HEN 
was frequently en gaged 
and trifling, and aiming at nothing but ea he ac- 
i ili ort time followed 
loweft orders of the people, to whom the 
vulgarity and licentioufnefs of his addreffes were fuited. 
He removed to a_hired room near Lincoln’s-inn Fields, 
where he practifed the moft miferable tricks to colle& mo- 
employ to man 
fn the year 1800 the town confiited of 635 houfes, and 2948 
ancient and very curious Druidical temple, which the late 
ct the ifle of Jer- 
ones have been placed in the fame relative pofi- 
tions as they were originally found. 
Hen .ey in Arden, a market town and chapelry in the parith 
_ of Wootton-wawen, and hundred of Barich 
Montford obtained the grant of a weekly “ mercate,’”” or 
people and | gdale defcribes 19 fhields of 
arms which were painted on the glafs of the chapel win- 
—— Antiquities of Warwickhhire, fol. 1656. 
LEY-hou/e, a ftation or factory of Canada, bi n 
river ; 150 miles S. W. of Alb 
to the Hudfon Bay company, on the N. bank of Albany 
Wolong. Sg25" ya 
NLOPEN Caps, a cape of America, which forme 
the S.We fide of the entrance of Delaware ba 'y and ca 
Mary on the N.E. fide ; 28 miles apart. It Ber in N. tes 
38 ‘ 50. W. long. 75°26. Hereisa handfome light-houfe, 
e petty feflions are held here. - 
elonging the fecond century 
; any fort, ’ N. lat. tg 14! 27". 
HE N 
maintained at the annual expence of ‘about 6s5ol., and vifible 
at fea at the diftance of 10 leagues, 
HEN-MOULD Sott, in Agriculture, aterm ufed by the 
hufbandmen in Northamptonfhire, and other counties, to ex- 
prefs a black, hollow, {pungy, and mouldering earth, ufually 
found at the bottoms of hills. 
t is an earth much fitter for grazing than for corn, be- 
caufe it will never fettle clofe enough to the grain to keep it 
fufficiently iteady while it is growing up, without which, the 
farmers obferve, it either does not grow well; or if it feem 
to thrive, as it will in fome years, the growth is rank, and 
yields much ftraw, but little ear. : 
It is too moift, and to that is principally to be attributed 
this ranknefs of the crop in fome years ; and the occafion of 
its retaining fo much moifture is, that it ufually has a bed of 
a ftiff clay, which will not let the water run off into the under 
ftrata. 
In fome places they alfo give this name to a black, rich, 
and denfe earth, with ftreaks of a whitifh mould in man 
rts. This fort of hen-mould is ufually found very rich 
and fertile. Moreton’s Northamp. p. 37. 
HENNA, in Botany, the Arabian name of the Lawfonia 
inermis. See ALHEN and ALCAXNNA. 
HENN. 
about 24 miles from N. to S. and 22 from E. to 
bears corn and tobacco. It abounds with forefts and moun- 
tains, mines of copper, filver, iron, and {teel, medicinal {prings 
and falt water. The principal of its 13 towns are the Wer- » 
e 
ra, Schleufs, Schwartza, and Felde. "The inhabitants are 
Lutherans: four miles S. of Meinungen. 
HENNADYS, the moft ancient of the Libyan tribes, 
known in E They poffefs about three or four hun- 
dred horfes ; and with their allies can mufter from goo to 
I0CO Cava oa 
es on a confiderable trade in corn, 
iron, honey, &c. N. lat. 47° 40'. - long. 3 11. 
HEN-NEISHAH, Fe Ee ana eg warlike, but a 
genteel and comely tribe, who inhabit the moft fruitful, as 
well as the moft extenfive diflri@ of Numidia, in Africa. 
It lies betwixt the rivers Hameefe and Myfkim-Anah, the 
latter being the moft fouthern, the former the moft nort 
branch of the Me-jerdah, and is in every part of it watered 
y fome choice fountain or rivulet 
HENNE 
of Neiffe ; eight miles N.N.E. of Neifle. 
HENNEVEUX, a town of France, in the department 
of the Straits of Calais, and chief place of a canton, 
diftrict of Boulogne ; three leagues E. of Boulogne. ~ 
HENNIN Lierarp, a town of France, in the de 
ment of the Straits of Calais, and chief place of a cantom, 
in the diftri& of Arras; three and a half leagues N.N.E. of 
Tras. ho flourifhed in 
KT : * ee 4 , HOUPrACS * 
HENNINGES, al Biography, ae difeiple of 
G 
mnium /Gtatum et 
> is ple 
Monarchiarum Familias compleétens.”. T! 
oi 
ABERG, in Geography,acountyand principality of - 
Germany, fituated N. of the bifhopric ow re 
» The lan 
RSDORF, atown ‘of Silefia, in the principality, 
ell : 
native of Ge ys a diferple OF 
came diftinguifhed by his genealogical 
rum Saxonicarum,”’ publithed at Hamburgh in folios 
i 
from ‘Adam to the de- 
ys 2 a 
> nga val epg ee 
