H AD 
_HADELN, a feral county of Germany, near de Elbe, 
bordering on the duc 
es the fame breadth, fecured by a large dyke from inunda- 
‘tions. The foil is fertile, and the country abounds in er 
fruit, cattle, and fifh. It formerly belonged to the elector 
‘of Hanover. 
- HADEQUIS, a town of Morocco; 20 miles E. of 
HADERSLEBEN, a fea-port. of, Lennart in the 
‘bos of Slefwick, on the N. fide a gulf, about 
8 miles from its mouth, which opens inte Ag Little Belt. 
Tts harbaur can accommodate onl veflels; and it 
principally depends we its fupport on ii the paflage from 
Slefwick to the ifland of yen ; 24 miles N. of Ripen. 
Ni iategs° rs’. E. ion Fy 360 
HAD DES: See ApEs. 
HADESOGN, a town of Norah in the diocefe of 
Bergen ; 6 miles 5. E. of Ber 
HADGI-Brs os - town oF. eee Turkey, in 1 Cara. 
mania 3 28 miles S. E. of Kir-fhehr. 
_Hanet-Hamzch, a ae of «A fiatic sage in the go- 
_vernment of Sivas ; 31 miles E. of Kia 
Tanei-Keui, a town of A fiatic a ae in the govern- 
“ment of Sivas; 30 miles N. W. of Amatich, 
~ Hape - Moral, cen of Atace Turkey, in the go- 
yernment of ish ; 36 miles N. N. E. of Sivas. 
HA: ee eats a town'of Africa, in Algiers ; ; 
29 miles Ss. W. Pes 
gees a town of 2 es in Yemen; 16 miles E. of 
Beit-el-Fakieh 
_ HADIN GTON, a royal borough, and county towa of 
eae or Hadin gtonfhire, Scotland, is feated on 
the banks of the ri 
les in 
Mabitan ec eu eetes, with the sown by a bridge of three 
: he Tyne, is a fuburb called Nungate, which, 
‘with seth male Ratonigite, ane 502 inhabitants. 
Fa derives its name from.a nunnery, which was found- 
oe here in 1178 by Ada, the SE of king Malcolm I 
alfo granted a charter to the town, wherein ye ityles 
Sc Meum burgum e Haddin ngton overn- 
ed by 4 provolt, eS bailiffs, a dean <Z U wild, (Ree 
and 12 counfellors ; . and, in conjun¢tion of il other ea 
of the county, returns one member to parliament. Former- 
| place was forifed,, a fome fragments Of i its 
led walls - Hadin, ‘on has fuftained material in- 
Jury, both by ae ei ‘water : in the year 1775 the water of 
the Tyne rofe full 17 feet above its ufual level, and inun- 
. the ‘inci sual of the tow ne Of the public buildings, 
4 ae 7 bai ee ne It is a arge ancient edifice, 
thirteenth century ; and was 
df 
, for. “many a te the pee. of Leithington, 
ing to lord ges g the mo 
lord. rae chancellor of ‘Scotland. 
ritten»by k g James VI. ‘Here. are. 
chy of Bremen, about 8 miles long, and’ the feat of the earl o 
ing to. ty monuments ae of the ‘mountains, nearly t 
18 one to the memory an ioe Maitland, ee » fourth 
mou 
Y HAD 
fpeétablé. manfions; the. wot mated of which is A wieiel, 
pictures, . Other fea 
ed, who died i in 1572 ter his death was = publifhed his 
«¢ Hiftory of the Reformation of Religion within the 
of Scotl 0m 
Sinclair’s Statiftical relate of Scotland, vol. vi. P+ 535y. 
written by the Rev e Barclay, who ‘furnifhed, ac- 
cordin g to fir John Sicchar.’ “a very complete, alte er 
or r 
a account of the town will alfo be fhuad 3 in 
the fecond volume of Chalmers’s Caledonia, p. 
that part of t Figen and a bounded by the German 
of Edinburgh ou the W. sol S. Ws and Berwickshire on 
Eb acres, of which shot 64 parts are arable, 16 m 
or low-lying land, ° parts, or one-fifth of the whole, 
confifts of hills and gs a great part of which is uncul- 
tivated.” This is the account of Mr. Somerville, who, in 
acites part of his “ Agricultural Survey of Eaft-Lothian,’* 
ays, that in point of foil, gage and produce, this 
county ‘ holds the firft rank in Scotland; and in pees 
thefe refpects, particularly Sif mode of hut andry, it 
ear a comparifon with the beft improved diftri . in. 
England ; notw ithitanding he Stas difference of latitude, 
fituated between 55° 46’ 10", and 56° 3' 10” of 1 no1 
latitude, three degrees farther north. than the county’ of 
Yorfolk, whofe rival it is in many refpeéts.’”? The area of 
this county feems to have been called Bernicia, from the 
abdication of the Romans till the epoch of 1020. The. 
Saxon fettlers afterwards denominated the whole country 
the fea and the forth, from the Tweed to the 
This diftri& was _known diftinét from 
Afterwards it was. 
lying alon 
Avon, Lot nian. 
In an agricu 
BS Pp 7 
divided into four diflricts, in Spee ny which, the 
neral chara Ger ar of the whole Mies be pointed out. 1. oat 
of the county, including 
a cae part of which is eet 
valuable. . The ed. coniifts of a traét of varied _ breadth, 
elevated above the mid-lands, z 
confilts of an extenfive range of 
"eS a fo extremity 
ntory called 
