[ 459 1 



sthe north-eaft k the Thyringae, to the north of thefe are the 

 Seaxan, to the north-weft are the Fryfae, and to the weft of 

 Old Saxony is the mouth of the Elbe, as alfo Frifeland. Hence to 

 riie north- weft 1 is that- land which is called Angle, Sillende, and 

 fbme part of Dena ; to the north is Apdrede, and to the north- 

 eaft the wolds ra which are called JEfekhn. -From hence eaft- 

 ward is Wineda-land, which - men call Syfyle, and great part 

 of the country to the fouth- weft Maroaro, and thefe Maroaro 

 have to the weft the Thyringse and Behem^e, as alfo half of the 

 Beathware, and to the fouth, on the other' fide of the Danube, is 

 the country called Carendre. Southward, towards the Alps, 

 lie the boundaries of Beathwara, as .alfo Swaefa ; and then to the 

 eaftward of the-Carendre country, and beyond the weft part, is"* 

 Bulgaria. To me eaft is Greece, to the eaft of Maroara is 

 Wifleland, and to the eaft of that is Datia, though it for- 

 merly belonged to the Goths. To the -north-eaft of Maroaro are 

 the Dalamenfas ; eaft of Dalamenfe are the Honithi, and north 

 of- the -Dalamenfe are the Sarpe, to the weft alfo are the 

 Syfele. To the north of the Honithi is Maegthaland, and 

 north of M<egtha!and h Sermende, quite to the Riphsean 

 mountains. To the fouth- weft of the Dene is that arm of the 

 Ocean that furrounds Brytannia, and to the north is that arm of 

 the Sea which is OJl Sea, to the eaft and to the north are the 

 North Dene, either on the continent or on the ifland, to the 



k Eaft-north, in" the Saxon, as 1 have before obferved, with regard 

 to the fouth-weft, which in the Saxon is weft-fouth ; a fingle inftance 

 follows, however, where the point fouth -weft 4s mentioned, and not 

 weft-fouth. 



1 This Ihould be north-cart. 



J " fylre... 



Nn-no- eaft- 



