211 
h o 
HIV'ING, f. The act or procefs of putting bees into 
hives. 
HI'VITES, a people defcended from Canaan. They 
dwelt at firft in the country which was afterwards pof- 
fefled by the Caplitorims, or Philiitines. There were Hi¬ 
vites likewife at Shechem and Gibeon, and confequently 
in the centre of the promifed land ; for the inhabitants 
of Shechem and the Gibeonites were Hivites. Jofhua xi. 
19. Genefis xxxiv. 2. There were fome beyond Jordan, 
at the foot of mount Hermon. Jofhua xi. 3. Bochart is 
of opinion, that Cadmus, who carried a colony of Phoe¬ 
nicians into Greece, was a Hivite. His name Cadmus, 
comes from the Hebrew Kcdem, “ the eaft,” becaufe he 
was of the eaftern part of the land of Canaan. The name 
of his wife Hermicne, comes from mount Hermon, at the 
foot whereof the Hivites had their dwelling. The meta- 
morphofis of Cadmus’s companions into ferpents is 
grounded on the fignification of the name Hivites, which 
in Phoenician fignifies “ferpents.” 
HIWASS'EE, a river which empties itfelf into the 
Tenneflee from the fouth, and on which the town of Hi- 
waffee Hands. It is a bold river, palling through the Che¬ 
rokee towns, and empties into the Tenneflee about forty 
.miles below the month of the Clinch, and forty-fix above 
.the Whirl or Suck, by land, but lixty by water. It is 
navigable till it penetrates the mountains on its fouth fide. 
Ore was found in thefe mountains, when in poffeflion of 
the Bvitifh, from which gold was extracted. The Indians 
know the fpot; but are very anxious to keep it fecret. 
A branch of the Hiwalfee, called t Amoia, almoft inter¬ 
locks a branch of the Mobile. The portage between them 
is Ihort, and the road firm and level. 
HIWASS'EE, a town of the American States, in the 
Tenneflee government: twenty-two miles fouth-welt of 
Tellico. 
HIZKI'JAH, [Hebrew.] A man’s name. 
HLA'WITZ, a town of Bohemia, in the circle of Bole- 
flau: four miles fouth-weft of Aycha. 
HLIN'KA, a town of Bohemia, in the circle of Chru- 
dim : twelve miles fouth of Chrudim. 
HLIWI'NO, a town of Lithuania, in the palatinate of 
Minlk : forty-four miles eaft of Minlk. 
HLUMC'ZA, a town of Poland, in the palatinate of 
Volhynia : fixty miles north-north-weft of Zytomiers. 
HLUSK PAFI'ARYALE, a town of Lithuania, in the 
palatinate of Minlk : forty-eight miles weft of Rohaczow. 
HLUSKODUBROW'RIKIE, a town of Lithuania, in 
the palatinate of Minlk: forty-eight miles weft of Rohac¬ 
zow. 
KLYBO'KIE, a town of Lithuania, in the palatinate 
of Wilna : forty-four miles fouth-eaft of Breflau. 
HNA'RIZ, a town of Bohemia, in the circle of Bole- 
flau : four miles fouth-eaft of Turnau. 
HO, f. Moderation ; bounds.—There is no ho with 
them ; they are madder than March-hares. Dckkers Honejl 
Where. —He once loved the fair maid of Freling-field out 
of all ho. Green's Fryer Bacon. 
HO, or Ho'a, interj. [eho! Lat.J A call; a fudden ex¬ 
clamation to give notice of approach, or any thing elfe : 
What noife there ho? 
Here dwells my father Jew: hoa, who’s within ? Shakefp. 
HO, a town of China, in the province of Se-tchuen: 
796 miles fouth-weft of Peking. Lat. 30. 8. N. Ion. 123. 
44. E. Eerro. 
HO, a town of China, of the fecond rank, in the pro¬ 
vince of Chen-fi : 600 miles weft-fouth-weft of Peking. 
Lat. 33.48. N. Ion. 120. 20. E. Ferro. 
HO, a town of China, of the third rank, in the pro¬ 
vince of Quang-ft: forty-feven miles eaft-fouth-eaft of 
Pin-lo. 
HO, a town of China, of the fecond rank, in the pro¬ 
vince of Kiang-nan : 515 miles fouth of Peking. Lat. 3 r, 
42. N. Ion. 135. 40. E. Ferro. 
HO-BASCH, a town of Arabia, in the province of Ye¬ 
men. Lat. 14.18. N. Ion.44. E. Greenwich, 
HOA 
HO-CHOU'I, a town of China of the third rank, in 
the province of Chen-fi : twelve miles eaft of ICing-yang. 
HO-CHUN, a town of China, of the third rank, in the 
province of Chan-fi : thirty-two miles fouth of Ping-ting. 
HO-KI'EN, a city of China, of the fir ft:’rank, in the pro¬ 
vince of Pe-tche-li, fituated between two rivers well fup- 
piied with filli: eighty-feven miles fouth of Peking. Lat. 
38.28.N. Ion. 133. 29. E. Ferro. 
HO-KIU, a town of China, of the third rank, in the 
province of Chan-fi: thirty miles north-well of Ho-lan. 
HO-NAN, a province of China, bounded on the north 
by Chan-fi and Pe-tche-li, on the eaft by Kiang-nan and 
Chan-tong, on the fouth by Hou-quang, and on the weft 
by Chen-fi. The Chinefe call it Tong-hoa, which fignifies 
the flower of the middle ; it contains eight cities of the 
firft rank. The whole province is a plain, except towards 
the weft, where it is mountainous ; it is well watered with 
rivers, great and finall; the air is temperate and healthy ; 
it produces corn, rice^ and fruit, in great abundance and 
variety. The Hoang crolfes it from weft to eaft. 
HO-NAN, a city of China, of the firft rank, and capi¬ 
tal of the province of Ho-nan, fuppofed formerly by the 
Chinefe to have been the centre of the world, becaufe it is 
in the centre of their empire : 360 miles fouth-fouth-weft 
of Peking. Lat. 34.44. N. ion. 129. 53. E. Ferro. 
HO'A, a town of China, of the third rank, in the pro¬ 
vince of Chen-fi : 465 miles fouth-weft of Peking. Lat. 
34. 28. N. Ion. 127. i2. E. Ferro. 
HO'A, a town of China, of the fecond rank, in the pro¬ 
vince of Quang-tong: 175 miles fouth-iouth-weft of Pe¬ 
king. Lat. 21.38. N. Ion. 127. 35. E. Ferro. 
HO'A, a town of China, of the third rank, in the pro¬ 
vince of Quang-tong: twenty miles north of Quang- 
tcheou. 
HO'A, a town-of China, of the third rank, in the pro¬ 
vince of Pe-tche-le : twenty-five miles weft-fouth-weft of 
Cay. 
HO'A-TING, a town of China, of the third rank, in 
the province of Chan-fi : fifteen miles fouth of Pin-leang. 
HO'A-TSI'ANG, a town of Alia, in Thibet: thirty 
miles eaft-fouth-eaft of Hand. Lat. 40. 55. N. Ion. 117. 5. 
E. Ferro. 
HO'A-YONG, a town of China, of the third rank, in 
the province of Hou-quang : twenty-five miles weft of 
Yo-tcheou. 
HOACHE',yi a Chinefe earth, refemblingfteatiteorfoap- 
rock, but fulible, and argillaceous, with a mixture of filex. 
HOAD'LY (Benjamin), an eminent prelate of the 
church of England, born at Wefterham, in Kent, in 1675. 
He was educated in grammar.-learning under his father, 
who was a clergyman, and matter of a private fchool in 
his native place ; and in 1691 was entered of Catharine- 
hall, in the univerfity of Cambridge. He received his de¬ 
gree of B. A. in 1695-6, and in the following year was 
defied a fellow of his college. In 1698 he was admitted 
to deacon’s orders ; and commenced M. A. in 1699. He 
began very early to diftinguilh himfeif in the republic of 
letters. Befides fome occafional trails, he published, in 
1703, The Reafonablenels of Conformity to the Church 
of England represented to the Difienting Miniiters; in 
anfwer to the tenth Chapter of Mr. Calamy’s Abridgment 
of Mr. Baxter’s Hiftory of his Life and Times, 8vo. This 
piece was followed by a fucceflion of treatifes on clerical 
and lay conformity, epifcopal ordination, &c. together 
with a long and violent controverfy on certain religious 
tenets, with the celebrated biihop Atterbury, bilhop Black- 
hall, and feveral other dignitaries of the church; over whom 
Mr. Hoadly triumphed with fuch obvious advantage, that 
Mrs. Howland, grandmother of the duke of Bedford, pre- 
fented him, though unknown and unfeen, to the valuable 
reflory of Streatham, in Surrey; and he was honoured with 
a chaplaincy by his grace, as a qualification for holding 
it. In 1711, he publiihed his volume of Dil’courfes on the 
Terms of Acceptance with God, 8vo. a molt valuable 
performance ; which was followed by the publication of 
fome occafional fennons, and political trach, which, to¬ 
gether 
