Ttirket/. 



1683 The Turk* invaJe Germany, and are repulfed ii, 6ri 

 ijiS Science aiifing — printing introduced - ivj 97 



'Turkfy comfanj — See turkey. 

 Said to fpring from the ruins of a Barbai y company iil, 171 

 1581 They get a charter for 7 years - - ii, 168 



158Z They are publicly thanked for building large fliips 170 

 — — They import oriental g-i'n.ti ... J71 



— — Faflories edabliftied in ruikey,&c - - 171 



1590 Ten Englifli Ihips from Turkey fight 12 Spanilli 



gallies - . . 153 



— — Some of the company travel to Bagdat, Ormus, 



Goa, and other parts of India • - .9!? 



1593 The company chartered excluuve'' for 12 years zoi 

 — — A branch of them, caMc! tlie More;; company, 



trade with a joint (lock - - 20i 



1S05 Thev get a perpetual cliavter - - 241 



1606 An Englilh envoy f.-nt to Turkey . 14.!; 



1615 The company lend fewer (hips than formerly 279 



Their (hips large, in order to keep off pirates 280 

 1S19 An ambaffador lent — he appoints conl'uls - 296 

 »6ii The trade very profitable — the returns entirely 



purchalcd w^ith Englilli cloth, tin, &c while 



oihernations pay large balances - 306 



jfi27 An amball'ador lent, &c - . 34; 



1643 Privileges confirmtd by parliament - 424 



>66i A new charter — admiliion confined to citizens of 



London, noblemen, &c - - 494 



1678 A petition to parlisment againft the company 553 



>68o,i68t Turkey company complain of the Eaft India . 



company - - 598, 600 



■ Statement of the trade — 40 years ago 70 members, 



now 500 — they defire to (end fhips to the Red 



Sea by the Cape of Good Hope - 600 



.1710 The company confi lis of 200 members, all trading 



feparately — they complain of the Englilh mer- 



chants at Leghorn - - iii, 1 1 5 



1730 Said to (hip 10,000 pieces of broadcloth - 159 

 »744 A Bill in parliament for laying the trade open— 



ftate of the trade, and caules of decline 240 



»753 The trade made more open than formerly 293 



• 759 Aft for checking fraudulent trade in French woolen 



eloth and raw filk - - 312 



1765 The company's trade declining •. 427 

 17^0 The company may ul'e neutral veiTels - 69 



They receive ^10,000 Int^ead of the ufual ^^5,000 661 



1781 Perm'ifTion for neutral vefl'cls continued - 687 



They now receive ^8,000 from parliament 689 



1797 They may ufe neutral velTels • iv, 421 



1800 £s°°° granted by parliament - . 500 



1524II Turkey foivls laid to be brought to England ii, 63, 170 

 1570 Said to he very rare in France - - 151 ' 



1695 Turk's ijland claimed as part of Carolina iii, 406 « 

 1764. The French deltroy the lalt-rakcrs' huts, carry olf 

 their velVels, &e — they reftore the illand, and 

 nwke reparation . - 406 



1766 An agent appointed to regulate the trade - 452 

 1769 They fcem to have an uncontroulcd free trade 492 

 T770 Two veffels feized tor illicit trade - 50 ^ 

 1776 The ifland claimed by Bermuda - 592 

 1783 Seized and foitifrcd by the French - iv, 1 3 

 1788 Their trade regulated by parliament - i6-i 

 1630 Tufiiatiy — the duke encourages trade - ii, 36; 

 J791; Secedes from the alliance againft France - iv, 353 



5o6*7}V«j luppoled a Phoenician colony, has very dur- 

 able vefTcis - . - i, 59 

 i4i;o* Tjri? firll mentioned - - i, 12 

 1046* Tyre lends timber and workmen to lirael az, 23 

 Two kings of Tyre call Hiram - 23^ 

 1000* The Fyrians afllft Solomon to build a temple and- 



rtiips, and to navigate the Indian ocean - 2-3 

 880* Tyre unknown to Homer - - tA 



717* The Tyrians defeat the Afl'yrians at fea - 30 



5*8* The commercial Iplcndour ot Tyre -. 37 



Tyre. [GENERAL 



39 



79 



7t 

 Si 

 8z 



in 

 335 



76 



309 

 31X 



4.63 



583»Route of the trade with Arabia . i, 38« 



5S5*Tyre befieged by N buchadnezzar — the people 



abandon the city, and build s new one in a 



linall ifland ... 



34S* Tyre included in a treaty with Rome 

 331* Tyre, after a gallant oppofition, is dellroyed, and 



the citizens butchered, by Alexander 

 314* Recovers, and rivals Alexandria 

 3:3* Agiinalmoft ruined by Antigonus 

 280* Languifliing under the powerful rivalfh-.p of Egypt 



— the trade henceforth almolf confined to liy- 



Ing, weaving, and fifhing 

 14. Purple dye and fiflicry, the chief trade 

 517 Tyre has a manufafture of filk - 13 1, 



1160 Still famous for glaCs — has excellent fugar 

 Tyrrhenian; — See Etruria. 



1794. UnJerivriters M Lloyd' s coffee- houje generou![y con. 

 tribute tor the widows and children of feamen 

 flain in battle - - iv. 



And for the I'ufferers by the fire at RatclifF 

 1798 And for the widows of the flain at Ahoukir — and 

 generally on every fimilar occation 

 United Slates of America — See Ainer'ua, American 

 colonies, Briiijh. 



1776 July 4th — Congrcfs declare independence ill, 591 



1777 Their crullers take many Britifh velfels - 611 

 177S CongreJs feek alliances inEurope, propofc a parti- 

 tion of tlieBritiQi colonies, lucceed with France 615 



They make a I'ecret treaty with the Dutch - 625 



1780 Their paper money much depretiated - 657 



American academy of arts, &c eftablKlied - 658 



1782 Sums advanced by the king of France . 717 



And, on his I'ecurity, by the Dutch . 71$ 



Independence acknowledged by Great Britain 719 



View of their trade during the war » 719 



F.ftimate of the population - -jzi 



1783 Peace — boundaries with Britifh colonies — rights of 



fifhery — reftoration of property, &c - iv, j 



Advantages of the United States - 10 



— — All the Bntifh afts againft the United States re- 

 pealed, and all obftruffions to commercial Inter- 

 courfe removed by a temporary aft of the Brit- 

 ifh parliament, and a proclamation by the king 17 



— — Oppofire opinions on the commerce of the United 



States, with the Britifh dominions - iS 

 — - Britifh regulations for the trade of the Weft Indies 



give much offence - - 26 



Mr. Jcffcrfon's opinion on the intereft of America 26« 

 ^ — New rrg'dations for the importation of American 



prod ce in feveral ports of Great Britain - 28 



Treaties with feveral European powers - 29 



-84,1785 Britifh temporary aft prolonged - 53, 71 



Fieedou. of trade with French W. Indies abridged 55 



But :i!low, d in French Eaft-India iflands - 56 



— — • Eaft-liKiia goods imported — a general defire of 



going largely into foieign trade - 57- 



1:85 Algier at war with the Un ted States - 77- 



— — A cargo of tea, &c imported from China - <(7- 



— — Prcportioi. of taxation in each Hate - 92' 



National debt of the United States. 



I7»6 A tr aiy with PrulTia - -• 



1-8; Britifh temporary aft continuedi 

 17S7 A new conllitution confirmed 



Trade with the Britifh Weft Indies. 



A Philadelphia (Mp fails to China by a new- route — 



two filvcr mjnrs dil'covcred 

 1789 American velTcls kmdly treated atCalcutta 

 — — Filteen American vtlfcls this year in China 

 1751 Numbers of fice people and flaves in each ftate- 



opinions on gufhing forward the population 



94, 

 ir6 

 122. 



1 3 J. 

 158, 161. 



176. 

 •95- 



