I N D E X .
Ba Fing river, notices respecting it, 205.
Ba Lee river, notices respecting it, 205.
Ba Woolima river, notices respecting it, 206.
Bammakoo, too remote a point on the Niger,
for the destination of European expeditions,
208.
Banks, Sir Joseph, examines Adams, xix.
Barbary, West, description of its classes of
inhabitants, 2 1 ], et seqq.
Barrow, John, Esq. examines Adams, xix.
Bathurst, Earl, examines Adams, xix.
Barry, Mr. of Teneriffe, confirms a circumstance
in Adams’s story, 88.
Berrebbers, one of the three great classes of
inhabitants of West Barbary, description
and character of them, 2 1 1 - 16.
Betoo, or Badoo, country of, noticed, 196,
7, 8.
Boki river, noticed, 206.
Bukharie tribe of Moors, origin and description
of it, 220.
Caravans, seasons of travelling of those of
Barbary which trade to Tombuetoo, and
other parts of the Interior, 127.
Cannibals, 1 19>
Canoes, description of those which navigate
the La Mar Zarah, 25, 101.
Chancellor of the Exchequer, examines
Adams, xix.
“ Charles,” The, American ship, names of her
owner and crew, 6.—wrecked on the wes-
. tern coast of Africa, 7.—statement of the
fate of the crew, 160.
Christian captives, their inhuman treatment,
69, 70, 145.—their deplorable condition,
when rescued from the Arabs, 145. treated
more cruelly than any other slaves, 146.
Cidi Mohammed Mousoul, sanctuary of, noticed,
77*
Cidi Mahomeda Moussa, great market held
there annually, 77, 150.
CoarcoQ, a singular animal described by
Adams, 30.—his description apparently
erroneous, 109.
D’Anville, cited, 100, 200.
Davison, one of the crew of the <e Charles;”
renounces his religion, 74,.—escapes from
. Wed-Noon, and finally restored to Christianity,
149.
Details, introductory, respecting Adams, xi.
Dibbie, Lake,thedescriptions ofit improbable,
186.
Dolbie, the mate of the te Charles,” falls sick
at Wed-Noon, and put to death by his
master, 73, 144.
Doiiar, its meaning, S6.
Dupuis, Mr.,British Vice Consul at Mogadore,
letter from him lo the Editor, corroborating
Adams’s statements, and containing some
curious particulars relating to his ransom,
and appearance and conduct on his arrival
at Mogadore, xxii.—xxviii.—his notes and
observations on Adams’s Narrative, 185.
et seqq.—his account of the different classes
of inhabitants of W est Barbary,.21 l,ef seqq.
El Gazie, Moors of, make prisoners the crew
of the “ Charles,” 8.—description of that
Douar, 85, 6.
El Kabla (see Hilla Gibla.)
Elephants, mode of hunting them by the people
of Tombuetoo, 28.—great numbers of
their teeth brought into Barbary., 106.—
observations on Adams’s account of the
elephant, 106, 8.
Errifi, a tribe of Berrebbers, described, 212.
Faleme river, notices respecting it, 204.
Fatima, queen of Tombuetoo,her dress, 21,22.
■
I N D
her name no proof of her being a Moorish,
or Mohammedan woman, 93.
French renegade at El Gazie, his story, 9.__
manufactures gun-powder at Wed-Noon,
88.
Furkomah ri.ver, noticed, 208.
Gambia river, its course not so long nor so
far south, as laid down on the Maps, 203.
Genne (or J in n ie ), its trade with Tombuetoo,
196. Gollo (or Quallo), account of a Negro nation
of that name, 120.
Gordon, Major-Gen. Sir Willoughby, examines
Adams, his opinion of his story, xix.
xx.
Goulburn, Henry, Esq. examines Adams, xx.
Gowoina, rock of, the Niger navigable westward
nearly to that point, 200.'
Guns,double-barrelled,in common use among
the Arabs of the Desert, 97.
Gunpowder, manufactured at Wed-Noon by
a French renegade, 68.
Haoussa, merchants from that country frequent
Lagos, in the Bight of Benin; information
obtained from them respecting
the nature of the country through which
they travel, xxxvi-vii.
Heine, a species of camel, of great swiftness
28.—the same animal as that described by-
Leo Africanus under the name ragnahil;
and by Pennant under that of raguah/, 105.
Iiieta Mouessa Ali (Aiata Mouessa Alii), a
large Douar in the Desert, visited by
Adams, 62.
Harrison, George, Esq., examines Adams, xx.
Hilla Gibla, (or El Kabla), a Douar in the
Desert, described, 68.—some account of
the Arab tribe of that place, 133.
E X. 229
Horses, none at Tombuetoo, 104.
Horton, John, master of the “ Charles,” his
death among the Moors, 10, 89.
Jinnie, its distance and bearing from Tom-
buctoo, 101. (See Genne.)
Joos, (Fos or Yadoos (Ayos) of D’Anville’8
Maps), a powerful Negro nation, xxxvii.
Islta, the wife of the Governor of Hilla Gibla,
intrigues with Adams, 58, .9.
Kancaba (ICaniuba of Renoell’s Mbips), an
extensive slave-market on the Niger, 201.
Kanno, curious relation made to Adams by a
female slave from that place, 69.
Kashna, notice respecting the distance between
that place and Honssa, in Major
Rennell’s Maps, 142, and Errata.
Kong mountains, their general direction, 202.
Lahamar river, mentioned by Marmol, as a
branch of the Niger, 100.
La Mar Zarah, name of the river on which
Tombuetoo stands; its size, navigation,
and course, 25.— conjectures respecting
it, 98-100.—probably a branch of the
Niger, 190. .
Lagos, in the Bight of Benin, probability of
Europeans being able to proceed thence in
the direction of the Niger, xxxvii.
Lake Dibbie (see Dibbie.)
Lakes of considerable extent intersect the
countries between Haoussa and the coast-
of tile Bight of Benin, xxxviii.
Leo Africanus, his account of Tombuetoo
noticed, 181. —remarks on the discordances
in the different versions of his book, 182, 3,
188,9.
Lords of the Treasury, order Adams a handsome
gratuity, xx.