FOR 
g@. A third volume of the fame work in 16043 and 3. A 
fourth volume, confifting of the 30th, 31fl, and 32d books 
ini 4. In 1610 a fifth volume was printed, under the 
Obfervationum et Curationum Chirurgicarum, 
Accefferunt de incerto ac fallaci Urinarum 
treatifes was publithed at Frankfort, in 
1611, with the cin of * Obfervationum et’ Curationum 
pay ancien libri quatuor pofterius,’’? folio. All 
thefe books of obfervations were ee feparately at 
hag ae the years 1589 and 1610, in 8vo. a 
ay 
e books relative to the urine, in 1583. Comiplet 
totlcdtions of ae works of Foreftu van ve been fecuen 
publifhed at various times and plac 
FORE-THIGH, a term denoting the arm in the horfe 
and fome other rae 
to in neat cattle-fto 
— ahh ha Ship. See Tor. 
Fore-ror-Mafis fore-maft,and the 
fore- top-gallantaa a the length of the fore-top-maft. 
See Oe tT, and Sx 
FORE.-T OOTH. Gene. out the fore tooth is a 
them. 
ee EORE:YARD. See Yar 
FOREZ, in aie ted a county of France, fo called 
Hefore the revolution was a large and fertile valley i in- 
terfected with fmall. risers, which run 
ontbrifon 
It is a point not much attended 
lf the leng th of th 
re 
The foil 
In feveral places are mines of coal-and iron, and. medicinal 
{prings. 
FORFANG, See Forrran 
FORFAR, in Geography, a rl burgh of: confiderable 
antiquity, and the cae he ale of Angus, or Forfarfhir 
fituated 13 miles N. of t what time it was cre 
ed into a royal burgh is sere aw 
however, een its: privileges 
_as fuch, with pailia 
a . re nt es non 
modious ftruéture, ftands nearly in the centre of the town. 
‘The feffions-houfe, lately re-built, “has a neat front towards 
the market-place: the lower part is appropriated for ‘pri- 
foners, the upper confilts of a fpacious fet of dpart- 
ments for the tranfaétion of municipal butinefs, public 
i h olds his 
are Cee 
Co) s they are Meee ermed, viz. 
Reftenet, Fithie, and Forfar. On the banks OF the firft 
are the remains of a ah a steep on . 
foonales of Jedburgh. ond i a mile i 
eacaalcenee: and the aay Sprie fae cay eee 
go 
fo rfeiture or rebellion of the vaffal. 
oods forfeited, and go sa conleated Rect aaa ; 
ane ; 
rit oO arvodamus, 
of lan 
‘various mean 
FOR 
on its margin an elegant boudoir, or fumme elie: In the 
loch of Forfar was formerly an ifland, on which ftood a 
caftle, the refidenace of Malcolm Canmore 5 at which time 
it formed alfo a place of religious retirement for queen 
; but by the draining occafioned by digging for 
peat, this now united to the land.- From this lake iftues 
the rivulet, called Dean, which falls into the river Ifla, in 
ay. 
FORFEITURE originally "gas a pe aolaeeliian or 
offence againt fome penal law. 
Forfeiture is defined by judge Blackftone to be a punifh- 
ment annexed by law to fome illegal a&, or negligence in 
la nds, tenements, or hereditaments, whereby 
wrong which either he 
the public ties “with himfelf, hath fuf- 
taine 
The word is formed of the bafe Latin Ee led 
whence Mb ashe and forfaidura, and the French for- 
fait. risfaé dura comes of forisfacere, which, ‘according 
to Tfidore, cui to hurt, ox offend, facere contra rationem ; 
and which 
meee o do; - 
the 
ot improperly derived of foris, out, aud - 
au action out of rule, or contrary to - 
Bu aah us, it is now more frequently ufed for the effe& * 
of fuch eb Neir or the lofing 
re honou ce, or at in 
forfeitu of goods, a 
ee becomes 1 vacant is t 
ick have -a pares 10 has co ted 
offence, whereby ‘he lofes his goods, are faidto ae forfeited : 
thofe which’an offender difavows, as not ‘his own, and 
which are not claimed by any olen are faid to‘be confif- 
ape at. 25° Edw. III 
ore ge eneral ; aad co 
Add, that forfeiture, or forfeit, 
ai fealicn more particular, being - 
7 
+” 
princip ally ufed for fuch as forfeit only to'thé king’s. ex- - 
cheque 
Foarerrunt; full, plena: ~ forisfadura, called alfo ‘plena 
“vita, is a forfeiture of life and member, and all-elfe' that a + 
-man has.’ 
This obtains in crirhinal cafes, ‘as where a 
attainted of treafon, felony, &é. 
s, &c. in civil cafes. 
a petfon i is 
There is alfo a ie 
There are: various degrees and 
s, whereby ands, tenements," ‘and heredita- 
ments, may be forfeited. y crimes and mifdemeanors : 
of hele: the principal offerces that induc ce’ a forfeiture of 
lands and teriements wn, are: tre — — ny» 
mifptifion of treafon,: Senne drawing a, w 
judge, or ‘ftriking a 
obfervance of certain’ eve enacted in reftraint of ‘papifts.‘: 
cafes is two-fo 
to 
the eras of all aide and tenements which he had in his 
own right for e or Rives o long as fuch intereft fhall 
fubfitt. (Co. I. ‘392. nit. 19. I se Gi 240. 
2 Hawk.. vr tat. a Hen. VIII. c. 13). This 
forfeiture relates seat eet to the time of nt treafon 
committed ; 
any one in the prefence: of nie xing 8. 
“principal courts of juitice, and popifh récufancy, or non- 
es 
