C. fredoriek. ): 



GEOGRAPHICAL 



OBSERVATIONS 



RELATING TO THE 



KINGDOM of ALGIERS. 



CHAP. I. 



Of the Kingdom of Algiers in general 



S) H E Country of the Akerines^ com- t'"'-^ ^-'^'^ «/ 



4lr 1 1-11-IT7'- 1 n AT • this Khigdom. 



monly called the Kingdom of Algiers, 

 hath, fince it became fubje6l to the 

 Turks, been one of the moll confidera- 

 ble Diftrids of that Part of Africa, 

 which the later Ages have known by the 

 Name of Barhary \ It is bounded to 

 the Weft, with Twunt, and the Moun- 

 )c^/i&^^&z: tains of Trara ; to the South, with the 

 Sahara, orDefert; to the Eaft, with the River Z/«i«^, thean- 

 tient Tufca ; and to the North, with the Mediterranean Sea. 



I Afnca veteribus proprie difta, hodie Barbaria quibufdam vocatur, aliis Barb^tr'm pars. Tlman. 

 Hift. 1.7- Moros, Alarbesy CabayleSy y Algunos Turcos, todos gente puerca, fuzia, torpe, 



A 2 ' indo- 



