524 



lisDEX. 



Tithymalos, v. 177-180. 

 Titidius Labeo, vi. 230. 

 Titles of Greek works, i. 7. 

 Titus, the Emperor, i. 2, 



147 ; vi. 320. 

 Tlepolenius, iv. 302. 

 Tmolus, i. 465; ii. 203 — 



wines of, iii. 245, 246. 

 Toad, vi. 22. Seealso " Bram- 

 ble-frog," and "Kvibeta." 

 Tobit, cure of his father's 



blindness, vi. 30. 

 Toes, eight on each foot, ii. 



130. 

 Toga, statues clad in the, 



vi. 155. 

 Toga Phiyxia, ii, 837. 

 Toga picta, ii. 443. 

 Toga prsetexta, ii. 337, 338, 



411, 447. 448 ; vi. 72. 

 Toga pura, ii. 3.36. 

 Toga undulata, ii. 336. 

 Toledo, i. 171. 

 Toletum, i. 171. 

 Tolosa, i. 180. 



Tomentum, ii. 335; iv. 134. 

 Tomi, i. 306 ; vi. 65. 

 Touberos, ii. 58. 

 Tone, vi. 235, 236. 

 Tongres, v. 476. 

 Tongue, of various animals, 



iii. 61— asperities of, in 



some, 61. 

 Tonsillary glands, iii. 62 — 



remedies for diseases of, 



V. 342. 

 Tooth of wolf used as an 



amulet, iii. 59. 

 Tooth-ache, remedies for, 



V. 338, 339, 430, 431 ; vi. 



34. 

 Toothpicks, V. 19. 

 Tooth-wort, V. 245, 257. 

 Toparchies of Jndtea, i. 427. 

 Topaz, vi. 427, 4.34, 435. 

 Topazos, vi. 426, 427. 

 Tophus, iii. 447, 448; vi.371. 

 Toranius, his trick upon 



Antonv, ii. 148. 

 Torch-tree, iii. 358 ; v. 19. 

 Tores of gold, vi. 86. 

 Tordylon, v. 71, 72. 

 Toreutic art.vi. 171,247,256. 

 Tornadoes, i. 80. 

 Torone, i. 300. 

 Toi-pedo, ii. 396, 411, 451, 



456 ; vi. 4. 

 Torquatus, his defeat of the 



Gaul, vi. 75. 

 Torquatus, Novellius, the 



drunkard, iii. 272, 273. 

 Torques, ii. 171; vi. 86. 

 Tortivtim, iii. 268. 

 Tortoise, vi. 15-18. 

 Tortoi.se shell, ii. 379 ; iii. 



429 ; vi. 16. 



Tortona, i. 186. 



Touchstones, vi. 125, 327. 

 328 



Toulouse, i. ISO. 



Tourmaline, vi. 356, 398, 

 404, 405, 424.425,448,453. 



Towers, by whom tirst erect- 

 ed, ii. 223. 



Toxica, iii. 360 ; iv. 397 ; v. 

 10, 333. 



Toxicum, V. 171. 



Trabea, ii. 337, 447. 



Trachin, i. 294. 



Trachinia, v. 269. 



Trachonitis, i. 433. 



Trafalgar, Cape, i. 156. 



Tragacanthe, iii. 202. 



Tragelaphus, ii. 302. 



Tragemata. iii. 177. 



Tragi, ii. 455. 



Tragion, iii. 201. 202. 



Tragonis, v. 269, 270. 



Tragopan, ii. 530. 



Tragopogon, iv. 349 ; v. 270. 



Tragoriganum, iv. 268. 



Tragos, iii. 202; v. 270. 



Tragum, iv. 29. 



Tragus, ii. 455 ; vi. 65. 



Trajan, the Emperor, his 

 death, i. 448. 



Tralles, i. 464. 



Transpadana, i. 246. 



Transplanting, iii. 468-471, 

 487-491. 



Trapezus, ii. 9. 



Travertine, vi. 371* 



" Treacle," origin of the 

 word, iv. 300 ; v. 380. 



Treasury, the Roman, vi. 95. 



Trebellian wine, iii. 243. 



Trebizond, ii. 9. 



Trebula, wine of, iii. 244. 



Trees, their place in the sys- 

 tem of Nature, iii. 101— 

 early history of, 102— con- 

 secrated to peculiar divi- 

 nities, 102 — uses of, 103 — 

 exotic, 103— of huge size, 

 105— of India, 107, 108— 

 of Asia, 115, 116— of Per- 

 sia, 117 — that grow in the 

 sea, 117 — that never lose 

 their leaves, 118 — pro- 

 ducts of, 119— exhibited 

 in triumphal processions. 

 147 -of Syria, 178— of 

 Phoenicia, 178— of Egypt. 

 180— in which fruits ger- 

 minate one beneath the 

 other, 182— of Ethiopia, 



193, 194— of Mount Atlas, 



194, 195 — of Cyreuaica, 

 200- of Asia and Greece, 

 201 — of the Mediterrane- 

 an, 209, 210— gigantic, in 

 the Indian Seas, 212 — of 



the Troglodytic Sea, 212 

 — methods of grafting, ;%2 



— countries that have 

 none, 339— wonders con- 

 nected with those of the 

 North, 340, 341— various 

 products of, 350. 351— the 

 bark of, 354, 255— those of 

 which the wood is valued, 

 365— localities of various, 

 370, 371— species of, -373— 

 evergreen, 373, 374 — 

 leaves of, 374-379— blos- 

 soms of, 380, 383— fecun- 

 dation of, 381 — which bear 

 tiie whole year, 385 — 

 which bear no fruit, 385 — 

 looked upon as ill-omen- 

 ed, 386, 387-which soonest 

 lose their fruit or flowers, 

 386-unproductive in some 

 localities, 387 — theirmode 

 of bearing, 387 — in which 

 the fruit appears first. 387 

 — with twocrops in a year, 

 388 — wliich become old 

 most rapidly or most 

 Blowly, 389, 390— with va- 

 rious products, 390— dif- 

 ferences in their trunks 

 and branches, 391, 392— 

 roots of, 391 — trunks of, 

 391, 392— branches of, 391, 

 392— bark of, 393— which 

 grow spontaneously, 394, 

 395, 396— changes in their 

 nature, 397— juices of, 412 

 — veins and pores of, 413, 

 414— the felling of, 415— 

 size of, 417 — largest in 

 size, 419 — some proof 

 against decay, 422, 423 — 

 age of, 429, 430, 431 — 

 shortlived, 432 — famous, 

 433 — enormous prices of, 

 438, 439 — surnames deriv- 

 ed from, 440— influence of 

 weather upon, 441, 442 — 

 their mode of bearing, 460 



— which never degene- 

 rate, 461, 462 — interval 

 left between, 472, 473 — 

 shadow thrown by, 473, 

 474 — growth of, 475 — 

 which grow from cuttings, 

 486— diseases of, 517-524, 

 527, 530— which are inju- 

 rious to one another, 525, 

 526 — prodigies connected 

 with, 526, 527— incisions 

 in, 529, 530 — mode of ma- 

 nuring, 531, 5.32— medica- 

 ments for, 532, 533, 534. 



Trefoil, iv. 330, 331, 374, 375. 

 Trent, i. 252. 

 Treviso, i. 248. 



