arrangements; but what chiefly shocked him was the circum- 
stance that neither the gaoler nor his subordinates were salaried 
officers, but were dependent for their livelihood on fees from 
the prisoners. He found that some whom the juries had declared 
not guilty, others in whom the grand jury had net found evea 
such appearance of guilt as would warrant a trial, others whose 
prosecutors had failed to appear, were frequently detained in 
prison for months after they had ceased to be in the position 
of accused parlies, until they should have paid the fees of gaol 
delivery (see Introduction to The Stale of the Prisms of EmgUni 
and Wales). His prompt application to the justices of the 
county for a salary to the gaoler in lieu of his fees was met by a 
demand for a precedent in charging the county with an expense. 
This he undertook to find if such a thing existed. He went 
accordingly from county to county, and though be could find 
no precedent for charging the county with the wages of its 
servants he did find so many abuses in prison management 
that he determined to devote himself to their reform. 

In 1774 he gave evidence before a committee of the House 
of Commons, and received the thanks of the house for " the 
humanity and zeal which have led him to visit the several gaols 



HOWARD, O. O. 



833 



of this kingdom, and to communicate to the House the interesting 
observations which he has made on that subject" Almost 
immediately an act was passed which provided for the liberation, 
free of all charges, of every prisoner against whom the grand 
jury failed to find a true bill, giving the gaoler a sura from the 
county rate in lieu of the abolished fees. Tnis was followed in 
June by another requiring justices of the peace to see that the 
walls and ceilings of all prisons within their jurisdiction were 
scraped and whitewashed once a year at least; that the rooms 
were regularly cleaned and ventilated; that infirmaries were 
provided for the sick, and proper care taken to get them medical 
advice; that the naked should be clothed; that underground 
dungeons should be used as little as could "be; and generally 
that such courses should be taken as would tend to restore and 
preserve the health of the prisoners. It was highly characteristic 
of the man that, having caused the provisions of the new legisla- 
tion to be printed at his own private cost in large type, he sent 
a copy to every gaoler and warder in the kingdom, that no one 
should be able to plead ignorance of the law if detected in the 
violation of its provisions. He then set out upon a new tour of 
inspection, from which, however, he was brought home by the 
approach of a general election in September 1774. Standing 
as one of the anti-ministerial candidates for Bedford, he was 
returned by a narrow majority but was unseated after a 
scrutiny. 

After a tour in Scotland and Ireland, he set out in April 1775 
upon an extended tour through France, the Low Countries 
and Germany. At Paris he was at first denied access to the 
prisons; but, by recourse to an old and almost obsolete law of 
171 7, according to which any person wishing to distribute alms 
to the prisoners was to be admitted, he succeeded in inspecting 
the Bicetre, the Force l'£v6que and most of the other places 
of confinement, the only important exception being the Bastille. 
Even in that case he succeeded in obtaining possession of a 
suppressed pamphlet, which he afterwards translated and 
published in English, to the unconcealed chagrin of the French 
authorities. At Ghent he examined with special interest the 
great Maison de Force, then recently erected, with its distinctive 
features— useful labour, in the profits of which the prisoners 
bad a share, and complete separation of the inmates by night. 
At Amsterdam, as in Holland generally, he was much struck 
with the comparative absence of crime, a phenomenon which 
he attributed to the industrial and reformatory treatment there 
adopted. In Germany he found little that wis useful andmuch 
that was repulsive; in Hanover and OsnabrOck, under the rule 
of a British sovereign, he even found traces of torture. After 
a short tour in England (Nov. 1775 to May 1776), he again 
went abroad, extending his tour to several of the Swiss cantons. 
Jn 1777 appeared The State of ike Prisons in England and Wales, 
with Prektninary Observations, and an Account of same Foreign 
Prisons. One of the immediate results was the drafting a bill 
for the establishment of penitentiary houses, where by means 
of solitary imprisonment, accompanied by well-regulated 
labour and religious instruction, the object of reforming the 
c*fr™n»i and inaring him to habits of industry might be pursued. 
New buildings were manifestly necessary; and Howard volun- 
teered to go abroad again and collect plans* He first went 
to Amsterdam (April 2778), and carefully examined the "spin- 
houses " and " rasp-houses" 1 for which that city was famous; 
next he traversed Prussia, Saxony, Bohemia, Austria and Italy; 
e v er yw here inspecting prisons, hospitals and workhouses, and 
carefully recording the merits and defects of each. The informa- 
tion he thus obtained having been placed at the service of 
parliament, a bill was passed for building two penitentiary 
houses, and Howard was appointed first supervisor, but he 
resigned the post before anything practical had been achieved. 
In 1780 he had published a quarto volume as an appendix (the 
first) to his State of Prisons ; about the same time also he 
caused to be printed his translation of the suppressed French 

'The spmhouses were for women p ri soner s , who were set to 
•pinning or other useful work: in the rasp-houses, the prisoners 
were employed in rasping wood, 
xm. 15 



pamphlet on the Bastille; but on obtaining release from hfc 
employments at home his passion for accumulating statistics 
urged him to new and more extended continental tours, as far 
as to Denmark, Sweden and Russia in 2781, and to Spain and 
Portugal in 2783. The results of these journeys were embodied 
in 1784 in a second appendix, with the publication of which his 
direct Jabours in connexion with the subject of prison reform 
may be said to have ceased. 

The five remaining years of his life were chiefly devoted to 
researches on the means for prevention of the plague, and for 
guarding against the propagation of contagious, distempers 
in general After an extended tour on the continent his researches 
seemed to be complete; and with a great accumulation of papers 
and memoranda, he was preparing to return homewards from 
Constantinople by Vienna, when it occurred to his scrupulous 
mind that he still lacked any personal experience of quarantine 
discipline. He returned to Smyrna, and, deliberately choosing 
a foul ship, took a passage to Venice. A protracted voyage 
of sixty days, during which an attack by pirates gave Howard 
an opportunity of manifesting his personal bravery, was followed 
by a weary term of confinement which enabled him to gain the 
experience he had desired. While imprisoned in the Venetian 
lazaretto he received the information that his only son, a youth 
of twenty-two years of age, had lost his reason and had been 
put under restraint. Returning hastily by Trieste and Vienna 
(where he had a long and singular interview with the emperor 
Joseph II.), he reached England in February 2787. His first 
care related to his domestic concerns; ht then set out upon 
another journey of inspection of the prisons of the United 
Kingdom, at the same time busying himself in preparing (or 
the press the results of his recent tour. The somewhat rambling 
work containing them was published in 2708 at Warrington, 
under the title An Account of the Principal Lazarettos in Europe ; 
with various Papers relative to the Plague, together with further 
Observations on some Foreign Prisons and Hospitals, and addi- 
tional Remarks on the present State of those in Great Britain and 
Ireland. 

In July 1780 he embarked on what proved to be his last 
journey. Travelling overland to St Petersburg and Moscow, 
and so southwards, and visiting the principal military hospitals 
that lay on his route, he reached Kherson in November. In the 
hospitals of this place and of the immediate neighbourhood be 
found more than enough to occupy his attention while he awaited 
the means of transit to Constantinople. Towards the end of the 
year his medical advice was asked in the case of a young lady who 
was suffering under the camp fever then prevalent, and in 
attending her he himself took the disease, which terminated 
fatally on the aoth of January 2700. He was buried near the 
village of Dauphigny on the road to St Nicholas. There is a 
statue by Bacon to his memory in St Paul's, London, and one at 
Bedford by A. Gilbert. In personal appearance Howard is 
described as having been short, thin and sallow — unpre- 
possessing apart from the attraction of a penetrating eye and a 
benevolent smile. 

Authorities.— X**akter of Ike Life and Character of John Howard, 
written by a Gentleman (1700): AUan. View of the Character and 
Public Services of the late John Howard (1792); Memoirs by I. 
Baldwin Brown (1818): T. Taylor (1836), Hepworth Dixon (1849), 
J. Field (1850), and J. Stoughton, Howard the Philanthropist (1884). 

HOWARD, OLIVER OTIS (1830-2009), American soldier, was 
born in Leeds, Maine, on t}ie 8th of November 1830. He gradu- 
ated at Bowdoin College in 2850, and at the U.S. Military 
Academy in 2854. In 2857 he served in Florida against the 
Seminole Indians, and from 2857 to 2862 he was assistant 
professor of mathematics at West Point. At the beginning of the 
Civil War he resigned to become colonel of the 3rd Maine volun- 
teer regiment, and at the first battle of Bull Run was in command 
of a brigade. In September he was promoted brigadier-general 
of volunteers. He served in the Peninsular Campaign, and at 
the battle of Seven Pines (Fair Oaks) he was twice wounded, 
losing his right arm. On his return to active service in August 
286s he took part in the Virginian campaigns of 2862-63; at 

2a 



«34 



HOWARD, SIR R.— HOWARD OF EFFINGHAM 



Antktam he succeeded Sedgwick in command of a division, and 
he became major-general of volunteers in March 1863. In the 
campaign of Chancellorsville (see Wilderness) he commanded the 
XI. corps, which was routed by "Stonewall" Jackson, and in the 
first day's battle at Gettysburg he was for some hours (succeeding 
Doubleday after Reynolds's death) in command of the Union 
troops. The XI. corps was transferred to Tennessee after 
Rosecrans's defeat at Chickamauga, and formed part of Hooker's 
command in the great victory of Chattanooga. When Sherman 
prepared to invade Georgia in the spring of 1864 the XI. corps was 
merged with the XII. into the new XX., commanded by Hooker, 
and Howard was then placed in command of the new IV. corps, 
which he led in all the actions of the Atlanta campaign*, receiving 
another wound at Pickett's Mills. On the death in action of 
General M'Pherson, Howard, in July 1864, was selected to com- 
mand the Army of the Tennessee. In this position he took part 
in the " March to the Sea " and the Carolina* campaign. In 
March 1865 he was breveted major-general U.S.A. " for gallant 
and meritorious service in the battle of Ezra Church and during 
the campaign against Atlanta," and in 1893 received a Con- 
gressional medal of honour for bravery at Fair Oaks. After the 
peace he served as commissioner of the Bureau of Refugees, 
Freedmcn and Abandoned Lands from 1865 until 1874; in 1872 
he was special commissioner to the hostile Apaches of New 
Mexico and Arizona; in 1874-1881 was in command of the 
Department of the Columbia and conducted the campaign 
against Chief Joseph in 1877 and that against the Bannocks and 
Piutes in 1878. In 1 881-1882 he was superintendent of West 
Point; and in 1 882-1886 he commanded the Department of 
the Platte, In 1886-1888 the Department of the Pacific, and in 
1888-1804 the Department of the East. In. 1886 he was pro- 
moted major-general and in 1804 he retired. He died at 
Burlington, Vermont, on the 26th of October 1900. 

Howard was deeply interested in the welfare of the negroes; 
and the establishment by the U.S. Government in 1867 
of Howard University, at Washington, especially for their 
education, was largely due to him; it was named in his 
honour, and from 1869 to 1873 he presided over it. In 1895 
he founded for the education of the " mountain whites " the 
Lincoln Memorial University at Cumberland Gap, Tenn. (see 
Cumberland Mountains), and became president of its board. 
He held honorary degrees of various universities, and was a 
chevalier of the Legion of Honour. He wrote, amongst other 
works, Donald's Schooldays (1877); Chief Joseph (i88i>; a life 
of General Zachary Taylor (1892) in the " Great Commanders " 
aeries; Isabella of Castile (1894); Fighting for Humanity 
(1898); Henry in the War (1898); papers in the " Battles and 
Leaders" collection on the Atlanta campaign; My Life and 
Experience among our Hostile Indians (1007); and Autobio- 
graphy of O. O. Howard (2 vols., New York, 1007). 

HOWARD, SIR ROBERT (1626-1698), English dramatist, 
sixth son of Thomas Howard, 1st earl of Berkshire, was born in 
1626. He was knighted at the second battle of Newbury (1644) 
for his signal courage on the Royalist side. Imprisoned in 
Windsor Castle under the Commonwealth, his loyalty was 
rewarded at the Restoration, and he eventually became auditor 
of the exchequer. His best play is a comedy, The Committee, or 
the Faithful Irishman (1663; printed 1605), which kept the stage, 
long after its interest as a political satire was exhausted, for the 
character of Tcague, said to have been drawn from one of his own 
servants. He was an early patron of Dryden, who married his 
sister, Lady Elizabeth Howard, and in the Indian Queen, a 
tragedy in heroic verse (1664; P*. 1665) Howard had assistance 
from Dryden, although the fact was not made public until the 
production of Dryden's Indian Emperor. The magnificence of 
the spectacle, and the novelty of the costume of feathers, pre- 
sented by Mrs. Aphra Behn, that was worn by Zempoalla, the 
Indian queen, made a great sensation. The scenery and acces- 
sories were unusually brilliant, the richest ever seen in England, 
according to Evelyn. In 1665 Howard published Foure New 
Plays, in the preface to which he opposed the view maintained 
by Dryden in the dedicatory epistle to The Rival Ladies, that 



rhyme was better suited to the heroic tragedy than blank 1 
Howard made an exception in favour of the rhyme of Lord 
Orrery, but by his silence concerning Dryden implicated him in 
the general censure. Dryden answered by placing Howard* s 
sentiments in the mouth of Crites in his own Essay on Dramatic 
Poesy (1668). The controversy did not end here, but Diodes 
completely worsted his adversary in the 1668 edition of The 
Indian Emperor, Howard died on the 3rd of September 1608. 

His brother, James Howard, wrote two comedies, All Mistaken, 
or the Mad Couple, a comedy (1667; pr. 1672), and The English 
Mounsieur (1666; pr. 1674), the success of which seems to have 
been partly due to the acting of Nell Gwynn. 

HOWARD, LORD WILLIAM (1563-1640), known as M Belted 
or Bauld (bold) Will," 3rd son of Thomas Howard, 4th duke of 
Norfolk (executed in 1572), and of his second wife Margaret, 
daughter of Lord Audley, was born at Audley End in Essex 
on the 19th of December 1563. He married on the 28th of 
October 1577 Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas, Lord Dacre, and 
proceeded subsequently to the University of Cambridge. Being 
suspected of treasonable intentions together with bis elder 
brother, Philip, earl of Arundel, he was imprisoned in 1585, 
1585 and 1589. He joined the church of Rome in 15S4, both 
brothers being dispossessed by the queen of a portion of their 
Dacre estates, which were, however, restored in 1601 for a pay- 
ment of £10,000. Howard then took up his residence with his 
children and grandchildren at Naworth Castle in Cumberland, 
restored the castle, improved the estate and established order 
in that part of the country. In 1603, on the accession of James, 
he had been restored in blood. In 1618 he was made one of the 
commissioners for the border, and performed great services 
in upholding the law and suppressing marauders. Lord WHttam 
was a learned and accomplished scholar, praised by Camden, 
to whom be sent inscriptions and drawings from relics collected 
by him from the Roman wall, as M a singular lover of valuable 
antiquity and learned withaL" He collected a valuable library, 
of which most of the printed works remain still at Naworth, 
though the MSS. have been dispersed, a portion being now in 
the Arundel MSS. in the Royal College of Arms; be corresponded 
with Ussher and was intimate with Camden, Spelman, and 
Cotton, whose eldest son married bis daughter. He pabusned 
in 1592 an edition of Florence of Worcester's Chronica* ex 
Chronicis, dedicated to Lord Burghley, and drew up a genealogy 
of his family, now among the duke of Norfolk's MSS. at Norfolk 
House. He died in October 1640 at Greystock, to which place 
he had been removed when failing in health to escape the Scots 
who were threatening an advance on Naworth. He bad a large 
family of children, of whom Philip, his heir, was the grandfather 
of Charles, xst earl of Carlisle, and Francis was the ancestor of 
the Howards of Corby. 

HOWARD OP BFFDWHAM. WILLIAM HOWARD, xst 
Bason (c. 1 510-1573), English lord high admiral, was the son 
of the 2nd duke of Norfolk. He was popular with Henry VHL, 
and at Anne Boleyn's coronation was deputy earl marshal; 
and he was sent on missions to Scotland and France; bat ia 
1541 he was charged with abetting his relative Queen Catherine 
Howard, and was convicted of misprision of treason, bat pardoned. 
In 1552 he was made governor of Calais, and in 1553 lord Ugh 
admiral, being created Baron Howard of Effingham in 1554 
for his defence of London in Sir Thomas Wyat's rebellion against 
Queen Mary. He befriended the princess Elizabeth, bat fats 
popularity with the navy saved him from Mary's resentment; 
and when Elizabeth became queen he had great influence wkh 
her and filled several important posts. His son, the second 
baron, who is famous In English naval history, was created earl 
of Nottingham (?•»•); and from a younger son the later earls 
of Effingham were descended. William's descendant, Francis 
(d. 1695), inherited the barony of Howard of Effingham on the 
death of his consin, Charles, in 1681; and Frands's son, Franca 
(1683-1743), was created earl of Effingham in 1731. This earldom 
became extinct on the death of Richard, the fourth holder, m 
1816; but it was created again in 1837 in favour of . 
Alciindc 1^1767-1845), another of William Howard's d 



HOWE, EUAS— HOWE; JOSEPH » 



*3S 



wbo had succeeded to the barony of Howard of Effingham in 
i8t6. 

HOWE* BXIAS (1810-1867), American sewing-machine 
inventor, was born in Spencer, Massachusetts, on the 9th of July 
1&10. His early years were spent oa his father's farm. In 1835 
he entered the factory of a manufacturer of cotton-machinery 
at Lowell, Massachusetts, where he learned the machinist's 
trade Subsequently, while employed in a machine shop at 
Cambridge, Mass., he conceived the idea of a sewing machine, 
and for five years spent all his spare time in its development 
In September 1846 a patent for a practical sewing machine was 
granted to him; and Howe spent the following two years 
(1847-1840) in London, employed by William Thomas, a corset 
manufacturer, to whom he had sold the English rights for £250. 
Years of disappointment and discouragement followed before 
he was successful in introducing his invention, and several 
imitations which infringed his patent, particularly that of Isaac 
Merritt Singer (1811-1875), had already been successfully 
introduced and were widely used His rights were established 
after much litigation in 1854, and by the date of expiration 
of his patent (1867) he had realised something over $2,000,000 
out of his invention. He died in Brooklyn, New York, on the 
3rd of October 1867. 

See History of the Sewtng Machine and of Elias Howe, Jr., the 
Inventor (Detroit, 1867). P C. Hubert. Jr , Inventors, in " Men of 
Achievement " series (New York, 1893) 

HOWE, JOHN (1630-1706), English Puritan divine, was born 
an the 17th of May 1630 at Loughborough, Leicestershire, 
where his father was vicar. On the 19th of May 1647 he entered 
Christ's College, Cambridge, as a sizar, and in the following 
year took his degree of B.A. During his residence at the univer- 
sity he made the acquaintance of Ralph Cudworth, Henry 
More and John Smith, from intercourse with whom, as wen* 
as from direct acquaintance with the Dialogues themselves, 
his mind received that ° Platonic tinge " so perceptible in 
his writings. Immediately after graduation at Cambridge, be 
migrated to Oxford, where he became fellow and chaplain of 
Magdalen College, proceeding M.A. in 1652. He was then 
ordained by Charles Herle (1508-1659), the Puritan rector of 
VYinwick, and in 1654 went as perpetual curate to Great Tomng- 
ton in Devon, where he preached the discourses which later 
took shape in his treatises on The Blessedness of the Righteous 
and on Delighting in Cod. In the beginning of 1657 a journey 
to London accidentally brought Howe under the notice of 
Cromwell/who made him his domestic chaplain. In this position 
his conduct was such as to win the praise of even the bitterest 
enemies of his party. Without overlooking his fellow- Puritans, 
he was always ready to help pious and learned men of other 
schools. Scth Ward (afterwards bishop of Exeter) and Thomas 
Fuller were among those who profited by Howe's kindness, and 
were not ashamed subsequently to express their gratitude for 
it. On the resignation of Richard Cromwell, Howe returned to 
Great Torrington, to leave it again in 1662 on the passing of 
the Act of Uniformity For several years he led a wandering 
and uncertain life, preaching in secret as occasion offered to 
handfub of trusted hearers. Being in straits he published in 
1668 The Blessedness of the Righteous ; the reputation which 
he thus acquired procured him an invitation from Lord 
Massereene, of Antrim Castle, Ireland, with whom he lived for 
five or six years as domestic chaplain, frequently preaching in 
public, with the approval of the bishop of the diocese. Here 
too he produced the most eloquent of his shorter treatises. 
The Vanity of Man as Mortal, and On Delighting in God, and 
planned his best work, The Living Temple. In the beginning of 
1676 he accepted an invitation to become joint-pastor of a non- 
conformist congregation at Haberdashers' Hall, London; and 
in the same year he published the first part of The Living Temple 
entitled Concerning Cod's Existence and his Conversabtcness with 
Man: Against Atheism or the Epicurean Deism. In 1677 
appeared his tractate On the Reconcileableness of Cod's Prescience 
of the Sins of Men with the Wisdom and Sincerity of His Counsels, 
Ex ho r ta tio ns and whatsoever means He uses to prevent them, 



which was attacked from various quarters, and had Andrew 
Marvell for one of its defenders. On Thought fulness for ike Morrow 
followed in 1681-, Self- Dedication and Union among Protestants 
in 1682, and The Redeemer's Tears wept over Lost Souls in 1684. 

For five years after his settlement in London Howe enjoyed 
comparative freedom, and was on not unfriendly terms with 
many eminent Anglicans, such as Stilhngfleet, Tillotson, John 
Sharp and Richard Kidder; but the greater severity which 
began to be exercised towards nonconformists in i68t so inter* 
fered with his liberty that in 1685 he gbdly accepted the invite* 
tion of Philip, Lord Wharton, to travel abroad with him. In 
1686 he determined to settle for a time at Utrecht, where he 
officiated in the English chapeL Among his friends there was 
Gilbert Burnet, by whose influence he obtained several con- 
fidential interviews with William of Orange. In 1687 Howe 
availed himself of the declaration for liberty of conscience to 
return to England, and in the following year he headed the 
deputation of nonconformist ministers who went to congratulate 
Wiiliam on his accession to the English throne. The remainder 
of hb life was uneventful His influence was always on the aide 
of mutual forbearance, between conformists and dissenters 
in 1680, and between Congregationahsts and Presbyterians 
in 1600. In 1693 he published three discourses On the Carnality 
of Religious Contention, suggested by the disputes that became 
rife among nonconformists as soon as liberty of doctrine and 
worship had been granted. In 1604 and 1695 he published 
various treatises on the subject of the Trinity, the principal 
being A Calm and Solemn Inquiry concerning the Possibility 
of * Trimly in the Godhead. The second part of The Living 
Temple, entitled Animadversions on Spinosa and- a French 
Writer pretending to confute him, with a recapitulation of the 
former port and an account, of the destitution and restitution of 
God's Temple among Men, appeared in 1702. In I701 he had 
some controversy with Daniel Defoe on the question of occasional 
conformity. In 170s be published a discourse On Patience 
in the Expectation of Future Blessedness, but his health had begun 
to fail, and he died in London on the 2nd of April 1706. 
Richard Cromwell visited him in his last illness. 

Though excelled by Baxter as a pulpit orator, and by Owen 
in exegetical ingenuity and in almost every department of 
theological learning, Howe compares favourably with either as 
a sagacious and profound thinker, while he was much more 
successful in combining religious earnestness and fervour of 
conviction with large-hearted tolerance and cultured breadth 
of view He was a man of high principle and fine presence, 
and it was said of him " that be never made an enemy and never 
lost a friend." 

The works published in his lifetime, including a number of sermons, 
were collected into 2 vols. fol. in 1724, and again reprinted in 3 
vols. 8vo. in 1848. A complete edition ot the WhoU Works, including 
much posthumous and additional matter, appeared with a memoir 
in 8 vols, in 1822; this was reprinted in l vol. in 1838 and in 6 vols, 
in 1862-1863. E. Calamy's Life (1724) forms the basis of The 
Life and Character of Howe, with an Analysts of his Writtngs, by 
Henry Rogers (1836, new ed. 1863). See also a sketch by K F. 
Horton (1896). 

HOWE, JOSEPH (1804-1873), Canadian statesman, was bom 
at Halifax, Nova Scotia, on the 13th of December 1804, the son 
of John Howe (1752*1835), a United Empire Loyalist who was 
for many years king's printer and postmaster-general for the 
Maritime Provinces and the Bermudas. He received little 
regular education, and at the age of 13 entered his father's office. 
In 1827 he started the Acadian, a weekly non-political journal, 
but soon sold it, and in 1828 purchased the Nova ScoHan, which 
later became amalgamated with the Morning Chronicle. From 
this date he devoted increasing attention to political affairs, and 
in 1835 was prosecuted for libelling the magistrates of Halifax*. 
Being unable to find a lawyer willing to undertake his case, he 
pleaded it himself, and won his acquittal by a speech of over six 
hours, which secured for Nova Scotia the freedom of the press 
and for himself the reputation of an orator. In 1836 he was 
elected member for Halifax in the provincial assembly, and 
during the next twelve years devoted himself to attaining 



«36 



HOWE, JULIA. WARD^-HOWE, EA5RL 



responsible government for Nov* Scotia. This brought Mm into 
fierce conflict with the reigning oligarchy and with the lieutenant- 
governor, Lord Falkland (1803*1884), whom be forced to resign. 
Largely owing to Howe's statesmanship responsible government 
was finally conceded in 1848 by the imperial authorities, and 
was thus gained without the bloodshed and confusion which 
marked its acquisition in Ontario and Quebec In 1850 he was 
appointed a delegate to England on behalf of the Intercolonial 
railway, for which he obtained a large imperial guarantee. 
In 1854 he resigned from the cabinet, and was appointed chief 
commissioner of railways. In 1855 he was sent by the imperial 
government to the United States in connexion with the Foreign 
Enlistment Act, to raise soldiers for the war in the Crimea. 
Through the rashness of others he got into difficulties, and was 
attacked in the British House of Commons by Mr Gladstone, 
whom he compelled to apologize. 

In 1855 he was defeated by Mr (afterwards Sir Charles) 
Tupper, but was elected by acclamation in the next year in Hants 
county, and was from i860 to 1863 premier of Nova Scotia. In the 
latter years he was appointed by the imperial government fishery 
commissioner to the United States, and thus took no part in the 
negotiations for confederation. Though his eloquence had done 
more than anything else to make practicable a union of the 
British North American provinces, he opposed confederation, 
largely owing to wounded vanity; but on finding it impossible 
to obtain from the imperial authorities the repeal of the British 
North America Act, he refused to join his associates in the 
extreme measures which were advocated, and on the promise 
from the Canadian government of better financial terms to bis 
native province, entered (on the 30th of January i860) the 
cabinet of Sir John Macdonald as president of the council. 
This brought upon him a storm of obloquy, under which his 
health gradually gave way. In May 1873 ne "** appointed 
lieutenant-governor of Nova Scotia, but died suddenly on the 
xst of June of the same year. 

Howe's eloquence, and still more his unfailing wit and high 
spirits, made him for many years the idol of his province. He 
b the finest orator whom Canada has produced, and also wrote 
poetry, which shows in places high merit. Many of his sayings 
are still current in Nova Scotia. In 1904 a statue in his honour 
was erected in Halifax. 

His Letters and Speeches were published in 1858 in Boston, Mass., 
in 2 vols., edited nominally by William Annand, really by himself* 
See also Public Letters and Speeches of Joseph Howe (Halifax, 
1009). The Life and Times by G. E. Fenety (1806) is poor The 
Life by the Hon. James W Longley (Toronto, 1004) is dispassionate, 
but otherwise mediocre Joseph How. by George Monro Grant 
(reprinted Halifax, 1904), is a brilliant sketch. (W. L. G.) - 

• HOWE, JUUA WARD (18x9-10x0), American author and 
reformer, was born in New York City on the 27th of May 1810. 
Her father, Samuel Ward, was a banker; her mother, Julia 
Rush [Cutlerl (1706-18*4), a poet of some ability. When only 
sixteen years old she had begun to contribute poems to New 
York periodicals In 1843 she married Dr Samuel Gridley 
Howe ($.? ), with whom she spent the next year in England, 
France, Germany and Italy. She assisted Dr Howe in editing 
the Commonwealth in 1851-1853. The results of her study of 
German philosophy were seen in philosophical essays; in 
lectures on " Doubt and Belief," " The Duality of Character," 
kc, delivered in 1 860-1861 in her home in Boston, and later in 
Washington; and in addresses before the Boston Radical Club 
and the Concord school of philosophy. Samuel Longfellow, 
his brother Henry, Wendell Phillips, W.L. Garrison, Charles 
Sumner, Theodore Parker and James Freeman Clarke were 
among her friends; she advocated abolition, and preached 
occasionally from Unitarian pulpits. She was one of the 
organizers of the American Woman-Suffrage Association and of 
the Association for the Advancement of Women (i860), and in 
1870 became one of the editors of the Woman's Journal, arid 
in 1872 president of the New England Women's Club. In the 
tame year she was a delegate to the Prison Reform Congress in 
London, and founded there the Woman's Peace Association, 
one of tha many ways in which she expressed her opposition 



to war; She wrote The Worths Own (m 
Wallack's, New York, in 1855, published 1857), and in 1858, tot 
Edwin Booth, HtppUytus, never acted or pubOabed. Her lyric 
poetry, thanks to her temperament, and possibly to her mwacil 
training, was her highest lkerary form: she published Possum 
Flowers (anonymously, 1854), Words for Ike Hour (1856), Later 
Lyrics (1866), and From Sunset Ridge: Poems Old ami New 
(1898); her most popular poem is The Batik Hymn of the 
Republic, written to the old folk-tune associated with the stag 
of "John Brown's Body," when Mrs Howe was at the from 
in 1861, and published (Feb. x86a) in the Atlantic Monthly, to 
which she frequently contributed. She edited Sex and Eewntum 
(1874), an answer to Sex in Education (1873) by Edward Ham- 
mond Clarke (1820-1877); and wrote several books of travel. 
Modern Society (1880) and Is Polite Society Polite t (1895). 
collections of addresses, each taking its title from a lecture criti- 
cizing the shallowness and falseness of society, the power of 
money, &c*, A Memoir of Dr Samuel G. Howe (1876), Life ef 
Margaret Fuller (1883)* in the " Famous Women " series, 
Sketches of Representative Women of New England (1905) and 
her own Reminiscences (Boston, 1800). Her children were: Julia 
Romana Anagnos (1844-1886), who, like her mother, wrote 
verse and studied philosophy, and who taught in the Perkins 
Institution, in the charge of which her husband, Michael Anagnos 
(1837-1906), whose family name had been AnagnostopouJos, 
succeeded her father; Henry Marion Howe (b. 1848), the 
eminent metallurgist, and professor in Columbia University; 
Laura Elizabeth Richards (b, 1850), and Maud Howe Elliott 
(b. 1855), wife of John Elhott, the painter of a fine ceiling in the 
Boston library ,*-both these daughters being contributors to 
literature. Mrs Howe died on the 17th of October xoxo. 

HOWS, RICHARD HOWB, Eakl (1726-1709), British admiral, 
was born in London on the 8th of March 1726. He was the 
second son of Emmanuel Scrope Howe, and Viscount Howe, 
who died governor of Barbadoes in March 1735, and of Mary 
Sophia Charlotte, a daughter of the baroness Ktrmamrgge, 
afterwards countess of Darlington, the mistress of George L — 
a relationship which does much to explain his early rise in the 
navy. Richard Howe entered the navy in the " Severn," one 
of the squadron 3ent into the south seas with Anson in 1740. 
The u Severn " failed to round the Horn and returned home. 
Howe next served in the West Indies in the " Btirxerd," and 
was present in her when she was very severely damaged in the 
unsuccessful attack on La Guayta on the i8tb of February 1742. 
He was made acting-lieutenant in the West Indies in the sane 
year, and the rank was confirmed in 1744, During the Jacobite 
rising of 1745 he commanded the "Baltimore" sloop in the 
North Sea, and was dangerously wounded in the head while 
co-operating with a frigate in an engagement with two strong 
French privateers. In 1746 he became post -captain, and com- 
manded the " Triton " (24) in the West Indies. As captain of 
the " Cornwall " (80), the flagship of Sir Charles Knowks, he 
was in the battle with the Spaniards off Havana on the 2nd of 
October x 748. While the peace between the War of the Austrian 
Succession and the Seven Years' War lasted, Howe held com- 
mands at home and on the west coast of Africa. In 175s ** 
went with Boscawen to North America as captain of the ** Dun- 
kirk " (60), and his seizure of the French " Alchie " (64) was the 
first shot fired in the war. From this date till the peace of 1763 
he served in the Channel in various more or less futile expeditions 
against the coast of France, with a steady increase of reputation 
as a firm and skilful officer. On the 20th of November 1759 
he led Hawke's fleet as captain of the " Magnanime u (64) in 
the magnificent victory of Qirfberoa. 

By the death of his elder brother, killed near Ticottdecoga on the 
6th of July 1758, he became Viscount Howe — an Irish peerage. 
In 1762 he was elected M.P. for Dartmouth, and held the seat 
till he received a title of Great Britain. During 1763 and 1765 
be was a member of the Admiralty board, and from 176s to 
x 770 was treasurer of the navy. In that year be was promoted 
rear-admiral, and in 1 775 vice-admiral. . In x 776 he was appointed 
.to the commnnd of the North American station. The rebdhos 



HOW£, S. G. 



»37 



of the colonies was making rapid progress, and Howe was known 
to be in sympathy with the colonists. He had sought the 
acquaintance of Benjamin Franklin, who was a friend of his 
sister Miss Howe, a clever eccentric woman well known in 
London society, and had already tried to act as a peacemaker 
It was doubtless because of his known sentiments that he was 
selected to command in America, and was joined in commission 
with his brother Sir William Howe, the general at the head of the 
land forces, to make a conciliatory arrangement. A committee 
appointed by the Continental Congress conferred with the Howes 
in September 1 7 76 but nothing was accomplished. The appoint- 
ment of a new peace commission in 1778 offended the admiral 
deeply, and he sent in a resignation of his command. It was 
reluctantly accepted by Lord Sandwich, then First Lord, but 
before it could take effect Franca declared war, and a powerful 
French squadron was sent to America under the count d'Estaing. 
Being greatly outnumbered, Howe had to stand on the defensive, 
but he baffled the French admiral at Sandy Hook, and defeated 
his attempt' to take Newport in Rhode Island by a fine combina- 
tion of caution and calculated daring. On the arrival of Admiral 
John Byron from England with reinforcements, Howe left the 
station in September Until the fall of Lord North's ministry 
in 1784 he refused to serve, assigning as his reason that he could 
not trust Lord Sandwich. He considered that he had not been 
properly supported in America, and was embittered both by 
the supersession of himself and his brother as peace commis- 
sioners, and by attacks made on him by the ministerial writers 
in the press. 

On the change of ministry in March 1782 he was selected to 
command in the Channel, and in the autumn of that year, 
September, October and November, he carried out the final 
relief of Gibraltar, It was a difficult operation, for the French 
and Spaniards had in all 46 Une-of-battle ships to his 33, and in 
the exhausted state of the country it was impossible to fit his 
ships properly or to supply them with good crews. He was, 
moreover, hampered by a great convoy carrying stores. But 
Howe was eminent in the handling of a great multitude of ships, 
the enemy was awkward and unenterprising, and the operation 
was brilliantly carried out. From the 28th of January to the 
16th of April 1783 he was First Lord of the Admiralty, and he 
held that post from December 1783 till August 1788, in Pitt's 
first ministry. The task was no pleasant one, for he had to 
agree to economies where he considered that more outlay was 
needed, and he had to disappoint the hopes of the many officers 
who were left unemployed by the peace. On the outbreak 
of the Revolutionary war in £793 he was again named to the 
command of the Channel fleet. His services in 1704. form the 
most glorious period of his life, for in it he won the epoch-making 
victory of the 1st of June (see First or June, Battle or). 
Though Howe was now nearly seventy, and had been trained 
in the old school, h£ displayed an originality not usual with 
veterans, and not excelled by any of his successors in the war, 
not even by Nelson, since they had his example to follow and 
were served by more highly trained squadrons than his. He 
continued to hold the nominal command by the wish of the 
king, but his active service was now over. In 1797 he was 
called on to pacify the mutineers at Spithead, and his great 
influence with the seamen who trusted him was conspicuously 
shown. He died on the 5th of August 1709, and was buried in 
his family vault at Langar. His monument by Flaxman is in 
St Paul's Cathedral. In 1782 he was created Viscount Howe 
of Langar, and in 1788 Baron and Earl Howe. In June 1797 he 
was made a knight of the Garter. With the sailors he was 
always popular, though he was no popularity hunter,, for they 
knew him to be just. His nickname of Black Dick was given 
on account of his swarthy complexion, and the well-known 
portrait by Gainsborough shows that it was apt. 

Lord Howe married, on the 10th of March 1758, Mary Hartop, 
the daughter of Colonel Chiverton Hartop of Welby in Leicester- 
shire, and had issue two daughters. His Irish title descended 
to his brother William, the general, who died childless in 1814. 
The earldom, and the viscounty of the United Kingdom, being 



limited to heirs male, became extinct, but the barony,. being 
to heirs general, passed to his daughter, Soplua Charlotte 
( 1 762-1835), who married the Hon. Penn Assheton Cursor*. 
Their son, Richard William Cur*on (1796-1870), who succeeded 
his paternal grandfather as Viscount Curzon in 1820, was 
created Earl Howe in 1821; he was succeeded by his son, George 
Augustus (1821-1876), and then by another son, Richard William 
(1822-1900), whose son Richard George Penn Curzon-Howe 
(b. i860 became 4th Earl Howe in 190a 

The standard Life is by Sir John Barrow (1838). Interesting 
reminiscences will be found in the Life of CodnngUm. by Lady 
Bourchier. Accounts of his professional services arc in Charnockii 
Biographia Navatis, v. 457, and in Ralf s Naval Biographies, I. 83, 
See also Beatson's Naval and Military Annals, James's Naval 
History, and Chevalier's Hittoir* 4e la Marint francaise, vols. I 
and u. (D. H.) 

HOWE, SAMUEL GRIDLEY (1801-1876), American philan- 
thropist, was born at Boston, Massachusetts, on the ioLh of 
November 1801. His father, Joseph N. Howe, was a ship-owner 
and cordage manufacturer; and his mother, Patty Gridley, was 
one of the most beautiful women of her day. Young Howe was 
educated at Boston and at Brown University, Providence, and in 
1821 began to study medicine in Boston. But fired by enthusiasm 
for the Greek revolution and by Byron's example, he was no 
sooner qualified and admitted to practice than he abandoned 
these prospects and took ship for Greece, where he joined the 
army and spent six years of hardship amid scenes of warfare, 
Then, to raise funds for the cause, he returned to America; 
his fervid appeals enabled him to collect about $60,000, which he 
spent on provisions and.clothing, and he established a relief depot 
near Aegina, where he started works for the refugees, the existing 
quay,, or American Mole, being built in this way. He formed 
another colony of exiles on the Isthmus of Corinth. He wrote 
a History of the Creek Revolution,, which was published in 1828, 
and in 183 1 he returned to America. Here a new object of 
interest engaged him. Through his friend Dr John D. Fisher 
(d. 1850), a Boston physician who had started a movement there 
as early as 1826 for establishing a school for the blind, he had 
learnt of the similar school founded in Paris by Valentin Hatty, 
and it was proposed to Howe by a committee organized by 
Fisher that he should direct the establishment of a " New 
England Asylum for the Blind " at Boston. He took up the 
project with characteristic ardour, and set out at once for Europe 
to investigate the problem. There he was temporarily diverted 
from his task by becoming mixed up with the Polish revolt, and, 
in pursuit of a mission to carry American contributions across 
the Prussian frontier, he was arrested and imprisoned at Berlin, 
but was at hist released through the intervention of the American 
minister at Paris. Returning to Boston in July 1832, he began 
receiving a few blind children at his father's house in Pleasant 
Street, and thus sowed the seed which grew into the famous 
Perkins Institution. In January 1833 the funds available 
were all spent, but so much progress had been shown that the 
legislature voted S6000, later increased to $30,000 a year, to 
the institution on condition that it should educate gratuitously 
twenty poor blind from the state; money was also contributed 
from Salem, and from Boston, and Colonel Thomas H. Perkins, 
a prominent Bostonian, presented his mansion and grounds 
in Pearl Street for the school to be held there in perpetuity. 
This building being later found unsuitable, Colonel Perkins 
consented to its sale, and in 1839 the institution was moved to 
South Boston, to a large building which had previously been an 
hotel. It was henceforth known as the " Perkins Institution 
and Massachusetts Asylum Cor, since 1877, School) for the Blind," 
Howe was director, and the life and soul of the school; he 
opened a printing-office and organised a fund for printing for 
the blind — the first done in America; and be was unwearied 
in calling public attention to the work. The Institution, through 
him, became one of the intellectual centres of American phil- 
anthropy, and by degrees obtained more and more financial 
support. In 1837 Dr Howe went still further and brought 
the famous blind deaf-mute. Laura Bridgman (940.) to the 
school. 



$3* 



HOWE, VISCOUNT— HOWELL 



It must suffice here to chronicle the remaining more important 
facts in Dr Howe's life, outside his regular work. In 1843 he 
married Julia Ward (see above), daughter of a New York banker, 
and they made a prolonged European trip, on which Dr Howe 
spent much time in visiting those public institutions which 
carried out the objects specially interesting to him. In Rome, 
In 1844, his eldest daughter, Julia Romana (afterwards the wife 
of Michael Anagnos, Dr Howe's assistant and successor), was 
born, and in September the travellers returned to America, and 
Dr Howe resumed his activities. In 1846 he became interested 
in the condition and treatment of idiots, and particularly in the 
experiments of Dr Guggenbiihl on the cretins of Switzerland. 
He became chairman of a state commission of inquiry into the 
number and condition of idiots in Massachusetts, and the report 
of this commission, presented in 1848, caused a profound sensa- 
tion. An appropriation of $2500 per annum was made for 
training' ten idiot children under Dr Howe's supervision, and by 
degrees the value of his School for Idiotic and Feeble-minded 
Youths, which, starling in South Boston, was in 1800 removed 
to Walt ham, was generally appreciated. It was the first of its 
kind in the United States. An enthusiastic humanitarian on all 
Subjects, Dr Howe was an ardent abolitionist and a member of 
the Free Soil party, and had played a leading part at Boston in 
the movements which culminated in the Civil War. When it 
broke out he was an active member of the sanitary commission. 
In 187 x he was sent to Santo Domingo as a member of the 
commission appointed by President Grant to examine the 
condition of the island, the government of which desired annexa- 
tion; and when that scheme was defeated through Sumner's 
opposition he returned (1872) as the representative of the 
Samana Bay Company, which proposed to take a lease of the 
Samana peninsula; but though in 1874 he revisited the island, it 
was only to see the flag of the company hauled down. His health 
was then breaking and began soon after to fail rapidly, and on 
the 9th of January 1876 he died at Boston. The governor of the 
state sent a special message of grief to the legislature on his death, 
eulogies were delivered in the two houses, and a public memorial 
service was held, at w*iich Dr O. W. Holmes read a poem. 
Whit tier had in his lifetime commemorated him in his poem 
•• The Hero," in which he called him " the Cadmus of the Wind "; 
and in 1001 a centennial celebration of his birth was held at 
Boston, at which, among other notable tributes, Senator Hoar 
spoke of Howe as M one of the great figures of American history." 

A Memoir of Dr Howe by his wife appeared in 1876. Sec also 
the Utters and Journals of 5. G. Home, edited by Laura E. Richards 
(1910). (H. Ch.) 

HOWE, WILLIAM HOWE* cth Viscount (1720-1814), 
British general, was the younger brother of George Augustus, 
3rd viscount, killed in the Ticonderoga expedition of 17 58, and 
of Richard, 4th viscount and afterwards Earl Howe, the admiral. 
He entered the cavalry in 1 746, becoming lieutenant a year later. 
On the disbanding of his regiment in 1749 he was made captain- 
lieutenant and shortly afterwards captain in Lord Bury's (20th) 
regiment, in which Wolfe was then a field officer. Howe became 
major in 1756 and lieutenant-colonel in 1757 of the 58th (now 
Northampton) regiment, which he commanded at the capture 
of Louisburg. In Wolfe's expedition to Quebec he distinguished 
himself greatly at the head of a composite light battalion. He 
led the advanced party in the landing at Wolfe's Cove and took 
part in the battle of the Plains of Abraham which followed. He 
commanded his own regiment in the defence of Quebec in 1759- 
1760, led a brigade in the advance on Montreal and took part on 
his return to Europe in the siege of Belleisle (1761). He was 
adjutant-general of the force which besieged and took Havana in 
1762, and at the dose of the war had acquired the reputation of 
being one of the most brilliant of the junior officers of the army. 
He was made colonel of the 46th foot in 1764 and lieutenant- 
governor of »he Isle of Wight four years later. From 1758 to 1780 
he was M.P. for Nottingham. In 1772 he became major-general, 
and in 1774 he was entrusted with the training of light infantry 
companies on a new system, the training-ground being Salisbury 
Plain. 



Shortly after thus he was sent out to North America. He <Sd 
not agree with the policy of the government towards the colonists, 
and regretted in particular that he was sent to Boston, where the 
memory of hts eldest brother was still cherished by the inhabitants, 
and General Gage, in whom he had no confidence, commanded in 
chief. He was the senior officer after Gage, and led the troops 
actively engaged in the storming of Bunker Hill, be himself being 
in the thickest of the fighting. In the same year Howe was 
made a K.B. and a lieutenant-general, and appointed, with the 
local rank of general, to the chief command in the seat of war. 
For the events of his command see Amemcam Wak op Inde- 
pendence. He retained it until May 1778—00 the whole with 
success. The cause of his resignation was hb feeling that the 
home government had not afforded the proper support, and 
after his return to England,- he and hb brother engaged in a 
heated but fruitless controversy with the ministers. Howe's own 
defence b embodied in Narrcthc of Sir WilHom Howe before a 
Committee of the House of Commons (London, 1780). In 1782 
Howe was made lieutenant-general of the ordnance; in 1700 he 
was placed In command of the 1 forces organized for action against 
Spain, and in 1793 he was made a full general. He held various 
home commands in the early part of the French revolutionary 
war, in particular that of the eastern district at the critical 
moment when the French established their forces on the Dutch 
coast. When Earl Howe died in 1709, Sir William succeeded to 
the Irish viscounty. He had been made governor of Berwick -on- 
Tweed in 1795, and in 1805 he became governor of Plymouth, 
where he died on the 12th of July 1814. With his death the 
Irish peerage became extinct. 

HOWBL DBA (" the Good ") (d. 9 so), prince of Debcubartn 
(South Central Wales) from before 915, and king of Wales from 
943 to 950, was the grandson of Rhodri Mawr (the Great), who 
had united practically the whole of Wales under hb supremacy. 
As Idwal Voel succeeded Ms father Anarawd, the elder son of 
Rhodri, as lord of Gwynedd in 915, so Howel at some time before 
that date succeeded RhodrFs younger son CadeU as prince of 
Deheubarth. Howel married Elen, daughter of the last king of 
Dyfed, and also added Kidweli and Gwyr to hb dominions, wble 
on the death of Idwal, who was slain by the English in 043. he 
took possession of Gwynedd. Both these princes had done 
homage to the English kings, Edward the Oder and AetbeJstan, 
in 92* and 926, and we find that Howel attended the witans 
of the English kingdom and witnessed about ten charters b etwe en 
the years 931 and 949. He was secure, therefore, from attack on 
the eastern side of hb kingdom, and it b not certain whether he 
was engaged in any of the battles recorded during these years in 
Wales, either in Mon 914, at Dinaa Newydd 919 or at Bnrn 935. 
To the peaceful character of hb reign b probably due the high 
place which he holds among' the Welsh princes. From 043 to 
950 Howel Dda was probably ruler of all Wales except Powys 
(apparently dependent on Mercia), Brechelniog, Bualk, Gweot 
and Morgannwg. With Morgan Hen, king of Morgannwg, 
Howel had a dispute which was eventually settled in favour of the 
former at the court of the English king. Howel died in 950, and 
such unity as he had preserved at once disappeared in a war 
between his sons and those of Idwal Voel. The code of laws 
attributed to this prince b perhaps hb chief claim to fame. He 
b said to have summoned four men from each cantref inbb 
dominions to the Ty Gwyn (perhaps Wbltland in Caennartben- 
shire) to codify existing custom. Three codes, accordingly cafied 
Venedotbn,Demetian and Gwentian, are said to have been written 
down by Bleggwryd, archdeacon of Llandaff (see Welsh Laws). 

See Sir John Rhys and Brynmor-Jones, The Welsh People (Loadoa. 
1000); and Anearin Owen. Ancient Laws and Institutions of Woks 
(London, 1841). 

HOWELL, JAMES (c. 1594-1666), British author, who came 
of an old Webh family, was born probably at Abernant, in 
Carmarthenshire, where his father was rector. From the free 
grammar school at Hereford he went to Jesus College, Oxford, 
and took his degree of B.A. in 1613. About 1616 he was steward 
in Sir Robert ManseU's glass-works in Broad Street, and was 
commissioned to go abroad to procure the services of expert 



HOWELLS— HO WITT 



»39 



workmen. It was not till ifci that he returned, having visited 
Holland, France, Spain and Italy. With the intention of utiliz- 
ing to better purpose his knowledge of continental languages 
and methods, he left the glass business and applied for a diplo- 
matic post. Failing to obtain this, he was for a short time 
tutor in a nobleman's family. At the close of 162a he was sent 
on a special mission to Madrid to obtain redress lor the seizure 
of an English vessel, but, owing to the presence at the Spanish 
court of Prince Charles and the duke of Buckingham to arrange 
a marriage between the prince and the infanta of Spain, the 
negotiations had to be broken off. He made many friends 
among the prince's retinue, and, after his return in 1624, applied 
for employment to the duke of Buckingham, but without success. 
In 1626 he became secretary to Lord Scrope, Lord President 
of the North at York, and retained the office under Scropc's 
successor, Thomas Wcntworth. In 1627 he was elected M.P. 
for Richmond: in 1632 ho was sent as secretary to the embassy 
of the earl of Leicester to Denmark; and in 1642 the king 
appointed him one of the clerks of the privy council. In 1643 
he was committed to the Fleet prison by the parliament, accord- 
ing to bis own account, on suspicion of royalist leanings, or, as 
Anthony a Wood says, for debt. Whatever the reason, he 
remained in prison until 1651. He had acquired considerable 
fame by his allegorical AoopoJuryia: Dodona's Grove, or /Are 
Vocall Forest, published in 1640, and hfs Instructions for Forreine 
Traveli (1642), which has been described as the first continental 
handbook; and now he was driven to maintain himself by his 
pen. He edited and supplemented (1650) Cotgrave's French and 
English dictionary, compiled Lexicon Tetraglotton, or en English, 
French, Italian and Spanish Dictionary (London, 1660), trans- 
lated various works from Italian and Spanish, wrote a life of 
Louis XIII. and issued a number of political pamphlets, varying 
the point of view somewhat to suit the changes of the time. 
Among these tracts may be mentioned a rather malicious 
Perfect Description of the People and Country of Scotland, which 
was revived by John Wilkes and printed in the North Briton 
during the agitation directed against Lord Bute. In 1660 he 
asked for the place of clerk of the privy council; and, though 
this was not granted him, the post of historiographer royal was 
created for him. In 1661 he applied for the office of tutor in 
foreign languages to the infanta Catherine of Braganza, and in 
1662 published an English Grammar translated into Spanish. 
He was buried in the Temple Church on the 3rd of November 
1666, having realized to the last his favourite motto, " Senesco 
non segnesco." 

All Howell's writings are imbued with a certain simplicity 
and quaintness. His elaborate allegories are forgotten; his 
linguistic labours, of value in their time, are now superseded; 
but bis Letters, the Bpistoiae Ho*dianae (four volumes issued in 
1645, 1647, 1650 and 1655), are still models of their kind. Their 
dates are often fictitious, and they are, in nearly every case, 
evidently written for publication. ' Thackeray said that the Letters 
was one of his bedside books. He classes it with Montaigne 
and says he scarcely ever tired of * the artless prattle " of the 
" priggish little clerk of King Charles's council." 

The Bpistoiae have been frequently edited, notably br J. Jacobs 
in 1890, with a commentary (1891), and Agnes Repplier (1907). 

HOWELLS, WILLIAM DEAN (1837- ), American novelist, 
was born at Martin's Ferry, Ohio, on the 1st of March 1837. His 
father, William Cooper Howdls, a printer-journalist, moved in 
2840 to Hamilton, Ohio, and here the boy's early life was spent 
successively as type-setter, reporter and editor in the offices 
of various newspapers. In the midst of routine work he contrived 
to familiarize himself with a wide range of authors in several 
modern tongues, and to drill himself thoroughly in the use of 
good English. In i860, as assistant editor of the leading Re- 
publican newspaper in Ohio, he wrote — in connexion with the 
Presidential contest— the campaign life of Lincoln; and in 
the same year he was appointed consul at Venice, where he 
remained till 1865. On his return to America he joined the staff 
of tht Atlantic Monthly, And from 1872 to i88t he was its editor- 
in-chief. Since 1885 ** has lived in New York. For a time he 



conducted for Harper's Magazine the department called " The 
Editor's Study," and in December 1900 he revived for the same 
periodical the department of "The Easy Chair," which had 
lapsed with the death of George William Curtis. Of Mr Howells's 
many novels, the following may be mentioned as specially 
noteworthy: Their Wedding Journey (1872); The Lady of 
the Aroostook (1879); A Modern Instance (1882); The Rise 
of Silas Lapham (1885)- The Minister's Charge (1886); A 
Hazard of New Fortunes (1889); The Quality of Mercy (1892); 
The Landlord at Lion's Head (1897). He also published Poems 
(1873 and x886); Stops of Various Quills (1895), a book of verse; 
books of travel; several amusing farces; and volumes of essays 
and literary criticism, among others, Literary Friends and 
Acquaintance (1901), which contains much autobiographical 
matter, Literature and Life (1002), and English Films (1005). . 

Howells is by general consent the foremost representative 
of the realistic school of indigenous American fiction. From 
the outset hb aim was to portray life with entire fidelity in aU 
its commonplaceness, and yet to charm the reader into a liking 
for this commonplacencss and into reverence for what it conceals. 
Though in his earliest novels his method was not consistently 
realistic— he is at times almost as personal and as whimsical as 
Thackeray — yet his vivid impressionism and his choice of sub- 
jects, as well as an occasional explicit protest that "dulness 
is dear to him," already revealed unmistakably his realistic 
bias. In A Modern Instance (1882) he gained complete command 
of his method, and began a series of studies of American life 
that are remarkable for their loyalty to fact, their truth of tone, 
and their power to reveal, despite their strictly objective method, 
both the inner springs of American character and the sociological 
forces that are shaping American civilization. He refuses to over- 
sophisticate or to over-intellectualize his characters, and he 
is very sparing in his use of psychological analysis. He insists 
on seeing and portraying American life as it exists in and for 
itself, under its own skies and with its own atmosphere; he 
docs not scrutinize it with foreign comparisons in mind, and thus 
try to find and to throw into relief unsuspected configurations 
of surface. He keeps his dialogue toned down to almost the 
pitch of everyday conversation, although he has shown in his 
comedy sketches how easy a master he Is of adroit and witty 
talk. 

See also T. M. Robertson, Essays towards a Critical Method (London, 
1889); H. C Vedder, American Writers (Boston, 1894). 

HOWITT WILLIAM, (1792-1879), English author, was born 
on the 18th of December 1792 at Heanof, Derbyshire. His 
parents were Quakers, and he was educated at the Friends' 
public school at Ackworth, Yorkshire. In 1814 he published 
a poem on the " Influence of Nature and Poetry on National 
Spirit." He married, in 1821, Mary Botham <i 700-1888), tike 
himself a Quaker and a poet. William and Mary Howitt col- 
laborated throughout a long literary career, the first of their 
joint productions being The Forest Minstrels and other Poems 
(1821). In 1831 William Howitt produced a work for which 
his habits of observation and his genuine love of nature peculiarly 
fitted him. It was a history of the changes in the face of the out- 
side world in the different months of the year, and was entitled 
The Book of the Seasons, or the Calendar of Naturt (1831). His 
Popular History of Priestcraft (18^3) won for him the favour of 
active Liberals and the office of alderman in Nottingham, where 
the Howitts had made their home. They removed in 1837 to 
Esher, and in 1840 they went to Heidelberg, primarily for the 
education of their children, remaining in Germany for two years. 
In 1841 William Howitt produced, under the pseudonym of 
" Dr Cornelius," The Student Life of Germany, the first of a 
series of works on German social life and institutions. Mary 
Howitt devoted herself to Scandinavian literature, and between 
1842 and 1863 she translated the novels of Frederika Bremer 
and many of the stories of Hans Andersen. With her husband 
she wrote in 1852 The Literature and Romance of Northern 
Europe. In June of that year William Howitt, with two of 
his sons, set sail for Australia, where he spent two years in the 
goldfields. The results of his travels appeared in A Boys 



8+o 



HOWITZER—HOXTER 



Adventures in the Wilds of Australia (1854), Land, Labour and 
Cold; or, Two Years in Victoria (1855) and Tallangetta, the 
Squatter's Home (1857). On his return lo England Howitt had 
settled at Highgatc and resumed his indefatigable book-making. 
From 1856 to 1862 he was engaged on Cassell's Illustrated 
History of England, and from 1861 to 1864 he and his wife worked 
at the Ruined A bbeys and Castles of Great Britain. The Ho wilts 
had left the Society of Friends in 1847, and became interested 
in spiritualism. In 1863 appeared The History of the Super- 
natural in all Ages and Nations, and in all Churches, Christian 
and Pagan, demonstrating a Universal Faith, by William 
Howitt. He added " his own conclusions from a practical 
examination of the higher phenomena through a course of 
seven years." From 1870 onwards Howitt spent the summers 
in Tirol and the winters in Rome, where he died on the 3rd 
of March 1879. Mary Howitt was much affected J>y his death, 
and in 1882 she joined the Roman Catholic Church, towards 
which she had been gradually moving during her connexion with 
spiritualism. She died at Rome on the 30th of January 1888. 
The Howitts are remembered for their untiring efforts to provide 
wholesome and instructive literature. Their son, Alfred William 
Howitt, made himself a name by his explorations in Australia. 
Anna Mary Howitt married Alaric Alfred Watts, and was the 
author of Pionttrs of the Spiritual Reformation (1883). 

Mary Howitt's autobiography was edited by her daughter.Margarct 
Howitt, in 1889. William Howitt wrote some fifty books, and his 
wife's publications, inclusive of translations, number over a hundred. 

HOWITZER (derived, through an earlier form howilx, and the 
Cer. Haubitz, from the Bohemian koufnke ■ catapult, from 
which come also, through the Ital. obita or obice, the French 
forms obus « shell and obusier «= howitzer), a form of mobile 
ordnance in use from the i6lh century up to the present day. It is 
a short and therefore comparatively light gun, which fires a 
heavy projectile at low velocity. A high angle of elevation is 
always given and the angle of descent of the projectile is con- 
sequently steep (up to 70 ). On this fact is based the tactical 
use of the modern howitzer. The field howitzer is of the greatest 
value for " searching " trenches, folds of ground, localities, &c, 
which are invulnerable to direct fire, while the more powerful 
siege howitzer has, since the introduction of modern artillery and, 
above all, of modern projectiles, taken the foremost place 
amongst the weapons used in siege warfare. 

See Artillery, Ordnance and Fortification and Siscec raft. 

HOWLER, a name applied to the members of a group of 
tropical American monkeys, now known scientifically as Alouala, 
although formerly designated Mycetes. These monkeys, which 
are of large size, with thick fur, sometimes red and sometimes 
black in colour, are characterized by the inflation of the hyoid- 
bone (which supports the roof of the tongue) into a large shell- 
like organ communicating with the wind-pipe, and giving the 
peculiar resonance to the voice from which they take their title. 
To allow space for the hyoid, the sides of the lower jaw are very 
deep and expanded. The muzzle is projecting, and the profile of 
the face slopes regularly backwards from the muzzle to the 
crown. The long tail is highly prehensile, thickly furred, with the 
under surface of the extremity naked. Howlers dwell in large 
companies, and in the early morning, and again in the evening, 
make the woods resound with their cries, which arc often con* 
tinucd throughout the night. They feed on leaves, and are in the 
habit of sitting on the topmost branches of trees. When active, 
they progress in regular order, led by an old male. (R. L.*) 

HOWRAH, a city and district of British India, in the Burdwan 
division of Bengal. The city is situated opposite Calcutta, with 
which it is connected by a floating bridge. The municipal area 
is about 11 sq. m.; pop. (1001) 157,594, showing an increase of 
35 % in the decade. Since 1872 the population has almost 
doubled, owing to the great industrial development that has 
taken place. Howrah is the terminus of the East Indian railway, 
and also of the BcngalNagpur and East Coast lines. It is 
also the centre of two light railways which run to Amta and 
Shcakhala. Further, it is the headquarters of the jute-manu- 
facturing industry, with many steam mills, steam presses, also 



cotton milk, oil mills, rope-works, iron-works and engineering 
works. Sibpur Engineering College lies on the outskirts of the 
town. There is a hospital, with a department for Europeans, and 
Howrah forms a suburban residence for many people who have 
their place of business in Calcutta. 

The District of Howrah extends southwards down the right 
bank of the Hugli to the confluence of the river Damodar. For 
revenue purposes it is included within the district of Hugh. 
Its area is 510 sq. m.; pop. (1001) 850,514, showing an increase 
of 11 % in the decade. In addition to the two steam tramways 
and the East Indian railway, the district is crossed by the high- 
level canal to Midnapore, which communicates with the Hugli 
at Ulubaria, The manufacturing industries of Howrah extend 
beyond the city into the district. One or two systems of draining 
low-lying lands are maintained by the government. 

HOWSON, JOHN SAUL (1816-1885), English divine, was ban 
at Cigglcswick-in-Craven, Yorkshire, on the 5th of May 1S16. 
After receiving his early education at Giggleswick school, oi 
which his father was head-master, he went to Trinity College, 
Cambridge, and there became tutor successively to the marquis of 
Sligo and the marquis of Lome. In 1S45 Howson, having taken 
orders, accepted the post of senior classical master at the Liver- 
pool College under his friend W. J. Conybcare, whom he succeeded 
as principal in 1849. This post he held until 1865, and it was 
largely due to his influence that a similar college for girls was 
established at Liverpool. In 1866 he left Liverpool for the 
vicarage of Wisbech, and in 1867 he was appointed dean of 
Chester Cathedral, where he gave himself vigorously to the work 
of restoring the crumbling fabric, collecting nearly £1004000 in 
five years for this purpose. His sympathies were with the 
evangelical party, and he stoutly opposed the " Eastward 
position," but he was by no means narrow. He did much to 
reintroduce the ministry of women as deaconesses. The building 
of the King's School for boys, and the Queen's School for girls 
(both in Chester), was due in a great measure to the active 
interest which he took in educational matters. He died at 
Bournemouth on the 15th of December 1885, and was buried ia 
the cloister garth of Chester. Howson 's chief literary production 
was The Life and Epistles of St Paul (1852) in which he collabor- 
ated with Conybcare. 

The book is still of interest, especially for Its descriptive p» ■H |, '» 
which were mostly done by Howson; but later researches (such as 
those of Sir W. M. Ramsay) have made the geographical and histori- 
cal sections obsolete, and the same may be said of the treatment 
of the Pauline theology. 

HOWTH (pronounced Hdth], & seaside town of Co. Dublin, 
Ireland, on the rocky bill of Howth, which forms the northern 
horn of Dublin Bay, m. N.E. by N. of Dublin by the Great 
Northern railway. Pop. (1901) 1166. It is frequented by the 
residents of the capital at a watering-place. The artificial 
harbour was formed (1807-1832) between the mainland and the 
picturesque island of Ireland's Eye, and preceded Kingstown as 
the station for the mail-packets from Great Britain, but was 
found after its construction to be liable to silt, and ia now chiefly 
used by fishing-boats and yachts. The collegiate church, 
standing picturesquely on a cliff above the sea, was founded 
about 1235, and has a monastic building attached to it. The 
embattled castle contains the two-handed sword of Sir Ahneric 
Tristram, the Anglo-Norman conqueror of the mil of Howth ; and 
a portrait of Dean Swift holding one. of the D rapier letters, with 
Wood, the coiner against whom he directed these attacks, 
prostrate before him. The view of Dublin Bay from the hill of 
Howth is of great beauty. Howth is connected with the capital 
by electric tiamway, besides the railway, and another tramway 
encircles the MIL 

H OXTER, a town of Germany, in the Prussian province of 
Westphalia, prettily situated on the left bank of the Wescr, and 
on the Prussian state railways Bdrssum-Soest and Scherfede* 
Holzminden, 32 m. N. of Cassel. Pop. (1005) 7690. It has a 
medieval town hall, and interesting houses with high gables and 
1 wood-carved facades of the 15th and 16th centuries. The most 
I interesting of the churches is the Protestant church of St Kilian, 



HOY— HOZIER 



841 



with a pulpit dating from 150$ tad a font dating Iron 1631. 
There are a gymnasium, a school of architecture and a monu- 
ment to Hoffmann von. Fallersleben in the town. The Weser is 
crossed here by a stone bridge about soo ft. in length, erected 
in 1833. On the Brunsberg adjoining the town there is an old 
watch-tower* said to be the remains of a fortress built by Bruno, 
brother of Widukind. Near Hdxter is the castle, formerly the 
Benedictine monastery, of Cbrvey. The principal manufactures of 
the town are linen, cotton, cement and gutta-percha, and there 
is also a considerable shipping trade. Hdxter (Lat. Huxaria) 
in the time of Charlemagne was a villa rcgia, and was the scene of 
a battle between him and the Saxons. Under the protection of 
the monastery of Corvey it gradually increased in prosperity, 
and became the chief town of the principality of Corvey. Later 
it asserted its independence and joined the Hanseatic League. 
It suffered severely during the Thirty Years' War. After the 
peace of Westphalia in 1648 It was united to Brunswick; in 1802 
it was transferred to Nassau; and in 1807 to the kingdom of 
Westphalia, after the dismemberment of which, in 1814, it came 
into the possession of Prussia. 

See Kampschulte, Chronih der Stadl HdxUr (Hdxter, 187a). 

HOY (Norse Haey, " high island "), the second largest island 
of the Orkneys, county of Orkney, Scotland. Pop. (xooi) 12 16. 
It has an extreme length from N.W.to S.E.of 13} m.,its greatest 
breadth from E. to W. is 8 m., and its area occupies 53 sq. m. 
It is situated a m. S.W. of Pomona, from which it is separated 
by Hoy Sound. As seen from the west it rises abruptly from the 
sea, presenting in this respect a marked contrast to the rest of 
the isles of the Orcadian group, which as a whole are low-lying. 
Its eastern and southern shores are indented by numerous nays, 
one of which, Long Hope, forms a natural harbour 4 m. long, 
with a breadth varying from $ m. to more than x m., affording 
to any number of vessels a haven of refuge from the roughest 
weather of the Pentland Firth. Off the eastern coast lie the 
islands of Graemsay, Cava, Risa, Fara, Flotta and Switha, 
while the peninsula of South Walls, forming the southern side 
of the harbour of Long Hope, is an island in all but name* Red 
and yellow sandstone cliffs, sometimes over 1000 ft. in height, 
stretch for 10 to 12 m. on the Atlantic front. The detached 
pillar or stack called the Old Man of Hoy (450 ft) is a well-known 
landmark to sailors. The only break in this remarkable run 
of rocky coast is at Rackwick in the bight below the head of 
Rora. In the interior, Ward Hill (1 564 ft.) is the loftiest summit 
in either the Orkneys or Shetland*. In the valley between 
Ward Hill and the ridge of the Hamars to the south-east is 
situated the famous Dwarfie Stone, an enormous block of 
sandstone measuring 28 ft. long, from xz ft. to 14} ft. broad, 
and 6) ft high at one end and 2 ft. high at the other, in which 
two rooms have been artificially hollowed out, traditionally 
believed to be the bed-chambers of Trolld, the dwarf of the 
sagas, and his wife. A boulder lying at the narrow end was 
supposed to be used to dose the entrance. The generally 
accepted theory is that it was a pagan altar which some hermit 
afterwards converted into a cell. Other hills in the island are 
the Cuilags (1420 ft.) and the Knap of Trewieglen (1308 ft.), 
besides several peaks exceeding 1000 ft in height Hoy is 
commonly approached from Stromness, there being piers at 
Linksness, the nearest point to Graemsay, and at Hackness, 
South Ness and North Bay, the last three all on the harbour 
of Long Hope. 

HOYLAKE; a watering-place in the Wirral parliamentary 
division of Cheshire, England, 8 m. W. of Birkenhead, on the 
Wirral railway. With West Klrby to the south, at the mouth 
of the estuary of the Dec, It forms the urban district of Hoylake 
and West Kirby. Pop. (1901) 10,9x1. The well-known links 
of the Royal Liverpool Golf Club are at Hoylake. The town 
has a considerable population of fishermen. 

HOYLAND NETHER, an urban district in the Hallamshire 
parliamentary division of the West Riding of Yorkshire, England, 
5§ m. S.S.E. of Barnsley, on the Midland railway. Collieries 
and brickworks, employ the large industrial population. Pop. 
(xoox) 12,464. 



HOYLK, EDMUND, or £dmond (1673-1709), the first system- 
atizer of the laws of whist, and author of a book on games, 
was born in 1 67 2. His parentage and place of birth are unknown, 
and few details of his life are recorded. For some time he was 
resident in London, and partially supported himself by giving 
instruction in the game of whist. For the use of his pupils he 
drew up a Short Treatise on the game, which after circulating 
for some time in manuscript was printed by him and entered 
at Stationers' Hall in November 1742. The laws of Hoyle 
continued to be regarded as authoritative until 1864, since which 
time they have been gradually superseded by the new rules 
adopted by the Arlington and Portland clubs in that year (see 
Whist). He also published rules for various other games, and 
his book on games, which includes the Short Treatise, has passed 
into many editions. The weight of his authority is indicated 
by the phrase " according to Hoyle," which, doubtless first 
applied with reference to whist, has gained currency as a general 
proverb. Hoyle died in London on the 29th of August 1769. 

HOZIBR, PIERRE 0\ Seigneur Dr la Garde (1592-1660), 
French genealogist, was born at Marseilles on the xoth of July 
X593. In 1616 he entered upon some very extensive researches 
into the genealogy of the noble families of the kingdom, in which 
work he was aided by his prodigious memory for dates, names 
and family relationships, as well as by his profound knowledge 
of heraldry. In 1634 he was appointed historiographer and 
genealogist of France, and in 1641 juge d*armes of France, an 
officer corresponding nearly to the Garter king-of-arms in 
England. In 1643 he was employed to verify the claims to 
nobility of the pages and equerries of the king's household. He 
accumulated a large number of documents, but published 
comparatively little, his principal works being Recueil armorial 
des aneiennes maisons de Brelagne (1638); Les noms, surnoms, 
qualitez, armes ct blasons des chevaliers et ojficiers de Vordre du 
Saint- Esprit (1634); and the genealogies of the houses of La 
Rochefoucauld (1654), Bournonville (1657) and Amatue (1659). 
He was renowned as much for his uprightness as for his knowledge, 
no slight praise in a profession exposed to so many temptations 
to fraud. He died in Paris on the 1st of December 1660. At 
his death his collections comprised more than 150 volumes or 
portfolios of documents and papers relating to the genealogy of 
the principal families in France. Of his six sons, only two 
survived him. His eldest son, Louis Roger d'Hozier (1634-1708), 
succeeded him as juge d f armes, but became blind in 1675, an d 
was obliged to surrender his office to his brother. 

Charles Rzn£ d'Hozier (1640-1732), younger son of Pierre, 
was the true continuator of his father. In addition to his 
commentary appended to Antoine Varillas's history of King 
Charles IX. (1686 ed.), he published Recherches sitr la noblesse 
de Champagne (1673). On the promulgation in 1696 of an 
edict directing all who had armorial bearings to register them 
on payment of 20 livres, he was employed to collect the declara- 
tions returned in the various geniraliUs, and established the 
Armorial general de Prance, This work, which contained not 
only the armorial bearings of noble families, but also of those 
commoners who were entitled to bear arms, is not complete, 
inasmuch as many refused to register their arms, either from 
vanity or from a desire to evade the fee. 

The collection (now in the. Bibliotheque Nationalc) consists of 
34 volumes of text and 35 of coloured armorial bearings, and in 
spite of its deficiencies is a useful store of information for the history 
of the old French families. It contains 60,000 names, grouped 
according to provinces and provincial subdivisions. The sections 
relating to Burgundy and Franche-Comte" were published by Henri 
Bouchot (1875-187$: those relating to the gbniraliU of Limoges, 
by Moreau de Pravieux (1895) ; and those for the election of Rams, 
by P. Gosset (1903). 

In 17x7, in consequence of a quarrel with his nephew Louis 
Pierre, son of Louis Roger, Charles sold his collection to the 
king. It then comprised 160 portfolios of genealogical papers 
arranged alphabetically, 175 volumes of documents, and numerous 
printed books profusely annotated. In 1720 it was inventoried 
by P.de Clairambault, who added a certain number of genealogies 
taken from the papers of F. R. de Gaignieres, increasing the 



8+2 



HRABANUS— HROSVITHA 



total to 2x7 boxes and portfolios. Thus originated toe Cabinet 
des litres of the Bibliotheque Nationale. Charles subsequently 
became reconciled to his nephew, to whom he left all the papers 
he had accumulated from the date of the quarrel until his death, 
which occurred in Paris on the 13th of February 173a. 

Louis Pierre d'Hoziei (1685-1767), son of Louis Roger, 
succeeded his uncle Charles asjuge d'armes. He published the 
Armorial giniral, ou regislre de la noblesse de France (10 vols., 
x 738-1 768), which must not be confounded with the publication 
mentioned above, inasmuch as it related solely to noble families 
and was not an official collection. Complete copies of this work, 
which should contain six regis t res, are comparatively rare. 
A seventh registre, forming voL zi. t prepared by Ambroise 
Louis Marie, nephew of Louis Pierre, was published in 1847 by 
comte Charles d'Hozier. Louis Pierre died on the 25th of 
September 1767. His eldest son, Antoine Marie d'Hozier de 
Sengny (1721-c. 1810), was his father's collaborator and con- 
tinuator; and his fourth son, Jean Francois Louis, wrote an 
account of the knights of St Michael in the province of Poitou, 
which was published in 1806 by the vicomte P. de Chabot. 

His nephew, Ambroise Louis Maris d'Hozier (1 764-1846), 
was the last of the juges d'armes of France. He held the* position 
of president of the cour da comptes, aides et finances of Normandy, 
and was therefore generally known as President d'Hozier, to 
distinguish him from the other members of the family. After 
the Restoration he was employed to verify French armorial 
bearings for the conseil du sceau des Hires. He died in obscurity. 
His collection, which was purchased in 1851 by the Bibliotheque 
Nationale, comprised 136 volumes, x6$ portfolios of documents 
and 200 packets of extracts from title-deeds, known as the 
Carres d'Hozier. 

Abraham Charles August^ d'Hozier (1775-1846), who 
also belonged to his family, was* implicated in the conspiracy 
Of Georges Cadoudal, and was condemned to death, but Bona- 
parte spared his life. He did not, however, recover his liberty 
until after the fall of the emperor, and died at Versailles on 
the 24th of August 1846. (C. B.*) 

HRABANUS MAORUS MAGMENTTTJS (c. 776-856), arch- 
bishop of Mainz, and one of the most prominent teachers and 
writers of the Carolingian age, was bom of noble parents at Mainz. 
Less correct forms of his name are Rabanus and Rhabanus. 
Hie date of bis birth is uncertain, but in 801 he received deacon's 
orders at Fulda, where he had been sent to school; in the follow- 
ing year, at the instance of Ratgar, his abbot, he went together 
with Haimon (afterwards of Halberstadt) to complete his studies 
at Tours under Alcuin, who in recognition of his diligence and 
purity gave him the surname of Maurus, after St Maux the 
favourite disciple of Benedict. Returning after the lapse of 
two years to Fulda, he was entrusted with the principal charge 
of the school, which under his direction rose into a state of great 
efficiency for that age, and sent forth such pupils at Wakf rid 
Strabo, Servatus Lupus of Ferrieres and Otfrid of Weissenburg. 
At this period it is most probable that his Excerptio from the 
grammar of Priscian, long so popular as a text-book during the 
middle ages, was compiled. In 814 he was ordained a priest; 
but shortly afterwards, apparently on account of disagreement 
with Ratgar, he was compelled to withdraw for a time from 
Fulda. This " banishment " is understood to have occasioned 
the pilgrimage to Palestine to which he alludes in his commentary 
on Joshua. He returned to Fulda on the election of a new abbot 
(Eigil) in 817, upon whose death in 822 he himself became abbot. 
The duties of this office he discharged with efficiency and success 
until 842, when, in order to secure greater leisure for literature 
and for devotion, he resigned and retired to the neighbouring 
cloister of St Peter's. In 847 he was again constrained to enter 
public life by his election to succeed Otgar in the archbishopric 
of Mainz, which see he occupied for upwards of eight years. 
The principal incidents of historical interest belonging to this 
period of his life were those which arose out of his relations to 
'Gottschalk (?.f.); they may be regarded as thoroughly typical 
of that cruel intolerance which he shared with all his contempor- 
aries, and also of that ardent zeal which was peculiar to himself; 



but they hardly do justice to the spirit of kindly b enevolence 
which in less trying circumstances he was ever ready 10 display. 
He died at Winkel on the Rhine, on the 4 th of February 8561. 
He is frequently referred to as St Rabanus, but incorrectly. 

His voluminous works, many of which remain unpublished, com- 
prise commentaries on a considerable number of the books both of 
canonical and of apocryphal Scripture (Genesis to Judges. Ruth. 
Kings, Chronicles, Judith, Esther, Canticles, Proverbs, wisdom. 
Ecclesiasticus, Jeremiah, Lamentations. Ezekiel, Maccabees, 
Matthc*. the Epistles of St Paul, including Hebrews); and ▼arioos 
treatises relating to doctrinal and practical subjects, indtfdinc more 
than one series of Homilies. Perhaps the most important is that De 
institution* cUricorum, in three books, by which he did much to 
bring into prominence the views of Augustine and Gregory the 
Great as to the training which was requisite for a right dischaiTe 
of the clerical function; the most popular has been a comparatively 
worthless tract De laudibus sanctae cruets. Among the others 
may be mentioned the De universe libri xxii., sine etymologiaram 
opus, a kind of dictionary or encyclopaedia, designed as a help 
towards the historical and mystical interpretation of Scripture, the 
De socris ordimbus, the De disciplino ecclesiastic* and the Martyr* 
logium. All of them are characterized by erudition (he knew eves 
some Greek and Hebrew) rather than by originality of thought. 
The poems are of singularly little interest or value, except as includ- 
ing one form of the *' Veni Creator." In the annals of German 
philology a special interest attaches to the Clossaria Latino- Tkooduca. 
A commentary. Suffer Porthyrium, printed by Cousin in 1836 among 
the Outrages inidtts d' Aboard, and assigned both by that editor 
and by Haurtiau to H rabanus Maurus, is now generally believed to 
have been the work of a disciple. 

The first nominally complete edition of the works of Hrabamv 
Maurus was that of Colvener (Cologne, 6 vols, fol., 1637). The 
Opera omnia form vols. cvii.-cxU. of Migne's Patrologiae curses 
computus. The De unioerso is the subject of Compendium der 
Naturwismnschaften an der Sckute xu Fulda im IX. Jakrhundrt 
(Berlin, 1880). Maurus is the subject ol monographs by Scbwars 
(De Rhabono Afauro prima Germaniae pr acceptor e, 181 1), Kupstmaaa 
(Historische Monographic Hber Hrabanus Maguentius Maurus t 1841}, 
Spengler (Leben des keil. Rhabanus Maurus, 1836) and KohJer 
(Rkabanus Maurus n. die Schukt *u Fulda, 1870). Lines by bis 
disciple Rudolphus and by Joannes Tritbemius are printed m the 
Cologne edition of the Opera. See also Peru, Monusn. Germ. Hut 
0. and ii.); Bahr, Cesch. d. rdmischen LiUratur im Kcrding. 
Zeilalter (1840), and Hauck's article in the Herzog-Hauclc Reel- 
encyUopadie, ed. 3. 

HR6LFR KRAKI, perhaps the most famous of the Danish 
kings of the heroic age. In Beowulf, where he is called Hrotb- 
wnlf , he is represented as reigning over Denmark in con junction 
with his unde Hrothgar, one of the three sons of an earlier 
king called Healfdene. In the Old Norse sagas Hrotfe is the son 
of Helgi (Halga), the son of Halfdan (Healfdene). He b repre- 
sented as a wealthy and peace-loving monarch similar to Hrothgar 
in Beowulf, but the latter (Hroarr, or Roe) is quite overshadowed 
by his nephew in the Northern authorities. The chief incidents 
in Hrolfr's career are the visit which he paid to the Swedish king 
Anils (Beowulf's Eadgils), of which several different explanations 
are given, and the war, in which he eventually lost his life, 
against his brother-in-law Hiotvaror. The name Kraki (pole- 
ladder) is said to have been given to him on account of bis great 
height by a young knight named Vdggr, whom he handsomely 
rewarded and who eventually avenged his death on HiOnraxftt. 
There is no reason to doubt that Hrolfr was an historical person 
and that he reigned in Denmark daring the early years of the 
6th century, but the statement found in ail the sagas that be 
was the stepson of Atils seems hardly compatible with the 
evidence of Beowulf T which is a much earlier authority. 

See Saxo Grammaticus, Costa Danonm, Pp. S»-68, ed. A. Holder 
(Strassburg, 1886); and A. Olsik, Danmarks Hettedigtumi (Copen- 
hagen, 1903). 

HROSVITHA (frequently Roswitba, and properly HnoTSurr), 
early medieval dramatist and chronicler, occupies a very notable 
position in the history of modern European literature. Her 
endeavours formed part of the literary activity by which the age 
of the emperor Otto the Great sought to emulate that of Charles 
the Great. The famous nun of Gandersheim has o cc asiona ll y 
been confounded with her namesake, a learned abbess of the 
same convent, who must have died at least half a century earlier. 
The younger Hrosvitha was born in all probability about the year 
935; and, if the statement be correct that she sang the praises 
of the three Ottos, she must have lived to near the dose of the 



HSUAN TSANG 



*43 



centur y . Some time before the year 950 she entered the Bene- 
dictine nunnery of Gandersbehn, a foundation which was con- 
fined to ladies of German birth, and was highly favoured by 
the Saxon dynasty. In 959 Gerberga, daughter of Duke Henry 
of Bavaria and niece of the emperor Otto I., was consecrated 
abbess of Gandersheim; and the earlier literary efforts of the 
youthful Hrosvitha (whose own connexion with the royal family 
appears to be an unauthenticated tradition) were encouraged 
by the still more youthful abbess, and by a nun of the name of 
Ricbarda. 

The literary works of Hrosvitha, afl of which were as a matter 
of course in Latin, divide themselves into three groups. Of 
these the first and least important comprises eight narrative 
religious poems, in leonine hexameters or distichs. Their subjects 
are the Nativity of the Virgin (from the apocryphal gospel of 
St James, the brother of our Lord), the Ascension and a series 
of legends of saints (Gandolph, Pelagius, Tbeophilus, Basil, 
Denis, Agnes). Like these narrative poems, the dramas to which 
above all Hrosvitha owes her fame seem to have been designed 
for reading aloud or recitation by sisters of the convent. For 
though there are indications that the idea of their representation 
was at least present to the mind of the authoress, the fact of 
such a representation appears to be an unwarrantable assumption.. 
The comedies of Hrosvitha are Six in number, being doubtless 
in this respect also intended to recall their nominal model, the 
comedies of Terence. They were devised on the simple principle 
that the world, the flesh and the devil should not have all the 
good plays to themselves. The experiment upon which the young 
Christian dramatist ventured was accordingly, although not 
absolutely novel, audacious enough. In form the dramas of 
M the strong voice of Gandersheim," as Hrosvitha (possibly 
alluding to a supposed etymology of her name) calls herself, are 
by no means Terentian. They are written in prose, with an 
element of something like rhythm, and an occasional admixture 
of rhyme. In their themes, and in the treatment of these; they 
are what they were intended to be, the direct opposite* of the 
lightsome adapter of Menander. They are founded upon 
legends of the saints, selected with a view to a glorification of 
religion in its supremest efforts and most transcendental aspects. 
The emperor Constantine's daughter, for example, Constantsa, 
gives ber hand in marriage to Gollicanus, just before he starts 
on a Scythian campaign, though she has already taken a vow 
of perpetual maidenhood. In the hour of battle he is himself 
converted, and, having on his return like his virgin bride chosen 
the more blessed unmarried state, dies as a Christian martyr 
in exile. The three holy maidens, Agape, Chionia and Irene, 
are preserved by a humorous miracle from the evil designs of 
DulcUius, to offer up their pure lives as a sacrifice under 
Diocletian's persecutions. Callitnachus, who has Romeo-like 
carried his earthly passion for the saintly Drusiana into her 
tomb, and among its horrors has met with his own death, is 
by the mediation of St John raised with her from the dead to 
a Christian life. All these themes are treated with both spirit 
and skill, often with instinctive knowledge of dramatic effect- 
often with genuine touches of pathos and undeniable felicities 
of expression. In DulcUius there is also an element of comedy, 
or rather of farce. How far Hrosvitha 's comedies were an isolated 
phenomenon of their age in Germany must remain undecided; 
in the general history of the drama they form the visible bridge 
between the few earlier attempts at utilizing the forms of the 
classical drama for Christian purposes and the miracle plays. 
They are In any case the productions of genius; nor has Hrosvitha 
missed the usual tribute of the supposition thai Shakespeare 
has borrowed from her writings. 

The third and last group of the writings of Hrosvitha is that 
of her versified historical chronicles. At the request of the 
abbess Gerberga, she composed her Carmen de gestis Oddonis, 
an epic attempting in some degree to follow the great Roman 
model. It was completed by the year 968, and presented by 
the authoress to both the old emperor and his son (then already 
crowned as) Otto II. This poem so closely adheres to the materials 
supplied to the authoress by members of the imperial family 



that, notwithstanding its courtly omissions, it is regarded as 
an historical authority. Unfortunately only half of it remains; 
the part treating of the period from 953 to 062 is lost with the 
exception of a few fragments, and the period from 962 to 
067 is summarized only. Subsequently, in a poem (of 837 
hexameters) De frimordUs et fundaioribus coenebii Ganders- 
keimensis, Hrosvitha narrated the beginnings of her own convent, 
and its history up to the year 9x9. 

numerated above 
ex the great Vienna 

hi ltea was published 

at t Durer. It was 

re it Wittenberg in 

17 ited into German 
by h by C Magnin 
(F it ofthe authoress 
an a translation into 
Fi 854). A copious 
an naU» de* Dramas, 
jit r ntutrtn Dramas, 
L English Dramatic 
Li Freytae wrote a 
di .0 qualify himself 
as Brinnenmgen cms 
m how impossible it 
wi >mpo«e dramatic- 
al] akesptarc in Ger- 
m reestcd to certain 
pa Res in verse were 
ed mm, iv. 306-335 
(h <gfa* curs. comU. 
(P ided by Leibnitz 
in 17"}- For other 
ea Pa kutorica mtdit 
ae 1 appreciation of 
th , and Giesebrecht, 
Dt in translation by 
Pf orks of Hrosvitha 
by (1867) attempted 
to bich he published 
us ed by R. Kopke 
(B (&— aerie, Paris, 

18 cent experiment, 
th he Theatre des 
M (A.W.W.) 

HSttAN TSANG (Hiouen Thsang, Hiwen TSang, YOah 
Tsang, Yuan-Chwang), the most eminent representative of a 
remarkable and valuable branch of Chinese literature, consisting 
of the narratives of Chinese Buddhists who travelled to India, 
wbust their religion flourished there, with the view of visiting 
the sites consecrated by the history of Sakya Muni, of studying 
at the great convents which then existed in India, and of collecting 
books, relics and other sacred objects. 



£ 



8 44 



HUAMBISAS— HUANCAVELICA 



Hsuan Tsang was born in the district of Keu-Shi, near Honan- 
Fu, about 605, a period at which Buddhism appears to have had 
a powerful influence upon a large body of educated Chinese. 
From childhood grave and studious, he was taken in charge by an 
elder brother who had adopted the monastic life, in a convent at 
the royal city of Loyang in Honan. Hsuan Tsang soon followed 
his brother's example. For some yean he travelled over China, 
teaching and learning, and eventually settled for a time at the 
capital Chang-gan (now Si-gan-fu in Shensi), where his fame 
for learning became great. The desire which he entertained 
to visit India, in order to penetrate all the doctrines of the 
Buddhist philosophy, and to perfect the collections of Indian 
books which existed in China, grew irresistible, and in August 
629 he started upon his solitary journey, eluding with difficulty 
the stria prohibition which was in force against crossing the 
frontier. 

The " master of the law, 1 ' as his biographers call him, plunged 
alone into the terrible desert of the Gobi, then known as the 
Sha-roo or " Sand River," between Kwa-chow and Igu (now 
Hami or Kamil). At long intervals he found help from the small 
garrisons of the towers that dotted the desert track. Very 
striking is the description, like that given six centuries later 
by Marco Polo, of the quasi-supernatural horrors that beset the 
lonely traveller in the wilderness — the visions of armies and 
banners; and the manner in which they are dissipated singularly 
recalls passages m Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress. After great 
suffering Hsuan Tsang reached Igu, the seat of a Turkish princi- 
pality, and pursued his way along the southern foot of the 
T'ian-shan, which he crossed by a glacier pass (vividly described) 
in the longitude of Lake Issyk-kuL In the valley of the Talis 
Trver he encounters the great khan of the Turks on a hunting 
party,— a rencontre which it is interesting to compare with the 
visit of Zemarchus to the great khan Dizabul, sixty years before, 
in the same region. Passing by the present Tashkend, and by 
Samarkand, then inhabited by fire worshippers, he reached the 
basin of the Upper Oxus, which had recently been the seat of 
the powerful dominion of the Haiathelah, Epbthalites or 
White Huns, known in earlier days to the Greeks as Tockari, and 
to HsOan Tsang (by the same name) as Tuholo or Tukbara. His 
account of the many small states into which the Tukhara 
empire had broken up is of great interest, as many of them are 
identical in name and topography with the high valley states 
and districts on the Upper Oxus, which are at this day the object 
of so much geographical and political interest. 

Passing by Bamian, where he speaks of the great idols still 
so famous, he crosses Hindu-Kush, and descends the valley of 
the Kabul river to Nagarahara, the site of which, still known 
as Nagara, adjoining Jalalabad, has been explored by Mr W. 
Simpson. Travelling thence to Peshawar (Pvrushapura), the 
capital of Gandhara, he made a digression, through the now 
inaccessible valley of Swat and the Dard states, to the Upper 
Indus, returning to Peshawar, and then crossing the Indus (Sintu) 
into the decayed kingdom of Taxila (Ta-cha-si-lo, Takshasila), 
then subject to Kashmir. In the latter valley he spent two 
whole years (631-633) studying in the convents, and visiting 
the many monuments of his faith. In his further travels he visited 
Mathura {Mol'ulo, Muttra), whence he turned north to Thanesar 
and the upper Jumna and Ganges, returning south down the 
valley of the latter to Kanyakubja or Kanauj, then one of the 
great capitals of India. The pilgrim next entered on a circuit 
of the most famous sites of Buddhist and of ancient Indian 
history, snch as Ajodhya, Prayaga (Allahabad), Kausambhi, 
Sravasti, Kapilavastu, the birth-place of Sakya, Kusinagara, his 
death-place, Pataliputra (Patna, the Palibolhra of the Greek*), 
Gaya, Rajagriba and Nalanda, the most famous and learned 
monastery and college in India, adorned by the gifts of successive 
kings, of the splendour of which he gives a vivid description, and 
of which traces have recently been recovered. There he again 
spent nearly two years in mastering Sanskrit and the depths 
Of Buddhist philosophy. Again, proceeding down the banks of 
the Ganges, he diverged eastward to Kamarupa (Assam), and 
then passed by the great ports of TamralipU (Tamluk, the mis- 



placed TamaiiHs of Ptolemy), and through Orissa to 
(Conjeeveram), about 640. Thence he went northward aero* 
the Carnatic and Maharashtra to Bacakacheva (Broach of o*r 
day, Barygaa of the Greeks). After this he visited Malwa, Ouch, 
Surashtra (peninsular Gujarat, Syrastrene of the Greeks), Stod, 
Multan and Ghaxni, whence he rejoined his former comae in the 
basin of the Kabul river. 

This time, however, he crosses Pamir, of which be gives a 
remarkable account, and passes by Kashgar, Khotan (Kwtow), 
and the vicinity of Lop-nor across the desert to Kwa-chow, 
whence he had made his venturous and lonely plunge into the 
waste fifteen years before. He carried with him great coiled ions 
of books, precious images and reliques, and was received (April 
645) -with public and imperial enthusiasm. The e mp e r or T'ai- 
Tsung desired him to commit his journey to writing, and also 
that he should abandon the eremitic rule and serve the state. 
This last he declined, and devoted himself to the comptUtioo 
of his narrative and the translation of the books he had brought 
with him from India. The former was completed aj>. 648. In 
664 Hsuan Tsang died in a convent at Chang-gan. Some things 
in the history of his last days, and in the indications of beatitude 
recorded, strongly recall the parallel history of the saints of the 
.Roman calendar. But on the other hand we find the Chinese 
saint, on the approach of death, causing one of fab dis cipl es to 
frame a catalogue of his good works, of the books that be had 
translated or caused to be transcribed, of the sacred pictures 
executed at his cost, of the alms that he had given, of the Irving 
creatures that he had ransomed from death. " When Kia-thaag 
had ended writing this list, the master ordered him to read it aloud. 
After hearing it the devotees clasped their bands, and showered 
their felicitations on him." Thus the "well-done, good and 
faithful " comes from the servant himself in seH-applause. 

The book of the biography, by the disciples Hwai-li and 
Yen-t'sung, as rendered with judicious omissions by Sian. 
Julien, is exceedingly interesting; its Chinese style receives 
high praise from the translator, who says he has often had to 
regret his inability to reproduce its grace, elegance and vivacity. 

Authorities.— F*-iCo«*-J:i, trad, do Chineis, par Abel-Ressmat, 
revu et complete par Klaproth et Landresse (Pans, 1836); H. it la 
vie de Hiouen-Thsang, 6>c, trad, du Chtnois par Stanislas Julien 



(Paris, 1853); M (moires sur Us conlrtes occidental** . . . trad, da 
Chinois en Francais (par le meme) (a vols., Paris, 1857-1 ts*); 
UtmcArt analytique, fife, attached to the last work, by L. Vhriea de 



St Martin; " Attempt to identify some of the Places 1 
the Itinerary of Hiuan Tbsang." by Major Wm. Anderson, C.B.. 
Journ. As. Soc. BcMgal, vol. xvi. pt. a, p. 1183 (the enunciation of a 
singularly perverse theory) ; " Verification of the Itinerary of Hvan 
Tbsang. &c," by Captain Alex. Cunningham, Bengal Engineers, ibid. 



on Hwen Thsang's Account of the Principalities of Tbkharktaa.*" 
by Colonel H. Yule, C.B., in Journ. Roy. As. Soc.. new ser.. voL ri 
p. 83; "On Hiouen Thsang's Journey from Patna to Ballabhi." 
by James Fcrgusson, D.C.L., ibid. p. 213. (H. Y. ; R. K. D.) 

HUAMBISAS, a tribe of South American Indians on the upper 
Marafion and Santiago rivers, Peru. In 1841 they drove all the 
civilized Indians from the neighbouring missions. In 1843 they 
killed all the inhabitants of the village of Santa Teresa, between 
the mouths of the Santiago and Morona. They are fair-skinned 
and bearded, sharing with the Jeveros a descent from the Spanish 
women captured by their Indian ancestors at the sack of Sevilla 
dclOroin 1500. 

HUANCAVELICA, a city of central Peru and capital of a 
department, 160 m. S.E. of Lima. The city stands in a deep 
ravine of the Andes at an elevation of about 13,400 ft. above the 
sea, the ravine having an average width of x m. Pop. (1006 
estimate) 6000. The city is solidly and regularly built, the 
houses being of stone and the stream that flows through the 
town being spanned by several stone bridges. Near Buan- 
cavelica is the famous quicksilver mine of Santa Barbara, with 
its subterranean church of San Rosario, hewn from the native 
cinnabar-bearing rock. Huancavelica was founded by Viceroy 
Francisco de Toledo in 157a as a mining town, and mining 
continues to l>e the principal occupation of its inhabitants. The 



HUANUCQ— HUBER, L. F. 



«45 



department is traversed by the Cordillera Occidental, .and is 
bounded N., E. and S. by Junin and Ayacucho. Pop. (1906 
official estimate) 167,840; area, 9254 sq. m. The principal 
industry is mining for silver and quicksilver. The best-known 
silver mines are the Castrovirreyna. 

HUAHUCO, a city of central Peru, capital of a department, 
170 m. N.N.E. of Lima in a beautiful valley on the left bank of 
the Huallaga river, nearly 6000 ft. above sea-level. Pop. (1906 
estimate) about 6000. The town was founded in 1539 by Gomes 
Alvarado. Huinuco is celebrated for its fruits and sweetmeats, 
the " chirimoya " {Anona ckirimolia) of this region being the 
largest and most delicious of its kind. Mining is one of the city's 
industries. Huinuco was the scene of one of the bloodthirsty 
massacres of which the Chileans were guilty during their occupa- ' 
tion of Peruvian territory in 1881-188,}. The department of 
Huinuco lies immediately N. of Junin, with Ancachs on the W. 
and San Martin and Loreto on the N. and E. Pop. (1906 
estimate) 108,980; area, 14,028 sq. m. It lies wholly in the 
Cordillera region, and is traversed from S. to N. by the Maranon 
and Huallaga rivers. 

HUARAZ, a city of northern Peru and capital of the department 
of Ancachs, on the left bank of the Huaraz, or Santa river, about 
190 m. N.N.W. of Lima and 58 m. from the coast. Pop. (1876) 
4851, (1906 estimate) 6000. Huaraz is situated in a narrow 
fertile valley 01 the Western Cordillera, at a considerable eleva- 
tion above sea-level, and has a mild climate. A railway projected 
to connect Huaraz with the port of Chimbotc, on the Bay of 
Chimbote, a few miles S. of the mouth of the Santa river, was 
completed from Chimbote to Suchimin (33 ra.) in 1872, when 
work was suspended for want of money. In the valley of the 
Huaraz cattle are raised, and wheat, sugar and fruit, gold, silver, 
copper and coal are produced. Alfalfa is grown by stock-raisers, 
and the cattle raised here are among the best in the Peruvian 
market. In the vicinity of Huaraz are megalithic ruins similar 
to those of Tiahunaco and Cuzco, showing that the aboriginal 
empire preceding the Incas extended into northern Peru. 

HUAHTE DB SAN JUAN, or Huaktk Y Navarro, Juan 
(e. 1530-1592), Spanish physician and psychologist, was born at 
Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port (Lower Navarre) about 1530, was 
educated at the university of Huesca, where he graduated in 
medicine, and, though it appears doubtful whether he practised 
as a physician at Huesca, distinguished himself by his professional 
skill and heroic zeal during the plague which devastated Baeza 
in 1566. He died in 1592. His Examen de ingenios para las 
ciencias (1575) won him a European reputation, and was trans- 
lated by Leasing. Though now superseded, Huarte's treatise is 
historically interesting as the first attempt to show the con- 
nexion between psychology and physiology, and its acute 
ingenuity is as remarkable as the boldness of its views, 

HUASTECS, a tribe of North American Indians of Mayan 
stock, living to the north of Vera Cruz. They are of interest to the 
ethnologist as being so entirely detached from the other Mayan 
tribes of Central America. The theory is that the Mayas came 
from the north and that the Huastecs were left behind in the 
migration southward. 

HUBER, FRANCOIS (1750-1831), Swiss naturalist, was born 
at Geneva on the and of July 175a He belonged to a family 
which had already made its mark in the literary and scientific 
world: his great-aunt, Marie Huber (1695-1753), was known as 
a voluminous writer on religious and theological subjects, and 
as the translator and epitomizer of the Spectator (Amsterdam, 
3 vols., 1753); *J»d his father Jean Huber (1 721-1786), who had 
served for many years as a soldier, was a prominent member of 
the coterie at Ferney, distinguishing himself by his Observations 
tur levoldes oiscaux (Geneva, 1784). Francois Huber was only 
fifteen years old when he began to suffer from an affection of the 
eyes which gradually resulted in total blindness; but, with the 
aid of his wife, Marie Aimee Lullin, and of his servant, Francois 
Burncns, he was able to carry out investigations that laid the 
foundations of our scientific knowledge of the life history of the 
honey-bee. His NouveUes Observations sur les abeiUes was pub- 
lished at Geneva in. 1792 (Eng. trans., x8o6). He assisted Jean 



Senebier in his Aftst. sur rimfimnee de fair, 6fe, dans la&rndna- 
tion (Geneva, 1800) ; and he also wrote " Mem. sur l'ociginc de la 
cire " (BibUotkhque brtianmique, tome xxv ), a u Lettrc i M. 
Pictet sur certains dangers que oourent les abeules" (Bib. 
brU. xxvii), and " NouveUes Observ. rd. au sphinx Atropos " 
( Bib. brit. xxvii). He died at Lausanne on the 2nd of December 
1831. DeCandolle gave his name to a genus of Brazilian trees— 
Huberia laurina. 

Pierre Hober (1 777-1*40) followed in his father's footsteps. 
His best-known work is Reckerckes sur Us numrs des fonrms 
indigenes (Geneva and Paris, 1810; new ed., Geneva, 1861), and 
he also wrote various papers on entomological subjects. 

See the account of Francois Huber, by De Candolle, in BtW. 
unsversetU (1832); and the notice of Pierre in Bibl. unto. (1886); 
also Haag, La franco protestante, 

HUBER, JOHANN NEPOMUK (1830-1879), German philo- 
sophical and theological writer, a leader of the Old Catholics, 
was born at Munich on the 18th of August 1830. Originally 
destined for the priesthood, he early began the study of theology. 
By the writings of Spinoza and Oken, however, he was strongly 
drawn to philosophical pursuits, and it was in philosophy that 
he " habilitated (1854) in the university of his native place, 
where he ultimately became professor (extraordinarius, 1859; 
ordinarius, 1864). With Ddllinger and others he attracted a 
large amount of public attention in 1869 by the challenge to the 
Ultramontane promoters of the Vatican council in the treatise 
Der Papst uuddasKoncU, which appeared under the pseudonym 
of " Janus," and also in 1870 by a series of letters (Rdmiuke 
Bricfe, a redaction of secret reports sent from Rome during the 
sitting of the council), which were published over the pseudonym 

Q'" ~- 

di 

18 
pL 

•ti 

ft 

Jt 
Gi 

% 

ad 

E 

Si 

Ai 

(1 



Michael Huber (1727-1804), who did much to promote the 
study of German literature in France. In his infancy young 
Huber removed with his parents to Leipzig, where he was 
carefully instructed in modern languages and literature, and 
showed a particular inclination for those of France and England. 
In Leipzig he became intimate with Christian Gottfried KSrner, 
father of the poet; in Dresden Huber became engaged to Dora 
Stock, sister of Korner's betrothed* and associated with Schiller, 
who was one of Korner's stancbest friends. In 1787 he was 
appointed secretary to the Saxon legation in Mainz, where he 
remained until the French occupation of 1792. While here be 
interested himself for the welfare of the family of bis friend 
Georg Forster, who, favouring republican views, had gone to 
Paris, leaving his wife Therese Forster (1764-1829) and family 
in destitute circumstances. Huber, enamoured of the talented 
young wife, gave up his diplomatic post, broke off his engagement 
to Dora Stock, removed with the Forster family to Switzerland, 
and on the death of her husband in 1794 married Therese Forster. 
In 1798 Huber took over the editorship of the AUgemeine Zeitung 
in Stuttgart. The newspaper having been prohibited in Wurttem- 
berg, Huber continued its editorship in Ulm in 1803. He was 
created " counsellor of education " for the new Bavarian province 
of Swabia in the following year, but had hardly entered upon 
the functions of his new office when be died on the 24th of 
December 1804. 



« 4 6 



HUBERT, ST— HUC 



Huber was well versed in English literature, and in 1785 he 
published the drama Ethehoolf, with notes on Beaumont and 
Fletcher and the old English stage. He also wrote many dramas, 
comedies and tragedies, most of which are now forgotten, and 
among them only Das Heimlich* Gericht (1790, new ed. 1795) 
enjoyed any degree of popularity. As a critic he is seen to 
advantage in the Vermischte SckrifUn ws dem Verfasser des 
heimlichen Gerichts (2 vols., 1793). As a publicist he made his 
name in the historical-political periodicals Friedensprttliminaricn 
(1794*1796, xo vols.) and Klio (1795-^98, 1819). 

His collected works. Sdmiliche Werhe seitdem Jakre 1802 U vols., 
1807-1819), were published with a biography by his wife Therese 
Huber. See L. Speidel and H. Wittmann, Bilder aus der SchUler- 
Zeit (1884). 

HUBERT (Hucbertus, Hucbertus), ST (d. 727), bishop of 
Liege, whose festival is celebrated on the 3rd of November. 
The BoBandists have published seven different lives of the 
saint. The first is the only one of any value, and is the work 
of a contemporary. Unfortunately, it is very sparing of details. 
In it we see that Hubert in 708 succeeded Lambert in the see 
of Maestricht (Tongres), and that he erected a basilica to his 
memory. In 825 Hubert's remains were removed to a Bene- 
dictine ctoister in the Ardennes, which thenceforth bore his 
name (St Hubert, province of Luxemburg, Belgium), and ulti- 
mately became a considerable resort of pilgrims. The later 
legends (BibUotheca hagiographica latino, nos. 3994-4002) are 
devoid of authority. One of them relates, probably following 
the legend of St Eustace, the miracle of the conversion of St 
Hubert. This conversion, represented as having been brought 
about while he was hunting on Good Friday by a miraculous 
appearance of a stag bearing between his horns a cross or crucifix 
surrounded with rays of light, has frequently been made the 
subject of artistic treatment. He is the patron of hunters, and 
Is also invoked in cases of hydrophobia. Several orders of 
knighthood have been under his protection; among these may 
be mentioned the Bavarian, the Bohemian and that of the 
electorate of Cologne. 

See Acta Sanctorum, Novembris, f. 759-93°: G. Kurth, Chartes 
de Fabbayt de St Hubert en Ardenne (Brussels, 1003) ; Anna Jameson, 
Sacred and Legendary Art, i. 732-737 (London, 1896); Cahier, 
CaracUristtques des sasnts, pp. 183, 775, cVc. (Paris, 1867). (H. De.) 

HUBBRTDSBURG, a chateau in the kingdom of Saxony, 
near the village of Wermsdorf and midway 6 m. between the 
towns Oschatz and Grimma. It was built in 1721-1724 by 
Frederick Augustus II., elector of Saxony, subsequently King 
Augustus III. of Poland, as a hunting box, and was often the 
scene of brilliant festivities. It is famous for the peace signed 
here on the 15th of February 1763, which ended the Seven Years' 
War. After undergoing various vicissitudes, it now serves the 
purpose of a lunatic asylum and a training school for nursing 
sisters. 

See Riemer, Das Schloss Hubertusburg, sonst undjettt (Oschatz, 

HUBLI, a town of British India, in the Dharwar district of 
Bombay, 15 ra. S.E, of Dharwar town. Pop. (1901) 60,214. 
It is a railway junction on the Southern Mahratta system, 
where the lines to Bangalore and Bezwada branch off south and 
west. It is an important centre of trade and of cotton and silk 
weaving, and has two cotton mills and several factories for 
ginning and pressing cotton. Hubli was in early times the seat 
of an English factory, which, with the rest of the town, was 
plundered in 1673 by Sivaji, the Mahratta leader. 

H0BNBR, EML (1834-1901), German classical scholar, son 
of the historical painter Julius Hilbner (1806-1882), was born at 
Dusseidorf on the 7th of July 1834. After studying at Berlin 
and Bonn, he travelled extensively with a view to antiquarian 
and epigraphical researches. The results of these travels were 
embodied in several important works: Inscriptiones Hispaniae 
Latinae (1869, supplement 1892), I.H. Christians (1871, supple- 
ment 1900); Inscriptions Britanniae Latinae (1873), J B - 
Christiana* (1876); La Arqueologia de EspaOa (1888); Monu- 
ment* linguae Hibsrioae (1893). Hilbner was also the author 
of two books of the greatest utility to the classical student: 



Grundriss s* Vorlesungen flier die rimische Lkeraimrg€sekUkm 
(4th ed. 1878, edited, with large additions, by J. E. B. Mayor as 
Bibliographical Clue to Latin Literature, 1873), and B&iogrophie 
der dassischen AUertumsvissenschaft (and ed., 1889); mentioa 
may also be made of Rbmische Epigraphih (2nd ed., 1892); 
Exempla Scripturae Epigraphicae Latinae (1885); and Rfimische 
Herrschaft in Westeuropo (1890). In 1870 Htibner was appointed 
professor of Classical Philology in the university of BeriSn, 
where be died on the 21st of February 1901. 

HttBNER, JOSEPH ALEXANDER. Count (1811-1802), 
Austrian diplomatist, was born in Vienna on the 26th of 
November 181 1. His real name was Hafenbredl, winch he after- 
wards changed to HCibner. He began his public career in 1833 
under Metternich, whose confidence he soon gained, and who 
sent him in 1837 as attache to Paris. In 1841 he became secretary 
of embassy at Lisbon, and in 1844 Austrian consul-general at 
Leipzig. In 1848 he was sent to Milan to conduct the diplomatic 
correspondence of Archduke Rainer, viceroy of Lombardy. 
On the outbreak of the revolution he was seized as a hostage; 
and remained a prisoner for some months. Returning to Austria, 
he was entrusted with the compilation of the documents and pro- 
clamations relating to the abdication of the Emperor Ferdinand 
and the accession of Francis Joseph, His journal, an invaluable 
due to the complicated intrigues of this period, was published 
in 1891 in French and German, under the title of Une Annie 
de ma vie, 1848-1849. In March 1849 he was sent on a special 
mission to Paris, and later in the same year was appointed 
ambassador to France. To his influence was in large measure 
due the friendly attitude of Austria to the Allies in the Crimean 
War, at the close of which he represented Austria at the congress 
of Paris in 1856. He allowed himself, however, to be taken by 
surprise by Napoleon's intervention on behalf of Italian unity, 
of which the first public intimation was given by the French 
emperor's cold reception of Htibner on New Year's Day, 1859, 
with the famous words: " I regret that our relations with your 
Government are not so good as they have hitherto been," He 
did not return to Paris after the war, and after holding the 
ministry of police in the Goluchowski cabinet from August to 
October 1859, lived in retirement till 1865, when be became 
ambassador at Rome. Quitting this post in 1867, be undertook 
extensive travels, his descriptions of which appeared as Promemade 
autour du monde, 1871 (1873; English translation by Lady 
Herbert, 1874) and Through the British Empire (x886). Written 
in a bright and entertaining style, and characterized by shrewd 
observation, they achieved considerable popularity in their 
time. A more serious effort was his Sixte-Quint (1870, trans- 
lated into English by H. E. H. Jerningham under the title of 
The Life and Times of Sixtus the Fifth, 1872), an original contribu- 
tion to the history of the period, based on unpublished documents 
at the Vatican, Simancas and Venice. In 1879 he was made 
a life-member of the Austrian Upper House, where he sat as a 
Clerical and Conservative. He had received the rank of Baron 
(Freiherr) in 1854, and in z888 was raised to the higher rank of 
Count (Graf). He died at Vienna on the 30th of Jury 1892. 
Though himself of middle-class origin, he was a profound admirer 
of the old aristocratic regime, and found his political ideals in 
his former chiefs, Metternich and Schwarzenberg. As the last 
survivor of the Metternich school, he became towards the dose 
of his life more and more out of touch with the trend of modern 
politics, but remained a conspicuous figure in the Upper House 
and at the annual delegations. That he possessed the breadth 
of mind to appreciate the working of a system at total variance 
with his own school of thought was shown by his grasp of British 
colonial questions. It is interesting, in view of subsequent 
events, to note his emphatic belief in the loyalty of the British 
colonies— a belief not shared at that time by many statesmen 
with far greater experience of democratic institutions. 

See & Erne* Soxow, An AMlrionDiplematistim the Fifties (11^ 

HUC, 4VARI8TB RfiGIS (18x3-1860), French missionary* 
traveller, was born at Toulouse, on the xst of August 18x3. In 
his twenty-fourth year he entered the congregation of the 
Lazarists at Paris, and shortly after receiving boxy orders m 



HUCBALD— HUCHOWN 



8+7 



1839 went out to Orin*. At Macao he spent some eighteen 
months in the Lazarist seminary, preparing himself for the 
regular work of a missionary. Having acquired some command 
of the Chinese tongue, and modified his personal appearance 
and dress in accordance with Chinese taste, he started from 
Canton. Be at first superintended a Christian mission in the 
southern provinces, and then passing to Peking, where he per- 
fected his knowledge of the language, eventually settled in the 
Valley of Black Waters or He Shuy, a little to the north of the 
capital, and just within the borders of Mongolia. There, beyond 
the Great Wall, a large but scattered population of native 
Christians had found a refuge from the persecutions of Kia- 
King, to be united half a century later in a vast but vague 
apostolic vicariate. The assiduity with which Hue devoted 
himself to the study of the dialects and customs of the Tatars, 
for whom at the cost of much labour he translated various 
religious works, was an admirable preparation for undertaking 
in 1844, at the instigation of the vicar apostolic of Mongolia, 
an expedition whose object was to dissipate the obscurity which 
hung over the country and habits of the Tibetans. September 
of that year found the missionary at Dolon Nor occupied with 
the final arrangements for his journey, and shortly afterwards, 
accompanied by his feUow-Lazarist, Joseph Gabet, and a young 
Tibetan priest who had embraced Christianity, he set out. To 
escape attention the little party assumed the dress of lamas 
or priests. Crossing the Hwang-ho, they advanced into the 
terrible sandy tract known as the Ordos Desert. After suffering 
dreadfully from want of water and fuel they entered Kansu, 
having recrosied the flooded Hwang-ho, but it was not till 
January 1845 that they reached Tang-Kiul on the. boundary. 
Rather than encounter alone the horrors of a four months' 
journey to Lhasa they resolved to wait for eight months till 
the arrival of a Tibetan embassy on its return from Peking. 
Under an intelligent teacher they meanwhile studied the Tibetan 
language and Buddhist literature, and during three months 
of their stay they resided in the famous Kunbum Lamasery, 
which was reported to accommodate 4000 persons. Towards 
the end of September they joined the returning embassy, which 
comprised 2000 men and 3700 animals. Crossing the deserts 
of Koko Nor, they passed the great lake of that name, with its 
island of contemplative lamas, and, following a difficult and 
tortuous, track across snow-covered mountains, they at last 
entered Lhasa on the 29th of January 1846. Favourably received 
by the regent, they opened a little chapel, and were in a fair way 
to establish an important mission, when the Chinese ambassador 
interfered and had the two missionaries conveyed back to Canton, 
where they arrived in October of the same year. For nearly 
three years Hue remained at Canton, but Gabet, returning to 
Europe, proceeded thence to Rio de Janeiro, and died there 
shortly afterwards. Hue returned to Europe in shattered 
health in 1852, visiting India, Egypt and Palestine on his way, 
and, after a prolonged residence in Paris, died on the 31st of 
March 1860. 

His writings comprise, besides numerous letters and memoirs 
in the Annates de la propagation de la Jot, the famous Souvenirs d'un 
voyage dans la Tartarie, te Thibet, et la Chine pendant Us annies 
28*4-1846 (2 vols., Paris, 1850; Eng. trans, by W. Haxlitt, 1851, 
abbreviated by M. Jones, London, 1867); its supplement, crowned 
by the Academy, entitled L' Empire chtnois (2 vols., Paris, 1854; 
trig, trans., London, 1859); and an elaborate historical work, Le 
Christianisme en Chine, &c. (4 vols., Paris, 1857-1858; Eng. trans., 
London. 1857-1858). These works are written in a lubd, racy, 
picturesque style, which secured for them an unusual degree of 
popularity. The Souvenirs is a narrative of a remarkable teat of 
travel, and contains passages of so singular a character as in the 
absence of corroborative testimony to stir up a feeling of incredulity. 
That Hue was suspected unjustly was amply proved by later re- 
search. But he was by no means a practical geographer, and 
the record of his travels loses greatly in value from the want of 
precise scientific data. 

See, for information specially relating to the whole subject , the 
Abbe Desgodin's Mission dm Thibet de 1855 a 1870 (Verdun, 1872); 
and " Account of the Pundit's Journey in Great Tibet," in the 
Royal Geographical Society's Journal for 1877. 

HUCBALD (Hucbaldos, Hubalous), Benedictine monk, and 
writer on music, was born at the monastery of Saint Amand 



near Toumai, in or about 840, if we may believe the statement of 
his biographers to the effect that he died in 930, aged 00. He 
studied at the monastery, where his uncle Milo occupied an 
important position. Hucbald made rapid progress in the 
acquirement of various sciences and arts, including that of musk, 
and at an early age composed a hymn in honour of St Andrew, 
which met with such success as to excite the jealousy of his uncle. 
It is said that Hucbald in consequence was compelled to leave 
St Amand, and started an independent school of music and other 
arts at Never*. In 860, however, he was at St Germain d'Auxerre, 
bent upon completing his studies, and in 872 he was back again 
at St Amand as the successor in the headmastership of the 
convent school of his uncle, to whom he had been reconciled in 
the meantime. Between 883 and 900 Hucbald went on several 
missions of reforming and reconstructing various schools of 
music, including that of Rheirns, but in the latter year he re- 
turned to St Amand, where he remained to the day of his death 
on the 25th of June 030, or, according to other chroniclers, 
on the 20th of June 952. The only work which can positively 
be ascribed to him is his Harmonica Instilutio. The Music* 
Enchiriadis, published with other writings of minor importance 
in Gerbert's Scriptora de Mustio, and containing a complete 
system of musical science as well as instructions regarding 
notation, has now been proved to have originated about half a 
century later than the death of the monk Hucbald, and to have 
been the work of an unknown writer belonging to the close of the 
10th century and possibly also bearing the name of Hucbald. 
This work is celebrated chiefly for an essay on a new form 
of notation described in the present day as Dasia Notation. 
The author of the Harmonica Jnslitutio wrote numerous lives 
of the saints and a curious poem on bald men, dedicated to 
Charles the Bald. 

Authorities.— Sir John Hawkins, General History of tk* Scienct 
and Practice of Music (1. 153) ; Histoire lilliraire de la France (vi. 216 
et seq.); Coussemaker, Mtmoire sur Hucbald (Paris, 1841); Hans 
MQllcr, Hucbald's edit* und unechU Schriften uber Musik (Leipto'g, 
1884); Spitu, Die Musica Enchiriadis und seine ZeitaiUr (Vtewm- 
jahresschrift fir Musikwissenschoft, 1889, 5th year). 

HU-CHOW-FU, a city of China, in the province of Cheh-Riang 
(30° 48' N., i2o° 3' E.), a little S. of Tai-hu Lake, in the 
midst of the central silk district. According to Chinese authorities 
it is 6 m. in circumference, and contains about 100,000 families. 
A broad stream or canal crosses the city from south to north, 
and forms the principal highway for boat traffic. The main 
trade of the place is in raw silk, but some silk fabrics, such as 
flowered crape (ckousha), are also manufactured. Silk is largely 
worn even by the lowest classes of the inhabitants. 

HUCHOWN, " of the Awle Ryale " (fl. 14th century), Scottish 
poet, is referred to by Wyntoun in his Chronicle in these words.— 
41 Hucheon, 

Git cunnande was in lhtratur. 
e made a grct Gest of Arthur*, 
And pe Awntyr of Gawane, 

B; Pistil ak of Suet Susane. 
e was curyousse in his stifle, 
Fayr of facunde and subtile, 
And ay to pleyssance hade delyte. 
Mad in metyr meit his dyte 
Litil or noucht neuir pe lease 
Wauerande fra be suythfastnes." 

(Cott. MS. bk. v. 11, 4308-4318). 

Much critical ingenuity has been spent in endeavouring to 
identify (a) the poet and (b) the works named in the foregoing 
passage. It has been assumed that " Huchown," or " Hucheon," 
represents the " gude Sir Hew of Eglyntoun " named by Dunbar 
(q-.v.) in his Lament for the Makaris (i. 53). The only known 
Sir Hugh of EgKntoun of the century is frequently mentioned 
in the public records from the middle of the century onwards, 
as an auditor of accounts and as witness to several charters. 
By 1360 he had married Dame Egidia, widow of Sir James 
Lindsay and half-sister of Robert the Steward. His public 
office and association with the Steward sorts well with the 
designation " of the Awle Ryale," if that be interpreted as 
" Aula Regalis " or " Royal Palace." He appears to have died 
late in 1576 or early in 1377. 



3 4 8 



HUCHTENBURG— HUDDERSFIELD 



The first of the poems named above, the Gest of Artkure ot 
Gest Histeryalle (ib. L 4288), has been identified by Dr Trautmann, 
" Anglia," Der Dichter Huchown (1877), with the alliterative 
Morte Artkure in the Thornton MS. at Lincoln, printed by the 
E.E.T.S. <ed. Brock, 1865). The problem of the second (Tke 
Awntyr of Gavane) is still in dispute. There are difficulties in 
the way of accepting the conjecture that the poem is the " Awn- 
tyres of Arthure at the Tern Wathdyne " (see S.T.S., Scottish 
Alliterative Poems, 1897, and Introduction, pp. 11 et seq.), and 
little direct evidence in favour of the view that the reference is 
to the greatest of middle English romances, Sir Gawam and 
tke Grene Knight. The third may be safely accepted as the 
well-known Pistil [Epistle] of Swete Susan, printed by Laing 
{Select Remains, 1822) and by the S.T.S. (Scottish Alliterative 
Poems, ujX 

See, in addition to the works named above. G. NeSson's Sir Hew 
of Eglintoun and Huckown of the Awle Ryale (Glasgow, iqoi). which 
contains a full record of references to the historical Sir Hew of 
Eglintoun; Huchown of the Awle Ryale, the Alliterative Poet 
(Glasgow, 1902) by the same; J. T. T. Brown's Huchown of the 
Awle Ryale and his Poems (Glasgow, 1902), tn answer to the fore- 
going. See also the correspondence in the Athenaeum, 1 900-1 901, 
and the review of Mr Neilson's pamphlets, ib. (Nov. 22, 1902) ; and 
Jf. H. Millar's Literary History of Scotland (1903), pp. 8-14. 

HUCHTENBURG, the name of two brothers who were Dutch 
painters in the second half of the 17th century. Both were natives 
of Haarlem. Jacob, the elder, of whom very little is known, 
studied under Berghem, and went early to Italy, where he 
died young about 1667. His pictures are probably confounded 
with those of his brother. In Copenhagen, where alone they are 
catalogued, they illustrate the style of a Dutchman who transfers 
Berghem's cattle and flocks to Italian landscapes and market- 
places. 

. John van Huchtenburg (1646-1733), born at Haarlem it is 
said in 1646, was first taught by Thomas Wyk, and afterwards 
induced to visit the chief cities of Italy, where, penetrating as 
far as Rome, he met and dwelt with his brother Jacob. After 
the death of the latter he wandered homewards, taking Paris on 
his way, and served under Van der Meulen, then employed in 
illustrating for Louis XIV. the campaign of 1667-1668 in the 
Low Countries. In 1670 he settled at Haarlem, where he married, 
practised and kept a dealer's shop. His style had now merged 
into an imitation of Philip Wouvermans and Van der Meulen, 
which could not fail to produce pretty pictures of hunts and 
robber camps, the faculty of painting horses and men in action 
and varied dress being the chief point of attraction. Later 
Huchtenburg ventured on cavalry skirmishes and engagements 
of regular troops generally, and these were admired by Prince 
Eugene and William III., who gave the painter sittings, and 
commissioned him to throw upon canvas the chief incidents of 
the battles they fought upon the continent of Europe. When 
he died at Amsterdam in 1733, Huchtenburg had done much by 
his pictures and prints to make Prince Eugene, King William 
and Marlborough popular. Though clever in depicting a milSe 
or a skirmish of dragoons, he remained second to Philip Wouver- 
mans in accuracy of drawing, and inferior to Van der Meulen in 
the production of landscapes. But, nevertheless, he was a clever 
and spirited master, with great facility of hand and considerable 
natural powers of observation. 

The earliest date on his pictures is 1674, when he executed the 
" Stag-Hunt " in the Museum of Beriin,and the " Fight with Robbers " 
in the Lichtenstein collection at Vienna. A " Skirmish at Fleurus " 
(1690) in the Brussels gallery seems but the precursor of larger and 
more powerful works, such as the " Siege of Namur " (1695; in the 
Belvedere at Vienna, where William 1H. is seen in the foreground 
accompanied by Max Emmanuel, the Bavarian elector. Three 

E before, Huchtenburg had had sittings from Prince Eugene 
ue museum) and William III. (Amsterdam Trippenhuis). 
1696 he regularly served as court painter to Prince Eugene, 
and we have at Turin (gallery) a series of eleven canvases all of the 
same sire depicting the various battles of the great hero, commenc- 
ing with the fight of Zentha against the Turks in 1697, and con- 
cluding with the capture of Belgrade in 1717. Had the duke of 
Marlborough been fond of art he would doubtless have possessed 
many works of our artist. All that remains at Blenheim, however, 
a a couple of sketches of battles, which were probably sent to 
Churchill by his great contemporary. The pictures of Huchtenburg 




are not very numerous now in public galleries. There b one ia the 
National Gallery, London, another at the Louvre. But Copeatmgem 
has four, Dresden six, Gotha two, and Munich has the wefl-koowa 
composition of " Tallart taken Prisoner at Blenheim in 1704." 

HUCKABACK, 1 the name given to a type of doth used lor 
towels. For this purpose it has perhaps been more extensively 
used in the linen trade than any other weave. One of the chief 
merits of a towel is its capacity for absorbing moisture; phia 
and other flat-surfaced cloths do not perform this function 
satisfactorily, but cloths made with huckaback, as well at 
those rnade with the honeycomb and similar weaves, are 1 
larly well adapted for this purpose. . 
The body or foundation of the doth | 
is plain and therefore sound in struc- 
ture (see designs A and B in figure), I 
but at fixed intervals some of the 1— 
warp threads float on the surface of 
the doth, while at the same time a number of weft threadi 
float on the back. Thus the doth has a somewhat sumlar 
appearance on both sides. Weave A is the ordinary and most 
used huck or huckaback, while weave B, which is usually 
woven with double weft, is termed the Devon or medical buck. 
The doths made by the use of these weaves were originally aQ 
linen, but are too often adulterated with inferior fibres. 

HUCKLEBERRY, in botany, the popular name in the north- 
eastern United States of the genus Gaytussacia, small branching 
shrubs resembling in habit the English bilberry (V actinium), 
to which it is dosely allied, and bearing a similar fruit. The 
common huckleberry of the northern states is G. resmsso; 
while G. brachycera and G. dumosa are known respectivdy as 
box and dwarf huckleberry. The name Gaytussacia com- 
memorates the famous French chemist Gay-Lussac. 

HUCKNALL TORKARD, a town in the Ruabdiffe parmv 
mentary division of Nottinghamshire, England; 13 2 m. N.N.W. 
from London by the Great Central railway, served also by the 
Great Northern and Midland railways. Pop. (toox) x 5,350. 
The church of St Mary Magdalene contains the tomb of Lord 
Byron. There are extensive collieries in the vidnity, and the 
town has tobacco and hosiery works. Small traces are found 
of Beau vale Abbey, a Carthusian foundation of the 14th century, 
In the hilly, wooded district W. of HucknaO; and 3 in. N. is 
Newstead Abbey, in a beautiful situation on the border of 
Sherwood Forest. This Augustinian foundation owed *" its 
origin to Henry II. It came into the hands of the Byron family 
in 1540, and the poet Byron resided in it at various times until 
18 18. There remain the Early English west front of the church, 
a Perpendicular cloister and the chapter-house; while m the 
mansion, wholly restored since Byron's time, and in the demesne, 
many relics of the poet are preserved. To the S. of HucknaD are 
traces of Gresl ey Castle, of the 14th century. 

HUCKSTER, a dealer or retailer of goods in a small way. 
The word, in various forms, is common to many Teutonic 
languages. In Early English it is found as kowkester, hokesUr, 
huxter\ in early modern Dutch as keuker, and Medieval Low 
German as hoker; but the ultimate origin is unknown. Huckster 
apparently belongs to that series of words formed from a verb,— 
as brew, brewer, but the noun "huckster" is found in use 
before the verb to huck. Hawker and pedlar are nearly synonym- 
ous in meaning, but " huckster " may include a person in a small 
way of trade in a settled habitation, while a hawker or pedlar 
invariably travels from place to place offering his wares. la 
a contemptuous sense, -huckster is used of any one who barters, 
or makes gain or profit in underhand or mean ways, or who 
over-reaches another, to get advantage for himself. 

HUDDERSFIELD, a municipal, county and parliamentary 
borough in the West Riding of Yorkshire, England, 100 m. 
N.N.W. from London. Pop. (1001) 95,047. It is served 
by the Lancashire & Yorkshire and London & North Western 

1 Skeat, Etym. Diet. (1898), says, " The word bears so remarkable 
resemblance to Low Ger. hukkeboh, Ger. huckeback. P ick -*-}*cM*|5 
it seems reasonable to suppose that it at first meant * peddlers 
ware.' " The New English Dictionary does not consider that the 
connexion can at present be assumed. 



HUDSON, G.— HUDSON, H. 



8+9 



railways, and has connexion with all the important railway 
system* of the West Riding, and with the extensive canal 
system of Lancashire and Yorkshire. It is well situated on a 
slope above the river Colne, a tributary of the Colder. It is 
built principally of stone, and contains several handsome streets 
with numerous great warehouses and business premises, many 
of which are of high architectural merit. Of the numerous 
churches and chapels all are modern, and some of considerable 
beauty. The parish church of St Peter, however, though rebuilt 
In 1837, occupies a site which is believed to have carried a church 
since the 1 ith century. The town hall < 1880) and the corporation 
offices (1877) are handsome classic buildings, the Ramsden 
Estate buildings are a very fine block of the mixed Italian 
order The market hall (1880) surmounted by a dock-tower 
is in geometrical Decorated style. The cloth-hall dates from 
1784, when it was erected as a clothiers' emporium. It is no 
longer used for any such purpose, but serves as an exchange 
news-room. The Armoury, erected as a riding-school, was the 
headquarters of a volunteer corps, and is also used for concerts 
and public meetings. The chief educational establishments 
are the Huddersfield College (1838), a higher-grade school, 
the technical school and several grammar-schools, of which 
Longwood school was founded in 1731. The Literary and 
Scientific Society possesses a museum. Of the numerous 
charitable institutions, the Infirmary, erected in 1831, is housed 
in a building of the Doric order. The chief open spaces are 
Greenhead and Beaumont parks, the last named presented to 
the town by Mr H. F. Beaumont in 1880. There is a sulphurous 
spa in the district of Lockwood. 

Huddersficld is the principal seat of the fancy woolkn trade 
In England, and fancy goods in silk and cotton are also produced 
in great variety. Plain cloth and worsteds are also manufactured. 
There are silk and cotton spinning-mills, iron foundries and 
engineering works. Coal is abundant in the vicinity. The 
parliamentary borough returns one member. The county 
borough was created in 1888. The municipal borough is under 
a mayor, 15 aldermen and 45 councillors. Area, 11,859 acres. 

Huddersficld (Oderesfclie) only rose to importance after the 
introduction of the woollen trade in the 17th century. After 
the Conquest William I. granted the manor to Ilbert de Laci, 
of whom the Saxon tenant Godwin was holding as underiord at 
the time of the Domesday Survey. In Saxon times it had been 
worth 1 oos., but after being laid waste by the Normans was 
still of no value in 1086. From the Lacys the manor passed to 
Thomas Plantagenet, duke of Lancaster, through his marriage 
with Alice de Lacy, and so came to the crown on the accession 
of Henry IV. In 1500 Queen Elizabeth sold it to William 
Ramsden, whose descendants still own it. Charles II. in 1670 
granted to John Ramsden a market in Huddersfield every 
Wednesday with the toll and other profits belonging. By the 
beginning of the 18th century Huddersfield had become a 
"considerable town," chiefly owing to the manufacture of 
woollen kersies, and towards the end of the same century the 
trade was increased by two events— the opening of navigation 
on the Calder in 1780, and in 1784 that of the cloth-hall or 
piece-hall, built and given to the town by Sir John Ramsden, 
baronet. Since 1832 the burgesses have returned members to 
parliament. The town possesses no charter before 1868, when 
it was created a municipal borough. 

HUDSON, GEORGE (1800-1871), English railway financier, 
known as the ** railway king," was born in York in March 1800. 
Apprenticed to a firm of linendrapers in that city, be soon 
became a successful merchant, and in 1837 was elected lord 
mayor of York. Having Inherited, in 1827, a sum of £30,000, 
he invested it in North Midland Railway shares, and was shortly 
afterwards appointed a director. In 1833 he had founded and 
for some time acted as manager of the York Banking Company. 
He had for long been impressed with the necessity of getting 
the railway to York, and he took an active part in securing the 
passing of the York and North Midland Bill, and was elected 
chairman of the new company — the line being opened in 1839. 
From this time he turned his undivided attention to the projec- 



tion of railways. In 184 1 he initiated the Newcastle and Darting- 
ton line. With George Stephenson he planned and carried out 
the extension of the Midland to Newcastle, and by 1844 had 
over a thousand miles of railway under his control. In this year 
the mania for railway speculation was at its height, and no 
man was more courted than the "railway king." All classes 
delighted to honour him, and, as if a colossal fortune were an 
insufficient reward for his public services, the richest men in 
England presented him with a tribute of £ao,ooo. Deputy- 
lieutenant for Durham, and thrice lord mayor of York, he was 
returned in the Conservative interest for Sunderland in 1845, 
the event being judged of such public interest that the news 
was conveyed to London by a special train, which travelled part 
of the way at the rate of 75 m. an hour. Full of rewards and 
honours, he was suddenly ruined by the disclosure of the Eastern 
Railway frauds. Sunderland clung to her generous representa- 
tive till 1859, but on the bursting of the bubble he had lost 
influence and fortune at a single stroke. His later life was 
chiefly. spent on the continent, where be benefited little by a 
display of unabated energy and enterprise. Some friends gave 
him a small annuity a short time before his death, which took 
place in London, on the 14th of December 1871. His name 
has long been used to point the moral of vaulting ambition and 
unstable fortune. The " big swollen gambler," as Carlyle calls 
him in one of the Latter- Day Pamphlets, was savagely and 
excessively reprobated by the world which had blindly believed 
in his golden prophecies. He certainly ruined scrip-holders-, 
and disturbed the great centres of industry; but he had an 
honest faith in his own schemes, and, while be beggared himself 
in their promotion, he succeeded in overcoming the powerful 
landed interest which delayed the adoption of railways in 
England long after the date of their regular introduction into 
America. 

HUDSON, HENRY, English navigator and explorer. Nothing 
is known of his personal history excepting such as falls within 
the period of the four voyages on which his fame rests. The 
first of these voyages in quest of new trade and a short route 
to China by way of the North Pole, in accordance with the sug- 
gestion of Robert Thome (d. 1527), was made for the Muscovy 
Company with ten men and a boy in 1607. Hudson first coasted 
the east side of Greenland, and being prevented from proceeding 
northwards by the great ice barrier which stretches thence to 
Spitsbergen sailed along it until he reached " Ncwland," as Spits- 
bergen was then called, and followed its northern coast to beyond 
8o° N. lat. On the homeward voyage he accidentally discovered 
an island in lat. 71° which he named Hudson's Touches, and 
which has since been identified with Jan Mayen Island. 
Molineux's chart, published by Hakluyt about 1600, was Hudson's 
blind guide in this voyage, and the polar map of 161 1 by 
Pontanus illustrates well what he attempted, and the valuable 
results both negative and positive which he reached. He in- 
vestigated the trade prospects at Bear Island, and recommended 
his patrons to seek higher game in Newland; hence he may be 
called the father of the English whale-fisheries at Spitsbergen. 

Next year Hudson was again sent by the Muscovy Company 
to open a passage to China, this time by the north-east route 
between Spitsbergen and Novaya Zemlya, which had been 
attempted by his predecessors and especially by the Dutch 
navigator William Barents. This voyage lasted from the 22nd 
of April to the 26th of August 1608. He raked the Barents Sea 
in vain between 75° 30' N-W. and 71* is* S,E. for an opening 
through the ice, and on the 6th of July, " voide of hope of a 
north-east passage (except by the Waygats, for which I was not 
fitted to trie or prove)," h*» resolved to sail to the north-west, and 
if time and means permitted to run a hundred leagues up 
Lumlcy's Inlet (Frobisher Strait) or Davis's " overfall " (Hudson 
Strait). But his voyage being delayed by contrary winds he was 
finally compelled to return without accomplishing his wish. The 
failure of this second attempt satisfied the Muscovy Company, 
which thenceforward directed all its energies to the profitable 
Spitsbergen trade. 

Towards the end of 1608 Hudson " had a call " to Amsterdam. 



850 



HUDSON, J.— HUDSON 



where he saw the celebrated cosmographer the Rev Peter 

Plancius and the cartographer Hondius, and after some delay, 
due to the rivalry which was exhibited in the attempt to secure 
his services, he undertook for the Dutch East India Company 
his important third voyage to find a passage to China either by the 
north-east or north-west route. With a mixed crew of eighteen 
or twenty men he left the Texel in the " Half-Moon " on the 6th 
of April, and by the 5th of May was in the Barents Sea, and soon 
afterwards among the ice near Novaya Zemlya, where he had 
been the year before. Some of his men becoming disheartened 
and mutinous (it is now supposed that he had arrived two or 
three months too early), he lost hope of effecting anything by 
that route, and submitted to his men, as alternative proposals, 
either to go to Lumley's Inlet and follow up Waymouih's light, or 
to make for North Virginia and seek the passage in about 40 lat., 
according to the letter and map sent him by his friend Captain 
John Smith. The latter plan was adopted, and on the 14th of 
May Hudson set his face towards the Chesapeake and China. 
He touched at Stromo in the Faroe Islands for water, and on 
the 15th of June off Newfoundland the " Half-Moon " " spent 
overboard her foremast." This accident compelled him to put 
into the Kennebec river, where a mast was procured, and 
some communication and an unnecessary encounter with the 
Indians took place. Sailing again on the 26th of July, be began 
on the 28th of August the survey where Smith left off, at 37 36' 
according to his map, and coasted northwards. On the 3rd of 
September, in 40 30', he entered the fine bay of New York, and 
after having gone 150 m. up the river which now bears his name 
to near the position of the present Albany, treating with the 
Indians, surveying the country, and trying the stream above 
tide-water, he became satisfied that this course did not lead to 
the South Sea or China, a conclusion in harmony with that of 
Champlain, who the same summer had been making his way 
south through Lake Champlain and Lake St Sacrement (now 
Lake George). The two explorers by opposite routes approached 
within 20 leagues of each other. On the 4th of October the 
" Half-Moon " weighed for the Texel, and on the 7th of November 
arrived at Dartmouth, where she was seized and detained by the 
English government, Hudson and the other Englishmen of the 
ship being commanded not to leave England, but rather to serve 
their own country. The voyage had fallen short of Hudson's 
expectations, but it served many purposes perhaps as important 
to the world. Among other results it exploded Hakluyt's myth, 
which from the publication of Lok's map in 1582 to the and 
charter of Virginia in May 1609 he had lost no opportunity of 
promulgating, that near 40° lat. there was a narrow isthmus, 
formed by the sea of Verrazano, like that of Tchuantepec or 
Panama. 

Hudson's confidence in the existence of a North* West Passage 
had not been diminished by his three failures, and a new company 
was formed to support him in a fourth attempt, the principal 
promoters being Sir Thomas Smith (or Smythe), Sir Dudley 
Digges and John (afterwards Sir John) Wolstcnholme. He 
determined this time to carry out his old plan of searching for a 
passage up Davis's " overfall " — so-called in allusion to the over- 
fall of the tide which Davis had observed rushing through the 
strait. Hudson sailed from London in the little ship " Discovery " 
of 55 tons, on the 17th of April 1610, and entered the strait 
which now bears his name about the middle of June. Sailing 
steadily westward he entered Hudson Bay on the 3rd of August, 
and passing southward spent the next three months examin- 
ing the eastern shore of the bay. On the tst of November 
the " Discovery " went into winter quarters in the S.W. corner 
of James Bay, being frozen in a few days later, and during the 
long winter months which were passed there only a scanty 
supply of game was secured to eke out the ship's provisions. 
Discontent became rife, and on the ship breaking out of the ice 
in the spring Hudson had a violent quarrel with a dissolute 
young fellow named Henry Greene, whom he had befriended by 
taking him on board, and who now retaliated by inciting the 
discontented part of the crew to put Hudson and eight others 
(including the sick men) out of the ship. This happened on the 



22nd of June 161 r. Robert Bylot was elected master and 

brought the ship back to England. During the voyage bocae 
Greene and several others were killed in a fight with the Eskimo, 
while others again died of starvation, and the feeble rrmnint 
whkh reached England in September were thrown into prison. 
No more tidings were ever received ef the deserted men. 

Although it is certain that the four great geographical land- 
marks which to-day serve to keep Hudson's memory aim; 
namely the Hudson Bay, Strait, Territory and River, had 
repeatedly been visited and even drawn on maps and charts before 
he set out on his voyages, yet he deserves to take a very high rank 
among northern navigators for the mere extent of his discoveries 
and the success with which he pushed them beyond the atnitt 
of his predecessors. The rich fisheries of Spitsbergen and the 
fur industry of the Hudson Bay Territory were the immediate 
fruit of his labours. 

See Henry Hudson, the Navigator (Hakluyt Society, i860); an* 
T. A. Janvier, Henry Hudson (1000). In 1909 a groat celebratwQ u 
the tercentenary was held in the United States. 

HUDSON, JOHN (1662-17 19), English classical scholar, wai 
bora at Wythop in Cumberland. He was educated at Oxford, 
where the remainder of his life was spent. In 1701 be wai 
appointed Bodley's librarian, and in 17 11 principal of St Mary's 
Hall. His political views stood in the way of his preferment ta 
the church and university. He died on the 26th of November 
1 7 10. As an editor and commentator he enjoyed a high repeti- 
tion both at home and abroad. His works, chiefly editions of 
classical authors, include the following: VeUetus Patercuta 
(1693); Thucydides (1696); GfopofkUo Vettris Scriptoru 
Croeei minores (1698-1719) containing the works and fragments 
of 21 authors and the learned, though diffuse, dissertations of 
H. Dodwell— a rare and valuable work, which in spite of its 
faulty text was not superseded until the appearance of C. W. 
Mailer's edition in the Didot series: the editio princeps of 
Moeris, Do Vociitus AUicis el HeUenicis (1712); Josephus (17 jo, 
published posthumously by his friend Anthony Hall, the anti- 
quary), a correct and beautifully printed edition, with variorum 
notes and translation. 

See Wood, Alhenoe Oxonienses, iv. ; introduction to the edition of 
Josephus; W. Hutchinson, History 0/ Cumberland (17>4). 

HUDSON, a city and the county-seat of Columbia county, 
New York, U.S.A., on the E. side of the Hudson river, about 
114 m. N. of New York City and about 28 m. S. of Albany. 
Fop. (1800) 0970; (1900) 9528, of whom n 55 were foreign-born; 
(19x0 census) 11,417. It is served by the Boston & Albany, 
the New York Central & Hudson River and the (electric) 
Albany & Hudson railways, by river steamboats, and by a steam 
ferry to Athens and Catskill across the river. The city is pictur- 
esquely situated on the slope of Prospect Hill; and Promenade 
Park, on a bluff above the steamboat landing, commands a 
fine view of the river and of the Catskill Mountains. Among 
the public buildings and institutions are a fine city hall, the 
Columbia County Court House, a public library, a Federal 
building, a State Training School for Girls, a State Firemen's 
Home, an Orphan Asylum, a Home for the Aged and a hospital. 
The city's manufactures include hosiery and knit goods, Portland 
cement (one of the largest manufactories of that prod u a in the 
United States being here), foundry and machine shop products, 
car wheels, ice tools and machinery, ale, beer, bricks and tiles 
and furniture. The value of the factory products in 1905 was 
$4.ii5i5*5» an increase of 58-1% over that in 1900. The 
municipality owns and operates the water-works. Hudson, 
which was originally known as Claverack Landing, was for many 
years merely a landing with two rude wharfs and two small 
storehouses, to which farmers in the neighbourhood brought 
their produce for shipment on the river. Late in 1783 the place 
was settled by an association of merchants and fishermen from 
Rhode Island, Nantucket and Martha's Vineyard. The present 
name was adopted in 1784, and the city was chartered in 1785. 
For many years Hudson had a considerable foreign commerce 
and whaling interests, but these were practically destroyed 
by the war of 1812. 



HUDSON BAY— HUDSON RIVER 



t 5 t 



WIBBOII BAY (k» often, but more eonectly, Htfeftoirt 
Bay), an inland sea in the N.E. of Canada* extending from 
?9? to os° W. and from 51° to 70° N. On the east it is connected 
with the Atlantic Ocean by Hudson Strait, and on the north with 
the Arctic Ocean by Fox Channel and Fury and Hecla Strait. 
Its southern extremity between 55° arid 51 N. is known as James 
Bay. It is 500 m. in width, and 1300 from S. to N. ( including 
James Bay (550 m.) and Fox Channel (350 m.). The customary 
use of the terra includes James Bay, but not Fox Channel. The 
average depth of water is about 70 fathoms, deepening at the 
entrance of Hudson Strait to too fathoms. James pay is 
much shallower, and unfit for shipping save for a centsal channel 
leading to the mouth of the Moose riven The centre and west 
of the main bay are absolutely free from shoals, rocks or islands, 
but down its east coast extend two lines of small islands, one 
dose to shore, the other at 70 to 100 m. distance, and comprising 
a number of scattered groups (the Ottawa Islands, the Sleepers, 
the Belchers, &c.). 

Into Hudson and James Bays flow numerous important riven, 
so much so that the water of the latter is rather brackish than 
salt. Beginning at the north-west, the chief of these are Churchill, 
Nelson (draining Lake Winnipeg, and the numerous inland 
rivers of which it is the basin), Hayes (the old boat route of the 
toyageurs to Winnipeg), Severn, Albany, Moose, Rupert river 
(draining Lake Mistassini), Nottaway, East Main, Great Whale 
and Little Whale. 

Save for some high bluffs on the east and north-east, the shores 
of the bay are low. Around much of James Bay extend marshes 
and swampy ground. Geologically the greater part of the 
Hudson Bay district belongs to the Laurentian system, though 
there are numerous outcrops of later formation; Cambro* 
Silurian on the south and west, and to the north of Cape Jones 
(the north-eastern extremity of James Bay) a narrow belt of 
Cambrian rocks, of which the islands are composed. Coal, 
plumbago, iron and other minerals have been found in various 
districts near the coast. The climate is harsh, though vegetables 
and certain root crops ripen in the open air as far north as Fort 
Churchill; cattle flourish, and are fed chiefly on the native 1 
grasses; spruce, balsam and poplar grow to a fair size as far 
as the northern limit of James Bay. Caribou, musk ox and other 
animals are still found in large numbers, and there h an abun- 
dance of feathered game— ducks, geese, loons and ptarmigan; 
hunting and fishing form the chief occupations of the Indians 
and Eskimo who live in scattered bands near the shore. The 
bay abounds with fish, of Which the chief are cod, salmon, 
porpoise and whales. The last have long been pursued by 
American whalers, whose destructive methods have so greatly 
depicted the supply that the government of Canada is anxious 
to declare the bay a mare clausum. 

Hudson Strait is about 450 m, long with an average breadth 
of 100 m., narrowing at one point to 45. Its shores are high 
and bold, rarely less in height than 1000 ft-, save on the coast 
of Ungava Bay, a deep indentation on the south-east. No 
islands or rocks impede navigation. Its depth is from too to 
aoo fathoms. Owing to the violence of the tides, which rise to 
a height of 35 ft., it never absolutely freezes over. 

After three centuries of exploration, the navigability of t Hudson 
Bay and Strait remains a vexed question. To Canada it is one of 
great commercial interest, and numerous expeditions have been 
made and reports issued by the Geological Survey. From Winnipeg 
to Liverpool via Churchill is over 500 m. less than via Montreal, and 
from Edmonton to Liverpool almost 1000 m. less. Were navigation. 
open for a sufficient time, such a route for the grain of the Canadian 
and American west would be of enormous advantage. But the inlet 
from the Arctic sends down masses of heavy ice, which drift about 
in the bay and the strait Past the mouth of the strait flows a 
stream often over 100 m. wide, of berg and floe ice, carried by the 
Arctic current. Owing to Che proximity of the Magnetic Pole (in 
Boothia) the compass often refuses to work. For sailing ships, such 
as the Hudson's Bay Company has long employed, the season for 
safe navigation is from the 15th of July to the 1st of October In 
over aoo years very few serious accidents have occurred to the 

npany's ships within these limits, It is claimed that specially 
t and protected steamers would be safe from the 15th of June 
till the 1st of November, and the problem may be solved by ice- 
breaking vessels of great power. The only good harbour available 



is Fort ChufthSU, at the mouth of the Churchill river, which is large 
and easy of access. Moose Factory (at the foot of James Bay) and 
York Factory (at the mouth of the Nelson) are mere roadsteads. 
Marble Island, south of Chesterfield Inlet, where the whalers winter, 
is too far north for regular shipping. 

The Cabots enteredthe strait in 1498, and during the next century 
a series of Elizabethan mariners; but the bay was not explored 
until 1610, when Henry Hudson pushed through the ace and 
explored to the southern limit of lames Bay. 

See Lieutenant Gordon, R.N., Reports on Ike Hudson's Bay 
Expositions (1884, 5, 6); William Ogtlvie, Exploratory Survey to 
Hudson's Bay in 1890 (Ottawa, 1891); R. F. Stupart, The Naviga- 
tion of Hudson's Bay and Straits (Toronto, 1904). 

HUDSON RIVER, the principal river of New York state, 
and one of the most important highways of commerce in the 
United States of America. It is not a river in the truest sense 
of the word, but a river valley into which the ocean water has 
been admitted by subsidence of the land, transforming a large 
part of the valley into an inlet, and thus opening it up to 
navigation. 

The Hudson lies entirely In the state of New York, which it 
crosses in a nearly north-and-south direction near the eastern 
boundary of the state. The sources of the river arc in the wildest 
part of the Adirondack Mountains, in Essex county, north- 
eastern New York. There arc a number of small mountain- 
streams which contribute to the headwater supply, any one of 
which might be considered the main stream; but assuming the 
highest collected and permanent body of water to be the true 
head, the source of the Hudson is Lake Tcar-of-i he- Clouds, 
which lies near Mount Marcy at an elevation of about 4332 ft. 
This small mountain stream flows irregularly southward with a 
fall of 64 ft. per mile in the upper s* miles, then, from the mouth 
of North Creek to the mouth of the Sacondaga, at the rate of 
nearly 14 ft. per mile. In this part of its course the Hudson 
has many falls and rapids, and receives a number of mountain 
streams as tributaries, the largest being Indian river, Schroon 
river and Sacondaga river. Below the mouth of the Sacondaga 
the Hydson turns sharply and flows eastward for about ia m., 
passing through the mountains, and leaping over several f alb of 
great height and beauty. At Glens Falls there is a fall of about 
50 ft; and just below this, at Sandy Hill, the river again turns 
abruptly, and for the rest of its course to New York Bay flows 
almost due south. There are numerous falls and rapids between 
Glens Falls and Troy which are used as a source of power and are 
the seats of busy manufacturing plants. Several large tributaries 
join this part of the river, including Batten Kill, Fish Crock, 
Hoosk river and the Mohawk, which is the largest of all the 
tributaries to the Hudson, and contributes more water than the 
main, river itself. 

From Troy to the mouth of the Hudson the river is tidal, 
and from this point also the river is navigable, not because of 
the river water itself, but because of the low grade of the river 
bed by which the tide is able to back up the, water sufficiently 
to float good-sized boats. From Albany, 6 m. below Troy, to 
the mouth of the Hudson, a distance of 14s m., there b a total 
fall of only 5 ft. It is this lower, tidal, navigable portion of the 
Hudson that is of so much importance and general interest. 
Numerous tributaries enter this part of the Hudson from both 
the east and the west, the largest and most important being the 
Wailkill which enters at Kingston. In general there is in this 
part of the river a broad upper valley with a much narrower 
gorge cut ia its bottom, with its rock floor below sea level and 
drowned by the entrance of the sea. Although this is true in 
a general way, the Character of the river valley varies greatly 
in detail from point to point, under the influence of the geological 
Structure of the enclosing rock walls. 

Most of these variations may be included in a threefold division 
of the lower Hudson valley. The uppermost of these extends from 
the south-eastern base of the Adirondack Mountains to the noithern 
portal of the Highlands in Dutchess and Ulster counties- This is a 
iowtand region 01 ancient Paleozoic rocks. Into the upper portion 
of this section of the river the non-tidal Hudson is depositing its 
load of detritus, buying a delta below Troy This, shifted about 
by the currents, has interposed an obstacle to navigation which has 
carted for extensive dredging and other work, for the purpose of 
maintaining a navigable channel. The width of the tidal river 



852 



HUDSON'S BAY COMPANY. 



varies somewhat, being about 300 yds. at Albany and thence to the 
Highlands varying from 300 yds. to 900 yds. 

The scenery in this part of the river, though not tame, is a little 
monotonous, the gently sloping hills, with the variegated colours of 

wood and cultivated land, and the oc — : — ' * - *— vn 

or village being repeated without any sir 

regularity. Thirty miles from Troy nc cd 

of the Catskill Mountains towering 1 he 

nearest eminence at the distance of in- 

mediate banks of the river are great be ly 

used in the manufacture of brick; 1 its 

and huge ice houses are conspicuot >c. 

Although the river freezes in the wi a 

favourite winter sport, the summer cl he 

cultivation of grapes and other frui >n- 

aiderable extent by the influence of n* 

dosed between the valley walls, whu ly 

and late frosts, and thus to extt„_ ..., ^, In 

addition to smaller towns and villages, there arc a number of 
larger towns and cities, including Hudson and Catskill, nearly 
opposite each other, and farther down Kingston and the thriving 
city of Poughkeepsic. Near the extreme end of this section 
of the Hudson lies the city of Newburgh, a short distance below 
which, at Cornwall Landing, the river enters the Highlands, the 
second division of the tidal part of the Hudson and far the 
grandest of all. 

The river enters the northern portals of the Highlands between 
a scries of hills whose frequently precipitous sides rise often abruptly 
from the water's edge. For about 16 m. the river is bordered 
by steeply rising hills, giving picturesque and striking views of 
great variety. These are due to the fact that the river here is 
crossing a belt of ancient crystalline rocks of moderately high 
relief, comparable in geological structure to the Adirondack region. 
The views in this part of the river, often compared with those along 
the Rhine, arc of a character in some respects unparalleled, and at 
several points they have an impressiveness and surprising grandeur 
rarely equalled. About IQ m. after the Highlands are entered 
West Point is reached, a favourite landing-place of tourists 
and the scat of the United States Military Academy, from whose 
grounds fine views of the river may be had. This point is 
historically interesting as the seat of Fort Putnam, now in ruins, 
built during the American War of Independence, at which time 
a chain was stretched across the river to prevent the passage of 
British ships. 

The third and lowest section of the tidal part of the Hudson 
extends from the lower end of the Highlands to New York Bay. 
This is a region of ancient and metamorphic Paleozoic rocks on the 
eastern side, and mainly Triassic rocks on the west. Because of 
their less resistance to denudation, these rocks have permitted a 
broadening of the valley in this part of the course. Just below 
Peekskill the river broadens out to form Havcrstraw Bay, at the 
extremity of which is the headland of Croton Point, Below this is 
the wider expanse of Tappan Bay, which has a length of 12 m. and 
a breadth of from 4 to 5 m., while below this bay the river narrows 
*o a breadth between 1 and am. On Tappan Bay stands Tarry- 
town, famous both historically and from its connexion with Wash- 
ington Irving, whose cottage of Sunnyside is in the vicinity. At 
Picrmont, where the bay ends, the range named the Palisades rises 
picturesquely from the water's edge to the height of between 300 
and 500 ft., extending along the west bank for about 20 m., the 
opposite shore f- f ' _J J — J ? " L »---•-- — - B< j 

towns. The Pa ip, 

which has been cs. 

and, on cooling, so 

much more pert t's 

Causeway in In tat 

has given rise t tsc 

face fronts the >th 

broadens and bi nt 

harbour, owing as 

permitted the si cs. 

A submerged va tst 

of New York, is of 

the Hudson wl an 

at present, and w ng 

excavated. 

Although the Hudson river has a total length of only about 
300 m., and a drainage area of but 13,370 sq. m., it has been one 
of the most significant factors in the development of the United 
States. With an excellent harbour at its mouth, and navigable 
waters leading into a fertile interior for a distance of 150 m., 
U early invited exploration and settlement. Verrazano pro- 
ceeded a short distance up the Hudson in a boat in 1524, but 
the first to demonstrate its extent and importance was Henry 
Hudson, from whom it derives its name. He sailed above the 
mouth of the Mohawk in September 1600. The Dutch later 
explored and settled the valley and proceeded westward along 



the Mohawk. The Dutch place-names of the region dearly 
show the significance of this early use of the Hudson highway. 
Later, in wars, and notably in the American War of Independence, 
and American War of 18 12, the valley became a region of great 
strategic importance. This was increased by the fact that from 
the Hudson near Sandy Hill there are two low gaps into the 
northern country, one along the valley occupied by Lake George, 
the other into the Lake Champlain valley. The divide between 
this part of the Hudson and Lake Champlain is only 147 ft. 
above sea level, and a depression of the land of only so© ft. in 
the region between Albany and the St Lawrence river would 
convert the Hudson and Champlain valleys into a navigable 
strait having a depth sufficient for the largest vessels. Move- 
ments of armies across these gaps were noteworthy events in the 
wars between the United States and the French and British; 
but modern commerce has made far less significant use of this 
highway, mainly because the gaps lead to a region of link 
economic importance, and thence to the boundary line of a 
foreign country. Far more important has been the highway 
westward along the Mohawk, which has cut a gap across the 
mountains that has been the most useful of all the gaps through 
the Appalachians. It has been useful in exploration, in war 
and in commerce, the latter especially because it leads fo the 
fertile interior and to the waterway of the Great Lakes. By 
the Erie canal the river is connected with Lake Erie, with a 
branch to Lake Ontario, and other branches to smaller lakes. 
The Champlain canal connects the Hudson with Lake Champlain. 
Although these canals are far less used than formerly, the 
Hudson is still a busy highway for navigation. It is of interest 
to note that it was on the Hudson that Fulton, the inventor of 
steam navigation, made his first successful experiment; and 
that it was along this same highway, from Albany, that one of 
the first successful railways of the country was built. A railway 
line now runs parallel to each bank of the Hudson, the New York 
Central & Hudson River on the eastern side and the West Store 
on the western side, each with connexions to the north, cast and 
west, and each turning westward along the Mohawk to Buffalo. 
It is largely because of the importance of this highway of cons 
merce, by water and by rail, from the ccast to the interior, that 
the greatest and densest population in the United States has 
gathered at the seaward end of the route in New York City, 
Jersey City, Hqboken and other places on and near Nea York 
Bay, making one of the leading industrial and commercial centres 
of the world. 

For references 
see R. S. Tarr, 
19 % 
W( z 

(A 

cc » 

Pi 

G< 1 

be 1 

A\ 
A. 

«9 

19 : 

W \ 

of 

I '■ 

HUDSON'S BAY COMPANY, or " the Governor and Company 
of Adventurers of England trading into Hudson's Bay," a 
corporation formed for the purpose of importing into Great 
Britain the furs and skins which it obtains, chiefly by barter, from 
the Indians of British North America. The trading stations of 
the Company are dotted over the immense region (excluding 
Canada proper and Alaska), which is bounded E. and W. by the 
Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, and N. and S. by the Arctic Ocean 
and the United States. From these various stations the furs are 
despatched in part to posts in Hudson Bay and the coast of 
Labrador for transportation to England by the Company's ships, 
and in part by steamboat or other conveyances to points on the 
railways from whence they can be conveyed to Montreal, St John, 



ices to articles on the physiography of the Hudson 
irr. Physical Gcopfpky of New York State /New J 



York, 



HUg— HUE AND CRY 853 



of the Dominion Lands Act of that year, it was 
retard to the one-twentieth of the lands in the 
I to the Company under the terms of the Deed 
ey should be taken as follows:— 
cle five of the terms and conditions in the Deed 
he Hudson's Bay Company to the Crown, the 
ititled to one-twentieth of the lands surveyed 
1 certain portion of the territory surrendered, 
tatcd as the Fertile Belt. 
- the terms of the said deed, the right to claim 
rth is extended over the period of fifty years, 
that the lands comprising the same shall be 
nd whereas the said Company and the Govcrn- 
>n have mutually agreed that with a view to an 
>n throughout the territory described, of the 
of the lands, and in order further to simplify 
frcof , certain sections or parts of sections, alike 
wition in each township throughout the said 
the townships are surveyed, be set apart and 
md cover such one-twentieth : 
.._ •...„*.., .v is found by computation that the said one» 
wentieth will be exactly met, by allotting in every fifth township 
wo whole sections of 640 acres each, and in all other townships one 
section and three quarters of a section each, therefore — 

" In every fifth Township in the said Territory; that is to say: 
n those townships numbered S, 10, 15, 20, 2«>, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50 and 
soon in regular succession northerly from the International boundary, 
the whole of sections Nos. 8 and 26, and in each and every of the 
other townships the whole of section No. 8, and the south half and 
north-west quarter of section 26 (except in the cases hereinafter 
provided for) shall be known and designated as the lands of the said 
Company." 

See G. Bryce, Remarkable History of the Hudson's Bay Company 
(London, 1900); and A. C. Laut, Conquest of the great Northwest; 
betng the story of the adventurers of England known as Hudson's 
Bay Co. (New York, 1909). 

HTJ& a town of French Indo-China, capital of Annam, on the 
Hue river (Song-Huong-Giang) about 8 m. from its mouth in 
the China Soa. Pop. about 42,000, of whom 240 are Europeans. 
The country immediately surrounding it is flat, alluvial land, 
traversed by streams and canals and largely occupied by rice 
fields. Beyond the plain rises a circle of hills formed by spurs of 
the mountains of Annam. The official portion of the town, 
fortified under French superintendence, lies on the left bank of 
the river within an enclosure over 7300 yds. square. It contains 
the royal palace, the houses of the native ministers and officials, 
the arsenals, &c. The palace stands inside a separate enclosure. 
Once forbidden ground, it is to-day open to foreigners, and the 
citadel is occupied by French troops. The palace of the French 
resident-general and the European quarter, opposite the citadel 
on the right bank of the Hue, are connected with the citadel by 
an iron bridge. Important suburbs adjoin the official town, 
the villages of Dong-Bo, Bo-vinh, Gia-Ho, Kim-Long and 
Nam-Pho forming a sort of commercial belt around it. Glass- 
and ivory-working are carried on, but otherwise industry is of 
only local importance. Rice is imported by way of the river. 
A frequent service of steam launches connects the town with the 
ports of Thuan-an, at the mouth of the river, and Tourane, on 
the bay of that name. Tourane is also united to Hue by a 
railway opened in 1006. In the vicinity the chief objects of 
interest are the tombs of the dead kings of Annam. 

HUB AND CRY, a phrase employed in English law to signify 
ihe old common law process of pursuing a criminal with horn and 
voice. It was the duty of any person aggrieved, or discovering 
a felony, to raise the hue and cry, 1 and his neighbours were bound 
to turn out with him and assist in the discovery of the offender. 
In the case of a hue and cry, all those joining in the pursuit were 
justified in arresting the person pursued, even though it turned 
out that he was innocent- A swift fate awaited any one overtaken 

1 The word " hue,*' which is now obsolete except in this phrase 
and in the " huers '* on the Cornish coast who direct the pilchard- 
fishing from the cliffs, is generally connected with the Old French 
verb Huer, to cry, shout, especially in war or the chase. It has been 
suggested that while " cry " represents the sound of the voices of 
the pursuers, " hue " applies to the sound of horns or other instru- 
ments used in the pursuit; and so Blackstone, Comment, iv. xxi. 
293 08oo)r " an hue and cry. hutestum el damor. with horn 

and voice." " Hue." appearance, colour, is in Old English htew, 
htw, cognate with Swedish htj, complexion, skin, and probably 
connected with Sanskrit chawi, skin, complexion, beauty. 



«S4 



HUEHUETANANGO— HUESCA 



by hue and cry, if he still had about him the signs of his guilt. 
If he resisted he could be cut down, while, if he submitted 
to capture, his fate was decided. Although brought before a 
court, he was not allowed to say anything in self-defence, 
nor was there any need for accusation, indictment or appeal. 
Although regulated from time to time by writs and statutes, 
the process of hue and cry continued to retain its summary 
method of procedure, and proof was not required of a culprit's 
guilt, but merely that he had been taken red-handed by hue and 
cry. The various statutes relating to hue and cry were repealed 
m 1827 (7 and 8 Geo. IV. c. 27). The Sheriffs Act 1887, re- 
enacting 3 Edw. I. c. 9, provides that every person in a county 
must be ready and apparelled at the command of the sheriff 
and at the cry of the county to arrest a felon, and in default 
shall on conviction be liable to a fine. 

" Hue and cry " has, from its original meaning, come to be 
applied to a proclamation for the capture of an offender or 
for the finding of stolen goods, and to an official publication, 
issued for the information of the authorities interested, in 
which particulars are given of offenders " wanted," offences 
committed, &c 

For the early history, see Pollock and Maitland, History of English 
Law, vol. tl ; W. Stubbs, Select Charters. 

HUEHUETANANGO {i.e. in the local Indian dialect, " City 
of the Ancients "), the capital of the department of Huehuc- 
tanango, western Guatemala, 106 m. W.N.VY. of Guatemala 
city, on the right bank and near the source of the river Salegua, 
a tributary of the Chiapas. Pop. (1905) about 12,000. Huchue- 
tanango was built near the site of the ancient Indian city of 
Zakuleu, .now represented by some ruins on a neighbouring ridge 
surrounded by deep ravines. It is the principal town of a fertile 
upland region, which produces coffee, cocoa and many European 
and tropical fruits. Chiantla, a neighbouring town mainly 
inhabited by Indians, was long the headquarters of a successful 
Dominican mission; its convent, enriched by the gifts of 
pilgrims and the revenues of the silver mines owned by the monks, 
became one of the wealthiest foundations in Central America. 
It was secularized in 1873, and the mines have been abandoned. 

HUELVA, a maritime province of south-western Spain, 
formed in 1833 of districts taken from Andalusia, and bounded 
on the N. by Badajoz, E. by Seville, S. by the Gulf of Cadiz 
and W. by Portugal. Pop. (1000) 260,880; area 3913 sq. m. 
With the exception of its south-eastern angle, where the province 
merges into the flat waste lands known as Las Marismas, at the 
mouth of the Guadalquivir, Huelva presents throughout its 
entire extent an agreeably varied surface. It is traversed in 
a south-westerly direction by the Sierra Morcna, here known, 
fn its main ridge, as the Sierra de Aracena. The principal 
streams are the navigable lower reaches of the Guadalquivir 
and Guadiana, which respectively form for some distance the 
south-eastern and south- western boundaries; the Odicl and the 
Tinto, which both fall into the Atlantic by navigable rias or 
estuaries; the Malagon, Chanza, Alcalaboza and Murtiga, which 
belong to the Guadiana system; and the Huelva, belonging to 
that of the Guadalquivir. Huelva has a mild and equable 
climate, with abundant moisture and a fertile soil. Among the 
mountains there are many valuable woodlands, in which oaks, 
pines, beeches, cork-trees and chestnuts predominate, while 
the lowlands afford excellent pasturage. But agriculture and 
stock-breeding are here less important than in most Spanish 
provinces, although the exports comprise large quantities of 
fruit, ofl and wine, besides cork and esparto grass. The head- 
quarters of the fishing trades', which include the drying and salting 
of fish, are at Huelva, the capital, and Ayamonte on the Guadiana. 
There are numerous brandy distilleries; and bricks, pottery, 
soap, candles and flour are also manufactured; but the great 
local industry is mining. In 1003 no fewer than 470 mines were 
at work; and their output, consisting chiefly of copper with 
smaller quantities of manganese and iron, exceeded £1,500,000 
in value. The celebrated Rio Tinto copper mines, near the 
sources of the Tinto, were, like those of Tharsis, 30 m. N.N.W. 
of Huelva, exploited long before the Christian era, probably by 



the Carthaginians, and certainly by the P«Mw««f They mm 
still among the most important copper mines in the world (see 
Rio Tinto). Saline and other mineral springs are common 
throughout the province. Huelva is the principal seaport, 
and is connected with Seville on the east and Merida on the 
north by direct railways, while a network of narrow-j 
railways gives access to the chief mining centres. The | 
towns, besides Huelva (21,350) and Rio Tinto (11,603), 
are described in separate articles, are Alosno (8187), Ayamonte 
(7530), Bollullos (7922), Mogucr (845s), Nerva (700S) and 
Zalamea la Real (7335)* The state and municipal roads are 
better engineered and maintained than those of the neighbouring 
provinces. See also Andalusia. 

HUELVA (the ancient Onuba, Onoba, or Onuba Aestuaria), 
the capital of the Spanish province of Huelva, about 10 m. 
from the Atlantic Ocean, on the left bank of the river Odiel, 
and on the Seville-Huelva, Merida-Huelva and Rio Timo- 
Huelva railways, the last-named being a narrow-gauge line, 
Pop. (1000) 21,357. Huelva is built on the western shore of a 
triangular peninsula formed by the estuaries of the Odiel and 
Tinto, which meet below the town. It is wholly modern m 
character and appearance, and owes its prosperity to an ever 
increasing transit trade in copper and other ores, for which 
it is the port of shipment. After 1872, when the famous Rio 
Tinto copper mines were for the first time properly exploited, 
it progressed rapidly in size and wealth. Dredging operations 
removed a great part of the sandbanks lining the navigable 
main channel of the Odiel, and deepened the water over the bar 
at its mouth; new railways were opened, and port works were 
undertaken on a large scale, including the construction of 
extensive quays and two piers, and the installation of modern 
appliances for handling cargo. Many of these improvements 
were added after 1000. Besides exporting copper, manganese 
and other minerals, which in 1903 reached 2,750,000 tons, valued 
at more than £1,500,000, Huelva is the headquarters of profitable 
sardine, tunny and bonito fisheries, and of a trade in grain, 
grapes, olives and cork. The copper and cork industries are 
mainly in British hands, and the bulk of the imports, which 
consist chiefly of coal, iron and steel and machinery, comes 
from Great Britain. Foodstuffs and Australian hardwood are 
also imported. 

Huelva was originally a Carthaginian trading-station, and 
afterwards a Roman colony; but it retains few memorials of 
its past, except the Roman aqueduct, repaired in modern limes, 
and the colossal statue of Columbus. This was erected in 189a 
to commemorate the fourth centenary of his voyage to the new 
world in 1492-1493, which began and ended in the village of 
San Pilos de la Frontera on the Tinto. Columbus resided in 
the neighbouring monastery of Santa Maria la Rabida after his 
original plans for the voyage had been rejected by King John 
II. of Portugal in 1484. An exact reproduction of this monastery 
was erected in 1893 at the World's Fair, Chicago. U.S.A., and 
was afterwards converted into a sanatorium. Higher up the 
Tinto, above San Palos, is the town of Mogucr (pop. 8455), 
which exports large quantities of oil and wine. 

HUftRCAL OVERA, a town of south-eastern Spain, in the 
province of Almeria, on the Lorca-Baza railway, and between 
two branches of the river Almanzora. Pop. (1900) 15,763. 
Huercal Overs is the chief town of a thriving agricultural 
district, largely dependent for its prosperity on the lead mining 
carried on among the surrounding highlands. 

HUESCA, a frontier province of northern Spain, formed in 
1833 of districts previously belonging to Aragon; and bounded 
on the N, by France, E. and S.E. by Lerida, S.W. and W. by 
Saragossa, and N.W. by Navarre. Pop. (1900) 244,867, area 
5848 sq. m. The entire northern half of Huesca belongs to the 
mountain system of the Pyrenees, which here attain their greatest 
altitudes fn Aneto, the highest point of the Maladetta ridge 
(t 1,168 ft.), and in Monte Pcrdido (10,997 ft ). The southern 
half forms part of the rugged and high-lying plateau of Aragon. 
Its only conspicuous range of hills is the Sierra de Alcubierre on 
the south-western border. The whole province is included in 



HOESCA— HUET 



855 



tbe basin of the Ebro, and is drained by four of its principal 
tributaries— the Aragon in the north-west, the Gallego in the 
west, the Cinca in the centre, and the Nogucra Ribagorzana 
along part of the eastern border. These rivers rise among the 
Pyrenees, and take a southerly course; the two last-named 
unite with the Segre on their way to join the Ebro. The Cinca 
receives the combined waters of the Aicanadre and Isuela on 
the right and the Esera on the left. 

The climate varies much according to the region; in the north, 
cold winds from the snow-capped Pyrenees prevail, while in 
the south, the warm summers are often unhealthy from the 
humidity of the atmosphere. Agriculture, the leading industry 
of Huesca, is facilitated by a fairly complete system of irrigation, 
by means of which much waste land has been reclaimed, although 
large tracts remain barren. There is good summer pasturage 
on the mountains, where cattle, sheep and swine are reared. 
The mountains are richly clothed with forests of pine, beech, 
oak and fir, and the southern regions, wherever cultivation 
|s possible, produce abundant crops of wheat and other cereals, 
vines, mulberries and numerous other fruits and vegetables. 
The mineral resources include argentiferous lead, copper, iron 
and cobalt, with salt, lignite, limestone, millstone, gypsum, 
granite and slate. None of these, however, occurs in large 
quantities; and in 1903 only salt, lignite and fluor-spar were 
worked, while the total output was worth less than £1500. 
Mineral springs are numerous, and the mining industry was 
formerly much moTe important; but the difficulties of trans- 
port hinder the development of this and other resources. Trade 
is most active with France, whither are sent limber, millstones, 
cattle, leather, brandy and wine. Between 1882 and 1892 
the wine trade throve greatly, owing to the demand for common 
red wines, suitable for blending with finer French vintages, 
but the exports subsequently declined, owing to the protective 
duties imposed by France. The manufactures, which are of 
little importance, include soap, spirits, leather, pottery and 
coarse cloth. 

The Saragossa-Lenda-Barcelona railway traverses the pro- 
vince, and gives access, by two branch lines, to Jaca, by way of 
Huesca, the provincial capital, and to Barbastro. Up to the 
beginning of tbe 20th century this was the only railway com- 
pleted, although it was supplemented by many good roads. 
But by the Railway Convention of 1904, ratified by the Spanish 
government in rooo, France and Spain agreed jointly to construct 
a Transpyrenean line from Oloron, in the Basses Pyrenees, to 
Jaca, which should pass through the Port de Canfranc, and 
connect Saragossa with Pau. Apart from the episcopal cities of 
Huesca (pop. 1000, 12,626) and Jaca (4934). which are separately 
described, the only towns in the province with more than 5O00 
inhabitants are Barbastro (7033), an agricultural market, and 
Fraga (6899), an ancient residence of the kings of Aragon, with 
a fine 1 2th century parish church and a ruined Moorish citadel. 
Monzon, long celebrated as the meeting-place of the Aragonese 
and Catalonian parliaments, is a town on the lower Cinca, with 
the ruins of a Roman fortification, and of a 12th century castle, 
which was owned by the Knights Templar. (See also Aragon.) 

HUESCA (anc. Osca), the capital of the Spanish province of 
Huesca, 35 m. N.N.E. of Saragossa, on the Tardienta-Huesca- 
Jaca railway. Pop. (1900), 12,626. Huesca occupies a height 
near the right bank of the river Isuela, overlooking a broad arid 
fertile plain. It is a very ancient city and bears many traces of its 
antiquity. The streets in the older part are narrow and crooked, 
though clean, and many of the houses witness by their size and 
style to its former magnificence. It is an episcopal see and has 
an imposing Gothic cathedral, begun in 1400, finished in 1515, 
and enriched with fine carving. In the same plaza is the old 
palace of the kings of Aragon, formerly given up for the use of 
the now closed Sertoria (the university), so named in memory of 
a school for the sons of native chiefs, founded at Huesca by 
Sertorius in 77 B.C. (Plut. Sert. 15), Among the other prominent 
buildings are the interesting parish churches (San Pedro, San 
Martin and San Juan), the episcopal palace, and various bene- 
volent and religious foundations. Considerable attention is 



paid to public education, and there are not only several good 
primary schools, but schools for teachers, an institute, an 
ecclesiastical seminary, an artistic and archaeological museum, 
and an economic society. Huesca manufactures cloth, pottery, 
bricks and leather, but its chief trade is in wine and agricultural 
produce. The development of these industries caused an increase 
in the population which, owing to emigration to France, had 
declined by nearly 2000 between 1887 and 1807. 

Strabo (iii. 161, where some editors read Ueosca) describes 
Osta as a town of the Ilergetes, and the scene of Sertorius*s death 
in 72 B.c; while Pliny places the Oscenses In regio Vescilania. 
Plutarch (Joe. cit.) calls it a large city. Julius Caesar names it 
Vcncedora; and the name by which Augustus knew it, Urbs 
victrix Osca, was stamped on its coins, and is still preserved 
on its arms. In the 8th century ad. it was captured by the 
Moors; but in 1096 Pedro I. of Aragon regained it, after winning 
the decis ive battle of Alcoraz. 

HUET, PIERRE DANIEL (1630-1721), bishop of Avranches, 
French scholar, was born at Caen in 163a He was educated at 
the Jesuit school of Caen, and also received lessons from the 
Protestant pastor, Samuel Bochart. At the age of twenty he 
was recognized as one of the most promising scholars of the time. 
He went in 1651 to Paris, where he formed a friendship with 
Gabriel Naude, conservator of the Mazarin library. In the 
following year Samuel Bochart, being invited by Queen Christina 
to her court at Stockholm, took his friend Huct with him. 
This journey, in which he saw Leiden, Amsterdam and Copen- 
hagen, as well as Stockholm, resulted chiefly in the discovery, 
in the Swedish royal library, of some fragments of Ongen's 
Commentary on St Matthew, which gave Huet the idea of editing 
Ortgen, a task he completed in 1668. He eventually quarrelled 
with his friend Bochart, who accused him of having suppressed 
a line in Origen in the Eucharist ic controversy. In Paris he 
entered into close relations with Chapelain. During the famous 
dispute of Ancients and Moderns Huet took the side of the 
Ancients against Charles Perrault and Desmarets. Among his 
friends at this period were Conrart and Pellisson. His taste for 
mathematics led him to the study of astronomy. He next turned 
his attention to anatomy, and, being himself shortsighted, 
devoted his inquiries mainly to the question of vision and the 
formation of the eye. In this pursuit he made more than 800 
dissections. He then learned all that was then to be learned in 
chemistry, and wrote a Latin poem on salt. All this time he was 
no mere book-worm or recluse, but was haunting the salons of 
Mile de Scudery and the studios of painters; nor did his scientific 
researches interfere with his classical studies, for during this lime 
he was discussing with Bochart the origin of certain medals, and 
was learning Syriac and Arabic under the Jesuit Parvilliers, 
He also translated the pastorals of Longus, wrote a tale, called 
Diane de Castro, and defended, in a treatise on the origin of 
romance, the reading of fiction. On being appointed assistant 
tutor to the Dauphin in 1670, he edited with the assistance of 
Anne Lefevre, afterwards Madame Dacier, the well-known 
edition of the Delphin Classics. This series was a comprehensive 
edition of the Latin classics in about sixty volumes, and each work 
was accompanied by a Latin commentary, ordo verborum, and 
verbal index. The original volumes have each an engraving 
of Arion and the Dolphin, and the appropriate inscription in 
usum serenissimi Delpkini. Huet was admitted to the Academy 
in 1674. He issued one of his greatest works, the DcmonstraLio 
evangelka, in 1679. He took holy orders in 1676, and two years 
later the king gave him the abbey of Aulnay, where he wrote his 
Questumes Aletuanae (Caen, 1690), his Ccnsura philosophiae 
Cartesianae (Paris, 1689), his Nouveou mimoire pout servir a 
Vhistoire du Cartlsianismc (1692), and his discussion with 
Boileau on the Sublime. In 1 685 he was made bishop of Soissons, 
but after waiting for installation for four years he took the 
bishopric of Avranches instead. He exchanged the cares of his 
bishopric for what he thought would be the easier chair of the 
Abbey of Fontenay, but there he was vexed with continual law- 
suits. At length he retired to the Jesuits' House in the Rue 
Saint Antoine at Paris, where he died in 1 721. His great library 



858 



HUGH CAPET— ^HUGH OF ST CHER 



even paid homage to Otto, and supported him in his struggle 
against Louis. When Louis fell into the hands of the Normans 
in 045, he was banded over to Hugh, who released. him in 046 
only on condition that he should surrender the fortress of Laon. 
At the council of Ingelheim (948) Hugh was condemned, under 
pain of excommunication, to make reparation to Louis. It was 
not, however, until 950 that the powerful vassal became re- 
conciled with bis suzerain and restored Laon. But new dim- 
cullies arose, and peace was not finally concluded until 953. 
On the death of Louis IV. Hugh was one of the first to recognize 
Lothair as his successor, and, at the intervention of Queen 
Gerberga, was instrumental in having him crowned. In recogni- 
tion of this service Hugh was invested by the new king with the 
duchies of Burgundy (his suzerainty over which had already been 
nominally recognized by Louis IV.) and Aquitaine. But his 
expedition in 955 to take possession of Aquitaine was unsuccess- 
ful. In the same year, however, Giselbert, duke of Burgundy, 
acknowledged himself his vassal and betrothed his daughter to 
Hugh's son Otto. At Giselbert 's death (April 8, 956) Hugh 
became effective master of the duchy, but died soon afterwards, 
on the 1 6th or 17 th of June 956. 

HUGH CAPET (c. 938-996), king of France and founder of the 
Capetian dynasty, was the eldest son of Hugh the Great by his 
wife Had wig. When his father died in 956 be succeeded to his 
numerous fiefs around Paris and Orleans, and thus becoming one 
of the most powerful of the feudatories of his cousin, the Frankish 
king Lothair, he was recognized somewhat reluctantly by that 
monarch as duke of the Franks. Many of the counts of northern 
France did homage to him as their overlord, and Richard I., duke 
of Normandy, was both his vassal and his brother-in-law. His 
authority extended over certain districts south of the Loire, and, 
owing to his interference, Lothair was obliged to recognize his 
brother Henry as duke of Burgundy. Hugh supported his royal 
suzerain when Lothair and the emperor Otto II. fought for the 
possession of Lorraine; but chagrined at the king's conduct in 
making peace in 980, he went to Rome to conclude an alliance with 
Otto. Laying more stress upon independence than upon loyalty, 
Hugh appears to have acted in a haughty manner toward Lothair, 
and also towards his son and successor Louis V.; but neither 
king was strong enough to punish this powerful vassal, whose 
clerical supporters already harboured the thought of securing for 
him the Frankish crown. When Louis V. died without children 
in May 987, Hugh and the late king's uncle Charles, duke of 
Lower Lorraine, were candidates for the vacant throne, and in 
this contest the energy of Hugh's champions, Adalberon, arch- 
bishop of Reims, and Gerbert, afterwards Pope Sylvester II., 
prevailed. Declaring that the Frankish crown was an elective 
and not an hereditary dignity, Adalberon secured the election of 
his friend, and crowned him, probably at Noyon, in July 987. 

The authority of the new king was quickly recognized in his 
kingdom, which covered the greater part of France north of the 
Loire with the exception of Brittany, and in a shadowy fashion 
he was acknowledged in Aquitaine; but he was compelled to 
purchase the allegiance of the great nobles by large grants of 
royal lands, and he was hardly more powerful as king than he had 
been as duke. Moreover, Charles of Lorraine was not prepared 
to bow before his successful rival, and before Hugh had secured 
the coronation of his son Robert as his colleague and successor in 
December 987, he had found allies and attacked the king. Hugh 
was worsted during the earlier part of this struggle, and was in 
serious straits, until he was saved by the wiles of his partisan 
Adalberon, bishop of Laon, who in 991 treacherously seized 
Charles and banded him over to the king. This capture virtually 
ended the war, but one of its side issues was a quarrel between 
Hugh and Pope John XV., who was supported by the empire, 
then under the rule of the empresses Adelaide and Theophano as 
regents for the young emperor Otto III. In 987 the king had 
appointed to the vacant archbishopric of Reims a certain Arnulf, 
who at once proved himself a traitor to Hugh and a friend to 
Charles of Lorraine. In June 99 1 , at the instance of the king, the 
French bishops deposed Arnulf and elected Gerbert in his stead, 
a proceeding which was displeasing to the pope, who excom- 



municated the new archbishop and his partisans. Hngh and hit 
bishops remained firm, and the dispute was still in progress who 
the king died at Paris on the 24th of October 996. 

Hugh was a devoted son of the church, to which, it is not too 
much to say, he owed his throne. As lay abbot of tbe abbeys of 
St Martin at Tours and of St Denis he was interested in clerical 
reform, was fond of participating in religious ceremonies, and had 
many friends among the clergy. His wife was Adelaide, daughter 
of William III., duke of Aquitaine, by whom he left a son, Robert, 
who succeeded him as king of France. The origin of Hugh's 
surname of Capet, which was also applied to his father, has been 
the subject of some discussion. It is derived undoubtedly 
from the Lat. capo, cappa, a cape, but whether Hugh received it 
from the cape which he wore as abbot of St Martin's, or from 
his youthful and playful habit of seizing caps, or from some other 
cause, is uncertain. 

See Richerus, Historiarum libri IV., edited by G. Wait* (Leipzig. 
1877); F. Lot, Les Dernier s Carolingiens (Paris, 1891). and Ehtda 
sur le regne de Hugues Capet (Paris, 1900) ; G. Monod, " Les Sources 
du regne de Hugues Capet," in the Revue kistorique, tome xxviiL 
(Paris, 1891); P. Viollct, L* Question de la UgitimM * rmtememen* 
a Hugues Capet (Paris, 1892); and E. Lavisse, HiUoire de Frmmet, 
tome ii. (Pans, 1903-1905). 

HUGH DE PUISET (c. n 25-1 195), bishop of Durham, was the 
nephew of Stephen and Henry of Blois; the latter brought him 
to England and made him an archdeacon of the see of Winchester. 
Hugh afterwards became archdeacon and treasurer of York. 
In 1 1 53 he was chosen bishop of Durham, in spite of the opposi- 
tion of tbe archbishop of York; but he only obtained consecration 
by making a personal visit to Rome. Hugh took little part in 
politics in the reign of Henry II., remaining in tbe north, immersed 
in the affairs of his see. He was, however, present with Roger, 
archbishop of York, at the coronation of young Henry (1 1 70), and 
was in consequence suspended by Alexander III. He remained 
neutral, as far as he could, in the quarrel between Henry and 
Becket, but he at least connived at the rebellion of 1173 and 
William the Lion's invasion of England in that year. After the 
failure of the rebellion the bishop was compelled to surrender 
Durham, Norham and Northallerton to the king. In 1179 be 
attended the Lateran Council at Rome, and in 1181 by tbe pope's 
order he laid Scotland under an interdict. In 1184 he took tbe 
cross. At the general sale of offices with which Richard began 
his reign (1189) Hugh bought the earldom of Northumberland. 
The archbishopric of York had been vacant since 1181. This 
vacancy increased Hugh's power vastly, and when the vacancy 
was filled by the appointment of Geoffrey he naturally raised 
objections. This quarrel with Geoffrey lasted till the end of his 
life. Hugh was nominated justiciar jointly with William 
Longchamp when Richard left the kingdom. But Longchamp 
soon deprived the bishop of his place (1 191), even going so far as 
to imprison Hugh and make him surrender his castle, his earldom 
and hostages. Hugh's chief object in politics was to avoid ac- 
knowledging Geoffrey of York as his ecclesiastical superior, but 
this he was compelled to do in 1195. On Richard's return 
Hugh joined the king and tried to buy back his earldom. He 
seemed on the point of doing so when he died. Hugh was one of 
the most important men of his day, and left a mark upon the 
north of England which has never been effaced. Combining in 
his own hands the palatinate of Durham and the earldom of 
Northumberland, he held a position not much dissimilar to that 
of the great German princes, a local sovereign in all but name. 

Sec Kate Norgate's England under the Angevin Kings (1887); 
Stubbs's preface to Hoveden, iii. 

HUGH OF ST CHER (c. 1 200-1 263), French cardinal and 
Biblical commentator, was born at St Cher, a suburb of Vicnne, 
Dauphin6, and while a student in Paris entered the Dominion 
convent of the Jacobins in 1 225. He taught philosophy, theology 
and canon law. As provincial of his order, which office he held 
during most of the third decade of the century, he contributed 
largely to its prosperity, and won the confidence of the popes 
Gregory IX., Innocent IV. and Alexander IV., who charged him 
with several important missions. Created cardinal-priest In 
1244, he played an important part in the council of Lyons is 



HUGH OF ST VICTOR— HUGHES, D. E. 



859 



1145, contributed to the institution of the Feast of Holy Sacra- 
ment, the reform of the Carmelites (1247), and the condemnations 
of the Iniroductorius in evangdium actcrnum of Gherardino 
del Borgo San Donnino (1255), and of William of St Amour's 
De periculis wmssimorum temporum. He died at Orvieto on 
the 19th of March 1263. He directed the first revision of the 
text of the Vulgate, begun in 1236 by the Dominicans; this 
first' " correctorium," vigorously criticized by Roger Bacon, 
was revised in 1248 and in 1256, and forms the base of the 
celebrated Correetorium Bibliae Sorbonkum. With the aid of 
many of his order he edited the first concordance of the Bible 
(Cortcordantiae Sacrorum BiUiorum or Cortcordantiae S. Jacobi), 
but the assertion that we owe the present division of the chapters 
of the Vulgate to him is false. 

Besides a commentary on the booh of Sentences, he wrote the 
PostiUae in tatram scripiuram pasta qumdrupiicem sensum, UMerakm, 
aUegoricum, anagogkum et moralem, published frequently in the 
15th and 16th centuries. His Sermoues de tempore tt Sanctis are 
apparently only extracts. His exegetical works were published at 
Venice in 1754 in 8 vols. 

See, for sources, Quetif-Echard, Scriptures ordims praedicatorum; 
Dcnine, in Archivfur Litter atur und Kirchengesckukte des Mitklalters% 
i. 49, ii. 171, iv. 263 and 471 ; V Annie domintcaine, iii. (1886) 500 and 
883; Ckarlularium untvtrsilatis Parisiensis, i. 158. (H. L.) 

HUGH OF ST VICTOR (c. 1078-1141), mystic philosopher, was 
probably born at Hartingam, in Saxony. After spending some 
time in a bouse of canons regular at Hamersleben, in Saxony, 
where he completed his studies, be removed to the abbey of St 
Victor at Marseilles, and thence to the abbey of St Victor in Paris. 
Of this last house he rose to be canon, in 1x25 schotasHcus, and 
perhaps even prior, and it was there that he died on the nth of 
February 1141. His eloquence and his writings earned for him 
a renown and influence which far exceeded St Bernard's, and 
which held its ground until the advent of the Thomist philosophy. 
Hugh was more especially the initiator of a movement of ide as 
the mysticism of the school of St Victor— which filled the whole 
of the second part of the 12th century. "The mysticism 
which he inaugurated," says Ch. V. Langkris, "is learned, 
unctuous, ornate, florid, a mysticism which never indulges in 
dangerous temerities; it is the orthodox mysticism of a subtle 
and prudent rhetorician-" This tendency undoubtedly shows 
a marked reaction from the contentious theology of Roscellinus 
and Abelard. For Hugh of St Victor dialectic was both 
insufficient and perilous. Yet he did not profess the haughty 
contempt for science and philosophy which his followers the 
Victorines expressed; he regarded knowledge, not as an end in 
itself, but as the vestibule of the mystic life. The reason, he 
thought, was but an aid to the understanding of the truths which 
faith reveals. The ascent towards God and the functions of the 
"threefold eye of the soul "— -cogitath, medUaHo and contcm- 
pfotio—wttt minutely taught by him in language which is at 
once precise and symbolical. 

Manuscript copies of his works abound, and are to be found in 
almost every library which possesses a collection of andent writings. 
The works themselves are very numerous and very diverse. The 
middle ages attributed to him sixty works, and the edition in Misne's 
Patr. Lot. vols, dxxv.-clxxvu. (Paris, 1854) contains no fewer 
than forty-seven treatises, commentaries and collections of sermons. 
Of that number, however, B. Haureau (Les CEutres de Hugues de 
St Victor (1st ed., -Paris, 1839; and ed., Paris, 1JB86) contests the 
authenticity of several, which he ascribes with some show of proba- 
bility to Hugh of Fouilloi, Robert Paululus or others. Among 
those works with which Hugh of St Victor may almost certainly be 
credited may be mentioned the celebrated De saeramenUs christians 
Juki; the Dtdascaiken de studio legends; the treatises on mysticism 
entitled SolUoquium de arrha animae. De contempiatione et ejus 
operibus* Aureum de meditando opusculum, De area Hoe moraJi, De 
area Hoi mysltea, De vanitate mundi, De arrha anitnae, De amore 
sponsi ad stonsam, Ac; the introduction (Praenoiatiuneulae) to 
the study of the Scriptures; homilies on the book of Ecclesiastes; 
commentaries oa other books of the Bible, e.g. the Pentateuch, 
Judges, Kings, leremlah, &c. 

See B. Haureau, op. cil. and Notices et ext raits des MSS. latins de 
la BMioike&ue HaHonate, passim; De Wulf, Ilistoire d* h phito- 
sopkie rrUihaak (Louvain, 1900). pp. 220-221 ; article by H. Dentfie 
to Archie far Literatur und KinhengeukkkU des Mittetallers, iii. 
634-640 (1887); A. Mignon, Les Origines de la scholastique et Hugues 
de 51 Victor (Paris, 1895); J. Kilgenstein, Die GottesUkre des Hugo 
9tmStVia$e{iB98). (P. A.) 



HTJ0HBS, DAVID EDWARD (1831-1000), Anglo-American 
electrician, was born on the x6th of May 1831 in London, but the 
earlier part of his life was spent in America, whither his parents 
emigrated when he was about seven years old. In 1850 he 
became professor of music at the college of Bardstown, Kentucky, 
and soon afterwards his attainments in physical science procured 
his appointment as teacher of natural philosophy at the same 
place. His professorial career, however, was brief, for in 1854 
he removed to Louisville to supervise the manufacture of the 
type-printing telegraph instrument which he had been thinking 
out for some time, and which, was destined to make both his 
name and his fortune. The patent for this machine was taken 
out in the United States in 1855, and its success was immediate. 
After seeing it weH established on one side of the Atlantic, 
Hughes in r8$7 brought it over to his native country, where, 
however, the telegraph companies did not receive it with any 
favour. Two or three years afterwards he introduced it to the 
notice of the French Government, who, after submitting it to 
severe tests, ultimately adopted it, and in the succeeding ten 
years it came into extensive use all over Europe, gaining for its 
inventor numerous honours and prizes. In the development of 
telephony also Hughes had an important share, and the telephone 
has attained hs present perfection largely as a result of his 
investigations. The carbon transmitters which in various forms 
are in almost universal use are modifications of a simple device 
which he called ft microphone, and which consists essentially of 
two pieces of carbon, in loose contact one with the other. The 
arrangement constitutes ft variable electrical resistance of the 
most delicate character; if ft is included in an electric circuit 
with a battery and subjected to the influence of sonorous vibra- 
tions, its resistance varies in such a way as to produce an un- 
dulatory current which affords an exact representation of the 
sound waves as to height, length and form. These results were 
published in 1878, but Hughes did much more work on the 
properties of such microphonic joints, of which he said nothing tiul 
many years afterwards. When towards the end of 1879 he 
found that they were also sensitive to " sudden electric impulses, 
whether given out to the atmosphere through the extra current 
from a coil or from a frictional machine," he in fact discovered 
the phenomena on which depends the action of the so-called 
" coherers " used in wireless telegraphy. But he went further 
and practised wireless telegraphy himself, surmising, moreover, 
that the agency he was employing consisted of true electric 
waves. Setting some source of the M sudden electric impulses " 
referred to above into operation in his house, he walked along 
the street carrying a telephone in circuit with a small battery 
and one of these microphonic joints, and found that the sounds 
remained audible in the telephone until he had traversed a 
distance of 500 yards. This experiment he showed to several 
English men of science, among others to Sir G. G. Stokes, to 
whom he broached the theory that the results were due to electric 
waves. That physicist, however, was not disposed to accept this 
explanation, considering that ft sufficient one could be found m 
well-known electromagnetic induction effects, and Hughes was 
so discouraged at that high authority taking this view of the 
matter that he resolved to publish no account of his inquiry until 
further experiments had enabled him to prove the correctness 
of his own theory. These experiments were still in progress 
when H.R.Hertz settled the question by his researches on electric 
waves in 1887-1880. Hughes, who is also known for Ms invention 
of the induction balance and for his contributions to the theory 
of magnetism, died in London on the 22nd of January 1900. 
As an investigator he was remarkable for the simplicity of the 
apparatus which served ins purposes, domestic articles like 
jam-pots, pins, &c, forming a large part of the equipment of Ms 
laboratory. His manner of life, too, was simple and frugal in the 
extreme. He amassed a large fortune, which, with the exception 
of some bequests to the Royal Society, the Paris Academy of 
Sciences, the Institution of Electrical Engineers, and the Paris 
Societe Internationale des Electridens, for the estaSBshment of 
scholarships and prizes in physical science, was left to four 
London hospitals, subject only to certain Eft annuities. 



862 



HUGLI— HUGO, VICTOR 



estuary narrow* suddenly into the river, and often exceeds 7 ft 
in height It is felt as high up as Calcutta, and frequently destroys 
small boats. The difference from the lowest point of low-water in 
the dry season to the highest point of high-water in the rains is 
reported to be 20 ft. 10 in. The greatest mean rise of tide, about 
16 ft, takes place in March, April or May—with a declining range 
during the rainy season to a mean of 10 ft, and a minimnm during 
freshets of 3 ft 6 in* 

HUGLI, or Hooghly, a town and district of British India, in 
the Burdwan division of Bengal, taking their name from the 
river Hugii. The town, situated on the right bank of the HngH, 
24 m. above Calcutta by rail, forms one municipality with 
Chinsura, the old Dutch settlement, lower down the river. Pop. 
(1001) 29,383. It contains the Hooghly College at Chinsura, 
a Mahommedan college, two high schools and a hospital with a 
Lady Duffenn branch for female patients. The principal building 
is a handsome imambara. or mosque, constructed out of funds 
which had accumulated from an endowment originally left for 
the purpose by a wealthy Shia gentleman, Mahommed Mohtin. 
The town was founded by the Portuguese in 1537, on the decay 
of Satgaon, the royal port of Bengal. Upon establishing them- 
selves, they built a fort at a place called Gholghat (close to the 
present jail), vestiges of which are still visible in the bed of the 
river. This fort gradually grew into the town and port of Hugh*. 

The District comprises an area of 1X91 sq. m. In rooz the 
population was 1,049,282, showing an increase of 1% in the 
decade. It is flat, with a gradual ascent to the north and north- 
west. The scenery along the high-lying bank of the Hugii has a 
quiet beauty of its own, presenting the appearance of a connected 
series of orchards and gardens, interspersed with factories, 
villages and temples. The principal rivers, besides the Hugh, 
are the Damodar and the Rupnarayan. As in other deltaic 
districts, the highest land lies nearest the rivers, and the lowest 
levels are found midway between two streams. There are in 
consequence considerable marshes both between the Hugli and 
the Damodar and between the latter river and the Rupnarayan. 
The district is traversed by the main line of the East Indian 
railway, with a branch to the pilgrim resort of Tarakeswar, 
whence a steam tramway has been constructed for a further 
distance of 31 m. The Eden canal furnishes irrigation, and there 
are several embankments and drainage works. Silk and indigo 
are both decaying industries, but the manufacture of brass and 
bcll-mctal ware is actively carried on at several places. There 
are several jute mills, a large flour mill, tone-crushing mills 
and a brick and tile works. 

From an historical point of view the district possesses as much 
interest as any in Bengal In the early period of Mahommedan 
rule Satgaon was the seat of the governors of Lower Bengal and 
a mint town. It was also a place of great commercial importance. 
In consequence of the silting up of the Saraswati, the river on 
which Satgaon was situated, the town became inaccessible to 
large ships, and the Portuguese settled at Hogli. In 1632 the 
latter place, having been taken from the Portuguese by the 
Mahoaunedans, was made the royal port of Bengal; and all the 
public offices and records were withdrawn from Satgaon, which 
rapidly fell into decay, In 1640 the East India Company estab- 
lished a factory at Hugli, their first settlement in Lower Bengal. 
In 1685, a dispute having taken place between the English factors 
and the nawab, the town was bombarded and burned to the 
ground. This was not the first time that Hugh* had been the scene 
of a struggle deciding the fate of a European power in India. In 
1629, when held by the Portuguese, it was besieged for three 
months and a half by a large Mahommedan force sent by the 
emperor Shah Jahan. The place was carried by storm; more 
than xooo Portuguese were lulled, upwards of 4000 prisoners 
taken, and of 300 vessels only 3 escaped. But Hugli district 
possesses historical interest for other European nations besides 
England and Portugal The Dutch established themselves at 
Chmsura in the 17th century, and held the place till 1825; when 
it was ceded to Great Britain in exchange for the island of 
Sumatra. The Danes settled at Seraxnpur in 1616, where they 
remained till 1845. when all Danish possessions in India were 
transferred to the East India*. Company. ^Chandcroagoce 



became a French settlement in 1688. The English captured this 
town twice, but since 1816 ft has remained in the possession 
of the French. 

See D. C. Crawford, A Brief History of the HaogVy District 
(Calcutta, 1903). 

HUGO, OUSTAV VON (1764-1844). German jurist, was bora 
at Lflrrach in Baden, on the 23rd of November 1764. From the 
gymnasium at Cartsruhe he passed in 1782 to the university of 
Gdttrngen, where he studied law for three years. Having re- 
ceived the appointment of tutor to the prince of Anhalt-Dessan, 
he took his doctor's degree at the university of Halle in 1788. 
Recalled in this year to Gdttingen as extraordinary professor 
of law, he became ordinary professor In 1792. In the preface to 
his BeiMlge sua thUistischen BUcherkenntnis der Ictslcn tiazif 
Jahre (1828-1829) he gives a sketch of the condition of the dxt 
law teaching at Gdttingen at that time. The Roman Canon and 
German elements of the existing law were, without criticism or 
differentiation, welded into an ostensible whole for practical needs, 
with the result that it was difficult to say whether historical trutk 
or practical ends were most prejudiced. One man handed oa the 
inert mass to the next in the same condition as he had received 
it, new errors crept in, and even the best of teachers could net 
escape from the false method which had become traditions). 
These were the evils which Hugo set himself to combat, and he 
became the founder of that historical school of jurisprudence 
which was continued and further developed by Savtgny. His 
magna opera arc the Ltkrbuch eines sivilisHstken Knrsus (7 vols, 
1792-1821), in which his method is thoroughly worked out, 
and the Zivilistisckes Magaain (6 vols., 1790-1637). He died at 
Gdttingen on the 15th of September 1844. 

For an account of his life see Eyssenhardt, Zur Erinmtrang as 
Custav Hugo (Berlin. 1845). 

HUGO, VICTOR MAB1B (1802-188$), French poet, dramatist 
and romance-writer, youngest son of General J. L. S. Hags 
(1773-1828), & d i s tin gu i shed soldier in Napoleon's service, 
was born at Besaacon on the 26th of February 1802. The 
all but still-born child was only kept alive and reared by the 
indefatigable devotion of bis mother Sophie Trebuchet (d. r8*i), 
a royalist of La Vendee. Educated first in Spain and after- 
wards in France, the boy whose infancy had followed the fortunes 
of the imperial camp grew up a royalist and a Catholic Usi 
first work in poetry and in fiction was devoted to the passionate 
proclamation of his faith in these principles* 

The precocious eloquence and ardour of these early works 
made him famous before his time. The odes which he published 
at the age of twenty, admirable for their spontaneous fervour 
and fluency, might have been merely the work of a marvellous 
boy; the ballads which followed them two years later revealed 
him as a great poet, a natural master of lyric and creative song. 
In 1823, at the age of twenty-one, he married his cousin Adele 
Foucher (d. 1868). In the same year bis first romance, Hon 
d'Islande, was given to the press; bis second, BrngJarjal, 
appeared three years later. In 1827 he published the great 
dramatic poem of Cromtoett, a masterpiece at all points except 
that of fitness for the modern stage. Two years afterwards he 
published Les Orientates, a volume of poems so various in style, 
so noble in Spirit, so perfect in workmanship, in music and ia 
form, that they might alone suffice for the foundation of an 
immortal fame. In the course of nine years, from 1831 to 1840, 
he published Les Fewilles d'autotmte, Les Chants du ertpusenk, 
Lts Voix intirieures and Let Rayons et les ombres. 

That their author was one of the greatest elegiac and lyric 
poets ever born into the world, any one of these volumes would 
amply suffice to prove. That he was the greatest tragic and 
dramatic poet born since the age of Shakespeare, the appearance 
of Hernani in 1830 made evident for ever to all but the meanest 
and most perverse of dunces and malignants. The earlier and 
even greater tragedy of Marion de Lome (1828) had been 
proscribed on the ground that it was Impossible for royalty 
to tolerate the appearance of a play in which a king was repre- 
sented as the puppet of a minister. In all the noble and glorioos 
life oi^he. greatest pott of bis time there is nothing so record 



HUGO, VICTOR 



863 



mcfee chivalrous and Tbaraoteristic than the fact that Victor 
Hugo refused to allow the play which had been prohibited by 
the government of Charles X. to be instantly produced -under 
the government of his supc r sesso r . Le Roi s' amuse (1832), 
the next play which Hugo gave to the stage, was prohibited 
by order of Louis Philippe after a tumultuous first night — to 
reappear fifty years later on the very same day of the same 
month, under the eyes of its author, with atoning acclamation 
from a wider audience than the first. Terror and pity had never 
found on the stage word or expression which so exactly realised 
the ideal aim of tragic poetry among the countrymen of Aeschylus 
and Sophodes since the time or since the passing of Shakespeare, 
of Marlowe and of Webster. The tragedy of Lmcrece Borgia, 
coequal in beauty and power with its three precursors, followed 
rteact year in the humbler garb of prose; but the prose of Victor 
Hugo stands higher on the record of poetry than the verse of 
any lesser dramatfet or poet. Marie Tudor (1833), his next 
play, was hardly more daring in its Shakespearean defiance of 
historic fact, and hardly more triumphant in its Shakespearean 
loyalty to the everlasting truth of human character and passion. 
Angela, Tyran de Padoue (1855), the last of the tragic triad to 
which their creator denied the transfiguration, of tragic verse, 
is inferior to neither in power of imagination and of style, in 
skill of invention and construction, and in mastery over all 
natural and noble sources of pity and of terror. La Esmeralda, 
the libretto of an opera founded on bis great tragic romance 
of Notre- Dame de Paris, is a miracle of lyric melody and of 
skilful adaptation. Ruy Bias (1838) was written in verse, 
and in such verse as none but he could write. la command 
and in expression of passion and of pathos, of noble and of evil 
nature, it equals any other work of this great dramatic poet;, 
in the lifelike fusion of high comedy with deep tragedy it excels 
them all. Les Bur graves, a tragic poem of transcendent beauty 
in execution and imaginative audacity in conception, found 
so little favour on the stage that the author refused to submit 
his subsequent plays to the verdict of a public audience. 

Victor Hugo's first mature work in prose fiction, Le Dernier 
Jour d'un condamnt, has appeared thirteen years earlier (1829). 
As a tragic monodrama it is incomparable for sustained power 
and terrible beauty. The story of Claude Gueux t published 
five years later (1834), another fervent protest against the in- 
fliction of capital punishment, was followed by many other 
eloquent and passionate appeals to the same effect, written or 
spoken on various occasions which excited the pity or the 
indignation of the orator or the poet. In 1831 appeared the 
greatest of all tragic or historic or romantic poems in the form 
of prose narrative, N or U- Dame de Paris. Three years after- 
wards the author published, under the title of Litttralure el 
philosophic meWes, a compilation or selection of notes and essays 
ranging and varying in date and in style from his earliest effusions 
of religious royalism to the magnificent essay on Mirabeau 
which represents at once the historical opinion and the critical 
capacity of Victor Hugo at the age of thirty-two. Next year 
he published Le Khin, a series of letters from Germany, brilliant 
and vivid beyond all comparison, containing one of the most 
splendid stories for children ever' written, and followed by a 
political supplement rather pathetically unprophetic in its 
predictions. 

At the age of thirty-eight he honoured the French Academy 
by taking his place among its members; the speech delivered 
on the occasion was characteristically generous in its tribute to 
an undeserving memory, and significantly enthusiastic in its 
glorification of Napoleon. Idolatry of his father's hero and 
leader bad now superseded the earlier superstition inculcated 
by his mother. In 1846 his first speech in the chamber of peers 
—Louis Philippe's House of Lords— was delivered on behalf 
of Poland; his second, on the subject of coast defence, is memor- 
able for the evidence it bears of careful research and practical 
suggestion. His pleading on behalf of the exiled family of 
Bonaparte induced Louis Philippe to cancel the sentence which 
excluded its members from France. After the fall and flight 
of the house of Orleans, his parliamentary elo q uen c e was never 



less generous in aim and always as fervent in its constancy 
to patriotic and progressive principle. When the conspiring 
forces of clerical venality and political prostitution had placed a 
putative Bonaparte in power attained by perjury after perjury, 
and supported by massacre after massacre, Victor Hugo, in 
common with all honourable men who had ever taken part in 
political or public life under the government superseded by 
force of treason and murder, was driven from his country into 
an exile of well-nigh twenty years. Next year he published 
NapoUon le petit', twenty-five years afterwards, Hisloire d'un 
crime. In these two books his experience and his opinion of 
the tactics which founded the second French empire stand 
registered for all time. In the deathless volume of Chdtiments, 
which appeared in 1853, his indignation, his genius, and his 
faith found such utterance and such expression as must recall 
to the student alternately the lyric inspiration of Coleridge and 
Shelley, the prophetic inspiration of Dante and Isaiah, the 
satiric inspiration of Juvenal and Dryden. Three years after 
Les Chdtiments, a book written in lightning, appeared Les 
Contemplations, a book written in sunlight and starlight. Of the 
six parts into which it is divided, the first translates into many- 
skied music the joys and sorrows, the thoughts and fancies, the 
studies and ardours and speculations of youth; the second, aa 
full of light and colour, grows gradually deeper in tone of thought 
and music; the third is yet riper and more various in form of 
melody and in fervour of meditation; the fourth is the noblest 
of all tributes ever paid by song to sorrow— a series of poems 
consecrated to the memory of the poet's eldest daughter, who 
was drowned, together with her husband, by the upsetting of 
a boat off the coast of Normandy, a few months after their 
wedding-day, in 1843; the fifth and the sixth books, written 
during his first four years of exile (all but one noble poem which 
bears date nine years earlier than its epilogue or postscript), 
contain more than a few poems unsurpassed and unsurpassable 
for depth and clarity and trenchaacy of thought, for sublimity 
of inspiration, for intensity of faith, for loyalty in translation 
from nature, and for tenderness in devotion to truth; crowned 
and glorified and completed by their matchless dedication to 
the dead. Three years later again, in 1859, Victor Hugo gave 
to the world the first instalment of the greatest book published 
in the 19th century, La Legend* des siectes. Opening with a 
vision of Eye in Paradise which eclipses Milton's in beauty no 
less than in sublimity— a dream of the mother of mankind at 
the hour when she knew the first sense of dawning motherhood, 
it closet with a vision of the trumpet to be sounded on the day 
of judgment which transcends the imagination of Dante by 
right of a realised idea which was utterly impossible of conception 
to a believer in Dante's creed: the idea of real and final equity; 
the concept of absolute and abstract righteousness. Between 
this opening and this dose the pageant of history and of legend, 
marshalled and vivified by the will and the hand of the poet, 
ranges through an infinite variety of action and passion, of light 
and darkness, of tenor and pity, of lyric rapture and of tragic 
triumph. 

After yet another three years' space the author of La Ligende 
des tiecies reappeared as the author of Les Miser obits, the 
greatest epic and dramatic work of fiction ever created or 
conceived: the epic of a soul transfigured and redeemed, purified 
by heroism and glocjfied through suffering; the tragedy and 
the comedy of life at its darkest and its brightest, of humanity 
at its best and at its worst. Two years afterwards the greatest 
man born since the death of Shakespeare paid homage to the 
greatest of his predecessors in a volume of magnificent and 
discursive eloquence which bore the title of William Shakespeare, 
and might, as its author admitted and suggested, more properly 
have been entitled A propos de Shakespeare* It was undertaken 
with the simple design of furnishing a preface to his younger 
son's translation of Shakespeare; a monument of perfect 
scholarship, of indefatigable devotion, and of literary genius, 
which eclipses even Urquhart's Rabelais— its only possible 
Competitor; and to which the translator's father prefixed a 
brief and admirable note of introduction in the year after the 



966 



HUGUENOTS 



remnants of the Protestant army and by a march as able as it 
was audacious moved on Paris, and the Peace of St Germain was 
signed on the 8th of August 1570. 

For a moment it seemed reasonable to hope that the war was 
at an end. Coligny had said that he would prefer to be dragged 
through the streets of Paris than to recommence the fighting; 
Charles IX. had realized the nobility and the patriotism of the 
man who wished to drive the Spaniards from Flanders; Henri 
de Bourbon was to marry Marguerite of France. Peace seemed 
to be assured when on the night of the 24th of August, 1573, 
after a council at which Catherine de* Medici, Charles IX., the 
duke of Anjou and other leaders of the League assisted, there 
occurred the treacherous Massacre of St Bartholomew (q.v.) 
in which Coligny and all the leading Huguenots were slain. 
This date marks a disastrous epoch in the history of France, 
the long period of triumph of the Catholic reaction, during which 
the Huguenots had to fight for their very existence. The Paris 
massacre was repeated throughout France; few were those 
who were noble enough to decline to become the executioners 
of their friends, and the Protestants were slain in thousands. 
The survivors resolved upon a desperate resistance. It was 
at this time that the Huguenots were driven to form a political 
party; otherwise they must, like the Protestants of Spain, 
have been exterminated. This party was formed at Milhau 
in 1573, definitely constituted at La Rochelle in 1588, and lasted 
until the peace of Alois in 1629. The delegates selected by the 
churches bound themselves to offer a united opposition to the 
violence of the enemies of God, the king and the state. It is 
a profound mistake to attribute to them, as their enemies have 
done, the intention of overthrowing the monarchy and sub- 
stituting a republic. They were royalists to the core, as is shown 
by the sacrifices they made for the sake of setting Henry IV. 
on the throne. It is true, however, that among themselves 
they formed a kind of republic which, according to the historian 
J. A. de Thou, had its own laws dealing with civil government, 
justice, war, commerce, finance. They had a president called 
the Protector of the Churches, an office held first by Conde 
and afterwards by the king of Navarre up to the day on which 
he became king of France as Henry IV. (1589). The fourth 
religious war, which had broken out immediately after the 
Massacre of St Bartholomew, was brought to an end by the 
pacification of Boulogne (July x6, 1573), which granted a general 
amnesty, but the obstinate intolerance of the League resulted 
in the creation of a Catholic party called "les Politique* " 
which refused to submit to their domination and offered aid to 
the Huguenots against the Guises. The recollections of the 
horrors of St Bartholomew's night had hastened the death of 
Charles IX., the last of the Valois; he had been succeeded by 
the most debauched and effeminate of monarebs, Henry III. 
Once more war broke out. Henry of Guise, "le Balafre*," 
nephew of the cardinal of Lorraine, became chief of the League, 
while the duke of Anjou, the king's brother, made common cause 
with the Huguenots. The peace of Monsieur, signed on the 
5th of May 1576, marked a new victory of liberty of conscience, 
but its effect was ephemeral; hostilities soon recommenced and 
lasted for many years, and only became fiercer when the duke 
of Anjou died on the zoth of June 1584. 

The fact that on the death of Henry III. the crown would 
pass to Henry of Navarre, the Protector of the Churches, induced 
the Guise party to declare that they would never accept a 
heretical monarch, and, at the instigation of Henry of Guise, 
Cardinal de Bourbon was nominated by them to succeed. Henry 
of Navarre since 1575 leader of the Huguenots, had year by 
year seen his influence increase, and now, faced by the machina- 
tions of the Guises, who had made overtures to Spain, 
declared that his only object was to free the feeble Henry III. 
from their influence. On the 20th of October 1587 he won the 
battle of Coutras, but on the 28th the foreign Protestants 
who were coming to his aid were routed by Guise at Montargis. 
The new body, known as " the Sixteen of Paris," thereupon 
compelled Henry III. to sign the " Edict of Union " by which 
the cardinal of Bourbon was declared heir presumptive. The 



king could not, however, endure the humiliation of bearing Henry 
of Guise described as " king of Paris " and on the 23rd of 
December 1588 bad him murdered together with the cardinal 
of Lorraine at the chateau of Blob. The League, now led by 
the duke of Mayenne, Guise's brother, declared war to the knife 
upon him and caused him to be excommunicated. In his isola- 
tion Henry III. threw himself into the arms of Henry of Navarre, 
who saved the royalist party by defeating Mayenne and escorted 
the king with his victorious army toSLCloud, whence he proposed 
to enter Paris and destroy the League. But Henry III., on the 
xst of August 1589, was assassinated by the monk Jacques 
Clement, on his deathbed appointing Henry of Navarre as his 
successor. 

This only spurred the League to redoubled energy, and 
Mayenne proclaimed the '•■■wftr 1 *! of Bourbon king with the 
title of Charles X. But Henry IV., who had already promised 
to maintain the Roman Church, gained new adherents every 
day, defeated the Leaguers at Arques in 1589, utterly routed 
Mayenne at Ivry on the 14th of March 1590, and laid siege to 
Paris. Cardinal de Bourbon having died in the same year and 
France being in a state of anarchy, Philip IL of Spain, in concert 
with Pope Gregory XIV., who excommunicated Henry IV., 
supported the claims of the infanta Isabella, Mayenne, unable 
to continue the struggle without Spanish help, promised to 
assist him, but Henry neutralized this danger by declaring 
himself a Roman Catholic at St Denis (July 95, 1593), saying, 
" Paris after all is worth a mass, in spite of the .advice and the 
prayers of my faithful Huguenots." " It is with anguish and 
grief," writes Beza, " that I think of the fall of this prince in whom 
so many hopes were placed." On the 22nd of March 1504 
Henry entered Paris. The League was utterly defeated. Thus 
the Huguenots after forty years of strife obtained by their 
constancy the promulgation of the Edict of Nantes (April 13, 
1598), the charter of religion and political freedom (see Naktss. 
Edict or). 

The Protestants might reasonably hope that Henry IV., 
in spite of his abjuration of their faith, would remember the 
devoted support which they had given him, and that his authority 
would guarantee the observance of the provisions of the Edict- 
Unhappily twelve years afterwards, on the 14th of May i$io, 
Henry was assassinated by Ravaillac, leaving the great work 
incomplete. Once more France was to undergo the misery of 
civil war. During the minority of Louis XIII. power resided 
in the hands of counsellors who had not inherited the wisdom 
of Henry IV. and were only too ready to favour the Catholic 
party. The Huguenots, realizing that their existence was at 
stake, once more took up arms in defence of their liberty under 
the leadership of Henri de Rohan (q.v.). Their watchword bad 
always been that, so long as the state was opposed to liberty 
of conscience, so long there could be no end to religious and 
civil strife, that misfortune and disaster must attend an empire 
of which the sovereign identified himself with a single section 
of his people. Richelieu had entered the king's council on the 
4th of May 1624; the destruction of the Huguenots was his 
policy and he pursued it to a triumphant conclusion. On the 
28th of October 1628, La Rochelle, the last stronghold of the 
Huguenots, was obliged to surrender after a siege rendered 
famous for all time by the heroism of its defenders and of its 
mayor. The peace of Alais, which was signed on the 28th of 
June 1629, marks the end of the civil wars. 

The Huguenots had ceased to exist as a political party and, 
in the assurance that liberty of conscience would be accorded 
to them, showed themselves loyal subjects. On the death of 
Louis XIII., the declaration of the 8th of July 1643 had 
guaranteed to the Protestants "free and unrestricted exercise 
of their religion," thus confirming the Edict of Nantes. The 
synods of Charenton (1644) and Loudun (1659) asserted their 
absolute loyalty to Louis XIV., a loyalty of which the Huguenots 
had given proof not only by their entire abstention from the 
troubles of the Fronde, but also by their public adherence to 
the king. The Roman Catholic clergy had never accepted the 
Edict of Nantes, and all their efforts were directed to obtaining 



HUGUENOTS 



867 



Its revocation. As long as Mazarin was alive the complaints 
of the clergy were in vain, but when Loujs XIV. attained his 
majority there commenced a legal persecution which was bound 
in time to bring about the ruin of the reformed churches. The 
Edict of Nantes, which was part of the law of the land, might 
seem to defy all attacks, but the clergy found means to evade 
the law by demanding that it should be observed with literal 
accuracy, disregarding the changes which had been produced 
in France during more than half a century. The clergy in 1661 
successfully demanded that commissioners should be sent to 
the provinces to report infractions of the Edict, and thus began 
a judicial war which was to last for more than twenty years. 
All the churches which had been built since the Edict of Nantes 
were condemned to be demolished. All the privileges which 
were not explicitly stated in the actual text of the Edict were 
suppressed. More than four hundred proclamations, edicts or 
declarations attacking the Huguenots in their households and 
their civil freedom, their property and their liberty of 
conscience were promulgated during the years which preceded 
the revocation of the Edict of Nantes. In spfte of all sufferings 
which this rigorous legislation inflicted upon them they did not 
cease to resist, and in order to crush this resistance and to 
cornpellhem to accept the " king's religion," there were organized 
the terrible dragonnades (1 683-1 686) which effected the forcible 
conversion of thousands of Protestants who gave way under 
the tortures which were inflicted upon them. It was then 
that Louis XIV. declared that " the best of the larger part of 
our subjects, who formerly held the so-called reformed religion, 
have embraced the Catholic religion, and therefore the Edict 
of Nantes has become unnecessary "; on the 18th of October 
1685 he pronounced its revocation. Thus under the influence 
of the clergy was committed one of the most flagrant political 
and religious blunders in the history of France, which in the 
course of a few years lost more than 400,000 of its inhabitants, 
men who, having to choose between their conscience and their 
country, endowed the nations which received them with their 
heroism, their courage and their ability. 

There is perhaps no example in history of so cruel a persecution 
as this, which destroyed a church of which Protestant Europe 
was justly proud. At no period in its career had it numbered 
among its adherents so many men of eminence, Abbadie, Claude, 
Bayle, Du Bosc, Jurieu, £lie Bcnoist, La Placet te, Basnage, 
Dailll, Mestrezat, Du Quesne, Schomberg, Ruvigny. There 
were no Huguenots left in France; those who, conquered by 
persecution, remained there were described as "New Catholics." 
All the pastors who refused to abjure their faith were compelled 
to leave the country within fifteen days. The work was complete. 
Protestantism, with its churches and its schools, was destroyed. 
As Bayle wrote, "France was Catholic to a man under the reign 
of Louis the Great." 

Persecution had succeeded in silencing, but ft could not 
convert the people. The Huguenots, before the ruins of their 
churches, remembered the early Christians and held their 
services in secret. Their pastors, making light of death, returned 
from the lands of their exile and visited their own churches to 
restore their courage. If any one denied the Catholic faith on 
his death-bed his body was thrown into the common sewers. 
The galleys were full of brave Huguenots condemned for remain- 
ing constant to the Protestant faith. For fifteen years the 
exiles continuously besought Louis XIV. to give them back their 
religious liberty. For a moment they hoped that the Treaty 
of Ryswick (1697) would realise their hopes, but Louis XIV. 
steadily declined to grant their requests. Despair armed the 
C6vennes, and in 1702 the war of the Camisards broke out, a 
struggle of giants sustained by Jean Cavalier with his moun- 
taineers against the royal troops (see C a in sards and Cavalier, 
Jean). The Huguenots seemed to be finally conquered. On 
the 8th of March 17 15 Louis XIV. announced that he had put 
an end to all exercise of the Protestant religion; but in this 
very year, on the 21st of August, while the king was -dying at 
Versailles, there assembled together at Monoblet in Languedoc, 
under the presidency of a .young man twenty yean of age, 



Antoine Court, a number of preachers, as the pastors were then 
called, with the object of raising the church from its ruins. 
This was the first synod of the Desert To re-establish the 
abandoned worship, to unite the churches in the struggle for 
liberty of conscience, such was the work to which Court devoted 
his life, and which earned for him the name of the " Restorer 
of Protestantism " (see Coukt, Antoine). In spite of persecu- 
tion the Protestants continued their assemblies; the fear of death 
and of the galleys were alike powerless to break their resistance. 
On the demand of the clergy all marriages celebrated by their 
pastors were declared null and void, and the children bora of. 
these unions were regarded as bastards. 

Protestantism, which persecution seemed to have driven from 
France, drew new life from this very persecution. Outlawed, 1 
exiles in their own country, deprived of all civil existence, the 
Huguenots showed an invincible heroism. The history of their 
church during the period of the Desert is the history of a church 
which refused to die. Amongst its famous defenders was Paul 
Rabaut, the successor of Antoine Court. Year by year the 
churches became more numerous. In 1756 there were already 
40 pastors; several years later, in 1763, the date of the last 
synod of the Desert, their number had increased to 65. The 
question of Protestant marriages roused public opinion which 
could not tolerate the idea that Frenchmen, whose sole crime 
was their religious belief, should be condemned to civil death. 1 
The torture of Jean Calas, who was condemned on a false charge 
of having killed his son because he desired to become a Catholic, 1 
'caused general indignation, of whkh Voltaire became the 
eloquent mouthpiece. Ideas of tolerance, of which Bayle had 
been the earliest advocate, became victorious, and owing to the 
devotion of Rabaut Saint- fctienne, son of Paul Rabaut, and the 
zeal of Lafayette, the edict of November 1787, in spite of the 
fierce opposition of the clergy, renewed the civil rights of the 
Huguenots by recognizing the validity of their marriages. 
Victories even greater were in store; two years later liberty of 
conscience was won. On the 2 and of August 1789 the pastor 
Rabaut Saint-£tienne, deputy for the xtoUchausstc of Nlmes 
to the States General, cried out, " It is not tolerance which I 
demand, it is liberty, that my country should accord it equally 
without distinction of rank, of birth or of religion-" The Declara- 
tion of the Rights of Man affirmed the liberty of religion; the 
Huguenots had not suffered in vain, for the cause for which their 
ancestors and themselves had suffered so much was triumphant, 
and it was the nation itself which proclaimed the victory. But 
religious passions were always active, and at Montauban as 
at Nlmes (1700) Catholics and Protestants came to blows. The 
Huguenots, having endured the persecutions of successive 
monarch*, had to endure those of the Terror; their churches 
were shut, their pastors dispersed and some died upon the 
scaffold. On the 3rd of Ventose, year II. (February 21, 1705), 
the church was divorced from the state and the Protestants 
devoted themselves to reorganization. Some years later 
Bonaparte, having signed the Concordat of the 15th of July 
1 80 1, promulgated the law of the 18th of Germinal, year X. # 
which recognized the legal standing of the Protestant church, 
but took from it the character of free church which it had 
always claimed. So great was the contrast between a past which 
recalled to Protestants nothing but persecution, and a present in 
which they enjoyed liberty of conscience, that they sccepted 
with a profound gratitude a regime of which the ecclesiastical 
standpoint was so alien to their traditions. With enthusiasm 
they repeated the words with which Napoleon bad received the 
pastors at the Tuileries on the 16th of Friraaire, year XII.: 
" The empire of the law ends where the undefined empire of 
conscience begins; law and prince are powerless against this 
liberty." 

The Protestants, on the day on which liberty of conscience 
was restored, could measure the full extent of the misery which 
they had endured. Of this people, which in the 16th century 
formed more than one-tenth of the population of France, there 
survived only a few hundred thousands; migration and persecu* 
tion had more than decimated them. In 1626 there were 800 



868 



HUGUENOTS 



pastors in the service of 751 churches; in 180* there were only 
iai pastors and 171 churches; in Paris there was only a single 
church with a sing le pastor. The church had no faculty of 
theology, no schools, no Bible societies, no asylums, no orphan- 
ages, no religious literature. Everything bad to be created 
afresh, and this work was pursued during the 19th century with 
the energy and the earnest faith which is characteristic of the 
Huguenot character. 

At the fall of the Empire (18x5) the reaction of the White 
Terror once more exposed the Protestants to outrage, and once 
more a number fled from persecution ana sought safety in foreign 
countries. Peace having been established, attention was once 
more focussed on religious questions, and the period was marked 
In Protestantism by a remarkable awakening. On all sides 
churches were built and schools opened. It was an epoch of 
the greatest importance, for the church concentrated itself more 
and more on its real mission. During this period were founded 
the great religious societies:— Societt biblique (1819), Soriete de 
l'instruction primaire (1829), Sotiete des traites (1821), Sotiete 
des missions (1822). The influence of English thought on the 
development of religious life was remarkable, and theology drew 
its inspiration from the writings of Paley, David Bogue, Chalmers, 
Ebenezer Erskinc, Robert and James Alexander Haldanc, 
which were translated into French. Later on German theology 
and the works of Kant, Neander and Schleiermacher produced 
a far-reaching effect. This was due to the period of persecution 
which had checked that development of religious thought which 
had been so remarkable a feature of French Protestantism of 
the 16th and 17th centuries. 

Slowly Protestantism once more took its place in the national 
life. The greatest names in its history are those of Guixot and 
Cuvier; Adolf Monod, with Athanase Coquerel, stand in the 
front rank of pulpit orators. The Protestants associated them- 
selves with all the great philanthropic works— Baron Jules 
Delessert founded savings banks. Baron de Stael condemned 
slavery, and all France united to honour the pastor, Jean 
Frederic Oberiin. But the reformers, if they had no longer to 
fear persecution, had still to fight in order to win respect for 
religious liberty, which was unceasingly threatened by their 
adversaries. Numerous were the cases tried at this epoch in 
order to obtain justice. On the other band the old union of the 
reformed churches had ceased to exist since the revolution of 
July. Ecclesiastical strife broke out and baa never eotirely 
ceased. A schism occurred first in 1848, owing to the refusal of 
the synod to draw up a profession of faith, the comic de Gasparin 
and the pastor Frederic Monod seceding and founding the Union 
des Eglises £vangeliques de France, separated from the state, of 
which later on E. de Pressense was to become the most famous 
pastor. Under the Second Empire (18S2-1870) the divisions 
between the orthodox and the liberal thinkers were accentuated; 
they resulted in a separation which followed on the reassembly of 
the national synod, authorized in 1872 by the government of the 
Third Republic. The old Huguenot church was thus separated 
into two parts, having no other link than that of the Concordat 
of x8oa and each possessing its own peculiar organisation. 
I The descendants of the Huguenots, however, remained faithful 
to the traditions of their ancestors, and extolled the great past 
of the French reform movement. Moreover, in 1859 were held 
the magnificent religious festivals to celebrate the third centenary 
of the convocation of their first national synod; and when on 
the 18th of October x88$ they recalled the 200th anniversary 
of the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, they were able to assert 
that the Huguenots had been the first defenders of religious 
liberties in France. In the early days of the 20th century the 
work of restoring French Protestantism, which had been pursued 
with steady perseverance for more than one hundred years, 
showed great results. This church, which in 1802 had scarcely 
100 pastors has seen this number increased to 1000; it possesses 
more than 90© churches or chapels and 180 presbyteries. In 
contra** with the poverty of religious life under the First Empire 
it presented a striking array of Bible societies, missionary 
poetics, and others Um evangelical, educational, pastoral and 



charitable work, which bear witness to a church risen from tts 
ruins. French Protestantism in the course of the xoth century 
reckoned among its members such eminent theologians as 
Timothee Colani (1824-1888), who together with Edmond Scherer 
founded the celebrated Rent* de thiologie de Strasbourg (1850); 
Edmond de Pressense, editor of the Revue ckrUienne, Quirks 
Bois and Michel Nicolas, professors of theology at Montauban, 
Auguste Sabatier, professor of theology at the university of Paris, 
Albert Rlville, professor at the College de France, Felix Pecart, 
&c; well-known preachers such as Eugene Bexsier, Ernest 
Dhombres, Ariste Vigure, Numa Recolin, Auguste de Coppet, 
and missionaries, for example Eugene Casalis and CotUard; 
Jean Bost, who founded the hospitals at Laforce; historian* 
like Napoleon Peyrat, the brothers Haag, who wrote La Frame* 
proUstante^ Francois Puaux, Charles Coquerel, Onesime Douem, 
Henri Bordier, Edouard Sayous, de Felice, TheophOe Rolles; 
Jean Pedezert, Leon Pilatte and others, who were journalists; 
such statesmen as Guizot, Leon Say, Waddington; such scholars 
as Cuvicr, Broca, Wurtx, Friedcl de Quatrefages; such illustrious 
soldiers and sailors as Rapp, Admirals Baudin, Jaureguiberry, 
Colonel Denfert-Rochereau. But the population of Protestant 
France does not exceed 750,000 souls, without counting the 
Lutherans, who are attached to the Confession of Augsburg, 
numbering about 75,000. Their chief centres are in the depart- 
ments of Gard, Ardeche, Drome, Lozere, the Deux Sevres and 
the Seine. 

The law of the otb of December 1005, which separated the 
church from the state, has been accepted by the great majority 
of Protestants as a legitimate consequence of the reform 
principles. Nor has its application given rise to any difficulty 
with the state. They used their influence only in the direction 
of rendering the law more liberal and immediately devoted 
themselves to the organisation of their churches under the new 
regime. If the two great parties, orthodox and liberal, have each 
their particular constitution, nevertheless a third party has been 
formed with the object of effecting a reconciliation of all the 
Protestant churches and of thus reconstituting the old Huguenot 
church. 

Bibliography.— A complete list of works is impossible. The 
following are the most important: — 

General Authorities.— Bulletin de la. sociSH de Vhistoir* dm pro- 
testantism* franqais (54 vols.), a most valuable collection, indis- 
pensable as a work of reference; Haag, La France pntestamte, lives 
of French Protestants (10 vols., 1840; and ed., Henri Bonfier. 
6 vols., 1887) ; F. Puaux, Histoire de la Riformatiou francaise (7 vol*-, 
1858) and articles " Calvin " and " France protestante " in Emey- 



Rise of Ike Huguenots of France (New York, 1879) ; A. W. Whitehead. 
Caspard de Cotiguy (London. 1904); J. W. Thompson, The Wars of 
Religion in France, iSS9-i$7* (»90?) ; Tb. Besa, Histoire ecclisiastiam* 



protesiants de France (1874). 

Special Periods. The loth Century.— H. M. Baird, The Huguenots 
and Henry of Navarre (2 vols., New York, 1886), and History of the 
»,„ -,.,.- r/. i r._._„ „^.*,__. .«__ ) j. K w Whitehead. 

ropaon. The Wars of 
«*.»«,« •» "•"»<*.. 'jjy-*j/" \.yvry/t •— »~— , Hutoire e c cU si a st iam* 
des tglises rtformtes au royaume de Franc* (3 vols., Antwerp, 1580; 
new edition by G. Baum et Cunitx, 1883); Crcspin, Histoire dot 
martyrs persecutes et mis * mart pour la veritl de fioamgik (2 vols, 
in fol., Geneva, 1619; abridged translation by Rev. A. Maddock, 
London, 1780); Pierre de la Place. Commentaires sur Mat de la 
religion et de la rtpublique (1565); Florimond de Raetoond. L' His- 
toire de la naissance, progrks et decadence de Fhirisie dm siasU 
(1610); De Thou, Histoire umoeneUe (16 vols.); Tb. Agnosia 
D'Aubignc, Histoire universe!!* {3 vols., Geneva, 1626) ; Hormingard. 
Correspondance des reformaleurs dans let pays de la (angue framboise 
(8 vols., 1866), a scholarly work and the most trustworthy source 
for the history of the origin of French reform. " Calvini opera " 
in the Carpus reformatorum, edited by Reus*, Baum aad Cunitx, 
particularly the corre sp ondence, vols. x. to xxii.; Doumergue, 
Jean Cain*, les homines et les chases de son temps (x vols.. 1899); 
G. von -Polenz, Ceschichte des fransasischen Cahintsmns (5 vols-, 
1857): fctienne A. Laval, Compendious history of the reformmtiam 
in France and of the reformed Church in that Kingdom from tkefrst 
beginning of the Reformation to the Repealing of the Edict of Nantes 
(7 vols., London, 1737-1741); Soltlan, Ceschichte des Frotestantumns 
in Frankreich bis sum tode Karts JX. (2 vols., 1853); Merle 
D'Aubigno, Histoire de la reformation en Europe am temps de Cammm 
(S vols., 1863). 

17th Century.— Elte Benoit, Histoire de PEdil de Nantes (5 vol*. 
Delft. iGftj), a work of the first rank; Aymon, Tons les synaia 



HUGUE&—HULL 



869 



n am onaux des itfises riformtes de France (a volt.); J. .Quick, 
1 Srnodkon (2 vols., London, 1692), important for the ecclesiastical 

1 history of French Protestantism; D'Huisseau, La Discipline des 

j Mists H form i es de France (Amsterdam, 1710); H. de Rohan, 

, Mimoires . . , iusquen 1629 (Amsterdam, iC x " —-....- 

, Les PlainUs des Protestans de " rr% " 

with notes by Frank Puaux, 



pastorales (x vols., Rotterdam, 
de France (3 ~" 



„j vols., The Hague, 168$); Anquez, Uistoire des 

kUes politique* des rtjormis de France (1 vol, Paris, 1859); Pilatte, 
Edits et anils concemant la religion pritendue riformie, 1662-171 1 
(1889); Dotien, Les Premiers pasteurs du Disert (2 vols., 1879); 
H. M. Baird, The Huguenots and The Revocation ef Ike Edict of 
lHantes (2 vols.. New York). 

18th Century. — Peyrat, Uistoire des pasteurs du Disert (2 vols., 
1842); Ch. CoquereL Hisloire des iglises du Disert (2 vols., 1841); 
E. Hugues, Antoine Court, Histoire de la restauration du protestantisms 
en France (2 vols., 1872}; Les Synodes du Disert (3 vols., 1875); 
A. Coquecel, Jean Colas (1869); Court de Gebelm, Les Toulousoines 
(1763). 

19th Century. — Die protestantische Kirche Frankreichs (2 vols^. 
1848); Annuaire de Rabaut 1807, de Soulier 1827, de De Prat 1862, 
(1878): Agenda protestant de Frank Puaux (1880-1894); Agenda 
annuaire protestant de Gambler (1895-1907); Bersfer, uistoire dn 
Synode de 1872 (2 vols.) ; Frank Puaux, Les (Euwes du protestantism* 

Sancais au JC1X' sibek. See also Camisards, Calvin, Edict op 
ANTES. (F. Px.) 

> HUGUES, CLOVIS (1851-1907), French poet and socialist, 
was born at Menerbes in Vauduse on the 3rd of November 1851. 
Be studied for the priesthood, but did not take orders. For 
some revolutionary articles in the local papers of Marseilles 
he was condemned in 1871 to three years' imprisonment and a 
fine of 6000 francs. In 1877 he fought a duel in which he killed 
his adversary, a rival journalist. Elected deputy by Marseilles 
in the general elections of 1881, he was at that time the sole 
representative of the Socialist party in the chambers. He was 
re-elected in 1885, and in 1893 became one of the deputies for 
Paris, retaining his seat until 1906. He died on the nth of June 

1007. 

\ His poems, novels and comedies are full of wit and exuberant 

vitality. 

His principal works are: Palmes de prison (1875), written during 
Ws detention. Soirs de oataUU (1883); Jours de combat (1883); and 
U Trawail (1889) I the novels, Madame Photon (1885) and Monsieur 
le gendarme (1891); and the dramas. Une UoUe (1888) and U 
sommeU de Danton (1888). 

HTJICHOL (pronounced Veetchol— a corruption of the native 
name Viskalika or Virarika, doctors or healers), a tribe of Mexican 
Indians living in a mountainous region on the eastern side of the 
Chapalagaoa river, Jalisco. Huichol tradition assigns the south 
as their place of origin. Their name of " healers " is deserved, 
for about one-fourth of the men are Shamans, The Huichols are 
in much the same social condition as at the time of the Aztte 
empire. They were conquered by the Spaniards in 1 7 2 2. 

For full description of the people and their habits see Carl Lura- 
hottt, Unknown Mexico (1903). 

\ HUrrZILOPOCHTLI. the supreme being in the religions of 
ancient Mexico, and as a specialized deity, the god of war. He 
was the mythic leader and chief divinity of the Aztecs, dominant 
tribe of the Nahua nation. As a humming-bird HuitzUopochtli 
was alleged to have led the Aztecs toa new borne. E. B. Tylor 
{Primitive Culture, 4th ed., vol. ii. p. 307) calls him an "in- 
extricable compound parthenogenetic deity"; and finds, in 
the fact that his chief festival (when his paste idol was shot 
through with an arrow, and afterwards eaten) was at the winter 
solstice, ground for believing that he was at first a nature-god, 
whose Hfe and death were connected with the year's. His idol 
was a huge block of basalt (still thought to be preserved in Mexico), 
on one side of which he is sculptured in hideous form, adorned with 
the feathers of the humming-bird. The ceremonies of his worship 
were of the most bloodthirsty character, and hundreds of human 
beings were murdered annually before his shrine, their limbs 
being eaten by his worshippers.. When bis temple was dedicated 
in i486 it is traditionally reported that 70,000 people were killed. 
See Mexico. 

• HULDAt in Teutonic mythology, goddess of marriage. She 
was a beneficent deity, the patroness and guardian of all maidens 
(see Bebcbta). 



HULKB. JOHH WHTTAKER (1830-1895), British surgeon 
and geologist, was born on the 6th of November 1830, being the 
son of a well-known medical practitioner at Deal. He was 
educated partly at a boarding-school in this country, partly 
at the Moravian College at Neuwied (1843-1845), where he gained 
an intimate knowledge of German and an interest in geology 
through visits to the Eifel district. He then entered King's 
College school, and three years later commenced work at the 
hospital, becoming M.R.C.S. in 1852. In the Crimean War he 
volunteered, and was appointed (1855) assistant-surgeon at 
Smyrna and subsequently at Sevastopol. On returning home 
he became medical tutor at his old hospital, was elected F.R.C.S. 
in 1857, and afterwards assistant-surgeon to the Royal Oph- 
thalmic Hospital, Moorfields (1857), and surgeon (1868-1890). 
In 1870 he became surgeon at the Middlesex hospital, and here 
much of his more important surgical work was accomplished. 
His skill as an operator was widely known: he was an excellent 
general surgeon, but made his special mark as an ophthal- 
mologist, while as a geologist he attained a European reputation. 
He was elected FJLS. in 1867 for his researches on the anatomy 
and physiology of the retina in man and the lower animals, 
particularly the reptiles. He subsequently devoted all his spare 
time to geology and especially to the fossile reptilia, describing 
many remains of Dinosaurs, to our knowledge of which as well as 
of other Saurians he largely contributed. In 1887 the Wollaston 
medal was awarded to him by the Geological Society of London. 
He was president of both the Geological and Pathological Societies 
in 1883, and president of the Royal College of Surgeons from 
1893 until his death. He was a man with a wide range of know- 
ledge not only of science but of literature and art. He died in 
London on the 19th of February 1895. 

HULL, ISAAC (177S-1843), commodore in the U.S. navy, was 
born at Derby in Connecticut on the 9th of March 1775. He 
went to sea young in the merchant service and was in command 
of a vessel at the age of nineteen. In 1798 he was appointed 
lieutenant in the newly organized TJ.S. navy. From 1803 to 
1805 he served in the squadron sent to chastise, the Barbary 
pirates as commander of the " Enterprise," but was transferred 
to the " Argus " in November of 1803. When the War of 181 2 
broke out he was captain of the U.S. frigate " Constitution " (44) , 
and was on a mission to Europe carrying specie for the payment 
of a debt in Holland. The " Constitution" was shadowed by 
British men-of-war, but was not attacked. In July of that year, 
however, he was pursued by a squadron of British vessels, and 
escaped by good seamanship and the fine sailing qualities of the 
" Constitution." He was to have been superseded, but put to sea 
before the officer who was to have relieved him arrived— an action' 
which might have been his ruin if he had not signalized his cruise 
by the capture of the British frigate " Guerriere " (38). Captain 
Hull had been cruising off the Gulf of St Lawrence, and the engage* 
ment, which took place on the 19th of August, was fought south 
of the Grand Bank. The " Constitution " was a fine ship of 1 533 
tons, originally designed for a two-decker, but cut down to a 
frigate. The " Guerriere " was of 1092 tons and very ill-manned, 
while the " Constitution " had a choice crew. The British ship 
was easily overpowered. Hull received a gold medal for the 
capture of the " Guerriere," but had no further opportunity cf 
distinction in the war. After the peace he held a variety of 
commands at sea, and was a naval commissioner from 1815 to 
1817. He had a high reputation in the United States navy for 
practical seamanship. He died at Philadelphia on the 13th of 
February 1843. 

HULL, a city (1875) *ad railway junction of the province of 
Quebec, Canada, and the capital of Wright county, opposite the 
city of Ottawa. Pop. (1901) 13,988. The magnificent water- 
power of the Chaudiere Falls of the Ottawa is utilized for the 
lighting of the city, the operation of a system of electric railways 
connecting Hull with Ottawa and Aylmer, and a number of large 
saw-mills, pulp, paper and match manufactories. Hull has gone 
through several disastrous fires, but since that of 1900, which 
swept out most of the town, an efficient system of fire protection 
has been established. Three bridges unite Ottawa and Hufl. 



870 



HULL 



The dty is governed by a council composed of a mayor and twelve 
aldermen elected annually. Champlain was the first white man 
to set foot on the site of Hull, but long before he came it was a 
favourite meeting-place for the Indians. Later it became familiar 
to explorers and fur-traders as the foot of the Chaudiete portage, 
and many a canoe has been carried shoulder high over the she of 
future busy streets. Philemon Wright, of Woburn, Massachusetts, 
was the first man to settle here in 1800. The report he sent back 
was so favourable that a number of other families followed from 
the same place and .laid the foundations of the future city. 
His descendants have remained among the substantial men of the 
town. 

HULL (officially KingstoN-upon-Hull), a city and county 
of a dty, municipal, county and parliamentary borough, and 
seaport in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England, at the junction 
of the river Hull with the Humber, 22 m. from the open sea, 
and 181 m. N. of London. Pop. (1891) 200,473; (1001) 240,259. 
Its full name, not in general use, is Kin gston-upon- Hull. It 
is served by the North Eastern, Great Central and Hull & 
Barnsley railways, the principal station being Paragon Street. 
The town stands on a level plain so low as to render embank* 
tnents necessary to prevent inundation. The older portion is 
completely enclosed by the Hull and Humber on the E. and S. 
and by docks on the N. and W. Here are narrow streets typical 
of the medieval mercantile town, though modern improvements 
have destroyed some of them; and there are a few ancient houses. 
In Holy Trinity church Hull possesses one of the largest English 
parish churches, having an extreme length of 272 ft. It is 
cruciform and has a massive central tower. This and the 
transepts and choir are of Decorated work of various dates. 
The choir is largely constructed of brick, and thus affords an 
unusually early example of the use of this material in English 
ecclesiastical architecture. The nave is Perpendicular, a fine 
example of the style. William Mason the poet (1725-1797) 
was the son of a rector of the parish. The church of St Mary, 
Lowgate, was founded in the 14th century, but is almost wholly 
a reconstruction. Modern churches are numerous, but of no 
remarkable architectural merit. Among public buildings the 
town-hall, in Lowgate, ranks first. It was completed in 1866, 
but was subsequently extended and in great part rebuilt; it is 
in Italian renaissance style, having a richly adorned facade. 
The exchange, in the same street, was also completed in 1866, 
in a less ornate Italian style. There are also theatres, a chamber 
of commerce, corn exchange, market-hall, custom-house, and 
the dock offices, a handsome Italian building. The principal 
intellectual institution is the Royal Institution, a fine classical 
building opened by Albert, prince consort, in 1854, and con- 
taining a museum and large library. It accommodates the Literary 
and Philosophical Society. The grammar school was founded 
in i486. One of its masters was Joseph Milner (1744-1797), 
author of a history of the Church; and among its students were 
Andrew Marvell the poet (1621-1678) and William Wilber- 
force the philanthropist (1759-1833), who is Commemorated 
by a column and statue near the dock offices, and by the preserva- 
tion of the house of his birth in High Street. This house 
belongs to the corporation and was opened in 1006 as the Wilber- 
force and Historical Museum. There are also to be mentioned 
the Hull and East Riding College, Hymer's College, comprising 
classical, modern and junior departments, the Trinity House 
marine school (17 16), the Humber industrial school ship 
" Southampton," and technical and art schools. Charities and 
benevolent foundations are numerous. Trinity House is a 
charity for seamen of the merchant service; the building (1753) 
was founded by the Trinity House Gild instituted in 1369, and 
contains a noteworthy collection of paintings and a museum. 
The Charterhouse belongs to a foundation for the support of 
the old and feeble, established by Sir Michael de la Pole, after- 
wards earl of Suffolk, in 1384. The infirmary was founded in 
2782. Of the three parks, Pearson Park was presented by a 
mayor of that name in i860, and contains statues of Queen 
Victoria and the Prince Consort. A botanic garden was opened 
in 1880. 



The original harbour occupied that part of the river HuB 
which faced the old town, but in 1774 an act was passed for 
forming a dock on the site of the old fortifications on the right 
bank of the Hull. This afterwards became known as QueenS 
dock, and with Prince's and Humber docks completes the circle 
round the old town. The small railway dock opens from Humber 
dock. East of the Hull lie the Victoria dock and extensm 
timber ponds, and west of the Humber dock basin, p nrattrl to 
the Humber, is Albert dock. Others are the Alexandra, Si 
Andrew's and fish docks. The total area of the docks is about 
186 acres, and the owning companies are the North Eastern aad 
the Hull & Barnsley railways. The ports of Hull and Goole 
(?.f.) have been administratively combined since 18S8, the 
conservancy of the river being under the Humber Conservancy 
Board. Hull is one of the principal shipping ports for the maim* 
factures of Yorkshire and Lancashire, and has direct communica- 
tion with the coal-fields of the West Riding. Large quantities 
of grain are imported from Russia, America, &c., and of timber 
from Norway and Sweden. Iron, fish, butter and fruit are among 
other principal imports. The port was an early seat of the whale 
fisheries. Of passenger steamship services from Hun the principal 
are those to the Norwegian ports, which are greatly frequented 
during the summer; these, with others to the ports of Sweden, 
&c,are in the hands of the large shipping firm of Thomas Wilson 
& Co. A ferry serves New Holland, on the Lincolnshire shore 
(Great Central railway). The principal industries of Hull are 
iron-founding, shipbuilding and engineering, and the manu- 
facture of chemicals, oil-cake, colours, cement, paper, starch, 
soap and cotton goods; and there are tanneries and breweries. 

The parliamentary borough returns three members, an increase 
from two members in 188$. Hull became the seat of a suffragan 
bishop in the diocese of York in 1891. This was a revival, as 
the office was in existence from 1534 tut the death of Edward 
VI. The county borough was created in 1888. The dty is 
governed by a mayor, 16 aldermen and 48 coundDors. Area, 
8089 acres. 

The first mention of Hull occurs under the name of Wyke- 
upon-Hull in a charter of 1160 by which Maud, daughter of Hugh 
Camin, granted it to the monks of Meaux, who in 1 278 rece i ved 
licence to hold a market here every Thursday and a fair on the 
vigil, day and morrow of Holy Trinity and twelve following 
days. Shortly afterwards Edward I., seeing its valme as a pott, 
obtained the town from the monks in exchange for other lands 
in Lincolnshire and changed its name to Kingston-upon-HaQ. 
To induce people to settle here he gave the town a charter 
m 1209. This granted two weekly markets on Tuesday and 
Friday and a fair on the eve of St Augustine lasting thirty days; 
it made the town a free borough and provided that the fctsg 
would send his justices to deliver the prison when necessary. 
He sent commissioners in 1303 to inquire how and where the 
roads to the " new town of Ringston-upon-Hull " could best be 
made, and in 1321 Edward II. granted the burgesses licence to 
enclose the town with a ditch and " a wall of stone and lime." 
In the 14th century the burgesses of Hull disputed the right of 
the archbishop of York to prisage of wine and other liberties 
in Hull, which they said belonged to the king. The archbishop 
claimed under charters of King iEthelstand and Henry III. 
The dispute, after lasting several years, was at length decided 
In favour of the king. In 1381 Edward III., while fns p mi ng 
former charters, granted that the burgesses might bold the borough 
with fairs, markets and free customs at a fee-farm of £70, and 
that every year they might choose a mayor and four bailiffs. 
The king in 1440 granted the burgesses Hessle, North Ferriby 
and other places in order that they might obtain a supply of 
fresh water. The charter also granted that the above places 
with the town itself should become the county of the town of 
Kingston-upon-HuD. Henry VHI. visited the town in 1541, 
and ordered that a castle and other places of defence should be 
built, and Edward VI. in 1552 granted the manor to the burgesses. 
The town was incorporated by Queen Elizabeth in 1576 and a 
new charter was granted by James II. in 1688. Daring the 
.civil wars Hull, although the majority of the inhabitants wete 



HULL— HUMANE SOCIETY 



871 



royalist*, vat garrisoned by the parliamentarians, and Charles 
I. was refused admission by the governor Sir John Hotham. 
In 1643 it stood a siege of six weeks, but the new governor 
Ferdinando Fairfax, and Baron Fairfax, obliged the Royalist 
army to retreat by opening the sluices and placing the surround- 
ing country under water. Hull was represented in the parlia- 
ment of 1295 and has sent members ever since, save that in 
1384 the burgesses were exempted from returning any member 
on account of the expenses which they were incurring through 
fortifying their town. Besides the fairs granted to the burgesses 
by Edward I., two others were granted by Charles II. in 1664 
to Henry Hildiard who owned property in the town. 

See T. Gent, Annates Repoduni Hullini (York. 1735. re- 

Srinted 1869); G. Hadley, History of the Town and County of 
Ungston-upon-Hull (Hull, 1788); C Frost, Noticts relative to the 
Early History of the Town and Port of Hull (London, 1827); J- J. 
Sheaham, Central and Concise History of Kingston-upon-Hm 
(London and Beverley, 1864). 

HULL (in O.Eng. hulu, from helcn, to cover, cf. Ger. Hiille, 
covering), the outer covering, pod, or shell of beans, peas, &c, 
also the enclosing envelope of a chrysalis. The word may be the 
same as " hull, " meaning the body of a ship without its masts or 
superstructure, &c, but in this sense the word is more usually 
connected with " hold/' the interior cargo-carrying part of a 
vessel. This word was borrowed, as a nautical term, from the 
Dutch, hot (cognate with " hole "), the d being due to confusion 
with " to hold," " grasp " (O.Eng. hcaldan). The meanings of 
" hull " and " hold " are somewhat far apart, and the closest 
sense resemblance is to the word " hulk," which is not known till 
about a century later. 

HULLAH, JOHN PYKB (18x3-1884), English composer and 
teacher of music, was born at Worcester on the 17th June 
18 1 a. He was a pupil of William Horsley from 2820, and 
entered the Royal Academy of Music in x 833. He wrote an opera 
to words by Dickens, The Village Coquettes, produced in 1836; 
The Barbers of Bassora in 2837, and The Outpost in 1838, the last 
two at Covent Garden. From 1839, when he went to Paris to 
investigate various systems of teaching music to large masses 
of people, he identified himself with Wilhem's system of the 
" fixed Do," and his adaptation of that system was taught with 
enormous success from 1840 to i860. In 1847 a large building in 
Long Acre, called St Martin's Hall, was built by subscription 
and presented to Hullah. It was inaugurated iri 2850 and burnt 
to the ground in 2860, a blow from which Hullah was long in 
recovering. He had risked his all in the maintenance of the 
building,- and had to begin the world again. A series of lectures 
was given at the Royal Institution in 2862, and in 2864 he lectured 
in Edinburgh, but in the following year was unsuccessful in his 
application for the Reid professorship. He conducted concerts 
in Edinburgh in 1866 and 2867, and the concerts of the Royal 
Academy of Music from 2870 to 2873; he had been elected to the 
committee of management in 2869. In 2872 he was appointed 
by the Council of Education musical inspector of training schools 
for the United Kingdom. In 2878 he went abroad to report on 
the condition of musical education in schools, and wrote a very 
valuable report, quoted in the memoir of him published by his 
wife in 2886. He was attacked by paralysis m 2880, and again 
in 2883. His compositions, which remained popular for some 
years after his death in 2884, consisted mainly of ballads; but 
his importance in the history o£ music is owing to his exertions 
in popularizing musical education, and Ins persistent opposition 
to the Tonic Sol* Fa system, which had a success he could not 
foresee. His objections to it were partly grounded on the 
character of the music which was in common use among the early 
teachers of the system. While it cannot be doubted that Hullah 
would have won more success if he had not opposed the Tonic 
Sol-Fa movement so strenuously, it must be confessed that his 
work was of great value, for he kept constantly in view and 
impressed upon ail who followed him or learnt from him the 
supreme necessity of maintaining the artistic standard of the 
music taught and studied, and of not allowing trumpery com- 
positions to usurp the place of good music on account of the 
greater ease with which they could be read. 



HtJUsB, WILLIAM (2632-2692), English philanthropist, 
was born in the neighbourhood of Manchester, and died on the 
29th of October 1692 . Having lost his only son Banastre, Hulme 
left his property in trust to maintain " four exhibitioners of the 
poorest sort of bachelors for the space of four years " at Brasenose 
College, Oxford. This was the beginning of the Hulme Trust. Its 
property was in Manchester, and owing to its favourable situa- 
tion its value increased rapidly. Eventually in 1882 a scheme 
was drawn up by the charity commissioners, by which (as 
amended in 2907) the trust is now governed. Its income of 
about £10,000 a year is devoted to maintaining the Hulme 
Grammar School in Manchester and to assisting other schools, 
to supporting a theological college, Hulme Hall, attached to the 
university of Manchester, and to providing a number of scholar- 
ships and exhibitions at Brasenose College. 

See J. Croston, Hulme' s Charity (1877). 

H0LS, a town of Germany, in the Prussian Rhine province, 
4 m. N. of Crefeld and 17 N.W. of Dusseldorf by rail. Pop. 
(2905) 6520. It has two Roman Catholic churches, a synagogue 
and manufactures of damask and velvet. In the neighbourhood 
ironstone is obtained. 

HULSB, JOHN (2708*2790), English divine, was born— the 
eldest of a family of nineteen— at Middlewich, in Cheshire, in 
1708. Entering St John's College, Cambridge, in 2724, he 
graduated in 2728; and on taking orders (in 2732) was presented 
to a small country curacy. His father having died in 2753, 
Hulse succeeded to his estates in Cheshire, where, owing to feeble 
health, be lived in retirement till his death in December 2790. 
He bequeathed his estates to Cambridge University for the 
purpose of maintaining two divinity scholars (£30 a year each) 
at St John's College, of founding a prize for a dissertation, and of 
instituting the offices of Christian advocate and of Christian 
preacher or Hulsean lecturer. By a statute in 2860 the Hulsean 
professorship of divinity was substituted for the office of Christian 
advocate, and the lectureship was considerably modified. The 
first course of lectures under the benefaction was delivered in 
282a In 2830 the number of annual lectures or sermons was 
reduced from twenty to eight; after 2862 they were further 
reduced to a minimum of four. The annual value of the Hulse 
endowment is between £800 and £900, of which eight-tenths 
I "vinity and one-tenth to the prise and 

] 

an lectures from 2820 to 2894 is given in 

ht in the Moth Century \ 332-338; among 

1 nry Alford (1841). R. C. Trench (1845), 

< [1847), Charles Merivale (1861), James 

1 Farrar (1870), F. J. A. Hort (1871), 

1. W. Cunningham (1885), M. Creightoo 



I 

HUMACAO, a small dty and the capital of a municipal district 
and department of the same name, in Porto Rico, 46 m. S.E. of 
San Juan. Pop. (1899) of the city, 4428; and of the municipal 
district, 24,313. Humacao is attractively situated near the 
£. coast, 9 m. from the port of Naguabo and a little over 6 m. 
from its own port of Punta Santiago, with which it is connected 
by a good road; a railway was under construction in 2008, and 
some of the sugar factories of the department are now connected 
by rail with the port. The department covers the eastern end 
of the island and includes all the islands off its coast, among 
which arc Culebra and Vieques; the former (pop. in 2899, 704) 
has two excellent harbours and is used as a U.S. naval station; 
the latter is 22 m. long by 6 m. wide and in 2809 had a population 
of nearly 6000. Grazing is the principal industry, but sugar-cane, 
tobacco and fruit are cultivated. There are valuable forests 
in the mountainous districts, a part of which has been set aside 
for preservation under the name of the Luquillo forest reserve. 
Humacao was incorporated as a city in 1 899. It suffered severely 
in the hurricane of 2808, the damage not having been fully 
repaired as late as 1006. 

HUMANE SOCIETY, ROYAL. This society was founded in 
England in 2774 for the purpose of rendering "first aid " in cases 
of drowning and for restoring life by artificial means to those 
apparently drowned. Dr William Hawes (2736-2808), an 



872 



HUMANISM— HUMBERT, KING OF ITALY 



English physician, became known in 1773 for his efforts to 
convince the public that persons apparently dead from drowning 
might in many cases be resuscitated by artificial means. For a 
year he paid a reward out of his own pocket to any one bringing 
him a body rescued from the water within a reasonable time of 
immersion. Dr Thomas Cogan (1736-1818), another English 
physician, who had become interested in the same subject during 
a stay at Amsterdam, where was instituted in 1767 a society for 
preservation of life from accidents in water, joined Hawes in his 
crusade. In the summer of 1774 each of them brought fifteen 
friends to a meeting at the Chapter Coffee-house, St Paul's 
Churchyard, when the Royal Humane Society was founded. 
The society, the chief offices of which are at 4 Trafalgar Square, 
London, has upwards of 280 depots throughout the kingdom, 
supplied with life-saving apparatus. The chief and earliest of 
these depots is the Receiving House in Hyde Park, on the north 
bank of the Serpentine, which was built in 1704 on a site granted 
by George III. Boats and boatmen are kept to render aid to 
bathers, and in the winter ice-men are sent round to the different 
skating grounds in and around London. The society distributes 
money-rewards, medals, clasps and testimonials, to those who 
save or attempt to save drowning people. It further recognizes 
44 all cases of exceptional bravery in rescuing or attempting to 
rescue persons from asphyxia in mines, wells, blasting furnaces* 
or in sewers where foul gas may endanger life." It further 
awards prises for swimming to public schools and training ships. 
Since 1873 the Stanhope gold medal has been awarded " to 
the case exhibiting the greatest gallantry during the year." 
During the year 1905 873 persons were rewarded for saving or 
attempting to save 047 lives from drowning. The society is 
maintained by private subscriptions and bequests. Its motto 
is Latent scintiUula forsatt, " a small spark may perhaps lie hid." 
(See also Dkowning and Lxte-Savino.) 

HUMANISM (from Lat. kumatnts, human, connected with 
homo, mankind), in general any system of thought or action 
which assigns a predominant interest to the affairs of men as 
compared with the supernatural or the abstract. The term is 
specially applied to that movement of thought which in western 
Europe in the 15th century broke through the medieval traditions 
of scholastic theology and philosophy, and devoted itself to 
the rediscovery and direct study of the ancient classics. This 
movement was essentially a revolt against intellectual, and 
especially ecclesiastical authority, and is the parent of all 
modern developments whether intellectual, scientific or social 
(see Renaissance). The term has also been applied to the 
philosophy of Comte in virtue of its insistence on the dignity 
of humanity and its refusal to find in the divine anything 
external or superior to mankind, and the same tendency has had 
marked influence over the development of modern Christian 
theology which inclines to obliterate the old orthodox conception, 
of the separate existence and overlordship of God. The narrow 
sense of the term survives in modem university terminology. 
Thus in the University of Oxford the curriculum known as 
IMterto Humanicres (" Humane Literature ") consists of Latin 
and Greek literature and philosophy, U. of the " arts," often 
described in former times as the "polite letters." In the 
Scottish universities the professor of Latin is called the professor 
of " humanity." The plural " humanities " is a generic term 
for the classics. In ordinary language the adjective " humane" 
is restricted to the sense of " kind-hearted," " unselfish ": the 
abstract " humanity " has this sense and also the sense of " that 
which pertains to mankind" derived in this case with the 
companion adjective M human." 

HUMANITARIANS, a term applied (r) to a school of theologians 
who repudiate the doctrine of the Trinity and hold an extreme 
view of the person of Christ as simply human. The adoption 
of this position by men like Nathaniel Lardner, Joseph Priestley 
and Theophilus Lindsey in the middle of the 18th century 
led to the establishment of the first definitely organized Unitarian 
churches in England. (2) It is also applied to those who 
believe in the perfectibility of man apart from superhuman aid, 
especially these who follow the teaching of Pierre Leroux (fl.p.). 



The name is also sometimes given to the Posftfvtsts, and, 
in a more general sense, to persons whose chief prindpk 
of action is the desire to preserve others from pain and 
discomfort. 

HUMATUN (1508-1556), Mogul emperor of Deflri, succeeded 
his father Baber in India in 1530, while his brother Kamraa 
obtained the sovereignty of Kabul and Lahore. Humsytsi 
was thus left in possession of his father's recent conquests, 
which were in dispute with the Indian Afghans under Sfacr Shah, 
governor of Bengal After ten years of fighting, Humayun was 
driven out of India and compelled to flee to Persia through the 
desert of Sind, where his famous son, Akbar the Great, was bora 
in the petty fort of Umarkot (1542). Sher Shah was killed at 
the storming of Kalinjar (1545), and Humayun, returning to 
India with Akbar, then only thirteen years of age, defeated the 
Indo- Afghan army and reoccupied Delhi (1555). India tins 
passed again from the Afghans to the Moguls, but six months 
afterwards Humayun was killed by a fall from the parapet of his 
palace (1556), leaving his kingdom to Akbar. The tomb d 
Humayun isone of the finest Mogul monuments in the neighbour- 
hood of Delhi, and it was here that the last of the Moguls, Bahadur 
Shah, was captured by Major Hodson in 1857. 

HUMBER* an estuary on the east coast of 'Engl and formed 
by the rivers Trent and Ouse, the northern shore belonging 
to Yorkshire and the southern to Lincolnshire. The junctioa 
of these two important rivers is near the village of Faxfieet, from 
which point the course of the Humber.runs E. for 18 m., and 
then S.E, for 10 m. to the North Sea. The total area draining 
to the Humber is 9293 sq. ra. The width of the estuary sia 
at the head, gradually widening to 3$ m. at 8 m. above the 
mouth, but here, with a great shallow bay on the Yorkshire 
side, it increases to 8 m. in width, The seaward horn of tha 
bay, however, k formed by a narrow protruding; bank of sand 
and stones, thrown up by a southward current along the York- 
shire coast, and known as Spurn Head. Tins reduces the width 
of the Humber mouth to 5} m. Except where the Humber cats 
through a low chalk ridge, between north and south Ferriby, 
dividing it into the Wolds of Yorkshire and of Lincolnshire, the 
shores and adjacent lands are nearly flat. The water is meddy; 
and the course for shipping considerably exceeds in length the 
distances given above, by reason of the numerous shoals it is 
necessary to avoid. The course is carefully buoyed and lighted, 
for the Humber is an important highway of co mm erce, having 
on the Yorkshire bank the great port of Hull, and on the Lincoln- 
shire bank that of Grimsby, while Goole lies on the Ouae a little 
above the junction with the Trent. Canals connect with the 
great manufacturing district of South Yorkshire, and the Trent 
opens up wide communications with the Midlands. The pheno- 
menon of the tidal bore is sometimes seen on the Humber. The 
action of the river upon the flat Yorkshire shore towards the 
mouth alters the shore-line constantly.. Many ancient villages 
have disappeared entirely, notably Ravenspur or Ravens**, 
once a port, represented in parliament under Edward I., and the 
scene of the landing of BoHngbroke, afterwards Henry IV n ■ 
1300. Soon after this the town, which lay immediately Inside 
Spurn Point, must have been destroyed. 

HUMBERT, RAN1ERI CARLO KMANUELE QIOTAMH 
MARIA FBROINANOO EUGENIC Kino c* Italy (1844-1000), 
son of Victor Emmanuel IL and of Adelaide, archduchess of 
Austria, was born at Turin, capital of the kingdom of Sardinia, 
on the 14th of March 1S44. His education was entrusted to 
the most eminent men of his time, amongst others to m^fp™*, 
d'Azeglio and Pasquale Stanislao Mandni. Entering the army 
on the 14th of March 1858 with the rank of captain, he was prcseat 
at the battle of Solferino in 1859, and in 1866 commanded a 
division at Custozza. Attacked by the Austrian cavalry near 
Villafranca, he formed his troops into squares and drove the 
assailants towards Sommacampagna, remaining himself through- 
out the action in the square most exposed to attack. With Bubo 
he covered the retreat of the Italian army, receiving the gold 
medal for valour. On the list of April 1868 be married his 
cousin, Margherita Teresa Giovanna, princess of Savoy, daughter 



HUMBOLDT, ALEXANDER VON 



873 



of the duke of Genoa (born at Turin on the 20th of November 
1851). On the nth of November 1869 Margherita gave birth 
to Victor Emmanuel, prince of Naples, afterwards Victor 
Emmanuel III. of Italy. Ascending the throne on the death of 
his father (9th January 1878), Humbert adopted the style 
" Humbert I. of Italy " instead of Humbert IV., and consented 
that the remains of his father should be interred at Rome in 
the Pantheon, and not in the royal mausoleum of Superga (see 
Cuspi). Accompanied by the premier, Cairoli, he began a 
tour of the provinces of his kingdom, but on entering Naples 
(November 17, 1878), amid the acclamations of an immense 
crowd, was attacked by a fanatic named Passanante. The king 
warded off the blow with his sabre, but Cairoli, in attempting 
to defend him, was severely wounded in the thigh. The would-be 
assassin was condemned to death, but the sentence was by the 
king commuted to one of penal servitude for life. The occurrence 
upset for several years the health of Queen Margherita. In 
1881 King Humbert, again accompanied by Cairoli, resumed 
his interrupted tour, and visited Sicily and the southern Italian 
provinces. In 1882 he took a prominent part in the national 
mourning for Garibaldi, whose tomb at Caprera he repeatedly 
visited. Wheny in the autumn of 1882, Verona and Venetia 
were inundated, he hastened to the spot, directed salvage opera- 
tions, and provided large sums of money for the destitute. 
Similarly, on the 28th of July 1883, he hurried to Ischia, where 
an earthquake had engulfed some 5000 persons. Countermand- 
ing the order of the minister of public works to cover the ruins 
with quicklime, the king prosecuted salvage operations for five 
days longer, and personally saved many victims at the risk of 
his own life. In 1884 he visited Busca and Naples, where 
cholera was raging, helping with money and advice the numerous 
sufferers* and raising the spirit of the population. Compared 
with the reigns of his grandfather, Charles Albert, and of his 
father, Victor Emmanuel, the reign of Humbert was tranquil. 
Scrupulously observant of constitutional principles, he followed, 
as far as practicable, parliamentary indications in his choice 
of premiers, only one of whom — Rudini — was drawn from the 
Conservative ranks. In foreign policy he approved of the 
conclusion of the Triple Alliance, and, in repeated visits to 
Vienna and Berlin, established and consolidated the pact 
Towards Great Britain his attitude was invariably cordial, and 
he considered the Triple Alliance imperfect unless supplemented 
by an Anglo-Italian naval entente* Favourably disposed towards 
the policy of colonial expansion inaugurated in 1885 by the 
occupation of Massawa, be was suspected of aspiring to a vast 
empire in north-east Africa, a suspicion which tended somewhat 
to diminish his popularity after the disaster of Adowa on the 
1st of March x8oo. On the other hand, bis popularity was 
enhanced by the firmness of his attitude towards the Vatican, 
aa exemplified in his telegram declaring Rome " intangible " 
(September 20, 1 886),. and affirming the permanence of the 
Italian possession of the Eternal City. Above all King Humbert 
was a soldier, jealous of the honour and prestige of the army 
to such a degree that he promoted a duel between his nephew, 
the count of Turin, and Prince Henry of Orleans (August 15, 
1897) on account of the aspersions cast by the latter upon Italian 
arms. The. claims of King Humbert upon popular gratitude 
and affection were enhanced by his extraordinary munificence, 
whkh was not merely displayed on pablic occasions, but directed 
to the relief of mmimcrable private wants into which he had 
made personal inquiry. It has been calculated that at least 
£100,000 per annum was expended by the king in this way. The 
regard in which he was universally held was abundantly demon- 
strated on the occasion of the unsuccessful attempt upon Ins life 
made by the anarchist Acctarito near Rome on the 22nd of 
April 1897, and still more after his tragic assassination at 
Monsa by the anarchist Biesd on the evening of the 29th 
of July roeo. Good-humoured, active, tender-hearted, some- 
what fatahstic, but, above aU r generous, he was spontaneously 
called " Humbert the Good." He was buried m the Pantheon 
In Rome, by the side of Victor Emmanuel II., on the 9th of 
August xooo. (H. W. S.) 



HUMBOLDT, FRIEDRICH HHWRICH ALEXANDER, Ba&on 

von (1760-1859), German naturalist and traveller, was born at 
Berlin, on the 14th of September 1769. His father, who was a 
major in the Prussian army, belonged to a Pomeranian family 
of consideration, and was rewarded for his services during the 
Seven Years' War with the post of royal chamberlain. He 
married in 1766 Maria Elizabeth von Colomb, widow of Baron 
von Hollwede, and had by her two sons, of whom the younger 
is the subject of this article. The childhood of Alexander von 
Humboldt was not a promising one as regards either health or 
intellect. His characteristic tastes, however, soon displayed 
themselves; and from his fancy for collecting and labelling 
plants, shells and insects he received the playful title of " the 
little apothecary." The care of his education, on the unexpected 
death of his father in 1770, devolved upon his mother, who 
discharged the trust with constancy and judgment. Destined 
for a political career, he studied finance during six months at the 
university of Frankfort-on-the-Oder; and a year later, April 25, 
1780, he matriculated at Gottingen, then eminent for the lectures 
of C G. Heyne and J. F. Blumenbach. His vast and varied 
powers were by this time fully developed; and during the vaca- 
tion of 1789 he gave a fair earnest of his future performances in 
a scientific excursion up the Rhine, and in the treatise thence 
issuing, Minerologiscke Beobachtungen Uber einige Basolie am 
Rhein (Brunswick, 1790). His native passion for distant travel 
was confirmed by the friendship formed by him at Gottingen with 
George Forster, Heyne's son-in-law, the distinguished companion 
of Captain Cook's second voyage. Henceforth his studies, whkh 
his rare combination of parts enabled him to render at once 
multifarious, rapid and profound, were directed with extra- 
ordinary insight and perseverance to the purpose of preparing 
himself for his distinctive calling as a scientific explorer. With 
this view he studied commerce and foreign languages at Hamburg, 
geology at Freiberg under A. G. Werner, anatomy at Jena under 
J. C. Loder, astronomy and the use of scientific instruments 
under F. X. von Zach and J. G. Kohier. His researches into 
the vegetation of the mines of Freiberg led to the publication 
in x 793 of his Florae Fribergensis Specimen; and the results of a 
prolonged course of experiments on the phenomena of muscular 
irritability, then recently discovered by L. Galvani, were con- 
tained in his VersucMe Uber die gereUU Musket- und Nerven/aser 
(Berlin, 1797), enriched in the French translation with notes by 
Blumenbach. 

In 1794 he was admitted to the intimacy of the famous Weimar 
coterie, and contributed (June 1795) to Schiller's new periodical, 
Die Heren, a philosophical allegory entitled Die Lebenskraft, 
oder der rkodisthe Genius. In the summer of 1700 he paid a 
flying visit to England in company with Forster. In 1794" and 
1797 he was in Vienna; in 1795 he made a geological and botani- 
cal tour through Switzerland and Italy. He had obtained in 
the meantime official employment, having been appointed 
assessor of mines at Berlin, February 29, 1792. Although the 
service of the state was consistently regarded by him but as an 
apprenticeship to the service of science, he fulfilled its duties 
with such conspicuous ability that he not only rapidly rose to 
the highest post in his department, but was besides entrusted 
with several important diplomatic missions. The death of his 
mother, on the 19th of November 1796, set him free to follow 
the bent of his genius, and, finally severing his official connexions, 
be waited for aa opportunity of executing his long-cherished 
schemes of travel On the postponement of Captain Baudm's 
proposed voyage of circumnavigation, which he had been officially 
invited to accompany, he left Paris for Marseilles with Aime 
Bonpland, the designated botanist of the frustrated expedition, 
hoping to join Bonaparte in Egypt. Means of transport, however, 
were not forthcoming, and the two travellers eventually found 
their way to Madrid, where the unexpected patronage of the 
minister d'Urqtrijo determined them to make Spanish America 
the scene of their explorations. 

Armed with powerful recommendations, they sailed in the 
" Pizarro " from Corunna, on the 5th of June 1790, stopped six 
days at Teoerint for the ascent of the Peak, and landed, on the 



876 



HUMBUG— HUME, DAVID 



Hermann und Dorothea, published in 1800, had already placed 
him in the first rank of authorities on aesthetics, and, together 
with his family connexions, had much to do with his appoint- 
ment at Rome; while in the years 1705 and 1797 he had brought 
out translations of several of the odes of Pindar, which were held 
in high esteem. On quitting his post at Rome he was made 
councillor of state and minister of public instruction. He soon, 
however, retired to his estate at Tegel, near Berlin, but was 
recalled and sent as ambassador to Vienna in 181 a during the 
exciting period which witnessed the closing struggles of the 
French empire. In the following year, as Prussian plenipo- 
tentiary at the congress of Prague, he was mainly instrumental 
in inducing Austria to unite with Prussia and Russia against 
France; in 1815 he was one of the signatories of the capitulation 
of Paris, and the same year was occupied in drawing up the 
treaty between Prussia and Saxony, by which the territory 
of the former was largely increased at the expense of the latter. 
The next year he was at Frankfort settling the future condition 
of Germany, but was summoned to London in the midst of his 
work, and in 1818 had to attend the congress at Aix-la~Chapelle» 
The reactionary policy of the Prussian government made him 
resign his office of privy councillor and give up political life in 
1819; and from that time forward he devoted himself solely to 
literature and study. 

During the busiest portion of his political career, however, 
he had found time for literary work. Thus in 1816 he had 
published a translation of the Agamemnon of Aeschylus, and in 
181 7 corrections and additions to Adelung's MUhridates, that 
famous collection of specimens of the various languages and 
dialects of the world. Among these additions that on the Basque 
language is the longest and most important, Basque having 
for some time specially attracted his attention. In fact, Wilhelm 
von Humboldt may be said to have been the first who brought 
Basque before the notice of European philologists, and made 
a scientific study of it possible. In order to gain a practical 
knowledge of the language and complete his investigations into 
it, he visited the Basque country itself, the result of his visit 
being the valuable " Researches into the Early Inhabitants of 
Spain by the help of the Basque language " (Prtifung der Unter- 
suchungen iibar die Urbewohner HispanUns vermiUelst der vaski- 
schen Sprachc), published in 1821. In this work he endeavoured 
to show, by an examination of geographical names, that a race 
or races speaking dialects allied to modern Basque once extended 
through the whole of Spain, the southern coast of France and 
the Balearic Islands, and suggested that these people, whom 
he identified with the Iberians of classical writers, had come 
from northern Africa, where the name of Berber still perhaps 
perpetuates their old designation. Another work on what has 
sometimes been termed the metaphysics of language appeared 
from his pen in 1828, under the title of Vber den Duoks; but 
the great work of his rife, on the ancient Kawi language of Java, 
was unfortunately interrupted by his death on the 8th of April 
1835. The imperfect fragment was edited by his brother and 
Dr Buschmann in 1836, and contains the remarkable introduc- 
tion on " The Heterogeneity of Language and its Influence on 
the Intellectual Development of Mankind" (fiber die Vcr- 
schiedenheil des menschlichen Sprachbaues und ihren Einfluss auf 
die geistige Entwichetung des Menschengeschlechts), which was 
afterwards edited and defended against Steinthal's criticisms 
by Pott (i vols., 1876). This essay, which has been called the 
text-book of the philosophy of speech, first dearly laid down 
that the character and structure of a language expresses the 
inner life wnd knowledge of its speakers, and that languages must 
differ from one another in the same way and to the same degree as 
those who use them. Sounds do not become words until a 
meaning has been put into them, and this meaning embodies 
the thought of a community. What Humboldt terms the inner 
form of a language is just that mode of denoting the relations 
between the parts of a sentence which reflects the manner m 
which a particular body of men regards the world about them. 
It is the task of the morphology of speech to distinguish the 
various wa> s in which languages differ from each other as regards 



their Inner form, and to classify and arrange them auxndingly . 
Other linguistic publications of Humboldt, which had appeared 
in the Transactions of the Berlin Academy, the Journal of the 
Royal Asiatic Society, or elsewhere, were republished by hk 
brother in the seven volumes of Wilhelm von Humboldt's 
Gcsammette Werke (1841-1852). These volumes also contain 
poems, essays on aesthetics! subjects and other creations of his 
prolific mind. Perhaps, however, the most generally ixttercstmf 
of his works, outside those which deal with language, is hk 
correspondence with Schiller, published in 1830. Both poet and 
philosopher come before us in it in their most genial mood. 
For, though Humboldt was primarily a philosopher, he was a 
philosopher rendered practical by his knowledge of statesmanship 
and wide experience of life, and endowed with keen sy mp at hi es, 
warm imagination and active interest in the method of s tirn ti fc c 
inquiry. (A. H. SJ 

HUMBUG, an imposture, sham, fraud. The word seems to 
have been originally applied to a trick or hoax, and appears as a 
Slang term aboutx 750. tecot^g to the New English Dictionary, 
Ferdinand© KUligrew's The Universal Jester, which contains 
the word in its sub-title " a choice collection of many conceits . . . 
bonmots and humbugs," was published in 1754, not, as is of tea 
stated, in 1735-1740. The principal passage in reference to 
the introduction of the word occurs in The Student, 17 50-1 7 si, 
ii. 41, where it is called " a word very much in vogue with 
the people of taste and fashion." The origin appears to have 
been unknown at that date. Skeat connects it (Efym. DicL 
1808) with " hum," to murmur applause, hence flatter, trick, 
cajole, and " bug," bogey, spectre, the word thus meaning a 
false alarm. Many fanciful conjectures have been made, eg. 
from Irish uim-bog, soft copper, worthless as opposed to sternal 
money; from " Hamburg," as the centre from which false 
coins came into England during the Napoleonic wars; asd 
from the Italian uomo bngiardo^ lying man. 

HUMS, ALEXANDER (c 1557-1609), Scottish poet, second 
son of Patrick Hume of Polwarth, Berwickshire, was bora, 
probably at ReidbraiB, one of his family's houses, about 1557. 
It has been generally assumed that he is the Alexander Hume 
who matriculated at St Mary^s college, St Andrews, in 1571, 
and graduated in 1574. In Ant Epistle to Maister Gilbert 
Hontcreif (Moncrieff), mediciner to the Kings Majestic* wku iin 
is set downs the Experience of the Autkonrs youth, he relates the 
course of his disillusionment. He says he spent four years ia 
France before beginning to study law in the court* at Edinburgh 
(L 136). After three years* experience there he abandoned 
law in disgust and sought a post at court (*©. 1. mi)- Still 
dissatisfied, he took orders, and became in 1597 minister of Logie, 
near Stirling, where he lived until his death on the 4th of 
December 1609. His best-known work is ms Hymns, or Saerti 
Songs (printed by Robert Waldegrave at Edinburgh in 1599, 
and dedicated to Elizabeth Melviil, Lady Cbmrie) containing 
an epistle to the Scottish youth, urging them to abandon vanity 
for religion. One poem of the collection, entitled " A description 
of the day Estivatt," a sketch of a summer's day and its occupa- 
tions, has found its way into several anthologies. " The Triumph 
of the Lord after the Manner of Men " is a song of victory of 
some merit, celebrating the defeat of the Armada in 1588. Hit 
pros* works include Ant Treatise of Conscience (Edinburgh, 1504). 
A Treatise of the Felicitie of the Life to come (Edinburgh, 1594), 
and Ant Afdd AdmonhHonn to the Ministerie of Scotland. The 
last is an argument against prelacy. Hume's elder brother. 
Lord Polwarth; was probably one of the combatants in the 
famous " Flyting betwixt Montgomerie and PolwarL" 

The editions of Hume's verse are: (0) by Robert Waldegtavs 
((509) ; (t>) a reprint of (0) by the Bannatyne Chib (1832); and (O by 
the Scottish Text Society (ed. A. Lawton) (190a). The last includes 
the prose tracts. 

HUME, DAVID (1711-1776), English philosopher, historian 
and political economist, was bom at Edinburgh, on the 16th 
of April (O.S.) 17 xr. His father, Joseph Hume or Home, a 
scion of the noble house of Home of Douglas (but see Jioks 
and Queries, atb ser. iv. 72), was owner of a small estate a 



HUME, DAVID 



87? 



Berwickshire, on the banks of the Whiteadder, cafled, from the 
spring rising ia front of the dwelling-house, Nmewells. David 
was the youngest of a family of three, two sons and a daughter, 
who after the earfy death of the father were brought up wkh 
great care and devotion by their mother, the daughter of Sir 
David Falconer, president of the college of justice. 

Of Hume's early education little is known beyond what 
he has himself stated in his Lift. He appears to have entered 
the Greek classes of the university of Edinburgh in 1793, and, 
be tells us, " passed through the ordinary course of education 
with success." From a letter printed in Burton's Life (i. 30-30), 
it appears that about 1726 Hume returned to Ninewelb with 
a fair knowledge of Latin, slight acquaintance with Greek and 
literary tastes decidedly inclining 10 " books of reasoning and 
philosophy, and to poetry and the polite authors." We do not 
know, except by inference, to what studies he especially devoted 
himself. It is, however, dear that from his earliest years he 
began to speculate upon the nature of knowledge in the abstract, 
and iu concrete applications, as in theology, and that with this 
object he studied largely the writings of Cicero and Seneca and 
recent Enghsh philosophers (especially Locke, Berkeley and 
Butler). His acquaintance with Cicero Is clearly proved by the 
form in which he cast some of the most important of his specula- 
tions. From his boyhood he devoted himself to acquiring a 
literary reputation, and throughout his life, in spite of financial 
and other difficulties, he adhered to his original intention. A 
man of placid and even phlegmatic temperament, he lived 
moderately in all things, and sought worldly prosperity only 60 
far* as was necessary to give him leisure for his literary work. 
At first he tried law, but was unable to give his mind to a study 
which appeared to him to be merely a barren waste of technical 
jargon. At this time the intensity of his intellectual activity 
in the area opened op to him by Locke and Berkeley reduced him 
to a state of physical exhaustion. In these circumstances he 
determined to try the effect of complete change of scene and 
occupation, and in 1734 entered a business house in Bristol. 
In a few months he found " the scene wholly unsuitable " to 
him, and about the middle of 1734 set out for France, resolved 
to spend some years in quiet study. He visited Paris, resided 
for a time at Rheims and then settled at La Fleche, famous 
in the history of philosophy as the school of Descartes. His 
health seems to have been perfectly restored, and during the 
three years of his stay in France his speculations were worked 
into systematic form in the Treatise of Human Nature. In the 
autumn of 1737 he was in London arranging for its publication 
and polishing It in preparation for the judgments of the learned. 
In January 1739 appeared the first and second volumes of the 
Treatise of Human Nature, being an Attempt to Introduce the 
Experimental Method of Reasoning into Moral Subject*, containing 
book i., Of the Understanding, and book ii., Of the Passions. 
The third volume, containing book Hi., Of Morals, was published 
in the following year. The publisher of the first two volumes, 
John Noone, gave him £50 and twelve bound copies for a first 
edition of one thousand copies. Hume's own words best describe 
its reception. " Never literary attempt was more unfortunate; 
it fell dead-born from the press, without reaching such distinction 
as even to excite a murmur among the zealots." " But," he 
adds, " being naturally of a cheerful and sanguine temper, I 
very soon recovered the blow, and prosecuted with great ardour 
my studies in the country." This brief notice, however, is not 
sufficient to explain the full significance of the event for Hume's 
own life. The work undoubtedly failed to do what its author 
expected from it; even the notice, otherwise not unsatisfactory, 
which It obtained in the History of the Works of the Learned, 
then the principal critical journal, did not in the least appreciate 
the true bearing of the Treatise on current discussions. Hume 
naturally expected that the world would see as dearly as he 
did the connexion between the concrete problems agitating 
contemporary thought and the abstract principles on which their 
solution depended. Accordingly he looked for opposition, and 
expected that, if his principles were received, a change in general 
conceptions of things would ensue. His disappointment at its' 



reception was great? and though he never entirely relinquished 
his metaphysical speculations, though all that fa of value in his 
later writings depends ou the acute analysis of human nature to 
which he was from the first attracted, one cannot but regret 
that his high powers were henceforth withdrawn for the most part 
from the consideration of the foundations of belief, and expended 
on its practical applications. In later years he attributed his 
want of success to the immature style of his early exposition, 
to the rashness of a young innovator in an old and well-established 
province of literature. But this has little foundation beyond 
the irritation of an author at his own failure to attract such 
attention as he deems his due. None of the principles of the 
Treatise is given up in the later writings, and no addition is 
made to them. Nor can the superior polish of the more mature 
productions counterbalance the concentrated vigour of the more 
youthful work. 

After the pubficatlon of the Treatise Hume retired to his 
brother's house at Ninewclls and carried on his studies, mainly 
in the direction of politics and political economy. In r74i he 
published the first volume of his Essays, which had a considerable 
and immediate success. A second edition was called for in the 
following year, in which also a second volume was published. 
These essays Butler, to whom he had sent a copy of his Treatise, 
but with whom he had failed to make personal acquaintance, 
warmly commended. The philosophical relation between Butler 
and Hume fa curious. So far as analysis of knowledge fa con- 
cerned they are in harmony, and Hume's sceptical conclusions 
regarding belief in matters of fact are the foundations on which 
Butler's defence of religion rests. Butler, however, retained, 
in spite of his destructive theory of knowledge, confidence in the 
rational proofs for the existence of God, and certainly maintains 
what may be vaguely described as an a priori view of conscience. 
Hume had the greatest respect for the author of the Analogy, 
ranks him with Locke and Berkeley as an originator of the 
experimental method in moral science, and in his specially 
theological essays, such as that on Particular Providence and 
a Future State, has Butler's views specifically in mind. (See 
Butler.) 

The success of the Essays, though hardly great enough to 
satisfy his somewhat exorbitant cravings, was a great encourage- 
ment to him. He began to hope that his earlier work, if recast 
and lightened, might share the fortunes of its successor; and 
at intervals throughout the next four years he occupied himself 
in rewriting it in a more succinct form with all the literary 
grace at his command. Meantime he continued to look about 
for some post which might secure him the modest independence 
he desired. In 1744 we find him, in anticipation of a vacancy 
in the chair of moral philosophy at Edinburgh university, moving 
his friends to advance his cause with the electors; and though, 
as he tells us, "the accusation of heresy, deism, sceptirism 
or theism, &c, Arc., was started " against him, it had no effect, 
" being bore down by the contrary authority of all the good 
people in town." To his great mortification, however, he found 
out, as he thought, that Hutcheson and Leech man, with whom 
he had been on terms of friendly correspondence, were giving 
the weight of their opinion against his election. The after history 
of these negotiations is obscure. Failing in this attempt, he was 
induced to become tutor, or keeper, to the marquis of Annandale, 
a harmless literary lunatic. This position, financially advantage- 
ous, was absurdly false <see letters in Burton's Life, i. ch. v.), 
and when the matter ended Hume had to sue for arrears of salary. 

In 1746 Hume accepted the office of secretary to General 
St Clair, and was a spectator of the ill-fated expedition to France 
in the autumn of that year. His admirable account of the 
transaction has been printed by Burton. After a brief sojourn 
at Nine wells, doubtless occupied in preparing for publication 
his Philosophical Essays (afterwards entitled An Inquiry con- 
cerning Human Understanding), Hume was again associated 
with General St Clair as secretary in the embassy to Vienna 
and Turin (1748). The notes of this journey are written in a 
light and amusing style, showing Hume's usual keenness of 
sight in some directions and his almost equal blindness in others. 



HUME, DAVID 



During his absence from England, early in the year 1748, the 
Philosophical Essays were published; but the first reception 
of the work was little more favourable than that accorded to 
the Treatise. To the later editions of the work Hume prepared 
an " Advertisement " referring to the Treatise, and desiring 
that the Essays " may alone be regarded as containing his 
philosophical sentiments and principles." Some modern critics 
have accepted this disclaimer as of real value, but in fact it has 
no significance; and Hume himself in a striking letter to Gilbert 
Elliott indicated the true relation of the two works. " I believe 
the Philosophical Essays contain everything of consequence 
relating to the understanding which you would meet with in 
the Treatise, vidl give you my advice against reading thelatter. 
By shortening and simplifying the questions, I really render 
them much more complete. Adda dum minuo. The philosophical 
principles are the same in ooth." The Essays are undoubtedly 
written with more maturity And skill than the Treatise; they 
contain in more detail application of the principles to concrete 
problems, such as miracles, providence, immortality; but the 
entire omission of the discussion forming part ii. of the first 
book of the Treatise, and the great compression of part iv., are 
real defects which must alwavs render the Treatise the more 
important work. 

In 1740 Hume returned to Ninewells," enriched with " near 
a thousand pounds." In 1751 he removed to Edinburgh, 
where for the most part he resided during the next twelve 
years of his life. These years are the richest so far as literary 
production is concerned. In 17 51 he published his Political 
Discourses, which had a great and well-deserved success both 
in England and abroad. It was translated into French by 
Mauvillon (1 753) and by the AbW le Blanc (1 754). In the same 
year appeared the recast of the third book of the Treatise, 
called Inquiry concerning the Principles of Morals, of which 
he says that "of all his writings, philosophical, literary or 
historical, it is incomparably the best." At this time also 
we hear of the Dialogues concerning Natural Religion, a work 
which Hume was prevailed on not to publish, but which he 
revised with great care, and evidently regarded with the greatest 
favour. The work itself, left by Hume with instructions that it 
should be published, did not appear till 1779. 

In 1 751 Hume was again unsuccessful in the attempt to 
gain a professor's chair. In the following year he received, in 
spite of the usual accusations of heresy, the librarianship of the 
Advocates' Library in Edinburgh, small in emoluments (£40 
a year) but rich in opportunity for literary work. In a playful 
letter to Dr Clephane, he describes his satisfaction at his appoint- 
r..ent, and attributes it in some measure to the suprx>rt of " the 
ladies." 

In 1753 Hume was fairly settled in Edinburgh, preparing 
for his History of England. He had decided to begin the History, 
not with Henry VII., as Adam Smith recommended, but with 
James I., considering that the political differences of his time 
took their origin from that period. On the whole his attitude 
in respect to disputed political principles seems not to have been 
at first consciously unfair. As for the qualities necessary to 
secure success as a xorHer on history, he felt that he possessed 
them in a high degree; and, though neither his ideal of an 
historian nor his equipment for the task of historical research 
would now appear adequate, in both he was much in advance 
of his time. " But," he writes in the well-known passage of 
his Life, " miserable was my disappointment I was assailed 
by one cry of reproach, disapprobation, and even detestation; 
. . . what was still more mortifying, the book seemed to sink 
into oblivion. Mr Millar told me that in a twelvemonth he 
sold only forty-five copies of it." This account must be accepted 
with reservations. It expresses Hume's feelings rather than 
the real facts. In Edinburgh, as we learn from one of his letters, 
the book succeeded well, no fewer than 450 copies being disposed 
of in five weeks. Nor is there anything in Hume's correspon- 
dence to show that the failure of the book was so complete as he 
declared^ Within a very few years the sale of the History was 
sufficient to gain for the author a larger revenue than had ever 



before been known in hit country to Bow from literature, ami 
to place him in comparative affluence. He seems to have received 
£400 for the first edition of the first volume, £700 for the first 
edition of the second and £840 for the copyright of the two 
together. At the same time the bitterness of Hume's focUags 
and their effect are of importance in his life. It ia from the 
publication of the History that we date his virulent hatred of 
everything English, towards society in London, Whig prmapics, 
Whig ministers and the public generally {see Burton's Life, 
ii. 268, 417, 434). He was convinced that there was a conspiracy 
to suppress and destroy everything Scottish. 1 The remainder 
of the History became little better than a party pimphlrt 
The second volume, published in 1756, carrying on the narrative 
to the Revolution, was better received than the first; but Home 
then resolved to work backwards, and to show from a survey 
of the Tudor period that his Tory notions were grounded t 
the history of the constitution. In 1759 this portion of the 1 
appeared, and in 1761 the work was completed by the history 
of the pre-Tudor periods. The numerous editions of the vmrions 
portions— for, despite Hume's wrath and grumblings, the 
book was a great literary success— gave him ail opportunity 
of careful revision, which he employed to remove from it ail the 
*' villainous seditious Whig strokes," and " plaguy prejudices 
of Whiggism " that he could detect. In other words, he bent 
all his efforts toward making his History more of a party week 
than it had been, and in his effort he was entirely successful. 
The early portion of his History may be regarded as now of 
little or no value. The sources at Hume's command were few, 
and he did not use them alL None the less, the History has a 
distinct place in the literature of England. It was the first 
attempt at a comprehensive treatment of historic facts, the 
first to introduce the social and literary aspects of a nation's 
life as only second in importance to its political fortunes, and 
the first historical writing in an animated yet refined and polished 
style.* 

While the History was in process of publication, Hume did 
not entirely neglect his other lines of activity. In s 75 7 appeared 
Four Dissertations: The Natural History of Religion, Of the 
Passions, Of Tragedy, Of the Standard of Taste, Of these the 
dissertation on the passions is a very subtle piece of psychology, 
containing the essence of the second book of the Treatise, It 
is remarkable that Hume does not appear to have been acquainted 
with Spinoza's analysis of the affections. The last two essays 
are contributions of no great importance to aesthetics, a de- 
partment of philosophy in which Hume was not strong. The 
Natural History of Religion is a powerful contribution to the 
deistic controversy; but, as in the case of Hume's earlier work, 
Us significance was at the time overlooked. It is an attempt 
to carry the war into a province hitherto allowed to remain at 
peace, the theory of the general development of religious ideas. 
Deists, though raising doubts regarding the historic narratives 
of the Christian faith, had never disputed the general fact that 
belief in one God was natural and primitive. Hume endeavours 
to show that polytheism was the earliest as well as the most 
natural form of religious belief, and that theism or deism is 

1 See Burton, ii. 265, 148 and 236. Perhaps our knowledge of 
Johnson's sentiments regarding the Scots in general, and of .his 
expressions regarding Hume and Smith in particular, may lessen our 
surprise at this vehemence. 

* Macaulay describes Hume's characteristic fault as an historian: 
" Hume is an accomplished advocate. Without positively asserting 
much more than he can prove, he gives prominence to all the circum- 
stances which support his case; be glides lightly over those which are 
unfavourable to it; his own witnesses are applauded and en- 
couraged; the statements which seem to throw discredit on them 
are controverted; the contradictions into which they fall are ex- 
plained away; a clear and connected abstract of their evidence is 
given. Everything that is offered on the other side is scrutinised with 
the utmost severity; every suspicious circumstance is a ground for 
argument and invective; what cannot be denied is extenuated, or 
passed by without notice; concessions even arc sometimes made: 
but this insidious candour only increases the effect of the vast mass 
of sophistry."— Miscdl. Writings, " History." With this may be 
compared the more favourable verdict by J. S. Brewer, in the preface 
to Jus edition of the S'Mdent's Hume. 



HUME, DAVID 



879 



the product of reflection upon experience, thus reducing the 
validity of the historical argument to that of the theoretical 
proofs. 

In 1763 he accompanied Lord Hertford to Paris, doing the 
duties of secretary to the embassy, with the prospect of the 
appointment to that post. He was everywhere received " with 
the most extraordinary honours." The society of Paris was 
peculiarly ready to receive a great philosopher and historian, 
especially if he were known to be an avowed antagonist of 
religion, and Hume made valuable friendships, especially with 
D'Alembert and Turgot, the latter of whom profited much by 
Hume's economical -essays. In 1766 he left Paris and returned 
to Edinburgh. In 1767 he accepted the post of undcr-secretary 
to General Conway and spent two years in London.' 

He settled finally in Edinburgh in 1769, having now through 
his pension and otherwise an income of £1000 a year. The 
solitary incident of note in this pe~iod of his life is the ridiculous 
quarrel with Rousseau, which throws much light upon the 
character of the great sentimentalist. Hume certainly did his 
utmost to secure for Rousseau a comfortable retreat in England, 
but his usually sound judgment seems at first to have been 
quite at fault with regard to his protege. The quarrel which 
all the acquaintances of the two philosophers had predicted 
soon came, and no language had expressions strong enough for 
Rousseau's anger. Hume came well out of the business, and 
had the sagacity to conclude that his admired friend was little 
better than a madman. In one of his most charming letters 
he describes his life in Edinburgh. The new house to which 
he alludes was built under his own directions at the corner of 
what is now called St David Street after him; it became the 
centre of the most cultivated society of Edinburgh. Hume's 
cheerful temper, his equanimity, his kindness to literary aspirants 
and to those whose views differed from his own won him universal 
respect and affection. He welcomed the work of his friends 
(e.g. Robertson and Adam Smith), and warmly recognized the 
worth of his opponents (e.g. George Campbell and Reid). He 
assisted Blackwell and Smollett in their difficulties and became 
the acknowledged patriarch of literature. 

In the spring of 1775 Hume was struck with a tedious and 
harassing though not painful illness. A visit to Bath seemed at 
first to have produced good effects, but on the return journey 
more alarming symptoms developed themselves, his strength 
rapidly sank, and, little more than a month later, he died in 
Edinburgh on the 25th of August 1776. 

No notice of Hume would be complete without the sketch of his 
character drawn by his own hand: — To conclude historically with 
my own character, 1 am, or rather was (for that is the style I must 
now use in speaking of myself, which emboldens roe the more to 
speak my sentiments), — I was, I say, a man of mild dispositions, of 
command of temper, of an open, social and cheerful humour, capable 
of attachment, but little susceptible of enmity, and of great modera- 
tion in all my passions. Even my love of literary fame, my ruling 
passion, never soured my temper, notwithstanding my frequent 
disappointments. My company was not unacceptable to the young 
and careless, as well as to the studious and literary ; and as I took 
a particular pleasure in the company of modest women, I had no 
reason to be displeased with the reception I met with from them. 
In a word, though most men anywise eminent have found reason to 
complain of calumny, I never was touched, or even attacked, by 
her baleful tooth ; and , though I wantonly exposed myself to the 
rage of both civil and religious factions, they seem to be disarmed 
on my behalf of their wonted fury. My friends never had occasion 
to vindicate any one circumstance of my character and conduct; not 
but that the zealots, we may well suppose, would have been gtad to 
invent and propagate any story to my disadvantage, but they could 
never find any which they thought would wear the face of proba- 
bility. I cannot say there is no vanity in making this funeral oration 
of myself, but I hope it is not a misplaced one; and this is a matter 
of fact which is easily cleansed and ascertained." The more his life 
Jus become known, the more confidence we place in this admirable 
estimate. 

The results of Hume's speculations may be discussed under two 
heads: — (1) philosophical, (j) economical. 

1. The philosophical writings, which mark a distinct epoch in 
the development of modern thought, can here be considered in two , 
only of the many aspects in which they p re se nt themselves 
as of the highest interest to the historian of philosophy. 
In the Treatise of Human Nature, which is in every respect 
the most complete exposition of Hume's philosophical conception, we 



in 



hi he fundamental 

pi Dnstruction of a 

tli the first system- 

at m this point of 

vi « to Locke and 

B Logic to Hartley 

ai eminently in the 

D ult of his specu- 

la ; theological dis- 

ci with respect to 

si theory in its 
* and J. S. Mill 

1 work is to be 

re in psychology a 
cc knowledge. In 
L* ill the many ni- 
ce „ ng, none is more 

apparent or more significant than the complete want of harmony 
between the view of knowledge developed in the fourth book and the 
psychological principles laid down in the earlier part of the work. 
Though Locke, doubtless, drew no distinction between the problems 
of psychology and of theory of knowledge, yet the discussion of the 
various forms of cognition given in the fourth book of the Essay seems 
to be based on grounds quite distinct from and in many respects 
inconsistent with the fundamental psychological principle of his 
work. The perception of relations, which, according to him, is the 
essence of cognition, the demonstrative character which he thinks 
attaches to our inference of God's existence, the intuitive knowledge 
of self, are doctrines incapable of being brought into harmony with 
the view of mind and its development which is tho keynote of his 
general theory. To some extent Berkeley removed this radical in- 
consistency, but in his philosophical work it may be said with safety 
there are two distinct aspects, and while it holds of Locke on the 
one hand, it stretches forward to Kantianism on the other. Nor in 
Berkeley are these divergent features ever united into one harmoni- 
ous whole. It was left lor Hume to approach the theory of know- 
ledge with full consciousness from the psychological point of view, 
and to work out the final consequences of that view so far as cognition 
is concerned. The terms which he employs in describing the aim and 
scope of his work are not those which we should now employ, but the 
declaration, in the introduction to the Treatise, that the science of 
human nature must be treated according to the experimental method, 
is in fact equivalent to the statement of the principle implied ia 
Locke's Essay, that the problems of psychology and of theory oi 
knowledge are identical. This view ia the characteristic of what we 
may call the English school of philosophy. 

I n order to make perfectly clear the full significance of the principle 
which Hume applied to the solution of the chief philosophical 
questions, it is necessary to render somewhat more precise _,, 
and complete the statement of the psychological view T fT° nr 
which lies at the foundation of the empirical theory, and ?""** 
to distinguish from it the problem of the theory of know- *4»» 
ledge upon which it was brought to bear. Without entering into 
details, which it is the less necessary to do because the subject has 
been recently discussed with great fulness in works readily accessible, 
it may be said that for Locke as for Hume the problem of psychology 
was the exact description of the contents of the individual mind, and 
the determination of the conditions of the origin and development 
of conscious experience in the individual mind. And the answer to 
the problem which was furnished by Locke b in effect that with which 
Hume started. The conscious experience of the individual is the 
result of interaction between the individual mind and the universe of 
things. This solution presupposes a peculiar conception of the 
general relation between the mind and things which in itself requires 
justification, and which, so far at least as the empirical theory was 
developed by Locke and his successors, could not be obtained from 
psychological analysis. Either we have a right to the assumption 
contained in the conception of the individual mind as standing in 
relation to things, in which case the grounds of the assumption must 
be sought elsewhere than in the results of this reciprocal relation, or 
we have no right to the assumption, in which case reference to the 
reciprocal relation can hardly be accepted as yielding any solution 
of the psychological problem. But in any case, — and, as we shall see, 
Hume endeavours so to state his psychological premises as to conceal 
the assumption made openly by Locke,— it is apparent that thb 
psychological solution does not contain the answer to the wider and 
radically distinct problem of the theory of knowledge. For here 
we have to consider how the individual intelligence comes to know 
any fact whatsoever, and what is meant by the cognition of a fact. 
With Locke, Hume professes to regard this problem as virtually 
covered or answered by the fundamental psychological theorem; 
but the superior clearness of his reply enables us to mark with perfect 
precision the nature of the difficulty inherent in the attempt to regard 
the two as identical. For purposes of psychological analysis the 
conscious experience of the individual mind is taken as given fact, 
to be known, i.e. observed, discriminated, classified and explained in 
the same way in which any one special portion of experience is 
treated. Now if this mode of treatment be accepted as the only 
possible method, and its results assumed to be conclusive as regards 



88o 



HUME, DAVID 



tbep»T)blemoftaio^fadc^thef0»damf«ratpgCTiliarityofcogmtk^b 
In all cognition, strictly so-called, there is involved a 



certain synthesis or relation of parts of a characteristic nature, and if 
we attempt to discuss this synthesis as though it were in itself but one 
of the facts forming the mutter of knowledge, we are driven to regard 
this relation as bang of the quite external kind d isco ver e d by ob- 
servation among matters of knowledge. The difficulty of reconciling 
the two views is that which gives nse to much of the obscurity '— 
Locke's treatment of the theory of knowledge: in Hume the eft* 



Rort 
ntial to 
t of external relations among 
the elements of cons ci o us experience, appears with the utmost clear- 
ness, and gives the keynote of all his philosophical work. The final 
p erpl ex ity, concealed by various forms of expression, comes forward 



to identify them, and to explain the synthesis which is 
cognition as merely the ac ci d ent al result < 



at the dose of the Treatise as absolutely unsolved, and leads Hume, 
as will be pointed out. to a traly umniiMi conf< 



i of his own 
While, then, t! 



» of the weak- 



idea of a theory of knowledge as based 

' the Treatise* it is 

to Hume the 



■poo psychological analysts is the groundwork of the 
a particular consequence of this idea that f urmsbes 
characteristic criterion applied by htm to all philosophical q u es ti ons. 
If the relations involved in the tact of cognition are only those dis- 
coverable by observation of any particular portion of known experi- 
ence, then such relations are qmte external and contingent. The 
only necessary relation which can be discovered in a given fact of 
c tp riir n r r b that of non<ootndiction (Lt. purely formal); the 
thmg must be what it is, and cannot be conceived as having qualities 
contradictory of its nature. The universal test, therefore, of any 
su pposed phDosophicaJ principle is the possibility or impossibility 
of imagining its contradictory. AH our knowledge is but the sum at 
our conscious e xp erience, and is cons eq uen tly material for imagina- 
tion. - Let us fix our attention out of ourselves as much as possible; 
let us chase our imagination to the h ea v ens or to the utmost limits of 
the universe; we never really advance a step beyond ourselves, nor 
can co n c e i ve any kind of rrbtrnre, but those perceptions which have 

-* -- that narrow compas s, This is the universe of the 

nor have we any idea but what is there produced." 

sedately from his funda- 



{Werks. ed. of 16X4. L 03. cf. a. 107.) 
t of Hume s work follows 



Tnec 



, and the several divisions of the treati s e, so far 
J portions are c o n c er n ed , are but its logical con- 

The first part of the first book contains a brief state- 

t of the contents of mind, a descri pti on of all that observation 
conscious experience. The second part deals with 
1 which rest upon the f o r i n a l el em e n ts of experience, 
hi !■■—- The third part discusses the principle of real con- 
among the elements of e xp erie nc e, the relation of cause and 
The fourth part is virtually a conmderarJpn of the ultimate 



c of this < 



s experience, of the place it ts su 

..v.- •_ ntji.r Miii if ■ *£ »-I»a mm 



_ ■TlOMrH C&fJCIKUUC, KM U«C |i!T II B» 1 

to occupy in the universe of existence, in other words, of the 
b e ftm the conscious experience of an in di vidual mind as <* 
to observation and the supposed realities of self and external 
In the first part Hume gives his own staff mrnt of the | 
logical foundations of his theory. Viewing the contents of mind as 
.._ matter of experien ce, he can di s co ver among them only 

** m M one distinction, a dist i ncti on cxpiunul by the terms 



i psycho- 



particular impn mill ii conce iv ed in a particular anaamer- The ■fens 
of space and time, as will presently be pointed out. a=e : -*^e~ -A 
impressions conceived in a particular manner. The Hea <* wen -=&-— 
connexion b merely the reproduction of an iinpn \f* •^xn. -« 
mind feels itself cornpeUcd to c on ceive in a pnrucs.~«r ssb^sk? 
Such a fashion of disguising difficulties points, not <x-« *J» »- 
consistent in Hume's theory as staled by himseif . U-t t=. r%* *s--^*, 
error upon which it proceeds; for these prrplex-tjes a** bur aw 
consequences of the doctrine that co gn iti on bto be exawasned on *ae 
basis of particular pe rceptio ns, These external teiat"n,mn aae. a* sag, 
what Hume describes as the natural bonds of i nnm iit aaunmg aleas. 
and, regarded subjectively as principles of assocazjaai i ■■*H r% * 
facts of mental ex p erience, they form the strbstitrre he eafe* iar The 
synthesis implied in knowledge. These 
determine the imagination to combine idei _ 
by thb mechanical combination Hume, for a l 
to explain what are otherwise called judgments of resaciou- 
impossible, however, for him to carry out thb view cewses:— ■ r 
The only combination which, even in appearance, cowJd be u.rwi 1 ' 
satisfactorily by its means was the formation of a convenes nam nut 
of simpler parts, but the idea of a relation asaong facts is n nx acc ur- 
ately described as a complex idea; and, as such reJa^aons haw ne 
basis in impressions, Hume b finally driven to a cm ft iii's*. of *^e 
absolute impossibility of explaining them. Such m ft «nrei huati. . 
b only reached after a vnmrous effort had been ssmde an sender 
some account of knowledge by the <i|iriini>wfil nsefjnod. 

The psychological concep ti on, then, on the basb of wriei Hwm* 
pro c eeds to discuss the theory of knowledge, b that or - 

: a containing merely the mmt i wi t m of §—»——« 

and their f 




together by rnerely natural or external finks of c 
the principles of asm ' 
cognition must be 



another of the points in which nsunly they dnfer fiuan < 

Nor b it of the first importance, save with the view of o 

own consistency, that we should adopt any of the c l v ak ^ ^ cam&aj 

in hb exposition. ^ For practical purposes we may i ------ 

important dtscussaona m the Treatise as fammg wa 
In the first place there are certain principles of cognation i 
to rest upon and to express relations of the unitunl < 
conscious experience, vu. space and time. The pro- 
em to be in dependent of tins or tha t nj n sat* or 

to remain unchnnged twin wheat the onsscnene unsBar 
of experience varies. They are formal. In the second pance. cagnt- 
tkm, tn any real sense of that term, implies couaeabo* lor the hwS- 
vidual mind be tn een the present fact of experience and other facta, 
whether past or future. It appears to involve, therefore, name mi 
relation among the u w li o ns of fspnii n rr. oa the laanu of wane* 
relation judgments and inferences as to matters of fact cam be shown 
to rest. The theore tica l question b conse q uently that of the nature 
of the supposed relation, and of the certainty of bn%aaemts and 
inferences resting on it. 

Hume s well-known distinction between relations ox uaeas and 
matters of fact corresponds fairly to tab separation of tan? farxsai asd 
real problems in the theory of cognition, ■hhnngh tkat t~" ' 



f c o g n it i on, 
t f ufiy repn 




nth negavd m 
It warn be of 



With regard, then, to the first problem, the formal < 
xnowiedfe, Hume has to consider several 
nature and hardly discriminated by him wil 
For a complete treatment of thb portion of the theory of I 
there require to be taken into consideration at least the fuM mn s g 
points: (a) the exact nature and significance of the space and time 
relations m our experience, (b) the mode in which the primary data, 
facts or principles, of mathematical cognition are oUaiorrl. fcrj the 
nature, extent and certainty of such data, in thenasetwes and wka 
reference to the concrete material of experience, («*) the psi a uLn e sf 
inference from the data, however obtained. Not al of these sxant 
are dbciissrd by Hume with the same fulness, 
some of them it b difiacult to state hb conchj 
service, however, to attempt a summary of has txenxmemt aader 
these several beads,— -the more so as almost al expositions of hb 
plnkwohyare entirely defective in the accooat mnmof tssscsnrnrid 
portion. The brief statement in the /asnii i . | tv_ is of no wame. 
and indeed b almost unintelligible unless taken hi wku w i to the 
full discussion contained in part n. of the Tremeue. 

(«> The nature of space and 
ence b considered by Hume in relation to a 
their su pposed infinite divuabflity. Ei 
view of conscious e x perience, of the world of 
such infinite divisibility must be a fiction. The 
elements of experience must be real units, cap a b le of 1 
seated or imagined in isolation. Whence then do these 
or. if we put the problem as it was necessary H 
himself, in what orders or classes of impressions do 
elements of space and time ? Beyond all q w nrk m 1 
deavouring to answer thb problem, b brought face to face i 
"" ' ies inherent in hb concef 




amd*tl 



of the dimculue* i 



HUME, DAVID 



For he has to give some explanation of the nature of space and time 
which shall identify these with impressions, and at the same time is 
compelled to recognise the fact that they are not identical with any 
single impression or set of impressions. Putting aside, then, the 
various obscurities of terminology, such as the distinction between 
the objects known, vis. " points or several mental states, and the 
impressions themselves, which disguise the full significance of his 
conclusion, we find Hume reduced to the following as his theory of 
space and time. Certain impression** the sensations of sight and 
touch, have in themselves the dement of space, for these impressions 
(Hume skilfully transfers his statement to the points) have a certain 
order or mode of arrangement. This mode of arrangement or manner 
of disposition is common to coloured points and tangible points, and, 
considered separately, » the impression from which our idea of space 
is taken. AH impressions and all ideas are received, or form parts of a 
mental experience only when received, in a certain order, the order 
of succession. This manner of presenting themselves is the im- 
pression from which the idea of time takes its rise. 

It is almost superfluous to remark, first, that Hume here deliber- 
ately gives up his fundamental principle that ideas are but the 
fainter copies of impressions, for it can never be maintained that 
order of disposition is an impression, and, secondly, that he fails to 
offer any explanation of the mode in which coexistence and succession 



«n nw innny, iiuwvvcr, is wu muupcnsaiHC inax DC snouio MSISl 

upon the real, i.t. presentative character of the ultimate units of 
■pace and time. 

(6) How then are the primary data of mathematical cognition to be 
derived from an experience containing space and time relations in 
Mmthm. t * lc manner J ust etated? It is important to notice that 
jJSfcT Hume, in regard to this problem, distinctly separates 
"■*"*• geometry from algebra and arithmetic, Lb. he views 
extensive quantity as being cognized differently from number. 
With regard to geometry, he holds emphatically that it is an em- 
pirical doctrine, a science founded on observation of concrete facts. 
The rough appearances of physical facto, their outlines, surfaces and 
so on, are the data of observation, and only by a method of approxi- 
mation do we gradually come near to such propositions as are laid 
down in pore geometry. He definitely repudiates a view often 
ascribed to him, and certainly advanced by many later empiricists, 
that the data of geometry are hypothetical. The ideas of perfect 
lines, figures and surfaces have not, according to him, any existence. 
(See Works, I 66, 69, 73, 97 and iv. 180.) It n impossible to give any 
consistent account of his doctrine regarding number. He holds, 
apparently, that the foundation of all the science of number is the 
fact that each element of conscious e x perience is presented as a unit, 
and adds that we are capable of considering any fact or collection of 
facts as a unit. This manner of conceiving is absolutely general and 
distinct, and accordingly affords the possibility of an all-compre- 
hensive and perfect science, the science of discrete quantity. (See 
Works, I 07.) 

(c) In respect to the third point, the nature, extent and certainty of 
the elementary propositions of mathematical science, Hume's utter- 
ances are far from clear. The principle with which he starts and from 
which follows his well-known distinction be t ween relations of ideas 
and matters of fact, a distinction which Kant appears to have 
thought identical with his distinction between analytical and syn- 
thetical judgments, is comparatively simple. The ideas of the 
auantitative asper*- **' ~ u — — "- — -* •**•' — of 
lese aspects or c rer 

is found true by 00 ing 

the real impressk us 

of the fact represt be- 

matical judgment ley 

•imply assert wha ice 

containing coexisti nd 

touch), and in iti ire 

hypothetical in th en 

the abstract truth re- 

spondence of cone tch 

distinction is quit to 

him from an entin of 

space and time. is 

almost universal, s 7.) 

. (d) From this ex- 

ceedingly confused ice 

and time and the ii ids 

him to regard ju< as 

standing on the sa ita 

gives a certain col< »nt 

and truth of th< tic 

utterances in the 1 of 

the relative sectior mi. 

But in both work) ler 

as to enable us to to 

pronounce at once ed 

to him. " It is f [he 

relation of cqualit es: 

and this relation is _ a ' 



681 

(i» 95)* U taken In isolation thb passage mi f fct appear sufficient 
justification for Kant's view that, according to Hume, geometrical 
judgments are analytical and therefore perfect. But it is to be 
recollected that, according to Hume, an idea is actually a representa- 
lion or individual picture, not a notion or even a schema, and that he 
never claims to be able to extract the predicate of a geometrical 
judgment by analysis of the subject. The properties of this indi- 
vidual subject, the idea of the triangle, are, according to him, dis- 
covered by observation, and as observation, whether actual or ideal, 
never presents us with more than the rough or general appearances of 
geometrical quantities, the relations so discovered have only ap- 
proximate exactness. M Ask a mathematician what he means when 
he pronounces two quantities to be equal, and he must say that the 
idea of equality is one of those which cannot be defined, and that it is 
sufficient to place two equal quantities before any one in order to 
suggest it. Now this is an appeal to the general appearances of 
objects to the imagination or senses " (iv. 180). " Though it (iVe. 
geometry) much excels, both in universality and exactness, the loose 
judgments of the senses and imagination, yet [it] never attains a 
perfect precision and exactness " fi. 97). Any exactitude attaching 
to the conclusions of geometrical reasoning arises from the com- 
parative simplicity of the data for the primary judgments. 

So far, then, as geometry b concerned, Hume s opinion is perfectly 
definite. It is an experimental or observational science, founded 
on primary or immediate judgments (in his phraseology, perceptions), 
of relation between facts of intuition; its conclusions are hypo- 
thetical only in so far as they do not imply the existence at the 
moment of corresponding real experience; and its propositions have 
no exact truth. With respect to arithmetic and algebra, the science 
of numbers, he expresses an equally definite opinion, but unfortun- 
ately it is quite impossible to state in any satisfactory fashion the 
grounds for it or even its full bearing. He nowhere explains the 
origin of the notions of unity and number, but merely asserts that 
through their means we can have absolutely exact arithmetical pro- 
positions (Works, i. 97, 98}. Upon the nature of the reasoning by 
which in mathematical science we pass from data to conclusions, 
Hume gives no explicit statement. If we were to say that on his view 
the essential step must be the establishment of identities or equival- 
ences, we should probably be doing justice to his doctrine of numerical 
reasoning, but should have some difficulty in showing the application 
of the method to geometrical reasoning. For in the latter case we 
possess, according to Hume, no standard of equivalence other than 
that supplied by immediate observation, and consequently transition 
from one premise to another by way of reasoning must be, in 
geometrical matters, a purely verbal process. 

Hume's theory of mathematics — the only one, perhaps, which is 
compatible with his fundamental principle of psychology — is a 
practical condemnation of his empirical theory of perception. ~ He 
has not offered even % plausible explanation of the mode by which a 
consciousness made up of isolated momentary impressions and ideas 
can be aware of coexistence and number, or succession. The relations 
of ideas are accepted as facts of immediate observation, as being 
themselves perceptions or Individual elements of conscious experience, 
and to all appearance they are regarded by Hume as being in a sense 
analytical, because the formal criterion of identity is applicable to 
them. It is applicable, however, not because the predicate is con- 
tained in the subject, but on the principle of contradiction. If these 
judgments are admitted to be facts of immediate perception, the 
supposition of their non-existence is impossible. The ambiguity in 
his criterion, however, seems entirely to have escaped Hume's 
attention. 

A somewhat detailed consideration of Hume's doctrine with regard 
to mathematical science has been given for the reason that this 
portion of his theory has been very generally overlooked or _ . 
misinterpreted. It does not seem necessary to endeavour 2E?t# 
to follow his minute examination of the principle of real JJJJ^JJT 
cognition with the same fulness. It will probably be cammoa - 
sufficient to indicate the problem as conceived by Hume, and the 
relation of the method he adopts for solving it to the fundamental 
doctrine of his theory of knowledge. 

Real cognition, as Hume points out, implies transition from the 
present impression or feeling to something connected with it. As 
this thing can only be an impression or perception, and is not itself 
present, it is represented by its copy or idea. Now the supreme, 
all-comprehensive link of connexion between present feeling or im- 
pression and- either past or future experience is that of causation. 
The idea in question is, therefore, the idea of something connected 
with the present impression as its cause or effect. But this is ex- 
plicitly the idea of the said thine as having had or as about to have 
existence, — in other words, belief in the existence of some matter of 
fact. What, for a conscious experience so constituted as Hume will 
admit, is the precise significance of such belief in real existence? 

Clearly the real existence of a fact is not demonstrable. For 
whatever is may be conceived not to be. " No negation of a fact 
can involve a contradiction." Existence of any fact, not present 
as a perception, can only be proved by arguments from cause or 
effect. But as each perception is in consciousness only as a con- 
tingent fact, which might not be or might be other than it is, we must 
admit that the mind can conceive no necessary relations or cor.' 
ncxions among the several portions of its experience, 



88a 



HUME, DAVID 



If, therefore, a present p er cep ti o n leads ua to assert the existence 
of some other, this can only be interpreted as meaning that in some 
natural, i.e. psychological, manner the idea of this other perception 
is excited, and that the idea is viewed by the mind in some peculiar 
fashion. The natural link of connexion Hume finds in the simi- 
larities presented by experience. One fact or perception is discovered 
by experience to be uniformly or generally accompanied by another, 
and its occurrence therefore naturally excites the idea of that other. 
But when an idea is so roused up by a present impression, and when 
this idea, being a consequence of memory, has in itself a certain 
vivacity or liveliness, we regard it with a peculiar indefinable feeling, 
and in this feeling consists the immense difference between mere 
imagination and belief. The mind is led easily and rapidly from the 
present impression to the ideas of impressions found by experience 
to be the usual accompaniments of the present fact. The ease and 
rapidity of the mental transition is the sole ground for the supposed 
necessity of the causal connexion between portions of experience. 
The idea of necessity is not intuitively obvious; the ideas of cause 
and effect are correlative in our minds, but only as a result of ex* 
perience. Hobbcs and Locke were wrong in saying that the mind 
must find in the relation the idea of Power. We mistake the sub- 
jective transition resting upon custom or past experience for an 
objective connexion independent of special feelings. All reasoning 
about matters of fact is therefore a species of feeling, and belongs to 
the sensitive rather than to the cogitative side of our nature. It 
should be noted that this theory of Causation entirely denies the 
doctrine of Uniformity in Nature, so far as the human mind is 
concerned. All alleged uniformity is reduced to- observed similarity 
of process. The idea is a mere convention, product of inaccurate 
thinking and custom. 

While it is evident that some such conclusion must follow from 
the attempt to regard the cognitive consciousness as made up of dis- 
connected feelings, it is equally clear, not only that the result is self- 
contradictory, but that it involves certain assumptions not in any 
way deducible from the fundamental view with which Hume starts. 
For in the problem of real cognition he is brought face to face with 
the characteristic feature of knowledge, distinction of self from 
matters known, and reference of transitory states to permanent 
objects or relations. Deferring his criticism of the significance of 
sett and object, Hume yet makes use of both to aid his explanation 
of the belief attaching to reality. The reference of an idea to past 
experience has no meaning, unless we assume an identity in the 
object referred to. For a past impression is purely transitory, and, 
as Hume occasionally points out, can have no connexion of fact with 
the present consciousness. His exposition has thus a certain-plausi- 
bility, which would not belong to it had the final view of the per- 
manent object been already given. 

The final problem of Hume's theory of knowledge, the discussion 
of the real significance of the two factors of cognition, self and 
external things, is handled in the Treatise with great fulness and 
dialectical subtlety. 

ow 
to 

ihe 



ral 
of 
»n. 
the 
ter 
of 
rell 
:nt 



*d 



nd 

red 

ily 
ict 

»iy 

>ne 



ims |s«aviiai iwuuijr, wueii, iciita.vniK un uic now ui paai |*«v.£p- 

tions that compose a mind, the ideas ofthem are felt to be connected 
together and naturally introduce each other. 

However extraordinary this conclusion may seem, k need not 
surprise us. Modern philosophers seem inclined to think that 
personal identity arises from consciousness, and consciousness is 
nothing but a reflected thought or perception. The present philo- 
sophy, therefore, has a promising aspect. But all my hopes vanish 



when I come to explain the principles that unite our s u cc es s Ir s 
perceptions in our thought or consciousness. I cannot discover any 
theory which gives me satisfaction on this head. . . . 

" In short, there are two principles which I cannot render con- 
sistent, nor is it in ray power to renounce either of them; vis. that 
all our distinct perceptions are distinct existences, and that the nwssa* 
never percewes any real connexion among distinct existence*. Dtd 
our perceptions either inhere in something simple or indrviduaLor 
did the mind perceive some real connexion among them, there 
would be no difficulty in the case M (ii. 551). 

The closing sentences of this passage may be regarded as pointing to 
the very essence of the Kantian attempt at solution of the probM 
of knowledge. Hume sees distinctly that if conscious e xp erie nc e be 
taken as containing only isolated states, no progress is exptanntioo 
of cognition is possible, and that the only hope of farther develop- 
ment is to be looked for in a radical change in our mode of conferring 
experience. The work of the critical philosophy is the introduction 
of this new mode of regarding experience, a mode which, in the 
technical language of philosophers, has received the title of irons* 
eendentalaaf J l - _t ■•■-■■' -«• j »-- ■ — *— 

and Hume. 



eendental as opposed to the psychological method followed by Locke 
It is because Kant alone perceived the full significance 
of the' change required in order to meet the difficulties of the < 



B'rical theory that we regard his system as the only sequel to that of 
ume. The writers of the Scottish school, Reid in particular, did 
undoubtedly indicate some of the weaknesses in Hume's funda- 
mental conception, and their attempts to show that the isolated 
feeling cannot be taken as the ultimate and primary unit of cog niti ve 
experience are efforts in the right direction. But the question of 
knowledge was never generalised by them, and their reply to Hume, 
therefore, remains partial and inadequate, while its effect is weakened 
by the uncritical assumption of principles which is a characteristic 
feature of their writings. 

The results of Hume's theoretical analysis are applied by him to 
the problems of practical philosophy and religion. For the first 
of these the reader is referred to the article Ethics, where Tajj. 
Hume's views arc placed in relation to those of his pre- ma4 4 
decessors in the same field of inquiry. His position, as 
regards the second, b very noteworthy. As before said, bis 
metaphysic contains in obstrocto the principles which were at that 
time being employed, uncritically, alike by the debts and by their 
antagonbts. There can be no doubt that Hume has continually ia 
mind the theological questions then current, and that he was fully 
aware of the mode in which hb analysb of knowledge might be 
applied to them. A few of the less important of hb criticisms, such 
as the argument on miracles, became then and have since remained 
public property and matter of general discussion. But the fu& 
significance of hb work on the theological side was not at the time 
perceived, and justice has barely been done to the admirable manner 
in which he reduced the theological disputes of the century to their 
ultimate elements. The importance of the Dialogues on Natural 
Religion, as a contribution to the criticism of theological ideas and 
methods, can hardly be over-estimated. A brief survey of its contents 
will be sufficient to show its general nature and its relations to such 
works as Clarke's Demonstration and Butler's A nalogy. The Dialogues 
introduce three interlocutors, Demca, CIcanthe* and Philo. who 
represent three distinct orders of theological opinion. The first b 
the type of a certain a priori view, then regarded as the safest bulwark 
against infidelity, of which the main tenets were that the being of 
Cod was capable of a priori proof, and that, owing to the finhuoe of 
our faculties, the attributes and modes of operation of deity were 
absolutely incomprehensible. The second is the typical debt of 
Locke's school, improved as regards his philosophy, and holding that 
the only possible proof of God's existence was a posteriori, from 
design, and that such proof was, on the whole, sufficient. The third 
b the type of completed empiricbm or scepticism, holding that no 
argument, either from reason or experience, can transcend experience, 
and consequently that no proof 01 God's exbtence is at all possible. 
The views of the first and second are played off against one another, 
and criticised by the third with great literary skill and effect. 
Cleanthes, who maintains that the doctrine of the incomprehensi- 
bility of Cod is hardly dbtinguishable from athebm. b compelled 
by the arguments of Philo to reduce to a minimum the conclusion 
capable of being inferred from experience as regards the existence 
of God. For Philo lays stress upon the weakness of the analogical 
argument, points out that the demand for an ultimate cause is no 
more satisfied by thought than by nature itself, shows that the 
argument from design cannot warrant the inference of a perfect or 
infinite or even of a single deity, and finally, carrying out hb principles 
to the full extent, maintains that, as we have no experience of the 
origin of the world, no argument from experience can carry us to its 
origin, and that the apparent marks of design in the structure of 
animals are only results from the conditions oftheir actual existence. 
So far as argument from nature b concerned, a total suspension of 
judgment is our only reasonable resource. Nor does the a priori 
argument in any of its forms fare better, for reason can never demon- 
strate a matter of fact, and, unless we know that the world had a 
beginning in time, we cannot insist that it must have had a cause. 
Demea. who b willing to give up his abstract proof, brines forward 
the ordinary theological topic, man's consciousness^ of hb own 
imperfection, misery and dependent condition. Nature b throughout 



HUME, DAVID 



883 



, bot " the preaant ervfl phenomena are rectified 

in other regions and in some future period of existence." Such a 
view satisfies neither of his interlocutors. Clcanthes, pointing out 
that from a nature thoroughly evil we can never prove the existence 
of an infinitely powerful and benevolent Creator, hazards the con- 

1'ecture that the deity, though all-benevolent, is not all-powerful. 
5 hilo, however, pushing his principles to their full consequences, 
shows that unless we assumed (or knew) beforehand that the system 
of nature was the work of a benevolent but limited deity, we certainly 
could not, from the facts of nature, infer the benevolence of its 
creator. Cleanthes's view is, therefore, an hypothesis, and in no 
sense an inference. 
The Dialogues ought here to conclude. There is, however, ap~ 

Gmded one of those perplexing statements of personal opinion (for 
ume declares Clcanthes to be his mouthpiece) not uncommon 
among writers of this period. Cleanthes and Philo come to an agree* 
ment, in admitting a certain illogical force in the a posteriori argu- 
ment, or, at least, in expressing a conviction as to God's existence, 
which may not perhaps be altogether devoid of foundation. The 
precise value of such a declaration must be matter of conjecture. 
Probably the true statement of Hume's attitude regarding the 
problem is the somewhat melancholy utterance with which the 
Dialogues dose. 

It is apparent, ev< the 

importance of Hum the 

vigour and logical t lar 

metaphysical view. ;ed 

in his system, but tl ;lf, 

and not, as in the ca isp 

of the principle, an< fly 

incompatible. In H ial 

expression of what or 

atomism, while his ci cal 

consequences of this ed, 

Hume has given th all 

additions, whether fi >m 

the general history c er, 

and affect in no, way on 

to say that the late by 

J. S. Mill made in t gtc 

of Mill, e.g., we find 1 er- 

part m Hume, much >n- 

siderations of scienti is 

concerned, the Syste c's 

doctrine of knowled IPs 

remarkable posthumi tat 

in substance the trea on 

Natural Religion, whi rce 

must be assigned to 1 

2. Hume's eminen 1st 

not be allowed to ol r , st. 

Rxuumikm. Berkeley had already, in the Querist, attacked the mercan- 
w "" w tile theory of the nature of national wealth and the 
functions of money, and Locke had, in a partial manner, shown that 
political economy could with advantage be viewed m relation to the 
modern system of critical philosophy. But Hume was the first to 
apply to economics the scientific methods of his philosophy. His 
services to economics may be summed up in two heads: (1) he 
established the relation between economic facts and the fundamental 

{>henomena of social life, and (2) he introduced into the study of these 
acts the new historical method. Thus, though he gave no special 
name to it, he yet describes the subject-matter, and indicates the 
true method, of economic science. His economic essays werepablished 
in the volumes entitled Political Discourses (1752) and Essays and 
Treatises on Several Subjects (1753) ; the most important are those on 
Commerce, on Money, on Interest and on the Balance of Trade, but, 
notwithstanding the disconnected form of the essays in general, the 
other less important essays combine to make a complete economic 
system. We have said that Berkeley and Locke had already begun 
the general work for which Hume is most important: In details also 
Hume had been anticipated to some extent. Nicholas Barbon and 
Sir Dudley North had already attacked the mercantile theory as to 
the precious metals and the balance of trade; Joseph Massie and 
Barbon had anticipated his theory of interest. Vet when we com- 
pare Hume with Adam Smith, the advance which Hume had made 
on his predecessors in lucidity of exposition and subtlety of intellect 
becomes clear, and modern criticism w agreed that the main errors of 
Adam Smith are to be found in those deductions which deviate from 
the results of the Political Discourses. A very few examples must 
suffice to illustrate his services to economics. 

In dealing with money, he refutes the Mercantile School, which 
had tended to confound it with wealth. " Money," said Hume, " is 
Mooty &one °* toe "heels of trade; it is the oil which renders the 
motion of the wheels more smooth and easy." " Money 
and commodities are the real strength of any community.'* From 
the internal, as distinct from the international, aspect, the absolute 
quantity of money, supposed as of fixed amount, in a country, is of 
no consequence, while a quantity larger than is required for the 
interchange of commodities is injurious, as tending to raise prices 
and to drive foreigners from the home markets, ft is only during 



Tmxttloa 
mad 



the period of acquisition of money, and before the rise inpfices. that the 
accumulation of precious metals is advantageous. This principle is 
perhaps Hume's most important economic discovery (ef. P. A. 
Walker's Money in its Relations to Trade and Industry, London, 1880, 
p. 64 sqq.). He goes on to show that the variations of prices are due 
solely to money and commodities in circulation. Further, it is a 
misconception to regard as injurious the passage of money into 
foreign countries. " A government," he says, " has great reason to 
preserve with care its people and its manufactures; its money it may 
safely trust to the course of human affairs without fear or jealousy. 
Dealing with the phenomena of interest, he exposes the old fa . rf 
fallacy that the rate depends upon the amount of money *■■"*■* 
in a country; low interest does not follow on abundance of money. 
The reduction in the rate of interest must, in general, result from' 
" the increase of industry and frugality, of arts and commerce." In 
connexion with this he emphasizes a too generally neglected factor 
in economic phenomena, " the constant and insatiable desire of the 
mind for exercise and employment/* ** Interest," he says in general, 
" is the barometer of the state, and its lowness an almost infallible 
sign of prosperity," arising, as it does, from increased trade, frugality 
in the merchant class, and the consequent rise of new lenders: low 
interest and low profits mutually forward each other. In the matter 
of free trade and protection he compromises. He says on &^ 
the one hand, " not only as a man, but as a British subject <2L 
I pray for the flourishing commerce of Germany, Spain, ««*»•» 
Italy and even France itself," and condemns " the numerous bars, 
obstructions and imposts which all nations of Europe, and none more 
than England, have put upon trade." On the other hand, he 
approves of a protective tax on German linen in favour of home 
manufactures, and of a tax on brandy as encouraging the sale of runt 
and so supporting our southern colonies. Indeed it has been fairly 
observed that Hume retains an attitude of refined mercantilism. 
With regard to taxation he takes very definite views. The best taxes, 
he says, are those levied on consumption, especially on 
luxuries, for these are least heavily felt. He denies that 
all taxes fail finally on the land. Superior frugality and 
industry on the part of the artisan will enable him to pay 
taxes without mechanically raising the price of labour. 
Here, as in other points, he differs entirely from the physiocrats, and 
his criticism of contemporary French views are, as a whole, in 
accordance with received modern opinion. For the modern expe- 
dient of raising money for national emergencies by way of loan he 
has a profound distrust. He was convinced that what is bad for the 
individual credit must be bad for the state also. A national debt, he 
maintains, enriches the capital at the expense of the provinces; 
further, it creates a leisured class of stockholders, and possesses all 

PI 

th 



88 4 



HUME, J.— HUMITE 



Principles of Politick Economy (J. LaIor*8 trans, of 13th ed.,New York. 
1878); F. A. Walker's Money (New York, i8j7)-gtves an account ol 
Hume's views on interest and money; H. H. Gibbs (Lord Aldenhara), 
Colloquy on the Currency; for Hume's relation to Adam Smith, John 
Rae's Life of Adam Smith (London, 1 895). See also M. Teisseire, Us 
Essais iconomiques de David Hume (100a ; a critical study) ; A. SchaU, 
L'CEtare iconomique de Dand Hume (1903). (R. Ad. ; J. M. M.) 

t HUME, JOSEPH (1777-1855), British politician, was born on 
the a 2nd of January 1777, of humble parents, at Montrose, 
Scotland. After completing his course of medical study at the 
university of Edinburgh he sailed in 1797 for India, where he 
was attached as surgeon to a regiment; and his knowledge of the 
native tongues and his capacity for business threw open to him 
the lucrative offices of interpreter and commissary-general. 
In 1802, on the eve of Lord Lake's Mahratta war, his chemical 
knowledge enabled him to render a signal service to the admi- 
nistration by making available a large quantity of gunpowder 
which damp had spoiled. In 1808, on the' restoration of peace, 
he resigned all his civil appointments, and returned home in 
the possession of a fortune of £40,000. Between 1808 and 181 1 
he travelled much both in England and the south of Europe, 
and in 18x2 published a blank verse translation of the Inferno. 
In 1812 he purchased a seat in parliament for Weymouth and 
voted as a Tory. When upon the dissolution of parliament 
the patron refused to return him he brought an action and re- 
covered part of his money. Six yean elapsed before he again 
entered the House, and during that interval he had made the 
acquaintance and imbibed the doctrines of James Mill and the 
philosophical reformers of the school of Bentham. He had 
joined his efforts to those of Francis Place, of Westminster, 
and other philanthropists, to relieve and improve the condition 
of the working classes, labouring especially to establish schools 
for them on the Lancastrian system, and promoting the forma- 
tion of savings banks. In 18 18, soon after bis marriage with 
Miss Burnley, the daughter of an East India director, he was 
returned to parliament as member for the Border burghs. He 
was afterwards successively elected for Middlesex (1830), Kil- 
kenny (1837) and for the Montrose burghs (1842), in the service 
of which constituency he died. From the date of his re-entering 
the House Hume became the self-elected guardian of the public 
purse, by challenging and bringing to a direct vote every single 
Hem of public expenditure. In 1820 he secured the appointment 
of a committee to report on the expense of collecting the revenue. 
He was incessantly on his legs In committee, and became a name 
for an opposition bandog who gave chancellors of the exchequer 
bo peace. He undoubtedly exe r cised a check on extravagance, 
and he did real service by helping to abolish the sinking fund. It 
was he who caused the word " retrenchment " to be added to the 
Radical programme " peace and reform." He carried on a suc- 
cessful warfare against the old combination laws that hampered 
workmen and favoured masters; he brought about the repeal 
of the laws prohibiting the export of machinery and of the act 
preventing workmen from going abroad. He constantly pro- 
tested against flogging in the army, the impressment of sailors 
and imprisonment for debt. He took up the question of light- 
houses and harbours; in the former be secured greater efficiency, 
in the latter he prevented useless expenditure, Apart from his 
pertinacious fight for economy Hume was not always fortunate 
in his political activity. He was conspicuous in the agitation 
raised by the so-called Orange plot to set aside King William 
IV. In favour of the duke of Cumberland (1835 and 1836). His 
action as trustee for the notorious Greek Loan In 1824 was at 
least not delicate, and was the ground of charges of downright 
dishonesty. He died on the 20th of February 1855. 

A Memorial of Hume was published by his son Joseph Burnley 
Hume (London, 1855). 

HUMIUATI, the name of an Italian monastic order created in 
the 1 2th century. Its origin is obscure. According to some 
chroniclers, certain noblemen of Lombardy, who had offended 
the emperor (either Conrad IH. or Frederick Barbarossa), were 
carried captive into Germany and after suffering the miseries 
of exile for some time, " humiliated " themselves before the 
emperor, Returning to their own country, they did penance 



and took the name of Humiliati. They do not seem to have had 
any fixed rule, nor did St Bernard succeed an inducing then to 
submit to one. The traditions relating to a reform of this order 
by St John of Meda are ill authenticated, his Acta {Ada sanc- 
torum BoU. t Sept., vii. 320) being almost entirely unsupported 
by contemporary evidence. The " Chronicon anonymi Laadu- 
nensis canonic!" (Hon. Germ. hist. Scriptures, xxvi. 449), at 
date 1178, states that a group of Lombards came to Rome with 
the intention of obtaining the pope's approval of the rule of Ek 
which they had spontaneously chosen; while continuing to live 
in their houses in the midst of their families, they wished to lead 
a more pious existence than of old, to abandon oaths and 
litigation, to content themselves with a modest dress, and all in 
a spirit of Catholic piety. The pope approved their resolve to 
live in humility and purity, but forbade them to bold awrmhoTS 
and to preach in public; the chronicler adding that they in- 
fringed the pope's wish and thus drew upon themselves mi 
excommunication. Their name, Humiliati (" Husniks " would 
have been more appropriate), arose from the fact that the c lot he s 
they wore were very simple and of one colour. This lay fraternity 
spread rapidly and soon put forth two new branches, a second 
order composed of women, and a third composed of priests. 
No sooner, however, had this order of priests been formed, than 
it claimed precedence of the others, and, though chronologically 
last, was called primus ordo by hierarchical right — propter 
tonsurom (see P. Sabatter, "Regula antiqua Fr. et Sor. de 
poenitentia " in Opuscules de critique historique, part L p. is). 
In X20Z Pope Innocent III. granted a rule to this third order. 
Sabatier has drawn attention to the resemblances between tins 
rule and the Regula de pocniteuHa granted to FrapoVanrtw in 
the course of its development; on the other hand, it if incon- 
testable that Innocent IIL wished to reconcile the order with the 
Waldenses, and, indeed, its rule reproduces several of the 
Waldensian propositions, ingeniously modified in the orthodox 
sense, but still very easily recognizable. It forbade useless oaths 
and the taking of God's name in vain; allowed voluntary 
poverty and marriage; regulated pious exercises; and approved 
the solidarity which already existed among the members of the 
association. Finally, by a singular concession, it authorised 
them to meet on Sunday to listen to the words of a brother 
" of proved faith and prudent piety," on condition that the 
hearers should not discuss among themselves either the articles 
of faith or the sacraments of the church. The bishops were 
forbidden to oppose any of the utterances of the Hmnihati 
brethren, " for the spirit must not be stifled." James of Vitry, 
without being unfavourable to their tendencies, represents thctr 
association as one of the peculiarities of the church of bis time 
(Historic orienlaKs, Douai, 1597). So broad a discipline must 
of necessity have led back some waverers into the pale of tat 
church, but the Waldcnses of Lombardy, in their congregation** 
labcronlium, preserved the tradition of the independent Humiliati. 
Indeed, this tradition is confounded throughout the later irth 
century with the history of the Waldenses. The " Chronicon 
Urspergense" (Man. Germ. hist. Scriptorcs, xxiu. 376-377) 
mentions the Humiliati as one of the two Waldensian sects. 
The celebrated decretal promulgated in 1184 by Pope Lucius IIL 
at the council of Verona against all heretics condemns at the 
same time as the " Poor Men of Lyons " " those who attribute to 
themselves falsely the name of Humiliati," at the very time 
when this name denoted an order recognized by the papacy. 
This order, though orthodox, was always held in tacit and ever- 
increasing suspicion, and, in consequence of grave disorders, 
Pius V. suppressed the entire congregation in February 1570-71. 
See* Tlraboschl, Vetera humSiatorum monumenta (Milan, 1766}; 
K, Mailer, Die Waldenser (Gotha, 1886); W. Preger, Bcitt4tt but 
Ceschkhte der Waldensier (Munich, 1875). (P. A. ) 

HUM1TB, a group of minerals consisting of basic magnesium 
fluoHdlicates, with the following formulae: — Cbondrodite, 
Mgj(Mg(F,OH)USiOj,; Humite, MgJMg(F,OH)MSKU; 
Clinohumite, Mgr{Mg(F,OH)USiOj«. Humite crystallizes b 
the orthorbombic and the two others in the monoclinic system, 
but between them there is a dose crystauographic relation: the 



HUMMEL— HUMMING-BIRD 



885 



length* of the* vertical axes art in tfat ratio $:}:Q» and this is 
abo the ratio of the number of magnesium atoms present in each 
of the three minerals. These minerals are strikingly similar in 
appearance, and can only be distinguished by the gonfometric 
measurement of the complex crystals. They are bnney-yeuow to 
brown or red in colour, and have a vitreous to resinous lustre; 
the hardness is 6-61, *nd the specific gravity 31-32. Further, 
they often occur associated together, and it is only comparatively 
recently that the three specks have been properly discriminated. 
The name hurnke, after Sir Abraham Hume, Bart. (1740-1830), 
whose collection of diamond crystals is preserved at Cambridge 
in the University museum, was given by the comte de Boumon 
in 1813 to the small and brilliant honey-yellow crystals found in 
the blocks of crystalline limestone ejected from Monte Somma, 
Vesuvius; aU three species have since been recognized at this 
locality. Chondrodite (from xMpot, " a grain ") was a name 
early (18x7) in use for granular forms of these minerals found 
embedded In crystalline limestones in Sweden, Finland and at 
several place in New York and New Jersey. Large hyacinth-red 
crystals of all three species are associated with magnetite in the 
, Tilly Foster iron-mine at Brewster, New York; and at KafveHorp 
in drebro, Sweden, similar crystals (of chondrodite) occur em- 
bedded in galena and chalcopyrite. 

\ The relation mentioned above between the crystallographic 
constants and the chemical composition is unique amongst 
minerals, and is known as a morpbotropic relation. S. L. Penfield 
and W. T. H. Howe, who in 1804 noticed this relation, predicted 
the existence of another member of the series, the crystals of 
which would have a still shorter vertical axis and contain less 
magnesium, the formula being Mg(Mg(F,OH)l£i0 4 ; cms has 
since been discovered and named prolectite {homvpokkyar, " to 
foretell "). (L. J. S.) 

. HUMMEL, JOHANN KBPOMUK (1778-1837), German com- 
poser and pianist, was born on the- 14th of November 1778, at 
Pressburg, in Hungary, and received his first artistic training 
from his father, himself a musician. In 1785 the latter received 
an appointment as conductor of the orchestra at the theatre of 
Schikaneder, the friend of Mozart and the librettist of the Magic 
Fluk. It was in this way that Hummel became acquainted with 
the composer, who took a great fancy to him, and even invited 
him to his house for a considerable period. During two years, 
from the age of seven to nine, Hummel received the invaluable 
instruction of Mozart, after which he set out with his father on 
an artistic tour through Germany, England and other countries, 
his clever playing winning the admiration of amateurs. He began 
to compose in his eleventh year. After his return to Vienna be 
completed his studies under Albrechtsberger and Haydn, and 
for a number of years devoted himself exclusively to composition. 
At a later period he learned song-writing from Salieri. For some 
years he held the appointment of orchestral conductor to Prince 
Eszterhazy, probably entering upon this office in 1807. From 
i8xx to 181 5 he lived in Vienna. On the 18th of May 1813 he 
married Elisabeth Rdckl, a singer, and the sister of one of Beet- 
hoven's friends. It was not till 18x6 that he again appeared in 
public as a pianist, his success being quite extraordinary. His 
gift of improvisation at the piano was especially admired, but his 
larger compositions also were highly appreciated, and for a time 
Hummel was considered one of the leading musicians of an age 
in which Beethoven was in the zenith of his power. In Prussia, 
which he visited in 1822, the ovations offered to him were un- 
precedented, and other countries— France in 1825 and 1829, 
Belgium in 1836 and England in 1830 and 1831— added further 
laurels to his crown. He died in 1837 at Weimar, where for a long 
time be had been the musical conductor of the court theatre. 
His compositions are very numerous, and comprise almost every 
branch of music. He wrote, amongst other things, several operas, 
both tragic and comic, and two grand masses (Of. 80 and in). 
Infinitely more important are his compositions for the pianoforte 
(his two concerti in A minor and B minor, and the sonata In 
F sharp minor), and his chamber music (the celebrated 
septet, and several trios, ftc). His experience as a player 
and teacher of the ntanoforto won embodied in Ids Gnat 



Pianoforte School (Vienna), and the excellence of his method is 
further proved by such pupils as Hensek and Ferdinand Hiller. 
Both as a composer and as a pianist Hummel continued the 
traditions of the earlier Viennese school of Mozart and Haydn; 
bis style in both capacities was marked by purity and correctness 
rather than by passion and imagination. 

HUMMDie-BIHD, a name in use, possibly ever since English 
explorers first knew of them, for the beautiful little creatures 
to which, from the sound occasionally-made by the rapid vibrar 
tions of their wings, it is applied. Among books that are ordi- 
narily in naturalists' hands, the name seems to be first found 
in the Musaeum TradescanHanum, published in 1656, but it 
therein occurs (p. 3) so as to suggest its having already been 
accepted and commonly understood; and its earliest use, as yet 
traced, is by Thomas Morton (d. 1646), a disreputable lawyer 
who had a curiously adventurous career In New England, in the 
New English Canaan, printed in 1637—- a rare work giving an 
interesting description of the natural scenery and social lift 
in New England in the 17th century, and reproduced by Peter 
Force in his Historical Tracts (vol. ii., Washington, 1838). Andre 
Thevet, in his Singularity de la Franca antarOique (Antwerp, 
"1558, fbL 99), has been more than once cited as the earliest 
author to mention hurnming-birds, which he did under the name 
of Gonamhuch; but it is quite certain that Oviedo, whose 
Hysteria general de las Indies was published at Toledo in 1595, 
preceded Urn by more than thirty years, with an account of 
the " paxaro mosquito " of Hispaniola, of which island " the first 
chronicler of the Indies" was governor. 1 This name, though 
now apparently disused in Spanish, must have been current 
about that time, for we find Gesner in 1555 {De awinm nature, 
iii. 620) translating it literally into Latin as Passer mmscatus, 
owing, as he says, his knowledge of the bird to Cardan, the 
celebrated mathematician, astrologer and physician, from whom 
we learn {Comment, in Ptolem. de astr. fudicUs, Basel, 1354, 
p. 472) that, on his return to Milan from professionally attending 
Archbishop Hamilton at Edinburgh, be visited Gesner at Zurich, 
about the end of the year 1 55s.* The name still survives in the 
French oiseau-mouche; but the ordinary Spanish appellation 
is, and long has been, Tominejo, from tomin, signifying a weight 
equal to the third part of an adarme or drachm, and used meta- 
phorically for anything very small. Humming-birds, however, 
are called by a variety of other names, many of them derived 
from American languages, such as Guaimmbi, Onrissia and 
Cetibri, to say nothing of others bestowed upon them (chiefly 
from some peculiarity of habit) by Europeans, like Picafhres, 
Chuparosa and Froufrou. Barrere, in 1745, conceiving that 
humming-birds were allied to the wren, the Trochilus,* in part, of 

1 In the edition of Oviedo'* work published at Salamanca in 1547, 
the account (lib. xiv. cap. 4) runs thus: " Ay a&si mbmo enesta ysia 
vnos paxaricos tan negroa como vn terciopelo negro muy bueno ft 
son tan pequeflos que ningunos he yo visto en Indias menores/ ex- 
cepto cl que aca te llama paxaro mosquito. El qual es tan pcquefio 

3ue el bulto del es menor harto o astaz que le cabeca del dedo pulgar 
e la mano. Este.no le he visto enesta Ysia pcro'dizen me que aqui 
los ay: ft por esao dexo de hablar enel pa lo dezir dode los he visto 
que es en la tierra firme quado della se trate." A modern Spanish 
version of this passage will be found in the beautiful edition 
of Oviedo's works published by the Academy of Madrid in 1851 

* See also Morley's Life efGirotamo Cardano (ii. 152. X53). 

• Under this name Pliny perpetuated (Hist, naiumlis, vm. 95) the 
confusion that had doubtless arisen before his time of two very 
distinct birds. As Sundevall remarks {Tentamen, p. 87, note), 
TooxtXtH was evidently the name commonly given by the ancient 
Greeks to the smaller plovers, and was not improperly appHed by 
Herodotus (ii. 68) to the species that feeds in the open mouth of the 
crocodile— the Phmanus aegypHus of modern ornithologists— in 
which sense Aristotle (HisL ammalhm, be. 6) also uses ft. But the 
received text of Aristotle has two other passages (ix. I and 1 1) wherein 
the word appears in a wholly different connexion, and can there be 
only taken to mean the wren— the usual Greek name of which would 
seem to be fartXot (Sundevall, Om Arts tod. Djurarter, No. 54). 
Though none of his editors or commentators has suggested the 
possibility of such a thing, one can hardly help suspecting that ia 
these passages some early copyist has substituted rpoxfXoc for 6>x<X<», 
and so laid the foundation of a curious error. It may be re* 
marked that the crocodile of Santo Domingo is said to have the like 
onV»o^Mforftbysomebr»do(blrd.wWc1iiscalUdwyr 



886 



HUMMING-BIRD 



Pliny, applied that name in a. generic sense (Omitk. spec. 
pp. 47, 48) to both. Taking the hint thus afforded, Linnaeus 
very soon after went farther, and, excluding the wrens, founded 
his genus Trochilus for the reception of such humming-birds as 
were known to him. The unfortunate act of the great nomen- 
clator cannot be set aside ; and, since bis time, ornithologists, 
with but few exceptions, have followed his example, so that 
nowadays humming-birds are universally recognized as forming 
the family Trockilidae. 

The relations of the Trockilidae to other birds were for a long 
while very imperfectly understood. Nitzsch first drew attention 
to their agreement in many essential characters with the swifts, 
CypseUdae, and placed the two families in one group, which he 
called Macrockires, from the great length of their manual bones, 
or those forming the extremity of the wing. The name was 
perhaps not very happily chosen, for it is not the distal portion 
that is so much out of ordinary proportion to the size of the bird, 
but the proximal and median portions, which in both families are 
curiously dwarfed. Still the manut, in comparison with the 
other parts of the wing, is so long that the term Macrockires 
is not wholly inaccurate. The affinity of the Trockilidae and 
CypseUdae, once pointed out, became obvious to every careful 
and unprejudiced investigator, and there are probably few 
systematise now living who refuse to admit its validity. More 
than this, it is confirmed by an examination of other osteokgical 
characters. The " lines," as a boat-builder would say, upon 
which the skeleton of each form is constructed are precisely 
similar, only that whereas the bill is very short and the bead 
wide in the swifts, in the humming-birds the head is narrow and 
the bill long— the latter developed to an extraordinary degree 
in some of the Trockilidae, rendering them the longest-billed 
birds known. 1 Huxley takes these two families, together with 
the goatsuckers (Caprimulgidae), to form the division Cypsch- 
morphae— one of the two into which he separated his larger 
group Aegilnognalkae, However, the most noticeable portion 
of the humming-bird's skeleton is the sternum, which in propor- 
tion to the size of the bird is enormously developed both longi- 
tudinally and vertically, its deep keel and posterior protraction 
affording abundant space for the powerful muscles which drive 
the wings in their rapid vibrations as the little creature poises 
itself over the flowers where it finds its food.* 

So far as is known, all humming-birds possess a protrusible 
tongue, In conformation peculiar among the class Aves, though 
to some extent similar to that member in the woodpeckers 
(JieidaeY— the " horns " of the hyoid apparatus upon which 
it is seated being greatly elongated, passing round and over 
the back part of the head, near the top of which they meet, 
and thence proceed forward, lodged in a broad and deep groove, 
till they terminate in front of the eyes. But, unlike the tongue 
of the woodpeckers, that of the humming-birds consists of two 
cylindrical tubes, tapering towards the point, and forming two 
sheaths which contain the extensile portion, and are capable 
of separation, thereby facilitating the extraction of honey from 
the nectaries of flowers, and with it, what is of far greater import- 
ance for the bird's sustenance, the small insects that have been 
attracted to feed upon the honey. 4 These, on the tongue being 
withdrawn into the bill, are caught by the mandibles (furnished 

i Voyage, iii. 26), a " Todier," but, as Geoffr. St Hilaire observes 
Descr. de I'Egypte, ed. 2, xxiv. 440), is more probably a plover, 
Jnfortunatcly the fauna of Hispaniola is not much better known 
now than in Oviedo's days. 

1 Thus Docimastes enstfer, .in which the bill is longer than both 
head and body together. 

1 This is especially the case with the smaller species of the group, 
for the larger, though shooting with equal celerity from place to 
place, seem to flap their wings with comparatively slow but not less 
powerful strokes. The difference was especially observed with re- 
spect to the largest of all humming-birds, Patagona gigas, by Darwin. 
* The resemblance, so far as it exists, must be merely the result of 
analogical function, and certainly indicates no affinity between the 

4 It is probable that in various members of the Trockilidae the 
structure of the tongue, and other parts correlated therewith, will be 
found subject to several and perhaps considerable modifications, as is 
eke case in various members of the Picidae, 



for J 



in the males of many species with Ine, horny, aawHke teetb*% 
and swallowed in the usual way. The stomach is small, mode- 
rately muscular, and with the inner coat slightly hardened. 
There seem to be no caeca. The trachea is remarkably short, 
the bronchi beginning high up on the throat, and aong-ennscks 
are wholly wanting, as in all other Cypselomorpkae* 

Humming-birds comprehend the smallest members of the 
class Aves. The largest among them measures no more than i\ 
and the least si in. in length, for it is now admitted gmrraBy 
that Sloane must have been in error when he described ( Voyage, 
U. 308) the "least humming-bird of Jamaica" as " about 1} 
in. long from the end of the bill to that of the tail "—unless, 
indeed, he meant the proximal end of each. There are, however, 
several species in which the tail is very much elongated, such as 
the Aiiknrus polytmus (fig. 1) of Jamaica, and the remarkable 
Loddigesia intra- _ 
bilie of Chacha- 
poyas in Peru, 
which last was for 
some time only 
known from 
unique specimen 
(/Mr, 1880, p. 152); 
but "trochilidists " 
in giving their 
measurements do 
not take these ex- 
traordinary de- 
velopments into 
account. Next to their 
size, the best-known chai 
Trockilidae is the wonderful 
plumage of nearly all then 
respect they are surpass 
birds, and are only equal] 
for instance, by the Ntcl 
birda of the tropical parts < 
in popular estimation so < 
with them. 

The number of species < 
now known to exist constdei 
and, though none departs verj 
a moiphologist would deem 
ture of the family, the amoui 
within certain limits, presented by tne various 
forms is surprising and even bewildering to v ™3 ^ , . _ — ^ 
the uninitiated. But the features that arc ~ fiHr- " J^* n •„ ^ 
ordinarily chosen by systematic ornithologists MacnSbaftGB, IM. 
in drawing up their s cheme s of classification ace p IG . _>( £*•,_• 
found by the " trochilidists," or special students iUdlimn^^^ 
of the Trockilidae, insufficient for the purpose of *^* 
arranging these birds in groups, and characters 
on which genera can be founded have to be sought in the style and 
coloration of plumage, as well as in the form and p r o p or ti ons of those 
parts which are most generally deemed sufficient to furnish them. 
Looking to the large number of species to be taken into account, 
convenience has demanded what science would withhold, and the 

Enera established by the ornithologists of a preceding generation 
ve been broken up by their successors into multitudinous sections— 
the more adventurous making from 150 to 180 of such groaps, the 
modest being content with 120 or thereabouts, but the last dignifying 
each of them by the title of genus. It is of course obvious that these 
small divisions cannot be here considered in detail, nor would much 
advantage accrue by giving statistics from the works of recent 
trochilidists, such as Gould, r Mulsant* and Elliot. 9 It would be as 
unprofitable here to trace the successive steps by which the original 

Knus TrockUms of Linnaeus, or the two genera Pdrtmns and 
eUinga of Brisson, have been split into others, or have t 



* These are especially observable in Rkampkodom uaenims and 
Androdon aeqnoiorialis. 

4 P. H. Cosse {Birds of Jamaica, p. 130) says that MeBitnga 
minima, the smallest species of the family, has " a real song " bit 
the like is not recorded of any other. 

1 A Monograph of the Trockilidae or Humming-birds, 5 vols. imp. 
fol. (London, 1861, with Introduction in 8vo). 

* Hisfoire natureUe des oiseoux-mouckes, est coUbrls, 4 vols., with 
supplement, imp. 4to (Lyon-Ceneve-Bale. 1874-1877). 

* Smithsonian Contribntimu to Knowledge, No. 317. A 
and Synopsis of the Trixkilidae* 1 vol. imp. *to (Wa 



1879). 



HUMMING-BIRD 



887 



to, by modem writer*, for not one of theee professes to have arrived 
at any final, but only a provisional, arrangement ; it teems, however, 
expedient to notice the fact that some of the authors of the 1 8th 
century * supposed themselves to have seen the way to dividing what 
we now know as the family Trotk&idat into two groups, the distinc- 
tion between which was that in the one the bill was arched and in 
the other straight, since that difference has been insisted on in many 
works. This was especially the view taken by Brisson and Buffon, 
who termed the birds having the arched bill " colibris," and those 
having it straight " ofoeaux-mouches." The distinction wholly 
breaks down, not merely because there are TrockUida* which possess 
almost every gradation of decurvation of the bill, but some which 
have the bill upturned after the manner of that strange bird the 
avocet," while it may be remarked that several of the species placed 
by those authorities among the " colibris " are not humming-birds 
atalL 

In describing the ex tr aordinary brilliant plumage which most of 
the TrochUidoe exhibit, ornithologists have been compelled to adopt 
the vocabulary of the jeweller in order to give an idea of the inde- 
scribable radiance that so often breaks forth from some part or other 
of the investments of these feathered gems. In all, save a few 
other birds, the most imaginative writer sees gleams which he may 
adequately designate metallic, from their resemblance to burnished 
gold, bronze, copper or steel, but such similitudes wholly fail when 
he has to do with the TrochUidoe, and there is hardly a precious 
stone— ruby, amethyst, sapphire, emerald or topaz — the name of 
which may not fitly, and without any exaggeration, be employed in 
regard to humming-birds. In some cases this radiance beams from 
the brow, in some it glows from the throat, in others it shines from 
the tail-coverts, in others it sparkles from the tip only of elongated 
feathers that crest the head or surround the neck as with a frill, while 
again in others it may appear as a luminous streak across the cheek or 
auriculars. The feathers that cover the upper parts of the body very 
frequently have a metallic lustre of goiden-green, which in other 
birds would be thoi " ~ * " " * Mlidat 

its sheen is overp r that 

radiates from the a ewels. 

The flight feathers ; f their 

movement would, 1 ctive: 

while, on the conti e bird 

hovers over its food J, and 

b therefore compa trans- 

lucency, as of stai at no 

stained glass ever imson 

changing to purple xrttle- 

green. But this p lite as 

much modification listing 

of ten rettrius. It . ^ . ightljr 

rounded. or wedge-shaped with the middle quills prolonged beyond 
the rest ; or, again, it may be deeply forked, sometimes by the over- 
growth of one or more of the intermediate pairs, but most generally 
by the development of the outer pair. In the last case the lateral 
feathers may be either broadly webbed to their tip or acuminate, or 
again, in some forms, may lessen to the filiform shaft, and suddenly 
enlarge into a terminal spatula tion as in the forms known as " racquet 
tails. The wings- do not offer so much variation; still there are a 
few groups in which diversities occur that require notice. The 
primaries are invariably ten in number, the outermost being the 
longest, except in the single instance of Ailhurus, where it is shorter 
than the next. The group known as " sabre-wings," comprising the 
genera Compyicptrrus, Eupetomena and Sphenoproctus, present a 
most curious sexual peculiarity, for while the female has nothing 
remarkable in the form of the wing, in the male the shaft of two or 
three of the outer primaries is dilated proximally, and bowed near 
the middle in a manner almost unique among birds. The feet again, 
diminutive as they arc, are very diversified in form. In most the 
tarsus is bare, but in some groups, as Eriocnemu, it is clothed with 
tufts of the most delicate down, sometimes black, sometimes buff, 
but more often of a snowy whiteness. In some the toes are weak, 
nearly equal in length, and furnished with small rounded nails; in 
others they are largely developed, and armed with long and sharp 
claws. 

Apart from the well-known brilliancy of plumage, of which enough 
has been here said, many humming-birds display a large amount of 
ornamentation in the addition to their attire of crests of various 
shape and size, elongated ear-tufts, projecting neck-frills, and pend- 
ant beards — forked or forming a single point. But it would be 
impossible here to dwell on a tenth of these beautiful modifications, 
each of which as it comes to our knowledge excites fresh surprise and 
exemplifies the ancient adage — maxime miranda in minimis Natura. 
It must be remarked, however, that there are certain forms which 
possess little or no brilliant colouring at alt, but, as most tropical 
birds go, are very soberly clad. These are known to trochilidists as 
" hermits," and by Gould have been separated as a subfamily under 
the name of Pka*tkornitkinae t though Elliot says he cannot find any 



1 Salcroe must be excepted, especially as he was rebuked by Buffon 
for doing what we now deem right. 

• For example Avoccttula rtewvirostris of Guiana and A. euryptera 
of Colombia. 



characters to distinguish it from the TrochUUag proper. But sight is 
not the only sense that is affected by humming-birds. The large 
species known as Pterophones lemmmcki has a strong musky odour, 
very similar to that given off by the petrels, though, so far as appears 
to be known, that is the only one of them that possesses this 
property.* 

All well-informed people are aware that the Trochilidot are a 
family peculiar to America and its islands, but one of the commonest 
of common errors is the belief that humming-birds are found in 
Africa and India — to say nothing even of England. In the first two 
cases the mistake arises from confounding them with some of the 
brightly-coloured sun-birds (NeclarinUdat), to which British colonists 

:J— . _ "ipply the better-known name; but in the last 

i the want of perception which disables the 

c lishing between a bird and an insect — the 

k-motb (Macroglosso), whose mode of feeding 
a nly bears some resemblance to that of the 

1 ! one of the species (AT. stdlerum) is wy 
I ' humming-bird hawk-moth." But though 
c irld the TrochUidoe pervade almost every part 

Ubhanus gaUritus has been seen flitting about 
t lei Fuego in a snow-storm, and in the north- 

1 in summer visits the nbes-blossoms of Sitka. 
* st TroehUus eolubris charms the vision of 
C tself over the althaea-bushes in their gardens, 
a t least so far as lat. 57° N. Nor b the distri- 
b ds limited to a horizontal direction only, it 
t bootrockUus cktmbenuo and O. piehmcka live 
whence each takes its specific name, but just 
t etual snow, at an elevation of some 16,000 ft., 
d >f almost 

c rain, and 

f „ - _ ta which 

resort to the indigenous flower- 
ing plants, while other peaks, 



only inferior to these in height, 
are no less frequented by one or 
more specks. Peru and Bolivia 



he 

an \ 
tutp 



Prom TheCiwtbrUttNlimdBU-y, 
vol. ix.. u Binb." fay pSRBiMMO «f U*> 
roiUoa ii Co. Lid. 



produce some of the most splen- 
did of the family — the genera 
Comctes, Diphlogaena and Thau- 
mastura, whose very names 
indicate the glories of their 
bearers. The comparatively 
gigantic Pataiona inhabits the 
west coast of South America, 
while the isolated rocks of Juan 
Fernandez not only afford a 
home to the EusUphanus butf 
also to two other species of the 
same genus which are not found 
elsewhere. The slopes of the 
Northern Andes and the hill 

country of Colombia furnish .... 

perhaps the greatest number of Fig. a—Eulampisjutuiarus. 
forms, and some of the most 
beautiful, but leaving that great range, we part company with the 
largest and most gorgeously arrayed species.and their number dwindles 
as we approach the eastern coast. Still there are many brilliant 
humming-birds common enough in the Brazils, Guiana and Venezuela. 
The Chrysolampis mosquUus is perhaps the most plentiful. Thousands 
of its skins are annually sent to Europe to be used in the manufacture 
of ornaments, its rich niby-and-topaz glow rendering it one of the 
most beautiful objects imaginable. In the darkest depths of the 

Brazilian forests dwell the russet-clothed brotherhood of the genus 
/,!.„.,.„_.._ .u- .. L — ... ... _ .u j. j u_. in £ tbe 

J vchilidae, 

l be met 

1 ay one or 

1 >le sin 



i singu- 
irds from 
it would 
in South 
te metro- 
numbers 
nong the 
ce, while 

liters like 

sse.A.R. 

_^^reciative 



* The specific name of a species of Chrysolampis, commonly written 
by many writers mosckitus, would lead to the belief that it was a 
mistake for moschatus, ix. " musky," but in truth it originates with 
their carelessness, for though they quote Linnaeus as their authority 
they can never have referred to hb works, or they would have found 
the word to be mosquUus, the " mosquito " of Oviedo, awkwardly, 
it is true, Latinized. If emendation be needed, muscatus, after 
Gcsner's example, b undoubtedly, preferable. 



888 



HUMMOCK— HUMOUR 



of the beauties of nature who will not recall to memory with delight 
the time when a live humming-bird first met his ease. The sudden- 
ness of the apparition, even when expected, and its brief duration, 
are alone enough to fix the fluttering vision on the mind's eye. The 
wings of the bird, if flying, are only visible as a thin grey film, 
bounded above and below by fine black threads, in form of a St 
Andrew's cross,— the effect on the observer's retina of the instantane- 
ous reversal of the motion of the wing at each beat— the strokes being 
so rapid as to leave no more distinct image. Consequently an ade* 

auate representation of the bird on the wing cannot be produced by 
»e draughtsman. Humming-birds show to the greatest advantage 
when engaged in contest with another, for rival cocks fight fiercely, 
and, as may be expected, it is then that their plumage flashes with 
the most glowing tints. But these are quite invisible to the ordinary 
spectator except when very near at hand, though doubtless efficient 
enough for their object, whether that be to inflame their mate or to 
irritate or daunt their opponent, or something that we cannot com- 
pass. Humming-birds, however, will also often sit still for a while, 
chiefly in an exposed position, on a dead twig, occa si onally darting 
into the air, either to catch a passing insect or to encounter an 
adversary; and so pugnacious are they that they will frequently 
attack birds many times bigger than themselves, without, as would 
seem, any provocation. 

i The food of humming-birds consists mainly of insects, mostly 
gathered in the manner already described from the flowers they 
visit; but, according to Wallace, there are many species which he 
has never seen so occupied, and the " hermits " especially seem to 
live almost entirely upon the insects which are found on the lower 
surface of leaves, over which they will closely pass their bill, balancing 
themselves the while vertically in the air. The same excellent 
observer also remarks that even among the common flower-frequent- 
ing species he has found the alimentary canal entirely filled with 
insects, and very rarely a trace of honey. It is this fact doubtless 
that has hindered almost all attempts at keeping them in confine- 
ment for any length of time — nearly every one making the experi- 
ment having fed nis captives only with syrup, which, without the 
addition of some animal food, is insufficient as sustenance, and 
seeing therefore the wretched creatures gradually rink into inanition 
and die of hunger. With better management, however, several 
species have been brought on different occasions to Europe, some of 
tnem to England. 

■ The beautiful nests of humming-birds, than which the work of 
fairies could not be conceived more delicate, are to be seen in most 
museums, and will be found on examination to be vcrv solidly and 
tenaciously built, though the materials are generally of the slightest 
—cotton- wool or some vegetable down and spiders' webs. They vary 
greatly in form and ornamentation — for it would seem that the 
portions of lichen which frequently bestud them are affixed to their 
exterior with that object, though probably concealment was the 
original intention. They are mostly cup-shaped, and the singular 
fact is on record (ZooL Journal, v. p. I ) that in one instance as the 
young grew in size the walls were heightened by the parents, until 
at last the nest was more than twice as big as when the eggs were 
bid and hatched. Some species, however, suspend their nests from 
the stem or tendril of a climbing plant, and more than one case has 
been known in which it has been attached to a hanging rope. These 
pensile nests are said to have been found loaded on one side with a 
small stone or bits of earth to ensure their safe balance, though how 
the compensatory process is applied no one can say. Other species, 
and especially those belonging to the " hermit " group, weave a frail 
structure round the side of a drooping palm-leaf. The eggs are never 
more than two in number, quite white, and having both ends nearly 
equal. The solicitude for her offspring displayed by the mother is not 
exceeded by that of any other birds, but it seems doubtful whether 
the male takes any interest in the brood. (A. N.) 

HUMMOCK (of uncertain derivation; d. hump or hillock), 
a boss or rounded knoll of ice rising above the general level of 
an ice-field, making sledge travelling in the Arctic and Antarctic 
region extremely difficult and unpleasant. Hummocky ice 
is caused by slow and unequal pressure in the main body of the 
packed ice, and by unequal structure and temperature at a 
later period. 

' HUMOUR (Latin humor), a word of many meanings and of 
strange fortune in their evolution. It began by meaning simply 
" liquid." It passed through the stage of being a term of art 
used by the old physicians — whom we should now call physio- 
logists—and by degrees has come to be generally understood 
to signify a certain " habit of the mind," shown in speech, 
in literature and in action, or a quality in things and events 
observed by the human intelligence. The word reached its 
full development by slow degrees. When Dr Johnson compiled 
his dictionary, he gave nine definitions of, or equivalents for, 
** humour." They may be conveniently quoted: " (i) Moisture. 
'V> The different kinds of moisture in man's body, reckoned by 



the old physicians to be phlegm, blood, tholer and melancholy, 
which as they predominate are supposed to determine the 
temper of mind. (3) General turn or temper of mind. (4) 
Present disposition. (5) Grotesque imagery, jocularity, merri- 
ment. (6) Tendency to disease, morbid disposition. (7) Petu- 
lance, peevishness. (8) A trick, a practice. (9) Caprice, whim, 
predominant inclination." The list was not quite complete, 
even in Dr Johnson's own time. Humour was then, as it it 
now, the name of the semi-fluid parts of the eye. Yet no diction- 
ary-maker has been more successful than Johnson in giving 
the literary and conversational meaning of an English word, 
or the main lines of its history. It is therefore instructive to 
note that in no one of his nine clauses does humour bear the 
meaning it has for Thackeray or for George Meredith. ** General 
turn or temper of mind " is at the best too vague, and has more- 
over another application. His list of equivalents only, carries 
the history of the word up to the beginning ol the last stage 
of its growth. 

The limited original sense of liquid, moisture, mere wet, in 
which " humour " is used in Wycline's translation of the Bible, 
continued to attach to it until the 17th century. Thus Shakes- 
peare, in the first scene of the second act of Julius Caesar, makes 
Portia say to her husband: — 

* Is Brutus sick? and is it physical 

To walk unbraced and suck up the humours 

Of the dank morning?" 
In the same scene Dedus employs the word in the wide meta- 
phorical sense in which it was used, and abused, then and 
afterwards. " Let me work," he says, referring to Caesar— 
' For I can give his humour the true bent. 

And I will bring him to the Capitol." 

Here we have " the general turn or temper of mind," which 
can be flattered, or otherwise directed to " present disposi- 
tion." We have travelled far from mere fluid, and have 
been led on the road by the old physiologists. We are not 
concerned with their science, but it is necessary to see- what 
they mean by " primary humours," and " second or third 
concoctions," if we are to understand how it was that a name 
for liquid could come to mean "general turn" or "present 
disposition," or " whim " or " jocularity." Part I., Section 1, 
Member 2, Subsection a, of Burton's Anatomy of Mdandwly 
will supply all that is necessary for literary purposes. '* A 
humour is a liquid or fluent part of the body comprehended 
in it, and is either born with us, of is adventitious and acquisHe." 
The first four primary humours are — "Blood, a hot, sweet, 
tempered, red humour, prepared in the meseraic veins, and made 
of the most temperate parts of the chylus (chyle) in the liver, 
whose office h is to nourish the whole body, to give it strength 
and colour, being dispersed through every part of it. And 
from it spirits are first begotten in the heart, which afterwards 
in the arteries are communicated to the other parts. Fitafc* 
or phlegm is a cold and moist humour, begotten of the colder 
parts of tie chylus (or white juice coming out of the meat 
digested in the stomach) in the liver. His office is to nourish 
and moisten the members of the body," &c. " Cboler is hot and 
dry, begotten of the hotter parts of the chylus, and gathered 
to the gall. It helps the natural heat and senses. Melancholy, 
cold and dry, thick, black and sour, begotten of the more feculent 
part of nourishment, and purged from the spleen, is a bridle 
to the other two hot humours, blood and choler, preserving them 
in the blood, and nourishing the bones." Mention must also 
be made of serum, and of " those excrementitious humours of 
the third concoction, sweat and tears." An exact balance 
of the four primary humours makes the justly constituted man, 
and allows for the undisturbed production of the " concoctions " 
— or processes of digestion and assimilation. Literature seized 
upon these terms and definitions. Sometimes it applied them 
gravely in the moral and intellectual sphere. Thus the Jesuit 
Bouhours, a French critic of the 17th century, in his EntreHens 
d'Arisle el fEugbte, says that in the formation of a bd esprit, 
"La bile donne le brillant et la penetration, la mebmcohe 
donne le bon sens et la solidite; le sang donne Tagxement et 



HUMOUR 



889 



U. delicatesse." It was, in fact, taken for granted that the 
character and intellect of men were produced by— were, so to 
speak, concoctions dependent on — the " humours." In the 
fallen state of mankind it rarely happens that an exact balance 
is maintained. One or other humour predominates, and thus 
we have the long-established doctrine of the existence of the 
sanguine, the phlegmatic, the choleric, or the melancholy 
Hmpcranuntx. Things being so, nothing was more natural 
than the passage of these terms of art into common speech, and 
their application in a metaphorical sense, when once they had 
been adopted by the literary class. The process is admirably 
described by Asper in the introduction to Ben Jonson's play— 
Eury Man out 0] his Humour. — 

M Why humour, as it is ' ens,* we thus define it, 

To be a quality of air or water; 

And in itself holds these two properties 

Moisture and fluxure: as, for demonstration 

Pour water on this floor. Twill wet and run. 

Likewise the air forced through a horn or trumpet 

Flows instantly away, and leaves behind 

A kind of dew; and hence we do conclude 

That whatsoe'er hath fluxure and humidity 

As wanting power to contain itself 

Is humour. So in every human body 

The cooler, melancholy, phlegm and blood 

By reason that they flow continually 

In some one part and arc not continent 

Receive the name of humours. Now thus far 

It may, by metaphor, apply itself 

Unto the general disposition; 

As when some one peculiar quality 

Doth so possess a man that it doth draw 

All his effects, his spirits and his powers, 

In their confluxton all to run one way,— 

This may be truly said to be a humour." 
A humour in this sense is a " ruling passion," and has' done 
excellent service to English authors of " comedies of humours," 
to the Spanish authors of comedias defiguron, and to the French 
followers of Moliere. Nor is the metaphor racked out of its 
fair proportions if we suppose that there may be a temporary, 
or even an " adventitious and acquisitc " " predominance of a 
Rumour," and that " deliveries of a man's self " to passing passion, 
or to imitation, are also " humours," though not primary, but 
only second or third concoctions.' By a natural extension, 
therefore, " humours " might come to mean oddities, tricks, 
practices, mere whims, and the aping of some model admired 
for the time being. " But," as Falstaff has told us, " it was 
always yet the trick of our English, if they have a good thing, 
to make it too common." The word " humour " was a good 
thing, but the Elizabethans certainly made it too common. 
It became a hack epithet of all work, to be used with no more 
discretion, though with less imbecile iteration, than the modern 
"awful" Shakespeare laughed at the folly, and pinned it 
for ever to the ridiculous company of Corporal Nym — " I like 
not the humour of lying. He hath wronged me in some humours. 
I should have borne the humoured letter to her... I love 
not the humour of bread and cheese; and there's the humour 
of it." The humour of Jonson was that he tried to clear the air 
of thistledown by stamping on it. Asper ends in denunciation:— 

' But that a rook by wearing a pied feather. 
The sable hat-band, or the three-piled ruff, » 
A yard of shoe tie, or the Switaer knot 
On his French gaiters, should affect a humour/} 
O! it is more than most ridiculous." 

The abuse of the word was the peculiar practice of England. 
The use of it was not confined wholly to English writers. The 
Spaniards of the 16th and 17th centuries knew humores in 
the same sense, and still employ the word as a name for caprices, 
whims and vapours. Humorada was, and is, the correct 
Spanish for & festive saying or writing of epigrammatic form. 
Martial's immortal reply to the critic who admired only dead 
poets— 

Ignoscas petimus Vacerra: tanti 
Non est, ut placeam tibi perire,— 
Is a model humorada. It would be a difficult and would 
certainty be a lengthy task to exhaust all the applications given 



to so elastic a word. We still continue to use it in widely different 
senses. " Good humour " or " bad humour " are simply good 
temper or bad temper. There is a slight archaic flavour about 
the phrases "grim humour," "the humour they were fn," in 
the sense of suspicious, or angry or careless mood, which were 
favourites with Carlyle, but though somewhat antiquated they 
are not affected, or very unusual. With the proviso that the 
exceptions must always be excepted, we may say that for a long 
time " humour " came to connote comic matter less refined than 
the matter of wit. It had about it a smack of the Boar's Head 
Tavern in Eastcheap, and of the unyoked " humour " of the 
society in which Prince Henry was content to imitate the sun — 
" Who doth permit the base contagious clouds 
To smother up his beauty from the world." 

The presence of a base contagious cloud is painfully felt in the 
so-called humorous literature of England till the 18th century. 
The reader who does not sometimes wonder whether humour in 
the mouths of English writers of that period did not stand for 
maniacal tricks, horse-play, and the foul names of foul things, 
material and moral, must be very determined to prove himself 
a whole-hearted admirer of the ancient literature. Addison, 
who did much to clean it of mere nastiness, gives an excellent 
example of the base use of the word in his day. In Number 371 
of the Spectator he introduces an example of the " sort of men 
called Whims and Humourists." It is the delight of this person 
to play practical jokes on his guests. He is proud when " he 
has packed together a set of oglers " who had " an unlucky cast 
in the eye," or has filled his table with stammerers. The humor* 
ist, in fact, was a mere practical joker, who was very properly 
answered by a challenge from a military gentleman of peppery 
temper. Indeed, the pump and a horse-whip would appear to 
have been the only effective forms of criticism on the prevalent 
humour and humours of the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries. But 
the pump and the horse-whip were themselves humours. Carlo 
Buff one in Jonson's play is put " out of his humour " by the 
counter humour of Signer Puntarvolo, who knocks him down 
and gags him with candle wax. The brutal pranks of Fanny 
Burney's Captain Mirvan, who belongs to the earlier part of 
the 18th century, were meant for humour, and were' accepted as 
such. Examples might easily be multiplied. A briefer and also 
a more convincing method of demonstration is to take the de- 
liberate judgment of a great authority. No writer of the 18th 
century possessed a finer sense of humour in the noble meaning 
than Goldsmith. What did he understand the word to mean? 
Not what he himself wrote when he created Dr Primrose. We 
have his express testimony in the 9th chapter of The Present 
State of Polite Learning. Goldsmith complains that " the critic, 
by demanding an impossibility from the comic poet, has, ' in 
effect, banished true comedy from the stage." This he has done 
by banning " low " subjects, and by proscribing " the comic or 
satirical muse from every walk but high life, which, though 
abounding in fools as well as the humbler station, is by no means 

so fruitful in abs'udity Absurdity is the poet's game, and 

good breeding is the nice concealment of absurdity. The truth 
is, the critic generally mistakes ' humour ' for ' wity which is a 
very different excellence; wit raises human nature above its 
level; humour acts a contrary part, and equally depresses it. 
To expect exalted humour is a contradition in terms. . . . The 
poet, therefore, must place the object he would have the subject 
of humour in a state of inferiority; in other words,the subject 
of humour must be low." 

That no doubt may remain in his reader's mind, Goldsmith 
gives an example of true humour. It is nothing more or less 
than the absurdity and incongruity obvious in a man who, though 
" wanting a nose," is extremely curious in the choice of his snuff* 
box. We applaud " the humour of it," for " we here see him 
guilty of an absurdity of which we imagine it impossible for 
ourselves to be guilty, and therefore applaud our own good sense 
on the comparison." 

Nothing could be mote true as an account of what the Eliza- 
bethans, the Restoration, the Queen Anne men, and the 18th 
century meant by "humour." Nothing could be more false 



890 



HUMOUR 



as an example of what we mean by the humour of Falstaff or 
of The Vicar of Wakefield. 

When we pass from Goldsmith to Hazlitt— one of the greatest 
names in English criticism — we find that " humour " has grown 
in meaning, without quite reaching its full development. In the 
introduction to his Lectures on the English Comic Writers he 
attempts a classification of the comic spirit into wit and humour. 
" Humour," he says, " is the describing the ludicrous as it is in 
itself; wit is the exposing it, by comparing or contrasting it 
with something else. Humour is, as it were, the growth of 
nature and accident; wit is the product of art and fancy. 
Humour, as it is shown in books, is an imitation of the natural 
or acquired absurdities of mankind, or of the ludicrous in accident , 
situation and character; wit is the illustrating and heightening 
the sense of that absurdity by some sudden and unexpected 
likeness or opposition of one thing to another, which sets off the 
quality we laugh at or despise in a stiU more contemptible or 
striking point of view." HazUtt's definition will, indeed, not 
stand analysis. The element of comparison is surely as necessary 
for humour as for wit. Yet his classification is valuable as 
illustrating the growth of the meaning of the word. Observe 
that Hazlitt has transferred to wit that power of pleasing as by a 
flattering sense of our own superiority which Goldsmith attri- 
buted to humour. He had not thought, and had not beard, 
that sympathy is necessary to complete humour. He cannot 
have thought it needful, for if he had he would hardly have said 
of the Arabian Nights that they are " an inexhaustible mine of 
comic humour and invention," " which from the manners of the 
East, which they describe, carry the principle of callous in- 
difference in the jest as far as it can go." He might, and probably 
would, have dismissed Goldsmith's illustration as "low" in 
every conceivable sense. He would not have added, as we should 
to-day, that humour does not lie in laughter, according to the 
definition of Hobbes, in a " sudden glory," in a guffaw of self- 
conceited triumph over the follies and deficiencies of others. 
If there is any place for humour in Goldsmith's sordid example, 
it must be made by pity, and shown by a deft introduction of the 
de te fabula dear to Thackeray, by a reminder that the world Is 
full of people, who, though wanting noses, are extremely curious 
in their choice of snuff-boxes, and that the more each of us thinks 
himself above the weakness the more likely he is to fall into it. 
t The critical value of Hazlitt's examination of the differences 
between wit and humour lies in this, that he ignores the doctrine 
that the quality of humour lies in the thing or the action and not 
in the mind of the observer. The examples quoted above, to 
which anjr one with a moderate share of reading in English 
literature could add with ease, show that humour was first 
held to lie in the trick, the whim, the act, or the event and dash 
of incidents. It might even be a mere flavour, as when men 
spoke of the sah humour of sea-sand. Even when it stood for 
the " general turn or temper of mind " it was a form of the ruling 
passion which inspires men's actions and words. It was used 
in that sense by Dccius when he spoke of the humour of 
Caesar, which is a liability to be led by one who can play on his 
weakness — 

" for he loves to hear • 
That unicorns may be betrayed with trees 
And bears with glasses, elephants with holes* 
Lions with toils, and men with flatterers; 
But when I tell him he hates flatterers 
He says be does; being then most flattered. n ' 

It is plain that this is not what Hazlitt meant, or we now mean, 
by the humour displayed in " describing the ludicrous as it is 
shown in itself." Nor did he, any more than we do, suppose 
with Goldsmith that a " low " quality of actions and persons 
is inseparable from humour. It had become for Hazlitt what 
Addison called cheerfulness, " a habit of the mind " as distin- 
guished from mirth, which is " an act." If in Addison's sentences 
the place of cheerfulness is taken by humour, and that of mirth 
by wit, we have a very fair description of the two. " I have 
always preferred cheerfulness to mirth. The latter I consider 
is an act, the former as a habit of the mind. l Mirth is short 



and transient, cheerfulness is fixed and permanent." Humour 
is the fixed and permanent appreciation of the ludicrous, of which 
wit may be the short and transient expression. 

If now we pass to an attempt to define " humour," the tempta- 
tion to take refuge in the use of an evasion employed by Dr 
Johnson is very strong. When Boswell asked him, " Then, Sir, 
what is poetry? " the doctor answered, " Why, Sir, it is much 
easier to say what it is not. We all know what light is, but it 
is not easy to tell what it is." But George Meredith has cone 
to our assistance in two passages of his Essay on Comedy mmi 
the uses of the Comic Spirit, " If you laugh all round him (to 
wit, the ridiculous person), tumble him, roll him about, deal 
him a smack, and drop a tear on him, own his likeness to you, 
and yours to your neighbour, spare him as little as you shun, 
pity him as much as you expose, it is spirit of Humour that is 
moving you. . . . The humourist of mean order is a refreshing 
laugher, giving tone to the feelings, and sometimes allowing 
the feelings to be too much for him. But the humourist, if 
high, has an embrace of contrasts beyond the scope of the comic 
poet." The third sentence is required to complete the first. 
The tumbling and rolling, the smacks and the exposure, may 
be out of place where there is humour of the most humorous 
quality. Who could associate them with Sir Walter Scott's 
characters of Bradwardine or Monkbarns ? Bradwardine, one 
feels, would have stopped them as he did the ill-timed jests 0/ 
Sir Hew Halbert, " who was so unthinking as to deride my 
family name." Monkbarns was a man of peace who loved the 
company of Sir Priest better than that of Sir Knight. But 
there is that in him which cows mere ridicule, be it ever so genial 
He cared not who knew so much of his valour, and by that 
very avowal of his preference took his position sturdily in the 
face of the world. But Meredith has given its due prominence 
to the quality which, for us, distinguishes humour from pure 
wit and the harder forms of jocularity. It is the sympathy, 
the appreciation, the love, which include the follies of Doa 
Quixote, the prosaic absurdities of Sancho Panza, the oddities 
of Bradwardine, Dr Primrose or Monkbarns, and the jovial 
animalism of Falstaff, in " an embrace of contrasts beyond the 
scope of the comic poets." 

It is needless to insist that humour of this order is far older than 
the very modern application of the name. It is assuredly 
present in Horace. Chaucer, who knew the word only as meaning 
" liquid," has left a masterpiece of humour in his prologue to 
the Canterbury Pilgrims. We look for the finest examples in 
Shakespeare. And if it is old, it is also more universal than is 
always allowed. National, or at least racial, partiality, has 
led to the unfortunate judgment that humour is a virtue of the 
northern peoples. Yet Rabelais came from Tournine, and if 
the creator of Panurge has not humour, who has? The Italians 
may say that umorc in the English sense is unknown to them. 
They mean the word, not the thing, for it is in Ariosto. To 
claim the quality for Cervantes would indeed be to push at an 
open door. The humour of the Germans has been rarely indeed 
of so high an order as his. It has been found wherever humanity 
has been combined with a keen appreciation of the ludicrous. 
The appreciation may exist without the humanity. When 
Rivarol met the Chevalier Florian with a manuscript sticking 
out of his pocket, and said, " How rash you are? if you were not 
known you would be robbed," he was making use of the comic 
spirit, but he was not humorous. When Rivarol himself, a man 
of dubious claim to nobility, was holding forth on the rights of 
the nobles, and calling them " our rights," one of the company 
smiled. " Do you find anything singular in what I say ? ° 
asked he. "It is the plural which I find singular," was the 
answer. There is certainly something humorous in the neat 
overthrow of an insolent wit by a rival insolence, but the humour 
is in the spectator, not in the answer. The spirit of humour 
as described by George Meredith cannot be so briefly shown as 
in the rapid flash of the Frenchmen's wit. It lingers and ex- 
patiates, as in Dr Johnson's appreciation of Bet Flint. " Oh, 
a fine character, Madam 1 She was habitually a shrt and a 
drunkard, arid occasionally a thief and a harlot. And for heaven's 



HUMPBACK WHALE— HUMPHREYS 



891 



sake how came yon to know* her? Why, Madam, she figured 
in the literary world tool Bet Flint wrote her own life, and 
caJJed herscli Cassandra, and it was in verse; it began.*-*- - 

4 When nature first ordained my birth 
A diminutive 1 was born on earth 
And then I came from a dark abode , 
Into a gay and gaudy world.' 
" So Bet brought her verses to me to correct; but I gave her 
half-a-crown, and she liked it as well. Bet had a fine spirit; 
she advertised for a husband, but she had no success, for she 
told me no man aspired to her. Then she hired very handsome 
lodgings and a footboy, and she got a harpsichord, but Bet 
could not play; however, she put herself in fine attitudes and 
drummed. And pray what became of her, Sir? Why, Madam, 
she stole a quilt from the man of the house, and he had her 
taken up; but Bet Flint had a spirit not to be subdued, so when 
she found herself obliged to go to gaol, she ordered a sedan 
chair, and bid her footboy walk before her. However, the 
footboy proved refractory, for he was ashamed, though his 
mistress was not. And did she ever get out of gaol, Sir? Yes, 
Madam, when she came to her trial, the judge acquitted her. 
' So now,' she said to me, ' the quilt is my own, and now I'll 
make a petticoat of it.' Ohl I loved Bet Flint." 

The subject is low enough to please Goldsmith. The humour 
may be of that mean order which has only a refreshing laugh, 
and gives tone to the feelings, but it is the pure spirit of humour. 

We need not labour to demonstrate that a kindly appreciation 
of the ludicrous may find expression in art as well as in literature. 
But humour in art tends so inevitably to become caricature, 
which can be genial as well as ferocious, that the reader must 
be referred to the article on Caricature for an account of its 
manifestations in that field. (D. H.) 

HUMPBACK WHALE (Megaptera longimana or M. bdops), the 
representative of a genus of whalebone whales distinguished 
by the great length of the flippers. This whale (or a closely 




Humpback Whale (Megaptera longimana or bdops). 

allied species) is found in nearly all seas; and when, full-grown 
may reach from 45 ft. to 50 ft. in length, the flippers which are 
indented along their edges measuring from 10 ft. to 12 ft. or 
mere. The general colour is black, but there are often white 
.markings on the under surface; and the flippers may be entirely 
.white, or parti-coloured like the body. Deep longitudinal 
furrows, folds or plaits occur on the throat and chest. It is 
said that the popular name refers to a prominence on which 
the back fin is set; but this " hump " varies greatly in size in 
different individuals. The humpback is a coast-whale, irregular 
in its movements, sometimes found in "schools," at others 
singly. The whalebone is short, broad and coarse; but the 
yield of oil from a single whale has been as much as 75 barrels. 
A few examples of this whale have been taken in Scotland and 
the north of England (see Cetacea). 

HUMPERDINCK, ENGELBERT (1854- ), German musical 
composer, was born at Siegburg, in the Rhine Province, and 
studied under F. HiUer at Cologne, and F. Lachner and J. 
Kheinberger at Munich. In 1870, by means of a scholarship, 
he went to Italy, where he met Wagner at Naples; and on the 
latter's invitation he went to Bayreuth and helped to produce 
Parsifal there next year. He travelled for the next few years 
in Italy and Spain but in 1800 became a professor at Frankfort, 
where he remained till 1896. In 1900 he became the head of a 
school in Berlin. His fame as a composer was made by his 
charming children's opera H Unset und Grttcl in 189.3, founded 
very largely (like his later operas) on folk-tunes; but his works 



also include other forms of. music, in all of which his mastery 
of technique is apparent. 

HUMPHREY (or Humfrey), LAWRENCE (1527M590), 
president of Magdalen CoUege, Oxford, and dean successively 
of Gloucester and Winchester, was born at Newport PagneL 
He was elected demy of Magdalen College in 1546 and fellow 
in 1 548. He graduated B.A. in 1 549, M. A. in x 552, and B.D. and 
D.D. in x 562. He was noted as one of the most promising pupils 
of Peter Martyr, and on Mary's accession obtained leave from 
his college to travel abroad. He lived at Basel, Zurich, Frank- 
fort and Geneva, making the acquaintance of the leading 
Swiss divines, whose ecclesiastical views he adopted. His leave 
of absence having expired in 1556, be ceased to be fellow of 
Magdalen. He returned to England at Elizabeth's accession, 
was appointed regius professor of divinity at Oxford in 1560, 
and was recommended by Archbishop Parker and others for 
election as president of Magdalen. The fellows refused at 
first to elect so pronounced a reformer, but they yielded in 1561, 
and Humphrey gradually converted the college into a stronghold 
of Puritanism. In 1564 he and his friend Thomas Sampson, 
dean of Christ Church, were called before Parker for refusing to 
wear the prescribed ecclesiastical vestments; and a prolonged 
controversy broke out, in which Bullinger and other foreign 
theologians took part as well as most of the leading divines in 
England. In spite of Bullinger's advice, Humphrey refused 
to conform; and Parker wished to deprive him as well as 
Sampson. But the presidency of Magdalen was elective and 
the visitor of the college was not Parker but the bishop of 
Winchester^ and Humphrey escaped with temporary retirement. 
Parker, in fact, was not supported by the council; in 1566 
Humphrey was selected to preach at St Paul's Cross, and was 
allowed to do so without the vestments. In the same year he 
took a prominent part in the ceremonies connected with Eliza- 
beth's visit to Oxford. On this occasion he wore his doctor's 
gown and habit, which the queen told him " became him very 
well"; and his resistance now began to weaken. He 
yielded on the point before 1571 when he was made 
dean of Gloucester. In 1578 he was one of the divines 
selected to attend a diet at Schmalkalde to discuss the 
project of a theological accommodation between the 
Lutheran and Reformed churches; and in 1580 he 
was made dean of Winchester. In 1585 he was per- 
suaded by his bishop, Cooper, to restore the use of 
surplices in Magdalen College chapel. He died on the 
xst of February 1500 and was buried in the college 
chapel, where there is a mural monument to his memory; a 
portrait is in Magdalen College school. 



Bi 
to 
ag 
t* 

At 
In 

8 

HUMPHREYS, ANDREW ATKINSON (1810-1883), American 
soldier and engineer, was born at Philadelphia on the 2nd 
of November 1810. He was the son of Samuel Humphreys 
(1778-1846), chief constructor U.S.N., and grandson of Joshua 
Humphreys (1751-1838), the designer of the "Constitution" 
and other famous frigates of the war of 181 2, sometimes known 
as l ha " father of the American navy." Graduating from West 
Point in 183 1, he served with the 2nd Artillery in the Florida 
war in 1835. He resigned soon afterwards and devoted himself 
to civil engineering. In 1838 he returned to the army for survey 
duties, and from 1842 to 1849 was assistant in charge of the Coast 
Survey Office. Later he did similar work in the valley of the 
Mississippi, and, with Lieut. H. L. Abbott, produced in 1861 
a valuable Report on Ike Physics and Hydraulics of the Mississippi 
River. In connexion with this work he visited Europe in 2851. 



892 



HUMPHRY— HU-NAN 



in the earlier part of the Civil War Humphreys was employed 
as a topographical engineer with the Army of the Potomac, 
and rendered conspicuous services in the Seven Days' Battles. 
It is stated that he selected the famous position of Malvern Hill, 
before which Lee's army was defeated. Soon after this he was 
assigned to command a division of the V. corps, and at the battle 
of Fredericksburg he distinguished himself greatly in the last 
attack of Marye's heights. General Burnside recommended 
him for promotion to the rank of major-general U.S.V., which 
was not however awarded to Humphreys until after Gettysburg. 
He took part in the battle of Cbancellorsville, and at Gettysburg 
commanded a division of the III. corps under Sickles. Upon 
Humphreys' division fell the brunt of Lee's attack on the second 
day, by which in the end the III. corps was dislodged from its 
advanced position. His handling of his division in this struggle 
excited great attention, and was compared to Sheridan's work 
at Stone river. A few days later he became chief of staff to 
General Meade, and this position he held throughout the Wilder- 
ness campaign. Towards the end of the war General Humphreys 
succeeded General Hancock in command of the famous II. corps. 
The short campaign of 1865, which terminated in Lee's surrender, 
afforded him a greater opportunity of showing his capacity for 
leadership. His corps played a conspicuous part in the final 
operations around Petersburg, and the credit of the vigorous 
and relentless pursuit of Lee's array may be claimed hardly 
less for Humphreys than for Sheridan. After the war, now 
brevet major-general, he returned to regular engineer duty as 
chief engineer of the U.S. army, and retired in 1879. He was a 
member of the American Philosophical Society (1857) and of 
the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1863), and received 
the degree of LL.D. from Harvard University in 1868. He died 
at Washington on the 27th of December 1883. Amongst his 
works may be mentioned From Gettysburg to the Rapidan (1882) 
and The Virginia Campaigns of 1864-1865 (1882). 

See Wilson, Critical Sketches of some Commanders (Boston, 1895). 

HUMPHRY, 0ZIA8 (1742-1810), English miniature painter, 
was born at Honiton and educated at the Grammar School of 
that town. Attracted by the gallery of casts opened by the 
duke of Richmond, Humphry came to London and studied at 
Shipley's school; and later he left for Bath, where he lodged 
with Linley and became a great friend of his beautiful daughter, 
afterwards Mrs Sheridan. In 1766 he was in London warmly 
encouraged by Sir Joshua Reynolds, who was always interested 
in Devonshire painters. He was a great friend of Romney, 
with whom in 1773 he went to Italy, staying, on his way to Dover, 
at Knole, where the duke of Dorset gave him many commissions. 
In 1785 he went to India, visiting the native courts, painting 
a large number of miniatures, and making many beautiful 
sketches. His sight failed him in x 797, and he died in Hampstead 
in 1 8 10. The bulk of his possessions came into the hands of 
his natural son, William Upcott, the book collector. From 
him the British Museum acquired a large number of papers 
relating to Humphry. He was Opic's first master, and is alluded 
to in some lines by Hayley. His miniatures are exquisite in 
detail and delightful in colouring. Many of the finest are in 
the collection of Mr J. Pierpont Morgan. 

Sec The History of Portrait Miniatures, by G. C. Williamson, vol. it 
(London, 1904). (G. C. W.) 

HUHUS (a Latin word meaning the ground), a product of 
decomposing organic matter. It is especially present in peat 
bogs, and also occurs in surface soils, to which it imparts a brown 
or black colour. It is one of the most important soil-constituents 
from the agricultural point of view; it is the chief source of 
nitrogenous food for plants, and modifies the properties of the 
soil by increasing its water-holding capacity and diminishing 
its tenacity. Little is known with regard to its chemical com 
position. By treating with a dilute acid to remove the bases 
present, and then acting On the residue with ammonia, a solution 
is obtained from which a mineral acid precipitates humic acid; 
the residue from the ammonia extraction is termed humin. 
Both the humic acid and humin are mixtures, and several 
constituents have been separated; ulmic acid and ulmin, 



In addition to humic acid and humin, an perhaps tfce bat 
characterized. 

HUNALD, Duke or Aquitains, succeeded his father Odo, or 
Eudes, in 735. He refused to recognize the high authority of 
the Frankish mayor of the palace, Charles Martel, whereupon 
Charles marched south of the Loire, seized Bordeaux and Blaye, 
but eventually allowed Hunald to retain Aquitaine on conditio! 
that he should promise fidelity. From 736 to 741 the relatioas 
between Charles and Hunald seem to have remained amicable. 
But at Charles's death in 741 Hunald declared war against the 
Franks, crossed the Loire and burned Chartres. Menaced by 
Pippin and Carloman, Hunald begged for peace In 74s and 
retired to a monastery, probably on the Isle of Re. We find 
him later in Italy, where he allied himself with the Lombards 
and was stoned to death. He had left the duchy of Aquitaine 
to Waifer, who was probably his son, and who struggled for 
eight years in defending his independence against King Pippin. 
At the death of Pippin and at the beginning of the reign of 
Charlemagne, there was a last rising of the Aquitanians. This 
revolt was directed by a certain Hunald, and was repressed In 
76S by Charlemagne and his brother Carloman. Hunald sought 
refuge with the duke of the Gascons, Lupus, who handed him 
over to his enemies. In spite of the opinion of certain historians, 
this Hunald seems to have been a different person from the old 
duke of Aquitaine. 

See j^Vataette, Hisioire geniraleje Languedoe, vol. i <ed. of 1871 



sea.); Th. Breysig, H. Hahiv L. Oelsner, S. Abel and 
Jahrbucher des deutschen Reichs. (C Pf.) 

HU-NAN, a central province of China, bounded N. by Hu-peh, 
E. by Kiang-si, S. by Kwang-si and Kwong-tung, and W. by 
Kwei-chow and Szech'uen. It occupies an area of 84,000 sq. m., 
and its population is estimated at 22,000,000. The provincial 
capital is Chang-sha Fu, in addition to which it has eight pre- 
fectural cities. It is essentially a province of hills, the only 
considerable plain being that around the Tung-t'ing lake, but 
this extends little beyond the area which in summer forms part 
of the lake. To the north of Heng-chow Fu detached groups 
of higher mountains than are found in the southern portion of 
the province are met with. Among these is the Heng-shan, 
one of the Wu-yo or five sacred mountains of China, upon which 
the celebrated tablet of Yu was placed. The principal rivers of 
the province are: (1) The Siang-kiang, which takes its rise in 
the Nan-shan, and empties into the Tung-t'ing lake; it is 
navigable for a great distance from its mouth, and the area of 
its basin is 39,000 sq. m.; (2) the Tszc-kiang, the basin of which 
covers an area of 10,000 sq. m., and which is full of rapids and 
navigable only for the smallest boats; (3) the Yuen-kiang, a 
large river, which has some of its head-waters in the province 
of Kwei-chow, and empties into the Tung-t'ing lake in the 
neighbourhood of Chang-te Fu; its basin has an area of 35,000 
aq. m., 22,500 of which are in the province of Hu-nan and 12,500 
in that of Kwei-chow; its navigation is dangerous, and only 
small boats are able to pass beyond Hang-kia, a mart about 
180 m. above Chang-te" Fu; and (4) the Ling-kiang, which 
flows from the tea district of Ho-ffing Chow to the Tung-ting 
lake. Its basin covers an area of about 8000 sq. m., and it 
is navigable only in Its lowest portion. The principal places 
of commerce are: (1) Siang-t'an, on the Siang-kiang, said to 
contain 1,000,000 inhabitants, and to extend 3 m. long by nearly 
2 m. deep; (2) Chang-sha Fu, the provincial capital which stands 
on the same river 60 m. above the treaty port of Yo-chow, and 
between which mart and Han-kow steamers of 500 tons burden 
run; and (3) Changed Fu, on the Yuen-kiang. The products 
of the province are tea (the best quality of which is grown at 
Gan-hwa and the greatest quantity at Ping-kiang), hemp, 
cotton, rice, paper, tobacco, tea-oil and coal. The whole of 
the south-eastern portion of the province is one vast coal-field, 
extending over an area of 21,700 sq. m. This area is divided 
into nearly two equal parts— one, the Lei river coal-fields, yield- 
ing anthracite, and the other the Siang river coal-fields, yielding 
bituminous coal. The people have been, as a rule, more anti- 
foreign in their ideas, and more generally prosperous than the 



HUNDRED— HUNDRED YEARS' WAR 



*93 



inhabitants of the other provinces. Baron votf Richthofen 
noticed with surprise the number of fine country seats, owned 
by rich men who had retired from business, scattered over the 
rural districts. Almost all the traffic is conveyed through 
Hunan by water-ways, which lead northward to Han-kow on 
the Yangtsze Kiang, and Fan-cbeng on the Han River, eastward 
to Fu-kien, southward to Kwang-tung and Kwang-si and west- 
ward to Sae-ch'uen. One of the leading features of the province 
is the Tung-t'ing lake. Yo Chow, the treaty port of the province 
stands at the outlet of the river Siang into this lake. 

HUNDRED, the English name of the cardinal number equal 
to ten times ten. The O. Eng. hundred is represented in other 
Teutonic languages; cf. Dutch honderd, Ger. H under t, Dan. kun- 
drede, &c. It is properly a compound, kund-red, the suffix meaning 
" reckoning "; the first part hund is the original Teutonic word 
for too which became obsolete in English in the 13th century. 
It represents the Indo-European form hanla, seen in Cr. Uarar, 
Lat. centum, Sans, calano; kanta stands for dakanta and meant 
the tenth ten, and is therefore connected with Gr. 6i** t Lat 
decent and Eng. " ten," the Teutonic form of Indo-European dakan 
being tehart, cf. Ger. zehn. In England the term " hundred " 
is particularly applied to an ancient territorial division inter- 
mediate between the villa and the county. Such subordinate 
districts were also known in different parts of the country by 
other names, e.g. wapentakes in Yorkshire, Line Inshire, Notting- 
hamshire, Derbyshire, Rutland and Leicestershire; wards in 
Northumberland, Durham and Cumberland; while some of the 
hundreds of Cornwall were formerly called skires. In some 
parts of England a further intermediate division is to be found 
between the hundred and the county. Thus we have the tritking, 
or as it is now called the riding, in Yorkshire, the lathe in Kent, 
and the rapt in Sussex. In Lincolnshire the arrangement is 
peculiar. The whole county was divided into the three sub- 
counties of Lindsey, Kesteven and Holland; and of these 
Lindsey was again divided into three ridings. The division into 
hundreds is generally ascribed to the creative genius of Alfred, 
who, according to William of Malmesbury, divided his kingdom 
into counties, the counties into hundreds, and the hundreds into 
tithings or vUlae, It is probable, however, that he merely 
rearranged existing administrative districts in that part of 
England which was subject to his rule. The significance of the 
name hundred is a matter of some difficulty. The old theory, 
and perhaps the best, is that the hundred denoted first a 
group of a hundred families, and then the* district which 
these families occupied. This is not inconsistent with toother 
view, according to which the hundred was originally a term 
of measurement denoting a hundred hides of land, lor there 
is good reason for considering that the hide was originally as 
much land as supported one family. It is important to notice 
that in the document compiled before the Norman Conquest, 
and now known as the County Hidage, the number of hides in 
aO the counties are multiples of a hundred, and that in many 
cases the multiples agree with the number of hundreds ascribed 
to a county in Domesday Book. The hundreds of Devon, 
however, seem never to have contained a hundred hides; but 
various multiples of five, such as twenty, forty and sixty. Here, 
and in some of the other western counties, the hundreds are* 
geographical divisions, to which a varying number of hide* was 
attributed for fiscal purposes. 

In the middle ages the hundred was chiefly important for' 
its court of justice; and the word kundredum was as often 
applied to the court as to the district over which the court had 
jurisdiction. According to the compilation known as Leges 
Henrici, written shortly before 11x8, it was held twelve times 
a year, but an ordinance of 1234, after stating that it had been 
held fortnightly in the reign of Henry II., declares that its 
ordinary sessions were henceforth to take place every three 
weeks {Dunstable Annals, 139). Existing court rolls show that 
from the 13th to the 15th centuries it usually sat seventeen times 
a year, in some hundreds in a fixed place, in others in various 
places, but in no regular course of rotation. Twice a year a 
specially full court was held* to which various names such as 



kundredum legale or hundrednm magnum were applied. This 
was the sheriffs' turn held after Easter and Michaelmas in 
accordance with the Magna Carta of 121 7. The chief object 
of these sessions was to see that all who ought to be were in the 
frank-pledge, and that the articles of the view of frank-pledge 
had been properly observed during the preceding half-year. 
Each township of the hundred was represented by a varying 
number of suitors who were bound to attend at these half-yearly 
sessions without individual summons. If the proper number 
failed to appear the whole township was amerced, the entry on 
the rolls being frequently of the form " Villata da A. est in 
mistricordia quia non venil pUnarie." All the seventeen courts, 
including the two fuU courts, had jurisdiction in trespass covenant 
and debt of less than forty shillings, and in these civil cases such 
of the freeholders of the county as were present were judges. 
But the sheriff or the lord of the hundred was the sole judge 
in the criminal business transacted at the full courts. A hundred 
court, especially In the west of England, was often appurtenant 
to the chief manor in the hundred, and passed with a grant of 
the manor without being expressly mentioned. In the 13th 
century a large number of hundreds bad come into private 
hands by royal grant, and in Devonshire there was scarcely a 
Hundred which still belonged to the king. In private hundreds 
the lord's steward took the place of the king's sheriff. 

Owing to the great fall in the value of money the hundred 
court began to decay rapidly under the Tudor sovereigns. They 
were for the most part extinguished by a section In the County 
Courts Act 1867, which enacts that no action which can be 
brought in a county court shall thenceforth be brought in a 
hundred or other inferior court not being a court of record. 
Until lately the most important of the surviving duties of the 
hundred was its liability to make good damages occasioned by 
rioters. This liability was removed by the Riot (Damages) 
Act x886, which threw the liability on the police rate. 

See Pollock and Mattland, History of English Law; F. W. Maitland. 



HUNDRED DAYS (Fr. Cent Jours), the name commonly given 
to the period between the 20th of March 1815, the date on which 
Napoleon arrived in Paris after his return from Elba, and the 
28th of June 181 5, the date of the restoration of Louis XVIII. 
The phrase Cent Jours was first used by the prefect of Paris, the 
comte de Chabrol, in his speech welcoming the king. See 
Napoleon, and Frakcx: History. 

HUNDRED YEARS' WAR. This name is given to the 
protracted conflict between France and England from 1337 to 
1453. which continued through the reigns of the French kings 
Philip VI., John II., Charles V., Charles VL, Charles VII., and 
of the English kings Edward IIL, Richard II., Henry IV., 
Henry V. and Henry VI. The principal causes of the war, 
which broke out in Guienne In 1337, were the disputes arising in 
connexion with the French possessions of the English kings, 
in respect to which they were vassals of the kings of France; the 
pretensions of Edward III. to the French throne after the 
accession of Philip VI.; Philip's intervention in the affairs of 
Flanders and Scotland; and, finally, the machinations of Robert 
of Artois. 

During Philip Vl.'a reign fortune favoured the English. 
The French fleet was destroyed at Sluys on the 14th of June 
1340. After the siege of Tournai a truce was arranged on the 
25th of September 1340; but the next year the armies of England 
and France were again at war in Brittany on account of the 
rival pretensions of Charles of Blois and John of Mont fort to 
the succession of that duchy. In 1346, while the French were 
trying to invade Guienne. Edward III. landed in Normandy, 
ravaged that province, part of the tie de France and Picardy, 
defeated the French army at Crecy on the s6th of August rj46, 
and besieged Calais, which surrendered on the 3rd of August 
1347. Hostilities were suspended for some years after this, 
in consequence of the truce of Calais concluded on the 28th 
of September 1347.* 



•8g + 



HUNGARY 



The principal feats of arms which mark the first years of 
John the Good's reign were the taking of St Jean d'Angely by 
the French in 1351, the defeat of the English near St Omer in 
1352, and the English victory near Guinea in the same year. 
In 1355 Edward HI. invaded Artois while the Black Prince was 
pillaging Languedoc. In 1356 the battle of Poitiers (September 
10), in which John was taken prisoner, was the signal for conflicts 
in Paris between Stephen Marcel and the dauphin, and for the 
outbreak of the Jacquerie. The treaty of Brctigny, concluded 
on the 8tb of May 1360, procured France several years' repose. 

Under Charles V. hostilities at first obtained only between 
French, Anglo-Navarrais (Du Guesclin's victory at Cocherel, 
May 16, 1364) and Bretons. In 1369, on the pretext that 
Edward III. had failed to observe the terms of the treaty of 
Brctigny, the king of France declared war against him. Du Gues- 
clin, having been appointed Constable, defeated the English at 
Pontvallain in 1370, at Chiie" in 1373, and drove them from their 
possessions between the Loire and the Gironde, while the duke 
of Anjou retook part of Guienne. Edward III. thereupon 
concluded the truce of Bruges (June 27, 1375), which was pro- 
longed until the 24th of June 1377. Upon the death of Edward 
III. (June 21, 1377) Charles V. recommenced war in Artois and 
. Guienne and against Charles the Bad, but failed in his attempt 
to reunite Brittany and France. Du Guesclin, who had refused 
to march against his compatriots, died on the 13th of July 1380, 
and Charles V. on the x6th of the following September. 

In the beginning of Charles VI.'s reign the struggle between 
the two countries seemed to slacken. An attempt at recon- 
ciliation even took place on the marriage of Richard II. with 
Isabella of France, daughter of Charles VI. (September 26, 1306). 
But Richard, having been dethroned by Henry of Lancaster 
(Henry IV.), hostilities were resumed, Henry profiting little by 
the internal discords of France. In 1415 his son, Henry V., 
landed in Normandy on the expiry of the truce of the 25th of 
September 1413, which had been extended in 1414 and 141 5. 
He won the victory of Agincourt (October 25, I4i$)f and then 
seized Caen and part of Normandy, while France was exhausting 
herself in the feuds of Armagnacs and Burgundians. By the 
treaty of Troyes (May 21, 141 5) he obtained the hand of Catherine, 
Charles VI.'s daughter, with the titles of regent and heir to the 
kingdom of France. Having taken Meaux on the 2nd of May 
1420. and made his entry into Paris on the 30th of May, he died 
on the 31st of August in the Bois de Vincennes, leaving the throne 
to his son, Henry VI., with the duke of Bedford as regent in France. 
Charles VI. died shortly afterwards, on the 21st of October. 

His son, who styled himself Charles VIL, suffered a series of 
defeats in the beginning of his reign: Cravant on the Yonne 
(1423), Verneuil (1424), St James de Beuvron (1426) and 
Rouvray (1429). Orleans, the last bulwark of royalty, had been 
besieged since the 12th of October 1426, and was on the point 
of surrender when Joan of Arc appeared. She saved Orleans 
(May 8, 1420), defeated the English at Patay on the 1 6th of June, 
had Charles VII. crowned at Reims on the 17th of July, was 
taken at Compiegne on the 24th of May 1430, and was burned 
at Rouen on the 30th of May 1431 (see Joan of Arc). From this 
time on the English lost ground steadily, and the treaty of Arras 
(March 20, 1435), by which good relations were established 
between Charles VII. and Philip the Good, duke of Burgundy, 
dealt them a final blow. Normandy rose against them, while the 
constable De Richemont 1 drove them from Paris (1436) and 
retook Nemours, Montereau (1437) and Meaux (1439)* The 
quickly repressed revolt of the Praguerie made no break in 
Charles VII.'s successes. In 1442 he relieved successively Saint 
Sever, Da x, Martaandc, La Rcole, and irt 1444 Henry VI. had 
to conclude the truce of Tours. In 1448 the English were driven 
from Mans; and in 1449 , while Richemont was capturing 
Cotentin and Fougercs, Dunois conquered Lower Normandy 
and Charles VII. entered Rouen. The defeat of Sir Thomas 
Kyriel, one of Bedford's veteran captains, at Formigny in 1450, 
and the taking of Cherbourg, completed the conquest of the 

1 Arthur, carl of Richmond, afterwards Arthur III., duke of 
Brittany. 



province. During this tune Dunois fn Guienne was takis* 
Bordeaux and Bayonne. Guienne revolted against France, 
whereupon Talbot returned there with an army of 5000 men, but 
was vanquished and killed at Castillon on the 17th of July 145J- 
Bordeaux capitulated on the 9th of. October, and the Hundred 
Years' War was terminated by the expulsion of the Fjigtkh. 
who were by this time so fully occupied with the Wars of the 
Roses as to be unable to take the offensive against France anew. 

AuTitoarrrBS. — The chronicles of Jean le Bd, Adam Murimuth. 
Robert of Avesbury, Froissart and " Le Rcligicux dc Saint Deni^ 
■Sec Simoon Luce, Hist, de Bertrand du Guesclin (3rd ed-. Pairs, 
1896); G. du Fresne de Bcaucourt, Hist, de Charles VII <6 vols^ 
Paris. 1881-1891); F. J. Snell, articles in the United Scrvke 
Magazine (1906-1907). (J- V. # ) 

HUNGARY (Hungarian Magyanrsz&g), a country in the 
south-eastern portion of central Europe, bounded E- by Austria 
(Bukovina) and Rumania; S. by Rumania, Servta, Bosnia and 
Austria (Dalmatia); W. by Austria (Istria, Carniola, Stvria 
and Lower Austria); and N. by Austria (Moravia, Silesia and 
Galicia). It has an area of 125402 sq. rn., being thus about 
4000 sq. m. larger than Great Britain and Ireland. 

I. Geocraphy and Statistics 

The kingdom of Hungary (Magyarbiradolom) is one of the 
two states which constitute the monarchy of Austria-Hungary 
(q.v.), and occupies 51-8% of the total area of the monarchy. 
Hungary, unlike Austria, presents a remarkable geographical 
unity. It is almost exclusively continental, having only a short 
extent of seaboard on the Adriatic (a little less than too nv). 
Its land-frontiers are for the most part well defined by natural 
boundaries: on the N.W., N., E. and S.E. the Carpathian 
mountains; on the S. the Danube, Save and Unna. On the 
W. they are not so clearly marked, being formed partly by low 
ranges of mountains and partly by the rivers March and Leitha. 
From the last-mentioned river are derived the terms Cislcithanu 
and Translcithania, applied to Austria and Hungary respectively. 

General Divisiatu-^-The kingdom of Hungary in its widest 
extent, or the " Realm of the Crown of St Stephen/' comprises 
Hungary proper (Magyarorszdg), with which is included the 
former grand principality of Transylvania, and the province 
of Croatia-Slavonia. This province enjoys to a large extent 
autonomy, granted by the so-called compromise of 1868. The 
town and district of Fiume, though united with Hungary proper 
in respect of administration, possess a larger measure of 
autonomy than the other cities endowed with municipal rights. 
Of the total area of the kingdom Hungary proper has 106,082 
sq. m. and Croatia-Slavonia 16,420 sq. m. In the present 
article the kingdom is treated mainly as a whole, especially 
as regards statistics. In some respects Hungary proper has 
been particularly dealt with, while special information regard- 
ing the other regions will be found under Ckoatxa-Slavoxu, 
Transylvania and Fiume 

Mountains. — Orographically Hungary is composed of an e x t en si ve 
central plain surrounded by high mountains. These mountains 
belong to the Carpathians and the Alps, which arc separated by the 
valley of the Danube. But by far the greater portion of the Hun- 
garian highlands belongs to the Carpathian mountains, which begin, 
to the north, on the left bank of the Danube at Devcny near Press- 
burg (Pozsony), run in a north-easterly and easterly direction, 
sway t round south-eastward and then westward in a vast irregular 
semicircle, and end near Orsova at the Iron Gates of the Danube, 
where they meet the Balkan mountains. The greatest elevations 
are in the Tfitra mountains of the north of Hungary proper, in the 
cast and south of Transylvania (the Transylvanian Alps) and in 
the eastern portion of the Banat. The highest peak, the Gerlsdorf 
or Spitze or Gerlachfalva, situated in trie Tatra group, has an 
altitude of 8700 ft. The nortion of Hungary situated on the right 
bank Of the Danube is filled by the Alpine system, namely, the 
eastern outlying groups of the Alps. These groups are the Lett ha 
mountains, the Styrian highlands, the Lower Hungarian highlands, 
which are a continuation of the former, and the Bakony Forest. 
The Bakony Forest, which lies entirely within Hungarian territory, 
extends to the Danube in the neighbourhood of Budapest, the hfehest 
peak being Kdroshegy (2320 ft.). The south-western portion of this 
range is specially called Bakony Forest, while Che ramifications to 
the north-east are known as the Vertes group (157S ft.), and the 
Pilis group (2476 ft.). The Lower Hungarian highlands extend 
between the Danube, the Mur, and Lake Balaton, and attain in the 



GEOGRAPHY AND STATISTICS! 



Meaek hil 

province c 
andistrat 

Plains. - 
the smaflc 
" Preasbur 
to the west 
the " Pest 
largest pta 
average el< 
Basin ext( 
Hungary, 
tributaries 
covered w 
presents in 
aspect of 1 
Fata Morg* 

Caverns. 
Aggtclck ( 
the largest 
have been 
also yielde 
Demenyfal 
Banat and 
many inte 
are the iuI 
to the sou 
of Csetate 
Hunyad a 

Rivers.— 
rivers and 
districts sh 
e.g., is poo 
towards th 
but few wa 
in the wh 
greatest p 
arenaceous 
most part 
of the kin 
configurati 
actenstic fi 
of its riven 
the Waag 
direction o 
country, ai 
Danube. ' 
the Transy 
Another c 
navigable 
almost cor 
to the din 
external c 
foreign coi 
towards Ai 
Sea. All l 
the execpti 
Dunajec fl< 
Adriatic, 
called the 
course of « 
Iron Gate, 
sea- level, a 
the counrr; 
SchOtt, ca 
with an an 
island; the 
tributaries 
the largest 
and Save, 
(the princi; 
and Cserns 
about 88« 
of the navi 
Danube is 
in Hungar 
the danger 
the Danub 
and the & 
Danube, ai 
rendering t 
the work a! 
the erectioi 
and of rec 
solved. 

Canals. - 
constructec 
the rivers f i 

The most i... r - . 

and Bcxdan, above Zombor 



HUNGARY 



895 



» and the 
:w Channel, 
to Ujvidek, 
emesvar to 
the Theiss. 
id with one 
eluding the 
ernes. The 
on and the 
he marshes 
irds and the 
Kftros were 
rhetss, and 

ilaton (q.v.) 
id Fertd or 
Moson and 
it 33 m. in 
completely 
t same time 
t known as 
he Danube. 
Is. Several 
ler lowland 
le Velencze 
%p hollows 
akes, popu- 
erous small 
cause they 
n their bed. 
istic of the 
situated to 

inks of the 
te Hansag, 
rers a con* 

Bekesand 

sernye near 

Since the 

have been 

le northern 
:ks and are 
Carpathian 
srtiary and 
lid and the 
ased chiefly 
some share 
urea of the 

y loess and 
rise to the 
( are mostly 
he Miocene 
e evolution 
wn state of 
by the sea, 
tScklier,* 
lurope, and 
the forma- 
ea or series 
tration and 
r. Towarda 
ice and the 
The third 
K of Sucss. 
and formed - 
tian period, 
fauna being 
the Ponlian 
It, and th« 
:e of shells 



in winter, 
tion of the 
rpted, three 
' highland," 
ind Eastern 
nue for half 
try stretch- 
: Hungarian 
m Budapest 
and " xone.. 
Plain, and 
the summer 
:e bears the 
itries inter" 
s bordering- 

„ , „ . je sea. The 

It is about 70 m. in length, and t minimum of the temperature is attained in January and the 



8 9 6 



HUNGARY 



[GEOGRAPHY AND STATISTICS 



maximum in July. The rainfall in Hungary, except in the mountain- 
ous regions, u small in comparison with that of Austria. In these 
regions the greatest fall is during the summer, though in some 
years the autumn showers are heavier. Hail storms are of frequent 
occurrence in the Carpathians. On the plains rain rarely falls 
during the heats of summer; and the showers though violent are 
generally of short duration, whilst the moisture is quickly evaporated 
owing to the aridity of the atmosphere. The vast .sandy wastes 
mainly contribute to the dryness of the winds on the Great Hungarian 
Alfdla. Occasionally, the whole country suffers much from drought ; 
but disastrous floods not unfrequentty occur, particularly in the 
spring, when the beds of the rivers are inadequate to contain the 
increased volume of water caused by the rapid melting of the snows 
on the Carpathians. On the whole Hungary is a healthy country, 
excepting in the marshy tracts, where intermittent fever and 
diphtheria sometimes occur with great virulence. 

The following table gives the mean temperature, relative 
humidity, and rainfall (including snow) at a series of meteorological 
stations during the years 1896-1900: — 



Stations. 


Feet 
above 
Sea. 


Mean Temperature 
(Fahrenheit). 


31 


Rainfall 

in 
Inches. 


Annual. 


Jan. 


July. 


Selmeczbanya . 
Budapest . . 
Keszthely . . 
Zagrab . . . 
Fiume . . . 
Debreczen . . 
Szeged . . . 
Nagyszeben 


*>37 

423 
31a 
1357 


46a 
509 
5»-5 
5*-3 
56-9 
50*2 
516 
489 


27-9 
30-9 
30*0 
34;3 

286 
311 
259 


648 
68-8 
714 
70-5 
72-7 
70 

ZI' 1 
69*1 


IS 

78 
72 

75 

I 9 
80 

79 


35-29 
24*02 
2667 
34-3a 
70-3? 

22*26 

22 



Fauna. — The horned cattle of Hungary are amongst the finest in 
Europe, and large herds of swine are reared in the oak forests. 
The wild animals are bears, wolves, foxes, lynxes, wild cats, badgers, 
'weasels. Among the rodents there are 
uirrels, rats and mice, the last in enor- 
game the chamois and deer are specially 
s are the vulture, eagle, falcon, buzzard, 
, stork and bustard. Domestic and wild 
. The rivers and lakesyield enormous 
es also are plentiful. The Theiss, once 
an any other river in Europe, has for 
s productiveness. The culture of the 
a in the south, and in Croatia-Slavonia. 
scription of grain is found, especially 
Turkish pepper or paprika, rape-seed, 
toes and root crops. Fruits of various 
ticularly melons and stone fruits, are 
districts almonds, figs, rice and olives 
rest and other trees are the oak, which 

, ,, ulls, the beech, fir, pine, ash and alder, 

also the chestnut, walnut and filbert. The vine is cultivated over 
the greater part of Hungary, the chief grape-growing districts being 
those of the Hcgyalja (Tokaj), Sopron, and Ruszt, Menes, Somlyo 
fSchomlau), Beuye and Villa ny, Balaton, Neszmlly, Visonta, Eger 
(Erlau) and Buda. Hungary is one of the greatest wine-producing 
countries in Europe, and the quality of some of the vintages, especi- 
ally that of Tokaj, is unsurpassed. A great quantity of tobacco is 
also grown; it is wholly monopolized by the crown. In Hungary 
proper and in Croatia and Slavonia there are many species of indi- 
genous plants, which are unrepresented in Transylvania. Besides 
12 species peculiar to the former grand-principality, 14 occur only 
there and in Siberia. 

! Population. — Hungary had in 1900 a population of 10,254,550, 
equivalent to 153-7 inhabitants per square mile. The great 
Alfdld and the western districts are the most densely populated 
parts, whereas the northern and eastern mountainous counties 
are sparsely inhabited. As regards sex, for every 1000 men there 
were 101 x women in Hungary, and 998 women in Croatia- 
Slavonia. The excess of females over males is great in the 
western and northern counties, while in the eastern parts and in 
Croatia-Slavonia there is a slight preponderance of males. 
1 The population of the country at the censuses of 1880, 1890 
and 1900 was: — 





1880. 


1890. 


1900. 


Hungary proper . . . 
Croatia-Slavonia . . . 

Toul . . . 


13.749,603 
1.892499 


15,261.864 
2,201,927 


16.838 255 
24 "6.304 


15,642.102 


17463,791 


19.254.559 



From 1870 to 1880 there was little increase of population, < 
to the great cholera epidemic of 1872-1873, and to many epidemic 
diseases among children towards the end of the period. More 
normal conditions having prevailed from x88o to 1800, the 
yearly increase rose from 0*13% to 1-09%, declining in the 
decade 1890-1900 to 1*03. 

If compared with the first general census of the country, decreed 
by Joseph II. in 1785, the population of the kingdom shows aa 
increase of nearly 108% during these 116 years. Recent historical 
research has ascertained that the country was densely peopled ia 
the 15th century. Estimates, based on a census of the tax-paying 
peasantry in the years 1494 and 1 405, give five millions of inhabf cants. 

a — -^..~<ii c^ which explains fully the predominant 

pc the east of Europe at that epoch. The 

di Turks, incessant civil wars and devastation 

b* stilence, caused a very heavy loss both of 

pc ity. In 1715 and 1720, when the land was 

aj Lordes ana peace was restored, the poputa- 

ti< millions. Then immigration began to 69 

th more, and by 1785 the population had 

tr : immigrants were of very different foreign 

iu y became a collection of heterogeneoBs 

et vhich the ruling Magyar race formed only 

a 

on the population is caused by emigration, 
di ng poverty of the mass of the peasants, 

pc of the subject races against the process of 

ich they have long been subjected by the 

gc ement reached its height in 1900, whea 

13,.-,, r —, . ountry; in 1906 the number had sunk to 

169,202, of whom 47,920 were women. 1 Altogether, since 1896 

Hungary has lost about a million of its inhabitants through this cause, 

a serious source of weakness in a sparsely populated country; in 

1907 an attempt was made by the-Hungarian parliament to restrict 

emigration by law. The flow of emigration is mainly to the United 

States, and a certain number of the emigrants return (27,612 ia 

1906) bringing with them much wealth, and Americanized views 

which have a considerable effect on the political situation. 1 Of 

political importance also is the steady immigration of Magyar 

peasants and workmen into Croatia-Slavonia, where they become 

rapidly absorbed into the Croat population. From the Transyl- 

vanian counties there is an emigration to Rumania and the Balkaa 
tf _ -.- • * . 

tl 
o< 
tl 
el 



46,6*70; Pecs (FQnfkirchcn), "42,252; Miskolcz, 40,833; 
35^56. 
The n 



KuZ. 



number and aggregate population of all towns and boroughs 
in Hungary proper having in 1890 more than 10,000 inhabitants 
was at the censuses of 1880, 1890 and 1900:— 



Census. 


Towns. 


Inhabitants. 


Percentage of 
Total Population. 


1880 
1890 
1900 


,8 

122 


2,191,878 
2,700,852 
3.525.377 


15*94 
17*81 
21*58 



Thus the relative increase of the population living in urban dis- 
tricts of more than 10,000 inhabitants amounted in 1900 to nearly 
4% of the total population. In Croatia-Slavonia only 3-62% ef 
the population was concentrated in such towns in 1900. 

Races. — One of the prominent features of Hungary being; the great 
complexity of the races residing in it (see map* " Distribution of 



1 See the table in Seton-Watson's Racial Problems in Huntery. 
Appendix xiii. p. 470, and Drage, Austria-Hungary, p. 969. Of the 
emigrants in 1906, 52.121 were Magyars. 32.904 Slovaks, 30.551 
Germans, 20,859 Rumanians and 16,016 Croats. 

* Racial Problems, p. 202. 



^ 



GEOGRAPHY AND STATISTICS! HUNGARY 

Race*," in the article Austria), the census returns of 1880, 1890 
and 1900, exhibiting the numerical strength of the different nation- 
alities, are of great interest. Classifying the population according 
to the mother-tongue of each individual, there were, in the civil 
population of Hungary proper, including Flume : — 



897 



Census. 


Hungarians 
(Magyars). 


Germans 
(Niuut). 


Slovaks 
(T6t). 


Rumanians 
(Oldk). 


Ruthcnians 
{Ruthin). 


Croatian* 
(Uorvdl). 


Servians 
iSzcrb). 


Others. 


1880 
1890 
1900 


6404,070 
8!s88!&34 


1,870,772 
1,900.084 
1.980423 


1,991.402 


2403.041 
2.589.079 
2,784.726 


353.229 
379.786 
423J59 




223.054 
259.893 
329.837 


639.986 
I944»2 495.133 
188.552 434.641 


»\*. in percentages of the total population : 


1880 
1890 
1900 


4658 
4*53 
5»38 


fj*6i 
13-12 
u-88 


«3'49 
12-51 

n-88 


17-48 
1708 
1662 


2-57 
250 

2-52 


128 327 
1-17 | 2-60 


162 
1-71 
«-95 



The censuses show a decided tendency of change in favour of the 
dominating nationality, the Magyar, which reached an absolute 
majority in the decade 1890-1900. This is also shown by the data 
relating to the percentage of members of other Hungarian races 
' ' [ this language. Thus in 1900 out of a total civil population 



1,132,740, whose mother-tongue is not Magyar, 1,365.764 could 
speak Magyar. This represents a percentage of 16-8, while in 1890 
the percentage was only 138. In Croatia-Slavonia the language of 
instruction and administration being exclusively Croat, the other 
races tend to be absorbed in this nationality. The Magyars formed 
but 38%, the Germans 5-6% of the population according to the 
census of 190a 

The various races of Hungary are distributed either in compact 
ethnographical groups, in larger or smaller colonies surrounded by 
other nationalities,^— *.£. in the Banat — so intermingled as to defy 



th 
th 
th 



th 
th 
an 
se 
of 
in 
T. 
N 
nt 

P« 

ar 
m 



H 
in 
Ci 

Vi 
th 
m 
ba 
at 
Tl 
th 
Ui 
fa 

CO 



Torontal) a respectable minority. 1 

The Jews in 1900 numbered 851,378, not counting the very great 
number who have become Christians, who are reckoned as Magyars. 
Their importance is out of all proportion to their number, since they 
monopolize a large portion 01 the trade, are with the Germans the 
chief employers of labour, and control not only the finances but 



'The colouring of ordinary ethnographical maps is necessarily 
somewhat misleading. When an attempt is made to represent in 
colour the actual distribution of the races (as in Dr Chavanne's 
Ceograpkiseker und staiistischer Han d a tl as ) the effect is that of 
occasional blotches of solid colour on a piece of shot silk. 

•The distribution of the races is analysed in greater detail in 
Mr Seton- Watson's Racial Problems, p. 3 acq. 
xui. t6 



to a great extent the government and press of the country. Owing 
to the improvidence of the Hungarian landowners and the poverty 
of the peasants the soil of the country is also gradually passing into 
their bands. 1 
The Gipsies, according to the special census of 1893, numbered 

274,940. Of these, how- 
ever, only 82,000 gave 
Romany as their lan- 
guage, while 104,000 
described themselves as 
Magyars and 67,000 as 
Rumanians. They are 
scattered in small 
colonics, especially in 
G6mo> county and in 
Transylvania. Only 
some 9000 are still 
nomads, while some 
20,000 more are semi- 
nomads. Other races, 
which.- are not numerous, are Armenians, Greeks, Bulgars, 
Albanians and Italians. 

The ethnographical map of Hungary does much to explain the 
political problems of the country. The central plains, which have 
the most fertile soil, and from the geographical conditions of the 
country form its centre of gravity, are occupied almost exclusively 
by the Magyars, the most numerous and the dominant race. But 
all round these, as far as the frontiers, the country is inhabited by 
the other races, which, as a rule, occupy it in large, compact and 
uniform ethnographical groups. The only exception is formed by 
the Banat, where Magyars, Rumanians, Serbs, Bulgarians, Croats 
and Germans live mixed together. Another important fact is that 
these races are all in direct contact with kindred peoples living 
outside Hungary: the Rumanians in Transylvania and Banat with 
those in Rumania and Bukovina: the Serbs and Croats with those 
on the other bank of the Danube, the Save and the Unna; the 
Germans in western Hungary with those in Upper Austria and 
Styria; the Slovaks in northern Hungary with those in Moravia; 
and lastly the Ruthcnians with the Ruthenians of Galicia, who 
occupy the opposite slopes of the Carpathians. The centrifugal 
forces within the Hungarian kingdom are thus increased by the 
attraction of kindred nationalities established beyond its borders, 
a fact which is of special importance in considering the vexed and 
difficult racial problem in Hungary. 

Agriculture. — Hungary is pre-eminently an agricultural country 
and one of the principal wheat-growing regions of Europe. At the 
census of 1900 nearly 69% of the total population of the country 
derived their income from agriculture, forestry, horticulture and 
other agricultural pursuits. The agricultural census taken in 1895 
shows the great progress made in agriculture by Hungary, mam- 
fested by the increase in arable lands and the growth of the average 
production. The increase of the arable land has been effected 
partly by the reclamation of the marshes, but mostly by the trans- 
formation of large tracts of pusxia (waste prairie land) into arable 
land. This tatter process is growing every year, and is coupled with 
great improvements in agricultural methods, such as more intensive 
cultivation, the use of the most modern implements and the 
application' of scientific discoveries. According to the agricul- 
tural census of 1895, the main varieties of land are distributed 
as follows: — 





Hungary 
Proper. 


Croatia- 
Slavonia. 


By area in acres — 

Arable land 

Gardens 

Meadows 

Vineyards ........ 

Pastures 

Forests 

Marshes 

B 'age of the total area— 

nd 

» '. 

!s 

Forests' '.'.'.'..... 
Marshes 


29.711.382 

7,075,888 

482,801 

9,042,267 

18464,396 

199.685 

42-81 
«-34 

10-19 
0*69 

0*28 


I3.370.540 

136.354 

1.099.45! 

65.475 

1.465.930 

3.734.094 

7.921 

32*26 

131 
10-52 

0-63 
14-03 
35-74 

0-08 



The remainder, such as barren territory, devastated vineyards, 
water and area of buildings, amounts to 5-1 % of the total. 

The chief agricultural products of Hungary are wheat, rye, barley, 
oats and maize, the acreage and produce of which are shown In 
the following tables: — 



• Seton- Watson, op. eil. pp. 173, 188, 252; Drag*, Austria' 
Hungary, pp. 280, 588; Gonnard, La Hongrie, p. 72. 

2a 



898 



HUNGARY 



[GEOGRAPHY AND STATISTICS 



Area in Acres in ftmtary Prefer. 



Cereal. 


Average per Annum. 


1900. 


1907. 


1881-85. 


1886-90. 


1891-95. 


Wheat. . 
Rye . . 
Bariey . . 
Oats . . 
Maixe . . 


6483.876 
2,475.301 
2420.393 
2460,080 
4.567,186 


7.014.891 
2.727,078 
2491422 
2,546.582 
4.681,376 


7.551.584 
2,510,093 
2407469 
2.339.297 
5.222,538 


8,142.303 
2.546.738 
2,485.117 
2.324.992 
5.469.050 


8.773440 

2,898,780 
7.017.270 



Produce in Millions of Bushels. 



Cereal. 


Average per Annum. 


1900. 


1907. 


1881-85. 


1886-90. 


1891-95- 


Wheat. . 
Rye . . 
Barley . . 
Oats . . 
Maize . . 


998 
418 
46a 

539 
924 


1213 
421 
43*7 

£5 


11 

64-9 
nS-o 


»37'3 
39*2 

1217 


1285 
380 
510 

1587 



In Croatia-Slavonia no crop statistics were compiled before 1885. 
Subsequent returns for maize and wheat show an increase both in the 
area cultivated and quantity yielded. The former is the principal 
product of this province. Certain districts are distinguished for 
particular kinds of fruit, which form an important article of com- 
merce both for inland consumption and for export. The principal 
of these fruits are: apricots round Kecskemet, cherries round 
Kdrds, melons in the Alfold and plums in Croatia-Slavonia. The 
vineyards of Hungary, which have suffered greatly by the phyl- 
loxera since 1881, show since 1900 a tendency to recover ground, 
and their area is again slowly increasing. 

Forests.— Of the productive area of Hungary 26*60% Is occupied 
by forests, which for the most part cover the slopes of the 
Carpathians. Nearly half of them belong to the state, and in them 
forestry has been carried out on a scientific basis since 1879. The 
exploitation of this great source of wealth is still hindered by want 
of proper means of communication, but in many parts of Transyl- 
vania it is now carried on successfully. The forests are chiefly 
composed of oak, fir, pine, ash and alder. 

Live Stock.— The number of live stock in Hungary proper in two 
different years is shown in the following table : — 



Animal. 


1884. 


1895- 


Horses . . 
Cattle . . 
Sheep . . 
Pigs . . 


1.749.302 
4.879.334 
10,594.867 
4.803.777 


1,972.930 
5.829483 
7.526.783 
6.447.134 



In Croatia-Slavonia the live stock was numbered in 1895 at: 
horses, 309,098; cattle. 908.774; sheep, 595,898; pigs, 882,957. 
But the unproved quality of the live stock is more worthy of 
notice than the growth in numbers. 

The small Magyar horse, once famous for its swiftness and endur- 
ance, was improved during the Turkish wars, so far as height and 
beauty were concerned, by being crossed with Arabs; but it de- 
generated after the 17th century as the result of injudicious cross- 
breeding. The breed has. however, been since improved by govern- 
ment action, the establishment of state studs supported since 1867 
by annual parliamentary grants, and the importation especially of 
English stock. The largest of the studs is that at Mczdhegyes 
(founded 1785) in the county of Csanad, the most extensive and 
remarkable of those " economics," model farms on a gigantic scale, 
which the government has established on its domains. 1 In 1905 
it had 2224 horses, including 27 stallions and 422 blood mares. 
The next most important stud is at Kisber (founded 1853), with 731 



horses; others arc at Babolna (founded 1798), with 802 horses, 
and Fogaras (founded 1874), with 400 horses.* Besides these there 
are several large depots of state stallions, which are hired out or 



•old at moderate rates; but buyers have to guarantee not to export 
them without permission of the government. Large numbers of 
horses are exported annually, principally to Austria, Germany, 
Italy, France and Rumania. 

Owing to its wide stretches of pasture-land Hungary is admirably 
suited for cattle-raising, and in the government economies " the 
same care has been bestowed on improving the breed of horned 
beasts as in the case of horses. The principal breeds are either 
native or Swiss (especially that of Simmcnthal). The export trade 
in cattle is considerable, amounting in 1905 to 238,296 head of 

1 An admirable account of this " little world, which produces 
almost everything and is almost self-sufficient " is given by M. 
Gomtard in his Hougrie au XX™ siecie, p. 159 seq. 

• Jb. p. 349 »«q. 



GEOGRAPHY AND STATISTICS) 



HUNGARY 



«99 



The product* of these mills form the principal article of export of 
Hungary. Brewing and distilling, as other branches of industry 
connected with agriculture, are also greatly developed. The sugar 
industry has made great strides, the amount of beetroot used having 
increased tenfold between 1880 and 190$. Other principal branches 
of industry are: tobacco manufactories, belonging to the state, 
tobacco being a government monopoly; iron foundries, mostly in 
the mining region; agricultural machinery and implements, notably 
at Budapest; leather manufactures; paper-mills, the largest at 
Fiume; glass (only the more common sort) and earthenwares; 
chemicals; wooden products; petroleum-refineries; woollen yarns 
and cloth manufactories, as well as several establishments of knitting 
and weaving. The various industrial establishments are located 
in the larger towns, but principally at Budapest, the only real 
industrial town of Hungary. 

In 1900 the various industries of Hungary (including Croatia- 
Stavonia) employed 1.127,730 persons, or 12*8% of the earning 
population. In 1890 the number of persons employed was 913,010. 
including families and domestic servants, 2,605,000 persons or 13*5% 
of the total population were dependent on industries for their 
livelihood in Hungary in 1900. 

Commerce. — Hungary forms together with Austria one castoms 
and commercial territory, and the statistics for the foreign trade is 
given under Austria-Hungary. The following table gives the 
foreign trade of Hungary only for a period of years in millions 
sterling : — 



Year. • 


Imports. 


Exports. 


1 886-1890 
1 891-1895 

1900 

1907 


373 

ii 


375 
44- 1 
55-3 
647 



Of the merchandise 1 entering the country, 75-80 %<omes from 
Austria, and exports go to the same country to the extent of 75%. 
Next comes Germany with about 10% of the value of the total 
exports and 5% of that of imports. The neighbouring Balkan 
states — Rumania and Servia— follow, and the United Kingdom 
receives somewhat more than 2% of the exports, while supplying/ 
about 1*5% of the imports. The principal imports are: cotton 
goods, woollen manufactures; apparel, haberdashery and linen; 
silk manufactures; leather and leather goods. The exports, which 
show plainly the prevailing agricultural character of the country, 
are flour, wheat, cattle, beef, barley, pigs, wine in barrels, horses 
and maize. 

With but a short stretch of sea-coast, and possessing only one 
important seaport, Fiume, the mercantile marine of Hungary is 
not very developed. It consisted in 1905 of 434 vessels with a 
tonnage of 91,784 tons and with crews of 2359 persons. Of these 
95 vessels with a tonnage of 89,161 tons were steamers. Fifty-four 
vessels with 84,844 tons and crews numbering 1168 persons were 
sea-going; 134 with 6587 tons were coasting- vessels, and 246 with 
353 tons were fishing vessels. 

j\t all the Hungarian ports in 1900 there entered 19,223 vessels 
of 2.223,30? tons; cleared 19,218 vessels of 2,226,733 tons. The 
tonnage of British steamers amounted to somewhat more than II % 
of the total tonnage of steamers entered and cleared. 

Railways.— Hungary is covered by a fairly extensive network of 
railways, although in the sparsely populated parts of the kingdom 
the high road is still the only means of communication. The first 
railway in Hungary was the line between Budapest and Vacs 
(Waitien), 20 m. long, opened in 1846 (15th of July). After the 
Compromise of 1867, the policy of the Hungarian government was 
to construct its own railways, and to take over the Unes constructed 
and worked by private companies.* In 1907 the total length of the 
Hungarian railways, in which over £145,000,000 had been invested, 
was 12,100 m., of which 5000 m. belonged to and were worked by 
the state, 5100 m. belonged to private companies but were worked 
by the state, and 2000 m. belonged to and were worked by private 
companies. The passengers earned in 1907 numbered 107,171,000, 
the goods traffic was 612483,000 tons; the traffic receipts lor the 
year were £16420,000. The corresponding figures for 1880 were as 
follows: passengers carried, 9,346,000; goods carried, 1 1,225,000 
tons : traffic receipts, £4,300,000. The so-called lone tariff, adopted 
for the first time in Europe by the Hungarian state railways, was 
inaugurated in 1889 for passengers and in 1891 for goods. The 
principle of this system is to offer cheap fares and relatively low 
tariffs lor greater distances, and to promote, therefore, long-distance 
travelling. The zone tariff has given a great impetus both to 
passenger and goods traffic in Hungary, and has been adopted on 
some of the Austrian railways. 



1 Merchandise passing the boundaries is subject to declaration; 
the respective values are stated by a special commission of experts 
residing in Budapest. 

•The acquisition of the Austrian Staatsbahn in 1891 practically 

ive to the state the control of the whole railway net ofHungary. 

y 1900 all the main lines, except the SQdbahn and the Kaschan- 



ga 

By 1900 all me iiwiH uiic*, vxwiji 1 
Oberbergar Bahn, were in its hands. 



1 1907 the length of the navigable waterways of Huognry was 

1 m., of which 2450 m. were navigable by steamers. 

uxporls. — On the Adriatic lies the port of Fiume (}.».), the only 



In 1907 1 
3200 m., of 

Seaports.' »,---,. , 

direct outlet by sea for the produce of Hungary. Its commanding 
position at the head of the Gulf of Quarnero. and spacious new 
harbour works, as also its immediate connexions with both the 
Austrian and Hungarian railway systems, render it specially ad- 
vantageous as a commercial port. As shipping stations, Buccari, 
Portort, Selce, Novi, Zengg, San Giorgio, jablanac and Carlopago 
are of comparative insignificance. The whole of the short Hungarian 
seaboard is mountainous and subject to violent winds. 

Government. — Hungary Is a constitutional monarchy, its 
monarch bearing the title of king. The succession to the throne 
is hereditary in the order of primogeniture in the male line of the 
house of Habsburg-Lorraine; and failing this, in the female line. 
The king must be a member of the Roman Catholic Church. 
The king of Hungary is also emperor of Austria, but beyond (his 
personal union, and certain matters regulated by both govern- 
ments jointly (see Austbia-Hunoary), the two states are 
independent of each other, having each its own constitution! 
legislature and administration. The king is the head of the 
executive, the supreme commander of the armed forces of the 
nation, and shares the legislative power with the parliament. 

The constitution of Hungary is in many respects strikingly 
analogous to that of Great Britain, more especially in the fact 
that it is based on no written document but on immemorial 
prescription, confirmed or modified by a series of enactments, 
of which the earliest and most famous was the Golden Bull of 
Andrew III. (1222), the Magna Carta of Hungary. The ancient 
constitution, often suspended and modified, based upon this 
charter, was reformed under the influence of Western* Liberalism 
in. 1848, the supremacy of the Magyar race, however, being 
secured by a somewhat narrow franchise. Suspended after 
the collapse of the- Hungarian revolt in 1849 for some eighteen 
years, the constitution was restored in 1867 under the terms 
of the Compromise (Ausglekk) with Austria, which established 
the actual organization of the country (see History, below). 
' The legislative power is vested in the parliament (OrstdggyiUis), 
which consists of two houses: an upper house or the House of 
Magnates (FdrendiM*), and a lower house or House of Repre- 
sentatives (Kipviseidhdz). The House of Magnates is composed 
as follows: princes of the royal house who have attained their 
majority (16 in 1004); hereditary peers who pay at least £250 
a year land, .tax (237 in 1004); high dignitaries of the Roman 
Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches (42 in 1004); repre- 
sentatives of the Protestant confessions (13 in 1004); life peers 
appointed by the crown, not exceeding 50 in number, and life 
peers elected by the house itself (73 altogether in 1004) ; members 
ex officio consisting of state dignitaries and high judges (19 in 
1004); and three delegates of Croatia-Slavonia. The House of 
Representatives consists of members elected, under the Electoral 
Law of 1874, by a complicated franchise based upon property, 
taxation, profession or official position, and ancestral privileges.* 
The house consists of 453 members, of which 413 are deputies 
elected in Hungary and 43 delegates of Croatia-Slavonia 'sent 
by the parliament of that province. The members are elected 
for five years and receive payment for their services. The 
parliament is summoned annually by the king at Budapest. 
The official language is Magyar, but the delegates of Croatia- 
Slavonia may use their own language. The Hungarian parlia- 
ment has power to legislate on all matters concerning Hungary, 
but for Croatia-Slavonia only on matters which concern these 
provinces in common with Hungary. The executive power is 
vested in a responsible cabinet, consisting of ten ministers, 
namely, the president of the council, the minister of the interior, 
of national defence, of education and public worship, of finance, 

•The franchise is "probably the most illiberal in Europe.** 
Servants, in the widest sense of the word, apprenticed workmen 
and agricultural labourers are carefully excluded. The result is 



f ijoyed b. .... 

(see Seton-Watson, Racial Problems, 250, 251). For the question 
of franchise reform which played so great a part in the Austro* 
Hungarian crisis of 1909-1910 see History, below.— {Ed.] 



goo 



HUNGARY 



(GEOGRAPHY AND STATISTICS 



of agriculture, of industry and commerce, of justice, the minister 
for Croatia-Slavonia, and the minister ad lalus or near the king's 
person. As regards local government, the country is divided 
into municipalities or counties, which possess a certain amount 
of self-government. Hungary proper is divided into sixty-th'ree 
rural, and— including Fiume— twenty-six urban municipalities 
(see section on Administrative Divisions). These urban munici- 
palities are towns which for their local government are inde- 
pendent of the counties in which they are situated, and have, 
therefore, a larger amount of municipal autonomy than the 
communes or the other towns. The administration of the 
municipalities is carried on by an official appointed by the king, 
aided by a representative body. The representative body is 
composed half of elected members, and half of citizens who pay 
the highest taxes. Since 1876 each municipality has a council 
of twenty members to exercise control over its administration. 

Administrative Divisions.— Since 1867 the ac nd 

Klitical divisions of the lands belonging to the wn 

ve been in great measure remodelled. In 1868 ras 

definitely reunited to Hungary proper, and the ict 

of Fiume declared autonomous. In 1873 part try 

Frontier " was united with Hungary proper and | ia- 

ci :- u ~—^" according to ancient ui Uy 

sions or circles, and T to 

:h. In 1876 a general \ ies 

5 to this division H b 

which Transylvania lie 

:o the following counties: — 
t bank of the Danube contains eleven 
Bars, (3) Esztcrgom, (4) Hont, (5) 
"fyitra, (8) Poraony (Pressburg), (9) 
'11) Zolyom. 

tit bank of the Danube contains eleven 
, Gydr, Komarom, Moson, Somogy, 
hn and Zala. 

the Danube and Theiss contains five 
songrad, Heves, Jasc-Nagykun-Szolnok 

ght bank of the Theiss contains eight 
reg, Borsod, Gdm6r-es Kis-Hont, Saros, 

ank of the Theiss contains eight counties: 
maros, Szabolcs, Saatmar, Szilagy and 
ugocsa. 

(/) The circle between the Theiss and the Maros contains five 
counties: Arad, Csanad, Krasso-Szftreny, Tetnes and Torontal. 

(e) Transylvania contains fifteen counties : Also-Feher, Besxtcrcze- 
Nasxod, Brass6, Csik, Fogaras, Haromsz&c, Hunyad, Kis-Kukullo, 
Kolozs. Maros-Torda, Nagy-Kukull6, Szeben, Saolnok-Doboka, 
Torda-Aranyos and Udvarhefy. 
» Fiume town and district forms a separate division. 
1 Croatia-Slavonia is divided into eight counties: Belovar-Kdros, 
Lika-Krbava, Modrus-Fiume, Pozaega, Sserem, Varasd, Verocae 
and Zagrab. 

Besides these sixty-three rural counties for Hungary, and eight 
for Croatia-Slavonia, Hungary has twenty-six urban counties or 
towns with municipal rights. These are: Arad. Baja, Debrecsen, 



Gy6r, Hodmezo-VasArhely, Kasaa, Kecskemet, Kolozsvar, Komarora, 
Maros- V&sarhely, Nagyvarad, Pancsova, Pecs, Pozsony, Sclraecz-es 
BeMabanya, Sopron, Szabadka, Szatmar-Ncmeti, Szeged, Sz4kes- 



fehervir, Temesvar, Ujvidelc, Versecz, Zorabor, the town of Fiume, 
and Budapest, the capital of the county. 

In Croatia-Slavonia there are four urban counties or towns with 
municipal rights namely : E&zdk, Varasd, Zagrab and Zimony. 

Justice. — The judicial power is independent of the administrative 
power. The judicial authorities in Hungary are: (1) the district 
courts with single judges (458 in 1905); (2) the county courts with 
collegiate judgeships (76 in number); to these are attached 15 

Sry courts for press offences. These are courts of first instance. 
) Royal Tables (12 in number), which arc courts of second instance, 
established at Budapest. Debreczen, Gydr, Kassa, Kolozsvar, 
Maros-Vasarhely, Nagyvarad, Pecs, Pressburg, Szeged, Temesvar 
and Zagrab. (4) The Ttoyal Supreme Court at Budapest, and the 
Supreme Court of Justice, or Table of Septemvirs, at Zagrab, which 
are the highest Judicial authorities. There are also a special com- 
mercial court at Budapest, a naval court at Fiame, and special army 
courts. 

Finance. — After the revolution of 1 848-1849 the Hungarian budget 
was amalgamated with the Austrian, and it was only after the 
Compromise of 1867 that Hungary received a separate budget. 
The development of the Hungarian kingdom can be better ap- 
preciated by a comparison of the estimates for the year 1849 prepared 
by the Hungarian minister of finance, which shows a revenue of 
£1.335.000 and an expenditure of £5.166,000 (including £3,500.000 
for warlike purposes), with the budget of 1905, which shows a revenue 



of £5 !• 583^00, and an expenditure of about the same sum- Owioe 
to the amount spent on railways, the Fiume harbour works and 
other causes, the Hungarian budgets after 1867 showed big aoaaal 
deficits, until in 1888 great reforms were introduced and the finances 
of the country were established on a more solid .basis. Daring the 
years 1891-1895 the annual revenue was £42,100,000 and the ex- 

Gnditure £39.000,000; in 1900 the revenue and e 
lanced themselves at £45,400,000, The following 
later years are typical.— 

Revenue. Expenditmre, 

1904 . . . £49.6i ».*» £49.S9».4«> 

1008 .. . 57.896^45 57.894.W 

The ordinary revenue of the state ia derived from direct and 
indirect taxation, monopolies, stamp dues, Ac. In 1904 direct 
taxes amounted to £9,048,000, and the chief heads of direct taxes 
yielded as follows: ground tax, £3,317,000; trade tax, £1,870*000; 
income tax, £1400,000; house tax, £ 1,000,00a Indirect taw 



amounted in 1004 to £7,363,000, and the chief heads of indirect 
taxation yielded as follows: taxes on alcoholic drinks, £4*375wooo; 
sugar tax, £1,292,000; petroleum tax, £418,000; meat tax, £375,000. 
The principal monopolies yielded as follows: salt monopoly, 
£1,210,000; tobacco monopoly, £2,650,000; lottery mono p oly. 
£105,000. Other revenues yielded as follows: stamp taxes and 
dues, £3,632,000: state railways, £3.545.000; post and telegraphs, 
£710,000; state landed property and forests, £250,000. 

The national debt of Hungary alone, excluding the debt incurred 
jointly by both members of the Austro-Hunganan monarchy, was 
£192,175,000 at the end of 1903. The following table shows the 
growth of the total debt, due chiefly to expenditure on public works, 
in millions sterling:— 

1880. 1890. 1900. 1905. 

£836 £1719 £192-8 £19804 

Felipon. — There b in Hungary just as great a variety of re&fious 
confessions as there is of rationalities and of languages. None of 
them pos s esses sn overwhelming majority, but perfect equality is 
granted to all religious creeds legally recognized. According to the 
census returns of 1900 in Hungary proper there were:— 

. Per Cent, of Population. 
Roman Catholics . . . . . . 8,198,497 or 48-69 

Uniat Greeks 1 1,841,272 or 10-94 

Greek Orthodox 2,199,195 or 13-06 

Evangelicals — 

' * - • ■• 1 ,258,860 or 7.48 

2,437.232 or 14-41 



Augsburg confession, or Lutherans 
Helvetia ' ~ ' ' ' 



elvctian confession, or Calvinists 
Unitarians 
Jews 



Jews 
Others 



68.551 or 0-41 
31.16a or 4-94 
13486 or 0-08 



83 



In mi 
Thus tl 
UniatC 
Uniats; 
the Ge 
Calvini 
the Lu 
Calvini 
Magyai 
nationa 
Eszterg 
and 17 
abbot c 
primat< 
prince, 
Hungai 
of Eszti 
Balasfa 
UniatC 
bishop 
archbis 
is subjc 

arCUDlSiiv}* vn naifHvuvii ^■rciiiiauuiwii/i uirau %mk lutwu wC 

the bishops of Bacs, Buda, Temesvar, Versecz and Pakricx, sod 
under the latter the bishops of Arad and Kar&nsebes. The two 
great Protestant communities are divided into ecclesiastical districts, 
five for each ; the heads of these districts bear the title of super- 
intendents. The Unitarians, chiefly resident in Transylvania, are 
under the authority of a bishop, whose see is Kolozsvar fKlausen- 
burg). The Jewish communities are comprised in ecclesiastical 
districts, the head direction being at Budapest. 

Education. — Although great improvements have been effected 
in the educational system of the country since 1867, Hungary k 
still backward in the matter of general education, as in 1900 only a 
little over 50% of the population could read and write. Before 
1867 public instruction was entirely in the hands of the clergy of 
the various confessions, as is still the case with the majority ol the 

1 ue. Catholics of the Oriental rite ia communion with Rome. 



hbto*yj HUNGARY 

primary and secondary schools. Or»e of the fim raeaeure* of newly 

established Hungarian government was to provide supplementary 
schools of a non-denominational character. By a law passed in 
1868 attendance at school is obligatory on all children between 
the ages of 6 and 12 years. The communes or parishes are boand 
to maintain elementary schools, and they are entitled to levy an 
additional tax of 5% on the state taxes for their maintenance. 
But the number of state-aided elementary schools is continually 
increasing, as the spread of the Magyar language to the other races 
through the medium of the elementary schools is one of the principal 
concerns of the Hungarian government, and is vigorously pursued.* 
In (902 there were in Hungary. 18,729 elementary schools with 
£2,020 teachers, attended by 2,573,377 pupils, figures which compare 
favourably with those of 1877, when there were 15486 schools with 
10,717 teachers, attended by 1,5591636 pupils. In about 61% of 
these schools the language used was exclusively Magyar, in about 
20 % it was mixed, and in the remainder some noa-Maiyar language 
was used. In 1902, 8056% of the children of school age actually 
attended school. Since 1 891 infant schools, for children between 
the ages of 3 and 6 years, have been maintained either by the com- 
munes or by the state. 

The public instruction of Hungary contains three other groups 
of educational institutions: middle or secondary schools, high 
schools" and technical schools. The middle schools comprise 
classical schools (gymnasia) which are preparatory for the uni- 
versities and other high schools," and modern 10110018 {Realsekulen) 
preparatory for the technical schools. Their course of study is 
generally eight years, and they are maintained mostly by the state. 
The state-maintained gymnasia arc mostly of recent foundation, 
but some schools maintained by the various churches have been in 
existence for three, or sometimes four, centuries. The number of 
middle schools in 1902 was 143 with 4705 teachers, attended by 
71,788 pupils; in 1880 their number was 185, attended by 40,747 
fcuplls. • 

The high tch try 

possesses three, . ed 

u* 1635), at Kolc in 

1874^. They ha od 

medicine. (The di- 

cine.) There an es, 

which in 1900 w irn 

io Budapest, fa nd 

was attended ir gh 

achool. There w :al 

Colleges, twenty iur 

Creek Orthodox ial 

schools the prim ig 

and Fclsobanya en 

and Kolozsvar; ; fa, 

military college! a 

naval school at of 

training institul of 

commerce, sevc re. 

music, &c. Mot. _ , ._. _nd 

are almost entirely maintained by the state or the communes. 

The richest libraries in Hungary are the National Library at 
Budapest; the University Library, also at Budapest, and the library 
of the abbey of Pannonn&lma. Besides the museums mentioned in 
the article Budapest, several provincial towns contain. interesting 
' ~ ' K.Te ' ~ 



museums, namely, Pressburg, Temesvir, Dcva. Kolozsvir, Nagysze- 
beu; further, the national museum at Zagr&m, the national 
(Szlkler) museum at Maros-Vasarhdy, and the Carpathian museum 
at Poprad should be mentioned. 

At the head of the learned and scientific societies stands the 
Hungarian Academy of Sciences, founded in 1830; the Klsfaludy 
Society, the Petoft Society, and numerous societies of specialists, 
as the historical, geographical, &c, with their contrer at Budapest. 
There are besides a number of learned societies in the various 
provinces for the fostering of special provincial or national aims. 
There are also a number of societies for the propagation of culture, 
both amongst the Hungarian and the non-Hungarian nationalities. 
Worth mentioning are also the two Carpathian societies: the 
Hungarian and the Transylvanian. 

Bibliography.— F. Umlauft, Die Lander Osterreich-Ungarns in 
Wort und Bild (Vienna, 1870-1889, 15 vols., 12th volume, 1886, 
deals with Hungary), Die osterreickisch* Monarchic in Wort und 
Bild (Vienna^ 1888-1902, 24 vols., 7 vols, are devoted to Hungary), 
Die Volher OsUrretik-Ungarns (Tcschcn, 1881-1885, 12 vols.); A. 
Supan, " Osterrelch-Ungarn " (Vienna, 1889, in Kirchhoff's Ldnder~ 
kunde von Eurotoa, vol. u.); Aucrbach, Les Races et les nationality's en 
Autriche-Hongrte (Paris, 1897); Mayerhofer, Vsterreich-ungnrisches 
Ortslexikon (Vienna, 1806); Hungary, Its People, Placis and Polities. 
The Journey of the Eighty Club to Hungary in 1906 (London, 
1907) ; R. W. Seton-Watson ('* Scotus Viator "), Racial Problems 
in Hungary (London, 1908), a strong indictment of the racial 
policy of the Magyars, supported by exact references and many 



1 The methods pursued to this end are exposed in pitiless detail 
by Mr Seton-Watson in his chapter on the Education Laws of 
Hungary, in Racial Problems, 205. 



9OI 

dcoMeents, reaJnly conce r ne d with the Slovaks; Rene Goooard, 
La Hongrte au XX* siede (Paris, 1908), an admirable descrip- 
tion of the country and its people, mainly from the point of 
-view of economic development and social conditions; Geoffrey 
Drage, Austria-Hungary (London, 1909), a very useful book of 
reference; P. Alden (editor), Hungary of To-day, by members of 
the Hungarian Government (London, 1909) ; see also The Problem 
of Hungary " in the Edinburgh Review (No. 429) for July 1909. 
The various reports of the Central Statistical Office at Budapest 
contain all the necessary statistical data. A summary of them is 
ihed under the title Magyar statisxtiMai Bok&nyo 



annually published under the tit 
{JStaustual Year-Book oj Hungary). 



(0. Ba.) 



II. History 



When Arp&d, toe semi-mythical founder of the Magyar 
monarchy, at the end of a.o. 895 led his savage hordes through 
the Vereczka past into the regions of the Upper ^. 
Theiss, the land, now called Hungary, was, for the most rrrjirrff 
part, in the possession of Slavs or semi-Slavs. From 
the Riesengebirge to the Vistula, and from the Moldau to the 
Drave, extended the shadowy empire of Moravia, founded by 
Moirair and Svatopluk (c. 850-890), which collapsed so com- 
pletely at the first impact of the Magyars that, ten years after 
their arrival, not a trace of it remained. The Bulgarians, Serbs, 
Croats and Avars in the southern provinces were subdued with 
equal ease. Details are wanting, but the traditional decisive 
battle was fought at Ahpar on the Theiss, whereupon the victors 
pressed on to Orsova, and the conquest was completed by 
Arp&d about the year 006. This forcible intrusion of a non- 
Aryan race altered the whole history of Europe; but its peculiar 
significance lay in the fact that it permanently divided the 
northern from the southern and the eastern from the western 
Slavs. The inevitable consequence of this rupture was the 
Teutonizing of the western branch of the great Slav family, 
which, no longer able to stand alone, and cut off from both 
Rome and Constantinople, was forced, in self-defence, to lake 
Christianity, and civilization along with it, from Germany. 

During the following seventy years wc know next to nothing 
of the internal history of the Magyars. Arp&d died in 007, and 
his immediate successors, Zsolt (907-947) and Taksony (947-972), 
are little more than chronological landmarks. This was the 
period of those devastating raids which made the savage Magyar 
horsemen the scourge and the terror of Europe. We have an 
interesting description of their tactics from the pen of the 
emperor Leo VI., whose account of them is confirmed by the 
contemporary Russian annals. Trained riders, archers and 
javelin-throwers from infancy, they advanced to the attack 
in numerous companies following hard upon each other, avoiding 
close quarters, but wearing out their antagonists by the persist- 
ency of their onslaughts. Scarce a corner of Europe was safe 
from them. First (008-910) they ravaged Thuringia, Swabia 
and Bavaria, and defeated the Germans on the Lechfcld, where- 
upon the German king Henry I. bought them off for nine years, 
employing the respite in reorganizing his army and training 
cavalry, which henceforth became the principal military arm 
of the Empire. In 933 the war was resumed, and Henry, at the 
head of what was really the first national German army, defeated 
the Magyars at Gotha and at Ricd (933). The only effect of 
these reverses was to divert them elsewhere. Already, in 926, 
they had crossed the Rhine and ravaged Lotharingia. In 934 
and 942 they raided the Eastern Empire, and were bought off 
under the very walls of Constantinople. In 943 Taksony led 
them into Italy, when they penetrated as far as Otranto. In 
9SS they ravaged Burgundy. The same year the emperor 
Otto I. proclaimed them the enemies of God and humanity, 
refused to receive their ambassadors, and finally, at the famous 
battle of the Lechfeld, overwhelmed them on the very scene 
of their first victory, near Augsburg, which they were besieging 
(Aug. 10, 955). Only seven of the Magyars escaped, and these 
were sold as slaves on their return home. 

The catastrophe of the Lechfeld convinced the leading Magyars 
of the necessity of accommodating themselves as far as possible 
to the Empire, especially in the matter of religion. Christianity 
had already begun to percolate Hungary. A large proportion 



902 



HUNGARY 



(HISTORY 



of the captives of the Magyars had been settled all over the 
country to teach their conquerors the arts of peace, and close 
Aeeaptm contact with this civilizing element was of itself an 
*jk» •/ enlightenment. The moral superiority of Christianity 
ChrtMth to paganism was speedily obvious. The only question 
"**• was which form of Christianity were the Magyars to 
adopt, the Eastern or the Western? Constantinople was the 
first in the field. The splendour of the imperial city profoundly 
impressed all the northern barbarians, and the Magyars, during 
the 10th century, saw a great deal of the Greeks. One Tran- 
sylvanian raider, Gyula, brought back with him from Constanti- 
nople a Greek monk, Hierothus (c. 950), who was consecrated 
" first bishop of Turkia." Simultaneously a brisk border trade 
was springing up between the Greeks and the Magyars, and the 
Greek chapmen brought with them their religion as well as their 
wares. Everything at first tended to favour the propaganda 
of the Greek Church. But ultimately political prevailed over 
religious considerations. Alarmed at the sudden revival of the 
Eastern Empire, which under the Macedonian dynasty extended 
once more to the Danube, and thus became the immediate 
neighbour of Hungary, Duke Geza, who succeeded Taksony 
in 972, shrewdly resolved to accept Christianity from the more 
distant and therefore less dangerous emperor of the West. 
Accordingly An embassy was sent to Otto II. at Quedlinburg 
in 973, and in 975 Geza and his whole family were baptized. 
During his reign, however, Hungarian Christianity did not 
extend much beyond the limits of his court. The nation at 
large was resolutely pagan, and Geza, for his own sake, was 
obliged to act warily. Moreover, by accepting Christianity 
from Germany, he ran the risk of imperilling the independence 
of Hungary. Hence his cautious, dilatory tactics: the encourage* 
ment of Italian propagandists, who were few, the discouragement 
of German propagandists, who were many. Geza, in short, 
regarded the whole matter from a statesman's point of view, 
and was content to leave the solution to time and his successor. 

That successor, Stephen L (q.v.), was one of the great construc- 
tive statesmen of history. His long and strenuous reign (997* 
*_«_» _ 10 3**) resulted in the firm establishment of the Hun- 
5t9 P k9alt garian church and the Hungarian state. The great 
work may be said to have begun in 1001, when Pope Silvester II. 
recognized Magyar nationality by endowing the young Magyar 
prince with a kingly down. Less fortunate than his great 
exemplaf, Charlemagne, Stephen had to depend entirely upon 
foreigners — men like the Saxon Asztrik 1 (c. 976-1010), the first 
Hungarian primate; the Lombard St Gellcrt (c. 977-1046); 
the Bosomanns, a German family, better known under the 
Magyarized form of their name Pazmany, and many others 
who came to Hungary in the suite of his enlightened consort 
Gisela of Bavaria. By these men Hungary was divided into 
dioceses, with a metropolitan see at Esztcrgom (Gran), a city 
originally founded by Geza, but richly embellished by Stephen, 
whose Italian architects built for him there the first Hungarian 
cathedral dedicated to St Adalbert. Towns, most of them also 
the sees of bishops, now sprang up everywhere, including 
Szekesfehlrvar (Stuhlweissenburg), Veszprgm, Pecs (Fiinf kirchen) 
and Gyor (Raab). Esztergom, Stephen's favourite residence, 
was the capital, and continued to be so for the next two centuries. 
But the Benedictines, whose settlement in Hungary dates from 
the establishment of their monastery at Pannonhalma (c. 1001), 
were the chief pioneers. Every monastery erected in the Magyar 
wildernesses was not only a centre of religion, but a focus of 
civilization. The monks cleared the forests, cultivated the 
recovered land, and built villages for the colonists who flocked 
to them, teaching the people western methods of agriculture and 
western arts and handicrafts. But conversion, after all, was the 
chief aim of these devoted missionaries, and when some Venetian 
priests had invented a Latin alphabet for the Magyar language 
a great step had been taken towards its accomplishment. 

The monks were soon followed by foreign husbandmen, 
artificers and handicraftsmen, who were encouraged to come to 
Hungary by reports of the abundance of good land there and 
1 Ger. Ottrik. in religion Anasusius. 



T_» 



the promise of privileges. This Immigration was also stimulated 
by the terrible condition of western Europe between 987 and 
1060, when it was visited by an endless succession of bad harvest! 
and epidemics.* Hungary, now better known to Europe, cane 
to be regarded as a Promised Land, and, by the end of Stephen's 
reign, Catholics of all nationalities, Greeks, Pagans, Jews and 
Mabommedans were living securely together within bee borders. 
For, inexorable as Stephen ever was towards fanatical pagans, 
renegades and rebels, he was too good a statesman to inquire 
too closely into the private religious opinions of useful sad 
quiet citizens. 

In endeavouring, with the aid of the church, to establish 
his kingship oa the Western model Stephen had the f 
advantage of building on unencumbered ground, 
the greater part of the soil of the country being at his _____ 
absolute disposal His authority, too, was absolute, n ff ,;, 
being tempered only by the shadowy right of the Magyar 
nation to meet in general assembly; and this authority he was 
careful not to compromise by any slavish imitation of that 
feudal polity by which in the West the royal power was becoming 
obscured. Although he broke off the Magyar tribal system, 
encouraged the private ownership of land, and even made 
grants of land on condition of military service — in order ia 
secure an armed force independent of the national levy— he 
based his new principle of government, not on feuda___, bat 
on the organization of the Prankish empire, which he adapted 
to suit the peculiar exigencies of his realm. Of the institution! 
thus borrowed and adapted the most notable was the famou 
county system which still plays so conspicuous a part ia 
Hungarian national life. Central and western Hungary (the 
south and north-east still being desolate) were divided into 
forty-six counties (vArmegyek, Lat. comilatus). At the head of 
each county was placed a count, or lord-lieutenant* (Fdispin, 
Lat. comes), who nominated his subordinate officials: the 
castellan (tdrnagy), chief captain (kadnagy) and " hundredor ** 
(szAxados, Lat. ceuturio). The lord-lieutenant was nominated 
by the king, whom he was bound to follow to battle at -the fat 
summons. Two-thirds of the revenue of the county went into the 
royal treasury, the remaining third the lord-lieutenant retained 
for administrative purposes. In the county system were in- 
cluded all the inhabitants of the country save two classes: 
the still numerous pagan clans, and those nobles who were 
attached to the king's person, from whom he selected his chief 
officers of state and the members of his council, of which we now 
hear for the first time. 

It is significant for the whole future of Hungary that no effort 
was or could be made by Stephen to weld the heterogeneous races 
under bis crown into a united nation. The body politic consisted, 
after as before, of the king and the whole mass of Magyar freemen 
or nobles, descendants of Arpad's warriors, theoretically aS 
equal in spite of growing inequalities of wealth and power, who 
constituted the populiu; privileges were granted by the king 
to foreign immigrants in the cities, and the rights of nobility 
were granted to non-Magyars for special services; but, ia 
general, the non-Magyars were ruled by the royal governors as 
subject races, forming— in contradistinction to the " nobles "— 
the mass of the peasants, the misera contribute fUbs upon whom 
until 1848 nearly the whole burden of taxation felL The right, 
not often exercised, of the Magyar nobles to meet in genet- 
assembly and the elective character of the crown Stephen also 
did not venture to touch. On the other hand, his ex a m ple ia 
manumitting most of his slaves, together with the precepts of 
the church, practically put an end to slavery in the course of 
the 13th century, the slaves becoming for the most part serfs, 
who differed from the free peasants only in the fact that they 
were attached to the soil {odscripli tUboe). 

At this time all the conditions of life in Hungary were simple 

* At its worst, c. 1030-1033, cannibalism was common. 

•The English title of lord-lieutenant is generally used as the 
best translation of F6isp6n or comes (in this connexion). The title 
of count (grdf) was assumed later (15th century) by those nobto 
who had succeeded, ia spite of the Golden Bull, in making t bar 
authority over whole counties independent and hereditary.— {Ed-J 



HISTORYJ 



ind primitive. The court Itself was perambulatory. In 
the lung dispensed justice in the open air, under a large tree. 
Only in the short winter months did be dwell in the house built 
for him at Esztergom by his Italian architects. The most 
valuable part of his property still consisted of flocks and herds, 
or the products of the labours of his serfs, a large proportion of 
whom were bee-keepers, hunters and fishers employed in and 
around the interminable virgin-forests of the rough-hewn young 
monarchy. 

A troubled forty years (1038-1077) divides the age of St Stephen 
from the age of St Ladislaus. Of the six kings who reigned in 
Hungary during that period three died violent deaths, and 
the other three were fighting incessantly against foreign and 
domestic foes. In 1046, and again in 1061, two dangerous pagan 
risings shook the very foundations of the infant church and 
state; the western provinces were in constant danger from the 
attacks of the acquisitive emperors, and from the south and south- 
east two separate hordes of fierce barbarians (the Petcheoeg* 
in 106 7-1068, and the Rumanians in 1071-1072) burst over the 
land. It was the general opinion abroad that the Magyars would 
either relapse into heathendom, or become the vassals of the Holy 
Roman Empire, and this opinion was reflected in the increasingly 
hostile attitude of the popes towards the Arpad kings. The 
political independence of Hungary was ultimately secured by 
the outbreak of the quarrel about investiture (1076), when 
Geza I. (1074-1077) shrewdly applied to Pope Gregory 
VII. for assistance, and submitted to accept his 
kingdom from him as a fief of the Holy See. The immediate 
result of the papal alliance was to enable Hungary, under both 
Ladislaus and his capable successor Coloman [Kalman] (1005* 
ii 16), to hold her own against all her enemies, and extend her 
dominion abroad by conquering Croatia and a portion of the 
Dalmatian coast. As an incipient great power, she was beginning 
to feel- the need of a seaboard. 

In the internal administration both Ladislaus L and Coleman 
approved themselves worthy followers of St Stephen. Ladislaus 
planted large Petcheneg colonies in Transylvania and 
the trans-Dravian provinces, and established military 
cordons along the constantly threatened south-eastern 
boundary, the germs of the future banates 1 (bdnsdgok) 
which were to play such an important part in the national 
defence in the following century. Law and order were enforced 
with the utmost rigour. In that rough age crimes of violence 
predominated, and the king's justiciars regularly perambulated 
the land in search of offenders, and decimated every village which 
refused to surrender fugitive criminals. On the other hand, 
both the Jews and the " Ishmaehtes" (Mahommedans) enjoyed 
complete civil and religious liberty In Hungary, where, indeed, 
they were too valuable to be persecuted. The Ishmaehtes, 
the financial experts of the day, were the official mint-masters, 
treasurers and bankers. The clergy, the only other educated class, 
supplied the king with his lawyers, secretaries and ambassadors. 
The Magyar clergy was still a married clergy, and their connubial 
privileges were solemnly confirmed by the synod of Szabolcs, 
presided over by the king, in 1093. So firmly rooted in the land 
was this practice, that Coloman, much as he needed the assistance 
of the Holy See in his foreign policy, was only with the utmost 
difficulty induced, in 1106, to bring the Hungarian church into 
line with the rest of the Catholic world by enforcing clerical 
celibacy. Coloman was especially remarkable asan administrative 
reformer, and Hungary, during his reign, is said to have been 
the best-governed stale in Europe. He regulated and simplified 
the whole system of taxation, encouraged agriculture by dif- 
ferential duties in favour of the fanners, and promoted trade by 
a systematic improvement of the ways of communication. 
The Magna via Colomaitni Regis was m use for centuries after 
his death. Another important reform was the law permitting 
the free disposal of landed estate, which gave the holders an 
Increased interest in their property, and an inducement to im- 
prove it. During the reign of Coloman, moreover, the number 
Of freemen was increased by the frequent manumission of serfs. 
1 The Mft.is equivalent to the margrave, or count of the marches. 



HUNGARY 



903 



The lot of the slaves was also somewhat ameliorated by the 
law forbidding their exportation. 

Throughout the greater part of the 12th century the chief 
impediment in the way of the external development of the 
Hungarian monarchy was the Eastern Empire, which, n^gtry 
under the first three princes of the Coronenian dynasty, wttb i*» 
dominated south-eastern Europe. During the earlier 
part of that period the Magyars competed on fairly 
equal terms with their imperial rivals for the possession of 
Dalmatia, Rascia (the original home of the Servians, situated 
between Bosnia, Dalmatia and Albania) and Rama or northern 
Bosnia (acquired by Hungary in 1135); but on the accession 
of Manuel Comnenus in x 143 the struggle became acute. As 
the grandson of St Ladislaus, Manuel had Hungarian blood in 
his veins; his court was the ready and constant refuge of the 
numerous Magyar malcontents, and be aimed not so much at 
the conquest as at the suzerainty of Hungary, by placing one 
of his Magyar kinsmen on the throne of St Stephen. He success- 
fully supported the claims of no fewer than three pretenders to 
the Magyar throne, and finally made Beia III. (11 73-1 196) king 
of Hungary, en condition that he left him, Manuel, a free hand 
in Dalmatia. The intervention of the Creek emperors had im- 
portant consequences for Hungary. Politically it increased the 
power of the nobility at the expense of the crown, every com- 
peting pretender naturally endeavouring to win adherents by 
distributing largesse in the shape of crown-lands. Ecclesi- 
astically k weakened .the influence of the Catholic Church in 
Hungary, the Greek Orthodox Church, which permitted a 
married clergy and did not impose the detested tithe (the 
principal cause of nearly every pagan revolt) attracting thousands 
of adherents even among the higher clergy. At one time, indeed, 
a Magyar archbishop and four or five bishops openly joined the 
Orthodox communion and willingly crowned Manuel's nominees 
despite the anathemas of their Catholic brethren. 

The Eastern Empire ceased to be formidable on the death o» 
Manuel (108©), and Hungary was free once more to pursue a 
policy of aggrandisement. In Dalmatia the Venetians Btoartk 
were too strong for her; but she helped materially to 
break up the Byzantine rule in the Balkan peninsula by assisting 
Stephen Nemanya to establish an independent Servian kingdom, 
originally under nominal Hungarian suzerainty. Beia en- 
deavoured to strengthen his own monarchy by introducing the 
hereditary principle, crowning his infant son Erne rich, as his 
successor during his own- Ufetime, a practice followed by most 
of the later Arpads; he also held a brilliant court on the Byzan- 
tine model, and replenished the treasury by his wise economies. 

Unfortunately the fruits of his diligence and foresight were 
dissipated by the follies of his two immediate successors, Emeridi 
(1196-1904) and Andrew II. (9.9.), who weakened the Aa ^ 9WlL 
royal power in attempting to win support by lavish 
grants of the crown domains on the already over-influential 
magnates, a policy from which dates the supremacy of the 
semi-savage Magyar oligarchs, that insolent and self-seeking 
class which would obey no superior and trampled ruthlessly 
on every inferior. The most conspicuous event of Andrew's 
reign was the promulgation in 1322 of the so-called Golden Bull, 
which has aptly been called the Magna Carta of Hungary, and 
is in some of its provisions strikingly reminiscent of that signed 
seven years previously by the English king John. 

The Golden Bull has been described at. consecrating the humiliation 
of the crown by the great barons, whose usurpations h legalized: 
the more usually accepted view, however, is that it was directed 
not so much to weakening as to strengthening the crown by uniting 
its interests with those ofthe mass of the Magyar nobility, equally 
threatened by the encroachments of the great barons.' The pre- 
amble, indeed, speaks of the curtailment of the liberties of the nobles 
by the power of certain of the kin^s, and at the end the right of 
armed resistance to any attempt to infringe the charter is conceded 
to " the bishops and the higher and lower nobles" of the realm; 
but. for the rest, its contents clearly show that it was intended to 
strengthen the monarchy by ensuring " that the momentary folly 



* Andristy, Development of Hung. Const. Liberty (Enj„ trans., 
p. 93); KnakkbmU-Hugwen, i. 26 seq.. where its provisions are 
given in some detail. 



or weakness of the king «hould not endanger the institution itself." 
This u especially clear from clause xvi., which decrees (hat the 
title and estates of the lords-lieutenant of counties should not be 
hereditary, thus attacking feudalism at its very roots, while clause 
xiv. provides for the degradation of any lord-lieutenant who should 
abuse his office. On the other hand, the principle of the exemption 
of all the nobles from taxation is confirmed, as well as their right to 
refuse military service abroad, the defence of the realm being their 
sole obligation. All nobles were also to have the right to appear 
at the court which was to be held once a year at Stekeslcher- 
var. by the king, or in his absence by the palatine, 1 for the purpose 
of hearing causes. A clause also guarantees all nobles against 
arbitrary arrest and punishment at the instance of any powerful 
person. 

This famous charter, which was amplified, under the influence 
of the clergy, in 1331, when its articles were placed under tike 
guardianship of the archbishop of Esztergom (who was authorised 
to punish their violation by the king with excommunication), 
is generally regarded as the foundation of Hungarian constitu- 
tional liberty, though like Magna Carta it purported only to 
confirm immemorial rights; and as such it was expressly 
ratified as a whole in the coronation oaths of all the Habsburg 
kings from Ferdinand to Leopold I. Its actual effect in the 
period succeeding its issue was, however, practically nugatory ; 
if indeed it did not actually give a new handle to the subversive 
claims of the powerful barons. 

Bela IV. (1235-1270), the last man of genius whom the Arpad* 
produced, did something to curb the aristocratic misrule which 
BiM iv was to k* onc °* tnc determining causes of the collapse 
* of his dynasty. But he is best known as the regenerator 
of the realm after the cataclysm of 1 341-1242 (see B£la IV.). 
On his return from exile, after the subsidence of the Tatar deluge, 
he found his kingdom in ashes; and his two great remedies, 
wholesale immigration and castle-building, only sowed the seeds 
of fresh disasters. Thus the Rumanian colonists, mostly pagans, 
whom he settled in vast numbers on the waste lands, threatened 
to overwhelm the Christian population; while the numerous 
strongholds, which he encouraged his nobles to build as a protec- 
tion against future Tatar invasions, subsequently became to 
many centres of disloyalty. To bind the Rumanian still more 

closely to his dynasty, B61a married his son Stephen V. 
MMrL*tf*£ ( I2 7o-«72) to a Rumanian girl, and during the 
toffy, reign of her son Ladislaus IV. (1272-1200) the court 

was certainly more pagan than Christian. Valiant 
and enterprising as both these princes were (Stephen successfully 
resisted the aggressions of the brilliant " golden King," Ottakar 
II. of Bohemia, and Ladislaus materially contributed to his 
utter overthrow at Dumkriit in 1278), neither of them was 
strong enough to make head against the disintegrating influences 
all around them. Stephen contrived to bold his own by adroitly 
contracting an alliance with the powerful Neapolitan Angevins 

who had the ear of the pope; but Ladislaus (?.».) 
Eadot tb* waa ^ ^napieteiy caught in the toils of the Rumanians, 
ltyB*siy. that the Holy See, the suzerain of Hungary, was 

forced to intervene to prevent the relapse of the 
kingdom into barbarism, -and the unfortunate Ladislaus perished 
in the crusade that was preached against him. An attempt 
of a patriotic party to keep the last Arpad, Andrew III. (1200* 
I301), on the throne was only temporarily successful, and after 
a horrible eight years' civil war (1301-1308) the crown of St 
Stephen finally passed into the capable hands of Charles Robert 
of Naples. 

During the four hundred years of the Arpad dominion the 
nomadic Magyar race had established itself permanently in 
central Europe, adopted western Christianity and founded a 
national monarchy on the western model. Hastily and violently 
converted, driven like a wedge between the Eastern and the 
Western Empires, the young kingdom was exposed from the 
first to extraordinary perils. But, under the guidance of a 

1 The full title of the palatine (Mag. nddor or nddor-ispdn, Lat. 
PaUtinus) was comes palatii regni, the first palatine being Abu Samuel 
(<r. 1041). By the Golden Bull the palatine acquired something of 
the quality of a responsible minister, as " intermediary between the 
crown and people, guardian of the nation's rights, and keeper of 
the king's conscience " (KnatchbuUHugessen. i. 30). 



HUNGARY tmsroRT 

series of eminent rulers, it successfully asserted Itself alike against 
pagan reaction from within, and aggressive pressure from 
without, and, as it grew in strength and skill, expanded territori- 
ally at the expense of all its neighbours. These triumphs were 
achieved while the monarchy was absolute, and thus abk to 
concentrate in its hands all the resources of the state, but towards 
the end of the period a political revolution began. The weakness 
and prodigality of the later Aipads, the depopulation of lac 
realm during the Tatar invasion, the infiltration of westers 
feudalism and, finally, the endless civil discords of the 13th 
century, brought to the front a powerful and predacious class 
of barons who ultimately overshadowed the throne. The 
ancient county system was gradually absorbed by this new 
governing element. The ancient royal tenants became the 
feudatories of the great nobles, and fell naturally into two classes, 
the ncbiUs bene pvt sessional, and the mobiles mmms session*, 
in other words the richer and the poorer gentry. We cannot 
trace the gradations of this political revolution, but we know 
that it met with determined opposition from the crown, which 
resulted in the utter destruction of the Arpids, who, whuc 
retaining to the last their splendid physical qualities, now 
exhibited unmistakeable signs of moral deterioration, partly 
due perhaps to their too frequent marriages with semi-Oriental 
Greeks and semi-savage Rumanians. On the other hand the 
great nobles were the only class who won for themselves a 
recognized political position. The tendency towards a repre- 
sentative system of government had begun, but the almost 
uninterrupted anarchy which marked the last thirty years 
of the Arpad rule was no favourable time for constitutional 
development. The kings were fighting for their lives, the great 
nobles were indistinguishable from brigands and the whole nation 
seemed to be relapsing into savagery. 

It was reserved for the two great princes of the house of Anjon, 
Charles I. (13107134a) *nd Louis I. (1342-1382), to rebuild tbt 
Hungarian state, and lead jthe Magyars back to 
civilisation. Both by character and education they 
were eminently fitted for the task, and all the circum- 
stances were in their favour. They brought from their native 
Italy a thorough knowledge of the science of government as the 
middle ages understood it, and the decimation of the Hungarian 
magnates during the civil wars enabled them to re-create the 
noble hierarchy on a feudal basis, in which full allowance was 
made for Magyar idiosyncrades. Both these monarch*- were 
absolute. The national assembly (OrstaggyuMes) was still 
summoned occasionally, but at very irregular intervals* the 
real business of the state being transacted in the^^^ 
royal council, where able men of the middle class, JJ2JJ* 
principally Italians, held confidential positions. The 
lesser gentry were protected against the tyranny of the 
magnates, encouraged to appear at court and taxed for military 
service by the royal treasury direct— so as to draw them 
closer to the crown. Scores of towns, too, owe their origin 
and enlargement to the care of the Angevin princes, who were 
lavish of privileges and charters, and saw to it that the high-roads 
were dear of robbers. Charles, moreover, was a born financier, 
and his reform of the currency and of the whole fiscal system 
greatly contributed to enrich both the merchant class and the 
treasury. Louis encouraged the cities to surround themselves 
with strong wails. He himself erected a whole cordon of forts 
round the nourishing mining towns of northern Hungary. 
He also appointed Hungarian consuls in foreign trade centres, 
and established a system of protective tariffs. More important 
in its ulterior consequences to Hungary was the law of 1351 
which, while confirming the Golden Bull in general, abrogated 
the clause (iv.) by which the nobles bad the right to alienate 
their lands. Henceforward their possessions were to descend 
directly and as of right to their brothers and their issue, whose 
daira was to be absolute. This " principle of avitirity " (4n*4& 
avUicum), which survived till 1848, was intended to preserve 
the large feudal estates as part of the new military system, but 
its ultimate effect was to hamper the development of the country 
by preventing the alienation, and therefore the mortgaging of 



RBTORY] 



HUNGARY 



905 



lands, ad long as any, however distant, scion of the original 
owning family survived. 1 Louis's efforts to increase the national 
wealth "<ere also largely frustrated by the Black Death, which 
ravaged Hungary from 1347 to 1360, and again during 1380-1381, 
carrying off at least one-fourth of the population. 

Externally Hungary, under the Angevin kings, occupied a 
commanding position. Both Charles and Louis were diplo- 
matists as weH as soldiers, and their foreign policy, largely 
based on family alliances, was almost invariably successful. 
Charles married Elizabeth, the sister of Casimir the Great of 
Poland, with whom he was connected by ties of close friendship, 
and £ouis, by virtue of a compact made by his father thirty-one 
years previously, added the Polish crown to that of Hungary m 
1370. Thus, during the last twelve years of his reign, the 
dominions of Louis the Great included the greater part of central 
Europe, from Pomerania to the Danube, and from the Adriatic 
to the steppes of the Dnieper. 

The Angevins were less successful towards the south, where the 
first signs were appearing of that storm which ultimately swept 

away the Hungarian monarchy. In 13 S3 the Ottoman 
la^sloa*. Turks crossed the Hellespont from Asia Minor and 

began that career of conquest which made them the 
terror of Europe for the next three centuries. In 1360 they 
conquered southern Bulgaria. In 7365 they transferred their 
capital from Brusa to Adrianople. In 1371 they overwhelmed 
the Servian tsar Vu leash in at the battle of Taenarus and pene- 
trated to the heart of old Servia. In 1380 they threatened 
Croatia and Dalmatia. Hungary herself was now directly 
menaced, and the very circumstances which had facDitated the 
advance of the Turks, enfeebled the potential resistance of the 
Magyars. The Arpad kings had succeeded in encircling their whole 
southern frontier with half a dozen military colonies or banates, 
comprising, roughly speaking, Little Walachia* and the northern 
parts of Bulgaria, Servia and Bosnia. But during this period a 
redistribution of territory had occurred in these parts, which 
converted most of the old banates into semi-independent and 
violently anti-Magyar principalities. This was due partly to the 
excessive proselytizing energy of the Angevins, which provoked 
rebellion on the part of their Greek-Orthodox subjects, partly to 
the natural dynastic competition of the Servian and Bulgarian 

tsars, and partly to the emergence of a new nationality, 
vjadks. tne Walachian. Previously to 13 20, what is now 

called Walachia was regarded by the Magyars as part 
Of the banate of Szbreny. The base of the very mixed and ever- 
shifting population in these parts were the Vlachs (Rumanians), 
perhaps the descendants of Trajan's colonists, who, under their 
voivode, Bazarad, led Ring Charles into an ambuscade from 
which he basely escaped with bis life (Nov. 0-1 2, 1330). From 
this disaster are to be dated the beginnings of Walachia as ah 
independent state. Moldavia, again, ever since the 1 1 th century, 
had been claimed by the Magyars as forming, along with Bessar- 
abia and the Bukowina, a portion of the semi-mythical Etelkdz, 
the original seat of the Magyars before they occupied modern 
Hungary. This desolate region was subsequently peopled by 
Vlachs, whom the religious persecutions of Lotra the Great had 
driven thither from other parts of his domains, and, between 
1350 and 1360, their voivode Bogdan threw off the Hungarian 
yoke altogether. In Bosnia the persistent attempts of the 
Magyar princes to root out the stubborn, crazy and poisonous 
sect of the Bogomib had alienated the originally amicable 
Bosnians, and m 1353 Louis was compelled to buy the friendship 
of their Bar Tvrtko by acknowledging him as king of Bosnia. 
Both Servia and Bulgaria were by this time split up into half a 
dozen principalities which, as much for religious as for political 
reasons, preferred paying tribute to the Turks to acknowledging 
the hegemony of Hungary. Thus, towards the end of his reign, 
Louis found himself cut off from the Greek emperor, his sole ally 
In the Balkans, by a chain of bitterly hostile Greek-Orthodox 
states, extending from the Black Sea to the Adriatic. The 

1 KnaUhbuU-Hutf!sen> i. 41. 

•That is to say the western portion of Walachia, which lies 
between the Aluta and the Danube. 



commercial greed of the Venetians, who refused to aid him with 
a fleet to cut off the Turks in Europe from the Turks in Asia 
Minor, nullified Louis' last practical endeavour to cope with a 
danger which from the first he had estimated at its true value. 

Louis the Great left two infant daughters: Maria, who was 
to share the throne of Poland with her betrothed, Sigismund of 
Pomerania, and Hedwig, better known by her Polish name of 
Jadwiga, who was to reign over Hungary with her young bride- 
groom, William of Austria. This plan was upset by the queen- 
dowager Elizabeth, who determined to rule both kingdoms 
during the minority of her children. Maria, her favourite, with 
whom she refused to part, was crowned queen of Hungary a 
week after her father's death (Sept. 17, 1382). Two years later 
Jadwiga, reluctantly transferred to the Poles instead of her 
sister, was crowned queen of Poland at Cracow (Oct. 15, 1384) 
and subsequently compelled to marry JagielJo, grand-duke of 
Lithuania. In Hungary, meanwhile, impatience at the rule of 
women induced the great family of the Horvathys to offer the 
crown of St Stephen to Charles III. of Naples, who, despite the 
oath of loyalty he had sworn to his benefactor, Louis the Great, 
accepted the offer, landed in Dalmatia with a small Italian army, 
and, after occupying Buda, was crowned king of Hungary on the 
jtst of December, 1385, as Charles II. His reign lasted thirty- 
eight days. On the 7th of February, 1386, he was treacherously 
attacked in the queen-dowager's own apartments, at her instiga- 
tion, and died of his injuries a few days later. But Elizabeth did 
not profit long by this atrocity. In July the same year, while 
on a pleasure trip with her daughter, she was captured by the 
Horvathys, and tortured \o death in her daughter's presence. 
Maria herself would doubtless have shared the same fate, but for 
the speedy intervention of ber jianci, whom a diet, by the 
advice of the Venetians, had elected to rule the headless realm on 
the 31st of March 1387. He married Maria m June the same 
year, and she shared the sceptre with him tin her sudden death 
by accident on the 17th of May 1395. 

During the long reign of Sigismund (1387*1437) Hungary was 
brought face to face with the Turkish peril in its most threatening 
shapes and all the efforts of the king were directed 
towards combating or averting it. However sorry a 
figure Sigismund may have cut as emperor in Germany, 
as king of Hungary he claims our respect, and as king 
of Hungary he should be judged, for he ruled her, not 
unsuccessfully, for fifty years during one of the most difficult 
crises of her history, whereas his connexion with Germany was 
at best but casual and transient.* From the first he recognized 
that his chief duty was to drive the Turks from Europe, or, at 
least, keep them out of Hungary, and this noble ambition was 
the pivot of his whole policy. A domestic rebellion (1387-1395) 
prevented hhn at the outset from executing his design till 1396, 
and if the hopes of Christendom were shattered at Nicopolis, the 
failure was due to no fault of his, but to the haughty insubordina- 
tion of the feudal levies. Again, his inaction during those memor- 
able twelve years (1401-1413) when the Turkish empire, after the 
collapse at Angora (1402), seemed about to be swallowed up by 
* the great wolf " Tamerlane, was due entirely to the malice of 
the Holy See, which, enraged at his endeavours to maintain the 
independence of the Magyar church against papal aggression 
(the diet of 1404, on Sigismund's initiative, had declared bulb 
bestowing Magyar benefices on foreigners, without the royal 
consent, pernicious and illegal), saddled him with a fresh rebellion 
and two wars with Venice, resulting ultimately In the total loss of 
Dalmatia (c. 1430). Not till 1409 could Sigismund be said to be 
king in his own realm, yet in 1413 we find him traversing Europe 
in his endeavour to terminate the Great Schism, as the first step 
towards uniting Christendom Once more against the Turk. 
Hence the council of Constance to depose three rival popes; 
hence the council Of Basel to pacify the Hussites, and promote 
another anti-Moslem league. But by this time the Turkish 

• Though elected king of the Romans in 1411, he cannot be 
regarded as the legal emperor till his coronation at Rome in 1423. 
and if he wa* titular king of Bohemia as early as 1410, he was not 
acknowledged as king by the Czechs themselves till 1436. 



Sfrff 



906 



HUNGARY 



empire had been raised again from its ruins by Mahommed I. 
(1402-14*1), and resumed its triumphal progress under Murad 
II. (1421-1451). Yet even now Sigismund, at the head of his 
Magyars, thrice (14*2-1424, 1426-1427, and 1430-143 en- 
countered the Turks, not ingloriously, in the open held, till, 
recognizing that Hungary must thenceforth rely entirely on her 
own resources in any future struggle with Islam, he elaborately 
fortified the whole southern frontier, and converted the little fort 
of Nandorfehirvar, later Belgrade, at the junction of the Danube 
and Save, into an enormous first-class fortress, which proved 
strong enough to repel all the attacks of the Turks for more than 
a century. It argued no ordinary foresight thus to recognise 
that Hungary's strategy in her contest with the Turks must be 
strictly defensive, and the wisdom of Sigismund was justified by 
the disasters which almost invariably overcame tha later Magyar 
kings whenever they ventured upon aggressive warfare with 
the sultans. 

A monarch so overburdened with cares was naturally always 
in need of money, 1 and thus obliged to lean heavily upon the 
Support of the estates of the realm. The importance and 
influence of the diet increased proportionately. It met every 
year, sometimes twice a year, during Sigismund's reign, and was 
no longer, as in the days of Louis the Great, merely a consultative 
council, but a legislative body in partnership with the king. 
It was still, however, essentially an assembly of notables, lay 
and clerical, at which the gentry, though technically eligible, 
do not seem to have been directly represented. At Sigismund's 
first diet (1397) it was declared that the king might choose his 
counsellors where he listed, and at the diet of 1397 he invited 
the free and royal towns to send their deputies to the parliament 
Subsequently this privilege was apparently erected into a statute, 
but how far it was acted upon we know not. Sigismund, more 
fortunate than the Polish kings, seems to have had little trouble 
with his diets. This was largely due to his friendly intimacy 
with the majority of the Magyar notables, from among whom 
he chose his chief counsellors. The estates loyally supported 
biro against the attempted exactions of the popes, and do not seem 
to have objected to any of his reforms, chief among which was 
the army-reform project of 1435, to provide for the better 
defence of the land against the Turks. This measure obliged all 
the great dignitaries, and the principal towns also, according to 
their means, to maintain a bondtriun of five hundred horsemen, 
or a proportional part thereof, and bold it ready, at the first 
summons, thus supplying the crown with a standing army 
76,875 strong. In addition to this, a reserve force called the 
klckkalonas&t was recruited from among the lesser gentry 
according to their uUks or holdings, every thirty-three Uieks 
being held responsible for a mounted and fully equipped archer. 
Moreover, river fleets, built by Genoese masters and manned by 
Servians, were constructed to patrol and defend the great rivers 
of Hungary, especially on the Turkish frontier. Much as he 
owed to them, however, Sigismund was no mere nobles' king. 
His care for the common people was sincere and constant, but 
his beneficial efforts in this direction were thwarted by the 
p.. curious interaction of two totally dissimilar social 
tytfm. factors, feudalism and Hussitism. In Sigismund's 
reign the feudal system, for the first time, became 
deeply rooted in Magyar soil, and it is a lamentable fact that 
in isih-century Hungary it is to be seen at its very worst, 
especially in those wild tracts, and they were many, in which the 
king's writ could hardly be said to run. Simultaneously from 
ttmniUam Ihe west came the Hussite propagandists teaching 
that all men were equal, and that all property should 
be held in common. The suffering Magyar multitudes eagerly 
responded to these seductive teachings, and the result was a 
series of dangerous popular risings (the worst in 1433 and 1436) 
in which heresy and communism were inextricably intermingled. 
With the aid of inquisitors from Rome, the evil was literally 
burnt out, but not before provinces, especially in the south and 

1 In 1412 he pawned the twenty*four Zips towns to Poland, and. 
in 1411 he pledged hit margraviate of Brandenburg to the Hohen- 
zollerns. 



(HISTORY 
They were re- 



south-east, had been utterly depopulated, 
peopled by Vlachs. 

Yet despite the interminable wars and rebellion* 
darken the history of Hungary in the reign of Sigismund, the 
country, on the whole, was progressing. Its ready response 
to the king's heavy demands for the purpose of the n atio n al 
defence points to the existence of a healthy and self-sacriaViag 
public spirit, and the eagerness with which the youth of all dmases 
now began to flock to the foreign universities is another satis- 
factory feature of the age. Between 1362 and 1450 no fewer 
than 4151 Magyar students frequented the university of 
Vienna, nearly as many went by preference to Prague, and this, 
too, despite the fact that there were now two universities in 
Hungary itself, the old foundation of Louis the Great at Pecs, 
and a new one established at Buda by Sigismund. 

Like Louis the Great before him, Sigismund bad failed ta 
found a dynasty, but, fifteen years before his death, he had 
succeeded in providing his only daughter Elisabeth with a 
consort apparently well able to protect both her and her in- 
heritance in the person of Albert V., duke of Austria. Albert, 
a sturdy soldier, who had given brilliant proofs of valour and 
generalship in the Hussite wars, was crowned king of Hungary 
at SzeJcesfeh6rvar (Stuhlweissenburg) on the 1st of January 
1438, elected king of the Romans at Frankfort on the tftth of 
March 1438, and crowned king of Bohemia at Prague on the 
29th of June 1438. On reluming to Buda in 1439. he hi once 
plunged into a war with the Turks, who had, in the meantime, 
captured the important Servian fortress of Semcndria and 
subjugated the greater part of Bosnia. But the king got no 
farther than Servia, and was carried off by dysentery (Oct. 27, 
i439)i in the forty-second year of his age, in the course of the 
campaign. 

Albert left behind him two infant daughters only, but his 
consort was big with child, and, in the event of thai child proving 
to be an heir male, his father's will bequeathed to him the 
kingdoms of Hungary and Bohemia, under the regency of 
his mother. Thus, with the succession uncertain, with the 
Turk at the very door, with the prospect, dismal at the best, 
of a long minority, the political outlook was both embarrasciag 
and perilous. Obviously a warrior-king was preferable 10 a 
regimen of women and children, and the eyes of the wiser 
Magyars turned involuntarily towards Wladislaus III. of Poland. 
who, though only in his nineteenth year, was already renowned 
for his martial disposition. Wladislaus accepted the proffered 
throne from the Magyar delegates at Cracow on the 8th of 
March 1440; but in the meantime (Feb. 22) the queen- widow 
gave birth to a son who, six weeks later, as Ladislaus V. (9.9.) 
was crowned king of Hungary (May 1 5) at Szckcsfehlrvir Oa 
the 22nd of May the Polish monarch appeared at Buda. was 
unanimously elected king of Hungary under the title of Wladi sl aus 
I. (June 24) and crowned on the 17th of July. This duoregnua 
proved even more injurious to Hungary than the dreaded 
interregnum. Queen Elizabeth, aided by her kinsmen, the 
emperor Frederick III. and the counts of Cilli, flooded northern 
and western Hungary with Hussite mercenaries, one of whom. 
Jan Giszkra, she made her cap tain -general, while Wladislaus 
held the central and south-eastern parts of the realm. The 
resulting civil war was terminated only by the death of .Elizabeth 
00 the 13th of December 1443. 

All this time the pressure of the Turks upon the southern 
provinces of Hungary had been continuous, but fortunately 
all their efforts had so far been frustrated by the ^^ 
valour and generalship of the ban of Szoreny, John t§ mtfm ^, 
Hunyadi, the fame of whose victories, notably in 1442 
and 1443, encouraged the Holy See to place Hungary /or the 
third time at the head of a general crusade against the infidel 
The experienced diplomatist Cardinal Cesarini was accordingly 
sent to Hungary to reconcile Wladislaus with the emperor 
The king, who had just returned from the famous "Jong cam- 
paign " of 1443, willingly accepted the leadership of the Christian 
League. At the diet of Buda, early in 1444. supplies were voted 
for the enterprise, and Wladislaus was on the point of quitting 



HISTORY) 



HUNGARY 



907 



bis camp at Sieged for the seat of war, when envoys from Saltan 
Murad arrived with the offer of a ten years' truce on such favour- 
able conditions (they included the relinquishment of Servia, 
Walachia and Moldavia, and the payment of an indemnity) 
that Hunyadi persuaded the king to conclude (in July) a peace 
which gave him more than could reasonably be anticipated from 
the most successful campaign. Unfortunately, two days later, 
Cardinal Cesarini absolved the king from the oath whereby he 
had sworn to observe the peace of Szeged, and was thus mainly 
responsible for the catastrophe of Varna, when four months 
later (Nov. 10) the young monarch and the flower of the Magyar 
chivalry were overwhelmed by fourfold odds on Turkish soil. 
(See Hunyaot, JAnos; and Wladislaus III.) 

The next fourteen years form one of the most interesting and 
pregnant periods of Hungarian history. It marks the dawn 
of a public spirit as represented by the gentry, who, alarmed 
at the national peril and justly suspicious of the ruling magnates, 
unhesitatingly placed their destinies in the hands of Hunyadi, 
the one honest man who by sheer merit had risen within the 
last ten years from the humble position of a country squire 
to a leading position in the state. This feeling of confidence 
found due expression at the diet of 1446, which deliberately 
passing over the palatine Laszlo Garai elected Hunyadi governor 
of Hungary, and passed a whole series of popular measures 
intended to be remedial, e.g. the decree ordering the demolition 
Of the new castles, most of them little better than robber-strong- 
holds; the decree compelling the great officers of state to 
suspend their functions during the session of the diet-, the 
decree declaring illegal the new fashion of forming confederations 
on the Polish model, all of which measures were obviously 
directed against the tyranny and the lawlessness of the oligarchy. 
Unfortunately this salutary legislation remained a dead letter. 
It was as much as the governor could do to save the state from 
destruction, let alone reform it. At this very time northern 
Hungary, including the wealthy mining towns, was in the 
possession of the Hussite mercenary Jan Giszkra, who held 
them nominally for the infant king Ladtslaus V., stOl detained 
at Vienna by his kinsman the emperor. The western provinces 
were held by Frederick himself. Invaluable time was wasted 
hi negotiating with these intruders before the governor could 
safely devote himself to the task of expelling the Turk from the 
southern provinces. He had to be content with armistices, 
reconciliations and matrimonial contracts, because the great 
dignitaries of the state, men like the palatine Laszlo Garai, 
Count Uhicb of Cilli, and the voivode of Transylvania, Mihaly 
Ujlaky, thwarted in every way the novus, homo whom they hated 
and envied. From them, the official guardians of Hungary's 
safety, he received no help, either during his governorship (144&- 
M53)> or when, in 1454, on the eve of 4iis departure for his last 
and most glorious campaign, the diet commanded a Ictte en 
masse of the whole population in his support. At that critical 
hour it was at his own expense that Hunyadi fortified Belgrade, 
now the sole obstacle between Hungary and destruction, with 
the sole assistance of the Franciscan friar Giovanni da Capistrano, 
equipped the fleet and the army which relieved the beleaguered 
fortress and overthrew Mahommed II. But the nation at least 
was grateful, and after his death (Aug. 11, 1456) it freely trans- 
ferred its allegiance to his family as represented by his two 
sons, L4szl6, now in his 23rd, and Matthias, now in his 16th 
year. The judicial murder of L4szl6 Hunyadi (q.v.) by the 
enemies of his house (March 16, 1457) was there/ore a stupid 
blunder as well as the foulest of crimes, and on the death of his 
chief assassin, Ladislaus V., six months later (Nov. 23, 1457). 
the diet which assembled on the banks of the RAkos, in defiance 
of the magnates and all foreign competitors, unanimously and 
enthusiastically elected Matthias Hunyadi king of Hungary 
(Jan. 24, 1458). 

In less than three years the young king had justified their 

confidence, and delivered his country from its worst embarrass- 

^ttVkfttL ments - (See Matthias I., king of Hungary.) This 

prodigy was accomplished in the face of every 

conceivable obstacle. His first diet grudgingly granted him 



supplies and soldiers for the Turkish war, on condition that 
under no circumstances whatever should they henceforth be 
called upon to contribute towards the national defence, and he 
was practically deprived of the control of the benderia or 
mounted militia. It was with a small force of mercenaries, 
raised at his own expense, that the young king won his first 
Turkish victories, and expelled the Czechs from his northern 
and the Habsburgt from his western provinces. But his limited 
resources, and, above all, the proved incapacity of the militia 
in the field, compelled him instantly to take in band the vital 
question of army reform. In the second year of his reign he 
undertook personally the gigantic task of providing Hungary 
with an army adequate to her various needs on the model of the 
best military science of the day. The landless younger sons 
of the gentry and the Servian and Vlach immigrants provided 
him with excellent and practically inexhaustible military 
material. The old feudal levies he put aside. Brave enough 
personally, as soldiers they were distinctly inferior both to the 
Janissaries and the Hussites, with both of whom Matthias had 
constantly to contend. It was a trained regular army in his 
pay and consequently at his disposal that he wanted. The 
nucleus of the new army he found in the Czech mercenaries* 
seasoned veterans who readily transferred their services to the 
best payer. This force, formed in 1450, was generally known 
as the FtkeU Sereg, or '• Black Brigade/ 1 from the colour of its 
armour. From 1465 the pick of the Magyars and Croatians 
were enlisted in the same way every year, till, towards the end 
of his reign, Matthias could count upon 20,000 horse and 8000 
foot, besides 6000 black brigaders. The cavalry consisted of 
the famous Hussars, or light horse, of which he may be said to 
have been the creator, and the heavily armed mounted musketeers 
on the Czech-German model. The infantry, in like manner, 
was divided into light and heavy. This army was provided 
with a regular commissariat, cannon 1 and ballistic machines, 
and, being constantly on active service, was always in a high 
state of efficiency. The land forces were supported by a river 
fleet consisting (in 1470) of 360 vessels, mostly sloops and 
corvettes, manned by 2000 sailors, generally Croats, and carrying 
10,000 soldiers. Eight large military stations were also built 
at the chief strategic points on the Danube, Save and Theiss. 
These armaments, which cost Matthias 1,000,000 florins per 
annum, equivalent to £200,000, did not include the auxiliary 
troops of the hospodars of Walachia and Moldavia, or the 
feudal levies of the barons and prelates* 

The army of Matthias was not only a military machine of 
first-rate efficiency, but an indispensable civilising medium. 
It enabled the king to curb the lawlessness of the Magyar nobility, 
and explains why none of the numerous rebellions against him 
ever succeeded. Again and again, during his absence on the 
public service, the barons and prelates would assemble to 
compass his ruin or dispose of his crown, when, suddenly, 
" like a tempest," from the depths of Silesia or of Bosnia, he 
would himself appear among them, confounding and scattering 
them, often without resistance, always without bloodshed. He 
also frequemly employed his soldiers in collecting the taxes from 
the estates of those magnates who refused to contribute to the 
public burdens, in protecting the towns from the depredations 
of the robber barons, or in convoying the caravans of the 
merchants. In fact, they were a police force as wcH as an army. 

Despite the enormous expense of maintaining the army, 
Matthias, after the first ten years of his reign, was never in want 
of money. This miracle was achieved by tact and management. 
No Hungarian king had so little trouble with the turbulent diet 
as Matthias. By this time the gentry, as well as the barons 
and prelates, took part in the legislature. But attendance at 
the diet was regarded by the bulk of the poorer deputies as an 
intolerable burden, and they frequently agreed to grant the taxes 
for two or three years in advance, so as to be saved the expense 

1 Some of these were of gigantic size, e.g. the Varea Mozssr, or 
great mortar, which sixty horses could scarce move from its place, 
and a ballistic machine Invented by Matthias which could hurl 
stones of 3 cwt. 



go8 



HUNGARY 



gHlSTORY 



of attending every year. Moreover, to promote their own 
convenience, they readily allowed the king to assess as well 
as to collect the taxes, which consequently tended to become 
regular and permanent, while Matthias' reform of the treasury, 
which was now administered by specialists with separate 
functions, was economically of great benefit to the state. Yet 
Matthias never dispensed with die diet. During the thirty-two 
years of his reign he held at least fifteen diets, 1 at which no 
fewer than 450 statutes were passed. He re-codified the Hungarian 
common law; strictly defined the jurisdiction of the whole 
official hierarchy from the palatine to the humblest village judge; 
cheapened and accelerated legal procedure, and in an age when 
might was right did his utmost to protect the weak from the 
strong. There is not a single branch of the law which he did not 
simplify and amend, and the iron firmness with which he caused 
justice to be administered, irrespective of persons, if it exposed 
him to the charge of tyranny from the nobles, also won for him 
from the common people the epithet of " the Just." To Matthias 
Is also due the credit of creating an efficient official class. Merit 
was with him the sole qualification for advancement. One of his 
best generals, Pal Kinizsy, was a miller's son, and his capable 
chancellor, Piter Varady, whom he made archbishop of Kalocsa, 
came of a family of small squires. For education so scholarly 
a monarch as Matthias naturally did what he could. He founded 
the university of Pressburg (Academia Istropolitana, 1467)1 
revived the declining university of Pecs, and, at the time of his 
death, was meditating tffe establishment of a third university 
at Bud*. 

Unfortunately the civilizing efforts of Matthias made but 
little impression on society at large. The bulk of the Magyar 
nobility was still semi-barbaric. Immensely wealthy (it is 
estimated that most of the land, at this time, was in the hands of 
25 great families, the Zapolyas alone holding an eighth of it), it 
was a point of honour with them to appear in public in costly 
raiment ablaze with silver, gold and precious stones, followed at 
every step by armies of retainers scarcely less gorgeous. At the 
same time their ignorance was profound. Many of the highest 
dignitaries of state did not know their alphabet. Signatures to 
documents of the period are rare; seals served instead of signa- 
tures, because most of the nobles were unable to sign their names. 
Learning, indeed, was often ridiculed as pedantry in a gentleman 
of good family. 

The clergy, the chief official class, were naturally less ignorant 
than the gentry. Some of the prelates— notably Janos 
Csezmeczey, better known as Janus Pannonzus (1433-1472) — 
had a European reputation for learning. The primate Cardinal, 
J&nos Vitea (140&-1472), at the beginning, and the primate, 
Cardinal Tamas Bakocz (q.v.) t at the end of the reign were men 
of eminent ability and the highest culture. But the moral tone of 
the Magyar church at this period was very low. The bishops 
prided themselves on being great statesmen, great scholars, great 
financiers, great diplomatists — anything, in fact, but good 
Christians. Most of them, except when actually celebrating 
mass, were indistinguishable alike in costume and conduct from 
the temporal magnates. Of twelve of them it is said that 
foreigners took them at first for independent temporal princes, 
so vast were their estates, so splendid their courts, so numerous 
their armed retainers. Under such guides as these the lower 
clergy erred deplorably, and drunkenness, gross immorality, 
brawling and manslaughter were common occurrences in the 
lives of the parish priests. The regular clergy were if possible 
worse than the secular, with the exception of the Paulicians, the 
sole religious order which steadily resisted the general corruption, 
of whose abbot, the saintly Gregory, was the personal friend of 
Matthias. 

What little culture there was outside the court, the capital and 
the palaces of a few prelates, was to be found in the towns, most 
of them of German origin. Matthias laboured strenuously to 
develop and protect the towns, multiplied municipal charters, and 
materially improved the means of communication, especially in 

* We know actually of fifteen, but there may Have been many 
*aore. 



Transylvania, His SUesian anrfAustrian acquisitions «m also 
very beneficial to trade, throwing open as they did the western 
markets to Hungarian produce. Wine and meat were the chief 
exports. The wines of Hungary were already renowned through- 
out Europe, and cattle breeding was conducted on a great scale. 
Of agricultural produce there was barely sufficient for hone 
consumption, but the mining industries had reached a very high 
level of excellence, and iron, tin and copper were very largely 
exported from the northern counties to Danzig and other Baltic 
ports. So highly developed indeed were the Magyar metho ds 
of smelting, that Louis XI. of France took the Hungarian mining 
system as the model for his metallurgical reforms, and Hungarian 
master-miners were abo in great demand at the court of Ivan the 
Terrible. Moreover, the keen artistic instincts of Matthias led him 
to embellish his cities as well as fortify them. Debreczen was 
practically rebuilt by him, and dates its prosperity from his 
reign. Breslau, his favourite town, he endowed with many fiae 
public buildings. Buda he endeavoured to make the worthy 
capital of a great realm, and the palace which he built there was 
pronounced by the papal legates to be superior to any in Italy. 

Politically Matthias raised Hungary to the rank of the greatest 
power in central Europe, her influence extending into Asia and 
Africa. Poland was restrained by his alliances with 
the Teutonic Knights and the tsardom of Muscovy, 
and his envoys appeared in Persia and in Egypt to 
combat the diplomacy of the Porte. He never, indeed, jeo- 
pardised the position of the Modems in Europe as his father had 
done, and thus the peace of Szeged (1444), which regained the 
line of the Danube and drove the Turk behind the Balkans, 
must always be reckoned as the high-water mark of Hungary's 
Turkish triumphs. But Matthias at least taught the saltan to 
respect the territorial integrity of Hungary, and throughout hit 
reiga the Eastern Question) though often vexatious, was never 
acute* Only after his death did the Ottoman empire become a 
menace to Christendom. Besides, his hands were tied by the 
unappeasable enmity of the emperor and the emperor's allies, sad 
he could never count upon any material help from the West 
against the East. The age of the crusades bad gone. Through- 
out his reign the Czechs and the Germans were every whit as 
dangerous to Hungary as the Turks, and the political necessity 
which finally compelled Matthias to partition Austria and 
Bohemia, in order to secure Hungary, committed him to a policy 
of extreme circumspection. He has sometimes been blamed for 
not crushing his incurably disloyal and rebellious nobles, instead 
of cajoling them, after the example of his contemporary, Louis 
XI., who laid the foundations of the greatness of France on the 
ruin of the vassals. But Louis XL had a relatively civilized and 
politically developed middle class behind him, whereas Matthias 
had not. It was as mucji as Matthias could do to keep the ri\k 
life of Hungary from expiring altogether, and nine-tenths of his 
burgesses were foreigners with no political interest in the country 
of their adoption. Never was any dominion so purely personal, 
and therefore so artificial as his. His astounding energy and 
resource curbed all his enemies during his lifetime, but they 
were content to wait patiently for his death, well aware that the 
collapse of his empire would immediately follow. 

All that human foresight could devise for the consolidation and 
perpetuation of the newly established Hungarian empire had 
been done by Matthias in the last years of his reign. 
He had designated as his successor his natural son, rf ,, n „ 
the highly gifted J&nos (John) Corvinus, a youth of 
seventeen. He had raised him to princely rank, endowed him with 
property which made him the greatest territorial magnate in the 
kingdom, placed in his hands the sacred crown and half-a-dozen 
of the strongest fortresses, and won over to his cause the majority 
of the royal council. How Janos was cajoled out of an almost 
impregnable position, and gradually reduced to insignificance, is 
told elsewhere (see Corvinus, Janos). The nobles 
and prelates, who detested the severe and strenuous 
Matthian system, desired, as they expressed it, " a king 
whose beard they could hold in their fists," and they found a 
monarch after their own heart in Wladi*laus Jagiello, since 1471 



historyi HUNGARY 

king of Bohemia, who as Wladisiaus XL wis electa) unanimously 
king of Hungary on the 15th of July 1490* Wladislaus was the 
personification of helpless inertia. His Bohemian subjects had 
long since dabbed him " King All Right " because he said yes to 
everything. As king of Hungary he was, from first to last, the 
poppet of the Magyar oligarchs, who proceeded to abolish all the 
royal prerogatives and safeguards which had galled them under 
Matthias. By the compact of Farkashida (1400) WladisUus not 
only confirmed all the Matthian privileges, but also repealed all 
the Matthian novelties, including the system of taxation which 
had enabled his predecessor to keep on foot an adequate national 
army. The virtual suppression of Wladislaus was completed at 
the diet of 1402, when " King AU Right " consented to live on the 
receipts of the treasury, which were barely sufficient to maintain 
his court, and engaged never to impose any new taxes on his 
Magyar subjects. The dissolution of the standing army, including 
the Black Brigade, was the immediate result of these decrees. 
Thus, at the very time when the modernization of the means of 
national defence had become the first principle, in every other 
part of Europe, of the strongly centralized monarchies which were 
rising on the ruins of feudalism, the Hungarian magnates deliber- 
ately plunged their country back into the chaos of medievalism* 
The same diet which destroyed the national armaments and 
depleted the exchequer confirmed the disgraceful peace of 
Pressburg, concluded between Wladislaus and the emperor 
Maximilian on the 7th of November 1401, whereby Hungary 
retroceded all the Austrian conquests of Matthias, together with 
a long strip of Magyar territory, and paid a war indemnity 
equivalent to £200,000. 

The thirty-six years which elapsed between the accession of 
Wladislaus II. and the battle of Monies Is the most melancholy 
and discreditable period of Hungarian history. Like Poland two 
centuries later, Hungary had ceased to be a civilized autonomous 
state because her prelates and her magnates, uncontrolled by 
any higher authority, and too ignorant or corrupt to look beyond 
their own immediate interests, abandoned themselves to the 
exclusive enjoyment of their inordinate privileges, while openly 
repudiating their primal obligation of defending the state against 
extraneous enemies. During these miserable years everything 
like patriotism or public spirit seems to have died out of the 
hearts of the Hungarian aristocracy. The great officers of state 
acted habitually on the principle that might Is right. Stephen 
Bathory, voivodc of Transylvania and count of the Szeklers, 
for instance, ruled Transylvania like a Turkish pasha, and 
threatened to behead all who dared to complain of his exactions; 
" Stinking carrion," he said, was hotter than living Szeklers. 
Thousands of Transylvanian gentlemen emigrated to Turkey 
to get out of his reach. Other great nobles were at perpetual feud 
with the towns whose wealth they coveted. Thus the Zapolyas, 
in 1500 and again in 1507, burnt a large part of Bretnobanya 
and Beszterczebanya, two of the chief industrial towns of north 
Hungary. Kronstadt, now the sole flourishing trade centre 
in the kingdom, defended itself with hired mercenaries against 
the robber barons. Everywhere the civic communities were 
declining; even Buda and Pressburg were half in ruins* In 
their misery the cities frequently appealed for protection to the 
emperor and other foreign potentates, as no redress was attainable 
at home. Compared even with the contemporary Polish diet 
the Hungarian national assembly was a tumultuous mob. 
The diet of 1497 passed most of its time in constructing, and then 
battering to pieces with axes and hammers, a huge wooden image 
representing the ministers of the crown, who were corrupt enough, 
but immovable, since they regularly appeared at the diet with 
thousands of retainers armed to the teeth, and openly derided 
the reforming endeavours of the lower gentry, who perceived 
that something was seriously wrong, yet were powerless to 
remedy it. All that the gentry could do was to depress the lower 
orders, and this they did at every opportunity. Thus, many 
of the towns, notably Viscgrad, were deprived of the charters 
granted to them by Matthias, and a whole series of anti-civic 
ordinances were passed. Noblemen dwelling within the walls 
of the. towns were especially exempted from all civic burdens, 



909 

while every burgess who bought* an extra-mural estate was made 
to pay doable tor the privilege. 1 Every nobleman had the right 
to engage m trade toll-free, to the great detriment of their 
competitors the burgesses. The peasant class suffered most of afl. 
In 1406 Varady, archbishop of Kajocsa, one of the few good 
prelates, declared that their lot was worse than that of brut* 
beasts. The whole burden of taxation rested on their shoulders, 
and so ground down were they by ingeniously multiplied 
exactions, that thousands of them were, reduced to literal 
beggary. 

Yet, despite this inward rottenness, Hungary, for nearly 
twenty years after the death of Matthias, enjoyed an undeserved 
prestige abroad, due entirely to the reputation which that great 
monarch had won for her. Circumstances, indeed, were especi- 
ally favourable. The emperor Maximilian was so absorbed by 
German affairs, that he could do her little harm, and under 
Bayezid II. and Selim I. the Turkish menace gave little anxiety 
to the court of Buda, Bayezid being no warrior, while Schm's 
energies were claimed exclusively by the East, so that he was 
glad to renew the triennial truce with Hungary as often as it 
expired. Hungary, therefore, for almost the first time in ber 
history, was free to choose a foreign policy of her own, and had 
she been guided by a patriot, she might now have easily regained 
Dalmatia, and acquired besides a considerable sea-board. 
Unfortunately Tamos Bakocz, her leading diplomatist from 
1490 to is* 1, was as much an egotist as the other magnates, 
and he sacrificed the political interests of Hungary entirely 
to personal considerations. Primate of Hungary since 1407, he 
coveted the popedom— and the red hat as the first step thereto 
above all things,— and looked mainly to Venetian influence fox 
both. He therefore supported Venice against her enemies, 
refused to enter the League of Cambray in 1508, and concluded 
a ten years' alliance with the Signoria, which obliged Hungary to 
defend Venetian territory without any equivalent gain. Less 
reprehensible, though equally self-seeking, were his dealings 
with the emperor, which aimed at a family alliance between the 
Jogiellos and the Habsburga on the basis of a double marriage 
between the son and daughter of Wladislaus, Louis and Anne, 
and an Austrian archduke and archduchess; this was concluded 
by the family congress at Vienna, July aa, 15x5, to which Sigts- 
mund I. of Poland, the brother of Wladislaus, acceded. The 
Hungarian diet frantically opposed every Austrian alliance 
as endangering the national independence, but to any unpre- 
judiced observer a union with the house of Habsburg, even with 
the contingent probability of a Habsburg king, was infinitely 
preferable to the condition into which Hungary, under native 
aristocratic misrule,. was swiftly drifting. The diet itself had 
become as much a nullity as the king, and its decrees .were 
systematically disregarded. Still more pitiable was the condition 
of the court. The penury of Wladislaus II. was by this time so 
extreme, that he owed his very meals to the charity of his 
servants. The diet, indeed, voted him aids and subsidies, but 
the great nobles either forbade their collection within thek 
estates, or confiscated the amount collected. Under the cir- 
cumstances, we cannot wonder if the frontier fortresses fell 
to pieces, and the border troops, unpaid for years, took to 
brigandage. 

The last reserves of the national wealth and strength were 
dissipated by the terrible peasant rising of GyOrgy Dozsa (?.».) 
in 1514, of which the enslavement of the Hungarian 
peasantry was the immediate consequence. The SSJJf 1 
" Savage Diet " which assembled on the i8tb of ##/*. 
October the same year, to punish the rebels and restore 
order, well deserved its name. Sixty-two of its seventy-one 
enactments were directed against the peasants, who were hence- 
forth bound to the soil and committed absolutely into the 
hands of " their natural lords." To this vindictive legislation, 
which converted the labouring population into a sullenly hostile 

1 It should be remembered that at this time one-third of the land 
belonged to the church, and the remainder was in the bands of less 
than a dozen great families who had also appropriated the royal 



9io 



HUNGARY 



pnSTORY 



force within the state, It h mainly due that a healthy political 
life in Hungary became henceforth impossible. The same 

spirit of hostility to the peasantry breathed through 
jZrtUaa. t° e f &m °us condification of the Hungarian customary 

law known as the Tripartitum, which, though never 
actually formally passed into law, continued until 1845 to be 
the only document denning the relations of king and people, of 
nobles and their peasants, and of Hungary and her dependent 
states. 1 

• Wladislaus II. died on the 13th of March 1516, two years 
•iter the " Savage Diet," the ferocity of whose decrees he had 

feebly endeavoured to mitigate, leaving his two 
**J* a, « kingdoms to his son Louis, a child of ten, who was 
T^rti pronounced of age in order that his foreign guardians, 

the emperor Maximilian and Sigismund of Poland, 
might be dispensed with. The government remained in the 
hands of Cardinal Bakocz till his death in 1 521, when the supreme 
authority at court was disputed between the lame palatine Istvan 
Bathory, and his rival, the eminent jurist and orator Istvan 
Verboczy (q.v.), — both of them incompetent, unprincipled 
place-hunters, — while, in the background lurked Janos Zapolya 
(see John (Zapolya), kino op Hungary), voivode of Tran- 
sylvania, patiently waiting till the death of the feeble and 
childless king (who, in 152a, married Maria of Austria) should 
open for him a way to the throne. Every one felt that a catas- 
trophe was approaching. " Things cannot go on like this much 
longer," wrote the Venetian ambassador to bis government. 
The war of each against all continued; no taxes could be 
collected; the holders of the royal domains refused to surrender 
them at the command of the diet; and the boy king had very 
often neither clothes to wear nor food to eat. The whole atmo- 
sphere of society was one of rapine and corruption, and only on 
the frontier a few self-sacrificing patriots like the ban-bishop, 
Peter Biriszlo, the last of Matthias's veterans, and his successor 
the saintly Pal Tomori, archbishop of Kalocsa, showed, in their 
ceaseless war against the predatory Turkish bands, that the 
ancient Magyar valour was not yet wholly extinct. But the 
number of the righteous men was too few to save the slate. 
The first blow fell in 1521, when Sultan Suleiman appeared 
before the southern fortresses of Sabic and Belgrade, both of 
which fell into his hands during the course of the year. After 
this Venice openly declared that Hungary was no longer worth 
the saving. Yet the coup de grdce was postponed for another 
five years, during which time Suleiman was occupied with the 
conquest of Egypt and the siege of Rhodes. The Magyars 
fancied they were safe from attack, because, the final assault 
was suspended; and everything went on in the old haphazard 
way. Every obstacle was opposed to the collection of the taxes 
which had been voted to put the kingdom in a state of defence. 
u If this realm could be saved at the expense of three florins," 
exclaimed the papal envoy, Antonio Burgio, " there is not a man 
here willing to make the sacrifice." Only on the southern 
frontier did Archbishop Tomori painfully assemble a fresh army 
and fleet, and succeed, by incredible efforts, in constructing at 
Peterwardeln, on the right bank of the Danube, a new fortress 
which served him as a refuge and sally post in his interminable 
guerilla war with the Turks. 

In the spring of 1526 came the tidings that Sultan Suleiman 
had quitted Constantinople, at the head of a countless host, to 
conquer Hungary. On the 28th of July Peterwardcin, after a 
valiant resistance, was blown into the air. The diet, which met 
at Buda in hot haste, proclaimed the young king * dictator, 

'The Opus tripartilum Juris consueludinarii regni Hungarian 
was drawn up by Verboczy at the instance of the diet in 1507. It 
was approved by a committee of the diet and received the royal 
imprimatur in 1514, but was never published. In the constitutional 
history of Hungary the Tripartilum is of great importance as re- 
asserting the fundamental equality of all the members of the populus 
(i.e. the whole body of the nobles) and. more especially, as denning 
the co-ordinate power of the king and " people " in legislation : 
£«. the king may propose laws, but they had no force without the 
consent of the people, and vice versa. See Knatchbull-Hugeaaen, 

•He was just twenty. 



granted Mm unlimited subsidies which there was no time to 
collect, and ordered a lc*6e en ndss* of the entire male population, 
which could not possibly assemble within the given time. Louis 
at once formed a camp at ToLna, whence he issued despairing 
summonses to the lieges, and, by the middle of August, tome 
25,000 ill-equipped gentlemen bad gathered around Mm. With 
these he marched southwards to the plain of Monies, where, 
on the 99th of August, the Hungarians, after a two hours* fight, 
were annihilated, the king, both the archbishops, five bishops 
and 24,000 men perishing on the field. The sultan refused to 
believe that the pitiful array he had so easily overcome could be 
the national army of Hungary. Advancing with extreme caution, 
he occupied Buda on the x 2th of September, but speedily returned 
to bis own dominions, carrying off with him 105,000 captives, 
and an amount of spoil which filled the bazaars of the East tor 
months to come. By the end of October the last Turkish 
regular had quitted Magyar soil, and, to use the words of a 
contemporary observer, one quarter of Hungary was as utterly 
destroyed as if a flood had passed over it. 

The Turks had no sooner quitted the land than John Zapolya, 
voivode of Transylvania, assembled a diet at Tokaj (Oct. 14, 
1526) at which the towns were represented as well as Johm 
the counties. The tone of the assembly being violently r^nfra 
anti-German, and John being the only conceivable a i ww 
national candidate, his election was a matter of course ; *** 
but his misgivings were so great that it was not till the beginning 
of November that he very reluctantly allowed himself to be 
crowned at a second diet, held at Szekesfehervar. By this 
time a competitor had entered the field. This was the archduke 
Ferdinand, who claimed the Hungarian crown by right of 
inheritance in the name of his wife, Anne, sister of the late king. 
Ferdinand was elected (Dec 16) by a scratch assembly 
consisting of deputies from Croatia and the towns Jjjjjjj* 
of Pressburg and Sopron; but he speedily improved M j ttta q. 
his position in the course of 1527, by driving King 
John first from Buda and then from Hungary. In No vemb er 
the same year he was elected and crowned by a properly con- 
stituted diet at Sz&esfeheivar (Stuhlweissenburg). In x$ao 
Zapolya was reinstated in Buda by Suleiman the Magnificent 
in person, who, at this period, preferred setting up a 
rival to " the king of Vienna " to conquering Hungary 
outright. Thus the Magyars were saddled with two 
rival kings with equally valid titles, which proved an even 1 
disaster than the Mohacs catastrophe; for in most of the 
counties of the unhappy kingdom desperadoes of every descrip- 
tion plundered the estates of the gentry, and oppressed the com- 
mon people, under the pretext that they were fighting the battles 
of the contending monarchs. The determination of Ferdinand 
to partition Hungary rather than drive the Turks out, which 
he might easily have done after Suleiman's unsuccessful attempts 
on Vienna in 1520-1550, led to a prolongation of the struggle 
till the 24th of February 1538, when, by the secret peace of 
Nagyvarad,' Hungary was divided between the two competitors. 
By this treaty Ferdinand retained Croatia-Slavonia and the 
five western counties with Pressburg and Esztergom (Gran), 
while Zapolya kept the remaining two-thirds with the royal 
title. He was indeed the last national king of Hungary till 
modern times. His court at Buda was maintained according 
to the ancient traditions, and his gyiiks, at which 67 of the 73 
counties were generally represented, was the true national diet, 
the phantom assembly occasionally convened at Pressburg by 
Ferdinand scarcely deserving the title. Indeed, Ferdinand 
regarded his narrow strip of Hungarian territory as simply 
a barrier behind which he could better defend the hereditary 
states. During the last six years ( 1 534-1 540) of John's reign, his 
kingdom, beneath the guidance of the Paulidan monk, Frater 
Gyorgy, or George Martin uzzi (q.v.), the last great statesman 
of old Hungary, enjoyed a stability and prosperity marvellous 
in the difficult circumstances of the period, Martinuzzi holding 
the balance exactly between the emperor and the Porte with 

• Tt was kept secret for some years for fear of Turkish inter- 
vention. 



HISTORY] 



HUNGARY 



9U 



astounding diplomatic dexterity, and at the same time intro- 
ducing several important domestic reforms. Zapolya died on 
the 18th of July 1540, whereupon the estates of Hungary elected 
Jus baby son John Sigismund king, in direct violation of the 
peace of Grosswardein which had formally acknowledged 
Ferdinand as John's successor, whether he left male issue or not. 
Ferdinand at dhce asserted his rights by force of arms, and 
attacked Buda in May 1541, despite the urgent remonstrances of 
Marlinuzzi, who knew that the Turk would never suffer the 
emperor to reign at Buda, His fears were instantly justified. 
In August 1541, Suleiman, at the head of a vast army, invaded 
Hungary, and on the 30th of August, Buda was in his hands. 
During the six following years the sultan still further improved 
his position, capturing, amongst many other places, Pecs, and 
the primatial city of Esztcrgom; but, in 1547, the exigencies 

of the Persian war induced him to sell a truce of five 
J**** 1 "* years to Ferdinand iot £100^00, on a. uii possidetis basis, 

Ferdinand holding thirty-five counties (including 

Croatia and Slavonia) for which he was to pay an 
annual tribute of £60,000; John Sigismund retaining Tran- 
sylvania and sixteen adjacent counties with the title of prince, 
while the rest of the land, comprising most of the central counties, 
was annexed to the Turkish empire. Thus the ancient kingdom 
was divided into three separate states with divergent aims and 
interests, a condition of things which, with frequent rearrange- 
.ments, continued for more than 150 years. 

A period of infinite confusion and extreme misery now ensued, 
of which only the salient points can here be noted. The attempts 
_^ of the Ha bs burgs to conquer Transylvania drew down 

fefert^ir, upon them two fresh Turkish invasions, the first in 

1552, when the sultan's generals captured Temesv&r 
and fifty-four lesser forts or fortresses, and the second in 
1566, memorable as Suleiman's last descent upon Hungary, 
and also for the heroic defence of Saigetvar by Miklos Zrinyi 
(q. v.), one of the classical sieges of history. The truce of 
Adrianople in 1568, nominally for eight years, but prolonged 
from time to time till 1593, finally suspended regular hostilities, 
and introduced the epoch known as " The Long Peace," though, 
throughout these twenty-five years, the guerilla warfare on the 
frontier never ceased for more than a few months at a time, and 
the relations between the Habsburgs and Transylvania were 
persistently hostile. 

Probably no other country ever suffered so much from its 
rulers as Hungary suffered during the second half of the 16th 
century. This was due partly to political and partly to religious 
causes. To begin with, there can be no doubt that from 1558, 
when the German imperial crown was transferred from the 
Spanish to the Austrian branch of the Habsburg family, royal 
Hungary 1 was regarded by the emperors as an insignificant 
barrier province yielding far more trouble than profit. The 
visible signs of this contemptuous point of view were (x) the 
suspension of the august dignity of palatine, which, after the 
death of Tamas Nadasdy, " the great palatine," in 1562, was left 
vacant for many years; (2) the abolition or attenuation of all the 
ancient Hungarian court dignitaries; (3) the degradation of the 
capital, Pressburg, into a mere provincial town; and (4) the more 
and more openly expressed determination to govern Hungary 
from Vienna by means of foreigners, principally German or 
Czech. During the reign of Ferdinand, whose consort, Anne, 
was a Hungarian princess, things were at least tolerable; but 
under Maximilian (1564-1576) and Rudolph (1 576-161 2) the 
antagonism of the Habsburgs towards their Magyar subjects 
was only too apparent. The diet, which had the power of the 
purse, could not be absolutely dispensed with; but it was 
summoned as seldom as possible, the king often preferring to 
forego his subsidies rather than listen to the unanswerable 
remonstrances of the estates against the illegalities of his 
government. In the days of the semi-insane recluse Rudolph 
things went from bad to worse. The Magyar nobles were now 
systematically spoliated on trumped-up charges of treason; 

* In contradistinction to Turkish Hungary and Trantylvantan 
Hungary. 



hundreds of them were ruined. At last they either durst not 
attend the diet, or " sat like dumb dogs " during its session, 
allowing the king to alter and interpret the statutes at his 
good pleasure. Presently religious was superadded to political 
persecution. 

The Reformation had at first produced little effect on Hungary. 
Except in the towns, mostly of German origin, it was generally 
detested, just because it came from Germany. The 
battle of Mohacs, however, severely shook the faith ffj* °* 
of the Hungarians. " Where are the old Magyar £2™" 
saints? Why do they not defend the realm against 
the Turks? " was the general cry. Moreover, the corrupt church, 
had lost its hold on the affections of the people. Zapolya, a 
devout Catholic, is lauded by Archbishop Frangipan in 1533 
for arresting the spread of the new doctrines, though he would 
not allow Martinuzzi to take the extreme step of burning 
perverts at the stake. These perverts were mostly to be 
found among nobles desirous of amassing church property, or 
among those of the clergy who clamoured for communion in 
both kinds. So long, however, as the old national kingdom 
survived, the majority of the people still clung to the old faith. 
Under Ferdinand the parochial clergy were tempted to become 
Lutherans by the prospect of matrimony, and, in reply to the 
remonstrances of their bishops, declared that they would rather 
give up their cures than their wives. In Transylvania matters 
were at first ordered more peaceably. In 1552 the new doctrines 
obtained complete recognition there, the diet of Torda (1557) 
going so far as to permit every one to worship in his own way so 
long as he did not molest his neighbour Yet, in the following 
year, the whole of the property of the Catholic Church there 
was diverted to secular uses, and the Calvinists were simul- 
taneously banished, though they regained complete tolerance in 
1564, a privilege at the same time extended to the Unitarians, 
who were now very influential at court and converted Prince 
John Sigismund to their views. In Turkish Hungary all the 
confessions enjoyed liberty of worship, though the CatJiolics, as 
possible partisans of the " king of Vienna," were liked the least. 
It was only when the Jesuits obtained a footing both at Prague 1 
and Klauscnburg that persecution began, but then it was very 
violent. In Transylvania the princes of the Bathory family 
(1571-1604) were ardent disciples of the Jesuit fathers, and 
Sigismund Bathory in particular persecuted fiercely, his fury 
being especially directed against the queer judaizing sect known 
as the Sabbatarians, whose tenets were adopted by the Sxcklcrs, 
the most savage of " the three nations " of Transylvania, many 
thousands of whom were, after a bloody struggle, forced to 
emigrate. In royal Hungary also the Jesuits were the chief 
persecutors. The extirpation of Protestantism was a deliberate 
prearranged programme, anti as Protestantism was by this 
time identical with Magyarism* the extirpation of the one was 
tantamount to the extirpation of the other. The method gener- 
ally adopted was to deprive the preachers in the towns of their 
churches by force, Italian mercenaries being preferably employed 
for the purpose. It was assumed that the Protestant nobles* 
jealousy of the burgesses would prevent them from interfering; 
but religious sympathy proved stronger than caste prejudice, 
and the diets protested against the persecution of their fellow 
citizens so vehemently that religious matters were withdrawn 
from their jurisdiction. 

This persecution raged most fiercely towards tne end of what 
.is generally called "The Long War," which began in 1593, 
and lasted till 1606. It was a confused four-cornered 
struggle between the emperor and the Turks, the Jjjg- 
Turks and Transylvania, Michael of Moldavia and ,Wsr." 
Transylvania, and Transylvania and the emperor, 
desultory and languishing as regards the Turks (the one notable 
battle being Sigismund Bathory 's brilliant victory over the 

* At first the Habsburgs held their court at Prague instead of at 
Vienna. 

•According to contemporary records the number of prelates 
and priests in the three parts of Hungary at the beginning of the 
17th century was but 103, all told, and of the great families not 
above half a dozen still clung to Catholicism, 



9*2 



HUNGARY 



{HISTORY 



grand vfcrier in Watachia in isqs, when the Magyar army pene- 
trated as far as Giurgcvo), but very bitter as between the emperor 
and Transylvania, the principality being finally subdued by the 
imperial general, George Basta, in August 1604. A reign of terror 
ensued, during which the unfortunate principality was well-nigh 
ruined. Basta was authorized to Germanize and Catholicize 
without delay, and he began by dividing the property of most of 
the nobles among his officers, appropriating the lion's share him' 
self. In royal Hungary the same object was aimed at by in- 
numerable indictments against the richer landowners, indictments 
supported by false title-deeds and carried through by forged or 
purchased judgments of the courts. At last the estates of even 
the most devoted adherents of the Habsburgs were not safe, 
and some of them, like the wealthy Istvan Illeshizy (1 540-1600), 
had to fly abroad to save their heads. Fortunately a peculiarly 
shameless attempt to blackmail Stephen Bocskay, a rich and 
powerful Transylvanian nobleman, converted a long- 
suffering friend of the emperor into a national deliverer. 
Bocskay (q.v.), a quiet but resolute man, having once 
made up his mind to rebel, never paused till he had estab- 
lished satisfactory relations between the Austrian court and the 
Hungarians. The two great achievements of his brief reign 
(he was elected prince of Transylvania on the 5th of April 1605, 
and died on the 29th of December 1606) were the peace of Vienna 
(June 23, 1606) and the truce of Zsitvatdrok (November 1606). 
By the peace of Vienna, Bocskay obtained religious liberty and 
political autonomy, the restoration of all confiscated estates, 
the repeal of all unrighteous judgments and a complete retro- 
spective amnesty for all the Magyars in royal Hungary, besides 
his own recognition as independent sovereign prince of an 
enlarged * Transylvania. This treaty b remarkable as being the 
first constitutional compact between the ruling dynasty and the 
Hungarian nation. Almost equally important was the twenty 
years* truce of Zsitvatdrdk, negotiated by Bocskay between the 
emperor and the sultan, which established for the first time a 
working equilibrium between the three parts of Hungary, with 
a distinct political preponderance in favour of Transylvania. 
Of the 5163 sq. m. of Hungarian territory, Transylvania now 
possessed 2082, Turkish Hungary 1850, and royal Hungary only 
1222. The emperor, on the other hand, was freed from the 
humiliating annual tribute to the Porte on payment of a war 
indemnity of £400,000. The position of royal Hungary was still 
further improved when the popular and patriotic Archduke 
Matthias was elected king of Hungary on the 16th of November 
1608. He had previously confirmed the treaty of Vienna, and 
the day after his election he appointed IUeshazy, now reinstated 
in all his possessions and dignities, palatine of Hungary." In 
Transylvania, meantime, Gabriel Bath6ry had been elected 
(Nov. ix t 1608) in place of the decrepit Sigismund Rikoczy, 
Bocskay's immediate successor. 

For more than fifty t ycars after the peace of Vienna the princi- 
pality of Transylvania continued to be the bulwark of the 
, liberties of the Magyars. It owed its ascendancy in 

Varna!' the fim p!acc i ° inc aDiiities ° f ine tw ° p^ccs who 

Hesnaoay. ruled it from 1613 to 1648. The first and most 
famous of these rulers was Gabriel Bcthlen {q.v.), 
who reigned from 1613 to 1629, perpetually -thwarted all 
the efforts of the emperor to oppress or circumvent his Hungarian 
subjects, and won some reputation abroad by adroitly pretend- 
ing to champion the Protestant cause. Three times he waged 
war on the emperor, twice he was proclaimed king of Hungary, 
and by the peace of Nikolsburg (Dec. 31, 1621) he obtained for 
the Protestants a confirmation of the treaty of Vienna, and for 
himself seven additional counties in northern Hungary besides 
other substantial advantages. Bet Wen's successor, George I. 
Rikoczy, was equally successful. His principal achievement was 
the peace of Linz (Sept. 16. 1645). the last political triumph of 
Hungarian Protestantism, whereby the emperor was forced to 
confirm once more the oft-broken articles of the peace of Vienna, 



The counties of Szatmar. Ugocsa and Bereg and the fortress of 

uj were formally ceded to htm. 

He was the first Protestant palatine*, 



to restore nearly a hundred churches to the sects and to acknow- 
ledge the away of Rlkoczy over the north Hungarian counties. 
Gabrid Bethlen and George I. Rikoczy also did much for educa- 
tion and civilization generally, and their era has justly been called 
the golden era of Transylvania. They lavished money on the 
embellishment of their capital, Gyulafehervar, .which became a 
sort of Protestant Mecca, whither scholars and divines of every 
anti-Roman denomination flocked to bask in the favour of 
princes who were as liberal as they were pious. Yet both Bethlea 
and Rikoczy owed far more to favourable circumstances thaa 
to their own cunning. Their reigns synchronized with the Thirty 
Years* War, during which the emperors were never in a position 
seriously to withstand the attacks of the malcontent Magyars, 
the vast majority of whom were still Protestants, who naturally 
looked upon the Transylvanian princes as their protectors and 
joined them in thousands whenever they raided Moravia or 
Lower Austria, or threatened to advance upon Vienna. In si 
these risings no battle of importance was fought. Generally 
speaking, the Transyrvanians had only to appear, to have their 
demands promptly complied with; for these marauders bad to 
be bought off because the emperor had more pressing business 
elsewhere. Yet their military efficiency must have been small, for 
their allies the Swedes invariably allude to them as wild and 
ragged semi-barbarians. 

Another fortunate accident which favoured the hegemony of 
Transylvania was the temporary collapse of Hungary's most 
formidable adversary, the Turk. From the peace of 
ZsitvatorOk (1606) to the ninth year of the reign of 
George Rakoczy II., who succeeded his father in 1648, 
the Turkish empire, misruled by a series of incompetent 1 
and distracted by internal dissensions, was unable to intervene ia 
Hungarian politics. But in the autumn of 1656 a great statesman, 
Mahommed Kuprili (q.v.) , obtained the supreme control of affairs 
at Constantinople, and all Europe instantly felt the pressure of the 
Turk once more. It was George Rakoczy II. {q.v.) who gave the 
new grand vizier a pretext for interference. Against the advice 
of all his counsellors, and without the knowledge of the estates, 
Rikoczy, in 1657, plunged into the troubled sea of Polish politics, 
in the hope of winning the Polish throne, and not only failed 
miserably but overwhelmed Transylvania in his own rum. 
Kuprili, who had forbidden the Polish enterprise, at once 
occupied Transylvania, and, in the course of the next five years, 
no fewer than four princes, three of whom died violent deaths, 
were forced to accept the kaftan and kalpag of investiture in the 
camp of the grand vizier. When, at the end of 166 r f a more 
stable administration was set up with Michael Apaffy (1661-1600) 
as prince, Transylvania had descended to the rank of a feudatory 
of the Turkish empire. On the death of Mahommed Kuprili 
(Oct. 11, 1661) his son Fazil Ahmed succeeded him as grand 
vizier, and pursued his father's policy with equal genius and 
determination. In 1663 be invaded royal Hungary, with the 
intention of uniting all the Magyars against the emperor, but, 
the Magyars steadily refusing to attend any diet summoned 
under Turkish influence, his plan fell through, and his only 
notable military success was the capture of the fortress of 
£rsekujvar (Neuh&usel). In the following year, thanks to the 
generalship and heroism of Miklos Zrinyi the younger (?»-). 
Kuprili was still less successful. Zrinyi captured 
fortress after fortress, and interrupted the Turkish 
communications by destroying the famous bridge of 
Esseg, while Montecuculi defeated the grand vizier at 
the battle of St Got hard (Aug. 1, 1664). Yet, despite these 
reverses, Kuprili 's superior diplomacy enabled him, at the peace of 
Vasvir (Aug. 10, 1664) to obtain terms which should only have 
been conceded to a conqueror. The fortress of £rsekujvfr and 
surrounding territory were now ceded to the Turks, with the 
result that royal Hungary was not only still further diminished, 
but its northern practically separated from its southern portion. 
On the other hand the treaty of Vasvir gave Hungary a respite 
from regular Turkish invasions for twenty years, though the 
border raiding continued uninterruptedly. 

Of far more political importance than these fluctuating wars ot 



HISTORY] 



HUNGARY 



9«3 



invasion and conquest was the simultaneous Catholic reaction 
in Hungary. The movement may be said to nave begun 
about 1601, when the great Jesuit preacher and 
controversialist, Peter Pazmany (q.v.), first devoted 
himself to the task of reconverting his countrymen. 
Progress was necessarily retarded by the influence of the inde- 
pendent Protestant princes of Transylvania in the northern 
Counties of Hungary. Even as late as 1621 the Protestants at 
the diet of Pressburg were strong enough to elect their candidate, 
Sxaniszlo Thurzo, palatine. But Thurzo was the last Protestant 
palatine, and, on his death* the Catholics, at the diet of Sopron 
(1625), where they dominated the Upper Chamber, and had a 
large minority in the Lower, were able to elect Count Miklos 
Esterh&zy in Thurso's stead. The Jesuit programme in Hungary 
was the same as it had been in Poland a generation earlier, and 
may be summed up thus: convert the great families and all 
the rest will follow. 1 Their success, due partly to their 
whole-hearted zeal, and partly to their superior educational 
pir i«v* svslem » was extraordinary; and they possessed the 
njmkay*a w j^^ OTi9k \ advantage of having in Pazmany a leader 
of commanding genius. During his primacy (1616- 
1637), when he had the whole influence of the court, and the 
sympathy and the assistance of the Catholic world behind him, 
he put the finishing touches to his life's labour by foundings great 
Catholic university at Nagyszombat (1635)1 and publishing a 
Hungarian translation of the Bible to counteract the influence of 
Caspar Karoli's widely spread Protestant version. Pazmany 
was certainly the great civilizing factor of Hungary in the 
seventeenth century, and indirectly he did as much for the 
native language as for the native church. His successors had 
only to build on his foundations. One most striking instance of 
how completely he changed the current of the national mind may 
here be given. From 1526 to 162$ the usual jubilee pilgrimages 
from Hungary to Rome had entirely ceased. During his primacy 
they were revived, and in 1650, only seventeen years after his 
death, they were as numerous as ever they had been. Five years 
later there remained but four noble Protestant families in royal 
Hungary. The Catholicization of the land was complete. 

Unfortunately the court of Vienna was not content with 
winning back the Magyars to the Church. The Habsburg kings 
H.h *«~ were ** J ,calou$ °* lhc political *» of the religious 
nprnsfe*. liberties of their Hungarian subjects. This was partly 
owing to the fact that national aspirations of any sort 
were contrary to the Imperial system, which claimed to 
rule by right divine, and partly to an inveterate distrust of 
the Magyars, who were regarded at court as rebels by nature, 
and therefore as enemies far more troublesome than the Turks. 
The conduct of the Hungarian nobles in the past, indeed, some- 
what justified this estimate, for the fall of the ancient monarchy 
was entirely due to their persistent disregard of authority, to 
their refusal to bear their share of the public burdens. They 
were now to suffer severely for their past misdoings, but un- 
fortunately the innocent nation was forced to suffer with them. 
Throughout the latter part of the 17th and the beginning of the 
18th century, the Hungarian gentry underwent a cruel discipline 
at the hands of their Habsburg kings. Their privileges were 
overridden, their petitions were disregarded, their diets were 
degraded into mere registries of the royal decrees. They were 
never fairly represented in the royal council, they were excluded 
as far as possible from commands in Hungarian regiments, and 
were treated, generally, as the members of an inferior and 
guilty race. This era of repression corresponds roughly with 
the reign of Leopold I. (1657-1705), who left the government 
of the country to two bigoted Magyar prelates, Gyorgy Szelc- 
pesenyi (1595-168S) and Lip6t (Leopold) Kollonich (1631-1707), 
whose domination represents the high-water mark of the anti- 
national regimen. The stupid and abortive conspiracy of Peter 
Zrinyi and three other magnates, who were publicly executed 
(April 30, 167 1 ), was followed by wholesale arrests and confisca- 

1 The jobbaeyok, or under-tenants, had to follow the example of 
their lows: they were, by this time, mere «erf» with' no privileges 
either political or religious. 



tionsi and for a time the legal government of Hungary was 
superseded (Patent of March 3, 1673) by a committee of eight 
persons, four Magyars and four Germans, presided over by a 
German governor, but the most influential person in this 
committee was Bishop Kollonich, of whom it was said that, 
while Pazminy hated the heretic in the Magyar, Kollonich 
haled the Magyar in the heretic. A gigantic process against 
leading Protestant ministers for alleged conspiracy was the first 
act of this committee. It began at Pressburg in March 1674, 
when 236 of the ministers were " converted " or confessed to 
acts of rebellion. But the remaining 93 stood firm and were 
condemned to death, a punishment commuted to slavery in the 
Neapolitan galleys. Sweden, as one of the guarantors of the 
peace of Westphalia, and several north German states, protested 
against the injury thus done to their coreligionists. It was 
replied that Hungary was outside the operation of the treaty 
of Westphalia, and that the Protestants had been con de mned 
not ex odio rdigionis but criminc rcbcUumis. 

But a high-spirited nation cannot be extinguished by any 
number of patents and persecutions. So long as the Magyar 
people had any life left, it was bound to fight in 
self-defence, it was bound to produce " malcontents " fSSSSS 
who looked abroad for help to the enemies of the 
house of Habsburg. The first and most famous of the 
malcontent leaders was Count Imre Tdkdli {q.v.). Between 
1678 and 1682 Tokoli waged three wars with Leopold, and, 
in September 1682, was acknowledged both by the emperor and 
the sultan as prince of North Hungary as far as the river Garam, 
to the great relief of the Magyar Protestants. The success of 
Tdkdli rekindled the martial ardour of the Turks, and a war 
party, under the grand vizier Kara Mustafa, determined to 
wrest from Leopold his twelve remaining Hungarian counties, 
gained the ascendancy at Constantinople in the course of 1682. 
Leopold, intent on the doings of his perennial rival Louis XIV., 
was loth to engage in an eastern war even for the liberation of 
Hungary, which he regarded as of far less importance than a 
strip or two of German territory on the Rhine. But, stimulated 
by the representations of Pope Innocent XI., who, well aware 
of the internal weakness of the Turk, was bent upon forming 
a Holy League to drive them out of Europe, and alarmed, besides, 
by the danger of Vienna and the hereditary slates, Leopold 
reluctantly contracted an alliance with John III. of Poland, and 
gave the command of the army which, mainly through the efforts 
of the pope he had been able to assemble, to Prince Charles of 
Lorraine. The war, which lasted for 16 years and put an end 
to the Turkish dominion in Hungary, began with the world- 
renowned siege of Vienna (July u-Sept. 12, 1683). There is no 
need to recount the oft-told victories of Sobieski (see John IIL 
Sobieski, Kjnc op Poland). What is not quite so generally 
known is the fact that Leopold slackened at once and would have 
been quite content with the results of these earlier victories 
bad not the pope stiffened his resistanae by forming a Holy 
League between the Emperor, Poland, Venice, Muscovy and the 
papacy, with the avowed object of dealing the Turk the coup de 
tr&u (March 5, 1684). This statesmanlike persistence was 
rewarded by an uninterrupted series of triumphs, culminating 
in the recapture of Buda (1686) and Belgrade (1688), and the 
recovery of Bosnia (1689). But, in 1600, the third of the famous 
Kuprilis, Mustafa, brother of Fazil Ahmed, became grand 
vizier, and the Turk, still further encouraged by the death 
of Innocent XI., rained once more. In the course of that year 
Kuprili regained Servia and Bulgaria, placed Tokdli on the 
throne of Transylvania, and on the 6th of October took Belgrade 
by assault. Once more the road to Vienna lay open, 
but the grand viiicr wasted the remainder of the year JJJJCJJJJ* 
in fortifying Belgrade, and on August 18th, 1601, he tmkM. 
was defeated and slain at Slankamen by the margrave 
of Baden. For the next six years the war languished owing to 
the timidity of the emperor, the incompetence of his generals and 
the exhaustion of the Porte; but on the 1 ith of September 1697 
Prince Eugene of Savoy routed the Turks at Zcnta and on 
the 13th of November 1698 a peace-congress was opened at 



gi6 



HUNGARY 



[HXSTDKY 



or even to the diet, for the necessary reforms. Society itself 
oust Uke the initiative by breaking down the barriers of 
class exdusiveness and reviving a healthy public spirit. The 
effect of this teaching was manifest at the diet of 1832, when the 
liberals in the Lower Chamber had a large majority, prominent 
among whom were Francis Deak and Oddn Bcothy. In the 
Upper House, however, the magnates united with the government 
to form a conservative party obstinately opposed to any project 
of reform, which frustrated all the efforts of the Liberals. 

The alarm of the government at the power and popularity 
of the Liberal party induced it, soon after the accession of the 
now king, the emperor Ferdinand I. (183 5- 1848), to attempt to 
crush the reform movement by arresting and imprisoning the 
most active agitators among lhem, Louis Kossuth and Miklos 
Wesselenyi. But the nation was no longer to be cowed. The 
diet of 1830 refused to proceed to business till the political 
prisoners had been released, and, while in the Lower Chamber 
the reforming majority was larger than ever, a Liberal party 
was now also formed in the Upper House under the brilliant 
leadership of Count Louis Batthyany and Baron Joseph EotvOi. 
Two progressive measures of the highest importance were 
passed by this diet, one making Magyar the official language of 
Hungary, the other freeing the peasants' holdings from all 
feudal obligations. 

The results of the diet of 1830 did not satisfy the advanced 
Liberals, while the opposition of the government and of the 
„^^ Upper House still further embittered the general 
discontent. The chief exponent of this temper was the 
Pesli Hirlap, Hungary's first political newspaper, founded in 
r&ti by Kossuth, whose articles, advocating armed reprisals if 
necessary, inflamed the extremists but alienated Szechenyi, 
who openly attacked Kossuth's opinions. The polemic on both 
sides was violent; but, as usual, the extreme views prevailed, 
and on the assembling of the diet of 1843 Kossuth was more 
popular than ever, while the influence of Szcchenyi had sensibly 
declined. The tone of this diet was passionate, and the govern- 
ment was fiercely attacked for interfering with the elections. 
Fresh triumphs were won by the Liberals. Magyar was now 
declared to be the language of the schools and the law-courts 
as well as of the legislature; mixed marriages were legalized; 
and official positions were thrown open to non-nobles. 

The interval between the diet of 1843 and that of 1847 saw 
a complete disintegration and transformation of the various 
political parties. Szechenyi openly joined the government, 
while the moderate Liberals separated from the extremists and 
formed a new party, the Centralists. Immediately before the 
elections, however, Deak succeeded in reuniting all the Liberals 
on the common platform of " The Ten Points": (1) Responsible 
ministries, (a) Popular representation, (3) The incorporation of 
Transylvania, (4) Right of public meeting, (6) Absolute religious 
liberty, (7) Universal equality before the law, (8) Universal 
taxation, (9) The abolition of the Aviticum, an obsolete and 
anomalous land-tenure, (10) The abolition of serfdom, with 
compensation to the landlords. The ensuing elections resulted 
in a complete victory of the Progressives. All efforts to bring 
about an understanding between the government and the opposi- 
tion were fruitless. Kossuth demanded not merely the redress of 
actual grievances, but a reform which would make grievances 
impossible in the future. In the highest circles a dissolution of 
the diet now seemed to be the sole remedy; but, before it 
-^^ could be carried out, tidings of the February revolution 
SJJJ^JJ" ** Paris reached Pressburg 1 (March 1), and on the 3rd 
1848. of March Kossuth's motion for the appointment of an 
J*V independent, responsible ministry was accepted by the 
JJJJJJ Lower House. The moderates, alarmed not so much 
by the motion itself as by its tone, again tried to inter- 
vene; but on the 13th of March the .Vienna revolution broke out, 
and the king, yielding to pressure or panic, appointed Count 
Louis Batthyany premier of the first Hungarian responsible 
ministry, which included Kossuth, Szechenyi and De&k. The 
Ten Points, or the March Laws as they were now called, were 

1 Up to 1848 the Hungarian diet was usually held at Pressburg. 



Tft»J 
Mmg, 



then adapted by the legislature and received the royal assent 
(April to). Hungary had, to all intents and purposes, become an 
independent state bound to Austria only by the fact thai the 
palatine chanced to be an Austrian archduke. 

In the assertion of their national aspirations, conrased as these 
were with the new democratic ideals, the Magyars had had the 
support of the German democrats who temporarily 
held the reins of power in Vienna. On the other hand, 
they were threatened by an ominous stirring of the 
subject races in Hungary itself. Croats, Vlachs, Serbs 
and Slovaks resented Magyar domination — a domination which 
had been carefully secured under the revolutionary constitution 
by a very narrow franchise, and out of the general chaos each race 
hoped to create for itself a separate national existence. The 
separatist movement was strongest in the south, where the 
Rumans were in touch with their kinsmen in Walachia and 
Moldavia, the Serbs with their brethren in Scrvia, and the Croats 
intent on reasserting the independence of the " Tri-une Kingdom.* 

The attitude of the distracted imperial government tofwaids 
these movements was at first openly suspicious and hostile. 
The emperor and his ministers hoped that, having ._ 

conceded the demands of the Magyars, they would ekkki 
receive the help of the Hungarian government in 
crushing the revolution elsewhere, a hope that seemed to be 
justified by the readiness with which Batthyany consented to 
send a contingent to the assistance of the imperialists in Italy. 
That the encouragement of the Slav aspirations was soon 
deliberately adopted as a weapon against the Hungarian govern- 
ment was due, portly- to the speedy predominance at Pcsi of 
Kossuth and the extreme party of which he was the mouthpiece, 
but mainly to the calculated policy of Baron Jellachich, who ea 
the 14th of April was appointed ban of Croatia. Jellachich, who 
as a soldier was devoted to the interests of the imperial house, 
realized that the best way to break the revolutionary power of 
the Magyars and Germans would be to encourage the Slav 
national ideas, which were equally hostile to both; to set up 
against the Dualism in favour at Pest and Vienna the federal 
system advocated by the Slavs, and so to restore the traditional 
Habsburg principle of Divide cl impera. This policy he pursued 
with masterly skill. His first acts on taking up his office were to 
repudiate the authority of the Hungarian diet, to replace the 
Maygar officials with ardent "Illyrians," and to proclaim 
martial law. Under pressure from the palatine of Batthyany 
an imperial edict was issued, on the 7th day of May, ordering the 
ban to desist from his separatist plans and take his orders from 
Pest. He not only refused to obey, but on the 5th of June con- 
voked to Agram the Croatian national diet, of which the first act 
was to declare the independence of the Tri-une Kingdom. Once 
more, at the instance of Batthyany, the emperor intervened; arid 
on the xoth an imperial edict stripped Jellachich of all his oiikes. 

Meanwhile, however, Jellachich had himself started for 
Innsbruck, where he succeeded in persuading the emperor of the 
loyally of his intentions, and whence, though not as yet formally 
reinstated, he was allowed to return to Croatia with practically 
unfettered discretion. The Hungarian government, in fact, had 
played into his hands. At a time when everything depended 
on the army, they had destroyed the main tie which bound the 
Austrian court to their interests by tampering with the relation 
of the Hungarian army to the crown. In May a national guard 
had been created, the disaffected troops being bribed by increased 
pay to desert their colours and join this; and on the 1st of June 
the garrison of Pest had taken an oath to the constitution. AH 
hope of crushing revolutionary Vienna with Magyar aid was 
thus at an end, and Jellachich, who on the aoth issued a proclama- 
tion to the Croat regiments in Italy to remain with their colours 
and fight for the common fatherland, was free to carry out his 
policy of identifying the cause of the southern Slavs with that 
of the imperial army. The alliance was cemented in July by a 
military demonstration, of which Jellachich was the hero, at 
Vienna; as the result of which the government mustered up 
courage to declare publicly that the basis of the Austrian state 
was " the recognition of the equal rights of all nationalities." 



HISTORY] 



HUNGARY 



917 



This was the challenge which the Magyars were not alow to 
accept 

1 Id the Hungarian diet, which met 00 the and of July, the 
influence of the conservative cabinet was wholly overshadowed 
by that of Kossuth, whose inflammatory orations— 
£2SZ!f* directed against the disruptive designs of the Slavs and 
the treachery of the Austrian government— precipitated 
the crisis. At his instance the diet not only refused to 
vote supplies for the troops of the ban of Croatia, but only 
consented to pass a motion for sending reinforcements to the 
army in Italy on condition that the anti-Magyar races in Hungary 
should be first disarmed. On the nth, on his motion, a decree 
was passed by acclamation for a levy of 100,000 men and the 
raising of £4,500,000 for the defence of the ind e p end ence of the 
country. Desultory fighting, in which Austrian officers with the 
tacit consent of the minister of war took part against the Magyars, 
had already broken out in the south. It was not, however, until 
the victory of Custom. (July 35) set free the army in Italy, that 
the Austrian government ventured on bolder measures. On 
the 4th of September, after weeks of fruitless negotiation, the 
king-emperor threw down the gauntlet by reinstating Jellachich 
in all his honours. Seven days later the ban declared open 
war on Hungary by crossing the Drave at the head of 36,000 
Croatian troops (see Austua-Hungaiy: iftsfory). The immediate 
result was to place the extreme revolutionaries in power at Pest. 
Steechenyi had lost his reason some days before; Edtvos and 
Desk retired into private life; of the conservative ministers only 
Batthyiny, to his undoing, consented to remain in office, though 
hardly in power, Kossuth alone was supreme. 

The advance of Jellachich as far as Lake Balaton had not been 
checked, the Magyar troops, though— contrary to his expecta- 
tion—none joined him, offering no opposition. The palatine, 
the Austrian Archduke Stephen, after fruitless attempts at 
negotiation, laid down his office on the 24th of September and 
left for Vienna. One more attempt at compromise was made, 
General Count Lamberg 1 being sent to take command of all 
the troops, Slav or Magyar, in Hungary, with a view to arranging 
an armistice. His mission, which was a slight to Jellachich, was 
conceived as a concession to the Magyars, and had the general 
approval of Batthyiny. Unhappily, however, when Lamberg 
arrived in Pest, Batthyiny had not yet returned; the diet, 
on Kossuth's motion, called on the army not to obey the new 
commander-in-chief, on the ground that his commission had not 
been countersigned by a minister at Pest. Next day, as he was 
crossing the bridge of Buda, Lamberg was dragged from his 
carriage by a frantic mob and torn to pieces. This made war 
inevitable; though Batthyiny hurried to Vienna to try and 
arrange a settlement. Failing in this, he retired, and on the 
and of October a royal proclamation, countersigned by his 
successor, Recssey, placed Hungary under martial law and 
appointed Jellachich viceroy and commander of all the forces. 
This proclamation, together with the order given to certain 
Viennese regiments to march to the assistance of Jellachich, 
who had been defeated at Pakozd on the 20th of September, 
led to the tmcuU (Oct. 3) which ended in the murder of the 
minister of war, Latour, and the second flight of the emperor 
to Innsbruck. The fortunes of the German revolutionaries in 
Vienna and the Magyar revolutionists in Pest were now closely 
Aa0A# bound up together; and when, on the nth, Prince 
Windischgrfttz laid siege to Vienna, it was to 
Hungary that the democrats of the capital looked for 
relief. The despatch of a Urge force of militia to the assistance 
of the Viennese was, in fact, the first act of open rebellion of the 
Hungarians. They suffered a defeat at Schwechat on the 30th 
of October, which sealed the fate of the revolutionists in Vienna 
and thus precipitated a conflict d outrona in Hungary itself. 

1 Franz Phillip, Count von Lamberg (1791-1848), a neJd-marahat 
in the Austrian army, who had seen service in the campaigns of 
1814-1815 in France, belonged to the Stockerau branch of the 
ancient countly family of Orteneck-Ottenstetn. He was chosen for 
this particular mission as being himself a Hungarian magnate 
conversant with Hungarian affairs, but at the same time of the 
party devoted to the court. 



In Austria the army was now supreme, and the appointment 
of Prince Felix Schwarzenberg as head of the government was a 
guarantee that its power would be used in a reactionary 
sense without weakness or scruple. The Austrian 
diet was transferred on the 15th of November to 
Kremsier, remote from revolutionary influences; and, though 
the government still thought it prudent to proclaim its con- 
stitutional principles, it also proclaimed its intention to preserve 
the unity of the monarchy. A still further step was taken when, 
on the 2nd of December, the emperor Ferdinand abdicated in 
favour of his nephew Francis Joseph. The new sovereign was 
a lad of eighteen, who for the present was likely to be the mere 
mouthpiece of Schwarxenberg's poficy. Moreover, he was not 
bound by the constitutional obligations unwillingly accepted by 
his uncle. The Magyars at once took up the challenge. On the 
7th the Hungarian diet formally refused to acknowledge the title 
of the new king, "as without the knowledge and consent of 
the diet no one could sit on the Hungarian throne," and called 
the nation to arms. Constitutionally, in the Magyar opinion,' 
Ferdinand was still king of Hungary, and this gave to the revolt 
an excuse of legality. - Actually, from this time until the collapse 
of the rising, Louis Kossuth was the ruler of Hungary. / 

The struggle opened with a series of Austrian successes.' 
Prince Windischgritx, who had received orders to reduce. 
Hungary by fire and sword, began his advance on the 
15th of December; opened up the way to the capital jjtj^. 
by the victory of M6r (Oct. 30), and on the $th of Xm 
January 1849 occupied Pest, while the Hungarian 
government and diet retired behind the Theiss and established 
themselves at Debrecsen. A last attempt at reconciliation, 
made by the more moderate members of the diet in Windssch- 
gr&tz's camp at BieskS (Jan. 3), had foundered on the uncom- 
promising attitude of the Austrian commander, who demanded 
unconditional submission; whereupon the moderates, including 
Dealt and Batthyiny, retired into private Hie, leaving Kossuth 
to carry on the struggle with the support of the enthusiastic 
extremists who constituted the rump of the diet at Debrecsen. 
The question now was: how far the military would subordinate 
Itself to the dvfl element of the national government. The 
first symptom of dissonance was a proclamation by the com- 
mander of the Upper Danube division, Arthur Gorge!, from his 
camp at Vicz (Jan. 5) emphasising the fact that the national 
defence was purely constitutional, and menacing all who might 
be led astray from this standpoint by republican aspirations. 
Immediately after this proclamation Gtirgd disappeared with 
bis army among the hills of Upper Hungary, and, despite the 
difficulties of a phenomenally severe winter and the constant 
pursuit of vastly superior forces, fought his way down to the 
valley of Hernad— and safety. This masterly winter-campaign 
first revealed Gdrgei's military genius, and the discipline of 
that terrible month of marching and counter-marching had 
hardened his recruits into veterans whom his country regarded 
With pride and his country's enemies with respect. Unfortu- 
nately his success caused some jealousy in official quarters, and 
when, in the middle of February 1849, a commander-in-chief 
was appointed to carry out Kossuth's plan of campaign, that 
vital appointment was given, not to the man who had made 
the army what it was, but to a foreigner, a Polish refugee, 
Count Henrik Dembinski, who, after fighting the nMtUmttt 
Moody and indecisive battle of Kipolna (Feb. 26-27), frff^; 
was forced to retreat. Gorge! was immediately 
appointed his successor, and the new generalissimo led 
the Honvtds from victory to victory. Ably supported by 
Klapka and Dam janich he pressed forward irresistibly. Szolnok 
(March 5), Isaszeg (April 6), Vicz (April zo), and Nagysari6 
(April 19) were so many milestones in his triumphal progress. 
On the 25th of May the Hungarian capital was once more in the 
hands of the Hungarians. 

Meanwhile, the earlier events of the war had so altered the 
political situation that any idea which the diet at Debreczen 
had cherished of a compromise with Austria was destroyed. The 
capture of Pest had confirmed the Austrian court in Its polir 



918 



HUNGARY 



[HBTOET 



of unification, which after the victory of Kapolna they thought 
it safe to proclaim. On the 7th of March the diet of Kremsier 
Hmftnn was dissolved, and immediately afterwards a proclama- 
ttotffm tion was issued in the name of the emperor Francis 
■■*•* Joseph establishing a united constitution for the whole 
****** empire, of which Hungary, cut up into half a dozen 
administrative districts, was henceforth to be little more than 
the largest of several subject provinces. The news of this 
manifesto, arriving as it did simultaneously with that of Gorgei's 
successes, destroyed the last vestiges of a desire of the Hungarian 
revolutionists to compromise, and on the 14th of April, on the 
motion of Kossuth, the diet proclaimed the independence of 
Hungary, declared the house of Habsburg as false and perjured, 
for ever excluded from the throne, and elected Kossuth president 
of the Hungarian Republic This was an execrable blunder in 
the circumstances, and the results were fatal to the national 
cause. Neither the government nor the army could accom- 
modate itself to the new situation. From henceforth the military 
and civil authorities, as represented by Kossuth and Gdrgei, 
were hopelessly out of sympathy with each other, and the breach 
widened till all effective co-operation became impossible. 

Meanwhile the humiliating defeats of the imperial army and 
the course of events in Hungary had compelled the court of 
Vienna to accept the assistance which the emperor 
Nicholas I. of Russia had proffered in the loftiest 
spirit of the Holy Alliance. The Austro-Russian 
alliance was announced at the beginning of May, and 
before the end of the month the common plan of campaign 
had been arranged. The Austrian commander-in-chief, Count 
Haynau, was to attack Hungary from the west, the Russian, 
Prince Paskevich, from the north, gradually environing the 
kingdom, and then advancing to end the business by one decisive 
blow in the mid-Theissian counties. They had at their dis- 
posal 375,000 men, to which the Magyars could only oppose 
160,000. The Magyars, too, were now more than ever divided 
among themselves, no plan of campaign bad yet been drawn 
up, no commander-in-chief appointed to replace Gtirgei, whom 
Kossuth had deposed. Haynau's first victories (June 30-28) 
put an end to their indecisions. On the and of July the 
Hungarian government abandoned Pest and transferred its 
capital first to Szeged and finally to Arad. The Russians were 
by this time well on their way to the Theiss, and the terrible 
girdle which was to throttle the liberties of Hungary was all 
but completed. Kossuth again appointed as commander-in- 
chief the brave but inefficient Dembinski, who was utterly 
routed at Temesvar (Aug. 9) by Haynau. This was the last great 
battle of the War of Independence. The final catastrophe was 
now unavoidable. On the 13th of August Gdrgei, who had been 
appointed dictator by the panic-stricken government two days 
before, surrendered the remnant of his hardly pressed army to 
the Russian General Rudiger at Vilagos. The other army corps 
and all the fortresses followed his example, Komarom, heroically 
defended by Klapka, being the last to capitulate (Sept. 27). 
Kossuth and his associates, who had quitted Arad on the 10th 
of August, took refuge in Turkish territory. By the end of 
the month Paskevich could write to the Emperor Nicholas: 
" Hungary lies at the feet of your Imperial Majesty." 

From October 1849 to July 1850 Hungary was governed by 
martial law administered by " the butcher " Haynau. This was 
a period of military tribunals, .dragooning, wholesale 
Jp^- confiscation and all manner of brutalities. 1 From 
4rst»***" l8 S x to l8 °° pure terrorism was succeeded by the 
M Bach System," which derives its name from the 
imperial minister of the interior, Baron Alexander von Bach. 
The Bach System did not recognize historical Hungary.. It 

1 The crowning atrocities, which the Magyars have never wholly 
forgiven, were the shooting and hangine of the " Arad Martyrs " and 
the execution of Batthyany. On October 6, 1849, thirteen generals 
who had taken part in the war, including Damjanics and Counts 
Vecsey and Lehungen, were hanged or shot at Arad. On the same 
day Count Louis Batthyany, who had taken no part in the war and 
had done his utmost to restrain his countrymen within the bounds of 
legality, was shot at Pest. 



postulated the existence of one common indivisible state of 
which mutilated Hungary ' formed an important section. The 
supreme government was entrusted to an imperial couttcfl 
responsible to the emperor alone. The counties were ad- 
ministered by imperial officials, Germans, Czechs and Galicians, 
who did not understand the Magyar tongue. German was the 
official language. But though reaction was the motive power 
of this new machinery of government, it could not do away with 
many of the practical and obvious improvements of 1848, and 
it was not blind to some of the indispensable requirements of a 
modem state. The material welfare of the nation was certainly 
promoted by it. Modern roads were made, the first railways 
were laid down, the regulation of the river Theiss was taken in 
hand, a new and better scheme of finance was inadgunoed 
But the whole system, so to speak, hung in the air. It took no 
root in the soil. The Magyar nation stood aloof from it. It was 
plain that at the first revolutionary blast from without, or the 
first insurrectionary outburst from within, the " Bach System* 
would vanish like a mirage. 

Meanwhile the new Austrian empire had failed to stand the 
test of international complications. The Crimean Wax had 
isolated it in Europe. The Italian war of 1859 had rb 
revealed its essential instability. It was felt at court OfciHi 
that some concessions were now due to the subject JJJ"* 
nationalities. Hence the October Diploma (Oct. 20, ^^ 
i860) which proposed to prop up the crazy common state with 
the shadow of a constitution and to grant some measure of local 
autonomy to Hungary, subject always to the supervision of the 
imperial council (Reichsrath).* This project was favoured by 
the Magyar conservative magnates who had never broken with 
the court, but was steadily opposed by the Liberal leader Ferencx 
Desk whose upright and tenacious character made him at this 
crisis the oracle and the buttress of the national cause. Desk's 
standpoint was as simple as it was unchangeable. He ***■ —■ AmA 
the re-establishment of the constitution of 1848 in its entirety, 
the whole constitution and nothing but the constitution. 

The October Diploma was followed by the February Patent 
(Feb. 26, i86x), which proposed to convert the Reichsrath into 
a constitutional representative assembly, with two j** 
chambers, to which all the provinces of the empire m w y 
were to send deputies. The project, elaborated by *£]* * 
Anton von Schmerling, was submitted to a Hungarian tML 
diet which assembled at Pest on the 2nd of April 1861. After 
long and violent debates, the diet, on the 8th of August, unanim- 
ously adopted an address to the crown, drawn up by Deak, 
praying for the restoration of the political and territorial integrity 
of Hungary, for the public coronation of the king with afl its 
accompaniments, and the full restitution of the fundamental 
laws. The executive retorted by dissolving the diet on the xist 
of August and levying the taxes by military execution. The 
so-called Protisorittm had begun. 

But the politicians of Vienna had neither the power nor the 
time to realize their intentions. The question of Italian unity 
had no sooner been settled than the question of 
German unity arose, and fresh international difficulties 
once more inclined the Austrian government towards 
moderation and concession. In the beginning of June 
1865, Francis Joseph came to Buda; on the 26th a 
provisional Hungarian government was formed, on the 20th of 
September the February constitution was suspended, and on the 
14th of December a diet was summoned to Buda-Pest* The great 
majority of the nation naturally desired a composition with its 
ruler and with Austria, and this general desire was unerringly 
interpreted and directed by Deak, who carried two-thirds of 
the deputies along with him. The session was interrupted 
by the outbreak of the Austro-Prussian War, but not before a 

9 Transylvania* Croatw-Slavonia with Flume and the Tenses 
Banat were separated from the kingdom and provided with local 
governments. 

■ This Reichsrath was a purely consultative body, the ultimate 
control of all important affairs being reserved to the emperor. 
Its representative element consisted of 100 members elected by 
the provinces. 



TbeC 



HISTORY] 

committee had been formed to draft the new constitution. 
The peace of Prague (Aug. 30, 1866), excluding Austria from 
Italy and Germany, made the fate of the Habsburg monarchy 
absolutely dependent .upon a compromise with the Magyars. 
(For the Compromise or AusgUick, see Austria-Hungary: 
History.) On the 7th of November 1866, the diet reassembled. 
On the 17th of February 1867 a responsible inde- 

pendent ministry was formed under Count Gyula 

WJM7. Andrassy. On the aoth of May the new constitution 
was adopted by 200 votes to 80. Practically it was 
an amplification of the March Laws of 1848. The coronation 
took place on the 8th of June, on which occasion the king 
solemnly declared that be wished "a veil to be drawn over the 
past." The usual coronation gifts he devoted to the benefit 
of the Honved invalids who had fought in the War of Independ- 
ence. The reconciliation between monarch and people waft 
assured. 

Hungary was now a free and independent modern state; but 
the very completeness and suddenness of her constitutional 
jtorffcete victory made it impossible for the strongly flowing 
current of political life to keep within due bounds. 
The circumstance that the formation of political 
parties had not come about naturally, was an additional 
difficulty. . Broadly speaking, there have been in Hungary since 
1867 two parties: those who accept the compromise with 
Austria, and affirm that under it Hungary, so far from having 
surrendered any of her rights, has acquired an influence which 
she previously did not actually possess, and secondly, those who 
see in the compromise an abandonment of the essentials of 
independence and aim at the restoration of the conditions 
established in 1848. Within this broad division, however, have 
appeared from time to time political groups in bewildering 
variety, each adopting a party designation according to the 
exigencies of the moment, but each basing its programme on 
one or other of the theoretical foundations above mentioned. 
Thus, at the outset, the most heterogeneous elements were to be 
found both on the Left and Right. The Extreme Left was 
Infected by the fanaticism of Kossuth, who condemned the 
compromise and refused to take the benefit of the amnesty, 
while the prelates and magnates who had originally opposed 
the compromise were now to be found by the side of De&k and 
Andrassy. The Deak party preserved its majority at the 
elections of 1869, but the Left Centre and Extreme Left returned 
to the diet considerably reinforced. The outbreak of the Franco- 
German War of 1870 turned the attention of the Magyars to 
iimrtip foreign affairs. Andrassy never rendered a greater 
service to his country than when he prevented the 
imperial chancellor and joint foreign minister, Count Beust, 1 
from intervening in favour of France. On the retirement of 
Beust in 1871, Andrassy was appointed his successor, the first 
instance, since Hungary came beneath the dominion of the 
Habsburgs, of an Hungarian statesman being entrusted with 
the conduct of foreign affairs. But, however gratifying such an 
elevation might be, it was distinctly prejudicial, at first, to 
Hungary's domestic affairs, for no one else at this time, in 
Hungary, possessed either the prestige or the popularity of 
Andrassy. Within the next five years ministry followed ministry 
in rapid succession. A hopeless political confusion ensued. 
Few measures could be passed. The finances fell into disorder. 
The national credit was so seriously impaired abroad that 
foreign loans could only be obtained at ruinous rates of interest. 
During this period De&k had almost entirely withdrawn from 
public life. His last great speech was delivered on the 98th of 
June 1873, and be died on the aoth of January 1876. Fortun- 
ately, in K&Iman Tisza, the leader of the Liberal 
{SzabadelmU, i.e. " Free Principle ") party, he left 
behind him a statesman of the first rank, who for the 
next eighteen years was to rule Hungary uninterruptedly. 

' * Beust was the only " imperial chancellor " in Aostro-Hunnrian 
history; even Metterakh bore only the title of "chancellor ' ; and 
Andrassy, who succeeded Beust, styled himself " minister of the 
imperial and royal household and for foreign affairs." 



HUNGARY 



919 



From the first, Tisza was exposed to the violent attacks of the 
opposition, which embraced, not only the party of Independence, 
champions of the principles of 1848, but the so-called National 
party, led by the brilliant orator Count Albert Apponyi, which 
aimed at much the same ends but looked upon the Compromise 
of 1867 as a convenient substructure on which to build up the 
Magyar state. Neither could forgive Tisza for repudiating 
his earlier Radical policy, the so-called Bihar Programme 
(March 6, 1868), which went far beyond the Compromise in the 
direction of independence, and both attacked him with a violence 
which his unyielding temper, and the ruthless methods by which 
he always knew how to secure victory, tended ever to fan into 
fury. Yet Tisza's aim also was to convert the old polyglot 
Hungarian kingdom into a homogeneous Magyar state, and the 
methods which he employed— notably the enforced magyariza- 
tion of the subject races, which formed part of the reformed 
educational system introduced by him — certainly did not err 
on the side of moderation. 1 Whatever view may be held of 
Tisza's policy in this respect, or of the corrupt methods by which 
he maintained his party in power,' there can be no doubt that 
during his long tenure of office — which practically amounted 
to a dictatorship — he did much to promote the astonishing 
progress of his country, which ran a risk of being stifled in the 
strife of factions. Himself a Calvmist, he succeeded in putting 
an end to the old quarrel of Catholic and Protestant and uniting 
them in a common enthusiasm for a race ideal; nominally a 
Liberal, he trampled on every Liberal principle in order to secure 
the means for governing with a firm hand; and if the political 
corruption of modern Hungary is largely his work, 4 to him also 
belongs the credit for the measures which have placed the country 
on a sound economic basis and the statesmanlike temper which 
made Hungary a power in the affairs of Europe. In this latter 
respect Tisza rendered substantial aid to the joint minister for 
foreign affairs* by repressing the anti-Russian ardour of the 
Magyars on the outbreak of the Russo-Turkish war of 1877-78, 
and by supporting Andrassy's execution of the mandate from 
the Berlin Congress to Austria-Hungary for the occupation of 
Bosnia, against which the Hungarian opposition agitated for 
reasons ostensibly financial Tisza's policy on both these 
occasions increased his unpopularity in Hungary, but in the 
highest circles at Vienna he was now regarded as indispensable. 

The following nine years mark the financial and commercial 
rehabilitation of Hungary, the establishment of a vast and 
original railway system which won the admiration of 
Europe, the liberation and expansion of her over-sea 
trade, the conversion of her national debt under 
the most favourable conditions and the consequent equilibrium 
of her finances. These benefits the nation owed for the most part 
to Gabor Baross, Hungary's greatest finance minister, who 
entered the cabinet in 1886 and greatly strengthened it But the 
opposition, while unable to deny the recuperation of Hungary, 
shut their eyes to everything but Tisza's " tyranny, " and their 
attacks were never so savage and unscrupulous as during the 
session of 1889, when threats of a revolution were uttered by the 
opposition leaders and the premier could only enter or leave the 
House under police protection. The tragic death of the crown 
prince Rudolph hushed for a time the strife of tongues, and in 
the meantime Tisza brought into the ministry Dezs5 SzHagyi, the 
most powerful debater in the House, and Sindor Wekerie, 
whose solid talents had hitherto been hidden beneath the bushel 
of an under-secretaryship. But in 1800, during the debates on 
the Kossuth Repatriation Bill, the attacks on the premier were 
renewed, and on the 13th of March he placed his resignation in the 
king's hands. 

The withdrawal of Tisza scarcely changed the situation, but 
the period of brief ministries now began. Tisza's successor, 

9 See for this Mr Seton-Watson's Racial Problems of Hungary* 
passim. • Ibid. p. 168. 

* Especially the Electoral Law of 1874, which established a very 
unequal distribution of electoral areas, a highly complicated franchise, 
and voting by public declaration, thus making it easy for the govern- 
ment to intimidate the electors and generally to gerrymander the 
elections. 



920 



HUNGARY 



[HISTORY 



Mlaltry, 



Count Gyula Szipary, formerly minister of agriculture, held 
office for eighteen months, and was succeeded (Nov. si, 1892) by 
ndt Wekexle. Wekerle, essentially a business man, had 
WMw* taken office for the express purpose of equilibrating 
Ministry, the finances, but the religious question aroused by the 
J***™ - encroachments of the Catholic clergy, and notably 
^nj ffi ^ their insistence on the baptism of the children of mixed 
marriages, had by this time (1893-1804) excluded all 
others, and the government were forced to postpone their finan ci al 
programme to its consideration. The Obligatory Civil Marriage 
Bill, the State Registries Bill and the Religion of Children of 
Mixed Marriages Bill, were finally adopted on the sxst of June 
1894, after fierce debates and a ministerial interregnum of ten 
days (June 10-20); but on the 25th of December, Wekerle, who 
no longer possessed the king's confidence, 1 resigned a second 
time, and was succeeded by Baron Dezso" (Desiderius) Banffy. 
The various parties meanwhile had split up into some hall a 
dozen sub-sections; but the expected fusion of the 
party of independence and the government fell through , 
and the barren struggle continued till the celebration of 
the millennium f the foundation of the monarchy pro- 
duced for some months a lull in politics. Subsequently, Banffy 
still further exasperated the opposition by exercising undue 
influence during the elections of 1896. The majority be obtained 
on this occasion enabled him, however, to carry through the Army 
Education Bill, which tended to magyarizc the Hungarian portion 
of the joint army; and another period of comparative calm 
ensued, during which Banffy attempted to adjust various out- 
standing financial and economical differences with Austria. But 
Jn November 1898, on the occasion of the renewal of the com- 
mercial convention with Austria, the attack on the ministry was 
renewed with unprecedented virulence, obstruction being 
systematically practised with the object of goading the govern- 
ment into committing illegalities, till Banffy, finding the situation 
Impossible, resigned on the 17th of February 1800. His successor, 
_. Kilrain Sz£ll, obtained an immense but artificial 

2/Jiay, majority by a fresh fusion of parties, and the minority 
U99. pledged itself to grant an indemnity for the extra- 
parliamentary financial decrees rendered necessary by 
Hungary's understanding with Austria, as well as to cease from 
obstruction. As a result of this compromise the budget of 1899 
was passed in little more than a month, and the commercial and 
tariff treaty with Austria were renewed till 1903.* But the 
government had to pay for this complacency with a so-called 
M pactum," which bound its hands in several directions, much to 
the profit of the opposition during the " pure " elections of 1901. 
On the reassembling of the diet, Count Albert Apponyi 
H^m* was elected speaker, and the minority seemed disposed 
to let the government try to govern. But the proposed 
raising of the contingent of recruits by 15,000 men 
(Oct. 1902) once more brought up the question of the common 
army, tie parliament refusing to pass the bill, except in return 
for the introduction of the Hungarian national flag into the 
Hungarian regiments and the substitution of Magyar for German 
in the words of command. The king refusing to yield an inch of 
his rights under clause ii. of Law XII. of the Compromise of 1867, 
the opposition once more took to obstruction, and on the xst of 
May 1003 SzeU was forced to resign. 

• Every one now looked to the crown to extract the nation 
from an tx-Ux, or extra-constitutional situation, but when the 
1^ king, passing over the ordinary party-leaders, appointed 
r t „, as premier Count Kiroly Khuen-Hedervary, who had 
thUrrirr made himself impossible as ban of Croatia, there was 
%£**' general amazement and indignation. The fact was that 
the king, weary of the tactics of a minority which for 
years haa terrorized every majority and prevented the government 
from exercising its proper constitutional functions, had resolved 
to show the Magyars that he was prepared to rule unconstitu- 

*Tbe Austrian court resented especially the decree proclaiming 
national mourning for Louis Kossuth, though 00 minister was 
present at the funeral. 

• Subsequently extended till 1907.' 



tionaUy rather than imperil the stability of the Dual Monarchy 
by allowing any tampering with the joint army. In an ordinance 
on the army word of command, promulgated on the 16th of 
September, he reaffirmed the inalienable character of the pema 
of the crown over the joint army and the necessity for maintaining 
German as the common military language. This was followed by 
the fall of Khuen-Hedervary (September 29), and a quarrel 
d outranct between crown and parliament seemed unavoidable. 
The Liberal party, however, realized the abyss towards which 
they were hurrying the country, and united their efforts to come 
to a constitutional understanding with the king. The problem 
was to keep the army an Hungarian army without infringing on 
the prerogative of the -king as coramander-jn-duri, lor, un- 
constitutional as the new ordinance might be, it could not 
constitutionally be set aside without the royal assent. The king 
met them half way by inviting the majority to appoint a com- 
mittee to settle the army question provisionally, and a committer 
was formed, which included Sntll, Apponyi, Count Istvan Tisza 
and other experienced statesmen. 

A programme approved of by all the members of the com- 
mittee was drawn up, and on the 3rd of November 1905, Count 
Istvan Tisza was appointed minister president to 
carry it out. Thus, out of respect for the wishes of 
the nation, the king had voluntarily thrown open to 
public discussion the hitherto strictly closed and 
jealously guarded domain of the army. Tisza, a statesman of 
singular probity and tenacity, seemed to be the one person 
capable of carrying out the programme of the king and the 
majority. The irreconcilable minority, recognising this, ex- 
hausted all the resources of " technical obstruction " in order to 
reduce the government to impotence, a task made easy by the 
absurd standing-rules of the House which enabled any singk 
member to block a measure. These tactics soon rendered 
legislation impossible, and a modification of the rule of p roce dur e 
became absolutely necessary if any business at all was to be done. 
The Modification of the Standing-orders Bill was c**m* 
accordingly introduced by the deputy Gabor Daniel m4 
(Nov. 18, X004); but the opposition, to which the jwa, 
National party had attached itself, den o unced it as " a 
gagging order" inspired at Vienna, and shouted it down so 
vehemently that no debate could be held; where u pon the 
president declared the bill carried and adjourned the House til 
the 13th of December 1904. This was at once followed by an 
anti-ministerial fusion of the extremists of all parties, . 

including seceders from the government (known as the « c—+ 
Constitutional party); and when the diet reassembled, ttmm." 
the opposition broke into the House by force and 
wrecked all the furniture, so that a session was pbystcaHy 
impossible (Jan. 5, 1905). Tisza now appealed to the country, 
but was utterly defeated. The opposition thereupon proceeded 
to annul the Lex Daniel (April 7) and stubbornly to clamour for 
the adoption of the Magyar word of command in the Hungarian 
part of the common army. To this demand the king as 
stubbornly refused to accede;' and as the result of the con- 
sequent dead-lock, Tisza, who had courageously continued a 
office at the king's request, after every other leading politician 
bad refused to form a ministry, was .finally dismissed on the 
17th of June. (R. N. B.; W. A. P.) 

Long negotiations between the crown and the leaders of 
the Coalition having failed to give any promise of a modus 
vimtdi, the king-emperor . at last determined to appoint an 

' • The question involves rather complex issues. Apart from the 
question of constitutional right, the Magyars objected to German 
as the medium of military education as increasing the dtfficmHv of 
magyarixing the subordinate races of Hungary (see KitatckimB- 
Hugessen, u. 396). On the other hand the Austrians pointed oat 
that not only would failure to understand each other s hagwage 
cause fatal confusion on a battlefield, but also tend to disintegrate 
the forces even in peace time. They also laid stress 00 the fact 
that Magyar was not, any more than German, the language of 
many Hungarian regiments, consisting as these did mainly of 
Slovaks, Vlachs, Serbs and Croats. In resisting the Magyar word of 
command, then, the king-emperor was able to appeal to the aatv 
Magyar feeling of the other Hungarian races, (W. A. P«j 



fOttOftY) 



HUNGARY 



921 



extra-parliamentary ministry, and on the aist of June Baron 
Fejfavtry, an officer in the royal bodyguard, was nominated 
minister president with a cabinet consisting of little* 
P*j4rr*ty known permanent officials. Instead of presenting the 
aJZ[ m ' usual programme, the new premier* read to the parlia- 
ment a royal autograph letter stating the reasons which 
had actuated the king in taking this course, and giving as the 
task of the new ministry the continuance of negotiations with the 
Coalition on the basis of the exclusion of the language question. 
The parliament was at the same time prorogued. A period 
followed of arbitrary government on the one hand and of stubborn 
passive resistance on the other. Three times the parliament 
was again prorogued— from the 15th of September to the 10th 
of October, from this date to the 19th of December, and from 
this yet again to the 1st of March 1006— in spite of the protests 
of both Houses. To the repressive measures of the government- 
press censorship, curtailment of the right of public meeting, 
dismissal of recalcitrant officials, and dragooning of disaffected 
county assemblies and municipalities—the Magyar nation 
opposed a sturdy refusal to pay taxes, to supply recruits or to 
carry on the machinery of administration. 

Had this attitude represented the temper of the whole 
Hungarian people, it would have been impossible for the crown 
to have coped with it. But the Coalition represented, in fact, 
not the mass of the people, but only a small dominant minority, 1 
and for years past this minority had neglected the social and 
economic needs of the mass of the people in the eager, pursuit 
of party advantage and the effort to impose, by coercion and 
corruption failing other means, the Magyar language and Magyar 
culture on the non-Magyar races. In this supreme crisis, then, 
it is not surprising that the masses listened with sullen indifference 
to the fiery eloquence of the Coalition leaders. Moreover, by 
refusing the royal terms, the Coalition had forced the crown into 
an alliance with the extreme democratic elements in the state. 
Universal suffrage had already been adopted in the Cis-leithan 
half of the monarchy; it was an obvious policy to propose it 
for Hungary also, and thus, by an appeal to the non-Magyar 
iCrHtiffy'u majority, to reduce the irreconcilable Magyar minority 
VmtTtrsmt to reason. Universal suffrage, then, was the first and 
*jJ*JJ[» most important of the proposals put forward by Mr 
* a,|If Joszef Krist6ffy, the minister of the interior, in the 
programme issued by him on the 36th of November 1005. 
Other proposals were: the maintenance of the system of 
the joint army as established in 1867, but with the- con- 
cession that all Hungarian recruits were to receive their 
education in Magyar; the maintenance till 1917 of the actual 
customs convention with Austria; a reform of the land laws, 
with a view to assisting the poorer proprietors; complete 
religious equality; universal and compulsory primary education. 
The issue of a programme'so liberal, and notably the inclusion 
in it of the idea of universal suffrage, entirely checkmated the 
opposition parties. Their official organs, indeed, continued 
to fulminate against the " unconstitutional " government, but 
the enthusiasm with which the programme had been received 
in the country showed the Coalition leaders the danger of their 
position, and henceforth, though they continued their denuncia- 
tions of Austria, they entered into secret negotiations with the 
king-emperor, in order, by coming to terms with him, to ward 
off the fatal consequences of Krist6ffy's proposals. 

On the xoth of February 1906 the parliament was dissolved, 
without writs being issued for a new election, a fact accepted 
by the country with an equanimity highly disconcerting 
to patriots. Meanwhile the negotiations continued, 
/90tf . so secretly that when, on the oth of April, the appoint- 

ment of a Coalition cabinet 1 under Dr Sandor Wekerle 
was announced, the world was taken completely by surprise. 

1 Of the 16,000,000 inhabitants of Hungary barely a half were 
Magyar; and the franchise was possessed by only 800,000, of whom 
the Magyars formed the overwhelming majority. 

•The cabinet consisted of Dr Wekerle (premier and finance), 
Ferenca Kossuth (commerce), Count Cyula Andrassy (interior). 
Count Albert Apponvi (education), Davanyi (agriculture), Polonyi 
(justice) and Count AladAr Zichy (court). 



The agreement with the crown whkh had made this course 
possible included the postponement of the military questions 
that had evoked the crisis, and the acceptance of the principle 
of Universal Suffrage by the Coalition leaders, who announced 
that their main tasks would be to repair the mischief wrought 
by the "unconstitutional" Fcje"rvary cabinet, and then to 
introduce a measure of franchise reform so wide that It would 
be possible to ascertain the will of the whole people on the 
questions at issue between themselves and the crown.* In the 
general elections that followed the Liberal party was practically 
wiped out, its leader, Count Istvftn Ttsza, retiring into private life. 

For two years and a half the Coalition ministry continued in 
office without showing any signs that they intended to carry out 
the most important item of their programme. The 4.^,^*0 
old abuses continued: the muzzling of the press in the Vatrtnmt 
interests of Magyar nationalism, the imprisonment Smitrng* 
of non-Magyar deputies for "incitement against - * 
Magyar nationality," the persecution of Socialists and of the 
subordinate .-aces. That this condition of things could not be 
allowed to continue was, indeed, recognized by all parties; the 
fundamental difference of opinion was as to the method by 
which it was to be ended. The dominant Magyar parties were 
committed to the principle of franchise reform; but they were 
determined that this reform should be of such a nature as not 
to imperil their own hegemony. What this would mean was 
pointed out by Mr Krist6ffy in an address delivered at Budapest 
on the 14th of March 1007. M If the work of social reform," he 
said, " is scamped by a measure calculated to falsify the essence 
of reform, the struggle will be continued in the Chamber until full 
electoral liberty is attained. Till then there can be no social 
peace in Hungary." * The postponement of the question was, 
indeed, already producing ugly symptoms of popular indignation. 
On the xoth of October 1007 there was a great and orderly demon* 
stration at Budapest, organized by the socialists, in favour of 
reform. About 100,000 people assembled, and a deputation 
handed to Mr Justh, the president of the Chamber, a monster 
petition in favour of universal suffrage. The reception it met 
with was not calculated to encourage constitutional methods. 
The Socialist deputy, Mr Mez8ffy, who wished to move an 
interpellation on the question, was howled down by the Inde- 
pendents with shouts of " Away with him! Down with himf "* 
Four days later, m answer to a question by the same deputy, 
Count Andrassy said that the Franchise Bill would be introduced 
shortly, but that it would be of such a nature that "the Magyar 
State idea would remain intact and suffer no diminution."* 
Yet more than a year was to pass before the promised bill was 
introduced, and meanwhile the feeling in the country had 
grown more intense, culminating in serious riots at Budapest 
on the 13th of March 1008. 

At last (November ir, 1908) Count Andrassy introduced the 
long-promised bill. How far it was from satisfying the demands 
of the Hungarian peoples was at once apparent. It granted 
manhood suffrage, it is true, but hedged with so many qualifying 
conditions and complicated with so elaborate a system of plural 
voting as to make its effect nugatory. Every male Hungarian 
citizen, able to read and write, was to receive the vote at the 
beginning of his twenty-fifth year, subject to a residential 
qualification of twelve months. Illiterate citizens were to choose 
one elector for every ten of their number. All electors not having 
the qualifications for the plural franchise were to have one vote. 
Electors who, e.g., had passed four standards of a secondary 
school, or paid 16s. 8d. in direct taxation, were to have two 
votes. Electors who had passed five standards, or who paid 
£4, 3s. 4± in direct taxes, were to have three votes. Voting 
was to be public, as before, on the ground, according to the 
Preamble, that " the secret ballot protects electors in dependent 
positions only in so far as they break their promises under the 
veil of secrecy." 

It was at once seen that this elaborate scheme was intended 

1 Seton- Watson, Racial Problems, p. 194. 

« TJte Times, March 14, 1907. 

* Ibid. October 1 1 , 1907. * Ibid. October 15, 1907. 



922 



HUNGARY 



(HISTORY 



to preserve " the Magyar State idea intact." Its result, bad 
it passed, would have been to strengthen the representation 
of the Magyar and German elements, to reduce that of the 
Slovaks, and almost to destroy that of the Rumans and other 
non-Magyar races whose educational status was low. 1 On the 
other hand, according to the Neue Freie Presse, it would have 
increased the number of electors from some million odd. to 
2,600,000, and the number of voles to 4,000,000; incidentally 
it would have largely increased the working-class representation. 
This proposal was st once recognized by public opinion— to 
use the language of the Journal des Dibals (May 21, 1009)— as 
" an instrument of domination " rather than as an attempt to 
carry out the spirit of the compact under which the Coalition 
government had been summoned to power. It was not, indeed, 
simply a reactionary or undemocratic measure; it was, as 
The Times correspondent pointed out, " a measure sui generis, 
designed to defeat the objects of the universal suffrage movement 
that compelled the Coalition to take office in April 1006, and 
framed in accordance with Magyar needs as understood by one 
of the foremost Magyar noblemen." Under this bill culture 
was to be the gate-to a share in political power, and in Hungary 
culture must necessarily be Magyar. 

Plainly, this bill was not destined to settle the Hungarian 
problem, and other questions soon arose which showed that the 
crisis, so far from being near a settlement, was destined 
Tt»cri*t» to become more acute than ever. In December 1908 
JJJJ" it was clear that the Coalition Ministry was falling to 
pieces. Those ministers who belonged to the con- 
stitutional and popular parties, ix. the Liberals and Clericals, 
desired to maintain the compact with the crown; their col- 
leagues of the Independence party were eager to advance the 
cause they have at heart by pressing on the question of a separate 
Hungarian bank. So early as March 1908 Mr Hallo had laid a 
formal proposal before the House that the charter of the Austro- 
Hungarian bank, which *vat; to expire on the 31st of December 
1910, should not be renewed; that negotiations should 
be opened with the Austrian government with a view 
to a convention between the banks of Austria and 
Hungary; and that, in the event of these negotiations 
failing, an entirely separate Hungarian bank should be 
established. The Balkan crisis threw this question into the 
background during the winter; but, with the settlement of 
the international questions raised by the annexation of Bosnia 
and Herzegovina, it once more came to the front. The ministry 
was divided on the issue, Count Andrassy opposing and Mr 
Ferencz Kossuth supporting the proposal for a separate bank. 
Finally, the prime minister, Dr Wekerle, mainly owing to the 
pressure put upon him by Mr Justh, the president of the Chamber, 
yielded to the importunity of the Independence party, and, 
in the name of the Hungarian government, laid the proposals for 
a separate bank before the king-emperor and the Austrian 
government. 

The result was a foregone conclusion. The conference at 
Vienna revealed the irreconcilable difference within the ministry; 
but it revealed also something more — the determination of 
the emperor Francis Joseph, if pressed beyond the limits of his 
patience, to appeal again to the non-Magyar Hungarians against 
the Magyar chauvinists. He admitted that under the Com- 
promise of 1867 Hungary might have a separate bank, while 
urging the expediency of such an arrangement from the point 
of view of the international position of the Dual Monarchy. 
But he pointed out also that the question of a separate bank 
did not actually figure in the act of 1867, and that it could not 
be introduced into it, more especially since Ike capital article of 
the ministerial programme, Le. electoral reform, was not realised, 
nor near being realized. On the 37 th of April, in consequence of 
this rebuff, Dr Wekerle tendered his resignation, but consented to 
hold office pending the completion of the difficult task of forming 
another government. 

This task was destined to prove one of almost insuperable 
difficulty. Had the issues involved been purely Hungarian and 
1 The Times, September 37, 1908. 



constitutional, the natural course would have been for the king 

to have sent for Mr Kossuth, who obmmanded the strongest 
party in the parliament, and to have entrusted him with the 
formation of a government. But the issues involved affected 
the stability of the' Dual Monarchy and its position in Europe; 
and neither the king-emperor nor his Austrian advisers, their 
position strengthened by the success of Baron Aehrenthal's 
diplomatic victory in the Balkans, were prepared to make any 
substantial concessions to the party of Independence. In these 
circumstances the king sent for Dr L6szl6 Lukacs, once finance 
minister in the Fejcrvary cabinet, whose task was, acting •» * 
homo regius apart from parties, to construct a government out 
of any elements that might be persuaded to co-operate with him. 
But Lukacs had no choice but to apply in the first instance to 
Mr Kossuth and his friends, and these, suspecting an intention of 
crushing their party by entrapping them into unpopular engage- 
ments, rejected his overtures. Nothing now remained but for 
the king to request Dr Wekerle to remain " for the present ~ 
in office with his colleagues, thus postponing the settlement of the 
crisis (July «a). 

This procrastinating policy played into the hands of the 
extremists; for supplies had not been voted, and the question 
of the credits for the expenditure incurred in connexion with the 
annexation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, increasingly urgent, 
placed a powerful weapon in the hands of the Magyars, and 
made it certain that in the autumn the crisis would assume- an 
even more acute form. By the middle of September affairs 
had again reached an impasse. On the 14th Dr Wekerle, 
at the ministerial conference assembled at Vienna for the pur- 
pose of discussing the estimates to be Laid before the delegations, 
announced that' the dissensions among his colleagues made the 
continuance of the Coalition government impossible. The 
burning points of controversy were the magyarization of the 
Hungarian regiments and the question of the separate state 
bank. On the first of these Wekerle, Andrassy and Apponyi 
were prepared to accept moderate concessions; as to the second, 
they were opposed to the question being raised at all. Kossuth 
and Justh, on the other hand, competitors for the leadership 
of the Independence party, declared themselves not prepared to 
accept anything short of the full rights of the Magyars in those 
matters. The matter was urgent; for parliament was to meet 
on the 28th, and it was important that a new cabinet, acceptable 
to it, should be appointed before that date, or that the Houses 
should be prorogued pending such appointment; otherwise 
the delegations would be postponed and no credits would be 
voted for the cost of the new Austro- Hungarian " Dreadnoughts " 
and of the annexation of Bosnia-Herzegovina. In the event, 
neither of these courses proved possible, and on the 28th Dr 
Wekerle once more announced his resignation to the parliament 

The prime minister was not, however, as yet to be relieved 
of an impossible responsibility. After a period of wavering 
Mr Kossuth had consented to shelve for the time the question 
of the separate bank, and on the strength of this Dr Wekerle 
advised the crown to entrust to him the formation of a govern- 
ment. The position thus created raised a twofold question: 
Would the crown accept? In that event, would he be able to 
carry his party with him in support of his modified programme? 
The answer to the first question, in effect, depended on that 
given by events to the second; and this was not long in declaring 
itself. The plan, concerted by Kossuth and Apponyi, with the 
approval of Baron Aehrenthal, was to carry on a modified 
coalition government with the aid of the Andrassy Liberals, the 
National party, the Clerical People's party 3 and the Independence 
party, on a basis of suffrage reform with plural franchise, the 

'The People*! party first emerged during the elections of 1896. 
when it contested 08 seats. Its object was to resist the anti-clerical 
tendencies of the Liberals, and for this purpose it appealed to the 
" nationalities " against the dominant Magyar parties, the dwe 
enforcement of the Law of Equal Rights ol Nationalities (1868) 
forming a main item of its programme. Its leader. Count Zichy, 
in a speech of Jan. 1, 1897, declared it to be neither national, nor 
Liberal, nor Christian to oppress the nationalities. See Sctoo- Watson, 
p. 185. 



history! HUNGARY 

prolongation of the charter of the Joint bank, and certain con- 
cessions to Magyar demands in the matter of the army. It was 
soon dear, however, that in this Kossuth would not carry his 
party with him. A trial of strength took place between him 
and Mr de Justh, the champion of the extreme demands in the 
matter of Hungarian financial and economic autonomy; on the 
7th of November rival banquets were held, one at Mako, Justh 's 
constituency, over which he presided, one at Budapest with 
Kossuth in the chair; the attendance at each foreshadowed the 
outcome of the general meeting of the party held at Budapest 
on the nth, when Kossuth found himself in a minority of 46. 
The Independence party was now split into two groups: the 
" Independence and 1848 party/' and the " Independence, 1848 
and Kossuth party." 

On the 1 2th Mr de Justh resigned the presidency of the Lower 
House and sought re-election, so as to test the relative strength 
of parties. He was defeated by a combination of the Kossuthists, 
Andrassy Liberals and Clerical People's party, the 30 Croatian 
deputies, whose vote might have turned the election, abstaining 
on Dr Wekcric promising them to deliver Croatia from the 
oppressive rule of the ban, Baron Rauch. A majority was thus 
secured for the Kossuthist programme of compromise, but a 
majority so obviously precarious that the king-emperor, in- 
fluenced also — it was rumoured — by the views of the heir- 
apparent, in an interview with Count Andrassy and Mr Kossuth 
on the 15th, refused to make any concessions to the Magyar 
national demands. Hereupon Kossuth publicly declared (Nov. 
82) to a deputation of his constituents from Czegled that he 
himself was in favour of an independent bank, but that the king 
opposed it, and that in the event of no concessions being made 
he would join the opposition. 

How desperate the situation had now become was shown by 
the fact that on the 27th the king sent for Count Tisza, on the 
recommendation of the very Coalition ministry which had been 
formed to overthrow him. This also proved abortive, and 
affairs rapidly tended to revert to the ex-lex situation. On the 
33rd of December Dr Lukacs was again sent for. On the previous 
day the Hungarian parliament had adopted a proposal in favour 
of an address to the crown asking for a separate state bank. 
Against this Dr Wekerle had protested, as opposed to general 
Hungarian opinion and ruinous to the national credit, pointing 
out that whenever it was a question of raising a loan, the mainten- 
ance of the financial community between Hungary and Austria 
was always postulated as a preliminary condition. Point was 
given to this argument by the fact that the premier had just 
concluded the preliminaries for the negotiation of a loan of 
£20,000,000 in France, and that the money — which could not 
be raised in the Austrian market, already glutted with Hungarian 
securities— was urgently needed to pay for the Hungarian share 
in the expenses of the annexation policy, for public works 
(notably the new railway scheme), and for the redemption in 
1010 of treasury bonds. It was hoped that, in the circumstances, 
Dr Lukacs, a financier of experience, might be able 10 come to 
terms with Mr de Justh, on the basis of dropping the bank 
question for the time, or, failing that, to patch together out of 
the rival parties some sort of a working majority. 

On the 38th the Hungarian parliament adjourned sine die, 
pending the settlement of the crisis, without having voted the 
estimates for 1010, and without there being any prospect of a 
meeting of the delegations. On the two following days Dr 
Lukacs and Mr de Justh had audiences of the king, but without 
result; and on the 31st Hungary once more entered on a period 
of extra-constitutional government 

After much negotiation a new cabinet was finally constituted 
on the 17th of January 1010. At its head was Count Khucn 
Khuon Hed6rvary, who in addition to the premiership, *as 
hedirvkty minister of the interior, minister for Croatia, and 
Govern* minister in waiting on the crown. Other ministers 
meat, wcre ^| r xiroly de Hieronymi (commerce), Dr Lukacs 
(finance), Ferencz de Szekely (justice, education, public worship), 
Bela Serenyi (agriculture) and General Hazay (national defence). 
The two main items in the published programme of the new 



923 



government were the introduction of universal suffrage and— 
even more revolutionary from the Magyar point of view— the 
substitution of state-appointed for elected officials in the counties. 
The real programme was to secure, by hook or by crook, a 
majority at the polls. Meanwhile, the immediate necessities of 
the government were provided for by the issue through Messrs 
Rothschild of £2,000,000 fresh treasury bills. These were to be 
redeemed in December 1910, together with the £0,000,000 worth 
issued in 1009, out of the £20,000,000 loan agreed on in principle 
with the French government; but in view of the opposition in 
Paris to the idea of advancing money to a member of the Triple 
Alliance, it was doubtful whether the loan would ever be floated. 
The overwhelming victory of the government in June at the 
polls produced a lull in a crisis which at the beginning of the 
year had threatened the stability of the Dual Monarchy and the 
peace of Europe; but, in. view of the methods by which tho 
victory had been won, not the most sanguine could assert 
that the crisis was overpassed. Its deep underlying causes 
can only be understood in the light of the whole of Hungarian 
history. It is easy to denounce the dominant Magyar 
classes as a selfish oligarchy, and to criticize the methods 
by which they have sought to maintain their power. But 
a nation that for a thousand years had maintained its in- 
dividuality in the midst of hostile and rival races could not 
be expected to allow itself without a struggle to be sacrificed 
to the force of mere numbers, and the less so if it were 
justified in its claim that it stood for a higher ideal of culture 
and civilization. The Magyars had certainly done much to 
justify their claim to a special measure of enlightenment. In 
their efforts to establish Hungarian independence on the firm 
basis of national efficiency they had succeeded in changing their 
country from one of very backward economic conditions into 
one which promised to be in a position to hold its own on equal 
terms with any in the world. (W. A. P.) 

Bibliography.— (a) Sources. The earliest important collection 
or sources of Hungarian history was Johann Georg Schrandtner's 
Scriptores rerum Hungaricarum (4th ed., Vienna, 1 766-1 768). The 
Codex diPlomatieus of Gydrgy Fejer (40 vols., Buda, 1820-1844), 
though lull of errors, remains an inexhaustible storehouse of 
materials. In 1849 Stephen Ladislaus Endiicher (1804-1849), 
better known as a botanist than as a historian, published a collection 
of documents, Rerum hungaricarum monumenta Arfadiana. This 
w&s followed by Gustav Wenzel's Codex diplomatieus arpadianus 
continuens (12 vols., Pest, 1857) and A. Theiner's Vet. monumenta 
hist. Uungariam sacram iUustrantia (2 vols.^ Rome, 1859, &cX 
Later collections are Documents of the Angevin Period, ed. by u. 
Wcnzel and Imrc Nary (8 vols., ib. 1874-1876); Diplomatic Records 
of the Time of King Matthias (Mag. and Lat.), ed. by Ivan Nagy 
(ib. 1875-1878); National Documents (Mag. and Lat.), ed. by 
Farkas Dcak and others (Pest, 1 878-1891); Monumenta Valicana 
historiam regni Hungariae illustrantia (8 vols., Budapest, 1885- 
189 1), a valuable collection of materials from the Vatican archives, 
edited under the auspices of the Hungarian bishops; Principal 
Sourcesjor the Magyar Conquest (Mag.), by Gyula Paulcr and Sandor 
Szilagyi (ib. 1900). Numerous documents have also been issued in 
the various publications of the Hungarian Academy and the Hun- 

5arian Historical Society. Of these the most important is the 
lonumenta Hungariae Historica, published by the Academy. This 
falls into three main groups: Dtplvmata (to vols.); Scriptores 
(40 vols.); Monumenta Comittalia (records of the Hungarian and 
Transylvanian diets, 12 vols, and 21 vols.). With these are as- 
sociated the Turkish-Hungarian Records (9 vols.). Turkish Historians 
(2 vols, pubd.), and the Archives of the Hungarian subordinate 
countries [2 vols. pubd.). 

On the sources see Hendrik Marczali, Ungarns CeschichtsqueUen 
im Zeilaller des Arb&den (Berlin, 1882); Kaindl. Studien zu den 
ungarischen CeschichtsqueUen (Vienna, 1894-1902); and, for a 
general appreciation. Mangold, Pragmatic History of the Hungarians 
tin Mag., 5th ed.. Budapest, 1907). 

(b) Works: The modern literature of Hungary is very rich in 
historical monographs, of which a long list will be found in the Subject 
Index of the London Library. Here it is only possible to give some 
of the more important general histories, together with such special 
works as are most readily accessible to English readers. Of the 
earlier Hungarian historians two are still of some value: Katona, 
Hist, critica regum Hungariae (42 vols., Pest, 1779-1810), and Pray, 
Annates regum Hungariae (5 vols., Vienna, 1764-1770). Of modern 
histories written in Magyar the most imposing is the History of the 
Hungarian Nation (10 vols., Budapest, 1898), issued to commemorate 
the celebration of the millennium of the foundation of the monarchy, 
by Sandor Szilagyi and numerous collaborators. Of importance, too. 



926 



HUNGARY 



work * at Cracow in 1531 to the end of the period just treated, more 
than 1800 publications in the native language are Known.' 

The period comprised between the peace of Szatmar (1711) and 
the year 177a is far more barren in literary results than even that 
which ...•-— • * • * - ts 



(LITERATURE 
than die 



'popular' 
of the Iliad appeared 



ant- 



protra 

court 

langw 

Latin 
all combined to bj 
and literature, 
Andrew Spangar, 
(Kassa, 1738), ii 
Magyar dialect; 
ment (Lauba, 1; 
Bel, which last, 
who besides bis tl 
literature under 
most celebrated ' 
the translator. tk 
account of the da 
the " Magyar C 
writer, but also a 
temporaries. An 
Amade, the nat 
running verses a 
Of considerable 
Radai in his Ltikt 
in 1715. Among 
George Kalmar, 
his rhymed " Lif« 

Istadu dso magyc . -.„-.- 

The next three literary periods stand in special relationship 
to one another, and are sometimes regarded bs the same. The 



of 
:*. I 
t? 

re 
dr 

he 



he 



sa 

>et 
ii's 
tlb 
1" 
cal 
int 
the 

, ,.M 

were published at Pest in 1 700. and again in 182a. Of his prose works 

": History 
t Magyar 



were published at Pest in 1 700. and again in 182a. Of his prow 
the most important is the Magyar Stdaadok or " Pragmatic 1 
of Hungary * (Buda. 1808 and 1816). Valyi-Nagy, the first ! 



1 The earliest, styled " Song on the Discovery of the right hand of 
the Holy King Stephen," and printed at Nuremberg by Anton 
Koburger in 1484. is lost. 

« See Chas. Ssabo's Ap Magyar Kinyvldr (Budapest. 1879). Cf. 
also Lit. Bcr. out Ungarn for 1879, Bd. ui. Heft 3, pp. 43J"434- 



translator of Homer, belongs rather to the ' 
*' classical " school. His translation of the . , 

Sarospatak in 1821. The establishment of the " national ' 
" popular " school is attributable chiefly to Andrew Dugomcs* 
though his earliest works, Troia vesteddme (1774) and Ulysset (176°), 
indicate a classical bias. His national romances, however, and 

r , r ^-?-ll.. ITj.II.- #0~ . -0-\ I A- *.„_-_. I. /T> . __^ 

P« 

foi 
of 

18 

wu 
H< 
Rt 
Fo 
as 
R< 
ca 

>? 
th 

ab 



a sonnet writer none stands higher than Paul Szcmere, known also 
for his rendering of Korner's drama Zrinyi (1818). and bis contribu- 
tions to the EUi is Literature (Life and Literature). The ankles of 
Francis Kolcsey in the same periodical are among the finest speci- 
men* of Hungarian aesthetical criticism. The lyric poems of 
Kolcsey can hardly be surpassed, whilst his orations, and markedly 
the Emlik beszid Kazincty felett (Commemorative Speech 00 
Kazincxy). exhibit not only hu own powers, but the singular ex- 
cellence of the Magyar language as an oratorical medium. Andrew 
Fay, sometimes styled the T * Hungarian Aesop," is • chiefly re- 
membered for his Eredeti Mestk (Original Fables). The dramatic 
works of Charles Kisfaludy. brother of Alexander, won him enthusi- 
astic recognition as a regenerator of the drama. His plays bear a 
distinctive national character, the subjects of most of them referring 
to the golden era of the country. His genuine simplicity as a lyrical 
1 writer is shown by the fact that 1 



t several of his shorter pieces have 



UTBRATOU) 



HUNGARY 



passed i 
lolk-eoo 



> popular ■one- As the earnest Magyariaer of Servian 
Michael Vitkovks did valuable service. Not without 




__.*>*oag, _„ .__- - 

interest to Englishmen is the name of Gabriel Dobrantei («.».) 

translator of Shakespeare's Matbatk. reprr J " ^ 

in 1825. An historical poem of a somewhat 

was produced in 1814 by Andreas Horvath ui , 

cmlilvu* (Reminiscence of Zircs); but his Arpdd, in it 
finished in 1830, and published at Pest in the following year, m a 
great national epic Among other poets of this period were Alois 
Scentmiklossy. George Gael, Enul Bucsy, Joseph Saasa, Ladislaus 
Toth and Joseph Katona, author of the much-extolled historical 
drama Bdnh Bdn, 1 Isidore Cusmics, the translator of Theocritus 
into Magyar hexameters, is chiefly noted for his prose writings on 
ecclesiastical and philosophical subject*. As authors of special 
works on philosophy, we find Samuel Koteles, John Imre, Joseph 
Rusxek, Daniel Ercaei and Paul Sarvari; as a theologian and 
Hebraist John Somossy; as an historian and philologist Stephen 
Horvath, who endeavoured to trace the Magyar descent from the 
earliest historic times; as writers on jurisprudence Alexander Khvy 
and Paul Sslemenies. For an account of the historian George Fejer, 
the laborious compiler of the Codox Diplomatic**, sec Feja*. 

The establishment of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences' (17th 
November 1830) marks the commencement of a new period, in 
the first eighteen years of which gigantic exertions were 
made as regards the literary and intellectual life of the 
nation. The language, nursed by the academy, developed 
showed its capacity f or 



rapidly, and . 

almost every form of scientific 



y lor giving expression 
Knowledge.' By often 



, lf«-' By offering 

rewards for the best original dramatic productions, the academy 
provided that the national theatre should not suffer from a lack 
of classical dramas. During the earlier part of its existence the 
Hungarian academy devoted itself mainly to the scientific develop- 
ment of the language and philological research. Since its reorganisa- 
tion in 1869 the academy has, however, paid equal attention to the 
various departments of history, archaeology, national economy and 
the physical sciences. The encouragement of polite literature was 
more especially the object of the Kisfaludy Society, founded in 18; ' 



Polite literature had received a great impulse in the preceding 
period (1807-1830), but after the formation of the academy and the 
Kisfaludy society it advanced with accelerated speed towards the 
point attained by other nations. Foremost among epic poets, 
though not equally successful as a dramatist, was Mihaly voros- 
marty (?.».), who, belonging also to the dose of the last period, 
combines great power of imagination with elegance of language. 
Generally less varied and romantic, though easier in style, are the 
': poems Augsburgi iUkdtsl (Battle of Augsburg) and Aradi 
\ (Diet of Arid) of Gregory Csucsor, who was, moreover, very 



ns Augsburgi iUkdut (Battle of Augsburg) and A 
gy*Us (Diet of Arid) of Gregory Csucsor, who was, moreover, 1 
felicitous as an epigrammatist. Martin Debrecxeni was chiefly famed 
for his Kiooi csata (Battle of Kieff), published at Pest in 1854 after 
his death by Count Enteric Miko. The laborious John Garay in his 
Ss*»U Lamo shows considerable ability as an epic poet, but his 
greatest merit was rather as a romancist and ballad writer, as shown 
by the," Pen Sketches " or ToUrajook (1843). and his legendary 
' » Arpddok (1847). Joseph Baua was a lyricist of a somewhat 
__ ncholycast. but his BorUtk (Wine Song), Sohajtds (Sigh). Ebfsttd 
I A wakening) and Apotkoosu are much admired. He is known 
further as the translator of F. C. Dahlmann's Guckukte der engUstkom 



1 The subject is similar to that of Grillparzer's tragedy, Bin tretur 
DUntr seines Herrn. 

* It was founded in 1825 through the generosity of Count Sxechenyi, 
who devoted his whole income for one year (60.000 florins) to the 
purpose. It was soon supported by contributions from all quarters 
except from the government. 

* Among the earlier publications of the academy were the Tuio- 
m&nytdr (Treasury of Sciences, 1834-1844). with its supplement 
LiUraiura; the K&lfoldi j&ttksxin (Foreign Theatres); the Magyar 
nyeh rendswtre (System of the Hungarian language, 1846; 2nd ed., 
1847); various dictionaries of scientific, mathematical, philosophical 
and legal' terms; a Hungarian -German dictionary (1835-1838), 
and a Glossary of Provincialisms (1838). The Nagy-Swdtar (Great 
Dictionary), begun by Cxucxor and Fogarasi in 1845, was not issued 
till 1862-1874. Among the regular organs of the academy are the 
Transactions (from 1840), in some 60 vols., and the Annuals. 

'Among its earlier productions were the Ntnacti konyvtdr 
(National Library), published 1843-1847, and continued in 1852 
under the title ujabo Nemuti kdnyvtdr, a repository of works by 
celebrated authors; the Kiilfoldi Reginytdr (Treasury of Foreign 
Romances), consisting of translations; and some valuable collections 
of proverbs, folk-songs, traditions and fables. Of the many later 
publications of the Kisfaludy society the most important as regards 
English literature is the Shaksfere Minden Munkdi (Complete Works 
of Shakespeare), in 10 vols. (1864-1878), to which a supplementary 
vol., Shaksptte PMy*J* (1880), containing a critical account of the 
life and writings of Shakespeare, has been added by Professor A. 
Greguss. Translations from.Moliere, Racine, Corneille, Calderon 
and Moreto have also been issued by the Kisfaludy society. The 
Evlapok *j folyama, or " New Series of Annuals," from i860 (Buda- 
pest. 1868. &c), is a chrestomathy of prise orations, and translations 
and original pieces, both in poetry and prose. 



earlier part of 



9*7 

As generally able writers of lyrical poetry during the 
this period may be mentioned among others Francis 

jh Seekacs and Andrew Kunoss also Lewis Saakal 

and Alexander Vachott, whose songs and romances are of an artless 
and simple character, and the sacred lyricist Bela Tarkanyi. As an 
original but rather heavy lyric and didactic poet we may mention 
Peter Vajda, who was, moreover, the translator of Bulwers " Night 
and Morning." Of a more distinctly national tendency are the 
lyrics of John Krica* and John Erdelyi. but the reputation of the 
latter was more especially due to h» collections of folk-lore made 

P> 
tr 



'Unitarian bishop of Transylvania, author of VairSudk, or 
' Wild Roses " (1863), a collection of Szekler folk-songs, ballads and 



928 



HUNGARY 



HJTERATUM 



MmowMU dramatic literature found many champions, of whom 
the iimmi «nff|«iii wa« hdward Ssigligeti, Pfffi* Joseph Ssathmary, 
«lt» «nrU hwl th» Mun«»f mh stage With more than a hundred piece*. 
Of thae* the mint pt»|»ul*r are comedies and *rrio-comtc rut ion* I 
tjianM* A Iras (ifolini bin more t laiwtcal writer appeared in Charles 
Oltemylk, whose (##*'*# flruMainui it, nest to Katona'a Bdnk Bdn, 
ntte nf th* l*M hUtoMial traiedlrs tn the language. Several of the 
Mimtiy mtnlionrtl lyrtc ami ejiit pottt were txxa clonal writer* also 
[w the drama, lo those we may add the gifted but unfortunate 






MaUmund 1 i«n<N, l.»wia Ooltta, Joseph Stigeti, Ignatiu* Nary. 
iu*ph Ssenvey (a ttantlatur ftom Schiller), Joseph Gaal, Charles 
Jlugii, I awrsm* lV>th (the Magyariser of the Sikttfer 5ra**W), 
KiMPiu Vahm, Alois l>e*;re (equally famou* as a novelist), Stephen 
lolily and I e*i* lK'«*i», author of the popular oriae drama CW* 
[ I he Kim), M ■ tatter r r*( nea^O* ( The Tragedy of Man), by Emetic 
Matlain (tani), I* a dramatic poem of a philosophical and content- 
pU»|v* iharaiter, and la nut intended for the stage. Among sue- 
t**«lul dramatic pines may be mentioned the ran reuse (village 
Hiantp) ul lilfrArd |V»th ft*75)» which represents the life of the 
Hung*! Un |**MiMrv, *nd «now* both poetic sentiment and dramatic 
skill • A twrW#m aeMsa Combat of Love), by Count Geaa Zichy; 
fifct**** (i *,*<») and the prise tragedy r*aieea (1879)1 by Anthony 
VAiadvt '♦<•**• (t*7f>» Im i.*reg««rv Cuky; and the dramatised 

Tenant* .W» Jtf»«*J iUaml»ome MichaD, bv Maurus lokai (1877). 
he ptiiH4|*d iwitt ol this aut hoi's diama a/*/** (1876) consist* in 
its bulhaitce ri language 1 he $f*ni*m ttaW^M (School of Love;), 
h* lutgen* rUkrnv, although tit some p*rt* exquisitely worded, did 
n«4 meet ttihthe.iitpUtiwtatMirdedtu His Jti**Kt** /*ij*s [Ktmdtym 
it »»♦> I he v.'V/ /v«i4Wi A«iiMNiatCount CoJorann Doravandi) of 



(tela ft*n«en\t vt*;.*> *• * «*♦*! tragedy ol the French school, 
w the wwat «>\rnt %ni^s of comedy we single out Arpad 
th tw kta A ^«tu^Ml«» Matchmakers) ; Ignatius Sulw\-*k>* 

Km hi* AV* J*fii\'m*ty* it *i>mW Oi|%h*maw 1 1 and theabove-nwmioned 



Am*nai 
iWnstl 



Hungarian fit* and character, have earned for hUn _ 
repuution. Of the novels produced by other authors bet w ee n 1*7* 
and 1880. we may mention A hot as tmbtr kndbdik (Where the Ma* 
Begins), by Edward Kavmssy (1871). in which be severely lashes the 
idling Magyar nobility; At tn umtr&tetm (My Acquaintances), by 
Lewi* Tolnai (1871). and A mud, by Stephen Toldy <i87*>. the 
versified romance* DMt bdbtk hist (Hero of the Fata ^fJTfV"'- 



generally aacribed to Ladblau* Arsnv, but anonynKHwIy 1 



A surtUm k*u (Hero of Love), by John Vajda (1S7J). uxf TcUf. 
L .^ .« . .. ^j A f m _^_ ~^ 

m ww .lerestiog i 

of narrative poetry; K4U*iy Bate (1875), a tale of Hui 



\nd*rm (The 



us nre- 
afosrf 



tingle out Arpdd 

i^nw Matcnmaaersi;i| ** *' 

*t*» \* <m»mW Oii^vnaw 1 ; and the 
V«ieg>H> V^iW\ t>M hw h«++***±*****n vVhe IrreeistibleK produced on 
the Mage ih tH»& A* \+^Ut \<Xx\% the sS*-e* 01W tHay Foal) a»d 
A t*++\*+t\+**> >** v \ h* K«\i INns*^, bv Ktuikw Cte^reghy, have their 
v*^ ajw^tal nieia, *fH< wveeviltefi revrearnted in 1*^1 and 1879 at 
eWU*vM ami rW«he«e\ 

vV^«^l rMHasK^e «»t««c wWh mav be said ea hav* tcenmsactd 
Swth (Via>^«oi **d Kvi«vk«*t tN<«W«eei the i5< V and to have sound 
a wyte»w>it»t>w in tx»»H« \v^*<S\ at the b*«»" *fTgof the toth 
w«tiH\\ was aiivT***\»s iy\av^ S* Fax ia sw5«»*» lit v»*ju* v , 
%mt b\ the vy«MnSit\*r» tv> cr*l*m Wrcrart ^ . 

the .4w*¥N^ *« *tMMA*c< va«*sWs«v4 K CKarsrs k *i.iUkV net- 
l#\wv *«^l csv^^«iN\i hx Kvwv<ii H*'*a t\> t^r AN*o*t »«<tuhasw> 
vm^K %v\k tViM* v4 t^c K tt^V^tx swsetx^ «vrfc»c* Svt«M asMfvcU 
a hw«y N^vrv^tt tN^w^v am* Sfy** tv* ^*r«*it km cU.iw* Iwr aceran 
rrv>M*<*vt fM tt\^«a *,t.»«H»"si tS* hnvcv v>* i«\«r mo tf<^r•i so- 
w*\»Uf <mi r^evs* n,s«u^>rv iW \t»ri*' »^^^*k *tWw»> e«. «ee»d 
V\ <s^*sW* *• ***«k^ \*\* *<r*w»^* S raiVc a »n\<wiW.i-\i< or 
^s.s- •.>*; rv^» s ■< fc vNN"»-'» •■ i^* tW > wr %**a NvKftftfc* '.vibs 
tH» x ,K»* 4 . vW4 V. 4 w v«*( t v* .^ SVV i»a^ •KJ•flar»V , 

t* ,V,^v a« *-* -*..*\ y^W« «i tW rv4ftk.^rH v* ;an. Ca. a V^k rwr* 
» \**»v.\t n x *->>* M \Vr »••«• «m> St **Va ^ tfawvi* *A«irft ' 
l,s\\\*\ X/>W%» ^i*.^ 1 **»• *c»V ,\*v *. ,N •<-j^e \j*i^ * 

*s x *.W » V^v **v' l ** * A" •".«* t -^ >*> x'^V. N* \> \i<"u-*. ' 
*v»-* s ^v to**'^' *»*V 4 *• »■*••• ^«r .-. *vm -.>* ?vv<, " <\i K-cvi 
e> ^>vn<* s \c^ *s»* x «»«">'% 'i»A *.» ". ><>< »*v» vr«» J. 
W •*.*». a-Wv ^ w * Vt-* ,\ V »^k v> ><■ tv^T*^ ."f.>r_v^v: ^. 
K \^» v^- ^ •s'.'s' V^**« ^ . v , «w . . v. * ► * v,-kv >, — ,-m -v 
Si »->»*\ , v» «v^> , V, *t\ ,. • v\*. t* 1 " * ^ °- x * t' - nX^ 

|V\V I.' *%\»'V » N^ . -.^ > >>«." V- </ -* - « *■ ; *J o- 

4« A \V>JV • \\* W^ ^ V J \ v* v V*-*." ■» *'*^ /C *• » -jjl -„ » 1 f 
*• \ •• ^ -v V » «^ *.«v*^n ,n. v<^ v » \ « -*~t V * » *■?*» * 1 V.n jr"~ X'C- 

^H- \ %t*^N» ^* •< V * \N <Ok">N •1»'\*f I*.- v , *-•» IT > ■^je-?*"*' 
«* • • >^s,*. ^". » V «**V* • ■>?<*<'«"* ■» * * - "!*- v-> «■ 

e» v» v« •«** - k ^ .»- * w» v «* : w Ax-^ft 

W 'k-. •V*,. , - N^ ^ S. ^ >v' X .* -*■<" *\ ^«. H »v "^M"V> 

»<^*V* »^ ,w* ■ "is *h.' .» ^,— .-v V»^v \ S;<wx S^- j»j 

> .•*-• ,.V-K \ **V s* H* v.. « v -x-M $*.--<*. ^ ' i ''" J" 

•»-*. *"Xt x^NV >X *■ ' ^ v >cV>.' -N«V^—'- ► >0 X-V 

i"<^ »«. ;» V»K -v<» ^ -«.v *^-^. -»> ^^^ . >. '•*"-^WTT* 

V\ l"»Sfc > i'Kw» "« > S* *-«^»-«^,^, ». ^. •* TTFVJt. »^»v.«c'<. 

Si*, ^t*. *A.v >\. -^» ^%>«*-v ,»••>....«.- - - - — „. ^ -„ 

«S «,-* * fcV-- % <■-**-* ^» -, ^ ^ . V ?• , «. 

« .««<*« ^*.i-« V »*»■ -<.v *► ,'. - ■ ^.._» *. - »-j.-^* .^ ^ 

V xv *fc ^ ^ *^ -•- „ ^ .^- n .-- -^ -J. 



goaiMa (Rencounters) by the same'(i877). and A 
Fairy Zone), by John Bulla (1876). all foor into 
of narrative poetry; Ktlotdy BUa (1875). a tak 
vlncial life, by loltan Beothv. a pleasing writer who 
of humour, and appears to follow the best English models; 
is****** (History of Edrth). by Joseph Prem (1876): A T jnin s a| 
tskoldh (School of Misery), by the prolific author .Arnoid Verten 
(1878); tukcll tmr&m (Secret love), by Cornefius Abranyi (t8;e>. 
a social-poNtical romance of some merit; and Uj safe*, avast 
<mk*tk (Modem Times, Men of the Past), by L. Vefca (it;«) U 
the /ttaeaj (At Home), by Alois Degre (1877). the tale s» nsade the 
medium for a satirical attach upon official corruption and Hsnsganaa 
national vanity: and in the Alm^k UmMqa (Dreamer of DreaauK 
by John Asboth (1878). other natsonal defects are aimed a*. A mm 
nmmami (The Bad Neighbour), by Charles Vadnay <i«7«> n - 
feticitoua representarion of the power of love. The A* srfnto BAk 
(The Last of the Bebeka). by the late Charles Petery. is a work nek 
in poetic invention, but sneagre in historical nutter. The retersr a 
the case with the Lajjs* *t» (Priest Lewis), by Charles V»rt»\ 1*75 ■. 
the secne of which is placed at Peat, in the begiomng est the i*r* 
century. In thb romance the interest of the narratrve as venaene* 
by a superabundance of historical and archae o l o gi ca l draft 

Aa regards works of a scientific character, the Magyars csri 
recently were confessedly behindhand as co - par e a* wmh swasy ocser 
Earopeaa nations. Indeed, before the fo undati on of the l langaisis 
academy in i8«o. but few snch works daubing f t 11 a s esrflart— a 

had been f>wblisned in the native baa ■ igt, . E>enwffl4 

physics, logsc and other s n b ject s of the kind had to 1 
sewal of the rvcewsss through the ssedna nf Laxaav 
political coeasno t i o a u of the sen few years aT 
tnmtv tor the p j u s iiou oa of seriess sradaes: 
state of the cowntn . and gradual n mibfiiss 
as a eaeans nf edwrarkkav were, s ti i u, 1 
opasent nf sesewnac knovstdee^ 
the departsaent of c*vh 
sertations bearvrg an namti ev < 
Hangarr o>cki hoan a lew awthees nf 
Oi ? Srse oae nf the ssnst snea&n 
awS«ned as the organs zt rte i 
a«i c i * 1 . w hewsreeneas nf ; 
s Swx^ci^a aamst be satsa 
xeioness of ii*r et^ral sendsaag nf * 
h**r*-«a kVa 





-v^. t*e ss-s 



flO * SCT- ..a 7T -> C UL - - CO»> 



• a- »*vr "•-«■ 




ri* -f im T* *_ry 



LITERATURE) HUNGARY Q2<) 



eccle 

write 

of C 

Anth 

John 

elucii 

aisto 

Mem 

node 

affon 

extcr 

kuvii 

Pauli 

Fran 

of us 

Bcot 

K6m 

grapl 

excel 

thcoi 

tiavc 

publi 

Lan<i 

studi 

Buck 

actio 

last 

Armi 

Tata 

As 
allict 
gcojji 
John 
Korc 
vani; 
Gold 
Andi 
Nich 
Rom 
Fran 
Bish< 
numi 
Augi 
Csac 
activ 
direc 
and 
thea 

N< 
in t 
"H* 
was 
nath 
orgai 
and 
actio 
phys 
and 
and 
Jura 
Szab 
HofT 
Jot«l 
tor r 
so-ca 
meni 

iP X\ 

coroi 
show 
atrid 
acad 
mcit 
its it 
scier 
Ilux 
Proc 
MoH 
wart 
mon 
in tl 
pokf 
*W 

t c 
histo 
the 
matl 
state 



XUl. 16* 



93° 



HUNGARY 



[UTETtATUKl 



A 
I* 

r 



HUNGER AND THIRST— HUNGERFORD 



93" 



cooscrvattve achoo!; younger crick*, tike Bela Laxar, Alexander 
Hevcsi, H. Lenket. Zotum Ferencsy. Aladar Ballagi. Udtsk* 
Ncgyessy, have shown themselves somewhat too ready to follow the 
latest Norwegian or Parisian sensation. 

Authorities.— The best authc ire: 

F. Toldy, A Magyar tumuli irodt 4 a 

jtUnkong (Pest. 1864-1865; 3rd jar 

irodalom is nyelv rovid tirtfnete (D ; J. 

S*vor6nyi, Magyar irodalmi stench yar 

irodalmt lanulmdnyok kisikonyte A 

id*. 
\cU 
ijz- 

, of 

One of the most useful mono- 



irodalmt lanulmdnyok kisikonyve 
Magyar irodalom tdrUnete (Pest, 
nemzeti irodalomtdrlitut vduata ( 



Lonkay, A Magyar irodalom isn 
Pest, 1864); J. Fcrcncz, Magyar ii 



(Pest, 1854); J. Fcrcncx 



GyOtemeny (2 vols.. Pest, 
L. Ncvy. Z. Bcothy and 



x 67 J. I 
, I856-I8 M _ 
B. Erodi. 



graphs on " Magyar Literary History Writing M is that of J. Szinnyci, 

tumor, A Magyar Irodalomldrtinel-frds ismerUlise (Budapest, 1878). 
: or information as to the most recent literature sec A. Dux, A us 
Ungarn (Leipzig, 1880); Zsolt Bcothy, A Alary, mm*, trod, tort.; 
S. Bodnar, A magy. trod, tort.; Bcia Lazar. A Ugnap, a mo, is a 
holnap (Budapest. 1806-1900); Joseph Szinnyci, Magy. irok iitU is 
munkdi (an extensive biographical dictionary of Hungarian authors); 
Irodalom IdrUneli Kddemtnytk (a periodical edited by Aron Szilady, 
for the history of literature); EmU Reich, Hungarian Literature 
(London. 1898). (E. Re.*) 

HUNGER and THIRST. These terms are used to express 
peculiar sensations which are produced by and give expression 
to general wants of the system, satisfied respectively by the 
ingestion of organic solids containing substances capable of 
acting as food, and by water or liquids and solids containing 
water. 

Hunger (a word common to Teutonic languages) is a peculiarly 
indefinite sensation of craving or want which is referred to the 
stomach, but with which is often combined, always indeed in its 
most pronounced stages, a general feeling of weakness or faintness. 
The earliest stages are unattended with suffering, and are charac- 
terized as " appetite for food." Hunger is normally appeased 
by the introduction of solid or semi-solid nutriment into the 
stomach, and it is probable that the almost immediate alleviation 
of the sensation in these circumstances is in part due to a local 
influence, perhaps connected with a free secretion of gastric 
juice. Essentially, however, the sensation of hunger is a mere 
local expression of a general want, and this local expression 
ceases when the want is satisfied, even though no food be intro- 
duced into the stomach, the needs of the economy being satisfied 
by the introduction of food through other channels, as, for 
example, when food which admits of being readily absorbed is 
injected into the large intestine. 

Thirst (a word of Teutonic origin, Ger. Durst, Swed. and Dan. 
tffrst, akin to the Lat. torrcre, to parch) is a peculiar sensation of 
dryness and heat localized in the tongue and throat. Although 
thirst may be artificially produced by drying, as by the passage 
of a current of air over the mucous membrane of the above parts, 
normally it depends upon an impoverishment of the system in 
water. And, when this impoverishment ceases, in whichever 
way this be effected, the sensation likewise ceases. The in- 
jection of water into the blood, the stomach, or the large intestine 
appeases thirst, though no fluid is brought in contact with the 
part to which the sensation is referred. 

The sensations of hunger and thirst lead us, or when urgent 
compel us, to take food and drink into the mouth. Once in the 
mouth, the entrance to the alimentary canal, the food begins to 
undergo a series of processes, the object of which is to extract 
from it as much as possible of its nutritive constituents. Food 
in the alimentary canal is, strictly speaking, outside the confines 
of the body; as much so as the fly grasped in the leaves of the 
insectivorous Dlonea is outside of the plant itself. The mechanical 
and chemical processes to which the food is subjected have their 
scat and conditions outside the body which it is destined to 
nourish, though unquestionably the body is no passive agent, and 
innumerable glands come into action to supply the chemical 
agents which dissolve and render assimilable those constituents of 
the food capable of being absorbed into the organism, and of 
forming part and parcel of its substance (see further under 
Nutrition). 



HUNGERFORD. WALTER HUNGERFORD, Baron (d. 1449), 
English soldier, belonged to a Wiltshire family. His father, 
Sir Thomas Hungerford (d. 1308), was speaker of the House of 
Commons in 1377, a position which he owed to his friend John of 
Caunt, and is the first person formally mentioned in the rolls 
of parliament as holding the office. Walter Hungerford also 
served as speaker, but he is more celebrated as a warrior and 
diplomatist, serving in the former capacity at Agincourt and 
in the latter at the council of Constance and the congress of 
Arras. An executor of Henry V.'s will and a member of the 
council under Henry VI., Hungerford became a baron in 1426, 
and he was lord treasurer from 1426 to 143 1. Remains of his 
benefactions still exist at Heytesbury, long the principal re- 
sidence of the family. 

Hungcrford's son Robert (c. 1400-1459) was also called to 
parliament as a baron; he was very wealthy, both his mother 
and his wife being heiresses. Like several other members of the 
family, Robert was buried in the cathedral at Salisbury. 

Robert's son and heir, Robert, Lord Moleyns and Hungerford 
(c. 14 20-1464), married Eleanor, daughter of Sir William de 
Moleyns, and was called to parliament as Lord de Moleyns in 
1445. He is chiefly remembered through his dispute with 
John Paston over the possession of the Norfolk manor of Gresham. 
After losing this case he was taken prisoner in France in 145a, 
not securing his release until 1459. During the Wars of the 
Roses he fought for Henry VI., with whom he fled to Scotland; 
then he was attainted, was taken prisoner at the battle of 
Hexham, and was executed at Newcastle in May 1464. 

His eldest son, Sir Thomas Hungerford (d. 1469), was attainted 
and executed for attempting the restoration of Henry VI.; 
a younger son, Sir Walter Hungerford (d. 1516), who fought for 
Henry VII. at Bosworth, received some of the estates forfeited 
by his ancestors. Sir Thomas, who had no sons, left an only 
daughter Mary (d. c. 1534). When the attainders of her father 
and grandfather were reversed in 1485 this lady became Baroness 
Hungerford and Baroness de Moleyns; she married into the 
Hastings family and was the mother of George Hastings, 1st 
earl of Huntingdon. 

Sir Walter Hungerford's son Edward (d. 1522) was the father 
of Walter, Lord Hungerford of Heytesbury (1 503-1 540), who 
was created a baron in 1536, but was attainted for his alleged 
sympathy with the Pilgrimage of Grace; he was beheaded on 
the 28th of July 1540, the same day as his patron Thomas 
Cromwell. As his sons Sir Walter (1532-1506) and Sir Edward 
(d. 1607) both died without sons the estates passed to another 
branch of the family. 

Sir Edward Hungerford (1506-1648), who inherited the estates 
of his kinsman Sir Edward in 1607, was the son of Sir Anthony 
( 1 564-1627) and a descendant of Walter, Lord Hungerford. 
He was a member of both the Short and Long Parliaments in 
1640; during the Civil War he attached himself to the parlia- 
mentary party, fighting at Lansdowne and at Roundway Down. 
His half-brother Anthony (d. 1657) was also a member of both 
the Short and the Long Parliaments, but was on the royalist 
side during the war. This Anthony's son and heir was Sir 
Edward Hungerford (1632-1711), the founder of Hungerford 
market at Charing Cross, London. He was a member of parlia- 
ment for over forty years, but was very extravagant and was 
obliged to sell much of his property; and little is known of the 
family after his death. 

See Sir R. C. Hoare, History of Modern Wiltshire (1822-1844). 

HUNGERFORD, a market town in the Newbury parliamentary 
division of Berkshire, England, extending into Wiltshire, 61 m. 
W. by S. of London by the Great Western railway. Pop. (1901) 
2006. It is beautifully situated in the narrow valley of the 
Rennet at the junction of tributary valleys from the south and 
south-west, the second of which is followed by the Bath road, 
an important highway from London to the west. The town, 
which lies on the Kennet and Avon canal, has agricultural trade. 
John of Gaunt, duke of Lancaster, presented to the citizens 
manorial rights, including common pasture and fishing. The 
fishing is valuable, for the trout of the Kennet and other streams 



93* 



HUNINGEN—HUNS 



in the locality ire numerous and carefully preserved. Hunger- 
ford is also a favourite hunting centre. A horn given to the town 
fay John of Gaunt is preserved in the town hall, another horn 
dating from 1634 being used to summon the manorial court of 
twelve citizens called feoffees (the president being called the 
constable), at Hocktidc, the Tuesday following Easter week. 
In 1774, when a number of towns had taken action against the 
imposition of a fee for the delivery of letters from their local 
post-offices, Hungerford was selected as a typical case, and 
was first relieved of the imposition. 

HONINGBN, a town of Germany, in Alsace-Lorraine, situated 
on the left bank of the Rhine, on a branch of the Rhine-Rhone 
canal, and 3 m. N. of Basel by rail. Pop. (1005) 3304. The 
Rhine is here crossed by an iron railway bridge. The town boasts 
a handsome Roman Catholic church, and has manufactures of 
silk, watches, chemicals and cigars. Huningen is an ancient 
place and grew up round a stronghold placed to guard the passage 
of the Rhine. It was wrested from the Imperialists by the duke 
of Lauenburg in 1634, and subsequently passed by purchase 
to Louis XIV. of France. It was fortified by Vauban (1679- 
1681) and a bridge was built across the Rhine. The fortress 
capitulated to the Austrians on the 26th of August 1815 and 
the works were shortly afterwards dismantled. In 187 1, the town 
passed, with Alsace-Lorraine, to the German empire. 

See Tschamber, Gesckkhte der Stadt und ehemaligen Pestnng 
Huningen (St Ludwig, 1894); and Latruffe, Huningue el BdU 
devant Us Irakis de 181s (Pans, 1863). 

HUNNERIC (d. 484), king of the Vandals, was a son of King 
Gaiseric, and was sent to Italy as a hostage in 435 when his 
father made a treaty with the emperor Valentinian III. After his 
return to the Vandal court at Carthage, he married a daughter of 
Theodoric I., king of the Visigoths; but when this princess was 
suspected of attempting to poison her father-in-law, she was 
mutilated and was sent back to Europe. Hunncric became king 
of the Vandals on his father's death in 477. Like Gaiseric he was 
an Arian, and his reign is chiefly memorable for his cruel perse- 
cution of members of the orthodox Christian Church in his 
dominions. Hunneric's second wife was Eudocia, a daughter 
of Valentinian III. and his wife Eudocia. (See Vandals.) 

HUNNIS, WILLIAM (d. 1507), English musician and poet, was 
as early as 1540 in the service of William Herbert, afterwards 
earl of Pembroke. His friend Thomas Newton, in a poem 
prefixed to The Hive of H win ye (1578), says: " In prime of youth 
thy pleasant Penne depainctcd Sonets swecte," and mentions his 
interludes, gallant lay9, rondelets and songs, explaining that it 
was in the winter of his age that he turned to sacred lore and 
high philosophy. In 1550 he published Ctrtayne Psalm . . . 
in English* metre, and shortly afterwards was made a gentleman 
of the Chapel Royal. At Mary's accession he retained his appoint- 
ment, but in 1555 he is said to have been one of a party of twelve 
conspirators who had determined to take Mary's life. Nothing 
came of this plot, but shortly afterwards he was party to a 
conspiracy to dethrone Mary in favour of Elizabeth. Hunnis, 
having some knowledge of alchemy, was to go abroad to coin the 
necessary gold, but this doubtful mission was exchanged for the 
task of making false keys to the treasury in London, which he was 
able to do because of his friendship with Nicholas Brigham, the 
receiver of the exchequer. The conspirators were, however, 
betrayed by one of their number, Thomas Whytc. Some of 
them were executed, but Hunnis escaped with imprisonment. 
The death of Mary made him a free man, and in 1559 he married 
Margaret, Brigham's widow, but she died within the year, and 
Hunnis married in 1560 the widow of a grocer. He himself 
became a grocer and freeman of the City of London, and super- 
visor of the Queen's Gardens at Greenwich. In 1566 he was 
made Master of the Children of the Chapel Royal. No complete 
piece of his is extant, perhaps because of the rule that the plays 
acted by the Children should not have been previously printed. 
In his later years he purchased land at Barking, Essex. If the 
lines above his signature on a 1557 edition of Sir Thomas More's 
works arc genuine, he remained a poor man, for he refuses to make 
a will on the ground that " the good that I shall leave, will not 



pay all I owe." In Harleian MS. 6443 ta » story that one of kit 

sons.in the capacity of page, drank the remainder of the poisoned 
cup supposed to have been provided by Leicester for Walter 
Devereux, 1st carl of Essex, but escaped with no injury beyond 
the loss of his hair. 
Hunnis'* extant works include Certayne Psalms (1549). A JUsejiA 



of Hnnnye (1578), Seven Sobbes of a sorrowful Sank] or Sinme OsSjJ. 
[tunnies Recreations (1588), sixteen poems in the Paradise of D&***J 
Devices (1576), and two in England's Helicon (1600). Sec Mn C 
Carmkhacl Stopes's tract on WUJianv Hunnis, reprinted (1892) from 
the Jahrbuch der deutschen Shakespeare GesetlsdtafU 

HUNS. This or some similar name is given to at least focr 
peoples, whose identity cannot be regarded as certain. (1) The 
Huns, who invaded the East Roman empire from about ajx. 37a 
to 453 and were most formidable under the leadership of Ana*. 
(2) The Hungarians or Magyars. The Magyars crossed the 
Carpathians into Hungary in a.d. 898 and mingled with the 
races they found there. The modern Hungarians (excluding 
Slavonic elements) arc probably a mixture of these Magyars wiih 
the remnants of older invaders such as Huns, Pctchenegs and 
Kumans. (3) The White Huns (Acvxol OGwx or Epht halites), 
who troubled the Persian empire from about 420 to 557 and were 
known to the Byzantines. (4) The Hunas, who invaded India 
during the same period. There is not much doubt that the 
third and fourth of these tribes are the same, and it is quite 
likely that the Magyars are descended from the horde which sent 
forth the Huns in the 4U1 century, but it is not demonstrable 
Neither can it be proved that the Huns and Magyars belonged 
either physically or linguistically to the same section as the 
Hunas and Ephthalitcs. But the occurrence of tbc name is 
both India and Europe is prima facie evidence in favour of a 
connexion between those who bore it, for, though civilized races 
often lumped all their barbarian neighbours together under one 
general name, it would seem that, when the same name is applkd 
independently to similar invaders in both India and eastera 
Europe, the only explanation can be that they gave themselves 
that name, and this fact probably indicates that they were 
members of the same tribe or group. What we know of the 
history and distribution of the Huns does not conflict with this 
idea. They appear in Europe towards the end of the 4th century 
and the Ephlhalitcs and Hunas in western Asia about fifty years 
later. It may be supposed that some defeat in China (and the 
Chinese were successful in driving back the Hiung-nu in the 
1st century a.d.) had sent them westwards some time earlier. 
One body remained in Transoxiana and, after resting for a time, 
pushed their way through the mountains into Afghanistan and 
India, exactly as the Yue-Chi had done before them. Another 
division pressed farther westwards and probably made its .head- 
quarters near the northern end of the Caspian Sea and the 
southern part of the Ural Mountains. It was from ficrc that the 
Huns invaded Europe, and when their power collapsed, after the 
death of Attila, many of them may have returned to their 
original haunts. Possibly the Bulgarians and Khaaars were 
offshoots of the same horde. The Magyars may very well have 
gradually spread first to the Don and then beyond it, until in the 
9th century they entered Hungary. But this sketch of possible 
migrations is largely conjectural, and authorities arc not even 
agreed as to the branch of the Turanians to which the Huns 
should be referred. The physical characteristics of these nomadic 
armies were very variable, since they continually increased their 
numbers by slaves, women and soldiers of fortune drawn from 
all the surrounding races. The language of the Magyars is Fiano- 
Ugric and most nearly allied to the speech of the Ostiaks now 
found on the east of the Ural, but we have no warrant for assum- 
ing that the Huns, and still less that the Ephlhalites and Hunas, 
spoke the same language. Neither can we assume that the Huns 
and Hunas are the same as the Hiung-nu of the Chinese. The 
names may be identical, but it is not certain, for in Hun may 
lurk some such designation as the ten (Turkish on or u») tribes. 
Also Hiung-nu seems to be the name of warlike nomads in general, 
not of a particular section. Again the Finnish languages spoken 
in various parts of Russia and more or less allied to Magyar 
must have spread gradually westwards from the Urals, and their 



HUNS 



933 



«leveJopment and diffusion Mem to postulate a long period (for 
the history of the Finns shows that they were not mobile like the 
Turks and Mongols), so that the ancestral language from which 
spring Finnish and Magyar can hardly have been brought across 
Asia after the Christian era. The warlike and vigorous temper 
of the Huns has led many writers to regard them as Turks. The 
Turks were perhaps not distinguished by name or institutions 
from other tribes before the $th century, but the Huns may have 
been an earlier offshoot of the same stock. Apart from this the 
Hungarians may have received an infusion of Turkish blood not 
only from the Osmanlis but from the Kumans and other tribes 
who settled in the country. 

History. — The authentic history of the Hurts in Europe 
practically begins about the year a.d. 37*, when under a leader 
named Balamir (or, according to some MSS., Balamber) they 
began a westward movement from their settlements in the steppes 
lying to the north of the Caspian. After crushing, or compelling 
the alliance of, various nations unknown to fame (Alpitzuri, 
Alcidzuri, Himari, Tuncarsi, Boisci), they at length reached the 
Alani, a powerful nation which had its seat between the Volga 
and the Don; these also, after a struggle, they defeated and 
finally enlisted in their service. They then proceeded, in 374, 
to invade the empire of the Ostrogoths (Greutungi), ruled over 
by the aged Ermanaric, or Hermanric, who died (perhaps by 
bis own hand) while the critical attack was still impending. 
Under his son Hunimund a section of his subjects promptly 
made a humiliating peace; under Withemir (Winithar), however, 
who succeeded him in the larger part of his dominions, an armed 
resistance was organized; but it resulted only in* repeated 
defeat, and finally in the death of the king. The representatives 
of his son Witheric put an end to the conflict by accepting the 
condition of vassalage. Balamir now directed his victorious 
arms still farther westward against that portion of the Visigothic 
nation (or Tervingi) which acknowledged the authority of 
Athanaric. The latter entrenched himself on the frontier which 
bad separated him from the Ostrogoths, behind the " Grcutung- 
rampart " and the Dniester; but he was surprised by the enemy, 
who forded the river in the night, fell suddenly upon his camp, 
and compelled him to abandon his position. Athanaric next 
attempted to establish himself in the territory between the 
Pruth and the Danube, and with this object set about heightening 
the old Roman wall which Trajan had erected in north-eastern 
Dacia; before his fortifications, however, were complete, the 
Huns were again upon him, and without a battle he was forced 
to retreat to the Danube. The remainder of the Visigoths, 
under Alavivus and Fritigcm, now began to seek, and ultimately 
were successful in obtaining (376), the permission of the emperor 
Valens to settle in Thrace; Athanaric meanwhile took refuge 
in Transylvania, thus abandoning the field without any serious 
struggle to the irresistible Huns. For more than fifty years the 
Roman world was undisturbed by any aggressive act on the part 
of the new invaders, who contented themselves with over- 
powering various tribes which lived to the north of the Danube. 
In some instances, in fact, the Huns lent their aid to the Romans 
against third parties; thus in 404-405 certain Hunnic tribes, 
under a chief or king named Uldin, assisted Honorius in the 
struggle with Radagaisus (Ratigar) and his Ostrogoths, and 
took a prominent part in the decisive battle fought in the 
neighbourhood of Florence. Once indeed, in 409, they are said 
to have crossed the Danube and invaded Bulgaria under perhaps 
the same chief (Uldin), but extensive desertions soon compelled 
a retreat. 

About the year 432 a Hunnic king, Ruas or Rugulas, made 
himself of such importance that he received from Theodosius II. 
an annual stipend or tribute of 350 pounds of gold (£14,000), 
along with the rank of Roman general. Quarrels soon arose, 
partly out of the circumstance that the Romans had sought to 
make alliances with certain Danubian tribes which Ruas chose 
to regard as properly subject to himself, partly also because 
some of the undoubted subjects of the Hun had found refuge 
on Roman territory; and Theodosius, in reply to an indignant 
and insulting message which he had received about this cause 



of dispute, was preparing to send off a special embassy when 
tidings arrived that Auas was dead and that he had been 
succeeded in his kingdom by Attila and Bleda, the two sons of 
his brother Mundzuk (433). Shortly afterwards the treaty of 
Margus (not far from the modern Belgrade), where both sides 
negotiated 00 horseback, was ratified. By its stipulations the 
yearly stipendium or tribute payable to Attila by the Romans 
was doubled; the fugitives were to be surrendered, or a fine 
of £& to be paid for each of those who should be missing; free 
markets, open to Hun and Roman alike, were to be instituted; 
and any tribe with which Attila might be at any time at war 
was thereby to be held as excluded from alliance with Rome. 
For eight years afterwards there was peace so far as the Romans 
were concerned; and it was probably during this period that the 
Huns proceeded to the extensive conquests to which the con- 
temporary historian Friscus so vaguely alludes in the words: 
u He (Attila) has made the whole of Scythia his own, he has 
laid the Roman empire under tribute, and he thinks of renewing 
his attacks upon Persia. The road to that eastern kingdom 
is not untrodden by the Huns; already they have marched 
fifteen days from a certain lake, and have ravaged Media." 
They also appear before the end of this interval to have pushed 
westward as far as to the Rhone, and to have come into 
conflict with the Burgundians. Overt acts of hostility, how- 
ever, occurred against the Eastern empire when the town of 
Margus (by the treachery of its bishop) was seized and sacked 
(441), and against the Western when Sirmium was invested and 
taken. 

In 445 Bleda died, and two years afterwards Attila, now sole 
ruler, undertook one of his most important expeditions against 
the Eastern empire; on this occasion he pushed southwards 
as far as Thermopylae, Gallipoli and the walls of Constantinople; 
peace was cheaply purchased by tripling the yearly tribute 
(which accordingly now stood at 2100 pounds of gold, or £84,000 
sterling) and by the payment of a heavy indemnity. In 448 
again occurred various diplomatic negotiations, and especially 
the embassy of Maximinus, of which many curious details have 
been recorded by Prisons his companion. Then followed, in 4sr, 
that westward movement across the Rhine which was only 
arrested at last, with terrible slaughter, on the Catalaunian plains 
(according to common belief, in the neighbourhood of the 
modern Chalons, but more probably at a point some 50 m. to 
the south-east, near Mery-sur-Seine). The following year (452), 
that of the Italian campaign, was marked by such events as the 
sack of Aquileia, the destruction of the cities of Venetja, and 
finally, on the banks of the Mincio, that historical interview with 
Pope Leo I. which resulted in the return of Attila to Pannonia, 
where in 453 he died (see Attila). Almost immediately after- 
wards the empire he had amassed rather than consolidated fell 
to pieces. His too numerous sons began to quarrel about their 
inheritance, while Ardaric, the king of the Gepidae, was placing 
himself at the head of a general revolt of the dependent nations. 
The inevitable struggle came to a crisis near the river Netad in 
Pannonia, in a battle in which 30,000 of the Huns and their 
confederates, including Ellak, Attila's eldest son, were slain. 
The nation, thus broken, rapidly dispersed, exactly as the White 
Huns did. after a similar defeat about a hundred years later. 
One horde settled under Roman protection in Little Scythia 
(the Dobrudzha), others in Dacia Ripensis (on the confines oi 
Servia and Bulgaria) or on the southern borders of Pannonia. 
Many, however, appear to have returned to what is now South 
Russia, and may perhaps have taken part in the ethnical com- 
binations which produced the Bulgarians. 

The chief original authorities are Ammianus Marccllinus, Priscus, 
Jordanes, Procopius, Sidonius ApoHinaris and Menandcr Protector. 
See also Gibbon, Decline and Fall of the Roman Emptrei J. B. Bury, 
History of the Later Roman EmPtr* (1889); H. H. Ho worth, History 
of the Mongols (1 876-1888); j. Hodgjcin, Italy and her Invaders 
(1 892) ; and articles in the Rene orientate pour les itudes Ourat- 
altaiques. For the Chinese sources sec E. H. Parker, A Thousand 
Years of the Tartars (1905). and numerous articles by the same 
author in the Asiatic Quarterly, also articles by Chavannes, O 
Frankc, Stein and others in various learned periodicals. For the 
literature on the White Huns see E hit halites. (C. El.) 



93+ 



HUNSDON— HUNT, LEIGH 



HUNSDON, HENRY CARET, ist Baron (c. i 514-1 506), 
English soldier and courtier, was a son of William Carey (d. 
1529); bis mother was Mary (d. 1543), a sister of Anne Boleyn, 
and he was consequently cousin to Queen Elizabeth. Member of 
parliament for Buckingham under Edward VI. and Mary, he 
was knighted in 1558, was created Baron Hunsdon in 1559, 
and in 1561 became a privy councillor and a knight of the Garter. 
In 1568 he became governor of Berwick and warden of the east 
Marches, and he was largely instrumental in quelling the rising 
in the north of England in 1569, gaining a decisive victory over 
Leonard Dacre near Carlisle in February 1570. Hunsdon 
received very little money to cover his expenses, but Elizabeth 
lavisned honours upon him, although he did not always carry 
out her wishes. In 1583 he became lord chamberlain, but he 
did not relinquish his post at Berwick. Hunsdon was one of the 
commissioners appointed to try Mary queen of Scots; after 
Mary's execution he went on a mission to James VI. of Scotland, 
and when the Spanish Armada was expected he commanded the 
queen's bodyguard. He died in London, at Somerset House, 
on the 23rd of July 1596. 

His eldest son, George (1547-1603), and Baron Hunsdon, was 
a member of parliament, a diplomatist, a soldier and lord 
chamberlain. He was also captain-general of the Isle of Wight 
during the time of the Spanish Armada. He was succeeded by 
his brother John (d. 1617). In 1628 John's son Henry, 4th 
Baron Hunsdon, was created earl of Dover. This title became 
extinct oh the death of the 2nd earl, John, in 1677, and a like 
fate befell the barony of Hunsdon on the death of the 8th baron, 
William Ferdinand, in June 1765. Elizabeth, daughter of Sir 
John Spencer of Althorp, and wife of the 2nd Lord Hunsdon, 
is celebrated as the patroness of her kinsman, the poet Spenser; 
and either this lady or her daughter Elizabeth was the author 
of the Tragedie of Marian (1613). 

The xst lord's youngest son, Robert Carey (c. 1560-1639), was 
for a long time a member of the English parliament. He was 
frequently employed on the Scottish borders; he announced the 
death of Elizabeth to James VI. of Scotland; and he was 
created earl of Monmouth in 1626. He wrote some interesting 
Memoirs, first published in 1759. His son and successor, Henry 
(1596-1661), is known as a translator of various French and 
Italian books. The title of earl of Monmouth became extinct 
on his death in June 1661. 

HUNSTANTON [commonly pronounced Hunston], a seaside 
resort in the north-western parliamentary division of Norfolk, 
England, on the east shore of the Wash, 112 m. N. by E. from 
London by the Great Eastern railway. Pop. of urban district 
of New Hunstanton (1901) 1893. The new watering-place is 
about 1 m. from the old village. It has a good beach, a golf 
course and a pier. The parish church of St Mary is a fine 
Decorated building, containing monuments of the L'Estrange 
family, whose mansion, Hunstanton Hall, is a picturesque Tudor 
building of brick in a well-wooded park. A convalescent 
home (1872) commemorates the recovery from illness of King 
Edward VII. when Prince of Wales. At Brancaster, 6 m. E., 
there is a Roman fort which formed part of the defences of 
the Lilus Saxonicum (4th century a.d.) 

HUNT. ALFRED WILLIAM (1830-1896), English painter, 
son of Andrew Hunt, a landscape painter, was born at Liverpool 
in 1830. He began to paint while at the Liverpool Collegiate 
School; but as the idea of adopting the artist's profession was 
not favoured by his father, he went in 1848 to Corpus Christi 
College, Oxford. His career there was distinguished; he won 
the Newdigate Prize in 185 1, and became a Fellow of Corpus 
in 1858. He did not, however, abandon his artistic practice, 
for, encouraged by Ruskin, he exhibited at the Royal Academy 
in 1854, and thenceforward regularly contributed landscapes 
in oil and water-colour to the London and provincial exhibitions. 
In 1861 he married, gave up his Fellowship, and was elected 
an Associate of the Royal Society of Painters in Water-Colours, 
receiving full membership three years later. His work is distin- 
guished mainly by its exquisite quality and a poetic rendering 
of atmosphere. Hunt died on 3rd May 1896. Mrs A. W. Hunt 



(nie Margaret Raine) wrote several works of Action; and oat 
of her daughters, Violet Hunt, is well known as a novelist. 
See Frederick Wedmore. "Alfred Hunt." Ifflfossa* mf Art 

(1891): Exhibition of Drawings in Water Colour by Alfred WuUcm 
Bunt, Burlington Fine Arts Club (1897). 

HUNT, HENRY (1773-1835), English politician, commonly 
called " Orator Hunt," was born at Widdington Farm, Upavoa, 
Wiltshire, on the 6th of November 1773. While following the 
vocation of a farmer he made the acquaintance of John Hon* 
Tooke, with whose advanced views he soon began to sympathixe. 
At the general election of 1806 he came to the front in Wiltshire; 
he soon associated himself with William Cobbett, and in 1813 
he was an unsuccessful candidate for Bristol. He was one of the 
speakers at the meeting held in Spa Fields, London, in November 
x8i6; in 1818 he tried in vain to become member of paxiiamest 
for Westminster, and in 1820 for Preston. In August 181$ 
Hunt presided over the great meeting in St Peter's FieJd, 
Manchester, which developed into a riot and was called the 
" Peterloo massacre. " He was arrested and was tried far 
conspiracy, being sentenced to imprisonment for two years and 
a half. In August 1830 be was elected member of parliament 
for Preston, but be lost his seat in 1833. While in parEainent 
Hunt presented a petition in favour of women's rights, probably 
the first of this kind, and he moved for a repeal of the corn bvs. 
He died on the 15th of February 1835. During his imprisonment 
Hunt wrote his Memoirs which were published in 1820. 

See R. Huish. Life of Hunt (1836); and S. Bamford, Pau*ta m 
the Life of a Radical (and ed., 1893). 

HUNT, HENRY JACKSON (1810-1889), American sohSer, 
was born In Detroit, Michigan, on the 14th of September 181* 
and graduated at the U.S. military academy in 1830, Be 
served in the Mexican War under Scott, and was breveted for 
gallantry at Contreras and Churubusco and at Chapultepec Be 
became captain in 1852 and major in 1861. His professiossl 
attainments were great, and in 1856 he was a member of a board 
entrusted with the revision of light artillery drill and tactics. 
He took part in the first battle of Bull Run in 1861, and soot 
afterwards became chief of artillery in the Washington defence* 
As a colonel on the staff of General M'Clellan he organized and 
trained the artillery reserve of the Army of the Potomac 
Throughout the Civil War be contributed more than any oficer 
to the effective employment of the artillery, arm. With the 
artillery reserve he rendered the greatest assistance at the 
battle of Malvern HiO, and soon afterwards he became chief of 
artillery in the Army of the Potomac. On the day after the 
battle of South Mountain he was made brigadier-general of 
volunteers. At the Antietam, Fredericksburg and Chanceflorv 
ville, he rendered further good service, and at Gettysburg hn 
handling of the artillery was conspicuous in the repulse of 
Pickett's charge, and he was rewarded with the brevet of colonel 
He served in Virginia to the end of the war, attaining the brevet 
ranks of major-general of volunteers and brigadier-general of 
regulars. When the U.S. army was reorganized in 1866 he 
became colonel of the 5th artillery and president of the permanent 
Artillery Board. He held various commands until 1883, when he 
retired to become governor of the Soldiers' Home, Washington, 
D.C. He died on the nth of February 1889. He was the 
author of Instructions for Field Artillery (i860), and of papers 
on Gettysburg in the " Battles and Leaders " series. 

His brother, Lewis Cass Hunt (1 824-1 886), served throughout 
the Civil War in the infantry arm, becoming brigadier-general of 
volunteers in t86a, and brevet brigadier-general U.S.A. in 1865. 

HUNT, JAMBS HENRY LEIGH (1 784-1859), English essayist 
and miscellaneous writer, was born at Southgate, Middlesex, 
on the 19th of October 1784. His father, the son of a West 
Indian clergyman, had settled as a lawyer in Philadelphia, aad 
his mother was the daughter of a merchant there. Having 
embraced the loyalist side, Leigh Hunt's father was compelled 
to fly to England, where he took orders, and acquired some 
reputation as a popular preacher, but want of steadiness, want 
of orthodoxy, and want of interest conspired to prevent ha 
obtaining any preferment. He was engaged by James Brydges, 
3rd duke of Chandos. to act as tutor to his nephew, Jams 



HUNT, LEIGH 



935 



Henry Leigh, after whom Leigh Hunt was called. The boy 
was educated at Christ's Hospital, of which school be has left 
a lively account in his autobiography. As a boy at school he 
was an ardent admirer of Gray and Collins, writing many verses 
in imitation of them. An impediment in his speech, afterwards 
removed, prevented his being sent to the university. " For 
some time after I left school," he says, " I did nothing but visit 
my school-fellows, haunt the book-stalls and write verses." 
These latter were published in 1801 under the title of Juvenilia, 
and contributed to introduce him into literary and theatrical 
society. He began to write for the newspapers, and published 
in 1807 a volume of theatrical criticisms, and a series of Classic 
Tales with critical essays on the authors. 

In 1808 he quitted the War Office, where he had for some time 
been a clerk, to become editor of the Examiner newspaper, a 
speculation of his brother John. The new journal with which 
Leigh Hunt was connected for thirteen years soon acquired a 
high reputation. It was perhaps the only rewspaper of the time 
which owed no allegiance to any political party, but assailed 
whatever seemed amiss, " from a principle of taste," as Keats 
happily expressed it. The taste of the attack itself, indeed, 
was not always unexceptionable; and one upon the Prince 
Regent, the chief sting of which lay in its substantial truth, 
occasioned (181 3) a prosecution and a sentence of two years' 
imprisonment for each of the brothers. The effect was to give 
a political direction to what should have been the career of a 
man of letters. But the cheerfulness and gaiety with which 
Leigh Hunt bore his imprisonment attracted general attention 
and sympathy, and brought him visits from Byron, Moore, 
Brougham and others, whose acquaintance exerted much 
influence on his future destiny. 

In 1810-1811 he edited for his brother John a quarterly 
magazine, the Reflector, for which he wrote " The- Feast of the 
Poets," a satire which gave offence to many contemporary poets, 
and particularly offended William Cifford of the Quarterly. 
The essays afterwards published under the title of the Round 
Table (2 vols., 1816-1817), conjointly with William Hazlitt, 
appeared in the Examiner. In 1816 he made a permanent 
mark in English literature by the publication of his Story of 
Rimini. There is' perhaps no other instance of a poem short of 
the highest excellence having produced so important and durable 
an effect in modifying the accepted standards of literary com- 
position. The secret of Hunt's success consists less in superiority 
of genius than of taste. His refined critical perception had 
detected the superiority of Chaucer's versification, as adapted to 
the present state of the language by Dryden, over the sententious 
epigrammatic couplet of Pope which had superseded it. By a 
simple return to the old manner he effected for English poetry 
in the comparatively restricted domain of metrical art what 
Wordsworth had already effected in the domain of nature; his 
is an achievement of the same class, though not of the same 
calibre. His poem is also a triumph in the art of poetical narra- 
tive, abounds with verbal felicities, and is pervaded throughout 
by a free, cheerful and animated spirit, notwithstanding the 
tragic nature of the subject. It has been remarked that H does 
not contain one hackneyed or conventional rhyme. But the 
writer's occasional flippancy and familiarity, not seldom degen- 
erating into the ludicrous, made him a mark for ridicule and 
parody on the part of his opponents, whose animosity, however, 
was rather political than literary. 

In 1818 appeared a collection of poems entitled Foliage, 
followed in 1819 by Hero and Leanier, and Bacchus and Ariadne. 
In the same year he reprinted these two works with The Story of 
Rimini and The Descent of Liberty with the title of Poetical 
Works, and started the Indicator, in which some of his best work 
appeared. Both Keats and Shelley belonged to the circle 
gathered around him at Hampstead. which also included William 
Haatitt, Charles Lamb, Bryan Procter. Benjamin Haydon, 
Cowden Clarke, C. W. Dilke, Walter Coulson, 1 John Hamilton 



1 Walter Coulson (1794? — »86o}. 
time amanuensis to "* 

theft**. 



(1794? — 1860}, lawyer and journalist, was at one 
Jeremy Bentham. and became in 1823 editor of 



Reynolds,' and in general almost all the rising young men oi 
letters of liberal sympathies. He had now for some years been 
married to Marianne Kent, who seems to have -been sincerely 
attached to him, but was not in every respect a desirable partner. 
His own affairs were by this time in the utmost confusion, and 
he was only saved from ruin by the romantic generosity of 
Shelley, In return he was lavish of sympathy to Shelley at the 
time of the latter's domestic distresses, and defended him with 
spirit in the Examiner, although he does not appear to have 
at this date appreciated his genius with either the discernment 
or the warmth of his generous adversary, Professor Wilson. 
Keats he welcomed with enthusiasm, and introduced to Shelley. 
He also wrote a very generous appreciation of him in the Indi- 
cator, and, before leaving for Italy, Keats stayed with Hunt at 
Hampstead. Keats seems, however, to have subsequently felt 
that Hunt's example as a poet had been in some . respects 
detrimental to him. After Shelley's departure for Italy (1818) 
Leigh Hunt's affairs became still more embarrassed, and the pro* 
spects of political reform less and less satisfactory. His health 
and his wife's failed, and he was obliged to discontinue his 
charming series of essays entitled the Indicator (1819-2821), 
having, he says, " almost died over the last numbers." These 
circumstances induced him to listen to a proposal, which seems 
to have originated with Shelley, that he should proceed to Italy 
and join Shelley and Byron in the establishment of a quarterly 
magazine in which Liberal opinions should be advocated with more 
freedom than was possible at home. The project was injudicious 
from every point of view; it would have done little for Hunt 
or the Liberal cause at the best, and depended entirely upon the 
co-operation of Byron, the most capricious of allies, and the 
most parsimonious of paymasters. Byron's principal motive for 
acceding to it appears to have been the expectation of acquiring 
influence over the Examiner, and he was exceedingly mortified 
on discovering when too late that Hunt had parted, or was con* 
sidered to have parted, with his interest in the journal Leigh 
Hunt left England for Italy in November .1821, but storm, 
sickness and misadventure retarded ins arrival until the 1st 
of July 1822, a rate of progress which T. L. Peacock appropriately 
compares to the navigation of Ulysses. 

The tragic death of Shelley, a few weeks later, destroyed every 
prospect oi* success for the Liberal. Hunt was now virtually a 
dependant upon Byron, whose least amiable qualities were called 
forth by the relation of patron to an unsympathetic dependant, 
burdened with a large and troublesome family. He was moreover 
incessantly wounded by the representations of his friends that he 
was losing caste by the connexion. The Liberal lived through four 
quarterly numbers, containing contributions no less memorable 
than Byron's " Vision of Judgment " and Shelley's translations 
from Faust; but in 1823 Byron sailed for Greece, leaving his 
coadjutor at Genoa to shift for himself. The Italian climate and 
manners, however, were entirely to Hunt's taste, and he pro- 
tracted his residence until 1825, producing in the interim Ultra- 
Crepidarius, a Satire on William Gijford (1823); and his matchless 
translation (1895) of Francesco Redi's Baeeo in Toscana. In 
1825 an unfortunate litigation with his brother brought him back 
to England, and in 1828 he committed his greatest mistake by 
the publication of his Lord Byron and some of his Contemporariest 
The work is of considerable value as a corrective of merely 
idealised estimates of Lord Byron. But such a corrective should 
not have come from one who had lain under obligations to 
Byron. British ideas of what was decent were shocked, and 
the author especially writhed under the withering satire of Moore. 
For many years ensuing the history of Hunt's rife is that of a 
painful struggle with poverty and sickness. He worked un- 
remittingly, but one effort failed after another. Two journalistic 
ventures, the Tatter (1830-1832), a daily devoted to literary and 
dramatic criticism, and Leigh Hunt's London Journal ( 1834-1 83 5) , 

• John Hamilton Reynolds (1796-1851). best known for his friend- 
ship and correspondence with Keats. His narrative verse founded 
on the tales of Boccaccio appeared in 1821 as The Garden of Florence 
and other Poems. He wrote some admirable sonnets, one of which is 
addressed to Keats. 



936 



HUKT.R. 



were discontinued for want of subscribers, although in the 
latter Leigh Hunt had able coadjutors, and it contained some of 
his best writing. His editorship (183 7- 1838) of the Monthly 
Repository, in which he succeeded W. J. Fox, was also unsuccess- 
ful. The adventitious circumstances which had for a time made 
the fortune of the Examiner no longer existed, and Hunt's strong 
and weak points, his refinement and his affectations, were alike 
unsuited to the general body of readers. 

In 1832 a collected edition of his poems was published 
by subscription, the list of subscribers including many of his 
opponents. In the same year was printed for private circulation 
C/trislianism, the work afterwards published (1853) as The 
Religion of the Heart. A copy sent to Carlyle secured his friend- 
ship, and Hunt went to live next door to him in Cheyne Row in 
1833. Sir Ralph Esher, a romance of Charles II. 's period, had 
a success, and Captain Sword and Captain Pen (1835), a spirited 
contrast between the victories of peace and the victories of war, 
deserves to be ranked among bis best poems. In 1840 his cir» 
cumstances were improved by the successful representation at 
Covent Garden of his Legend of Florence, a play of considerable 
merit. Lover* s Amazements, a comedy, was acted several years 
afterwards, and was printed in Leigh Hunt's Journal (1850-1851); 
and other, plays remained in MS. In 1840 he wrote introductory 
notices to the work of R. B. Sheridan and to Moxon's edition of 
the works of Wycherley, Congreve, Vanbrugh and Farquhar, 
a work which furnished the occasion of Macaulay's essay on the 
Dramatists of the Restoration, The pretty narrative poem of 
The Palfrey was published in 1842. 

The time of Hunt's greatest difficulties was between 1834 and 
1840. He was at times in absolute want, and his distress was 
aggravated by domestic complications. By Macaulay's recom- 
mendation he began to write for the Edinburgh Review. In 1844 
he was further benefited by the generosity of Mrs Shelley and 
her son, who, on succeeding to the family estates, settled an 
annuity of £120 upon him; and in 1847 Lord John Russell 
procured him a civil list pension of /"200. The fruits of the 
improved comfort and augmented leisure of these latter years 
were visible in the production of some charming volumes. 
Foremost among these are the companion books, Imagination 
and Fancy (1844), and Wit and Humour (1846), two volumes of 
selections from the English poets. In these Leigh Hunt shows 
himscH within a certain range the most refined, appreciative 
and felicitous of critics. Homer and Milton may be upon the 
whole beyond his reach, though even here he is great in the 
detection of minor and unapprehended beauties; with Spenser 
and the old English dramatists he is perfectly at home, and his 
subtle and discriminating criticism upon them, as well as upon 
his own great contemporaries, is continually bringing to light 
unsuspected beauties. His companion volume on the pastoral 
poetry of Sicily, quaintly entitled 4 Jar of Honey from Mount 
Hybla (1848), is almost equally delightful. The Town (2 vols., 
1848) and Men, Women and Boohs (2 vols., 1847) are partly 
made up from former material. The Old Court Suburb (2 vols., 
1855; ed. A. Dobson, 1902) is an anecdotic sketch of Kensington, 
where he long resided before his final removal to Hammersmith. 
In 1850 he published his Autobiography (3 vols.), a naive and 
accurate piece of self-portraiture, full of affectations, but on 
that account free from the affectation of unreality. It contains 
very detailed accounts of some of the most interesting periods 
of the author's life, his education at Christ's Hospital, his 
imprisonment, and his residence in Italy. A Book for a Corner 
(2 vols.) was published in 1849, and his Table Talh appeared 
in 1851. In 1855 his narrative poems, original and translated, 
were collected under the title of Stories in Verse, with an interest- 
ing preface. He died at Putney on the 28th of August 1859. 

Leigh Hunt's virtues were charming rather than imposing 
or brilliant; he had no vices, but very many foibles. His 
great misfortune was that these foibles were for the most part 
of an undignified sort. His affectation is not comparable to 
Byron's, nor his egotism to Wordsworth's, but their very pettiness 
excites a sensation of the ludicrous. The very sincerity of his 
nature is detrimental to him; the whole man seems to be revealed 



Sn everything he ever wrote, and hence the most beautiful pro- 
ductions of his pen appear in a manner tainted by his really very 
pardonable weaknesses. Some of these, such as his helplessness 
in money matters, and his facility in accepting the obligations 
which he would have delighted to confer, involved him in pair fj 
and humiliating embarrassments, which seem to have t<-rn 
aggravated by the mismanagement of those around him. The 
notoriety of these things has deprived him of much of th* 
honour due to him for his fortitude under the severest calamity 
for his unremitting literary industry under the most discourar^nf 
circumstances, and for his uncompromising independence as a 
journalist and an author. It was his misfortune to be invohtd 
in politics, for he was as thorough a man of letters as ever existed, 
and most of his failings were more or less incidental to ihz: 
character. But it is not every consummate man of letters of 
whom it can be unhesitatingly affirmed that he was brave, just 
and pious. When it was suggested that Leigh Hunt was the 
original of Harold Skimpole in Bleak House, Charles Dkiess 
denied that any of the shadows in the portrait were suggested 
by Hunt, who was, he said, •• the very soul of troth and honour." 
Leigh Hunt's character as an author was the counterpart of 
his character as a man. In some respects his literary position is 
unique. Few men have effected so much by mere exquisitrcess 
of taste in the absence of high creative power; fewer si 31, so 
richly endowed with taste, have so frequently and conspicuousJy 
betrayed the want of it; and he was incapable of discovering 
where familiarity became flippancy. But his poetry possesses 
a brightness, animation, artistic symmetry and metrical harmony, 
which lift the author out of the rank of minor poets, particularly 
when the influence of his example upon his contemporaries a 
taken into account. He excelled especially in narrative poetry, 
of which, upon a small scale, there are probably no better 
examples than " Abou ben Adhem " and " Solomon's Ring." 
He possessed every qualification for a translator; and as 211 
appreciative critic, whether literary or dramatic, be has hardly 
been equalled. 

A Tale of the Woods 
(t mon-Places rrfrtskd 

h ilea in The Pttwu cf 

Ct nn the Italian Pom 

fi mantes cf Rscl h't 

(l r (1855): and. with 

S. 1867). His Potted 

Vf Lee, were printed at 

B. 1 and New Yorl) by 

hi Among volumes <J 

ee Leigh Hunt as Pat 

at I Poems (1891), ed. 

R 

tly before his death, 
ar ho also arranged ka 

Ct n? were printed by 

th Yriters (1878). Tbt 

A full bibliographical 

nc Its was compik-d ty 

Al m Hadtll and Lnfk 

H Cosmo Moakhoex 

HUNT, ROBEBT (1807-1887), English natural philosopher, 
was born at Devonport on the 6th of September 1807. His 
father, a naval officer, was drowned while Robert was a youth. 
He began to study in London for the medical profession, bat 
ilUbealth caused him to return to the west of England, and ia 
1840 he became secretary to the Royal Cornwall Polytechnic 
Society at Falmouth. Here he was brought into contact wiib 
Robert Were Fox, and carried on some physical and chemical 
investigations with him. He took up photography with great 
seal, following. Daguerre's discovery, and introducing new 
processes. His Manual of Photography (1841. cd. 5, 1857) vis 
the first English treatise on the subject. He also experimented 
generally on the action of light, and published Researches em 
Light (1844). In 1845 he accepted the invitation of Sir Henry 
de la Beche to become keeper of mining records, at the Maaeua 
of Economic (afterwards " Practical ") Geology, and when the 
school of mines was established in 1851 he lectured for two 
years on mechanical science, and afterwards for a short time es 



HUNT, T. a— HUNT, W. HOLMAN 



937 



experimental physics. His principal work was the colle ct ion and, 
editing of the Mineral Statistics of the United Kingdom, and this 
be continued to the date of his retirement (1883), when the 
mining record office was transferred to the Home Office. He was 
elected F.R.& in 1854. In 1884 he published a large volume on 
British Mining, in which the subject was, dealt with very folly from 
an historical as well as a practical point of view. He also edited 
the fifth and some later editions of Ure's Dictionary of Arts, 
Mints and Manufactures. He died in London on the 17th of 
October 1887. A mineralogical museum at Redruth has bees 
established in bis me mory . 

HUNT, THOMAS STERRY (1826-1892), American geologist 
and chemist, was born at Norwich, Conn., on the 5th of September 
1826. He lost his father when twelve years old, and had to earn 
his own livelihood. In the course of two years be found employ- 
ment in a printing office, in an apothecary's shop, in a book 
store and as a clerk. He became interested in natural science, 
and especially in chemical and medical studies, and in 1845 he 
was elected a member of the Association of American Geologists 
and Naturalists at Yale— a body which four years later became 
the American Association for the Advancement of Science. 
In 1848 he read a paper in Philadelphia On Acid Springs and 
Gypsum Deposits of the Onondaga Salt Croup, At Yale he 
became assistant to Professor B. Silliman, Jun., and in 1846 
was appointed chemist to the Geological Survey of Vermont. 
In 1847 be was appointed to similar duties on the Canadian 
Geological Survey at Montreal under Sir William Logan, and 
this post he held until 1872. In 1859 he was elected F.R.S., and 
he was one of the original members and president of the Royal 
Society of Canada. He was a frequent contributor to scientific 
journals, writing on the crystalline limestones, the origin of 
continents, the chemistry of the primeval earth, on serpentines, 
&c. He also wrote a notable " Essay on the History of the 
names Cambrian and Silurian" (Canadian Naturalist, 1872), 
in which the claims of Sedgwick, with respect to the grouping of 
'the Cambrian strata, were forcibly advocated. He died in 
New York City on the 12th of February 189a. 

His publications include Chemical and Geological Essays (1875, 
ed. 2, 1879); Mineral Physiology and Physiography (1886); A New 
Basis far Chemistry (1887, cd. 3, 189O; Systematic Mineralogy 
C1891). See an obituary notice by Persifor Frazer, Amer. Geologist 
(xi. Jan. 1893), with portrait. 

HUNT, WILUAM HENRY (1790-1804), English water-colour 
painter, was born near Long Acre, London, on the 28th of March 
1790. He was apprenticed about 1805 to John Varley, the 
landscape-painter, with whom he remained five or six years, 
exhibiting three oil pictures at the Royal Academy in 1807. 
He was early connected with the Society of Painters in Water- 
colour, of which body, then in a transition state, he was elected 
associate in 1824, and full member in 1827. To its exhibitions 
he was until the year of his death one of the most prolific 
contributors. Many years of Hunt's uneventful and industrious 
life were passed at Hastings. He died of apoplexy on the 10th 
of February 1864. Hunt was one of the creators of the English 
school of water-colour painting. His subjects, especially those 
of his later life, are extremely simple; but, by the delicacy, 
humour and fine power of their treatment, they rank second to 
works of the highest art only. Considered technically, his works 
exhibit all the resources of the water-colour painter's craft, 
from the purest transparent tinting to the boldest use of body- 
colour, rough paper and scraping for texture. His sense of 
colour is perhaps as true as that of any English artist. " He 
was," says Ruskin, " take him for all in all, the finest painter of 
still life that ever existed." Several characteristic examples of 
Hunt's work, as the " Boy and Goat," " Brown Study " and 
" Plums, Primroses and Birds' Nests " are in the Victoria and 
Albert Museum. 

HUNT. WILUAM HOLMAN (1827-1910), English artist, 
was born in London on the 2nd of April 1837. An ancestor on 
his father's side bore arms against Charles L, and went over to 
Holland, where he fought in the Protestant cause. He returned 
with William III., but the family failed to recover their property. 
Holman Hunt's father was the manager of a city warehouse, 



with tastes superior to his position in Kfe. He loved books and 
pictures, and encouraged his son to purrue art as an amusement, 
though not as a profession. At the age of twelve and a half 
Holman Hunt was placed in a city office, but lie employed ins 
leisure in reading, drawing and painting, and at sixteen began 
an independent career as an artist. When he was between 
seventeen and eighteen he entered the Royal Academy schools, 
where he toon made acquaintance with has lifelong friend John 
Everett Millais, then a boy of fifteen. In 1846 Holman Hunt 
sent to the Royal Academy his first picture (" Hark 1 "), which 
was followed by " Dr Rocheclifie performing Divine Service in 
the Cottage of Joceline JoUffe at Woodstock," in 1847, and 
The Flight oi Madeline and Porphyrio" (from Keats** Eh of 
St Agnes) in 1848. In this year he and Millais, with the co- 
operation of Dante Gabriel Rossetti and others, initiated the 
famous Pre-Raphaelite movement in art. Typical examples 
of the new creed were furnished in the next year's Academy 
by MUlais's " Isabella " and Holman Hunt's " Rienxi vowing 
to Obtain Justice for the Death of his Young Brother." This 
last pathetic picture, which was sold to Mr Gibbons for £105, 
was followed in 1850 by M A Converted British Family sheltering 
a Christian Missionary irom the Persecution of the Druids " 
(bought by Mr Combe, of the Clarendon Press, Oxford, for £150), 
and in 1851 by " Valentine protecting Sylvia from Proteus." 
This scene from The Two Gentlemen of Verona was very warmly 
praised by Ruskin (in letters to The Times), who declared that 
asstudiea both of drapery andof every minor detail there had been 
nothing in art so earnest and complete since the days of Albert 
Durer. It gained a prise at Liverpool, and is reckoned as the 
finest, of Holman Hunt's earlier works. In 1852 he exhibited 
"A Hireling Shepherd." " Claudio and Isabella," from Measure 
for Measure, and a brilliant study of the Downs near Hastings, 
called in the catalogue "Our English Coasts, 1852" (since 
generally known as " Strayed Sheep "), were exhibited in 1853. 
For three of bis works Holman Hunt was awarded prises of £50 
and £60 at Liverpool and Birmingham, but in 1851 be had become 
so discouraged by the difficulty of selling his pictures, that he 
had resolved to give up-art and learn fanning, with, a view to 
emigration. In 1854 he achieved his first great success by the 
famous picture of " The Light of the World," an allegorical 
representation of Christ knocking at the door of the human soul. 
This work produced perhaps the greatest effect of any religious 
painting of the century. " For the first time in England," 
wrote William Bell Scott, " a picture became a subject of con- 
versation and general interest from one end of the island to the 
other, and indeed continued so for many years." " The Awaken- 
ing Conscience," exhibited at the same time, depicted a tragic 
moment in a life of sin, when a girl, stricken with memories of her 
innocent childhood, rises suddenly from the knees of her para- 
mour. The inner meaning of both these pictures was explained 
by Ruskin in letters to The Times in May 1854. " The Light 
of the World " was purchased by Mr Combe, and was given by 
his wife to Keble College. In 1904 Holman Hunt completed a 
second " Light of the World," slightly altered from the original, 
the execution of which was due to hfe dissatisfaction wRh the 
way in which the Keble picture was shown there; and he in- 
tended the second edition of it for as wide public exhibition 
as possible. It was acquired by Mr Charles Booth, who arranged 
for the exhibition of the new " Light of the World " in all the 
large cities of the colonies. 

In January 1854 Holman Hunt left England for Syria and 
Palestine with the desire to revivify on canvas the facts of Scripture 
history, " surrounded by the very people and circumstances of 
the life in Judaea of old days." The first fruit of this idea, 
which may be said to have dominated the artist's life, was 
" The Scapegoat," a solitary outcast animal standing alone on 
the salt-encrusted shores of the Dead Sea, with the mountains of 
Edom in the distance, seen under a gorgeous effect of purple 
evening light. It was exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1856, 
together with three Eastern la n dscapes. His next picture (i860), 
one of the most elaborate and most successful of his works, was 
" The Finding of our Saviour in the Temple." Like all his 



93» 



HUNT, W. MORRIS 



important pictures, It was the work of years. Many causes 
contributed to the delay in its completion, including a sentence 
of what was tantamount to excommunication (afterwards 
revoked) passed on all Jews acting as models. Thousands 
crowded to see this picture, which was exhibited in London and 
in many English provincial towns. It was purchased for £5500, 
and is now in the Birmingham Municipal Art Gallery. Holman 
Hunt's next great religious picture was " The Shadow of Death " 
(exhibited separately in 1873), an imaginary incident in the life 
of our Lord, who, lifting His arms with weariness after labour 
in His workshop, throws a shadow on the wall as of a man 
crucified, which is perceived by His mother. This work was 
presented to Manchester by Sir William Agnew. Meanwhile 
there had appeared at the Royal Academy in 1861 " A Street in 
Cairo: The Lanternmaker's Courtship/' and in 1863 "The 
King of Hearts," and a portrait of the Right Hon. Stephen 
Lushington, D.C.L. In 1866 came " Isabella and the Pot of 
Basil," " London Bridge on the Night of the Marriage of the 
Prince of Wales," and " The Afterglow." In 1867 Holman Hunt 
sent a charming head of " A Tuscan Girl " to the Grosvenor 
Gallery and two pictures to the Royal Academy. These were 
" II doke far niente " and a lifelike study of pigeons in rain 
called " The Festival of St Swithin," now in the Taylor Building, 
Oxford, with many others of this artist's work. After two years' 
absence Holman Hunt returned to Jerusalem in 1875, where he 
was engaged upon bis great picture of " The Triumph of the 
Innocents," which proved to be the most serious labour of his 
life. The subject is an imaginary episode of the flight into 
Egypt, in which the Holy Family are attended by a procession 
of the Holy Innocents, marching along the waters of life and 
illuminated with unearthly light. Its execution was delayed 
by an extraordinary chapter of accidents. For months Holman 
Hunt waited in vain for the arrival of his materials, and at last 
he unfortunately began on an unsuitable piece of linen procured 
in despair at Jerusalem. Other troubles supervened , and when he 
arrived in England he found his picture in such a state that he 
was compelled to abandon it and begin again. The new version 
of the work, which is somewhat larger and changed in several 
points, was not completed till 1885. Meanwhile the old picture 
was refined and so skilfully treated that the artist was able 
to complete it satisfactorily, and there are now two pictures 
entitled " The Triumph of the Innocents," one in the Liverpool, 
the other in the Birmingham Art Gallery. The pictures ex- 
hibited between 1875 and 1885 included "The Ship," a realistic 
picture of the deck of a passenger ship by night (1878), and 
portraits of bis son (1880), Sir Richard Owen (1881) and Dante 
Gabriel Rossetti (1884). All of these were exhibited at the 
Grosvenor Gallery, where they were followed by " The Bride of 
Bethlehem" (1885), "Amaryllis" and a portrait of his son 
(tracing a drawing on a window) in 1886. His most important 
later work is " May-Day, Magdalen Tower," a record of the 
service of song which has been held on the tower of Magdalen, 
Oxford, at sunrise on May-Day from time immemorial. The 
subject had interested the artist for a great many years, and, after 
"The Triumph of the Innocents" was completed, be worked 
at it with his usual devotion, climbing up the tower for weeks 
together in the early morning to study the sunrise from the top. 
This radiant poem of the simplest and purest devotion was 
exhibited at the Gainsborough Gallery in Old Bond Street in 
1891. He continued to send occasional contributions to the 
exhibitions of the Royal Water-Colour Society, to the New 
Gallery and to the New English Art Club. One of the most 
remarkable of his later works (New Gallery, 1809) is "The 
Miracle of Sacred Fire in the Church of the Sepulchre, Jerusalem." 
By his strong and constant individuality, no less than by 
his peculiar methods of work, Holman Hunt holds a somewhat 
isolated position among artists. He remained entirely unaffected 
by all the various movements in the art-world after 1850. His 
ambition was always " to serve as high priest and expounder 
of the excellence of the works of the Creator." He spent too 
much labour on each work to complete many; but perhaps no 
painter of the 10th century produced so great an impression by a 



few pictures as the painter of " The Light of the World ." " Trie 
Scapegoat," " The Finding of our Saviour in the Temple ** aad 
"The Triumph of the Innocents"; and his greatness was 
recognized by his inclusion in the Order of Merit. His History 
of Pre-RapkcefUitm, a subject on which he could speak as a 
first authority, but not without dissent from at least one Ihrisx 
member of the P.R.B., was published 011005. On the 7th of 
September 1010 he died in London, and on September 1 7th ha 
remains, after cremation at Golder's Green, were buried in St 
Paul's Cathedral, with national honours. 

Sec A 
Hunt. I 
Raskin, 
Gordon 
Hunt, 
tempore 
W. M. 
The Pt 
Painter* 

HUNT, WILLIAM MORRIS (1824-1879), American painter, 
was born at Brattleboro, Vermont, on the 31st of March 1824. 
His father's family were large landowners in the state. He was 
for a time (1840) at Harvard, but his real education began wfeea 
he accompanied his mother and brother to Europe, where he 
studied with Couture in Paris and then came under tbe influence 
of Jean Francois Millet. The companionship of Millet had a 
lasting influence on Hunt's character and style, and bis work 
grew in strength, in beauty and in seriousness. He was the real 
introducer of the Barbizon school to America, and he more thaa 
any other turned tbe rising generation of American painters 
towards Paris. On his return in 1855 he painted some of his 
most beautiful pictures, all reminiscent of his life in France sod 
of Millet's influence. Such are " The Belated Kid," " Girlat the 
Fountain," "Hurdy-Gurdy Boy," &c But the pubfic called 
for portraits, and it became the fashion to sit to him, among his 
best paintings in this kind being those of William M. Evans, 
Mrs Charles Francis Adams, the Rev. James Freeman Clarke, 
William H. Gardner, Chief Justice Shaw and Judge Horace Gray. 
Unfortunately many of his paintings and sketches, together 
with five large Millets and other art treasures collected by him ia 
Europe, were destroyed in the great Boston fire of 1872. Among 
his later works American landscapes predominated. They abe 
include the " Bathers " — twice painted— and the allegories for the 
senate chamber of tbe State Capitol at Albany, N. Y., now lost by 
the disintegration of the stone panels on which they were painted. 
Hunt was drowned at the Isles of Shoals on the 8th of September 
1879. His book, Talks about Art (London, 1878), is well known. 

His brother, Ricka&d Morjus Hunt (1828-1895), the famous 
architect, was born in Brattleboro, Vermont, on the 31st of 
October 1828. He studied in Europe (1843-1854), mainly ia 
the £cole des Beaux Arts at Paris, and in 1854 was appointed 
inspector of works on the buildings connecting the Tuikries 
with the Louvre. Under Hector Lefuel he designed the Pavilion 
de la Bibliotheque, opposite the Palais Royal. In 185 s he 
returned to New York, and was employed on the extension of 
{he Capitol at Washington. He designed the Lenox Library, 
the Stuyvesant and the Tribune buildings in New York; the 
theological library, and Marquand chapel at Princeton; the 
Divinity College and the Scroll and Key building at Yale; the 
Vanderbilt mausoleum on Staten Island, and the York town 
monument. For the Administration Building at tbe World's 
Columbian Exposition at Chicago in 1893 Hunt received the 
gold medal of the Institute of British Architects. Among tbe 
most noteworthy of his domestic buildings were the residences 
of W. K. Vanderbilt and Henry G. Marquand in New York 
City; George W. Vanderbilt 's country house at Bfltmore, and 
several of the large " cottages " at Newport, R.I., including 
" Marble House " and " The Breakers." He was one of three 
foreign members of the Italian Society of St Luke, an honorary 
and corresponding member of the Academic des Beaux Arts 
and of the Royal Institute of British Architects, and a Chevalier 
of the Legion of Honour. He was the first to command respect 
in foreign countries for American architecture, and was the leader 



HUNTER, JOHN 



of a school that has estabfisbed in the United States the manner 
a\nd the traditions of the Beaux Arts. He took a prominent part 
in the founding of the American Institute of Architects, and, 
from 1888, was its president. His talent was eminently practical; 
and he was almost equally successful in the ornate style of the 
early Renaissance in France, in the picturesque style of his 
comfortable villas, and the monumental style of the Lenox 
library. There is a beautiful memorial to Hunt in the wall of 
Central Park, opposite this building, erected in 1808 by the 
associated art and architectural societies of New York, from 
designs by Daniel C French and Brace Price. He died on the 
31st of July 1895. 

HUNTER, JOHN (1728-1793), British physiologist and surgeon, 
was born on the 13th * of February 1728, at Long Calderwood, 
in the parish of East Kilbride, Lanarkshire, being the youngest 
of the ten children of John and Agnes Hunter. His father, who 
died on the 30th of October 1741,' aged 78, was descended from 
the old Ayrshire family of Hunter of Hunterston, and his mother 
was the daughter of a Mr Paul, treasurer of Glasgow. Hunter 
Is said to have made little progress at school, being averse to 
its restraints and pursuits, and fond of country amusements. 
When seventeen years old he went to Glasgow, where for a snort 
time he assisted his brother-in-law, Mr Buchanan, a cabinetmaker. 
Being desirous at length of some settled occupation, he obtained 
from his brother William (q.v.) permission to aid, under Mr 
Symonds, in making dissections in his anatomical school, then 
the most celebrated in London, intending, should he be unsuccess- 
ful there, to enter the army. He arrived accordingly in the 
metropolis in September 1748, about a fortnight before the 
beginning of his brother's autumnal course of lectures. After 
succeeding beyond expectation with the dissection of the muscles 
of an arm, he was entrusted with a similar part injected, and from 
the excellence of his second essay Dr Hunter predicted that he 
would become a good anatomist. Seemingly John Hunter had 
hitherto received no instruction in preparation for the special 
course of life upon which he had entered. 

Hard-working, and singularly patient and skilful in dissection, 
Hunter had by his second winter in London acquired sufficient 
anatomical knowledge to be entrusted with the charge of his 
brother's practical class. In the summer months of 1740-1750, 
at Chelsea' Military Hospital, be attended the lectures and 
operations of William Cheselden, on whose retirement in the 
following year he became a surgeon's pupil at St Bartholomew's, 
where Percivall Pott was one of the senior surgeons. In the 
summer of 1752 he visited Scotland. Sir Evcrard Home and, 
following him, Drewry Ottley state that Hunter began in 1754 to 
assist his brother as his partner in lecturing; according, however, 
to the European Magazine for 1782, the office of lecturer was 
offered to Hunter by his brother in 1758, but declined by him 
on account of the " insuperable embarrassments and objections M 
which be felt to speaking in public. In 1754 he became a 
surgeon's pupil at St George's Hospital, where he was appointed 
house-surgeon in 1 756.* During the period of his connexion with 
Dr Hunter's school he, in addition to other labours, solved the 
problem of the descent of the testis in the foetus, traced the 
ramifications of the nasal and olfactory nerves within the nose, 
experimentally tested the question whether veins could act 
as absorbents, studied the formation of pus and the nature of the 
placental circulation, and with his brother earned the chief 
merit of practically proving the function and importance of the 
lymphatics in the animal economy. On the 5th of June 1755, 4 ne 

1 The date is thus entered in the parish register, see Joseph Adams, 
Memoirs, Appendix, p. 203. The Huntcrian Oration, instituted in 
1813 by Dr Matthew Battue and Sir Everard Home, is delivered at 
the Royal College of Surgeons on the 14th of February, which 
Hunter used to give as the anniversary of his birth. 

a Ottley*s date, 1738, is inaccurate, see S. F. Simmons, Account 
of.,. W. Hunter, p. 7. Hunter's mother died on the 3rd of 
November 1751, aged 66. 

' So in Home's Life, p. xvi., and Ottley s, p. 15. Hunter himself 
{Treatise on the Blood, p. 62) mentions the date 1755. 

• Ottley incorrectly gives 1753 as the date. In the buttery book 
for 1755 at St Mary's Hall his admission is thus noted: " Die Jumi 
5^ 175$ Admiama est Johannes Hunter svptrioris onHnis Coalmen- 



939 

was induced U enter as a gentleman commoner at St Mary's 
Hall, Oxford 1 , but his instincts would not permit Mm, to use 
his own expression, " to staff Latin and Greek at the university." 
3ome three and thirty years later he thus significantly wrote of 
an opponent: "Jesse Foot accuses me of not understanding 
the dead languages; but I could teach htm that on the dead 
body which he never knew in any language dead or living."* 
Doubtless, however, linguistic studies would have served to 
correct in him what was perhaps a natural defect— a difficulty 
in the presentation of abstract ideas not wholly attributable to 
the novelty of his doctrines. 

An attack of inflammation of the lungs in the spring of 1759 
having produced symptoms threatening consumption, by which 
the promising medical career of his brother James had been cut 
short, Hunter obtained in October 1760 the appointment of 
staff-surgeon in Hodgson and Keppel's expedition to Bellessle. 
With this he sailed in 1 761. In the following year he served with 
the English forces on the frontier of Portugal Whilst with the 
army he acquired the extensive knowledge of gunshot wounds 
embodied in his important treatise (1704) on that subject, in 
which, amongst other matters of moment, he insists on the 
rejection of the indiscriminate practice Of dilating with the knife 
followed almost universally by surgeons of his time. When not 
engaged in the active duties of his profession, he occupied himself 
with physiological and other scientific researches. Thus, in 1 761 , 
off BeUetsfe, the conditions of the coagulation of the blood were 
among the subjects of his inquiries.* Later, on land, he continued 
the study of human anatomy, and arranged his notes and 
memoranda on inflammation; he also ascertained by experiment 
that digestion does not take place in snakes and lixards during 
hibernation, and observed that enforced vigorous movement at 
that season proves fatal to such animals, the waste so occasioned 
not being compensated, whence he drew the inference that, in 
the diminution of the power of a part attendant on mortification, 
resort to stimulants which increase action without giving real 
strength is inadvisable. 7 A MS. catalogue by Hunter, probably 
written soon after Ins return from Portugal, shows that he had 
already made a collection of about two hundred frfiwrn of 
natural and morbid structures. 

On arriving in England early in 1763, Hunter, having retired 
from the array on half-pay, took a -house in Golden Square, and 
began the career of a London surgeon. Most of the metropolitan 
practice at the time was held by P. Pott, C Hawkins, Samuel 
Sharp, Joseph Warner and Robert Adair; and Hunter sought 
to eke out his at first slender income by teaching practical 
anatomy and operative surgery to a private class. His leisure 
was devoted to the study of comparative anatomy, to procure 
subjects for which he obtained the refusal of animals dying in the 
Tower menagerie and in various travelling zoological collections. 
In connexion with his rupture of a tendo AchilUs,* in 1767, be 
performed on dogs several experiments which, with the illustra- 
tions in his museum of the reunion of such structures after 
division, laid the foundation of the modern practice of cutting 
through tendons (tenotomy) for the relief of distorted and con- 
tracted joints. In the same year he was elected F.R.S. His 
first contribution to the Philosophical Transactions, with the 

sails." Hunter apparently left Oxford after less than two months' 
residence, as the last entry in the buttery book with charges for 
battels against his name is on July 2$. 1755. His name was, how- 
ever, retained on the books of the Hall till December 10, 1756. The 
record of Hunter's matriculation runs: " Ter* Trin. 1753.— Junii 5** 
Aul. S. Mar. Johannes Hunter 24 Johannis de Kilbride In Com. 
Clidesdale Scotia* Arm. fit." 

• Ottley, Life of J. Hunter, p. 2*. 

* Treatise on the Blood, p. 21. 

T See Adams, Memoirs, pp. 32, 33. Cf. Hunter's Treatise on Ike 
Blood, d. 8* and Works* ed. Palmer, i. 604,— On the employment of 
Hunter s term u increased action " with respect to inflammation, see 



Sir James Paget, Lett, on Surg. Path., 3rd ed., p. 321 sqq. 

* According to Hunter, as quoted in Palmers edition of his lectures, 
p. 437, the accident was " after dancing, and after a violent fit of 



the cramp "; W. Clift, however, who says- he probably never danced, 
believed that he met with the accident " in getting up from the dis- 
secting table after being cramped by long sitting " (see W. Lawrence, 
Hunt. Oral., 1834, p. 64). 



940 

exception of a supplement to a paper by J. Ellis in the volume 
for 1766, was an essay on post-mortem digestion of the stomach, 
written at the request of Sir J. Pringle, and read on the 18th of 
June 1772, in which he explained that phenomenon as a result of 
the action of the gastric juice. 1 On the 9th of December 1768 he 
was elected a surgeon to St George's Hospital, and, soon after, a 
member of the Corporation of Surgeons. He now began to take 
house-pupils. Among these were Edward Jenner, who came to 
him in 1770, and until the time of Hunter's death corresponded 
with him on the most intimate and affectionate terms, W. Guy, 
Dr P. S. Physick of Philadelphia, and Everard Home his brother- 
in-law. William Lynn and Sir A. Carlisle, though not inmates of 
his house, were frequent visitors there. His pupils at St George's 
included John Abernethy, Henry Cline, James Earle and 
Astley Cooper. In 1770 he settled in Jermyn Street, in the 
house which his brother William had previously occupied; and 
in July 1771 he married Anne, the eldest daughter of Robert 
Home, surgeon to. Burgoyne's regiment of light horse.* 

From 1772 till his death Hunter resided during autumn at a 
house buik by him at Earl's Court, Brampton, where most of ins 
biological researches were carried on. There he kept for the 
purpose of study and experiment the fishes, lizards, blackbirds, 
hedgehogs and other animals sent him from time to time by 
Jenner; tame pheasants and partridges, at least one eagle, toads, 
silkworms, and many more creatures, obtained from every 
quarter of the globe. Bees he had under observation in his 
conservatory for upwards of twenty years; hornets and wasps 
were also diligently studied by him. On two occasions his life 
was in risk from his pets— once in wrestling with a young 
bull, and again when he fearlessly took back to their dens two 
leopards which had broken loose among his dogs. 

Choosing intuitively the only true method of philosophical 
discovery, Hunter, ever cautious of confounding fact and 
hypothesis, besought of nature the truth through the medium of 
manifold experiments and observations. " He had never read 
Bacon," says G. G. Babington, " but his mode of studying 
nature was as strictly Baconian as if he had."* To Jenner, who 
had offered a conjectural explanation of a phenomenon, be 
writes, on the 2nd of August 1775: " I think your solution is 
just; but why think? why not try the experiment? Repeat 
all the experiments upon a hedgehog * as soon as you receive 
this, and they will give you the solution." It was his axiom 
however, " that experiments should not be often repeated which 
tend merely to establish a principle already known and admitted, 
but that the next step should be the application of that principle 
to useful purposes " (" Anim. Oecon.," Works, iv. 86). During 



HUNTER, JOHN 



± 



ial 



* UunL Oral., 184a. p. 15. 

4 The condition of this animal during hibernation was a subject of 
special interest to Hunter, who thus introduce* it, even in a letter of 
condolence to Jenner in 1778 on a disappointment in love: " But 
let her go, never mind her. I shall employ you with hedgehogs, for 
I do not know how far 1 may trust mine." 



fifteen years he kept a lock of geese simply m order to 4 
himself with, the development of birds in eggs, with reference u 
which he remarked: " It would almost appear that this mode of 
propagation was intended for investigation." In his toxicologkal 
and other researches, in which his experience had led him to 
believe that the effects of noxious drugs are nearly similar in tat 
brute creation and in man, he had already, in 1780, as be stales, 
w poisoned some thousands of animals/' k 

By inserting shot at definite distances in the leg-bones of yonaf 
pigs, and also by feeding them with madder, by winch all fnsi 
osseous deposits are tinged,* Hunter obtained evidence thai 
bones increase in size, not by the intercalation of new amongst 
old particles, as had been imagined by HX. Duharoel dn Mooceaa, 
but by means of additions to their extremities and circumference, 
excess of calcareous tissue being removed by the absorbents. 
Some of his most extraordinary experiments were to ilm st ra i e 
the relation of the strength of constitution to sex. He exchanged 
the spurs of a young cock and a young pullet, and found that 00 
the former the transplanted structure grew to a fair size* on the 
latter but little; whereas a spur from one leg of a cock transferred 
to its comb, a part well supplied with blood, grew more than twice 
as fast as that left on the other leg. Another experiment of his. 
which required many trials for success, was the engrafting of t 
human incisor on the comb of a cock J The uniting of pans of 
different animals when brought into contact he attributed u> 
the production of adhesive instead of suppurative inflammation, 
owing to their possession of " the simple living principle-" 8 The 
effects of habit upon structure were illustrated by Hunters 
observation that in a sea-gull which he had brought to feed oa 
barley the muscular parietes of the gizzard became greatly 
thickened. A similar phenomenon was noticed by him in tat 
case of other carnivorous birds fed on a vegetable diet. 

It was in 177s that Hunter, in order effectually to gauge tat 
extent of his own knowledge, and also correctly to express as 
views, which had been repeatedly misstated or ascribed to others, 
began his lectures on the theory and practice of surgery, 
at first delivered free to his pupils and a few friends, bat sub- 
sequent to x 774 on the usual terms, four guineas. Though Pott, 
indeed, had perceived that the only true system of surgerr 
is that which most closely accords with the curative efforts of 
nature, a rational pathology can hardly be said to have had at 
this time any existence; and it was generally assumed that a 
knowledge of anatomy alone was a sufficient foundation for tte 
study of surgery. Hunter, unlike his contemporaries, to most of 
whom his philosophic habit of thought was a mystery, aad 
whose books contained little else than relations of cases aad 
modes of treatment, sought the reason for each phenomenon that 
came under his notice. The principles of surgery, he maintained, 
are not less necessary to be understood than the princjpki of 
other sciences; unless, indeed, the surgeon should wish to 
resemble " the Chinese philosopher whose knowledge consisted 
only in facts." Too much attention, he remarked, cannot he 
paid to facts; yet a multitude of facts overcrowd the memory 
without advantage if they do not lead us to establish principles, 
by an acquaintance with which we learn the causes of diseases. 
Hunter's course, which latterly comprised eighty-six lectures, 
delivered on alternate evenings between the hours of seven sad 
eight, lasted from October to April Some teachers of his time 
were content to dismiss the subjects of anatomy and surgery in a 
course of only six weeks' duration. His class was usually small 
and never exceeded thirty. He was deficient in the gifts of a 
good extempore speaker, being in this respect a remarkable 
contrast to his brother William; and he read his lectures, seldom 
raising his eyes from the manuscript. His manner with his 

* See his evidence at the trial of Captain Donellan, Works, 1 195. 

* On the discovery of the dyeing of bones by madder, sec Bdchier, 
Phil. Tram., vol mtxix.. 1 7 36, pp. 287 and 199. 

1 Essays and Observations, i. 55, 56. " May we not claim for him." 
says Sir Wra* Fergusson, with reference to these experiments, " that 
he anticipated by a hundred years the scientific data on which the 
present system of human grafting is conducted? " (Hunk OraL, 1871, 

* Essays and Observations, 1 115; cf. Works, i. 391. 



HUNTER, JOHN 



auditory is stated to have been embarrassed and awkward, or, as 
Adams puts it (Qbs. on Morbid Fois., p. 272), '♦ frequently 
ungraceful," and bis language always unadorned; but that his 
" expressions for the explaining of bis new theories rendered his 
lectures often unintelligible " is scarcely evident in his pupils' 
notes still extant. His own and others' errors and fallacies were 
exposed with equal freedom in his teaching. Occasionally he 
would tell his pupils, " You had better not write down that 
observation, for very likely I shall think differently next year "; 
and once in answer to a question he replied, M Never ask me 
what I have said or what I have written; but, if you will ask 
one what my present opinions are, I will tell you." 

In January 1776 Hunter was appointed surgeon-extraordinary 
to the king. He began in the same year his Croonian lectures on 
muscular motion, continued annually, except in 1777, till 1782: 
they were never published by him, being in his opinion too 
incomplete. In 1 778 appeared the second part of his Treatise on 
ike Natural History of ike Human Teeth, the first part of which 
was published in 177 1. It was in the waste of the dental alveoli 
and of the fangs of shedding teeth that m 1754-175$, as he 
tells us, he received his first hint of the use of the absorbents. 
Abernethy (Physiological Lectures, p. 106) relates that Hunter, 
being once asked how he could suppose it possible for absorbents 
to do such things as he attributed to them, replied, " Kay, I 
know not, unless they possess powers similar to those which a 
caterpillar exerts when feeding on a leaf." Hunter in 1780 read 
before the Royal Society a paper in which he laid claim to have 
been the first to make out the nature of the utero-placental 
circulation. His brother William, who had five years previously 
described the same in his Anatomy of the Gravid Uterus, there- 
upon wrote to the Society attributing to himself this honour. 
John Hunter in a rejoinder to his brother's letter, dated the 1 7thof 
February 1780, reiterated his former statement, viz. that his dis- 
covery, on the evening of the day in 1754 that he had made it in a 
specimen injected by a.Dr Mackenzie, had been communicated 
by him to Dr Hunter. Thus arose an estrangement between the 
two Hunters, which continued until the time of William's last 
illness, when his brother obtained permission to visit him. 

In 1783 Hunter was elected a member of the Royal Society of 
Medicine and of the Royal Academy of Surgery at Paris, and took 
part in the formation of " A Society for the Improvement of 
Medical and Chirurgical Knowledge." 1 It appears from a letter 
by Hunter that in the latter part of 1783, he, with Jenncr, had 
the subject of colour-blindness under consideration. As in that 
year the lease of his premises in Jcrrayn Street was to expire, he 
purchased the twenty-four years' leasehold of two houses, the one 
on the east side of Leicester Square, the other in Castle Street 
with intervening ground. Between the houses he built in 1783- 
1785, at an expense of above £3000, a museum for his anatomical 
and other collections which by 1782 had cost him £10,000. The 
new edifice consisted of a hall 52 ft. long by 28 ft. wide, and 
lighted from the top, with a gallery all round, and having beneath 
k a lecture theatre. In April 1785 Hunter's collections were 
removed into it under the superintendence of Home and William 
Bell,* and another assistant, Andre\ Among the foreigners of 
distinction who inspected the museum, which was now shown by 
Hunter twice a year— in October to medical men, and in May 
to other visitors— were J. F. Blumenbach, P. Camper and A. 
Scarpa. In the acquisition of subjects for his varied biological 
investigations and of specimens for his museum, expense was a 
matter of small moment with Hunter. Thus he endeavoured, 
at his own cost, to obtain information respecting the Cetacea by 

1 The Transactions of the Society contain papers by Hunter on 
inflammation of veins (1784), intussusception (1789). a case of para* 
lysis of the muscles of deglutition (1700), and a case of poisoning 
during; pregnancy (1794). with others written by Home, from 
materials supplied by him. on Hunter's operation for the cure of 
popliteal aneurism, on loose cartilages rn joints, on certain homy 
excrescences of the human body, and on the growth of bones. 

a Bell lived with Hunter fourteen years. t.e. from 1775 to 1780, and 
was employed by him chiefly in making and drawing anatomical pre- 
parations lor the museum. He died tn 1792 at Sumatra, where he 
was assistant-surgeon to the East India Company. 



941 

sending out a surgeon to the North In a Greenland whaler. He b 
said, moreover, to have given, in June 1783, £500 for the body of 
O'Brien, or Byrne, the Irish giant, whose skeleton, 7 ft. 7 in. high, 
is so conspicuous an object in the museum of the College of 
Surgeons of London.* 

Hunter , who in the spring of 1 769-1 772 had suffered from gout, 
in spring 1773 from spasm apparently in the pyloric region, 
accompanied by failure of the heart's action (Ottley, Life, p. 44), 
and in 1777 from vertigo with symptoms of angina pectoris, had 
in 1783 another attack of the last mentioned complaint, to which 
he was henceforward subject when under anxiety or excitement 
of mind. 

In May 1785,* chiefly to oblige William Sharp the engraver, 
Hunter consented to have his portrait tken by Sir Joshua 
Reynolds. He proved a bad sitter, and Reynolds made little 
satisfactory progress, till one day Hunter, while resting his 
somewhat upraised head on his left hand, fell into a profound 
reverie— one of those waking dreams, seemingly, which in his 
lectures he has so well described, when " the body loses the 
consciousness of its own existence."* The painter had now 
before him the man he would fain depict, and, turning his canvas 
upside down, he sketched out the admirable portrait which, 
afterwards skilfully restored by H. Farrar, is in the possession 
of the Royal College of Surgeons. A copy by Jackson, acquired 
from Lady Bell, is to be seen at the National Portrait Gallery, 
and St Mary's Hall, Oxford, also possesses a copy. Sharp's 
engraving of the original, published in 1788, is one of the finest 
of his productions. The volumes seen in Reynolds' picture are 
a portion of the unpublished records of anatomical researches 
left by Hunter at his death, which, with other manuscripts, 
Sir Evcrard Home in 1812 removed from his museum, and 
eventually, in order, it has been supposed, to keep secret the 
source of many of his papers in the Philosophical Transactions, 
and of facts mentioned fn his lectures, committed to the flames.' 

Among the subjects of Hunter's physiological investigation 
in 1 785 was the mode of growth of deer's antlers. As he possessed 
the privilege of making experiments on the deer in Richmond 
Park, he in July of that year had a buck there caught and 
thrown, and tied one of its external carotid arteries. He observed 
that the antler which obtained its blood supply therefrom, 
then half-grown, became in consequence cold to the touch. 
Hunter debated with himself whether it would be shed in due 
time, or be longer retained than ordinarily. To his surprise 
he found, on re-examining the antler a week or two later, when 
the wound around the ligatured artery was healed, that it had 
regained its warmth, and was still increasing in size. Had, then, 
his operation been 'in some way defective? To determine this 
question, the buck was killed and sent to Leicester Fields. On 
examination Hunter ascertained that the external carotid had 
been duly tied, but that certain small branches of the artery 
above and below the ligature had enlarged, and by their anasto- 
moses had restored the blood supply of the growing part. Thus 
it was evident that under " the stimulus of necessity," to use a 
phrase of the experimenter, the smaller arterial channels are 

* O'Brien, dreading dissection by Hunter, had shortly before his 
death arranged with several of his countrymen that his corpse should 
be conveyed by them to the sea, and sunk in deep water; but his 
undertaker, who had entered into a pecuniary compact with the great 
anatomist, managed that white the escort was drinking at a certain 

st *- ^ •- - v - --«- -»-—•-■ »-- • :ked up in a barn. 

T ted an equivalent 

w< ight forwarded to 

H 's Court, and, to 

a> Ic division boiled 

to Square, ch. xiv. 

(t 

Times of Sir J. 
R 

• by Cli ft in 1793 
at tlumes with notes, 

in 1 Natural History, 

A ft the destruction 

o( 1. ii. p. 497, alsO 



94+ 



HUNTER, R. M. T.— HUNTER, WILLIAM 



Generation; he told me perhaps it did, and that a* to Equivocal 
Generation all we c* have wai negative Proofs of its not taking Place. 
He did not deny that Equivocal Generation happened ; there were 
neither positive proofs for nor against its talcing pbce" 

To exemplify the differences between organic and inorganic growth, 
Hunter made and employed in his lectures a collection of crystallized 
specimens of minerals, or, as he termed them, " natural or native 
fossils." Of fossils, designated by him " extraneous fossils," because 
extraneous respecting the rocks in which they occur, be recognised 
the true nature, and he arranged them according to a system agreeing 
with that adopted for recent organisms. The study of fossils enabled 
hira to apply his knowledge of the relations of the phenomena of life 
to conditions, as exhibited in times present, to the elucidation of the 
history of the earth in geological epochs. He observed the non- 
occurrence of fossils in granite, but with his customary scientific 
caution and insight could perceive no reason for supposing it to be 
the original matter of the globe, prior to vegetable or animal, or that 
its formation was different from that of other rocks. In water he 
recognised the chief agent in producing terrestrial changes (cf. 
Treatise on the Blood, p. 15, note); but the popular notion that the 
Noachian deluge might account for the marine organisms discovered 
on land he pointed out was untenable. From the diversity of the 
situations in which many fossils and allied living structures are 
found, he was led to infer that at various periods not only repeated 
oscillations of the level of the land, lasting thousands of centuries, but 
also great climatic variations, perhaps due to a change in the ediptic, 
had taken place in geological times. Hunter considered that very 
few fossils of those that resemble recent forms are identical with 
them. He conceived that the latter might be varieties, but that if 
they are really different species, then " we must suppose that a new 
creation must have taken place." It would appear, therefore, that 
the origin of species in variation had not struck him as possible. 
That he believed varieties to have resulted from the influence of 
changes in the conditions of life in times past is shown by a some- 
what obscure passage in his " Introduction to Natural History " 
(Essays and Observations, i. 4), in which he remarks, " But, 1 think, 
we have reason to suppose that there was a period of time in which 
every species of natural production was the same, there being then 
no variety in any species," and adds that " civilisation has made 
varieties in many species, which are the domesticated." Modern 
discoveries and doctrines as to the succession of life in time are again 
foreshadowed by him in the observation in his introduction to the 
description of drawings relative in incubation (quoted in Prcf. to 
Cat. ofPhys. Ser. i. p. iv., 1831) that: " If we were capable of follow- 
ing the progress of increase of the number of the parts of the most 
perfect animal, as they first formed in succession, from the very fust, 
to its state of full perfection, we should probably be able to compare it 
with some one of the incomplete animals themselves, of every order of 
animals in the creation, being at no stage different from some of those 
inferior orders ; or, in other words, if we were to take a series of animals 
from the more imperfect to the perfect, we should probably find an 
imperfect animal corresponding with some stage of the most perfect." 
In pathological phenomena Hunter discerned the results of the 
perturbation of those laws of life by which the healthy organism 
subsists. With him pathology was a science of vital dynamics. 
He afforded principles bearing not on single complaints only, but 
on the effects of injury and disease in general. To attempt to set 
forth what in Hunter's teaching was new to pathology and systematic 
surgery, or was rendered so by his mode of treatment, would be 
well-nigh to present an epitome of all that he wrote on those subjects. 
44 When we make a discovery in pathology," says Adams, writing in 
1818, " we only learn what we have overlooked in his writings or 
forgotten in his lectures." Surgery, which only in 1745 had formally 
ceased to be associated with " the art and mystery of barbers," he 
raised to the rank of a scientific profession. His doctrines were, 

- minds around him were 
dogmatism of times past, 
n of a distant day. 

Cotcd publications. An 
subject of Ike tote J. 
A Lecture . . . being a 
ns of the Diseases of the 
I College of Surgeons of 
Erection of a Statue of 
en, " Sketch of Hunter's 
Taylor's Leicester Square 
w. vol. iv. (1817), and in 
ilogues of the Huntcrian 
iurgeons; and numerous 

....... _ — ..- ,. „.,...,._ vy v , ~yage to New South Wales, 

by John White, is a paper containing directions for preserving 
animals, printed separately in 1809, besides six zoological descriptions 
by Hunter, and in the Natural History of Aleppo, by A. Russell, are 
remarks of Hunter's on the anatomy ot the jerboa and the camel's 
stomach. Notes of his lectures on surgery, edited by 1. W. K. 
Parkinson, appeared in 1833 under the title of Huntenan Remi- 
niscences, Hunter's Observations and Reflections on Geology, intended 
to serve as an introduction to the catalogue of his collection of 
extraneous fossils, was published in 1859, and his Memoranda on 
Vetetation in i860. (F. H. B.) 



HUNTER. ROBERT MERCER TALIAFERRO (t 809-1 887). 
American statesman, was born in Essex county, Virginia, ca 
the 21st of April 1809. .He entered the university of Virgin 
in his seventeenth year and was one of its first graduates; lie 
then studied law at the Winchester (Va.) Law School, and ta 
1830 was admitted to the bar. From 1835 to 1837 be was a 
member of the Virginia house of delegates; from 1837 to 1843 
and from 1845 to 1847 was a member of the national house of 
representatives, being Speaker from 1839 to 1&41; *od from 
1847 to 1861 be was in the senate, where he was chairman of the 
finance committee (1850-1861). He is credited with having 
brought about a reduction of the quantity of silver in the smaller 
coins; he was the author of the Tariff Act of 1857 and of the 
bonded-warehouse system, and was one of the first to advocate 
civil service reform. In 1853 he declined President Fillmore's 
offer to make him secretary of state. At the National Dci&o- 
cratk Convention at Charleston, S.C., in i860 be was the Virginia 
delegation's choice as candidate for the presidency of the United 
States, but was defeated for the nomination by Stephen A. 
Douglas. Hunter did not regard Lincoln's election as being of 
itself a sufficient cause for secession, and on the x ith of January 
1861 he proposed an elaborate but impracticable scheme far the 
adjustment of differences between the North and the South, 
but when this and several other efforts to the same end had 
failed he quietly urged his own state to pass the ordinance of 
secession. From 1861 to 1862 be was secretary of state in the 
Southern Confederacy; and from 1862 to 1865 was » member of 
the Confederate senate, in which he was, at times, a caustic 
critic of the Davis administration. He was one of the com- 
missioners to treat at the Hampton Roads Conference in 1065 
(see Lincoln, Abraham), and after the surrender of General Lee 
was summoned by President Lincoln to Richmond to confer 
regarding the restoration of Virginia in the Union. From 1*74 
to 1880 he was treasurer of Virginia, and from 1885 until his 
death near Lloyds, Virginia, on the x8th of July 1887, was 
collector of the Port of Tappahannock, Virginia. 

See Martha T. Hunter, A Memoir ofRobert M. T. Hunter (Washing- 
ton, 1003) for his private life, and L>. R Anderson. Robert Mercer 
Taliaferro Hunter, in the John P. Branch Historical Papers of 
Randolph Macon College (vol. ii. No. a, 1906), for his public c 



HUNTER, WILLIAM (1 718-1783), British physiologist and 

physician, the first great teacher of anatomy in England, was 
born on the 23rd of May 17 18, at East Kilbride, Lanark. He 
was the seventh child of his parents, and an elder brother of the 
still more famous John Hunter (q.v ). When fourteen years of 
age, he was sent to the university of Glasgow, where he studied 
for five years. He had originally been intended for the church, 
but, scruples concerning subscription arising in his mind, be 
followed the advice of his friend William Cullen, and resolved 
to devote himself to physic. During 1 737-1 740 he resided with 
Cullen at Hamilton, and then, to increase his medical knowledge 
before settling in partnership with his friend, he spent the winter 
of 1 740-1741 at Edinburgh. Thence he went to London, where 
Dr James Douglas (1675-1742), an anatomist and obstetrician 
of some note, to whom he had been recommended, engaged his 
services as a tutor to his son and as a dissector, and assisted him 
to enter as a surgeon's pupil at St George's Hospital and to 
procure the instruction of the anatomist Frank Nicholls (1699- 
1778). When Dr Douglas died Hunter still continued to live 
with his family. In 1 746 he undertook, in place of Samuel Sharp, 
the delivery, for a society of naval practitioners, of a series of 
lectures on operative surgery, so satisfactorily that be was 
requested to include anatomy in his course. It was not long 
before he attained considerable fame as a lecturer; for not only 
was his oratorical ability great, but he differed from his con- 
temporaries in the fullness and thoroughness of his teaching, and 
in the care which he took to provide the best possible practical 
illustrations of his discourses. We read that the syllabus ot 
Edward Nourse (1701-1761), published in 1748, totem rem 
analomicam compJcdms, comprised only twenty-three lectures, 
exclusive of a short and defective " Syllabus Chirurgicus," and 
that at " one of the most reputable courses of anatomy in 



HUNTER, W. A.— HUNTER, SIR W. W. 



Europe," which Hunter had himself attended, the professor 
was obliged to demonstrate all the parts of the body, except the 
nerves and vessels (shown in a foetus) and the bones, on a single 
dead subject, and for the explanation of the operations of 
surf cry used a dogl In 1747 Hunter became a member of the 
Corporation of Surgeons. In the course of a tour through 
Holland to Paris with his pupil, J. Douglas, in 1728, he visited 
Albinus at Leiden, and inspected with admiration his injected 
preparations. By degrees Hunter renounced surgical for obstetric 
practice, in which he excelled. He was appointed a surgeon- 
accoucheur at the Middlesex Hospital in 1748, and at the British 
Lying-in Hospital in the year following. The degree of M.D. 
was conferred upon him by the university of Glasgow on the 
24th of October 1 7 50. About the same time he left his old abode 
at Mrs Douglas's, and settled as a physician in Jermyn Street. 
He became a licentiate of the College of Physicians on the 
30th of September 1756. In 1762 be was consulted by Queen 
Charlotte, and in 1764 was made physician-extraordinary to her 
Majesty. 

On the departure of his brother John for the army, Hunter 
engaged as an assistant William Hewson (1730-1774), whom 
he subsequently admitted to partnership in his lectures. Hewson 
was succeeded in 1 7 70 by W. C. Cruikshank (t 745-1800). Hunter 
was elected F.R.S. in 1767; F.S.A. in 1768, and third professor 
of anatomy to the Royal Academy of Arts; and in 1780 and 
1782 respectively an associate of the Royal Medical Society and 
of the Royal Academy of Sciences of Paris. During the dosing 
ten years of his life his health failed greatly. His last lecture, 
at the conclusion of which he fainted, was given, contrary to the 
remonstrances of friends, only a few days before his death, 
which took place in London on the 30th of March 1783. He was 
buried in the rector's vault at St James's, Piccadilly. 

Hunter had in 1765 requested of the prime minister, George 
Grenville, the grant of a plot of ground on which he might estab- 
lish " a museum in London for the improvement of anatomy, 
surgery, and physics " (see " Papers " at end of his Two Intro- 
ductory Lectures, 1784), and had offered to expend on its erection 
£7000, and to endow in perpetuity a professorship of anatomy 
m connexion with it. His application receiving no recognition, 
he after many months abandoned his scheme, and built himself 
a house, with lecture and dissecting-rooms, in Great Windmill 
Street, whither he removed in 1770. In one fine apartment in 
this house was accommodated his collection, comprising anatomi- 
cal and pathological preparations, ancient coins and medals, 
minerals, shells and corals. His natural history specimens were 
in part a purchase, for £1200, of the executors of his friend, 
Dr John Fothergill (1712-1780). Hunter's whole collection, 
together with his fine library of Greek and Latin classics, and 
an endowment of £8000, by his will became, after the lapse of 
twenty years, the property of the university of Glasgow. 

Hunter was never married, and was a man of frugal habits. 
Like his brother John, he was an early riser, and a man of untiring 
industry. He is described as being in his lectures, which were of 
two hours' duration, "both simple and profound, minute 
in demonstration, and yet the reverse of dry and tedious"; 
and his mode of introducing anecdotal illustrations of his topic 
was most happy. Lecturing was to him a pleasure, and, not- 
withstanding his many professional distractions, he regularly 
continued it, because, as he said, he " conceived that a man 
may do infinitely more good to the public by teaching his art 
than by practising it " (see " Memorial " appended to Inlrod. 
Led. p. 120). 

Hunter was the author of several contributions to the Medical 
Observations and Enquiries and the Philosophical Transactions. In 
his paper on the structure of cartilages and joints, published in the 
latter in 1743, he anticipated what M. F. X. Bichat sixty years after- 
wards wrote concerning the structure and arrangement of the synovial 
membranes. His Medical Commentaries (pt. i., 1762, supplemented 
1764) contains, among other like matter, details of his disputes 
with the Monro* as to who first had successfully performed the 
injection of the tubuli testis (in which, however, both he and they 
had been forestalled by A. von Haller in 1745), and as to who had 
discovered the true office of the lymphatics, and also a discussion on 
the question whether he or Percivall Pott ought to be considered the 



945 

y» to , which, as a 
y Haller. In the 
-an inordinate love 
he averred to be a 
ilarty condoned it. 
.bodies lendcred 
1 great work, The 
fol., was published 
try Lectures (1784), 
fid Uterus (1794), 

F. Simmons.' An 
and Ottlcy'a Lives 
ration (1837): W. 
1 of London, u. 20s 
(F.H.B.) 



HUNTER, WILLIAM ALEXANDER (1844-1808), Scottish 
jurist and politician, was bora in Aberdeen on the 8th of May 
1844, and educated at Aberdeen grammar school and university. 
He entered the Middle Temple, and was called to the English bar 
in 1867, but then was occupied mainly with teaching. In 186$ 
he was appointed professor of Roman law at University College, 
London, and in 1878 professor of jurisprudence, resigning that 
chair in 1882. His name became well known during this period 
as the author of a standard work on Roman law, Roman Law 
in the Order of a Code, together with a smaller introductory 
volume for students, Introduction to Roman Law. After i8Si 
Hunter took up politics and was elected to parliament for 
Aberdeen as a Liberal in 1885. In the House of Commons he 
was a prominent supporter of Charles Bradlaugh; he was the 
first to advocate old age pensions, and in 1800 carried a proposal 
to free elementary education in Scotland. In 1805 his health 
broke down; he retired from parliament in 1806 and died on 
the tist of July 1898. 

HUNTER, SIR WILLIAM WILSON (1840-1000), British 
publicist, son of Andrew Galloway Hunter, a Glasgow manu- 
facturer, was born at Glasgow on the 15th of July 1840. He 
was educated at Glasgow University (B.A. i860), Paris and 
Bonn, acquiring a knowledge of Sanscrit, and passing first fn the 
final examination for the Indian Civil Service in 1862. Posted 
in the remote district of Birbhum in the lower provinces of 
Bengal, he began collecting local traditions and records, which 
formed the materials for his novel and suggestive publication, 
entitled The Annals of Rural Bengal, a book which did much to 
stimulate public interest in the details of Indian administration. 
He also compiled A Comparative Dictionary of the N on- Aryan 
Languages of India, a glossary of dialects based mainly upon the 
collections of Brian Houghton Hodgson, which testifies to the 
industry of the writer but contains much immature philological 
speculation. In 1872 he brought out two attractive volumes on 
the province of Orissa and its far-famed temple of Jagannath. 
In i860 Lord Mayo asked Hunter to submit a scheme for a 
comprehensive statistical survey of the Indian empire. The 
work involved the compilation of a number of local gazetteers, 
in various stages of progress, and their consolidation in a con- 
densed form upon a single and uniform plan. The conception 
was worthy of the gigantic projects formed by Arthur Young 
and Sir John Sinclair at the close of the 18th century, and the 
fact that it was successfully carried through between 1869 and 
1 881 was owing mainly to the energy and determination of 
Hunter. The early period of his undertaking was devoted to a 
series of tours which took him into every corner of India. He 
himself undertook the supervision of the statistical accounts of 
Bengal (20 vols., 1875-1877) and of Assam (2 vols., 1879). 
The various statistical accounts, when completed, comprised 
no fewer than 128 volumes. The immense task of condensing 
this mass of material proceeded concurrently with their com- 
pilation, an administrative feat which enabled The Imperial 
Gazetteer of India to appear in 9 volumes in 1881 (2nd ed., 14 vols., 
1885-1887; 3rd ed., 26 vols., including atlas, 1008). Hunter 
adopted a transliteration of vernacular place-names, by which 
means the correct pronunciation is ordinarily indicated; but 
hardly sufficient allowance was made for old spellings consecrated 
by history and long usage. Hunter's own article on India was 
published in 1880 as A Brief History of the Indian Peoples, and 



94-6 



HUNTING 



has been widely translated and utilised in Indian schools. A 
revised form was issued in 189$, under the title of The Indian 
Empire: Us People, History and Products. In 1882 Hunter, 
as a member of the governor-general's council, presided over the 
commission on Indian Education; in 1886 he was elected vice- 
chancellor of the university of Calcutta. In 1887 he retired from 
the service, was created K.C.S.I., and settled at Oaken Holt, near 
Oxford. He arranged with the Clarendon Press to publish a series 
of Rulers of India, to which he himself contributed volumes on 
Dalhousie (1800) and Mayo (1892). He had previously, in 1875, 
written an official Life of Lord Mayo, in two volumes. He also 
wrote a weekly article on Indian affairs for The Times. But the 
great task to which he applied himself on his settlement in England 
was a history upon a large scale of the British Dominion in India, 
two volumes of which only had appeared when he died, carrying 
the reader barely down to 1700. He was much hindered by the 
confused state of his materials, a portion of which he arranged and 
published in 1804 as Bengal Manuscript Records, in three volumes. 
•A delightful story, The Old Missionary (1895), and The Thackerays 
in India (1897), a gossipy volume which appeals to all readers of 
The Newcomes, may be regarded as the relaxations of an Anglo- 
Indian amid the stress of severer studies. In the winter of 1808- 
1899, in consequence of the fatigue incurred in a journey to the 
Caspian and back, on a visit to the sick-bed of one of his two 
sons, Hunter was stricken down by a severe attack of influenza, 
which affected his heart. He died at Oaken Holt on the 6th of 
February xooo. 

HUNTING (the verbal substantive from "hunt"; 0. Eng. 
huntian, hunla; apparently connected with O. Eng. hentan, Gothic 
Jtinpan, to capture, O.H.G. hunda, booty), the pursuit of game 
and wild animals, for profit or sport; equivalent to "chase" 
(like " catch," from Lat. capture, Fr. ckasse, Ital. cacda). The 
circumstances which render necessary the habitual pursuit of 
wild animals, either as a means of subsistence or for self-defence, 
generally accompany a phase of human progress distinctly inferior 
to the pastoral and agricultural stages; resorted to as a recreation, 
however, the practice of the chase in most cases indicates a con- 
siderable degree of civilization, and sometimes ultimately be- 
comes the almost distinctive employment of the classes which are 
possessed of most leisure and wealth. It is in some of its latter 
aspects, vis. as a " sport," pursued on fixed rules and principles, 
that hunting is dealt with here. 

Information as to the field sports of the ancients is in many 
directions extremely fragmentary. With regard to the ancient 
Egyptians, however, we learn that the huntsmen 
constituted an entire sub-division of the great second 
fTjofti caste; they either followed the chase on their own 
account, or acted as the attendants of the chiefs in 
their hunting excursions, taking charge of the dogs, and securing 
and bringing home the game. The game was sought in the open 
deserts which border on both sides the valley of the Nile; but 
(by the wealthy) sometimes in enclosed spaces into which the 
animals had been driven or in preserves. Besides the noose 
and the net, the arrow, the dart and the bunting pole or vena- 
bulum were frequently employed. The animals chiefly hunted 
were the gazelle, ibex, oryx, stag, wild ox, wild sheep, hare and 
porcupine; also the ostrich for its plumes, and the fox, jackal, 
wolf, hyaena and leopard for their skins, or as enemies of the 
farm-yard. The lion was occasionally trained as a hunting 
animal instead of the dog. The sportsman appears, occasionally 
at least, in the later periods, to have gone to cover, in his chariot 
or on horseback; according to Wilkinson, when the dogs threw 
off in a level plain of great extent, it was even usual for him "to 
remain in his chariot, and, urging bis horses to their full speed, 
endeavour to turn or intercept them as they doubled, discharging 
a well-directed arrow whenever they came within its range." 1 
The partiality for the chase which the ancient Egyptians mani- 
fested was shared by the Assyrians and Babylonians, as is shown 
by the frequency with which hunting scenes are depicted on the 
walls of their temples and palaces; it is even said that their 
■See on this whole subject ch. viii. of Wilkinson's Ancient 
Egyptians (U. 78-92. ed. Birch, 1878). 



dresses and furniture were ornamented with similar subjects 1 
The game pursued included the lion, the wild ass, the gaxcSt 
and the hare, and the implements chiefly employed seem to h*n 
been the javelin and the bow. There are indications that halt- 
ing was also known. The Assyrian kings also maintained 
magnificent parks, or " paradises," in which game of every kiai 
was enclosed; and perhaps it was from them that the Persua 
sovereigns borrowed the practice mentioned both by Xenopfcca 
in the Cyropaedia and by Curtius. According to Herodxaas, 
Cyrus devoted the revenue of four great town* to meet lac 
expenses of his hunting establishments. The earc timst sa m 
under which the death of the son of Croesus is by the same writer 
(i. 34-45) related to have occurred, incidentally shorn in what 
high estimation the recreation of hunting was held in Lydia. Is 
Palestine game has always been plentiful, and the Biblical 
indications that it was much sought and duly appreciated an 
numerous. As means of capture, nets, traps, snares and pitfafis 
are most frequently alluded to; but the arrow (Isa. viL uKtfee 
spear and the dart (Job. xli. 26-29) are also mentioned. Then 
is no evidence that the use of the dog (Jos. AnL iv. 8 t to, not- 
withstanding) or of the horse in hunting was known among lit 
Jews during the period covered by the Old Testament history; 
Herod, however, was a keen and successful sportsman, and is 
recorded by Joscphus {B.J. L ax, 13, compare AnL xv. 7, j; 
xvi. 10, 3) to have killed no fewer than forty head of game (boat, 
wild ass, deer) in one day. 

The sporting tastes of the ancient Greeks, as may be gathered 
from many references in Homer (//. ix. 538-545; Od. ix. 120, 
xvii. 295, 316, xix. 429 seq.), had developed at a very early 
period; they first found adequate literary expression in the work 
of Xenophon entitled Cynegcticus,* which expounds his principle* 
and embodies his experience in his favourite art of r u m r ing 
The treatise chiefly deals with the capture of the hare; in the 
author's day the approved method was to find the hare in her 
form by the use of dogs; when found she was either driven into 
nets previously set in her runs or else run down in the opes. 
Boar-hunting is also described; it was effected by nets into whka 
the animal was pursued, and in which when fairly ml angled ac 
was speared. The stag, according to the same work, was taken by 
means of a kind of wooden trap (*ofarrpa£if), which attached 
itself to the foot. Lions, leopards, lynxes, panthers and bears 
are also specially mentioned among the large game; sometimes 
they were taken in pitfalls, sometimes speared by mou n ted 
horsemen. As a writer on field sports Xenophon was followed by 
Arrian, who in his Cynegelicus, in avowed dependence 00 ha 
predecessor, seeks to supplement such deficiencies in the earlier 
treatise as arose from its author's unacquaintance with the doss 
of Gaul and the horses of Scythia and Libya. Four books of 
Cynegetica, extending to about 2x00 hexameters, by Oppian have 
also been preserved; the last of these is incomplete, and it is 
probable that a fifth at one time existed. The poem contains 
some good descriptive passages, as well as some very curious 
indications of the state of zoological knowledge in the author's 
time. Hunting scenes are frequently represented in ancient 
works of art, especially the boar-hunt, and also that of the haxe. 
tn Roman literature allusions to the pleasures of the chase 
(wild ass, boar, hare, fallow deer being specially mentioned as 
favourite game) are not wanting (Virg. Ceorg. iii. 400-4x3; 
Ed. Ui. 75; Hor. Od. i. x, 25-28); it seems to have been viewed, 
however, with less favour as an occupation for gentlemen, and 
to have been chiefly left to inferiors and professionals. The 
immense vivaria or thcriotropheia, in which various wild an im als, 
such as boars, stags and roe-deer, were kept in a state of semi- 
domestication, were developments which arose at a compara- 
tively late period; as also were the venationes in the circus, 
although these are mentioned as having been known as early 
as 186 B.C. The bald and meagre poem of Grattius Faliseus on 
hunting (Cynegetica) is modelled upon Xenophon's prose work; 
a still extant fragment (315 lines) of a similar poem with the same 
title, of much later date, by Nemesianus, seems to have at one 

* See Layard (Nineveh, u. 431, 432), who cites Ammian. MarcdL 
xxvL 6, and Atheo. xii. 9. * Engl, transl. by Blane.. 



HUNTING 



947 



time formed the introduction to an extended work corresponding 
fco> that of Oppian. 

That the Romans had borrowed tome things in the art of 
hunting from the Gauls may be inferred from the name tdnis 
gallic us (Spanish galgo) for a greyhound, which is to be met with 
both in Ovid and Martial; also in the words (cants) vertragus 
and segusius, both of Celtic origin, 1 According to Strabo (p. aoo) 
the Britons also bred dogs well adapted for hunting purposes. 
The addiction of the Franks in later centuries to the chase is 
evidenced by the frequency with which not only the laity but 
also the clergy were warned by provincial councils against 
expending so much of their time and money on hounds, hawks 
and falcons; and we have similar proof with regard to the 
habits of other Teutonic nations subsequent to the introduction 
of Christianity.* Originally among the northern nations sport 
was open to every one* except to slaves, who were not permitted 
to bear arms; the growth of the idea of game-preserving kept 
pace with the development of feudalism. For its ultimate 
development in Britain see Fokest Law, where also the distinc- 
tion between beasts of forest or venery, beasts of chase and 
beasts and fowls of warren is explained. See also Game Laws. 

Modern Hunting.— The term "hunting" has come to be 
applied specially to the pursuit of such quarries as the stag or 
Cox, or to following an artificially laid scent, with horse and hound. 
It thus corresponds to the Fr. ckasse au courre, as* distinguished 
from ckasse au /*>, & Foiseau, &c, and to the Ger. heUjagd as 
distinguished from birsck. In the following article the English 
practice is mainly considered. 

Doubtless the early inhabitants of Britain shared to a large 
extent in the habits of the other Celtic peoples; the fact that 
they kept good hunting dogs is vouched for by Strabo; and an 
interesting illustration of the manner in which these were used 
is given in the inscription quoted by Orelli (n. 1603) — " Silvano 
Invicto Sacrum — ob aprum exhniae formae captum, quern multi 
antecessorcs pracdari non potuerunt." Asser, the biographer of 
Alfred the Great, states that before the prince was twelve years 
of age he " was a most expert and active hunter, and excelled in 
all the branches of that noble art, to which he applied with inces- 
sant labour and amazing success." 4 Of his grandson Athelstan 
it is related by William of Malmesbury that after the victory of 
Brunanburgh he imposed upon the vanquished king of Wales a 
yearly tribute, which included a certain number of " hawks and 
sharp-scented dogs fit for hunting wild beasts." According to 
the same authority, one of the greatest delights of Edward the 
Confessor was " to follow a pack of swift hounds in pursuit of 
game, and to cheer them with his voice." It was under the 
Anglo-Saxon kings that the distinction between the higher and 
lower chase first came to be made — the former being expressly 
for the king or those on whom he had bestowed the pleasure of 
sharing in it, while only the latter was allowed to the proprietors 
of the land. To the reign of Cnut belong the " Constitutions de 
Foresta," accotding to which four thanes were appointed in 
every province for the administration of justice in all matters 
connected with the forests; under them were four Inferior 
thanes to whom was committed immediate care of the vert and 
venison.* The severity of the forest laws which prevailed during 
the Norman period is sufficient evidence of the sporting ardour 
of William and his successors. The Conqueror himself " loved 
the high game as if he were their father "; and the penalty 
for the unauthorized slaughter of a hart or hind was loss of 
both eyes. 



1 Hehrt, Kulturfflan 
References will b 



anxen u. Bausthiere, p. 327. 
be found in Smith's Dictionary of Christian 
Antiquities — art. on " Hunting." 

* " Vita omnis in venationfbus . . . consist it." Caes. B.C., vi. 21. 
" Quoties bella non meunt, snultum venatibus, plas per otium transi- 
gunt," Tacitus, Germ. 15. 

♦See Strutt, Sports and Pastimes, who also gives an illustration. 
" taken from a manupcriptalpainting of the 9th century in the Cotton 
Library," representing a Saxon chieftain, attended by his hunts- 
nun and a couple of hounds, pursuing the wild swine in a forest." 

•See Lappcnberg, Hist, of England under the Anglo-Saxon Kings 
01 36!, Thorpe's trans.). 



At an early period stag hunting was a favourite recreation 
with English royalty. It seems probable that in the reign of 
Henry VIII. the royal packofbuckhounds was kennelled 
at Swinley, where, in the reign of Charles II. (1684), a ?*** 
deer was found that went away to Lord Fetre's seat in 
Essex; only five got to the end of this 70 m. run, one being the 
king's brother, the duke of York. George III. was a great stag 
hunter, and met the royal pack as often as possible. 

In The Close of tke Wild Red Deer, Mr CoHyns says that the 
earliest record of a pack of staghoonds in the Exmoor district k 
in 1508, when Hugh PoUand, Queen Elizabeth's ranger, kept one 
at Simonsbath. The succeeding rangers of Exmoor forest kept 
up the pack until some 200 years ago, the hounds subsequently 
passing into the possession of Mr Walter of Stevenstone, an 
ancestor of the Rolle family. Successive masters continued the 
sport until 1S25, when the fine pack, descended probably from 
the bloodhound crossed with the old southern hound, was sold in 
London. It is diAcult to imagine how the dispersion of such a 
pack could have come about in such a sporting country, but in 
1827 Sir Arthur Chichester got a pack together again. Stag 
hunting begins on the rath of August, and ends on the 8th of 
October; there is then a cessation until the end of the month, 
when the hounds are unkennelled for hind hunting, which con- 
tinues up to Christmas; it begins again about Ladyday, and lasts 
till the xoth of May. The mode of bunting with the Devon and 
Somerset hounds is briefly this: the whereabouts of a warrant- 
able stag is communicated to the master by that important 
functionary the harbourer; two couple of steady hounds called 
tufters are then thrown into cover, and, having singled out a 
warrantable deer, follow him until he is forced to make for the 
open, when the body of the pack are laid on. Very often two or 
three hours elapse before the stag breaks, but a run over the wild 
country fully atones for the delay. 

It is only within comparatively recent times that the fox has 
come to be considered as an animal of the higher chase. William 
Twiri, indeed, who was huntsman-in-chief to Edward 
II., and who wrote in Norman French a treatise on 
hunting,* mentions the fox as a beast of venery, but 
obviously as an altogether inferior object of sport. Strutt also 
gives an engraving, assigned by him to the 14th century, in 
which three hunters, one of whom blows a horn, are represented 
as unearthing a fox, which is pursued by a single hound. The 
precise date of the establishment of the first English pack of 
hounds kept entirely for fox hunting cannot be accurately fixed. 
In the work of " Nirarod " (C. J. Apperlcy), entitled The Chase, 
there is (p. 4) an extract from a letter from Lord Arundel, dated 
February 1833, in which the writer says that his ancestor, Lord 
Arundel, kept a pack of foxhounds between 1600 and 1700, and 
that they remained in the family till 1782, when they were sold 
to the celebrated Hugh Meynell, of Quorndon Hall, Leicester* 
Shire. Lord Wilton again, in his Sports and Pursuits of the 
English, says that "about the year 1750 hounds began to be 
entered solely to fox." The Field of November 6, 1875, p. 512, 
contains an engraving of a hunting-horn then in the possession of 
the late master of the Cheshire hounds, and upon the horn is the 
inscription: — "Thomas Boothby, Esq., Tooley Park, Leicester. 
With this horn he hunted the first pack of foxhounds then in Eng- 
land fifty-five years. Born 1677. Died 1752. Now the property 
of Thomas d'Avenant, Esq., county Salop, his grandson." These 
extracts do not finally decide the point, because both Mr Boothby's 
and Lord Arundel's hounds may have hunted other game besides 
fox, just as in Edward IV.'s time there were " fox dogs " though 
not kept exclusively for fox. On the whole, it is probable that 
Lord Wilton's surmise is not far from correct. Since fox hunting 
first commenced, however, the system of the sport has been much 
changed. In our great-grandfathers' time the hounds met early, 
and found the fox by the drag, that is, by the line he took to his 
kennel on his return from a foraging expedition. Hunting the 

* Lt Art de venerie, translated with preface and notes by Sir 
Henry Dryden (1893). new edition by Miss A. Drydea (1009), in- 
cluding The Craft of Venerie from a 15th-century MS. and a 13th* 
century poem La Ckasse d'on cerf. 



Fox 

buaUgg. 



948 



HUNTING 



drag was doubtless a great test of nose, but many good runs 
must have been lost thereby, for the fox must often have heard 
the hounds upwind, and have moved off before they could get on 
good terms with him. At the present day, the woodlands are 
neither so large nor so numerous as they formerly were, while 
there are many more gorse -covers; therefore, instead of hunting 
the drag up to it, a much quicker way of getting to work is to find 
a fox in his kennel; and, the hour of the meeting being later, the 
fox is not likely to be gorged with food, and so unable to take care 
of himself at the pace at whkh the modern foxhound travels. 

Cub hunting carried out on a proper principle is one of the 
secrets of a successful season. To the man who cares for hunting, 
as distinct from riding, September and October are not the least 
enjoyable months of the whole hunting season. As soon as the 
young entry have recovered from the operation of " rounding," 
arrangements for cub hunting begin. The hounds must have 
first of all walking, then trotting and fast exercise, so that their 
feet may be hardened, and all superfluous fat worked off by the 
last week in August. So far as the hounds are concerned, the 
object of cub hunting is to teach them their duty; it is a dress 
rehearsal of the November business. In company with a certain 
proportion of old hounds, the youngsters learn to stick to the 
scent of a fox, in spite of the fondness they have acquired lor 
that of a hare, from running about when at walk. When cubbing 
begins, a start is made at 4 or 5 am., and then the system is 
adopted of tracking the cub by his drag. A certain amount of 
blood is of course indispensable for hounds, but it should never 
be forgotten that a fox cub of seven or eight months old, though 
tolerably cunning, is not so very strong; the huntsman should 
not, therefore, be over-eager in bringing to hand every cub he 
can find. 

bare bunting, which must not be confounded with Coursing 
(q.v.), is an excellent school both for men and for horses. It is 
Mara. attended with the advantages of being cheaper than 
any other kind, and of not needing so large an area of 
country. Hare hunting requires considerable skill; Beckford 
even goes so far as to say: " There is more of true hunting with 
harriers than with any other description of hounds. ... In the 
first place, a hare, when found, generally describes a circle in 
her course which naturally brings her upon her foil, which is 
the greatest trial for hounds. Secondly, the scent of the hare 
is weaker than that of any other animal we hunt, and, unlike 
some, it is always the worse the nearer she is to her end." Hare 
hunting is essentially a quiet amusement; no hallooing at 
hounds nor whip-cracking should be permitted; nor should the 
field make any noise when a hare is found, for, being a timid 
animal, she might be headed into the hounds' mouths. Capital 
exercise and much useful knowledge are to be derived by running 
with a pack of beagles. There are the same difficulties to be 
contended with as in hunting with the ordinary harrier, and a 
very few days' running will teach the youthful sportsman that he 
cannot run at the same pace over sound ground and over a deep 
ploughed field, up hill and down, or along and across furrows. 

Otter hunting, which is less practised now than formerly, 
begins just as all other hunting is drawing to a close. When 
otter ^ the waterside is reached an attempt is made to hit 
upon the track by which the otter passed to his 
" couch," which is generally a hole communicating with the river, 
into which the otter often dives on first hearing the hounds. 
When the otter " vents " or comes to the surface to breathe, his 
muzzle only appears above water, and when he is viewed or 
traced by the mud he stirs up, or by air bubbles, the hounds are 
laid on. Notwithstanding the strong scent of the otter, he often 
escapes the hounds, and then a cast has to be made. When he 
is viewed an attempt is made to spear him by any of the field 
who may be within distance; if their spears miss, the owners 
must wade to recover them. Should the otter be transfixed by 
a spear, the person who threw it goes into the water and raises 
the game over his head on the spear's point. If instead of being 
speared, he is caught by the hounds, he is soon worried to death 
by them, though frequently not before he has inflicted some 
severe wounds on one or more of the pack. 



When rafl ways were first started tn England dismal 1 
were made that the end of hunting would speedily be 1 
about. The result on the whole has been the reverse. 
While in some counties the sport has suffered, towns- 
men who formerly would have been too far from a meet can mm 
secure transport for themselves and their horses in all directions, 
and as a consequence, meets of certain packs are not advertwd 
because of the number of strangers who would be induced *» 
attend. The sport has never been so vigorously pursued as it wa» 
at the beginning of the aoth century, 19 packs of sUgbouads bHag 
kept in England and 4 in Ireland, over 170 packs of foxboundi a 
England, ro in Scotland and 23 in Ireland, with packs of harrien 
and beagles too numerous to be counted. The chase off the wfld 
stag is carried on in the west country by the Devon and Somerset 
hounds, which hunt three or four days a week from kennels at 
Dunster; by the Quantock; and by a few other meal padu. 
In other parts of England staghound packs are devoted to the 
capture of the carted deer, a business which is more or less el 
a parody on the genuine sport, but is popular for the reason that 
whereas with foxhounds men may have a blank day, they aa 
practically sure of a gallop when a deer is taken out in a cart 
to be enlarged before the hounds are laid on. Complaints are 
often raised about the cruelty of what is called tame stag huning, 
and it became a special subject of criticism that a. pack sboJd 
still be kept at the Royal kennels at Ascot (it was abolbbed a 
2001) and hunted by the Master of the Biirkhotinds; bat it a 
the constant endeavour of all masters and hunt servants t» 
prevent the infliction of any injury on the deer. Their efforts is 
this direction are seldom unsuccessful; and it appears to be 
a fact that stags which are hunted season after season come ta 
understand that they are in no grave danger. Packs of lax- 
hounds vary, from large establishments in the " Shires," the 
meets of which are attended by hundreds of horsemen, some of 
whom keep large stables of hunters in constant work — for thonga 
a man at Melton, for instance, may see a great deal of sport won 
half-a-dozen well-seasoned animals, the number is not sufficient 
if he is anxious to be at all times well mounted — to small kenneb 
in the north of England, where the field follow on foot. The 
" Shires " is a recognized term, but is nevertheless somewhat 
vague. The three counties included in the expression are Leicester- 
shire, Rutlandshire and Northamptonshire. Several packs whkh 
hunt within these limits are not supposed, however, to bekag 
to the " Shires," whereas a district of the Bclvoir country a is 
Lincolnshire, and to hunt with the Belvoir is certainly understood 
to be hunting in the " Shires." The Shire hounds include the 
Belvoir, the Cottesmore, the Quorn and .the Pytchleys; far 
besides the Pytchlcy proper, there is a pack Hictingmckwi u 
the Woodland. It is generally considered that the cream of the 
sport lies here, but with many of the packs which are generally 
described as " provincial " equally good hunting may be obtained. 
Round about London a man who is bent on the pursuit of lot 
or stag may gratify his desire in many directions. The Essex 
and the Essex Union, the Surrey and the Surrey Union, the Old 
Berkeley, the West Kent, the Burstow, the Hertfordshire, the 
Crawley and Horsham, the Puckeridge, as regards foxhounds; 
the Berkhampstcad, the Enfield Chase, Lord Rothschild's, the 
Surrey, the West Surrey and the Warnham, as regards stag- 
hounds— as well as the Bucks and Berks, which was substituted 
for the Royal Buck hounds— are within easy reach of the capitaL 

Questions axe constantly raised as to whether horse and hounds 
have improved or deteriorated in modern times. It is probabk 
that the introduction of scientific agriculture has m 
brought about an increase of pace. Hounds hunt ^JjJJj^ 
as well as ever they did, are probably faster on the *•*■*. 
whole, and in the principal hunts more thoroughbred 
horses are employed. For pace 'and endurance no hunter 
approaches the English thoroughbred; and for a bold mu 
who " means going." a steeplechase horse is often the best 
animal that could be obtained, lor when he has become loo slow 
to win races " between the flags," he can always gallop much 
faster, and usually lasts much longer, than animals who have 
not his advantage of blood. The quondam '* 'chaser" is, how- 



HUNTING DOG—HUNTINGDON, EARLS OF 



949 



ever, usually apt to be somewhat impetuous at his fences. But 
it must by do means be supposed that every man who goes out 
hunting desires to gallop at a great pace and to jump formidable 
obstacles, or indeed any- obstacles at all. A large proportion 
of men who follow hounds are quite content to do so passively 
through gates and gaps, with a canter along the road whenever 
one is available. A few of the principal packs hunt five days a 
week, and sometimes even six, and for such an establishment 
not fewer than seventy-five couples of hounds are requisite. 
A pack which hunts four days a week, will be well supplied with 
anything between fifty and sixty couples, and lor two days a 
week from twenty-five to thirty will suffice. The young hound 
begins cub-hunting when he is some eighteen months old, and 
as a rule is found to improve until his third or fourth season, 
though some last longer than this. Often, however, when* 
hound is five or six yeais old he begins to lack speed. Exceptional 
animals naturally do exceptional things, and a famous hound 
called Potentate is recorded by the 8th duke of Beaufort to 
have done notable service in the hunting field for eleven seasons. 
Servants necessary for a pack include the huntsman, the 
duties of whose office a master sometimes -fulfils himself; two 

whippers-in, an earth-stopper and often a kennel hunts- 
mnvmatt. man * also employed, though the 18th Lord Willoughby 

de Broke (d. 1002), a great authority, laid it down 
that " the man who hunts the hounds should always feed them." 
In all but the largest establishments the kennel huntsman is 
generally called the " feeder." It is his business to look after 
the pack which is not bunting, to walk them out, to prepare 
the food for the bunting pack so that it is ready when they 
return, and in the spring to attend to the wants of the matrons 
and whelps. A kennel huntsman proper may be described as 
the man who does duty when the master hunts his own hounds, 
undertaking all the responsibilities of the huntsman except 
actually hunting the pack. It may be said that the first duty 
of a huntsman is to obtain the confidence of his hounds, to 
understand them and to make himself understood; and the 
intelligence of hounds is remarkable. If, for example, it is the 
habit of the huntsman to give a single note on his horn when 
hounds are drawing a covert, and a double note when a fox is 
found, the pack speedily understand the significance. The 
mysteries of scent are certainly no belter comprehended now 
than they were more than a hundred years ago when Peter 
Beckford wrote his Thoughts on Hunting. The subject of scent 
is full of mysteries. The great authority already quoted, the 
8th duke of Beaufort, noted as a very extraordinary but 
well-known fact, for example, " that in nine cases out of ten 
if a fox is coursed by a dog during a run all scent ceases after- 
wards, even when you get your hounds to the line of the fox 
beyond where the dog has been." This is one of many phenomena 
which have always remained inexplicable. The duties of the 
whipper-in arc to a great extent explained by his title. Whilst 
the huntsman is drawing the cover the whipper-in is stationed 
at the spot from which he can best see what is going on, in order 
to view the fox away; and it is his business to keep the hounds 
together when they have found and got away after the fox. 
There are many ways in which a whipper-in who is not intelligent 
and alert may spoil sport; indeed, the duke of Beaufort went 
so far as to declare that " in his experience, with very few 
exceptions, nine days out of ten that the whipper-in goes out 
hunting he does more harm than good." In woodland countries, 
however, a good whipper-in is really of almost as much import- 
ance as the huntsman himself; if he is not alert the hounds 
are likely to divide, as when running a little wide they are apt 
to put up a fresh fox. The earth-stopper " stops out " and 
" puts to "—the first expression signifying blocking, during the 
night, earths and drains to which foxes resort, the second perform- 
ing the same duties in the morning so as to prevent the fox from 
getting to ground when he has been found. In the interests 
of humanity care should be taken that the earth-stopper always 
has with him a small terrier, as it is often necessary to " stop-out " 
permanently; and unless a dog is run through the drain some 
unfortunate creature in it, a fox, cat or rabbit, may be imprisoned 



and starved to death. This business is frequently performed 
by a gamekeeper, a sum being paid him for any litter of cubs 
or fox found on his beat. 

With regard to the expenses of hunting, it Is calculated that a 
master of hounds should be prepared to spend at the rate of £500 
a year for every day in the week that his hounds are c _ t 
supposed to hunt. Taking one thing with another, Jjjjj, 
this is probably rather under than over the mark, and 
the cost of hunting three days a week, if the thing be really 
properly done, will most likely be nearer £2000 than £ 1 500. The 
expenses to the individual naturally vary so much that no figures 
can be given. As long ago as 1826 twenty-seven hunters and 
hacks were sold for 7500 guineas, an average of over £200; and 
when Lord Stanford ceased to hunt the Quorn in 1853, seventy- 
three of his horses fetched at auction an average of close on £200. 
Early in the iotb century, when on the whole horses were much 
cheaper than they are at present, 700 and 800 guineas are prices 
recorded as having been occasionally paid for hunters of special 
repute, A man may see some sport on an animal that cost him' 
£40; others may consider it necessary to keep an expensive 
establishment at Melton Mowbray or elsewhere in the Shires, 
with a dosen or more 500-guinea hunters, some covert-hacks, and 
a corresponding staff of servants. Few people realize what 
enormous sums of money are annually distributed in connexion 
with hunting.' Horses must be fed; the wages of grooms and 
helpers be paid; saddlery, clothing, shoeing, frc., are items; 
farmers, innkeepers, railway companies, fly-men and innumerable 
others benefit more or less directly, (A. E. T. W.) ' 

HUNTING DOO (Lyceum pictus), an African wild dog, differing 
from the rest of the family in having only four toes on each foot, 
and its blotched coloration of ochery yellow, black and white. 
The species is nearly as large as a mastiff, with long limbs, broad 



Cape Hunting Dog (Lycaon pictus). 

flat head, short muzzle and large erect ears, and presents a 
superficial resemblance to the spotted hyena on which account 
it is sometimes called the hyena-dog. " Mimicry " has been 
suggested as an explanation of this likeness; but it is difficult 
to see what advantage a strong animal hunting in packs like 
the present species can gain by being mistaken for a hyena, 
as it is in every respect fully qualified to take care of itself. 
These wild dogs are found in nearly the whole of Africa south 
and east of the Sahara. The statement of Gordon dimming 
that a pack " could run into the swiftest or overcome the largest 
and most powerful antelope," is abundantly confirmed, and 
these dogs do great damage to sheep flocks. Several local 
races of the species have been named. 

HUNTINGDON, EARLS OP. George Hastings, xst earl of 
Huntingdon 1 (c. 1488-1545), was the son and successor of 

•The title of earl of Huntingdon had previously been held in 
other families (sec Huntingdonshire). The famous Robin Hood 
( ?li6o-? 1 247) is said to have had a claim to the earldom. 



950 



HUNTINGDON, COUNTESS OF— HUNTINGDON 



Edward, and Baron Hastings (d. 1506), and the grandson of 
William, Baron Hastings, who was put to death by Richard III. 
in 1483. Being in high favour with Henry VIII., he was created 
earl of Huntingdon in 1529, and he was one of the royalist 
leaders during the suppression of the rising known as the Pilgrim- 
age of Grace in 1536. His eldest son Francis, the and earl 
(c. 1514-1561), was a dose friend and political ally of John 
Dudley, duke of Northumberland, sharing the duke's fall and 
imprisonment after the death of Edward VI. in 1553; but he 
was quickly released, and was employed on public business by 
Mary. His brother Edward (c. 1530-1572) was one of Mary's 
most valuable servants; a stout Roman Catholic, he was 
master of the horse and then lord chamberlain to the queen, 
and was created Baron Hastings of Loughborough in 1558, this 
title becoming extinct when he died. 

The 2nd earl's eldest son Henry, the 3rd earl (c. 1535-1595), 
married Northumberland's daughter Catherine. His mother 
was Catherine Pole (d. 1576), a descendant of George, duke of 
Clarence; and, asserting that he was thus entitled to succeed 
Elizabeth on the English throne, Huntingdon won a certain 
amount of support, especially from the Protestants and the 
enemies of Mary, queen of Scots. In 1572 Jie was appointed 
president of the council of the north, and during the troubled 
period between the flight of Mary to England in 1568 and the 
defeat of the Spanish armada twenty years later he was frequently 
employed in the north of England. It was doubtless felt that 
the earl's own title to the crown was a pledge that he would 
show scant sympathy with the advocates of Mary's -claim. 
He assisted George Talbot, earl of Shrewsbury, to remove the 
Scottish queen from Wingfield to Tutbury, and for a short time 
in 1569 he was one of her custodians. Huntingdon was re- 
sponsible for the compilation of an elaborate history of the 
Hastings family, a manuscript copy of which is now in the 
British Museum. As he died childless, his earldom passed to his 
brother George. Another brother, Sir Francis Hastings (d. 1610), 
was a member of parliament and a prominent puritan during 
Elizabeth's reign, but is perhaps more celebrated as a writer. 
George, the 4th earl (c. 1 540-1604), was the grandfather of 
Henry, the 5th earl (1 586-1643), and the father of Henry 
Hastings (c. 1560-1650), a famous sportsman, whose character 
has been delineated by the 1st earl of Shaftesbury (see L. Howard, 
A Collection of Letters, &c, 1753). The 6th earl was the 5th 
earl's son Ferdinando (e. 1608-1656). His brother Henry, 
Baron Loughborough (c. 1610-1667), won fame as a royalist 
during the Civil War, and was created a baron in 1643. 

Theophilus, the 7th earl (1650-1701), was the only surviving 
son of the 6th earl. In early life he showed some animus against 
the Roman Catholics and a certain sympathy for the duke of 
Monmouth; afterwards, however, he was a firm supporter 
of James II., who appointed him to several official positions. He 
remained in England after the king's flight and was imprisoned, 
but after his release he continued to show bis hostility to 
William III. One of his daughters, Lady Elizabeth Hastings 
(1682-1739), gained celebrity for her charities and her piety. 
Her beauty drew encomiums from Congreve and from Steele in 
the pages of the Taller, and her other qualities were praised by 
William Law. She was a benefactor to Queen's College, Oxford. 

The 7th earl's sons, George and Theophilus, succeeded in turn 
to the earldom. George (1677-1705) was a soldier who served 
under Marlborough, and Theophilus (1696-1746) was the 
husband of the famous Selina, countess of Huntingdon (?.?.). 
Theophilus was succeeded by his son Francis (17 20-1 789), 
on whose death unmarried the baronies passed to his sister 
Elizabeth (1731-1808), wife of John Rawdon, earl of Moira, and 
the earldom became dormant. 

The title of earl of Huntingdon was assumed by Theophilus 
Henry Hastings (i 728-1804), a descendant of the 2nd earl, who, 
however, had taken no steps to prove his title when he died. 
But, aided by his friend Henry Nugent Bell (1792-1822), his 
nephew and heir, Hans Francis Hastings (1 779-1828), was 
more energetic, and in 18 18 his right to the earldom was declared 
proved, and he took his seat in the House of Lords. He did not. 



however, recover the estates. Before thus becoming the nth 
(or 12th) earl, Hastings had served for many years in the mmry, 
and after the event he was appointed governor of Dominica. 
He died on the 9th of December 1828 and was succeeded by his 
son Francis Theophilus Henry (1808-1875), whose grandson, 
Warner Francis, became 14th or 15th earl of Huntingdon m 
1885. Another of the nth earl's sons was Vice-admiral George 
Fowler Hastings (1814-1876). 

See H. N. Bell, the Huntingdon Peerage (1830). 

HUNTINGDON, SEUNA HASTINGS. Couxnss or (1707- 
1791)1 English religious leader and founder of a sect of Calvinistk 
Methodists, known as the Countess of Huntingdon's Conneaon, 
was the daughter of Washington Shirley, 2nd Earl Ferrers. Si* 
was born at Stanton Harold, a mansion near Ashby-de-U-Zoudi 
in Leicestershire, on the 24th of August 1707, and in her tweucy- 
first year was married to Theophilus Hastings, oth eart of 
Huntingdon. In 1739 she joined the first Methodist society ta 
Fetter Lane, London. On the death of her husband in 1746 she 
threw in her lot with Wesley and Whitefidd in the work of 
the great revival. Isaac Watts, Philip Doddridge and A. H. 
Toplady were among her friends. In 1748 she gave Whitefietd a 
scarf as her chaplain, and in that capacity he frequently preached 
in her London house in Park Street to audiences that included 
Chesterfield, Walpole and Bolingbroke. In her chapel at Bath 
there was a curtained recess dubbed " Nicodemus's corner " 
where some of the bishops sat incognito to hear him. Lady 
Huntingdon spent her ample means in building chapels ia 
different parts of England, e.g. at Brighton (1761), London and 
Bath (1765), Tunbridge Wells (1769), and appointed ministers to 
officiate in them, under the impression that as a peeress she had a 
right to employ as many chaplains as she pleased. It is said that 
she expended £100,000 in the cause of religion. In 1768 she con- 
verted the old mansion of Trevecca, near Talgarth* in South 
Wales, into a theological seminary for young ministers for the 
connexion. Up to 1779 Lady Huntingdon and her chaplains 
continued members of the Church of England, but in that year 
the prohibition of her chaplains by the consistorial court frost 
preaching in the Pantheon, a large building in London rented for 
the purpose by the countess, compelled her, in order to evade the 
injunction, to take shelter under the Toleration Act. This step, 
which placed her legally among dissenters, had the effect of 
severing from the connexion several eminent and useful members, 
among them William Romaine (17 14-1 795) and Henry Vena 
(1725-1797). Till her death in London on the 17th of June 1791, 
Lady Huntingdon continued to exercise an active, and eves 
autocratic, superintendence over her chapels and chaplains. 
She successfully petitioned George III. in regard to the gaiety of 
Archbishop Cornwallis's establishment, and made a vigorous 
protest against the anti-Calvinistic minutes of the Weslcyao 
Conference of 1 770, and against relaxing the terms of subscription 
in 1773. Her sixty-four chapels and the college were bequeathed 
to four trustees. In 1792 the college was removed to Cheshunt, 
Hertfordshire, where it remained till 1905, -when it was transferred 
to Cambridge* The college is remarkable for the number of men 
it has sent into the foreign mission field. 

The connexion in 1910 consisted of 44 churches and mission station, 
with a roll of about 2400 communicants under 26 ordained past an. 
The government is vested by the trust deed, sanctioned by the court 
of Chancery on the 1st of January 1899, in nine trustees assisted by a 
conference of delegates from each church in the trust. The endow- 
ments of the trust produce £1500 per annum, and are devoted to four 
purposes: grants in aid of the ministry; annuities to ministers over 
sixty years of age who have given more than twenty years* continuous 
service in the connexion, or to their widows; grants for the main- 
tenance and extension of the existing buildings belonging to the trust ; 
grants to assist in purchasing chapels and chapel site*. In sddstiot 
the trustees may grant loans for the encouragement of new pro- 
gressive work from a loan fund of about £8000. 



See The Life of the Countess of Huntingdon (London, 2 vols.. 1844): 
' w. The Coronet and the Cross, or Memorials of 5mm. 



A. H. New, 



Countess of Huntingdon (1857); Sarah Tytler, The Countess of 
Huntingdon and her Circle (1907). 

HUNTINGDON, a market town and municipal borough and the 
county town of Huntingdonshire, England, on the left bank of 
the Ouse, on the Great Northern, Great Eastern and Midland 



HUNTINGDON— HUNTINGDONSHIRE 



951 



railway*, 59 ra, N. of London. Pop. (1001) 4201- It consists 

principally of one street, about a mile long, in the centre of which is 

the market-place. Of the ancient religious bouses in Huntingdon 

few traces remain. The parish church of St Mary occupies the 

site of the priory of Augustinian Canons already existing in the 

xoth century, in which David Bruce, Scottish earl of Huntingdon, 

was afterwards buried. The church, which was restored by Sir 

A. W. Blomfield, in 1876, contains portions of the earlier building 

which it replaced in 1620. All Saints' church, rebuilt about a 

century earlier, has slight remains of the original Norman church 

and some good modem, as well as ancient, carved woodwork. 

The church registers dating from 1558 are preserved, together 

with those of the old parish of St John, which date from 1585 and 

contain the entry ot Oliver Cromwell's baptism on the 99th of 

April 1 599, the house in which he was bom being still in existence. 

Some Norman remains of the hospice of St John the Baptist 

founded by David, king of Scotland, at the end of the lath 

century were incorporated in the buildings of Huntingdon 

grammar school, once attended by Oliver Cromwell and by 

Samuel Pepys. Hinchingbrooke House, on the outskirts of the 

town, an Elizabethan mansion chiefly of the 16th century, was 

the seat of the Cromwell family, others of the Montagus, earls 

of Sandwich. It occupies the site of a Benedictine nunnery 

granted by Henry VIII. at the Dissolution, together with many 

other manors in Huntingdonshire, to Sir Richard Williams, alias 

Cromwell, whose son, Sir Henry Cromwell, entertained Queen 

Elizabeth here in isfo. His son, Sir Oliver Cromwell, was the 

uncle and godfather of the Protector. Among the buildings of 

Huntingdon are the town hall (i74S>, county gaol, barracks, 

county hospital and the Montagu Institute (1897). A racecourse 

is situated in the bend of the Ouse to the south of the town, 

and meetings are held here in August. The town Is governed 

by a mayor, 4 aldermen and 12 councillors. Area, 1074 acres. 

Huntingdon {Huntandun, Hunter sdune) was taken by the' 
Danes in King Alfred's reign but recovered c 919 by Edward the 
Elder, who raised a castle there, probably on the site of an older 
fortress. In 1010 the Danes destroyed the town. The castle 
was strengthened by David, king of Scotland, after the Conquest, 
but was among the castles destroyed by order of Henry II. At 
the time of the Domesday Survey Huntingdon was divided into 
four divisions, two containing 1 16 burgesses and the other two 
X49. Most of the burgesses belonged to the king and paid a rent of 
£10 yearly. King John in 1205 granted them the liberties and 
privileges held by the men of other boroughs in England and 
increased the farm to £20. Henry III. further increased it to 
£40 in 1252. The borough was incorporated by Richard III. in 
1483 under the title of bailiffs and burgesses, and in 1630 Charles 
I. granted a new charter, appointing a mayor and 12 aldermen, 
which remained the governing charter until the Municipal 
Corporations Act of 2835 changed the corporation to a mayor, 
4 aldermen and 12 councillors. The burgesses were represented 
in parliament by two members from 1295 to 1867 when the 
number was reduced to one, and in 1885 they ceased to be 
separately represented. Huntingdon owed its prosperity to its 
situation on the Roman Ermine Street. It has never been noted 
for manufactures, but is the centre of an agricultural district. 
The market held on Saturday was granted to the burgesses by 
King John. During the Civil Wars Huntingdon was several 
times occupied by the Royalists. 

• See Victoria County History, Huntingdon; Robert Carrurhers, 
The History of Huntingdon from the Earliest to the Present Times 
(1824); Edward Griffith, A Collection of Ancient Records relating to 
the Borough of Huntingdon (1827). 

.HUNTINGDON, a borough and the county-seat of Huntingdon 
county, Pennsylvania, U.S.A., on the Juniata river, about 150 
m. E. of Pittsburg, in the S. central part of the state. Pop. 
(1800) 5729; (1900) 6053 (425 foreign-bom); (19x0) 6861. 
It is served by the Pennsylvania and the Huntingdon ft Broad 
Top Mountain railways, the latter running to the Broad Top 
Mountain coalfields in the S.VY- part of the county. The borough 
is buttt on ground sloping gently towards the river, which furnishes 
valuable water power- The surrounding country is well adapted 



to agriculture, and abounds (n coal, iron, fire day, limestone 
and white sand. Huntingdon's principal manufactures ate 
stationery, flour, knitting-goods, furniture, boilers, radiators 
and sewer pipe. It is the seat of Juniata College (German 
Baptist Brethren), opened in 1876 as the Brethren's Normal School 
and Collegiate Institute, and rechartered as Juniata College in 
1896, and of the State Industrial Reformatory, opened in 1888. 
Indians (probably Oneidas) settled near the site of Huntingdon, 
erected here a tall pillar, known as " Standing Stone "; the 
original was removed by the Indians, but another has been 
erected by the borough on the same spot. The place was laid 
out as a town in 1767 under the direction of Dr William -Smith 
(1727*1803), at the time provost of the college of Pennsylvania 
(afterwards the university of Pennsylvania); and it was named 
in honour of the countess of Huntingdon, who had contributed 
liberally toward the maintenance of that institution. It was 
incorporated as a borough in 1796. 

HUWTIlieDOlfSHlRB (HUNTS), an east midland county of 
England, bounded N. and W. by Northamptonshire, S.W. by 
Bedfordshire and E. by Cambridgeshire. Among English 
counties it Is the smallest with the exception of Middlesex and 
Rutland, having an area of 366 sq. m. The surface is low, and 
for the most part bare of trees. The south-eastern corner of 
the county, bounded by the Ouse valley, is traversed by a low 
ridge of hills entering from Cambridgeshire, and continued 
over the whole western half of the county, as well as in a strip 
about 6 m. broad north of the Ouse, between Huntingdon and 
St Ives. These hills never exceed 300 ft. in height, but form 
a pleasantly undulating surface. The north-eastern part of 
the county, comprising 50,000 acres, belongs to that division 
of the great Fen district called the Bedford Levels. The prin- 
cipal rivers are the Ouse and Nene. The Ouse from Bedfordshire 
skirts the borders of the county near St Neots, and after flow- 
ing north to Huntingdon takes an easterly direction past St 
Ives into Cambridgeshire on its way to the Wash. The Kym, 
from Northamptonshire, follows a south-easterly course and 
joins the Ouse at St Neots, while the Alconbury brook, flowing 
in a parallel direction, falls into it at Huntingdon. The 
Nene forms for 15 m. the north-western border of the 
county, and quitting it near Peterborough, enters the Wash 
below Wisbech, in Cambridgeshire. The course of the Old 
River Nene is eastward across the county midway between 
Huntingdon and Peterborough, and about ij m. N. by E. of 
Ramsey it is intersected by the Forty Foot, or Vermuyden's 
Drain, a navigable cut connecting it with the Old Bedford river 
m Cambridgeshire. ; 

Geology.— ^The geological structure is very simple. All the strati- 
fied rocks are of Jurassic age, with the exception of a small area 
of Lower Greenland which extends for a short distance along the 
border, north of Potton. The Greensands form low, rounded hills. 
Phosphatic nodules are obtained from these beds. On the north- 
western border is a narrow strip of Inferior Oolite, reaching from 
Thrapston by Oundle to Wansford near Peterborough. It is repre- 
sented about Wansford by the Northampton sands and by a feeble 
development of the Lincolnshire limestone. The Great Oolite Series 
has at the base the Upper Estuarine clays; in the middle, the Great 
Oolite limestone, which forms the escarpment of Alwalton Lynch: 
and at the top. the Great Oolite clay. The Cornbrash is exposed 
along part of the Billing brook, and in a small inlier near Yaxley. 
Over the remainder of the county the lower rocks are covered by the 
Oxford clay. It is about 600 ft. thick. This clay cannot be dis- 
tinguished from the Kimmeridge clay except by the fossils; the two 
formation* probably graduate into one another, bnt thin limestones 
are found in places, and at St Ives a patch of the intermediate 
Corallian rock b present. All the stratified rocks have a general dip 
towards the south-east. 

Much glacial drift clay with stones covers the older rocks over a 
good deal of the county; it is a bluish clay, often containing masses 
of chalk, some of them being of considerable size. e.g. the one at 
Catworth. The Fens on the eastern side of the county are under- 
lain by Oxford clay, which here and there projects through the 
prevailing newer deposit of silt and loam. There are usually two 
beds of peat or peaty soil observable in the numerous drains; they 
are separated by a bed of marine warp. Black loamy alluvium and 
valley gravels, the most recent deposits, occur in the valleys of the 
Ouse and Nene. Calcareous tufa is formed by the springs .near 
Alwalton. Oxford clay is dug on a considerable scale for brick- 
making at Fktton, also at St Ives, Ramsey and St Neots. 



952 



HUNTINGDONSHIRE 



j4p"tc»J/ttr*.— Huntingdonshire Is almost wholly an agricultural 
county; nearly nine-tenths of its total area is under cultivation, 
and much improvement has been effected by drainage. On 
account of the tenacity of the clay the drains often require to 
be placed very close. Much of the soil is, however, undrained, 
and only partly used for pasturage. On the drained pasturage 
a large number of cattle are fed. The district comprising the 
gravel of the Ouse valley embraces an area of 50,000 acres. 
On the banks of the Ouse it consists of fine black loam deposited 
by the overflow of the river, and its meadows form very rich 
pasture grounds. The upland district is under arable culture. 
Wheat is much more extensively grown than any other grain. 
Barley is more widely cultivated than oats, but its quality on 
many soils is lean and inferior, and unsuitable for making 
purposes. Beans and pease are largely grown, while mangold 
and cabbage and similar green crops are chiefly used for the> 
feeding of sheep. During the last quarter of the 10th century 
there was a large decrease in the areas of grain crops and of 
fallow, and an increase in that of permanent pasture. Market- 
gardening and fruit-farming, however, greatly increased in 
importance. Willows are largely grown in the fen district. 
Good drinking water is deficient in many districts, but there are 
three natural springs, once famous for the healing virtues their 
waters were thought to possess, namely, at Hail Weston near 
St Neots, at Holywell near St Ives and at Somersham in the 
same district. Bee-farming is largely practised. Dairy-farming 
is not much followed, the milk being chiefly used for rearing 
calves. The village of Stilton, on the Great North Road, had 
formerly a large market for the well-known cheese to which 
it has given its name. Large numbers of cattle are fattened in 
the fiejd or the fold-yard, and are sold when rising three years 
old. They are mostly of the shorthorn breed, large numbers 
of Irish shorthorns being wintered in the fens. Leicester! and 
Lincolns are the most common breeds of sheep; they usually 
attain great weights at an early age. Pigs include Berkshire, 
Suffolk and Neapolitan breeds, and a number of crosses. Their 
fattening and breeding are extensively practised. 
• Other Industries. — There is no extensive manufacture, but the 
chief is that of paper and parchment Madder is obtained in 
considerable quantities, and in nearly every part of the county 
lime burning is carried on. Lace-making is practised by the 
female peasantry; and the other industries are printing, iron- 
founding, tanning and currying, brick and tile making, malting 
and brewing. 

t Communications. — The middle of the county is traversed from 
south to north by the Great Northern railway, which enters 
it at St Neots and passing by Huntingdon leaves it at Peter- 
borough. A branch line running eastward to Ramsey is given 
off at Holme junction, midway between Huntingdon and 
Peterborough. From Huntingdon branch lines of the Midland 
and the Great Eastern run respectively west and east to Thrapston 
(Northamptonshire) and to Cambridge via St Ives. From St 
Ives Great Eastern lines also run N.E. to Ely (Cambridgeshire) 
via Earitb Bridges on the county border, and N. to Wisbech 
(Cambridgeshire) with a branch line westward from Somersham 
to Ramsey. The north-western border is served by the Great 
Northern and the London and North-Western railways between 
Peterborough and Wansford, where they part. 
[ Population and Administration. — The area of the ancient 
county is 234,218 acres, with a population in 1891 of 57,761, 
and in 1901 of 57,771. The area of the administrative county 
is 233.984 acres. The county contains 4 hundreds. The muni- 
cipal boroughs arc Godmanchester (pop. 2017), Huntingdon, 
the county town (4261) and St Ives (2910), The other urban 
districts are Old Fletton (4585). Ramsey (4823) and St Neots 
(3880). The county is in the south-eastern circuit, and assizes 
are held at Huntingdon. It has one court of quarter sessions, 
and is divided into five petty sessional divisions. There are 105 
civil parishes. Huntingdonshire, which contains 87 ecclesiastical 
parishes or districts wholly or in part, is almost wholly in the 
diocese of Ely, but a small part is in that of Peterborough. 
The parliamentary divisions, each of which returns one member, 



are the Northern or Ramsey and the Southern or Htwtxngdon. 
Part of the parliamentary borough of Peterborough also fa£s 
within the county. 

History.— The earliest English settlers in the district wen tie 
Gyrwas, an East Anglian tribe, who early In the 6th eenrery 
worked their way up the Ouse and the Cam as far as Huntingdon. 
After their conquest of East Anglia in the latter half of the oik 
century, Huntingdon became an important seat of the Danes, 
and the Danish origin of the shire is borne out by an entry in the 
Saxon Chronicle (018-021) referring to Huntingdon as a nufitarr 
centre to which the surrounding district owed allegiance, wh& 
the shire itself is mentioned in the Historia Blitnsis in coonexaea 
with events which took place before or shortly after the deat& 
of Edgar. About 91 5 Edward the Elder wrested the fen-country 
from the Danes, repairing and fortifying Huntingdon, and 1 
few years later the district was included in the earldom at 
East Anglia. Religious foundations were established at Ramsey. 
Huntingdon and St Neots in the xoth century, and that of 
Ramsey accumulated vast wealth and influence, owning twenty- 
six manors in this county alone at the time of the Domesday 
Survey. In ion Huntingdonshire was again overrun by tat 
Danes and in 1016 was attacked by Canute. A few years later 
the shire was included in the earldom of Thored (of the Middle 
Angles), but in 1051 it was detached from Mertia and formed 
part of the East Anglian earldom of Harold. Shortly before 
the Conquest, however, it was bestowed on Siward, as a reward 
for his part in Godwin's overthrow, and became an oodyiaf 
portion of the earldom of Northumberland, passing throngs 
Waltheof and Simon de St Lis to David of Scotland. After the 
separation of the earldom from the crown of Scotland daring 
the Bruce and Balliol disputes, it was conferred in 1336 oa 
William Clinton; in 1377 on Guichard d' Angle; in 1387 oa 
John Holand; in 1471 on Thomas Grey, afterwards marquess of 
Dorset; and in 1529 on George, Baron Hastings, whose descend- 
ants hold it at the present day. 

The Norman Conquest was followed by a general confiscation 
of estates, and only four or five thanes retained lands wfaka 
they or their fathers had held in the time of Edward the Confessor. 
Large estates were held by the church, and the rest of the county 
for the most part formed outlying portions of the fiefs of Witttaa s 
Norman favourites, that of Count Eustace of Boulogne, thesberi£, 
of whose tyrannous exactions bitter complaints are recorded, 
being by far the most considerable. Kimbokon was fortified 
by Geoffrey de Maodeville and afterwards passed to thefamuKs 
of Bohun and Stafford. 

The hundreds of Huntingdon were probably of very early 
origin, and that of Norman Cross is referred to m 063. The 
Domesday Survey, besides the four existing divisions of Normaa 
Cross, Toseland, Hurstingstone and Leightonstone, which from 
their assessment appear to have been double hundreds, mentioas 
an additional hundred of Kimbolton, since absorbed in I right on- 
stone, while Huntingdon is assessed separately at fifty hades 
The boundaries of the county have scarcely changed since the 
time of the Domesday Survey, except that parts of the Bedford- 
shire parishes of Everton, Pertenhall and Keysoe and the 
Northamptonshire parish of Hargrave were then assessed under 
this county. Huntingdonshire was formerly in the diocese of 
Lincoln, but in 1837 was transferred to Ely. In 1201 it consti- 
tuted an archdeaconry, comprising the deaneries of Huntingdoa, 
St Ives, Yaxley and Leightonstone, and the divisions re- 
mained unchanged until the creation of the deanery of Kimboltos 
in 1870. 

At the time of the Domesday Survey Huntingdonshire had 
an independent shrievalty, but from 11 54 it was united with 
Cambridgeshire under one sheriff, until in 1637 the two counties 
were separated for six years, after which they were reunited 
and have remained so to the present day. The shire-court 
was held at Huntingdon. 

In 1 174 Henry II. captured and destroyed Huntingdon Castla 
After signing the Great Charter Jojui sent an army to ravage tint 
county under William, earl of Salisbury, and Falkes de Breaute, 
During the wars of the Roses Huntingdon was sacked by tat 



HUNTINGTON, D.— HUNTINGTON 



953 



1 Lancastrians. The county resisted the illegal taxation of Charles 
' I. and joined in a protest against the arrest of the five members. 
In 1642 it was one of the seven associated counties in which the 
1 king bad no visible party. Hinchingbrook, however, was held 
f for Charles by Sir Sydney Montagu, and in 1645 Huntingdon 
' was captured and plundered by the Royalist forces. The chief 
1 historic family connected with this county were the CromwcUs, 

who held considerable estates in the 16 lb century. 
1 Huntingdonshire has always been mainly an agricultural 

1 county, and at the time of the Domesday Survey contained 
( thirty -one mills, besides valuable fisheries in its meres and rivers* 
1 The woollen industry flourished in the, county from Norman 
times, and previous to the draining of its fens in the 1 7th century, 
by which large areas were brought under cultivation, the in- 
I dustries of turf-cutting, reed-cutting for thatch and the manu- 
facture of horse-collars from rushes were carried on in Ramsey 
and the surrounding district. In the 17 th century saltpetre 
1 was manufactured in the county. In the 18th century women 
and children were largely employed in spinning yarn, and pillow* 
lace making and the straw-plait industry flourished in the St 
! Ncots district, where it survives; pillow lace was also manu- 
factured at Codmanchester. In the early 19th century there 
were two large sacking manufactures at Standground, and 
! brewing and malting were largely carried on. 

Huntingdonshire was represented by three members in parlia- 
ment in 1 200. From 1 295 the county and borough of Huntingdon 
t returned two members each, until in 1868 the representation 
[ of the borough was reduced to one member. By the act of 1885 
the borough was disfranchised. 

Antiquities. — Huntingdonshire early became famous on account 
of its great Benedictine abbey at Ramsey and the Cistercian 
abbey founded in 1 146 at Sawtry, 7 m. W. of Ramsey; besides 
which there were priories at Huntingdon and Stonely, both 
belonging to the Augustinian canons, and at St Ives and St 
Neots belonging to the Benedictines, together with a Benedic- 
tine nunnery at Hinchingbrook, near Huntingdon. Of these 
buildings almost the only remains are at Ramsey and St Ives. 
The most interesting churches for Norman architecture are 
Hartford near Huntingdon, Old Fiction near Peterborough 
(containing on the exterior some carved ornament said to have 
belonged to the original Saxon cathedral at Peterborough), 
Ramsey and Alwalton, a singular combination of Norman and 
Early English. Early English churches are Kimbolton, Alcon- 
bury, Warboys and Somersham, near Ramsey, and Hail Weston 
near St Neots, with a 15th-century wooden tower and spire. 
Decorated are Orion Longuevillc and Yaxley, both near Peter- 
borough, the latter containing remains of frescoes on its walls; 
Perpendicular, St Neots, Connington near Ramsey and Cod- 
manchester. At Buckden near Huntingdon are remains of a 
palace (15th century) of the bishops of Lincoln. There were two 
ancient castles in the county, at Huntingdon and at Kimbolton, 
of which only the second remains as a mansion. Hinchingbrook 
House, Huntingdon, was the seat of the Cromwell family. 
Connington Castle passed, like the title of earl of Huntingdon, 
through the hands of Wallheof , Simon de St Lis and the Scottish 
royal family, and was finally inherited by Sir Robert Cotton 
the antiquary, who was born in the neighbourhood, and is 
buried in Connington church. Ellon Hall, on the north-west 
border of the county, was rebuilt about 1660, and contains, 
besides a good collection of pictures, chiefly by English masters, 
a library which includes many old and rare prayer-books, Bibles 
and missals. 

Norman Cross. 13 m. N. of Huntingdon, on the Great North 
Road, marks the site of the place of confinement of several thousand 
French soldiers during the Napoleonic wars at the beginning of the 
19th century. The village of Little Gidding, Q m. N.W. of Hunt- 
ingdon, is memorable for its connexion with Nicholas Ferrar 
in the reign of Charles I., when the religious community of which 
Ferrar was the head was organized. Relics connected with this 
community are preserved in the British Museum. 

HUNTINGTON, DANIEL (1816-1006), American artist, was 
born in New York on the 14th of October 1816. In 183s he 
studied with S. F. B. Morse, and produced " A Bar-Room 



Politician " and " A Toper Asleep." Subsequently be painted 
some landscapes on the river Hudson, and in 1839 went to Rome. 
On his return to America he painted portraits and began the 
illustration of TMe Pilgrim's Progress, but his eyesight failed, 
and in 1844 he went back to Rome. Returning to New York 
in 1846, be devoted his time chiefly to portrait-painting, although 
he has painicd many genre, religious and historical subjects. 
He was president of the National Academy from 1862 to 1870, 
and again in 1877-1890. Among his principal works are: 
"The Florentine Girl," "Early Christian Prisoners," "The 
Shepherd Boy of the Campagna," "The Roman Penitents," 
" Christiana and Her Children," " Queen Mary signing the 
Death-Warrant of Lady Jane Grey," and " Feckenbam in the 
Tower " (1850), " Chocorua " (i860), " Republican Court in the 
Time of Washington," containing sixty-four careful portraits 
(1861), " Sowing the Word " (1869), " St Jerome," " Juliet on the 
Balcony " (1870), " The Narrows, Lake George " (1871), " Titian," 
" Clement VII. and Charles V. at Bologna," " Philosophy and 
Christian Art " (1878), " Goldsmith's Daughter " (1884). His 
principal portraits are: President Lincoln, in Union League 
Club, New York; Chancellor Ferris of New York University; 
Sir Charles Eastlake «uid the carl of Carlyle, the property of 
the New York Historical Society; President Van Buren, in the 
State Library at Albany; James Lenox, in the Lenox Library; 
Louis Agassiz (1856-1857), William Cullen Bryant (1866), John 
A. Dix (1880) and John Sherman (1881). Be died on the 19th 
of April 1006 in New York City. 

HUNTINGTON, FREDERIC DAN (1819-1904), American 
clergyman, first Proteslant Episcopal bishop of central New 
York, was born in Hadley, Massachusetts, on the 28th of May 
i8ia> He graduated at Amherst in 1839 and at the Harvard 
Divinity School in 184a. In 1842-1855 he was pastor of the 
South Congregational Church of Boston, and in 1855-1860 was 
preacher to the university and Plummcr professor of Christian 
Morals at Harvard; he then left the Unitarian Church, with 
which his father had been connected as a clergyman at Hadley, 
resigned his professorship and became pastor of the newly 
established Emmanuel Church of Boston. He had refused the 
bishopric of Maine when in 1868 he was elected to the diocese of 
central New York. He was consecrated on the 9th of April 1869, 
and thereafter lived in Syracuse. He died in Hadley, Massa- 
chusetts, on the 1 ith of July 1904. His more important publica- 
tions were Lectures on Human Society (i860); Memorials of a 
Quiet Life (1874); and The Golden Rule applied to Business 
and Social Conditions (1892). 

See Memoir and Letters of Frederic Dan Huntington (Boston, 1906), 
by Arria S. Huntington, his wife. 

HUNTINGTON, a city and the county-seat of Huntington 
county, Indiana, U.S.A., on the Little river, about 35 ra. S.W. 
of Fort Wayne. Pop. (1900) 9491, of whom 621 were foreign- 
born; (1910 census) 10,272. Huntington is served by three 
railways— the Wabash, the Erie (which has car shops and 
division headquarters here) and the Cincinnati, Brufflon & 
Chicago (which has machine shops here), and by the Fort Wayne 
& Wabash Valley Traction Company, whose car and repair shops 
and power station are in Huntington. The city has a public 
library, a business college and Central College (1897), controlled 
by the United Brethren in Christ (Old Constitution). Wooden- 
ware is the principal manufacture. The value of the factory 
product in 1905 was $2,081/319, an increase of 20-6% since 
1900. The municipality owns and operates the waterworks 
and the electric-lighting plant. Huntington, named in honour 
of Samuel Huntington (1736-1706)1 of Connecticut, a signer 
of the Declaration of Independence, was first settled about 1829. 
was incorporated as a town in 1848 and was chartered as a 
city in 1873. 

HUNTINGTON, a township of Suffolk county, New York, 
U.S.A., in the central part of the N. side of Long Island, bounded 
on the N. by Huntington Bay, a part of Long Island Sound. 
Pop. (1905, state census) 10,236; (1910) 12,004. The S. part 
of the township is largely taken up with market-gardening; 
but along the Sound are the villages of Huntington, Cold Spring 



95+ 



HUNTINGTON— HUNTLY, MARQUESSES OF 



Harbor, Centreport and Northport, which are famous for the 
fine residences owned by New York business men; they are 
served by the Wading river branch of the Long Island Railroad. 
Northport— pop. (1910 census) 2006 — incorporated in 1804, 
is the most easterly of these; it has a large law-publishing house, 
shipbuilding yards and valuable oyster-fisheries. Cold Spring 
Harbor, 33 m. E. of Brooklyn, is a small unincorporated village, 
once famous for its whale-fisheries, and now best known for 
the presence here of the New York Stale Fish Hatchery, and of 
the Biological Laboratory of the Brooklyn Institute of Arts and 
Sciences and of the laboratory of the Department of Experimental 
Evolution of the Carnegie Institution of Washington. The village 
of Huntington, 3 J m. E. of Cold Spring, is unincorporated, but 
is the most important of the three and has the largest summer 
colony. There is a public park on the water-front. The Soldiers' 
and Sailors' Memorial Building is occupied by the public library, 
which faces a monument to Nathan Hale on Main Street. A big 
boulder on the shore of the bay marks the place of Hale's capture 
by the British on the 21st of September 1776. Benjamin 
Thompson (Count Rumford) occupied the village and built a 
British fort here near the close of the American War of Inde- 
pendence. Huntington's inhabitants were mostly strong patriots, 
notably Ebenezer Prime (1700-1779), pastor of the First 
Presbyterian Church, which the British used as a barracks, and 
his son Benjamin Young Prime (1733-1791), a physician, linguist 
and patriot poet, who was the father of Samuel Irenaeus Prime 
(1812-1885), editor of the New York Observer. Walt Whitman 
was born near the village of Huntington, and established there 
in 1836, and for three years edited, the weekly newspaper 
the Long Islander. The first settlement in the township was 
made in 1653; in 1662-1664 Huntington was under the govern- 
ment of Connecticut. The township until 1872 included the 
present township of Babylon to the S., along the Great 
South Bay. 

HUNTINGTON, a dty and the county-scat of Cabell county, 
West Virginia, U.S.A., about 50 m. W. of Charleston, W. Va., 
on the S. bank of the Ohio river, just below the mouth of the 
Guyandotte river. Pop. (1000) 11,023, of whom 1212 were 
negroes ; (19 10 census) 31,161. It is served by the Baltimore 
& Ohio and the Chesapeake & Ohio railways, and by several 
lines of river steamboats. The dty is the seat of Marshall College 
(founded in 1837; a State Normal School in 1867), which in 
1 007-1008 had 34 instructors and 1100 students; and of the 
West Virginia State Asylum for the Incurable Insane; and it 
has a Carnegie library and a city hospital. Huntington has 
extensive railway car and repair shops, besides foundries and 
machine shops, steel rolling mills, manufactories of stoves and 
ranges, breweries and glass works. The value of the city's 
factory product in 1005 was $4,407,153, an increase of 21% 
over that of 1000. Huntington dates from 1871, when it became 
the western terminus of the Chesapeake & Ohio railway, was 
named in honour of Collis P. Huntington (1821-1000), the 
president of the road, and was incorporated. 

HUNTINOTOWER AND RUTHVENFIBLD, a village of 
Perthshire, Scotland, on the Almond, 3 m. N.W. of Perth, and 
within 1 m. of Almondbank station on the Caledonian railway. 
Pop. (1001) 450. Bleaching, the chief industry, dates from 
1774, when the blcaching-ficld was formed. By means of an old 
aqueduct, said to have been built by the Romans, it was provided 
with water from the Almond, the properties of which render 
it specially suited for bleaching. Huntingtower (originally 
Ruthven) Castle, a once formidable structure, was the scene of 
the' Raid of Ruthven (pron. Rirvrn), when the Protestant lords, 
headed by William, 4th Lord Ruthven and 1st earl of Cowrie 
(1541-XS84), kidnapped the boy-king James VI., on the 22nd of 
August 1582. The earl's sons were slain in the attempt (known 
as the Gowrie conspiracy) to capture James VI." (1600), con- 
sequent on which the Scots parliament ordered the name of 
Ruthven to be abolished, and the barony to be known in future 
as Huntingtower. 

HUNTLY, EARLS AND MARQUESSES OF. This Scottish 
title, in the Gordon family, dates as to the earldom from 1449, 



and as to the marquestate (the premier marquessate In J 
from 1500. The first earl (d. 1470) was Alexander de Setae, 
lord of Gordon — a title known before 1406; and his son Geoxfe 
(d. 1502), by his marriage with Princess Annabella (altenrxrii 
divorced), daughter of James I. of Scotland, bad several children, 
induding, besides his successor the 3rd earl (Alexander), a second 
son Adam (who became carl of Sutherland), a third sera WHBar* 
(from whom the mother of the poet Byron was descendeeTi 
and a daughter Katherine, who first married Perkin Warberi 
and afterwards Sir Matthew Cradock (from whom the earJs of 
Pembroke' descended). Alexander, the 3rd earl (d. 1524). con- 
solidated the position of his house as supreme in the north; be 
led the Scottish vanguard at Flodden,- and was a supporter of 
Albany against Angus. His grandson George, 4th earl (1514- 
1562), who in 1548 was granted the earldom of Moray, played 
a leading part in the troubles of his time in Scotland, and in 1 562 
revolted against Queen Mary and was killed in fight at Corrkhie, 
near Aberdeen. His son George (d. 1576) was restored to the 
forfeited earldom in 1565; he became Both well's close associate 
—he helped Both well, who had married his sister, to obtaia 2 
divorce from her; and he was a powerful supporter of Mary uC 
he seceded from her cause in 1572. 

George Gordon, 1st marquess of Huntly (is6*-i626>, 
son of the 5th earl of Huntly, and of Anne, daughter of Jzao 
Hamilton, earl of Arran and duke of ChateOierault, was bom 
in 1562, and educated in France as a Roman Catholic. He took 
part in the plot which led to the execution of Morton in 1 $5i 
and in the conspiracy which delivered King James VI. from the 
Ruthven raiders in 1583. In 1588 he signed the Presbyteriaa 
confession of faith, but continued to engage in plots for the 
Spanish invasion of Scotland. On the 28th of November be %a 
appointed captain of the guard, and while carrying out his duties 
at Holyrood his treasonable correspondence was discovered 
James, however, who found the Roman Catholic lords useful as t 
foil to the tyranny of the Kirk, and was at this lime seekiex 
Spanish aid in case of Elizabeth's denial of his right to the EngGsfe 
throne, and with whom Huntly was always a favourite, pardoaed 
him. Subsequently in April 1589 he raised a rebellion in the 
north, but was obliged to submit, and after a short imprisonment 
in Borthwick Castle was again set at liberty. He next involved 
himself in a private war with the Grants and the Mackintoshes, 
who were assisted by the earls of Alholl and Murray; and on the 
8th of February 1592 he set fire to Murray's castle of Donibmtk 
in Fife, and stabbed the earl to death with his own hand. This 
outrage, which originated the ballad "The Bonnie Earl ef 
Moray," brought down upon Huntly his enemies, who ravaged 
his lands. In December the u Spanish Blanks '* were inter- 
cepted (see Erroll, Francis Hay, oth Earl of), two of whka 
bore Huntly's signature, and a charge of treason was agais 
preferred against him, while on the 25th of September 1593 he 
was excommunicated. James treated him and the other rebel 
lords with great leniency. On the 26th of November they were 
freed from the charge of treason, being ordered at the same 
time, however, to renounce Romanism or leave the kingdom. 
On their refusal to comply they were attainted. Subsequently 
Huntly joined Erroll and Bothwcll in a conspiracy to imprison 
the king, and the former two defeated the royal forces under 
Argyll at Glenlivat on the 3rd of October 1594, Huntly especially 
distinguishing himself. His victory, however, gained no real 
advantage; his castle of Strathbogie was blown up by James, 
and he left Scotland about March 1595. He returned secretly 
very soon afterwards, and his presence in Scotland was at -first 
connived at by James; but owing to the hostile feeling aroused, 
and the " No Popery " riot in Edinburgh, the king demanded 
that he should abjure Romanism or go into permanent banish- 
ment. He submitted to the Kirk in June 1 597, and was restored 
to his estates m December. On the 7th of April 1 599 he was 
created a marquess, and on the 9th of July, together with Lennox, 
appointed lieutenant of the north. He was treated with great 
favour by the king and was reconciled with Murray and Argyll. 
Doubts, however, as to the genuineness of his abjuration 1 
troubled the Kirk. On the 10th of December 1606 he was c 



HUNTLY— HUNYADI, JANOS 



to Aberdeen, and on the 19th of March 1607 he was summoned 
before the privy council. Huntly thereupon went to England 
and appealed to James himself. He was excommunicated in 
1608, and imprisoned in Stirling Castle till the 10th of December 
1610, when he signed again the confession of faith. Accused of 
Romanist intrigues in 1616, he was ordered once more to sub- 
scribe the confession, which this time he refused to do; imprisoned 
«t Edinburgh, he was liberated by James's order on the 18th of 
June, and having joined the court in London was absolved from 
excommunication by Abbot, archbishop of Canterbury; which 
absolution, after some heartburnings at the archbishop's inter- 
ference, and after a further subscription to the confession by 
Huntly, was confirmed by the Kirk, At the accession of Charles I. 
Huntly lost much of his influence at court. He was deprived 
in 1630 of his heritable sheriffships of Aberdeen and Inverness. 
The same year a feud broke out between the Crichtons and 
Gordons, in the course of which Huntly's second son, Lord 
Mdgum, was burnt to death either by treachery or by accident, 
while being entertained in the house of James Crichton of Fren- 
draught. For the ravaging of the lands of the Crichtons Huntly 
was held responsible, and having been summoned before the 
privy council in 163 s he was imprisoned in Edinburgh Castle 
from December till June 1636. He left his confinement with 
shattered health, and died at Dundee while on his journey to 
Strathbogie on the 13th of June 1636, after declaring himself a 
Roman Catholic. 

George Gordon, 2nd marquess of Huntly (d. 1649), his 
eldest son by Lady Henrietta, daughter of the duke of Lennox, 
was brought up in England as a Protestant, and created earl 
of Eruie by James I. On succeeding to his father's title his 
influence in Scotland was employed by the king to balance that 
of Argyll in the dealings with the Covenanters, but without 
success. In the civil war he distinguished himself as a royalist, 
and in 1647 was excepted from the general pardon; in March 
1649, having been captured and given up, he was beheaded by 
order of the Scots parliament at Edinburgh. His fourth son 
Charles (<L 168 i) was created earl of Aboyne in 1660; and the 
eldest son Lewis was proclaimed 3rd marquess of Huntly by 
Charles II. in 1651. But the attainder was not reversed by 
parliament till tooi. 

George Gordon, 4th marquess (1643-1716), served under 
Turcnne, and was created 1st duke of Gordon by Charles II. 
in 1684 (see Gordon). On the death of the 5th duke of Gordon in 
1836 the title of oth marquess of Huntly passed to his relative 
George Gordon (1761-1853), son and heir of the 4th earl of 
Aboyne; who in 1815 was made a peer of the United Kingdom 
as Baron Meldrum, his descendants being the 10th and nth 
marquesses. 

HUNTLY, a police burgh, burgh of barony and parish of 
Aberdeenshire, Scotland, capital of the district of Strathbogie. 
Pop. (1001) 4136. It lies at the confluence of the rivers Deveron 
and Bogie, 41 m. N.W. of Aberdeen on the Great North of 
Scotland Railway. It is a market town and the centre of a large 
agricultural district, its chief industries including agricultural 
implement-making, hosiery weaving, weaving of woollen doth, 
and the manufacture of lamps and boots. Huntly Castle, half a 
mile to the north, now in ruins, was once a fortalice of the Comyns. 
From them it passed in the 14th century to the Gordons, by 
whom it was rebuilt. It was blown up in 1 594, but was restored 
In 1602. It gradually fell into disrepair, some of its stones being 
utilised in the building of Huntly Lodge, the residence of the 
widow of the " last " duke of Gordon, who (in 1840) founded the 
adjoining Gordon schools to his memory. The Standing Stones 
of Strathbogie in Market Square have offered a permanent 
puzzle to antiquaries. 

HUNTSMAN, BENJAMIN (1704-177*), English inventor and 
steel-manufacturer, was born in Lincolnshire in 1704, His 
parents were Germans. He started business as a dock, lock and 
tool maker at Doncaster, and attained a considerable local 
reputation for scientific knowledge and skilled workmanship. 
He abo practised surgery in an experimental fashion, and was 
frequently consulted as. an ocuHsL Finding that the bad quality 



955 

of the steel then available for his products seriously hampered 
him, he began to experiment in steel-manufacture, first at 
Doncaster, and subsequently at Handsworth, near Sheffield, 
whither he removed in 1740 to secure cheaper fuel for his furnaces. 
After several years' trials he at last produced a satisfactory cast 
sted, purer and harder than any steel then in use. The Sbeffidd 
cutlery manufacturers, however, refused to buy it, on the ground 
that it was too hard, and for a long time Huntsman exported his 
whole output to France. The growing competition of imported 
French cutlery made from Huntsman's cast-sted at length 
alarmed the Sheffield cutlers, who, after vainly endeavouring to 
get the exportation of the sted prohibited by the British govern- 
ment, were compelled in self-defence to use it. Huntsman had not 
patented his process, and its secret was discovered by a Sheffield 
ironfounder, who, according to a popular story, obtained ad- 
mission to Huntsman's works in the disguise of a tramp. 
Benjamin Huntsman died in 1776, his business being sub- 
sequently greatly developed by his son, William Huntsman 
(1733-1800). 

See Smiles, Industrial Biography (1879)4 

HUNTSVILLE, a dty and the county-seat of Madison county, 
Alabama, U.S.A., situated on a plain 10 m. N. of the Tennessee 
river, 18 m. from the northern boundary of the stale, at an 
altitude of about 617 ft. Pop. (1000) 8068, of whom 3009 were 
of negro descent; (1910 census) 7611. There is a considerable 
suburban population. Huntsvittc is served by the Southern and 
the Nashville, Chattanooga & St Louis railways. The public 
square is on a high bluff (about 750 ft. above sea -level), at the 
base of which a large spring furnishes the dty with water, and 
also forms a stream once used for floating boats, loaded with 
cotton, to the Tennessee river. The surrounding country has 
rich deposits of iron, coal and marble, and cotton, Indian corn 
and fruit are grown and shipped from Huntsville. Natural gas 
is found in the vicinity. The principal industry is the manu- 
facture .of cotton. The value of the dty*s factory products 
increased from $691,340 in 1000 to $1,758,718 in 1905, or 154%. 
At Normal, about 3} m. N.E. of Huntsville, is the State Agri- 
cultural and Mechanical College for Negroes. Huntsville was 
founded in 1805 by John Hunt, a Virginian and a soldier in 
the War of Independence; in 1809 its name was changed to 
Twickenham, in memory of the home of the poet Alexander Pope, 
some of whose relatives were among the first settlers; but in 
1811 the earlier name was restored, under which the town was 
incorporated by the Territorial Government, the first Alabama 
settlement to receive a charter. Huntsville was chartered as a 
city in 1844. Here, in 1819, met the convention that framed the 
first state constitution, and in 1820 the first state legislature. 
On the nth of April 1862 Huntsville was seized by Federal 
troops, who were forced to retire in the following September, but 
secured permanent possession in July 1863. 

HUNYADI, JANOS (t. 1387-1456), Hungarian statesman and 
warrior, was the son of Vojk, a Magyarized Vlach who married 
Elizabeth Morzsinay. He derived his family name from the 
small estate of Hunyad, which came into his father's possession in 
1409. The later epithet Corvinus, adopted by bis son Matthias, 
was doubtless derived from another property, Piatra da Corvo or 
Raven's Rock. He has sometimes been confounded with an elder 
brother who died fighting for Hungary about 1440. While still 
a youth, he entered the service of King Sigismund, who appreci- 
ated his qualities and borrowed money from him ; he accompanied 
that monarch to Frankfort in his quest for the imperial crown in 
14 10; took part in the Hussite War in 1430, and in 1437 drove 
the Turks from Semendria. For these services he got numerous 
estates and a seat in the royal council. In 1438 King Albert II. 
made him ban of Szoreny, the district lying between the Aluta 
and the Danube, a most dangerous dignity entailing constant 
warfare with the Turks. On the sudden death of Albert in 1439, 
Hunyadi, feeling acutely that the situation demanded a warrior- 
king on the throne of St Stephen, lent the whole weight of his 
influence to the candidature of the young Polish king Wladis- 
laus III. (1440), and thus came Into collision with the powerful 
Cilkis, the chid supporters of Albert's widow Elizabeth and her 



956 



HUNYADI, LASZLO 



infant ton, Ladiilmus V. (see Cuxkt, Ulkich; and Ladislaus V.). 
He took a prominent part in the ensuing civil war and was 
rewarded by Wladisiaus III. with the captaincy of the fortress of 
Belgrade and the voivodeship of Transylvania, which latter 
dignity, however, he shared with his rival Mihaly U jbdri. 

The burden of the Turkish War now rested entirely on his 
shoulders. In 1441 he delivered Servia by the victory of 
Semendria. In 1442, not far from Hcrmannstadt, on which he 
had been forced to retire, he annihilated an immense Turkish 
host, and recovered for Hungary the suzerainty of Wallachia 
and Moldavia; and in July he vanquished a third Turkish army 
near the Iron Gates. These victories made Hunyadi's name 
terrible to the Turks and renowned throughout Christendom, 
and stimulated him in 1443 to undertake, along with King 
Wladisiaus, the famous expedition known as the hosszu hdboru 
or " long campaign." Hunyadi, at the head of the vanguard, 
crossed the Balkans through the Gate of Trajan, captured Mish, 
defeated three Turkish pashas, and, after taking Sofia, united 
with the royal army and defeated Murad U. at Snaim. The 
impatience of the king and the severity of the winter then com- 
pelled him (February 1444) to return home, but not before he had 
utterly broken the sultan's power in Bosnia, Herzegovina, 
Servia, Bulgaria and Albania. No sooner had he regained 
Hungary than he received tempting offers from the pope, repre- 
sented by the legate Cardinal Cesarini, from George Brankovic, 
despot of Servia, and George Castriota, prince of Albania, to 
resume the war and realize his favourite idea of driving the Turk 
from Europe. All the preparations had been made, when 
Murad's envoys arrived in the royal camp at Szeged and offered 
a ten years' truce on advantageous terms. Both Hunyadi and 
Brankovid counselled their acceptance, and Wladisiaus swore on 
the Gospels to observe them. Two days later Cesarini received 
the tidings that a fleet of galleys had set off for the Bosporus 
to prevent Murad (who, crushed by his recent disasters, had 
retired to Asia Minor) from recrossing into Europe, and the 
cardinal reminded the king that he had sworn to co-operate by 
land if the western powers attacked the Turks by sea. He then, 
by virtue of his legatine powers, absolved the king from his 
second oath, and in July the Hungarian army recrossed the 
frontier and advanced towards the Euxine coast in order to 
inarch to Constantinople escorted by the galleys. Brankovid, . 
however, fearful of the sultan's vengeance in case of disaster, 
privately informed Murad of the advance of the Christian host, 
and prevented Castriota from joining it. On reaching Varna, 
the Hungarians found that the Venetian galleys had failed to 
prevent the transit of the sultan, who now confronted them with 
fourfold odds, and on the 10th of November 1444 they were 
utterly routed, Wladisiaus falling on the field and Hunyadi 
narrowly escaping. 

At the diet which met in February 1445 a provisional govern- 
ment, consisting of five Magyar captain-generals, was formed, 
Hunyadi receiving Transylvania and the ultra-Theissian counties 
as his district; but the resulting anarchy became unendurable, 
and on the 5th of June 1446 Hunyadi was unanimously elected 
governor of Hungary in the name of Ladislaus V., with regal 
powers. His first act as governor was to proceed against the 
German king Frederick III., who refused to deliver up the 
young king. After ravaging Styria, Carinthia and Carniola and 
threatening Vienna, Hunyadi's difficulties elsewhere compelled 
him to make a truce with Frederick for two years. In 1448 
he received a golden chain and the title of prince from Pope 
Nicholas V., and immediately afterwards resumed the war with 
the Turks. He lost the two days' battle of Kossovo (October 
i7th-ioth) owing to the treachery of Dan, hospodar of Wallachia, 
and of his old enemy Brankovid, who imprisoned him for a time 
in the dungeons of the fortress of Semendria; but he was 
ransomed by the Magyars, and, after composing his differences 
with his powerful and jealous enemies in Hungary, Led a punitive 
expedition against the Servian prince, who was compelled to 
accept most humiliating terms of peace. In 1450- Hunyadi went 
to Pressburg to negotiate with Frederick the terms of the 
surrender of Ladislaus V., but no agreement could be come to, 



whereupon the CiDeis and Hunyadi's ether 

him of aiming at the throne. He shut their mouth* by i 

all his dignities into the hands of the young king, 00 baa 1 

to Hungary at the beginning of U53. whereupon 1 ■ri a ft si 

created him count of Bettercze and captain-general <rf tat 

kingdom. 

Meanwhile the Turkish question had again become scat, 
and it was plain, after the fall of Constantinople in 1455. tbsi 
Mahommed II. was rallying his resources in order to swhjagrtr 
Hungary. His immediate objective was Belgrade, and thither, 
at the end of 145s, Hunyadi repaired, after a public TccoocSmtmm 
with all his enemies. At his own expense he provisioned aatf 
armed the fortress, and leaving in it a strong garrison nnder tit 
command of bis brother-in-law Mihaly SailAgyi and ha 0*1 
eldest son LAszlo, he proceeded to form a relief army and a flea 
of two hundred corvettes. To the eternal shame of the laagyaf 
nobles, he was left entirely to his own resources. His one mSj 
was the Franciscan, friar, Giovanni da Captstraao iq-v~), vfc» 
preached a crusade so effectually that the peasants and yeomanry. 
ill-armed (most of them had but slings and scythe*) but fist sf 
enthusiasm, flocked to the standard of Hunyadi. the kensd 
of whose host consisted of a small band of seasoned mescenaria 
and a few banderia of noble horsemen. On the 14th of July 
1456 Hunyadi with his flotilla destroyed the Turkish tee^ 
on the aist SzOagyi beat off a fierce assauh, and the same ear 
Hunyadi, taking advantage of the confusion of the Tacks. 
pursued them into, their camp, which he captured after 1 
desperate encounter. Mahommed thereupon raised tne siege 
and returned to Constantinople, and the independence 4 
Hungary was secured for another seventy years. The Magyan 
had, however, to pay dearly for this crowning victory, the hen 
dying of plague in his camp three weeks later (1 1 th August 1456)* 

We are so accustomed to regard Hunyadi as the incarnsiiea 
of Christian chivalry that we are apt to forget that he was a 
great captain and a great statesman as weU as a great hem. 
It has well been said that he fought with his head rather than 
with his arm. He was the first to recognize the insufficiency and 
the unreliability of the feudal levies, the first to employ a regular 
army on a large scale, the first to depend more upon stntefj 
and tactics than upon mere courage. He was in fact the £nt 
Hunga rian genera] in the modern sense of the word. It was only 
late in life that he learnt to read and write, and his Latin cat 
always very defective. He owed his Influence partly to bis 
natural genius and partly to the transparent integrity as4 
nobility of his character. He is described as an undersized, 
stalwart man with full, rosy checks, long snow-white locks, and 
bright, smiling, black eyes. 

Teleki, The Age of the Hunyadis in Hungary (Hung.). (Peak, 
D. Cs&nki 189: 



■£* . . . 

1852-1857; supplementary volumes by 
Fcjer, Genus, incunabula et virtus Joat 

iBuda. 1844); J. dc Chassin, Jean de Hunyad (Paris 1850): A. Par. 
.ife of Hunyadi (Hung.) (Budapest. 1873); V. Fraknoi, 



sanki 
Joannis Corvini de 



*S 



. m . (Hung.) (Budapest 

dinal Car jowl and his Missions ' " 



1873); V. Fraknoi. Cms 
, to Hungary (Hung.) (Budapest, 

1889); P. Frankl, Der Friede van Szeged in und die Cescktckie stints 
Bruclies (Leipzig, 1004); R. N. Bain, ,7 The Siege of Belgrade. 145ft." 
(Eng. Hilt. Rev., 189}); A. Bonfini, Rrrum uugaricarum hbri xfr, 
editio stptima (Leipzig. 1771). (R. N. B ) 

HUNYADI, LaSZL6 (1433-1457), Hungarian statesman and 
warrior, was the eldest son of Janos Hunyadi and Elizabeth 
Szil&gyi. At a very early age he accompanied his father » 
his campaigns. After the battle of Kossovo (144&) he was left 
for a time, as a hostage for his father, in the hands of George 
Brankovid, despot of Servia. In 1452 he was a member of the 
deputation which went to Vienna to receive back the Hungarian 
king Ladislaus V. In 1453 he was already ban of Croatia- 
Dalmatia. At the diet of Buda (1455) he resigned all his dignities, 
because of the accusations of Ulrich Cillei and the other enemies 
of his house, but a reconciliation was ultimately patched up and 
he>was betrothed to Maria, the daughter of the palatine, Listto 
Garai. After his father's death in 1456, he was declared by 
his arch-enemy Cillei (now governor of Hungary with unlimited 
power), responsible for the debts alleged to be owing by the 
elder Hunyadi to the state; but he defended himself so ably 
at the diet of Futak (October 1456) that Cillei feigned a leconda* 



HUNZA— HUPFELD 



957 



(ion, promising to protect the Hunyadfs on condition that they 
first surrendered all the royal castles entrusted to them. A 
beginning was to be made with the fortress of Belgrade, of which 
L&asl6 was commandant, Cillci intending to take the king with 
him to Belgrade and assassinate L4szl6 within its walls. But 
Hunyadi was warned betimes, and while admitting Ladislaus V. 
and Cillei, he excluded their army of mercenaries. On the 
following morning (oth of November 1456) Cillci, during a private 
interview, suddenly drew upon L4szl6, but was himself cut down 
by the commandant's friends, who rushed in on hearing the 
clash of weapons. The terrified young king, who had been 
privy to the plot, thereupon pardoned Hunyadi, and at a sub- 
sequent interview with his mother at Temesvar swore that he 
would protect the whole family. As a pledge of his sincerity 
he appointed Laszld lord treasurer and captain-general of the 
kingdom. Suspecting no evil, Hunyadi accompanied the king 
to Buda, but on arriving there was arrested on a charge of 
compassing Ladislaus's ruin, condemned to death without the 
observance of any legal formalities, and beheaded on the 16th 
of March 1457* 

See I. Acsady, History of the Hungarian Realm (Hung.), vol. L 
(Budapest, 1904). (R. N. B.) 

HUNZA (also known as Kanjut) and NAGAR, two small 
states on the North-west frontier of Kashmir, formerly under 
the administration of the Gilgit agency. The two states, which 
are divided by a river which runs in a bed 600 ft. wide between 
cliffs 300 ft. high, are inhabited generally by people of the same 
stock, speaking the same language, professing the same form 
of the Mahommedan religion, and ruled by princes sprung from 
the same family. Nevertheless they have been for centuries 
persistent rivals, and frequently at war with each other. 
Formerly Hunza was the more prominent of the two, because 
It held possession of the passes leading to the Pamirs, and could 
plunder the caravans on their way between Turkestan and 
India. But they are both shut up in a recess of the mountains, 
and were of no importance until about 1880, when the advance 
of Russia up to the frontiers of Afghanistan, and the great 
development of her military sources in Asia, increased the 
necessity for strengthening the British line of defence. This 
led to the establishment of the Gilgit agency, the occupation 
of Chitral, and the Hunza expedition of x8or, which asserted 
British authority over Hunza and- Nagar. The country is 
inhabited by a Dard race of the Yeshkun caste speaking Burishki. 
For a description of the people see Gilgit. The Hunza-Nagar 
Expedition of 1891, under Colonel A. Durand, was due to the 
defiant attitude of the Hunza and Nagar chiefs towards the 
British agent at Gilgit. The fort at Nilt was stormed, and after 
a fortnight's delay the cliffs (1000 ft. high) beyond it were also 
carried by assault. Hunza and Nagar were occupied, the chief 
of Nagar was reinstated on making his submission, and the 
half-brother of the raja of Hunza was installed as chief in the 
place of his brother. 

HUON OP BORDEAUX, hero of romance. The French 
chanson de gesle of Huon de Bordeaux dates from the first half of 
the 13th century, and marks the transition between, the epic 
chanson founded on national history and the roman d"avenlures. 
Huon, son of Seguin of Bordeaux, kills Chariot, the emperor's son, 
who had laid an ambush for him, without being aware of the rank 
of his assailant. He is condemned to be hanged by Charlemagne, 
but reprieved on condition that he visits the court of Gaudisse, 
the amir of Babylon, and brings back a handful of hair from the 
amir's beard and four of his back teeth, after having slain the 
greatest of his knights and three times kissed his daughter 
Esdarmondc. By the help of the fairy dwarf Oberon, Huon 
succeeds in this errand, in the course of which he meets with 
further adventures. The Chariot of the story has been identified 
by A. Longnon {Romania viii. 1-11) with Charles TEnfant, one 
of the sons of Charles the Bald and Irmintrude, who died in 866 in 
consequence of wounds inflicted by a certain Aubouin in precisely 
similar circumstances to those related in the romance. The epic 
father of Huon may safely be identified with Seguin, who was 
count of Bordeaux under Louis the Pious in 839, and died 



fighting against the Normans six years later. A Turin manu- 
script of the romance contains a prologue in the shape of a 
separate romance of Attberon, and four sequels, the Chanson 
d' Esclarmonde* the Chanson de Qarisse et Florent, the Chanson 
d'Ide et d'OUve and the Chanson de Codin. The same MS. con* 
tains in the romance of Les Lorrains a summary in seventeen 
lines of another version of the story, according to which Huon '3 
exile is due to his having slain a count in the emperor's palace. 
The poem exists in a later version in alexandrines, and, with its 
continuations, was put into prose in 1454 and printed by Michel 
lc Noir in 1516, since when it has appeared in many forms, 
notably in a beautifully printed and illustrated adaptation 
(1.808) in modern French by Gaston Paris. The romance had a 
great vogue in England through the translation (c. 1540) of John - 
Bourchier, Lord Berners, as Huon of Burdeuxe. The tale was 
dramatized and produced in Paris by the Confrene de la Passion 
in I S57» and in Philip Henslowe's diary there is a note of a 
performance of a play, Hewen of Burdoche, on the 28th of 
December x 593. For the literary fortune of the fairy part of the 
romance see Oberon. 

The Chanson de gesle of Huon de Bordeaux was edited by MM F. 
Guessard and C. Grandmaison for the Amiens pottos de la France in 
i860; Lord Bcrners's translation was edited lor the E.E.TJ5. by 
S. L. Lee in 1883-1885. See also L. Gauticr, Les Epoptes froncaises 
(2nd cd. vol. Hi. pp. 719-773); A. Graf, / complements deUa Chanson 
de Huon de Bordeaux (Halle, 1878) ; " Esclarmonde, &c.," by Max 
Schweigel, in Aust. u, Abhandl. . . .der roman. Phil. (Marburg, 1889); 
C. Voretzsch, Etnscke Studien (vol. i., Halle, 1900); Hist. IxU.dc la 
France (vol. xx\n., 1873). 

HUON PINE, botanical name Dacrydium Pranklinii, the most 
valuable timber tree of Tasmania, a member of the order Coni- 
ferae (see Gyhnosperms). It is a fine tree of pyramidal outline 
80 to 100 ft. high, and xo to 20 ft. in girth at the base, with 
slender pendulous much-divided branchlcts densely covered 
with the minute scale-like sharply-keeled bright green leaves. 
It occurs in swampy localities from the upper Huon river to Port 
Davey and Macquarie Harbour, but is less abundant than 
formerly owing to the demand for its limber, especially for 
ship- and boat-building. The wood is close-grained and easily 
worked. 

HU-PKH, a central province of China, bounded N. by Ho-nan, 
E. by Ngan-hui, S. by Hu-nan, and W. by Shen-si and Szech'uen. 
It has an area of 70,450 sq. m. and contains a population of 
34,000,000. Han-kow, Ich'ang and Shasi are the three open 
ports of the province, besides which it contains ten other pre- 
fect ural cities. The greater part of the province forms a plain, 
and its most noticeable feature is the Han river, which runs in a 
south-easterly direction across the province from its north- 
westerly comer to its junction with the Yangtsze Kiang at Han- 
kow. The products of the Han valley are exclusively agri- 
cultural, consisting of cotton, wheat, rape seed, tobacco and 
various kinds of beans. Vegetable tallow is also exported in 
large quantities from this part of Hu-peh. Gold is found in the 
Han, but not in sufficient quantities to make working it more 
than barely remunerative. It is washed every winter from 
banks of coarse gravel, a little above I-ch'eng Hien, on which it 
is deposited by the river. Every winter the supply is exhausted 
by the washers, and every summer it is renewed by the river. 
Baron von Richthofen reckoned that the digger earned from 
50 to 150 cash (i.e. about ijd. to 4$d.) a day. Only One waggon 
road leads northwards from Hu-peh, and that is to Nan-yang Fu 
in Ho-nan, where it forks, one branch going to Peking by way of 
K'ai-feng Fu, and the other into Shan-si by Ho-nan Fu. 

HUPFELD, HERMANN (1 706-1866.), German Orientalist and 
Biblical commentator, was born on the 31st of March 1796 at 
Marburg, where he studied philosophy and theology from 1813 
to 1 81 7; in 1819 he became a teacher in the gymnasium at 
Hanau, but in 1822 resigned that appointment. After -studying 
for some time at Halle, he in 1824 settled as Prtvatdocent in 
philosophy at that university, and in the following year was 
appointed extraordinary professor of theology at Marburg. 
There he received the ordinary professorships of Oriental 
languages and of theology in 1827 and 1830 respectively; 
thirteen years later he removed as successor of Wilhelm Gescnius 



958 



HURD— HURDY-GURDY 



(1786-1841) to Halle. In 1865 he was accused by some theo- 
logians of the Hengsienberg school of heretical doctrines. From 
this charge, however, he successfully cleared himself, the entire 
theological faculty, including Julius Muller (1801-1878) and 
August Tholuck (1790-1877), bearing testimony to his sufficient 
orthodoxy. He died at Halle on the 34th of April 1866. 
■ His earliest works in the department of Semitic philology (Exerci- 
tationes Acthiopicae, 1825, and D* ewundanda ration* lexicographic* 
SemUicae, 1827) were followed by the first part (1841), mainly 
historical and critical, of an AusfUhrliche Hebrdische Grammatik, 
which he did not live to complete, and by a treatise on the early 
history of Hebrew grammar among the Jews (De rti grammatical 
apud Judaeos initiis antiquissimisque scripioribus, Halle, 1846). His 
principal contribution to Biblical literature, the excgetical and 
critical Obersetxung und Auslegung der Psalmcn, began to appear in 
' " " ' in 1861 (2nd ed. by E. Riehm, 1867-1871, 
Things are Ober Begriff und Method* der 
nleitung (Marburg, 1844); De primilwa el 
tos ratione (Halle, 1 851-1864); Die Quellen 



titer sucht (Berlin, 1853); Die heutige theo- 
he Theohgie und Schrifterkldrunt (1861). 
is Hupfeld (Halle, 1867); W. Kay, Crisis 



the article by A. Kamphausen m Band 
lealencyklopddt* (1900). 

HURD, RICHARD (1720-1808), English divine and writer, 
bishop of Worcester, was born at Congreve,.in the parish of 
Penkridge, Staffordshire, where his father was a farmer, on the 
13th of January 1720. He was educated at the grammar- 
school of Brewood and at Emmanuel College, Cambridge. He 
took his B.A. degree in 1739, and in 1742 he proceeded M.A. and 
became a fellow of his college. In the same year he was ordained 
deacon, and given charge of the parish of Rcymerston, Norfolk, 
but he returned to Cambridge early In 1743. He was ordained 
priest in 1744. In 1748 he published some Remarks on an 
Enquiry into the Rejection of Christian Miracles by the HcatJicns 
(1746), by William Weston, a fellow of St John's College, 
Cambridge. He prepared editions, which won the praise of 
Edward Gibbon, 1 of the Ars poetica and Epistola ad Pisones 
(x749)i and the Epistola ad Auguslum (1751) of Horace. A com- 
pliment in the preface to the edition of 1749 was the starting-point 
of a lasting friendship with William Warburton, through whose 
influence he was appointed one of the preachers at Whitehall 
in 1750. In 1765 he was appointed preacher at Lincoln's Inn, 
and in 1767 he became archdeacon of Gloucester. In 176S he 
proceeded D.D. at Cambridge, and delivered at Lincoln's Inn the 
first Warburton lectures, which were published later (1772) as 
An Introduction to the Study of the Prophecies concerning the 
Christian Church. He became bishop of Lichfield and Coventry 
in 1774. and two years later was selected to be tutor to the prince 
of Wales and the duke of York. In 178 1 he was translated to the 
see of Worcester. He lived chiefly at Hartlebury Castle, where he 
built a fine library, to which he transferred Alexander Pope's and 
Warburton's books, purchased on the lattcr's death. He was 
extremely popular at court, and in 1783, on the death of Arch- 
bishop Cornwallis, the king pressed him to accept the primacy, 
but Hurd, who was known, says Madame d'Arblay, as " The 
Beauty of Holiness,' 1 declined it as a charge not suited to his 
temper and talents, and much too heavy for him to sustain. 
He died, unmarried, on the 28th of May 1808. 

Hurd's Letters on Chivalry and Romance (1762) retain a certain 
interest for their importance in the. history of the romantic 
movement, which they did something to stimulate. They were 
written in continuation of a dialogue on the age of Queen 
Elizabeth included in bis Moral and Political Dialogues (1759)* 
Two later dialogues On the Uses of Foreign Travel were printed in 
1763. Hurd wrote two acrimonious defences of Warburton: 
On the Delicacy of Friendship (1755)1 in answer to Dr J. Jortin; 
and a Letter (1764) to Dr Thomas Lcland, who had criticized 
Warburton's Doctrine of Grace. He edited the Works of William 
Warburton, the Select Works (1772) of Abraham Cowley, and 
left materials for an edition (6 vols., 181 1) of Addison. His 
own works appeared in a collected edition in 8 vols, in 
1811. 

1 " Examination of Dr Hurd's Commentary on Horace's Ep i s tl es " 
{Misc. Works, cd. John, Lord Sheffield, 1837, pp. 403-427). 



The chief sources for Bishop Hurd's biography ate m 

occurrences in the life of the author," written by himself and in 
fixed to vol. i. of his works (t8il); u Memoirs of Dr Hard " & tit 
Ecclesiastical and University . . . Register (1809). pp. 399- 4V 
John Nichols, Literary anecdotes, vol vi. (1812). pp. 466-61J ; Fraaca 
Kilvcrt, Memoirs of . . . Richard Hurd (i860), giving sekxtiau 
from Hurd's commonplace book, some correspondence, and eatr&rra 
from contemporary accounts of the bishop. A review of this »cri, 
entitled " Bishop Hurd and his Contcmporaries, , • appeared is tar 
North British Review, vol. xxxiv. (1861), pp. 375-39*- 

HURDLB (O. Eng. kyrdd, cognate with such Teutonic fans 
as Ger. HUrde, Dutch horde, Eng. " hoarding "; in pne-Tcuioe* 
languages the word appears in Gr. tcupria, wkkerwork, exert 
Lat. cratis, basket, cf. "crate," "grate"), ft movable tem- 
porary fence, formed of a framework of light timber, wattle* 
with smaller pieces of hazel, willow or other pliable wood, sr 
constructed on the plan of a light five-barred field sate, f&ed 
in with brushwood. -Similar movable frames can be mode at 
iron, wire or other material A construction of the same type 
is used in military engineering and fortification as a f o rm da ti ra 
for a temporary roadway across boggy ground or as a bockisf 
for earthworks. 

HURDLB RACING, running races over short distances, u. 
intervals in which a number of hurdles, or fence-like otwlaHn, 
must be jumped. This has always been a favourite bancs el 
track athletics, the usual distances being 120 yds., 220 yds. a&d 
440 yds. The 120 yds. hurdle race is run over ten bercLo 
3 ft. 6 in. high and 10 yds. apart, with a space of 15 yds. fr«m 
the start to the first hurdle and a like distance from the ha 
hurdle to the finish. In Great Britain the hurdles ate awe* 
and the race is run on grass; in America the hurdles, altaosgt 
of the same height, are not fixed, and the races are run on tat 
cinder track. The " low hurdle race " of 220 yds. is ran ova- 
ten hurdles 2 ft. 6. in. high and 20 yds. apart, with like rffst a nm 
between the start and the first hurdle and between the Is* 
hurdle and the finish. The record time for the 120 yds. race 
on grass is isf sees., and on cinders 15& sees., both 4 
which were performed by A. C. Kraenzlein, who also holds tie 
record for the 220 yds. low hurdle race, 33I sees. For 440 y*. 
.over hurdles the record time is 57! sees., by T. M. Donovan, 
and by J. B. Densham at Kennington Oval in 1907. 

HURDY-GURDY (Fr. tidied mamvclle, symphonic or ckjfmtt 
d roue; Ger. Bauer nlcier, Deulschdeitr, BettlerUier, RadUur, 
Ital. lira tcdesca, lira rusiica, lira pagana), now loosely ssed si 
a synonym for any grinding organ, but strictly a medieval 
drone instrument with strings set in vibration by the frictice 
of a wheel, being a development of the or gam strum (q.v.) reduced 
in size so that it could be conveniently played by one penes 
instead of two. It consisted of a box or sounrkhest, sometima 
rectangular, but more generally having the outline of the guitar; 
inside it had a wheel, covered with leather and rosined, and worked 
by means of a crank at the tail end of the instrument. On the 
fingerboard were placed movable frets or keys, which, on beef 
depressed, stopped the strings, at points corresponding to the 
diatonic intervals of the scale. At first there were 4 strings, 
later 6. In the organistrum three strings, acted on simultane- 
ously by the keys, produced the rude harmony known as organ**. 
When this passed out of favour, superseded by the first beginnings 
of polyphony over a pedal bass, the organistrum gave place to 
the hurdy-gurdy. Instead of acting on all the strings, the keyi 
now affected the first string only, or " chanterelle," though is 
some cases certain keys, made longer, also reached the ibirt 
string or " trompetlc "; the result was that a diatonic melody 
could be played on the chanterelles. The other open string* 
always sounded simultaneously as long as the wheel was turned, 
like drones on the bag-pipe. 

The hurdy-gurdy originated in France at the time when the 
Paris School or Old French School was laying the foundations of 
counterpoint and polyphony. During the 1 jth and 14th centuries 
it was known by the name of Symphonic or Chyjonu, and is 
Germany Lira or Leyer. Its popularity remained un diminished 
in France until late in the 18th century. Although the hurdy- 
gurdy never obtained recognition among serious musicians is 
Germany, the idea embodied in the mrchanfom stimulated 



HURLSTONE— HURRY 



959 



Ingenuity, the result being such musical curiosities as the Gagcn- 
ucrk or Gcigcn-Clcvlcymbcl of Hans Hay den of Nuremberg 
(c. 1600), a harpsichord in which the strings, instead of being 
plucked by quills, were set in vibration by friction of one of the 
little steel wheels, covered with parchment and well rosined, 
which were kept rotating by means of a large wheel and » series of 
cylinders worked by treadles. Other instruments of similar type 
were the BogencUnier invented by Joh. Hohlfeld of Berlin in 
2751 and the Bogenfliigel by C. A. Meyer of Cdrlitz in 1794. In 
Adam Walker's CeUslina (1772) the friction was provided by a 
running band instead of -a bow. (K. S.) 

HURLSTONR, FREDERICK YBATES (1 800-1 869), English 
painter, was born in London, his father being a proprietor of the 
Morning Chronicle. His grand-uncle, Richard Huristone, had 
been a well-known portrait-painter a generation earlier. F. Y. 
Huristone studied under Sir W. Beechey, Sir T. Lawrence and 
B. R. Haydon, and in 1820 became a student at the Royal 
Academy, where he soon began to exhibit. In 1823 he won the 
Academy's gold medal for historical painting. In 1831 he was 
elected to the Society of British Artists, of which in 1835 he 
became president; it was to their exhibitions that he sent most 
of his pictures, as he became a pronounced critic of the manage- 
ment of the Academy. He died in London on the xoth of June 
1869. His historical paintings and portraits were very numerous. 
Some of the most representative are " A Venetian Page " (1824), 
" The Enchantress Armida " (1831), " Eros " (1836), " Prisoner 
of Chiflon" (1837), "Girl of Sorrento" (1847), "Boabdil" 
(1854), and his portrait of the 7th earl of Cavan (1833). 

HURON (a French term, from hurt, bristled, early used as 
an expression of contempt, signifying "lout "), a nickname given 
by the French when first in Canada to certain Indian tribes 
of Iroquoian stock, occupying a territory, which similarly was 
called Huronia, in Ontario, and constituting a confederation called 
in their own tongue Wendat (" islanders "), which was corrupted 
by the English into Yendat, Guyandotte and then Wyandot. 
The name persists for the small section of " Hurons of Lorette," 
in Quebec, but the remnant of the old Huron Confederacy which 
after its dispersal in the 17th century settled in Ohio and was 
afterwards removed to Oklahoma is generally called Wyandot. 
For their history see Wyandot, and Indians, North American 
(under " Indian Wars "; Algonkian and Iroquoian). 

Sec Handbook of American Indians (Washington, 1907), a.v. 
" Huron." 

HURON, the second largest of the Great Lakes of North 
America, including Georgian Bay and the channel north of 
Manitoulin Island, which are always associated with it. It 
lies between the parallels of 43° and 46 20' N. and between 
the meridians of 8o° and 84 W., and is bounded W. by the 
state of Michigan, and N. and E. by the province of Ontario, 
Georgian Bay and North Channel being wholly within Canadian 
territory. The main portion of the lake is 235 m. long from 
the Strait of Mackinac to St Clair river, and 98 m. wide on the 
45th parallel of latitude. Georgian Bay is 125 m. long, with 
a. greatest width of 60 m., while North Channel is 120 m. long, 
with an extreme width of 16 m., the whole lake having an area 
of 23,200 sq. m. The surface is 581 ft. above the sea. The 
main lake reaches a depth of 802 ft.; Georgian bay shows 
depths, especially near its west shore, of over 300 ft.; North 
Channel has depths of 180 ft. Lake Huron is 20 ft. lower than 
Lake Superior, whose waters it receives at its northern extremity 
through St. Mary river, is on the same level as Lake Michigan, 
which connects with its north-west extremity through the 
Strait of Mackinac, and is nearly 9 ft. higher than Lake 
Erie, into which it discharges at its south extremity through 
St Clair river. 

On the mainland, the north and east shores are of gneisses and 
granites of archaean age, with a broken and hilly surface rising in 

J)laccs to 600 ft. above the lake and giving a profusion of islands 
ollowing the whole shore line from the river St Mary to Waubau- 
shene at the extreme east end of Georgian bay. Manitoulin Island 
and the Saujreen Peninsula are comparatively flat and underlaid by 
a level bed of Trenton limestone. The southern shores, skirting the 
peninsula of Michigan, arc flat. The rock formations are of sand- 



from inlet to outlet. At the south end it turns and pastes up 
the east coast. There is also a return current south of Manitoulin 
Island and a current, sometimes attaining a strength of half a 
knot, passes into Georgian bay through the main entrance. Ice 
and navigation conditions and yearly levels are similar to those 
on the other Great Lakes (q.v.). 

Practically all the United States traffic is confined to vessels 
passing through the main lake between Lakes Superior and 
Michigan and Lake Erie, but on the Canadian side are several 
railway termini which receive grain mostly from Lake Superior, 
and deliver mixed freight to ports on that lake. The chief of 
these are Parry Sound, Midland, Victoria Harbour, ColHngwood, 
Owen Sound, Southampton, Kincardine, Goderich and Sarnia, 
at the outlet of the lake. The construction of a ship canal to 
connect Georgian bay with Montreal by way of French river, 
Lake Nipissing and Ottawa river began in 191a A river and 
lake route with connecting canals, in all about 440 m. long, 
will be opened for vessels of 20 ft. draught at a cost estimated 
at £20,000,000 saving some 340 miles in the distance from 
Lake Superior or Lake Michigan to the sea. 

There is a large fishing industry in Lake Huron, the Canadian 
catch being valued at over a quarter million dollars per annum. 
Salmon trout {Salvdinus namaycush, Walb.) and whitefish 
(Coregonus dupeiformis, Mitchill) are the most numerous and 
valuable. Amongst the islands on the east shore of Georgian 
bay, which are greatly frequented as a summer resort, black 
bass (mkropUrus) and maskinonge (Esox nobilior, Le Sueur) 
are a great attraction to anglers. 

See Georgian Bay and North Channel Pilot, Department of Marine 
and Fisheries (Ottawa, 1903) ; Sailing Directions for Lake Huron, 
Canadian Shore, Department of Marine and Fisheries (Ottawa, 
1905); Bulletin No. 17, Survey of Northern and North-Western Lakes, 
United States, War Department (Washington, 1907); U.S. Hydro- 
graphic Office Publication, No. 108 C. Sailing Direclionsfor Lake Huron, 
&c. U.S. Navy Department (Washington, 1901). 

HURRICANE, a wind-storm of great force and violence, 
originally as experienced in the West Indies; it is now used to 
describe similar storms in other regions, except in the East 
Indies and the Chinese seas, where they are generally known 
as " typhoons." Hurricane is the strongest force of wind in 
the Beaufort scale. The Caribbean word huracan was introduced 
by the Portuguese, Spanish and Dutch explorers of the 15th and 
1 6th centuries into many European languages, as in Span. 
huracan, Portu. furacao, Ital. uracane, Fr. ouragan, and in 
Swed., Ger. and Dutch as orkan, or orkaan. A " hurricane-deck " 
is an upper deck on a steamer which protects the lower one, 
and incidentally serves as a promenade. 

HURRY (or Urry), SIR JOHN (d. 1650), British soldier, 
was born in Aberdeenshire, and saw much service as a young 
man in Germany. In 1641 he returned home and became 
Licut.-Colonel in a Scottish regiment. At the end of the 
same year he was involved in the plot known as the " Incident.'* 
At the outbreak of the Civil War Hurry joined the army of the 
earl of Essex, and was distinguished at Edgehill and Brentford. 
Early in 1643 he deserted to the Royalists, bringing with him 
information on which Rupert acted at once. Thus was brought 
about the action of Chalgrove Field, where Hurry again showed 
conspicuous valour; he was knighted on the same evening. 
In 1644 h * was with Rupert at Marston Moor, where with Lucas 
he led the victorious left wing of horse. But a little later, 
thinking the King's cause lost, he again deserted, and eventually 
was sent with Baillie against Montrose in the Highlands. His 



960 



HURST— HURSTMONCEAUX 



detached operations were conducted with great skill, but his 
attempt to surprise Montrose's camp at Auldearn ended in 
a complete disaster, partly on account of the accident of the 
men discharging their pieces before starting 00 the march. 
Soon afterwards he once more joined Charles's party, and he 
was taken prisoner in the disastrous campaign of Preston (1648). 
Sir John Hurry was Montrose's Major-Gencral in the last 
desperate attempt of the Scottish Royalists. Taken at Carbis- 
dale, he was beheaded at Edinburgh, May 29th, 165a A soldier 
of fortune of great bravery, experience and skill, his frequent 
changes of front were due rather to laxity of political principles 
than to any calculated idea of treason. 

HURST, JOHN FLETCHER (1 834-1003), American Methodist 
Episcopal bishop, was born in Salem, Dorchester county, 
Maryland, on the 17th of August 1834. He graduated at 
Dickinson College in 1854, and in 1856 went to Germany and 
studied at Halle and Heidelberg. From 1858 to 1867 he was 
engaged in pastoral work in America, and from 1867 to 187 1 he 
taught in Methodist mission institutes in Germany. In 1871-1 873 
he was professor of historical theology at Drew Theological 
Seminary, Madison, New Jersey, of which he was president 
from 1873 till 1880, when he was made a bishop. He died at 
Bethesda, Maryland, on the 4th of May 1003. Bishop Hurst, 
by his splendid devotion in 1876-1879, recovered the endowment 
of Drew Theological Seminary, lost by the failure in 1876 of 
Daniel Drew, its founder; and with McCUntock and Crooks he 
improved the quality of Methodist scholarship. The American 
University (Methodist Episcopal) at Washington, D.C., for 
postgraduate work was the outcome of his projects, and he 
was its chancellor from 1891 to his death. 



History of Rationalism (1866); Hagenbsrh'i 
< Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries (2 vt*s-, 
*s John's Gospel: Apologeiical Lectures (ite}>, 
on Ike Epistle to Ike Ramans (1869): hiartyn 
Contribution la the History of the Reformaltam 
and revision of Thiemann's Martyrer Jet 



Outlines of Bible History (1873); Ontlinei ef 
Life and Literature in the Fatherland (i£; 



Germany; a brief pamphlet. Our Thtaier.ccl 
otheca Theolotica (1883), a compilation by nu 
». W. Gillmore in 1895 under the title LitcralMrt 
the Country and People of India, and CW^n 
1 of his travels in 1884-1885 when he held the 
; and several church histories (Chautauqua 
I together as A Short History of the Christen 



HURSTMONCEAUX (also Hebstmonceux), a village in tbe 
Eastbourne parliamentary division of Sussex, England, 9 m. NX 
of Eastbourne. Pop. (1901) 1429. The village takes its name 
from Waleran de Monceux, lord of the manor alter tbe Conquest, 
but the castle, for the picturesque ruins of which the vilia^t 
is famous, was built in the reign of Henry VI. by Sir Roger de 
Fiennes. It is moated, and is a fine specimen of istb-century 
brickwork, the buildings covering an almost square quadracgle 
measuring about 70 yds. in the side. Towers flank the corners, 
and there is a beautiful turreted entrance gate, but only the 
foundations of most of the buildings ranged round the iaaer 
courts are to be traced. The church of All Saints is in the iua 
Early English, and contains interesting monuments to membra 
of the Fiennes family and others. In the churchyard is M 
tomb of Archdeacon Julius Charles Hare, the theologian OS5-1. 
Much material from the castle was used in the erection d 
Hurstmonceaux Place, a mansion of the 18th century. 



END Or THIRTEENTH VOLUME 



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