OCA 
properly in the Chinefe Soongoria, from whence it iffues in a 
ge ftrean, under the appellaion of Tfhulifhman; aad 
in N. lat. 52 and E. long. 103° 30/, fa'ls into the lake 
Teletrkoey in the Ruffian soa From this lake, called 
< 
joa 
ened 
ina 
ct 
Fs 
oO 
Bs: 
ed 
_— 
f. 
it difcharges se into the guif 
of the fame name, which unites it wit zen ocean in 
N. lat. 73° 50’, and long. go° e pr cicipal rivers which 
the Oby takes up in its courle are to the left, t 
. lat. 67°, and long. 86’, 
{peaking, flows over a clayey, fandy, and m . It 
is navigable till very near up to the Teletzkae Ors. uncom- 
monly prolific in fifh, and in many places is ane gery by 
forefts of large pine and birch trees. The courfe Ai this 
river hear above 3000 verits. Tooke’s Ruffia, ¥ 
or Ouby, a {mall ifland i in the Eaft Indian eee ; "50 
see in Tength from - to ise e and from 12 to 20 in breadth. 
S. lat. 1°3 El 4° 56’. 
eta Little a {malt “fland near the W. coaft of Oby. 
S. lat. E. long. 
O ADH. a town of Arabia, i in the province of Hedsjaz ; 
30 miles N.E. of Niab. 
AMPO, Frorian pe, in Biography, a perfon of 
whom little is known, except what is learnt frem a petition 
which he prefented to the Cortes of Valladolid, a few 
months before his death. In this petition he ftated, that for 
on mora 
ation fea ived him n of a leifure for mae purfuits, and 
he therefore petitioned for a penfion of 400 ucats, being 
equivalent to the value of the pretesine nt. is was fa- 
vourably received, but Ocampo did not live to receive it. 
He took great pains in travelling through many rae 
in queft of documents for his hiftery, and boafts of havin 
copied every infcription in T'arragona with his own hand. 
He fays, he went down into the mine near Carthagena, not 
He had travelled abroad, and 
n 8 down to the death of the Scipios. 
ree ee ae fal ha FSyracul Florian devotes a whole 
chapter to Archi 
of 
ufeful to the world, fo — to have their cea one ata and 
benefa€tions praifed by us all who come after them, than 
the cruelty and fiercenefs of fo many battles, fo much ftrife 
and rancour, fuch wafte of blood as we find t o be their 
main fubje& of relation, being manifeftly thin 
ure, and which 
occ 
h great care, and the 
moft fcrupulous sage This edition w 
December 1541, a 
mpo. a. Bio 
A, in Cas, a large and antique city of 
nd chief town of Lower Mancha, fituated on an 
oft much of its {plendour, and is now partly in 
Ocanna contains four parifhes, fix monatteries, five convents, 
a governor of the order of St. James, and an Alcade mayor. 
The inhabitants formerly carried on a confiderable trade in 
sil of St. James, then fo rich aad powerful, lived at 
na; and, therefore, at a much earlier period than the 
reign of Philip II. The number of inhabitants 7 Tag 
s E.N.E. of Toledo. N. lat. 40° WwW 
ieee. 
co. or St. Anna, atown of South aaa in the 
a of St. Martha, on fl — di Oro ; © miles 
of St. Martha. N lat.7° 50’. W lon 
OCCA, a ridge of mountains in Spain, bane one of - 
principal ramifications of the Pyrenees, extending from t 
vicinity of Tortofa in Catalonia, to Burgos in Old Cattile.— 
Ifo, a river of — which rifes near Burgos, and runs 
into the Ebro near Fria 
OCCACOKE, an ‘fland near the coaft of North Caro- 
sae fe) miles long, wa from 13 to 3 wide. N. lat. 36° 
W. long. 76° nnel egea this arma and Cove 
bank is called Cesc ars N. lat. 34° 55! . long. 
76° 18/. 
OCCAM, bis caeac in ee ware an ae a {cholaftic 
divine of the 14t ury, was ad n Scotus, 
to whom he was title, if at all, s fener in Tabtiety, and ob- 
tained hed title of the « pipaciule Doétor.”” He became 
t 
fequence pola ihe eerochnen of 
the iouan fee, aa the ence ae of the m o be- 
agra 
