the Damjb and Saxon tongues: but that can benoother 
then the natural effed of the two Nations being jumbl- 
ed together in this part of the World. Our Borderers, 
to this day, fpeak a Leafli of Languages (Brittijb, Saxon, 
and Danijh) in one ; and *tis hard to determine, which 
of thofe three nations has the greateft fhare in the Mot- 
ly Breed, 
Tour, 6c. W. N. 
An account of the Latitude of Conftantinople, and 
Rhodes, Written by the Learned John 
Greaves, fometime Profefor of AJlronomy in the 
Vniverfity of O'^^oxd^and directed to the moji J^e- 
•z/ere;2i^ James Usfher, Arch-Bifliop (?/^ Armagh. 
UPON Intimation of your Gr^r// defires, and up* 
on importunity of fome Learned Men, having 
finifhed a Table, as a key coyour Graces exquifite dif- 
quifition, touching Jfa properly fo called; 1 thought 
my felf obliged to give both you and them a reafon, why 
in the fituation of By^antiuniy and the IJland J^hodus^ 
{"which two eminent places I have made the ^z^r^Tcyjyf^aJ^ 
and bounds of the Chart,) I difTent from the traditions 
of the Antients, and from the Tables of our late and 
beft Geographers, and confequently diflenting in thele, 
have been neceffitated to alter the Latitudes, if not 
Longitudes, of moft of the remarkable City's of this dif- 
courfe. And ^ii^iiov Byzantium, the received Latitude 
A a a a of 
