NOG 
verfions of books written in that tongue. In 1545 he was 
appointed one of three commiflioners to whom was com- 
mitted the care of fupplying Verona with provifions in a time 
of {carcity. Soon after this he was fent to the council of 
Trent, where he gained much applaufe, by a difcourfe pro- 
nounced before that aflembly. In 1554 he was made a knight 
of the republic of Verona, and in the following year he was 
arpenes euew: of the a. over - Ahaier apd 
the a He d t Verona in the yea 
works were numerous, of. ich we notice the 
n tranflation of a ook attributed to St. 
D e fubjeét ** De tis qui fidem dor- 
mierunt.”? Inthe year I nen he publithed at Venice ‘ Apof- 
tolicz inflitariones i in ee Libellum colle&te :’? to this he 
annexed his difcourfe delivered before the council of Trent. 
In 1552 he printed, in quarto, a Latin treatife relating to 
the periodical increafe of the Nile, from a very rare work, 
printed at Milan under the title of ‘ Timotheus, five de Nilo, 
“a He tranflated alfo * «De Univerfa Eisele ?? of Ocel- 
tmilies w ave written in ‘Crk, ”? which is given | in the 
Venice edition of “Ocellus? work ; inthe ‘ Opufcula Mytho- 
logica,” publifhed at Cambridge i in 1673, and in the “ Sup- 
plementa et Obfervationes ad Voffium de Hiftoricis Gracis 
et Latinis,” by John cial Fabricius, publifhed at Ham- 
burgh in 1709. 
soled Siegsabaae ig in n angrapyy a town of Italy, in the 
Veronefe ; a miles S.S 
nifland at the mouth of the Viftula, bounded 
N. by the old Viltula, E. by the Frifch Haff, S.E. by the 
Nogat river, and W. by the Viftula; about 30 miles in 
length from N. to S., and from five to fifteen broad ; well 
watered and fertile. 
OGATA, a = of Japan, in the ifland of Ximo ; 
5 miles N. of T 
ONO GAYANS, “ealled alfo geen one > the ma ain 
pe of the Tartars; which, 
was foon deftroyed under his fucceffors. Af 
dation of this ftate, the name of its founder continued in 
nation which he had governed ; and it is very probable that 
‘the Nogayans {pread themfelves from the Volga to the Ural, 
and thence again as far as the Irtyfh, and were not driven 
put of thefe regions by the ieaeaes till the era of the Ruf- 
fian fovereignty.- They now inhabit the Steppes on the N. 
fide of the Caucafian mountains and the Euxi to the 
m w a 
La of abode, and even their names. ‘The Nogayans {ub- 
o Ruffia, are partly in what was formerly called the 
ye ee Nogay or the Krimean a partly in the Kuban, 
and bapted hai about the Volga, and im other regions 
-of the empire. The ‘ Eaftern Nogay”’ forms the northern 
larger half of the province of Taurida, denominated by the 
Roffians the “ Krimiean Steppe.’’ It is about = as large 
‘as the peninfula of the Krim, and was formerly larger 5 
‘but in 1739, by the peace of Belgrade, more ta half of 
NO! 
inoflaf. The 
eaflern Nogay has 
been inhabited by she ime e people. 
now form a confiderable part of its aren 
has 
nae eee 
wards 
gerated account. 
the Ruffian aed ee (Bubs nb 
the Ruffians in 1783 
pire, other remains 3rd célonies of this nation of Nogays. 
Tooke’s Ruffia, vol. i. 
NOGELN, a town of Pruffia, in the province of Sam- 
land ; 52 miles N. of Konigfberg. 
NOGENT Haut Marne, a town of France, 
department of the 
ton, in the diftri& 
mont. lace contains 1949, and the canton 8638 in- 
habitants, on a territory of 24@ kiliometres, in 20 com- 
munis. 
in the 
T-/e-Rotrou, a town of France, eae principal 
place of a 2 dilteie, in the an of the Eur 
on the Eure; 12 miles N. of Chartres. ‘The lace 
6780, and the canton 11,552 inhabitants, on a air of 
I oa Kilomer res, in 32 communes. N. lat. 48° 2 E. 
o° 557. 
‘Nocewr-Reulbois, a town of France, in the department 
of the Eure and Loire, and chief place of a canton, in the 
diftri&t of re The place cqntains 2290, and the canton 
10,733 inhabitants, on aterritory of 215 kiliometres, in 22 
communes 
NoGENT-/ur-Seine, a town of France, in the department 
of the aa and principal piace of a diftrict ; Riad miles 
S. Provins. ‘The place contains 3208, andthe can- 
ton roa a inhabitants, on a -o 170 kiliometres in 
17commures. N. dat. 48 30 
NOGG,, in Rural Beoamy, a prone word often ufed 
to fignify nore beer 
NOGHE, Geography, a town al set on the right 
bank of the Nile ; 50 miles f 
NOGONG, a are of Bengal, capita a “of the circar : 
Barbaekpour ; 50 miles N.E. of Moorfhedabad. N.la 
24° 48'. E. long. 88° 
NOHOTHA, a river ‘of Thibet, which runs iuto the 
anpoo; 21 miles W.S.W. of Tank: la, 
NOHUKUODN, a river of Mexico, which rifes in the pro- 
vince of Yucatan, and runs into the bay of Honduras by 
fe mouths. N. lat. 17° 30’, iene. go° 16’. 
HUTTA, atownof Bengal; 18 miles W. of Nat- 
tore. N. lat. 24° 28’. E. long. 88 46'—Alfo, — of 
Bengal ; five miles S.W. of Mahmudpour.—Alio, a town 
of Hindoottan, in Bahar ; 33 miles E.S.E. of Ditied. 
N. lat. 25° 59/. E. long. 86° 4o!. 
IA, a town of Naples, in the province of Otranto; 
five miles S.E. of Nardo.—Alfo, a town of Naples, in Bat 
hea 
