Cut 
ages,” with figures from Vefalius ; 7 
mitfeles du corps humain, &c. aité de la generation 
eed Sign 37 —« L’heureux Eeetniets des femmes ; 
w« Traité fur les abus qui fe omg fur les procédures 
de limpuiffance des hommes et emmes ;—** La Chi- 
rurgie “Vrancoife, recueillies des iaiiens Médecins et Chi- 
rurgiens, &c.’?—** Traité des plaies recueillies des Lecons 
yi [. Courtin ;’’—“* Operations de Chirurgie vecteillies des 
neieus Medecins et’ Chirurgiens ;"’—* ‘Traité des maladies 
de eal 2 and laftly, “ Traité de la parfaite methode d’em- 
wenltl Hiftoire de tous les 
baumer les corps';”? which contains a report of that opera- 
tion, as performed upon the bodie << Charles IX. and 
Henry ILI. and iV loy. Dia. 
the ten of St. Auguftine, and are soverned bs 
who does not Gke the title of provincial, and is elected 
every four years. 
GUILLEMOT, in coe “ Cotympus Grylle. 
GUILLESTRE, in Geography, a town of France, in 
the department of the Big her Alps, ad being to place of 23 
| 
and the canton 7838 
ome 
he place contains 1057; 
abitants, on a territory of 387% Riliomictres in It 
 CUILLET, DE ars Grorcr, Grorer, in Biogra- 
phy, born at Thiers i in Auvergne, was the firft hiftoriogra- 
pher of oe cele of Painting and Sculpture ; to which 
office 1682. was author of 
Viziers’ se ate ”” Be, s_# The Life of Mahomet IT.’’— 
¢ The Hitto of Caftrucio Caftrani,”’ tranflated from the 
Italian of Machine :— Les Arts de homme 4d’ Epée, 
Di&ion enti homme? in two ‘volumes. “He 
at Paris oy 17 oki 
-LMAIN, heperne a mufician,’ born at Paris in 
; He manifeft his infancy a ftrong paflion for 
the violin, and acquired cache ty on that inftrument beforc 
In 1738 he was receives into the king’s band 
See Gri 
»CUMATIERS, in Geography a i ota walled 
igal, in h the province of Entre Minho Douro, 
kagues BSE ok 
i sa i Wty oie * Ws long. 7° a 
Congo is commonly divided into Loango, C 
arifh churches, 4 fai 
GUI 
GUIMARAS, one of the ee hod Manis, about. 40 
miles in circttmference, covered with tr and producing 
a great quantity of ae ae about “fis miles from the 
ifland of Panay. N. lat. 45’. E. long. 122° 30’. 
IN, or GuIEN, a it er of Africa, or rather a branch 
of the iter "Joliba, which flows from the Dibbie lake, and 
after purfuing ‘a northern courfe, enclofing on that fide the 
ifland Guinbala, paffes near Tombuétoo to ‘the S. of it, and 
joins the other branch of the Joliba, which paffes fouthward 
of Guinbala; and both together form the Nee , 
called alfo the Guin river, w hich purfues its courfe towards 
the Eaft. 
GUINALA, a ner of fags in. the ig of the 
Biafares. N. lat. 11° 25°. 
GUINBALA. "See JINBA ; 
GUI EA, an Extentive epi e S.W. art of 
a 
je 
o 
oo 
s 
5 
“ 
ct 
+S) 
oe 
pag 
— 
ct 
o, 
og 
oO 
o 
= 
Q 
be! 
i 
o 
wv 
aa 
“g 
o 
1 
oa 
fo} 
“<4 
a) 
Tea agues from 
coaft; fee that suet a 
coaft, which bounds it on the fouth. 
Benin on the E., Gago and Melli on the N., an 
guetta on the W v. i i 
peans into two parts, viz- the T 
coaft, and the Gold Coatt ; the former extending from cape 
Palinas to the river Sueira a Cofta, and the latter from thence 
to the river Volta. ote Ivory Coaff and Gorp-coaft. ) For 
an account Benin; fee Bexrx. Lower 7. 
eh is bounded on the N. thes Upper La i or the 
kingdom of 
accurately a certained. from. 
cape Lopo, S. lat. 1°, to cape Negro, S. lat. 23° 30°, is 
about 16° 30', or about ggo Englifh miles; its exteat eatt. 
ward is not known. It is watered by many rivers, and would 
be very eto 7 it were better cultivated by the lazy 
untains abound with gold, 
that are. worked, chiefly for the purpofe of maki 
‘Angola,- and 
if] 
—_ this eeaiee territory lies not yet been com- 
i it is generally allowed to be a vait 
from what is abfurdly called the bac ood of | 
ood Hope, or more properly White Point in the N.W 
probably to cape Rodney in the S.E., a length of more 
“1209 miles by a medial breadth of ups 
