280 MAN 
MAN'GO, a town of Africa, in the country of Agoana. 
MAN'GO, a river of Sweden, which runs into the Wen- 
ner Lake ten miles weft of Carlftadt, in the province of 
Warmeland. 
MAN'GON, or Mango'na, f. in military-language, 
formed from a Greek word of the fame import in the time of 
the lower empire, was ufed in general to denote all kinds 
of machines; and mangonel was a diminution, applied to 
the fmaller machines. See Artillery, vol. ii. p. 231. 
MANGONE'GRO, a market and poll: town of Spain, 
in the kingdom of Seville; three leagues from Cordova. 
MAN'GONISM,yr The aft of furbifliing up any thing 
old. Bailey. 
MANGONIZA'TION, /. The aft of furbilhing up for 
fale. Cole. 
To MAN'GONIZE, v. n. [from mango, Lat.] To deal 
in buying and felling human beings—You mangonizing 
flave, I will not part from them. B. Jonfon's Poetajier. 
MANGON'NE, one of the fmall Friendly Illands. Lat. 
19. 38. S. Ion. 185. 30. E. 
MANGOO'SE, or MuN'GO,y. A name given in India 
to the ichneumon-weafel, that attacks vipers and ferpents. 
See the article Viverra. 
MANGOPUN'GOLY, a town of Hindooftan, in Mey- 
war : thirty-eight miles eaft of Cheitore. 
MANGOR', a town of Africa, in the kingdom of 
Kayor. 
MANGOSTAN', f. in botany. See Garcinia. 
MAN'GOTSFIELD, a town or village of England, in 
Gloucefterfhire, with 2492 inhabitants: fix miles north- 
eaft from Briftol, feven from Chipping-Sodbury, and 
thirty-two from Gloucefter. This village is one of thofe 
places in the neighbourhood of the city of Briftol, which 
abound with a very laiting kind of coal. 
MANGRA'HA, a town of Hindooftan, in Bahar: 
thirty-five miles north of Hajypour. 
MANGROL'LA, a town of Hindooftan, in Guzerat: 
twenty-five miles north-eaft of Surat. 
MAN'GROVE, f. in botany. See Rhizophra. 
MAN'GROVE GRA'PE. See Coccoloba. 
MAN'GROVE I'SLAND, a fmall ifland among the 
Bahamas. Lat. 26. 12. N. Ion. 78.45. W. 
MAN'GROVE RIV'ER, a river of New Zealand, (fo 
called by Lieut. Cook in 1769, on account of the number 
of mangrove-trees about it,) which runs into Mercury Bay. 
The fafeft and beft way of failing into this river is to keep 
the fouth (hore all the way on the board. The country 
on the eaft fide of the river and bay is very barren, its 
produce being only fern, and a few other plants that will 
grow in a poor foil. The land on the north-weft fide is 
covered with wood ; and the foil, being much more fertile, 
■will doubtlels produce all the necefiaries of life with pro¬ 
per cultivation. The inhabitants have no plantations ; 
their canoes are mean, and without ornament; they fleep 
in the open air, and lay, that Taratu, whole fovereignty 
they do not acknowledge, if he were to come among them, 
would kill them. Hence it was inferred, that they were 
outlaws; though they faid that they had heppahs, orftrong 
holds, to which they retired in time of danger. 
MANGS, three rocks among the Ladrone Illands, about 
fifteen miles weft of Aftumption Ifland. 
MANG'SCHUTZ, a town of Silefia, in the principality 
of Brieg: eight miles north-eaft of Brieg. 
MAN'GUALD, a river of Bavaria, which runs into 
the Inn near Rofenheim. 
MAN'GULUM, a town of Hindooftan, in Coimbetore : 
twenty-five miles fouth-fouth-eaft of Coimbetore. 
MAN'GUT, a town of Hindooftan, in Baramaul.: 
twenty-eight miles fouth-fonth-eaft of Darempoor. 
MANGUT'ZKOI, a town of Ruffin, in the govern¬ 
ment of Irkutlk, on the borders of China: eighty-eight 
miles fouth-weft of Doroninlk. Lat. 49.40. N. Ion. 111.4.E. 
MA'NGY, adj. Infefted with the mange; fcabby; 
Away, thou iflue of a mangy dog ! 
I lwoon to fee thee. Shake/pearc's Timon of Athens. 
MAN 
MANHANTAN'GO CREE'K, a river of Pennfylvania, 
which runs into the Sufquehanna in lat. 40. 37. N. Ion. 
76. 59. W. 
MAN'HARTZBERG, a quarter or divifion of the 
archduchy of Aullria, fituated between the Danube and 
Bohemia and Moravia. 
MANHAT'TAN, the ancient Indian name of Lons: 
Ifland. > 
MAN'HEIM, a city of Germany, now belonging to 
the eleftorate of Baden, is fituated on a low' plain, near 
the conflux of the Neckar and the Rhine. The old vil¬ 
lage and citadel of Manheim were converted into a town 
by the eleftor Frederic IV. in the year 1606, and adapted 
to the accommodation of fome Netberlar.ders, who had 
quitted their country for the fake of liberty of confidence 5 
and, though it was befieged and taken by the Bavarians 
1666, and entirely deinolillied by the French in 1688, it 
was re-built by the eleftors John William and Charles 
Philip, and fortified in fuch a manner, that it became one 
of the ftrongeft places in Germany. Its prefent works 
were formed upon the fyltem of Cohorn. The number of 
inhabitants, exclufive ol the garrifon, was, in 1784, 21,858. 
Some of the ftreets are planted with rows of trees ; and it 
has five or fix open places, fuitable for promenades or 
markets. The cuitom-houfe, forming one fide of tliefe, is 
a noble ftone-building, refembling a palace, having under 
the colonnades that furround it (hops for jewellery and 
other commodities. The eleftor’s palace opens on one 
fide to the city, and on the other to the ramparts; it con¬ 
tains a gallery for paintings, and cabinets of antiquities 
and fubjefts of natural hiftory, a library, treafury, and 
riding-ichool. Manheim was taken by the French in 
Sept. 1795, re-taken by the Auftrians in November fol¬ 
lowing; but, at length, in 1802, it was ceded, together 
with its territory, to the margrave (eleftor) of Baden. 
Lat. 49. 28. 59. N. Ion. 8. 27. 22. E. 
MAN'HEIM, a town of America, in Pennfylvania, in 
the county of Lancafter, containing 60 houles, and 1041 
inhabitants, and a Dutch-church ; eleven miles north-by¬ 
weft of Lancafter.—A town in York county, Pennfylvania, 
having 1876 inhabitants. 
MAN'HOOD, /. Human nature.—In Seth was the 
church of God eftabliflied; from whom Chrilt defeended, 
as touching his manhood. Raleigh. 
Not therefore joins the Son 
Manhood to Godhead, with more ftrength to foil 
Thy enemy. Milton's Paradife Lojl. 
Virility ; not womanhood : 
’Tis in my pow’r to be a foVereign now, 
And, knowing more, to make his manhood bow. Dryden. 
Virility; not childhood: 
By fraud or force th« fuitor train deftroy, 
And, darting into manhood, fcorn the boy. Pope. 
Tetchy and wayward was thy infancy; 
Thy fchool-days frightful, defp’rate, wild, and furious ; 
Thy prime of manhood daring, bold, and vent’rous. 
Skakefpeare. 
Courage; bravery; refolution; fortitude.—Nothing fo 
hard but his valour overcame ; which he fo guided with 
virtue, that, although no man was fpoken of but he for 
manhood, he was called the courteous Amphialus. Sidney. 
MA'NI, in biography. See Manichean. 
MA'NI, in geography, a town of Airica, in Benguefa, 
on the coaft of the Atlantic : lixteen miles fouth-iouth- 
eaft of Old Benguela. 
MA'NIA, J\ See the article Insanity, vol. xi. and 
London, vol. xiii. p. 518. 
MA'NIA, in geography, a river of Ruflia, which runs 
into the Don eight miles of Tcherkalk. 
MA'NIA-KU'A, in botany. See Curcuma. 
MA'NIA-KURI'NI. See Justicia. 
MA'NIA-PUMERAN', See Nyctanthes. 
3 MAN'IABLE, 
