FUM 
nounced, they caft down to the ground the lighted wax. ' 
nds. 
apers — antl _ in their ha 
Fura or Fulguration, in. Chemiftry, a vehement 
vock. oh 
on of dive 
Geo on fire 
K, in eo “ph ,a villag e cage on a {mall 
diitance from the high roa aise 
ford, 44 miles from fae former place, te 
orley, and in the weft-ridin 
remarkable fora fettlement 0 
3 p epaeibee: 3 as 
» at the foot of which runs a me eae an 
It confifts chiefly of two long ftreets, the hoses of which 
are neatly built, and an elegant ‘ftrudaie near the centre 
contains a chapel and feminary. "there are two apna ae 
ich go un 
| Men s Econ eee 
ftrangers of the 
oppofite ae are admitted: in either houfe, but the inhabitants 
may occafionall ut to converfe with their friends, 
They are slog a . follow any bufine {s moft eligible to 
themfelves, and, fixed by no vows, they are at liberty, when- 
ever they ple eafe, to change their way of life. The number 
of women is about fix ty; who are principally occupied in 
{pinning, tambour, and embroidery, an cee fleep toge- 
i oom. - cue men, who a int to — ut 
decline. Man who a joie 
aration 7 
“a fexes, apace to the principles of their iin an 
i a aoe by themfelves, together with their pecu- 
agement in conducting tr a is little a 
pee ‘to Beate population or exten 
‘ULNECK, atown of Moravia, in ‘he circle: of. Prera rau, is 
a place of confiderable importance in the Moravian n churc h ; 
21 miles N.E. of Prerau. N. lat. 49° 37’. E. long. 17 st. 
F A, a town of Hind meee in as iat on the E. 
fide of the Hoogly ; ;: = ie 8.8.W. of Caleu 
FULTAWARY, own of “Hindoottany i in Bengal 
26 miles N. of Purne a 
FULUSCULUM, in Botany, a name given by the ancient 
Romans to a peculiar fpecies of mullein or verbafcum m, of 
ufed to make the wic 
Se 
cles necuia. iofcori 
deed calls it lychnitis, Avyure ys and Nic ee set pe is : 
Spear. The way they ufed it was thus; they bea 
the ftalk of the plant, as we do hemp, and when it was “Te. 
parated into loofe fibres, they plunged it into melted refin ; 
this gave it a confiftence again, and when cold, it was a 
kind of: = mbea 
AR, in. Ge ography, a town of Hindooftan, in 
the foabah of Lahore, on the wetiedees 100 sand S. E. of. 
Lahore. 
FUMADOES, in Commerce, peer ‘Bie to. pilchards, 
aie ea and falted, then hung in preffed ; 
pain and Italy, ae hey are aia in 
great pe Vid. Stat. 14 Car. TI. cap: 3I. 
eae! ry ee by the fud- . 
g It+sas not printed till the yea 
| gibbous and oe earing at the 
FUM 
FUMAGE, aterm cies : fome parts of the kingdom, 
ung. 
or dung, or manuring wi 
Fumace. See Fuacr 
FUMANI, Anam; in Biography, was born at Verona 
in the fixteenth centur y his fkill and acquirements 
n the ancient languages, he obtained = ae of the 
moft eminent ie of his mpanied Car- 
dinal Pole in his gu to Flanders, mre ce vage the 
council of Trent, to whic y he was appointed fe- 
cretary. He held “Glewife. ae church preferment. He - 
g Sar aa from the Greek into Latin the works of St. 
r 
ompofed many poetical pieces, of which ue 
ae ble was iat Syftem gi 
e books, which ne treated with an i anes 
and eafe ach are «itogether furprifing, and. prove the 
author's faciuty i in the management of verfe and language. ~ 
ar 1739, in an edition of the 
works of Frafcatorius. Moreri. 
TA, in Botany, from fumus, fmoke, it having ben 
called by old w agi S fumus terre, {moke the ground, we - 
ea not for what Hence the Eng 
* Linn. 
Mat. Mill. Di. v. 2. Juff. 237. Ck 
Hexandira. , 
Gen. Ch. 
leaves, 
Ze 
aS 
el 
r 
branous bafes, fheathing the germen ; 
vertica ‘: Pift ‘Germen roundifh or oblong ; 
Sei eine sana Ease = of two valves, and 
e orm 
Eff. Ch. ee of es a een ie ‘Corolla ringents 
bafe. Each filament 
bearing three anthers 
riciiGeation of plants, has, an “thie _— alone, ee 
rated Fumaria into feyeral new gen are more dif- 
ofed to agree wit a elec as the feed-veffela 
in queftion feem to cafes, to differ rather in 
appearance ea in ae 
Some fpecies of /umaria have a fingle propia at. nad 
bafe of the corolla, Agr a double one, which i 
ecomes a {purees of in ormer divifion are fee “OF 
ee n, but none “of the F. folida, Eng). Bot. 
t. 1471, is common in carers though rarely wild with us. 
It flowers in the fpring, and mixes prettily with harebells, 
anemonies and daffodils. . lutea, t. 588, found .on rocks 
and old walls. in the north, is a doubtful native, but very: 
eon ee in. pees where it feon becomes a fe 
o hav many-feede iia s 
. a, and the rare a _ parvi, viflor O,_ and cpr 
t. 943, all agree in their elegant little pink bloffom 
ts of dark red. and of green, as il aa i 
having round fingle-feeded_ pods. a claviculata, t. 103. 
has ¢ hite flowers, and a very delicate climbing 
herbage. Its pods have feveral is. but es Gag generic 
affinity to the three preceding cannot be difpu 
The exotic Fumaria are feveral. Among, aon with twa 
protuberance | e o Lars of the flower is F. Sfpettabilis, a 
native of r Tartary, as far as we can ditcovers It! 
is el re he Chincke A fometimes a oe their 
drawings 
