GAU 
ed by one or other of thefe names, ec Gaulona or 
ond Jordan ny 
diftinguifh it from the othe a 
(See Gatizzz.) This J ae had raed and headed an infur- 
rection againft the Roman government, on occafion of the 
tax which Auguftus levied on Judea, when he reduced it 
fephus ii 1.) that Judas roufed their 
rebellious fpirit, by cha arping them with meannefs, if bea 
could endure to pay tribute to the Romans, and ac 
ledge mortal mei: for their lords, after God had been dae 
king. But notwithftanding the pretenfions of Judas, the 
Jews had. before this time ae ‘ss ie al lords r 
2.) tha 
people (in 
Judza, Seating be them thes felons of a ver, 
lonite eee was foon fuppreffed ; an read no more OF 
it in the yy ena cae, as ion have conjeQtured, 
who were otherwife called Ga- 
lileans, an as they were performing the 
mer rites i the oe ine mingling their ul lood with their 
facrifi Luke, xiil. 
GAULONITIS. ae GAULAN. 
GAULTHERIA, in Botany, named by Kalm in honour 
of a Fre es phyfician fettled 3 n Canada, _ name was 
really Gautier, and who wrote an account of the fugar 
obtained fom ihe maple, Acer fccbarin, hag aia in the 
Mem. etrangers de I’ Aca 
378, eens to Dryander's s Bi 
Linn. Gen. 220. pupa 295, 
Ait. Hort. Kew Mart. 
161. Lamarck Tila, ne 367. 
or Decandria Monogynia. 
Ju ‘ 
Gaertn. t. 63.—Cl lafs a nd 
Nat. Ord. Bicornes, Cae 
. Cal. ae a healer of one leaf, 
s fegments half-o Cor. 
five-cleft 5 : limb tall, revolute. 
m 
aa ree incurved, fhorter than the Lie iis into 
the receptacle; anthers with two 
Cae f{uperior, roundith, depreffed ; be cy india he 
fiigma 0 tufe. Peric 
valves, opening a 
with the perant, oe a roundifh, coloured berry, open 
at the fum Seeds numerous, nearly ovate, angular, 
“Tih Ch. Calyx inferior, five-cleft, permanent. Corolla 
ovate. Neétary of ten awl-fhaped points, Capfule of five 
ane clothed with the pulpy calyx. 
Linn. Sp. Pl. Andr. Repof. 
ate, pointed, flightly deryated, {meoth, 
crowded about tl.e on of the branches. Stems cane 
wavy, naked.—Found by Kalm in barren fandy gro in 
Canada. It is eafily cultivated with us in a light pes oa 
with a mixture of peat earth, and is ver ee SS 
flowers and fruit moft part of the yea The are 
moderately creeping. Stems procumbent in their lowe yer on 
fabdivi fomewhat angular, 
fincoth, woody, naked the top, where they 
bear a fea {cattered, evergreen, broadifh obovate /eaves, 
fo f Andromeda. 
GAV 
paler beneath, on a come flalks. Flowers axillary, fo- 
litary, ftalked, dro g, white, with a re 
which becomes a ae ne berry. Every par 
Me nt has more or lef{s of an aromatic flavour, like can of 
capillaire, with fome aftringency. A few of the leaves are 
id to communicate an oa eae perfume to tea. The two 
{cales at the bafe of each flower are rather bra¢teas than an 
outer calyx, as appears a the a agri of other ince in this 
order, ae their a — ce after flowering. 
ntipoda. . Prod. 
rowdstr “with ar ferratures. 
fufe.’—Native of New Zealand. 
Mr. R. Brown, in his valuable Prodromus, v. 1 
propofed to augment this genus with the Andromed. ie aM ae 
of Forfter, and feveral American plants, hitherto referred to 
We have not had fufficient opportunity to ex- 
amin the uae eae of this meafure. Another indu- 
bitable {pecies, however, 1 
—‘** Leaves fcattered, 
Stem fhrubby, dif- 
er. 
3. G. ereda. Veen: Jard. de Cels, t. 5.—Leaves 
ate, po finely ferrated, fcattered. Stem erett. 
Flowers in long hairy clufters ive of Peru. Ventenat.. 
coaft of North America. Mr. enzies. Stem {hru aes 
branched, leafy, ere&t, 18 inc ches to three feet high; the: 
nc alf or — © inches 
e thar rp eer 
paler ee ro 
and ae growing i the 
rty. e have not = it alive in Englan 
“LTIER, St., in Geography, atown of France, in 
the department of the Indre ; ~ place of a canton in 
the diftrict of Le Blanc 3; 15 m ateauroux,. 
he place eae gry and the canton So417 inhabitants, on 
a territory 0 4 kiliometres, in 10 co ne 
S, in Aas, a be of a voundith un mott- 
GAULU 
oF ly ufed by the people of Pheenic 
Gautus alfo fignitied a kind ve up. 
AUN, aterm provincially applied to the gallon meafure, 
and eet toa {mall tu 
GA 7 >in Ancient Geogr aphy, a town of Afia, in Me- 
dia. Pte 
eine tee ape ete in Geegraphy, a town of Auftria, 
16 miles N.N.E. of V 
GAUNLASSE, a river mer 
Durham, which runs into the Wear at Bifhop’s 
GAVNOE, in fmall ifland of net near the 
of Zealand. lat. 55° 12". FE. long.11° 53’. 
AUNT- Be in Rural iBemomg, a term applied to 
fuch animals as are drawn up {mall or thin in their bellies : 
England, in the courity of 
s Auckland. 
WwW. 
e fed as little as poflible with any fort of dr 
fodder. aa ne other kinds of moift food are cormtantly 
the moft proper. 
GAUNTLET. See Gant. TLE 
GAVOTTA, or Gavorve, derived fr rom the Gavots,a 
people inhabiting a mountainous diftri@ in France, called Gap, 
in Italian Mufic, is a kind o dance, the oa ides as two 
rains, brifk and lively, and in commo of its 
ftrains are pied twice over; the firft be ually owe or 
4 Y 2 
