INDEX 



Tangiers, conquered by the Portu- 

 guese, VIII. 127. 



Tangomangos and the King of 

 Sierra Leone (1565) x. 24; and 

 the Spanish merchant (1565) 43. 



Tangut, in Cathay, 11, 484; Ezina, 

 city of the kingdom of, iii. 280; 

 people of, I. 290 f. 



Tapaon Island, mentioned in Rut- 

 tier, XI. 76. 



Tapestry, made of small reeds in 

 Florida (1564) ix. 25. 



Tapia, Francis de, governor of S. 

 Domingo, and the English ship 

 (1517) X. 4, 5. 



Tapia, Peter de, letter to, from Bar- 

 tholomew Cano (1590) X. 166. 



Tapia, in West Indies, burnt by Sir 

 Thomas Baskerville (1595) x. 235. 



Tappan, Audrey, settler in Virginia 

 (1587) viii. 403. 



Taprobana, see Ceylon. 



Tapuere, small river in Guiana, xi. 



II. 13- 

 Taquani, see Mosquito. 

 Tar, works at Kholmogory, 11. 393; 



trade, in Russia, in. 368. 

 Taranto, John Foxe at (1577) v. 



164, 166, 167. 

 Tarapaza, Port, Sir Francis Drake 



at (1578) XI. 114. 

 Tarenate, see Ternate. 

 Tarentum, see Taranto. 

 Tarifa, William Harborne at (1583) 



V. 243. 

 Tarquia, Las Sierras de, near Pan- 



uco river, x. 318. 

 Tarquino, Sierras de, at Cape de 



Cruz, in Cuba, mentioned in the 



Ruttier, x. 285 ; in second Ruttier, 



314- 

 Tarracoa province, mentioned by Sir 



Walter Raleigh, x. 416. 

 Tarroopanama, Indian chief tortured 



by Don Antonio de Berreo (1595) 



X. 353. 



Tarrose of Scilly, John Davys at 

 (1586) VII. 409. 



Tartaria, see Tartary. 



Tartars, cannibalism of, i. 50 ; Eng- 

 lish spy's account of, 51 ff. ; char- 

 acteristics of, 53, 136; morality 

 of, 138; horses, 53, 81; couriers, 

 54 ; marriage laws, 58, 67, 139 f. ; 



garments, 58 ; of wool, 242 ; hair, 

 243 f. ; women's dresses and head- 

 gear, 244 f. ; their habitations, 59, 

 136 f. ; movable houses, 234-237 ; 

 beds, 236 f. ; cattle, 59, 135, 137, 

 234 ; faith of, 59 f . ; worship of 

 the moon, 62, 288 f. ; supersti- 

 tions of, 61 f., 64, 141, 163, 237, 

 248, 275 ; purifying customs, 142 ; 

 soothsayers, 289 ; funerals, 63 f. ; 

 peaceful habits, 64 f. ; deceitful- 

 ness, 65 f. ; food, 66, 137, 239 ; 

 winter food, 241 f. ; arms, 67 f., 

 79, 83, 90 ff., 155, 157; army of, 

 78 ; fighting, 82 ; conquests, 84 ; 

 wars, 88 ; discipline, 137, 151, 155; 

 strategy, 158; empire, 68; sove- 

 reignty in the East, 231 ; captives, 

 83 ; laws of inheritance, 86 ; cus- 

 toms, 136; severe punishments of 

 crimes, 139, 157; hereditary laws, 

 S5, 140; Tartars named after a 

 river, 142; taught to read, 144, 

 expedition into the country of 

 Sultan Alti, 152 ; in Georgia 

 and Armenia, 154; the Caliph 

 of Bagdad and, 154; the Sul- 

 tans and, 154 ; their treatment 

 of cowards, 155, 157 f . ; crossing 

 a river, 156; how to resist them, 

 157 f. ; court ceremonial, 162, 

 164; drinking ceremonial, 165, 

 237 f. ; eating ceremonial, 239 f. ; 

 funeral ceremonial, 247 f. ; am- 

 bassadors discouraged by the 

 legates, 177; their preparation of 

 mare's milk or koumiss, 240 f. ; 

 hawk's used for hunting by, 242; 

 duties of their women, 245 f. ; 

 duties of, 246; laws and judg- 

 ments, 247 ; thieving ways of, 250, 

 251,255; rye harvest, 259 ; Moxel 

 in bondage to the, 260 ; their pre- 

 ference for the name of Moal, 266 ; 

 oppressed by Vut Khan, 268; 

 scriptural quotations applied to 

 the, 279; Vitoldus, captain of the, 

 II. 7 ; war stratagem of, 186 ; con- 

 quest of Poland and Silesia by 

 (1237) 186; of Hungary, 187; re- 

 ligion of, 187 ; defeated by Russia, 

 190, 423, 438; two, in England, 

 and Sir Hugh Wllloughby's voy- 

 age (1553)244; a migraWy people. 



423 



