AUTHORS AND WORKS OUOTEB. 
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Gomara. History of the Conquest of Mexico^ xiii, 138, 
287, 298, 339, 381, 395 ^ xiv, 16 ; General Chro- 
nicle of the Indies, xiii, 220. 
Grosier. General History of China, xiii, 341. 
H. 
Hager. Explanation of an Oriental Zodiac, xiii, 362, 366 j 
xiv, 241 j Memoir on the Ciphers of China, xiv, 
120 j Monument of Yu, xiv, 244. 
Hamilton. Catalogue of the Sanskrit MSS. of the Imperial 
Library, xiii, 228, 229 3 xiv, 16. 
Hammer. Mines of the East, xiv, 223. 
Elermann. Mythology of the Greeks, xiv, 15. 
Herodotus. His report on the Pyramids of the Lake 
Moeris, xiii, 84 3 his description of the Temple of 
Belus at Babylon, 98 ; of the Tumulus of Ninus, 
102 3 his observation on the names of the days of 
the week, 360 3 on the four apparent changes 
which have taken place in the position of the rising 
and setting Sun, xiv," 31 3 on the Intercalation in 
use among the Greeks, 129 3 on the Calendar of the 
Egyptians, 236. 
Hervas. Arithmetic of all known Nations, xiv, 115 and 
following. 
Hesiod. Works and Days, xiv, 31. 
Hipparchus. Commentary on Aratus, xiv, 242, 243. 
Homer. Hymn to Mercury, xiii, 226. 
Hug. On the Invention of Letters, xiv, 222. 
Humboldt (Alexander de). Tableaux de la Nature, xiii, 3433 
Description of Cotopaxi, 124 3 on the carnivorou's 
quadrupeds of Mexico, 343 3 Essay on the primi- 
tive Population of Mexico, in the Journal of Berlin, 
288 3 Political Essay on the kingdom of New Spain, 
