HAD 
falt oe and in commercial purfuits. At fome places 
the lmen and woollen manufactures have been eftablifhed, and 
at Prefton-pans is a — manufactory for oil of vitriol, and 
another for fal-ammon The weftern part of the county 
— with coal ; befides which eS and red granite 
1-ftone coufetute the chief mineral fubftances beneath 
the farses. Several ftreams and prac are found in the 
co t it has only one river of any confequence, which 
peed f cinch the whole in a north-eatterly dire&tion, en- 
tering it near Ormilton, and leaving it at Tyningham, where 
it forms a ba 
Hadingtonthire abounds wich gentlemens’ feats, fome of 
which are built on a large and commodiou > an 
of their proprietors refide, almoft wholly, at them. Amif- 
field and See belong to the earl of Wemyfs; Broxmo ath 
to the duke — urgh ; Yeiter-caitle, the feat of the 
marquis of Tweed e; Tyningham belongs to the earl of 
Hadington ; Leithington, the feat of lord in 
of the earl of Hopetown ; Dunglafs 
all, bart.; Lockend, fir Peter Warrender ; 
tir George Kinloch. Befides thefe the county contains fome 
feats called caitles, which belong to ancient families: the prin- 
cipal are the caftles of Dunbar and Hailes, once the property 
of: the earl of Bothwell. Tantallan, the refidence of _ 
glaffes: the caftle of Redhoufe, the property of t 
Hamiltons : on caftle, belonging to the Nefbit family: 
and. ‘Luffnefs, to a me 
Near the of this county are the {mall iflands 
of Bafs, Fiddrie ; allo fe fome rocks called Craig-Leith, lbres, 
and. Lamb. The firit is a fingular infulated rock of about 
one mile in circumference, and is chiefly inhabited by rabbits 
=~ senate 
ot Sera contains the three royal yarns a of 
Hadington, N rth-Berwick, and Dunbar. According to 
bees, nd 2508 report of 1801, it then aoe ot 
siiBient buildings in this wide A e fhore at 
North-Berwick ; a ertian nunnery ame place ; 
Dirleton-caftle ; Dunbar-caitle ; Gulene church ; Hading- 
ton church; Hales-caitle ; Innerwick-caftle ; and Tantal- 
or ‘T'amtallon-caftle. Frnesh nici objects of a more 
prc charaéter are, an encampment, c Chefters in 
Bolton parifh ; another of a circular form at Gawald ; a third 
at Carfrac ; a fourth on Prieftlaw, which is encompaffed by 
four ditches, and meafures 2000 feet; in circumferen he 
ie Tigris: a ore 8. of Mo 
HADITH. or get ar a town 3 Sytin on the 
ears ; Too —, W.N. ea of Bags 
SNE a 
the ‘town arbtng © 
‘time 5 says =: 
rot he yor or trade of the 
HAD 
the tomb of Guthrum, but there is only a lon 
mutch later date.’’ 
the reftory-houfe ftands a venerable b gate, with tre 
hexagonal towers, built, with the houfe, by William Pikyng- 
Pong dean of Stoke college, and rector here about 1490. 
alfo founded, in the year 1497, 12 alms-houfes for 24 
aged’ poor gertone, with a chapel. On ae . —o 
on isa ftone, with an infcription, to perpetuate the 
dom of Dr. Rowland Taylor, rector of ey phe vib, th 
1555, for 
« Defending what was good, 
Upon this plas he left his blood.” 
This town was —, incorporated, = its charter was 
furrendered quo-warranto to king James II, 
It had formerly oR weekly markets, but has now only one, 
on Mondays, and two annual fairs 
Hap ey, a pleafant poft-town of America, in Hamp- 
fhire county, Maffachufetts,- on the E. fide of Conneéticut 
river, nearly — to Northampton; 97 miles W. of 
fton. It con ftreets, parallel to one 
another, and to dhe river, and the townfhip contains 1073 
mmhabitants, 
HADOWTY. See Naco 
HADRAMAUT,a picchaadk of Arabia Felix, tvaliaal 
on the W. by Yemen, on the S.E. b 
N.E. by Oman, and on the N. by a great 
prehends a wide extent of gat ioe more Sia if, with 
the Arabians, we include in it 
fee. Hadramaut, like Yemen, y ealibine great 
foil and furface. Some parts of it are 
the hills are extremely fertile, and are interfe€ted tee 
watered valess The inhabitants of this province, like ; 
of Yemen, are divided into Arabs, nen in ae wander 
ing Betoudie: =~ Kobar 
a tiffue of fantafl 
thefe articles of merchandize were <a ate by land 
the apprehended. danger of — the reso 
Egypt and wf The sre eb 
by pure 
their here But fince the Europeans have oe 
different route to India, the trade of South ra 
province pe 
hun: fou ea quien + the inhabitants of Hadramavt 
= teri averfe to a’ = a 
maritime life, the trade from 7 
ports is carried on iitogettier 3 in foreign bottoms, 
i i Setier Koon tele sackets an ay acer procera 
Anglia. Gough fays the inhabitants “ pretend to thew 
arch w 
ey toe ook a: 2 aha 
