p2 Geographical Ohfervations upon the Sea-Coaft 



TrovK Au- is a fmall Port and Promontory ; This, the Audiis, the Other, 

 j^Rs'ATHf the Jarfath perhaps oiTtolemy. 



|d ^'Ir'^' + 7{M the Igilgili of the Antients, lyeth a httle beyond the 

 ^Ex^.tbit Cape that fonneth the Eaftern Boundary of the Gulph oi Bou- 

 jeiah. There is nothing left us of this antient City, but a few 

 miferable Houfes and a fmall Fort, where the Turks have a 

 Garrifon of one Suffrah. It will not, I prefume, be difputed 

 that Bouje'iah and J'ljel are the Saldt^ and Igilgili of the An- 

 tients : though it may be difficult to reconcile the thirteen 

 Leagues, which, in coafting, we find betwixt Them, with the 

 τ. oiTtolemy and the ninety thiQQ Roman Miles of the liine- 

 rary. Ttolemy likewife placeth Igilgili half a Degree to the 

 Southward οϊ Salda, in a Situation contrary to that of our 

 Jijel, which lyeth ii!. more to the Northward. 

 BeniBe-ieit. The Bcni Be-kit have Their Ί)αβΛτα5 betwixt Jijel and The 

 [JVed el Kiheer\ Great Ri'ver^ which falleth into the Sea, feven 

 Leagues to the E. or a little beyond the half Way between 

 River w Jijel and Cull. It is made up of a Number of Branches, like 

 fiL^r^r''' the River οϊ Boujeiah- the firft of which, called il^e• \Wedel 

 wcac\D\ri-T>fahal•'' [y\^^'\ Ri'ver of Gold, flows from Kaf-haite, a Heap of 

 -"''■ Ruins, fixty Miles to the S.W. The next is the Rivulet of J/;»- 



meelab, in the fame Direotion nearly with the IV^ed el DJahab, 

 but at little more than forty Miles Diftance. The other princi- 

 pal Contributions are from the Wed el Hammam, twenty Miles 

 to the W. of Οοηβαηήηα : from the Sigan, fifteen Miles to 

 the S. W. from Tbyfgeab, at the like Diftance to the S. and from 

 the Springs of Hydrah, about half that Diftance, to the S. E. 

 The Union of the Wed el Hammam and Sigan , with fome 

 fmall Rills ixom JibhelWooJgar, make The [Wed el Rummelor 

 Wed el Rum-malaJj] Sandy River ; as the other Two, with their ad- 

 Rummci. (Jitional RiUs, conftitute the Boo-Mar-zooke, fo named from 

 Boo-mar- thc JVf^r^^-^/^//, whofc Tomb It runs by. A Furlong to the S. 

 zoukt. ΟΪ Οοηβαηήηα,ύν^ Rummel}oyi\st]\Q Boo-Mar-zoohe, where 

 They begin jointly to have the Name, fometimes of Suf-jim- 

 mar, fometimes of Rummel, though the Latter is moft com- 

 The siif-jim- j-^^^j^^y γ^^ίά^ ufe of Bclow Conflantina, This River is aug- 

 mented by the Wed el Mailah, where there are the Ruins of 

 a Bridge of Roman Workmanfliip. Three Miles farther is the 

 Influx of the Hammah, a lukewarm Stream, which fwells the 

 Rummel to the Bignefs of our Cherwell. It afterwards re- 



ceiveth 



mar. 



