. GEI 
GEIL, a river which rifes in the county of Tyrol, , 
through Upper Carinthia, and joins the Drave, near Vil- 
ach. 
GEILENKIRCHEN, a town of France, 1 in the depart- 
ment of the Roer, and chief place of a canton, in the diftri& 
of Ain-la-Chapelle. The place contains 43h - the canton 
12,245 inhabitants, in 46 communes : s N.W. of 
Juliers. N. lat. 50°57. E. isis: 6° tol. 
GEILGARBEN, a town of Pruffia, in Samland; 15 
miles N.E. of Konigtberg. 
SDORF, a town of Saxony, in the Vogtland ; 
5 miles S.S.W. of Plau 
GEILSTATT, a town of oe in the bifhopric 
of Bamberg ; 3 miles N. of Bam 
yore a a town of ae in the principality 
of Anfpa 
GEL’ re atown of Afiatic Turkey, in Natolia, anciently 
ae a city of Caria; 60 miles E.S.E. of Guzel- 
"GEISEL, a hh of Saxony, which runs into the Saale ; 
5 miles S. o 
GEISELAND, a town of Gena. in the county of 
Schwarzenburg ; 16 miles N. of Schainfe Id. 
GEISELWINDEN, a town of Germany, in the county 
of Sehwarzenburg ; 8 miles E. of Sc ainfeld. 
GEISENFELD, a town of Sa, g miles S.E. of 
Ingolftadt. 
GEISENHEIM, a town of or a in the circle of 
the Lower Rhine; 17 miles W. of Men 
GEISING, a town of ia in i margraviate of 
Meiffen ; 20 miles S. of D 
GEISINGEN, 4 town a Sonar, in the principality 
of Furftenberg ; 14 miles N. of Schaffhaufen 
GEISLEDE, a river of Germa ny; which runs into the 
Leine, near Heiligenftadt, in the territory of Eichs feld. 
GEISLINGEN, a town of Germany, in the circle a 
Swabia, on the Kocher, containing two churches ; 12 mi 
W. of Ulm. N. lat. 48° 34’. E. long. 9° 50' 
GEISMAS, a town of Germany, in the rnepality of 
Heffe ; 5 22 miles W. of Gottingen. N. lat. 51 E. 
long. 9° 24 
Bn. See GISON. 
ictapr eee peer te a town of France, in the aan 
of the tele! Rhine, and chief P ace of a canton, in 
the ‘aitria of Str of Str rafbourg. 
The place ee 2086, and the eon 11,683 inhabit- 
ants, on a territory of 135 Plneee in 14 CO 
GEISSELBORING, a town of Bavaria ; 9 “miles S.W 
of Straubins. 
GEISSERN, a town of the archbifhopric of Salzburg ;: 
32 miles S. of Salzburg... 
GEISSING ae a lake of cael 12 miles N. of 
Feitkirchen 
GEISSORRHIZA, i in ies from -yessory a penthoufe, 
the imbricated er whic 
pita, a root, alludin 
clothe that part. Gawler in Cur ae a . t. 672. 
and Konig’s Annals of coe he ve enus 
er Bellenden)> out of Ixia, 
formed by Mr. Gawler, Seti 
t differs in having inclined 
‘from which, according to 
amens. Examples of it, befides the plate above quoted, 
ft 
‘are Ixia ie Curt. Mag..t. 5985 fecunda, t. 597 5 and 
t 
a te 5 
EIS TOL, in Gergraphy a a river of Stiria, which runs 
into ce Keinach, near Mofkirc 
7 
GEL 
GEITHAYN, or Grrruzn, a town of Saxony, in 
a lied of Leipzig ; 20 miles §.S.E. of Leipzig. N, lat, 
long. 12° 39'. 
 CEKELEMUERCECHUENK, a town of America, 
belonging to the Delaware Indians, on a creek of the fame 
name, a head-water of the Mufkingum. This was the north- 
ernmoft Moravian fettlement of Mufkingum river. It lies: 
12 miles N. from Salem, and 78 N. wefterly from 
and Gexxonres. See Lace 
A, a Anco ee by, a town of "Sicily, — 
on the a a little diftance from i fea 
the river is city was built Ant fends co 
Rhodes and Entimos of Crete, 713 years aie the vc 
era. e ruin is now called e Nuo 
GELAOPACHIA, in Natural Hi a. ie name oof a 
clafs of mineral fluids, which are inflammable, and of fome- 
hier thick-texture, and opake. The word is derived from 
e Greek yx, the earth, | Aaory oil, and waxy h 
a of this clafs are the Barbadoes tar, oil of earth, and 
the common pip of the hops ; which fee undeg 
their feveral heads 
GELEOPSILA, the: name of a clafs of ie The 
word is derived from the "0 earth, « oil, and 
Liroc, thin, and expr fubitance aay 
ound in the earth: ‘Thefe are on ad pellucid inflammable 
liquid fubftances, commonly known by the name of liquid 
bitumens, but by that sae as confounded with the 
thicker and coarfer kinds. e only bodies of this clafs are 
thofe commonly diftinguifhed by the names of naphtha and. 
petroleuin, 
GELALEAN Catenpar. See Care 
GELANDRI, in Ancient Geography, a 
pyrene cs do 
the bank and to the right of the river Danapri is (the Die ; 
per), near the fourth catara of this r 
NI » a term me iy fome authors to. 
exprefs the four middle fore-teeth, both of the upper and 
under jaw. They have their. fame from the Greek, yerocs 
* laughter, becaufe they are fhewn when people lau 
SIUS L., in Biography, an African by birth, was. 
admitted to the papal dignity in the year 492» on the death 
of Felix III., to whom he ha been fecr 
with malar are 
and they applied to the ambaflador, Fauftus, who wrote to: 
the pope, apprifing him of the fatal confequences which they 
apprehended to - caufe, if he fhould perfift in his refolu- 
e moft fav: 
fubfifted one ‘the eaftern an rches. 
reach was, indeed, during his anes made ae wider. 
In 
