NOR 
a duke for a cay. workhoufe; but fince the oe ee 
n St. Andre arifh was enlar. rged, t the ite 
lea fold, a bul on by different propri roller 
Taye this palace = the largeft he had ever Been out of Lon- 
on. mon various accommodations for amufement, 
were a theatre, pend rt, and bowling-alley. The lat- 
ler was the firft of the ‘Kind j in England, and when Thomas, 
orfolk, was accufed of 
int age with 
bearings 
Among the more = natives of this ap are William 
Bice volta kn records by th of Wil- 
li from i. place of his birth. “He was fon 
of William Reloan, who ferved the office of bailiff, and in 
Mathew 
a pious a ne 
in the time of queen Elizabeth, was born in the parifh of 
St. pal aa in this city, Auguft 6, 1504. John Kaye, 
better kno y his latinized name of Caius, an eminent 
phyfician in ie reigns of queens Mary and Elizabeth, was 
t Norwich in the year 1510. Edward Browne, a 
ditinguited phyfician in the reign of Charles II., the 
ent fon of an eminent father, fir Edward Browne, was 
rene in this city about the year 1642. Dr. Samuel Clarke, 
a learned and polemical divine, who was diftinguifhed in the 
latter part of the feventeeoth, and beginning of the eighteenth r 
century, was the fon of Edward Clarke, efq. who was al- 
derman of Norwich, and for —. years one of its repre- 
fentatives in parliament. He was born Oftober 11, 1675. 
William Cuningham, a phyfician of Norwich, was born in 
the year1531. Thomas Legge, antiquary, born in 1535. 
John Cofin, bifhop of Durham, the eldeft fon oe Giles 
Cofin, a citizen of aay was born November 30, 1594. 
Edward King, F.R.S.a aF. S.A. defcended from a Nor- 
of Norfolk. Beauties of England, vol. xi. 1809, b 
Britton, 
— RWICH, a confiderable townfhip in Windfor county, 
Vermont, on the of Conneéticut river, oppofite to 
Dartmouth college ; ee ning 1486 inhabitants. —Alfo, a 
townhip in Hamphhire county, Maflachufetts, 14 miles S.W. 
of N 
wis ndon county, “fitnated at the 
head of Navigation or Thames river, 14 miles N. of New 
ig is a convenient city, and has an extenfive 
on 
and rich back country; and being fituated on a navigable 
river, has convenient feats for mills and water machines of all 
kinds. inhabitants manufa&ture paper of many kinds, 
forts o f fo ot Tt contains about 500 dwelling-houfes, 
a court-houfe, two churches for Congregationalifts, and one 
for Epifcopalians, and 3476 inhabitants. e town confifts 
of three divifions, wiz. Chelfea at the landing, the Town 
and Bean hill, in which latter divifion is an academy, and 
in the tewn is an endowed fchool. The courts of law are 
held alternately at New London and Norwich. This town 
NOS 
lying 55 miles of Cherry valley, and containing 221 
inhabitants. Al called “ Whitby,”’ in Upper 
anada, 0 of lake Ontario.—Alfo, a town- 
n the N. fh 
fhip in Novfol aa Ope Canada, E. of and-adjoin- 
in gs Der 
OSAG,. a town of Bengal; 20 miles S.S.E. of Pa- 
lam 
NOSAPOUR, a town of pena in the circar of 
Hindia; 10 miles N.E. o 
NOSCHALSKOI, a town of Ruffia, i in the province 
of ee 3 68 miles S.E. 0 
: E, in Anatomy and 'Phyfi fology, the organ of the fenfe 
oO 
{me 
The nofe confifts of two large yrek pea oftrils 
(n bees a Hise and left, formed by the bon 
extending from before ba soit 
orbits ahaa: aa immediately ov te below, and 
feparated ris each road by a ee sendiculae flat partition, 
called the fe nar 
The sari of which the right oni ie are perfe@ly 
alike, are furmounted in front by a pyr pene com. 
pofed of aa: e, and called in common ee ge the nofe. 
At the bafis of this are two openings, leading into the 
noftrils. Thefe cavities terminate behind, by two much 
ol apertures, in the upper and fait part of the pha- 
ynx 
The bones compofing the nofe are defcribed pena pe 
in the article CRANIUM, which centains alfo a gen 
count of the cavities refulting Beri their union. The b ony 
hollows are lined by a vafcular membrane, called the pitui- 
tary or Schneiderian, on which are diftributed the waa! 
nerves, the immediate feat ot the fenfe. 
Ee the ‘detailed defcription of the apparatus of the fenfe 
lling, we fhall no otice, 1, the external eal ar 3 2, the 
ona pofition, figure, a noftrils or in- 
ae seo 3 3) the communications of the Jatter with the 
the 
developement ‘of the gee : i the phyfiology of a 
I. The nofe, which c and completes the organ of 
faelinesouack the fro oe. occupies the middle and upper 
part of the face, bounded above by the forehead, below b 
fide e orbits and cheeks 
the upper lip, and on the 
The fize and form are f 
of the latter is eee from the chee 
circular groove, which then advances a oe w. 
lateral furface. The two lateral planes méet together in front 
in a ridge ef various breadth, directed obliquely from above 
forwards and downwards, and called in Latin dorfum nafi 
as du nez). ‘This ridge ends below in a prominence con- 
—s the tip of the nofe (le lobe) 
bafis of the nofe prefents ie oval openings, elie 
