OGY 
OGOA, in Mythology, a cane vate a 2 the 
Carians, efpecally in the city Mylaffus. We learn from 
Paufanias (In Arc.), tha the fea, ns was cone tie 
pafs under the temple of this gud, fometimes overflowed it. 
Tt is probable, therefore, that Ogoa was the name which 
the My laffians gave to the god of the 
OGOL LETZ, in aie an ifland of eee in the 
ftraits of Ma koi. N. lat. 69°40’. E. long. 2 
O » ariver of Rotts, which runs into ihe Dita, 
12 miles S.E. of Riga. 
OGOROO, one of the fmaller Friendly iflands; 15 miles 
N. of Annamooka. 
O T, a river of European eee , which runs into 
the Danube near Rakova, in Bu ulgari 
GO See Orewa. 
of the irs Beau 
OGRAN, a town OF Hungary ; 15 miles N.N.W. of 
Prefburg. 
_OGRESSES, or Aaressss, in Heraldry. See PEL- 
_ OGULIN, in Geography, a town of Croatia; 32 miles 
E. of Fiuma 
OG GES, in the Hiflory of the Heroic or Fabulous Age 
of Greece, a foverei eign of Attica and Beeotia, under whofe 
byges 
reigned, as we ee faid, in Attica and Betis, while Pho- 
n Marbles fay nothing 
t famous thronicle hepa only with the arrival 
a 
agrees with the opinion of Petavius, who ixés the deluge 
under that a s reign to the year 1796 before our vulgar 
era, t. Jerome contends, that it was not at Attica, as all 
the cere allege, idan in Egypt that the deluge of Ogyges 
happened; but as Jerome fuppofes that prince to have been 
contemporary with Mo fes, we may conjeure that this con- 
tended deluge was nothing elfe but. the event that happened 
in the Red fea at the exodus of the Hebrews. ie ler 
thinks it eee that Ogyges was not a native of Gre 
but does n 
Nicia, or ia 
OHE 
hae hie .C., and his bie in my B. 
luge happened ; ich deluge is faid to 
the country o of Attica for 200 years, till i ecaie ae 
Cecrops. 
OGY Sores InsuL#, or Ogygian Ifles, in Ancient Gea- 
graphy, comprehend a certain number of iflands near that 
ees of ae eealled Brutium, to the eaft, 
kind of peninfula, north-eaft of the Bevlecan gulf. They 
are reprefented as the andre ef the nymph Calypfo, and 
one of them bears her name, as well as that of Ogygia. It 
is particularly defcribed by Plin 
NENO, in Geography, a {mall but good har- 
bour, on the weit fide of Ulietea, one of the Society iflands. 
The channel leading into it is about a quarter of a mile wide, 
e lyin ng palate two low fandy iflands, within which is good 
and oppofite to a 
anchorage 28 fi athoms, aa foft ground. S.-lat. 167 45’. 
W. long. 1 
HA ENE Hanzour, a fine bay on the eaft fide of 
Otaha, one of the Society iflands ; which paffes in between 
two {mall iflands, Tochoutu and Whannuaia, fornting a 
good harbour, with 25 to 26 fathoms water. 
OHANG JAVA, a group of nine iflands in the Pacific 
ocean, ena by oa pee and lying in §. lat. 4° 361 
on oy thefe iflands is ” of confiderable 
extent, ie other rie are yan better than large rocks ; 
but though they are low and flat, they are well cara with 
wood, and abound with inhabitants. The Ay i are black, 
and woolly-headed, like the Negroes of Africa. Their 
weapons are bows and arrows; and they have ies canoes, 
which they navigate with a 
> one of i Navigator’ siflands, probably 
the fame with that called by La Peroufe Ozolova; which 
a 
% 
OH ERURUA, a harbour on the weft coatt of the ifland 
of Otaha. S. lat. 16° 38’. W. long. 151° 30! 
OHETEROA, an ifland in the South Pacific ocean, 
13 miles in circuit, and rather high than low, but neither: 
populous nor fertile in proportion to the other speed in 
thefe feas. The chief produce feemed to ree of 
which they make their weapons, called in their language 
*< Eto: Pua ed by Cook and his 
paniens, Auguit 1769; but it had foe: harbour nor an- 
chorage about it. The natives, who were fierce and hoftile,. 
feemed to be lufty and well shade: under their arm-pits they 
had black marks about as broad as the hand; they had alfo. 
circles of the fame colour, but lefs broad, round their arms 
legs, but no other part of the body was marked. e 
a dark lead colour: over this were painted ftripes of many 
different asia erie difpofed. Their habit was a 
fhort jacket of this cloth, reaching about 
ei 
Wood of the tren-called see sell polifhed and fharpened 
a one end, fome of which w 
fingers thick. They had alfo a weapon, which was both a 
club and pike, and made of the fame wood, about feven feet 
one end with a broad. 
ed each. cee they 
bad feveral folds of mate died ae ther clothes. ion 
