INDEX. 
381 
Telemsen, desert of, 148. 
Tembudoo, account of, 145. Its reputed 
immense population accounted for, ibid. 
Notice of its port, Kabra, ibid. Ma- 
nufactures and dress of the people, 146. 
Government, 147- 
Temedd, brackish well at, 834. 
Temenhiut, or Temenhint (village), notice of, 
85. Singular mode of barter practised 
there, 302. 
Ttmeshecn, Wadey of, SOS. 
Tents, Arab, described, 41. 
To-boo (village), notice of, 220. Wretched 
condition of its inhabitants, ibid. 
Ter/aas, a species of root, notice of, 37. 
Terhoona, Arabs of, 37. 
Tessoutoa (town), notice of, 189. 
Tewecwa^ desert of, 211. 
Tghrasai, Bazaar of, 32. 
The/'c, how punished at Tripoli, 17, 64. 
Tibhoo., or Slave Traders in the interior of 
Africa, account of, 120, 121. Articles 
of commerce between them and Bornou, 
159. Dress and character of the Tibboo 
women, 225 — 227, 232; and of the men, 
227, 228. Notice of the animals pro- 
duced in their country, 231. Distance 
thence to Waday, 230, 231. Voca- 
bulary of the Tibboo language, 233. 
Tibboo forms of courtesy, 232. Music 
of this people, 234. Their mode of pre- 
paring tar, 235, 236. 
Tibhoos of Borgoo, account of, 251, 252, 
254. Arab mode of making them cap- 
tives, 255. Anecdotes of a Tibboo boy, 
308, 309. 
Tibesty (region), notice of, 230. 
Touela (village), notice of, 209. 
Trade of the Tuarick, 114. Of the Tibboo, 
120 — 122. Between Fezzan, Soudan, 
Bornou, and Waday, 152 — 157. Be- 
tween Fezzan and Egypt, 157 — 159. 
Between Bornou and the Tibboo country, 
159- Between Tuat and the Tuarick, 
ibid. 160. 
l^mg'han, date groves of, 205. Modesty of 
a Marfiboot there, 206. Account of tlie 
castle and town, 207, 208. 
Travelling; mode of, across the deserts, 91 — 
93. On camels, extraordinary mode of, 
114. 
Tribute:, how collected in Fezzan, 74. 
Tripoli, markets of, 12. Bazaars, ibid. 
Schools, ibid. Prevalence of drunken- 
ness there, 13. Filthy practice of eruc- 
tation, in all classes, 14. All offices held 
by Mamlukes, ibid. Description of tiie 
public baths, 14, 15. The Bashaw's 
guards, 16. The punishment of hang- 
ing, how performed, ibid. Torture iu 
use there, ibid. Bastinado, how per- 
formed, 17. Marriages and burials of, 
18, 19. Adventures of a Tripoline 
woman, 321. The Author's interview 
with the Bashaw of, on his return from 
his mission to the interior, 349. Geo- 
logical observations on the mountains 
and rocks of, 361 — 369. 
Tripolines, dress of, described, 6, 7, 17, 18. 
Tsad, a river of Bornou, account of, 124, 
125. Extraoi'dinary mode of crossing it, 
124. Notice of the inhabitants in its 
vicinity, 125. 
Tuarick (an African tribe), costume of, 109, 
110. Arms, 110. Superstitions, 111. 
Language, ibid. Their extraordinary 
aversion to Avashing, ibid. Religion, 112. 
Notice of their chief towns, 113. Their 
