THE INDEX. 



Sttrthquakti, ufually afterRain.p.134. 

 their frequency in Harbury, ibid. 

 at Se.i, ibid. 



Ede Tepe/aar. p. Sy. 



£dom (tlie Land of) p. JJ^, 336. 

 theDefcription of it. p. 377- 



Education ; the Method of it in 

 Barbary, p. i6l. 



Egypt; docs not abound much in 

 Plants. p. 417. in what manner the 

 Soil of it may be fuppofed to have 

 increafed. p. 438. .Several Argu- 

 ments to prove it to be the Gift 

 oftheA';7e. p 436 The Increale 

 of Soil agreeable to theScripture- 

 ^r« of the Flood, and the Di- 

 fperfion of Mankind, p.4411. 



■^;5)'/"> formerly the Seat of Learn- 

 ing. P.3S9. gave Gi cccc lier Arts 

 and Sciences, p.390. The Coaft 

 of it low. p. 3j6. The River of 

 it. p.3jy. 



Igyftiam, their Symbolical Learn- 

 ing. P-39I- what it related to. 

 ibid, no proper Key to it. iiirf.The 

 Veracity of their Hil1:ory to be 

 called in Queftion. p. 41 7. 



lUlia, the ^cholay or .yiciUa. p.I93- 



£/-Eimah (^r^hs) p. 108. 



Sleuiherut , the Cold Stream , the 

 Boundary o{ Syria, and Phanice. 

 p. 319. 



Elim, the Wells, p. 3 50. and Palm- 

 Trees. ibid. 



El Mildegah (Phins) p. 5:4. 



Eloth , Etana , .yfilah, or ^etana. 



?■ 355- 

 Em-dou-khil, (Village) p. 114. 

 Emeer, what? p. 3 10. N. ?. 

 Employments ; how the Turk^i, 



Moors and ^rabs employ their 



Time. p. 198 9. 

 Engines, for lailingWater in Egypt. 



p. 45 t. 

 E|(j(ii/|a»Te!, how interpreted, p 178. 

 Xiham, (the Wildernefs of ) p. 345. 



the Saraicne. ibid. 

 Euroctydon, a Levanter, p. 3^8. not 



Euroaijuilo. p. 559. 

 £i(lort-gaber , or the Port of Gold. 



p.35^6. 



F. 



Faadh, like the Leopard, p. i4y. 



Faradeefe, the ^phyodifium. p. 164. 



Farafieefe, (Arabs) ptl4. 



F<r«an, (the Mountain of )p.76 137. 



Fereanah, the Thala. p, 107, and 

 Telepte. p io8. 



Figs; the SuctelUon ofthein from 

 the Beginning of Summer to the 

 Spring, p. 370. the Time of Figs, 

 ibid, their Kinds, p. 126. 



Fi)i,ig, a Knot of DateVillages. p ^ I. 



Filii, thofe tiiat are curious in Bar- 

 bary. p. 159. E. 50. 



F!(biaU, the tragelafhut. p. 143- 



Fteetah, (Arabs) p 54. 



Flux, (of the Sea) the Height of 

 it at ft(c\. p. 378. 



Fofiil Shells, in Arabia, p. {83. a 

 Catalogue of them. E. 49, 50. 



Food, the leveral Sorts in Batbary. 

 p. 197. 



Fountains, very rare in .Arabia. 

 p. 379. the dilferent Qualities of 

 them, p 380. 



Fowling, the Method of it in Bta- 

 bary- p.300. 



Frttiijah, (Fountain) p. 54. 



fn^Mfo(Diftri£i: of) p. 141. 



Fruit, what Kinds are produced in 

 Barbary. p. 224 &c. 



Gabs, the Epichut, and Tacape. p 196. 



Cxiulia p. 8. N. 4. how fituatcd. 

 p. 136. 



Gafia^ the Capfe or Capfa. p. 109. 



Game; the Variety iai ^cm. p 37^- 



Gar el Alaitah. p. 146. 



Gardeiah (Village) p. 86. 



Gardens of Barbary; no Regularity 

 obferved in the laying them out, 

 p. 227. the Kitchen Garden, 

 p. 223. the Fruit Garden, p. 214. 



Carvancoi, the ( icer or Chick Pea ; 

 called Leblebbi when parched. 



p. 222. 



Gii'^e*, what ? p. 243.4. N.I. or 



.y^ntilope. 

 Gee^a, p. 28- the Aiemphii, p. 341. 

 Geldings, none in Barbary. p 242. 

 Gel/ah at Snaan. p 130. 

 Gellah, p 148. the CaHra Cornelia. 



p. 150. 

 Gelma or l(at»iahj the Calama. p. 1 22. 

 GemelU. p. 105. 

 Geographers ; Extrafts out of the 



antienteft: of them. E. I — 36. 

 Cilma, the Cilm.t, or Oppidum Cbilma- 



ntnfe. p. 20f. 

 Ginetia, vid. Shibeardou. 

 Giran, the antient ^rina. p. 53. 

 Cirfah (Arabs) p. 123. 

 Glue ; a particular Sort ufed in 



Barbary. p. 28 6. 

 Go-jeeda, (the Town of) p. j6. 

 Gorbata, the Orbiia. p. a 10. 

 Gtrya (^J^abylei") p. 60. 

 Gojhen, (the Land of) p.341 &c. 

 Grain j the different Sorts of it in 



Barbary. p.2li. 

 Grarah (Village) p.8(J. 

 Gray-Hounds of Syria, their Shape. 



P-37f- 

 Grinding, at the Mill. p. 297. 

 Grotto, an extraordinary one near 



Bellmont, p- 373. a Rivulet rifing 



up in it. ibid. 

 Gun-Powder, cr Ba-route. p. 130. 

 Giirba, the Curobis. p. 160. 

 Curbiei, p. 61. 288. the Fafhion of 



them, the Afagalia. ibid. 

 Gurboi , or Hammam Gvubos , the 



Carpii and .yi(]t4£ Calid*. p. 157. 

 Gurgoure (J^abylei) p. 103. 

 O'urmaat (the River) p.43. 

 Gypfum. p.235. 

 Gyp/aria, vid. Hunneine. p. lo. 



H. 



t-fabeebx (the Ifland) p.ii. 

 Habits, of the People of Barbary, 



from p. 189, to 194. Hyh't an- 



fwering to the Peplus or Toga, 



p. 290. Burnoofe,ot ifMTtn. p. 291. 



(iirdtes, the Fadiion of them, ibid. 



Linnen, little wore by the ^rabs, 



p. 293. Shirts, how [Viaped, ibid. 



the Undrefs of the Women, ibid. 

 Habrah (the River) p.3 1 . a.t\dy1rabs, 



p. 3 2. 

 Hadjar el Hammar. p. ii8. 



Soudah. p. \i6. 



Titterie. p. 79. 



f-fadjeei or Pilgrims ; their Stations 



from ii^4iVi) to A/ecca. E.53. 

 fiadjome, (the Pl.iin of) p. 66. 

 Hamamet, not the antient ^drumt- 



meiiim, but the Siagut. p. 16 1. 

 Hameefe (the River) p. 71. 

 h'ammab, the A<Jiiie Tibiiitant, p. 121. 



Hammah (jtl) the Village and Rivu- 

 let, p. 113. 



nammaiie, (Rivulet and Ruins) p 5 i. 



Jrfammarm, Baqnio'i or Stoves, the 

 different Kinds of them in Bar- 

 bary, p _3i. their relpeftive Si- 

 tuations, p. 233. their Wattf 

 weighed Itj/drofiaiically, ibid. 



Hammam el Elma, p. 78. 



ice/, p. 157. 



• — —Melrvan, p. 228. 



nUskoMteen, p. m. 231. 



Moufa, p.3 50. 



Tru'^, p. 202. 



Sidy .y^ly ben Joube, p. 3 !• 



Pharaoime, p. 380. 



Hammecfe (the Creek) p.3y. 



Ham\a (the Plains of) p 80. 



Hararr, (Arabs) p. 51. 



Hiratih, (ihe River) p. 72. 



Harbeene, (the Rivulet of ) p. 34. 78- 



Harjhgoone, (the Port of) p 19. 



Hajhem, (the River) p. 38. 42. the 

 .ytrabi, pj2. 



Hawking; a Diverlion of the Peo- 

 ple of Barbary, p. 300. and of 

 Syria, p. 375. 



Heliopolii, or Un, now fltalla-reah. 



P- 343- 

 y.et'iopolnan Nomot, the Land of /{f- 



mejes, p. 341. .^ ,, 



Henna, vid. .^ihennah. 

 Htnneijhah, (Arabs) p. 129. 

 Herba (el) (the Ruins of) p. 6i. 8 J. 



what it lignifies, p. 78. 

 Herkja, the Htradea and .^drumttuttt^ 



p. 186. 

 Heroopolii, now ^djtroute, p. ^41. 

 Herpidiiani, p. 1 7. 

 Hieroglypbicks, vid .Symbolical Learn- 



»ng> ^gyptiani, &c. 

 Hippo, or Hippo logins, p. 97. what 



it fignifies, ibid. 

 Hippo Dirutus, Diarrhyiui, or ZaritHi, 



PI14. the Lake, ibid, the Port, 



p.145. 

 Hipponenpi Sinut. ibid. 

 Hipponites, p. 1 6j . 

 Hippopotamus, p. 427. 

 Hirmam (Dafhkrah) p. 84. 

 Hirotb, p. 346. what it denotes, 



P- 347- 

 Holy Land, the Fertility of it, p.3tff . 



it's Olive-yards and Vine yards, 



p.367. Honey, p. 366 &c. Plants, 



p. 368. 

 Houbaara, not the Buftard, p. 2ji. 

 Horeb , from whence the Name, 



p 383. N. 2. 

 Horle , the Qualities of a good 



one, p.238, 

 Houfes (of Barbary') their Fafhion, 



p 273. their Porches, ibid. Int- 



pluvitim, p. 274. the Court, ibid. 



the Court fhaded by a Veil or 



Awning, ibid, their Cloyfters , 



ibid. Stairs, p.i76. Terraces, iiirf. 



Parapet Walh, p. 277- 

 Hubbcd, (the Village) p. 50. 

 Hunneine (the Port of) or CticlHf 



p. 18. 

 Hunting, the Method of it, p 299. 

 Huibnab(el) (the Plains of) p.m. 

 Hyuna or Diibbah, p. 246. 

 Hyle, what it denotes, p. II6. 

 Hyle ben ^ly (Arabs) ibid. 

 Hydrah (the Ruins of) p. 1 98. the 



Tbumidronum. ibid. 

 f/j-Ac or Blanket, p.289. the Peplus, 



Toga &c. p. 290. 



/. 



Jackali or Vhteb, p. 247. not the 



Lyon's Provider, ibid. 

 Jafartab, what ? p. 308. 



Q_ 1 Jam 



