I V E 



J U G 



/itian, of excellent fkill in liis art, and of Mr. Lawcs, to liiindi-ed familk-s Tlie lower part of tlic town, from its vt- 

 compofe tlie aiers, lellbns, and longs for the mafque, and to cinity to the river Oufe, lias I)ecn frequently overflowed, 

 be maders of all the mulicke under me." Over the river is a (lone bridge, with four pointed, and two 



The compofitions of Simon Ives arc not devoid of merit ; femicircular arches. The charier for the market was granted 



fome of his ro'jnds and catclies, publiflied in Hilton's col- ' ' ■ '^ • , r , , 



leclion, (fill live; '• Copie lioueil friends and jovial boys,'' &c. 



In Playford's Mulical Companion, and among the ".'\.yres 

 and Dialogues' ' publiflied in his time, there are feveral fongs 

 fct by Ives, who died in 1662, in the paridi of Chrill- 

 church, London. 



IvKs, St., in Geography, is a populous b<)rough, market 

 and fea-port town, in the hundred of Penv.ith and county 

 of Cornwall, England. It is fituated near the north-ealt 



by king Edward I. about the year 1290: it is held 

 Mondays, and is one of the largell in the kingdom for cat- 

 tle, fliecp, pigs, and pouitiy ; being conlidered as fecond 

 only to that of Smithlield in London. Here are alfo two well 

 frequented fairs, held annually, at Michaelmas and Whitfun- 

 tide : the former fprung from an annual meeting appointed 

 in 1020, to be held on the feafl of St, Michael ; the latter 

 rranted by a charter of Henry I., dated in mo, and 

 ])rivileged to continue from " Wliit-Monday till the 



ngle of a fine bay, which is bounded by bold rocks of black Monday following, and all that day.'' Several b 



I killas. The church is a low, but fpacious building, 1 

 I a nave and two aides : from its lituation near the P.iore, it 

 is frequently covered, at high tides and tempeils, with th 



and malt-kilns are ellablifhed in the town : the inns and pub- 

 houfes are numerous. Many charitable donations are 

 ■ded on two tablets in the clrirch, but the gifts are not 



fpray of the fea. The chief articles exporced from this covi'n large. St. Ives is 60 miles dillant from London : the popul; 



are flate and pilchards. The latter arc m mod feafons taken tion, as returned under the ait of iSoi, amoiuiled to 2099, 



in the bay in great abundance; and at the time of large inhabiting 478 houfes. In the pits in the neighbourhood of 



draughts, it is ufua! for all the inhabitants to coi 



their affiftance : the fliops are tl 



be Sunday, even the church is 



port, as well as molt others on the north eoaft, is greatly 



incommoded by the Ihoals of fand driven in by the north-well 



.winds: and the town, as appears from Leland, has alfo fuf- 



fered from the fame caufe. In the reign of queen Mary, St. 



this town, the cornua ammonis, belemnites, and other fofiils 

 deferted ; and if it fliould are occafional'y found. Beauties of England and Wales, 

 kewife abandoned. This vol. vii 



IVETEAUX, Nicholas Vauquelix, \n Biogriiphy,ce- 

 Icbrated as a French poet, was born at Frefnaye, near Fa- 

 laife, about the year 15J9. His father, Vauquelin de la 

 Frefnaye, was eminent for his poetry, and had the office of 



Ives was governed by a portreve and burgefTes ; but v.as not lieutenant-general of the bailiwick of Caen, which he readilv 



incorporated till the lixteenlh year of Ciiarles I., who con- made over to his fon, but he wa* ill adapted to the duties of 



firmed fome former privileges, vefted the future government the lituation, and after another cliange or two he was ap- 



of the town in a mayor, recorder, twelve capital and twenty- pointed preceptor to the duke of Vendome, natural fon of 



four inferior burgefles, and granted the inhabitants four an- Henry IV. He was next engaged in the fame bulinefs with 



nual fairs, two weekly markets, Wednefday and Saturday, regard to the dauphin, afterwards Louis XIII , but not 



and aifo endowed a grammar fchool. Two members are giving fatisfaCtion, he was difcharged with a penlion and 



returned to parliament from this borough : the right of two abbacies. Thefe, on account of fome irregularities, he 



election is pofl'cjTed by the corporation, and all the inhabit- was obliged to refign, and then retired to a good lioufe in 



ants paying feot and lot ; the number of voters being about the Fauxbourg St. Germair., where he adopted an epicu- 



A&O. St. Ives is diilant from London 27J miles: the rean life : after this he retired to a country feat in the 



number of houfes was eltimated, under the population adl of diocefe of Meaux, where he died, in 1649, at the age of 



l8oD, as J40, inhabited by 2714 perfons. Beauties of ninety. The works by which he is known are " Inllitution 



England and Wales, vol. ii. Polwhtle's Hiftory, &c. of dun Prince,'' a poem written with force and fohdity, and 



.Cornwall. containing excellent leffons of moralily : and " Stanzas, 



IvE.s, St., a market town and parilh in the hundred of Sornets, and other Poems." Morcri. 



Huritingftone, Huntingdonihire, England, is iituated on the JUFFERS, among Ciirpeiiters, a term ufed for pieces of 



banks of the river Oufe. It w<is called, in the Saxon times, wood about four or live inches fquare, and of feveral 



Klepe, and is mentioned by that appellation in the Domefday lengths. 



book: but it afterwards obtained the name of St. Ives from JUFOSTA, in Geography, a town of Arabia, in the 



ivo, a Perlian archbilliop, v/ho is reported to have travelled province of Oman ; 160 miles E.S E. of El-Catif. 



through England, preaching the gofpel, about tlie year JUG, an earthen pot or pitcher to hold drink ; alfo a 



600. On the fpot where the remains of this faint were' re- term ufed in many parts for a common, pallure, or mea- 



ported to have been found, abbot Ednoth built a church : dow. 



and foon afterwards, anno 1017, a priory was erected by 

 earl Adelmar, who brouglit hither fo.me Benedictine monks 

 from the abbey of Ramfey. After the dilTolution of mo- 

 naileries, the fcite of this priory was granted, 36 Henry 

 VllL, to fir Thomas Audley. The priory, barn, and 1' 



boufe are yet Handing, but do not exhibit any thing worthy N.E. of Allahabad, 



.lUGANG, in G<osra^ 

 E.N.E. of Zncnga. 



JUGDALLIK, a town of Candahar, 

 3; miles E.S.E.of Cabul. 



JUGDEES. a town of Hindoollan, in Oude ; 31 miles 



town of Thibet ; 30 miles 

 the Karaeh ; 



if notice. Tlie pari (h church is a neat edifice ; itsfpireh 

 been twice blown down. The other places for religious wor 



JUGDISPOUR, a town of Ilindooftan, in Baliar ; 15 

 miles S.W. of Arrah. N. lat. 2J 27'. E. long. 83^ 



this town are, two meetings for Baptitts, one for 36'. — Alfo, atownof Hindoollan, in Bahar; S miles S. of 

 Quakers, and one for Prelbyterians: the latter had its rife at li5t}i.ali- N. lat. 26^ 39'. E. long. 84 5 1\-— Alfo, a towa 



the period of the civil wars of the feventeenth century, when 



the ejected mini Her of St. Ives was fnpported by t!ie inh 



bitants in oppoCtion to the reigning powers. Great part of of Kairabad 



the town was dellroyed by a lire on the 30th of April 1689: JUGERUM 



it began in a malthoufe at the end of Wliite-hart-Iane ; and quadra 



Hindoollan, in Oude ; 44 miles N. of Manickpour.— « 

 Alfo, a town of Hindoollan, in Oude ; 46 miles W.S.W. 



Roman meafurc, the double of the adtua 

 It was a fquare of 120 Roman feet The 



laid iu alhes the dwellings and property of upwards of an jugerum was divided into 12 uncix, and tie uncix into 24 



fcrupulae 



