HAR 
t the landgrave of Heffe commanded 
him to  fertle at Caffe, in order to attend his perfon as chief 
phyfici ian. He removed thither accordingly, though net 
without great pcm cé at qbitting his chair, in the ear 
1616, and continued there until his death, which too 
He left the follaiuin 
~chymica,’”? was edited at Francfort, 1664 and 1699, 
bet. Dotead Johren. Eloy. Dict 
. HARTOGIA, in Botany, i named by Thunberg and 
the nger Linnus, in m a a Dutch bo- 
tanical traveller, by soho 5 sada plants from the Cape of 
Good Hope were firft made known to. European = 
(The original Hartogia of Linneus being referred to-Di 
the prefent was-cholen by Thunberg, who neverthelefs, say 
ai unaccountable. error, Sbfequdistly miftook it for the real 
_ Schrebera Sehinoides of Linnzus, as did Juffieu. The latter. 
us however is a nonéntity, appearing by his herbarium 
to be sre = of Willdenow, growing on Myrica 
d therefore antes —— was founded b 
et Syab. fafc. 2. 42< 
bera is, we hope, eft 
the late learned and excellent 
. Willd. Sp. Pl. v. 1. 669. Mart. Mill. Dia. 
¥. 2. ene we gi 77. Illuftr. 307. t. 76. 
¢ era 3 Thunb. Prod. part 1. n. 12,)—Clafs and 
order, Tetrandria Monogynia. Nat. Ord. Dumofe, Linn. 
Gen. "Ch.-Cal. Perianth inferior, in tal (not five) deep, 
e fegments, ov Cor. Pe- 
with the calyx and ak » equal, 
ce as | 
obovate, concave, inferted under a glandular aa obed re- be 
ceptacle, or neétarys Stam. Filaments four, ere 
’velling 
M.C 
burg’s. an aftronomer, he Eadateok to make fome eipae im: 
HAR 
petals being four 5. according a the analogy of he natural: 
order to which the plant belong 
Spang Linm Gen, an Tet Pl. 288, Se Di- 
tik 
‘ates 
he met with. 
ftand the holy of ) 
others, without fome degree of mathematical obiealh lie 
hajerdsd up the little money allowed him for his pocket, to: 
pay an inftru@tor for aS to him the principles of 
this fcience. -He now affiduoufly mits himfelf to. his fa- 
vourite ftudies, and ‘particularly to of the 
crofcope. By his obfervations with this 
he improved, he maf@e many Prbprarere: 
refpeét to the animalcula found in the femen 
‘When he was about eighteen years old, he 
defire of his father, fome years to the “feu di 
lettres, and other fubjects. connected with general literature;. 
moet the ableft maiters at Ikeyden and Amiterdam- He 
mbraced. ee saa oe po which he afterwards aban- 
miterdam he had an Marat 
of iste 
fc an Here he: me 
philofopher von 
ys 
eet. 
of many men of learning, partic 
branche and the marquis de ?’ Hép fl.” "eis le 
entitled ‘The principles of Natural Phiiofophy.” 
el 
_member of feveral 
artfocker did not accept 
in his native count 
ding, fhorter than the petals, inferted between The magiftrates of Amfterdam, as an in acknowledgment 4 
ak. the sens chee cated, pat dy ate ates Pile the honour which he had done to Holland, in his preference: 
Germen aston ven BS arte fhort ; ftigmas two. of it in @ppofition to the high honours of a ess eed 
cated, cloven. Drupa dry," ovate. Seed. Nat fa ereéted for his ule a fmall obfervatory on one of the hee 
tary cogeeining tw of the city. In 1704, after three years folicitation,. 
Ch. Galyx. 3 in four deep fegments. Petals four. 
Necrya fourlobed (08 Stigmas two, cloven. Drupa 
with a two- 
a agg only known fpecies. Linn. Su 
328. (Sele {chinoides ; Thunb. Prod. 28. -t. me 
_— woods at the Cape of Good Hope. A /brub five 
feet high, varioufl branched, fmooth. Leaves op- 
two inches long, saetictanpetline, obtufe, ferrated, 
oes entire at the bafe, and taperin | 
Lebdutihiethitic Fihenicimih, sn tortatine thers, 
yaired to the court of the beeet - EF tat a 
naire) 
male, aid "where he en 
year 1730, his “ Courfe of eek 
ublifhed. with additional: pieces on ph 
rom the = of Sasinpebeeci: 
