148 BOG 
To play fad and loofe ; to diffemble.—When fitmmoned 
to his lad end, it was no time for him to boggle with the 
world. Howel. 
BOG'GLER,^. A doubter: a timorous man.—You 
have been a boggier ever. Shakcfpeare. 
BOG'GY, adj. Marfliy ; fwampy.—This country was 
very narrow, low, and boggy, and, by great indufiry and 
expences, defended from the fea. Arbulhnot. 
BOG'HOUSE,y! [from bog and houfe.~\ A privy, or 
houfe of eafement. A vulgar term. 
BOGLEPOUR', a didrict of Hindoodan, remarkable 
for a lofty pyramidal rock fitnated in the Ganges, on the 
jummit of which is an ancient pagoda, which is held in 
great veneration by the inhabitants of the neighbouring 
country. 
BOGLIAS'CO, a town of Paly, In the date of Genoa, 
on the fea-coaft : fix miles ead of Genoa. 
BO'GLIO, a county of Savoy, bounded on the north, 
wed, and fouth, by a part of France, and on the ead by 
the counties of Nice and Tende ; the country is mountain¬ 
ous, lying on the Alps. It was wholly furrendered to the 
French revolutionary army in May, 1796. 
BO'GLIO, or Beuil, a town of Savoy, which gives 
name to the above-mentioned county, of which it is the 
capital, fituated on the Tinea : twenty-one miles north- 
north-wed of Nice, and twenty-two north of Grade. 
BOGLIPOUR', a town of Hindoodan, in the country 
of Bahar : twenty-five miles fouth-ead of Monghir, and 
ninety-eight north-wed of Moorfhedabad. 
BOG LOR AY', a town of Poland, in the palatinate of 
Sandomirz : twenty-four milesead-fouth-ead of Sandomirz. 
BOGMUT'TY, a river of Hindoodan, which runs into 
the Ganges, not far from Monghir, in the country of Bahar. 
BOG'NOR, an elegant village, near Chicheder, in 
Suffex, lately built by Sir Richard Hotham, with a view 
to form a comfortable retirement for the purpofes of fea- 
bathing. It is fituated on a dry healthy fpot, feven miles, 
from Chicheder; and is well fupplied with fifii, particu¬ 
larly lobders and prawns. Amongd the many advantages 
of this place, are good roads, pleafant rides, and a re- 
fpe&able fociety. The houfes are built on a moderate 
fcale, replete with every convenience and comfort. The 
filiation is truly pleafant, being within a quarter of a mile 
of the fea, and having a grand and extenlive profpeid of 
the main ocean and the Ifie of Wight; with pifturefque 
views of a fertile inland country, commanding the Sudex 
and Surrey hills, Chicheder, Standead, Goodwood, Slin- 
don, and Arundel. The Crefcent, and Hothampton- 
Place, form the principal part of the village. The fmooth 
delightful fands, and convenient machines, render the 
bathing perfeflly fafe, commodious, and agreeable. 
BOGODU'CHOV, a town of Rudia, in the govern¬ 
ment of Charkov; eighty-four miles north-north-wed of 
■Charkov. 
BOGOGNA'NO, a town of the idand of Corfica : five 
leagues north-ead of Ajaccio. 
BOGOIAVLEN'SKOI, a town of Rudia, in the go¬ 
vernment of Archangel, near the coad of the White Sea ; 
feventy-two miles fouth-vved of Archangel. 
BOGOI AVLEN'SKOl, a town of Rudia, in the go¬ 
vernment of Archangel, near the river Onega: 100 miles 
fouth of Archangel. 
BOGOIAVLEN'SKOI, a town of Rudia, in the go¬ 
vernment of Archangel, on the Pinega : feventy miles ead 
of Archangel. 
BOGOIAVLEN'SKOI, a town of Rudia, in the pro¬ 
vince of Udiug : fifty miles ead-north-ead of Udiug. 
BOGOIAVLEN'SKOI, a town of Siberia, on the 
Tchulim : eighty miles north-north-ead of Tomfk. 
BOGOIAVLEN'SKOI, a town of Rudia, in the go¬ 
vernment of Upha : forty-eight miles fouth of Upha. 
BOGO'MILI, or Bogarmit^e, a fe£t of heretics, 
which fprung up about the year 1179. They held, that 
the ufe of churches, of the facrament of the Lord’s flip¬ 
per, and all prayer, except the Lord’s prayer, ought to 
B O H 
be abolifiied ; that the baptifm of Catholics is imperfefl ; 
that the Perfons of the Trinity are unequal; and that they 
oftentimes made themfelves vilible to thofe of their led. 
They faid, that devils dwelt in the churches, and that 
Satan had redded in the temple of Solomon from the de- 
druffion of Jerufalem to their own time. 
BOGORD'SKOI, a town of Rudia, in the government 
of Archangel : eight miles Couth-well of Mezen. 
BOG-ORES, j. Thefe are ores of iron, confiding of a 
calx of the metal in a date of greater or lefs purity, mixed 
with earth, chiefiy of the argillaceous kind. They appear 
to have been depofited by water, and are ufually difpofed 
in drata, feparated into fmall prifmatic parts by the con¬ 
traction of the clay. The chief of thefe are, theaetites, 
or eagle-done, with other round pieces or pebbles; and 
the haematites, or blood-done. See Iron. 
BOGOROD 1 TZ', a town of Rudia, in the government 
of Tula : fixteen miles ead of Tula, and 456 fouth-fouth- 
ead of Peterfburg. 
BOGQRODITZ'SK, a town of Rudia, in the govern¬ 
ment of Archangel, on the Dwina : forty-four miles fouth- 
fouth-ead of Archangel. 
BOGOROD'SK, a town of Rudia, in the government 
of Mofcow, on the Kliafma : twenty-eight miles ead of 
Mofcow, and 368 fouth-ead of Peterfburg. 
BO'GRA, mountains, bogs, and moors, of Ireland, in' 
the county of Cork : fifteen miles north-wed of Cork. 
BOG-RUSH,/ in botany, fee Schoenus. 
BOGUDIA'NA, a part of Mauritania Tingitana, in 
Africa. According to Cluverius, it is the Tingitana, an¬ 
ciently fo called from king Bogud. 
BO'GUSLAU, a town of Poland, in the palatinate of 
Kiow : thirty-two miles fouth-ead of Bialacerkiewv 
BOHAIN', a town of France, in the department of the 
Aifne, and chief place of a canton, in the didrict: of St. 
Quentin : ten miles north-north-ead of St. Quentin, and. 
eight north-wed of Gitife. 
. BO'HADIN, an Arabian hidorian of great note, cele¬ 
brated for his Life of Saladin, in whofe court he fiouridied 
in the 12th century. What makes his liidory particularly 
valuable, is his being cotemporary to the events he writes. 
He is very accurate in his account of the crufades, and 
Saladin’s taking of Jerufalem ; and mentions our Richard I. 
who made fuch a figure as Saladin’s antagonid. The ac¬ 
curate Schultens has publilhed a very excellent edition in 
folio with much erudition, Leyden, 1755. It has been 
obferved by an able critic, that this hidorian, as well as 
Abulpharagius and Abulfeda, bears much refemblance to 
Plutarch ; as they have enriched their hidories with fa 
many driking anecdotes and curious information on the 
progrefs and date of literature in their refpeefive ages and 
countries. 
BOHAD'SCHIA, f. in botany, fee Peltaria. 
BOHAROWC'ZE, a town of Poland, in the palatinate^ 
of Kaminiec : fixty miles north-wed of Kaminiec. 
BOHE'A, f. [an Indian word ] A fpecies of tea, of 
higher colour, and more adringent tade, than green tea. 
BOHE'A, an idand of Ireland, in Lough Erne : thir¬ 
teen miles north-north-w’ed of Ennifkillen. 
BOHE'MIA, a kingdom in Germany, bounded on the 
north by Lufatia and Upper Saxony, on the ead by Mo¬ 
ravia and Silefia, on the fouth by Bavaria, and on the 
wed by Franconia. Although this country is fituated in 
the middle of Germany, and its king be an eleftor of the 
empire, neverthelefs, it has its particular alfemblies, cuf- 
toms, and language, different from the Germans. The 
name Bohemia, in the German language, fignifies the 
home, or abode, of the Boii, a people of ancient Gaul, 
who, under their leader Segovefus, fettled in that country 
about 590 years before the Chridian sera. Thefe Boii 
were foon after expelled by the Marcomanni, a nation of 
the Suevi, who were afterwards fubdued by the Sclavi, a 
people of Scythia, whofe language is dill fpoken in Bo¬ 
hemia and Moravia. Notwithdanding the expulfion of 
the Boii, the prefent inhabitants are dill called Bohemians 
