Navigantium atqneltinerantium Bibliotheca, 
Or, A Complete Collection of 
VOYAGES and TRAVELS. 
BOOK III. 
Voyages to and Travels through the Dominions of the Grand Signior, 
and through the other Empires, Kingdoms and States in ^a ; 
with curious and copious Accounts of fuch Parts of that great 
Continent as are leaft known. 
CHARI. 
Voyages through the Iflands of the Archipelago : Travels through moll: of the Pro- 
vinces under the Dominion of the Grand Signior ; with a full Account of the 
prefent State, Forces, Revenue, Commerce, ^c, of the Turks, 
SECTION I. 
The Voyages and Travels of the Celebrated Mr. John Thevenot, from Italy to 
Conjlantinople^ including a very curious and exad Defcription of the feveral Places 
he touched at in his Paffage ; of the feveral Cities he vifited upon the Coafts ; and 
a moft exad View of Conjiantinople at the Time he vilited it. Interfperfed with a 
great Variety of Hiftorical and Political Remarks, equally inftrudlive and entertaining. 
V 
ExtraEled from the laft Edition of the Author s Travels^ printed at Am- 
fterdam in 1727. 
I . An Account of the Author and oj his Parnily ; the Occajion of his Voyages, and the Manner in nahich. 
they were undertaken. 2. His Arrival in Sicily, and his Defcription of that Jfland and its Goafs, with 
fome Account of^cyW^L and Charybdis. 3. An Account of the If and of Malta, and the Obfervations 
made therein by our Author during his Stay there. 4. He profecutes his Voyage from thence towards 
Conflantinople, and defcribes the Ifands touched at by the Way. 5. A curious Account of the celebrated 
Streigbts now called the Dardanelles. 6. Several Cities on the Aiian Goaf between the Streights and 
Conftantinople, defcribed by the Author. 7. Dhe feveral Cities on the Thr^iCv&n Side of the 
defcribed in the like Manner. 8. An Account of the feveral Ifands in the Propontis. 9. A Defcrip- 
tion of the City of Conftantinople, its Ports, Walls, Gates, Towers, &c. 10. Continuation of this 
Defcription, with a large Account of the noble Cathedral called Santa Sophia, now turned into a Turk- 
ifti Mofque j with an Account of feveral other Mofques and magnificent publick Buildings, ii. A 
very copious Defcription of the Seraglio, taken not not only from Mr. Thevenot, but from Tavernier 
and Wiflier’i Accounts. 12. Of the Divan, or Grand Signior' s Council of State, arid the Manner in 
which Caufes are heard there, and the Method in which Ambaffadors are received in publick Audien- 
ces. 13. The Secrets of the Seraglio, with the Manner of the Grand Signior' s living with his 
Wives and Concubines. 14. The Policy of the Seraglio, comprehending the entire Detail of the 
Rducation of the Sultan's Servants there, by which they are qualified for the chief Places in the Em- 
