HER 
ERVEY, James, in Biography, fon ofaclergyman at d 
: : h : 
Methodifts,”” and by their influ- 
ence and example zealoufly attached himfelf to the interefts 
of piety and learning. Befides the ufual ftudies of the 
place he learned anatomy of Dr. Keil; natural philofophy 
from Dr. Derham’s Phyfico and Attro-Theology, and for 
improvement in ftyle and compofition he paid particular 
attention to Mr. Spence’s Effay on Pope’s Odyfley. In 
1736, he became curate to his father, and afterwards ré- 
wa eem 
place very {mall, bu 
_ Afpafia, or Dialogues and Letters on important Subjeéts.’’ 
according t s author of 
feveral other works. The profits of his publications he de- 
voted wholly to purpofes of charity. Biog. Brit. 
dERVEY, JoHN AvucGustus, third earl of* Briftol, was 
in 1724, and was brought up to the navy, in which he 
ferved while he was very young, and obtained the’ rank of 
lieutenant in the year 1744. About this time he married 
mifs Chudleigh, afterwards the celebrated duchefs of King- 
on. In 17 was made poit captain, and ferved with 
high reputation in the Mediterranean. In 1771 he was made 
one of the lords of the admiralty, and in 1774. he fucceeded 
his brother as earl of Briftol. He died in 1779, and his 
titles defcended to his brother, the bithop of Derry. His 
lady, in 1768, obtained a decifion in the Commons which 
annulled their marriage; but the fentence was fet afide by 
the houfe of lords in 1771, and fhe was afterwards indi@ted 
for, and convicted of bigam 
c Wa 
large bay on the N.E. 
captain Cook, in honour 
y Cape and South Head. 
lenge 9¢2°.9¢% 5 23 
: j. . See 
_ Hervey’s Point, a cape on the N. coait of the ifland of 
Egmont, or . i 
164° 5. se) . : 2y 
HERULI, in Ancient Geography, a fierce 
i the coaft of t i 
he Euxine fea to # $ 
people, whofe 
the ban 
| Lol Sy a na was: their . 
barbarity that they difdained the ufe of armour, and cons 
HER 
r writer affir 
Proco- 
plus reprefents them as, ‘in ancient times, inhabiting the 
countries that lie beyond the Danube. Here they continued, 
making frequent irruptions into t! pire, till the reignof the 
emperor Anattafius, who fucceeded Zeno in 491, when great. 
numbers of them were cut off by the Lombards, and the reft. 
driven from their ancient habitations. A large body, having 
long migrated from one country to another, fettled at lat 
in that of the Rugians, the prefent Pomerania,” which they 
found uninhabited. Some time after they removed into’ 
Dacia, beyond the Danube; where, being ill treated by the 
4 
a 
S 
ut were foon re-° 
after this period, 
vee 
o 
emperor Claudius, 
ancient liberty ; 
ferved in their armie 
° 
btained lands in Ttaly. In the reign of the emperor Anaf- 
tafius, which began in 491; they made 
