1822.) 
prices of such produce in Russian and 
British curreacy. And embracing every 
information the philologist, phileso- 
pher, antiquary, statesman, and mer- 
chant can desire. 
The great object of the author is to 
supply agents entitled to the entire 
eonlidence of our mercantile houses 
with proper and adequate information 
to act as factors in the several branches 
of trade carried on with Russian Tar- 
tary, and which knowledge is to be 
acquired chiefly from a competent in- 
‘struction in the languages spoken among 
the inhabitants. This position cannot 
be doubted, nor can the subject be 
thought irrelevant, when the very great 
expense is considered to which the 
Honeurable East India Company have 
in their wisdom thought proper to ex- 
pose themselves, in qualifying of their 
servants in the languages spoken in the 
southern extremity of the Asiatic con- 
tinent; and since the factors hitherto 
employed, have been taken from among 
the studious inhabitants of Poland, 
Sweden, Hungary, and Germany, but 
chiefly from the last kingdom, whose 
general superiority in those and other 
oriental languages have been long con- 
fessed. 
Such are the claims the author and 
his labours have upon the patronage 
-and encouragement of a discriminating 
public. 
The common parents of the present 
Tartarian languages are discovered to 
have been most remotely the Sarr- 
Madain, or, as commonly known, Sar- 
matain, since, from locality of situation, 
denominated Hyperborean, and more 
recently termed Hunno, or Unno Scy- — 
thian: and the ancient Kusan, the sole 
and redoubted ancestor of the modern 
Arabic: from thence these north east- 
ern Europeans and NE, and western 
Asiatics derived their tongues, as did 
many of our more SW. European lan- 
guages come from the same source. 
The first, most general, and consi- 
derable of these Tartarian-genera, ap- 
pears to have been the Kalmuc, or Cal- 
muco-Mungealian, from whence the siv 
following classes are derived. The 
subordinate and component distinctions 
are presumed to have been assuming 
their present definite characters, ever 
gince the wera of the death of the potent 
Zingis,or Chingezhhann, on the division 
of his immense empire among his su- 
bordinate commanders and tributary 
prinees. 
MonTsaLy Mag. No. 364. 
The German Student, No. XX11.—Sehiller. 
20 
Primary—CALMUCO MUNGALIAN. 
cCLAss 1, 
HUNGARIAN TzEcKLERs, livingin Dacia. 
FINNLANDERS, to whom belong the Livo- 
nians, in Courland and Livonia. 
Morbuini, vel Morbua, living in Nysh- 
nygowd, 
WoGLowirTazi, vel Mautscut, of Ugoria, 
in Siberia. 
SZERMISSI, vel Morg, of Cassan. 
PoMEIKI, vel Comi, vel’ SUDAKI, in 
Permia. 
Wotrscki, vel Ant, of Wialka. 
OsTIAKI, vel Cuouri, or the Jrésich in 
Siberia. 
CLASS 2. 
SIBERIAN MAHOMEDAN TARTARS, near 
Fobolskoi, Tumen aud Tara. 
JACKUTI on the Lena. 
Cusacut, in the government of Cassan. 
CLASs 3. 
OsTIAKI, ov the Cby. 
Cossxr, ou the Bonn. 
OsTIakKt, on the Czudim. 
SAMOJEDI-TWAGI, on the Mare Glenale. 
SAMOGEDI-MENZULA, hear the City of 
Torokouskoi, on the Mure Glenale. 
KAmsk 01, rel KHOLOWA, near the Kur um. 
CuAss 4. 
SamMoGJeDI, living between Archangel and 
Pitziora. 
KALMUKI, of pure Mungalean descent. 
MANTeEsCHI, or, Chinese Tartars, for- 
meily tributary to the Pelai-Lama, 
i.e. wandering. 
CLAss 5. 
KAMTSINSKI. 
ARINTZI. 
TANGUINSKOI. 
TonGusi-G@venNt. 
TONGUSI-SCHZBASCHI. 
Kor@k1, Northand West, and Kuru, 
South and East, inhabitants of Kam- 
schatka, on the Promontory of Jedso. 
Cass 6. 
AvaRI, vel AKERI, and CURaALI, inhabi- 
tants of different parts of Mount 
Caucausus. 
Comukt, vel AKERI, living near Dages- 
fon. 
KABUTSCHINI, of Israelitish extraction, 
and 
TZUCKESI. 
—a——_ 
THE GERMAN STUDENT. 
No. XXII. 
SCHILLER’S INTELLECTUAL - SYSTEM. 
N 1785, Schiller undertook to edit 
a periodical miscellany, entitled 
Thalia, in which he inserted many 
prosaic essays, and many occasional 
poems which were afterwards collected. 
The Letters of Julio and Raffaelle de- 
serve notice, as containing thereligi- 
eus creed of Schiller, af which an idea 
E may 
