~~ * 
HAR 
-and Mortimer, eldeft fon of fir Edward Harley, was boru 
r 1661. Atthe period of the revolution, he and , 
ing himfelf the oe de Guifear 
Mr. Hatle 
much refiftance, and died {hortly ier in prifon. On this 
ot an at was pafled to make any attempt on the life 
a privy counfellor felony ; and both houfes of parliament 
joined in an addrefsto the queen, exprefling ** their deepcon- 
cern for the attempt againft thelife of Mr. Harley, whofe 
fidelity to her-majefty and zeal for’her _— had drawn upon 
him the hatred of all the abettars of action.”’ 
Mr. Harley was now raifed to the dignity of lord high trea- 
furer, and created earl of Oxford and earl of Mortimer, two 
of the nobleft titles in the Btitith peerage. Onthe acceffion 
ef George I. the meafures of the earl of Oxford were not 
purfued, and his enemies gaining the afcendancy,»he was 
impeached of high treafon, and committed to the Tower, 
where he remained a clofe prifoner two years. He now de- 
their pies for- conduting the proceeding, was 
the menth of ae 1724: his political character has 
cannot be denied that he 
e Britifh 
of it. Smollet’s Hitt. of E 
HARLING, East, «or Market-Harling in Geography, 
is a market town and parifh in the hundred of Guiltcro: 
and county of Norfolk, England. 
‘The charch, a handfome Sica building, confiits of a 
nave, two paid a chancel, and a quadrangular tower, witha 
arapet wall furmounted by afmall {pire. Ina 
private ape, originally connected with the man 
ments for the Harlin ng family ; under an altar 
ao a 
-diftinguifhed warrior in: Henry V. and 
fell while bravely daheridnie oy rh fg Paris in 1435. 
-In the windows are numerous figures and armorial bearings 
in the chancel window former: 
“This — was erected by fir 
ee dince dilapi- 
GEN, a ae “Ceo sped ‘Holland, in the » 
flat of Friellands ont ae _ This pi 
be fried and naturally ftron 
inundated. They furs, the { 
-alfo in importing — 
name, Init, 257.t. 133. but Linnzus preferred 
who wasa fi 
b 
Harling was “cee cated or. rhe pean egaeel the i 
HAR 
and clean, with canals in the. middle of them. It has five 
-large and much frequented, incommodes it, fo that heavy 
veflels are es to hie at a difta 
ing corn, “s it 
and deals The diet: poo ti is cBatg and affords 
abundant sonehe - corn, patture, and other neceflaries of 
dife. N. lat.53° 41’. E. long. 
HARLOT, a woman given to imcontinency ; or that 
makes a pelts or trade, of proftituting her body, See 
Courres 
The aad is f{uppofed to be ufed for the diminutive whore- 
let, a little whore. Others derive it from Ariotta, mi ae 
to eee evi of Normandy, and mother to William 
Conquer en derives it from one 4rlotha, pss Ti 
- William ia Parca ; : others from the Italian arlotta, 
T ARLOW V, in in Geagrapion is a parifh and ig He in the 
But fome advantages 
espunicne ye one, well 
rm; Fei the 
hae been replaced by a cupola. 
from Lendon ; and, in the year 1801, ; 
and 1514 inhabitants. About three miles diftant, in the parifh 
of Latton, are the remains of an Auguitine poems founded 
— to the year 1270. Morant’s Hiltory and Anti- 
-quities-of Effex, 2 vols. fol. 
+ eres = fills alarge de- HAR 
AA, atown of Sweden, in Eaft Bothnia 5 38 
miles ENE. of Wafa, 
HARMALA, in Botany, cgyara, an eminent Greek 
i a casa of his 
Tnyxi0, or Wild Rue generic 
tter- 
See Pecanum 
HARM ANGER, i in Cergraphys a town of Sweden, in 
Helfingland ; 12 miles N. of Hudwickfwall.. 
RMATIAN, or Cuanion hes comp 
ibaa the title of 5 are re4eo9 from its imitating r 
battle. 
TARMATTAN, a name _giv ven by the Fantees, 3 
tion on the Gold Coaft, toa ay wind that blows from 
parts. of Africa to 
fometimes for feveral days without regular. periods Ae 
always 3 attended with a a fog « or haze, fo do eas to 6 
mile: — aaahens t only about nents we 
mi fits fos cost righ it ‘partiles. fub fubli 
m — as to make grals, 
pa ee extreme drynefs 0 ote 
this peg fog, aethaet dews, 5 gibt 
the leaves of vegefables 5 and is faid b bei 
