Copernicus, 681 ; greatness of his 

 epocli, 083; his life and studies, 

 684, 685 ; grandei-u- of his views, 

 and boldness of hit teaching, 686 

 689 ; his eloquent description of his 

 system, 6vS8, 689; knowledge of the 

 ideas of the ancients on the struc- 

 ture of the universe, 691, 692. 



Cvrtenovis, Father Angelo, story re- 

 lated by, on the tomb of Lars Por- 

 sena, 503. 



Cortez, Hernan, expeditions of, 647 

 648, 675. 



Cosa, Juan de la, map of the world. 

 639, 64-2, 677. 



Cosmas, Indicopleustes, 556, 557, 649. 



Cosmos, its science and history discri- 

 minated, -166, 468. 



Coupvent and Dumoulin.on the height 

 of the Peak of Tenerifle, 498. 



Covilham, Pedro de, and Alonso de 

 Pavva, embassy to Prester John, 

 627." 



Crenzer, on the ' Adonis Gardens' of 

 the ancients, 450. 



Crusades, slightness of their influence 

 on the minne-singers, 400, 401. 



Ctesias, his account of an Indian 

 spring, 501 ; on the relations be- 

 tween lightning and conducting 

 metals, 503; on India, 519, 621, 

 523. 



Ctesibus, hydraulic clock of, 545, 591. 



Curtius, fine natural picture, in his 

 writings, 388, 389. 



Cuss, Nicholas de, a German cardinal, 

 revived the doctrine of the earth's 

 rotation on its axis, and translation 

 in space, 409. 



Cuvier, his life of Aristotle, 525 628; 

 on the scientific merits of Frederick 

 1 1., 61 8; palffiontological researches, 

 733. 



Cuyp, his landscapes, 447. 



Dante, ' southern stars,' quotation, 371; 

 instances of his deep sensibility to 

 the charms of nature, 418, 419; no- 

 tices in his poetry on Aristotle, 525 ; 

 on Albertus Magnus, 619; on the 

 magnetic needle, 629; on the con- 

 stellation of the southern cross, 667 

 668. 



Darwin, Charles, vivid pictures in his 

 writings, 437. 



Delillc, his poms on nature, 437. 



Dschayadeva, Indian poet, his ' Git* 

 govinda,' 408. 



Diaz, Bartholomew, his discovery of 

 the Cape of Good Hope, 627. 



Dictparchus, diaphragm, of, 616, 517, 

 644. 



Dicuil, Irish monk, his work ' De Men- 

 sura Orbis Terra?, 608. 



Diodorus, on the Gardens o" Semi 

 ramis, 460, praise of the Etrus. 

 cans, 504. 



Diophantus, the arithmetician and al- 

 gebraist, 551, 555, 596. 



Dioscorides of Cilicia, botanical inves- 

 tigations of, 550, 562, 563, 574, 580, 

 681. 



Distillation of a fluid, first mention of, 

 528. 



Dorians, their mental characteristics 

 506; migrations, 512 514. 



Drummond's incandescent lime-ball 

 707, 708. 



Dschebar, Arabian chemist, 580, 589. 



Duran D. Augustin, his Romance*: 

 428. 



Ehn-Junis, first employed a pendulum 

 to measure time, 691 ; his astrono- 

 mical observations, 694, 695. 



Eckhout, his large pictures of tropical 

 productions, 451. 



Eginhard, on the Arabian clock sent 

 to Charlemagne, 591. 



Egypt, its chronological data, 475, 

 485 490; civilization, 487 490; 

 monuments of its kings, 485, 486 ; 

 rictories and distant expeditions of 

 Ramses Miamen, 486488; Egyp 

 tian navigation, 487 490; founda- 

 tion of a permanent foreign com 

 merce introduced with Greek hired 

 troops, and its results, 489, 490, 501; 

 its greatness under the Ptolemies, 

 636 546; intercourse with distant 

 countries, 638 540. 



Ehrenberg, on the incense and myrrh 

 of Arabia, 574. 



Elcano, Sebastian de, completed the 

 first ciicumnavigation of the globe 

 after the death of Magellan, 647. 



Electrical science, gradual dawn of 

 725728. 



Elephants, African and Indian, 640 

 64 '' immense armiea of 541 



