~ immemorial rie to has eftablifhed it as of ri 
aera gaa la a ee 
age 
Q 
BAR 
cy from the tenant ; —_— now the 
«mains Pua se t in the lord. 
I / chattel, — immediately on the death of 
he em ee the own : “ he being afcertained by 
and tenant are a — 
cuftom ; but 
s due upon a oe. 
cial refervation on a grant or leafe of Sid and therefore 
amounts to little more thie: a mere rent. 2 Saund. 566 
for the other he fhall fslze; aA not diftra 
AE the lord purches part of the seach: featint-Leerice 
but it is not fo of hariot-cuftom, 
~ HARIR, in Geography, a town of Nubia, on the a 
bank of the Nile 5 25 miles E. of Dongola. N. lat. 19 
20s, E. long. ee 34'—Alfo, a town of Curdiftan; nine 
miles E. of Erb 
HARKO,a stall ifland of Sweden, in the N. part of the 
golf of Bothn lat. 65°27’. E. long. 24° 49’. 
RLE, in in Ort the name given oy Buffon te 
the Menaus tri 
HARLECH, or Harppiecn, in Geography, ani incon- 
fiderable market town in the parifh of Llanvair, and — 
. ‘Aybetoet a North Wales, England 5 was formerly 
hada Be cone 
8, with the houfes, are feated on the — of a cliff, which 
overhangs a flat marfh, on the rarer near Cardigan ss 
at the angles, a 
been built on this yee by Maelgwn Gwynedd, — 
re 
North Wales, about the year 530; but Edward I. e ed 
w 
am Man coins have been found in and near the town. 
a wall dath 
HARLE 
year 1721 to near 6000 books, 14,000 
HAR 
the environs are grand, raat and worthy of the travel- 
ler’s particular attention and enquiry. In the year 1692 an 
a golden tofquis was - up near the cattle, and was 
committed to the care of fir Roger Mottyn. Several Ro- 
About 
five miles from Harlech, near the road to Barmouth, are two 
ic 7 near each — ‘and pe. in the midit of two 
carne n the way to Maenturog are two concentric 
circles, leis upright Se ined other objects of druidical 
antiquity. mulus and carnedd, larger than the veal is 
diftingutihed by te title of king Arthur's tomb. 
the mountains is another large cromlech called Coston At 
thur. For further particulars refpecting Harlech and its en- 
virons, the reader is referred to Pennant’s, Bingley’ s, Wynd- 
ham’s, Evans’, and Warner’s refpeétive Tours in Wales. 
HA 2D, in Rural Economy, a term fignifying mot- 
tled or ores as applied to neat cattle. It alfo implies 
with lime and fand or other fimilar materials. 
Colleétion of ar Bake is a valuable 
collection begun near the end o ait century, by Robert 
Harley, efq. afterwards earl of ieeat and increafed in the 
original charters, and 
00 rolls. This collection was ia enlarged by his fon, 
and amounted at his death, in 1741, to 8000 volumes, and 
above 40,000 original rolls, charters, ‘Wea patents, grants, 
_and other deeds and inftruments of great antiquity. 
ftat. 26 Geo. II. it was enacted, that this collection thould 
be purchafed for the fum of 10,000/, and placed ,and con. 
tinued in the — -sepoltory with th Cottonian library. 
See Brits “68 Museu 
EM, in Grngraply. See HAERLE 
rene a town America, in Ken “nn i ck coun- 
re me sculescatal 5 in 1796, containing 262 inhabit. 
; 213 miles N.E. by N. from Bofton fo, a divifion 
of New. York county, in the northies par of York ifland, 
Gebises, gf Fs bce We have alfo introduced the harlequin 
“a 
Italian comedian, 
who came to Paris under Henry IIL. and. who "re uentin 
the houfe of M. rley, his companions to 
him Harlequino, q. d. little Harley ; a name whic x tele de- 
{cended t “4 all thofe of the fame rank and pro: 
HAR ere in Geography, a market town in the 
arith of id hundred of Earfham, count county 
Norfolk, England; is fituated on the banks of the river 
Waveney. The church of Redenhall confifts of a chancel, 
nave, _ two aifles ; and was rebuilt at the of the 
Aneto tury. The to tower, which i 18 fe wrstes and crowned 
amg in theventre, was begun in in the year 1460, and finithed 
ning, and was anchored ‘up as it appe refent. In 
1680 the fpire was entirely Vichtsoyed by a idode accident, 
but was rebuilt the fo: lowing year. _ Harlefton is 99 miles 
te é 
larly < wa the feltival of St; Jobe the Baptitt, and 
continuin, en to which immenfe droves of 
soap . The return to palamentnaStoy fated 
eiétaic. 4 273 houfes and 14 | inhabitants. 
ene o dlitory and Antiquities of } 
| HARLEY, Soares; TBS Biography, par ars Oxford 
