gum : && p i fe o** (.:j ENCYCLOPEDIA LONDINENSIS M * ft OR, UNIVERSAL DICTIONARY OF ARTS, SCIENCES, AND LITERATURE, COMPREHENDING, UNDER ONE GENERAL ALPHABETICAL ARRANGEMENT, ALL THE WORDS AND SUBSTANCE OF EVERY KIND OF DICTIONARY EXTANT IN THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE. IN WHICH THE IMPROVED DEPARTMENTS OF THE MECHANICAL ARTS, THE LIBERAL SCIENCES, THE HIGHER MATHEMATICS, AND THE SEVERAL BRANCHES OF POLITE LITERATURE, ABE SELECTED FROM THE ACTS, MEMOIRS, AND TRANSACTIONS, OF THE MOST EMINENT LITERARY SOCIETIES, IN EUROPE, ASIA, AND AMERICA. FORMING A COMPREHENSIVE VIEW OF THE RISE, PROGRESS, AND PRESENT STATE, OF HUMAN LEARNING IN EVERY PART OF THE WORLD. EMBELLISHED BY A MOST MAGNIFICENT SET OF COPPER PLATE ENGRAVINGS , i ILLUSTRATING, AMONGST OTHER INTERESTING SUBJECTS, THE MOST CURIOUS, RARE, AND ELEGANT, PRODUCTIONS OF NATURE, IN EVERY PART OF THE UNIVERSE-} ' AND ENRTCHED WITH PORTRAITS OF EMINENT AND LEARNED PERSONAGES, IN AL-L AGES OF THE WORLD. TOGETHER WITH A COMPREHENSIVE SYSTEM OF HERALDRY, 'FINELY ILLUMINATED, AND ENRICHED WITH THE ARMORIAL BEARINGS OF THE ROYAL FAMILY-; OF THE ENGLISH, SCOTCH, AND IRISH, NOBILITY; OF THE BARONETS OF THE UNITED KINGDOM; AND OF NUMEROUS DISTINGUISHED FAMILIES, PATRONS OF THIS WORK. COMPILED, DIGESTED, AND ARRANGED, 33y JOHN WILKES, of MILLAND HOUSE, in the COUNTY of SUSSEX, Esquire; ASSISTED BY EMINENT SCHOLARS OF THE ENGLISH, SCOTCH, AND IRISH, UNIVERSITIES. VOLUME IV. SlcmDon : PRINTED FOR THE PROPRIETORS, BY J. ADLARD, DUKE-STREET, WEST SMITHFIELD; SOLD AT THS ENCYCLOPAEDIA OFFICE, AVE-M ARIA-LANE, ST. PAUL’S; BY J. WHITE, FLEET-STREET; AND CHAMPANTE AND WHITROW, JEWRY-STREET, ALDGATE. — se»!©i»se— — IS 10. • JVore audiendi sunt homines imperiti, qui humuno ingenio majorem, vel inutilem , ct rebus gerendis adverfam •jrohvpuBe tat criminantur. Eft scilicet quit dam Scientiurum cognatio et conciliatio ; unde et ’EyxvHhovrcuhKiv xocant Grceci ; ut in un&- perfeftus did nequeat, qui cater as non attigerit. — Morhofi Polyhistor, 1. i. c. i. s. i. Those inexperienced perfons, who make it a charge of accufation againft variety and extenfrve learning, that it exceeds the compafs of human ability, or is ufelefs, or that it is an impediment to tranfa6ling bufinefs, deferve no attention. For there is between the Sciences a degree of natural and clofe connexion; from which the Greeks ufe the term « Encyclopedia so that no one can be perfe6t in any one Science, who has not attained to fome knowledge of the /te 5 fiiO \l> Ll ScOlpb DESCRIPTION OF THE FRONTISPIECE ILLUSTRATING CHEMISTRY. CHEMISTRY IS REPRESENTED BY A VENERABLE PHILOSOPHER SEATED NEAR A SAND- BATH FURNACE, IN THE ACT OF PERFORMING THE CHEMICAL ANALYSIS, SURROUNDED BY VARIOUS INSTRUMENTS. BEHIND HIM STANDS A FEMALE CLOTHED IN A SAF¬ FRON-COLOURED VEST, WITH A CORONET UPON HER HEAD, AND A GLOBE IN HER RIGHT HAND, ATTENTIVELY OBSERVING A YOUNG MAN WHO IS BUSILY EMPLOYED IN MELTING A DIAMOND BY THE FORCE OF A LENS ACTED UPON BY THE RAYS OF THE SUN, No. 736. ENCYCLOPAEDIA LONDINENSIS; OR, AN UNIVERSAL DICTIONARY O F ARTS, SCIENCES, and LITERATURE, i. ■■■■! i ■ i !■ » C A U AU'SA MATRIMO'NII PRAILO'CUTI, in law, a writ which lies where a woman gives land to a man in fee Ample, &c. to the intentTie fhould marry her, and he refufeth to do it in any reafonable time, being thereunto re¬ quired. Rrg. Orig. 66.. If a woman makes a feoffment to a ftranger, of land in fee, to the intent to infeoff her, and one who fhall be her hufband; if the marriage fli all not take effect, (he fhall have the writ of cauja matrimonii pr x- iocuti againft the ftranger, notwithftanding the deed of feoff¬ ment beabfolute. New. Nat. Br. 4 56. A woman infeoffed a man upon condition that he fliould take her to wife, and he had a wife at the time of the feoffment ; and afterwards the woman, for not performing the condition, entered again into the land, and her entry was adjudged lawful, though upon a fecond feoffee. Lib. AJj. 40. Ed. III. The hufband and wife may fue the writ caufa matrimonii prxlo- cnti againft another who ought to have married her: but if a man give lands to a woman to the intent to marry him, although the woman will not marry him, & c. he fhall not have his remedy by writ caufa matrimonii pra.locu.ti. New Nat. Br. 455. CAU'SABLE, adj. [from caifo, low I.at.] That which may be caufed, or effected by a caufe. — That may be mi- rac-u lou fly effected in one, which is naturally caufable in another. Brown. CAU'SAL, adj. \_caufalis, low Lat.] Relating to caufes ; implying or containing caufes. — Caujal proportions are, where two proportions are joined by caufal particles; as, houfes were not built, that they might be deitroyed; Re- hoboam was unhappy, becaufe he followed evil counfel. Waits. CAUSA'LITY, adj. [canfalitas, low Lat.] The agency of a caufe; the quality of caufing. — As God created all tilings,- fo is he beyond and in them all, in his very elfence, ■as being the foul of their caufalities, and the effential caufe of their exiffences. Brown. CAU'SALLY, adv. According to the order or feries of caufes. — Thusmayit.be more caufally made out, what Hippocrates affirmeth. Brown. C AU'SA M NO'BIS SIGNPFICF.S, in law, a writ di¬ rected to a mayor of a town, &c. who was by the king’s writ commanded to give feifin of lands to the king’s gran¬ tee, on his delaying to do it, requiring him to Jhew caufe ■why he fo delays tire performance of his duty. CAUS A'TION, f. [from raa/r, low Lat.] The adt or power of caufing. — Thus doth he fometimes delude us in the conceits of (tars and meteors, beffdes their allowable actions, afcribing effects thereunto of independent caufa- tion. Brown. VOL. IV. No. 173. C A U CAU'SATIVE, adj. [a term in grammar. ] That which expreffes a cattle or reafon. CAU'SATOR, f. [from caufo, low Lat.] A caufer; an authorof any efteCt. CAUSE, yi Zcaufa> Lat.] That which produces or ef¬ fects any thing; the efficient. — The wile and leirnedp amongft the very heathens themfelves, have all acknow¬ ledged fome firft caufe , whereupon originally the being of all things dependeth ; neither have they otherwife fpoken of that caufe, than as an agent, which, knowing what and why it workeih, obferveth, in working, a mod exact order or law. Hooker. — Caufe is a fubftance exerting its power into a<5t, to make one thing begin to be. Locke. — The rea¬ fon; motive to any thing : Thus, royal fir ! to fee you landed here. Was caufe enough. of triumph for a year. Dryden. Reafon of debate; fubjedt of litigation. — Hear the caufes between your brethren, and judge rightecully between every man and his brother, and the ftranger that is with him. Deuteronomy. — Side; party; ground or principle T action or oppofition : Ere to thy caufe and thee my heart inclin’d, Or love to party had feduc’d my mind. Ticke [. CAUSE, A among civilians, the fame with, or rather the caufe of, aCtion. See Action. CAUSE, A among phyficians, is applied to the caufe of adifeafe ; which is defined by Galen to be, that during the prelence of which we are ill, and which being remo¬ ved, the diforder immediately ceafes. The doctrine of the caufes of difeafes is called Etio loc y. It is often more difficult to difeover the caufes of diforders, than to preferibe for their cure when the caufe is known; and it is by this (kill and fagacity in making fitch difcpveries, that a phyfician flievvs how much he is above the ordinary prac¬ tice of an apothecary. Great confufion is met with in moft writers on this fubject ; and indeed it is hard to fay from vvhofe theory we fhall proceed to an ufeful practice. One fays that the caufes of difeafes are in the fluids; an¬ other fixes them in the fol ids ; fome proceed from chemi¬ cal, and others from mechanical, principles, See. But when reafoning a priori is laid afide, when nature is fiudied, and theory is confirmed only by clinical obfervation, this fubjeff, fo perplexed, may gradually unfold, and a theory be formed, which, fo far as it extends, will happily convert this uncertain fcienceinto an art. It is foRie latr - fa 61 ion to be able to account for morbid fymptoms, though the difeafes which give rife to them may. be in their own 2 CAUSE. nature incurable ; for, where we cannot, relieye, we ihall be at leti.lt prevented from doing harm, and alfo enabled to make judicious prognoftics. Difeafes ftiould he diftingui lhed by their caufes, and not their effects ; for this method, in many inftances, Boerhaave and Van Swie- ten are truly admirable. It is owned that men of experi¬ ence may be led from the effects of a difeafe to the know¬ ledge of itscaufe in fome cafes; but then the curative in¬ dications can only be properly taken from the knowledge of the true caufe. Molt difeafes have four- caufes, viz. the prcdifpofng, primary, antecedent, and conjunct. The three halt are called morbific caufes. The predifpofing caufe , alfo called caufa proegumina , is that which renders the body more tit to re-, eeive a morbid imprefiion, when a primary caufe is ap¬ plied; or difpofes the body to fuller in one or other mode more readily than in any different ones. This kind of caufe is a fault in the original confutation., or elfe it is induced in time by fome accident. Of itfelf it neither conftitmes nor produces a diforder; but, when certain morbid caufes occur, it favours their effects ; e. g. a long neck and Hat break difpofe to a confumption ; a lhort neck to an apo¬ plexy; fiendernef's to a pain in the lide; rigid fibres to in¬ flammation and fever; lax fibres to a cachexy and dropfyj . &c. Some difeafes pave the way for others, as an all lima for a dropfy; colic for thepalfy ; fmall-pox and mealies for an inflammation in the eyes and a confumption, &c. And a part once injured, is more fubjeft to be affeCted in the fame way again. The primary caufe- ,, called alfo the active, ejficient, or remote, excites the predifpofing caufe to action, or thefe caufes applied to the body that is predif- pofed thereto, excite difeafes; and are generally an error in one or more of" the non-naturals; as wounds, contu- fions, compreffions, morbid effluvia, &c. The antecedent caufic, called alfo the mediate, is ufually in the excreta and retenta. In mod complaints, the non- naturals firfl difor¬ der fome of the evacuations, this is the primary caufe of the difeafe; then thefe evacuations affedt the blood and juices, which is the fecond caufe; the blood and juices thus affeCted, will not fail todifturb the aCtion of the parts, which is the lalt and immediate caufe, of difeafe, and in which con- lilts the nature of ail dileafes. The immediate, called alfo the proximate, continent, hidden, and internal, are thofe which, taken all together, immediately contt-itute and continue the prefent difeafe; the removal of which caufes is the cure ; as the air in an emphyfema, and the blood in an aneurifm. A knowledge of the proximate caufe enables 11s to judge of the nature of the complaint and its remedies, which may be learnt from, firft, a fore-knowledge of the nature and powers of the remote caufes; fecondly, from collating the different fymptoms of the difeafe together, and, by ftriCf reafoning, to reduce them to one Ample caufe; thirdly, front the pernicious or falutary effeffls of the reme¬ dies applied during the difeafe; fourthly, .by a careful in- ipection of dead bodies. In this laft, likewife, much fkill in the appearances met with in dead bodies is required, left the effeCts of the caufes fltould be miltaken for the caufes themfelves. The proximate caufe is often difficult to be difeovered, fomethr.es irnpoffible ; and. general caufes are very numerous, hence the difficulty to fix on the particular one. However, the immediate caufe, wherever it can, ought to be difco.vered, becaufe upon that, depends the inode of cure which fhould be adopted, and from whence we have, every right to expeCt fuccefs in all cunt-, ble cafes. Upon the whole, if we can find out the nature of the predifpofing, the primary, and the proximate, caufe, we (hall be furnithed with every material on which to found a rational praCtice, whether our endeavours are di¬ rected to prevent, palliate, or cure, difeafe. SeeMEDiciNE. CAUSES and EFFECTS, as appertaining to judicial proceedings, the law hath refpedt to the caufe or begin¬ ning of a thing, as the principal part on which all other things are founded; and herein the next, and not the re¬ mote, caufe, is moftly looked upon, except it be incoviaous and criminal things ; and therefore that which is not good at firft will not be fo afterwards; for Inch as is the caufe-, fuch is the effeiff. Plowd. 208. If an infant or femme- covert. make a will, and publ.lh. it, and after die of full age, or lole, the w ill is of no force, by reafon of the origi¬ nal caufe of infancy and coverture. Finch. 12. Where the caufe ceafeth, t lire effeit or thing will ceafe. Co. Lit. it,. To CAUSE, v. a. To effect as an agent; to produce _ Never was man whofe apprehenfions are fober, and by a. p.cniive infpection advifed, but hath found, by an irrelilt- i ble neceflity, one everlafting being, all for ever caufing, and all for ev.er fuftaining. Raleigh. We derive our ideas of caufe and effedt from our obfer- vation ot the viciffitudes of things, while we perceive fome qualities or. fubfiances begin to exilt, and that they receive their exiftence from the application and operation of other beings. That which produces, we call the caufe ; andi that which is produced, the effedf.. Ariflotle, and the.. I'choolmen after him, diftinguifhed four kinds of caufes : the etffcient, the material, the formal, and the final. This - was only a diftindtion of the various meanings of an ambi¬ guous word : for the efficient, the matter, tl.e form, and the er.d, have nothing common in their nature by winch they may be accounted fpecies of the fame genus ; but the Greek word, which we tranfiate caufe, had thefe four dif¬ ferent meanings in Ariftotls’s days; and we have fince added other meanings. With regard to the phenomena of nature, the important end of knowing their caufes, befides gratifying ourcuri- ofity, is, that we may know when to expedt them, or how to bring them about. This is often of real importance in life; and this purpofe is ferved, by knowing what, in t lie courfe of nature, goes before them, and is connected wit li¬ the m : this, therefore) is called the caufe of fuch a pheno¬ menon. If a magnet be brought near to a mariner’s cbm- pafs, the needle, which was before at reft, immediately begins to move, and bends its courfe towards the magnet, or perhaps the contrary way. If an unlearned failor is afked the caufe of this motion of the needle, he is at no lofs for an anfwer. He fays it is the magnet ; and the proof is clear; for, remove tire magnet, and the effect ceafes; bring it near, and the effect is again produced. It is, therefore, evident to fenfe,- that the magnet is the caufe- of thiseffedf. A Cartefian philosopher enters more deeply into the caufe of this phenomenon. He obferves, that the magnet does not touch the needle, and therefore- can give it no impulfe. He pities the ignorance of the failor. The effect is produced, fays he, by magnetic efflu¬ via, or fubtile matter, which puffes from the magnet to tlie^ needle, and forces it from its place. He can even ftiew, by a figure, where thefe magnetic effluvia iffue from the magnet, what round they take, and what way they return home again. Thus he thinks he -comprehends perfectly , how, and by what caufe, the motion ot the needle is pro¬ duced. A Newtonian plnlofopher, however, inquires what proof can be offered of the exiftence of magnetic ef¬ fluvia, and can find none,- He therefore holds it as a fic¬ tion, an hypothefis ; and he has learned that hypothefes ought to have no place in the philofophy of nature. He confeffes his ignorance of the real caufe of this motion, and thinks that his buiinefs as a plnlofopher is only to find from experiment the laws by which it is regulated in all¬ cafes. Thefe three perfons differ much in their fentunents with regard to the real caufe of this phenomenon ; and the man who knows 1110ft is- lie w ho is- fenfible that lie knows- lead of the matter. Yet all the three f peak the tame lan¬ guage, and acknowledge that the caufe of this motion is the attractive or repulfrve power of the magnet. The grandeft’difcovei y ever made in natural philofophy was that of the law of gravitation and defledbon, winch opens fo rational a view of our planetary fyflem ; yet thefe- difeover no real cattle, but only the law or rule according to which the unknown caufes operate. Natural philofo--. pliers, therefore, who think accurately, have a precite meaning to the terms they ufe in the icience; and, when they pretend to fhevv the caufe of any phenomenon off nature, C A U nature, they mean by the caufe a lawof nature of which that phenomenon is a neceffary confequence. The whole ob¬ ject of natural philofophy, as Newton exprefsly teaches, is reducible to thefe two heads: firft, by juft induttion front experiment and oblervation, to difcover the laws of na¬ ture ; and then to apply thole laws to the folution of the phenomena of nature. This was all that this great philo¬ sopher attempted, and all that he thought attainable. And this, indeed, he attained in a great meafure, with regard to the motions of our planetary f> Item, and with regard to the rays of light. But fuppofing that all the phenomena which fall within the reach of our fenfes-were accounted for from general laws of nature juftly deduced from ex¬ perience; that is, fuppofing natural philofophy brought to its utmoft perfection; yet it does not difcover the im¬ mediate efficient caufe of any one phenomenon in nature. The laws of nature are the rules- according to which the effects are produced ; but there mu ft be a caufe which- operates according to thefe rules. The rules of naviga¬ tion never navigated a (hip. The rules of architecture never built a lioufe. Natural philofophers, by great at¬ tention to t he courfe of nature, have difcovered many of lier laws,. and have very happily applied them to account for many phenomena : but they have never difcovered the efficient caufe of any one phenomenon; nor do thofe who have diftinCt notions of the principles of the fcience nuke any fuch pretence. Upon the theatre of nature we fee in¬ numerable effedfs which require an agent endowed with aCtive powers; but the agent is behind the fcene. Whe¬ ther it be the Supreme Caufe alone, or a fubordinate caufe or cattles ; and, if fubordinate cattfes be employed by t lie Almighty, what their nature, their number, and their dif¬ ferent offices, may be, are things hid, for wife reafons with¬ out doubt, from the human eye. Concerning this doCtrine of caufe and cjfcPl, many opi¬ nions have been hazarded by different writers, all of which tend finally to nearly the fame refults. That every event is, and muff be, brought about by Joint caufe , is held to be a- felf-evident truth which no man can deny who under- ffands the terms in which it is. exprelfed ; but what or where the agency of the caufe is, we can very feldom, if ever, know, except when we refer to our own voluntary a-Ctions. When a change is obferved, we cannot doubt of its being produced by fomething : either the thing changed is animated, and has produced the change by its own agen¬ cy, juft as we move our heads or hands by an act of voli¬ tion ; or, if it be inanimated, or of itfelf incapable of agen¬ cy, the change muft be produced by fome adequate ope¬ ration, denominated a caufe. See Metaphysics, Natu-- kai. Philosophy, Ph ysics,.&g. CAU'SELESS-, adj. Having no caufe; wanting juft ground or motive : Alas ! my fears are caufelefs and ungrounded, Fantaftic.di earns, and melancholy fumes. Denham. CAU'SELESSLY,. adv. Without caufe; without rea- fon. — Human laws are not to be broken with fcandal, nor at all without reafon ; for he that does it caufetefsly is a defpifer of t he law, and undervalues its authority. Taylor. CAU'SER, /. He that cattles ; the agent by which an eJTeft is produced. — Abftinence, the apoftle determines; is of no other real value in religion, than as a. mini fte rial caufer of moral effefts.. Rogers . CAU'SEY, or Causeway., f. fkauffee, Fr. This, word, by a falfe notion of its etymology, has been lately written caufe way. Johnfon.~\ A way railed and paved; a way raifed above the reft of the ground. — To Shuppim the lot came forth vveftward by the caufey. i Chron. xxvi. Whofe caifeway parts- .the vale with ffiady rows; Whole feats the- weary traveller repofe. Pope. CAUSSA'DE, a town of France, in the department of the Lot, and chief place of a canton, in the diftrict of Mon— 'eauban: twelve miles porth-eaftof Montauban. CAUSSIN' (Nicholas), furnamed the Juft, a French j-efuit, born- at Troyes in-, Champagne, in 1580; and en¬ tered into the Jefnits’ order when he was twenty-fix years of age. He taught rhetoric in feveral of their colleges, and afterwards began to preach, by w hich he gained great reputation. He tncreafed this reputation by publifhing books, and in time was preferred to be confeftbr to the king. He died in the Jeluits’ convent at Paris, in 1651. None of his works did him more honour than that enti¬ tled La Cour Sainte. It has been printed a great many times; and tranflated into Latin, Italian, Spaniih, Portu- guefe, German, and Engliffi. He publilhed feveral other books both in Latin and French. CAU'STIC, or Caustical, adj. Epithets of medi¬ caments which deftroy the texture of the part to which they are applied, and eat it away, or burn it into an ef- char, which they do by extreme minutenefs, afperity, and quantity of motion, that, like thofe of fire itfelf, de- ftroy the texture of the folids, and change what t hey are applied to into a fnbftance like burnt fleffi; which, in a little time, with a detergent drefiing, falls quite oft, and leaves a vacuity in the part. Quincy. — If extirpa¬ tion be fafe, the beft way will be by caujtical medicines, or efcarotics. IVifman. CAU'STIC, /. [from xa.iu, Gr. to burn.] A burning application. — It was tender nefs to mankind that introduced corrofives and caujlics, which are indeed but artificial fires. Temple. — Cauftics are denominated common or lunar. The common cauftic is a fixed alkali, deprived of aerial acid, and raoft of its water. If the lixivium at the foap- boilers be evaporated to drynefs in a lilver or copper vef- fel, then fufed in a crucible, poured out into a bafon, and, when folid, cut into final] pieces, it forms the common cauftic. This muft be kept in a clofed bottle, to prevent its deliquefeing. When a piece of this alkali is applied to- the (kin for the fpace of three quarters ot an hour, it cor¬ rodes it by forming a faponaceous compound with its fat parts-. It wasfir.ft ufed in making i lilies before that prac¬ tice was laid afide. The lunar cauftic is called lapis inferna • lis, though improperly. It confifts of the cryltals of lil- -ver, obta ned by folution in nitrous acid, and afterwards fufed in a crucible. To make this preparation, very pure lilver muft be diffolved to faturation in nitrous acid, anil the cryftals feparated by evaporation and cooling. Thefe are to be fufed in an earthen crucible, (efficiently large to admit of the frothing and fwelling that happen at the com¬ mencement of the fulion. The heat muft be gentle, be- caufe the cryftals are very fufible, and the acid eafily de- compofed and driven off’. It requires, however, to be. Ibmewhat raifed after the ebullition lias ceafed. As foon ’as the matter is in quiet fulion, it is to be poured into a. mould, confiding of five or fix final 1 cylindrical cavities, by which it acquires the form of 1 mall pencils, and may con¬ veniently be held in a cafe, inftCad of touching it with the fingers. Lunae cauftic is black, which feemsto a rife from, part of the acid being driven off, and a portion of the (li¬ ver revived. Its caufticity, or action on animal fubftan- - ces, appears to depend on the ftrong difpofition of the fil- ver to recover its metallic ftate, and confcquently is a true combuftion. CAUS'TIC CURVE, f in the higher geometry, a curve formed by the concourfe or coincidence ot the rays of light reflected from fome other curve. CAUST l'CITY, J. "I he quality of being cauftic. All fubftances which have lo ftrong a tendency to combine, with the principles of organized fubftances as to deftroy their texture, are faid to be cauftic. The chief of thefe. are the concentrated acids, pure alkalis, and the metallic, l’alts. C AU'TEL, f. [ cautela , Lat.] Caution ;. fcruple : a word, now mj fed: Perhaps he loves you now ; And now no foil of cautel doth befmirch' The virtue of his will. Shahefpcare. CAU'TELOUS, adj. [caute/eux, Fr.] Cautious; wary; . provident ; not in life. — Palladio doth wiffi, like a cauleltms- ar.iifaEj,-., 4 C A U artifan, that the inward walls might bear Come good fliare in the burden. IVotton. — Wily; cunning; treacherous. — They are (o caulelous and wily, efpecially being men of f'mall experience, that you would wonder whence they borrow fuch fubtilties and 11 y fliifts. Spenfer. C AU'TELOUSLY, adv. Cunningly; flyly; treache- roudy; cautioufly; warily: notinuj'e. — The Jews, not re- lolved of the fciatica (ide of Jacob, do cauteloujly, in their diet, abftain from both. Brown. C AUTERIZA'TION, J. The ad of burning flefh with liot irons or can flic medicaments. They require, after cauterization, no fuch bandage, as that thereby you need to fear interception of the fpirits. IVifeman. To C AU' TERIZE, v. a. [ caulerifer , Fr. ] To burn w ith the cautery. — Thedelignof the cautery is to prevent thecanal from doling; but the operators cotifefs, that, in perfons cauterized, the tears trickle dsvvn ever after. Sharp. CAU'TERY, f. [from r.aia, uro, to burn.] A fub- ftance which lias power to burn tlie flefh. — A cautery is ei¬ ther ablual or potential ; the fir It is burning by a hot iron, and the latter with caultic medicines. The adual cautery is generally ufed to flop mortification, by burning the dead parts to the quick; or to flop the eft’ufionof blood by fear¬ ing up the velfels. Quincy . — In heat of fight it will be ne- ceflary to have your adlual cautery always ready; for that will (ecure the bleeding arteries in a moment. Wijanan. CAUTGUN'GE, a town of Hindoofian, in the country of Bahar, on the north fide of the Ganges, oppolite Bar. CAU'TION, A- \_caution, Fr. cautio, I,at.] Prudence, as it refpeds danger; forefight; provident care ; wari- nefs againl! evil ; lecurity for — Such conditions, and cau¬ tions of the condition, as might allure with as much aflu- rance as wot Idly matters bear. Sidney. — Provifion orfecu- rity again!!. — In defpite of all the rules and cautions of go¬ vernment, the raoft dangerous and mortal of vices will come of!'. L’EJtrange. — Provifionary precept. — Attention to the forenientioned fymptoms affords the beft cautions and rules of diet, by way of prevention. Arbuthnot. — Warning. To CAU'TION, v. a. To warn; to give notice of a danger : How fliall our thought avoid the various fnare? Or wifdom to our caution'd foul declare 'Flie different fliapes thou pleafeft to employ, When bent to hurt, and certain to deftroy > Prior. CAU'TION - MONEY, f. in the univerfities, a fum paid to the tutor of the college, on the admillion of a fiudent, as a kind of pledge or lecurity. CAUTIONARY, adj. Given as a pledge, or in fecu- ritv. Thus, in 1585, Flufliing and the Brille, with the caftle of Rammekms, were conligned by the United Pro¬ vinces to Elizabeth as cautionary towns, for a fecurity that her expeuces in aftifting them Ihould be tefunded at the conclufion of the war. I am made the cautionary pledge, The gage and hofla'ge of your keeping it. Southern. CAU'TIOUS, adj. [from cautus, Lat.] Wary; watch¬ ful. — Be cautious of him; for he is fometimes an inconflant lover, becaufe he hath a great advantage. Swift. CAUTIOUSLY, adv. In an attentive wary manner ; warily : They know how fickle common lovers are: Their oaths and vows are cautmfy believ’d ; For few there are but have been once deceiv’d. Dryden. CAUTIOUSNESS, f. Watchfulnefs; vigilance; cir- cumfpedtion; provident care; prudence with ref pec! to danger. — I could not but approve their generous conftancy and Qautioufnefs. King Charles. — We flionld always adl with great cautioujnefs and circumfpedion, in points wheie it is not impofiibie that we may be deceived. Addifon. CAU'I ING-IRON, f. A farrier’s iron to cauterize or fear the parts of a horfe which require burning. C A X CAU'TO, a town of the ifland of Cuba: twenty-five miles north-eaft of Bayamo. CAU' I O, a river of the ifland of Cuba, which runs into the fea, twenty miles north-weft of Bayamo. CAU'VERY, a principal river of Kindooftan, which rifes in the. Bednore country, pafles by Seringapatam, Al- lumbaddy, Trichinopoly, &c. and empties irlelf by two branches into the Bay of Bengal, one near Devicotta, and the other near Negapatam. CAUX, before the revolution, a country of France, in Normandy, about fifty leagues in circumference, lving be¬ tween theoceanand the Seine, Vexin, Normandy, Picardy, and the country of Bray. The land is fertile in grain, hemp, fruits, &c. The coafts abound with fifh, and the forefts with game. Caudebec is the capital. CA'VY,/. in zoology. See Cavia. To CAW, v. n. [taken from the found.] To cry as the rook, raven, or crow : The rook, who high amid the boughs, In early fpring, his airy city builds. And cealelefs caws. Thomfon. CAWK,/. A term by which miners diftinguifh the opake fpecimensof vitriolated ponderous earth, or mar- mor metallicum. CAWNPOUR', a town of Hindooftan, in the Subah of Oude: thirty-feven miles Ibuth-weft of Lucknow, and ninety-eight north weft of Allahabad. C A' WOOD, a final 1 town in the weft riding of York- fliire, 190 miles from London, ten from York, and five from Selby ; fituate upon the banks of the navigable river Oufe, over which there is a ferry from the town into the eaft riding. The town is in general well-built, and has a mar¬ ket on Wednefdays, and two annual fairs, viz. on old May- day, and the 33d of September. Here are the remains of a caftle of great antiquity, and winch was the laft refidence of cardinal Wolfey, being the place he retired to when difgraced at court. CAW'STON, a fmall town in the county of Norfolk, eleven miles from Norwich. It has a market on Wednef¬ days ; fairs, Feb. 1, the laft Wednefday in April, and the laft Wednefday in Auguft, which is a large fair for flieep. Two miles from the town is Bickling, the fuperb feat of the earl of Buckinghamfhire. CAX'A, f. A coin made of lead mixed with fcoria of copper, ftruck in China, but current chiefly at Bantam, in the ifland of Java, and foirte of the neighbouring iflands. CAX'A TAM'BO, a jurifdidion of South America, in the country of Peru, and archbifhopric'of Lima. CAXAMAR'QUA, a jurifdidion of Peru, in South America, under the bifliop of 1 ruxillo, lying between the two Cordilleras of the Andes: it produces plenty of all kinds of grain, fruits, and vegetables; alio cattle, elpeci- ally hogs. They have here a confiderable trade with Chincay, Lima, Truxillo, &c. Here the Indians weave cotton for fhips’ fails, bed-curtains, quilts, hammocks, See. There are fonie filver mines, but of little confequence. The town, which gives name to the diftrid, was at one time a royal city, where t he emperor Atahualapa was put to death, after having been defeated and imprifoned by Pizarro: about feventy miles from the Pacific Ocean. Lat. 8. S. Ion. 55. 20. W. Greenwich. CAX'TON (William), a mercer of London, eminent by the works he publifhed, and for being reputed the fit ft who introduced and pradifed the art of printing in Eng¬ land; for the particulars of which works, and alio the 01 i- gin of this invaluable art, fee the article Printing. CAX'TON, a final! town in Cambridgefliire, diftant fifty miles from London, on t lie old north road to York, and is one of the oktfeft poll-towns in the kingdom. A Roman way paftes front Holm to Papworth tii rough this town. Caxton, reputed the firft printer in England, was a nauve of this town ; as was alio Matthew Paris, the his¬ torian. Here are two annual fairs, one on St. Thomas-a- JBecket, the other three days after Michaelmas, for gloves, x hats, CAY hats, clothe, &c. The market was on Tuefdays, but is now difcontimied. The profpeits every way round Cax- ton confift of a rich and fertile corn-country, adorned with ■feveral feats of gentlemen; the chief of which is Wim¬ ple-hall, formerly built, at a vaft ex pence, by one of the earls of Radnor. It was afterwards bought by his grace John Holies Cavendifh, duke of Newcatlle; in a partition of whole vaft eftate, it fell to Edward earl of Oxford and Mortimer, in right of his lady, the only daughter of the faid duke ; who brought the earl this eftate, and many others fufficient to denominate her one of the richeft hei- reffes in Great-Britain; but his lordlhip parted with it, a little before his death, to the right honourable the then lord chancellor Hardwicke, whofe fon, the prefent earl of Hardwicke, now poffeffes it. CAY, a town of China, of the fecond rank, in the pro¬ vince of Pe-tche-li : 1 25 miles fouth-fouth-weft of Peking. Lat. 38. 3<'N. Ion. 133. 6 E. Ferro. CA'YA, a river of Spain, which runs into the Guadi- ana, near Badajoz. C A'Y A, a river of Spain in Catalonia, which runs into tile Mediterranean, near Tamarit. CAYAHO'GA, a town of North America, in the country weft of Pennfylvania, on a river of the fame name: thirty miles fouth of lake Erie. Lat. 41. 20. N. Ion. 81. 20. W. Greenwich. CAYAHO'GA, a river of North America, fometimes called the Great River, which runs in at the fouth bank of lake Erie, forty miles eaftward of the mouth of Hu¬ ron, having an Indian town of the fame name on its banks. It is navigable for boats; and its mouth is wide, and deep enough to receive large (loops from the lake. Near this are the celebrated impending rocks, which bound the lake. They are feveral miles io_length, and rife fifty feet per¬ pendicular out of the water. Some parts of them confift of feveral ftrata, of different colours, lying in a horizontal direction, and fo exactly parallel, that they refemble the work of art. The view from the land is grand, but the water prefents the nioft magnificent profpeCt of this fub- lime work of nature : it is attended, however, with great danger; for, if the leaft ftorm arifes, the force of the furf is fuch, that no velfel can efcape being dallied to pieces againft the rocks. The 'heathen Indians, when they pafs this impending danger, offer a facrifice of tobacco to the water. Part of the boundary line between the United States and the Indians, begins at the mouth of Cayahoga, and runs up the fame to the portage between that and the Titfcawara branch of the Mufkingum. The Cayahoga nation, confiding of 500 Indians, forty of whom relide in the United States, the reft in Canada, receive of the date of New-York an annuity of 2300 dollars, befides fifty dol¬ lars granted to one of their chiefs, as a confideration for lands fold by them to the date, and 500 dollars from the United States, agreeably to the treaty of 1794. CAYAM'BA, a town of South America, in the coun¬ try of Peru, and province of Quito : thirty miles north- eaft of Quito. CAYAMBU'RO, a mountain of South America, in the country of Peru : thirty miles north-eaft of Quito. CAYBO'BO, a town of the ifland of Ceram, in the eaf- tern Indian Sea. CAYEN'NE, a province in South America, belonging to the French, and the only part of the continent which theypoifefs; bounded north and eaft by the Atlantic Oce¬ an, fouth by Amazonia, and weft by Guiana or Surinam. It extends 240 miles along the coaft of Guiana, and nearly 300 miles within land ; lying between the equator and the fifth degree of north latitude. The coaft is low and mar- ftiy, and fnbjeCt to inundations, from the multitude of ri¬ vers which rufh down the mountains with great impetuo- fity. The foil is in many places fertile, producing fugar, tobacco, Indian corn, fruits, & c. The French have like- wife poffellion of an illand upon the coaft called alfo Cay¬ enne, which, as well as the whole country, takes its name from the river that is northward of it. Vol. IV. No. 173. CAY ? CAYEN'NE BAY, a bay on the fouth-weft coaftof the ifland of St. Vincent: two miles north-weft of Kinefton Bay. : CAYEN'NE RIVER, rifes in the mountains near the lake of Parima, runs through the country of the Galibis, a nation of Charibbee Indians, and- is 100 leagues long. The ifland which it environs is eighteen leagues in circuit, good . and fertile, but unhealthy. In 1752, the exports of the colony were 260,541 lbs. ofarnotto, 80,3631*03. of(u°-ar, 17,919 lbs. of cotton, 26,881 lbs. of coffee, 91,(716 IbsT of cocoa, befides timber and planks. The French firft fet¬ tled here in 1625, and built the fort of Ceperou, but were often forced to quit it, yet returned thither again, as in 1640, 1652, and 1654, and were forced to leave it for want of reinforcements. The Dutch fettled here in :65s, but were driven out by M. de la Barre. The Englifh took it 1667, but afterwards refiored it to the French. The Dutch hud their revenge in 1676, and drove out the French ; but were themlelves beat out, the year after, by d’Eftrees; fince which time the French have had peaceable poffeliion of it. CAYES (Les), a town of the ifland of St. Domimro, on the fouth coaft. Lat. 18.13.N. Ion. 73. 45. W. Grf * C AYET' (Pierre de) author of the celebrated and very rare Memoirs relative to Henry IV. of France, was a pro", tefiant minifter at the court of the king of Navarre, and was much prefled by the count of Soiffons to marry him to one of the princefles of the houfe of Navarre. He re- fufed, as not thinking it honourable to be concerned in nd the Athenians are often called Ce- cropidte. CECRO'PIA,/. The Trumpet-tree ; in botany, a genus of the clafs dioecia, order diandria, natural order fcabridae. The generic characters are-— I, Male. Calyx: Vol. IV. No. 173. C E C 9 fpathe ovate, burrting, caducous ; aments very many, faf. ciculate, columnar, imbricate with feales ; the fcales (re¬ ceptacles) copious, turbinate, compreHed-quadrangular, obtufe, with a double perforation. Corolla: none, unlefs the feales be called nedtaries. Stamina: filaments two, capillary, very (bort, front the perforations of the feales ; antherae oblong, quadrangular. II. Female. Calyx : fpathe; aments four, columnar, imbricate with germs. Corolla: none. Piffilluni : germs many, imbricate, cani- prefled-quadrangular, obtufe; ftyles (olitary, very (hort; ftigmas fomewhat headed, lacerated. Pericarpium: berry the form of the germ, one-celled, one-leeded. Seed ob¬ long, comprelfed. — EJJential Character. Male. Sputhe ca¬ ducous ; ament imbricate with turbinate feales, com- preffed-quadrangular ; corolla none. Female as in tlie male; germs imbricate; ltyle one; Itigma lacerated; berry one feeded. There is only one fpecies, called cecropia peltata, trum¬ pet-tree, or fnake-wood. It rife's commonly to a confider- able height, being feldoin under thirty-five or forty feet in tlie moll perfect (fate. The trunk and branches are hollow every where, and (lopped from (pace to (pace with membranous feptas, anfwering to fo many light annular marks in the furface ; leaves few, alternate, large, at the ends of tlie branches ; they are peltate, divided into many lobes like thofe of carica papaya, downy-white under¬ neath, petioled ; lobes entire, (harp, rugged on the up¬ per furface, the nerves obliquely tranfverfe, and the veins very much fo. There are Hi pules between the leaves, as in the fig, opening on the tide oppolite to tlie leaf, obvo-. lute or imbricate 011 the edge, Coon falling off. The fruits rife four, five, or more, from the very top of a common peduncle, and (hoot into fo many oblong cylindrical ber¬ ries, compofed of a row of little acini, fomething like our rafpberry, which they refemble in flavour when ripe, and are agreeable to mod European palates on that account. The wood of this tree, when dry, is very apt to take fire by attrition. The native Indians have taken the hint, and always kindle their fires in the woods by rubbing a piece of it againft fome harder wood. The bark is (Iron g and fibrous, and is frequently ufed for all forts of cordage. The trunk is very light, and for that reafon much ufed for bark-logs and fifliing-floats. Tlie fnvaller brandies,, when cleared of the feptums, ferve for wind inftruments. Both trunk and branches yield a great quantity of fixed fait, which is much ufed among the French, todefpumate and granulate their fugars. The fruit is much fed upon by pigeons and other birds, and thus the tree is much fpread and propagated. Native of South America, and tlie Weft- India i (lands. Miller received fpecimens of this tree from Dr. Houlton, who found it growing naturally at Vera Cruz in New Spain ; it does not appear however that he ever cultivated it. In the catalogue of the royal botanic garden at Kevv, it is faid to have been introduced in 1778, by Thomas Clark, M.D. Propagation and Culture. It may be propagated by feeds, procured from the places of natural growth. They fhould be brought over in fand, for, if they are put up moift in papers, they will be apt to grow mouldy. They fliould be (own in ("mail pots, filled w ith light earth, and plunged into a moderate hot-bed of tanner’s-bark, obferving to water the pots duly, and to admit frefh air whenever the weather is favourable. When the plants come up and are fit to tranfplant, they fliould be carefully taken up, and each planted in a feparate (mail pot, filled with the like light earth, and plunged into tlie hot-bed again, being careful to water them to fettle the earth to their roots, and alfo to fereen them from the fun till they have taken new root : after which they fliould be conftantly kept plunged into the bark-bed in the (love, and treated in the lame manner as other plants from the lame country. CE'CROPS, a native of Sais, in Egypt, who led a co¬ lony to Attica about 1556 years before the Chriftian era, and reigned over part of the country which was called from him Cecropia. He foftened and poliflied the rude D and so C E D and uncultivated manners of the inhabitants, and drew them from the country to inhabit twelve fmall villages which he had founded. He gave them laws and regula¬ tions, and introduced among them the worfliip of thof'e deities which were held in adoration in Egypt. He mar¬ ried the daughter of Aftceus, a Grecian prince, and was deemed the firft founder of Athens. He taught his (ob¬ jects to cultivate the olive, and inftrudted them to look upon Minerva as the watchful patronefs of their city. It is laid that he was the firft who railed an altar to Jupiter in Greece, and offered him lacrifices. After a reign of fifty years, fpent in regulating his newly-formed kingdom, and in polifhing the minds of his fubjedts, Cecrops died, leaving three daughters, Aglauros, Herle, and Pandrolos. He was fucceeded by Cranatts, a native of the country. Some time after, Thefeus, one of his fucceffors, formed the twelve villages w hich he had eftabliflied, into one city, to which the name of Athens v as given. See Athens. Some authors have deferibed Cecrops as a monfter, half a man and half a ferpent ; and this fable is explained by the recolledfion that lie was mailer of two languages, the Greek and Egyptian; or that he had the command over two countries, Egypt and Greece. Others explain it by an allufton to the regulations which Cecrops made amongft the inhabitants concerning marriage and the union of the two fexes. CECU'TIENCY, f. [cizcutio, Lat.] Tendency to blind- nefs; cloudinefs of fight. CE'DAR, an ifland of United America, on the coaft of Virginia. Lat. 37. 37. N. Ion. 76. 40. W. Greenwich. CE'DAR, a river of Canada, which runs into Lake Michigan. Lat. 47. 30. N. Ion. 86. 50. W. Greenwich. CE'DAR, a lake of North America. Lat. 53. 8. N. Ion. 100. 5. W. Greenwich. CE'DAR, BARB ADOES, f. in botany ; fee Cedrela. CEDAR, BERMUDAS and CAROLINA ; fee Junipe- rus. CEDAR, JAMAICA ; fee Theobroma. CE¬ DAR, LIBANUS or LEBANON ; fee Pinus Cedrus. CEDAR, LYC1AN, PHENICI AN, and VIRGINIAN; fee Juniperus. CEDAR, VIRGINIAN and WHITE ; fee Cupressus. No modern botanifts find any of the cedar- trees that agree with the feripture account of their loftinefs ; but rather with that account of them which the plalmift gives, when he fays, the flouriftiing ftate of a people is, that they fpread their branches like the cedar- tree. Maundrell, in his travels, fays, he meafured the trunks of fomeold cedar-trees, and found one to be twelve yards in circumference, and thirty-feven yards in the fpread of its boughs-; but the altitude he does not mention as re¬ markable, nor correfpondent either to the feripture ac¬ count, or to that in the following paflage ; I niuft yield my body to the earth : Thus yields the cedar to the axe’s edge, Whole arms gave flielter to the princely eagle ; Under whofe (hade the ramping lion flept ; Whofe top branch overpeer’d Jove’s fpreading tree. And kept low fiirubs from winter’s povv’rful wind. Shakf. CE'DAR POINT, a port of entry in Charles county, Maryland, on the eaft fide of Pa to tv mac liver, about twelve miles below Port Tobacco, and ninety-fix fouth by weft of Baltimore, in the American States. Its exports are chiefly tobacco and Indian corn, and in 1794, amounted in value to 18,593 dollars. CEDEY'RA, a town of Spain, in the province of Ga¬ licia : five leagues north of Ferrol. CED'MA, f. [from y.i^au, Gr. to difperfe.] A de¬ fluxion, or rheumatic aftedtion fcattered over the parts about the hips. CEDOG'NA, a town of I taly, in the kingdom of Na¬ ples, and province of Principato Ultra, the fee of a bifhop, fuffragan of Conza, at the foot of the Apennines ; in a ftate of decay : twelve miles north-weft of Melfi. CEDR.ET.A, f. Bar bad.ojss Base Cedar ; in botany, 3 genus of the clafs pentandria, order monogynia, natural C E D order mifcellaneae. The generic characlers are — Calyx : perianthium monophyllous, campanulas, very fmall, five, toothed, withering. Corolla: funnel-form, pentapeta- lous, the tube bellied below ; petals linear-oblong, ob- tufe, eredf, adjoined to the receptacle at one-third beneath. Stamina : filaments five, fubulate, feated on the receptacle, ftiorter than the corolla ; antherae oblong, bent outwards at the tip. Piftillum : receptacle proper five-cornered ; germ globular; ftyle cylindric, length of the corolla; ftigma headed, deprrfled. Pericarpinm : capfule fuperior, woody, roundifti, five-celled, five-valved ; valves decidu¬ ous. Seeds numerous, flefhy, imbricate downwards, ter¬ minated by a membranaceous wing. Receptacle woodv, five-angled, tree. — EJJential Character . Calyx withering; corolla five-petalled, funnel-form, faftened by the bafe to the receptacle to one-third of its length ; capfule woody, five-celled, five-valved; feeds imbricate downwards, with a membranaceous wing. Only one fpecie% called cedrela odorata : flowers pani- cled. This tree riles with a ftraight ftem to the height of feventy or eighty feet: while young the bark is fmooth, and of an afh-colour ; but, as it advances, the bark becomes rough and of a darker colour. Towards the top it (hoots out many fide branches, garniftied with winged leaves, compofed of fixteen or eighteen pair of leaflets, fo that they are fometimes near three feet long ; the leaflets are broad at their bafe, and are near two inches long, blunt at their ends, and of a pale colour ; thefe emit a very rank odour in the fummer feafon, fo as to be very offenfive. The fruit is oval, about the fize of a partridge’s egg, fmooth, of a very dark colour, and opens in five parts, having a five-cornered column (landing in the middle, be¬ tween the angles of which the winged feeds are rlofely placed, lapping over each other like the feales of filh. The trunk is covered with a rough bark, marked with lon¬ gitudinal fiflitres. This, as well as the berries and leaves, has a fmell like aflafoetida, when frefh. The timber how¬ ever has a pleafant fmell. This is commonly known un¬ der the name of cedar in the Britxfh Weft-India tllands. The trunk is fo large as to be hollowed out into canoes and periaguas, for which purpofe it is extremely, well adapted, the wood being foft, it may be cut out with great facility, and, being light, it will carry a great weight on the water. There are canoes in the Weft-Indies, which have been formed out of thefe trunks, forty feet long and fix broad ; the wood is of a brown colour, and has a fra¬ grant odour, whence the title of cedar has been given to it : it is frequently cut into fhingles for covering houfes, and is found very durable ; but, as the worms are apt to eat this wood, it is not proper for building (hips, though it is often ufed for that purpofe, as alfo for (heathing of (hips. It is often ufed for wainfeoting of rooms, and to make chefts, becaufe vermin do not fo frequently breed in it, as in many other forts of wood, this having a very bitter tafte, which is communicated to whatever is put into the chefts, efpecially when the wood is frefti ; for which realon it is never made into calks, becaufe fpirituous liquors will dilfolve part of the refill, and thereby acqure a bitter tafte. Dampier mentions fome of thefe trees in the ifland of St. Andreas near the ifle of Providence, tire bodies of which were forty or fifty, and many fixty or (eventy, feet long. Loureiro has another fpecies, to which he has given the name of cedrela rofmarinus. It is a ftirub, about four feet high, with linear leaves, and axillary one-flowered pe¬ duncles; the feeds are not winged. It grows wild in Co- chinchina and about Macao in China. It yields a fine elfential oil, and a fpirit not inferior to that which is drawn from rofemary. Propagation and Culture. It is propagated by feeds, which may be ealily procured from the Weft-Indies. They mud be lown upon a hot-bed in the fpring, and the plants treated in the fame manner as the mahogany. See S-wietenia. They are of much quicker growth, for in four years the plants will be upwards of ten feet high. CEDRE'NUS (George), a Grecian monk, who lived in C E I in the nth age, and wrote Annals, or an Abridged Hif- tory, from the Beginning of the World to the Reign of Ifaac Comnenus emperor of Conftantinople, who fueceed- cd Michael IV. in 1057. This work is no more than an ex-trail: from feveral hiftorians. There is an edition of it, printed at Paris in 1647, with the Latin verfion of Xylan- der, and the notes of father Goar, a Dominican. CE'DRINB, adj. [ccdrinus, Lat. ] Of, or belonging to, the cedar-tree. CE'DRp,yi in botany. See Cedrela. CEDRONEL'LA,yi in botany. SeeDRACOCEPHALUM. CEDRO'TA,yi in botany, a genus of the clafs otftan- dria, order monogynia. The generic characters are — Calyx : perianthium one-leaved, fix-parted; parts ovate, obtnfe, concave. Corolla: none. Stamina: filaments eight, fliort ; antherae roundilh. Piftillum : germ fupe- rior, roundilh, furrounded by a gland; flyle fhort ; ftigma obtufe. — EJJ'ential CkaraElcr. Calyx fix-parted ; corolla none ; germ fnperior, furrounded by a gland ; flyle fhort. There is but one fpecies, called cedrota guianenlis. It is a- tree forty feet in height,' and two feet in diameter, with a thick, unequal, wrinkled, bark, full of clefts, and a yellow, heavy, aromatic, wood, which however becomes light when dry. It has a great number of large branches at top, fome ftraight, other's inclined, and fpreading every way. Thefe are loaded with twigs, having leaves either oppofite, or in whorls of three or five together: they are fmooth, thin, entire, oblong, oval, acuminate, on a fhort petiole channelled above. Flowers very frnall, loofely racemed, on a long, weak, axillary, peduncle. It grows in the great forefls of Guiana, flowering in May. The inhabitants call it bois de cedre, and ufe it for making their pirogues-, they fay that it is alfo fit for malls. CE'DRUS,/] in botany. See Cedrela, Cliffortia, Juniperus, Pinus, and Swietenia. CEES'TER, a. town of Germany, in- the duchy of Hol- flein : eleven miles weft of Pinnenberg. CEES'TER MU'HE, a town of Germany, in the duchy of Holftein : thirteen miles weft of Pinnenberg. CEFALU', a fea-port of Sicily, in the valley of De- mona, on the north coaft of the ifland, the fee of a bilhop, fuffragan of Meflina. The harbour will not contain above thirty or forty veffiels. The number of inhabitants is about 5000 : fourteen miles eaft of Termini. Lat. 38. 5. N. Ion. 31. 51. E. Ferro. CEGI'NUS, the name of a fixed ftar of the third mag¬ nitude, in the Left fhoulder of Bootes ; marked y by Bayer. CE'GLI A, a town of Italy, in the kingdom of Naples, and province of Bari : five miles fonth-fouth-eaft of Bari. CEI'BAjyi in botany. See Bombax. To CEIL, v.a. \_calo , Lat.] To overlay, or cover, the inner roof of a building, — And the greater houfe he ceiled with fir-tree, which lie overlaid with fine gold. 2 Chron . CEIL'ING,yi The inner roof of a building : And now the thicken’d Iky Like a dark ceiling flood ; down rufh’d the rain Impetuous. * Milton. For the conftru&ion of ceilings, fee Architecture, vol. ii. p. io8- and the article Plastering. CEIME'LI A,yi [from Gr. to be laid up.] Choice or precious furniture or ornaments, referved for extraor¬ dinary ufes j in which fenfe, facred garments, veftels, &c. are the ceimelia of a church. Medals, antiques, manu- feripts, records, &c. are the ceimelia of men of letters. CEIMELI AR'CHUM, J. The repofitory or place where ceimelia are preferved. CEIMELIO'PHYLAX, [from xeipvihiov, and Ov^arloj, Gr. to keep.] The keeper or curator of a collection of ceimelia ; fometimes denominated ceime/iarcha. The cei- Sneliarcha, or ceimeliophylax, was an officer in the ancient churches or monafteries, anfwering to what was otlierw'ife denominated chartophylax , and cujlos axchivorum. CEl'RA, a town of Portugal, in the province of Beira ; one league fouth-eaft of Coimbra*. CEE JrjT; CEl'RA, a river of Portugal, which runs into the Mondego, about a league fouth-eaft of Coimbra. CEL/E'NAI, in the ancient geography, a city of Phry¬ gia, of which it was once the capital. Cyrus the younger had a palace there, with a park filled with wild beads, where he exercifed himfelf in hunting. The Maeander arofe in this park. Xerxes built a famous citadel there after his defeat in Greece. The inhabitants of Celtente were carried by Antioclms Soter to people Apamea when newly founded. Strabo. CE'LANDINE, J. in botany. See Chei.odin u m. CELA'NO, a town ot Italy, in the kingdom of Naples, and province of Abruzzo Ultra, near a lake of the fame name: fixteen miles weft of Solmona. CELA'NO, a river of Italy, which runs into the Gulf of Tarento, three miles from Roifano. CE'LARENT, f. among logicians, a mode of fyllogifm wherein the major and concluiion are univerfal negative propofitions, and the minor an univerfal affirmative • e. g. cE None whofe underftanding is limited can be omni:- feient. IA Every man’s underftanding is limited. rEnt Therefore no man is ommfcient. CELAS'TRUS, f. [from r-riha., a dart or pole, which it reprefents. Blanchard derives it from y.r^ac, a week, becatife it is flow in bringing its fruit to maturity.] The Staff-tree; in botany, a genus of the clafs pentandria,. order monogynia, natural order dumolte. The generic characters are — Calyx : perianthium one-leaved, half five- cleft, flat, frnall; divifions obtufe, unequal. Corolla: petals five, ovate, fpreading, fellile, equal, reflected. at the borders. Stamina: filaments five, Tubulate, length of the corolla; anthers very fmali. Piftillum: germ very frnall,. immerfed in a large flat receptacle, which is marked with ten (Leaks; flyle Tubulate, ftiorter than theftamens; ftig- ma obtufe, trifid. Perianthium: capfule coloured, ovate, obtufely triangular, gibbous, tri locular, tri valvular. Seeds: few, ovate, coloured, fmooth, half involved in an unequal coloured aurillus, with a four-cleft mouth. — Ejfential Cha- r aider. Corolla five-petalled,- fpreading j. . capfule trian¬ gular, trilocular; feeds calyptrated. Species. 1. Celaftrus bullatus : unarmed; leaves ovate, quite entire. It rifes to the height of eight or ten' feet ; but in England there are few of thefe ftirubs much mors than half that height. It generally puts out two or three ftems from the Toot, which divide upwards into feveral branches, covered with a brown bark, garnifhed with leaves near three inches long, and two broad, placed alter¬ nately on the branches ; the flowers come out in looie fpikes at the ends of the branches, and are white; the capfule is of a fcarlet colour, fet full of frnall protube¬ rances; it opens into three cells, each containing a hard oval feed, covered with a thin red pulp. This fltrub flowers in July, but rarely produces good feeds in Eng¬ land. Grows naturally in many parts of North America. 2. Celaflrus feandens, or climbing ftafF-tree: unarmed ; ftem twining. This fort fends out feveral woody ftaiks, which are flexible, and twift themfelves round trees and flmibs, or round each other, to the height of twelve or fourteen feet, or more, girding trees fo clofely as in a few years todeftroy them. The leaves are about three inches long, and nearly two broad, ferrate, alternate, of a lively green above, but paler on the under fide, having feveral tranfverfe nerves. The flowers are produced in fmali. bunches towards the ends of the branches ; they are of an heibaceotis colour, and are fucceeded by roundilh three- cornered capfules, which are red when ripe, and fpread open their three cells, difclofing their lleds in the lame manner as our common fpindle-tree. It flowers in the be¬ ginning of June, and the feeds ripen in autumn. Native of North America and Japan. 3. Celaftrus myrtifolius, or myrtle-leaved ftaft-tree; unarmed ; leaves ovate, finely ferrate.; flowers racemed;. flem ereCt, Native of North America. 4, Celaftrus* C E L A S T R V S. SS'2 4. Celaftrus procumbens, or procumbent daft-tree: un¬ armed, procumbent; leaves ovate, ferrate ; flowers axil¬ lary, tub folit ary.. 5. Celaftrus .filiforniis, or filiform- branched ftaff-tree : unarmed; leaves lanceolate, entire; branches filiform; peduncles axillary, one-flowered. 6. Celaftrus acuminatus, or acuminate-leaved ftaff-tree : unarmed; leaves ovate, acuminate, ferrate; peduncles axillary, one-flowered; ftem eredt, lax. 7. Celaftrus microphyllus : unarmed; leaves ovate, obtufe, emire; cymes terminal, dichotomous. All found at the Cape of Good Hope by Thunberg. 3. Celaftrus articulatus: unarmed; leaves rounded, acuminate, ferrate ; peduncles axillary, fubtrifid. 9. Ce¬ laftrus dilatatus: leaves obovate, cufped, ferrate at the tip, and fmooth; ftem unarmed. 10. Celaftrus ftriatus : Unarmed; branchlets erect, tlriated ; leaves ovate, acumi¬ nate, ferrate; peduncles fcattered, one-flowered, n. Ce¬ laftrus alatus, or wing-branched ftaff-tree: unarmed; branches winged. This and the three foregoing fpecies were firft oblerved by Thunberg in Japan. The laft is a handfome fhrub, lingular for its winged branches. It is frequently cultivated by the Japaaefe in their gardens : and fhe young men hang bunches of the flowers before the doors of a lioufe., to fignify tlieir defire to pay addreires to a young woman within. 12. Celaftrus buxifolius, or box-leaved ftaff-tree: fpines leafy ; branches angular ; leaves dbtule. This rifes with a (lender woody ftalk to the height of ten or twelve feet, covet ed with a light afti-coloured bark, and full of joints, armed with long fpines, upon which grow many fmall leaves; the branches are flender, armed alfo with fpines at every joint ; but the whole plant is fo weak as to re¬ quite lame fupport. The leaves come out in clufters, without any order, are fhaped fomewhat like thofe of the narrow-leaved box-tree, but longer and of a loofe texture. They are obovate and acutely ferrate. Both brandies and branchlets are angular. The flowers are on peduncled ■cymes from the axils. The fruit is globular; in the next fpecies it is triquetrous. Native of the Cape of Good Hope, and flowers in May and June. 13. Celaftrus pyracantlius, or pyracantha-leaved ftaff- tree: fpines naked ; branches round ; leaves acute. This rifes with an irregular (talk, three or four feet high, fend¬ ing out feveral fide branches, covered with brown bark. Leaves about two inches long, and more than half an inch broad, Come pointed and others obtule ; they are ftiff, of a lucid green, come out irregularly fiom the branches, and continue green through the year. The flowers are pro¬ duced from the Tides of the branches in loofe tufts, many from one point, on long peduncles, and of an herbaceous white colour. The fruit is of a fine red colour, and opens into three cells, containing one oblong hard feed ; two of the cells being generally empty. It is a native of the Cape of Good Hope, whence the feeds were firft brought to the gardens in Holland, and thence communicated to ntoft of the curious gardens in Europe. Flowers moft part of the futnmer. 14. Celaftrus lucidus, or Ihining ftaff-tree, or fmall Hottentot cherry : leaves oval, fhining, quite entire, mar¬ gined. An upright fhrub, w>ith brown hard branches. Native of the Cape of Good Hope ; flowers from April to September. 1 5. Celaftrus linearis, or linear-leaved ftaff-tree : fpines leafy ; leaves linear, entire. 16. Celaftrus integrifolius, or entire-leaved ftaff-tree : fpines leafy; leaves ovate, obtufe, quite entire ; cymes lateral. Found at the Cape of Good Hope by Thunberg. 17. Celaftrus crenatus, or notch-leaved ftaff-tree: un¬ armed ; leaves ovate, crenulate ; cymes axillary. Native of the Marquefas iflands in the South Seas. 18. Celaftrus corniculatus : leaves oval, quite entire, perennial; capfule three-horned. It has the appearance ofeuclea, and is a native of the Cape of Good Hope. 19. Celaftrus callinoides, or crenated ftaff-tree: un¬ armed ; leaves evatc, acute both ways, loofely toothed, perennial ; flowers axillary. Native of the Canary Iflands } florversiti Auguft and September. 20. Celaftrus phyllacanthus : thorns leafy; leaves lan¬ ceolate, ferrate, perennial ; flowers lateral. Found in Se¬ negal by Adanfbn. Xt flowered in the Paris garden, but has not borne fruit. 21. Celaftrus oftogonus, or angular-leaved ftaff-tree: unarmed; leaves elliptic, angular, almoft nervelefs, pe¬ rennial ; capfules bivalve, one-feeded. Found in Peru by Dombey. There are other fpecies from Peru and Chili, which have a bivalve capfule. It flowers in Oftober. 22. Celaftrus undiilauis, or wave-leaved ftaff-tree: tin- armed ; leaves nearly oppofite, lanceolate, waved; cap- files bivalve, many feeded. Commerfon found it in the ille of Bourbon, where they call it bois de joli caur, and life it as an antiliphylitic. Propagation and Culture. The firft fpecies is propagated here by layers, which will take root in one year ; the young branches only are proper for this purpofe, fo that, where there are not any of thele near the ground, the main (talks thould be drawn down, and fattened with pegs to prevent their riling, and the young fhoots from them thou'.d be laid. 'Fhe belt time for doing this is in autumn, when they be¬ gin to call their leaves, and by that time twelvemonths they will be fufnciently rooted, when they ftiould be cut off from the old plant, and planted in a mirlery for two or three years, to get ftrength ; after which they mull be removed to the places where they are to remain. This flirub grows naturally in moift places, and will not thrive well in a dry foil. It is very hardy, and bears the cold of out winters very well. It is alio propagated by feeds, which are frequently brought from America; but, as thefe rarely arrive here time enough to (ow before the fpring, the plants never come up the firft year; therefore the feeds may be town either in pots, or in a bed of loamy earth, keeping them clean from weeds during the fummer; and. thofe in the pots ftiould be placed in the (hade till the au¬ tumn, when the pots ftiould be either plunged into the ground in a warm fituation, or placed under a common frame, to prevent the frti ft from penetrating through the tides of t he pots; and, if the furface of thofe which are plunged into the ground, and alfo the bed where the feeds are fown, are lightiy covered with fomeold tan from a de¬ cayed hot-bed, it will fecurethe feeds from being hurt by fevere frofts. In the fpring, when the plants come up, they mull be kept clear from weeds ; and, if the feafon prove dry, they ftiould have water now and then, which v ill greatly forward their growth. If the plants make good progrefs the firft fummer, they may be tranfplanted into a nurfery in autumn ; otherwife they tliould remain in the feed-bed till the fecond year, when they may be treated in the fame manner as the layers. The feeds of the fecond fort generally ripen well in England, and this may be propagated from thefe or by layers, as the former. It delights in a ftrong loamy foil, rather moift than dry, and will grow in woods, among other trees and tlirubs; where, when the fruit is ripe, it makes a pretty appearance. It is extremely hardy. The Cape forts may be propagated by cuttings, which is. more expeditious than raifing them from feeds, becaufe thefe rarely come up the fame year. The cuttings may be planted any part of the fummer; but thofe which are planted early will have more time to get ftrength before winter. Put them in fmall pots filled with good kitchen- garden earth, four together: plunge them into a mode¬ rate hot-bed, (hade them from the fun, and gently refreth them with water now and then. When they have taken root, expofe them gradually to the open air, and then place them in a theltered fituation till they have obtained ftrength. Plant each in a fmall pot filled with the fame earth ; place them in the thade till they have taken freth root; fet them with other exotic plants in a fiieltered fitu¬ ation till autumn ; then houfe them with other hardy green-houfe plants. See Cass'I.ne, Ceanothus, and Euonymvs. CE'LATURE, CEL CE'LATURE, y. [_c