I " '
1
f,V ..
I® '
•t-
I'-l
i;4 ■ . ' T
7?
k u '■rót|
' ) F'
»El
'tt Ú'
là A
t
si'’
4 ° ^ c h r o n o l o g i c a l A R R A N G EM E N T
terrae” or ‘‘ U / ; ” J U d U I « raWgl according to Pliny xxiv. 20 “ thus
27 (Rhod. lex. Scribon.) ‘ mentioned by Apuleius Barbarus
Ute " T U “ and
accorffing to Dioscorides the leaves whiter and more T / g p ô J i i J J c J th U s 'e T ^ T
incumbent corymbs, is referred here by Matthioli andUibtho J U “ ft®""-
cretica origani folio villosa satureiæ oriorp cr>r,.,„n- ’ tyUthorp. O. onites is termed “ majorana
observed by Sibthorp U soU T G r e e c e £■” by Tournefort cor. ,3, a id was
medicinal u L of the U n i t i , b v Plinv Elands. Farther West, the
111 Sicily (Bocc. ii, pl. 38, Pers., and Spren» ) ^ ‘ft’ ° " ' ‘ es is known to grow
c . i i £ î r £ ; t o x : ! + 7 , : t t t + : ™ » i « r o s P -ö .n „t a *
¡ d e s » . . . h „ b w i l l . b , » » d ; . , » c r o S „ , 1 i £ ' 7 Dlo.corthe
tongue and purgative mentioned tJso\ v n 'I ■ * e but more slender leaves, bitter, biting
the “ ktiithëionUôkkôn ft a c T c S t d L U T U " ’ T b®
“ hamëlaia,” and the “ kökkön knilhion liJtTn ” s J / i o l e T J '’® " ’® ft™“ °ft
D .a lp in aw a s observed bySibthorp on Palnassus the B U " '® 5+H a remb.):
Crete; by Pallas pl. 35,011 the Altaian monntnîn^’ av 1 i and the mountains of
•‘ hamëlairo m é l a i iL ” o , " “ 0 0 0 + T T T T T ’ .‘ ft®/‘ ''“ ^Haia ” or “ aknêstôs ” or
tëllôum” or “ ölea gö” or “ kitökakiöum ” of the P “ identified in Syn. Diosc. with the “ ôlëas-
Niger to be procured from the w / a ” L T a l y ( / / i U U T
“ chamelaea” in Gaul is mentioned by Plinv xxv aS • J p £ ? + F ° '" * e
Idiny x v .y a n d x x iv . 72asashrubnot mn U thU ^ ’ 0®, ®ft>>maelea ” is further described by
described by Plukenet aim. pl. 2»o is termed “ th a l fo U U r 1 P^ces : D. alpina is
inst. 594, and is known to glow oTthe i orfnta s T T t a 1U by Tournefort
Chenopodium (A m b r i l ) b o t Z I 1+ 0 7 ! ■ Switzerland (Pers., and Lenz).
in which we recognize the “ votrus” identified u Called m Italy “ botri” (Lenz);
of the Cappadocians, the AMBPOCIHN of Nicaifoer f r / U T J i U " ’’
in ravines formed by torrents a vellow hprh In ' “ i ’ fuilher descnbed as growing
all around the branches, and th’e whole so fravra lt® ? ranches, “ kihöriö’’-like leaves, seeds
observed by Sibtliorp, ¿hauba ! Ind Jraas U 1 1p 1 7 ®ft°‘ ft'"^" botrys was
iu A s iaM i lo r ; a n d / G m În o’nÏ YaU r’/ T s J ^ ^ Peloponnesus to sinyrna
on the upper portion of the mountains of Tropical Arabia and c®I e T “ s U U ' T l ^orskal
the account of the “ botrys ” by Pliny xxvii a i sppm» t V f Vv ft' ®* bomar. Westward,
by T P » . , f. 333 (Sp re „g ), » £ ¿ S ™ " 2 .p 34 b “ £ ' T , “ ‘" “ ' t t ' "
by Tournefort inst. ço6 • and is known tn »7 * ' termecl ch. ambiosioides folio sinuato”
ern Europe (Pers., in d Tenz) B i U T e i i 7 and other parts of Southit
has becoml a weed in T d l n s T d 7 T e 7 '° ft"°''‘ ft®^^‘ tofmerica, where
at Columbia in upper Carolina bv Short 'in K ^ observed by Elliott ’
along the Mississippi and Missouri ' “ The wh^l^^ T ’ T ’’ ^ appearance indigenous
i p - U + U H r s r e î b S i b r " ” '- • * * * • . i « - - « » «¡»® >,
( I J e L ) : a n d t h e K A T A K P I p H ■ 3 A M H A H n f N ' f . ’ " ( h f » » s ) , i n E g y p t " . » g h l y i e h ’■
id . . n l i p , „ , p i , ™ . b + v “ + + e l™ t o l ? , T e
tliorp, Chaubard, and Fraas frennpn? n [ L ? T / by Fraas : U. urens Avas observed by Sib-
known to occur ajso in Siberia (Wats 1 • w i s ^ n Î Peloponnesus to Constantinople; is
from Abyssinia by Richard (A. D e c ) \ V e iw a r c r t h i “ a k n T !
wi th the “ our t ika mol l is ” o f the Romans • and 'the’ “ f ."P''® 'dentified in Syn. Dio s c .
r » + i ' p b T y t i r o
+ :.v » L v ‘r.,,rp :b ;:rU £ "£ 7 "
1'.™-) i to A n s td l A f r i c , Z M . u S . T e i ln ï , f o T b f " . A “ ' " ' ''■"»'¡b» (Con,».et. f »„il
perhaps to the Hawaiian Islands, for a species selminriy JTld i T " ‘-ft^’T ’
membranacea ” of Poiret, known to occur in Portugal S iJfo Bari '"® 'toentical. “ U.
Pers.), observed by Chaubard and Fraas in P r T * « r y , and Egypt (Brot., Desf., and
Chaubard as perhaps not distinct. ’ ^ orskal at Barah m Yemen, is reg.arded by
OF A C C O M P A N Y IN G A N IM A L S A N D P L A N T S . 407
S co kp en d ry n officinarum of Northern Climates. Called in Italy “ lingua cervina ” or “ fillitide ”
T 7 U T T . + ‘U T ' T ’T P®^>-P>" the T a a 1 T 1 C of Nicander
then 864. the phullitis is descnbed by Dioscondes as growing in gardens and shaded places
stemless and having nmfoer flower nor fruit, six or seyen leaves resembling those of dock' but fon»e1
ir td e T t iL d U f th é T i U V ’ f + t w i t h something like distant slender worms behind ; a"nd
IS Identified in the added Synonyms with the “ phullis ” or “ akaufon” or “ lapathon ao-rion • ” S
«icmarum was observed by Forskal growing in the .streets of Constantinople, and by Sibthoro and
Fraas, in mountain defiles and shaded situations in Greece, and called at present “ gfossa ” U i l s t !
w r d acc0 mg to Cremntius, a free on which the “ phyllis ” suspends itself never flourishes (Plin.
xvi 45), S Officinarum IS descnbed by Matthioli p. 606 (Spreng.), and is known to »row in Italy
0 throughout middle Europe as far as Britain (Curt. iond. i. pi. 67). Farther West w is discovered
by Pursh m 1807 m North America, on limestone rocks at Onondaga South of Lake Ontario
t h eMY KHT A C . AMANI T A C o f Nicander, — Athenaeus ii. 56, and Galen fac. alim, ii p. 655 A
campestris was « s e r v e d by Sibthorp around Athens. Westward, is called in Italy “ prataiolo’'’
or pratolmo (Lenz), in which we recognize the “ pratensibus optima fungis ” of H iraU satir ii
r p r t a ’+ T ' s T e r b Tonrnefort mst. 556 and i.s known to grow throughout middle Europe (Sdiaeff.
1. pl. 33, a « Sowerb. pl. 305). Farther West, is frequent in North America in grass-grown clearin»s
tl " ^s.yet almost our only rt-A/. mushroom, is sometimes artificially mnUiÍ
T e d ^ “ “ ’’ ft ft™'“ ft" “ ""® ft"^‘""®®^ ft®®"
• tn" T + 1’ (C. Ptol., Blair, and Clint.), “ a little after midnight on the 29th of Mechir
Iiarchus°'^ ft Calippic period,” the Vernal equinox observed on Rhodes by Hipé
r ■» " f t fU j ' J . T ® f t J 7 U °ft, ft'’® ‘ y°"""-kou ang ’ of Wou-ti ” (Chinese chron. table). “ In the
re gn of Wou-ti (Grobil) books written in the obsolete Chinese character, including a copy of the
Qrou-king, discovered m the rums of the family mansion of Confucius. The copy was written on
bamboo, and was certainly not less than a century old. vvriuen on
t in u e d U U T I r T 'f t ''” " ” “ ft'^’ ®°"™®"®®'"®"‘ Sicily of the Servile w a r . - T h e war con-
M a r J a U T lT ^ and twentyffifth gmreration. Sept. ist, 134, mostly beyond youth : the Syrian writer
Maubas . the (roeek philosophers, Cleitomachus, Apollodorus the Epicurean, and Hecaton the Stoic-
the historians Dionysms Scytobrachion ; the grammarian Herodicul of Babylon : the T n writers’
Uri P " " ^ft® 0 + + ' s t , L. Attius the tragic dramatist, the two historians Coellus Antipatel
Uator H Antonius the orator, and M. Aemilius Scaurus statesman and
sion ™l 7 f U “ ” of Abyss, chron., and M. Russel p. 99 and 109), access.
on of Mendec as king of Abyssinia. As he is termed “ son of Solomon,” was accompanied by
i n U U T T ft”'" " ft'i’ f '-'gftt-hand bench in judgment,” and by an officer carrvi
f o ° A b T * i 7. “ “ ^ ^ " '“ ft®''’ ” “ “F """'ft ‘ ft® oommencement of Jewish ascendanly
133 B. C .” (Liv., Blair, and Clint.), Numantia captured and destroyed by P. C. Scinio Afri-
R o T n s I ° m Asia Minor, the kingdom of Pergamus bequeathed by Attalus III. to the
S i d e T T l T S / S T ' T r U ^ Antiochus
s t + v j " ' " » • » .« . .» » .c » .» . . r
.»»d róró.rir:Lrór;£:;;,5:»;to?r:;'5 tP t x - r o - tt » . . ¡ - » d ,
I' T U “ ft '“ ‘“'7 °ft F®'"®‘ ""'^ H. from captivity among the Persians,
a ® i' + 7 7 ^’! , youa-choua ’ of Wou-ti ’’ — (Chinese chron. table).
year of th+Thfrd C r ' ^” 7 7 7 ’ “ “ " ft° " ‘ """"®‘ ‘ ''® ° f Phamenoth, in the fiftieth
L i d s the sUr C f *’ 9.’® P®’'‘° 7 equinox observed on Rhodes by Hipparchus. After-
“ ’i2V T v L U 7+ 7 “ " °ft?,®T"ft + ; ftft'" ‘ ° ft® “■ ''9° 50' from the Summer solsticial colure.”
7, May « 35 years after his first Astronomical observation (C. Ptol. and Clint ) an
Obserrauon ma e on r to d e s by Hipparchus. And on “ July 7th,” another L s e rv a tio n .
“ s ix fe L l > ‘ ""®.(^'+ft®ft'’ .""to i- 6t), Dhou-Sadad succeeded by Harith-Erraich, of the
s xteent 1 geneiation from Himyar, and now first tobba of reunited Yemen. The new dynasty is
t r f ¿ r . “ M”A + i + v ’E” + ^ ” « « ¡- » . to d iS 5
fe ;
I :
■ft if-
I t
i I: