ORK 
ftly excite wonder, 
ical powers, they could be crouetr 
$ are bear no infcription, or hiero. 
lyphics, nor any m of an inftrument, but are as rude 
and unpolifhed as when dug up from the quarry, it feems 
a very early age, when the people were ignorant of arts and 
of letters. ‘And this i is alt that can be > fa id c g them, 
for not e tod th 
purpofe of their erection. 
t 
Some aay mele Leg sing the 
r graves, have hitherto 
been found near them ; 3 andi fhe is eels poffible to conceive 
that any fet of men would expend fo much labour on land- 
marks as the quarrying, removal, and eae of fuch air 
maffes muft of neceffity oe as eke The writer of this 
ie is iether tae inclinec 
In the 
ile ee compated of reife (tone: imprefled 
ety of figures. The veftiges of many ancient 
buildings can be traced in er ee parts of ie iflands ; and 
fome itru€tures of lefs antiquity are ftill tolerably ae 
Among the latter may be men ntioned the cathedral of St. 
rft is kept in good repair, wo ex- 
tremely ruinous. In the ifland of Weir are te remains Ns the 
caftle of Coppirow, or Cubbirow, built by Kobbem Sta- 
i This 
vanga, a of great note in the twelfth century. 
edifice forms a ee of fifteen feet on each fide ; 8 
furrounded by ditches and a tok which, with the eT 
of its walls, evinces it to hay 
importance. 
Fee. are numerous ruins of popifh chapels, which continue 
© be much vilited by pa common people, from motives 0 
ion veneration. t and of Roufay is a Bay 
ridge or mound,.. which ee a 2 the name of the camp of 
be i Fring. As it is plainly, lobe a natural eee a 
ears no marks of human art either on it or around it, 
of opinion that its prefent appellation has ori- 
ginated. ah fome whimfical genius in later times, proba 
on acconnt of this {pot ie a favourite haunt of the eagle ; 
nt Eset and u 
u of 
ORL 
S 
-_ will be men- 
4to. Lond, 1808. The pr 
publifhed a folio volume, with feve 1 etchings seh ted by 
her own hand, illuftrative of the ens antiqui 
e 
when the copper-plates were deftroye auna Orcadenfis, 
or the Natural Hittory of the a pegs ane Shetland Iflands, 
4to. 1813, by the Rev. Geo. Lov 
ORLAMUNDY, a town of Saya in the principality 
of oe at the conflux of the Orla and the Se al; 
40 miles W.S.W. of Altenburg. N. lat. 50°45’. E. long. 
agi. 
bot 
— 
ORLAND, a town of America, in Hancock count ys 
and ftate of Maine, rues on the bars bank of Penobfcot 
river, = its mouth, having Buckftown on the north, Penob- 
{cot on the fouth, and Elifworth on nate eat; 17 miles N. 
of Caftine. 
ORLANDIN, Nicuoras, in Bio togr replys a gs 
Italian Jefuit, was born at hep in the year 
entered the fociety at the age of eighteen, and diftinguithed 
himfelf by his ae para in erature, oe in the 
knowledge of the a 
qui se that ae cer : eae he was 
oh alae publifhed four volumes; and was at ak 
) own to the year 1616 Re father Jouvency, who 
ublithed a ath a at 171 Orlandin was 
- author nue Littere ‘Sceean. is Jems for the 
ears 1583) ie and 1586; and alfo of ‘ Vita Petri 
Fabri Soc. Jef.,’ Moreri. 
ORLANDO DI ies a native of Mons, in Hainault, 
born 1520. Orlando not only {pent many — of his life 
in Italy, but had his mutfical icone there ; 
carried thither furreptitioufly, when 
ne voice. 
at Antwerp, till 
being invited by the duke of Bavaria to Munich, he fettled at 
that cour 
matter and direétor of his ban 
aie but was ee on whe ae to Paris, by the news. 
of that monarch’s death. fter this event he returned to 
Munich, whither he was recalled by William, _ = and 
ceflor 
