REV 



K E V 



An Account of the Amount of Navy, Victualling, and 



Tranfport Bills. 



Navy 



Victualling 



Tranfport 



£ s. d. 



''535'3 8 ° ° 3 



1,250,947 1 11 



913,413 6 c 



3,699,740 8 2 



An Account of the Charge upon the 

 diflinguifhed under feveral 



Confolidated Fund, 

 Heads. 



_j (" For the fupport of his majefly's 



H J houfehold, per 17 G. III. - 



t ) Ditto - 44 G. III. - 



|6 (.Ditto - 52 G. III. - 



Courts of juftice - 



Mint 



Salaries, Allowances, &c. - 

 Conimiffioncrs of public accounts - 

 Commifiioncrs of Weft India ac- 7 



counts - - - - 1 



Mifcellaneous .... 

 His royal highnefs the duke of) 



Clarence, per 31 Geo. III. - ] 

 His royal highnefs the duke of! 



York, per 32 Geo. III. 

 Her royal liitjlinefs the duchefs of 



York, per 32 Geo. III. 

 His royal highnefs the prince of 



Wale's, per 35 Geo. III. 

 His royal highnefs the duke of 



Kent, per 39 Geo. III. 

 His royal highnefs the duke of ) 



Cumberland, per 39 Geo. III. J 

 His royal highnefs the duke of) 



Sullcx, per 42 Geo. III. -J 

 His royal highnefs the duke of 



Cambridge, per 42 Geo. III. 

 His royal highnefs the duke of 



Clarence, per 46 Geo. III. 

 His royal highnefs the duke of 



Kent, per 46 Geo. III. 

 His royal highnefs the duke of 



Cumberland, per 46 Geo. III. 

 I lis royal highnefs the duke of 



Snffex, per 46 Geo. III. 

 His royal highnefs the duke of" 



Cambridge, per 46 Geo. III. ' 

 Her royal highnefs the princefs 



Charlotte of W ales, 46G. III. 

 His highnefs the duke of Glou 



cefter, per 46 Geo. III. 



Her highnefs the princeis Sophia 



of Glouccuei-,/vr 46 Geo. III. 

 Her royal highnefs the prii c 1 



Elizabeth, per c.1 Geo. III. - 

 Her royal highnefs the princefs 



Augulla Sophia, 52 G. III. 

 Her royal highnefs the princefs 



Mary, per 52 Geo. III. - 



Her royal highnefs the princefs" 



Sophia, per 52 Geo. III. 

 Thcfe, with other p.-nfions, 



amount in the whole to 





898,000 o o 



60,000 o o 



70,000 o o - 



69,692 3 o 



17.333 n ° 



i2»«33 '3 4 



45,463 14 4^ 



9,656 6 11 



79,956 5 o 



I2,CCO O O 



14,000 o 9 



4,000 o o 



65,000 o o 



12,000 O O 



12,000 O O 



12,000 O O 



12,000 o o 



6,coo o o 



6,000 o o 



6,000 o o 



6,000 o o 



6,000 o o 



7,000 o o 



14,000 o o 



7,000 o o 



9,000 o o 



-.0 o o 



9. coo o o 



9,000 o o 



''595'3S° ° ll l 



For more particulars of this kind, fee Political Arith- 

 metic, Pul/lic Debts, Public FUNDS, and Tax. 

 Revenue, Auditors of the. See Auditor. 



REVENUE, Court of. SeeCoiKT of Exchequer. 



Kiu.Mi, Officers of, are excluded from voting in 

 elections for members ot parliament by 22 Geo. III. 



Rbveni 1, Revenu, in Hunting, a flefliy mafs or lump, 

 formed chiefly of a duller of whitifh worms on the heads of 

 deer, and fuppofed to occafion tliem to caft their horns, by 

 thofe worms gnawing the roots of them. 



The revenue diitillcd, is (aid to help women in travail. 



ReVENI 1: is alio ufed for a new tail of a partridge, grow, 

 ing out after the lofs of a former. The revenue is mca- 

 fured by fingers ; thus they fay, a partridge of two, three, 

 and four fingers revenue. 



REVERA, in Geography, a fmall ifland in the Adriatic, 

 near the coalt of Ittria. N. lat. 45° 15'. E. long. 13 . 



REVERBERATION, Reverbebatio, formed from 

 re, and verbero, q. d. / beat again, in Phyfics, the act of a 

 body repelling or reflecting another, after impinging on 

 it. In the glafs-men's furnace, the flame reverberates or 

 bends back again to burn the matter on all fides. Echoes 

 are occafioned by the reverberation of founds from arched 

 obftacles. 



Reverberation and refilition refer to the fame action ; only 

 the one to the agent, the other to the patient. A polifhcd 

 body reverberates the rays all around ; the refilition of the 

 rays does not arife from their flriking agaitui the folid parts 

 of bodies. See REFLECTION. 



Rkverbkratiox, in Chemiflry, denotes a kind of circu- 

 lation of the flame, by means of a reverberatory ; or the re. 

 turn of the (lame from the top of the furnace back to the 

 bottom, chiefly ufed in calcination. 



Reverberation is of two kinds. The lirft with a chfefire ; 

 that is, in a reverberatory furnace, where the flame has no 

 vent at top ; being covered with a dome, or capital, which 

 repels its action back on the matter, or the veflel that con- 

 tains it, with increaled vehemence. 



After this manner are refining, the dillillation of acid 

 fpirits, &c. performed. 



Reverberation with an open fire, is that performed in a 

 furnace, or reverberatory, whole regifters are all open ; ufed 

 in calcination, &c. 



REVERBERATORY, or Reverberating Furnaee, 

 is a chemical furnace built dole all round, and covered at the 

 top with a capital of brick or tile--, fo as not to give any 

 vent to the heat or flame, but to determine it to ie\eiher.iti 

 or turn back from the brick-work with new f< ice, upon the 

 matters placed at bottom. 



When the fire has no vent or pa0ag< at top, it is a wbol 1 

 beratory ; when the middle of the capital is open, and only 

 tlie lides clofe, fo that tl inly a half circulation 



the flame, it is called a half reverbcra' I j . 



The reverberating fin 1.. u > chief!) ufcd in thi 

 calcination of metals and min rals, and on ol lions, 



where the moll iutenfe heat is required, as in all. • 

 Whence it is alio .ailed the melting-furnace, and affaying fur- 

 nace. See Reverberating Fl i;\ ice. 



REV KR ENC'F.,ki /•.'//■-., e. i: 

 of refpect, which is paid to fuperi 1 fanctity, intermixed with 

 a certain degree of awe. It is the high refpi , lid to the 

 facred character of Us object, attended with a confcioirs 

 Ml (, , ,, 11 H ■ in ii iral worth. 



REVEREND, Rkvi ' given 



Icliatiics. 

 The religious abroad are 1 n ad fathers) and ab- 



i , priorefli . called reverend mothers. 



8 With 



