( 2012 ) 
IV. An Ahf.raH of a (Book, Entituled, 
Olaui Rudbeckij, Atlanticae ftVe Manhemij pars 
Jecunda. In qua Solis^ Lun^ <sr Terr^it Cultm de^ 
/crihitury omnifque adeo fuperfiitionU huju/ce Origo 
farti Sueoniae Septentrionali^ Term futn eimmcri- 
orum Vmdkatury ex qua deinceps in orlem reliquum 
. diyulgata ejly isrc. Jcctdunt demonfiratmies cer^ 
tifflmiej qud Septentrionales mjlrosyin niaxime genuu 
mm Solh ac Lun^ motuniy indeq^ .pendtntem accura-- 
tijjimam temporum ratmenty mulco <(sr prm zs^ felU 
cm quam gentem aliam uUam penetrajfe declarant. . 
Upfalse. In Folio. 
^TT^His Learned Author, in this hisfecond part of his-4/- 
Untka, or ManheiM [See an Account of the firfi fart in 
JOr HookV Pkilofophieal tol/e^ions^ Nuwb. 4.3 has conuinued 
to oblige the Learned World with a farther egregious Illu- 
flrration of the Northern Hiftory and Antiquities, performed ^ 
by no man as he has done. He divides this great Work into 
1 1 Chapters. In the firjR: he fets forth, that the Ifland Atlan- 
tka was neither feign'd by Vlato^ nor that i t wa3 Atretic 4^ 
nor Africa^ nor the Canary JJlands^ nor that it was drown*d 
in the Sea, as many have thought, but that it's Sweden it- 
feU which, tbo he conceives to have already made fc^rtli 
by more than a hundred diftinft figns or marks, not fo fit- 
ly applicable to any part of the World whatfoever as to 
Sweden 5 yet forafmuch asbefide the things already alledg'd 
by hjm, there are found many things in the Writings of 
the Ancients, both of his own Country and Foreigners, 
hid under the Veils of their Learned Fables, which make 
greatly for the lUuftration of this Argument, and for which 
there- 
