Of the Southern Province. 67 



might lye Itill farther to the E. beyond the Frontiers of This 

 Province. 



I take that particular Chain of Mountains, which lyeth be-^-^^ ^oun- 

 tween the mantmie and midland rlain-Country, to be the Con- 

 tinuation of Mount Atlas. We have a full Profped: of Them 

 all along the Mettijiah\ efpecially from the Hills in the Neigh- 

 bourhood of Algiers. At the River Zeitoune, They begin to 

 turn towards the S. E. and, joyning Jurjura, alter Their Di- 

 redlion, and tend more to the Southward. In This Polition 

 They are continued through the Mountains o{JVan-nougah, and, 

 uniting afterwards with Jibhel I-aite, begin once more to run 

 parallel with the Coaft. 



A Few Miles to the N. N/E. of the Ma-faffran, theTurretta 

 Weftern Boundary of This Province, we have a round watch via. £vr. 

 Tower, built upon a rocky Cape, that ftretcheth Itfelf about a^^" 

 Furlong into the Sea. It is known in fome modern Sea Charts 

 by the Name of [ Turretta Ch'ica ] The little Tower, but the 

 Moors call It Seedy Ferje from the Name of the Marab-hutt, 

 who is there interred. Within the Cape there is a fmall Creek, 

 with a little Bay on each Side of It, where Veflels fometimes 

 put in for flielter againft ftrong Eafterly Winds. We have 

 at This Place fome few Walls and Cifterns of Roma?! Work- 

 manfliip, which, by the Order of the Tables, may lay Claim 

 to Ttolemf'Sy Via. We meet with feveral Pieces of a Roman 

 High Way betwixt Seedy Ferje, Ras Accon-natter and Algiers \ 

 and near the Tomb of Seedy Hallif, another Marahhutt, about 

 the half Way betwixt Seedy Ferje and Algiers, we fall in with 

 a Number of Graves, covered with large flat Stones, each of 

 Them big enough to receive two or three Bodies. 



The high Mountain of Boojereah, with It's three contiguous Boojereah. 

 T>ajljkras, are nine Miles from Seedy Ferje to the N. E. and 

 about half a League from Them, to the W. N. W. is the Ras Ras Accon- 

 Accon-natter , the Cape Caxines of our modern Sea Charts. Be- Cap^Caxi- 

 fides a Fountain of good Water, we have likewife at This Place ''^^* 

 fome Ruins, with the Traces of a fmall Aqueduft, that might 

 formerly conduct a Part of the Water towards Seedy Ferje or Via. 

 Edrift fituateth His Hur' betwixt This Promontory and theEdnfivHur. 



I A Promontorio Battal incipit contincns Hur, c^nx per llneam reiStam extenditur plu{^ 

 quam XL M. P. arcuatim vero LX. Toca haec ora profundiffima eft, & qui in earn labitur, 

 nunquani evadit. Ab extremitate continentis Hur ad Infulas filiorum Maz.a<^hana, XIII. M. 

 ?.Geogr.Nub.p.S6. 



R z Ras 



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