own eye; every curious particular relative 
to which we may expeét to find in Henke’s 
copious ** Religions-Annalen,’’ which are 
ftill continued. 
On the mof proper method of. teaching 
religion, Mr. Niemeyer, of Halle, has 
publithed a ** Lehrbuck fiir die obern Re- 
‘ligionskiafen gelehrter Schulen,”? which 
fapplies along-felt preffing want, and in 
which animatrag zeal is joined to great 
comprehentibility and luminous order ; 
fuch, indeed, as might be expefed from 
the experience of the author, who, as di- 
reStor of the Padegogium, in Halle, in 
which about 150 young gentlemen of the 
firit families in “Germany are educated, 
has for many years taken upon himfelf the 
charge of inftru¢iine the pupils in the 
principles of religion. 
JURISPRUDENCE. 
That, in the prefent violent collifion- of 
new and old times and dorines, Jurif- 
prudence too comes in for its fhare af 
attention, appears fiom the continuation 
of HUFELann’s “ Beityage zur Berich- 
tigung und Erweiterung der, pefitiven 
Rechtswiflenfehaft, (Jena, Stah}.) and 
from the rapid progreis of the ** Juridi- 
{cher Archiv,” which is fupported by the 
contributions of a Danz, a Gmelin, and a 
Tafinger. 
HABERUIN’s £¢ Staatsarchiv’’ continues 
to communicate important ftate-papers. 
The bitter cup; which the Peace of 
Luneville prepared fer many of the mem- 
bers of the Germanic Empire, has loofencd 
the tongues of fome, who otherwife would 
never have fpoken. A Mr.v Wagner, 
of Mentz, lays before the Holy Roman 
Empire only “Fifty Political Queries ;” 
and from the fame place have come forth 
*¢ Free Thoughts on the Advantages an 
Difadvantages attending the’Pian of Se- 
cularization."* Voss, known by his for- 
mer publications on this fubje&t, has 
given us another “ Ueber die Schickfale 
der teutfchen Staatsverfaffung. 
MuDiciNne. 
Here we ftill fee a number of fiery 
champions under the Brunonian and Anti- 
Brunonian ftandard fiercely contending 
againft one another. A» particular ac- 
count of thefe feuds may be found in the 
Medical Journals, edited by Dr. Réscu- 
LavuB, in Wurzburg, and by Dr. Hure- 
LAND, of Berlin. 
NaGeve has publifhed, at Duffeidorfy 
a new Effay to render the Brunonian Pa- 
thogony and Theory of Excitability in- 
_telligible to Non-phyficians: and on the 
otber hand TReNKER, of Vienna, with his 
new Humoral Pathology, boldly: eniers 
Montuix Maa, N°, 82,/ 
Retvofped? of German Literature—Michaslmas fair, 1801. €05 
the lifts againft whatever bears the name 
of Brunonian. 
Dr. AucustTin, of Berlin, gives us an 
account of the neweft Galvanic expem- 
ments that came within his circle of “Ob 
fervation. But what is till more deferv- 
ing of attention, though not announced 
in the Catalogue, is a new Number of 
Ritrer’s * Contributions.” M. Ritter 
now refides at Weimar, and is efteemed the 
molt profound of ajl the Geiman Gal- 
vanifts. 
Froriep, of Jena, has been reading 
Le&tures on the ingénious Craniofcopy of 
Dr. Gall of Vienna. Thefe leftures he 
has communicated to the public in his 
entirely remoulded ‘+ Darttellung der 
neven auf Unterfuchune der Verrichtun- 
gen des Gehirns gegriindeten Theorie der 
Phvfliognomik des D, Gall in Wien.” _ 
It is with pleafure we announce the ap- 
pearance of the fecond volume of the 
«¢ Annales Inftituti Medico clinici Wur. | 
ceburgenfis, J. N. THoman, Obfervat. 
illuftravit,’? (Wirceb. Vid. Stahl, cum 
fig. 8.) 
But in this department of f{cience the 
propaganda of the vaccine inoculation have 
again molt aflivély eniployed their pens. 
The order of the police, probibiting the 
practice thereof in the fuburbs, does not 
deter the patriotic Careno, of Vienna, 
from anncuncing,-in German and French, >: 
popular treatifes on the beneficent utility 
of the invention, nor from tranflating Dr. 
Jenner’s Work into the claffical language 
of Latium.—Dr. Herz, a Jewith phyfi- 
cian in Berlin, had given great offence 
to all the friends and promoters of vacci- 
nation, by his ‘* Epiftle to Dohmeyer.” 
His ‘* Brutal inoculation,’ (for fo he 
termed the cow. pox, and was of opinion, 
that human nature would by the pre- 
valence of it become brutalized) could 
not*fail to call furth the mof violent op- 
pofition; and according!y we find an- 
nounced in the Catalogue no lefs than five 
polemical treatifes againft him. His 
entire refutation muft be left to time, 
which brings every thing to maturity, 
unlefs, indeed, experience fhould cohfrm 
the opinion lately broached, that what 
are called the human-pox had a very 
brutal origin, viz. from the commixtare of 
a difeafe of the cows with the miafma of 
a human fever. To thofe who with to 
acquire accurate information refative to 
the progrefs of vaccination in Germany, 
the Colle€tions publifhed by Heffert an 
Pilger will be mott acceptable. 
' Natura Hisrory. 
Profefior Scaungivze, of Frackfort on 
4 sue 
